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•

Page 86

Baseball
Yankees win fourth straight
AL East title via Boston loss
The New York Yankees
were at their best before and
after their tim home game
since the terroriSl attacks.
The Yankees' 4-o· loss to
Tampa Uay hardly mattered
Tuesday night as the storied
franchise honored the victims
and rescue workers and
wrapped up its fourth straight
AL East title.
By the rime Boston's 12- 7
home lo~s to B_altiri1ore gave
New York the division championship, few cared that
Tanyon
Sturtze
spoiled
Roger Clemens' bid for his
21st victory of the season.
" We came out flat," manager Joe Torre said. " We were
sloppy in the first inning. We
were distracted, but you can't
help but get distracted with
all the heroes on the field."
In other American League
games, it was Cleveland 1 I,
Toronto 7; Seattle 13, Texas ,2;
Detroit 6, Kansas City 4;
Minnesota 4, Chicago 2; and
Oakland 9, Anaheim 3.
In the pregame ceremony
at Yankee Stadium, players
from both teams ·lined the
baselines side-by-side with
city rescue workers during
patriotic
songs.
Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani, the city's
most public Yankees fan, got a
loud ovation before joining
the players on the pitcher's
mound.
Clemens (20-2) lost for the
first time since May 20 at
Seattle, ending a 16-game
winning streak. He did strike
out nine batters to move into
third place on . the career
strikeout list.
He gave up a one-out single to Brent Abernathy in the
first inning then threw wildly
into the stands on a pickoff

attempt. Ben Grieve and
Toby Hall hit RBI singles in
the inning to give Sturtze a
2-0 lead he wouldn't relinquish .
Sturtze (9-12) allowed four
hits in seven scoreless innings,
arid Victor Zambrano finishe~ Tampa Uay's second
straight shutout.
Orioles 12, .Red Sox 7
Tony
Batista,
C hris
Richard and Luis Matos
homered for Baltimore, with
Batista hitting a grand slam in
the ninth .
Mariners 13, Rangers 2
Bret Boone was 3-for-4
wi th four RBis as Seattle
. won at Texas to set an AL
record with its 56th road vi ctory.
John
Olerud,
Carlos
Guillen and AI Martin homered for Seattle, and lchiro
Suzuki stole his 49th and
50th bases.
Indians 11, Blue Jays 7
Kenny Lofton's three-run
single capped a five - run
eighth as host Cleveland beat
Toronto, just hours after Indians manager Charlie Manuel ·
was hospitalized.
Manuel, who had his third
colon surgery in 19 months
on Aug. 28, was admitted to
Cleveland Clinic with stomach inflamrilation and infection and will undergo further
tests.
Russell Branyan had three
hits and two RBis for Cleveland, which maintained a 6
1/ 2- game lead over Minnesota in the AL Central.
David Riske ·.(2-0) worked
a scoreless eighth for the win,
and Dan Plesac (4-6) took
the loss.
Athletics 9, Angels 3
Jeremy Giambi hit a threerun , pinch-hit double in an

•

AROUND THE DIAMON -D

AMERICAN LEAGUE

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

FLY YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORJ" YOUR COUNTRY!

Wednesdey; September lfi. 1001

N.Y. Meta 2, _

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Ronda

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Houslon
St. Louis

Chicago
Milwaukee

Cincinnati

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70 81
64 87
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Phll-phle (Woll7-tt), 7:05p.m.
Sl. Louis (KIIe 14-10) el Houston (Villono
6-7), 8:05p.m.
San Diogo (lawrence 4-4) ol Colorado
(Chacon 6-9). 9:05 p.m.
Milwaukee (Sheels 1Q-9) al Arizona {Wilt
3-1), 9:35p.m.
San Francisco (Schmidt 12·7) at los
Angeles (Mulholland t-1). 10:10 p.m.

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eight-run seventh inning as
Oakland beat Anaheim.
Tim
Hudson
(17-8)
pitched seven strong inni.ngs
for his fourth victory over the
Angels this season. Oakland,
which clinched the Al wild
card Sunday. has won five
straight and 13 in a tow at
·
home.
Shigetoshi Hasegawa (5-5)
was the loser.
1Wins 4, White Sox 2
Doug Mientkiewicz hit a
go-ahead single to cap a
three-run eighth as Minnesota won in C hicago.
Joe Mays (17 -13) improved
to 6-0 in his career against
the White Sox, allowing two
runs on four hits in seven
innings. Eddie Guardado
pitched the ninth for his
eighth save.
Tigers 6, Royals 4
Bobby Higginson hit a
three-run homer for visiting
Detroit, and Jose Lima beat
Kansas City for the third time
since joining the Tigers in a
June trade with Houston.
· Higginson hit his 15th .
homer in the first inning off
C hris George (4-6). Lima (58) held the Royals to one run
and eight hits in 7 1-3
mmngs.

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Chicago
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T111!1&gt;1l Bay 4, N.Y. Vonl&lt;ees 0
Seattle 13, Texas 2
Detroit 6, Kansas City 4
Minnesola 4, Chicago White SOx 2
Oaklard 9, Analleim 3
- . c i o y'l GotMO
Seattle (Abbot! 1~) at Texas (Bell !&gt;4),
3:05p.m.
Baltimo&lt;e (Bauer D-2) al Boston (Fossum
2-1 ). 7:05 p.m.
Clevel•nd
Toronto (Lyan !HI)
(Sttbtttltla 15-5), 7:05p.m .
Ta"""' Bay (P.Wilson Hl) 81 N. V. Yonkoes (Pettitte15-10), 7:05P-mOelroit (Murray 1-5) 81 Kansas City (Siein
5-B). 8:05 p.m.
Minll8S01a (Reed 4·3) at Chicago White
Sox (K.Wells 9-9), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Washburn 11-8) at Oakland
(Zfto 14-8), 10:05 p m.

Melp County's

AMERICA AT WAR

to .plan strike on bin Laden camps

x-clinched division
y-clinched .,;1&lt;1 card spot
1\JeadOy'a Gomea

Henderson moves within one run of Cobb
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Despite the horn~rs by BurThe next time Rickey H en- nitz and Sexson , the Dia.derson steps to the plate, he mondbacks stayed I I 12
could tie Ty.
games ahead of San Francisco
Henderson, w ho already in the NL West.
holds baseball's career record
llurnitz hit solo shots in the
for stolen bases and walks, secon d, fourth and six th
scored twi ce Tuesday night to innings. It was his second
move within one run of three-run homer game of the
matching Ty Cobb's mark.
season.
~
" It's more of a team record
lluniitz ca me to the plate
than an individual record, and rWo more tim es. H e stru ck out
1 co uld never score as many looking in the seventh and,
·runs as I haw· without my after Sexson homered in the
teammates," Henderson said ni1ith, drew a walk .
after leading the San Diego
Sexson drove in five runs
Padres over the· Colorado with the first three-homer
Rockies 8-7.
game of his career.
Henderson increased his
Dodgers 9, Giants 5
runs total to 2,244. He also
Shawn Green hit his 48th
nl
got two h its, an d nee ds o y homer d uring a seven-run
five for No. 3,000.
sixth inning and Los Angeles
While Barry Bonds did not · stopped San Francisco at
go deep -he stayed at 67- Dodger Stadium .
in San Francisco's 9-5 loss to
Bonds, who'd hit seven
Los Angeles, Milwaukee's home runs in his past eight
Jeromy Burnitz and Richie g•mes, went O-for-3 with rwci
Sexson made home-run histo- walks. He has 10 games leti to
ry.
break Mark McGwire's record
Brewers 9, D-backs 4
of 70 home runs.
Arizona allowed a teamThe Dodgers moved wi_thin
re(:ord six home runs and lost 3 1/2 gam es of Arizona in the
th e opener of a nine-galJle • NL West.
homestand.
Braves 5, Marlins 2

Atlanta made a great escape
in the ninth inning, then got a
go-ahead · single from BJ· Surhoff in the 1 I th to take the
NL East lead.
The Braves moved a game
ahead of Philadelphia. New
York stayed four games back.
Cardinals 3, Astros 2
Woody Williams pitched a
· paguet hree- h'mer; an d c rarg
tte singled home the tiebreaking run in the eighth inning as
St. Louis won at Enron Field.
Mets 2, Expos 0
Kevin Appi er pitched a
four-hitter, Mike Piazza hit his
35th home run and New York
won at Montreal .
Appier pitched his first
complete g•me since Jurye I 1,
2000, when he beat Los Angeles 6- 0 while with Oakland.
Pirates 13, Cubs 1
Cr•ig Wilson extended his
unusual hit streak and drove in
runs as Pittsburgh romped past
Chicago at PNC Park.
After getting hits in each of
the final three innings of
Monday night's game, Wilson
got hits in each of the first
three innings.

•
Copies of this

·SPECIAL
TUESDAY EDITION
Available while they last
at our offices:

mbe 1!lailp mrihune - Gallipolis
UI:be l\egister - Point Pleasant
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Delta
Air Lines announced thousands of
layofE Wednesday in jarring prelude
to a new administration bid to restore
cqnfidence in air travel foUowing the
terrorist attacks. Pakistan reported
broad agreement with the U.S. military on a plan to strike Osama bin
Laden's camps in Afghanistan.
. With an Ameri can armed forces
..buildup in motion, a crowd of thousands stormed the abandoned U.S.
Embassy compound in Afghanistan's

Today's

HJp:IOs

Sentinel

Details, /13

L-:

•os

Lotteries

AS
OHIO
84-6 Pick l: 4-8-6; Pick 4: 4-5-6-5
87 ~ Lollo: 48-1~16-32-49
A4 ICidrer. 7 g 4 8 6 2
A3 W.VA
Bl-3.5 Dally S: 2·1-8 o.lly 4: ~9-0-3
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - Despite a
census report that shows
Pomeroy's population has
fallen over the last decade,
officials remain optimistic
about the village's future.
Mayor John Blaettnar said
Wednesday that recently
obtained results from the
2000 U.S. Census indicates
Pomeroy's
population
clmnnecl- by 293 during the

compared to 2,259 in 1990.
Blaettnar said Pomeroy
isn't the only community
whose
population
has
dropped. Middleport's population fell by 500 and Meigs
County as a whole experienced a decrease in population.
"I assure you, the drop in
population will not have a
catastrophic effect on the villages or the county," Blaettnar said.
"There is no cause for
alarm at the present time.

Columbia Gas
proposes 20 percent
cut in rates this winter
COLUMBUS (AP) Columbia Gas of Ohio is
proposing a 20 percent Cut in
its natural gas rates this winter.
The company applied to
the Public Utility Commission of Ohio on Wednesday
to reduc e the rates for
November through January.
It estimated the average
monthly savings for its 1.3
million customers in 64
Ohio counties 'Would be

supplies are plentiful this year
beca use of increased drilling,
a mild summer that reduced
gas consumption by electricity providers and decreased
demand in a struggling
economy.
"The combination of
greater supply and lower
demand has shown the
workings of the marketplace,
bringing prices down," said
Michael Anderson, director
of supply planning for
Columbia Gas.
$40.
"I think market prices for
The PUCO is expected to
· routinely.
approve
the natural gas have surprised
everybody in this industry
request.
Company

officials

said

PleiH •• Judp, Al

Govemor wams of deepeni~g shortfalls
' . COLUMBUS (AP) - Some state parks
could restrict access or increase service fees
because of another round of looming budget cuts.
The Department of Mental Health will
debate whether to close state psychiatric
hospitals, while the prisons department
may lay off additional workers and dos6
prison housing units.
Gov. Bob Taft on Wednesday warn ed
that the. state will have to make further

cuts because of th e worsening economy..
The state cut more than $1 RO million last
year beca use' of th~ economy.
Tom Johnson, the state budget director,
is predictin g a $500 million revenue shortfall this budget year and next if the ~con­
a my doesn't improve, Taft said.
R evenue :-vas· down S100 million below
es tim ates in July and August.
"We are prepared to take tough management decisions to . balance. the budget

this year," Taft said. "There is of course a
limit to how much more we can cut
before ;ye jeopardize critical state functions ."
The financial effect of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks have made a difficult budgei
situation even worse, th e governor said.
Micha~l Hogan, director of the Department of M ental Health, said his department is reviewing what institutions could
be close.\! with the least effect on patients.

Galli a ·Fall Business Expo
look for the Holzer Medical Center.Community Health
and Wellness Department at the Expo

.

l,

Please see Strike, Al

TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

:: POMEROY -The rub~cir ducky derby will be a
~atured activity Saturday at
~iern wheel Riverfest m
~owntown Pomeroy.
·:Several hundred ducks will
bl! dumped into the Ohio
R)ver upriver from the levee,
at)d the winn ers will be
hQiders of certificates ~ith
nqmbers co rresponding to
those of the first 10 ducks
•
floating across the finish line
near- the -levee.~..._., - . ~ Top prizes are
bonds, $200 to the fir~~:~~-::
winner from the Ohio Vallev
Bank; $100 for second place
from Peoples Bank; and $75
for third place from Fariners
Bank.
Other prizes will include
gift certificates from the
Court Street Grill and
Crows Restaurant, and five
$1 0 cash prizes from George
Wright.
"Adoption" certificates for
each of the numbered ducks
are on sale at Clarks Jewelry
Store, Farmers Bank, the
Court Street Grill, Sonny's,
· Ohio Valley Bank, Always
and Forever, Andersons,
Hartwell House, Weaving
Stitches, Swisher and Lohse,
and McDonalds.
They also can be pur~
chased from George Wright
and john Musser, or at a
b&lt;?oth on the parking lot all
day Friday and on Saturday
until 2:30 p.m. The derby.
will begins about 4 p.m. or
WANNA BUY A DUCK?- Peggy Barton's office at the Farmers Bank is the temporary home
just after the Sternwreel race
for a thousand or so ducks which she hopes will be "adopted" before the ducky derby Saturday at Sternwheel Rlverfest. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
Pleese see Ducky. AJ

A3

be well into the future.
" 1 think it can't be stressed enough
that everybody who's waiting for military action ... needs .io rethink this
thing," Deputy Defense Secretary
Paul Wolfowitz told reporters in
Brussels, Belgium, where he appealed
to th e NATO alli es for inteUigence~ ·
gathering assistance.
"We don't believe in just demonstrating that our military is capable of
bo111bing. The whole world kr1ows

BY

CaD Rachel at the - ~ibune (140J' 446-2342.
.
Call Ellza~th at the Register (304) 675-1333
CaU Judy at the·Sentinel (740) 992-2155
'

By design or not, there was strikingly little talk of military action fi-om
the administration during the·day. and
an evident ea.,ing in the near-warlike
atmosphere that took hpld 15 days
earlier when hijackers flew planes
into the World Trade Center twin
towers and the Pentagon.
Bush bantered with reporters at
one point, and the second- in-command at the Pentagon w~ nt so far as
to say that military strikes against the
ai-Qaida network in Afghanistan may

;- BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF .

P. wjtb ~·~ news - get ti~~~ · .,u ·~~

•

of fraudulently obtaining licenses to
transport hazardous materials. The
arrests in Mis., ouri , Michigan and
Washington state foUowed FBI warnings that terroriSts may strike next
usmg chemical or biologi cal
weapons.
Also, a f~deral magistrate ordered a
Virginia man, Mohamed Abdi, held
without bail. Prosecutors said Abdi's
name and phone number were fo und
in a car registered to one of the 19
suspected hij ac kers.

are you the one? Pomeroy mayor
upbeat about·
population drop

Lucky derby
.winner will take
home $200
,·

calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
·Weather

'

capital, burning President Bush in
effigy and chanting words of support
for bin Laden.
"I consider bin Laden an evil man,"
Bush said at the White House, referring to the person the administration
has named the leading suspect behind
the Sept. 1 I attacks in New York and
Washington .A man "so dominated by
evil," he added.
The largest investigation in FBI history led to the arrest of nine people
in three states Wednesday on charges

Rubber ducky

1 Sections - 11 Pllps

The Daily Sentinel - Pomeroy

~

Hometown Newspaper

.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

-

a1

Baltimo&lt;o 12. Booton 7

~

N.Y. Me1s (Ausdl 7-tO) at (Ohl&lt;a 1_.), 7:05p.m.
l.llanla (Marquis 3-6) 81 Florida (Bumen
9-11), 7:05p.m.
Chicago Ct.t&gt;o (Cruz 2-1) 81 Pittsburgh
(Arroyo 4-6), 7:05p.m.

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san Francisco
Los Angeles
San Diego
Colorado

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Piltsburgh 13. Cl1lcago Ctm 1
Clnclnnolll, ~ 1
St. Louis 3, Hous1on 2
San Diogo 8, ~ 7
Mlwaukee9,AM&gt;na4
LOS Angoles 9, San FrancisCO 5

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_...._..

Saturday, September 29 • I 0 am • 5 pm
Sunday, September 30 • I pm • 5 pm

Gallla County Fairgrounds
FREE Blood Pressure screenings, Body Fat Analysis screenings and
health information will be provided .' For more information, call

.

446-5679
I

_.

M ED I CAL"' CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

_,....,._
...
·-- -~·-----------~ ---------~-------

�PageA2

at War

The Daily Sentinel

1

lhundiiJ, September 27, 2001

thought we were next, that we
would be a target," said Joe
Valiquette, an FBI spokesman.
But practical reasons were
also behind the decision to set
up shop in the FBI garage:
Dust and thick black smoke
had seeped into the FBI 's
headquarters in lower Manhattan, and the phone lines
had gone dead.
Inside 'the garage, little ourside light filters through windows covered with grime and
graffiti, and a few fans blow
the musty air around. But the
agents, prosecutors and members of a combined police and
FBI terrorist task force do not
seem to notice the dismal surroundings.
They have been joined by
investigators from the Federal
Aviation Administration and
the National Transportation
Safety Board.
"We are well on our way to
solving this," FBI assistant
·director Barry Mawn said
after walking through the
command center, patting a
few agents on the back and
asking about their families.
"We have made a lot of
progress. We have identified all
19 hijackers and we are trying ·
to identify their support
group."

Memorial service held for lost flight crews
BOSTON (AP) - Diane
Anthony took the day off from
her job at Delta Air Lines.
Along with thousands of other
airline employees, she wanted
to say goodbye to colleagu1!s.
At a memorial service at
City Hall, roses and doves symlbolized the 22 pilots and flight
attendants who died when
.American Flight 11 and United Flight 17 5 crashed into· the
World Trade Center on Sept.
11.
" I don't think we've had
~rime ·to·-e:riev,e-;'-saii:I-Amtl~orcv;--1

45. "After what happened we
were just working and work. ing, so I'm glad for this chance
to show our support."
A uniform from each lost
crew member, along with a
rose, lined the front of the
stage. The service culminated
with . the reading of each of
their names by representatives
from two flight attendant associations.
As each name was read alternating one American, one
United - the roses were put
in a basket by colleagues, their
uniforms sporting ribbons, flag
pins and their usual tiny wings,
J The basket of roses was to be
flown to Ne~York on Thurs-

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

••

-

EMS log calls .

James Drown

POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
'.: LANGSVILLE -James S. Drown, 69, of Ohio 124, answered two calls for assis• Langwille, died on Tuesday, Sept. 2!'i. 2001 at his residence.
tance on Wednesday. Units
He was. k~Qrn in Green Springs on May 17, 1932, son of the responded as follows:
, late DeWitt and Mary Ruth Diamond Brown. He was a retired
CENTRAL DISPATCH
: employee of Whirlpool Corp., and w:as a veter2n of the U.S.
12:35 · p.m., Rocksprings
: Army during the Korean War. ·
Rehabilitation Cemer, James
:::
Surviving are his wife, Paula Prater Drown; a son, Jimmy Williams, O 'Bleness Memori1
Drown, Golden Valley, Ariz.; two stepsons, Harve Prater of al Hospital.
Clyde and Denzil Prater Jr., Langsville; a brother, Clarence
POMEROY
:.. Drown of ;Bellevue; and two sisters, Sarah Drown of Fremont
7:49 p.m., Rocksprings,
: • and Harriet Woessner ofTiffin.
smoke odor, Earl Gilkey resi:.: : Services will be Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at Engle- Young dence, no inj uries.
~: .funeral Home in Green Springs, with the Rev. James McKen:--• ~e officiating. Burial will follow at Butternut Ridge Cemetery.
~ : Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 to 4
-and 6 to 8 p.m.

industry -fights back
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) This weekend, Gov. Jeb
Bush plans to hop on commercial flights to Chicago
and Boston and spread a
vital message: Come ~ack to
the Sunshine State.
In New York, the Niagara
· Parks Commission has
changed gears and is now
trying to lure visitors from
Toronto and other major
metropolitan areas within
driving
distance. And
Philadelphia is considering
creating a S3 million fund to
bolster the city's tourism
industry.
Faced with the greatest
threat ever to its.viability, the
nation's $582 billion tourism
industry is fighting back
with advertising campaigns,
disco unts and appeals to citizens to start traveling again .
The Washington-based
Travel Industry Association
of America in the next two
weeks plans to initiate a. S7
STILL WORKING - The Head of the FBI in New York Barry
million advertising camMawn, center right, (standing with navy jacket that reads "FBI"
paign in 20 of the nation's
on left sleeve), talks to FBI agents working in a garage set up
largest newspapers urging
as a command post in New York .. The agents enter tips about
Americans to travel. The
the terrorist attacks into computers and dispatch investigators
full-page ad shows a toddler
around the country to conduct interviews. (AP)
playing in ocean surf under
the watchful eyes of his parents.
"After all, America was
founded, expan~ed and
made great by travelers. And
·nobody can take that away
hand for patriotic songs such as
from us. Not now. Not
"Proud to be an American"
ever:· the closing text' of the
and the hymn "Amazing
advertisement reads. ·" ·
Grace " sung by state police
The ad campaigns can't·
. Sgt. Dan Clarke.
come soon enough for the
Several members of the clertourism industry, hit hard by
gy offered prayers and Bible
the swift plunge in . airline
rea&lt;;lings, and toward the end of
travel that has followed the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
the service Sikh,Jewish, IslamThe association hasn't
ic and Greek Orthodox relipublicly
calculated the loss
gious leaders met on stags,.in a
to the tourism industry, but
gesture of solidarity.
it's
substantial considering
Singer-actress Bette · Midler
domestic and international
reprised her role from the
travelers ordinarily spend
~ic1t~,rf~ith-&lt;:&lt;&gt;n• ia at-New-York's
lf$1. 53 billion a day in the
Yankee Stadium, singing
United States.
"Wind Beneath My Wings." .

.

..
-~

Agents track down tenurists from a garage Nation's tourism
NEW YORK (AP)
Inside a dingy garage reeking
of motor oil, scores of FBI
agents sir elbow ro elbow on
folding chairs, rapping leads
abour terrorists into laptop
computers amid rhe din of
ringing telephones.
fa st food and doughnuts are
piled on rabies, and wires for
300 new phone lines hang
from the warehouse-like
building that has been transformed into New York's nerve
center for information about
the arracks that destroyed the
World Trade Center.
It used to be the place
where mechanics did brake
jobs and transmission work on
the FBI's Heet of vehicles. The
cars are gone, replaced by
agents, prosecutors writing
arrest warrants, and intelligence analysts poring over tips
to ferret out the identities of
people suspected of helping
the 19 suicide hijackers.
The move from the FBI 's
New York headquarters, situated blocks from the trade
center, was done p~rtly for
security reasons. That building
Jwas targeted by terrorists in
1993 in a failed plot to blow
up New York City landmarks.
After the Sept. 11 trade cen• rer attack, "we definitely

__Th_u_nd
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...

~ ~.

