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                  <text>FLY YOUR FLAG TODAY TO HONOR AM RI(A!

Meip County's

Hometown Newspaper

.

.

Hijacking teams got training in U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) - At least
one hijacker on each of the four
planes in Tuesday's terrorist attacks
was trained at a U.S. flight school,
the Justice Department says. Overall,
50 people may have been involved in
the hijackers' well-financed operation.
"Both cash and credit cards were
used" by the hijackers "~o purchase
tickets, hotel rooms and other
things," Justice Department spokeswoman Mindy Tucker said Wednesday.

Related stories, A2
.
.
. .
The FBI 's maSSive
mvest1gat10n
stretches from the Canadian border
to Florida, where some of the participants. learned how to fly commercial planes before the attac ks. Tucker
said flight schools in more than one
state were involved in the training of
the hijackers, several of whom had
pilots' licenses. ·
. Multiple cells of terrorist groups
participated in the operation and the

hijackers had possible ties to countries that included Sa udi Arabia and
Egypt, said law enforcement officials,
speaking on condition of anonymity.
Officials said authorities were
gathering evidence that the terrorist
cells may have had prior involvement in earlier plots against the
United States, and 111ay have been
involved with Saudi exile Osama bin
Laden. That includes the USS Cole
bombing · in Yemen and the foiled
attack on U.S. 'oil during the millennium celebrations.

The identities of more than a
dozen of the men who hijacked the
four ,planes with knives and threats
of bombs have been ascertained, the
officials said.
For some suspected accomplices,
"we have information as to irivoivement with individual te~rorist
groups," FBl Director Robert
Mueller sai.d .

dozen or so are believed to have
assisted them. About 40 of the men
have been accou nted for, including
those killed in the suicide attacks,
but I 0 re main at large. th e Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday night
on its Web site, citing an unidentified
source with knowledge of the investigacion.
The Times reported at leost one of
the suspects rece iving advanced
Attorney Gen e:~! John Ashcroft flight training in Florida was a comsaJd 12 !O 24 huackers comman- mercia! pilot from Saudi Arabia.
deered the four planes, and a gov- ,
ernment official . said another two
Please see Training. Al

Smoking ..
ban enacted·
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY
A
county-wide
ban
pn
smoking in public was
approved Wednesday by
the Meigs County Board
of Health.
The
board's
Cle"an
Indoor Air Regulation
will go into effect in 30
days, and will make it illegal · to light up in ·any
enclosed publi c place,
including private businesses such as restaurants
and bars, and in all public
faciliti~s as v.oelL The measure also will make smok-

PRAYING FOR

125

et of th e main
en trance to a public place
illegal.
The board origi nally
proposed a 20-foot limit
on outdoor smoking, but
changed the distance to
five feet as one of several
minor changes in lan,
guage.
Jo Ann Crisp was the
only member of the board
to vote against the measur~. Gene Jeffers , Ann
Haning and J im C lifford
voted in favor, and Scott
Smith, D.O., voted in
absentia by way of a letter
read by Health Commissioner Norma Torres.
me eting
Yesterday's
became heated with the
arrival of abo ut 30 citi-

CA

OMEROY "For A number of local churches will hold
, those who have lost special prayer services this week for victheir lives, those who tims ofTuesday's attacks and their families, and a number of churches will be

were injured and those . open for quiet prayer for the remainder
who those who have of the week.
·
suffered in this national tragedy."
Trinity Congregational Church in
Prayer was offered by local "pastors and
residents of all faiths at a community
prayer service at the foot of the county
courthouse steps on Wednesday afternoon, in the aftermath ofTuesday's terrorist attacks in New York City, the Pentagon and near Pittsburgh, Pa.
Members of,the Meigs County Ministerial Association led the event, which
also included words of condolence on
behalf of Meigs County, read by Meigs
County Commissioner Jeff Thornton,
and a psalm read by Glenn Rowe, rep reisenting the Ash Street Church in Middleport, pictured here.

lbdays

Hlp: 60s
Low: 50s

Sentinel
2 Sections - 12 ...,_ .

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
~rts~t_~_

Weather

AS
82-4
85
M
A3
___J8i!.Jil,o.l.3

A3

Pomeroy will be open for prayer each
day this week from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.,- and
Pomeroy United Methodist Church at
noon each ·day. Sacre~ Heart Church
will hold a special prayer service on
Sunday at 4 p.n1.
·
The Rev. Keith Rader, director of the
Meigs · United Methodist Cooperative
Parish, said donations made \\to the
parish's relieffund in September will be
given to the United Methodist C hurch 's
Committee on Relief to assist victims in .
New York and Washington, and too percent of every contribution will go · to
the charita.ble cause. (Brian J. Reed photos)

zens, includin g a nuJ.nber

of restaurant and bar owners, all vo ca l in opposing
th e ban , and some asking
for a last-minute compromise.

Following the meeting,

Please see Smoking. A3

S.B. 128 talks
about local
smoking bans
BY· BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

COLUMBUS- Legislation before the Ohio
House of Representatives
would deny local boards of
health the authority to pass
smoking bans without the
approval of a local legislative
authority.
- Senate Bill 128 passed the
Ohio Senate earlier this
the Ohio House of Representatives' State Government Committee.
The bill was sponsort:d by
Sen. Lynn R . Watchmann,
R-Napoleon, and co-sponc
sored by 19 other senators.
Bethany Rhodes, a legislative aide in Watchmann's
office, said the bill received
only five votes of opposition in the high chamber,
and garners greater support
in the House than it did in
the Senate.
"We have the votes for it
now," Rhodes said, " but the
House will hear it on their .
own sc hedule.
"This bill simply clarifies
ex1stmg
legislation,"
Rhodes said Wednesday. " It
says tha t any bws concerning cigarettes, . tobacco
products a'nd smoking in cl uding new taxes and

permits, and legislation
banning smoking in public
places be approved by a

Please see Ban, Al

255 SOCCO m.iners la.id off

Details, A3

Lotteries

'· ,

OHiO
Pick 3: 7-3-2; Pick 4: 4-7-4-S.

time about 50 employees v.1111Je laid off.
·Employees who remain on the job then
will remove underground equipment and
supplies fium the mine. It is anticipated ·an
additional 125 enjployee; will be laid off in
mid-December. ·
The company anticipates. about 80
employees-of Meig; No. 31 will remain on
the job by the end of the caleridar year. Their

FROM STAFF REPORTS

\ SM.EM CENTER - Southern Ohio
Coal Co. gave layoff notices Wednesday to
ah9ut 255 employees of its Meig; No. 31
Mine.
·
Accotding to a news release issued by
CQNSOL Energy, Inc., SOCCO's parent
coinpany, coal producti6n at the mine is
e,(pected to end in mid-November, at which

5uplr LIIIID: 14-21-2S-304547

Kkbr. 7-&amp;1-9-7-9

W.VA.
Dally 3:9-7-8 Dally 4: I-6-7-3
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

work will be associated with surface f.1eilities
that also serve SOCCO's Mine No.2.
CONSOL purchased the mint'S from
American Electric Power in July. At that
time, both mines had linntcd economically
mineaqle reserves.
The mines supply steam coal to AEP's
coal-fired power ·plants, including the Gen.
James M. Gavin Plant near Chc~hire.

Holzer Medical Equip111ent, Inc.
.

'

-- qkygen and Related Services. .
M~ical Equipment and Supplies.

'

MEDICAL CENTER

2881 State Route 160 • Gallipolis

Discover the Holzer Difference

For more information, call

www .holz~r .org

,.

(740) 446·4095
~)

..

..

�.Page A 2 • Tha Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 13, 200t

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 13, 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) The White House and Air
Force One, two potent symbols of the American presiden cy, were targets of Tuesday's suicide bombers, govermnent officials said.
Sketching a scenario that is
nor mally the stuff of Hollywood thrillers, White House
prc&gt;s secretary Ari Fleischer
cited "real and credible informati on" th at the hijacked airplJnc that slammed into the
l'en ta go n was originally
int ended to hit the White
House.
That matter has . been a
poi nt of contention, however.
Several government ,officials,
speaking on condition of
anonymity, said investigators
believe the plane that crashed
in . Pennsylvania was headed
to the Whjte House.

Air Force One, which was
with Bush in Florida at the
time of the attacks, also was in
the terrorists' sights, Fleischer
said Wednesday. "That also is
one of the reasc;ms why A\r
Force One did not come
back to Andrews (Air Force
Base, Md.) where some people may have thought it
would."
He refused to say what kind
of attack might have been
aimed at the presidential jet.
Asked if evidence pointed
to an assassination plot that
went awry, Fleischer said he
would tell reporters only
what he kne\v about the
prospective targets, "and I
think you can draw your own
conclusions."
T he astonishing disclosure
came seven years to th e .day
after a Maryland man with a

history of mental illness
cr•&gt;hed a stolen light plane
against the south siae of the
White House, an act that
showed how vulnerable the
mansion can be. It was
reopened Wednesday for regular tours and some 400 people streamed through, re ceiving small Am er ican flags as
they left.
·
The Bush administration
was eager to explain Wednesday, in conside rable detail,
why Bush did not return
immediately to Washington
and take clear charge after the
terrorists who struck at New
York's World Trade Center
turned to the nation's capital.
Throughout
Tuesday,
images of the Pentagon in
smas hed by a
flames hija cked airliner - · and
White House aides fleeing

across Pennsylvania Avenue
provided a sharp contrast
with pictures of BLish heading
for an undergroltnd bunker
hundreds of miles away.
Fleischer said natiqnal
security offi cials learned that
both ihe White House and
Air Force One were targets
just as Bush's Boeing 747 lifted off Tuesday, morning jiL
Sarasota, Fla., \Vhere the pres.ident was to make an education speech. He already had
announced on· nati~nal television that he was hastening
back to Washington . That
plan was scrambled in midflight, and all who were
aboard Air Force One - for
a destination then unknown
- were ordered to turn off
their cell phones lest signals
from the phones give away
the plane's locati on.

Ohioans wait for we~rd of friends, families
COLUMBUS (AP) - James Laippley
-Was watching TV coverage of Tuesday's
attacks on the World Trade Center when
he heard of the' third attack, on the Pentagon .
He grabbed the phone: His daughter
julie Works there.
Ohioans with friends and family in New
York and Washington held their breath
waiting for news after planes slammed into
the buildings, tryi ng not to let impatience
and uncertainty overwhelm them.
Laippley, 55, tried · his daughter's cell
phone with no luck, then her work number. He finally tried her cell phone again,
reaching her as she arrived home about an
hou r after the plane hit.
Julie Laippley, 24, had leti her Pentagon
office to ·go home to retrieve a pass with a
higher security clearance for a meeting ,
later in the day, her father, a fiscal officer for
the O hio Environmental Protection
Agency, said Wednesday.
"I was all right until I heard her vo ice.
Then I started crying;' Laippley said, .
breaking down again at the memory.
llelarives of Alicia N icole Titus, a flight
attendant on United Flight 175 who grew
~--upmw.sr-:cer·itf:jj()ht.'J,'Vvaileo for word

Tuesday of her fate after roommates in said she was a fun kid.
Boston confirmed she was on the Boston
·"The hardest tiling is the talk about the
to Los Angeles flight that crashed into the possibility of some of the attendants being
trade center's south tower at 9:03 ·a.m. ·
stabbed or being abused prior . to (the
" It was pure hell," said her aunt, Jodi . crash);' Black said. "I just hope thing5 were
Lewis, of St. Petersburg, Fla. "From the not too difficult for her."
·
·
time that I walked in my door at 10 in the
Dolores Whiting of Colerain in eastern
morning until 4 o'clock yesterday after- Ohio was at her job as a deli clerk at Riesnoon, I was on the telephone, on call wait- beck's grocery in St. C lairsville when she
ing and had at least one cell phone, and started to hear customers talk about the
when my husband got home, a second cell attack.
phone.
Her daughter, Elaine Hensen, 34, is a
" We had two or three lines going, all of Marine Corps major who was working at
our friends, all of our family calling to offer a nearby Pentagon annex.
prayers."
Mrs. Whiting, 6S., couldn 't reach her
The airline eventually c&lt;?nfirmed ·Alicia daughter at work or at home. Hensen was
Titus' presence on the flight'Tuesday afte~- finally able to call about 3:30 p.m. to say
noon. Her grandmother, Olivia Titus of she was all right.
.
Rushsylvania, called Alicia a very outgoing
"She told me, 'Mom, I'm OK,"'Whitil)g
person.
·
said. "That was the weetest voice I've
"One in a million;' Mrs. Titus; 74, said. heard all day ... It was a happy ending for
"Full oflife and love for everyone."
me."
Titus graduated fiom Graham High
Ohio native Bob Paduchik, a former
School in Champaign County in 1991. aide to Gov. Bob Taft and later executive
She was a ch~erleader, a member of the director of the Bush-Cheney Ohio camtrack team • and National Honor Society paign, had stepped away from his Pentagon
Her family moved to Michigan four or five office a few minutes befo re the plane hit.
years ago. ·
He hasn't been back and doesn't know
. B.ecky Black, Titus.' gliidance counselor;- what, if anything, is lert of his office.

War talk begins
in Congress
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress is moving quickly
· on the Bush administration's
request for a multibilliondollar down - payment to
fight terro~ism, and legislation authorizing force against
terrorists is not' far behind.
Some lawmakers wanted
to go further: formally
declare war on terrorists.
"I say, bomb the hell out of
them;; Sen. ·zell Miller, DGa., said Wednesday. " If
there's collateral damage, so
be it They certainly found
our civilians to be expendable."
.
President Bush was expected to ask Congress on Th ursday for $20 billion in immediate funds to help rebuild
the damaged Pentagon, clean
up the debris from collapsed
buildings at New York's
World Trade Center, reimburse federal and local governments for rescue efforts,
and bolster security
Lawmakers
said
they
hoped . to have the bill to
Bush by Thursday, but Senate
Maj ority
Leader
Tom
Daschle said he doubted the
measure could be approved
in one day and said there was
no final agreement on a qollar amount.
At the same time, a separate measure would authorize the administration to
undertake ·military ac tion

under the War Powers Act.
While th e thought of
spending billions more this
year and likely tapping into
formerly untouchable Social
Security reserves would have
ignited a political firestorm
just a week ago, lawmakers
said Wednesday the request
would. be granted now..
"That debate is over at this
point," said 'sen . Ri chard
Dl.lrbin, D-Ill.
" If we can't protect o ur
nation al security, how can we
protect Social Security?" Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R - Utah,.said.
Congress suspended its
normal operations Wed nes~
day - a day after lawmaker&lt;
were evacuated in the first
mandatRTY evacuation ever
of the entire Capitol complex -. and devoted the
entire day to the terrorists
who crashed hijacked jet!
into the twin towers of the
World 'Trade Center and into
the Pentagon.
The House and Senate
broke during the day for
closed-door briefings with
Defense Secretary Donald H .
Rumsfeld and passed a resolution &lt;ondemning terrorism ·
and expressing solidarity
with the president in hi s
determination to ''punish th e
perpetrators of these attacks,
as well as their sponsors."

! lOl _: f!·&gt; -1'•- ,,,.

Another
Great Checking Account

from

Correction Polley

Na- Dapartmenta
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

., .

. General

Co\\

monogtr

.
or

today • "
\

Gallipolis

(740) 992-2136 (740) 446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667-3161

tne

·and other health-related-tax
levies - in protest of the
smoking ban, . while others
indicated they wiU not comply with the ban.
Non-compliance with the
ban could result in fines of
$100 to $500.

Schools' coalition
increases estimate of
school-funding cost

Our main concern In att stories Is
to be accurate. tf you know of an
error in a story, cafl the newsroom
at (740) 992·21'56.

Designed to meet the needs of people 55 and older.

~ We're Your Bank JorCije,~

Smoking

Reader Services

The GOLDEN LIFE Accoont

{F' B) Farmers Bank

Cooler conditions coming soon

new Visitors' Center in the
Meigs County Courthouse
open on Sternwheel Riverfest
weekend, Sept. 28-29, was discussed along with other activities planned to attract visitors
to the event.
Decorating the village lor
lioliCiays was aiscussed,
with plans made to get everything in place before the
weather gets too cold.
Annie Chapman volunteered to check out the
wreaths and other decorations
and make whatever repairs
need to be made, in preparation for George Wright and a
village employee to put them
in place.
. A holiday home tour is tentatively set for the first weekend in December.
A lack of involvement by
merchants in the association's
projects was discussed along
with how to get more participation,

The Daily Sentinel

From FARMERS BANKI

Pomeroy

Dwight

from

;•«&lt;)~lh.'l(&gt;$
l)l;~ f.! ~-;, !) ;()

• Free Notary Services
• Free Services on checking
• Free assistance with check balancing
° Free VISA Debit Card use (except at n~·Farmer's locations)'
• Free Travelers/Cashiers Checks &amp; Money Orders
o Discounted rate on printed checks
• Discounted rate on safety deposit boxes

POMEROY- Harley L. Stalnaker, 81, of fort Myers Beach,
Fla., former resident of Meigs County, died Friday, Sept. 7,
2001, at Health Park Hospital in Fort Myers.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Born April ·15, 1920, he was the son son of Jcie and Paige
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Stalnaker.
POMEROY - The need
He is survived by two sons, Bruce, of Port Charlotte, Fla.; and
Terry of Alva, Fla.; a brother, Bill Stalnaker of Spartensburg, S. for someone with a boat to
launch the ducks for the
C., and two grandchildren.
Sternwheel Riverfest ducky
Local memorial services will be announced later.
derby was voiced at Wednesday's meeting' of the Pomeroy
~n__HysJ!II
Merchant~ Association at City
National Bank.
POMEROY - Dwight Leon Hysell, 90, Pomeroy, .died
Terri Haynes of Always and
Wednesday, September 12, 2001, at Veterans Memorial Hospi,Forever, president of the mertal.
chants group, should be conArrangements will be announced later by Fisher Acree
tacted by anyone who is willFuneral Home in Middleport.
ing to handle getting the
ducks into the water and
retrieving them after the
derby.
Bobbie Karl noted that she
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
cooler. , Highs in the upper has the ducks and Peg Barton,
Passage of a frontal system 60s. North wind 10 to 15 indicated she will prepare the
into the region will bring mph.
"adoption" sheets to be put
Friday night ... Mostly clear around town for the mercooler air behind it
Temperatures will remain it! with .fog developing. Lows in chants' use in the fund-raiser.
the 50s tonight, the National the lower 40s .
Barton noted that last year's
Weather Service said.
Extended forecast:
event raised about $1,100 for
Skies will be partly cloudy
Saturday... Mostly
sunny. downtown beautification proFriday, but temperatures will Highs 62 to 69. ·
jects.
be unseasonably cool as
Saturday
night ... Mostly
The need for having the
__portherly winds carry Canadi- clear. Lows in the IO\ver 40s.
an air in\o the region. ,
Sunday... Mostly clear. Highs
Highs on Friday will be in 65 to 75.
Monday... Mostly
clear.
th e 60s.
· Sunset tonight will be at Lows in · the lower · 50s and
7:47, and sunrise on Friday is highs in the mid 70s.
PapAl
at 7:09 a.m.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
Weather forecast:
chan ce of showers during the many of those opponents
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. A night. Lows 48 to 57 and vowed to campaign against
chance of sprinkles after mid- . highs in the mid 70s,
any health department night. Lows in the mid 50s.
Wednesday.. .Partly cloudy
West wind 5 to 15 mph with a chance of showers.
becoming north late this Lows in the mid 50s and highs
·
in the mid 70s.
evenmg.
Friday.. .Partly cloudy and

Ban

~t-\PP't' f.'.\r~/1.4C r(&lt;; ,., •11(1lf.fP
p( )U ~

Harley L Stalnaker

County's, would have to seek
the approval of all boards of
township trustees and village
.
councils before the policy goes
Page AI
into effect. County commislocal legislative body, and not sioners would not be charged
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state should pay districts for
enacted by an appointed body. with the vote.
coalition of schoo\s that sued each student.
"This has nothing to do
State Rep. John Carey, R - Ohio over its school-funding
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
with the laws themselves, or Wellston, who represents system said WeQIIesday that it said on ihe day of the ruling
with smoking, but with the ·Meigs, said he will wait to see had raised its estimate of the ·that the court believed the fig(the laws) are enacted and what happens to the legisla- cost of fixing the system to $1.2 ure was $300 million to $400
l ~_j;n!J~~."::
Rhodes said. tion in the House committ.e.~illion a-yea~
million-annually,--based--oncevi"Appointed executive bodies before he pledges his support : The Ohio Coalition for dence in the case.
should not make laws, legisla"Generally, I support legisla- Equity and Adequacy of School
Figures cited by Justice Andy
tive authorities should.
tive authority on public policy .funding made the change after Douglas iri his opinion indicae"In cases where boards of issues," Carey said. ·
recalculating the cost of ed the ruling would cost about
health are enacting laws, the
Tobacco-Free Ohio, the changes mandated by the Ohio $595 million a year, ihe Ohio
executive body is both making American Cancer Society, the Supreme Court last week.
Department of Education said.
the laws and enforcing them." American Lung Association
The court ordered ihe state
Finan said the state needs to
Sen. Mike Shoemaker, D- and the Ohio Department of to spend additional money to decide by Thursday whether to
Bourneville, whose 17th Dis- Health ·have come out in make its school-funding system appeal the court's decision. It
trict includes Meigs County, opposition ofS.B. 128.
'constitutional. It didn't specifY must file with the court by
was originally a co-sponsor of
"This would make it virtu- an amount.
Monday. but needs to give the
the legislation, but said · ally impossible for local comThree hours after the court attorney general's office enough
:w'ednesday he withdrew after munities to protect citizens ruled Thursday, the coalition time, Finan sliid.
~n amendment he proposed from second-hand smoke on a estimated the cost of improveAttorney General Betty
was rejected on the Senate county-wide basis;' the orga- ments at $400 million. Three Montgomery said Wednesday
floor.
nizations said in a written hours later, it raised its estimate that the state still is calculating
That amendment would statement earlier this week.'
to at least $600 million.
the cost of ihe court's order.
.Jhave imposed a time limit on
"This bill is tied to tl.e
The coalition's new estimate
"I don't know that we have
legislative bodies in voting on tobacco, restaurant and hospi- is identical to that made by the final sort of numben with
the smoking-related measures tality industries, and is a tactic Senate Republican fiscal ana- the holy water sprinkled owr
after ihey were proposed by used to make. it more difficult lysts in the hours after the rul- them yet," she said.
the boards of health.
for communities to create mg.
Montgomery uid an .accu~
"This would prevent legisla- their own local policies in
Senate President Richard rate cost will not be the only
tive bodies, such ~ township regard to smoking.
Finan; a Cincinnati Republi- factor .in the state's decision on
trustees, from holding ofT on a
"In its current form, S.B. can, has S&lt;lid the state doesn't wheiher to appeal, but does
vote indefinitely," Shoemaker )28 . not only prevents local have the money. He said play an important role.
said, "when no vote becomes a · boards of health from address- Wednesday that he's sticking ·. Any additional state spending
vote of opposition.
would be on top of record
ing smoking in the future, but with the $1.2 billion figure.
, "I still think it's a good idea, would repeal existing local
"I met with my staff this spending on education of about
but I don't think local legisla- regulations."
morning. They put together a · $14 billion this year and next.
tive officials should be able to
That money was taken from a
Rhodes denied the legisla- memo and they think the numcop out when it comes time tion has any ties to the tobac- hers other than ours are budget Gov. Bob Taft described
for them to decide the issue:'
co lobby, and said the fate of wrong:' Finan said.
as the tightest in a decade. Since .
· Rhodes said a county-wide · existing policies would be in
At issue is what the court then, the state has collected less
board of health, such as Meigs the hands oflocal judges.
intended when it told the state revenue from taxes than it esti•
it had to alter its formula for mated in putting together the
determining how. much the $45 billion budget.

Plnny Wlrzberge
of New York pity
looka 11rounct:-11t
Newark Interne,
tiona! Airport In
Newark, N·,J .,
after lending
there early
today on one of
the flret flights
In the United
States since
the attacks on
the World Trade
Center and the
Pentagon, (AP
PhOto}

1st fli1ht

Merchants discuss
need for launching
boat at festival

Deaths

TERROR IN THE HEARTLAND

Investigators claim White House was target.·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ext I 2

·.

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
asnwered three calls for assistance on Wednesday. Units
responde.d as follows:

POMEROY A civil
action filed by Ohio University Employees' Credit Union,
against Michael A. Kinnison
and others, has been dismissed.

C£1'1TRAL DISPATCH
12:18 p.m ., College Avenue,
Roy Penn.ell, Holzer Medical
Center:
3:20p.m., Ohio 338, assisted
QY Racine as First Responder,
Brian Smerk, HMC;
I r:12 p.m ., Vine Street,
Terry Brewer, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
'

Training
from PageA1
Some of those involved in
the plot left suicide notes, but
they are not believed to have
been the hijackers , a govern~
ment source told The Associated Press. It's unclear
whether those who left the
notes actually killed themselves.
At least one hijacker on
each of the four planes was
trained at a U.S. flight school,
.Tucker said. The Times said
authorities believe 27 suspected terrorists received
pilot training.
Authorities detained at
least a half dozen people in
Massachusetts and Florida on
unrelated local warrants and
immigration charges and
were, questioning them about
their possible· ties to the
hijackers.
Search warrants were executed in Florida; New Jersey
and Massachu se tts. Sealed
warrants went out in several
other states, officials said.
A Venice, Fla., man said FBI
agents told him that two men
who stayed in his home while
training at a local flight
school were involved in the
attacks. Charlie Voss, a former
employee at Huffman Aviation in Venice said the FBI
told him qne of men was
named Mohamed Atta. A stu ~
dent at Huffman Aviation
identified the second man as
Marwan Alshehhi.
Citing federal authorities,
The Miami Herald reported
Thursday that Atta was one
of four suspects who died on
American Airlines Flight II ,
the first jetliner. to crash into
the World Trade Center.
"This could have b een the
kingpins
result ofworking
several together.·
terrorist
We're investigating that possibility:' one law enforcement
official speaking on condition
of anonymity told The Associated Press.
Sen. Charles Grassley of
Iowa, the top Republican on
the Senate Finance Committee, said the briefing he
received Wednesday from law
enforcement left him with
the same impression.
"Most of it today points to
Osama bin Laden, .but the
speculation at the end of the
road is that he arl:d his network were very mu ch

Issued licenses
POMEROY Marriage
li censes have been issued in
Meigs County Probate .Court
to George Robert Miller, 21,
and Kerri~_Le_igh Hetzer, /!I,
both of Rutland; and to Chad
Lee Roberts, 34, and Mandi
Lynn Smith, 26, both of Long
Bottom.

involved with Hezbollah,
Fatah and other" terrorist
organizations, Grassley said.
The senator said authorities
told him all the hijackers
were of Middle Eastern
descent and that .tliey had "a
tremendous
amount
of
ground support for each
hijacker."
Attorney General John
Ashcroft said numerous '
promising leads were being
followed up. 'The Department of Justice has undertaken perhaps the most mas.sive
and intensive investigation
ever conducted in this cou ntry," he said.
Two of the hijacked planes
destroyed New York 's World
Trade . Center, o ne plane
heavily damaged the Pentagon an d a fourth plane
crashed in sou th western
Pennsylvania.
The officials, who spoke on
condition of al)onymity, said
they
were
investigating
whether one group of hij ackers crossed the Canadian border at.a checkpoin t and made
their way to Boston, where
two jetliners were · hijacked
and flown into the World
Trade Center.
Two suspects flew·from the
Portland International Jetport
i.n Maine to Boston, where
they boarded the deadly
flights, Main e Gov. Angus
King said. The two men
apparently were using New
Jersey di'iver'Sltcenses ana~reft
. behind a rental car with
Massachusetts plates that was
impounded and hauled to the
Maine State Police crime lab.

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�.Page A 2 • Tha Dally Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 13, 200t

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 13, 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) The White House and Air
Force One, two potent symbols of the American presiden cy, were targets of Tuesday's suicide bombers, govermnent officials said.
Sketching a scenario that is
nor mally the stuff of Hollywood thrillers, White House
prc&gt;s secretary Ari Fleischer
cited "real and credible informati on" th at the hijacked airplJnc that slammed into the
l'en ta go n was originally
int ended to hit the White
House.
That matter has . been a
poi nt of contention, however.
Several government ,officials,
speaking on condition of
anonymity, said investigators
believe the plane that crashed
in . Pennsylvania was headed
to the Whjte House.

Air Force One, which was
with Bush in Florida at the
time of the attacks, also was in
the terrorists' sights, Fleischer
said Wednesday. "That also is
one of the reasc;ms why A\r
Force One did not come
back to Andrews (Air Force
Base, Md.) where some people may have thought it
would."
He refused to say what kind
of attack might have been
aimed at the presidential jet.
Asked if evidence pointed
to an assassination plot that
went awry, Fleischer said he
would tell reporters only
what he kne\v about the
prospective targets, "and I
think you can draw your own
conclusions."
T he astonishing disclosure
came seven years to th e .day
after a Maryland man with a

history of mental illness
cr•&gt;hed a stolen light plane
against the south siae of the
White House, an act that
showed how vulnerable the
mansion can be. It was
reopened Wednesday for regular tours and some 400 people streamed through, re ceiving small Am er ican flags as
they left.
·
The Bush administration
was eager to explain Wednesday, in conside rable detail,
why Bush did not return
immediately to Washington
and take clear charge after the
terrorists who struck at New
York's World Trade Center
turned to the nation's capital.
Throughout
Tuesday,
images of the Pentagon in
smas hed by a
flames hija cked airliner - · and
White House aides fleeing

across Pennsylvania Avenue
provided a sharp contrast
with pictures of BLish heading
for an undergroltnd bunker
hundreds of miles away.
Fleischer said natiqnal
security offi cials learned that
both ihe White House and
Air Force One were targets
just as Bush's Boeing 747 lifted off Tuesday, morning jiL
Sarasota, Fla., \Vhere the pres.ident was to make an education speech. He already had
announced on· nati~nal television that he was hastening
back to Washington . That
plan was scrambled in midflight, and all who were
aboard Air Force One - for
a destination then unknown
- were ordered to turn off
their cell phones lest signals
from the phones give away
the plane's locati on.

Ohioans wait for we~rd of friends, families
COLUMBUS (AP) - James Laippley
-Was watching TV coverage of Tuesday's
attacks on the World Trade Center when
he heard of the' third attack, on the Pentagon .
He grabbed the phone: His daughter
julie Works there.
Ohioans with friends and family in New
York and Washington held their breath
waiting for news after planes slammed into
the buildings, tryi ng not to let impatience
and uncertainty overwhelm them.
Laippley, 55, tried · his daughter's cell
phone with no luck, then her work number. He finally tried her cell phone again,
reaching her as she arrived home about an
hou r after the plane hit.
Julie Laippley, 24, had leti her Pentagon
office to ·go home to retrieve a pass with a
higher security clearance for a meeting ,
later in the day, her father, a fiscal officer for
the O hio Environmental Protection
Agency, said Wednesday.
"I was all right until I heard her vo ice.
Then I started crying;' Laippley said, .
breaking down again at the memory.
llelarives of Alicia N icole Titus, a flight
attendant on United Flight 175 who grew
~--upmw.sr-:cer·itf:jj()ht.'J,'Vvaileo for word

Tuesday of her fate after roommates in said she was a fun kid.
Boston confirmed she was on the Boston
·"The hardest tiling is the talk about the
to Los Angeles flight that crashed into the possibility of some of the attendants being
trade center's south tower at 9:03 ·a.m. ·
stabbed or being abused prior . to (the
" It was pure hell," said her aunt, Jodi . crash);' Black said. "I just hope thing5 were
Lewis, of St. Petersburg, Fla. "From the not too difficult for her."
·
·
time that I walked in my door at 10 in the
Dolores Whiting of Colerain in eastern
morning until 4 o'clock yesterday after- Ohio was at her job as a deli clerk at Riesnoon, I was on the telephone, on call wait- beck's grocery in St. C lairsville when she
ing and had at least one cell phone, and started to hear customers talk about the
when my husband got home, a second cell attack.
phone.
Her daughter, Elaine Hensen, 34, is a
" We had two or three lines going, all of Marine Corps major who was working at
our friends, all of our family calling to offer a nearby Pentagon annex.
prayers."
Mrs. Whiting, 6S., couldn 't reach her
The airline eventually c&lt;?nfirmed ·Alicia daughter at work or at home. Hensen was
Titus' presence on the flight'Tuesday afte~- finally able to call about 3:30 p.m. to say
noon. Her grandmother, Olivia Titus of she was all right.
.
Rushsylvania, called Alicia a very outgoing
"She told me, 'Mom, I'm OK,"'Whitil)g
person.
·
said. "That was the weetest voice I've
"One in a million;' Mrs. Titus; 74, said. heard all day ... It was a happy ending for
"Full oflife and love for everyone."
me."
Titus graduated fiom Graham High
Ohio native Bob Paduchik, a former
School in Champaign County in 1991. aide to Gov. Bob Taft and later executive
She was a ch~erleader, a member of the director of the Bush-Cheney Ohio camtrack team • and National Honor Society paign, had stepped away from his Pentagon
Her family moved to Michigan four or five office a few minutes befo re the plane hit.
years ago. ·
He hasn't been back and doesn't know
. B.ecky Black, Titus.' gliidance counselor;- what, if anything, is lert of his office.

War talk begins
in Congress
WASHINGTON (AP) Congress is moving quickly
· on the Bush administration's
request for a multibilliondollar down - payment to
fight terro~ism, and legislation authorizing force against
terrorists is not' far behind.
Some lawmakers wanted
to go further: formally
declare war on terrorists.
"I say, bomb the hell out of
them;; Sen. ·zell Miller, DGa., said Wednesday. " If
there's collateral damage, so
be it They certainly found
our civilians to be expendable."
.
President Bush was expected to ask Congress on Th ursday for $20 billion in immediate funds to help rebuild
the damaged Pentagon, clean
up the debris from collapsed
buildings at New York's
World Trade Center, reimburse federal and local governments for rescue efforts,
and bolster security
Lawmakers
said
they
hoped . to have the bill to
Bush by Thursday, but Senate
Maj ority
Leader
Tom
Daschle said he doubted the
measure could be approved
in one day and said there was
no final agreement on a qollar amount.
At the same time, a separate measure would authorize the administration to
undertake ·military ac tion

under the War Powers Act.
While th e thought of
spending billions more this
year and likely tapping into
formerly untouchable Social
Security reserves would have
ignited a political firestorm
just a week ago, lawmakers
said Wednesday the request
would. be granted now..
"That debate is over at this
point," said 'sen . Ri chard
Dl.lrbin, D-Ill.
" If we can't protect o ur
nation al security, how can we
protect Social Security?" Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R - Utah,.said.
Congress suspended its
normal operations Wed nes~
day - a day after lawmaker&lt;
were evacuated in the first
mandatRTY evacuation ever
of the entire Capitol complex -. and devoted the
entire day to the terrorists
who crashed hijacked jet!
into the twin towers of the
World 'Trade Center and into
the Pentagon.
The House and Senate
broke during the day for
closed-door briefings with
Defense Secretary Donald H .
Rumsfeld and passed a resolution &lt;ondemning terrorism ·
and expressing solidarity
with the president in hi s
determination to ''punish th e
perpetrators of these attacks,
as well as their sponsors."

! lOl _: f!·&gt; -1'•- ,,,.

Another
Great Checking Account

from

Correction Polley

Na- Dapartmenta
The main number Is 992·2156.
Department extentlons are:

., .

. General

Co\\

monogtr

.
or

today • "
\

Gallipolis

(740) 992-2136 (740) 446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667-3161

tne

·and other health-related-tax
levies - in protest of the
smoking ban, . while others
indicated they wiU not comply with the ban.
Non-compliance with the
ban could result in fines of
$100 to $500.

Schools' coalition
increases estimate of
school-funding cost

Our main concern In att stories Is
to be accurate. tf you know of an
error in a story, cafl the newsroom
at (740) 992·21'56.

Designed to meet the needs of people 55 and older.