I

Balloon launch ·
scheduled

.

•

POMEROY -The Meigs
County Chamber of Com~: MIDDLEPORT - Shirley Mae Long, 67, Middleport, died merce will hold a balloon
launch on Saturday at 6:15
pn Thesday, Sept. 25, 2001, at her residence. ·
·: •. She was born on July 28, 1934, in Pomeroy, daughter of.the p.m. riear the Pomeroy
Amphitheater.
·: ' late Michael and Myrtle Lenora· Pearson Bentz. She was
Balloons 'can be purchased·
~ -~ homemaker and attended )'4t. Olive Church. ·
from
4:30 p.m. until launch
: •. ' Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Dennis and
:· Brenda Long, and Bill and Tammy Long, all of Portland; a · time and all proceeds will go
: , :daughter and son-in-law, Debra and Jon Burdette, Centerburg; toward rescue workers and
victims of the terrorist attacks
. ,. I:Wo sisters and a brother-in-law, Agnes and Jake Rose of Little
on
New York City and Wash.-. : Hocking, and Judy Smith of Pomeroy; 11 gr2ndchildren; and
ington, D.C.
~· . three great-grandchildren.
• • : There will be no service and no calling hours.
Arrangements are under the direction of Ewing Funeral
.&lt;; ••. .!Home in Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Residents
ofVeterans Memorial Hospi,' '1 · .,
tall,Js Extended Care Unit
MIDDLEPORT .- Mary Neutzling, 83, Middleport, died
· ·: on Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001-, at Holzer Medical Center in
: · Gallipolis.
..
.
·· · · Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher-Acree
· \ · Funeral Home in Middleport and will be announced.

::.

Shilley Long

[i
r:;: :

a

NOT-SO BUSY DAYS- The
normally busy Las Vegas
Boulevard Strip looks almost
desolate. The Strip and Las
Vegas, Nev. in general has
seen a huge drop In tourism
since the terrorist attacks on
Sept. 11. Faced with the
greatest threat ever to its
viability, the nation's $582
billion tourism industry is
fighting back with advertising
campaigns, discounts and
appeals to citizens to start
traveling 11gain. (AP)

Wilma Weaver

'

'

N.Y. mayor hints that
rthere might be a role for
l him in the city's future ·

REMEMBERING - United Airlines worker Toni Shelhamer of
Boston, center left, cries as she and other aviation employees ·
attend ceremonies In Boston held to honor airline personnel
killed In the terrorist attacks In New York. Two passenger jets,
one from American Airlines and one from United Airlines, the
flights of which both originated In Boston, were crashed by terrorists Into the World Trade Center, Sept. 11. (AP)

:

NEW · YORK (AP) day after New Yorkers selected
'Rudolph Giuliani is not going billionaire
media
mogul
quiedy.
·
· Michael Bloomberg as the
The mayor said Wednesday he GOP nominee for mayor and
is discussing plan with candi- sent two Democrats, Bronx
dates vying for his job that Borough President · Fernando
\vouid "unify the city" and pro-' Ferrer and Public Advocate
vide him sorne. role iii New Mark Green, into a ·runoff next
York's recovery from the World month.
Trade Center arracks.
Green was the only DemocWhile Giuliani was not spe- ratic candidate to meet with
cific about the kind of role he Giuliani
on
Wednesday;
wants, earlier in the day he Bloomberg refused to say
called Assembly Speaker She!- whether he had met with . the
:don Silver seeking the powerful mayor. None of the candidates
·Democrat's support on legisla- would comment on Giuliani's
· tion that would extend his term. remarks.
•
"I want to do something that
The GOP mayor has been
• unifies the city because I love acclaimed for his · leadership
this· city." said Giuliani, who is since the Sept. 11 arracks and has
: barred from serving a third been urged by some NewYork' term. His term is "P on Dec. 31. ers to stay on to help guide the
Giuliani~ remarks came just a . city through the crisis.

j

day and laid at ground zero, the · the Rev. Richard Uftring, who
rubble-strewn heart of the res- ·led the service in front of an
cue effort in Manhattan.
estimated 25,000 people.
"They will take their final
Later, 22 doves were released
flight to ground zero, where into the air.
they will be at peace, and
Airline workers and au~i­
always within our hearts," said ence members stood hand-in-

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today\

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(740) 992-2136 (740) 446-2265
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Publl!lhed every aftemooo. Monday
through Fndoy, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second·class
pootage paid at Pomeroy. ·
llembor: The Asaoclaled Preas and
1111 Ohio Nowapopor Auoclallon.

Our main ooncem In all stoneala
to be accurate. If you know of an
errot' In a atoly, call the newaroom
at (740) 1192·2158. ·
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The Daily Sentinel

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Subscription rates
ey carrtor

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Trustees meet
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees will hold
their regular meeting on Oct.
1 at 7:30p.m. at the township
office on Joppa Road. Residents wishing to discuss
something at the m~eting
should call the clerk at 3786149 to be placed on the
agenda.

Plan service
SYRACUSE Forest
Run, Minersville, and Asbury
United Methodist congregations will assemble for a worship experience on Sunday at
Asbury Church at 11 a.m.,
with a special guest speaker.

POMEROY
Meigs
County commissioners have
postponed their Oct. 11
meeting until Oct. 12 at 10
a.m.

Ducky

annual event of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association, and
the proceeds go into beautification projects for the
downtown. Last year nearly
S 1,200 was raised . Peggy
Barton is chairman.

r.on~ Page AI

1s over.
The ducky derby

IS

an

Mayor
from Page AI
This drop occurred over a
period of years and it's really
not a huge surprise at all."
Blaettnar said the importapt
thing is Pomeroy did not fall

p.m. and sunrise on Fnday ar
Warmer temperatures across 7:25 a.m.
the state and mostly cloudy
Forecast
skies in the tri-county region
Today: Mostly cloud};· Hcgh
are expected ~hrousb&lt; hiday, 65,low 411 ..
the National Weather Service
Friday: Cloudy. High 61,
said.
low 44.
A high pressure system will
Saturday: Partly cloud y.
bring warmer temperatures High 64, low 41.
with near normal readings
Sunday: Partly cloudy. High
back by the weekend. Temper- 69,low 43.
atures over the weekend '-llill . Monday: Partly cloudy.
be moderate with highs in the. High 73, IO\v 44.
low 70s by Sunday.
Thesday: Partly cloudy. High
Sunset today will be at 7:21 73, low St.
·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Since then , prices have
dropped an·d unless rhe oil .
supply is disrupted, suppliers
from Page AI
will be able to charge less
through spring, Columbia
that th ey have gone so low."
Last winter, with tempera- officials said .
"In my mmd, the only
tures well below normal and
supply limited, natural-gas remaining wild card is the
. prices reached all-time highs. weather," said John Partridge
Some Columbia customers Jr., senior vice president of
Columbia Gas. ·
faced $300 gas bills.

Judge·

Change meeting

Bake sell slated

Mary Neutzling

"The losses ~ill be historic," said Betsy O'Rourke,
the association's senior vice
president of marketing. "We
,. ,
need to get into recovery
mode just as quickly as possible."
In the next few weeks, the
.,. . COOLVILLE - Wilma Cole Gilbert Weaver, 86, of
group plans to ask ,the tele· · Coolville, died on Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001, at Arcadia Nrus" · · ing Center, following an extended illness.
·
vision networks to ;put
together public service
·•. ' . She was born on Sept; 19, 1915, in Coolville. She was retired
announcements · featuting
'~. as head cook at Federal Hocking High School.
?··
Surviving are her ·son and daughter-in-law, Marvin N. and
celebrities that urge viewers
'·'to·See America."
Gloria]. Gilbert of Coolville; three g01ndsons; six great-grand~ ~hildren; and several nieces and nephews.
' Consumers are being
~' . She was preceded in death by her parents, the late Art and
polled to gauge fears and
, , . Ellen Cole; her first husband, George W. Gilbert and second
intentions to travel and· the
association has even posted a
" -husband, James A. Weaver; a brother, Ralph Cole; and a sister,
sample "letter to. the editor"
· · Gertrude Stephenson.
on its Web site for tourism
"'
Services will be at Fairview Chapel Church on Saturday, at leaders to send to · their
· !' .1 p.m., with Lloyd Middleton officiating. Burial will follow at
hometown · • ' newspapers,
,' · l;airvjew Chapel Cemetery.
reminding readers:..:t~hiatT,'~'tfcra~v~--.~f.-~daFfriends may call at White Funeral Home in Coolville on Friel is one of our l&lt;
·•·
from 2 ·to 4 and 6 to Sp.m.
mental freedoms."

will hold a bake sale on Friday
!rom 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. in the
sun room of the hospital.
All proceeds will go toward
a crisis relief fund for victims
and· rescue workers of the
attacks on the World Trade
Center and Pentagon.

Warmer temps on way

CHARGED - This Is an artist rendering of U.S. Magistrate
in status, thus keeping its rank Curtis sewell, second from right, presiding over .a hearing ' of
as a village, and that the future Herbert VIllalobos, second from left, In U.S. District Court in
stili looks promising for its Alexandria, Va. Villalobos was charged with helping one of the
suspected hijackers, Abdulazlz Alomari, obtain a fraudulent Vir·
residents .
glnla
ID card. From left are, Villalobos' attorney Michael Liber"Tbis decline in population .
man, Herbert Villalobos, FBI Agent Brian Weidner, u.s. Magiswill not deter our efforts to
trate Curtis Sewell and Assistant U.S. Attorney John Morton .
enhance the village in any (AP)
way, shape or form," he said.
"Business will definitely go
on as usu a! ." .

up to 13,000 employees by
the end of the year, an unspecified number through layoffs.
Previous cutbacks in the
from Page AI
industry totaled more than
that," he said.
100,000, including steps taken
At the same time, a Pakistani by ~ircraft maker Boeing to
official, wrapping up two days slash its costs.
of _talks · with an American
Bush gid some modest jawmch~~ry delegatton, satd t~ere boning on the subject of airw~. complete u_namnuty on ·· line safety during the day, with
mrhtary preparatcons for com- more to come.
bating . terrorists
inside
Meeting with Muslim IeadAfghamstan. Gen. Rashrd ers at the White House he
Qureshi, spokesman for Presi- told reporters some of' his
dent Perve~ Musharraf, said guests had traveled to · the
there was no dtfference of nation's capital by plane and
opmt~n between_ Pakistan and arrived safely. "One of the
Amenca on th e ISSUe of com- . keys to economic recovery is
bating terrorism."
going be the vitality of the
Underscoring the delicacy airline industry," he said, and
of Pakistan's position, Qureshi he said he would be unveiling
also said his country had no "confidence . building meainvolvement "in any action sures" as well as "concrete
plan against Afghanistan." Pak- steps" on Thursday when h~
istan is the only nation in the
travels to Chicago.
world with diplomatic ties to
the Taliban government of
Officials have said previousAfghanistan, and is home to a ly .the president would prolarge Muslim population that pose new steps to make cockhas held anti-American rallies pit doors more secure and to
place armed marshals aboard
in recent days.
most
planes as a deterrent to
The diplomatic and military
maneuverinjl unfolded as hijackers. He was also expectDelta chairman Leo Mullin ed to propose a great federal
said his company was joining involvement in the screening
the roster of carriers to lay off of passengers and baggage at
workers and cut service in the airports.
Bush also made a midday
wake of the attacks.
trip
to \he CIA, where Direc"War was declared on the
United States of America, tor George Tenet has been
using aviation as the instru- • criticized by some in Conment of destru ction," he said gress for the agency's failure to
in Atlanta. "As a result, the · warn of the attacks. Bush
operational and financial out- made clear his view is differlook for airlines has changed ent. "I've _got a lot of confiprecipitously, and drastic mea- dence in him and I've got a lot
sures are required if we are. to of confidence in the CIA, and
avoid being among the first so should America," he said as
economic casualties of the Tenet looked on from a nearwar." He said Delta would cut by seat on the stage.

Strike

Investigators arrest
1ofor fraudulently_ ·
obtaining Hazmat permits

WASHINGTON (AP) FBI agents investigating the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
assisted in the arrests of I 0
Middle Eastern men in three
states for fraudulently obtaining licenses to transport haz. ardous materials.
Wednesday's sweep in Mis~
souri, Michigan and Washington followed FBI warriings that terrorists may try to
strike next using chemical or
biological weapons.
The 10 who were arrested
were among 18 people from
seven states charged with
falsely obtaining hazardous
material licenses from a
Pennsylvania state examiner.
The examiner told the FBI
he took payoffi in exchange

for the permits between July
1999 and February 2000, ~~~~f~
according to · court papers. I '
The drivers didn 't take
required tests and some had
suspended licenses at t~e
time they got the permits.
It was too eariy to teil
whether any of those arrested
Wednesday · were connected
to the attacks on the World
-Trade Center arid the Pentagon, Justice Department
spokeswoman Susan Dryden
said.
· The FBI s~id a Middle
Eastern man named Abdul
Mohamman,
known
as
"Ben," acted as a middleman
in -the scheme, bringing in as
many as 30 driven who

II'RIII GVAl li f (I IIIII,;\
446·4524

CARPET SALE!

lla.'tl"r.Yll

IE};.;,_~ Sal6 '8" Par Yd

• I ·Floormg
• li1liiiA\\JI
Mohawk
VIny
· Laminate
Wood
In Sllc• '5" Per Yard

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fraudulently obtained commercial licenses to carry hazardous materials.
According to 'the FBI, the
examiner, identified in court
papers only as CW-1, said
that in exchange for the permits , "Ben paid between $50
and $100 per individual by
placing the money in 'brandnew' bills under CW-1's desk
calendar."
Five of th e arrests were in
Michigan, four in Washington and one in Missou ri .

',"' ·:· ., ..

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flllll/2101 • THURII/27101
TUES IS "IAIIGAIN NIGHT"

U.75ADM18110N

PIATU!ItiiMAY tl IXCL.UDID)

~:;::~f

�PageA2

at War

The Daily Sentinel

1

lhundiiJ, September 27, 2001

thought we were next, that we
would be a target," said Joe
Valiquette, an FBI spokesman.
But practical reasons were
also behind the decision to set
up shop in the FBI garage:
Dust and thick black smoke
had seeped into the FBI 's
headquarters in lower Manhattan, and the phone lines
had gone dead.
Inside 'the garage, little ourside light filters through windows covered with grime and
graffiti, and a few fans blow
the musty air around. But the
agents, prosecutors and members of a combined police and
FBI terrorist task force do not
seem to notice the dismal surroundings.
They have been joined by
investigators from the Federal
Aviation Administration and
the National Transportation
Safety Board.
"We are well on our way to
solving this," FBI assistant
·director Barry Mawn said
after walking through the
command center, patting a
few agents on the back and
asking about their families.
"We have made a lot of
progress. We have identified all
19 hijackers and we are trying ·
to identify their support
group."

Memorial service held for lost flight crews
BOSTON (AP) - Diane
Anthony took the day off from
her job at Delta Air Lines.
Along with thousands of other
airline employees, she wanted
to say goodbye to colleagu1!s.
At a memorial service at
City Hall, roses and doves symlbolized the 22 pilots and flight
attendants who died when
.American Flight 11 and United Flight 17 5 crashed into· the
World Trade Center on Sept.
11.
" I don't think we've had
~rime ·to·-e:riev,e-;'-saii:I-Amtl~orcv;--1

45. "After what happened we
were just working and work. ing, so I'm glad for this chance
to show our support."
A uniform from each lost
crew member, along with a
rose, lined the front of the
stage. The service culminated
with . the reading of each of
their names by representatives
from two flight attendant associations.
As each name was read alternating one American, one
United - the roses were put
in a basket by colleagues, their
uniforms sporting ribbons, flag
pins and their usual tiny wings,
J The basket of roses was to be
flown to Ne~York on Thurs-

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

••

-

EMS log calls .

James Drown

POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
'.: LANGSVILLE -James S. Drown, 69, of Ohio 124, answered two calls for assis• Langwille, died on Tuesday, Sept. 2!'i. 2001 at his residence.
tance on Wednesday. Units
He was. k~Qrn in Green Springs on May 17, 1932, son of the responded as follows:
, late DeWitt and Mary Ruth Diamond Brown. He was a retired
CENTRAL DISPATCH
: employee of Whirlpool Corp., and w:as a veter2n of the U.S.
12:35 · p.m., Rocksprings
: Army during the Korean War. ·
Rehabilitation Cemer, James
:::
Surviving are his wife, Paula Prater Drown; a son, Jimmy Williams, O 'Bleness Memori1
Drown, Golden Valley, Ariz.; two stepsons, Harve Prater of al Hospital.
Clyde and Denzil Prater Jr., Langsville; a brother, Clarence
POMEROY
:.. Drown of ;Bellevue; and two sisters, Sarah Drown of Fremont
7:49 p.m., Rocksprings,
: • and Harriet Woessner ofTiffin.
smoke odor, Earl Gilkey resi:.: : Services will be Saturday at 10:30 a.m. at Engle- Young dence, no inj uries.
~: .funeral Home in Green Springs, with the Rev. James McKen:--• ~e officiating. Burial will follow at Butternut Ridge Cemetery.
~ : Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 2 to 4
-and 6 to 8 p.m.

industry -fights back
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) This weekend, Gov. Jeb
Bush plans to hop on commercial flights to Chicago
and Boston and spread a
vital message: Come ~ack to
the Sunshine State.
In New York, the Niagara
· Parks Commission has
changed gears and is now
trying to lure visitors from
Toronto and other major
metropolitan areas within
driving
distance. And
Philadelphia is considering
creating a S3 million fund to
bolster the city's tourism
industry.
Faced with the greatest
threat ever to its.viability, the
nation's $582 billion tourism
industry is fighting back
with advertising campaigns,
disco unts and appeals to citizens to start traveling again .
The Washington-based
Travel Industry Association
of America in the next two
weeks plans to initiate a. S7
STILL WORKING - The Head of the FBI in New York Barry
million advertising camMawn, center right, (standing with navy jacket that reads "FBI"
paign in 20 of the nation's
on left sleeve), talks to FBI agents working in a garage set up
largest newspapers urging
as a command post in New York .. The agents enter tips about
Americans to travel. The
the terrorist attacks into computers and dispatch investigators
full-page ad shows a toddler
around the country to conduct interviews. (AP)
playing in ocean surf under
the watchful eyes of his parents.
"After all, America was
founded, expan~ed and
made great by travelers. And
·nobody can take that away
hand for patriotic songs such as
from us. Not now. Not
"Proud to be an American"
ever:· the closing text' of the
and the hymn "Amazing
advertisement reads. ·" ·
Grace " sung by state police
The ad campaigns can't·
. Sgt. Dan Clarke.
come soon enough for the
Several members of the clertourism industry, hit hard by
gy offered prayers and Bible
the swift plunge in . airline
rea&lt;;lings, and toward the end of
travel that has followed the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
the service Sikh,Jewish, IslamThe association hasn't
ic and Greek Orthodox relipublicly
calculated the loss
gious leaders met on stags,.in a
to the tourism industry, but
gesture of solidarity.
it's
substantial considering
Singer-actress Bette · Midler
domestic and international
reprised her role from the
travelers ordinarily spend
~ic1t~,rf~ith-&lt;:&lt;&gt;n• ia at-New-York's
lf$1. 53 billion a day in the
Yankee Stadium, singing
United States.
"Wind Beneath My Wings." .

.

..
-~

Agents track down tenurists from a garage Nation's tourism
NEW YORK (AP)
Inside a dingy garage reeking
of motor oil, scores of FBI
agents sir elbow ro elbow on
folding chairs, rapping leads
abour terrorists into laptop
computers amid rhe din of
ringing telephones.
fa st food and doughnuts are
piled on rabies, and wires for
300 new phone lines hang
from the warehouse-like
building that has been transformed into New York's nerve
center for information about
the arracks that destroyed the
World Trade Center.
It used to be the place
where mechanics did brake
jobs and transmission work on
the FBI's Heet of vehicles. The
cars are gone, replaced by
agents, prosecutors writing
arrest warrants, and intelligence analysts poring over tips
to ferret out the identities of
people suspected of helping
the 19 suicide hijackers.
The move from the FBI 's
New York headquarters, situated blocks from the trade
center, was done p~rtly for
security reasons. That building
Jwas targeted by terrorists in
1993 in a failed plot to blow
up New York City landmarks.
After the Sept. 11 trade cen• rer attack, "we definitely

__Th_u_nd
__•~Y~·-~~-2-7~·~200~1----------------------------~Po~m:e~ro~y~·~M:Id~d~l~epo~rt~~~O~h:lo~~------~-----------!Th~e~D~a~i~ly~S~e~m~in~e~I:•~Pa~g~e~A~3

...

~ ~.

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Balloon launch ·
scheduled

.

•

POMEROY -The Meigs
County Chamber of Com~: MIDDLEPORT - Shirley Mae Long, 67, Middleport, died merce will hold a balloon
launch on Saturday at 6:15
pn Thesday, Sept. 25, 2001, at her residence. ·
·: •. She was born on July 28, 1934, in Pomeroy, daughter of.the p.m. riear the Pomeroy
Amphitheater.
·: ' late Michael and Myrtle Lenora· Pearson Bentz. She was
Balloons 'can be purchased·
~ -~ homemaker and attended )'4t. Olive Church. ·
from
4:30 p.m. until launch
: •. ' Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Dennis and
:· Brenda Long, and Bill and Tammy Long, all of Portland; a · time and all proceeds will go
: , :daughter and son-in-law, Debra and Jon Burdette, Centerburg; toward rescue workers and
victims of the terrorist attacks
. ,. I:Wo sisters and a brother-in-law, Agnes and Jake Rose of Little
on
New York City and Wash.-. : Hocking, and Judy Smith of Pomeroy; 11 gr2ndchildren; and
ington, D.C.
~· . three great-grandchildren.
• • : There will be no service and no calling hours.
Arrangements are under the direction of Ewing Funeral
.&lt;; ••. .!Home in Pomeroy.
POMEROY - Residents
ofVeterans Memorial Hospi,' '1 · .,
tall,Js Extended Care Unit
MIDDLEPORT .- Mary Neutzling, 83, Middleport, died
· ·: on Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001-, at Holzer Medical Center in
: · Gallipolis.
..
.
·· · · Arrangements are under the direction of Fisher-Acree
· \ · Funeral Home in Middleport and will be announced.

::.

Shilley Long

[i
r:;: :

a

NOT-SO BUSY DAYS- The
normally busy Las Vegas
Boulevard Strip looks almost
desolate. The Strip and Las
Vegas, Nev. in general has
seen a huge drop In tourism
since the terrorist attacks on
Sept. 11. Faced with the
greatest threat ever to its
viability, the nation's $582
billion tourism industry is
fighting back with advertising
campaigns, discounts and
appeals to citizens to start
traveling 11gain. (AP)

Wilma Weaver

'

'

N.Y. mayor hints that
rthere might be a role for
l him in the city's future ·

REMEMBERING - United Airlines worker Toni Shelhamer of
Boston, center left, cries as she and other aviation employees ·
attend ceremonies In Boston held to honor airline personnel
killed In the terrorist attacks In New York. Two passenger jets,
one from American Airlines and one from United Airlines, the
flights of which both originated In Boston, were crashed by terrorists Into the World Trade Center, Sept. 11. (AP)

:

NEW · YORK (AP) day after New Yorkers selected
'Rudolph Giuliani is not going billionaire
media
mogul
quiedy.
·
· Michael Bloomberg as the
The mayor said Wednesday he GOP nominee for mayor and
is discussing plan with candi- sent two Democrats, Bronx
dates vying for his job that Borough President · Fernando
\vouid "unify the city" and pro-' Ferrer and Public Advocate
vide him sorne. role iii New Mark Green, into a ·runoff next
York's recovery from the World month.
Trade Center arracks.
Green was the only DemocWhile Giuliani was not spe- ratic candidate to meet with
cific about the kind of role he Giuliani
on
Wednesday;
wants, earlier in the day he Bloomberg refused to say
called Assembly Speaker She!- whether he had met with . the
:don Silver seeking the powerful mayor. None of the candidates
·Democrat's support on legisla- would comment on Giuliani's
· tion that would extend his term. remarks.
•
"I want to do something that
The GOP mayor has been
• unifies the city because I love acclaimed for his · leadership
this· city." said Giuliani, who is since the Sept. 11 arracks and has
: barred from serving a third been urged by some NewYork' term. His term is "P on Dec. 31. ers to stay on to help guide the
Giuliani~ remarks came just a . city through the crisis.

j

day and laid at ground zero, the · the Rev. Richard Uftring, who
rubble-strewn heart of the res- ·led the service in front of an
cue effort in Manhattan.
estimated 25,000 people.
"They will take their final
Later, 22 doves were released
flight to ground zero, where into the air.
they will be at peace, and
Airline workers and au~i­
always within our hearts," said ence members stood hand-in-

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News Dtptrtmentl

The main number Ia 1192·2158.
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(740) 992-2136 (740) 446-2265
~ppers Plains (740) 667-3161
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llembor: The Asaoclaled Preas and
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Our main ooncem In all stoneala
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at (740) 1192·2158. ·
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Trustees meet
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees will hold
their regular meeting on Oct.
1 at 7:30p.m. at the township
office on Joppa Road. Residents wishing to discuss
something at the m~eting
should call the clerk at 3786149 to be placed on the
agenda.

Plan service
SYRACUSE Forest
Run, Minersville, and Asbury
United Methodist congregations will assemble for a worship experience on Sunday at
Asbury Church at 11 a.m.,
with a special guest speaker.

POMEROY
Meigs
County commissioners have
postponed their Oct. 11
meeting until Oct. 12 at 10
a.m.

Ducky

annual event of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association, and
the proceeds go into beautification projects for the
downtown. Last year nearly
S 1,200 was raised . Peggy
Barton is chairman.

r.on~ Page AI

1s over.
The ducky derby

IS

an

Mayor
from Page AI
This drop occurred over a
period of years and it's really
not a huge surprise at all."
Blaettnar said the importapt
thing is Pomeroy did not fall

p.m. and sunrise on Fnday ar
Warmer temperatures across 7:25 a.m.
the state and mostly cloudy
Forecast
skies in the tri-county region
Today: Mostly cloud};· Hcgh
are expected ~hrousb&lt; hiday, 65,low 411 ..
the National Weather Service
Friday: Cloudy. High 61,
said.
low 44.
A high pressure system will
Saturday: Partly cloud y.
bring warmer temperatures High 64, low 41.
with near normal readings
Sunday: Partly cloudy. High
back by the weekend. Temper- 69,low 43.
atures over the weekend '-llill . Monday: Partly cloudy.
be moderate with highs in the. High 73, IO\v 44.
low 70s by Sunday.
Thesday: Partly cloudy. High
Sunset today will be at 7:21 73, low St.
·
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Since then , prices have
dropped an·d unless rhe oil .
supply is disrupted, suppliers
from Page AI
will be able to charge less
through spring, Columbia
that th ey have gone so low."
Last winter, with tempera- officials said .
"In my mmd, the only
tures well below normal and
supply limited, natural-gas remaining wild card is the
. prices reached all-time highs. weather," said John Partridge
Some Columbia customers Jr., senior vice president of
Columbia Gas. ·
faced $300 gas bills.

Judge·

Change meeting

Bake sell slated

Mary Neutzling

"The losses ~ill be historic," said Betsy O'Rourke,
the association's senior vice
president of marketing. "We
,. ,
need to get into recovery
mode just as quickly as possible."
In the next few weeks, the
.,. . COOLVILLE - Wilma Cole Gilbert Weaver, 86, of
group plans to ask ,the tele· · Coolville, died on Wednesday, Sept. 26, 2001, at Arcadia Nrus" · · ing Center, following an extended illness.
·
vision networks to ;put
together public service
·•. ' . She was born on Sept; 19, 1915, in Coolville. She was retired
announcements · featuting
'~. as head cook at Federal Hocking High School.
?··
Surviving are her ·son and daughter-in-law, Marvin N. and
celebrities that urge viewers
'·'to·See America."
Gloria]. Gilbert of Coolville; three g01ndsons; six great-grand~ ~hildren; and several nieces and nephews.
' Consumers are being
~' . She was preceded in death by her parents, the late Art and
polled to gauge fears and
, , . Ellen Cole; her first husband, George W. Gilbert and second
intentions to travel and· the
association has even posted a
" -husband, James A. Weaver; a brother, Ralph Cole; and a sister,
sample "letter to. the editor"
· · Gertrude Stephenson.
on its Web site for tourism
"'
Services will be at Fairview Chapel Church on Saturday, at leaders to send to · their
· !' .1 p.m., with Lloyd Middleton officiating. Burial will follow at
hometown · • ' newspapers,
,' · l;airvjew Chapel Cemetery.
reminding readers:..:t~hiatT,'~'tfcra~v~--.~f.-~daFfriends may call at White Funeral Home in Coolville on Friel is one of our l&lt;
·•·
from 2 ·to 4 and 6 to Sp.m.
mental freedoms."

will hold a bake sale on Friday
!rom 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. in the
sun room of the hospital.
All proceeds will go toward
a crisis relief fund for victims
and· rescue workers of the
attacks on the World Trade
Center and Pentagon.

Warmer temps on way

CHARGED - This Is an artist rendering of U.S. Magistrate
in status, thus keeping its rank Curtis sewell, second from right, presiding over .a hearing ' of
as a village, and that the future Herbert VIllalobos, second from left, In U.S. District Court in
stili looks promising for its Alexandria, Va. Villalobos was charged with helping one of the
suspected hijackers, Abdulazlz Alomari, obtain a fraudulent Vir·
residents .
glnla
ID card. From left are, Villalobos' attorney Michael Liber"Tbis decline in population .
man, Herbert Villalobos, FBI Agent Brian Weidner, u.s. Magiswill not deter our efforts to
trate Curtis Sewell and Assistant U.S. Attorney John Morton .
enhance the village in any (AP)
way, shape or form," he said.
"Business will definitely go
on as usu a! ." .

up to 13,000 employees by
the end of the year, an unspecified number through layoffs.
Previous cutbacks in the
from Page AI
industry totaled more than
that," he said.
100,000, including steps taken
At the same time, a Pakistani by ~ircraft maker Boeing to
official, wrapping up two days slash its costs.
of _talks · with an American
Bush gid some modest jawmch~~ry delegatton, satd t~ere boning on the subject of airw~. complete u_namnuty on ·· line safety during the day, with
mrhtary preparatcons for com- more to come.
bating . terrorists
inside
Meeting with Muslim IeadAfghamstan. Gen. Rashrd ers at the White House he
Qureshi, spokesman for Presi- told reporters some of' his
dent Perve~ Musharraf, said guests had traveled to · the
there was no dtfference of nation's capital by plane and
opmt~n between_ Pakistan and arrived safely. "One of the
Amenca on th e ISSUe of com- . keys to economic recovery is
bating terrorism."
going be the vitality of the
Underscoring the delicacy airline industry," he said, and
of Pakistan's position, Qureshi he said he would be unveiling
also said his country had no "confidence . building meainvolvement "in any action sures" as well as "concrete
plan against Afghanistan." Pak- steps" on Thursday when h~
istan is the only nation in the
travels to Chicago.
world with diplomatic ties to
the Taliban government of
Officials have said previousAfghanistan, and is home to a ly .the president would prolarge Muslim population that pose new steps to make cockhas held anti-American rallies pit doors more secure and to
place armed marshals aboard
in recent days.
most
planes as a deterrent to
The diplomatic and military
maneuverinjl unfolded as hijackers. He was also expectDelta chairman Leo Mullin ed to propose a great federal
said his company was joining involvement in the screening
the roster of carriers to lay off of passengers and baggage at
workers and cut service in the airports.
Bush also made a midday
wake of the attacks.
trip
to \he CIA, where Direc"War was declared on the
United States of America, tor George Tenet has been
using aviation as the instru- • criticized by some in Conment of destru ction," he said gress for the agency's failure to
in Atlanta. "As a result, the · warn of the attacks. Bush
operational and financial out- made clear his view is differlook for airlines has changed ent. "I've _got a lot of confiprecipitously, and drastic mea- dence in him and I've got a lot
sures are required if we are. to of confidence in the CIA, and
avoid being among the first so should America," he said as
economic casualties of the Tenet looked on from a nearwar." He said Delta would cut by seat on the stage.

Strike

Investigators arrest
1ofor fraudulently_ ·
obtaining Hazmat permits

WASHINGTON (AP) FBI agents investigating the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks
assisted in the arrests of I 0
Middle Eastern men in three
states for fraudulently obtaining licenses to transport haz. ardous materials.
Wednesday's sweep in Mis~
souri, Michigan and Washington followed FBI warriings that terrorists may try to
strike next using chemical or
biological weapons.
The 10 who were arrested
were among 18 people from
seven states charged with
falsely obtaining hazardous
material licenses from a
Pennsylvania state examiner.
The examiner told the FBI
he took payoffi in exchange

for the permits between July
1999 and February 2000, ~~~~f~
according to · court papers. I '
The drivers didn 't take
required tests and some had
suspended licenses at t~e
time they got the permits.
It was too eariy to teil
whether any of those arrested
Wednesday · were connected
to the attacks on the World
-Trade Center arid the Pentagon, Justice Department
spokeswoman Susan Dryden
said.
· The FBI s~id a Middle
Eastern man named Abdul
Mohamman,
known
as
"Ben," acted as a middleman
in -the scheme, bringing in as
many as 30 driven who

II'RIII GVAl li f (I IIIII,;\
446·4524

CARPET SALE!

lla.'tl"r.Yll

IE};.;,_~ Sal6 '8" Par Yd

• I ·Floormg
• li1liiiA\\JI
Mohawk
VIny
· Laminate
Wood
In Sllc• '5" Per Yard

1

In stack: '1" Per h

fraudulently obtained commercial licenses to carry hazardous materials.
According to 'the FBI, the
examiner, identified in court
papers only as CW-1, said
that in exchange for the permits , "Ben paid between $50
and $100 per individual by
placing the money in 'brandnew' bills under CW-1's desk
calendar."
Five of th e arrests were in
Michigan, four in Washington and one in Missou ri .

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flllll/2101 • THURII/27101
TUES IS "IAIIGAIN NIGHT"

U.75ADM18110N

PIATU!ItiiMAY tl IXCL.UDID)

~:;::~f

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Op1n1on
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The Daily Sentinel

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PageA4

Thunday, September 1..,7. 1001
a

jelehl4lfec:lnCypOel.com

The Daily Sentinel

'

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

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- md· have a disability. I live with my
mother. The problem is, she belittles
and shames me. 11 is bad enough to
deal with schizophrenia without constantly being insulted.
I have heard her tell people that I
.have ruined her life. Abby, I have
never been violent, I have always
taken my medication, and I do practically everything in the home. I'm
clean and neat, I don't party or do
drugs, I don't drink or smoke, I have
no children, I have never been
fromiscuous, and I am a Cllristian.
• Mother tells people that when she
'dies, she knows that my older siblings
will put me in, a home. T his is insulting, because I am intelligent and can
hanclle my own affairs. It also hurts
'because it implies that no one cares
about me. She has even said that the
only reason people associate with me

. .. .
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Managing Editor

DEAR ABBY: I am in my 30s

I
LOVE
'IOU...

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R. Shawn Lewis

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Charlene Hoeflich
· General Manager

Thursday, September 27, 2001

:,.

·-111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157-

-~e_oa_ny_sen_tin_ei_ _ _B;;;;;;;;;..y the Bend
Mother~ patronizing attitude insults her disabled daughter

Page AS

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Diane Kay Hill
Controller

IA'ttrr.&gt; tu rht ediwr arr wrlcomr. 1"'' should N /ru tluJn 300 wonb. AU Ut11n
arr \uhju/1, t-diti11g and mud Or !igned ond lntllldl oddnu oltd t1ltpll0111 lllllftbft'.
'Vu mulgm•d ltttt'rs will be publishld. Ltttm lho111d H ill tocwlltUtr, IJIIilnt!llnf
p1'r.Wtl41ilits.
Thl' opi11icnu upr11Uc&gt;d in lht colt~mtf bdow flU lltl ttHUIIIIIU oflhl Oltlo ltllUy
l'll hli.1hw~ ( lk. j · editorial boord. ulfltu t.dtrtf! l lt ltOiftl.

iHII!' '· ''''/

NATIONAL VIEW

SOUTHEAST
and educational support for people
DEAR DISCOURAGED: Since '--with - and families of people with
s\lch a large part of your mother's . --all the major mental disorders. The
existence revolves around being a toll-free number is (800) 950-6264
"martyr mother," it probably won't (NAMI). The Web address is:
be easy. Waste no time in enlisting www.nanu.org.
some help. The psychotherapist who
Although you may feel isolated and
issues your prescriptions is in a posi- all alone in your menu] illness, nothtion to advocate for you -- and to ing could be further from the truth . 1
ADVICE
clarifY for your mother and siblings urge you to reach out and join a sup the degree to which you are able to port group of other people who are
is !&gt;.:cause of her. (As though our live on your own if and when the coping with the same problems you
family and friends belong only to need arises.
are. You will find it both encouraging
her.)
In contrast to decades past, there is and empowering. Trust me.
What I have mentioned is only the much information available about
DEAR ABBY: My problem contip of the iceberg. I'm so tired of · schizophrenia - for anyone who is cerns people who are chronically late.
being dis~espected, but I have put up •interested. The World Psychiatric I'm talking about my mother-in-law.
with it this Iong without offering a Association sponsors a Web site, When she's invited for dinner or a
smgle_word m my own defense. How "Schizophrenia: Open the Doors" family outing, I can count on her
should I go about letting my mother (www.openthedoors.com), and you being the last to arrive -- 30 to 45
know that I deserve the same respec! ·· can find referrals to local chapten of J]linute~ late.
Meanwhile. my side of the family
she so readily g1ves to everyone else. the National Alliance for the MentalDISCOURAGED IN THE ly Ill (NAMI) that provide emotional gets tired of waiting for her while

Abigail
Van
Buren

dinner gets cold on the table. My
husband (her son) inSISts that we wait
until she arrives to begin eating,
while I think we should go ahead and
starr without h.er. My husband says I
am rude.
Abby, who is most rude - my
mother-in-law for showing up late,
my hu sband for sticking up for her. or
me for insisting that dinner be served
-on time, -with or without her? TIRED
OF
TARDINESS,
HURON, S.D.
DEAR TIRED: Instead of wasting your time debating who is the
ruqest, deal with the problem proactively. Since you know your motherin-law is always 30 to 45 minutes late,
invite her to dinner an hour earlier
than you want her to arrive. That
should solve the dilemma.
Dear Ai&gt;l&gt;y is "'ritter/ by Pau/i11e

Phillips allfl da11ghterJea~rne Phillips.

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SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

Coalition against terrorism must
·remain strong in coming months

0

R READERS' VIEWS
~·
ment for their programs and assistance?
Clean air

The health department provides much
needed assistance, programs, and information to benefit the health of us all.
Implementing this clean indoor air
regulation is a step in the right directiOI)
in providing residents a~d visitors of
Meigs County a healthier place to live,
visit, and conduct our business. Doesn't
everyone want to live as long as they
can?lt all starts with leading and living a
healthy life, and who is more than qual•
ified to provide us with the information,
assistance and programs that we need&gt;
Our Meigs County Health Department.
Keep up the good work.
Bob Williamson
Pomeroy

Stobarts hold
reunion

Kapraun,
poduck dinner. The afternoon and • Windi
was spent visiting with Gary Williamstown, W.Va.; Joe
Coleman, husband of Tanya Kapraun, Lower Salem; ·Bill,
Stobart Coleman, expanding Jolynn,Aaron and Brett Archer,
ATHENS - Imber Cop ~
family tree infonp.ation for the Lower Salem; Roberta Baxter,
family.
· . Joann and Ralph Starr, pinger, D.O... has been
appointed medical director
Floral bouquets were given Charleston, W.Va ..
,
for
Planned Parenthood of ·
Chuck, Wen~y. Kara and
to John and Noami Stobart and
Lucretia Stobart, eldest mem- Justin Lowry, LaGrange, Ky.; Southeast Ohio.
After graduating froni
bers attending. The 2002 Shirley Roberts, Lexington,
reunion \\Till be held at Racine K~:; Carl and Lorri Cooper, Ohio University College of
Star Mill Park the last Saturday Broadview · Aights; John and Osteopathic 'Medicine and
Barbara . Keith, Norwalk; completing her family pracof September.
Attending were Christa and Lucretia Stobart, Gary, Tanya, tice residency last year at
Kirk Holtmeier, Plymouth, Shaun and Kassandra Cole- O'Bleness Memorial HospiNeb.; Stacey Brandstetter and man, Middieport; Joe Stobart, tal, Coppinger joined the
Jay Myers, Carrboro, N .C.; Joe Portland; Beverly and Abby staff of On Call Medical
Cummins, Margie Wolfe, and Associates where she continJohn and Naomi Stobart, ues to work while serving as
Racine; Larry and Mary Grace Planned Parenthood Medical
Director.
Cowdery, Long Bottom.
Coppinger provides oversight of health services at six
clinics throughout Planned
PORTLAND - Lebanon TownParenthood's eight-county
ship Trustees, Saturday, 7
service area. She succeeded
a.m., township building.
Frank W. Myers, D.O. , who
resigned in June.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - E;agle Ridge
Community Church, homecom·
lng, Sunday. Morning service,
10 a .m., carry-In dinner at
noon, afternoon service, 1
p.m., wlfh special
Carmei·Sutton Bluegrass.