~ We're Your Bank JorCije,~

Smoking

Reader Services

The GOLDEN LIFE Accoont

{F' B) Farmers Bank

Cooler conditions coming soon

new Visitors' Center in the
Meigs County Courthouse
open on Sternwheel Riverfest
weekend, Sept. 28-29, was discussed along with other activities planned to attract visitors
to the event.
Decorating the village lor
lioliCiays was aiscussed,
with plans made to get everything in place before the
weather gets too cold.
Annie Chapman volunteered to check out the
wreaths and other decorations
and make whatever repairs
need to be made, in preparation for George Wright and a
village employee to put them
in place.
. A holiday home tour is tentatively set for the first weekend in December.
A lack of involvement by
merchants in the association's
projects was discussed along
with how to get more participation,

The Daily Sentinel

From FARMERS BANKI

Pomeroy

Dwight

from

;•«&lt;)~lh.'l(&gt;$
l)l;~ f.! ~-;, !) ;()

• Free Notary Services
• Free Services on checking
• Free assistance with check balancing
° Free VISA Debit Card use (except at n~·Farmer's locations)'
• Free Travelers/Cashiers Checks &amp; Money Orders
o Discounted rate on printed checks
• Discounted rate on safety deposit boxes

POMEROY- Harley L. Stalnaker, 81, of fort Myers Beach,
Fla., former resident of Meigs County, died Friday, Sept. 7,
2001, at Health Park Hospital in Fort Myers.
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Born April ·15, 1920, he was the son son of Jcie and Paige
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Stalnaker.
POMEROY - The need
He is survived by two sons, Bruce, of Port Charlotte, Fla.; and
Terry of Alva, Fla.; a brother, Bill Stalnaker of Spartensburg, S. for someone with a boat to
launch the ducks for the
C., and two grandchildren.
Sternwheel Riverfest ducky
Local memorial services will be announced later.
derby was voiced at Wednesday's meeting' of the Pomeroy
~n__HysJ!II
Merchant~ Association at City
National Bank.
POMEROY - Dwight Leon Hysell, 90, Pomeroy, .died
Terri Haynes of Always and
Wednesday, September 12, 2001, at Veterans Memorial Hospi,Forever, president of the mertal.
chants group, should be conArrangements will be announced later by Fisher Acree
tacted by anyone who is willFuneral Home in Middleport.
ing to handle getting the
ducks into the water and
retrieving them after the
derby.
Bobbie Karl noted that she
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
cooler. , Highs in the upper has the ducks and Peg Barton,
Passage of a frontal system 60s. North wind 10 to 15 indicated she will prepare the
into the region will bring mph.
"adoption" sheets to be put
Friday night ... Mostly clear around town for the mercooler air behind it
Temperatures will remain it! with .fog developing. Lows in chants' use in the fund-raiser.
the 50s tonight, the National the lower 40s .
Barton noted that last year's
Weather Service said.
Extended forecast:
event raised about $1,100 for
Skies will be partly cloudy
Saturday... Mostly
sunny. downtown beautification proFriday, but temperatures will Highs 62 to 69. ·
jects.
be unseasonably cool as
Saturday
night ... Mostly
The need for having the
__portherly winds carry Canadi- clear. Lows in the IO\ver 40s.
an air in\o the region. ,
Sunday... Mostly clear. Highs
Highs on Friday will be in 65 to 75.
Monday... Mostly
clear.
th e 60s.
· Sunset tonight will be at Lows in · the lower · 50s and
7:47, and sunrise on Friday is highs in the mid 70s.
PapAl
at 7:09 a.m.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. A
Weather forecast:
chan ce of showers during the many of those opponents
Tonight ... Partly cloudy. A night. Lows 48 to 57 and vowed to campaign against
chance of sprinkles after mid- . highs in the mid 70s,
any health department night. Lows in the mid 50s.
Wednesday.. .Partly cloudy
West wind 5 to 15 mph with a chance of showers.
becoming north late this Lows in the mid 50s and highs
·
in the mid 70s.
evenmg.
Friday.. .Partly cloudy and

Ban

~t-\PP't' f.'.\r~/1.4C r(&lt;; ,., •11(1lf.fP
p( )U ~

Harley L Stalnaker

County's, would have to seek
the approval of all boards of
township trustees and village
.
councils before the policy goes
Page AI
into effect. County commislocal legislative body, and not sioners would not be charged
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state should pay districts for
enacted by an appointed body. with the vote.
coalition of schoo\s that sued each student.
"This has nothing to do
State Rep. John Carey, R - Ohio over its school-funding
Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
with the laws themselves, or Wellston, who represents system said WeQIIesday that it said on ihe day of the ruling
with smoking, but with the ·Meigs, said he will wait to see had raised its estimate of the ·that the court believed the fig(the laws) are enacted and what happens to the legisla- cost of fixing the system to $1.2 ure was $300 million to $400
l ~_j;n!J~~."::
Rhodes said. tion in the House committ.e.~illion a-yea~
million-annually,--based--oncevi"Appointed executive bodies before he pledges his support : The Ohio Coalition for dence in the case.
should not make laws, legisla"Generally, I support legisla- Equity and Adequacy of School
Figures cited by Justice Andy
tive authorities should.
tive authority on public policy .funding made the change after Douglas iri his opinion indicae"In cases where boards of issues," Carey said. ·
recalculating the cost of ed the ruling would cost about
health are enacting laws, the
Tobacco-Free Ohio, the changes mandated by the Ohio $595 million a year, ihe Ohio
executive body is both making American Cancer Society, the Supreme Court last week.
Department of Education said.
the laws and enforcing them." American Lung Association
The court ordered ihe state
Finan said the state needs to
Sen. Mike Shoemaker, D- and the Ohio Department of to spend additional money to decide by Thursday whether to
Bourneville, whose 17th Dis- Health ·have come out in make its school-funding system appeal the court's decision. It
trict includes Meigs County, opposition ofS.B. 128.
'constitutional. It didn't specifY must file with the court by
was originally a co-sponsor of
"This would make it virtu- an amount.
Monday. but needs to give the
the legislation, but said · ally impossible for local comThree hours after the court attorney general's office enough
:w'ednesday he withdrew after munities to protect citizens ruled Thursday, the coalition time, Finan sliid.
~n amendment he proposed from second-hand smoke on a estimated the cost of improveAttorney General Betty
was rejected on the Senate county-wide basis;' the orga- ments at $400 million. Three Montgomery said Wednesday
floor.
nizations said in a written hours later, it raised its estimate that the state still is calculating
That amendment would statement earlier this week.'
to at least $600 million.
the cost of ihe court's order.
.Jhave imposed a time limit on
"This bill is tied to tl.e
The coalition's new estimate
"I don't know that we have
legislative bodies in voting on tobacco, restaurant and hospi- is identical to that made by the final sort of numben with
the smoking-related measures tality industries, and is a tactic Senate Republican fiscal ana- the holy water sprinkled owr
after ihey were proposed by used to make. it more difficult lysts in the hours after the rul- them yet," she said.
the boards of health.
for communities to create mg.
Montgomery uid an .accu~
"This would prevent legisla- their own local policies in
Senate President Richard rate cost will not be the only
tive bodies, such ~ township regard to smoking.
Finan; a Cincinnati Republi- factor .in the state's decision on
trustees, from holding ofT on a
"In its current form, S.B. can, has S&lt;lid the state doesn't wheiher to appeal, but does
vote indefinitely," Shoemaker )28 . not only prevents local have the money. He said play an important role.
said, "when no vote becomes a · boards of health from address- Wednesday that he's sticking ·. Any additional state spending
vote of opposition.
would be on top of record
ing smoking in the future, but with the $1.2 billion figure.
, "I still think it's a good idea, would repeal existing local
"I met with my staff this spending on education of about
but I don't think local legisla- regulations."
morning. They put together a · $14 billion this year and next.
tive officials should be able to
That money was taken from a
Rhodes denied the legisla- memo and they think the numcop out when it comes time tion has any ties to the tobac- hers other than ours are budget Gov. Bob Taft described
for them to decide the issue:'
co lobby, and said the fate of wrong:' Finan said.
as the tightest in a decade. Since .
· Rhodes said a county-wide · existing policies would be in
At issue is what the court then, the state has collected less
board of health, such as Meigs the hands oflocal judges.
intended when it told the state revenue from taxes than it esti•
it had to alter its formula for mated in putting together the
determining how. much the $45 billion budget.

Plnny Wlrzberge
of New York pity
looka 11rounct:-11t
Newark Interne,
tiona! Airport In
Newark, N·,J .,
after lending
there early
today on one of
the flret flights
In the United
States since
the attacks on
the World Trade
Center and the
Pentagon, (AP
PhOto}

1st fli1ht

Merchants discuss
need for launching
boat at festival

Deaths

TERROR IN THE HEARTLAND

Investigators claim White House was target.·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Ext I 2

·.

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
asnwered three calls for assistance on Wednesday. Units
responde.d as follows:

POMEROY A civil
action filed by Ohio University Employees' Credit Union,
against Michael A. Kinnison
and others, has been dismissed.

C£1'1TRAL DISPATCH
12:18 p.m ., College Avenue,
Roy Penn.ell, Holzer Medical
Center:
3:20p.m., Ohio 338, assisted
QY Racine as First Responder,
Brian Smerk, HMC;
I r:12 p.m ., Vine Street,
Terry Brewer, Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
'

Training
from PageA1
Some of those involved in
the plot left suicide notes, but
they are not believed to have
been the hijackers , a govern~
ment source told The Associated Press. It's unclear
whether those who left the
notes actually killed themselves.
At least one hijacker on
each of the four planes was
trained at a U.S. flight school,
.Tucker said. The Times said
authorities believe 27 suspected terrorists received
pilot training.
Authorities detained at
least a half dozen people in
Massachusetts and Florida on
unrelated local warrants and
immigration charges and
were, questioning them about
their possible· ties to the
hijackers.
Search warrants were executed in Florida; New Jersey
and Massachu se tts. Sealed
warrants went out in several
other states, officials said.
A Venice, Fla., man said FBI
agents told him that two men
who stayed in his home while
training at a local flight
school were involved in the
attacks. Charlie Voss, a former
employee at Huffman Aviation in Venice said the FBI
told him qne of men was
named Mohamed Atta. A stu ~
dent at Huffman Aviation
identified the second man as
Marwan Alshehhi.
Citing federal authorities,
The Miami Herald reported
Thursday that Atta was one
of four suspects who died on
American Airlines Flight II ,
the first jetliner. to crash into
the World Trade Center.
"This could have b een the
kingpins
result ofworking
several together.·
terrorist
We're investigating that possibility:' one law enforcement
official speaking on condition
of anonymity told The Associated Press.
Sen. Charles Grassley of
Iowa, the top Republican on
the Senate Finance Committee, said the briefing he
received Wednesday from law
enforcement left him with
the same impression.
"Most of it today points to
Osama bin Laden, .but the
speculation at the end of the
road is that he arl:d his network were very mu ch

Issued licenses
POMEROY Marriage
li censes have been issued in
Meigs County Probate .Court
to George Robert Miller, 21,
and Kerri~_Le_igh Hetzer, /!I,
both of Rutland; and to Chad
Lee Roberts, 34, and Mandi
Lynn Smith, 26, both of Long
Bottom.

involved with Hezbollah,
Fatah and other" terrorist
organizations, Grassley said.
The senator said authorities
told him all the hijackers
were of Middle Eastern
descent and that .tliey had "a
tremendous
amount
of
ground support for each
hijacker."
Attorney General John
Ashcroft said numerous '
promising leads were being
followed up. 'The Department of Justice has undertaken perhaps the most mas.sive
and intensive investigation
ever conducted in this cou ntry," he said.
Two of the hijacked planes
destroyed New York 's World
Trade . Center, o ne plane
heavily damaged the Pentagon an d a fourth plane
crashed in sou th western
Pennsylvania.
The officials, who spoke on
condition of al)onymity, said
they
were
investigating
whether one group of hij ackers crossed the Canadian border at.a checkpoin t and made
their way to Boston, where
two jetliners were · hijacked
and flown into the World
Trade Center.
Two suspects flew·from the
Portland International Jetport
i.n Maine to Boston, where
they boarded the deadly
flights, Main e Gov. Angus
King said. The two men
apparently were using New
Jersey di'iver'Sltcenses ana~reft
. behind a rental car with
Massachusetts plates that was
impounded and hauled to the
Maine State Police crime lab.

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�Page A4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

(

o_ai~~y-Sen_ti_nei_ _ _-=B=-J

Thunclay, September 13,2001

_rh_e

DEAR ABBY: I am a ..social
worker at a large, ·church-owned
group home for abused, abandoned
and neglected children. I hear many
stories similar to the letter from
" Wanti'ng Peace and Quiet in Oklahoma," who described how her
"wonderful husband, Chad" breaks
things, punches holes in the walls,
and had even flung the family dog to
the ground in fit of anger.
I wonder if that woman is really
considering what's best for her children, or if she's like some single
mothers whose desire to feel loved
by a man has clouded their decisions.
If her children grow up with Chad
as their father, they may end up ·
attaching themselves to an abuser or
even becoming abusers thems~lves,
believing violence is acceptabl e

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher ·

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

-

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

a

UntFf 10 tllr7rlilor1Ut wrh:omr. TM' should belrn than 300 ~orrb;-A./1 kltrn
wt IUbjtCI to tditiflg and must br :tigntld and include addrtu and ttkphotlt numb_tr.
No u~t.Jlg•ttl ltlttrr wiU bt pubiJsltt!d. Litten should 1H in gootl taJtr, tuldnmng
fuuts, noi ptrsrmaliJJn.

Tilt o,111 UJIU txpresud rn lht culu'"" btlow art tht co,rsuuus of lht. Ohio

Thursday, September 13, 1001

Husband's violetue to pet could escalate to peaple

The D~y Sentinel

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

the Bend

Page AS

~ey

Publirhing Co. 'J tditorinl boortL unltn ofht~·ist lfoted.

OUR VIEW

beca.use it's

Heroism
Local blood donors play role
in attack recovery dforts
\
In the next few weeks we'll hear a lot' abo ut the heroism of
the emergency workers at the World Trade Ce nter and Pen ta gon working around th e cl ock in searc h of vtctims ofTuesday's
terrorist attack.
We have heroes in our area, too, and they are the folks ready,
willing and able to donate blood for the incalculable number
of injuries from the twin disasters. Our tip of th e hat goes to
those people who h ave requested blood drives at their churches and communities to ensure that lives will be saved.
, ·
There's not a great deal we in this area can do at the scene of
the attacks. The professionals are handling that job to the best
of their considerable ability. But what we can do is provide a
needed, replenishable medical resou~ce.
One of the most admirable things about New Yorkers wanting to help is their eagerness to donate blood. But even all of
the donations given in the greater New York area won't be
enough to meet the need.
'
Donations made locally go a long way to relieve the crisis,
and keep our own hospitals well-supplied to meet emergenctes.
"We've received numerous calls frqm the public wanting to
give blood in response to the disaster," said Tom Angle, chief
executive officer of American Red Cross Blood Services
Greater Alleghenies Region, which serves our area.
"Areas affected will .need blood supplies not only today, but
in the
· days and weeks," he added. "Every two seconds,

f.1mi1iar.

That woman should leave C h.ad
for now. It's healthier to be a singleparent F:nnily than a two-parent family in an atmosphere of violence,

Abigail·
Van
Buren
ADVICE
incest or discord. If C had really loves
his family, he'll do whatever it takes
to become the husband and father he
needs to be to gt!t them back. If he
doesn 't - he's no asset to the family.
That mother sho uld protect her
children now, ·rather than risk th eir
becoming statistics in the foster care
system. SOCIAL WORKER,
FALCON, N.C.
DEAR SOCIAL WORKER: I
agree that for the sake of her children, "Wanting Peace and Quiet"
must end the fear at:Jd disruption in
their lives. Read on:

DEAR ABBY: "Chad's" actions
DEAR
OFFICER
DAN: cruelty toward compamon ammals
have nothing to do with an "anger" "Wanting Peace'' did not describe has been increasingly recognized .ts a
problem. They have everything to do her husband as violent to her or the
warning sign of other actual or
with co ntrolling his spouse. His kids. She said she was afraid to assert
potential violence within the family.
behavior is a planned technique to herself for fear that he would walk
The Humane Society of the Unitcontrol through fear and intimida- out on her. I advised her to get countion. He does not need anger man- !eling ASAP to get lier priorities in ~d States began a campaign last year
agement . At a minimum, he needs to order and to give her a more com- called "The First Strike Campaign,"
be in a barterers treatment program plete understanding- ·of what she to alert the public to the con nection
and to be prosecuted for his abusive must do.
between animal abuse and violence
treatment .and do some jail time. It
While violence to animals, intimi- toward humans.
'
should not be jail in lieu of treat- dation of children and destruction of
Abme toward any living being ment, but a combination of the two. property are deplorable, it appears hutnan or animal is a serious
I am a law enforcement officer that some women do not have the problem that should never be toleratwho has spent years working -with emotio nal strength. to leave th eir ed . - CONCERNED READER
survivors of violent relationships. I abusers without outside intervenIN NEW YORK CITY
see a tremendous need for society to tion : Read on:
DEAR CONCERNED: You're
stop the violence and hold batterers
DEAR ABBY: No matter how
accountable. My experience shows . "wonderful" her husband is the rest · right. According to a 1997 ·survey, in
th at the hu sband is abusing the pet to of the time, anyone who deliberately the largest shel te rs for battered
show th e wife and children what hurts the fam ily pet (in front of the women in 19 states and the District
he'll do to J)lem if they tell anyone.
children , no less!) is clearly a danget of Columbi a, 85.4 percent of women
and 63 percent of children described
That woman should seek help to the rest of the family.
immediately to begin safety planning
People whp scapegoat and abuse. incidents of pet abuse in the f.1mily.
and counselin g.
OFFICER defenseless animals are also prone to
Dear Abby is wrille/1 by Pa£~1ille
DAN
hurt human beings. In recent years, Phillips and d!wgl1tcr Jeal/lt&lt;' Phill1ps.

.

Dizzy 'spells' can signal serious illness
OUR READERS' VIEWS
Businesses affected .

Question: I've had several room is spinning? Also; paying
dizzy spells lately. I haven't gone attention to other symptoms
•
to 'the doctorbecause the spells • you . are experiencing will help
cleared up qutcldy, and my doc- you hone in on the potential
·
tor is so busy that it takes a week problem.
or two to get an appointment to
Dizziness that's accompanied
see her. Is it safe to assume my by a fast or skipping heartbeat
dizziness is not vety serious suggests that the heart may be
since the spells clear up quickly? the cause of dizziness. This may .
llloll ...
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Answer: Dizziness can be or may not be serious, bu~ it is a
~ln·cAssociate Professor
cal!'led from a number ofcondi- problem that you clearly should
of Family Medicine
tions. Many are primarily a nui- bring to the attention of your
sance and not related to long- doctor.
term health problems, while
Ligl1t-headedness that occurs head - is common and usually particularly prone to causing •
others are a warning of5erious an hour after taking a cold or the result of a minor problem these symptoms. A simple test
conditions to come. The length sinus remedy and clears up six with the balance mechanism of for these is to close· the eyes. If
of the dizziness has little bearing to 12 hours later is probably a the inner ear. This type of verti- the dizziness quickly goes away,
on the seriousness of the under- side effect ofthe medication and go can be due to a number of the problem is probably related
lying cause, so it is rtecessary to not a sign of more serious ttou- things, including the use of alco- to a visual difliculty.
In summary, then, if your
1consider other symptoms when ble. You may still need to see hol or other drugs, infection, or
deciding w hether or not to see your doctor, but not for the causes that we can't readily symptoms appear only when
your doctor. Now, I'll explain dizziness. Instead he may be able identify. Vertigo associated with you take a particular medication
some of those.
to help you to find a medication simultaneous ringing in the ears or alcohol, you really don't need
The term "dizziness" can be that helps with the cold or aller- and decreased hearing suggests your doctor to figure opt the
applied to a variety of symp- gy symptoms without nusing the possibility of another,type of proper treatment. Most other
tOtil.l and, therefore, is too gen- the dizziness or light- headed inner ear problem called causes of dizziness should be
Meniere's disease. More serious investigated more thoroughly
era! to be of much guidance. It feelings. Ho•we·ver,
will- helpstrokes or other abnormalities of ily doctor. The specific cause of
- your disorder if you can the dizziness itself.
Vertigo, the sense of whirling the nervous system can also your symptoms may even
describe the sensation with
require a physician who specialwords that are more specific or irregular motion of you or cause vertigo.
Light-headedncss or a sense izes in disorden of the eQn, nose
than !imply saying you feel your environment, is often
"dizzy." Is it a 1cn~ation ofllgln- described as dlzzinesa. One type of imbalance may remit !Tom a and throat (otorhinolaryngoloheJdedne~S, fninmess, imbillance, of vertigo that you only problem with vision. Cataract~ gi!t) or of the rietwus synem
m movement like you or the notice when you move your and eye mmele problenu Are (neurologiit) .
_j

hand smoke i~ fmik lvhcn we are surrounded by. fom coal-burnin ~ pbnts up
;md down th e river. What goes up, most
com e down in the form of acid rain and
other pollution.
How can the health board say that
el imi nating public. smoking will allow us
to breathe clean air'
People in M eigs County work hard for
the community and invest a lot of ti m e
and money in making a nice and inviting
place to live and visit. They don't deserve
to have their rights taken away one after
the other, and to be run out of business
in the process.
Yvonne "Bonnie" Dennis
Pomeroy

capable direction of Amy Erw1n Perrin
:l!)d presented us with "Okl:thoma."
Dear Editor:
Needless to say, we· were all very capably
·
entertained.
·
I am wnting to express my opinion
about the proposed smoki ng ban in
I had been to church and had my
Meigs County, and to share some points
dau ghter, g randdaughters and a close'
for the Board of H ealth to consider
friend for lunch, and was not really imerb~fore they v_ote, and for the public to
L'Sted in sitting for three hours with a
consider, as well.
wiggly eigh t-year-o ld. We went in with
The American Cancer Society and
reluctance and came Ollt · jubil:tnt. We
\be health department bave referred to
were wry entertained.
studies which say that there is no ceo1 sat and loo ked at the program and
nomic impact to businesses when smokwondered how a lo t of th e people had
ing is banned. As most of us know, you
found time to take part, and then it
can find a study to support any point'you
became quite evid ent that these to lks
wish to make, and if there isn 't one, you
were having .a rea lly good .tim e. I am
can pay someone to co me up with one.
quite certain that there were probably a
Local bar and restaurant owners are
few blunders, but to me , they weren 't too
certainly concerned about die business
evid ent.
they are sure to lose when smokers no
, I listen ed as Jennifer Sheets played the
lon~er fet\,welcome.
Dear Editor:
piano for the entire production and said
1 3111 a m)'mber of the Pomeroy-MidI will skip the arguments pro and con. to myself how did she work this into her
dlleport Lions Club, and th e club mem - about the smoking o rdinance, sin ce they busy sch edule? !tach of th e cast from th e
bers work hard to help the community. have been mostly stated already, and go oldest to the youngest were !'reat. It was
~-_iiQ!llci;tru:Jn.Jhis_j;m.lillr.y_oo:.ds...bLoo;:L:.:."----------l_:~fe-,de··ev•ervthint&gt;-wc,-.;m-teChel.o-:Jtt-I&lt;,.,;,J--.dil::ectJy_to-mjLrt"P·•~ru;e...._ _ _ _ _ _~s_rlwttgbL)ll)U-_were-watd ·ng~th C..'\C p(.!0Red Cross is planning additional blood drives for our area in
life across the stree t.
1 li ve at Darwin, .uJJ do nat have to pie iit a
events in order td improve Meigs C ounthe near future. Ke.ep watching for when they come to your
My hat is off to whomever designed
ty, and we purchase as much as we possi- shop and bank in, Pomeroy - th at is a
town. The greatest thing you can do for your fellow Americans,
bly can, like T-shirts and hats, from local matter of tradition. Athens is on ly a little and made the costumes, great job. I have
to spur the painful process of recovery for those who have surmerchants. As the form er owner of a fa rth er, and th e difFerence in distance is never had the feeli ng that so tmny penvived this outrage, is to give blood, prayers and support in the
local business, I kn ow that the business made up for by a wider sdcction of pic besides the director's family were so
weeks and months to come.
climate in Meigs County is pretty dismal stores. With the new h ighway, Athens will involved because there \vas. My t;randdau ghter said that there was a total o f 74
now, and the ban would only worsen th e be even more convenient.
If this ordinance passes, I will si mply people in the cast. My hat is also off to
picture, not only for local residents but
no
longer come to ·Pom eroy. Furth er, I th e patrons who numbered 30 and th e
tourists, too.
Local businesses still pay their taxes and intend to vote against every health levy 31 professio nals who deserve a very specontribute as much as they can, too, for in Meigs County until M s. Torres is cia! thank you for contributin g to the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
product . This totaled 135 people who
the
welfare of the county. To make removed from her position .
Today is Thursday, Sept. 13 , the 256th day of2001. There are
As .tong as el ec ted officials abdicate rall ied to give us a Labor Day event we
th eir work .more difficult by limiting
109 days left in the year.
th
eir constitution al responsibility by won 't be forgettin g for a loHt; time.
what their customers can o o n private
Today's Highlight in History:
allowing unelected bmea ucrats to estabI was just thinking about a dear
property is unfair.
On Sept. 13, 1971, a four-day inmates' rebellion at the Attilish
regulations
which
are,
in
effect,
laws,
deceased
fri end who would have said,
Who will pay their wages and the
ca Correctional l'acility in upstate N ew York ended as police
wages of their e1nployees when an the rest of us have to take resp6nsibility . "and what time next year may we expect
and guards stormed the prison; the ordeal and fin al assault
unfriendly business envirom11 el!t forces for seeing that anti-democratic extrem- an equal event ... ,"you all do remember ·
claimed 43 lives.
ists are kept from positions of power.
Bob Hoefli ch? And he would have loved
these businesses to close?
On this date:
Jack Hart everyone's efforts. I fee l certain that
H ealth departmen t administrators and
In 1759, during the fin al French and Indian War, the British
Catherine
Hart Richard Rodgers and Oscar H ammeremployees should ask who w ill pay their
defeated the French on th e Plains of Abraham overlooking
Pomeroy stein would have bee n pleased.
wages when the health department's
Quebec City.
My com men ts are," ... and w hat time
levies are rejected- and they will be In 1788, the Con gress of the Confederation authorized the
next
year may we ex:pect this event
and their revenue is affected to the point
first national election, and declared New York City the tempoagain?" I sincerely hope th at this
of layoffs?
rary national capital.
becomes a yearly event for Meigs Co un Dear
Editor:
I have n ever voted ·against a h ealth
In 1803, Commodore john Barry, considered "by many the
M eigs County residents were treated ty. Thanks again to all involved you did a
levy b efore, but I will the next time I
father of the Americati Navy,died in Philadelphia.
have an opportunity to do so, and I urge to a very special happening this Labor great job.
In 1851, American medical pioneer Walter Reed was born in
Day weekend. A group of talemed, funeveryone else to do the sam e.
Marjorie Walburn
Gloucester County, Va.
Clean air and the effects of second- loving people gathered under the very
Meib'&lt; County
In 1943, C hiang Kai-shek became president of China.
In 1948, R epublican Margaret C hase Smith of M aine was
elected to the US. Senate, becoming the first woman to serve
in both houses of Congress.
In 1949, the Ladies Professional Golf Association of America
was formed in Ne'\" York City, with Patty Berg as its first pr.esident.
In 1977, conductor Leopold Stokowski died in Hampshire,
England, at age 9 5.
'
In 1993, at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
planned over a number of years; planned
Born in Saudi Ar:tbi a in 1957, bin
BY GEORGE GEDDA
Rabin and PLO chairman Vasser Arafat signed an accord grantWASHINGTON - From the, outset, by real pros and experts.... Their belief is, Laden drew inspiration fro m Iran's Islaming limited Palestinian autonomy.
the culprit seemed obvious. Who else but at least initially, that this looks like Osama ic revolution in 1979. He had dreams of
In 1998, form er Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace died at age
Osama bin Laden had the m eans, the bin Laden's signature."
similar revolts in o ther Mu slim cou ntri es.
79.
Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ca., asked wh eth er
Less than a year later, th e Soviet invaorganization and the fanaticism required
Ten years ago: President Bush, w ho had suffered an irregular
to pull off the terrorist acts at the World bin Laden's group is the li kely perpetra- sio n and occupation of Afghani stan proheartbeat because of a thyroid condition , was pronoun ced in
tor, said, " I ilon't know if there's any vid ed anoth er turning point. He despised
Trade Center and the Pentagon?
"incredible physical condition" after a checkup by his doctors.
And indeed, by late afternoon Tuesday, other organization that had th e capabili- the notion of peopl e h e co nsidered to be
Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder declared his candidac-y for the
the Bush administration confirm ed that ty to carry out such a coord inated series infidels controlling a Muslim coumry
Democratic presidential nomination.
bin Litden and h is al-Qaeda organization of attacks."
and join ed forces witn the Afgh an rcsisFive years ago: RapperTupac Shakur ,died at a Las Vegas hosBin Laden's obsessive ami-Amer ican- tance.
were prime suspects.
pital six days after he was wounded in a drive-by shooting; he
He has proved to be an el usive target.
H e is widely regarded as the world's ism has never been in doubt. " I'm fightwas 25.
.
most dangerous man. He is thought to ing so I can di e a martyr and go to heav- Presi dent Clinton was so eager to liquiOne year ago: With the government all but abandoning its
' have b een behind the twin bombings of en to me et God. Our fight now·is against date bin Laden that he ordered more
case against him, former Los Alamos scientist Wen · Ho Lee
U. S. embassies in East Africa in 1998 that the Ameri cans," bin Laden was once than 70 sea-launc hed 'Tomahawk cruise
pleaded guilty in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to a single count
claimed the lives of224 people, including quoted as saying.
..,
missiles at his hideaway in Afghanist.'in in
of mishandling nuclear secrets; he was th en set free with an
12 Americans.
H e has declared all US citizens to be 1998. AII fe ll wide of the mark . ASS mi lapology from "U.S. District Judge James Parker, who said the
Those numbers pale ;~lon b'Side the legitimate targets of attack. CIA Director lion FBI bounty on his head has yet to
government's actions had "embarrassed our entire nation."
anticipated toll from Tu esday's attacks on . (;eorgc Tenet has s.tid bin Laden h:" . produce result\. AI!LI despite two r&lt;llllt&lt;h
Today's Birthdays: Actress Eileen Fulton ("As the World
symbols of Ameri can commercial and dcnu;tmwted a Ca f),!bility to plan "tlluit'i 2 of U.N. Security Cou ncil s,tnctinm, th e
Thrns") is 68.TV producer Fred Silverman is 64. Former White
military might.
pic attacks with little or no w.trning."
Taliban ruler\ in Af~hmistan rl'li he tn
Sen. Orrin Hatch,· R -Utah, the top
House spokesman Larry. Speakes is 62. Actor Richard Kiel is
His road to intcrnatio11al p;1riah status turn hin1 in .
62. Rock singer David Clayton-Thomas (Blood, Sweat &amp;
R epublican on the Senate Judicia ry has been helped along by his strong orgaCommittee, said FBI and intelligence niza tional skills and a warchest inherited
Tears) is 60. Actress Jacqueline Bisset is 57. Singer Peter Cetera
(George Gedda has covered foreign '!!fairs
officials told him the attacks were "well - from the family construction 'company. for 711e Associated Press si11ce 1968.)(Chicago) is 57. Actress Nell Carter is 53.

Will boycott

TODAY IN HISTORY

Hats off

WASHINGTON TODAY

Likely suspect has plotted our. destru((ion for years

...

LOCAL EVENTS

,.

J.tll11i/p

0U;dicine

....
0

The Community Calen·
dar Is published as a free
service
to
non-profit
groups
wishing
to
announce meetings and
special events. The calen- .
dar Is not designed to promole sales or fund raisers
of any type. llems are
printed only as space per·
mils and cannot be guar·
anleed to be printed a
specific number of days. ·
,THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Family and Children
First Council, meeting,
Thursday, 9 a.m. at the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family servic'es,
175 f'lace Street, Middleport. •

en barbeque .
KANAGUA
Wid ows
Fellowship, Thursday, noon ·
potluck picnic at roadside
park. Take covered dish and
wrapped white elephants for
bingo prizes. In the event of
rain , it will be held at the
Middleport Church of Chris!.
RUTLAND - Revival at
the Rutland Free Will Baptist Church , Thursday, Friday and Satur.day, 7 p.m.
Paul Taylor, evangelist
Special singers, New Hope
and
Tom
and
Jean
Schoolover, Hearts .in Harmony, and Henry and Hes·
ter Eblin.

MONDAY
CHESTER
James
TUPPERS PLAINS
Craig,
missionary,
to
speak
VFW 9053 ·Tuppers Plains,
at
the
Chester
Church
of the
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Dinner
Nazarene, 7 p.m. Monday.
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Thursday at the ·
of Eleanor Thomas.

TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Board
10:30 a.m. at the munici
building.

MORE LOCAL NEWS; MORE .LOCAL FOLKS.

Name change becomes an education in Sodal Security
BY VALRIA THOMPION
SOCIAL SEC URITY MANAGER, ATHENS

Honeymooners visiting a
Social Security office? Never
happen. Well, it did happen in
our office. The newly-weds
--lwere leisurely driving through
town when th ey saw our office
and the bride remembered she
needed to change her name qn
her Social Security card, so they
stopped by.
Fortunately, the new bride
had the marriage certificate and
other iden tifying information
with her. Once the name
change was completed, she had
a question about an apparent
error on her earnings record
that was reported on her Social
Security Statement.
On-the-spot measures taken
to correct the error led to a discussion of why it was important
to make sure her record is accu'ratc. We explained that the
bride's future benefits would be
based on the earnin gs posted to
her record. The discussion then
turned to the importance of
Social Security -.nefits in the
young couple's future.
Like many young · people,
they considered Social Security
as just a retirement program
that was too far away to think
about now We told them abdut
the protection Social Security
disability and survivors insurance provides tHem and the
children they hope to have.
With both working and paying
into Social Security the family
has "double" protection when
either spouse qualifies for benefits in case of disability or
death. We also reminded them
that a worker's Social Security
earnings record is . portable.
Unlike many employee benefit
plans, Social Security moves
with you from job to job

'
I

throughout your career.
A quick look at the survivors
benefit section of the Benefit
Planners on Social Security's
website, www.ssa.gov, was an
"eye-opener" for. .the newlyweds. They were surprised to
learn that a 25-year old disabled
worker with average e·arnings
and :i spouse and child could
receive more than $1,700 per
month in disability benefits.
Monthly survivors benefits
would be about the same

amount. .
Before leaving · our office,
they also looked at the retirement planning tips in the Benefit Planners and decided it's
never t&lt;;&gt;o early to start planning
for retirement. Social Security
is the base on which they'll
build their financial future.
We reminded the newlyweds
to use the Social Security Statements they receive each year as
a tool for planning th eir finan cial future.

•5136, Auto, Air

15181, AuiO,Air

$12,299

$15,440

. 2000
Chevy Lumina

2000 Pontiac
. Bonneville

. Due To Current Events,
The Gavin Plant Open
House Scheduled For

1998'1&gt; Ton Extended Cab Chevy- Only 21,000 mlles .......... $16,9$0
1998:'1&gt; Ton Ext. Cal!l Ford XLT- Loaded ............................... $15,950
1984 Ford Ranger .•..•...••.•.••••••....•....•....••••..•...••...••.•....•..•.•.... $2, 495
1996~ Chevy S-1 0 Pickup .•.•.•.••••..•••.••..••.... ~ · · ····· .•...••.•...•.•.•.•• $5,995

This Saturday,
1996 Buick Century..................•...............•............................$5499
1998 Chevy Cavalier .....................................•••.... ········ ~······ $6999

September 15, ·Has

1997 Olds Delta 88 ..................... ~ .•••••••...••.•.....••.•..••.•.• 4~ ••••••• $6999
1987 Cadillac -LOw miles .................................................... $4499

Been-Cancelled•

......,......

~ AMIRJCAN«~

.._

...........

liiiMI&amp;ICfRIC
PCWIIR
•

CIMC:.

www.aep.com

..

�Page A4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

(

o_ai~~y-Sen_ti_nei_ _ _-=B=-J

Thunclay, September 13,2001

_rh_e

DEAR ABBY: I am a ..social
worker at a large, ·church-owned
group home for abused, abandoned
and neglected children. I hear many
stories similar to the letter from
" Wanti'ng Peace and Quiet in Oklahoma," who described how her
"wonderful husband, Chad" breaks
things, punches holes in the walls,
and had even flung the family dog to
the ground in fit of anger.
I wonder if that woman is really
considering what's best for her children, or if she's like some single
mothers whose desire to feel loved
by a man has clouded their decisions.
If her children grow up with Chad
as their father, they may end up ·
attaching themselves to an abuser or
even becoming abusers thems~lves,
believing violence is acceptabl e

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher ·

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

-

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

a

UntFf 10 tllr7rlilor1Ut wrh:omr. TM' should belrn than 300 ~orrb;-A./1 kltrn
wt IUbjtCI to tditiflg and must br :tigntld and include addrtu and ttkphotlt numb_tr.
No u~t.Jlg•ttl ltlttrr wiU bt pubiJsltt!d. Litten should 1H in gootl taJtr, tuldnmng
fuuts, noi ptrsrmaliJJn.

Tilt o,111 UJIU txpresud rn lht culu'"" btlow art tht co,rsuuus of lht. Ohio

Thursday, September 13, 1001

Husband's violetue to pet could escalate to peaple

The D~y Sentinel

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

the Bend

Page AS

~ey

Publirhing Co. 'J tditorinl boortL unltn ofht~·ist lfoted.

OUR VIEW

beca.use it's

Heroism
Local blood donors play role
in attack recovery dforts
\
In the next few weeks we'll hear a lot' abo ut the heroism of
the emergency workers at the World Trade Ce nter and Pen ta gon working around th e cl ock in searc h of vtctims ofTuesday's
terrorist attack.
We have heroes in our area, too, and they are the folks ready,
willing and able to donate blood for the incalculable number
of injuries from the twin disasters. Our tip of th e hat goes to
those people who h ave requested blood drives at their churches and communities to ensure that lives will be saved.
, ·
There's not a great deal we in this area can do at the scene of
the attacks. The professionals are handling that job to the best
of their considerable ability. But what we can do is provide a
needed, replenishable medical resou~ce.
One of the most admirable things about New Yorkers wanting to help is their eagerness to donate blood. But even all of
the donations given in the greater New York area won't be
enough to meet the need.
'
Donations made locally go a long way to relieve the crisis,
and keep our own hospitals well-supplied to meet emergenctes.
"We've received numerous calls frqm the public wanting to
give blood in response to the disaster," said Tom Angle, chief
executive officer of American Red Cross Blood Services
Greater Alleghenies Region, which serves our area.
"Areas affected will .need blood supplies not only today, but
in the
· days and weeks," he added. "Every two seconds,

f.1mi1iar.

That woman should leave C h.ad
for now. It's healthier to be a singleparent F:nnily than a two-parent family in an atmosphere of violence,

Abigail·
Van
Buren
ADVICE
incest or discord. If C had really loves
his family, he'll do whatever it takes
to become the husband and father he
needs to be to gt!t them back. If he
doesn 't - he's no asset to the family.
That mother sho uld protect her
children now, ·rather than risk th eir
becoming statistics in the foster care
system. SOCIAL WORKER,
FALCON, N.C.
DEAR SOCIAL WORKER: I
agree that for the sake of her children, "Wanting Peace and Quiet"
must end the fear at:Jd disruption in
their lives. Read on:

DEAR ABBY: "Chad's" actions
DEAR
OFFICER
DAN: cruelty toward compamon ammals
have nothing to do with an "anger" "Wanting Peace'' did not describe has been increasingly recognized .ts a
problem. They have everything to do her husband as violent to her or the
warning sign of other actual or
with co ntrolling his spouse. His kids. She said she was afraid to assert
potential violence within the family.
behavior is a planned technique to herself for fear that he would walk
The Humane Society of the Unitcontrol through fear and intimida- out on her. I advised her to get countion. He does not need anger man- !eling ASAP to get lier priorities in ~d States began a campaign last year
agement . At a minimum, he needs to order and to give her a more com- called "The First Strike Campaign,"
be in a barterers treatment program plete understanding- ·of what she to alert the public to the con nection
and to be prosecuted for his abusive must do.
between animal abuse and violence
treatment .and do some jail time. It
While violence to animals, intimi- toward humans.
'
should not be jail in lieu of treat- dation of children and destruction of
Abme toward any living being ment, but a combination of the two. property are deplorable, it appears hutnan or animal is a serious
I am a law enforcement officer that some women do not have the problem that should never be toleratwho has spent years working -with emotio nal strength. to leave th eir ed . - CONCERNED READER
survivors of violent relationships. I abusers without outside intervenIN NEW YORK CITY
see a tremendous need for society to tion : Read on:
DEAR CONCERNED: You're
stop the violence and hold batterers
DEAR ABBY: No matter how
accountable. My experience shows . "wonderful" her husband is the rest · right. According to a 1997 ·survey, in
th at the hu sband is abusing the pet to of the time, anyone who deliberately the largest shel te rs for battered
show th e wife and children what hurts the fam ily pet (in front of the women in 19 states and the District
he'll do to J)lem if they tell anyone.
children , no less!) is clearly a danget of Columbi a, 85.4 percent of women
and 63 percent of children described
That woman should seek help to the rest of the family.
immediately to begin safety planning
People whp scapegoat and abuse. incidents of pet abuse in the f.1mily.
and counselin g.
OFFICER defenseless animals are also prone to
Dear Abby is wrille/1 by Pa£~1ille
DAN
hurt human beings. In recent years, Phillips and d!wgl1tcr Jeal/lt&lt;' Phill1ps.

.

Dizzy 'spells' can signal serious illness
OUR READERS' VIEWS
Businesses affected .

Question: I've had several room is spinning? Also; paying
dizzy spells lately. I haven't gone attention to other symptoms
•
to 'the doctorbecause the spells • you . are experiencing will help
cleared up qutcldy, and my doc- you hone in on the potential
·
tor is so busy that it takes a week problem.
or two to get an appointment to
Dizziness that's accompanied
see her. Is it safe to assume my by a fast or skipping heartbeat
dizziness is not vety serious suggests that the heart may be
since the spells clear up quickly? the cause of dizziness. This may .
llloll ...
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Answer: Dizziness can be or may not be serious, bu~ it is a
~ln·cAssociate Professor
cal!'led from a number ofcondi- problem that you clearly should
of Family Medicine
tions. Many are primarily a nui- bring to the attention of your
sance and not related to long- doctor.
term health problems, while
Ligl1t-headedness that occurs head - is common and usually particularly prone to causing •
others are a warning of5erious an hour after taking a cold or the result of a minor problem these symptoms. A simple test
conditions to come. The length sinus remedy and clears up six with the balance mechanism of for these is to close· the eyes. If
of the dizziness has little bearing to 12 hours later is probably a the inner ear. This type of verti- the dizziness quickly goes away,
on the seriousness of the under- side effect ofthe medication and go can be due to a number of the problem is probably related
lying cause, so it is rtecessary to not a sign of more serious ttou- things, including the use of alco- to a visual difliculty.
In summary, then, if your
1consider other symptoms when ble. You may still need to see hol or other drugs, infection, or
deciding w hether or not to see your doctor, but not for the causes that we can't readily symptoms appear only when
your doctor. Now, I'll explain dizziness. Instead he may be able identify. Vertigo associated with you take a particular medication
some of those.
to help you to find a medication simultaneous ringing in the ears or alcohol, you really don't need
The term "dizziness" can be that helps with the cold or aller- and decreased hearing suggests your doctor to figure opt the
applied to a variety of symp- gy symptoms without nusing the possibility of another,type of proper treatment. Most other
tOtil.l and, therefore, is too gen- the dizziness or light- headed inner ear problem called causes of dizziness should be
Meniere's disease. More serious investigated more thoroughly
era! to be of much guidance. It feelings. Ho•we·ver,
will- helpstrokes or other abnormalities of ily doctor. The specific cause of
- your disorder if you can the dizziness itself.
Vertigo, the sense of whirling the nervous system can also your symptoms may even
describe the sensation with
require a physician who specialwords that are more specific or irregular motion of you or cause vertigo.
Light-headedncss or a sense izes in disorden of the eQn, nose
than !imply saying you feel your environment, is often
"dizzy." Is it a 1cn~ation ofllgln- described as dlzzinesa. One type of imbalance may remit !Tom a and throat (otorhinolaryngoloheJdedne~S, fninmess, imbillance, of vertigo that you only problem with vision. Cataract~ gi!t) or of the rietwus synem
m movement like you or the notice when you move your and eye mmele problenu Are (neurologiit) .
_j

hand smoke i~ fmik lvhcn we are surrounded by. fom coal-burnin ~ pbnts up
;md down th e river. What goes up, most
com e down in the form of acid rain and
other pollution.
How can the health board say that
el imi nating public. smoking will allow us
to breathe clean air'
People in M eigs County work hard for
the community and invest a lot of ti m e
and money in making a nice and inviting
place to live and visit. They don't deserve
to have their rights taken away one after
the other, and to be run out of business
in the process.
Yvonne "Bonnie" Dennis
Pomeroy

capable direction of Amy Erw1n Perrin
:l!)d presented us with "Okl:thoma."
Dear Editor:
Needless to say, we· were all very capably
·
entertained.
·
I am wnting to express my opinion
about the proposed smoki ng ban in
I had been to church and had my
Meigs County, and to share some points
dau ghter, g randdaughters and a close'
for the Board of H ealth to consider
friend for lunch, and was not really imerb~fore they v_ote, and for the public to
L'Sted in sitting for three hours with a
consider, as well.
wiggly eigh t-year-o ld. We went in with
The American Cancer Society and
reluctance and came Ollt · jubil:tnt. We
\be health department bave referred to
were wry entertained.
studies which say that there is no ceo1 sat and loo ked at the program and
nomic impact to businesses when smokwondered how a lo t of th e people had
ing is banned. As most of us know, you
found time to take part, and then it
can find a study to support any point'you
became quite evid ent that these to lks
wish to make, and if there isn 't one, you
were having .a rea lly good .tim e. I am
can pay someone to co me up with one.
quite certain that there were probably a
Local bar and restaurant owners are
few blunders, but to me , they weren 't too
certainly concerned about die business
evid ent.
they are sure to lose when smokers no
, I listen ed as Jennifer Sheets played the
lon~er fet\,welcome.
Dear Editor:
piano for the entire production and said
1 3111 a m)'mber of the Pomeroy-MidI will skip the arguments pro and con. to myself how did she work this into her
dlleport Lions Club, and th e club mem - about the smoking o rdinance, sin ce they busy sch edule? !tach of th e cast from th e
bers work hard to help the community. have been mostly stated already, and go oldest to the youngest were !'reat. It was
~-_iiQ!llci;tru:Jn.Jhis_j;m.lillr.y_oo:.ds...bLoo;:L:.:."----------l_:~fe-,de··ev•ervthint&gt;-wc,-.;m-teChel.o-:Jtt-I&lt;,.,;,J--.dil::ectJy_to-mjLrt"P·•~ru;e...._ _ _ _ _ _~s_rlwttgbL)ll)U-_were-watd ·ng~th C..'\C p(.!0Red Cross is planning additional blood drives for our area in
life across the stree t.
1 li ve at Darwin, .uJJ do nat have to pie iit a
events in order td improve Meigs C ounthe near future. Ke.ep watching for when they come to your
My hat is off to whomever designed
ty, and we purchase as much as we possi- shop and bank in, Pomeroy - th at is a
town. The greatest thing you can do for your fellow Americans,
bly can, like T-shirts and hats, from local matter of tradition. Athens is on ly a little and made the costumes, great job. I have
to spur the painful process of recovery for those who have surmerchants. As the form er owner of a fa rth er, and th e difFerence in distance is never had the feeli ng that so tmny penvived this outrage, is to give blood, prayers and support in the
local business, I kn ow that the business made up for by a wider sdcction of pic besides the director's family were so
weeks and months to come.
climate in Meigs County is pretty dismal stores. With the new h ighway, Athens will involved because there \vas. My t;randdau ghter said that there was a total o f 74
now, and the ban would only worsen th e be even more convenient.
If this ordinance passes, I will si mply people in the cast. My hat is also off to
picture, not only for local residents but
no
longer come to ·Pom eroy. Furth er, I th e patrons who numbered 30 and th e
tourists, too.
Local businesses still pay their taxes and intend to vote against every health levy 31 professio nals who deserve a very specontribute as much as they can, too, for in Meigs County until M s. Torres is cia! thank you for contributin g to the
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
product . This totaled 135 people who
the
welfare of the county. To make removed from her position .
Today is Thursday, Sept. 13 , the 256th day of2001. There are
As .tong as el ec ted officials abdicate rall ied to give us a Labor Day event we
th eir work .more difficult by limiting
109 days left in the year.
th
eir constitution al responsibility by won 't be forgettin g for a loHt; time.
what their customers can o o n private
Today's Highlight in History:
allowing unelected bmea ucrats to estabI was just thinking about a dear
property is unfair.
On Sept. 13, 1971, a four-day inmates' rebellion at the Attilish
regulations
which
are,
in
effect,
laws,
deceased
fri end who would have said,
Who will pay their wages and the
ca Correctional l'acility in upstate N ew York ended as police
wages of their e1nployees when an the rest of us have to take resp6nsibility . "and what time next year may we expect
and guards stormed the prison; the ordeal and fin al assault
unfriendly business envirom11 el!t forces for seeing that anti-democratic extrem- an equal event ... ,"you all do remember ·
claimed 43 lives.
ists are kept from positions of power.
Bob Hoefli ch? And he would have loved
these businesses to close?
On this date:
Jack Hart everyone's efforts. I fee l certain that
H ealth departmen t administrators and
In 1759, during the fin al French and Indian War, the British
Catherine
Hart Richard Rodgers and Oscar H ammeremployees should ask who w ill pay their
defeated the French on th e Plains of Abraham overlooking
Pomeroy stein would have bee n pleased.
wages when the health department's
Quebec City.
My com men ts are," ... and w hat time
levies are rejected- and they will be In 1788, the Con gress of the Confederation authorized the
next
year may we ex:pect this event
and their revenue is affected to the point
first national election, and declared New York City the tempoagain?" I sincerely hope th at this
of layoffs?
rary national capital.
becomes a yearly event for Meigs Co un Dear
Editor:
I have n ever voted ·against a h ealth
In 1803, Commodore john Barry, considered "by many the
M eigs County residents were treated ty. Thanks again to all involved you did a
levy b efore, but I will the next time I
father of the Americati Navy,died in Philadelphia.
have an opportunity to do so, and I urge to a very special happening this Labor great job.
In 1851, American medical pioneer Walter Reed was born in
Day weekend. A group of talemed, funeveryone else to do the sam e.
Marjorie Walburn
Gloucester County, Va.
Clean air and the effects of second- loving people gathered under the very
Meib'&lt; County
In 1943, C hiang Kai-shek became president of China.
In 1948, R epublican Margaret C hase Smith of M aine was
elected to the US. Senate, becoming the first woman to serve
in both houses of Congress.
In 1949, the Ladies Professional Golf Association of America
was formed in Ne'\" York City, with Patty Berg as its first pr.esident.
In 1977, conductor Leopold Stokowski died in Hampshire,
England, at age 9 5.
'
In 1993, at the White House, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
planned over a number of years; planned
Born in Saudi Ar:tbi a in 1957, bin
BY GEORGE GEDDA
Rabin and PLO chairman Vasser Arafat signed an accord grantWASHINGTON - From the, outset, by real pros and experts.... Their belief is, Laden drew inspiration fro m Iran's Islaming limited Palestinian autonomy.
the culprit seemed obvious. Who else but at least initially, that this looks like Osama ic revolution in 1979. He had dreams of
In 1998, form er Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace died at age
Osama bin Laden had the m eans, the bin Laden's signature."
similar revolts in o ther Mu slim cou ntri es.
79.
Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ca., asked wh eth er
Less than a year later, th e Soviet invaorganization and the fanaticism required
Ten years ago: President Bush, w ho had suffered an irregular
to pull off the terrorist acts at the World bin Laden's group is the li kely perpetra- sio n and occupation of Afghani stan proheartbeat because of a thyroid condition , was pronoun ced in
tor, said, " I ilon't know if there's any vid ed anoth er turning point. He despised
Trade Center and the Pentagon?
"incredible physical condition" after a checkup by his doctors.
And indeed, by late afternoon Tuesday, other organization that had th e capabili- the notion of peopl e h e co nsidered to be
Virginia Gov. L. Douglas Wilder declared his candidac-y for the
the Bush administration confirm ed that ty to carry out such a coord inated series infidels controlling a Muslim coumry
Democratic presidential nomination.
bin Litden and h is al-Qaeda organization of attacks."
and join ed forces witn the Afgh an rcsisFive years ago: RapperTupac Shakur ,died at a Las Vegas hosBin Laden's obsessive ami-Amer ican- tance.
were prime suspects.
pital six days after he was wounded in a drive-by shooting; he
He has proved to be an el usive target.
H e is widely regarded as the world's ism has never been in doubt. " I'm fightwas 25.
.
most dangerous man. He is thought to ing so I can di e a martyr and go to heav- Presi dent Clinton was so eager to liquiOne year ago: With the government all but abandoning its
' have b een behind the twin bombings of en to me et God. Our fight now·is against date bin Laden that he ordered more
case against him, former Los Alamos scientist Wen · Ho Lee
U. S. embassies in East Africa in 1998 that the Ameri cans," bin Laden was once than 70 sea-launc hed 'Tomahawk cruise
pleaded guilty in Albuquerque, New Mexico, to a single count
claimed the lives of224 people, including quoted as saying.
..,
missiles at his hideaway in Afghanist.'in in
of mishandling nuclear secrets; he was th en set free with an
12 Americans.
H e has declared all US citizens to be 1998. AII fe ll wide of the mark . ASS mi lapology from "U.S. District Judge James Parker, who said the
Those numbers pale ;~lon b'Side the legitimate targets of attack. CIA Director lion FBI bounty on his head has yet to
government's actions had "embarrassed our entire nation."
anticipated toll from Tu esday's attacks on . (;eorgc Tenet has s.tid bin Laden h:" . produce result\. AI!LI despite two r&lt;llllt&lt;h
Today's Birthdays: Actress Eileen Fulton ("As the World
symbols of Ameri can commercial and dcnu;tmwted a Ca f),!bility to plan "tlluit'i 2 of U.N. Security Cou ncil s,tnctinm, th e
Thrns") is 68.TV producer Fred Silverman is 64. Former White
military might.
pic attacks with little or no w.trning."
Taliban ruler\ in Af~hmistan rl'li he tn
Sen. Orrin Hatch,· R -Utah, the top
House spokesman Larry. Speakes is 62. Actor Richard Kiel is
His road to intcrnatio11al p;1riah status turn hin1 in .
62. Rock singer David Clayton-Thomas (Blood, Sweat &amp;
R epublican on the Senate Judicia ry has been helped along by his strong orgaCommittee, said FBI and intelligence niza tional skills and a warchest inherited
Tears) is 60. Actress Jacqueline Bisset is 57. Singer Peter Cetera
(George Gedda has covered foreign '!!fairs
officials told him the attacks were "well - from the family construction 'company. for 711e Associated Press si11ce 1968.)(Chicago) is 57. Actress Nell Carter is 53.

Will boycott

TODAY IN HISTORY

Hats off

WASHINGTON TODAY

Likely suspect has plotted our. destru((ion for years

...

LOCAL EVENTS

,.

J.tll11i/p

0U;dicine

....
0

The Community Calen·
dar Is published as a free
service
to
non-profit
groups
wishing
to
announce meetings and
special events. The calen- .
dar Is not designed to promole sales or fund raisers
of any type. llems are
printed only as space per·
mils and cannot be guar·
anleed to be printed a
specific number of days. ·
,THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Family and Children
First Council, meeting,
Thursday, 9 a.m. at the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family servic'es,
175 f'lace Street, Middleport. •

en barbeque .
KANAGUA
Wid ows
Fellowship, Thursday, noon ·
potluck picnic at roadside
park. Take covered dish and
wrapped white elephants for
bingo prizes. In the event of
rain , it will be held at the
Middleport Church of Chris!.
RUTLAND - Revival at
the Rutland Free Will Baptist Church , Thursday, Friday and Satur.day, 7 p.m.
Paul Taylor, evangelist
Special singers, New Hope
and
Tom
and
Jean
Schoolover, Hearts .in Harmony, and Henry and Hes·
ter Eblin.

MONDAY
CHESTER
James
TUPPERS PLAINS
Craig,
missionary,
to
speak
VFW 9053 ·Tuppers Plains,
at
the
Chester
Church
of the
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Dinner
Nazarene, 7 p.m. Monday.
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Thursday at the ·
of Eleanor Thomas.

TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Board
10:30 a.m. at the munici
building.

MORE LOCAL NEWS; MORE .LOCAL FOLKS.

Name change becomes an education in Sodal Security
BY VALRIA THOMPION
SOCIAL SEC URITY MANAGER, ATHENS

Honeymooners visiting a
Social Security office? Never
happen. Well, it did happen in
our office. The newly-weds
--lwere leisurely driving through
town when th ey saw our office
and the bride remembered she
needed to change her name qn
her Social Security card, so they
stopped by.
Fortunately, the new bride
had the marriage certificate and
other iden tifying information
with her. Once the name
change was completed, she had
a question about an apparent
error on her earnings record
that was reported on her Social
Security Statement.
On-the-spot measures taken
to correct the error led to a discussion of why it was important
to make sure her record is accu'ratc. We explained that the
bride's future benefits would be
based on the earnin gs posted to
her record. The discussion then
turned to the importance of
Social Security -.nefits in the
young couple's future.
Like many young · people,
they considered Social Security
as just a retirement program
that was too far away to think
about now We told them abdut
the protection Social Security
disability and survivors insurance provides tHem and the
children they hope to have.
With both working and paying
into Social Security the family
has "double" protection when
either spouse qualifies for benefits in case of disability or
death. We also reminded them
that a worker's Social Security
earnings record is . portable.
Unlike many employee benefit
plans, Social Security moves
with you from job to job

'
I

throughout your career.
A quick look at the survivors
benefit section of the Benefit
Planners on Social Security's
website, www.ssa.gov, was an
"eye-opener" for. .the newlyweds. They were surprised to
learn that a 25-year old disabled
worker with average e·arnings
and :i spouse and child could
receive more than $1,700 per
month in disability benefits.
Monthly survivors benefits
would be about the same

amount. .
Before leaving · our office,
they also looked at the retirement planning tips in the Benefit Planners and decided it's
never t&lt;;&gt;o early to start planning
for retirement. Social Security
is the base on which they'll
build their financial future.
We reminded the newlyweds
to use the Social Security Statements they receive each year as
a tool for planning th eir finan cial future.

•5136, Auto, Air

15181, AuiO,Air

$12,299

$15,440

. 2000
Chevy Lumina

2000 Pontiac
. Bonneville

. Due To Current Events,
The Gavin Plant Open
House Scheduled For

1998'1&gt; Ton Extended Cab Chevy- Only 21,000 mlles .......... $16,9$0
1998:'1&gt; Ton Ext. Cal!l Ford XLT- Loaded ............................... $15,950
1984 Ford Ranger .•..•...••.•.••••••....•....•....••••..•...••...••.•....•..•.•.... $2, 495
1996~ Chevy S-1 0 Pickup .•.•.•.••••..•••.••..••.... ~ · · ····· .•...••.•...•.•.•.•• $5,995

This Saturday,
1996 Buick Century..................•...............•............................$5499
1998 Chevy Cavalier .....................................•••.... ········ ~······ $6999

September 15, ·Has

1997 Olds Delta 88 ..................... ~ .•••••••...••.•.....••.•..••.•.• 4~ ••••••• $6999
1987 Cadillac -LOw miles .................................................... $4499

Been-Cancelled•

......,......

~ AMIRJCAN«~

.._

...........

liiiMI&amp;ICfRIC
PCWIIR
•

CIMC:.

www.aep.com

..

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•
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

Thursday, Sept. 13,2001

•

Crow's

On1V

Fam.i.Jy

•-

All Times Eastern
• Craftsman Truck. Silverado 350
4 p.m . · Saturday · ES PN
• Winston Cup, New Hampshire 300
12 :30 p.m. · Sunday • NBC
• Busch Grand National, MBNA.com 200
1 p. 111 . · Sept. 22 · TNT

Southern prepares·for Alexander attack
BY Scorr Wou=E
OVP CORRESPONDENT

.If

Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

•

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

WINSTON CWO

228 Main St.

P.omeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

1, Jeri Gord011 . 3.768
2. A1 t lly AuOO. 3,546
3. Dale Jarrell. 3.375
4. Tony stcworl, J.J56
5. &lt;iter ling M&lt;lrl,r., 3.302

992-5432

6. Dobby laoon ie. 3.267
7. 0 Earnhardt Jr . 3.244
8. Ke~i n HarviCk. 3.230
9. Rusty Wallace. 3.225
10. Jahnfl")' B1mSon . 3.098

Kevrn Harvt~ll. 3.931
Jason Keller. 3 .657
Jeff Green. 3.554
Gre&amp;Brffie. 3.529
Flton Slll·.)'o:r. 3.269

Jack SPrague. 2. SlO
Joe Aultman, 2.683
Scon Riggs. 2.853

2100 E. R&gt;anklln Btvd.

Gaatonla. N.C. 28014

COMING UP ON TH£ CIRCUIT
117.134 mph , Jul~ 13. 1997
Notable: A year ago,

· What: New Hamp sh ire' 300
Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway~
loudon (1.05B·mile track),
300 laps/ 3 17 .4 miles
When: Green flag drops at
1 p.m .. Sunday
Defentlln&amp; champion: Jeff
Burton
Track quallfyln&amp; record:
Rusty Wallace. Ford,
132.089 mph, July 7, 2000
Race record: Jeff Burton,

restrictor plates were used
on thi s track, the only time
ttYer at a venue other than
Daytona and Talladega . Tha t
experiment will not be
repeate d.

BUSCH ORAND

Deftndln&amp; c:hamplon: Matt
Ken seth
Race quallf)'lnc record:
Mike Skinner. Chevrolet,
155 .932 mph, Sept. 22, 2000
Race record: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet.
130.152 mph , May 30, 1998

CRAnSMAN TRUCK

What: MBNA.com 200
Where: Dover tDeL) Down s
In ternat ional Speedway (1·
mile track), 200 laps/mites
When: 1 p.m ., Sept. 22

What: Silverado 350
Where: Texas Motor
Speedway, Justin (1.5-mlle
track), 167 laps/250.5 miles

Joe Nemechek
Winston Cup Series

• NASCAR Thts Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heading into this weekena-·s race. Last
week 's ra nktng is i n parentheses.

1. (1) loll Gordon
2. (2) Ricky Rudd

A roualn&amp;:

3. (5) Kevin Harwick
4. (3) Tony Stewart

ot Richmond
Uke him or not, he's a:ood
Shuffled ..Ide at tho end

5. (6) Dale Jarrett

Appeared from nowhere

all of a audden

FROM LAST WEEK

RICHMOND, Va . -ThiS
t ime, Jimmy Spencer
su rvived the eJtcitement.
In a night in which
crasheS occurred with

·
\

_Ciop_.

JM
Mil, r' ' tn ....
ad . , . . . . . Joe" fer
_ N•
............

this season In NASCAR"s
leading surJX'rt series. He
swept both races at
Richmond and clai med his
11th career triumph .

B~

Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Row Joe."
A&amp;e: Turns 38 on Sept.

~ Front

. ~

26

Joe Nemechek Is one of

Wife: Andrea

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
RICHMOND. Va. -Jack
Sprague led 196 of the 200
laps. but his final margin
over Kevin Harvick was only
a few feet as Richmond
hosted its annual pickuptruck race.
The final 10 laps made up
for Sprague's dominance
during the res t of the night
as both Harvitk and Ted
Musgrave made runs at
Sprague.

After the two drivers fought it ou t for first place in the
Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, Rudd said of Harvlck: • The
on ly thing I can say is that you can do that and }IOU race
each other and you use a li ttle class about it, or you
can kind of be like a bull in a china closet and just run
over people . He (Harvick) sort of chooses to do the
second ."
" He (Rudd ) did what he had to do to win the race,~
Harvick said . "It's great when you can race wi~h people.
l"m just glad I didn't take him out because I didn't mean
to do it."
NASCAR This W"k'a Monte Dutton Cfv.. h.. opinion:
" It iS sa id that what goes aro und comes around, and this
race was, for Once, an e11ample of that saying:

Ef»•c

lho._,., ...

••••••••••••
Who'aHot-

Who'aNot

•HOT: l&lt;evin Harvlck
fin ishes near the front
again.

8 NOT: Jeff Gordon -takes

a 1.20-point hit In the

points race .

1. What was the number of the car that
Dale Earnhardt first drove to a Winston Cup
championship?
2. Who holds the record for Winston Cup
superspeedway races won from the pole?
3. Who is the editor and publlsl"ltH emeritUI"i of Natloi"lel
Speed Sport News?
j)IBWOUO:J3 SJJI.I) ' £
•uosJead
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SH311\SNW

••••••••••
·

Inducted laat WMk Into
the Grand R.,.., Mich.,

Sports Hell of,...,
The thler Benson

NfMd Ills reputation on
the short tracks of.. ·

natlv. .t.te.
He competed In only
·one NABCAR WIM10n

Cup race, In il71 1t
Mlch.... n, eamln&amp; MIO.

AROUND THE GARAGE

Park out 4-6 weeks; Wallace to continue to drive No. 1 car
By-Dutton

Teum officials saiU they wanted to rom, "Whal should happen to the 5C'a500.
make 5ure Part was fully ~'ned spring r.K'f at Da'rtini,'1onT' an oYer·
'"The wholo thing makes for better
before he resumes his crueer.
whelming 72 peT'CL'fll of the 52.00&gt; racing.""~ said. "Tome, good rncRICHMOND, Va. - Ste'llc Park
Pari&lt; 'Mlfl the second race of !ht fans wllo parlicipated voted ''k~ il rng - 111 least from a fllll 's point of
"tiS n:::lcascd fmmf"amlitw Hospital 2001 season at Rockingham, N.C.. at Darlington."
view - isn 't jUSt or-.:: car lrying to~
System last Monday and is now his St:Cond career tnumph.
Si:o;tet..'fl pcn·cr~t 'illtd mow it to anodK"r car It "s ~ car "tryin~t to pass
ib..l)lo•ering fium his" ll"I!Xit.T.tte" can·
Texas. 11nd 6 percclll C'JCh H)(ed lOr another car while a third rnr I!&gt; trying
X
cu!tsion at his Moor"l.'sville, N.C.,
Las Vegas and California.
topa!5 lhc~ 'ca r. h!&gt;a lot ofd~­
hon'k:.
PERPETUALLY
CWSE'
ing and quick decisions and krvNing
lC
Park, who "a~ injured in a Busch Bobby Labontt: hrui rcln'd for a $1
if you do the wrong thi ng, you're

NASCAR This Week

Grand National race at Dw-lingtot1, million bonus 10 times in the 19
S.C.. on Saturday, Sept. I, \.\IIIIi unable rnces hekl m)der Winston's No Bull
to dri\'e at Richmond whc~ he was Fiw program. No other driver has
again replaced by Kmty Wallace.
had KS numy dmnces 10 win Sl mil·
In litct. il3f'Pl'ili'S Pnrk will~ out~ lioo, yet Labonte has never '.1«1 it.
mininuun of fourto si)f ~lu, v.ftich
\
l(
w.as an~ed Sept, 6 m Richmond.
Wallace will ~\'C the No. I Pmnzoii
SUPPORT FORTRADITIOS'
chcvrok.1 untill'ari.'. is abM: to rctum. When a NASCAR Online poll a.~

MORE RICH~toND PRAISE:
Kyle l\.1ty daimed the lirs.t of his.
l.'ight Winston Cup vktories at Rich·
inond bU1 it wa10 on the old fair·
y:rounds track. notlhe .75-mile layout
built on the same sight in the l11te
lli1Cl.ls.

HIGHLIGHTS

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going to lose positions."

lC
SlUGGING IT OUT: Richmd

·"S lugger" La~be has Joined Dale
Earnhardt lnr. to become Michael
Waltrip's crew chief. Tht: position has
Nor~~.1hl:it:SS. f\.1ty coosidm rae· been '-..coot sira Scott Egglcsron k!lt
·
1ng on the T'll.'\'.' tr.K:k a hiWi!igt. oft he the team in May.

.J., Q

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Fan Tips

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Ohio Division

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$12.95).
Mclaurin has a nice
humorous touch. best
e&gt;:pressed by this paragraph
from the preface: "And then
there ~Nere many noteworthy
events which were len out
because they slmpl~· defied
ca tegorization. It is one thing to
learn that after winning the
1981 cham~ionship, Darrell
\Yaltrip presehted his boss,
Junior Johnson, with the gift of
a prize mule. But It Is /:luite
another to find nine more
stories lnvolvtne farm animals."
Among the chapter tit les are
"Weird at the Wire," "Drivers
You Either Love or Hate" and
"What Might Ha~e ~en.·

• "I lhOUiht It WOO I
typical, &amp;ood ehort.

Eastern
Southern
Waterford
Trimble
Federal Hocking
Miller

b)IHJ,;
-~~~~o~uoa.-

Chester

most Important,
kept Rudd runnln• at or
ne1' ttle front of the
pack •• nllht lona.

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The Daily Sentin.el for details
Dave · H arris or Debbie Call

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EMOTIONAL RESPONSE- Cincinnati Bengals receiver Mar&lt;:o Battaglia, who grew up in Queens, N.Y. and
went to Rutgers University, reacts as he talks with reporters about the World Trade Center collapse after
practice Wednesday in Cincinnati. Battaglia still has two friends missing who may have been in the towers
when they collapsed. (AP)

NFL ponders p
g game$
in wake of na~on~l tragedies

,,

AU
3-0
2-1
2-.1
1-2
0-3
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BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Major league baseball, the PGA Tour and the NHL
suspended their sports in mourning. Some co ll eg~s
and the LPGA Tour opted to play' on, hoping to
"bring our people together."
Pro football wasn't sure which path was appropr iate.
The ·NFL was expected to decide Thursday
whether to call off this week's schedule, following
talks with ]~ague owners, union leaders and the
White House.
Several other leagu es, including the NHL and
Major League· Soccer, said they would make
announcements Thursday, too.
Tuesday's terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon left leagues struggling with how to
get back to business without offending a natton
grieving its dead.
"You can't have a stadium full of people having
fun," St. Louis Cardinals sec&lt;md baseman Fernando '
Vina. said, "because th~t's nQt what this is about now."

AU

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT
POMEROY
- The
Meigs
Marauders and the Ravenswood Red
Devils will clash for the first time ever
Friday evening when the Marauders
host the third-ranked Red Devils at
Bob Roberts Field.
•
The Red Devils are 3-0 on the sea-·
son, and after starting the season at
seventh in the West Vitgi11ia SSAC
rankings jumped to trurd last week.
Last week, Ravenswood defeated
Coach Dave Barr's Roane County
team 22-6, despite not dressing lline

RACINE - The Southern eighth grade volleyball
team improved to 5-0, notching wins over Meigs, OVC,
Bidwell, Federal Hocking and
Trimble.
,
The ~eventh grade team has
picked up wins over Federal
. Hocking and Trimble.

'.

With that sentim ent in mind , baseball put off all 45
games from Tuesday through Thursday, raising the
possibility of World Series games in November for
the first time. The postponements were the most for
the national pastime since World War L
.
Barry Bonds' pursuit of 70 homers, Roger
Clemens ' try for the first 20-1 start by a pitcher, and
the pennanr races were all put on hold with 2 1/ 2
weeks to go in the. regular season.
Thanks to a schedul ing quirk, though, baseball
could reschedule the postponed games as part of
doubleh eaders: Teams that were supposed to play
each other on th e three days of postponements are

The images were surreal.
· What impressed me most was ESPN's job,
or no job in this case as they switched over
to ABC's coverage of the cowardly bombings
of the World Trade Center and Pentagon.
At around 6 p.m., though, ESPN swi tch ed
back oyer to Sportscenter and their anchors
and reporters did a fine job in a diffic_.:u_lt'-~­
ti me.
Th ey did mention , though, over and over
and over ·again, how sports· and sporting
events at that lllOment were insignificant to
the day's happenings.
There are those .who are wondering how
long baseball games should remain suspended and if the NFL should play this weekend.
The sooner th e better.
l agree th at, on the day of the ~/
sports needed to be . put way back on the
backburners.
But now is the time when we need sporting events more than eve r, and tht: NFL,

Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer, etc ... all need to step up and help Amerira in one of this cou ntry's most tragic hours .
You sec, sports has always served as a
release and escape for mi)lions from daily
pressures, and what better time for that than
now.

- Asked how he' ll know w hen 1t s right to resume
playing, commissioner Bud Selig said: "History,
instinct, and the knowledge from talking to a lot of
peopl e. When the right time to come back is - and
th e sensitive, decent time is- I think I'll know 1t."

Sure, you don 't need to be playing baseball
at Yank ee Stadium when, a co upl e of miles
down the road, bodies are still being pulled
out of what once was one of th e greatest
symbols of American enrerprP.ie.
Still, what better why of showing those
who committed these cowardly acts . by
telling them th ey're nor drivi ng us to fear
and taking away our ITeedoms; by simply
playing the games that unite comm unities
and even entire states.
We can defiantly stand and say, "Hey, you
may have attacked a couple of our most valued landmarks, but we're still watching Barry
. Bonds hit home runs and Peyton Manning
throw touchdowns! Try to take THAT away
from us!!!" .
Back in 19~1. a couple ,of weeks after the

Please see NFL B:S

Please see Cooper, B:Z

also down to meet next week ..

Meigs preps for first R-wood meeting

wins ·

•

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1-2
1-2
1-2
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0-3

SJH -posts v-ball

I

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AU

Ravenswood
3·0
Ripley
2-1
Oak Hill
2·1
Wahama
1-2
0-3
Hannan
South Gallia
0-3
Friday's Games
Wahama at Williamson
Hannan at Marsh Fork
Symmes Valley at S. Gallia
Ravenswood at Meigs
Oak Hill at Wellston
Ripley at Nitro

crew performed well, .

5I

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0-0
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0-0
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rum

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~all

,.

Non-league

985·3308

and

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events.

Friday's Games
Alexander at Southern
Ravenswood at Meigs
Oak Hill at Wellston
Vinton County at Coal Grove
Bishop Rosecrans at Miller
Portsmouth N.D. at Trimble
Green at Nelsonville-York
Fort Frye at Waterford
Federal Hocking at Belpre

St. At. 248

Place Your Business's Ad here·

o-o

M

Itlm

Ridenour
Supply

track r1ce/' said
Michael McSweln,
Ricky Rudd's crew
chief, •fter Rudd won
the Chevrolet Monte
Carlo 400..., mean, 1
lot of be•tln&amp; 1nd
b•RC~n•, but there was
a lot ot prot. .,slonallsm
shown most of the
time ."
McSwain and hll·

Please see Southern, B:S

Like almost every American Tuesday, I
flipped through the television . chann els with
my remote conrrol, trying to find out as
much as I could about that day's. tragic

Hocking Division

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

X ClEW OF Til Will[

M

Belpre
Meigs
Nelsonville-York
Wellston
Alexander
Vinton County

CD

•Jim Mclaurin has written
"NASCAR's Most Wanted: The
Top 10 Book of Outrageous
Drivers. Wild wrecks, ana Other
Oddities· (Brassey·s Inc.,

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All
3-0
3-0
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2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
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Friday's Games
Marietta at Point Pleas11flt _
Jackson at Galli a Academy
River Valley at Logan
Warren at Athens

-·

-,;

SEQ
Logan
Marietta
Athens
Gallla Academy
Jackson
Point Pleasant
Warren
Riv~r yalley

o

::::r:

Ash rushed 11 times for fi'J yards
despite being slowed much of the first
half with an injury. Early in the game,
Pierce enjoyed a perfect passing night
of 6-6 on tosses to Aaron Ohlinger,
Justin Allen and Brice Mill, but four
desperation passes before the half
wiped out that perfect slate.

Sporting events
help the recovery
process

SEOAL

·

give Sourhern the win. ·

THE BUTCHMEISTER ·

Prep Football

&lt;
CD

winnt·r, but when the dust had settled,
the Tornadoes claimed a dramatic 1812 win. Southern's Brandon Pierce
burst througb IM li11c from four yards
,out on th e sixth play in overtime to

Butch
Cooper

THuRsDAY'S

-co- ::•
'&lt;
v,

many drivers who has proved
ClllldNn: Jotm Hunter (4),
he could win In stock car
Bla ir Me kenzie (will
2 on
racing's major leagues but
Dec. 261
still lacks the conslster.cy It
Hometown: Born In
takes to be one of the sport's Naples, Fla ., raised In
major stars.
Lakeland, Fla.
A career stock-car racer,
Crew ch•r: Ch ris Carrier
· Nemechek has been both
Car: No. 33 OakwOOd
rookie of the year and
Homes Chevrolet Monte
champion in the
Carlo, owned by Andy Petree
Are you optimistic obout
Southeastern Mini-Stock
,.h, .• 1
C•reer statistics: 243
Series, the Unite d Stock Car starts, 1 win, 7 to~5
know Andy has been talking
Alliance, the All Pro
finishes, 29 top-10 finishes. to a lot of companies, and I
Challenge Series and the
6 poles, over $9 mil lion In
think When they take a look
Busch Series. Twice he was earni['lgs
at what he,has with thl9 No.
ttle Busch Series' Most
Flrsta: Start Pul)' 11,
33 team. he Is going. to
Popular Driver.
1993. at Loudon. N.H.),
bring somebody in. This Is
In 1997, Nemechek won
pole (June 22, 1997, at
too good a deal to pass .up.
the pole for the first race at Fontana. Calif.). win (Sept.
I don 't kn.ow of .~tn~body who
Cel lfomla Speectway, added
19,1999, at loudon, N.H.) can offer the ·financlal
another at Pocono and
package he can offer a
How would you .valuate
started second three other
the teem? · we're like any
cOmpany. Nobody elves a
times. That performance
other race team out here:
sponsor more 'bang for the
earned him the nickname
looking to do the best we
buck' than Andy does."

be

Ricky Rudd va. Kevin Harvlck

lenaonSr.,wll

...