RACINE -The fifth annuDear Editor:
Dear Editor:
al Stobart reunion was Sept. 22
• The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, on the strngI am compelled to follow up my letter
The Meigs County Health Departat Racine Star Mill Park with
J!Ic liJ!&lt;Iinst "evil": As it has so often in the past centuwhich was recendy published in the . ment has implemented a clean indoor
)6 family members in atten~y. the United 'States is called upon to take the lead in
Sentinel.
air regulation so that the people of
Descendants
dance..
a struggle against a great evil.
My letter was written and in the mail Meigs County alld those who visit can
of John, Kelly, Ben and Arthur,
prior to the heinous terrorist attacks on breathe dealt smoke free air, something
In World War II, the evil was Nazi Germany . and
the four sons of Thomas and
America.
My
sarcastic
comparison
of
the
we
all
need
if
we
want
to
live
a
long
and
Isabel (Weaver) Stobart, came
!mph·· -J&lt;I(lan. In the 50 years following, the enemy
Meigs County Health Department to healthy life.
·to
the reunion from Nebraska,
was co l)l&lt;ffi1st oppressiOn.
the Taliban reflected on the harsh rules
This is a health issue, and who knows
North Carolina, Kentucky,
Now t · re
vii is terrorism.
imposed by the Taliban on the citizens of more about protecting our health than
West Virginia and the local area.
A united international effort to deprive terrorists of
Afghanistan.
the health deparrment? Every single one
FolloW\ng prayer by Joe Sroth eir ,,1fe havens, of their ability to travel at will, of
The world changed the day after my who is employed by the health departbart, the group enjoyed a
letter was sent. Any comparisons to the ment knows more about good health
th e support they get from various terror-sponsoring
Taliban, even with tongue-in-cheek, are and living a healthier life than I ever will
states, eventually will cripple terrorists' ability to
no longer appropriate. The issue of the and I'm sure I'm not the only one who
fun ction.
smoking ban itself is of no significance thinks that way, but how many of you
But building that coalition and keeping it united
compared to the gut"wrenching devasta· can admit to that?
will be a monumental task.
tion of our cities.
How many of you have healthy eating
In the coming months, the United States and its
God Bless America.
habits? Eating foods that are good for
Dear Editor:
THURSDAY
. lpAGEVILLE- Revival Free
allies sho uld remain united, reject efforts to underMichael G. Roberts your h~alth and avoiding the foods that
Well, America, more that a week has
·will Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
Akron are bad for you. I know that I am lead- passed and Osama Bin Laden looks to .
mine their collective will and remember that their
Evangelist, John Jeffrey,
ing a healthier life right now it i$ have done his deed. One only wonders
cause 1s JUSt.
-Thursday through Saturday,
because of the health department.
.if our government hadn't stopped all
. special singing nightly.
The air and smoke that our area power. flights , perhaps one of these planes
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Dear Editor:
plants puts into the air may not be good . would have had hit. a nuclear . power
'Post
9053 to meet Thursday,
This message is being sent to all resi- for us and the environment, but it is plant. God ·help us all.
7:30 p.m. Fish fry lor memdents of Meigs County, many of which something we have to deal with and
One can also wonder how long Amer'
bers, 6:30 p.m. Special draw·
--------~B~Y~T~H~E~A~
SS
~OCIATE~D~
PR~E~S~
S ~--~~-=~~ - will-be-voting on Nov.--6;-200·1~
~.
- · --·accept.- 'Phey- are supplying- power- to ica and itsbillion dollar military cansit ~~- ' lng.
Tod~y i ~ T hursday, Sept. 27, the 270th day of 2001. There
The Meigs County Tuberculosis (TB) each and every one of us, our homes, . back and talk to these terrorists who are
are 95 days left in tne year.
POMEROY - Town and counOffice is NOT part of the Meigs Coun- our businesses, ·our places of employ- backed by countries such as Afghanistan
try EXPO meeting, Thursday,
Toda y's Hi ghlight in History:
MIDDLEPORT- Homecom·
ty Health Department, nor does any ment. We take everything for granted and Iraq. Our government knows where
7:30 p.m. at Meigs County
lng, Hobson Christian Fellow·
On Sept. 27, 1939, Warsaw, Poland, surrendered after
until we are suddenly left without, only their training can1ps ~re, so .let's start
Health Department money fund it.
Fairgrounds.
ship Church, Sunday, 1:30
weeks of re,sistanc e to invading forces from Nazi Germany
We feel that the issues, which have than do we really appreciate our power bombing them and let them know that
p.m. The Hoskins Family to
and the Soviet Union during World War II.
POMEROY- Hysell Run
sing. Potluck dinner at noon at
surfaced concerning the smoking ban in companies, water companies, phone America means what they say.
On this date:
Church on Hysell Run Road,
the old Legion hall In Middle·
all public and private establishments, companie~. and even our cable TV.
If the Taliban is so powerful, where are
·Pomeroy , Thursday, 7 p.m.
In 1779, Jo hn Adams was named to negotiate the Revoport . .
may influence voters' decision in supThere is not much we can do about their friends, and if Osama Bin Laden is
- Those attending are asked to
lutionary War's peace terms with Britain.
porting the upcoming TB levy. The TB the outside air that we breathe, but there so great, why won't the coward come
·take a candle. Pastor Mark
SYRACUSE - Forest Run,
In 1854, the first great disaster involving an Atlantic
Michael Invites public .
Office is not associated with the recent- is something that can be done about the out of hiding and take responsibility for
Minersville, and Asbury United
Ocean liner occurted when the steamship Arctic sank with
ly enacted smoking ban, nor had any air that we breathe in our businesses, his crimes?
Methodist Church congrega·
POMEROY- Meigs County
~00 people aboa rd.
tlons, worship experience at
input during development of this policy. restaurants, and buildings that we visit or
At this time, America has not bombed
Church of Christ Women's Fel· Asbury, Sunday, 11 a.m. with
In 1928, the United States said it was recognizing the
The TB levy will be on the ballot work at. Solution? The passing of the anyone, which, to me, shows a very calm
Thursday, 7 p.m.
·lowshlp,
special speaker.Nationalist C hinese ·government.
president and nation who doesn't want
. Bradford Church of Christ. Pro·
Nov. 6, 2001. The Health Department dean indoor air regulation.
In 1942, Glenn Miller and his Orchestra performed
gram on CPR to be presented.
levy will be on the ballot in May 2002.
Rejecting health department levies is to fight. Other lives will be lost and we
together for the last time, at the Central Theater in Passaic,
·. Zion Church to give devotions. MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Town· We want to continue to provide free not a way to get back at them for pass- must show the rest of the world we will
Nomination of officers.
N .J. , pri or to Miller's e ntry into the Army.
I ship Trustee. Monday, 5 p.m.
services to residents of Meigs County as ing this dean indoor air regulation, stop not be terrorized by anyo.l'\e.
In 1954, "Tonight!" hosted by Steve Allen, made iti debut
Rutland Fire Station .
we have for so many years in the past.
and think. That would only jeopardize
So stand tall America. Those who
_.,RIDAY
on NBC: TV.
POMEROY - Fun, Food and
Thank you again for you support.
the health of the people in Meigs Coun- committed this act of war will truly pay
CARPENTER -The Columbia
In I ~59. Sovie t leader Nikita Khrushchev concluded his
.
Fellowship
at God's NET in
The Tuberculosis Office Staff ty. How many of you are aided by the in the end. God bless America, and if
Township
Trustees, Monday,
.. f&gt;omeroy. Nutritional meals,
v1sit to the United States.
· Connie Cotterill, RN programs and information that they pro- there is a hell on earth, Osama Bin
7:30
p.m.
at the lire station.
non-violent video games, com·
In 1959, a typhoo n battered the main Japanese island of
Carol little vide?
Laden must be living there.
. puler programs, board games,
Honshu , killing nearly 5,000 people.
Community Calendar Ia pubShannon Smith
How many of you have family and
Floyd H. Cleland
· for teens. 6 to 10:30 p.m. Frl·
·llahed
ae 1 free aervlce to
In 1964, the Warren Commission issued a report conday and Saturday.
friends who rely on the health departRutland
non-profit
groupe wlahlng to ·
cluding that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in assassiannounce
meeting•
and epa·
POMEROY- Free community
nating President Kennedy.
clal
,
avente.
The
calendar
Ia ·
dinner at Pomeroy Church of
In 1979, Co ngress gave final approval to forming the
not
dealgntld
to
promote
Christ, Friday 5:30 to 7 p.m.
Department of Education, the 13th Cabinet agency in U.S.
salee or fund-raleere of any
type. lteme are printed only
history.
SATURDAY
aa space permits and cannot
NEW HAVEN -American
In 19'!5, the govern ment unveiled its redesigned $100
be guaranteed to be printed
Legion.cook-oul for members
bill, fea turing a larger; off-center porirait of Benjamin
a apeclflc number of daye.
and guests, Saturday, 4 p.m.
Franklin .
Ten years ago: President Bush announced in a nationally
BY RID GREiN
I have a little trick I've always used to them from snacking, but that rarely
broack;llt adJr&lt;ss that he was eliminating all U .S. battlefield
In North America, the 20th century help me stay gainfully · employed. It's works and the picture ends up looking
nu cle- ar weapons, and called on the Soviet Union to match
was dominated by the internal com- not about job skills or work ethic, it's ' like a territorial claim. "This fridge and
th e gestur,· Th e Senate Judici ary Committee deadlocked,
bustion engine, or, more specifically, about rate of pay. The only job em ever its contents are the property of Big AI."
7-7, on the· nmn ination of Claren ce Thomas to the U.S.
the automobile. It's how suburbia was comfortable with is the one where I My advice is to find the ugliest, fattest, .
Suprl.'l~ll.' Court.
created, because having a car meant get paid 10 percent less than I'm most disgusting picture of yourself ever
Five years ago: In Afghanistan, th e Taliban, a band offoryou could live further from where you worth: If I get paid more than I'm taken, and then put it into a beautiful
mc·r sc llllnary stud ents. drove the government of President
worked and where you shopped, and worth, I'm a nervous wreck, expecting frame and hang it beside a full length
llurhanuJdi n Rabbani ou t of Kabul, captured the capital
most importantly, it meant you could to be fired at any minute. If I get paid mirror. It has to be such a horrible pic;mel excciltl'd for mer leader Najibullah.
·
live further from your relatives..
exactly what I'm worth, there are . ture of you th~t there is almost no
On ,· y,·a r ago: In Sydney, Australia, the U.S. Olympic
With DISH Holwoll&lt; 1011'11 ,_ hM lo dell with
A car was also pretty good for pick-. -whole bunch of guys just like me, try- chance you will ever :ook that bad
basc b,di lean I bea t C ub:l 4-0 to capture its first baseball gold
the
c.oble illY opln. Slcn up for the lliilllll Homi illg up girls . But then we got cartied ing to ste-al my job. Now don 't get me agairr. That means that when you stand
Pton
thlllncludoo oiiWIIIIe TV ftlllm, froe
mecb l. Ven us Wi lli ams became only the second player to
away. Every family got two or three wrong, I'm not promoting the concept and look at yourself in the wirror, you
lnlllllotlon,
your loCal channels. If ...noble, ond
win Wimhlcdo n, the U.S. Open and the Olympics in the
cars and a minivan and an ATV and a of being grossly underpaid. I'm only will notice how much better you look
America's Top 150 propammlna pecJcqo with""'"
sa m e year with her 6-2, 6-4 victory over Elena Dementiebackhoe and a hovercraft. Next thing talking 10 percent. The ,government · than you did in the picture. That will
of spotll,' movies and flmll~ chan noll, for only
va. (T he· llrst was Steffi Graf, in 1988.)
$&lt;19.99
• month.Rnd)' 1o dump your uble?
you know, we have a serious air poilu- would get a lot 'o f it anyway. And once fool ·you into thinking that as you get
Tnd .l\·\ llinhdays: Former Illinois Sen. Charles Percy is
DISH ISm
tion problem and that led to emission you get into that mindset, it makes older, you're looking better. And that
X2 . Mm·i,· directo r Arth ur Penn is 79.Actress Sada Thompcontrols, and now they're making many aspects of your life so much eas- will make you look better still. And if
1 ., . .
' "" i' 72. Actress Kathleen Nolan is 68. Actor Wilford
hybrid electric cars that run on fer- ier. For everything you do, expect to the day ever comes when . you look
Bri mle-y is (, 7. Actor C laude Jarman Jr. is 67. Author Barbara
menting broccoli and the gravitational get back 10 percent less than you worse than you do in the picture -Howar 11 (J 7 . Sportscaster Dick Schaap is 67. Singer-musi·pull of the moon.
deserve. I've even convinced my wife well, bey, time to get' out the camera.
cian ICtndy Bac hman (Ba1=hman-Turner Overdriv~) is 58.
·None of this is necessary. The auto- to try it, and it worked. We've been
QUOTE OF THE DAY: " If you're
Actr c·" Liz Tor res is 54. Actor Cary- Hiroyuki Tagawa is 51.
mobile no longer drives North Ameri- · married 35 years.
the only one .in your family who's in a
Middleport, Ohio Sinsc·r M,·,H Loaf is 50. Rock musician Greg Ham (Men At
You gotta be in pictures
good mood, it's probably not a coincica. The computer does. Now you can
Work 1 '' ~H -. Singer Shaun Cassidy is 43 ; Rock singer
work at home and shop at home. If you
Every one of us has had an unflatter- dence."-- Red Green
Stepb.111 Jenkins (Third Eye Blind) is 37. Actor .Patrick
(Red Green is the star of "The Red
go to the right Web site, you can even ing picture taken that we immediately
Muldo o n is 33. Singer Mark Calderon (Color Me Badd) is
pick up girls at home. So we're not rip up and then burn and then bury in Green Show," a television series seen in the
31 _ Actress Gwyneth Paltrow is 29. Rock singer Brad
going to save the ozone by .making the backyard. I think that's a mistake. U.S. on PBS and in Canada on the CBC
Arn o ld (."l Doors Down) is 23. Rapper Lil'Wayne is 19.
better cars. We're going lo save it by Now, I know so me people like to take Network, and the author of "The Red
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - ....... - ............ CIIIIIil . . . . -11 ......
__
Thought ti~r Today : " A man who is afraid will do anynever going anywhere.
a fat picture of themselves and stick it Green Book" and "Red Green-Talks Cars:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . ......
~
thin !l·" -· Jawaharlal Nehru, Indian statesman (1889-1964).
Internal job security
on the fridge as a deterrent to keep A Love Story:")
_.

Stand tall

To perform

Planned parent
diredor named

Four Shillings
Short Is
scheduled to
perform on
Sept. 27 at
Washington
State CommU:.
nity College In
Marietta. The
duo offers a
distinctly tradl·
tional mix of
music from
the Celtic
lands and
America that
"stretches the
boundaries of
folk music in
unexpected
directions."
(Submitted
photo)

LOCAL EVENTS

TB levy explained

TODAY IN HISTORY

FLY YOUR FLAG
TO SUPPORT
THE NATION!

~· ··

...

.. ~.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Saving the environment

by simply going nowhere

You're born.
You wait for them
to fix your cable.
You die.

••

s

(7 40) 992-2635

___......n.r:.r.z ·, =----..........
...........................................
........
...
---·-.........................................................
_............................. .............- ..

.''

is more thon one woy to

win With the Ohio Lottery.

Over the years, the lottery has contriiSuted over $11 billion to· the Lottery Profits Education
Fund to support primary and secondary education in Ohio. But kids are not the only ones
who win with the Lottery.

I

INGELS FURNITURE

,•

..'

The Lottery's 9,400 Agent .Retallers recently share~ $120 million in commissions and
·
bonuses. ~ottery products generate additional store traffic, yielding millions more in sales,
which sustains employment and fuels the local and state economy.
The Ohio lottery, Ohio sch6ols, ·and Ohio businesses continue to maintain
a true partnership that benefits all of Ohio.

�• •

l

Op1n1on
•

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageA4

Thunday, September 1..,7. 1001
a

jelehl4lfec:lnCypOel.com

The Daily Sentinel

'

.• •. ,• r.

:···. . ..

.. .

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

.

• '

'

.-~ .• . .. ..
...'

:'.·

.

.. ·. . ·......
. .·' . . :

.,

- md· have a disability. I live with my
mother. The problem is, she belittles
and shames me. 11 is bad enough to
deal with schizophrenia without constantly being insulted.
I have heard her tell people that I
.have ruined her life. Abby, I have
never been violent, I have always
taken my medication, and I do practically everything in the home. I'm
clean and neat, I don't party or do
drugs, I don't drink or smoke, I have
no children, I have never been
fromiscuous, and I am a Cllristian.
• Mother tells people that when she
'dies, she knows that my older siblings
will put me in, a home. T his is insulting, because I am intelligent and can
hanclle my own affairs. It also hurts
'because it implies that no one cares
about me. She has even said that the
only reason people associate with me

. .. .
... .
.., . : ;,

~ .

Managing Editor

DEAR ABBY: I am in my 30s

I
LOVE
'IOU...

..
'

,

R. Shawn Lewis

''

• I ::

.

.

· ..
'

Charlene Hoeflich
· General Manager

Thursday, September 27, 2001

:,.

·-111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157-

-~e_oa_ny_sen_tin_ei_ _ _B;;;;;;;;;..y the Bend
Mother~ patronizing attitude insults her disabled daughter

Page AS

I

'

• '

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

IA'ttrr.&gt; tu rht ediwr arr wrlcomr. 1"'' should N /ru tluJn 300 wonb. AU Ut11n
arr \uhju/1, t-diti11g and mud Or !igned ond lntllldl oddnu oltd t1ltpll0111 lllllftbft'.
'Vu mulgm•d ltttt'rs will be publishld. Ltttm lho111d H ill tocwlltUtr, IJIIilnt!llnf
p1'r.Wtl41ilits.
Thl' opi11icnu upr11Uc&gt;d in lht colt~mtf bdow flU lltl ttHUIIIIIU oflhl Oltlo ltllUy
l'll hli.1hw~ ( lk. j · editorial boord. ulfltu t.dtrtf! l lt ltOiftl.

iHII!' '· ''''/

NATIONAL VIEW

SOUTHEAST
and educational support for people
DEAR DISCOURAGED: Since '--with - and families of people with
s\lch a large part of your mother's . --all the major mental disorders. The
existence revolves around being a toll-free number is (800) 950-6264
"martyr mother," it probably won't (NAMI). The Web address is:
be easy. Waste no time in enlisting www.nanu.org.
some help. The psychotherapist who
Although you may feel isolated and
issues your prescriptions is in a posi- all alone in your menu] illness, nothtion to advocate for you -- and to ing could be further from the truth . 1
ADVICE
clarifY for your mother and siblings urge you to reach out and join a sup the degree to which you are able to port group of other people who are
is !&gt;.:cause of her. (As though our live on your own if and when the coping with the same problems you
family and friends belong only to need arises.
are. You will find it both encouraging
her.)
In contrast to decades past, there is and empowering. Trust me.
What I have mentioned is only the much information available about
DEAR ABBY: My problem contip of the iceberg. I'm so tired of · schizophrenia - for anyone who is cerns people who are chronically late.
being dis~espected, but I have put up •interested. The World Psychiatric I'm talking about my mother-in-law.
with it this Iong without offering a Association sponsors a Web site, When she's invited for dinner or a
smgle_word m my own defense. How "Schizophrenia: Open the Doors" family outing, I can count on her
should I go about letting my mother (www.openthedoors.com), and you being the last to arrive -- 30 to 45
know that I deserve the same respec! ·· can find referrals to local chapten of J]linute~ late.
Meanwhile. my side of the family
she so readily g1ves to everyone else. the National Alliance for the MentalDISCOURAGED IN THE ly Ill (NAMI) that provide emotional gets tired of waiting for her while

Abigail
Van
Buren

dinner gets cold on the table. My
husband (her son) inSISts that we wait
until she arrives to begin eating,
while I think we should go ahead and
starr without h.er. My husband says I
am rude.
Abby, who is most rude - my
mother-in-law for showing up late,
my hu sband for sticking up for her. or
me for insisting that dinner be served
-on time, -with or without her? TIRED
OF
TARDINESS,
HURON, S.D.
DEAR TIRED: Instead of wasting your time debating who is the
ruqest, deal with the problem proactively. Since you know your motherin-law is always 30 to 45 minutes late,
invite her to dinner an hour earlier
than you want her to arrive. That
should solve the dilemma.
Dear Ai&gt;l&gt;y is "'ritter/ by Pau/i11e

Phillips allfl da11ghterJea~rne Phillips.

.. . ..
~

.

.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

Coalition against terrorism must
·remain strong in coming months

0

R READERS' VIEWS
~·
ment for their programs and assistance?
Clean air

The health department provides much
needed assistance, programs, and information to benefit the health of us all.
Implementing this clean indoor air
regulation is a step in the right directiOI)
in providing residents a~d visitors of
Meigs County a healthier place to live,
visit, and conduct our business. Doesn't
everyone want to live as long as they
can?lt all starts with leading and living a
healthy life, and who is more than qual•
ified to provide us with the information,
assistance and programs that we need&gt;
Our Meigs County Health Department.
Keep up the good work.
Bob Williamson
Pomeroy

Stobarts hold
reunion

Kapraun,
poduck dinner. The afternoon and • Windi
was spent visiting with Gary Williamstown, W.Va.; Joe
Coleman, husband of Tanya Kapraun, Lower Salem; ·Bill,
Stobart Coleman, expanding Jolynn,Aaron and Brett Archer,
ATHENS - Imber Cop ~
family tree infonp.ation for the Lower Salem; Roberta Baxter,
family.
· . Joann and Ralph Starr, pinger, D.O... has been
appointed medical director
Floral bouquets were given Charleston, W.Va ..
,
for
Planned Parenthood of ·
Chuck, Wen~y. Kara and
to John and Noami Stobart and
Lucretia Stobart, eldest mem- Justin Lowry, LaGrange, Ky.; Southeast Ohio.
After graduating froni
bers attending. The 2002 Shirley Roberts, Lexington,
reunion \\Till be held at Racine K~:; Carl and Lorri Cooper, Ohio University College of
Star Mill Park the last Saturday Broadview · Aights; John and Osteopathic 'Medicine and
Barbara . Keith, Norwalk; completing her family pracof September.
Attending were Christa and Lucretia Stobart, Gary, Tanya, tice residency last year at
Kirk Holtmeier, Plymouth, Shaun and Kassandra Cole- O'Bleness Memorial HospiNeb.; Stacey Brandstetter and man, Middieport; Joe Stobart, tal, Coppinger joined the
Jay Myers, Carrboro, N .C.; Joe Portland; Beverly and Abby staff of On Call Medical
Cummins, Margie Wolfe, and Associates where she continJohn and Naomi Stobart, ues to work while serving as
Racine; Larry and Mary Grace Planned Parenthood Medical
Director.
Cowdery, Long Bottom.
Coppinger provides oversight of health services at six
clinics throughout Planned
PORTLAND - Lebanon TownParenthood's eight-county
ship Trustees, Saturday, 7
service area. She succeeded
a.m., township building.
Frank W. Myers, D.O. , who
resigned in June.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - E;agle Ridge
Community Church, homecom·
lng, Sunday. Morning service,
10 a .m., carry-In dinner at
noon, afternoon service, 1
p.m., wlfh special
Carmei·Sutton Bluegrass.