~bu.

tans - one by air and another rushing in a I00-yard game. Co rnell has
since moved to the line where he has
helped improve Sot~thern's overall
control of the line of Scrimmage.
Also last · year, Matt Ash had a 31yard tou chdown run, graduated se nior
13randon Hill had a to uchdown,
Anthony Coffman had a 3-yard
touchdown run, and Brice Hill a 32yard interception. return . For Coach
Richards it's a plus to know three of
th ese four players will still be in uni form this week ..
Last Friday at South Gallia, it took
.48 minutes and overtime to decide a

To be eligible fOr 'The OVP
10, a lllam mU81 either: a.) be
from the Mason-Galll•
Melghlackaon area; b.) be a
local con~Mwlce member; or
c.) play at least one game
agalnat localtasma.

C'"
CD

Pleose ~errfy for me that two
bro thers nam~:d Bjlly ~nd Dobby
Myers raced in NASCAR ir1 either
the lutt "50s or early "60s. I De lil:\·e
one of them was killed in !l wr~ck.
. .kMin Cllf!VN.'o&amp;CAR 1NI WM4I
AIIO. check to sct~ if • dri\·er named
"Crawfish~ or Curtis Crowder also
drt.Wc: at that time
Tony Bo!tl
Durham, N.C.
can do at every race.
Because we're looklog for
Hoh/11· Mrws died 1111 Sept. 1.
spongorshlp (In 2002)·~.,.,
':::-- - l'll1./flii rl~uhanJiii'fillgttml.l;;r:--might have more at stake
irtg ilw !:.'imlhl'rn JOfJ. Bil~i · ,\~\IUS,
k....
wlr11 wvn /ll"tl nues and O~t pule,
I"V
tnensomeoftheothers . ln
dil'diM .1pril/2, /tJJX, otr1 Jr 1w 1
other ways. We're ahead of a
auacll " 'hile rud11g In Win n m. .
.,.,
lot of teams in that Andy
Salem. N.C. He ~"as JJ a1thr tillte~f
Petr~e Racln&amp; has won a
hi., demh. Curtis '"Cmll"/ls.lr " Cride_r.
(II
race this year (Bobby
from Abht··ille, S.C. . oompererl.frr;m
Hamilton at Talleele8B), and
IYJ9 ro 1\l:dJ in a total o.f2J2 ruct.J.
11t'Wr f/11 is hlng betier rhun !It/rd.
both teams have proven they
are capable of running up
front:
• • • • • • • • • • •

1111t....., .......

I

FEUD Of THE WEEK

• Johnft)' Benson's
fatlter, 14-year-old .101111

A quc s1ion thn t w~s recently
asked rn the ··Your Turn "' scct'ion :
Why doesn't NASCAR do a race
with nil ri g ht turns'.' The correct
answer is: If the)" d rO\·c clockwise
on an O\'al. the driver's sr de would
De against rhe wall. 1Preny scary. I
·
·
T. 't'oung

DearNASCART~is Week.

~t-~:S-'-~!:!:~~!~--~~i-~:.~~0~of-Ru
after he nudged
Spencer, who started
dd-out-ofthe-thirct;""won-for the-thtrd""tlm·e--

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

llea r NASCAR Thi ~ Wl~k.

'""fl rh"rltrork.l o;;he .fchcdult."'

alarming regularity. reel-hot
racer Spencer was so wellbehaved that he might as
well have been participating
in the annual Vintage Grand
Prix. of Monterey, not the
Busch Series.Autolite Fra m
250 at Richmond
International Raceway.
Apparently Fram
sponsored the Friday night
race beca use it rhymed with
·bam ...

-~

way in the wani ng laps .
His_predicament, at the ·
end , came down to the
uneasy position of leading
anothe r driver. Rueld, whom
he could be fairly certain
was mad at him.
Sure enough , with six laps
to go, Rudd gave Harvick a
dose of his own medicine ,
putting his Ford on the left·
rear bumper of Harvlck "s
Chevrolet ana scooting past.

laH111

I

Team
Prev. Votn
1. Ironton
1 50 (5)
2. PMsmouth
3
45
3. Logan
4
38
4. Parkersburg
6
27
5. Waverly
7
25
6. Eastern
5
22
7. Ravenswood
9
19
2
18 . .
8. Gallipolis
9. Jackson
13
10. Marietta
9

RACINE - Southern (2-1) can
register its best opening mark in over
a decade with a win Friday over visiring Alexander.
Southern's only blemish came to
Berne Union in the season opener,
44-14; a game that ended a 24-game
skid by the Rockets. This week,
. Southern has a chance to keep intact ·
a I 9-game Alexander losing streak.
The Spartans have scored just once
this season. Alexander has experienced
losses of67-7, 44-0, and 27-0.
But on the flipside of that stat is

Coach Greg Halbert's belief "many
teams would be 0-3 after playing th ~
schedule we started with." Although
both sc hools are Tri-Valley Conference members, Fridays game is anonleague match-up.
Last season, Southern stormed·
through rhe Alexander Spartans 41-6,
fUeled by a 19,point third quarter.
Friday's conresr will be Round 2 of
student-against-mentor.
Rusty
Richards was a TVC standout at quarterback for Holbert's Trimble teams.
Southern's Joe Cornell , a year
removed from knee surgery, had two
touchdowns last year against the Spar-

Othera receiving votes: SE
Ross 7, Wellston 3.

rc
3

Your1Urn
mm 0. Readers

· Dear NASCAR This Weclr; .
Jtl1ink the Wimton Cup Sertes
should have a din-uack race at least
once a year. lmaairte 43 caro on a
di rt track: it wo uld be so tool ... It
doesn't h1ve to~ a points mce. And
"makt sure they don't •huw it on FX.
· Dennis Falrdotll
0-ford, Ga.
Tom• Srell"urf rece/H/1· made the
.tulfle .~uggl'.l"floll . W.lr e.n 1.1.~io"d ~·f
lfl(/f1! ro(lt/ I'Ollr.H!.~ Jlwuld ~added.
S1ewurt &gt;aid, ··1 iJ lfh 10 St'l' mu• or

•

·.c

-

Notable : No one ha s won
this race more than once .
Jack Sprague won for the
first time here earlier this
year.

NorthAttlrbnro,

8. (81 D. Earnhardt Jr. Made a nne run
1
I 9. (9) Ward Burton Faded badly at the end
! 10.(10) Ruoty Wallace Same old otory

Cl)

..

Rice rec:onl: Kenny Irwin,
Ford. 131.823 mph, June·6.

triumph

6. (4) Sterllnl Marlin Transmission trouble
7. (7) Bobby Labonte Best Ponttau at Richmond

RICHMOND, Va . - Ricky
Rudd proved the old ma.:.im
that what goe s around
comes around. and payback
was the operatlve .worel 1n
Rudd's victory Saturday
night In the Chevrolet Monte
Carlo 400.
Rudel's nemesis. Kevin
Ha rvick, seemed to have
I
elim inated all

180.373 mph. Oct 12.2000

••••••••••••

Jrmmle Johnson. 3.133 Denn•s Seller. 2.616
R1ck Crawford. 2,549
~nil)' wallace . 2.912
Cc.,- Gibb11, 2,284

WINSTON CUP

Deftndlnc: champion':
Bryan Reffner
Tntc:k qualifying record:
Bryan Reffner, Chevrolet.

1997

N~TIONAL

Ted Muctrave. 2.7Sfl

TOP TEN

•

When: 4 p.m ., Saturday

TtBYis KvBpll. 2.771

Chad l•ltle, 3.081

Mortal

region's top football teams,
as voted . by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. sports .
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

NASCAR Tills WHk
C/o The Oaaton Guatta

Tony Rarnes. 3.159
Rielly Hendrlclo.. 2.757
M1ke Mcll!ughlm. 3.151 Terry Cook. 2.654

•

A weekly look at the

you've cot • quutlon
or a comment, wrtta:

WINSTON CUP

Page 81

Thursday. September 13, 1001

l J Jj __:..j (.J JJ r J
j _]_,. ~ -.:../..r J _J

KFC

I

Golf notes, Page BJ
Terry Glenn te-instated, Page BJ

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

11/ll(liiJ

The Daily Sentinel

•

players nursing various InJUries. It is leads six returning starters on defense
not known if rhe .Red Devils will be from his defensive tackle spot.
Meigs, after struggling offensively
healthy this week.
The Red Devils are led by their the first two con test, broke out of its
record setting quarterback Brett Rec- , slump in last week's 27-7 win over
tor who threw for over 1,000 yards River Vallex.
last season's 5-5 team. The running
Meigs chalked up 16 first downs
backs are Dana "Moose" Raban, Josh and . 284 yards of total . yards. Buzzy
Miller and R. J. Balis. Rector threw Fackler had an outstanding game "for
touchdown passes of 12, 20 and 40 Meigs from his wide receiver slot.
yards last week.
Buzzy pulled in eight passes for 145
Also, place kicker Eric Redd ki cked yards and three touchdown. Junior
a school record 44-yard field goal in quarterback Kyle Hannan passed for
the contest.
100 yards and two of the score•, wh ile
Rabin, last year's leading tackler Jeremy Roush threw for 66 yards, one

score and J!so chipped in with 91
ya rds on the ground. Tyson Lee added
78 in just nine carri es.
On defense, the maroon and gold
limiied tho;, Raiders to only five first
downs and 168 yards of total offense.
Only 29 of those were through the
atr.

"Ravenswood has a lot of good
ski lled players," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said. "They have good team
speed, it should be a good football
gan1e."
ALUMNI GAME - The newly
Please sle Meigs, Bl

�I

•
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Inside:

Thursday, Sept. 13,2001

•

Crow's

On1V

Fam.i.Jy

•-

All Times Eastern
• Craftsman Truck. Silverado 350
4 p.m . · Saturday · ES PN
• Winston Cup, New Hampshire 300
12 :30 p.m. · Sunday • NBC
• Busch Grand National, MBNA.com 200
1 p. 111 . · Sept. 22 · TNT

Southern prepares·for Alexander attack
BY Scorr Wou=E
OVP CORRESPONDENT

.If

Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

•

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

WINSTON CWO

228 Main St.

P.omeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

1, Jeri Gord011 . 3.768
2. A1 t lly AuOO. 3,546
3. Dale Jarrell. 3.375
4. Tony stcworl, J.J56
5. &lt;iter ling M&lt;lrl,r., 3.302

992-5432

6. Dobby laoon ie. 3.267
7. 0 Earnhardt Jr . 3.244
8. Ke~i n HarviCk. 3.230
9. Rusty Wallace. 3.225
10. Jahnfl")' B1mSon . 3.098

Kevrn Harvt~ll. 3.931
Jason Keller. 3 .657
Jeff Green. 3.554
Gre&amp;Brffie. 3.529
Flton Slll·.)'o:r. 3.269

Jack SPrague. 2. SlO
Joe Aultman, 2.683
Scon Riggs. 2.853

2100 E. R&gt;anklln Btvd.

Gaatonla. N.C. 28014

COMING UP ON TH£ CIRCUIT
117.134 mph , Jul~ 13. 1997
Notable: A year ago,

· What: New Hamp sh ire' 300
Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway~
loudon (1.05B·mile track),
300 laps/ 3 17 .4 miles
When: Green flag drops at
1 p.m .. Sunday
Defentlln&amp; champion: Jeff
Burton
Track quallfyln&amp; record:
Rusty Wallace. Ford,
132.089 mph, July 7, 2000
Race record: Jeff Burton,

restrictor plates were used
on thi s track, the only time
ttYer at a venue other than
Daytona and Talladega . Tha t
experiment will not be
repeate d.

BUSCH ORAND

Deftndln&amp; c:hamplon: Matt
Ken seth
Race quallf)'lnc record:
Mike Skinner. Chevrolet,
155 .932 mph, Sept. 22, 2000
Race record: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet.
130.152 mph , May 30, 1998

CRAnSMAN TRUCK

What: MBNA.com 200
Where: Dover tDeL) Down s
In ternat ional Speedway (1·
mile track), 200 laps/mites
When: 1 p.m ., Sept. 22

What: Silverado 350
Where: Texas Motor
Speedway, Justin (1.5-mlle
track), 167 laps/250.5 miles

Joe Nemechek
Winston Cup Series

• NASCAR Thts Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers heading into this weekena-·s race. Last
week 's ra nktng is i n parentheses.

1. (1) loll Gordon
2. (2) Ricky Rudd

A roualn&amp;:

3. (5) Kevin Harwick
4. (3) Tony Stewart

ot Richmond
Uke him or not, he's a:ood
Shuffled ..Ide at tho end

5. (6) Dale Jarrett

Appeared from nowhere

all of a audden

FROM LAST WEEK

RICHMOND, Va . -ThiS
t ime, Jimmy Spencer
su rvived the eJtcitement.
In a night in which
crasheS occurred with

·
\

_Ciop_.

JM
Mil, r' ' tn ....
ad . , . . . . . Joe" fer
_ N•
............

this season In NASCAR"s
leading surJX'rt series. He
swept both races at
Richmond and clai med his
11th career triumph .

B~

Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Row Joe."
A&amp;e: Turns 38 on Sept.

~ Front

. ~

26

Joe Nemechek Is one of

Wife: Andrea

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK
RICHMOND. Va. -Jack
Sprague led 196 of the 200
laps. but his final margin
over Kevin Harvick was only
a few feet as Richmond
hosted its annual pickuptruck race.
The final 10 laps made up
for Sprague's dominance
during the res t of the night
as both Harvitk and Ted
Musgrave made runs at
Sprague.

After the two drivers fought it ou t for first place in the
Chevrolet Monte Carlo 400, Rudd said of Harvlck: • The
on ly thing I can say is that you can do that and }IOU race
each other and you use a li ttle class about it, or you
can kind of be like a bull in a china closet and just run
over people . He (Harvick) sort of chooses to do the
second ."
" He (Rudd ) did what he had to do to win the race,~
Harvick said . "It's great when you can race wi~h people.
l"m just glad I didn't take him out because I didn't mean
to do it."
NASCAR This W"k'a Monte Dutton Cfv.. h.. opinion:
" It iS sa id that what goes aro und comes around, and this
race was, for Once, an e11ample of that saying:

Ef»•c

lho._,., ...

••••••••••••
Who'aHot-

Who'aNot

•HOT: l&lt;evin Harvlck
fin ishes near the front
again.

8 NOT: Jeff Gordon -takes

a 1.20-point hit In the

points race .

1. What was the number of the car that
Dale Earnhardt first drove to a Winston Cup
championship?
2. Who holds the record for Winston Cup
superspeedway races won from the pole?
3. Who is the editor and publlsl"ltH emeritUI"i of Natloi"lel
Speed Sport News?
j)IBWOUO:J3 SJJI.I) ' £
•uosJead
z; ·~

oz:

P111eo ·z

SH311\SNW

••••••••••
·

Inducted laat WMk Into
the Grand R.,.., Mich.,

Sports Hell of,...,
The thler Benson

NfMd Ills reputation on
the short tracks of.. ·

natlv. .t.te.
He competed In only
·one NABCAR WIM10n

Cup race, In il71 1t
Mlch.... n, eamln&amp; MIO.

AROUND THE GARAGE

Park out 4-6 weeks; Wallace to continue to drive No. 1 car
By-Dutton

Teum officials saiU they wanted to rom, "Whal should happen to the 5C'a500.
make 5ure Part was fully ~'ned spring r.K'f at Da'rtini,'1onT' an oYer·
'"The wholo thing makes for better
before he resumes his crueer.
whelming 72 peT'CL'fll of the 52.00&gt; racing.""~ said. "Tome, good rncRICHMOND, Va. - Ste'llc Park
Pari&lt; 'Mlfl the second race of !ht fans wllo parlicipated voted ''k~ il rng - 111 least from a fllll 's point of
"tiS n:::lcascd fmmf"amlitw Hospital 2001 season at Rockingham, N.C.. at Darlington."
view - isn 't jUSt or-.:: car lrying to~
System last Monday and is now his St:Cond career tnumph.
Si:o;tet..'fl pcn·cr~t 'illtd mow it to anodK"r car It "s ~ car "tryin~t to pass
ib..l)lo•ering fium his" ll"I!Xit.T.tte" can·
Texas. 11nd 6 percclll C'JCh H)(ed lOr another car while a third rnr I!&gt; trying
X
cu!tsion at his Moor"l.'sville, N.C.,
Las Vegas and California.
topa!5 lhc~ 'ca r. h!&gt;a lot ofd~­
hon'k:.
PERPETUALLY
CWSE'
ing and quick decisions and krvNing
lC
Park, who "a~ injured in a Busch Bobby Labontt: hrui rcln'd for a $1
if you do the wrong thi ng, you're

NASCAR This Week

Grand National race at Dw-lingtot1, million bonus 10 times in the 19
S.C.. on Saturday, Sept. I, \.\IIIIi unable rnces hekl m)der Winston's No Bull
to dri\'e at Richmond whc~ he was Fiw program. No other driver has
again replaced by Kmty Wallace.
had KS numy dmnces 10 win Sl mil·
In litct. il3f'Pl'ili'S Pnrk will~ out~ lioo, yet Labonte has never '.1«1 it.
mininuun of fourto si)f ~lu, v.ftich
\
l(
w.as an~ed Sept, 6 m Richmond.
Wallace will ~\'C the No. I Pmnzoii
SUPPORT FORTRADITIOS'
chcvrok.1 untill'ari.'. is abM: to rctum. When a NASCAR Online poll a.~

MORE RICH~toND PRAISE:
Kyle l\.1ty daimed the lirs.t of his.
l.'ight Winston Cup vktories at Rich·
inond bU1 it wa10 on the old fair·
y:rounds track. notlhe .75-mile layout
built on the same sight in the l11te
lli1Cl.ls.

HIGHLIGHTS

cQ) e.
-1
-_,

CD

C

DJ
CO .. .

D)

going to lose positions."

lC
SlUGGING IT OUT: Richmd

·"S lugger" La~be has Joined Dale
Earnhardt lnr. to become Michael
Waltrip's crew chief. Tht: position has
Nor~~.1hl:it:SS. f\.1ty coosidm rae· been '-..coot sira Scott Egglcsron k!lt
·
1ng on the T'll.'\'.' tr.K:k a hiWi!igt. oft he the team in May.

.J., Q

...a.

(II

Fan Tips

-,;

-

en
CD

,

c -

~

TVC

CD_

Ohio Division

rum

~

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n

m
=·

c.

s--·

UJ .

$12.95).
Mclaurin has a nice
humorous touch. best
e&gt;:pressed by this paragraph
from the preface: "And then
there ~Nere many noteworthy
events which were len out
because they slmpl~· defied
ca tegorization. It is one thing to
learn that after winning the
1981 cham~ionship, Darrell
\Yaltrip presehted his boss,
Junior Johnson, with the gift of
a prize mule. But It Is /:luite
another to find nine more
stories lnvolvtne farm animals."
Among the chapter tit les are
"Weird at the Wire," "Drivers
You Either Love or Hate" and
"What Might Ha~e ~en.·

• "I lhOUiht It WOO I
typical, &amp;ood ehort.

Eastern
Southern
Waterford
Trimble
Federal Hocking
Miller

b)IHJ,;
-~~~~o~uoa.-

Chester

most Important,
kept Rudd runnln• at or
ne1' ttle front of the
pack •• nllht lona.

z
0

:::1.

:::T

The Daily Sentin.el for details
Dave · H arris or Debbie Call

""

1\)

Cl.

1\) CD~
•
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992-2155

en
CD
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'

EMOTIONAL RESPONSE- Cincinnati Bengals receiver Mar&lt;:o Battaglia, who grew up in Queens, N.Y. and
went to Rutgers University, reacts as he talks with reporters about the World Trade Center collapse after
practice Wednesday in Cincinnati. Battaglia still has two friends missing who may have been in the towers
when they collapsed. (AP)

NFL ponders p
g game$
in wake of na~on~l tragedies

,,

AU
3-0
2-1
2-.1
1-2
0-3
0-3

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Major league baseball, the PGA Tour and the NHL
suspended their sports in mourning. Some co ll eg~s
and the LPGA Tour opted to play' on, hoping to
"bring our people together."
Pro football wasn't sure which path was appropr iate.
The ·NFL was expected to decide Thursday
whether to call off this week's schedule, following
talks with ]~ague owners, union leaders and the
White House.
Several other leagu es, including the NHL and
Major League· Soccer, said they would make
announcements Thursday, too.
Tuesday's terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon left leagues struggling with how to
get back to business without offending a natton
grieving its dead.
"You can't have a stadium full of people having
fun," St. Louis Cardinals sec&lt;md baseman Fernando '
Vina. said, "because th~t's nQt what this is about now."

AU

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT
POMEROY
- The
Meigs
Marauders and the Ravenswood Red
Devils will clash for the first time ever
Friday evening when the Marauders
host the third-ranked Red Devils at
Bob Roberts Field.
•
The Red Devils are 3-0 on the sea-·
son, and after starting the season at
seventh in the West Vitgi11ia SSAC
rankings jumped to trurd last week.
Last week, Ravenswood defeated
Coach Dave Barr's Roane County
team 22-6, despite not dressing lline

RACINE - The Southern eighth grade volleyball
team improved to 5-0, notching wins over Meigs, OVC,
Bidwell, Federal Hocking and
Trimble.
,
The ~eventh grade team has
picked up wins over Federal
. Hocking and Trimble.

'.

With that sentim ent in mind , baseball put off all 45
games from Tuesday through Thursday, raising the
possibility of World Series games in November for
the first time. The postponements were the most for
the national pastime since World War L
.
Barry Bonds' pursuit of 70 homers, Roger
Clemens ' try for the first 20-1 start by a pitcher, and
the pennanr races were all put on hold with 2 1/ 2
weeks to go in the. regular season.
Thanks to a schedul ing quirk, though, baseball
could reschedule the postponed games as part of
doubleh eaders: Teams that were supposed to play
each other on th e three days of postponements are

The images were surreal.
· What impressed me most was ESPN's job,
or no job in this case as they switched over
to ABC's coverage of the cowardly bombings
of the World Trade Center and Pentagon.
At around 6 p.m., though, ESPN swi tch ed
back oyer to Sportscenter and their anchors
and reporters did a fine job in a diffic_.:u_lt'-~­
ti me.
Th ey did mention , though, over and over
and over ·again, how sports· and sporting
events at that lllOment were insignificant to
the day's happenings.
There are those .who are wondering how
long baseball games should remain suspended and if the NFL should play this weekend.
The sooner th e better.
l agree th at, on the day of the ~/
sports needed to be . put way back on the
backburners.
But now is the time when we need sporting events more than eve r, and tht: NFL,

Major League Baseball, Major League Soccer, etc ... all need to step up and help Amerira in one of this cou ntry's most tragic hours .
You sec, sports has always served as a
release and escape for mi)lions from daily
pressures, and what better time for that than
now.

- Asked how he' ll know w hen 1t s right to resume
playing, commissioner Bud Selig said: "History,
instinct, and the knowledge from talking to a lot of
peopl e. When the right time to come back is - and
th e sensitive, decent time is- I think I'll know 1t."

Sure, you don 't need to be playing baseball
at Yank ee Stadium when, a co upl e of miles
down the road, bodies are still being pulled
out of what once was one of th e greatest
symbols of American enrerprP.ie.
Still, what better why of showing those
who committed these cowardly acts . by
telling them th ey're nor drivi ng us to fear
and taking away our ITeedoms; by simply
playing the games that unite comm unities
and even entire states.
We can defiantly stand and say, "Hey, you
may have attacked a couple of our most valued landmarks, but we're still watching Barry
. Bonds hit home runs and Peyton Manning
throw touchdowns! Try to take THAT away
from us!!!" .
Back in 19~1. a couple ,of weeks after the

Please see NFL B:S

Please see Cooper, B:Z

also down to meet next week ..

Meigs preps for first R-wood meeting

wins ·

•

::z:

-

1-2
1-2
1-2
1-2
0-3
0-3

SJH -posts v-ball

I

,;l
0

I

AU

Ravenswood
3·0
Ripley
2-1
Oak Hill
2·1
Wahama
1-2
0-3
Hannan
South Gallia
0-3
Friday's Games
Wahama at Williamson
Hannan at Marsh Fork
Symmes Valley at S. Gallia
Ravenswood at Meigs
Oak Hill at Wellston
Ripley at Nitro

crew performed well, .

5I

0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

rum

....

~all

,.

Non-league

985·3308

and

co

0·0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0

events.

Friday's Games
Alexander at Southern
Ravenswood at Meigs
Oak Hill at Wellston
Vinton County at Coal Grove
Bishop Rosecrans at Miller
Portsmouth N.D. at Trimble
Green at Nelsonville-York
Fort Frye at Waterford
Federal Hocking at Belpre

St. At. 248

Place Your Business's Ad here·

o-o

M

Itlm

Ridenour
Supply

track r1ce/' said
Michael McSweln,
Ricky Rudd's crew
chief, •fter Rudd won
the Chevrolet Monte
Carlo 400..., mean, 1
lot of be•tln&amp; 1nd
b•RC~n•, but there was
a lot ot prot. .,slonallsm
shown most of the
time ."
McSwain and hll·

Please see Southern, B:S

Like almost every American Tuesday, I
flipped through the television . chann els with
my remote conrrol, trying to find out as
much as I could about that day's. tragic

Hocking Division

See us for Your Stihl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

X ClEW OF Til Will[

M

Belpre
Meigs
Nelsonville-York
Wellston
Alexander
Vinton County

CD

•Jim Mclaurin has written
"NASCAR's Most Wanted: The
Top 10 Book of Outrageous
Drivers. Wild wrecks, ana Other
Oddities· (Brassey·s Inc.,

0-0
0-0
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0-0
0' 0
0-0
0-0
0-0

-•

CD ::S
...
:::..

All
3-0
3-0
2-1
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
0-3

Friday's Games
Marietta at Point Pleas11flt _
Jackson at Galli a Academy
River Valley at Logan
Warren at Athens

-·

-,;

SEQ
Logan
Marietta
Athens
Gallla Academy
Jackson
Point Pleasant
Warren
Riv~r yalley

o

::::r:

Ash rushed 11 times for fi'J yards
despite being slowed much of the first
half with an injury. Early in the game,
Pierce enjoyed a perfect passing night
of 6-6 on tosses to Aaron Ohlinger,
Justin Allen and Brice Mill, but four
desperation passes before the half
wiped out that perfect slate.

Sporting events
help the recovery
process

SEOAL

·

give Sourhern the win. ·

THE BUTCHMEISTER ·

Prep Football

&lt;
CD

winnt·r, but when the dust had settled,
the Tornadoes claimed a dramatic 1812 win. Southern's Brandon Pierce
burst througb IM li11c from four yards
,out on th e sixth play in overtime to

Butch
Cooper

THuRsDAY'S

-co- ::•
'&lt;
v,

many drivers who has proved
ClllldNn: Jotm Hunter (4),
he could win In stock car
Bla ir Me kenzie (will
2 on
racing's major leagues but
Dec. 261
still lacks the conslster.cy It
Hometown: Born In
takes to be one of the sport's Naples, Fla ., raised In
major stars.
Lakeland, Fla.
A career stock-car racer,
Crew ch•r: Ch ris Carrier
· Nemechek has been both
Car: No. 33 OakwOOd
rookie of the year and
Homes Chevrolet Monte
champion in the
Carlo, owned by Andy Petree
Are you optimistic obout
Southeastern Mini-Stock
,.h, .• 1
C•reer statistics: 243
Series, the Unite d Stock Car starts, 1 win, 7 to~5
know Andy has been talking
Alliance, the All Pro
finishes, 29 top-10 finishes. to a lot of companies, and I
Challenge Series and the
6 poles, over $9 mil lion In
think When they take a look
Busch Series. Twice he was earni['lgs
at what he,has with thl9 No.
ttle Busch Series' Most
Flrsta: Start Pul)' 11,
33 team. he Is going. to
Popular Driver.
1993. at Loudon. N.H.),
bring somebody in. This Is
In 1997, Nemechek won
pole (June 22, 1997, at
too good a deal to pass .up.
the pole for the first race at Fontana. Calif.). win (Sept.
I don 't kn.ow of .~tn~body who
Cel lfomla Speectway, added
19,1999, at loudon, N.H.) can offer the ·financlal
another at Pocono and
package he can offer a
How would you .valuate
started second three other
the teem? · we're like any
cOmpany. Nobody elves a
times. That performance
other race team out here:
sponsor more 'bang for the
earned him the nickname
looking to do the best we
buck' than Andy does."

be

Ricky Rudd va. Kevin Harvlck

lenaonSr.,wll

...

~bu.

tans - one by air and another rushing in a I00-yard game. Co rnell has
since moved to the line where he has
helped improve Sot~thern's overall
control of the line of Scrimmage.
Also last · year, Matt Ash had a 31yard tou chdown run, graduated se nior
13randon Hill had a to uchdown,
Anthony Coffman had a 3-yard
touchdown run, and Brice Hill a 32yard interception. return . For Coach
Richards it's a plus to know three of
th ese four players will still be in uni form this week ..
Last Friday at South Gallia, it took
.48 minutes and overtime to decide a

To be eligible fOr 'The OVP
10, a lllam mU81 either: a.) be
from the Mason-Galll•
Melghlackaon area; b.) be a
local con~Mwlce member; or
c.) play at least one game
agalnat localtasma.

C'"
CD

Pleose ~errfy for me that two
bro thers nam~:d Bjlly ~nd Dobby
Myers raced in NASCAR ir1 either
the lutt "50s or early "60s. I De lil:\·e
one of them was killed in !l wr~ck.
. .kMin Cllf!VN.'o&amp;CAR 1NI WM4I
AIIO. check to sct~ if • dri\·er named
"Crawfish~ or Curtis Crowder also
drt.Wc: at that time
Tony Bo!tl
Durham, N.C.
can do at every race.
Because we're looklog for
Hoh/11· Mrws died 1111 Sept. 1.
spongorshlp (In 2002)·~.,.,
':::-- - l'll1./flii rl~uhanJiii'fillgttml.l;;r:--might have more at stake
irtg ilw !:.'imlhl'rn JOfJ. Bil~i · ,\~\IUS,
k....
wlr11 wvn /ll"tl nues and O~t pule,
I"V
tnensomeoftheothers . ln
dil'diM .1pril/2, /tJJX, otr1 Jr 1w 1
other ways. We're ahead of a
auacll " 'hile rud11g In Win n m. .
.,.,
lot of teams in that Andy
Salem. N.C. He ~"as JJ a1thr tillte~f
Petr~e Racln&amp; has won a
hi., demh. Curtis '"Cmll"/ls.lr " Cride_r.
(II
race this year (Bobby
from Abht··ille, S.C. . oompererl.frr;m
Hamilton at Talleele8B), and
IYJ9 ro 1\l:dJ in a total o.f2J2 ruct.J.
11t'Wr f/11 is hlng betier rhun !It/rd.
both teams have proven they
are capable of running up
front:
• • • • • • • • • • •

1111t....., .......

I

FEUD Of THE WEEK

• Johnft)' Benson's
fatlter, 14-year-old .101111

A quc s1ion thn t w~s recently
asked rn the ··Your Turn "' scct'ion :
Why doesn't NASCAR do a race
with nil ri g ht turns'.' The correct
answer is: If the)" d rO\·c clockwise
on an O\'al. the driver's sr de would
De against rhe wall. 1Preny scary. I
·
·
T. 't'oung

DearNASCART~is Week.

~t-~:S-'-~!:!:~~!~--~~i-~:.~~0~of-Ru
after he nudged
Spencer, who started
dd-out-ofthe-thirct;""won-for the-thtrd""tlm·e--

BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL

llea r NASCAR Thi ~ Wl~k.

'""fl rh"rltrork.l o;;he .fchcdult."'

alarming regularity. reel-hot
racer Spencer was so wellbehaved that he might as
well have been participating
in the annual Vintage Grand
Prix. of Monterey, not the
Busch Series.Autolite Fra m
250 at Richmond
International Raceway.
Apparently Fram
sponsored the Friday night
race beca use it rhymed with
·bam ...

-~

way in the wani ng laps .
His_predicament, at the ·
end , came down to the
uneasy position of leading
anothe r driver. Rueld, whom
he could be fairly certain
was mad at him.
Sure enough , with six laps
to go, Rudd gave Harvick a
dose of his own medicine ,
putting his Ford on the left·
rear bumper of Harvlck "s
Chevrolet ana scooting past.

laH111

I

Team
Prev. Votn
1. Ironton
1 50 (5)
2. PMsmouth
3
45
3. Logan
4
38
4. Parkersburg
6
27
5. Waverly
7
25
6. Eastern
5
22
7. Ravenswood
9
19
2
18 . .
8. Gallipolis
9. Jackson
13
10. Marietta
9

RACINE - Southern (2-1) can
register its best opening mark in over
a decade with a win Friday over visiring Alexander.
Southern's only blemish came to
Berne Union in the season opener,
44-14; a game that ended a 24-game
skid by the Rockets. This week,
. Southern has a chance to keep intact ·
a I 9-game Alexander losing streak.
The Spartans have scored just once
this season. Alexander has experienced
losses of67-7, 44-0, and 27-0.
But on the flipside of that stat is

Coach Greg Halbert's belief "many
teams would be 0-3 after playing th ~
schedule we started with." Although
both sc hools are Tri-Valley Conference members, Fridays game is anonleague match-up.
Last season, Southern stormed·
through rhe Alexander Spartans 41-6,
fUeled by a 19,point third quarter.
Friday's conresr will be Round 2 of
student-against-mentor.
Rusty
Richards was a TVC standout at quarterback for Holbert's Trimble teams.
Southern's Joe Cornell , a year
removed from knee surgery, had two
touchdowns last year against the Spar-

Othera receiving votes: SE
Ross 7, Wellston 3.

rc
3

Your1Urn
mm 0. Readers

· Dear NASCAR This Weclr; .
Jtl1ink the Wimton Cup Sertes
should have a din-uack race at least
once a year. lmaairte 43 caro on a
di rt track: it wo uld be so tool ... It
doesn't h1ve to~ a points mce. And
"makt sure they don't •huw it on FX.
· Dennis Falrdotll
0-ford, Ga.
Tom• Srell"urf rece/H/1· made the
.tulfle .~uggl'.l"floll . W.lr e.n 1.1.~io"d ~·f
lfl(/f1! ro(lt/ I'Ollr.H!.~ Jlwuld ~added.
S1ewurt &gt;aid, ··1 iJ lfh 10 St'l' mu• or

•

·.c

-

Notable : No one ha s won
this race more than once .
Jack Sprague won for the
first time here earlier this
year.

NorthAttlrbnro,

8. (81 D. Earnhardt Jr. Made a nne run
1
I 9. (9) Ward Burton Faded badly at the end
! 10.(10) Ruoty Wallace Same old otory

Cl)

..

Rice rec:onl: Kenny Irwin,
Ford. 131.823 mph, June·6.

triumph

6. (4) Sterllnl Marlin Transmission trouble
7. (7) Bobby Labonte Best Ponttau at Richmond

RICHMOND, Va . - Ricky
Rudd proved the old ma.:.im
that what goe s around
comes around. and payback
was the operatlve .worel 1n
Rudd's victory Saturday
night In the Chevrolet Monte
Carlo 400.
Rudel's nemesis. Kevin
Ha rvick, seemed to have
I
elim inated all

180.373 mph. Oct 12.2000

••••••••••••

Jrmmle Johnson. 3.133 Denn•s Seller. 2.616
R1ck Crawford. 2,549
~nil)' wallace . 2.912
Cc.,- Gibb11, 2,284

WINSTON CUP

Deftndlnc: champion':
Bryan Reffner
Tntc:k qualifying record:
Bryan Reffner, Chevrolet.

1997

N~TIONAL

Ted Muctrave. 2.7Sfl

TOP TEN

•

When: 4 p.m ., Saturday

TtBYis KvBpll. 2.771

Chad l•ltle, 3.081

Mortal

region's top football teams,
as voted . by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. sports .
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

NASCAR Tills WHk
C/o The Oaaton Guatta

Tony Rarnes. 3.159
Rielly Hendrlclo.. 2.757
M1ke Mcll!ughlm. 3.151 Terry Cook. 2.654

•

A weekly look at the

you've cot • quutlon
or a comment, wrtta:

WINSTON CUP

Page 81

Thursday. September 13, 1001

l J Jj __:..j (.J JJ r J
j _]_,. ~ -.:../..r J _J

KFC

I

Golf notes, Page BJ
Terry Glenn te-instated, Page BJ

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

11/ll(liiJ

The Daily Sentinel

•

players nursing various InJUries. It is leads six returning starters on defense
not known if rhe .Red Devils will be from his defensive tackle spot.
Meigs, after struggling offensively
healthy this week.
The Red Devils are led by their the first two con test, broke out of its
record setting quarterback Brett Rec- , slump in last week's 27-7 win over
tor who threw for over 1,000 yards River Vallex.
last season's 5-5 team. The running
Meigs chalked up 16 first downs
backs are Dana "Moose" Raban, Josh and . 284 yards of total . yards. Buzzy
Miller and R. J. Balis. Rector threw Fackler had an outstanding game "for
touchdown passes of 12, 20 and 40 Meigs from his wide receiver slot.
yards last week.
Buzzy pulled in eight passes for 145
Also, place kicker Eric Redd ki cked yards and three touchdown. Junior
a school record 44-yard field goal in quarterback Kyle Hannan passed for
the contest.
100 yards and two of the score•, wh ile
Rabin, last year's leading tackler Jeremy Roush threw for 66 yards, one

score and J!so chipped in with 91
ya rds on the ground. Tyson Lee added
78 in just nine carri es.
On defense, the maroon and gold
limiied tho;, Raiders to only five first
downs and 168 yards of total offense.
Only 29 of those were through the
atr.