RACINE -The fifth annuDear Editor:
Dear Editor:
al Stobart reunion was Sept. 22
• The Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch, on the strngI am compelled to follow up my letter
The Meigs County Health Departat Racine Star Mill Park with
J!Ic liJ!&lt;Iinst "evil": As it has so often in the past centuwhich was recendy published in the . ment has implemented a clean indoor
)6 family members in atten~y. the United 'States is called upon to take the lead in
Sentinel.
air regulation so that the people of
Descendants
dance..
a struggle against a great evil.
My letter was written and in the mail Meigs County alld those who visit can
of John, Kelly, Ben and Arthur,
prior to the heinous terrorist attacks on breathe dealt smoke free air, something
In World War II, the evil was Nazi Germany . and
the four sons of Thomas and
America.
My
sarcastic
comparison
of
the
we
all
need
if
we
want
to
live
a
long
and
Isabel (Weaver) Stobart, came
!mph·· -J&lt;I(lan. In the 50 years following, the enemy
Meigs County Health Department to healthy life.
·to
the reunion from Nebraska,
was co l)l&lt;ffi1st oppressiOn.
the Taliban reflected on the harsh rules
This is a health issue, and who knows
North Carolina, Kentucky,
Now t · re
vii is terrorism.
imposed by the Taliban on the citizens of more about protecting our health than
West Virginia and the local area.
A united international effort to deprive terrorists of
Afghanistan.
the health deparrment? Every single one
FolloW\ng prayer by Joe Sroth eir ,,1fe havens, of their ability to travel at will, of
The world changed the day after my who is employed by the health departbart, the group enjoyed a
letter was sent. Any comparisons to the ment knows more about good health
th e support they get from various terror-sponsoring
Taliban, even with tongue-in-cheek, are and living a healthier life than I ever will
states, eventually will cripple terrorists' ability to
no longer appropriate. The issue of the and I'm sure I'm not the only one who
fun ction.
smoking ban itself is of no significance thinks that way, but how many of you
But building that coalition and keeping it united
compared to the gut"wrenching devasta· can admit to that?
will be a monumental task.
tion of our cities.
How many of you have healthy eating
In the coming months, the United States and its
God Bless America.
habits? Eating foods that are good for
Dear Editor:
THURSDAY
. lpAGEVILLE- Revival Free
allies sho uld remain united, reject efforts to underMichael G. Roberts your h~alth and avoiding the foods that
Well, America, more that a week has
·will Baptist Church, 7 p.m.
Akron are bad for you. I know that I am lead- passed and Osama Bin Laden looks to .
mine their collective will and remember that their
Evangelist, John Jeffrey,
ing a healthier life right now it i$ have done his deed. One only wonders
cause 1s JUSt.
-Thursday through Saturday,
because of the health department.
.if our government hadn't stopped all
. special singing nightly.
The air and smoke that our area power. flights , perhaps one of these planes
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Dear Editor:
plants puts into the air may not be good . would have had hit. a nuclear . power
'Post
9053 to meet Thursday,
This message is being sent to all resi- for us and the environment, but it is plant. God ·help us all.
7:30 p.m. Fish fry lor memdents of Meigs County, many of which something we have to deal with and
One can also wonder how long Amer'
bers, 6:30 p.m. Special draw·
--------~B~Y~T~H~E~A~
SS
~OCIATE~D~
PR~E~S~
S ~--~~-=~~ - will-be-voting on Nov.--6;-200·1~
~.
- · --·accept.- 'Phey- are supplying- power- to ica and itsbillion dollar military cansit ~~- ' lng.
Tod~y i ~ T hursday, Sept. 27, the 270th day of 2001. There
The Meigs County Tuberculosis (TB) each and every one of us, our homes, . back and talk to these terrorists who are
are 95 days left in tne year.
POMEROY - Town and counOffice is NOT part of the Meigs Coun- our businesses, ·our places of employ- backed by countries such as Afghanistan
try EXPO meeting, Thursday,
Toda y's Hi ghlight in History:
MIDDLEPORT- Homecom·
ty Health Department, nor does any ment. We take everything for granted and Iraq. Our government knows where
7:30 p.m. at Meigs County
lng, Hobson Christian Fellow·
On Sept. 27, 1939, Warsaw, Poland, surrendered after
until we are suddenly left without, only their training can1ps ~re, so .let's start
Health Department money fund it.
Fairgrounds.
ship Church, Sunday, 1:30
weeks of re,sistanc e to invading forces from Nazi Germany
We feel that the issues, which have than do we really appreciate our power bombing them and let them know that
p.m. The Hoskins Family to
and the Soviet Union during World War II.
POMEROY- Hysell Run
sing. Potluck dinner at noon at
surfaced concerning the smoking ban in companies, water companies, phone America means what they say.
On this date:
Church on Hysell Run Road,
the old Legion hall In Middle·
all public and private establishments, companie~. and even our cable TV.
If the Taliban is so powerful, where are
·Pomeroy , Thursday, 7 p.m.
In 1779, Jo hn Adams was named to negotiate the Revoport . .
may influence voters' decision in supThere is not much we can do about their friends, and if Osama Bin Laden is
- Those attending are asked to
lutionary War's peace terms with Britain.
porting the upcoming TB levy. The TB the outside air that we breathe, but there so great, why won't the coward come
·take a candle. Pastor Mark
SYRACUSE - Forest Run,
In 1854, the first great disaster involving an Atlantic
Michael Invites public .
Office is not associated with the recent- is something that can be done about the out of hiding and take responsibility for
Minersville, and Asbury United
Ocean liner occurted when the steamship Arctic sank with
ly enacted smoking ban, nor had any air that we breathe in our businesses, his crimes?
Methodist Church congrega·
POMEROY- Meigs County
~00 people aboa rd.
tlons, worship experience at
input during development of this policy. restaurants, and buildings that we visit or
At this time, America has not bombed
Church of Christ Women's Fel· Asbury, Sunday, 11 a.m. with
In 1928, the United States said it was recognizing the
The TB levy will be on the ballot work at. Solution? The passing of the anyone, which, to me, shows a very calm
Thursday, 7 p.m.
·lowshlp,
special speaker.Nationalist C hinese ·government.
president and nation who doesn't want
. Bradford Church of Christ. Pro·
Nov. 6, 2001. The Health Department dean indoor air regulation.
In 1942, Glenn Miller and his Orchestra performed
gram on CPR to be presented.
levy will be on the ballot in May 2002.
Rejecting health department levies is to fight. Other lives will be lost and we
together for the last time, at the Central Theater in Passaic,
·. Zion Church to give devotions. MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Town· We want to continue to provide free not a way to get back at them for pass- must show the rest of the world we will
Nomination of officers.
N .J. , pri or to Miller's e ntry into the Army.
I ship Trustee. Monday, 5 p.m.
services to residents of Meigs County as ing this dean indoor air regulation, stop not be terrorized by anyo.l'\e.
In 1954, "Tonight!" hosted by Steve Allen, made iti debut
Rutland Fire Station .
we have for so many years in the past.
and think. That would only jeopardize
So stand tall America. Those who
_.,RIDAY
on NBC: TV.
POMEROY - Fun, Food and
Thank you again for you support.
the health of the people in Meigs Coun- committed this act of war will truly pay
CARPENTER -The Columbia
In I ~59. Sovie t leader Nikita Khrushchev concluded his
.
Fellowship
at God's NET in
The Tuberculosis Office Staff ty. How many of you are aided by the in the end. God bless America, and if
Township
Trustees, Monday,
.. f&gt;omeroy. Nutritional meals,
v1sit to the United States.
· Connie Cotterill, RN programs and information that they pro- there is a hell on earth, Osama Bin
7:30
p.m.
at the lire station.
non-violent video games, com·
In 1959, a typhoo n battered the main Japanese island of
Carol little vide?
Laden must be living there.
. puler programs, board games,
Honshu , killing nearly 5,000 people.
Community Calendar Ia pubShannon Smith
How many of you have family and
Floyd H. Cleland
· for teens. 6 to 10:30 p.m. Frl·
·llahed
ae 1 free aervlce to
In 1964, the Warren Commission issued a report conday and Saturday.
friends who rely on the health departRutland
non-profit
groupe wlahlng to ·
cluding that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in assassiannounce
meeting•
and epa·
POMEROY- Free community
nating President Kennedy.
clal
,
avente.
The
calendar
Ia ·
dinner at Pomeroy Church of
In 1979, Co ngress gave final approval to forming the
not
dealgntld
to
promote
Christ, Friday 5:30 to 7 p.m.
Department of Education, the 13th Cabinet agency in U.S.
salee or fund-raleere of any
type. lteme are printed only
history.
SATURDAY
aa space permits and cannot
NEW HAVEN -American
In 19'!5, the govern ment unveiled its redesigned $100
be guaranteed to be printed
Legion.cook-oul for members
bill, fea turing a larger; off-center porirait of Benjamin
a apeclflc number of daye.
and guests, Saturday, 4 p.m.
Franklin .
Ten years ago: President Bush announced in a nationally
BY RID GREiN
I have a little trick I've always used to them from snacking, but that rarely
broack;llt adJr&lt;ss that he was eliminating all U .S. battlefield
In North America, the 20th century help me stay gainfully · employed. It's works and the picture ends up looking
nu cle- ar weapons, and called on the Soviet Union to match
was dominated by the internal com- not about job skills or work ethic, it's ' like a territorial claim. "This fridge and
th e gestur,· Th e Senate Judici ary Committee deadlocked,
bustion engine, or, more specifically, about rate of pay. The only job em ever its contents are the property of Big AI."
7-7, on the· nmn ination of Claren ce Thomas to the U.S.
the automobile. It's how suburbia was comfortable with is the one where I My advice is to find the ugliest, fattest, .
Suprl.'l~ll.' Court.
created, because having a car meant get paid 10 percent less than I'm most disgusting picture of yourself ever
Five years ago: In Afghanistan, th e Taliban, a band offoryou could live further from where you worth: If I get paid more than I'm taken, and then put it into a beautiful
mc·r sc llllnary stud ents. drove the government of President
worked and where you shopped, and worth, I'm a nervous wreck, expecting frame and hang it beside a full length
llurhanuJdi n Rabbani ou t of Kabul, captured the capital
most importantly, it meant you could to be fired at any minute. If I get paid mirror. It has to be such a horrible pic;mel excciltl'd for mer leader Najibullah.
·
live further from your relatives..
exactly what I'm worth, there are . ture of you th~t there is almost no
On ,· y,·a r ago: In Sydney, Australia, the U.S. Olympic
With DISH Holwoll&lt; 1011'11 ,_ hM lo dell with
A car was also pretty good for pick-. -whole bunch of guys just like me, try- chance you will ever :ook that bad
basc b,di lean I bea t C ub:l 4-0 to capture its first baseball gold
the
c.oble illY opln. Slcn up for the lliilllll Homi illg up girls . But then we got cartied ing to ste-al my job. Now don 't get me agairr. That means that when you stand
Pton
thlllncludoo oiiWIIIIe TV ftlllm, froe
mecb l. Ven us Wi lli ams became only the second player to
away. Every family got two or three wrong, I'm not promoting the concept and look at yourself in the wirror, you
lnlllllotlon,
your loCal channels. If ...noble, ond
win Wimhlcdo n, the U.S. Open and the Olympics in the
cars and a minivan and an ATV and a of being grossly underpaid. I'm only will notice how much better you look
America's Top 150 propammlna pecJcqo with""'"
sa m e year with her 6-2, 6-4 victory over Elena Dementiebackhoe and a hovercraft. Next thing talking 10 percent. The ,government · than you did in the picture. That will
of spotll,' movies and flmll~ chan noll, for only
va. (T he· llrst was Steffi Graf, in 1988.)
$&lt;19.99
• month.Rnd)' 1o dump your uble?
you know, we have a serious air poilu- would get a lot 'o f it anyway. And once fool ·you into thinking that as you get
Tnd .l\·\ llinhdays: Former Illinois Sen. Charles Percy is
DISH ISm
tion problem and that led to emission you get into that mindset, it makes older, you're looking better. And that
X2 . Mm·i,· directo r Arth ur Penn is 79.Actress Sada Thompcontrols, and now they're making many aspects of your life so much eas- will make you look better still. And if
1 ., . .
' "" i' 72. Actress Kathleen Nolan is 68. Actor Wilford
hybrid electric cars that run on fer- ier. For everything you do, expect to the day ever comes when . you look
Bri mle-y is (, 7. Actor C laude Jarman Jr. is 67. Author Barbara
menting broccoli and the gravitational get back 10 percent less than you worse than you do in the picture -Howar 11 (J 7 . Sportscaster Dick Schaap is 67. Singer-musi·pull of the moon.
deserve. I've even convinced my wife well, bey, time to get' out the camera.
cian ICtndy Bac hman (Ba1=hman-Turner Overdriv~) is 58.
·None of this is necessary. The auto- to try it, and it worked. We've been
QUOTE OF THE DAY: " If you're
Actr c·" Liz Tor res is 54. Actor Cary- Hiroyuki Tagawa is 51.
mobile no longer drives North Ameri- · married 35 years.
the only one .in your family who's in a
Middleport, Ohio Sinsc·r M,·,H Loaf is 50. Rock musician Greg Ham (Men At
You gotta be in pictures
good mood, it's probably not a coincica. The computer does. Now you can
Work 1 '' ~H -. Singer Shaun Cassidy is 43 ; Rock singer
work at home and shop at home. If you
Every one of us has had an unflatter- dence."-- Red Green
Stepb.111 Jenkins (Third Eye Blind) is 37. Actor .Patrick
(Red Green is the star of "The Red
go to the right Web site, you can even ing picture taken that we immediately
Muldo o n is 33. Singer Mark Calderon (Color Me Badd) is
pick up girls at home. So we're not rip up and then burn and then bury in Green Show," a television series seen in the
31 _ Actress Gwyneth Paltrow is 29. Rock singer Brad
going to save the ozone by .making the backyard. I think that's a mistake. U.S. on PBS and in Canada on the CBC
Arn o ld (."l Doors Down) is 23. Rapper Lil'Wayne is 19.
better cars. We're going lo save it by Now, I know so me people like to take Network, and the author of "The Red
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - ....... - ............ CIIIIIil . . . . -11 ......
__
Thought ti~r Today : " A man who is afraid will do anynever going anywhere.
a fat picture of themselves and stick it Green Book" and "Red Green-Talks Cars:
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . ......
~
thin !l·" -· Jawaharlal Nehru, Indian statesman (1889-1964).
Internal job security
on the fridge as a deterrent to keep A Love Story:")
_.

Stand tall

To perform

Planned parent
diredor named

Four Shillings
Short Is
scheduled to
perform on
Sept. 27 at
Washington
State CommU:.
nity College In
Marietta. The
duo offers a
distinctly tradl·
tional mix of
music from
the Celtic
lands and
America that
"stretches the
boundaries of
folk music in
unexpected
directions."
(Submitted
photo)

LOCAL EVENTS

TB levy explained

TODAY IN HISTORY

FLY YOUR FLAG
TO SUPPORT
THE NATION!

~· ··

...

.. ~.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

Saving the environment

by simply going nowhere

You're born.
You wait for them
to fix your cable.
You die.

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�Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 27,2001

CHESTER - A pr:~y~r
circle for the victims oi the
attacks on America was held
at a recent meeting of the
Past Councilors Club of
. Ch~ster
Council
3~3.
Daughters of America.
Scripture from Psalms 4h

CHESTER
Anna
Roberts and Cathy Willis
were initiated at the rec ent
meeting of Chester Council
323. Daughters of America.
As a part of inspection conducted by lleny lliggs. tlw
group demonstrated receiving
nationaJ and sta te officers

was read by Laura

Ma~

Nice,

presidrnt. Mernber\ gave the

Lord's Prayer and the pledge
to th~ American flag in unison. In response to roll call
members
co1nments on
things for which they are
thankful.

Esther Smith gave the sec,
retary's report, and Jean
Welsh,
the
treasurerUs
report. The death of Ronald
Osborne was reported and it
was noted Opal Eichinger is
sick. A thank you card was
read from Ell Osborne's fam-

ily.
Refreshments were served
by Deloris Wolfe and Ruth
Smith and games were conducted by Betty Young and
Mary K. Holter. Door prizes
were won by Erma Cleland,
Margaret Amberger, Betty

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

use robot tO-find boat from Lewis and Clark expedition

Snmh; and Laura Mae Nice.
'fhe ume cl;,tnge to 7 p.m.
will take place at the Oct. 10
meeting. Others attending
were
Goldie
Frederick,
Charlotte Grant, Thelma
White and lnzy Newell.

HELENA, Mont. (AI') When Meriwether Lewis
first pushed his "great exper-.
iment" into the Missouri
River near present- day
Great Falls in 1805, he surely beamed.
"She lay like a cork," he

1
The

s

along with th!' initiittory
work. She was presented J
gifi:.
Gary Holter presided at th ~
meeting opening it \Vith a
prayer for those families wh o . .
lost loved ones in the atta cks
in New York and Washington,
D.C. The group sang "God

~

wrote in his journal.
But the iron-framed boat
that Lewis designed floated
only fot a· moment before it
leaked arid sank, taking with
it his high spirits. "The circumstance mortified me not
a little," he wrote.

lewis and expedition cocommander William Cfark
gave the boat a proper burial
in ·a field near the river 's
great falls. It was never mentioned again .
But now, archaeologist
Ken Karsmizki intends to

find it.
Karsmizki, of the Columbia Gorge Discovery Center
in The Dall~s. ' ore., has
enlisted the help of an Air
Force robot equipped with a
giant metal detector, and
will set out the second week

of September to find the
boat he believes is still
buried.
The boat, dubbed by some
"the holy grail of the exploration," would solve a brainteaser for archaeologists and
historians if it is found .

·s

September" 27th, 28th, and 29th

the

pledge; read scripture, said the
Lord's Prayer," and sang the
'"Star Spangled Banner."
A letter from the Chester
Historical Society was read
along with a t~ank you card
from the iamily of Ronald
Osborn.e for -prayer, food, and
visirs. Also . read \vas a letter
·Jrom the state cou-ncilor on
the commission of Mary Barriroger. Next meeting will
have a nme change to 7 p.m.
The friendship meeting was
announced for Oct. 13 at · ·
. noon with a potlllck dinner.
Quarterly birthdays were
observed with those honored
being Julie Curtis, Laura
Ni ce, Jean Welsh, Mary
Holter, and Cathy Willis.
Others attending were
Helen Wolfe,Jo Ann Rjtchie,
Doris Grueser, Ruth Smith,
Charlotte Grant, Esther
Smith, Opal Hollon, Dorothy
Myers, Ella Osborne, Everett
Grant, Betty Jackson, Deloris
1 Wolfe, Charlotte VanMeter,
· Marcia
Keller,
Opal
Eichinger, Thelma White,
Goldie Frederick, Shirley
Beegle, and Betty Young.

Bradford

~churcnto

celebrate
•
annaversary
POMEROY
Announcement of the Bradford Church of Christ's celebration of its I 25th anniversary Oct. 7-9 was made when
. the Lydia Council met
recently.
Brenda
Bolen, Sherry
Smith, and Carolyn Nichol. son hosted the meeting with
-'Paula Pickens presiding and
' giving prayer. Officers' reports
' were given, and sunshine bags
.· for September were given to
·. Chrissy Walker and Becky
Amberger.
Thank you notes for last

Thursday, September 27th

Saturday, September 29th

received from Eileen Bowers
and ·Sherry Smith. Communion for October will be hanclled by Marjorie Davis.
The clipboard corne r proJect has been completed by
Nicholson. It was noted that
supplies needed for the
. kitchen are napkins and furni -.
ture polish.
Devotions were given by
!Nicholson on the theme
"Time-Children Spell Love
'Time.'''
Refreshments were served.
Others attending were C harlotte Hanning, Marjorie
Davis, Gerty Lightfoot, C harlotte VanMeter, Sherry Shamblin, Neva Ch~pman , ·Brittney
Collins, Madeline Painter, ·
Tracy and Amber Davidson,
and Nancy Morris.

DO YOUR PART
TO SUPPORT
AMERICA!
•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

.

6:00 p.m.

Opening Ceremony by Pomeroy
American Legion
6:30 p.m.
Fire Truck Parade
7:00 • 10:00 p.m. Dee &amp; Dallas •
Sponsored by the Ohio Lollery

s

9:30am-12:30pm Live Remote· WYVK Radio
10:00 a.m.
Parade
10:30 a.m.
Swinging Seniors(after parade)
CloggingSponsored by the Ohio Lottery
II :00 a.m.-3:00p.m. Myron Duffield "King of the
Friday, September 28th
Calliope" (Calliope playing 15 to 20
1:00 p.m.
Meigs High School Band &amp; Flag Corp.
minutes on the hour) Sponsored by the
5:30-6:45p.m. Paul Doeffiriger •
Ohio Lottery
Sponsored by the -Ohio Lottery .
7:00 • 8:00 p.m. Midnight Cloggers • Sponsored by the II :00 a.m.-4:00p.m. Chili Cookoff - Sponsored by
VFW of Mason, WV
Ohio Lottery
8:30 - 9:30 p.m. High Country •
II :00 a.m.- I :00 p.m. Line Throwing Contest (sign-up at
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
II :00 a.m.) • Sponsored by AEP
10:00 ·11:00 p.m. Liquid CrystalI2:00n ·4:00p.m. Doll Collection "Room of a Thousand
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
Eyes" - upstairs of Clark's Jewelry Store
I :00 p.m.
Walking Tour of Pomeroy**
2:00- 3:00p.m. Phil N the Blanks· Sponsored by the
Ohio Lottery
3:00p.m.
Crowning of the Riverfest QueenSponsored by the University of Rio
Grande
4:00p.m.
Chili Cookoff Judging
4:00p.m.
"Ducky Derby" - Pomeroy Merchants
Association.
5:00 - 6:00p.m. Big Bend Cloggers · Sponsored by the
Ohio Lottery
· 5:30 p.m.
Captain's Dinner • Eagles Club
6:30- 8:30p.m. "ELVIS" Impersonator Dwight
Icenhower- Sponsored by the Ohio
on the "T" in Middleport
Lottery
--•.U~~i",~~ ·
9:00 - 1'32:00mitl Blitzkreigtlnplugged- Sj)(msc&gt;recilby ..,.......
the Ohio Lottery
. . . , · ··
• " I fk"' ,-,•,'''"''
9:30p.m.
FIREWORKS - Ripenhoff Distributing.

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Encourages you to attend
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Thursday -Friday - Saturday

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992-3148

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Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

Past Coundlors Club of Chester remembers attack vi~ms

Members
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into Chester
Council

Bless America," gave

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Fighter
plan~

found
in glacier
MII'.&gt;DLESBORO, Ky. (AP)
- A World War II fighter
plane that spent decades
encapsulated in the cold
silence of a glacier has roared
back to life.
The P-38 Lightning, once
one of the fastest planes in the
sky, was among six fighters
and two bombers forced by
foul weather to land on a
glacier in Greenland nearly 60
years ago.
The pilots and crews were
rescued, but the squadron of
warplanes was left pehind to
be slowly buried by snow and
;ce.
As a boy in Midcllesboro,
Roy Shoffner had become
enamored with the P-38 and
imagined himself flying the
plane that could reach 405
mph at altitudes of up to
35,000 feet.
Years passed, but Shoffner
never lost interest in the
plane. So when he learned
about the squadron abandoned On Greenland, he
became bent on retrieving
one. In the summer of 1992,'
he did just that, and has been
working since to restore it to
a like-new condition.
That plane, dubbed the
Glacier Girl, was brought up
piece by piece through an icy
tunnel from beneath 268 feet
of ice.
The plane is perhaps 1he
biggest hit in , Midcllesboro
since a meteorite ·made landfall thousands of years ago,
stamping out the flat basin on
which early settlers built the
town. Some 3,500 people a
month have been coming to
Midcllesboro to watch a crew
reassemble the vintage plane.

..

Research
could save
Iannen
thousands
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio
State
University
researcher Parwinder Grewal
hopes his latest project moves
along quicker than the pace of
his subjects: slugs.
Grewal, an entomologist, has
spent two years examining and
dissecting slugs. He's looking
. for a small parasitic worm
known as a nematode that
crawls into a slug through its
breathing pore, multiplies and
kills the pest in about a week
- hopefully before it eats
valuable plants and crops.
"Last year in Ohio, because
of the good rains we had in the
summer, slug populations were
so high that some farmers had
acrually lost their entire corn
ciop;' Grewal said.
He said slugs mainly eat
plant leaves, but if weather
conditions are right, 'they can
consume an entire plant just as
it starts to grow.
David Graham, a Wayne
County farmer who has about
1,000 acres of corns and soybeans, said he has had entire
fields wiped out in three to five
days.
"You can still make a ·profit if
you can get in there and get it
treated;' Graham said. "If you
don't, you'll be wiped out."
Ron Hammond, an OSU
field crop entomologist, said ·
slugs have always been a problem, btu do more damage on
no till farms.
No till leaves residue on the
soil surface to protect against
erosion, but also leaves enough
moisture in the soil to Sl!Stain
slugs.
· :•
GrewJ! said farmers probl~rns could be solved by a
nematode that has been found
in England and is being massproduced to control slugs in
Europe.
- - ·--- ·

~-- I

�Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Sept. 27,2001

CHESTER - A pr:~y~r
circle for the victims oi the
attacks on America was held
at a recent meeting of the
Past Councilors Club of
. Ch~ster
Council
3~3.
Daughters of America.
Scripture from Psalms 4h

CHESTER
Anna
Roberts and Cathy Willis
were initiated at the rec ent
meeting of Chester Council
323. Daughters of America.
As a part of inspection conducted by lleny lliggs. tlw
group demonstrated receiving
nationaJ and sta te officers

was read by Laura

Ma~

Nice,

presidrnt. Mernber\ gave the

Lord's Prayer and the pledge
to th~ American flag in unison. In response to roll call
members
co1nments on
things for which they are
thankful.

Esther Smith gave the sec,
retary's report, and Jean
Welsh,
the
treasurerUs
report. The death of Ronald
Osborne was reported and it
was noted Opal Eichinger is
sick. A thank you card was
read from Ell Osborne's fam-

ily.
Refreshments were served
by Deloris Wolfe and Ruth
Smith and games were conducted by Betty Young and
Mary K. Holter. Door prizes
were won by Erma Cleland,
Margaret Amberger, Betty

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

use robot tO-find boat from Lewis and Clark expedition

Snmh; and Laura Mae Nice.
'fhe ume cl;,tnge to 7 p.m.
will take place at the Oct. 10
meeting. Others attending
were
Goldie
Frederick,
Charlotte Grant, Thelma
White and lnzy Newell.

HELENA, Mont. (AI') When Meriwether Lewis
first pushed his "great exper-.
iment" into the Missouri
River near present- day
Great Falls in 1805, he surely beamed.
"She lay like a cork," he

1
The

s

along with th!' initiittory
work. She was presented J
gifi:.
Gary Holter presided at th ~
meeting opening it \Vith a
prayer for those families wh o . .
lost loved ones in the atta cks
in New York and Washington,
D.C. The group sang "God

~

wrote in his journal.
But the iron-framed boat
that Lewis designed floated
only fot a· moment before it
leaked arid sank, taking with
it his high spirits. "The circumstance mortified me not
a little," he wrote.

lewis and expedition cocommander William Cfark
gave the boat a proper burial
in ·a field near the river 's
great falls. It was never mentioned again .
But now, archaeologist
Ken Karsmizki intends to

find it.
Karsmizki, of the Columbia Gorge Discovery Center
in The Dall~s. ' ore., has
enlisted the help of an Air
Force robot equipped with a
giant metal detector, and
will set out the second week

of September to find the
boat he believes is still
buried.
The boat, dubbed by some
"the holy grail of the exploration," would solve a brainteaser for archaeologists and
historians if it is found .