"Ravenswood has a lot of good
ski lled players," Marauder coach Mike
Chancey said. "They have good team
speed, it should be a good football
gan1e."
ALUMNI GAME - The newly
Please sle Meigs, Bl

�P~eB 2 •T~~~~~~~---~---------•P•o•~--~-M~~•d•l•e•~~rt•,•O•h•l~o~-~-------~~

Thursday, 5epl. 13, 2001'

Meigs still second -in TVC-Ohio

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

BY

DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT
Belpre won Wednesday evening's Oh1o
Division golf tournament held at The Elm.
Belpre took home the win With a 166, fol lowed by Wellston with a 169.
Meigs fimshed in third place with a 172,
Alexander had a 179, Vmron County a 190
and Nelsonville-York carded a 210.
Ryan Kent ofVmton County fired a three

Wlll.a Ccn&amp;J~If, OH

.

Call Today•••

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD.

t

i

I

%~

· AU Dlspley . 12 Noon 2

Cally In - Column 1 . 00 p.m.
Business Days Prior To
Monday-Friday ror Insertion
Publ ic ation
In Nut Day's Pa per
Sunday In-Column: 1: 00 p.m. Sunday Display 1:00 p m
Thursday for Sundays
For Sundays Papl!!r

Iro

L - -PERsoNALS
- - - - - - " Absolute Top Dollar: U S

116
HFlJ'WANm&gt;

DIETETIC TECHNICIAN

11

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!$
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

110
HFlJ'WANIFD

1

2001 Meigs Youth

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Pnced
• No Co mmercial Ads
• No Ticke ts/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Golf League:

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

POUCIES: OhJo 'IIIIey Publishing.....,..,.. ths right to Mit, NJ-Ct, or Clnoel any H lit any t1m1. Errora mult bt report.cl on tM first ct.-, of
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• Start Vour Ads With AKevword • Include Co mplete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrelo'latlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

Successful Ads
S hou ld Include These Items
To Help Get Res
\'\'\Ot \,( 1· \11·'\1"\

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Word Ads

11

IIFlPWANIID

I io

McClure's Reslauranl now The Vlllaga of Middleport

rI Mo:RE~OMEli I

r•---liiiiiiiii;,.-"
HOMEN

FOR SALE

rio

~~

It

~~

I·

2 bedroom home close to For Loose: One bedroom.
New 2002 fleetwood only town,
basement. River view,

sns

Sliver, Gold Coins, Proof· Must possess skills required hiring all 3 location•. full or needs a Building Inspector,
down and $160.85 per $425/ month, 3 bedroom In unfurnished, second floor
to assess the nutritiQnat part·tlme, pick up appl~a· 20 hours a weak. Sand ra- 3 Bedroom on Route 2. month,
call
Charyl, town, t-t/2 baths. Good lo· apartment, at corner of Sec·.
needs of our residents, lnl· tlon allocation &amp; bring back aume to VIllage of Middle- (304)675-5332
(7-40)385~7
cation . $5001 month. Refer· opendr m""ondthp, 'wneale~~~ lu$J~~:
Uate programs to meet batw"n
9 30am
&amp; pan, 237 Race St., Middle·
ences and deposit required. ~~- urlty a•d kAV deposit

...,

Why walt? Start meeting seta, Diamonds, Gold
Ohio singles tonight, call toll Rings,
U.S. Currency,·
free 1·800·766·2623 eKI MT.S Coin ShOp, 151 Sec·
1621.
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·
446-2842.

thooe needs and document I O:OOam, Monday thru Sat· port, Ohio 45760 by Sept. 3 Bedroom, I bath, I both
the progreu. A minimum ot urday.
28th.
on Main Street, ri¥flf' view
an Associate degree lrom
on Main St., Pomeroy (740)
ANNouNCEMI'NJ'S 1
an accredited two year pro- Mechanic lor hire, 5 years URGENTLY
NEEDED· 992-8998
gram in Nutrition and/ or e)lperience, Wolle's Auto plasma donor1, eam S45 to
rfil;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Clinical Dietetics Is required. Repair, 30 Sycamore $60 tor 2 or 3 hours weekly.
New To You Thrift Shoppe 1110
Also must be able to obtain Street, (740)441·1803
Call Sera-Tee, 740·5929 West SUmson, Athens
HELP WAN'IID
membership In, and regis·
6651
740·592·1842
tration by the American 01• NHd Job
Security,
Quality clothing and house·
letlc Association 88 well as $1,0001$5,000.+ Month. Mason, experience needed,
hold 1tems $1 00 bag sale 100 WORKERS NEEDED maintain contln~lng educa· Work Fmm Homo, Free In· commercial job, Canal Win·
every Thursday. Monday A&amp;semble crafts, wood
lion as required hu the fo. 1·888·447-7813
chester, competitive pay,
thru Saturday 9 00·6 00.
Items Material provided Commission on Regl;~atlon Now • - 11 •• 11 11
signing bonus, call Kim at All real ..tate actvertlalng
,
To $480+ wk
-~P ng .,_p ca ons 1740)383-5280
fn lhlo nowwpopor Ia
- - - - - - - - ·Freolnformatlon pkg 24 Hr of tho Amerlcan Dietetic As· for PIT Sale Clerk Apply In
oubjooltolho F-.1
SELLING YOUR TIMBER?
1·801·264·5625
sociatlon E)lperience pre- Person at Kipling Shoes At. Someone to take care of my Fllr Houaing ACt of 1818
IT PAYS TO GET PAOFES
·
tarred, If you 111 these ,. :.2.:.B&lt;.:YP;::•;::ss;_oi:.:. :.Po.:.:. ln.;.tP;_l;::ea::sac:nc;;.t. mother In mv home, $5.50 wh~
tt IJteQII to
qulrements and have good
an hour, 8.308 m_ 12.30pm,
·
~~~a~~ 8111A~=I~A~~~~ lntematl!~1 ~::..ass
oral amf wrttten skills, Point P1o1asaNnt Moko1se (740)3e7-o 302
pme:':m..
x...... .
please apply at Holzer Sa- Lodge 73
ow ta ng
•
Consulting Forester. RR 1 eKpanding $251$75hr. PIT n1or Care cenler 380 COlo- appllcatton9' for Clerical
dlacrlmln~tlon baNd on
Box 458 Leon, WV 25123 Fff S00.588-3713
nial Drille, Bidw811, OH, or wonc. Office/Computer skills
r1ce, cok)r, N16g1Dn,ux
(304)458-1656. or emalllur· www.mogabucks4you.net
call (740)446-5001 ask for 8 must, and basic accounl·1 140
B~
flmllllllat.tu1 or natlomll
ayma.x@ezwv com •For·
ATTENTION
Eula or Martie.
lng Also needing a bartendTRAINING
origin, or 1ny lnltntk»nto
malty 24yr. Wood Industry
er.
m1 a 1 nu auch
Forester, 11yr. WVU For·
WE NEED HELP!
Domino's now taking appli·
ptefelence,ll~~ or
eatry Professor &amp; Syr Otrec$500-$1500 PT
cations lor management Professional Tank Truck Gelllpolll Clreer College
dlterlmlnation."
tor of WV Division ot ForestS2,D00-$6,000 FT
and sale d~vers GaHtpolls Transport Drivers Grow with (Careers Close To Home}
ry
Free Training
•
a Leader Enterprise Trans· Call Todayl740-448·4367,"
·
1·866·807-AICH
and Pomeroy OOattons only portation Company The
Thlt MWaPIPif wNI nol
1.80Q.2l4.0452,
www.comeworkwithme.com Apply in person .
Quality Link. Immediate
Reg 190.05-12748.
knowingly accept
GIVEAWAY
f
o1 1 15
lldvertiHn"'enta for rul
Attn. LPN's, AN's, EMT's Earn Cash by losing 2·81bs openings or pr ess ona 1170
eatlte which 111n
nd- Pa.amM,cai-Becomo-PftLWl'.eL.i..lm[ed..SRacss~lih our_grJ!.wJ!lg qgmpeny.
MlscEu.ANEous
vlolorlan ottho lowcDurOFFER
$3,000 SignPay
on
rudoro oro......._
5 Fuzzy Kttten, liter tratned an RN or BSN graduate and Apply
www heallhy4u net today' WE
bonus.
"Outstanding
,
(304)675·5801
after Increase your Income with·
and Benefits •safety 1999 Ca 't I~ 6' 10'
lnronnedtnaUH
J·OOpm
out going back to school! To Expenenced RooUng Fore- Awards Program "Up-To· fully lnsul~~~ r$2~ ~ar:
mw,illnoaldYartllad In
schedule you Interview In man· famll!ar In all phases Date Equipment •compa- vard Pin P0n table, like
this newapt~per.,.
8 weeks, I gray klnen , I Barboursville, call E¥elyn ot residential rooting ~xpe· ny-Matching 401 (k) Pro· new $2~0 1g RPM re·
IWIIIable orun tqulll
blackcaflco,2str~pedtigers Hunt by September 19 1· rienced Lead Carpentar·fa· gram "Husband &amp; Wife
d
S2 00
h
opponunttybuft,
1740)992·3201
800·737-2222
mlllar In all phases rosiden- Teams Welcome • Steady ~~,C:j742·2512
eac .
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or tall construction· sldi~. win· Work "Uniforms Fumlshed
:) bedroom, Racine, family
YARD SALE
Sell Shirley Spears, 304· dows, deccks, etc. Top pey SUCCESSFUL
CANOl· Mausoleum apace, third lo•· area, $37,500, 1740)949·
wlbonusos EXPERIENCED DATE REQUIREMENTS
el high Mamonal Gardens 3228.
L,~-------_.1. 875·!429.
ONLY NEED
APPLY. '21 Years Old 'COL w1th (740)992.78II or (740)992'·
Be Your Own Bossi
Immediate hire Christian Hazmet and Tank Endorse- 0633 paid s4600 want For sale by owner: Nice bl·
YARD SAih
From Homel
Construction, Inc . 1403 ments. ·ocT Qualified •Two $3000
,
level home on 1 acre near
--.OGOiAUJPOiiiiOiiiiliusiiiiio-,.1
Eam
$50()..$8000/MO
Eastem
Avenue,
Gallipolt&amp;
Years
Experience
"Clean
1::~-":':'~---.,
Chester
Three bedroom,
L,
PT/FT
(740)448-4514
Driving Record 'Stable Em-~180
WANI'ED
two baths, one-car garage,
~
No E~tperience Necessary
ployment Background.
T Do
family room wilh tireplaca,
Friday, September 14th, 1.888_27()-()()64
FAMILY HOMES Is current- OWNER/LEASE OPERA·
0
sun room Now central heat·
sponsored by the ~elephone www.Never9To5Agaln.com ly accepting re~umes tor the TORS NEEDED Ouanerly
lng &amp; ale svstem One ml·
p1onears of Amenca, toea·
position of Of11ce Manager Mileage Pay Guarantee . All Make Mowers, Lawn nute off Route 7, but still pri!ton Amentech SBC Garage
Child C1re Workera
In thetr Pomeroy Busmess INTERESTED DRIVERS Tractors, Tillers Repaired. vale 1740)985•3981
on route 160. Proceeds go Pan-time child care workers Office. Applicants should SHOULD CALL 1.800·6.24- Free plck·up, Dell¥ery Availto commun1ty seMce.
needed for after school pro- have the fotlowiAg quallfica· 2857 EOEIM·F 8_5pm.
able. 21 Years Experience. New Brick Ranch Home on
gram for eiJlOiionally or be- tiona and/or expertence to
Call Mike (740)446-7604
2.4 acres. 5 minutes rrom
· Moving 5ale- Friday &amp; Sat· haviorally~hallenged &lt;:hll- be conslclered for employ- REM Community Options Is -,..---'--'----- Holzer. 3 Bedrooms, 3
urday, 62 Myrtle Avenue off dran In Mason County ment
seeking to fill two positions David's General Contracting Baths, Open Kitchen/ Faml·
State Route 7 North across Some duties Include particiin the PI Pleasant area to Plumbtng, electncal, paint~ ly Room, Den, Mud Room,
from MTI
paling ln recreational acti'll· • Mlnlmumoltwayears
work with a child with au· ing, decks, roofs. Call Basement, In· ground Pool,
ttes, building SOCial skills. a~tperlence In Bookkeeping/ tism. Positions available In- (740)256~9373 (304)633· Storage Building, Smiths
Mul!t yard sale· 1.8 miles and monitoring behalo'lor Accounting and/or Associ· elude
,
6265
Gablnets. (740)446·0149
trom 141 on Netghborhood Must have HS diploma/ ales Degree In Accounting Coordinator: Provides direct .::.:.:..-.,-----,.
Road, September 14-15, GED, valid driver's license or Business Management services in the home and Georges Portable Sawmill, Newly constructed, single
6am·.5pm, ~by Items, adult and be willing to transport or equivalent education In a community providing life don't haul your logs to the SIOfy 1600 sq. foot home
clothing, mtsc
Children E~tperlence wllti Bachelor's Degree Pro· skills training. Starting pay mtH just caM 304·675-1 957. Located 10 minutes from
H 1 H ltal 20 1 to
Yard Sale· Wednesday children preferred. Visit our gram.
is $6 85 per hour, with avail· Ll ht/ Medi
Hauling o zer osp ' m nu s
September 12 Thursda ' website
at • Must Possess excellent In· ability of medical/dental · g
um
from Pleaqnl Valley Hospt·
13th &amp; Fnday t4th Starts www.prestera org for appll- terpersonal communication benelils, life insurance, (740)388·8769
tal, off SA 160 on a private
9 ooam at so 1 Rdtsh Lane, cation, apply· tn person, skills and excellent business 401K plan, and fle)lible' Quality housecleaning, lm- 1·1/2 acre lot 3 bedroom,
Cheshire, off Route 7 above or send appl resume to.
~rltlng skills
scheduling.
maculate, natlculous, de- 2·112 balhs, big kitchen
Cheshtre Old glassware, all
PRESTERA CENTER
Must be capable of ~perat· Respne Providef. Acontract tailed cleaning The abso- w/oak cabinets, OR, LR
size clothes girls and wornKarl Haobloon.
lng Microsoft Windows position that provides lute best CaD lor a free estl- wlges log fireplace, central
ens all slz~s- plus X·large
Employment Spectal
based Operating ' System relief/respite services to mate (740)256·1131 or 1- air, hla~n~~/2 room, front
womens. Household items
3375 Route 60 E.
and Mk:rosoh Office Soli· family on an as needed ba· 888-781·2412.
pore
• car garage
ot different ktnd Fumtture
Hunltngton, WV 25705
ware (Excel, Word , Power sis. Starting pay is $9.40
Immediate possession. Apsome anttques
EOEIAA
Point, Access).
per hour, responsible . for J"op to Bottom Cleaning praised at $125,500, asking
' E•porlence with Quick- own taxes. Flexible achodul· Service, professional, real- $125.500. Call (740)448·
4
YARDSALECIVIL ENGINEERING
books Pro is preferred, but inglsa¥eilable· For more in· dential, otuce cleaning at 4514 from &amp;-Spm, M·F, or
PoMERo IMmoL..E FIELD TECHNICIANS· En· now required
!ormation contact Greg an affordable price Refrlg· (740}448-3248 alter Spm
Lw-.liiiiiiiilll.i~-l::li-;.1 try Level and Experienced, • Expenence in the con· Messenger at (304)768- erators, stoves, freezers al·
.
p~efer Assocl~tes Degree li'l struct1on Industry Is prater· 5575
so
(740)992·2979 or Nice older home, 2 BR, liv·
8114·15, 11118 tamtly ftrst this CIVIl Englneenng Technolo- red, but not required.
(740)992·1391
lng room, dining room,
year, scrubs, desk, typewrit· gy and/ or certifiCations
AN- LPN
kitchen. pantry, utility room,
ers, love seat, biCYcles, re· (OOOT Le¥ell or ACI
Duties Include basic office We have available bot~ full· Will do·tree trimming andre· lull size ante, gas furnace,
mote control truck &amp; lots Certtf·
management
accounts time ana part-lime positions moval C&amp;!l lor free estl· central air, Racine, $35,000,
more, next to old L&amp;L hre, icatlon). ~erlonn construe- payable, accOunts recalva· for the right candidate. You mate (304)675·7210 or ~17 40p.)9~49'!'·.20•7•0""!''!""-'""'
33851 Pine Grove Road tton materials testing and
ble, and payrol. Opportunl· must be a licensed RN or ~17.;.40=)9.:.92:.·::.368=9---- 111 MOBD..E HOMES
(740)992·1093
' observation of concrete,
lies exist for additional du· LPN and be a sincere, car· Will haul away, clean out,
FOR SALE
':--'-~------ sons and asphalt Posttton ties and responstbiliUes 11 lng Individual, dedicated to clean up, mo'lle almost any· L w - - - - - - - "
Forest Run Ad Minersville is
qualified ThJs posl1iOA •Of• enhancing the lives of our
o·
II (near Forest Run Church) in Galllpolts area Resume ters thQ potential ol upward seniorS. If you meet these thing. ther odd jobs Ca 14"70 Mobile Home with
44 760 4
7
40
F'riday, Sept. 14th and Sat- to CTL Engtnaering Inc.
mobility and provtdea a qualifications, please apply ~1;.;;::.c.l;.;6-;;..:.::.:.;____ 10)128 manufactured add-on
urday, Sept 15th Ntce 2860 Fisher Road, Colum· ' competitive salary with ben· at Holzer Senior Care Cen· Wlll power wash houses, asking $7500 (304)675clothes, wood school desk bus, OH 43204 (taK 614·
eflts
tar, 380 Colonial Drive, Bid· trailers, anything Call 1186
&amp; chair, baskets, craHs and 278-63n) email·
well, OH, or call (740)448· (740)441-4238 or 1740)448· _ . ; _ - - - , - - - much more (740)992·6373
orestegOctleng.com
Interested applteants should 5001 and ask for Eula or 0151 ask for Ron If no 16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
EOE
call 1·800·266·1894 to Martie.
answer, lea¥e message.
Month, 8 99% Fixed Interest
Garage sale· 3/4 mtle New AN EMPLOYEE
OWNED schedUle an lnlervtew. A
.
RaJe With Alr And UnLima, Rutland, Sept 13th &amp;
COMPANY.
cqpy of your re&amp;dme and salesperson needed: lurnl·
.. de~lnnlng 1·688·928·3426
14th, turntlure, Halloween
CNA's
retarences wtll be required ture store Immediate open- ~i:i:1 o~;;;;;;;:~,;;;;;
~
·;;;;;;;;;;;;-..,~
Items, more.
COOK'S
to Interview.
l~, lufi-U ,;,. position. Apply.
~u~
1982 14X58 Oakbrook Mo~ARY A
S
n.-..nrn TLII'I'V
bile Home. Good Condition.
DI "'·
~ YARD SA!.EIDE
Full·llme Gill/ floral poallion. lleotyle Furniture, 856 Lw-.;vnv-iliftliii'~llil""iioo
'_.1. $5,000 (304)882-3893
LAUNDRY AIDES
Apply at Fruth Pharmacy. Third Avenue, Gallipolis, ~
Pr. I'LFAsANr
ACTIVITIES AIDES
INOTICE I
1st Tlme Buyers· Call Oak204 2nd """nue Gallipolis OH 9'30·5·00 No Phone
Excellent benefits
For OH
'
'C
.:..:.•1.:.1•-;__ _:--::-.,- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· wood, Gallipolis todayl
Big Movmg Sale Plymale prompt consideration. apply .::.:..:.·_ · - - - - - - cc
Lane, Oalltpohs Ferry. In parson at Scenic Hills Scenic HHis Nuratng Canter Scenic Hills Nursing Center lNG CO recommends that Gov't backed program· buy
do business witDpeople local (740)448·3093
Thursday, Fnday,and Satur- Nuralng Center, 311 Buck· Is now accepting appllca· Is preparing to hold a Nuns- you
you know, and NOT to send
day, September 13·15, ridge Road , Bidwell, OH lionl for Certified Nuralng lng Assistant Training class money
through the mall until 28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On·
9am·?1 Everything must 45814. There Ia a labor dla· Alalstanta tor the following beginning Septembsr 17, you have
Investigated tho ly $345.00 Per Month
Go!
pule atthlo place o1 employ· poolliono. 2 lull· limo e-2, 3 200 I. Anyone lntereatod offering.
8.99% Fixed Interest Rate,
- - - - - - - - mont Thoee pooHiooa are lull·tlmo 2·10, and 1 lull· needlto apply In poroon at _ ; - - - - - - : - : - 1·888-928·3428
Yard Solo 2221 Joffereon. ol!ortd In placa of employ· tlmo 10-8. Ploaoa opply In 311 Buckrf~ Road Bid·
Thuro., Frl., Sat Old Fumi- eeo Involved In tho lobor poroon ot 311 auokrldgo woll, ,OhiO 4 ,. bltwlon Provon S1 ,000 Truo Woolth &amp;4 14x70 Ookwood, muot
moved, 2 bedroom, 2 run
turo, Slg men/women dloputo. EOE. WFIH.
' Road Ii-I. Ohio o~&amp;el• &amp;am ond 4:30pm. Tho cllll Syllam. 1·81!8-888·78011.
Start Your Buolnooo To· bllhl, oomH with txtru.
olothoo, MoCoy Canlotor CNA' . HHA'
Denllled or odohohanlt ~trftpor II ~ ''" ol ohargo.
baby ltoma, houllhold hom;;,tklrt ~ 1o pro- (740)~ 1150.
Soon Ia Hlllo Nurtlng Dentor cla1-·· Pnmt Sl1opplng can. 115,000. (740)44t-8337
tomo.
vldt In homt ttr\11011 for
II loolcll)g lor 2 tun·tlmt II· 1tr SPIOI Available At AI· H mobllo 11omo on own lol,
ld
r1
/dl
bled
1
Muon
a
01noad
proolloal nurote, loraablt Alit. S~tg Vallt'f lOIII tltO. lot II 110 dOO.
1 1 Y N
n
c111 Http wilftttd oartn; lor lht one lor 11·7
and one 101 S·
7
1 1
and olty wallr on
P.utna~
oou~ arau. • aldlrl~, Darar Qroup Homt, 11 lllnltrHitd, piHH oall 111P!IIIuar.iCtillpn40iiiili~·0~Ot··, ltwtr
landhNI Ad. :104-171•1111
1 111 o1No4
now poYin; minimum wage, ltephanla ~ampar at
Abendonad Doubltwldl•
- lltlnt: 7am·3pm, 7amo (740l4&lt;1H 110 or ooma In
RIOit Pltrton Auotlon Com· .
lr• lli•up a dtKvtry, Mu~
PUNDIIAIIfNG
lpm, 3pm•11pm, 11pm• and INI ou1an applloatiOn In
pan1, lull tlml IUCIIOnttr,
rt· 1 only. (7•o)oi4HOIS
DIIIIOTOII
7am, oall 740·111·1015.
ptrton 11 S1 1 luokrld;t
oomplelt auollan etrvlot.
TUIINID DOWN ON
LIOtnlld tM,OitiO I Wttl
Momeworktra Nltded HSI lload, l ldWtll, Ohio •Hf•. IOCIA~ IICUIIITV /Ill? Alhltnd PIIIIWood 1001
Nttcltd for rour aroa
VIrginia, 304-771·1111 Or
lo warfl wfl~ tohoolt,
Wttkl~ P'rootNing Mill loenlo Hlllt II an ~UII Qp•
No ~II UnltH WI Win ~ Doubltwlda 121.12t Tall
304o77S.8447.
I'TNt lnd ooaohtl.lll. eo. 11111
Na
lxporltnoi ponunlly tmployor,
1·111·112·1341
Prte 111·101·1118 10 min
~. l ei yr. IIOIIOIC
Nttded. Ctll loiOC•III·
from Hun11nglon
NO N .. INO
1711 lxt, 2070, a•Hrt

r

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:."J'onor

f!':r--o:-----.,

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...

TVC OHIO DIVISION GOLF STANDINGS
1. Bel!&gt;~e 30 points, 2 Maiys 22, 3. Wellston 17; 4 . Alexander
15; 5 Vilton County 6, 6. Nelsonville-York
0 ·

The 2001 season of the
Meigs Youth Golf League
held at the Pine Hills Golf
Course ended recently.
The league • conmted of
boy's and girl's age eight
throu gh high school. There
were 42 golfers takmg part in
this year's league.

1\.egister
~ribune
Sentinel
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Your Ad,

over par 38 for match medahst honors. Meigs
was led once again by Jeremy Banks with a
39,Josh Napper added a 42, Ben Bookman a
43 and Josh Ray a 48 .
Metgs will play once again on Thursday at
Oxbow.

Now blnk ~ 14x70 3 (740) ... ~..
" -,
'
--~.
R"loronces
r~u
bedroom, 2 ··~·
bath· Pay $499
u
'"'"" l red. No
&amp; mov•ln O.kwood· Galllpo 3 bedroom home Minersville pets. (740)446-4425
olio. (740)446-3()93
area, river vlow, references
required , deposit required, Gracious ll11ing. 1 and 2
New Double Wide. $195 no pet&amp;, 740-992-6777 after bedroom apartments at Vtl·
Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 5pm,
lage Manor and Aiverstde.
Bath. Free Oellvsry &amp; Set· :::::::________ Apartments In Middleport
up. 1-888·928·3428
3 Bedroom, Pomemy, river From $278-$348. Call 740•·
view, $350/mo., references 992·5064. Equal Housing~
Aohland Fleetwood Soptam· required, (740)992-4451, al- .:O:;::ppo~rt::u:;:nil:;:l•::s:__ _ __
btir special 2002 14x70 tar 4pm.
3bd/2ba. $19,990 Free Del. :::.::=::::_______ Modern 1 bedroom apart·
&amp; Setup. Toll Free 1·866- Collage suitable lor single mont, 1740)446-0390
805·6619
or couple $260.00 Lincoln
Ave call Homestead 304· Now Taking Applications- .
35 West 2 Bedroom Town·· Beautiful 3 year old 16x80 675·5540 ask lor Nancy
mobile home, wllh cathedral
house Apartments, Includes,
ceilings on 5,17 acres, with Pilot Program, Renters Water Sewage, Trash,
HX&gt;' block garage, city wa- Needed, 304·736·7.295
$350/Mo., 740·446·0008
ter, in Alexander School Syracuse· new house on PLEASANT
VALLEY
District In Meigs County, river, 2 bedroom, bath &amp; APARTMENTS Are tak1ng
(740}698·7170
hall, 2 car garage, big Applications for 2BR.3BR &amp; ~"~~I
home
deck,
$700 a month plus 4BR , Apphcahons are taken
55 445
~~ m0d:";kyllr1e, 3 $700 deposit, (740)385- Monday thru Friday, Ol1tce
bedroom, 2 bath, total alec· 1159.
Is Located at 1151 Ever·
tric, vinul &amp; shingle, low -r-L.I
l"catlons lor a 2 green Drive Point Pleasant, 1
,
,-. ng app t
wv Phone (304)675 5806...
monthly payments, dell¥· bedrooms in 8 quiet netgh- E H0
·
.
ered &amp; setup Includes skirt· borhood
(740)446·6939 .
lng &amp; steps, Coles Mobile leave message
Tara Townhouse Apart·
Homes, US 50 East, Ath·
·
1
ono, Ohc740.592·1972- -c - MOBFOO;ER
· ~1,!.~
""" 0
Final Days, Nationwide In·
Ad
!lparpletpe,a . .
ventory
Reduction!
u11
oo' a· .
(304)736-o3:.409
2 bedroom trailer In the tio, Start
No Pet~, ,
country, washer/ dryer Leas~ Plus Security Depostt
For aale by owner, 3 bed· hookup, large yard, $300 Requ~red , Days 740·446room Schult mobile home. rent plus utiUttes, $200 de· 3481 , E¥enlngs 740·367 ·
Very nice, financing avella· posit (740)256-6202
0602. 740·446-01 01
bla. (740)446·3583.
land·homo . packages· all 3 bedroom mobile homo In Apartment Available Now
areas. Prequallly by phone. Middleport,
no
pets,
Coil
I740)446-35B3
(740)992·5858
Tlvin River Towers
..:,..;.:.:.:.:.:;:.:.:;;______
(304}675-6679
Umilad Or No Credit? Gov· 2 bedroom, 2 bath, beautttul for application . HUD subsl·
emment Bank Finance Only MH, large fenced yard, tront dlzed apt for elderly and
At Oakwood tn Bertours· &amp; blck decks, 12 miles lrom
disabled EHO.
ville, wv 304-736-3409.
Gallipolis, no pets, 1 year "l:l:r--""!~---.,
lease negotiable, $200 de· rr.
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom posit, $425 per month.
SPACE
Onl)t$19,850. Free Delivery (304)736·7268 for appoint· Lw.·--roO.RiOoiRFNriiiiiii.-"
&amp; Set Up. 1·888·928·2426 ment.
417 Second Avenue, GaUip·
New 16)(80, 3 bedroom, 2 3 bedroom with axpando &amp; oils, Ohio, 3 room office
bath, only $500 down, call central air, wat8f &amp; trash
Nikki (740)385-4367.
paid, 740·992-2167 tor ap· suite, formerly Kelly Serv·
m:r---::-...--., polntmenl.
ices. Call DQn Sta nle9'
FARMS
!:::::::::::;;::______ ~17_4_0:..)44
_6_·_1 7_6_1 _ _ __
FOR SALE
~~~~'::fo~~,~~:~cur:~ Full equipped beauty salol) ,
for rent in Gallipolis. .
Bullskin Road, no pets, 1740)446-7130
189 acres· approximately. 7 $350 deposit, $350 rent per :.:.::c.:.:.:.:.:.::____
room, 1 bath house, bam month
plus
utilities. Mobile Home lot for rent I"
and outbuildings. Willow· ~(7:.:40:::!:)2:::;66::,-8.::.:;192:::.,____ Mtddleport, $125 per mon\n
wood, Ohkl. First Federal a~ . 1 R
1740)992·3194
savings Bonk (740)532· ~aut1fu lver View Ideal ':..:c.:::::.:.:.:.:...____
6845
For 1 Or 2 People, Referen· :Ci---::----....., ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· Off10e/ Retail space lor rent
Bll'i~NFX'&gt;
ter Trailer Park, 740·441· in Gallipolis. Newly remod·
AND BunmNGS
:0~18::'::.·_..:..__ _ _ _ _ eled, plenty of parktng
__
,
(740)446·7130
New 16x80, really nice, CIA,
\II IH II\ '\IHSI·
Offlco building In Minors· $425/mo. $300 deposit, wa· r.;p:;======~
ville, 600 sq. ft., ale, COY· tar &amp; trash Included, nice
HOUSEHOlD
ered parking, ceiling fan, neighborhood , no pets.
s275/mo., 614·876·1661 . (740)256-1664
Goons
Lars &amp;
Two bedroom 12x60, $320
'
ACREAGE
month, deposit, AJC, no 2 Whirlpool washer, $65, 1
~~---iiiiiiiii;,._.l pets, reterences required GE washer, $60 , all white,
-·
,17j.!40jp):;;99;;:2:,·;:;54;.:7,;,7;,..- - - . . , Kenmore &amp; Whirlpool dryers
$f}O each Call aHer Spm
1-1 112 acre lot, flat w/sew· r.1
(140)446-9068
er, 2 miles out at RU11and on
APAR'I1\IENrS
Cremeans Rd., no mobile
FOR Rmr
homes
(740)742·2803 ·--iilliltiiiliiiii.-,J Appliances: Recond•lloned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
-leave nlessage.
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Refrlgrators, Up To 90 Days
Indian Creek Equestrian Es· menta, tunitshed and unfur· Guaranteed! We Sell New
lates, 3-6 acre lots, west of nlshed, security deposit re- Maytag Appliances, French
Rio Granda, from $25,800. quired, no pots, 740·992· City Maytag, 740·446-7795
2218.
1740)245·5747
Danc. blue chair with Queen
Looking To Buy A New 1 Bedroom Apartment, Re· Anne legs {$80) and be1go
Home? Don't Have Land? frigaratgr, Range, AJC In· Bench Craft rocker recline~
We Doll I Hurry Only 10 Lots eluded, $289 Plus Deposit &amp; ,IS;_75:.:l.:.l7:..4c:Ol:.:4.:;48:.·7;::2::.7.;.1----,
LaH, 304-738-7295.
Rof.eronce. HUD Approved For Sale: Racondltionod
NEAR RIO GRANDE. A 1740)44 1-1 519
washers, dryers and refng·
beautllul 5 acre tract located 1 Bedroom Apt, Water/ erators Thompsons Appil·
on Centerpoint Ad, for ON· Trash Paid, Near Porter, ance 3407 Jackson A~
LY $12,320. For more Info References Required. No nue, (304)675·7388.
and FREE maps contact Pete, 1740)388·1100
Giveaway sofabed &amp; couch
Anthony Lind CO., Lid.
80C).21W3t5.
1&amp;2 bedroom , near Holzer, 85' long In Pt Pleasant area
www.alcland.com
economical utlltltes, $279 to 304-875·3937
--'--'--'-'-'----- $379 per month plus utilities
Main Street Fumlturo
River Lots lor aala,ln Han- (740)448-2957
1304)675-1422
ford, WV Public Water &amp;
515 Main Street. Point
Sewer Available. Avg. 112 duple)( tor rent, 1 bed·
Pleasant
60&gt;&lt;160. Colll304)882·2607 room, $325 per month, it'a·
or 1304)882·2898
tor Included. Lower 4th Avenue. 1740)446·8677 da~s
No\11 &amp; Used Furniture: ·
HI '\ I \ I "
{740)258·1972 evenings. •
New '2 Place Llvlngrown
;;;:=:;;;;:::::::=:, IIAUTIFUL
APART· Suiteo,
Trade. $399 Buy, Sell,•
MENTI AT IUDO!T PAl·"
~
Cll AT JACKSON !8· Now And Uood Furnltur,
..... TATII, &amp;2 W•twood Orivt Storo Bolow Holiday Inn,
ii
from 1287 1o 1383. W,olk to Koneuga. Wo Soli Gravo
t 3 Bod
F IOIOIId lhop &amp; rnovltt. Ctll 740• Monumonto And Vaooo.
1
H.;,• ~,::"1 1 ~., . , 441·11H. Equal Houolng Twa bedroom oholt draw•
Down, 30 Yllra at U'llo Opportunity.
ere, very good oondltion,
AP'~ . '•r Uttlngo, 100-318· Chrltly'l Pamll~ Living, 1181. (740)~•8-7221
11325 lXI, 1701.
:13140 Ntw Uma flld ,, Aul•
~
land, OhiO, 740·741-7403.
AN'I1"'"""'
1 bedroom, NC, rtlrlgara· Apa~monl, homt and !railer L. .•••"i.
~~
--'
lOti '~:1 ~tllllnott "' rtnllll, Commttalll a1ort· .,
Qu rod. I 10 mon1h, 110 Jron11 avallablt lor ltaH. lkiV or ttll ~lverlnt Anll•
IIIII l1rat1. 1740)~·11117 VIOIIIOIII flOW,
QUII, 1114 lilt Main on
S ltdroom MOUN In ~ra· f'umlahtd tllklltno~. all ufll• 11'1 11• 1. ~omoroy, 740·
ou11. Ohio, ••sci Mtinth ltl• pakf, lhara bllh, 1115 181·1811 !'lull Moore,
HUO Approved (504)171• mon1h, t1 8 2nd Avtnut. owner.
13:11 Wllklndt only
(U0)4&lt;11·5841. .

I

1

AGES 8-12
I ot PLACE - JaCOb Hunter and Patrick
Johnoon; 2nd PLACE (Uo) - Bradley
Jones and Steven Stewart, Kirk legar and
J. A. Green; 3111 PLACE (lfe~lh Del·
twiller and Edge! Gobel, Evan Ounn and
Dru Reed
AQES 13 AND UP
111 PLACE- Eric VanMeter and Andrew TROPHY WINNERS -The following youngsters won troWhiled; 2nd PLACE - Daniel Bookman phies at this years Meigs Youth Golf League, 1st row (1·r):
..8nd Mike Lavender
3rd PLACE - Tyler French and Adem ' Daniel Bookman, Mike Lavender, Edge! Goble, Bradley
Wolfa
Medalists; Haath Oettwlllor, Bryan Harris, Jones and Dru Reed. 2nd row: J. R. Green, Kirk Legar, Bryan
Eric VanMetat', Jeremy Banks and Andrew Harris, Patrick Johnson, and Eric Johnson. 3rd row: Andrew
Whiled.
Wolfe , Andrew Whited, Jeremy Banks and Evan Dunn.