·s

September" 27th, 28th, and 29th

the

pledge; read scripture, said the
Lord's Prayer," and sang the
'"Star Spangled Banner."
A letter from the Chester
Historical Society was read
along with a t~ank you card
from the iamily of Ronald
Osborn.e for -prayer, food, and
visirs. Also . read \vas a letter
·Jrom the state cou-ncilor on
the commission of Mary Barriroger. Next meeting will
have a nme change to 7 p.m.
The friendship meeting was
announced for Oct. 13 at · ·
. noon with a potlllck dinner.
Quarterly birthdays were
observed with those honored
being Julie Curtis, Laura
Ni ce, Jean Welsh, Mary
Holter, and Cathy Willis.
Others attending were
Helen Wolfe,Jo Ann Rjtchie,
Doris Grueser, Ruth Smith,
Charlotte Grant, Esther
Smith, Opal Hollon, Dorothy
Myers, Ella Osborne, Everett
Grant, Betty Jackson, Deloris
1 Wolfe, Charlotte VanMeter,
· Marcia
Keller,
Opal
Eichinger, Thelma White,
Goldie Frederick, Shirley
Beegle, and Betty Young.

Bradford

~churcnto

celebrate
•
annaversary
POMEROY
Announcement of the Bradford Church of Christ's celebration of its I 25th anniversary Oct. 7-9 was made when
. the Lydia Council met
recently.
Brenda
Bolen, Sherry
Smith, and Carolyn Nichol. son hosted the meeting with
-'Paula Pickens presiding and
' giving prayer. Officers' reports
' were given, and sunshine bags
.· for September were given to
·. Chrissy Walker and Becky
Amberger.
Thank you notes for last

Thursday, September 27th

Saturday, September 29th

received from Eileen Bowers
and ·Sherry Smith. Communion for October will be hanclled by Marjorie Davis.
The clipboard corne r proJect has been completed by
Nicholson. It was noted that
supplies needed for the
. kitchen are napkins and furni -.
ture polish.
Devotions were given by
!Nicholson on the theme
"Time-Children Spell Love
'Time.'''
Refreshments were served.
Others attending were C harlotte Hanning, Marjorie
Davis, Gerty Lightfoot, C harlotte VanMeter, Sherry Shamblin, Neva Ch~pman , ·Brittney
Collins, Madeline Painter, ·
Tracy and Amber Davidson,
and Nancy Morris.

DO YOUR PART
TO SUPPORT
AMERICA!
•

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

.

6:00 p.m.

Opening Ceremony by Pomeroy
American Legion
6:30 p.m.
Fire Truck Parade
7:00 • 10:00 p.m. Dee &amp; Dallas •
Sponsored by the Ohio Lollery

s

9:30am-12:30pm Live Remote· WYVK Radio
10:00 a.m.
Parade
10:30 a.m.
Swinging Seniors(after parade)
CloggingSponsored by the Ohio Lottery
II :00 a.m.-3:00p.m. Myron Duffield "King of the
Friday, September 28th
Calliope" (Calliope playing 15 to 20
1:00 p.m.
Meigs High School Band &amp; Flag Corp.
minutes on the hour) Sponsored by the
5:30-6:45p.m. Paul Doeffiriger •
Ohio Lottery
Sponsored by the -Ohio Lottery .
7:00 • 8:00 p.m. Midnight Cloggers • Sponsored by the II :00 a.m.-4:00p.m. Chili Cookoff - Sponsored by
VFW of Mason, WV
Ohio Lottery
8:30 - 9:30 p.m. High Country •
II :00 a.m.- I :00 p.m. Line Throwing Contest (sign-up at
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
II :00 a.m.) • Sponsored by AEP
10:00 ·11:00 p.m. Liquid CrystalI2:00n ·4:00p.m. Doll Collection "Room of a Thousand
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
Eyes" - upstairs of Clark's Jewelry Store
I :00 p.m.
Walking Tour of Pomeroy**
2:00- 3:00p.m. Phil N the Blanks· Sponsored by the
Ohio Lottery
3:00p.m.
Crowning of the Riverfest QueenSponsored by the University of Rio
Grande
4:00p.m.
Chili Cookoff Judging
4:00p.m.
"Ducky Derby" - Pomeroy Merchants
Association.
5:00 - 6:00p.m. Big Bend Cloggers · Sponsored by the
Ohio Lottery
· 5:30 p.m.
Captain's Dinner • Eagles Club
6:30- 8:30p.m. "ELVIS" Impersonator Dwight
Icenhower- Sponsored by the Ohio
on the "T" in Middleport
Lottery
--•.U~~i",~~ ·
9:00 - 1'32:00mitl Blitzkreigtlnplugged- Sj)(msc&gt;recilby ..,.......
the Ohio Lottery
. . . , · ··
• " I fk"' ,-,•,'''"''
9:30p.m.
FIREWORKS - Ripenhoff Distributing.

'• .
:.:•·· v.

~ee

·~ • ~

Encourages you to attend
.. ~[[~ &amp;~ tfte C!Qver 2001"
in Pomeroy
Thursday -Friday - Saturday

Downing Childs Mullen Musser
. Insurance

992-3148

John E Musser, Agent

••

~

see You

SAVINOSI

At The

Stereo's • VCR's • Video Games
Major Items Out ofPawn Daily"Big Savings on Quality Merchandise"
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"we loan cash on anything ofvalue''

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Gift 8hop

"Close to the Courthouse"

992-7296

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Weleome

992-1161

to~t.\'1 NtiSGIJSA.f'"... :-:":

-Antiques

NowaccepllnQ ~&amp;
artisans &amp;crofters
•..,
for our new bulldlnQ at
112 West Main Street, Pomeroy
(Otd StNtco •Supplv Bleil
all thll WHk.

-Gifts
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HARTWELL HaUSE

Liz Roush 992-11 00

t;% ·o~F

Comer of Court &amp; Main

992•

" Furniture '1

·· Appliances ..,. ·
" 81. A~ Set .;;.... .
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992-3381

(Saturday

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nly)

~

Whether you need affordable life,
home, car, or business Insurance,
Nationwide• has a plan that's sure to
fit your needs. Give us a call today
for the protection you need and the
service you deserve.

POCKET kNIVES &amp;

COLLECTIBLES
217 E. Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

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we•re Celebrating
Sternwhnl River

'

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JEFF WARNER

992-5908

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113 W. 2ND STREET

45769
740-992·5479

1 lb. Reg. 56"

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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product, colt

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MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE .

mOnth's rem embrance were

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

Past Coundlors Club of Chester remembers attack vi~ms

Members
initiated
into Chester
Council

Bless America," gave

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY, OHIO

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992-0461

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~================~~========~·'==============================~~~~~~~~~~~~~~============~~

Fighter
plan~

found
in glacier
MII'.&gt;DLESBORO, Ky. (AP)
- A World War II fighter
plane that spent decades
encapsulated in the cold
silence of a glacier has roared
back to life.
The P-38 Lightning, once
one of the fastest planes in the
sky, was among six fighters
and two bombers forced by
foul weather to land on a
glacier in Greenland nearly 60
years ago.
The pilots and crews were
rescued, but the squadron of
warplanes was left pehind to
be slowly buried by snow and
;ce.
As a boy in Midcllesboro,
Roy Shoffner had become
enamored with the P-38 and
imagined himself flying the
plane that could reach 405
mph at altitudes of up to
35,000 feet.
Years passed, but Shoffner
never lost interest in the
plane. So when he learned
about the squadron abandoned On Greenland, he
became bent on retrieving
one. In the summer of 1992,'
he did just that, and has been
working since to restore it to
a like-new condition.
That plane, dubbed the
Glacier Girl, was brought up
piece by piece through an icy
tunnel from beneath 268 feet
of ice.
The plane is perhaps 1he
biggest hit in , Midcllesboro
since a meteorite ·made landfall thousands of years ago,
stamping out the flat basin on
which early settlers built the
town. Some 3,500 people a
month have been coming to
Midcllesboro to watch a crew
reassemble the vintage plane.

..

Research
could save
Iannen
thousands
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohio
State
University
researcher Parwinder Grewal
hopes his latest project moves
along quicker than the pace of
his subjects: slugs.
Grewal, an entomologist, has
spent two years examining and
dissecting slugs. He's looking
. for a small parasitic worm
known as a nematode that
crawls into a slug through its
breathing pore, multiplies and
kills the pest in about a week
- hopefully before it eats
valuable plants and crops.
"Last year in Ohio, because
of the good rains we had in the
summer, slug populations were
so high that some farmers had
acrually lost their entire corn
ciop;' Grewal said.
He said slugs mainly eat
plant leaves, but if weather
conditions are right, 'they can
consume an entire plant just as
it starts to grow.
David Graham, a Wayne
County farmer who has about
1,000 acres of corns and soybeans, said he has had entire
fields wiped out in three to five
days.
"You can still make a ·profit if
you can get in there and get it
treated;' Graham said. "If you
don't, you'll be wiped out."
Ron Hammond, an OSU
field crop entomologist, said ·
slugs have always been a problem, btu do more damage on
no till farms.
No till leaves residue on the
soil surface to protect against
erosion, but also leaves enough
moisture in the soil to Sl!Stain
slugs.
· :•
GrewJ! said farmers probl~rns could be solved by a
nematode that has been found
in England and is being massproduced to control slugs in
Europe.
- - ·--- ·

~-- I

�Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio -

Inside:
Diamo,ld Roundup, Page 82
Will Bcllisari start again?, Page B3

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

Page Bl
Thursday. September 17, 1001

'THuRsDAY's

Marty has had
enough

On TV

Family

•

All Times £astern
• Crnftsman Truck, NetZero 250
7 p.m · Fnday · ESPN2

Restaurant

• Buseh Series , M r. Goodcents 300
· 2 p.m . · Sa turday · NOC
• Win1ton Cup, Protection One 400
12:30 p.m. • Sunday · NBC

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

•

-

200•-POIIIlS SUHOIN65
IUKH

WINSTON CUP

228 Main St.

2. I«CI('I Ru&lt;kl . 3, 71 B

Kevin H&lt;tr~•t:k 4,052
Jason Kelle1, 3,745

Jock Spt ague . 2 .910
Joe RuttJ111:1n. 2.883

l . lonv

Jetf Green. 3.734

Scott

1. Jetr Gordon. 3.928

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

992-5432

St~w&lt;lrt.

3.516

Greg BrHie. 3 ,564
s . Sll.'f'lllli Mllrhn . 3 . ~44 Elton Sawyer. 3.399
6. 0 Eurt'lharm Jl.. 3,429 Tonv Raines . 3,305

4. Date Jarrl?lt. 3.507

2.853

Chad

Keflny Wallace. 3. 142

• -

debut in 200 1.Jolnlng
Chir::agoland Speedway in
Joliet . JJI ·-· The turn s are
ban ked 15 degrees at the
new tra ck.

.BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
Whet: Mr. Goodcen t s 300
Where : Kansps Speedway,
Kansas City (1.5-rnile track),
200 laps/300 miles
When : 2 p.rn .. Saturday
'DeffllndlnC champion: F1rsf
race

1. (1) Jell Gordon

f

race. Last week's ranklngs

Ancry and lrusttatod

record at Dover
One Junior ( Eamhaldt) won
race named for another

Extraordinary

6.

(3) Kevin Harvlc:k . Solid eilltl&gt;placo ftnlah
(61 Sterling Marlin Sixth, eighth at Dover In '01
(7) Bobby Labonte Ran out of luck early
(10) Rusty Wallace 11th alter 18~11111 wHh Audet
(9) Ward Burton
Caueht In a wreck

e -·a;

9.
10.

U)

•

~a;

DOVER. Del. - Dale
Earn hardt Jr.'s victory in the
MBNA Cal Ripken Jr. 400
was well worth the money.
In a sense. the race was
like a Sunday afternoon

w-.c
"'en
.c

--1~1- w-

•

Q)+::

c c:

·u:
v~
::J

m
...

NI
tJ) Q
_&gt;- ~ .. N
en
C1)

"'-

·-~en

5
~fa
&gt;""Q)C
Q).C

ul-

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0

-111'

1

For moSt of the day,
Newman 's Taurus ran a.s if
its engine had an extra
cyl mder or two . A late
ca ution flag cosl Newman
track position, however.
wh en three cars pulled
ahead of him b'P changing

-..
_,_

BUSCH ORAND NATIONAL
DOVER, Del. - Jeff GreM
won lhe MBNA.com 200,
but the more significant
occurrence was tha t another
Ford driver. Ryan Newman ,
lO St tt.

crew changed all four.
On lap 18?. Newman 's
problems became magnified
when Jimmy Spence r's
Chevy ca used hl rn to slip up
the track through the turns
and drop two positions.
Three laps later. an
appare ntly overa nxious
Newman slammed Into Matt
Ke nseth 's Ford at the
bottom of the track exiting
turn two. Kenseth, In tu rn,
bounced into Mike
M~Laughl i n 's Pont iac.
· 1 never k new you could
race down on the apron In
turn two ," said Spencer, who
watched the crash . " I've
never ~nown anyone who
could do it, and he
(Newman) couldn't ei ther."
Green, the 2000' Bu sch
Grand National champion,
won forthe th ird tlmelhls
year, beating Kenny
Wall ace's Chevrolet.

I

•

fEUD OF THE WEEK

The same rival ry that surfaced at the end of the
Richmond race came to the fore again whe n a tap from
Wallace's Ford sent Rudd 's Taurus spinning around on
lap 345. Rudd called Wallace "Rubberheac: and
Wallace sail;! Rudd had · an .awful short memory." The
two drivers angrily confronted each other after the race .
NASCAR Thll W~tk"a Monte Dutton &amp;lvee hie
opinion: "These two veteran drivers have probably had
their differences for two decades. Occasionally the
rancor still comes out."

:&lt;1 iiUJ?~i j:!1.1;ti II ¢ifj
•lo~f Labonte
• double .
' dltllnetlon alon• with
the 2000 Wln1ton Cvp
champlonahlp,
establltltlnl two ftrete.
The Labontee . .,, the
flret brotltera to wlh
chnplonshlps, with

lobby's tltlo and

tho

two won by older
brother Terry In 1184
and 1998. And Bobby'
became the first driver
to win charnplonehlps In
both Bach Grand
Natlonal and Cup.

"'"'
Wife; 38
t&lt;lm
Children: Broo ke (14), Brandy (12).
Brittany (10)
Hon:tetown: St. l ouis, Mo., now lives In
Concord, N.C.
Crew chief: Pau l And rews
C•r: N.o. 1 Pennzoll Chevrolet Monte
Carlo, owned by Dale Earnhardt Inc.
C••nr statl•tlca: 233 starts, 0 wins,
five top-five fi nishes, 23 top-10 finishes ,
two poles, over. $8 million In earn ings
Flrsta: Start (April 22 , 1990, at North

••••••••••••
WhnHot-

Ricky Rudd vs. RI.IStY Wallace

~ Hrned

Kenny Wallace got a rare opportunity
when he wa~ called on to relieve driver
Steve Park after -Park suffered a serious
concussion in ·a Busch Grand National
crasiL Sept._l__at _Dar.llngton ...S•.C.........,._
Wallace m ade what he now admits was
a bad call by giving up his ride at Andy
P~tree Racing to join Eel River duri ng the
offseason . A good part of the season
passed before the tea m found a pri mary
sponsor, and Wallace eventually left to
concentrate on the Busch Serfes, in which
he continues to participate .
Pa rk's recove ry Jlkely will last several
more weeks, and Wallace could drive the
ca r through seaso n's end. For the time
being, all thr"ee Wallace brothers - ~enny,
Mike and Rusty- are competing on the
Winston Cup Series.

Who'sNot

• HOT: Dale Earnhard t Jr.
has finished In the top 15
in 10 or the last 11
races .
Dale Jarrett has
finished outside the top
10 in fiv e of the past
eight races.

Fan Tips

• Golf. anyo ne? Fans
attending the UAW-GM 500
festivities at L.owe's Motor
- Speedwe~-m lghLwa nLt0--~1

1. Who was the first drive r to win a race 1{1 a
Che11ro let?
2. Who was the first driver to win three
champions hips?
3. Who ~as the fi rst driver to win three Southern 500s?

••••••••••

check out Rocky Riv8r Golf
Club, the p ublic course
located only a half-m ile from
the fro nt straight. The Dan
Maples-designed. par-72
championship course hosts
about 40 ,000 rounds
a nn ua l!~. Including a steady
strea m during the spring en d
fa ll race weeks .
"Du ring those two weeks
we line up a lot of customers
who come for an extended
s,ay ,~ Rock)' River he ad pro
Floyd Gragg said. "Also our
p ia~ Is impacted b)' t he
corporations the~t bring
customers here fo r the
races .M
You might even see a
celeb rity. Brett Bodi ne. Rusty
Wallace, Kyle Petty and Ste11e
Park have played the course
prior to Charlotte races , and
Michael Waltrip, Randy
LaJoie and Elliolt Sadler have
played In a benefit
tournament held during May
race week .
An added bonus for golfina
race fans Is free parking.
Rocky River offers free
parking for pole nights and
races to anyone who play s
golf on those particular days.
· n·s not a very long wauoc
up to the race track,~ Gragg
said . " It's much easier l o
walk up from the course than
to fight the crowd s."
For tee time s, ca ll (704f
455·1200 . The Web site is
www.rockyrlvergOif.com .

x·

X

r-.~rurdri\~,.Mikc:Walkc .
Blkkly Bame!'i and Scun l.cplge will
m-e !he duties.
.•
. ''We 're rmving l01"'4'wtJ." OWT~ Ji111
Srnith suir..l. w~·re riOI quitting. Vk'n!
ru SkJR~ iog. We'~ going rokeq&gt;Wng
C\'a)'lhing we C'JJ1 do kt be SIJOI.'e!'~ful.
~ Ruddy Wld Soot! have plenly nf
experie~ wtd ttry ._1-.:No' lrM· k&gt; o1n 1
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mcert:wn."

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Ridenour
Supply

bellnnlnc •nd end of
Jr. 400 81 Dover Downt
lntematktnal 8plld'ilu8).

St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

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celebnlted wtth •
victory lip holdlnc the
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•
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

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CLEVELAND (AP)
Indians manager Charlie
Manuel remained hospitalized
with ,an abdominal infection
and was urged by Cleveland
general manager John Hart to
ta~ e his time coming back.

Hoops
·offidating class
planned
MIDDLEPORT
- An
OHSAA basketball officiating
class will be held at Meigs
Middl e School starting on
October 16.
For more information, call
· Roger Foster at 446-2704 or
send a fax to the same number.

~JHS

tho MBNA COl Rlpkon

cr.w cht.f Tony

MAKING rr .WORK: AIILiv ·
1\.to'ee's btle:agl.lcrOO ICa01 Jp.Jt .t;(Jinc ru liCf
Ftklly when he lliii10UilCe(l u. !iJlllltUship ~ hao; been n'tiW fn- lldtly
Humihon\ No. ~5 Ow:vy for ZlWl2.
Square D. n ir..-urnbent. will )li n with
&amp;:tnitler Eb:tric w SJilfl.~ thr c-..-.

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X CREW Of Til WEll( ·

AROUND THE GARAGE

sur-

b!)llonl line i~ ~~~- 0c·~ ·

-

•••••••••••

like to try to driiJe one (once). I think
th ose are the type of race cars that you
ha11e to grow up in and stay i n. With Ri ck
Mears crushing his legs years a&amp;o. there's
·
j ust so many leg Injuries.
"Those are fantastic race cars and
high ly technical, but I wouldn' t want to
Orlve .them ~ecause 11 you hit the wal l
head-on, you're going to pretty much bang
up your legs pretty bad. Obviously, from
what's been aoing on here (l ately). we ca n
all get hurt, but I do feel much safer In a
Winston Cup car:
11 the No. 1 Monte Carlo the best c.r
you've ever driven? "No doubt. This Is my
best opportunity to showcase my talents,
aM we d id that at Darlington (In hi ~ fi rst
race). I guess the racing gods aren't
looking down on me very well because we
really wantel;l to capitalize on. whet's g9lng
on. We we re disappointed at Richmond
because that was my track. We Just got
caught off-guard, and we were realty loose
up off the corners all night long and
finished 21st. But this Is my best
opportunity, end I'm definitely going to
make the most out of lt.-

TIMF. TO MI::ND: Mike Skinne-r
extmnelv aim. In f..-t, he rn:t me • his
By Monte OP.Itton ·
door. wi!kt.d rrc ink\ lhe Jivin11 room. himed lllil ""-eet: thll. tK: may r.klp !1001::
NASCAR ThiS week
ami then we ~ down and wutthed ~ w: the ml o(~ setl.QI florUerto
Su:\'1.' P-.ui ') luiditi.Tt i~ i111pnving. 'RPM2Nirt: ' (ltr E.'iPNZ racing showl U~'O MlrgcT)' !o C'OITtCt !10/Ut: lingtr•
!.3id Ty Noo;s, lhe CU\.1llive ~ice ~i­ li.JICUL,. aOO talked alnrl i\ h of thirt;.' inscffeo..i.~nflhc !ihooldcr in,;..y hr
dem uf 'nolor:;pnrts a1 lkle Earnhardt gOO!goo in lb: niCing ....-orld.'fult !Julkl rem~ in ~ July 1.'111.'h II ChicagoiRnd
lnr .. hulv•hen Pi.~ L"llfii\1Um It! ttc cir- give ynu some idea of his me ntlll SpooQway
Skinnel". by ~inuc uf rnis.'\ing four
~;uil b !&lt;!i ll uoclo:;v-.
~ily.
''The hruise nn his OO!in. which 1\a.~ rll!.'t:S. i~oo ly l4lh in lhr Jrinl\ Sllllldin~~
An)• rt'lllm bt-ti~re I~ crxl tithe~~~~­
lunthc Mrl"lp.; rof 1nN of hi~ injtl"y. t-.a~ and i~ oct bdrit). 1\.'tuino:l in hb cum·nt
!&gt;(., 1\' ll"lllill'\ Lllflt in~ll on 111: climiiiUIif.)n uf l.luublc vbion he mntii'IOe!; 1q hr:llkd 11 u-erntnklu!.; llllDllt.ln fa:..1 ,one riOt&gt; at Rir.:h1ml Oil.ns., Racing • .'In
t:)(~r'-n.-c . Nun"i.\ S&lt;~kl. Purt suffered a tcndiny ~y~ir.: ian &gt;aid it w:,; ail bt11 b~· .J:ipping ....:veral r....u, Ilia)'~ the lklal
llfl•isc 111 his hrllin in 11 fn:nk Cl'll'ilt that That '~ n1'1 o null:ui !Crm.hu1 it sounded P'JI'JX'l!tC of u lktWi n~ himto recoYer wid
(JCcun-al Sep1 . I in a BLt~h Onu11.l g..-. ..tlu me. I dr.~t'l knnwwhitl pen.:cnt- gi\'C hb Mk.\:C:-.."1.11' - ll.' tif y et . ~ llurl!lll ­
Nat~Mul r.o: in Durtingmo, S.C. KerVly 1~ - hut d-..: loulb~n lu-.: i• Slel.·c "'1!.' up rnulUXI - :1fot·: d ' tOO 011 2fW.)2.
Wnil;'".-c ha.' hccn sull;titutinl! 1('4' P..ut. :nl1¥1'llnd Ulxl konkcd gJC.II.lM: all .....~
~1J111Jmle1J lxc:ll!~ II.\! h:lJil't!-O:nhirn in
e\l.'f •It'll.~ .
··Run-..1' ab&lt;111( l~d ·~)&lt;.-"Ono.hlion 1111! lll'illlpk: o!' .....,"k.,:·
UINIO HI&lt;:SII.ONS: Ji111 Lon~;
l!llll.'h llll"'ot" th;ul he 1\!illly • ~ ... Nunh
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Steve Park Improving, but his return date still uncertain

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Wr l!m•t IIIII. hml'l'l'tf , 1'\'tf fltill'd

Wilkesboro, N.C. }, pole (April18 , 1997, at
Martinsville, Va.), win (none)
.
Do you teet nftr 111 Winston Cup c•rs
than OIMD-Whleled c•ra? • Most definitely.
1really respect tholr type of r8clng.
though . It's ve ry techn ical. When I get
around those types of cars. I can't quit
l oo kln~_aLtbem.J&gt;.u.LC.UIWav.__.am_td

.,CD

NASCAN r!JJil'wf.l' ojrl'll l!m •t
h~t' ll tl/'ruit'•l 11j' /Jti11 1! rmhtr :l'llb ·
Jt'r'lil't in rhtlr rulf':'j n rjfm•rmt/1!.