Arbitrator re-instates Terry Glenn
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) An arbitrator overturned
Terry Glenn's season-long
suspension Wednesday, allowing him to rejoin the New
England Patriots for their
fifth game.
The fourth leading receiver
in team history still must
complete a four-game NFL
suspension for violatmg the
league's substance-abuse policy. His agent, James Goulp,
said there are no plans to
appeal that now.
"We are very gratified,"
Gould said m a telephone
mterview.fium his Cincinnati
office. "Terry's looking for_....Y.~~ to returning to the club
is excited about the
prospect of contributing to
the team's success."
Glenn is not allowed to
practice or play · With the
team during hJS suspension.
The arbitrator's decision
cannot be appealed unless the
team challenges It in court,
said R1c hard Berthelsen, genera! counsel of the NFL Players Association.
The
Patriots
weren't

inclined to do that
NFLPA lawyers at the hearCoach Bill Behchi ck, who mg •. said he wasn't surprised
suspended Gl e nn -after he by the decision against the
stayed away from training season-long suspension.
camp without permisstOn,
"It's such a draconian measa1d in a statement, "We hope sure to use agamst a player
that his desire to be reinstated that I think any neutral arbi1s a positive sign and ev1dence trator's going to err on · the
of his willingness to con- side of the player," Berthelsen
'tribute to the team th1s sea- said.
v
son."
Glenn left camp Aug. 3
Still unresolved is how when '1c was notified of the
~ much Glenn will be pat d. The four-g a me
suspension
ruling means Glenn will get impo se~ by the NfL. The
his $480,000 salary and per- team sent him a letter as preformance bonuses, possibly scribed m the collective bardecreased by the four games gaining agreement saying it
h e must miss .
could suspend him after a
The parti es also are at odds fifth
day of unexcused
over how much_ofhiuignin!Yg_jllab.,sences. _ _
bonus Clenn should get, but
The ream suspended him
Berthelsen said that case "is Aug. 15 when 1t put him on
not likely to be heard for the reserve-left squad list. On
some time."
the previous day, the team
Arbitrator Richard Blo ch and Gould discussed the pasruled after holding a 13- hour sibJlity of Glenn returning,
hearing last Thursday at Berthelsen said.
Foxboro Stadium. The deadAlthough other issues were
hne for mal\ing the decision discussed at the hearing,
was Tuesday, but its release Bloch ruled on narrow
was delayed because of the grounds
involving
that
terrorist attacks.
sequence of events, he added.
B e rthelsen, one of three

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Meigs

in to play under th e name of
the Meigs Marauders, in its
first year of consolidation.
All players are asked to be
at the game at b:30 and to
report to the Sidehners
Club tent whi c h IS located
next to the back ga te.
The players wtll have a
chance to visit and begin to
organize for the pre -game
ceremony.
An attempt bas been made

fiJNII Page In
'
formed Meigs Marauder
Sideliners Club will be
sponsoring Alumni Night
this Friday evemng. The
Club will honor the 1967
SEOAL C hampion Marauder~ before the game. The
196 7 team was the first ever

NFL

Meigs youth golf league wraps up play

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

GOLF ROUNDUP

\!Crtbune - Sentinel - 1\.egister
CLASSIFIED

In one week With us

Thursday, ~pt. 13, 2001

fromPIIpB1
His NFL counterpart, Paul Tagliabue, was
well aware of predecessor Pete Rozelle's decision to go ahead with games two days after the
assassination of President Kennedy in 1963.
The late Rozelle long regretted that choice.
"I made ·the deciston:' he once said. " In retrospect, I wish I hadn't."
Plenty of NFL players were adamant: They
want games canceled.
"If we do play Sunday, it looks like: ... 'All
they care about is their money,"'_said defensive
end Phil Hansen, the Buffalo Bills' players
association ·representative. "But we don't have
a choice in the matter. The NFL's going to
decide. But you know what? I'll forgo my
weekly paycheck. This is serious."
Complicating the decisions and logistics
were problems with a1r travel: Getting teams
where they're supposed to be appeared daunting. Flights resumed Wednesday only for passengers whose trips were diverted Tuesday.
The world of college football w.as divided,
with dozens of major schools from No. 1
Miami on down postponing games.
The Southeastern Conference is playin_g on.
The Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-t 0 were split
internally - some of their teams' games were
put off, others will be played. Games "present

Southem
from Pap II

Pierce finished 9-of- 18 for 158 yards and a
touchdown.
Ash and Ohlinger had il)terceptions for
Southern.
Marnhout, Pierce, Joe Cornell,
and 'fYier Little had sacks and Justi'n Allen a
fumble recovery. Russell Krider had a fumble
recovery to set up Southern's first score.
Pierce has been racking up defensive stars at
an alarming rate. Ash leads the team with 34
tackles - eight for losses. Pierce has 32 tackles with 16 of those for losses, a mark that leads
the team. Pierce also has seven sacks.

B.J.

from Pap II
GulfWar began, the biggest
pep party irt the world took
place at the Super Bowl. The
country rallied as jets flew
overhead, and who could ever
forget Whitney Houston's
singmg
of the
national

n.r·

a meaningful opportumty to bn11g our people
together tn a common expressio n o f sympathy
and mourning," the SEC said.'
.
Men's and women's golf also took separate
courses.
Tiger Woods w as in St. Lo uts With most of
the world's top players for the $5 million
World Golf Championship, whtch was callea
off Wednesday, along with the PGA Tour's
Tampa Bay C las.sic, a senior event in North
Carolma, and a Buy.com tournament in Oregon . The PGA Tour hadn't canceled a tournamellt m five years .
The LPGA Tour, though, will .open tts tournament in Oregon on Friday as scheduled
Also tentatively keeping eve nts on this
weekend's calendar are all the major car racing
series: NASCAR, CART, IRL and Formula
One.
Hockey, boxing and soccer relented.
The NHL scrapped the start of its preseason,
calling off Saturday's 12 games, and said it
would decide Thursday when to resume olaying. The middiewetght umficatwn ti\le bout
between Bernard Hopkms and Felix Trinidad,
on Sat urday at Madison Square Garden, was
postponed .
And the MLS, which put off four games
Wednesday, was undecided . on what to do
about the rest of the regular seaso n and play-

offs.
Offensively; Ash has rushed 39 times for 293
yards and five touchdowns. Pi erce is 20-for-48
passing with three touchdowns and 419 yards.
Brice Hill h as 8 catches for 248 yards and
three touchdowns.
Southern will have to watch Alexande r QB
L.C. Grigsby: Known for hts speed and fine
passing, Grigsby has not put up the numbers
this season that he was expected to generate.
Inconsistent blocking up front has put Grigsby under pressure.
Jason Brandeberry and Mic hael Hawk are
·the two blue-collar workers in the AHS backfield . Brandeberry leads the ailing Spartan
offense with 3.4 yards per carry.
Game time is]:30 1'-m.i.r! Rocir1C-

anthem. ·
It was a defiant s~and against
Saddam Hussein, something
we needed, and it worked.
Sporting events have always
rallied Americans and made us
forget the bad thmgs that usually happen in this world, even
though it's only for a couple of
hours a day.
But, during those couple of
hours, we see things that don't

Cooper

to locate all th e p laye r s, but
seve ral h ave ye t to be lo cat e d . If yo u w e re a m o mber of
t h e t e am, (freshm a n and
c oa c hes mcluded) you are
asked to call Sust e Souisby
at (740) 992- 2 377 to let
know you w ill b e a tte ndmg
If you kn o w o f any player s or coa c hes you are asked
to contact them and invite
them back by c ollmg Soulsby.

mean a thing in the grander
scheme of things, but on that
day, they mean everything.
As the nation recove rs,
sports can help the recovery
process by bnngmg normalcy
back to the masses
We can never forget, but we
can at least temporanly escape.
So, lets all just JOin together
and ...
PLAY BALL!!!

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1 cherry dining suite, hutch
table 8 chairs wltabto pads
&amp; pl.;.,. PVC Pallo Fuml·
·ture Consolo Sutra Singer
sowing machine with bench
Moving must oell. (304)882·
2804

C
Honda CB 850 • ustom ,
7•000 miles, $800, 18 loot
above ground poo w/pump
&amp; filter, $250 · 1740&gt;44 1·
f481
Independent Herbalile Cis·
tributor, Coil For Product Or
12 year old Dale Esmhart Opportunity. (740)441-1982
racket. bien worn twice,
kept In plaotlc for past 10
JET
years. Paid $250, will take
AERATION MOTORS
reasonable offer or will Repaired, Now &amp; Rebuilt In
tradelor 20 250 rlfflo, must Stock. Coil Ron Evans, 1·
be Remington or Ruger. 800·537·9528.
(740)441.0760 ask'"' nm.
_
1992 Ch
Pfck
6 1
ovy
·up, CV · MOBILEHOMEOWNE~S
lndar, aulo, $800; 1981 In·
tematlonal Bus. gao &amp; pro- Huge Inventory, Discount
pane. lull size. $2000. Gon· Prices, On VInyl Skirting,
erator 8500E , 18HP, 296 Doors, Windows, Anchors,
hours, $900. (740)379·9257 Wate1 Heetorar Plumbing &amp;
G
Electrical Parts, Furnaces &amp;
~~,:ce 8~ 1 ~~': ~v~~ Heat Pumps. Betmetts Mo·
Truck
lor
sale/trade bile Homo Supjlly, 740-446·
I304) 882•2887
9416 www orvb.comlben ·
!::~=:;;::::;_____ nett
32" ouIoIde doo r 2 rep1ace· NEW AND USED FUR·
~~4x32 &amp; 26 x37 ~~-d:'t~ NANCES FOR SALE! We
al cab. , exorcloe bike , Install, Freo 1 Eetlm.:~·~~
Mauve carpet 11x9 10, 2 r:s:f'l,;J4 ~~-8 308 , 1•

==----=-=:-

=75-1881
Firewood for ooto $150
"'76'
lood . (740)441 ·~
Flulo· Gemelnhordt 1175
and black lulon, tooathen i
yoar old, $70. (740)245·
9567
::::::___ _ _-'-·$Ingle Carport 12&gt;&lt;20 Iyr.
old. $580. 1304)874·4820
For oal• clark ook heavy
dlnlngroom oet. big F~ina
cabinet with light, tablo 7'
long with alx high back
chalro, excellent condil'on.
1700 1740)742·2060
'
Gravely Tractor, small
camper, 78 Jeep: 314 Ton,
Boot Offer. l740)388·1100
Grubb'o Plano- Tuning &amp;
Ropolro . Problema? Need
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
740-446-4525

f!00.291~.

Oxygen tank for taro h Irom
Air Producto, 3 loot high,
$100. 1740)992·2369

For Sale Sliver &amp; Golden
Table aaw $280 , Radlaloaw Queen Com. l304)675-15&lt;15
$100. Jointer $180; Shaper
$600, Air compressor $200;
Planer $180 1740)448·1489
WATER WELLS DRILLED.10
(7.0)8811-7311
FARM

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1067 Oidl Cutlaoo Supreme
Black, good lntortor tinted

I•

97 Milia Convertlblo, auiO,
tow mlltagt. Exotllont conclllon. Atki"'JI1D.800. Coli
(740~5 oftor 4pm.

j

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'"""""
FOR SALE

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AKC Boeton Terrier Puppies
lor oalo. l740)258-1825
AKC Registered Malo Booton Terrier puppy, 8 months
old, (740)446-1857 $200.
Chihuahua for oalo $20. 1
112
ld 1 1
lion
year)~~ 9.,8 orma
call (304
·3
Doberman Pinohcar pup·
plto not registered Mother/
Father on preml..;s. $!60
each. 1740 )446-963S days,
(740)258-11390 ...,enlnga ·

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l304)675o12n aHer 6pm
1997 Saturn • door auto
HAY &amp;
lair power .Un roof 'ollotl:
'
.
'
GRAIN
lent condolion. 14,eotl.
~
I
(740)44t-4792
Buck a bile oale, oquoro 1098 Ford Contour LX. 4
bales $1 .00 Other My up to cytlndlr, 78,000 mlleo, clar1c
$2 00 round blloa $15 00 green • door NADA
· 17 oo0 asking ' 15 700
eaCh 3o4-e75-4889
(74o)&lt;l48·2&amp;2•.
' ·
Hay &amp; Brighl Wire Tlo
Strew Yoor 'Round Dollvory 2000 Hyundle Etantra, fully
&amp; voiu~ otscoum Avalla· loaded, ar, tiH, cruloe, PW,
ble.
Heritage
Farm. PL, pollltlr · moonruof,
)6
5.
AMIFM oaoooHo, koyltao
7
5724
1304
ontry.
$10 ,500 OBO
(740)446'8112

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FOR SALE

1984 Marcury Grand Mar·
coo 39,500 actual mlleo.
4dr auto, air, am/lm cas·
salle. V·8 Garage Kept
$3500 1304)~75-4849
•

91 Hondo Civic, 124,000
miles, good condition,
$2300. No more, no liN.
(740)370.2111

94 Dodge Shadow. ounmol,
spoiler. 12,000. Phone
(304)882-2751
':-:--7-:::c---:=:,...-:-:---:cc
85 Spirit, $2760, 107800
mlleo, good COndition,
1740)949·3228.

110• Help Wanted

HOME -

1993 Suzuki Katana, Lw-OilMPRiiioiiOiiVFMENI'SiiOiiilltiilio,.l
GSX600, black &amp; blue, carbo cleaned &amp; now plugs,
BASEMENT
new tireo. (740)245-5834
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar- '
2000 \amaha PW50, lots ol antee Local references fur·
oxtru, llko new, $1100 nlohod. Established 1975
(740)~.0718
Coli 24 Hrs 1740) 445H
1·800·287·0576
2001 onda 400EX FMC 0870,
PiPE, Jet Kit In Corburotor, Rogers Waterproofing
new back Ioree, In good con- . , - . , - - - - - - - dillon. Take payoff $4200 C&amp;C General Home Malnte1(=)87)875-8587
or ·nonce· Painting, vinyl sid·
5-6538
lng, carpenuy, doors, w1n·
dowa, blths, mobile home
repair and more. For tree
r:~ &amp;u~~~eatlmatocaiiChot 740-992·
TS "'"'""" 8323
•
FOR Sui;;

I ,

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wfndowo, cold lir, new 465
engine bored 30 over 1oa1
Waterline Special: 314 200
than 1 000 mllto on rebulh 1983 Oodgo Ram 8 oyt. 225
PSI $21 95 Per 100 I' 200
•
low lito
good
PSI S37.oo Per ioo; All John Deere 450·C, 6 way r~n);:,:"s':7 good(304$3.)6~ =nloo. m $IOoovory OBO
Brass Compression FIHings blade, winch &amp; canopy, 8538
1304 )675-8832
In Stock.
F40)742·2~.
RON EVANS ENTERPR1S.
11988 Piyrr.outh Horizon, 1986 Ford F·I50 300
ES Jackoon, Ohio, 1·800LlvmucK
runs good, good lhapo. otral(1ot 8 w/Wood bod runs
537·9528
·
$350. (740)44&amp;-0718
good, good tlrn new 'water
' S . 98' c
BU1LDING
15reglotortdMorganhorses. 1990 Z24 Ctvaller, Good pump, 500, 1 7 hav;
SUPI'uJis
Maroa,
stallions,
Condition
,
Runo
Good.
Aotro
Von wloolvago tide,
3
2
$2600. (740)388·160t
loll ol now and atmoat now
1740 &gt;742' 2876
pons. Motor hlo 105,000
Block, brick, sewer pipes, Athens Livestock Sale:- Fall 1993 Mazda Protege, auto- mlltl, UHI
no ~1.
windows. lintels, etc Claude feedor call oalo Tuesday malic, amllm radio, orutoe, Good tranemlolion, $500.
Wlntoro, Rio Grande, OH September 18, ipm. can;,; power windows, ounroof, (740)448·0778 or (740)448·
Call740-245·5121.
will be accepted starting 69,000 mllea, "14,500, 4553 a1k tor Mary.
4pm Monday up until 3pm (740)992·5878
067
Ram
P1m:
Tuesday. All broods o1 five- 1994 Oklo 81! Royale one 1 S
G FlocrthiH
FOII'lfAU!
stock accepted Hauling
e-~lont Condl
' lien llcyl 1 · ood ShOpe 1
owner.
owner,
87,000
miles5-.
available. 1740)592·2322 or 1304)882-3173
(304)675 .21142
or (30ol)6
7
10 week old 1eglotered Mini· 1740)698-3531.
'7705
~':'ed~~::. sr:rm~~ Llmouoln Bull , siK monthl
~-SU= .~=: !988 Ford XLT, 4, 4, 78,000
$175. 1740)742·2525.
::.'?ar:' P&lt;&gt;t,~~~ pluoP~.:'.r. = g 5995. (304)675- mlloo, oxcollent condition ,

Qual:%.,hay, $1 .75 bite; ,lull
size I! 7'
6 ~12
polio,
n POl a
comor poota; 2·12' gatoo; 1·
10' gate; kldo chopped 5
horoo 3 wh-r. lnoulaled
steel door &amp; storm door Inoulated; lenco charger and
post-like new &amp; wire; 2 tilt In
replacement windows; 2
pistols lor oelo; lor salt or
tracla. (740)985-3810.
r70 1 M "
tJSICAL
RESIDENTIAL HOME
INSnUJMI!NI'S
OWNERS
.
Bach Trumpet with case
0
Tappan HI Effocloncy 90ll Excellent CondhloQ. $350.
Gao Furnaces, Oil Furno· Neg. 13(J4)875·2M2 or
ceo. 12 Seer Hoat Pump &amp; (304)675-2928 aHor 5pm.
Air Conditioning Syatoma
Free 8 Yoar Warranty Bon·
netto Haatlng .&amp; Coollog, 1•
8 0 0 -·~8_!_t;: ~ 8 7
www o..u "':'"-n

'=-cap,

1986 Monte Cono, runo
good, dopondable, faot,
good condition, asking
$4,000. (740)379-2258

II I "'

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SSJHR
Light
Indoor
Work

I 974-

,
REFRI
99
~ro.:.v'!"~~~P
2g • air, 11ml;
GI:RATION
condition $9 oOO ·(~)9 :~
· Residential or commercial
3413. ' • •
wfrlng, now sarvlce or ro·
pairs Master Licensed siectrlclan. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000306, 304·875-1788

=·

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JOBS
CDO Management, LLC

CAMJom&lt;i &amp;
..- - - - - - - Moroll HOMI!li 1

21

1971 Jayco Camper ~
pull behind $3600. , 1990
bayllnor Capri 90 hp.
ltM 5-10.13885: 10811 S· $2,000. 1304)882·3507
10 12811&amp;; 11182 Silvorodo
f3895. COOK MOTOIII
(740).448-0103
1988 Tioga flo.rrow 24H. Metor Horne Cl- C. 360 Cho·

=~~'x4~0:.,

~";

!': 4bl~~~ 1~500, ~H;~s;"&amp;~~~ie~

• • • ...,
•
oondHion, 103~. 11 lng ::284:::5_ _ _ _ _..;__
110,000. (740)2415--&amp;.188
1995 WlnMbago AdVontur·
&amp;
or, 34 loot, auto lovell,
ANI
awnings, good condllion,
4-WDs
s32 000
44 000
11
4o)448-~~·
' ·
17
Chlvloltt
4x
IXIInd·
11108
4'
Gullotroam lnnobruck
.., Clb, loaded, excollont 2000
conclllon, 5.7 V-8, AI.WM 28' FBH new oond oloepa
co, ,,.,200 OBQ . eight 304-875-nrt
(740)44t-4880
2000 Sprlntor, 27·112 loot
11198 Dodge 4••. 3!8, 5 camper, puU-oul, Qak trim,
"ke new, $16,000; 99 Forest
opeed, 58.0410 mlleo, like Rlvar, 27 foot, 18,000; 89
now tlroo a, ~mo, lhlrp
truck,
113,000
OBO Nomad Weekender camper,
30 loot, 14.800 , Call
(740)379-237•
(740)446-855&lt;1

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�P~eB 2 •T~~~~~~~---~---------•P•o•~--~-M~~•d•l•e•~~rt•,•O•h•l~o~-~-------~~

Thursday, 5epl. 13, 2001'

Meigs still second -in TVC-Ohio

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

BY

DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT
Belpre won Wednesday evening's Oh1o
Division golf tournament held at The Elm.
Belpre took home the win With a 166, fol lowed by Wellston with a 169.
Meigs fimshed in third place with a 172,
Alexander had a 179, Vmron County a 190
and Nelsonville-York carded a 210.
Ryan Kent ofVmton County fired a three

Wlll.a Ccn&amp;J~If, OH

.

Call Today•••

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD.

t

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· AU Dlspley . 12 Noon 2

Cally In - Column 1 . 00 p.m.
Business Days Prior To
Monday-Friday ror Insertion
Publ ic ation
In Nut Day's Pa per
Sunday In-Column: 1: 00 p.m. Sunday Display 1:00 p m
Thursday for Sundays
For Sundays Papl!!r

Iro

L - -PERsoNALS
- - - - - - " Absolute Top Dollar: U S

116
HFlJ'WANm&gt;

DIETETIC TECHNICIAN

11

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!$
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

110
HFlJ'WANIFD

1

2001 Meigs Youth

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Pnced
• No Co mmercial Ads
• No Ticke ts/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person

Golf League:

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

POUCIES: OhJo 'IIIIey Publishing.....,..,.. ths right to Mit, NJ-Ct, or Clnoel any H lit any t1m1. Errora mult bt report.cl on tM first ct.-, of
II
TrlbuM-Stnti'*-Reglster will bt ~ foJ no mo.-. then tt. cost of thli ~occupied by ttw error and only trw first lnNrtlon. We 1h1ll not .,.
any kilt or ••PiftM ttwl rMUb trom lhl publloltlon or omiiiiOn of an Mtvert!MmenL CorTKI!on will be made In ttw flrst IYIIIable .clition. • Box c~;.~p.,;.o;l
1 ,. alway• conrldlntlal. • Current rate card appllla. • All ,..., ..tabiiMfYWIIMments •re aubJHt to tht Ftdtrll Fllr Housing Act ol tMB. • Thla n
Mil meeting EOE standards. W. wll not knowingly .ooept an-, ldvM!IIng In violation of lhe law.

• Start Vour Ads With AKevword • Include Co mplete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrelo'latlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

Successful Ads
S hou ld Include These Items
To Help Get Res
\'\'\Ot \,( 1· \11·'\1"\

Display Ads

Word Ads

11

IIFlPWANIID

I io

McClure's Reslauranl now The Vlllaga of Middleport

rI Mo:RE~OMEli I

r•---liiiiiiiii;,.-"
HOMEN

FOR SALE

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2 bedroom home close to For Loose: One bedroom.
New 2002 fleetwood only town,
basement. River view,

sns

Sliver, Gold Coins, Proof· Must possess skills required hiring all 3 location•. full or needs a Building Inspector,
down and $160.85 per $425/ month, 3 bedroom In unfurnished, second floor
to assess the nutritiQnat part·tlme, pick up appl~a· 20 hours a weak. Sand ra- 3 Bedroom on Route 2. month,
call
Charyl, town, t-t/2 baths. Good lo· apartment, at corner of Sec·.
needs of our residents, lnl· tlon allocation &amp; bring back aume to VIllage of Middle- (304)675-5332
(7-40)385~7
cation . $5001 month. Refer· opendr m""ondthp, 'wneale~~~ lu$J~~:
Uate programs to meet batw"n
9 30am
&amp; pan, 237 Race St., Middle·
ences and deposit required. ~~- urlty a•d kAV deposit

...,

Why walt? Start meeting seta, Diamonds, Gold
Ohio singles tonight, call toll Rings,
U.S. Currency,·
free 1·800·766·2623 eKI MT.S Coin ShOp, 151 Sec·
1621.
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·
446-2842.

thooe needs and document I O:OOam, Monday thru Sat· port, Ohio 45760 by Sept. 3 Bedroom, I bath, I both
the progreu. A minimum ot urday.
28th.
on Main Street, ri¥flf' view
an Associate degree lrom
on Main St., Pomeroy (740)
ANNouNCEMI'NJ'S 1
an accredited two year pro- Mechanic lor hire, 5 years URGENTLY
NEEDED· 992-8998
gram in Nutrition and/ or e)lperience, Wolle's Auto plasma donor1, eam S45 to
rfil;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Clinical Dietetics Is required. Repair, 30 Sycamore $60 tor 2 or 3 hours weekly.
New To You Thrift Shoppe 1110
Also must be able to obtain Street, (740)441·1803
Call Sera-Tee, 740·5929 West SUmson, Athens
HELP WAN'IID
membership In, and regis·
6651
740·592·1842
tration by the American 01• NHd Job
Security,
Quality clothing and house·
letlc Association 88 well as $1,0001$5,000.+ Month. Mason, experience needed,
hold 1tems $1 00 bag sale 100 WORKERS NEEDED maintain contln~lng educa· Work Fmm Homo, Free In· commercial job, Canal Win·
every Thursday. Monday A&amp;semble crafts, wood
lion as required hu the fo. 1·888·447-7813
chester, competitive pay,
thru Saturday 9 00·6 00.
Items Material provided Commission on Regl;~atlon Now • - 11 •• 11 11
signing bonus, call Kim at All real ..tate actvertlalng
,
To $480+ wk
-~P ng .,_p ca ons 1740)383-5280
fn lhlo nowwpopor Ia
- - - - - - - - ·Freolnformatlon pkg 24 Hr of tho Amerlcan Dietetic As· for PIT Sale Clerk Apply In
oubjooltolho F-.1
SELLING YOUR TIMBER?
1·801·264·5625
sociatlon E)lperience pre- Person at Kipling Shoes At. Someone to take care of my Fllr Houaing ACt of 1818
IT PAYS TO GET PAOFES
·
tarred, If you 111 these ,. :.2.:.B&lt;.:YP;::•;::ss;_oi:.:. :.Po.:.:. ln.;.tP;_l;::ea::sac:nc;;.t. mother In mv home, $5.50 wh~
tt IJteQII to
qulrements and have good
an hour, 8.308 m_ 12.30pm,
·
~~~a~~ 8111A~=I~A~~~~ lntematl!~1 ~::..ass
oral amf wrttten skills, Point P1o1asaNnt Moko1se (740)3e7-o 302
pme:':m..
x...... .
please apply at Holzer Sa- Lodge 73
ow ta ng
•
Consulting Forester. RR 1 eKpanding $251$75hr. PIT n1or Care cenler 380 COlo- appllcatton9' for Clerical
dlacrlmln~tlon baNd on
Box 458 Leon, WV 25123 Fff S00.588-3713
nial Drille, Bidw811, OH, or wonc. Office/Computer skills
r1ce, cok)r, N16g1Dn,ux
(304)458-1656. or emalllur· www.mogabucks4you.net
call (740)446-5001 ask for 8 must, and basic accounl·1 140
B~
flmllllllat.tu1 or natlomll
ayma.x@ezwv com •For·
ATTENTION
Eula or Martie.
lng Also needing a bartendTRAINING
origin, or 1ny lnltntk»nto
malty 24yr. Wood Industry
er.
m1 a 1 nu auch
Forester, 11yr. WVU For·
WE NEED HELP!
Domino's now taking appli·
ptefelence,ll~~ or
eatry Professor &amp; Syr Otrec$500-$1500 PT
cations lor management Professional Tank Truck Gelllpolll Clreer College
dlterlmlnation."
tor of WV Division ot ForestS2,D00-$6,000 FT
and sale d~vers GaHtpolls Transport Drivers Grow with (Careers Close To Home}
ry
Free Training
•
a Leader Enterprise Trans· Call Todayl740-448·4367,"
·
1·866·807-AICH
and Pomeroy OOattons only portation Company The
Thlt MWaPIPif wNI nol
1.80Q.2l4.0452,
www.comeworkwithme.com Apply in person .
Quality Link. Immediate
Reg 190.05-12748.
knowingly accept
GIVEAWAY
f
o1 1 15
lldvertiHn"'enta for rul
Attn. LPN's, AN's, EMT's Earn Cash by losing 2·81bs openings or pr ess ona 1170
eatlte which 111n
nd- Pa.amM,cai-Becomo-PftLWl'.eL.i..lm[ed..SRacss~lih our_grJ!.wJ!lg qgmpeny.
MlscEu.ANEous
vlolorlan ottho lowcDurOFFER
$3,000 SignPay
on
rudoro oro......._
5 Fuzzy Kttten, liter tratned an RN or BSN graduate and Apply
www heallhy4u net today' WE
bonus.
"Outstanding
,
(304)675·5801
after Increase your Income with·
and Benefits •safety 1999 Ca 't I~ 6' 10'
lnronnedtnaUH
J·OOpm
out going back to school! To Expenenced RooUng Fore- Awards Program "Up-To· fully lnsul~~~ r$2~ ~ar:
mw,illnoaldYartllad In
schedule you Interview In man· famll!ar In all phases Date Equipment •compa- vard Pin P0n table, like
this newapt~per.,.
8 weeks, I gray klnen , I Barboursville, call E¥elyn ot residential rooting ~xpe· ny-Matching 401 (k) Pro· new $2~0 1g RPM re·
IWIIIable orun tqulll
blackcaflco,2str~pedtigers Hunt by September 19 1· rienced Lead Carpentar·fa· gram "Husband &amp; Wife
d
S2 00
h
opponunttybuft,
1740)992·3201
800·737-2222
mlllar In all phases rosiden- Teams Welcome • Steady ~~,C:j742·2512
eac .
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or tall construction· sldi~. win· Work "Uniforms Fumlshed
:) bedroom, Racine, family
YARD SALE
Sell Shirley Spears, 304· dows, deccks, etc. Top pey SUCCESSFUL
CANOl· Mausoleum apace, third lo•· area, $37,500, 1740)949·
wlbonusos EXPERIENCED DATE REQUIREMENTS
el high Mamonal Gardens 3228.
L,~-------_.1. 875·!429.
ONLY NEED
APPLY. '21 Years Old 'COL w1th (740)992.78II or (740)992'·
Be Your Own Bossi
Immediate hire Christian Hazmet and Tank Endorse- 0633 paid s4600 want For sale by owner: Nice bl·
YARD SAih
From Homel
Construction, Inc . 1403 ments. ·ocT Qualified •Two $3000
,
level home on 1 acre near
--.OGOiAUJPOiiiiOiiiiliusiiiiio-,.1
Eam
$50()..$8000/MO
Eastem
Avenue,
Gallipolt&amp;
Years
Experience
"Clean
1::~-":':'~---.,
Chester
Three bedroom,
L,
PT/FT
(740)448-4514
Driving Record 'Stable Em-~180
WANI'ED
two baths, one-car garage,
~
No E~tperience Necessary
ployment Background.
T Do
family room wilh tireplaca,
Friday, September 14th, 1.888_27()-()()64
FAMILY HOMES Is current- OWNER/LEASE OPERA·
0
sun room Now central heat·
sponsored by the ~elephone www.Never9To5Agaln.com ly accepting re~umes tor the TORS NEEDED Ouanerly
lng &amp; ale svstem One ml·
p1onears of Amenca, toea·
position of Of11ce Manager Mileage Pay Guarantee . All Make Mowers, Lawn nute off Route 7, but still pri!ton Amentech SBC Garage
Child C1re Workera
In thetr Pomeroy Busmess INTERESTED DRIVERS Tractors, Tillers Repaired. vale 1740)985•3981
on route 160. Proceeds go Pan-time child care workers Office. Applicants should SHOULD CALL 1.800·6.24- Free plck·up, Dell¥ery Availto commun1ty seMce.
needed for after school pro- have the fotlowiAg quallfica· 2857 EOEIM·F 8_5pm.
able. 21 Years Experience. New Brick Ranch Home on
gram for eiJlOiionally or be- tiona and/or expertence to
Call Mike (740)446-7604
2.4 acres. 5 minutes rrom
· Moving 5ale- Friday &amp; Sat· haviorally~hallenged &lt;:hll- be conslclered for employ- REM Community Options Is -,..---'--'----- Holzer. 3 Bedrooms, 3
urday, 62 Myrtle Avenue off dran In Mason County ment
seeking to fill two positions David's General Contracting Baths, Open Kitchen/ Faml·
State Route 7 North across Some duties Include particiin the PI Pleasant area to Plumbtng, electncal, paint~ ly Room, Den, Mud Room,
from MTI
paling ln recreational acti'll· • Mlnlmumoltwayears
work with a child with au· ing, decks, roofs. Call Basement, In· ground Pool,
ttes, building SOCial skills. a~tperlence In Bookkeeping/ tism. Positions available In- (740)256~9373 (304)633· Storage Building, Smiths
Mul!t yard sale· 1.8 miles and monitoring behalo'lor Accounting and/or Associ· elude
,
6265
Gablnets. (740)446·0149
trom 141 on Netghborhood Must have HS diploma/ ales Degree In Accounting Coordinator: Provides direct .::.:.:..-.,-----,.
Road, September 14-15, GED, valid driver's license or Business Management services in the home and Georges Portable Sawmill, Newly constructed, single
6am·.5pm, ~by Items, adult and be willing to transport or equivalent education In a community providing life don't haul your logs to the SIOfy 1600 sq. foot home
clothing, mtsc
Children E~tperlence wllti Bachelor's Degree Pro· skills training. Starting pay mtH just caM 304·675-1 957. Located 10 minutes from
H 1 H ltal 20 1 to
Yard Sale· Wednesday children preferred. Visit our gram.
is $6 85 per hour, with avail· Ll ht/ Medi
Hauling o zer osp ' m nu s
September 12 Thursda ' website
at • Must Possess excellent In· ability of medical/dental · g
um
from Pleaqnl Valley Hospt·
13th &amp; Fnday t4th Starts www.prestera org for appll- terpersonal communication benelils, life insurance, (740)388·8769
tal, off SA 160 on a private
9 ooam at so 1 Rdtsh Lane, cation, apply· tn person, skills and excellent business 401K plan, and fle)lible' Quality housecleaning, lm- 1·1/2 acre lot 3 bedroom,
Cheshire, off Route 7 above or send appl resume to.
~rltlng skills
scheduling.
maculate, natlculous, de- 2·112 balhs, big kitchen
Cheshtre Old glassware, all
PRESTERA CENTER
Must be capable of ~perat· Respne Providef. Acontract tailed cleaning The abso- w/oak cabinets, OR, LR
size clothes girls and wornKarl Haobloon.
lng Microsoft Windows position that provides lute best CaD lor a free estl- wlges log fireplace, central
ens all slz~s- plus X·large
Employment Spectal
based Operating ' System relief/respite services to mate (740)256·1131 or 1- air, hla~n~~/2 room, front
womens. Household items
3375 Route 60 E.
and Mk:rosoh Office Soli· family on an as needed ba· 888-781·2412.
pore
• car garage
ot different ktnd Fumtture
Hunltngton, WV 25705
ware (Excel, Word , Power sis. Starting pay is $9.40
Immediate possession. Apsome anttques
EOEIAA
Point, Access).
per hour, responsible . for J"op to Bottom Cleaning praised at $125,500, asking
' E•porlence with Quick- own taxes. Flexible achodul· Service, professional, real- $125.500. Call (740)448·
4
YARDSALECIVIL ENGINEERING
books Pro is preferred, but inglsa¥eilable· For more in· dential, otuce cleaning at 4514 from &amp;-Spm, M·F, or
PoMERo IMmoL..E FIELD TECHNICIANS· En· now required
!ormation contact Greg an affordable price Refrlg· (740}448-3248 alter Spm
Lw-.liiiiiiiilll.i~-l::li-;.1 try Level and Experienced, • Expenence in the con· Messenger at (304)768- erators, stoves, freezers al·
.
p~efer Assocl~tes Degree li'l struct1on Industry Is prater· 5575
so
(740)992·2979 or Nice older home, 2 BR, liv·
8114·15, 11118 tamtly ftrst this CIVIl Englneenng Technolo- red, but not required.
(740)992·1391
lng room, dining room,
year, scrubs, desk, typewrit· gy and/ or certifiCations
AN- LPN
kitchen. pantry, utility room,
ers, love seat, biCYcles, re· (OOOT Le¥ell or ACI
Duties Include basic office We have available bot~ full· Will do·tree trimming andre· lull size ante, gas furnace,
mote control truck &amp; lots Certtf·
management
accounts time ana part-lime positions moval C&amp;!l lor free estl· central air, Racine, $35,000,
more, next to old L&amp;L hre, icatlon). ~erlonn construe- payable, accOunts recalva· for the right candidate. You mate (304)675·7210 or ~17 40p.)9~49'!'·.20•7•0""!''!""-'""'
33851 Pine Grove Road tton materials testing and
ble, and payrol. Opportunl· must be a licensed RN or ~17.;.40=)9.:.92:.·::.368=9---- 111 MOBD..E HOMES
(740)992·1093
' observation of concrete,
lies exist for additional du· LPN and be a sincere, car· Will haul away, clean out,
FOR SALE
':--'-~------ sons and asphalt Posttton ties and responstbiliUes 11 lng Individual, dedicated to clean up, mo'lle almost any· L w - - - - - - - "
Forest Run Ad Minersville is
qualified ThJs posl1iOA •Of• enhancing the lives of our
o·
II (near Forest Run Church) in Galllpolts area Resume ters thQ potential ol upward seniorS. If you meet these thing. ther odd jobs Ca 14"70 Mobile Home with
44 760 4
7
40
F'riday, Sept. 14th and Sat- to CTL Engtnaering Inc.
mobility and provtdea a qualifications, please apply ~1;.;;::.c.l;.;6-;;..:.::.:.;____ 10)128 manufactured add-on
urday, Sept 15th Ntce 2860 Fisher Road, Colum· ' competitive salary with ben· at Holzer Senior Care Cen· Wlll power wash houses, asking $7500 (304)675clothes, wood school desk bus, OH 43204 (taK 614·
eflts
tar, 380 Colonial Drive, Bid· trailers, anything Call 1186
&amp; chair, baskets, craHs and 278-63n) email·
well, OH, or call (740)448· (740)441-4238 or 1740)448· _ . ; _ - - - , - - - much more (740)992·6373
orestegOctleng.com
Interested applteants should 5001 and ask for Eula or 0151 ask for Ron If no 16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
EOE
call 1·800·266·1894 to Martie.
answer, lea¥e message.
Month, 8 99% Fixed Interest
Garage sale· 3/4 mtle New AN EMPLOYEE
OWNED schedUle an lnlervtew. A
.
RaJe With Alr And UnLima, Rutland, Sept 13th &amp;
COMPANY.
cqpy of your re&amp;dme and salesperson needed: lurnl·
.. de~lnnlng 1·688·928·3426
14th, turntlure, Halloween
CNA's
retarences wtll be required ture store Immediate open- ~i:i:1 o~;;;;;;;:~,;;;;;
~
·;;;;;;;;;;;;-..,~
Items, more.
COOK'S
to Interview.
l~, lufi-U ,;,. position. Apply.
~u~
1982 14X58 Oakbrook Mo~ARY A
S
n.-..nrn TLII'I'V
bile Home. Good Condition.
DI "'·
~ YARD SA!.EIDE
Full·llme Gill/ floral poallion. lleotyle Furniture, 856 Lw-.;vnv-iliftliii'~llil""iioo
'_.1. $5,000 (304)882-3893
LAUNDRY AIDES
Apply at Fruth Pharmacy. Third Avenue, Gallipolis, ~
Pr. I'LFAsANr
ACTIVITIES AIDES
INOTICE I
1st Tlme Buyers· Call Oak204 2nd """nue Gallipolis OH 9'30·5·00 No Phone
Excellent benefits
For OH
'
'C
.:..:.•1.:.1•-;__ _:--::-.,- OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· wood, Gallipolis todayl
Big Movmg Sale Plymale prompt consideration. apply .::.:..:.·_ · - - - - - - cc
Lane, Oalltpohs Ferry. In parson at Scenic Hills Scenic HHis Nuratng Canter Scenic Hills Nursing Center lNG CO recommends that Gov't backed program· buy
do business witDpeople local (740)448·3093
Thursday, Fnday,and Satur- Nuralng Center, 311 Buck· Is now accepting appllca· Is preparing to hold a Nuns- you
you know, and NOT to send
day, September 13·15, ridge Road , Bidwell, OH lionl for Certified Nuralng lng Assistant Training class money
through the mall until 28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On·
9am·?1 Everything must 45814. There Ia a labor dla· Alalstanta tor the following beginning Septembsr 17, you have
Investigated tho ly $345.00 Per Month
Go!
pule atthlo place o1 employ· poolliono. 2 lull· limo e-2, 3 200 I. Anyone lntereatod offering.
8.99% Fixed Interest Rate,
- - - - - - - - mont Thoee pooHiooa are lull·tlmo 2·10, and 1 lull· needlto apply In poroon at _ ; - - - - - - : - : - 1·888-928·3428
Yard Solo 2221 Joffereon. ol!ortd In placa of employ· tlmo 10-8. Ploaoa opply In 311 Buckrf~ Road Bid·
Thuro., Frl., Sat Old Fumi- eeo Involved In tho lobor poroon ot 311 auokrldgo woll, ,OhiO 4 ,. bltwlon Provon S1 ,000 Truo Woolth &amp;4 14x70 Ookwood, muot
moved, 2 bedroom, 2 run
turo, Slg men/women dloputo. EOE. WFIH.
' Road Ii-I. Ohio o~&amp;el• &amp;am ond 4:30pm. Tho cllll Syllam. 1·81!8-888·78011.
Start Your Buolnooo To· bllhl, oomH with txtru.
olothoo, MoCoy Canlotor CNA' . HHA'
Denllled or odohohanlt ~trftpor II ~ ''" ol ohargo.
baby ltoma, houllhold hom;;,tklrt ~ 1o pro- (740)~ 1150.
Soon Ia Hlllo Nurtlng Dentor cla1-·· Pnmt Sl1opplng can. 115,000. (740)44t-8337
tomo.
vldt In homt ttr\11011 for
II loolcll)g lor 2 tun·tlmt II· 1tr SPIOI Available At AI· H mobllo 11omo on own lol,
ld
r1
/dl
bled
1
Muon
a
01noad
proolloal nurote, loraablt Alit. S~tg Vallt'f lOIII tltO. lot II 110 dOO.
1 1 Y N
n
c111 Http wilftttd oartn; lor lht one lor 11·7
and one 101 S·
7
1 1
and olty wallr on
P.utna~
oou~ arau. • aldlrl~, Darar Qroup Homt, 11 lllnltrHitd, piHH oall 111P!IIIuar.iCtillpn40iiiili~·0~Ot··, ltwtr
landhNI Ad. :104-171•1111
1 111 o1No4
now poYin; minimum wage, ltephanla ~ampar at
Abendonad Doubltwldl•
- lltlnt: 7am·3pm, 7amo (740l4&lt;1H 110 or ooma In
RIOit Pltrton Auotlon Com· .
lr• lli•up a dtKvtry, Mu~
PUNDIIAIIfNG
lpm, 3pm•11pm, 11pm• and INI ou1an applloatiOn In
pan1, lull tlml IUCIIOnttr,
rt· 1 only. (7•o)oi4HOIS
DIIIIOTOII
7am, oall 740·111·1015.
ptrton 11 S1 1 luokrld;t
oomplelt auollan etrvlot.
TUIINID DOWN ON
LIOtnlld tM,OitiO I Wttl
Momeworktra Nltded HSI lload, l ldWtll, Ohio •Hf•. IOCIA~ IICUIIITV /Ill? Alhltnd PIIIIWood 1001
Nttcltd for rour aroa
VIrginia, 304-771·1111 Or
lo warfl wfl~ tohoolt,
Wttkl~ P'rootNing Mill loenlo Hlllt II an ~UII Qp•
No ~II UnltH WI Win ~ Doubltwlda 121.12t Tall
304o77S.8447.
I'TNt lnd ooaohtl.lll. eo. 11111
Na
lxporltnoi ponunlly tmployor,
1·111·112·1341
Prte 111·101·1118 10 min
~. l ei yr. IIOIIOIC
Nttded. Ctll loiOC•III·
from Hun11nglon
NO N .. INO
1711 lxt, 2070, a•Hrt

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...

TVC OHIO DIVISION GOLF STANDINGS
1. Bel!&gt;~e 30 points, 2 Maiys 22, 3. Wellston 17; 4 . Alexander
15; 5 Vilton County 6, 6. Nelsonville-York
0 ·

The 2001 season of the
Meigs Youth Golf League
held at the Pine Hills Golf
Course ended recently.
The league • conmted of
boy's and girl's age eight
throu gh high school. There
were 42 golfers takmg part in
this year's league.

1\.egister
~ribune
Sentinel
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Your Ad,

over par 38 for match medahst honors. Meigs
was led once again by Jeremy Banks with a
39,Josh Napper added a 42, Ben Bookman a
43 and Josh Ray a 48 .
Metgs will play once again on Thursday at
Oxbow.

Now blnk ~ 14x70 3 (740) ... ~..
" -,
'
--~.
R"loronces
r~u
bedroom, 2 ··~·
bath· Pay $499
u
'"'"" l red. No
&amp; mov•ln O.kwood· Galllpo 3 bedroom home Minersville pets. (740)446-4425
olio. (740)446-3()93
area, river vlow, references
required , deposit required, Gracious ll11ing. 1 and 2
New Double Wide. $195 no pet&amp;, 740-992-6777 after bedroom apartments at Vtl·
Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 5pm,
lage Manor and Aiverstde.
Bath. Free Oellvsry &amp; Set· :::::::________ Apartments In Middleport
up. 1-888·928·3428
3 Bedroom, Pomemy, river From $278-$348. Call 740•·
view, $350/mo., references 992·5064. Equal Housing~
Aohland Fleetwood Soptam· required, (740)992-4451, al- .:O:;::ppo~rt::u:;:nil:;:l•::s:__ _ __
btir special 2002 14x70 tar 4pm.
3bd/2ba. $19,990 Free Del. :::.::=::::_______ Modern 1 bedroom apart·
&amp; Setup. Toll Free 1·866- Collage suitable lor single mont, 1740)446-0390
805·6619
or couple $260.00 Lincoln
Ave call Homestead 304· Now Taking Applications- .
35 West 2 Bedroom Town·· Beautiful 3 year old 16x80 675·5540 ask lor Nancy
mobile home, wllh cathedral
house Apartments, Includes,
ceilings on 5,17 acres, with Pilot Program, Renters Water Sewage, Trash,
HX&gt;' block garage, city wa- Needed, 304·736·7.295
$350/Mo., 740·446·0008
ter, in Alexander School Syracuse· new house on PLEASANT
VALLEY
District In Meigs County, river, 2 bedroom, bath &amp; APARTMENTS Are tak1ng
(740}698·7170
hall, 2 car garage, big Applications for 2BR.3BR &amp; ~"~~I
home
deck,
$700 a month plus 4BR , Apphcahons are taken
55 445
~~ m0d:";kyllr1e, 3 $700 deposit, (740)385- Monday thru Friday, Ol1tce
bedroom, 2 bath, total alec· 1159.
Is Located at 1151 Ever·
tric, vinul &amp; shingle, low -r-L.I
l"catlons lor a 2 green Drive Point Pleasant, 1
,
,-. ng app t
wv Phone (304)675 5806...
monthly payments, dell¥· bedrooms in 8 quiet netgh- E H0
·
.
ered &amp; setup Includes skirt· borhood
(740)446·6939 .
lng &amp; steps, Coles Mobile leave message
Tara Townhouse Apart·
Homes, US 50 East, Ath·
·
1
ono, Ohc740.592·1972- -c - MOBFOO;ER
· ~1,!.~
""" 0
Final Days, Nationwide In·
Ad
!lparpletpe,a . .
ventory
Reduction!
u11
oo' a· .
(304)736-o3:.409
2 bedroom trailer In the tio, Start
No Pet~, ,
country, washer/ dryer Leas~ Plus Security Depostt
For aale by owner, 3 bed· hookup, large yard, $300 Requ~red , Days 740·446room Schult mobile home. rent plus utiUttes, $200 de· 3481 , E¥enlngs 740·367 ·
Very nice, financing avella· posit (740)256-6202
0602. 740·446-01 01
bla. (740)446·3583.
land·homo . packages· all 3 bedroom mobile homo In Apartment Available Now
areas. Prequallly by phone. Middleport,
no
pets,
Coil
I740)446-35B3
(740)992·5858
Tlvin River Towers
..:,..;.:.:.:.:.:;:.:.:;;______
(304}675-6679
Umilad Or No Credit? Gov· 2 bedroom, 2 bath, beautttul for application . HUD subsl·
emment Bank Finance Only MH, large fenced yard, tront dlzed apt for elderly and
At Oakwood tn Bertours· &amp; blck decks, 12 miles lrom
disabled EHO.
ville, wv 304-736-3409.
Gallipolis, no pets, 1 year "l:l:r--""!~---.,
lease negotiable, $200 de· rr.
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom posit, $425 per month.
SPACE
Onl)t$19,850. Free Delivery (304)736·7268 for appoint· Lw.·--roO.RiOoiRFNriiiiiii.-"
&amp; Set Up. 1·888·928·2426 ment.
417 Second Avenue, GaUip·
New 16)(80, 3 bedroom, 2 3 bedroom with axpando &amp; oils, Ohio, 3 room office
bath, only $500 down, call central air, wat8f &amp; trash
Nikki (740)385-4367.
paid, 740·992-2167 tor ap· suite, formerly Kelly Serv·
m:r---::-...--., polntmenl.
ices. Call DQn Sta nle9'
FARMS
!:::::::::::;;::______ ~17_4_0:..)44
_6_·_1 7_6_1 _ _ __
FOR SALE
~~~~'::fo~~,~~:~cur:~ Full equipped beauty salol) ,
for rent in Gallipolis. .
Bullskin Road, no pets, 1740)446-7130
189 acres· approximately. 7 $350 deposit, $350 rent per :.:.::c.:.:.:.:.:.::____
room, 1 bath house, bam month
plus
utilities. Mobile Home lot for rent I"
and outbuildings. Willow· ~(7:.:40:::!:)2:::;66::,-8.::.:;192:::.,____ Mtddleport, $125 per mon\n
wood, Ohkl. First Federal a~ . 1 R
1740)992·3194
savings Bonk (740)532· ~aut1fu lver View Ideal ':..:c.:::::.:.:.:.:...____
6845
For 1 Or 2 People, Referen· :Ci---::----....., ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· Off10e/ Retail space lor rent
Bll'i~NFX'&gt;
ter Trailer Park, 740·441· in Gallipolis. Newly remod·
AND BunmNGS
:0~18::'::.·_..:..__ _ _ _ _ eled, plenty of parktng
__
,
(740)446·7130
New 16x80, really nice, CIA,
\II IH II\ '\IHSI·
Offlco building In Minors· $425/mo. $300 deposit, wa· r.;p:;======~
ville, 600 sq. ft., ale, COY· tar &amp; trash Included, nice
HOUSEHOlD
ered parking, ceiling fan, neighborhood , no pets.
s275/mo., 614·876·1661 . (740)256-1664
Goons
Lars &amp;
Two bedroom 12x60, $320
'
ACREAGE
month, deposit, AJC, no 2 Whirlpool washer, $65, 1
~~---iiiiiiiii;,._.l pets, reterences required GE washer, $60 , all white,
-·
,17j.!40jp):;;99;;:2:,·;:;54;.:7,;,7;,..- - - . . , Kenmore &amp; Whirlpool dryers
$f}O each Call aHer Spm
1-1 112 acre lot, flat w/sew· r.1
(140)446-9068
er, 2 miles out at RU11and on
APAR'I1\IENrS
Cremeans Rd., no mobile
FOR Rmr
homes
(740)742·2803 ·--iilliltiiiliiiii.-,J Appliances: Recond•lloned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
-leave nlessage.
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Refrlgrators, Up To 90 Days
Indian Creek Equestrian Es· menta, tunitshed and unfur· Guaranteed! We Sell New
lates, 3-6 acre lots, west of nlshed, security deposit re- Maytag Appliances, French
Rio Granda, from $25,800. quired, no pots, 740·992· City Maytag, 740·446-7795
2218.
1740)245·5747
Danc. blue chair with Queen
Looking To Buy A New 1 Bedroom Apartment, Re· Anne legs {$80) and be1go
Home? Don't Have Land? frigaratgr, Range, AJC In· Bench Craft rocker recline~
We Doll I Hurry Only 10 Lots eluded, $289 Plus Deposit &amp; ,IS;_75:.:l.:.l7:..4c:Ol:.:4.:;48:.·7;::2::.7.;.1----,
LaH, 304-738-7295.
Rof.eronce. HUD Approved For Sale: Racondltionod
NEAR RIO GRANDE. A 1740)44 1-1 519
washers, dryers and refng·
beautllul 5 acre tract located 1 Bedroom Apt, Water/ erators Thompsons Appil·
on Centerpoint Ad, for ON· Trash Paid, Near Porter, ance 3407 Jackson A~
LY $12,320. For more Info References Required. No nue, (304)675·7388.
and FREE maps contact Pete, 1740)388·1100
Giveaway sofabed &amp; couch
Anthony Lind CO., Lid.
80C).21W3t5.
1&amp;2 bedroom , near Holzer, 85' long In Pt Pleasant area
www.alcland.com
economical utlltltes, $279 to 304-875·3937
--'--'--'-'-'----- $379 per month plus utilities
Main Street Fumlturo
River Lots lor aala,ln Han- (740)448-2957
1304)675-1422
ford, WV Public Water &amp;
515 Main Street. Point
Sewer Available. Avg. 112 duple)( tor rent, 1 bed·
Pleasant
60&gt;&lt;160. Colll304)882·2607 room, $325 per month, it'a·
or 1304)882·2898
tor Included. Lower 4th Avenue. 1740)446·8677 da~s
No\11 &amp; Used Furniture: ·
HI '\ I \ I "
{740)258·1972 evenings. •
New '2 Place Llvlngrown
;;;:=:;;;;:::::::=:, IIAUTIFUL
APART· Suiteo,
Trade. $399 Buy, Sell,•
MENTI AT IUDO!T PAl·"
~
Cll AT JACKSON !8· Now And Uood Furnltur,
..... TATII, &amp;2 W•twood Orivt Storo Bolow Holiday Inn,
ii
from 1287 1o 1383. W,olk to Koneuga. Wo Soli Gravo
t 3 Bod
F IOIOIId lhop &amp; rnovltt. Ctll 740• Monumonto And Vaooo.
1
H.;,• ~,::"1 1 ~., . , 441·11H. Equal Houolng Twa bedroom oholt draw•
Down, 30 Yllra at U'llo Opportunity.
ere, very good oondltion,
AP'~ . '•r Uttlngo, 100-318· Chrltly'l Pamll~ Living, 1181. (740)~•8-7221
11325 lXI, 1701.
:13140 Ntw Uma flld ,, Aul•
~
land, OhiO, 740·741-7403.
AN'I1"'"""'
1 bedroom, NC, rtlrlgara· Apa~monl, homt and !railer L. .•••"i.
~~
--'
lOti '~:1 ~tllllnott "' rtnllll, Commttalll a1ort· .,
Qu rod. I 10 mon1h, 110 Jron11 avallablt lor ltaH. lkiV or ttll ~lverlnt Anll•
IIIII l1rat1. 1740)~·11117 VIOIIIOIII flOW,
QUII, 1114 lilt Main on
S ltdroom MOUN In ~ra· f'umlahtd tllklltno~. all ufll• 11'1 11• 1. ~omoroy, 740·
ou11. Ohio, ••sci Mtinth ltl• pakf, lhara bllh, 1115 181·1811 !'lull Moore,
HUO Approved (504)171• mon1h, t1 8 2nd Avtnut. owner.
13:11 Wllklndt only
(U0)4&lt;11·5841. .

I

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AGES 8-12
I ot PLACE - JaCOb Hunter and Patrick
Johnoon; 2nd PLACE (Uo) - Bradley
Jones and Steven Stewart, Kirk legar and
J. A. Green; 3111 PLACE (lfe~lh Del·
twiller and Edge! Gobel, Evan Ounn and
Dru Reed
AQES 13 AND UP
111 PLACE- Eric VanMeter and Andrew TROPHY WINNERS -The following youngsters won troWhiled; 2nd PLACE - Daniel Bookman phies at this years Meigs Youth Golf League, 1st row (1·r):
..8nd Mike Lavender
3rd PLACE - Tyler French and Adem ' Daniel Bookman, Mike Lavender, Edge! Goble, Bradley
Wolfa
Medalists; Haath Oettwlllor, Bryan Harris, Jones and Dru Reed. 2nd row: J. R. Green, Kirk Legar, Bryan
Eric VanMetat', Jeremy Banks and Andrew Harris, Patrick Johnson, and Eric Johnson. 3rd row: Andrew
Whiled.
Wolfe , Andrew Whited, Jeremy Banks and Evan Dunn.

Arbitrator re-instates Terry Glenn
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) An arbitrator overturned
Terry Glenn's season-long
suspension Wednesday, allowing him to rejoin the New
England Patriots for their
fifth game.
The fourth leading receiver
in team history still must
complete a four-game NFL
suspension for violatmg the
league's substance-abuse policy. His agent, James Goulp,
said there are no plans to
appeal that now.
"We are very gratified,"
Gould said m a telephone
mterview.fium his Cincinnati
office. "Terry's looking for_....Y.~~ to returning to the club
is excited about the
prospect of contributing to
the team's success."
Glenn is not allowed to
practice or play · With the
team during hJS suspension.
The arbitrator's decision
cannot be appealed unless the
team challenges It in court,
said R1c hard Berthelsen, genera! counsel of the NFL Players Association.
The
Patriots
weren't

inclined to do that
NFLPA lawyers at the hearCoach Bill Behchi ck, who mg •. said he wasn't surprised
suspended Gl e nn -after he by the decision against the
stayed away from training season-long suspension.
camp without permisstOn,
"It's such a draconian measa1d in a statement, "We hope sure to use agamst a player
that his desire to be reinstated that I think any neutral arbi1s a positive sign and ev1dence trator's going to err on · the
of his willingness to con- side of the player," Berthelsen
'tribute to the team th1s sea- said.
v
son."
Glenn left camp Aug. 3
Still unresolved is how when '1c was notified of the
~ much Glenn will be pat d. The four-g a me
suspension
ruling means Glenn will get impo se~ by the NfL. The
his $480,000 salary and per- team sent him a letter as preformance bonuses, possibly scribed m the collective bardecreased by the four games gaining agreement saying it
h e must miss .
could suspend him after a
The parti es also are at odds fifth
day of unexcused
over how much_ofhiuignin!Yg_jllab.,sences. _ _
bonus Clenn should get, but
The ream suspended him
Berthelsen said that case "is Aug. 15 when 1t put him on
not likely to be heard for the reserve-left squad list. On
some time."
the previous day, the team
Arbitrator Richard Blo ch and Gould discussed the pasruled after holding a 13- hour sibJlity of Glenn returning,
hearing last Thursday at Berthelsen said.
Foxboro Stadium. The deadAlthough other issues were
hne for mal\ing the decision discussed at the hearing,
was Tuesday, but its release Bloch ruled on narrow
was delayed because of the grounds
involving
that
terrorist attacks.
sequence of events, he added.
B e rthelsen, one of three

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Meigs

in to play under th e name of
the Meigs Marauders, in its
first year of consolidation.
All players are asked to be
at the game at b:30 and to
report to the Sidehners
Club tent whi c h IS located
next to the back ga te.
The players wtll have a
chance to visit and begin to
organize for the pre -game
ceremony.
An attempt bas been made

fiJNII Page In
'
formed Meigs Marauder
Sideliners Club will be
sponsoring Alumni Night
this Friday evemng. The
Club will honor the 1967
SEOAL C hampion Marauder~ before the game. The
196 7 team was the first ever

NFL

Meigs youth golf league wraps up play

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

GOLF ROUNDUP

\!Crtbune - Sentinel - 1\.egister
CLASSIFIED

In one week With us

Thursday, ~pt. 13, 2001

fromPIIpB1
His NFL counterpart, Paul Tagliabue, was
well aware of predecessor Pete Rozelle's decision to go ahead with games two days after the
assassination of President Kennedy in 1963.
The late Rozelle long regretted that choice.
"I made ·the deciston:' he once said. " In retrospect, I wish I hadn't."
Plenty of NFL players were adamant: They
want games canceled.
"If we do play Sunday, it looks like: ... 'All
they care about is their money,"'_said defensive
end Phil Hansen, the Buffalo Bills' players
association ·representative. "But we don't have
a choice in the matter. The NFL's going to
decide. But you know what? I'll forgo my
weekly paycheck. This is serious."
Complicating the decisions and logistics
were problems with a1r travel: Getting teams
where they're supposed to be appeared daunting. Flights resumed Wednesday only for passengers whose trips were diverted Tuesday.
The world of college football w.as divided,
with dozens of major schools from No. 1
Miami on down postponing games.
The Southeastern Conference is playin_g on.
The Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-t 0 were split
internally - some of their teams' games were
put off, others will be played. Games "present

Southem
from Pap II

Pierce finished 9-of- 18 for 158 yards and a
touchdown.
Ash and Ohlinger had il)terceptions for
Southern.
Marnhout, Pierce, Joe Cornell,
and 'fYier Little had sacks and Justi'n Allen a
fumble recovery. Russell Krider had a fumble
recovery to set up Southern's first score.
Pierce has been racking up defensive stars at
an alarming rate. Ash leads the team with 34
tackles - eight for losses. Pierce has 32 tackles with 16 of those for losses, a mark that leads
the team. Pierce also has seven sacks.

B.J.

from Pap II
GulfWar began, the biggest
pep party irt the world took
place at the Super Bowl. The
country rallied as jets flew
overhead, and who could ever
forget Whitney Houston's
singmg
of the
national

n.r·

a meaningful opportumty to bn11g our people
together tn a common expressio n o f sympathy
and mourning," the SEC said.'
.
Men's and women's golf also took separate
courses.
Tiger Woods w as in St. Lo uts With most of
the world's top players for the $5 million
World Golf Championship, whtch was callea
off Wednesday, along with the PGA Tour's
Tampa Bay C las.sic, a senior event in North
Carolma, and a Buy.com tournament in Oregon . The PGA Tour hadn't canceled a tournamellt m five years .
The LPGA Tour, though, will .open tts tournament in Oregon on Friday as scheduled
Also tentatively keeping eve nts on this
weekend's calendar are all the major car racing
series: NASCAR, CART, IRL and Formula
One.
Hockey, boxing and soccer relented.
The NHL scrapped the start of its preseason,
calling off Saturday's 12 games, and said it
would decide Thursday when to resume olaying. The middiewetght umficatwn ti\le bout
between Bernard Hopkms and Felix Trinidad,
on Sat urday at Madison Square Garden, was
postponed .
And the MLS, which put off four games
Wednesday, was undecided . on what to do
about the rest of the regular seaso n and play-

offs.
Offensively; Ash has rushed 39 times for 293
yards and five touchdowns. Pi erce is 20-for-48
passing with three touchdowns and 419 yards.
Brice Hill h as 8 catches for 248 yards and
three touchdowns.
Southern will have to watch Alexande r QB
L.C. Grigsby: Known for hts speed and fine
passing, Grigsby has not put up the numbers
this season that he was expected to generate.
Inconsistent blocking up front has put Grigsby under pressure.
Jason Brandeberry and Mic hael Hawk are
·the two blue-collar workers in the AHS backfield . Brandeberry leads the ailing Spartan
offense with 3.4 yards per carry.
Game time is]:30 1'-m.i.r! Rocir1C-

anthem. ·
It was a defiant s~and against
Saddam Hussein, something
we needed, and it worked.
Sporting events have always
rallied Americans and made us
forget the bad thmgs that usually happen in this world, even
though it's only for a couple of
hours a day.
But, during those couple of
hours, we see things that don't

Cooper

to locate all th e p laye r s, but
seve ral h ave ye t to be lo cat e d . If yo u w e re a m o mber of
t h e t e am, (freshm a n and
c oa c hes mcluded) you are
asked to call Sust e Souisby
at (740) 992- 2 377 to let
know you w ill b e a tte ndmg
If you kn o w o f any player s or coa c hes you are asked
to contact them and invite
them back by c ollmg Soulsby.

mean a thing in the grander
scheme of things, but on that
day, they mean everything.
As the nation recove rs,
sports can help the recovery
process by bnngmg normalcy
back to the masses
We can never forget, but we
can at least temporanly escape.
So, lets all just JOin together
and ...
PLAY BALL!!!

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1 cherry dining suite, hutch
table 8 chairs wltabto pads
&amp; pl.;.,. PVC Pallo Fuml·
·ture Consolo Sutra Singer
sowing machine with bench
Moving must oell. (304)882·
2804

C
Honda CB 850 • ustom ,
7•000 miles, $800, 18 loot
above ground poo w/pump
&amp; filter, $250 · 1740&gt;44 1·
f481
Independent Herbalile Cis·
tributor, Coil For Product Or
12 year old Dale Esmhart Opportunity. (740)441-1982
racket. bien worn twice,
kept In plaotlc for past 10
JET
years. Paid $250, will take
AERATION MOTORS
reasonable offer or will Repaired, Now &amp; Rebuilt In
tradelor 20 250 rlfflo, must Stock. Coil Ron Evans, 1·
be Remington or Ruger. 800·537·9528.
(740)441.0760 ask'"' nm.
_
1992 Ch
Pfck
6 1
ovy
·up, CV · MOBILEHOMEOWNE~S
lndar, aulo, $800; 1981 In·
tematlonal Bus. gao &amp; pro- Huge Inventory, Discount
pane. lull size. $2000. Gon· Prices, On VInyl Skirting,
erator 8500E , 18HP, 296 Doors, Windows, Anchors,
hours, $900. (740)379·9257 Wate1 Heetorar Plumbing &amp;
G
Electrical Parts, Furnaces &amp;
~~,:ce 8~ 1 ~~': ~v~~ Heat Pumps. Betmetts Mo·
Truck
lor
sale/trade bile Homo Supjlly, 740-446·
I304) 882•2887
9416 www orvb.comlben ·
!::~=:;;::::;_____ nett
32" ouIoIde doo r 2 rep1ace· NEW AND USED FUR·
~~4x32 &amp; 26 x37 ~~-d:'t~ NANCES FOR SALE! We
al cab. , exorcloe bike , Install, Freo 1 Eetlm.:~·~~
Mauve carpet 11x9 10, 2 r:s:f'l,;J4 ~~-8 308 , 1•

==----=-=:-

=75-1881
Firewood for ooto $150
"'76'
lood . (740)441 ·~
Flulo· Gemelnhordt 1175
and black lulon, tooathen i
yoar old, $70. (740)245·
9567
::::::___ _ _-'-·$Ingle Carport 12&gt;&lt;20 Iyr.
old. $580. 1304)874·4820
For oal• clark ook heavy
dlnlngroom oet. big F~ina
cabinet with light, tablo 7'
long with alx high back
chalro, excellent condil'on.
1700 1740)742·2060
'
Gravely Tractor, small
camper, 78 Jeep: 314 Ton,
Boot Offer. l740)388·1100
Grubb'o Plano- Tuning &amp;
Ropolro . Problema? Need
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr.
740-446-4525

f!00.291~.

Oxygen tank for taro h Irom
Air Producto, 3 loot high,
$100. 1740)992·2369

For Sale Sliver &amp; Golden
Table aaw $280 , Radlaloaw Queen Com. l304)675-15&lt;15
$100. Jointer $180; Shaper
$600, Air compressor $200;
Planer $180 1740)448·1489
WATER WELLS DRILLED.10
(7.0)8811-7311
FARM

r

.!i

1067 Oidl Cutlaoo Supreme
Black, good lntortor tinted

I•

97 Milia Convertlblo, auiO,
tow mlltagt. Exotllont conclllon. Atki"'JI1D.800. Coli
(740~5 oftor 4pm.

j

EQuJI'MJiNr

'"""""
FOR SALE

1:

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AKC Boeton Terrier Puppies
lor oalo. l740)258-1825
AKC Registered Malo Booton Terrier puppy, 8 months
old, (740)446-1857 $200.
Chihuahua for oalo $20. 1
112
ld 1 1
lion
year)~~ 9.,8 orma
call (304
·3
Doberman Pinohcar pup·
plto not registered Mother/
Father on preml..;s. $!60
each. 1740 )446-963S days,
(740)258-11390 ...,enlnga ·

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l304)675o12n aHer 6pm
1997 Saturn • door auto
HAY &amp;
lair power .Un roof 'ollotl:
'
.
'
GRAIN
lent condolion. 14,eotl.
~
I
(740)44t-4792
Buck a bile oale, oquoro 1098 Ford Contour LX. 4
bales $1 .00 Other My up to cytlndlr, 78,000 mlleo, clar1c
$2 00 round blloa $15 00 green • door NADA
· 17 oo0 asking ' 15 700
eaCh 3o4-e75-4889
(74o)&lt;l48·2&amp;2•.
' ·
Hay &amp; Brighl Wire Tlo
Strew Yoor 'Round Dollvory 2000 Hyundle Etantra, fully
&amp; voiu~ otscoum Avalla· loaded, ar, tiH, cruloe, PW,
ble.
Heritage
Farm. PL, pollltlr · moonruof,
)6
5.
AMIFM oaoooHo, koyltao
7
5724
1304
ontry.
$10 ,500 OBO
(740)446'8112

rio
,

Auros

I

FOR SALE

1984 Marcury Grand Mar·
coo 39,500 actual mlleo.
4dr auto, air, am/lm cas·
salle. V·8 Garage Kept
$3500 1304)~75-4849
•

91 Hondo Civic, 124,000
miles, good condition,
$2300. No more, no liN.
(740)370.2111

94 Dodge Shadow. ounmol,
spoiler. 12,000. Phone
(304)882-2751
':-:--7-:::c---:=:,...-:-:---:cc
85 Spirit, $2760, 107800
mlleo, good COndition,
1740)949·3228.

110• Help Wanted

HOME -

1993 Suzuki Katana, Lw-OilMPRiiioiiOiiVFMENI'SiiOiiilltiilio,.l
GSX600, black &amp; blue, carbo cleaned &amp; now plugs,
BASEMENT
new tireo. (740)245-5834
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar- '
2000 \amaha PW50, lots ol antee Local references fur·
oxtru, llko new, $1100 nlohod. Established 1975
(740)~.0718
Coli 24 Hrs 1740) 445H
1·800·287·0576
2001 onda 400EX FMC 0870,
PiPE, Jet Kit In Corburotor, Rogers Waterproofing
new back Ioree, In good con- . , - . , - - - - - - - dillon. Take payoff $4200 C&amp;C General Home Malnte1(=)87)875-8587
or ·nonce· Painting, vinyl sid·
5-6538
lng, carpenuy, doors, w1n·
dowa, blths, mobile home
repair and more. For tree
r:~ &amp;u~~~eatlmatocaiiChot 740-992·
TS "'"'""" 8323
•
FOR Sui;;

I ,

""·~

wfndowo, cold lir, new 465
engine bored 30 over 1oa1
Waterline Special: 314 200
than 1 000 mllto on rebulh 1983 Oodgo Ram 8 oyt. 225
PSI $21 95 Per 100 I' 200
•
low lito
good
PSI S37.oo Per ioo; All John Deere 450·C, 6 way r~n);:,:"s':7 good(304$3.)6~ =nloo. m $IOoovory OBO
Brass Compression FIHings blade, winch &amp; canopy, 8538
1304 )675-8832
In Stock.
F40)742·2~.
RON EVANS ENTERPR1S.
11988 Piyrr.outh Horizon, 1986 Ford F·I50 300
ES Jackoon, Ohio, 1·800LlvmucK
runs good, good lhapo. otral(1ot 8 w/Wood bod runs
537·9528
·
$350. (740)44&amp;-0718
good, good tlrn new 'water
' S . 98' c
BU1LDING
15reglotortdMorganhorses. 1990 Z24 Ctvaller, Good pump, 500, 1 7 hav;
SUPI'uJis
Maroa,
stallions,
Condition
,
Runo
Good.
Aotro
Von wloolvago tide,
3
2
$2600. (740)388·160t
loll ol now and atmoat now
1740 &gt;742' 2876
pons. Motor hlo 105,000
Block, brick, sewer pipes, Athens Livestock Sale:- Fall 1993 Mazda Protege, auto- mlltl, UHI
no ~1.
windows. lintels, etc Claude feedor call oalo Tuesday malic, amllm radio, orutoe, Good tranemlolion, $500.
Wlntoro, Rio Grande, OH September 18, ipm. can;,; power windows, ounroof, (740)448·0778 or (740)448·
Call740-245·5121.
will be accepted starting 69,000 mllea, "14,500, 4553 a1k tor Mary.
4pm Monday up until 3pm (740)992·5878
067
Ram
P1m:
Tuesday. All broods o1 five- 1994 Oklo 81! Royale one 1 S
G FlocrthiH
FOII'lfAU!
stock accepted Hauling
e-~lont Condl
' lien llcyl 1 · ood ShOpe 1
owner.
owner,
87,000
miles5-.
available. 1740)592·2322 or 1304)882-3173
(304)675 .21142
or (30ol)6
7
10 week old 1eglotered Mini· 1740)698-3531.
'7705
~':'ed~~::. sr:rm~~ Llmouoln Bull , siK monthl
~-SU= .~=: !988 Ford XLT, 4, 4, 78,000
$175. 1740)742·2525.
::.'?ar:' P&lt;&gt;t,~~~ pluoP~.:'.r. = g 5995. (304)675- mlloo, oxcollent condition ,

Qual:%.,hay, $1 .75 bite; ,lull
size I! 7'
6 ~12
polio,
n POl a
comor poota; 2·12' gatoo; 1·
10' gate; kldo chopped 5
horoo 3 wh-r. lnoulaled
steel door &amp; storm door Inoulated; lenco charger and
post-like new &amp; wire; 2 tilt In
replacement windows; 2
pistols lor oelo; lor salt or
tracla. (740)985-3810.
r70 1 M "
tJSICAL
RESIDENTIAL HOME
INSnUJMI!NI'S
OWNERS
.
Bach Trumpet with case
0
Tappan HI Effocloncy 90ll Excellent CondhloQ. $350.
Gao Furnaces, Oil Furno· Neg. 13(J4)875·2M2 or
ceo. 12 Seer Hoat Pump &amp; (304)675-2928 aHor 5pm.
Air Conditioning Syatoma
Free 8 Yoar Warranty Bon·
netto Haatlng .&amp; Coollog, 1•
8 0 0 -·~8_!_t;: ~ 8 7
www o..u "':'"-n

'=-cap,

1986 Monte Cono, runo
good, dopondable, faot,
good condition, asking
$4,000. (740)379-2258

II I "'

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SSJHR
Light
Indoor
Work

I 974-

,
REFRI
99
~ro.:.v'!"~~~P
2g • air, 11ml;
GI:RATION
condition $9 oOO ·(~)9 :~
· Residential or commercial
3413. ' • •
wfrlng, now sarvlce or ro·
pairs Master Licensed siectrlclan. Ridenour Electrical,
WV000306, 304·875-1788

=·

r

1~888-

JOBS
CDO Management, LLC

CAMJom&lt;i &amp;
..- - - - - - - Moroll HOMI!li 1

21

1971 Jayco Camper ~
pull behind $3600. , 1990
bayllnor Capri 90 hp.
ltM 5-10.13885: 10811 S· $2,000. 1304)882·3507
10 12811&amp;; 11182 Silvorodo
f3895. COOK MOTOIII
(740).448-0103
1988 Tioga flo.rrow 24H. Metor Horne Cl- C. 360 Cho·

=~~'x4~0:.,

~";

!': 4bl~~~ 1~500, ~H;~s;"&amp;~~~ie~

• • • ...,
•
oondHion, 103~. 11 lng ::284:::5_ _ _ _ _..;__
110,000. (740)2415--&amp;.188
1995 WlnMbago AdVontur·
&amp;
or, 34 loot, auto lovell,
ANI
awnings, good condllion,
4-WDs
s32 000
44 000
11
4o)448-~~·
' ·
17
Chlvloltt
4x
IXIInd·
11108
4'
Gullotroam lnnobruck
.., Clb, loaded, excollont 2000
conclllon, 5.7 V-8, AI.WM 28' FBH new oond oloepa
co, ,,.,200 OBQ . eight 304-875-nrt
(740)44t-4880
2000 Sprlntor, 27·112 loot
11198 Dodge 4••. 3!8, 5 camper, puU-oul, Qak trim,
"ke new, $16,000; 99 Forest
opeed, 58.0410 mlleo, like Rlvar, 27 foot, 18,000; 89
now tlroo a, ~mo, lhlrp
truck,
113,000
OBO Nomad Weekender camper,
30 loot, 14.800 , Call
(740)379-237•
(740)446-855&lt;1

r

v.

I

..

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 13, 2001

Thursday, Sept. 13, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel o Page B 5

ALLEYOOP

Sill DOl

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

I DIDN'T WANf

ALDER

10 WORRY

ACROSS

-rnEM,

. Hauling &amp;
•
Excavating

CotmACTOIS, IlK.

~
Haullaa • Umestoue

74Q-985-3948
• Foot~rs, Walls- Step• •
·ReplaCements, • Walks

(740) 992-3470.

Ser1'1ng Ohio and W.V.
WVIIQ317U

Flat Work,

Hill.

MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

Free Estlmlltll
949·1405
591·5011

Still

and Orl\'ts • Stencil
c,t• F.,. Eslfmat..