'*'*
....
for h i -

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

c-

Odess11. Teus

ln.t••of

NASCAR This .........

d ouOi e ne oa er-lt-l.WD~tire.s_wheo.Newman :s_

took foreve r. Well, actua lly, it
was just 3 hO urs. 56
minutes. 19 seconds. A lot
can happen in 3:56:19. A
lot di d.
Many of the sp·ort's most
promment names were
pointing fingers at each
other afterwara . Jeff Gordon
bu mped Ron Horn;;~ day from
be hind. Earnhardt bumped
Ricky Craven. although
Craven miraculously did not
crash . Ru sty Wall ace
bumped R lc ~y Rudd. Bill
Elliott bu mped Bobby
L.a bonte. Tony Stewa rt
bumped Dale Jarrett .

~

.....

FROM LAST WEEK
WINSTON CllP

"C
'l:J · ~ Q)
~ . 0·-

theNo.l-

(5) Dale Jarrett

8.

·..-.-_....,..
-_
--dllvlnC

Lost ground after
Ste,vart's bump

5.

7.

...

_,
.,,

rc
3

Dcur NASCAR Thi, Week .
I lU 11 ~; ur i t)u ~ a~ lu why Brett
!ko,J ine ~A·u~ give11a IW•l-lu.p penuhy
ut FS ri ~ l(ll fllt tht' ~1101~ bc h1wior di ~­
pluyccJ by l):lle Eumhttrdl for yearr; .
Earnhardt was even praise d hy
NASC AR . Ihc ~ pourh co mmentator'
and hi ~ fan" for bein@ " The lnlim·
idutor" und ri~~;ing mher dri ver ~·
11\C' in order lo w 1n 11 n'''e, Js lh l .~
1wo-lap pc nll h)l going 10 be c11 1led
for ull who nteo: n(1w, or are a ' Jlt·
ci~ l Few Mill go in g to be nempl'.'
Also, I wou ld liLe 10 thu nk (a
fn~~ NhO!&gt;C ~~rh c r lcuer w11~ pllbllshcd l for lelling me Lnow !hoi no
one but an Eu rn hardt ftm can ha\'t
11n opinion or ~ rilicile 01hers. I'll be
sure 10 puss 1h l~ new ce nmr.; hip on
tn m)' ~u lic ~c E11g lish ~ todent~
C 11n1l Hatlleld-lhnit is

WFula

No. 8 ( Rlpl&lt;en)

-

Your
Turn
ltlltn F11111 Our Reatlers

1

A rock..olld, c:onslstent

250 laps; 1 00 mil es
When : 7 p.rn., Fnday
Defending champion: First
race
Track quallf)'ln&amp; record:
First race ·
Aac:e record : First race
Notable : South Boston is
the hometown of the
Winston Cu p Series · Burton
brothers , Ward and Jeff . both
of whOm began their careers
racing on the track .... There
are on ly five rac ~s left in I he
season .

••••••••••••

•••c
In
-CUp

performance

2. (2) Ricky Rudd
3. (4) Tony Stewart
4 . (8) D. Eamhaldt Jr.

What : NetZero .250
Where: South Boston (Va.)
Speedwa~ (.4-mile track),

Winston Cup and Busch series

• NASCAR This Week wri{er Monte Dutton ranks the top 10
wee~end's

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

Kenny Wallace

Cov Gibbs. 2.284

TOP TEN

dnvers heading 1nto this
are in parentheses .

Track qualifying record :
First race
Race record: Fir st race
Notable: The new track
has 75.000 grandstand
seats .... Altno ugn most of
the city of Kansas City is in
Missouri. the track is 1n
Kansas .

-

•

Rielly HenOrlcK , 2, 757

L1llle. 3 .2 '1 1
Terrv Cook , 2,654
M•ke Mclaughlin, 3.22tiDenn•s Setzer, 2.616
Jimm1e Johnson, 3.197 Ric k Craw!orO. 2,54 9

Kcw1 Mw~rck 3.380
Rust) Wallace , 3,355
13obby LcMJonle, 3.327
Johnuy llllflson. 3.168

7.
8.
9.
10.

R•&amp;~~s.

What: Protect10n One 400
Where : Kansas Speedway..
Kansas City (1.5-mile trackf .
267 lapsj 400. 5 m11es
When : Green flag drops at
1 p .m .. Su nday
Defendlnc champion: First
race
Track qualltylnarHord :
First race
Race record: First race
Notable: Kansas is the
second of twO I racks to

TriJI.IIS ll.vapll, 2.771
Ted MU!ij!aYit, 2,758

ASHBURN,Va. (AP) -Jeff
George was cut by Washingrem after he failed to lead the
team to a single point in its
two embarrassing losses to
open the season . ·
George's 34.6 quarterback
rating ranks last in the NFL. In
the two b"'mes, he compl eted
23 of 42
passes for 168
yards
and
three interceptions. He
was
also
sacked
six
times.
George,
who was m
Schottenhelmer th e second
year of ·a
four-year, $18.25 million contract, was the NFL's No.1 pick
in 1990 o ut of !Uinois. He is
just 46-78 as a starter with five
teams.
Redskins ' head coach Marty
Schmtenheimer had expressed
displeasure with George's performance pulling him during
Washington's week one loss to
San Diego.
· Soon after cutting George,
the Redskins signed quarterback Kent Graham, who was
cut by Pittsburgh earlier this
month. Graham has also
played for Arizona and the
New York Giants. He signed a
one-year co ntract for the veteran minimum of$477,000.

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT -

WINSTON CUP

prepare for 1

HIGHLIGHTS
By George,

Crow's

The Daily Sentinel

\

. .. ··..

'

posts wins

the Southern Tornado
eighth grade volleyball team
has continued to do enjoy a
great season, posting wins over
Bidwell, Alexander, and Federal Hocking.
Southern claimed a 15-9,
12-15, 15-2 win over Alexander. The little Tornadoes were
led by Kristina Williams with
15 points; Jenny Warner added
seven, Shyla Jarrell four, and
Linda Eddy five. Against Federal
Hocking,
Southern
claimed th e match in two sets
15-3 and 15-3. Bethany Riffl e led with 12 points,
Williams had nine points.
Selena Spencer had four, and
Shyla Jarrell four.
Against Kyger Creek.
Southern claimed 15-8 and
15-6 wins~Williams had nine
points, R e ten, Warner
three, and rrell four. Amber
Holsinger, Catlin · Nease,
Tiffany McDaniel, Erin Wise,
Eddy, and . Spencer all contributed to the win.
Southern cruised through
the season at 10-0 until they
met up with a strong Eastern
ream. Eastern blitzed the Tornadoes in Racine· on their
hq_me turf 15-2• and 15-8.
Spencer had five points and
Warner three to lead the Tornadoes, who dropped to 10- 1.

BY BuTcH CooPER

BigTVC
Otlio

OVP tiPORTS STAFF '

TUPPERS PLAINS
One of Eastern's greatest
threats does not come from
the backfield or in the air.
Senior Chris Lyons has
developed a reputation as one
of the most dangerous kickoff
returners in the region. Lyons
(5 - foot- 11, 190 pounds), who
. returned a pair of kickoffi for
touchdowns last year, already
has returned four kickoffi for
touchdowns this year.
"We're doing a pretty good
job (with special teams)," said
Lyons. " We spend a lot of
time (practicing). We feel that
special teams is a very important part of the game. We like
to get all th e good field position we can ."
Lyons, who has 4.6 speed,
might not be th e fastest man
off the block, but once he has
a clear fi ~ld, his breakaway
speed takes over. It's been a
key for the special teams that
has not only been solid
returning the ball, but stopping the return as well.
" They 've had a real big
impact, both ways," said Eastern head coach Scott Christman. "Usually, we come out
on top on special teams .
Against Parkersburg Catholic,
we had a little let-down on a
few special teams (plays). We
can't have that happen this
week."
Such success,
though,
brings notice from other
teams.
With Lyons, ' other teams
have definitely taken notice.
"Unfortun ately, most teams
are kicking away 'from Chris
now," said Christman. ''He did
~on~e~~~~~~~!J~~~down)
(against

Please see Retums, 82

·opener for
Eastern
BY

BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern might be undefeated
going into this Friday's game
against Trimble, but the Eagles
are not taking anything for
granted against a tough Tomcats team.
"A lot of people are not
giving us a chance," said Eastern head coach Scott C hristman, explaining how his team
may even be considered an
underdog against the 3-2
Tomcats. "That's the way I
like it."
Eastern (5-0) and Trimble
have developed a sort of rivalry more common with county foes. The two teams are on
top of their games at this
point in the season .
"We've seen them on film,
and we've see n them in person," said C hristman. "They're
a very solid football team, a
big strong team. People were
saying, before we saw them,
that they weren't very fast, but
they looked pretty fast to me
at certain positions."
This also marks the opening
of TVC Ohio Division play
for both teams. Eastern is
coming off a 50- 0 victory
over Hannan, while Trimble
defeated Nelsonville- York,
GAME-BR~kER- Eastern kick-returner Chris Lyons returns a kick during the Eagles' game

against Fort Frye earlier this season. Lyons has returned four kicks for TD's. (Bryan Long)

like to have, hopefully,

Please see Opener, 82

Meigs hopes to contain explosive Wellston
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauders, in the m iddle of a three
game road trip, will travel to Wellston
this Friday and try and defuse the
powerful Golden Rockets.
Wellston will enter the first TVC
contest with a 4-2 mark. The Rockets opened up the season with a 4433 loss to rival Jackson , they bounced
back to defeat River Valley 58-0 in
the second game. Wellston then
dropped a 34-30 game to Waverly
before defeating Oak Hill 49-20 and
Rock Hill 50-0. The Rockets are
scoring 44 points a game and giving
up- 19.6

wellston ltas the best football
player (Brad Young) that JVe
will see tlli$ season, but they
11re trot a one pla}'er team.
Tlaey have a lot of weaJions. "
Meigs coach Mike Chancey

The Rockets return 19 seniors, 18
starters and 14 letter winners, among
those returning is the TVC's-Oh io
Division Offensive Player of the Year
in Brad Young.
So far this season , the senior tailback has carried 93 ti1nes for 83 1
yards and 14 touchdowns. Young ij lso
has ca ught three passes for 65 yards,

and all three going for scores an d two
kickoff returns for scores (74 and 91
yards).
· Fullback Thomas Mayes is also a
threat for the Rockets, he has carried
th e ball 42 times for 226 yards (5.3).
Mayes is also the R ockets' leading
receiver with nine catches for 239
yards.
When Wellston goes to the air,
senior Dustin Fultz has been excelk nt. Fultz is 21 of 39 (54%) for 534
yards and nine scores.
Former lo ngtime Coal Grove
Coac h Dave Lucas is in his second
year at the Ja ckson County school.
The Rockets were 6-4 last year and
4- 1 in the TV C.

Please see Melp, 82

SHS, Fed.Hock
a fa ly feud

Wolf shuts
down

Cinc.y bats
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Randy Wolf won't be going
back to the bullpen anytime
soon.
Wolf pitched a one-hitter,
giving up Raul Gonzalez'~ first
major league hit in the opening
inning, and the Philadelphia
Phillies beat the Cincinnati
Reds 8-0 Wedn,esday night.
Travis Lee hit a three-run
homer and Scott Rolen also
connected for Philadelphia,
which remained one game
behind first-place Atlanta in the
NL East. The Braves beat Aorida 4- 1.
"That might ·have been the
best I've seen Randy pitch,"
Phillies manager Larry Bowa
said. " It was unbelievable!'
Wolf (8-11 ) allowed just a
line- drive single to right by
Gonzalez, the second batter of
the game.
The left-bander retired 14

The Marauders are 1-4 on the year
and is coming off a 29-0 loss last
week at Fairland. The Marauder
olfense has had trouble getting started, but at times ihe last couple of
games, it has been able to move the
ball only , to have drives stall inside
opponents' te rritory.
The Marauder ground attack is led
by Jeremy Roush . The junior has carried 76 rimes for 273 yards (3.6) .
Senior Tyson Lee has carried 39 times
for 148 yards (3.8), and junior fullback Ross Stewart 20 rimes for 82
yards (4.1).
Junior quarterback . Kyle H annan is

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

between the two teams this
year are Wahama and
RACINE - One year Alexander.
Interestingly,
removed ·from Southern's those are the White Falwin over Federal Hocking cons' only two victories.
in the battle of th e Wahama defeated SouthRichards fami ly, the · two ern 26-0 last week and in
teams meet aga in in round game two of the s son,
two of the family slugfest Wahama bea t Fe eral
in the Tri- Vall ey Confer- H oc king 34-0. Fri y 's
ence opener for both clubs game could be a b nthis Friday night at Federal burner.
Hocking.
,__.,r
G;r wee
exander
T):le Southern Tornadoes bea t Federal 39- 2 1 and
won the Hom ecomin g defeated Southern 21-7
llagfest las t season, 14-6, · two weeks ago. Those too
over the Lancers in kick- are Alexander's only two
ing off the 2000 Tri- Valley wins of the 2001 season .
Conference sched ul e at
Southern is now 2-3 in
Roger Lee Adams Memo- 200 I and Federal is winless
rial Field.
at 0-5.
In round one of the
Last year, Southern's Joe
father-son dual, son Rusty Cornell led the Tornadoes
Richards cam e home the with 88 yards on 19 carries
victor over father Dave and one touchdown , while
Richards of Federa l Hock- Matt Ash carried 12 times
mg.
Ple•se see Feud, 8:5
The common opponents
OVP CORRESPOND.ENT

MOWIN' THEM DOWN - Phillies' starter Randy. Wolf limited
the Reds to just one hit , a first-inning s ingle, in leading his club
to an 8-0 win Wednesday. (AP)

straight afi:er th e hit before
walking Corky Miller to start
the sixth. Wo)f retired the last
11 batters, finishing with eight
strikeouts.
After losing five straight starts
between June 2-27, Wolf was

taken out of the rotation. He
wasn't too pleased about going
to the bullpen.
The
victory
clinched
Philadelphia's first non-losing
s~asop since 1993 and just its
secorld in 15 years.

�Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio -

Inside:
Diamo,ld Roundup, Page 82
Will Bcllisari start again?, Page B3

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

Page Bl
Thursday. September 17, 1001

'THuRsDAY's

Marty has had
enough

On TV

Family

•

All Times £astern
• Crnftsman Truck, NetZero 250
7 p.m · Fnday · ESPN2

Restaurant

• Buseh Series , M r. Goodcents 300
· 2 p.m . · Sa turday · NOC
• Win1ton Cup, Protection One 400
12:30 p.m. • Sunday · NBC

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

•

-

200•-POIIIlS SUHOIN65
IUKH

WINSTON CUP

228 Main St.

2. I«CI('I Ru&lt;kl . 3, 71 B

Kevin H&lt;tr~•t:k 4,052
Jason Kelle1, 3,745

Jock Spt ague . 2 .910
Joe RuttJ111:1n. 2.883

l . lonv

Jetf Green. 3.734

Scott

1. Jetr Gordon. 3.928

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

992-5432

St~w&lt;lrt.

3.516

Greg BrHie. 3 ,564
s . Sll.'f'lllli Mllrhn . 3 . ~44 Elton Sawyer. 3.399
6. 0 Eurt'lharm Jl.. 3,429 Tonv Raines . 3,305

4. Date Jarrl?lt. 3.507

2.853

Chad

Keflny Wallace. 3. 142

• -

debut in 200 1.Jolnlng
Chir::agoland Speedway in
Joliet . JJI ·-· The turn s are
ban ked 15 degrees at the
new tra ck.

.BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
Whet: Mr. Goodcen t s 300
Where : Kansps Speedway,
Kansas City (1.5-rnile track),
200 laps/300 miles
When : 2 p.rn .. Saturday
'DeffllndlnC champion: F1rsf
race

1. (1) Jell Gordon

f

race. Last week's ranklngs

Ancry and lrusttatod

record at Dover
One Junior ( Eamhaldt) won
race named for another

Extraordinary

6.

(3) Kevin Harvlc:k . Solid eilltl&gt;placo ftnlah
(61 Sterling Marlin Sixth, eighth at Dover In '01
(7) Bobby Labonte Ran out of luck early
(10) Rusty Wallace 11th alter 18~11111 wHh Audet
(9) Ward Burton
Caueht In a wreck

e -·a;

9.
10.

U)

•

~a;

DOVER. Del. - Dale
Earn hardt Jr.'s victory in the
MBNA Cal Ripken Jr. 400
was well worth the money.
In a sense. the race was
like a Sunday afternoon

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For moSt of the day,
Newman 's Taurus ran a.s if
its engine had an extra
cyl mder or two . A late
ca ution flag cosl Newman
track position, however.
wh en three cars pulled
ahead of him b'P changing

-..
_,_

BUSCH ORAND NATIONAL
DOVER, Del. - Jeff GreM
won lhe MBNA.com 200,
but the more significant
occurrence was tha t another
Ford driver. Ryan Newman ,
lO St tt.

crew changed all four.
On lap 18?. Newman 's
problems became magnified
when Jimmy Spence r's
Chevy ca used hl rn to slip up
the track through the turns
and drop two positions.
Three laps later. an
appare ntly overa nxious
Newman slammed Into Matt
Ke nseth 's Ford at the
bottom of the track exiting
turn two. Kenseth, In tu rn,
bounced into Mike
M~Laughl i n 's Pont iac.
· 1 never k new you could
race down on the apron In
turn two ," said Spencer, who
watched the crash . " I've
never ~nown anyone who
could do it, and he
(Newman) couldn't ei ther."
Green, the 2000' Bu sch
Grand National champion,
won forthe th ird tlmelhls
year, beating Kenny
Wall ace's Chevrolet.

I

•

fEUD OF THE WEEK

The same rival ry that surfaced at the end of the
Richmond race came to the fore again whe n a tap from
Wallace's Ford sent Rudd 's Taurus spinning around on
lap 345. Rudd called Wallace "Rubberheac: and
Wallace sail;! Rudd had · an .awful short memory." The
two drivers angrily confronted each other after the race .
NASCAR Thll W~tk"a Monte Dutton &amp;lvee hie
opinion: "These two veteran drivers have probably had
their differences for two decades. Occasionally the
rancor still comes out."

:&lt;1 iiUJ?~i j:!1.1;ti II ¢ifj
•lo~f Labonte
• double .
' dltllnetlon alon• with
the 2000 Wln1ton Cvp
champlonahlp,
establltltlnl two ftrete.
The Labontee . .,, the
flret brotltera to wlh
chnplonshlps, with

lobby's tltlo and

tho

two won by older
brother Terry In 1184
and 1998. And Bobby'
became the first driver
to win charnplonehlps In
both Bach Grand
Natlonal and Cup.

"'"'
Wife; 38
t&lt;lm
Children: Broo ke (14), Brandy (12).
Brittany (10)
Hon:tetown: St. l ouis, Mo., now lives In
Concord, N.C.
Crew chief: Pau l And rews
C•r: N.o. 1 Pennzoll Chevrolet Monte
Carlo, owned by Dale Earnhardt Inc.
C••nr statl•tlca: 233 starts, 0 wins,
five top-five fi nishes, 23 top-10 finishes ,
two poles, over. $8 million In earn ings
Flrsta: Start (April 22 , 1990, at North

••••••••••••
WhnHot-

Ricky Rudd vs. RI.IStY Wallace

~ Hrned

Kenny Wallace got a rare opportunity
when he wa~ called on to relieve driver
Steve Park after -Park suffered a serious
concussion in ·a Busch Grand National
crasiL Sept._l__at _Dar.llngton ...S•.C.........,._
Wallace m ade what he now admits was
a bad call by giving up his ride at Andy
P~tree Racing to join Eel River duri ng the
offseason . A good part of the season
passed before the tea m found a pri mary
sponsor, and Wallace eventually left to
concentrate on the Busch Serfes, in which
he continues to participate .
Pa rk's recove ry Jlkely will last several
more weeks, and Wallace could drive the
ca r through seaso n's end. For the time
being, all thr"ee Wallace brothers - ~enny,
Mike and Rusty- are competing on the
Winston Cup Series.

Who'sNot

• HOT: Dale Earnhard t Jr.
has finished In the top 15
in 10 or the last 11
races .
Dale Jarrett has
finished outside the top
10 in fiv e of the past
eight races.

Fan Tips

• Golf. anyo ne? Fans
attending the UAW-GM 500
festivities at L.owe's Motor
- Speedwe~-m lghLwa nLt0--~1

1. Who was the first drive r to win a race 1{1 a
Che11ro let?
2. Who was the first driver to win three
champions hips?
3. Who ~as the fi rst driver to win three Southern 500s?

••••••••••

check out Rocky Riv8r Golf
Club, the p ublic course
located only a half-m ile from
the fro nt straight. The Dan
Maples-designed. par-72
championship course hosts
about 40 ,000 rounds
a nn ua l!~. Including a steady
strea m during the spring en d
fa ll race weeks .
"Du ring those two weeks
we line up a lot of customers
who come for an extended
s,ay ,~ Rock)' River he ad pro
Floyd Gragg said. "Also our
p ia~ Is impacted b)' t he
corporations the~t bring
customers here fo r the
races .M
You might even see a
celeb rity. Brett Bodi ne. Rusty
Wallace, Kyle Petty and Ste11e
Park have played the course
prior to Charlotte races , and
Michael Waltrip, Randy
LaJoie and Elliolt Sadler have
played In a benefit
tournament held during May
race week .
An added bonus for golfina
race fans Is free parking.
Rocky River offers free
parking for pole nights and
races to anyone who play s
golf on those particular days.
· n·s not a very long wauoc
up to the race track,~ Gragg
said . " It's much easier l o
walk up from the course than
to fight the crowd s."
For tee time s, ca ll (704f
455·1200 . The Web site is
www.rockyrlvergOif.com .

x·

X

r-.~rurdri\~,.Mikc:Walkc .
Blkkly Bame!'i and Scun l.cplge will
m-e !he duties.
.•
. ''We 're rmving l01"'4'wtJ." OWT~ Ji111
Srnith suir..l. w~·re riOI quitting. Vk'n!
ru SkJR~ iog. We'~ going rokeq&gt;Wng
C\'a)'lhing we C'JJ1 do kt be SIJOI.'e!'~ful.
~ Ruddy Wld Soot! have plenly nf
experie~ wtd ttry ._1-.:No' lrM· k&gt; o1n 1
r
mcert:wn."