7:00AM· 8:00PM

Roofing • Home

~~~~~~.

CONCl£Tl!BlO&lt;K/8RICK

• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil• Fill Din
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

..........
,..........
1...,....

Wrltesel

ClllDCUE

Racine, Ohio 45771

T_.,.PIIIII

JONES'

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trill\
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

H OME CREEK
E NTE RPRISES

DIPOYSAG
PAR'rS -

General
Contracting
Excavating Dozer IUld

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Backhoe

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipme~t Pans
Factory Authorized
Case-JH Parts
Dealers

Self-Storage

Septic Systems
UtiUtles
New Homes

740-992-5232
3-0

LAMM'S

CONSTAUCT10N

CONSTRUCTION

Free oatlllllltta,
lnaured

Specialize In new
constn:ctton,

remodeling, plumbing,
eledrical, home main·
. tenance, and repair
porthes, &amp; decks.

Owner
Charles R. Dill

,._ 992·7445
Ctl
591·9254

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free estimates
10 yrs. experience
In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm

992-7943

74N87-G383

•lllllUIIIIIIItl frill Ull ....lr $24.95

Cellular

• J t 1
YQJ tSS

...
•

, Jeff Warner Ins.
,_ 992-5479

•

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy

740·992·1671

2n.71 mo pd

JERRY 'S
USED
COMPUTERS

Public Notices In Newspapers. ·
Your Rl&amp;hl to Know,
Delhered Rlahtlo Your Door.

441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

Olllio Nlf&gt;IUP'JJMr .4Dll.ld4r/Oit

992-9158
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
Commloolonera
rel8rYeJ the right to
reject any and/or all
bide and/or any party
thereof, and to waive
any Informality In any
bid.

Ohio, during normal
bualne.. houre,
Monday through
Friday.
ALL BIDS MUST
BE SEALED AND
MARKED "BID FOR
USED
I ... BULANCE". The (9)13,17,20,2001
Board ol County 3tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE

Map Couuty Fairp'otmd.'l

September 15th &amp; 16th
lnfvnnatlvn £vntad

Uallas Weber
74U·74:.1-:Jf):l() e"'enlnos

Freeeatlmatea
on repatrea,

24' 120' SECTI

·N-12 DOUBLE WAll
PlASTIC

S....

software.

Llcenoe •53008580

FREE ESTIMATES

RESIDENTIAL ·INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL
SMALl 01 LAUI JOtSUI

---

SINCE 1964

llCI!HOI• DOZING •IND IOADII•
TIUCKING • TllfNCHING

(10'x10' 610'x201

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • VInyl
Siding • N&lt;w Ganges
• Replacement
. Windows • Room
Additions • RooOng
· COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAL

Advertise your
message
$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

KENSINGTON'

~.Snodgrass' Upholstery
"Htlplnt You·to Rtco,,. Your ln,mmnn"

MIICI&lt;'I

Pacur Klltvn
a CaLUmiiUI
Pomeroy, Ohio

Raclnt,Ohlo

M-F t0.m-4pm

-........
........

F8JJJWJaW IIIII

1D-11:111 T-"1.
ISII:II-12:18

'

...~-t·

•!.

'•

,.

II~'

...,.,..

. - ';'.:(.,·
.
..~~.. '-!'.~
~.,..
:.n•c... w.

·- ...• 'Ail

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
• Complete Line of Sullivan's Grooming Supplies
Sulfur Coor.d Urea, bulk onlr, $128.00 par Ion
10% olf oil Prltlert Horae and LIVIIIO&lt;k Equip.
1G-1 G-1 0 All Purpoao Ftrtlllzer $4.5&lt;11501'
• 9,0110 Boler l'Nine $1UO/Balt .
•18,0110 Baler l'Nina $21.50/Btlt -

lbade River Ag lervlce,.lnc

C NSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE CAN HELP
•· \ )

l l·
\I

•:

35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

TREE SERVICE
Top • Trim • Removal
Buckel Sei~VI~:e

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;

Rornodollng

·

• New G•r•oe•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Quuora
· • VInyl Siding &amp; Polnt111i1

. • P•tlo and Porch Oecka

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomtf0y. Ohio

'

DIC, HERSELF OUT
'TIL JUNE.
LEANING
AGAIIIST IT
Lti&lt;.E THAT?

'(OU

PEANUTS
N;.. St6J.I;f ANOTJ.IER
'' D·MINU5''

TI-llS MA'Y BE
EVEN WORSE ..

I

ONE OF TI-lE NEW
LONGER LASTING'' D·MINUSES

~~

Pan
PUI
Pu1

fact

51 Shtkta
55-

qulntuplell

58 In tho

pracedlng
month
57 Pub
mlaallea
58 Runa off to
wed

2S Old age
30 Not lolao

10 Bemotoln,

tor ahol1
11 Lemony
drink

DOWN

13 Sewe ,

• loooely
18 Obltcta
thrown
o-rd
19 Not moving
C2 wcla.)
20 Hoatel
vlsltora,
ueually
22 Certain
refugee

1 UK l&gt;road31 Notlve of
caotora
Hollo
2 Poaltlve
33 Back·
vote
ground of 1 3 Klda' card
Jllay
r.me
36 Group ol
4 gg cell
thraa
5 Fix the
37 Type o1 trey
cloc:k
36 Planltt
8 Hums
Ptter
7 Strong
40 SW11nn
wind

PHIWP ALDER

32 Mombar of

9 Dawn

New Otlhl
denizen•
35 Tollor'o

34

tool
:It Llkoeome

pantyhooe
Cranium
Actor
AHrtd47 Rolllln
statesman
45 Da eame
43
45

Edmund
Burke
math
said, during a March
49 Spy Ofll·
· 22; 1775, speech on
23 Booocl
50 Rocky peak
24 United
52 Gym leal
co nciliation
with
41 Elevalfono 8 Nonprofit
25 Exproo·
53 Uncle
America, "Th e con· (abbr.)
org. ·
·
alona
$4 Signal
42 Loweat
9 Lawyer'•
27 Court
from tho
cessions of the weak
divider
Tltonlc
reg
lone
·
--·
arg:
.
.
are the concessions of
, fe~r." That might be
true when dealing
with "the colonies,"
but it isn't so at the
bridge table. As we
saw yesterday, if con-·
ceding an early trick
pemlits a safe trip to
your contract, bravely
give up that trick;
don't be weak.
Here is another exa~ple, but which
trick should you concede that you could
win? Against your
four-spade contract, ·
West leads the diamond four.
··--Discuss with your
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
partner .that threeby Lull Campo•
spade rebid by North,
Ctltbrlty Cipher CIYPtograma ore crHttd from quotatiOOI b~ famoua
· the responder. Is it
p101111, pool and ~nt. Each loner In tht cipher ataJdO foi anolhtr.
Today's clue: M equals Y
forcing, or just showing a 10- or 11-point
CHDPGOWDOLHW
'ANN X
hand with three
spades? I think it
RCOLHW . GR.' KWOY
should be forcing beVWG
T 'C H G N
cause of the double
fit. Always be pre'ZW
YPCVW NLH
pared to overbid with
OPWHWCUOWH
ILGKXGRAY;
a fit in two suits.
it looks natural to
LV . ' YPCVW
0 P W M
win trick one with
DP. LHDPGKK
ZGRYONR
the diamond ace and .
~REVIOUS SOLUTION: "There was no ooe q~lte !Ike ~er In
to ruff a diamond in
American literature.• - Author Elizabeth Hardwick on Eudora
the dummy. But what
Welty
next? You are unTIIAT DAILY
comfortably strarlded
PUZZLIR
in the dummy. You - - - - - - ldltod ~r CLAY R. POllAN
.
can draw trumps and
Rearrange letters of the
~-~,.,.-._,
take the club finesse,
four scrambled words below 10 form -four simple words.
but East puts West on
play with a diamond
IFSNHI
for a heart shift
through dummy's
king. You lose two
hearts, one diamond
HA E DA
and one club: one
down.
To maintain control, duck the first
THIEG
trick. What does East
s
:,
Life has · its many mysteries,
6
. do now? He has no
.
_ .
.
among which is why there is algood play. If he re~::~:=~=~~~~:-::_"'._, ways one key on your chain that
turns a diamond, you
N y H E p H ~doesn't fit-------·.
·
ruff in the dummy,
1--r~7!"""'1'~-r~-~~-li~arl
Complete .the chuckle quoted
.
.
by filling in the missing words
draw trumps, and take
•
'J'OU
develop
from s1ep No. 3 below.
the club finesse with
A PRINT NUMBERED
everything under
~ lETTERS IN SQUARES
control. You lose at
A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
n1ost one heart, one
W fOR ANSWER
diamond and one
club.
..
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
At trick one, you
Fathom· Madly· Ra{ny ·Absorb. NOT so BAD
have two choices: win
Friends are those who laugh at your jokes when they
or play low. You
aren't funny and sympathize with your woes when they 're
should consider the
NOT so BAD.
.
.
implications ofboth.

S@ \'Cc~tn~

-zrezrss ::!:

0

I

I I I l

If

e

I

I

'

., ,,.

Mltol

.'J.

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

..,

Ll(f~:'£

.,

CcmpTIA c.ra·

.....

DRIVa:.'S

,Po

WEITIIIUl
WlliSIIIP

~
-- A.+.

~

~etf.~

STEI' MtbE!

740.667-0600

.,

W¥i'

~~~no~

Roofing • Gutters o Siding
Decks • Concrete o Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

1.t

limestone!
Seniors Discounts
multiple LtNtd
, Discounts

N'I(;W IT~ liME. fCR (&gt;,

THE~ WH'I' 1\~E

.Bit• "ht••

lRI-COUUT'Y
TRHUSPORT

.
•

THE BORN LOSER

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

992-5908

or 992-2753

,.,

FREE IN HOME I!SnMAT£1•"8EEI~ IIIELIEVIIG.. •WVIOZI477 .

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

' 740-992-1101

..

1-800-291-5600. 740-992-4119
Pomerov, OH .

211' E••t S&amp;eond' Street

Free Estimates

~

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

740-992-7599

• New Hom••

..

TtiAT SHE CAN'T

. FREE ESTIMATES

• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagea
• Addltlona
• Dacktl
• Homt Repairs

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

FAITH FULL COSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 1U, LONC BOnOM, OHIO

'We'll fix it or else!'

._):'

LET'S HEA~ JUGHAID'S
DOOZ"f' ABOUT TOD~Y'S

I&amp;&amp;IN' HOMEWORK .

Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

.I

BY

.-\'( ONLY tiOPE IS

81~2202

PIU
Pau

tA
~·
Pau

Eul

Be brave

' BIG NATE

.

BISSELL

Pau

N_...

'

"Trane" Sales &amp; Senice For

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

Lernar
21 Dentlat'o
ccncern
23 - alai
26 Horrow'a
rival
28 Duck

Opening lead: + 4

1-800-250-9077

(14019-92·1194_
992-6635
..

Well

+

Gallia, Mason, a'nd M&lt;igs Counti..
Licensed and Tn.&lt;ured
WV 005176

In-home eervlce
available 24 houre,
used syetems 388
and up, used .
hardware ahd

middleport, OH

.\KtiZ

Vulnerablt: East-West

Residential · Commercial New Construction
Sal.. S."ice lnstullation
Sptdalizing in Sheet Metal Du&lt;twork

FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

97 Beech St.

t Q II 'tl:
.. Q t I

... J 4 2

/llr Hmtl'TO SfopATh::m ..~

• Nearly 2000·years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
F11r more information, come to our chtlrch site.
Sunday 9:30- Sunduy School;
10:30 • Preaching
Sunday Eve, 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

15 E10ttrlc
18 Main
17 RR depot
11 LYricist
Alan -

Dealer: South

TRANE'
1-304-&lt;i?S-7824

Enrico

ID I

t AI I

II

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

.....
.,,.
•

00

• Garages ·
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

6

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• New Homes '

ind

....

9 AJ I I

KJ14J

I.
3.
4

· Q~ 6dt Annual ~~
~ EXPO 200 1 1:.
f'()l'

••

.A.K11 753

w...

45 Flip ono'o

45 Org. lor
on
purebred•
14 ltllllan tenor 45 aiHd on

Y KIt

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION

•l*IIII$17.85•EUIUitWIIl ·
• Slnlll Pltle hllllllriiiiiCII $18.95
lrllle $42.95 •ltar· 1n1111 $411

74D-992-D7 9

NOTICES

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

~/~tvuN

l~~'r~
oxp -

•u-••

N.rt
6 Q 4 :1

'

~~~
High. &amp; Dry

clag. ·

7 Antelope

Howardl.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh1o 45760
Local843-5264
M~.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Morlgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
THE OI.IIUTY UFl!

dontlat'o

1 SlogaQ

BUL

P/8

44 Ortho-

7"1~ 1

u--'!•"tn- 2422

Blacllllurn

GRAVEL'
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

'Your

'Birthday
In the year ah~:ad you .
should be able to ~o after and
acquire many of the things
that h:~vc been denied you in
the past. C hannels that have
been pn:viously blocked will
now open up.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
· -- Should another want to do
something· nice for you today .
don't be embarrassed and stall
his or her cffo~. De receptive
a nd gracious, and mak~ this
person feel good about their
kindness. Get a jvmp Qn life
by undersundi ng the influences that'll govcm you in the
year ahead. Send for your Astra-G raph predictio ns by
mailing S2 to Astra-Graph, .
c/o this newspaper! P.O. Box

167, Wickliffe, OH 440920167. B&lt; IUr&lt; to !late your
Zodiac •ill"·

LIBRA (S&lt;pt. 23-0ct. 23) • You oro well oquippod . to
analyze ond evaluate an houe
you ro takln~ wry 1erlnu1ly.
lt't· wlae w conoult with oth·
on today (or their opinion,.
but 1ho flnol doehlon 1hould
bu ynun.
.
SCORI•IO (Oct. l~· Nnv .
2~) .. Undor no mh•r ol~n
ran ono 110 " doop within the
tolf In 1earGh nf nniW&lt;'Ii 01
,II

,,

..

'·

ScoJl'iO. u.~e th1s trcmcndou~
as_sct to your advantage roday.
Yom instinct5 wiJl guide you
correctly.
·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -~ Your me ntal faculties arc :~.pt ' to .be upe rati ng
full force today, with ·i m·pressive ideas and ~hinking .
Now is the time to tackJe any
grave problems you may have.
:It

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) ~- Set the example'
today by applying your ulcn"
to ~ork-related issue~ and
others will jumf on board .
Good results wil Come from
everyone pooling their forces
and working together.

AQUARIUS O•n. 20-Fcb.
19) -- Optimism will be con-

ARIES (March 21,Aprill9)
-~

This is an excellent day to
mix business wah plcamre ,
especially if you 'rc negC~tiating
something quite serious. Th~
friendly Jtm.o sphcrc will
lighten up the issues.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Lending a helping hand
to co- workers or family incmbcr, roQ;ay will not bC" taken
for granted. Whatever the
cas~. It' ll be greatly appreciated and dnw everyone closer
togJfher.

GEMINI (M'y 21-Ju nc 20)
--Get together with close, intim:He fric:nds coday to cu rb
your restlessness. The warmth.
closeness and congenia lity
you'll sh.are makes what you
do rogerher even more iatisfy~

tagious todily and effectively
rai1e the enthu&amp;iaam level~ of

in(!.

.your companion•. They'll realize that your encnuraJIOm&lt;nt
II buod on r..llotlc facu. •
l'ISt;JlS (Peb. 20-March 20)
.. Bocoul' you '11 novor !lop
tryln~~odoy, you'll oucmd If
mon overythln~ you undor•
toke, oven whot 11 conoldorod
a dud. Thll ohould tun1 nut tu
bo 1 ro1hur pmduotlvo dAy (or
you.

22) .. FoUow your innate diocirllno today in handling your
rooourc.,, and your chan&lt;ot of
aecmnullnJna ov"n morv will
b• Aeul... tod. U•• your hood,

'

CANCER (June 21-July

nol

~our ~mmiun1.

lEO (July 2J-Auy, 22) ••
Ute your ¥rtll muncol "facultloo lod•y 10 handlt 10rlouo
pr'tlocu or &amp;IIIAnmontl , You'U
no! only ••• tho big rleturo;
b111 tho do11Uo tl]at mnko up
lhu wholo.
•

...

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Sept. 13, 2001

Thursday, Sept. 13, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel o Page B 5

ALLEYOOP

Sill DOl

•

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

I DIDN'T WANf

ALDER

10 WORRY

ACROSS

-rnEM,

. Hauling &amp;
•
Excavating

CotmACTOIS, IlK.

~
Haullaa • Umestoue

74Q-985-3948
• Foot~rs, Walls- Step• •
·ReplaCements, • Walks

(740) 992-3470.

Ser1'1ng Ohio and W.V.
WVIIQ317U

Flat Work,

Hill.

MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

Free Estlmlltll
949·1405
591·5011

Still

and Orl\'ts • Stencil
c,t• F.,. Eslfmat..

7:00AM· 8:00PM

Roofing • Home

~~~~~~.

CONCl£Tl!BlO&lt;K/8RICK

• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil• Fill Din
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

..........
,..........
1...,....

Wrltesel

ClllDCUE

Racine, Ohio 45771

T_.,.PIIIII

JONES'

Tree Service
• Top • Removal • Trill\
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

H OME CREEK
E NTE RPRISES

DIPOYSAG
PAR'rS -

General
Contracting
Excavating Dozer IUld

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Backhoe

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipme~t Pans
Factory Authorized
Case-JH Parts
Dealers

Self-Storage

Septic Systems
UtiUtles
New Homes

740-992-5232
3-0

LAMM'S

CONSTAUCT10N

CONSTRUCTION

Free oatlllllltta,
lnaured

Specialize In new
constn:ctton,

remodeling, plumbing,
eledrical, home main·
. tenance, and repair
porthes, &amp; decks.

Owner
Charles R. Dill

,._ 992·7445
Ctl
591·9254

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free estimates
10 yrs. experience
In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm

992-7943

74N87-G383

•lllllUIIIIIIItl frill Ull ....lr $24.95

Cellular

• J t 1
YQJ tSS

...
•

, Jeff Warner Ins.
,_ 992-5479

•

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

FREE ESTIMATES

Pomeroy

740·992·1671

2n.71 mo pd

JERRY 'S
USED
COMPUTERS

Public Notices In Newspapers. ·
Your Rl&amp;hl to Know,
Delhered Rlahtlo Your Door.

441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

Olllio Nlf&gt;IUP'JJMr .4Dll.ld4r/Oit

992-9158
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
Commloolonera
rel8rYeJ the right to
reject any and/or all
bide and/or any party
thereof, and to waive
any Informality In any
bid.

Ohio, during normal
bualne.. houre,
Monday through
Friday.
ALL BIDS MUST
BE SEALED AND
MARKED "BID FOR
USED
I ... BULANCE". The (9)13,17,20,2001
Board ol County 3tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE

Map Couuty Fairp'otmd.'l

September 15th &amp; 16th
lnfvnnatlvn £vntad

Uallas Weber
74U·74:.1-:Jf):l() e"'enlnos

Freeeatlmatea
on repatrea,

24' 120' SECTI

·N-12 DOUBLE WAll
PlASTIC

S....

software.

Llcenoe •53008580

FREE ESTIMATES

RESIDENTIAL ·INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL
SMALl 01 LAUI JOtSUI

---

SINCE 1964

llCI!HOI• DOZING •IND IOADII•
TIUCKING • TllfNCHING

(10'x10' 610'x201

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • VInyl
Siding • N&lt;w Ganges
• Replacement
. Windows • Room
Additions • RooOng
· COMMERCIAL and RESIDENIIAL

Advertise your
message
$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

KENSINGTON'

~.Snodgrass' Upholstery
"Htlplnt You·to Rtco,,. Your ln,mmnn"

MIICI&lt;'I

Pacur Klltvn
a CaLUmiiUI
Pomeroy, Ohio

Raclnt,Ohlo

M-F t0.m-4pm

-........
........

F8JJJWJaW IIIII

1D-11:111 T-"1.
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Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
• Complete Line of Sullivan's Grooming Supplies
Sulfur Coor.d Urea, bulk onlr, $128.00 par Ion
10% olf oil Prltlert Horae and LIVIIIO&lt;k Equip.
1G-1 G-1 0 All Purpoao Ftrtlllzer $4.5&lt;11501'
• 9,0110 Boler l'Nine $1UO/Balt .
•18,0110 Baler l'Nina $21.50/Btlt -

lbade River Ag lervlce,.lnc

C NSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE CAN HELP
•· \ )

l l·
\I

•:

35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

TREE SERVICE
Top • Trim • Removal
Buckel Sei~VI~:e

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;

Rornodollng

·

• New G•r•oe•
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Quuora
· • VInyl Siding &amp; Polnt111i1

. • P•tlo and Porch Oecka

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomtf0y. Ohio

'

DIC, HERSELF OUT
'TIL JUNE.
LEANING
AGAIIIST IT
Lti&lt;.E THAT?

'(OU

PEANUTS
N;.. St6J.I;f ANOTJ.IER
'' D·MINU5''

TI-llS MA'Y BE
EVEN WORSE ..

I

ONE OF TI-lE NEW
LONGER LASTING'' D·MINUSES

~~

Pan
PUI
Pu1

fact

51 Shtkta
55-

qulntuplell

58 In tho

pracedlng
month
57 Pub
mlaallea
58 Runa off to
wed

2S Old age
30 Not lolao

10 Bemotoln,

tor ahol1
11 Lemony
drink

DOWN

13 Sewe ,

• loooely
18 Obltcta
thrown
o-rd
19 Not moving
C2 wcla.)
20 Hoatel
vlsltora,
ueually
22 Certain
refugee

1 UK l&gt;road31 Notlve of
caotora
Hollo
2 Poaltlve
33 Back·
vote
ground of 1 3 Klda' card
Jllay
r.me
36 Group ol
4 gg cell
thraa
5 Fix the
37 Type o1 trey
cloc:k
36 Planltt
8 Hums
Ptter
7 Strong
40 SW11nn
wind

PHIWP ALDER

32 Mombar of

9 Dawn

New Otlhl
denizen•
35 Tollor'o

34

tool
:It Llkoeome

pantyhooe
Cranium
Actor
AHrtd47 Rolllln
statesman
45 Da eame
43
45

Edmund
Burke
math
said, during a March
49 Spy Ofll·
· 22; 1775, speech on
23 Booocl
50 Rocky peak
24 United
52 Gym leal
co nciliation
with
41 Elevalfono 8 Nonprofit
25 Exproo·
53 Uncle
America, "Th e con· (abbr.)
org. ·
·
alona
$4 Signal
42 Loweat
9 Lawyer'•
27 Court
from tho
cessions of the weak
divider
Tltonlc
reg
lone
·
--·
arg:
.
.
are the concessions of
, fe~r." That might be
true when dealing
with "the colonies,"
but it isn't so at the
bridge table. As we
saw yesterday, if con-·
ceding an early trick
pemlits a safe trip to
your contract, bravely
give up that trick;
don't be weak.
Here is another exa~ple, but which
trick should you concede that you could
win? Against your
four-spade contract, ·
West leads the diamond four.
··--Discuss with your
CELEBRITY
CIPHER
partner .that threeby Lull Campo•
spade rebid by North,
Ctltbrlty Cipher CIYPtograma ore crHttd from quotatiOOI b~ famoua
· the responder. Is it
p101111, pool and ~nt. Each loner In tht cipher ataJdO foi anolhtr.
Today's clue: M equals Y
forcing, or just showing a 10- or 11-point
CHDPGOWDOLHW
'ANN X
hand with three
spades? I think it
RCOLHW . GR.' KWOY
should be forcing beVWG
T 'C H G N
cause of the double
fit. Always be pre'ZW
YPCVW NLH
pared to overbid with
OPWHWCUOWH
ILGKXGRAY;
a fit in two suits.
it looks natural to
LV . ' YPCVW
0 P W M
win trick one with
DP. LHDPGKK
ZGRYONR
the diamond ace and .
~REVIOUS SOLUTION: "There was no ooe q~lte !Ike ~er In
to ruff a diamond in
American literature.• - Author Elizabeth Hardwick on Eudora
the dummy. But what
Welty
next? You are unTIIAT DAILY
comfortably strarlded
PUZZLIR
in the dummy. You - - - - - - ldltod ~r CLAY R. POllAN
.
can draw trumps and
Rearrange letters of the
~-~,.,.-._,
take the club finesse,
four scrambled words below 10 form -four simple words.
but East puts West on
play with a diamond
IFSNHI
for a heart shift
through dummy's
king. You lose two
hearts, one diamond
HA E DA
and one club: one
down.
To maintain control, duck the first
THIEG
trick. What does East
s
:,
Life has · its many mysteries,
6
. do now? He has no
.
_ .
.
among which is why there is algood play. If he re~::~:=~=~~~~:-::_"'._, ways one key on your chain that
turns a diamond, you
N y H E p H ~doesn't fit-------·.
·
ruff in the dummy,
1--r~7!"""'1'~-r~-~~-li~arl
Complete .the chuckle quoted
.
.
by filling in the missing words
draw trumps, and take
•
'J'OU
develop
from s1ep No. 3 below.
the club finesse with
A PRINT NUMBERED
everything under
~ lETTERS IN SQUARES
control. You lose at
A UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
n1ost one heart, one
W fOR ANSWER
diamond and one
club.
..
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
At trick one, you
Fathom· Madly· Ra{ny ·Absorb. NOT so BAD
have two choices: win
Friends are those who laugh at your jokes when they
or play low. You
aren't funny and sympathize with your woes when they 're
should consider the
NOT so BAD.
.
.
implications ofboth.

S@ \'Cc~tn~

-zrezrss ::!:

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Mltol

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WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

..,

Ll(f~:'£

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CcmpTIA c.ra·

.....

DRIVa:.'S

,Po

WEITIIIUl
WlliSIIIP

~
-- A.+.

~

~etf.~

STEI' MtbE!

740.667-0600

.,

W¥i'

~~~no~

Roofing • Gutters o Siding
Decks • Concrete o Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

1.t

limestone!
Seniors Discounts
multiple LtNtd
, Discounts

N'I(;W IT~ liME. fCR (&gt;,

THE~ WH'I' 1\~E

.Bit• "ht••

lRI-COUUT'Y
TRHUSPORT

.
•

THE BORN LOSER

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

992-5908

or 992-2753

,.,

FREE IN HOME I!SnMAT£1•"8EEI~ IIIELIEVIIG.. •WVIOZI477 .

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

' 740-992-1101

..

1-800-291-5600. 740-992-4119
Pomerov, OH .

211' E••t S&amp;eond' Street

Free Estimates

~

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

740-992-7599

• New Hom••

..

TtiAT SHE CAN'T

. FREE ESTIMATES

• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagea
• Addltlona
• Dacktl
• Homt Repairs

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

FAITH FULL COSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 1U, LONC BOnOM, OHIO

'We'll fix it or else!'

._):'

LET'S HEA~ JUGHAID'S
DOOZ"f' ABOUT TOD~Y'S

I&amp;&amp;IN' HOMEWORK .

Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

.I

BY

.-\'( ONLY tiOPE IS

81~2202

PIU
Pau

tA
~·
Pau

Eul

Be brave

' BIG NATE

.

BISSELL

Pau

N_...

'

"Trane" Sales &amp; Senice For

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

Lernar
21 Dentlat'o
ccncern
23 - alai
26 Horrow'a
rival
28 Duck

Opening lead: + 4

1-800-250-9077

(14019-92·1194_
992-6635
..

Well

+

Gallia, Mason, a'nd M&lt;igs Counti..
Licensed and Tn.&lt;ured
WV 005176

In-home eervlce
available 24 houre,
used syetems 388
and up, used .
hardware ahd

middleport, OH

.\KtiZ

Vulnerablt: East-West

Residential · Commercial New Construction
Sal.. S."ice lnstullation
Sptdalizing in Sheet Metal Du&lt;twork

FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

97 Beech St.

t Q II 'tl:
.. Q t I

... J 4 2

/llr Hmtl'TO SfopATh::m ..~

• Nearly 2000·years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
F11r more information, come to our chtlrch site.
Sunday 9:30- Sunduy School;
10:30 • Preaching
Sunday Eve, 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

15 E10ttrlc
18 Main
17 RR depot
11 LYricist
Alan -

Dealer: South

TRANE'
1-304-&lt;i?S-7824

Enrico

ID I

t AI I

II

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

.....
.,,.
•

00

• Garages ·
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

6

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

• New Homes '

ind

....

9 AJ I I

KJ14J

I.
3.
4

· Q~ 6dt Annual ~~
~ EXPO 200 1 1:.
f'()l'

••

.A.K11 753

w...

45 Flip ono'o

45 Org. lor
on
purebred•
14 ltllllan tenor 45 aiHd on

Y KIt

ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTRUCTION

•l*IIII$17.85•EUIUitWIIl ·
• Slnlll Pltle hllllllriiiiiCII $18.95
lrllle $42.95 •ltar· 1n1111 $411

74D-992-D7 9

NOTICES

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

~/~tvuN

l~~'r~
oxp -

•u-••

N.rt
6 Q 4 :1

'

~~~
High. &amp; Dry

clag. ·

7 Antelope

Howardl.
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh1o 45760
Local843-5264
M~.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Morlgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
THE OI.IIUTY UFl!

dontlat'o

1 SlogaQ

BUL

P/8

44 Ortho-

7"1~ 1

u--'!•"tn- 2422

Blacllllurn

GRAVEL'
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

'Your

'Birthday
In the year ah~:ad you .
should be able to ~o after and
acquire many of the things
that h:~vc been denied you in
the past. C hannels that have
been pn:viously blocked will
now open up.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
· -- Should another want to do
something· nice for you today .
don't be embarrassed and stall
his or her cffo~. De receptive
a nd gracious, and mak~ this
person feel good about their
kindness. Get a jvmp Qn life
by undersundi ng the influences that'll govcm you in the
year ahead. Send for your Astra-G raph predictio ns by
mailing S2 to Astra-Graph, .
c/o this newspaper! P.O. Box

167, Wickliffe, OH 440920167. B&lt; IUr&lt; to !late your
Zodiac •ill"·

LIBRA (S&lt;pt. 23-0ct. 23) • You oro well oquippod . to
analyze ond evaluate an houe
you ro takln~ wry 1erlnu1ly.
lt't· wlae w conoult with oth·
on today (or their opinion,.
but 1ho flnol doehlon 1hould
bu ynun.
.
SCORI•IO (Oct. l~· Nnv .
2~) .. Undor no mh•r ol~n
ran ono 110 " doop within the
tolf In 1earGh nf nniW&lt;'Ii 01
,II

,,

..

'·

ScoJl'iO. u.~e th1s trcmcndou~
as_sct to your advantage roday.
Yom instinct5 wiJl guide you
correctly.
·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -~ Your me ntal faculties arc :~.pt ' to .be upe rati ng
full force today, with ·i m·pressive ideas and ~hinking .
Now is the time to tackJe any
grave problems you may have.
:It

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan . 19) ~- Set the example'
today by applying your ulcn"
to ~ork-related issue~ and
others will jumf on board .
Good results wil Come from
everyone pooling their forces
and working together.

AQUARIUS O•n. 20-Fcb.
19) -- Optimism will be con-

ARIES (March 21,Aprill9)
-~

This is an excellent day to
mix business wah plcamre ,
especially if you 'rc negC~tiating
something quite serious. Th~
friendly Jtm.o sphcrc will
lighten up the issues.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Lending a helping hand
to co- workers or family incmbcr, roQ;ay will not bC" taken
for granted. Whatever the
cas~. It' ll be greatly appreciated and dnw everyone closer
togJfher.

GEMINI (M'y 21-Ju nc 20)
--Get together with close, intim:He fric:nds coday to cu rb
your restlessness. The warmth.
closeness and congenia lity
you'll sh.are makes what you
do rogerher even more iatisfy~

tagious todily and effectively
rai1e the enthu&amp;iaam level~ of

in(!.

.your companion•. They'll realize that your encnuraJIOm&lt;nt
II buod on r..llotlc facu. •
l'ISt;JlS (Peb. 20-March 20)
.. Bocoul' you '11 novor !lop
tryln~~odoy, you'll oucmd If
mon overythln~ you undor•
toke, oven whot 11 conoldorod
a dud. Thll ohould tun1 nut tu
bo 1 ro1hur pmduotlvo dAy (or
you.

22) .. FoUow your innate diocirllno today in handling your
rooourc.,, and your chan&lt;ot of
aecmnullnJna ov"n morv will
b• Aeul... tod. U•• your hood,

'

CANCER (June 21-July

nol

~our ~mmiun1.

lEO (July 2J-Auy, 22) ••
Ute your ¥rtll muncol "facultloo lod•y 10 handlt 10rlouo
pr'tlocu or &amp;IIIAnmontl , You'U
no! only ••• tho big rleturo;
b111 tho do11Uo tl]at mnko up
lhu wholo.
•

...

�FLY YOUR FLAG TODAY TO HONOR AMERICA!
J

Meigs County's

'

Towards the purcha~a al a FORD.F·SBIIBS far aly_DDI wba aarraatly D~Ds .
-a Chevy Silverado, DKIIMC Sierra, ar Toyota Tundra!
.
Ford is currently offering up to $1500 rebates *PLUS* $1 000 if you currently have ownership of an equal competitive modele
*Does not have to be used as a·trade ln.
•

LINCOLN

.$1DDD Iabate
*PLUS* $1DDD IIWIID

"MEIICAN

LUXUIY

far anrana awning a laU sized
campatitiva SUV.
*DOll DOt Dlld ta b11111d lor tridl.

Hometown Newspaper

.

Bus vows

terrorism

W

ASHINGTON
(AP) - The nation
on maximwn alert
against future threats, President
Bush is pledging a global campaign to whip terrorism and
the likes of OSam.a bin Laden at
the same time Americans
grieve over attacks that claimed
thousands oflives in New York
and Washington.
: "Our country is strong. A
great people has . been moved
to defend a great nation ," the
president said Thursday as he
mapped a military response,
c onsulted with world leaders
and consoled the ' wounded in
the wake of coordinated
attacks Tuesday on _the World
Trade Center in New York and
· the ~entagon. The fight against
terrorism, Bush said, His now
the focus of my administra-

tion."
But recovery was uneven at
best in a land on edge.
Authorities hustled Vice
President Di~k C heney out of
Washington, kept .the New
GOD LOVE THE U.S.A.- With the nation in mourning in the wake of Tuesday's terYork stock markets shut anothrorist attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., students at Ordnance Elementary
er ·day and slowly very
in Point Pleasant West Virginia took time Thursday to celebrate their country and
slowly .- 'brought the, nation's fl:(iledom. Waving flags donated by third-grade teacher Rosie Miller·s father, World
air traffic system back to life. War II veteran and patriotic teacher Robert Miller of Asheville, N.C., the students
Information in th e hands of
the government "suggests we
haven't seen the end of this
current threat;' said one US.
official, speaking on condition
of anonymity. H e cited concerns that terrorists may strike
in a different manner now that
airport security has been
improved.
The bo9Y.,C_!&gt;'!Jll,p1ean~hile,
was grim and getting grimmer.
-~ New York Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani said 4,763 people
were reported missing at the
World Trade Center site, where
hijackers flew cwo jetliners
fully loaded with fuel into the
twin towers Tuesday morning.
There were 184 confirmed
fatalities. '
Authorities said they expected 190 deaths at the Pentagon,
where a third plane blew a hole
in one side of the nation's fivesided defense nerve center. A
fourth hijacked plane crashed
in a rural area of Pennsylvania,
·
with 65 aboard.
Early Friday, searchers found
the flight data and , cockpit
voice recorders from the jet
that crashed into the Pentagon.
A day earlier, the data recorder
was recovered from the
hijacked airliner that crashed in
Pennsylvania. .
The FAA cleared airports for
reopening only after strict new
security measures were in
place. But even then some airlines didn't fly, others flew

mLINCOLN
Mercury~

SPECIAL FINANCE
DEPARTMENT

BanJu'uptcy?
Credit Problems?
"We Can Help"!!

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle

1-800-272-5179 or 446-9800

I
-

· TIRES

•
-

'

We will meet or beat any c.ompetitor's
advertised price on the same,tire..

stood in front of the school's flag, flying at half-mast, to recite the Pledge of Allegiance and sing "America the Beautiful" and "The Star Spangled Banner" on the
birthday of our nation·s anthem. Students and teachers were dressed in red. white
and blue. Fifth-graders in Mlller"s class, whose desks each have a flag, spent time
drawing patriotic pictures. (Michele Carter/Point Pleasant (W.Va.) Register)

Please sH Bush, Al

· Please see Mining. A3

We fea1ure all major brands: Goodyear, Flraalone, General ,

Michelin, Brlctgestone. Continental. UNIAOYAj.., PF GOOdrich.

•
$199

Mouml ng and balancing may be extra.

MOTOitCUPT

"FAIT LUal

Whrtruat

wour lnVHtm•nt to

..., ..od»o..
th•..-opl•
vour.

• Service includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil and new
Motorcraft oil filter • Perform Multi-Point Vehlcte inspection
• Check and fill necessB.ry fluids • Allin 29 minutes or less
• Diesel vehicles
be extra.
·

FORD MOTOR CO.
FLOORMATS

Sta~ing

$4400

I

I
I
I
I

WIPER
Starting
at

SPLASH GUARDS

sso4o

•

I '

High: 70s

FORD.FACTORY
BUG SHIELD
Starting
at • .

'8150
.

$

2 Sedloni - 12 Pllps

Installed

BED RAILS .

Pomeroy EMS collecting relief items

L-:405
Details, A2

Calendar
· Classifieds
· Comics
Editorials
· Obituaries
Sports

Weather

Lotteries

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - Food, clothing and
blankets are being collected b y Pomeroy
Volunteer Emergency Squad in cooperation w ith Peoples Bank to b e sent to the
.vi ctims of the terrorist attacks in New
York and Washington .
Todd Smith, Pomeroy squad chief,
spoke Thursday afternoon of the rapid
depletion of !llppli es as ·the emergency

AS

OHIO
B2-4 Pick 5: 5-8-5; Pick 4: 9-().7-1

BS 1111ckere 5: 1-12·1&amp;18-19

A4

A3 W.VA.

81.3 bally 5: 7-&amp;4 Daily 4: 4-1-2.()

A3

Q

2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

Camaraderie and togetherness
that make this country the
greatest in the world.
goes on. H.e call ed for assistance from area
residents as a symbol of the "camaraderie
and togetherness th at make this co untry
the greatest in the world.'"
He said that donations of canned foods,
new or slightly used clothing, and blan•

kets are being accepted at the Pomeroy
Branch of M ei~s Co unty Public Library
and Meigs County Emergency M edical
Service behind Veterans Memorial H ospital.
In addition th e items listed, money wi ll
be ac,eptt'&lt;i at any of the Peoples Bank
locatio ns. He said ,the bank is set up to
accept donations of money, whi ch will be
electronically sent to both locations.

.

..

Holzer ,Medical Center joins
America in thought and
prayet
r
during.
our
recent
,.
ti m'e of.tragedy. .

•

ICAL CENTER
Discover the Holze1· Difference

www.holzer.org

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�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="456">
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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="9901">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24520">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24519">
              <text>September 13, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="29">
      <name>hysell</name>
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    <tag tagId="3051">
      <name>stalnaker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