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

Ridenour
Supply

bellnnlnc •nd end of
Jr. 400 81 Dover Downt
lntematktnal 8plld'ilu8).

St. At. 248
Chester 985·3308

&amp;rnh8rdlllld 193 of

tho 400 lopo, tho moot
lapa he hll ever '-«1 In 1

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11ld Eamh.nlt, made
the dltt.rence between
1 first· end thlrdopl•e

C8f. Elrnhlrdt
celebnlted wtth •
victory lip holdlnc the
Amettcannq.

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Call The Daily Sentinel for details
•
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

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still in ho$pital
•

CLEVELAND (AP)
Indians manager Charlie
Manuel remained hospitalized
with ,an abdominal infection
and was urged by Cleveland
general manager John Hart to
ta~ e his time coming back.

Hoops
·offidating class
planned
MIDDLEPORT
- An
OHSAA basketball officiating
class will be held at Meigs
Middl e School starting on
October 16.
For more information, call
· Roger Foster at 446-2704 or
send a fax to the same number.

~JHS

tho MBNA COl Rlpkon

cr.w cht.f Tony

MAKING rr .WORK: AIILiv ·
1\.to'ee's btle:agl.lcrOO ICa01 Jp.Jt .t;(Jinc ru liCf
Ftklly when he lliii10UilCe(l u. !iJlllltUship ~ hao; been n'tiW fn- lldtly
Humihon\ No. ~5 Ow:vy for ZlWl2.
Square D. n ir..-urnbent. will )li n with
&amp;:tnitler Eb:tric w SJilfl.~ thr c-..-.

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X CREW Of Til WEll( ·

AROUND THE GARAGE

sur-

b!)llonl line i~ ~~~- 0c·~ ·

-

•••••••••••

like to try to driiJe one (once). I think
th ose are the type of race cars that you
ha11e to grow up in and stay i n. With Ri ck
Mears crushing his legs years a&amp;o. there's
·
j ust so many leg Injuries.
"Those are fantastic race cars and
high ly technical, but I wouldn' t want to
Orlve .them ~ecause 11 you hit the wal l
head-on, you're going to pretty much bang
up your legs pretty bad. Obviously, from
what's been aoing on here (l ately). we ca n
all get hurt, but I do feel much safer In a
Winston Cup car:
11 the No. 1 Monte Carlo the best c.r
you've ever driven? "No doubt. This Is my
best opportunity to showcase my talents,
aM we d id that at Darlington (In hi ~ fi rst
race). I guess the racing gods aren't
looking down on me very well because we
really wantel;l to capitalize on. whet's g9lng
on. We we re disappointed at Richmond
because that was my track. We Just got
caught off-guard, and we were realty loose
up off the corners all night long and
finished 21st. But this Is my best
opportunity, end I'm definitely going to
make the most out of lt.-

TIMF. TO MI::ND: Mike Skinne-r
extmnelv aim. In f..-t, he rn:t me • his
By Monte OP.Itton ·
door. wi!kt.d rrc ink\ lhe Jivin11 room. himed lllil ""-eet: thll. tK: may r.klp !1001::
NASCAR ThiS week
ami then we ~ down and wutthed ~ w: the ml o(~ setl.QI florUerto
Su:\'1.' P-.ui ') luiditi.Tt i~ i111pnving. 'RPM2Nirt: ' (ltr E.'iPNZ racing showl U~'O MlrgcT)' !o C'OITtCt !10/Ut: lingtr•
!.3id Ty Noo;s, lhe CU\.1llive ~ice ~i­ li.JICUL,. aOO talked alnrl i\ h of thirt;.' inscffeo..i.~nflhc !ihooldcr in,;..y hr
dem uf 'nolor:;pnrts a1 lkle Earnhardt gOO!goo in lb: niCing ....-orld.'fult !Julkl rem~ in ~ July 1.'111.'h II ChicagoiRnd
lnr .. hulv•hen Pi.~ L"llfii\1Um It! ttc cir- give ynu some idea of his me ntlll SpooQway
Skinnel". by ~inuc uf rnis.'\ing four
~;uil b !&lt;!i ll uoclo:;v-.
~ily.
''The hruise nn his OO!in. which 1\a.~ rll!.'t:S. i~oo ly l4lh in lhr Jrinl\ Sllllldin~~
An)• rt'lllm bt-ti~re I~ crxl tithe~~~~­
lunthc Mrl"lp.; rof 1nN of hi~ injtl"y. t-.a~ and i~ oct bdrit). 1\.'tuino:l in hb cum·nt
!&gt;(., 1\' ll"lllill'\ Lllflt in~ll on 111: climiiiUIif.)n uf l.luublc vbion he mntii'IOe!; 1q hr:llkd 11 u-erntnklu!.; llllDllt.ln fa:..1 ,one riOt&gt; at Rir.:h1ml Oil.ns., Racing • .'In
t:)(~r'-n.-c . Nun"i.\ S&lt;~kl. Purt suffered a tcndiny ~y~ir.: ian &gt;aid it w:,; ail bt11 b~· .J:ipping ....:veral r....u, Ilia)'~ the lklal
llfl•isc 111 his hrllin in 11 fn:nk Cl'll'ilt that That '~ n1'1 o null:ui !Crm.hu1 it sounded P'JI'JX'l!tC of u lktWi n~ himto recoYer wid
(JCcun-al Sep1 . I in a BLt~h Onu11.l g..-. ..tlu me. I dr.~t'l knnwwhitl pen.:cnt- gi\'C hb Mk.\:C:-.."1.11' - ll.' tif y et . ~ llurl!lll ­
Nat~Mul r.o: in Durtingmo, S.C. KerVly 1~ - hut d-..: loulb~n lu-.: i• Slel.·c "'1!.' up rnulUXI - :1fot·: d ' tOO 011 2fW.)2.
Wnil;'".-c ha.' hccn sull;titutinl! 1('4' P..ut. :nl1¥1'llnd Ulxl konkcd gJC.II.lM: all .....~
~1J111Jmle1J lxc:ll!~ II.\! h:lJil't!-O:nhirn in
e\l.'f •It'll.~ .
··Run-..1' ab&lt;111( l~d ·~)&lt;.-"Ono.hlion 1111! lll'illlpk: o!' .....,"k.,:·
UINIO HI&lt;:SII.ONS: Ji111 Lon~;
l!llll.'h llll"'ot" th;ul he 1\!illly • ~ ... Nunh
n:-..lgrni h-t ,...._.d; "'nt•w Lilicf :11 Ullru

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Steve Park Improving, but his return date still uncertain

· -..1kl .

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llr•• r uli1rJI /lml,l·. nmmrl"llfl!lon· r'r
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Wr l!m•t IIIII. hml'l'l'tf , 1'\'tf fltill'd

Wilkesboro, N.C. }, pole (April18 , 1997, at
Martinsville, Va.), win (none)
.
Do you teet nftr 111 Winston Cup c•rs
than OIMD-Whleled c•ra? • Most definitely.
1really respect tholr type of r8clng.
though . It's ve ry techn ical. When I get
around those types of cars. I can't quit
l oo kln~_aLtbem.J&gt;.u.LC.UIWav.__.am_td

.,CD

NASCAN r!JJil'wf.l' ojrl'll l!m •t
h~t' ll tl/'ruit'•l 11j' /Jti11 1! rmhtr :l'llb ·
Jt'r'lil't in rhtlr rulf':'j n rjfm•rmt/1!.

'*'*
....
for h i -

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

c-

Odess11. Teus

ln.t••of

NASCAR This .........

d ouOi e ne oa er-lt-l.WD~tire.s_wheo.Newman :s_

took foreve r. Well, actua lly, it
was just 3 hO urs. 56
minutes. 19 seconds. A lot
can happen in 3:56:19. A
lot di d.
Many of the sp·ort's most
promment names were
pointing fingers at each
other afterwara . Jeff Gordon
bu mped Ron Horn;;~ day from
be hind. Earnhardt bumped
Ricky Craven. although
Craven miraculously did not
crash . Ru sty Wall ace
bumped R lc ~y Rudd. Bill
Elliott bu mped Bobby
L.a bonte. Tony Stewa rt
bumped Dale Jarrett .

~

.....

FROM LAST WEEK
WINSTON CllP

"C
'l:J · ~ Q)
~ . 0·-

theNo.l-

(5) Dale Jarrett

8.

·..-.-_....,..
-_
--dllvlnC

Lost ground after
Ste,vart's bump

5.

7.

...

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rc
3

Dcur NASCAR Thi, Week .
I lU 11 ~; ur i t)u ~ a~ lu why Brett
!ko,J ine ~A·u~ give11a IW•l-lu.p penuhy
ut FS ri ~ l(ll fllt tht' ~1101~ bc h1wior di ~­
pluyccJ by l):lle Eumhttrdl for yearr; .
Earnhardt was even praise d hy
NASC AR . Ihc ~ pourh co mmentator'
and hi ~ fan" for bein@ " The lnlim·
idutor" und ri~~;ing mher dri ver ~·
11\C' in order lo w 1n 11 n'''e, Js lh l .~
1wo-lap pc nll h)l going 10 be c11 1led
for ull who nteo: n(1w, or are a ' Jlt·
ci~ l Few Mill go in g to be nempl'.'
Also, I wou ld liLe 10 thu nk (a
fn~~ NhO!&gt;C ~~rh c r lcuer w11~ pllbllshcd l for lelling me Lnow !hoi no
one but an Eu rn hardt ftm can ha\'t
11n opinion or ~ rilicile 01hers. I'll be
sure 10 puss 1h l~ new ce nmr.; hip on
tn m)' ~u lic ~c E11g lish ~ todent~
C 11n1l Hatlleld-lhnit is

WFula

No. 8 ( Rlpl&lt;en)

-

Your
Turn
ltlltn F11111 Our Reatlers

1

A rock..olld, c:onslstent

250 laps; 1 00 mil es
When : 7 p.rn., Fnday
Defending champion: First
race
Track quallf)'ln&amp; record:
First race ·
Aac:e record : First race
Notable : South Boston is
the hometown of the
Winston Cu p Series · Burton
brothers , Ward and Jeff . both
of whOm began their careers
racing on the track .... There
are on ly five rac ~s left in I he
season .

••••••••••••

•••c
In
-CUp

performance

2. (2) Ricky Rudd
3. (4) Tony Stewart
4 . (8) D. Eamhaldt Jr.

What : NetZero .250
Where: South Boston (Va.)
Speedwa~ (.4-mile track),

Winston Cup and Busch series

• NASCAR This Week wri{er Monte Dutton ranks the top 10
wee~end's

CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

Kenny Wallace

Cov Gibbs. 2.284

TOP TEN

dnvers heading 1nto this
are in parentheses .

Track qualifying record :
First race
Race record: Fir st race
Notable: The new track
has 75.000 grandstand
seats .... Altno ugn most of
the city of Kansas City is in
Missouri. the track is 1n
Kansas .

-

•

Rielly HenOrlcK , 2, 757

L1llle. 3 .2 '1 1
Terrv Cook , 2,654
M•ke Mclaughlin, 3.22tiDenn•s Setzer, 2.616
Jimm1e Johnson, 3.197 Ric k Craw!orO. 2,54 9

Kcw1 Mw~rck 3.380
Rust) Wallace , 3,355
13obby LcMJonle, 3.327
Johnuy llllflson. 3.168

7.
8.
9.
10.

R•&amp;~~s.

What: Protect10n One 400
Where : Kansas Speedway..
Kansas City (1.5-mile trackf .
267 lapsj 400. 5 m11es
When : Green flag drops at
1 p .m .. Su nday
Defendlnc champion: First
race
Track qualltylnarHord :
First race
Race record: First race
Notable: Kansas is the
second of twO I racks to

TriJI.IIS ll.vapll, 2.771
Ted MU!ij!aYit, 2,758

ASHBURN,Va. (AP) -Jeff
George was cut by Washingrem after he failed to lead the
team to a single point in its
two embarrassing losses to
open the season . ·
George's 34.6 quarterback
rating ranks last in the NFL. In
the two b"'mes, he compl eted
23 of 42
passes for 168
yards
and
three interceptions. He
was
also
sacked
six
times.
George,
who was m
Schottenhelmer th e second
year of ·a
four-year, $18.25 million contract, was the NFL's No.1 pick
in 1990 o ut of !Uinois. He is
just 46-78 as a starter with five
teams.
Redskins ' head coach Marty
Schmtenheimer had expressed
displeasure with George's performance pulling him during
Washington's week one loss to
San Diego.
· Soon after cutting George,
the Redskins signed quarterback Kent Graham, who was
cut by Pittsburgh earlier this
month. Graham has also
played for Arizona and the
New York Giants. He signed a
one-year co ntract for the veteran minimum of$477,000.

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT -

WINSTON CUP

prepare for 1

HIGHLIGHTS
By George,

Crow's

The Daily Sentinel

\

. .. ··..

'

posts wins

the Southern Tornado
eighth grade volleyball team
has continued to do enjoy a
great season, posting wins over
Bidwell, Alexander, and Federal Hocking.
Southern claimed a 15-9,
12-15, 15-2 win over Alexander. The little Tornadoes were
led by Kristina Williams with
15 points; Jenny Warner added
seven, Shyla Jarrell four, and
Linda Eddy five. Against Federal
Hocking,
Southern
claimed th e match in two sets
15-3 and 15-3. Bethany Riffl e led with 12 points,
Williams had nine points.
Selena Spencer had four, and
Shyla Jarrell four.
Against Kyger Creek.
Southern claimed 15-8 and
15-6 wins~Williams had nine
points, R e ten, Warner
three, and rrell four. Amber
Holsinger, Catlin · Nease,
Tiffany McDaniel, Erin Wise,
Eddy, and . Spencer all contributed to the win.
Southern cruised through
the season at 10-0 until they
met up with a strong Eastern
ream. Eastern blitzed the Tornadoes in Racine· on their
hq_me turf 15-2• and 15-8.
Spencer had five points and
Warner three to lead the Tornadoes, who dropped to 10- 1.

BY BuTcH CooPER

BigTVC
Otlio

OVP tiPORTS STAFF '

TUPPERS PLAINS
One of Eastern's greatest
threats does not come from
the backfield or in the air.
Senior Chris Lyons has
developed a reputation as one
of the most dangerous kickoff
returners in the region. Lyons
(5 - foot- 11, 190 pounds), who
. returned a pair of kickoffi for
touchdowns last year, already
has returned four kickoffi for
touchdowns this year.
"We're doing a pretty good
job (with special teams)," said
Lyons. " We spend a lot of
time (practicing). We feel that
special teams is a very important part of the game. We like
to get all th e good field position we can ."
Lyons, who has 4.6 speed,
might not be th e fastest man
off the block, but once he has
a clear fi ~ld, his breakaway
speed takes over. It's been a
key for the special teams that
has not only been solid
returning the ball, but stopping the return as well.
" They 've had a real big
impact, both ways," said Eastern head coach Scott Christman. "Usually, we come out
on top on special teams .
Against Parkersburg Catholic,
we had a little let-down on a
few special teams (plays). We
can't have that happen this
week."
Such success,
though,
brings notice from other
teams.
With Lyons, ' other teams
have definitely taken notice.
"Unfortun ately, most teams
are kicking away 'from Chris
now," said Christman. ''He did
~on~e~~~~~~~!J~~~down)
(against

Please see Retums, 82

·opener for
Eastern
BY

BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern might be undefeated
going into this Friday's game
against Trimble, but the Eagles
are not taking anything for
granted against a tough Tomcats team.
"A lot of people are not
giving us a chance," said Eastern head coach Scott C hristman, explaining how his team
may even be considered an
underdog against the 3-2
Tomcats. "That's the way I
like it."
Eastern (5-0) and Trimble
have developed a sort of rivalry more common with county foes. The two teams are on
top of their games at this
point in the season .
"We've seen them on film,
and we've see n them in person," said C hristman. "They're
a very solid football team, a
big strong team. People were
saying, before we saw them,
that they weren't very fast, but
they looked pretty fast to me
at certain positions."
This also marks the opening
of TVC Ohio Division play
for both teams. Eastern is
coming off a 50- 0 victory
over Hannan, while Trimble
defeated Nelsonville- York,
GAME-BR~kER- Eastern kick-returner Chris Lyons returns a kick during the Eagles' game

against Fort Frye earlier this season. Lyons has returned four kicks for TD's. (Bryan Long)

like to have, hopefully,

Please see Opener, 82

Meigs hopes to contain explosive Wellston
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauders, in the m iddle of a three
game road trip, will travel to Wellston
this Friday and try and defuse the
powerful Golden Rockets.
Wellston will enter the first TVC
contest with a 4-2 mark. The Rockets opened up the season with a 4433 loss to rival Jackson , they bounced
back to defeat River Valley 58-0 in
the second game. Wellston then
dropped a 34-30 game to Waverly
before defeating Oak Hill 49-20 and
Rock Hill 50-0. The Rockets are
scoring 44 points a game and giving
up- 19.6

wellston ltas the best football
player (Brad Young) that JVe
will see tlli$ season, but they
11re trot a one pla}'er team.
Tlaey have a lot of weaJions. "
Meigs coach Mike Chancey

The Rockets return 19 seniors, 18
starters and 14 letter winners, among
those returning is the TVC's-Oh io
Division Offensive Player of the Year
in Brad Young.
So far this season , the senior tailback has carried 93 ti1nes for 83 1
yards and 14 touchdowns. Young ij lso
has ca ught three passes for 65 yards,

and all three going for scores an d two
kickoff returns for scores (74 and 91
yards).
· Fullback Thomas Mayes is also a
threat for the Rockets, he has carried
th e ball 42 times for 226 yards (5.3).
Mayes is also the R ockets' leading
receiver with nine catches for 239
yards.
When Wellston goes to the air,
senior Dustin Fultz has been excelk nt. Fultz is 21 of 39 (54%) for 534
yards and nine scores.
Former lo ngtime Coal Grove
Coac h Dave Lucas is in his second
year at the Ja ckson County school.
The Rockets were 6-4 last year and
4- 1 in the TV C.

Please see Melp, 82

SHS, Fed.Hock
a fa ly feud

Wolf shuts
down

Cinc.y bats
PHILADELPHIA (AP) Randy Wolf won't be going
back to the bullpen anytime
soon.
Wolf pitched a one-hitter,
giving up Raul Gonzalez'~ first
major league hit in the opening
inning, and the Philadelphia
Phillies beat the Cincinnati
Reds 8-0 Wedn,esday night.
Travis Lee hit a three-run
homer and Scott Rolen also
connected for Philadelphia,
which remained one game
behind first-place Atlanta in the
NL East. The Braves beat Aorida 4- 1.
"That might ·have been the
best I've seen Randy pitch,"
Phillies manager Larry Bowa
said. " It was unbelievable!'
Wolf (8-11 ) allowed just a
line- drive single to right by
Gonzalez, the second batter of
the game.
The left-bander retired 14

The Marauders are 1-4 on the year
and is coming off a 29-0 loss last
week at Fairland. The Marauder
olfense has had trouble getting started, but at times ihe last couple of
games, it has been able to move the
ball only , to have drives stall inside
opponents' te rritory.
The Marauder ground attack is led
by Jeremy Roush . The junior has carried 76 rimes for 273 yards (3.6) .
Senior Tyson Lee has carried 39 times
for 148 yards (3.8), and junior fullback Ross Stewart 20 rimes for 82
yards (4.1).
Junior quarterback . Kyle H annan is

Bv ScoTT WoLFE

between the two teams this
year are Wahama and
RACINE - One year Alexander.
Interestingly,
removed ·from Southern's those are the White Falwin over Federal Hocking cons' only two victories.
in the battle of th e Wahama defeated SouthRichards fami ly, the · two ern 26-0 last week and in
teams meet aga in in round game two of the s son,
two of the family slugfest Wahama bea t Fe eral
in the Tri- Vall ey Confer- H oc king 34-0. Fri y 's
ence opener for both clubs game could be a b nthis Friday night at Federal burner.
Hocking.
,__.,r
G;r wee
exander
T):le Southern Tornadoes bea t Federal 39- 2 1 and
won the Hom ecomin g defeated Southern 21-7
llagfest las t season, 14-6, · two weeks ago. Those too
over the Lancers in kick- are Alexander's only two
ing off the 2000 Tri- Valley wins of the 2001 season .
Conference sched ul e at
Southern is now 2-3 in
Roger Lee Adams Memo- 200 I and Federal is winless
rial Field.
at 0-5.
In round one of the
Last year, Southern's Joe
father-son dual, son Rusty Cornell led the Tornadoes
Richards cam e home the with 88 yards on 19 carries
victor over father Dave and one touchdown , while
Richards of Federa l Hock- Matt Ash carried 12 times
mg.
Ple•se see Feud, 8:5
The common opponents
OVP CORRESPOND.ENT

MOWIN' THEM DOWN - Phillies' starter Randy. Wolf limited
the Reds to just one hit , a first-inning s ingle, in leading his club
to an 8-0 win Wednesday. (AP)

straight afi:er th e hit before
walking Corky Miller to start
the sixth. Wo)f retired the last
11 batters, finishing with eight
strikeouts.
After losing five straight starts
between June 2-27, Wolf was

taken out of the rotation. He
wasn't too pleased about going
to the bullpen.
The
victory
clinched
Philadelphia's first non-losing
s~asop since 1993 and just its
secorld in 15 years.

�Thursday, September 27, 2001

Page Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'd1ursday, Septeber 27, 1001

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Bonds makhes McCwire's

National Lt

record with ~ree .•. walks
BY TH~ ASSOCIATED PRESS

~

Needing three to match Mark McGwire's record, Barry
Bonds got them at Dodger Stadium. Walks, that is.
· Boncls stayed at 67 . home runs, but tied Big Mac's NL mark
·of 162 walks and helped the San Francisco Giants rally in th e
---..,,.,...-.., ninth inning Wednesday rught for a 6-4 victory over Los Angeles.
''!.r:zona won, so we had to win," Bonds
said. "It was a good game, a lot of pressure for
both sides. It was fun."
The Giants overcame a 4-3 deficit in the
ninth, with Bonds scoring the go-ahead run
after a walk. He went 1-for-2.
San Francisco remained l 112 games behind
Arizona in the NL West and three games
Bonds
behind St. Louis in the wild card race.
"Every one now is our biggest win of the
year,' Giants manager Dusty Eaker said. "It was our biggest
comeback against a quality guy."
McGwire set the major league record of 70 home runs in
1998, the same season he drew all those walks. Babe Ruth
walked a record 170 times in 1923:
The Giants are offThursday, and begin a three-game se~ies at
home friday night agains t San Diego. Bonds has· rune games
left.
Benito Santiago's sacrifice fly ofT Jeff Shaw tied it in the
Giants' ninth, and John VanderWal hit a two-out, two-run single ofT !esse Orosco.
Robb Ncn earned his league-leading 42nd save in 49
chances, getting Adrian Beltre on a fly ball to the warrung track
with runners on first and second for the final out.
J "Vandy won that game, man, and Robb closed it," Bonds
saiJ. "Go talk to them, let them have the credit. I'm just glad
we won, that's all that's important right now."
Shawn Green, who has a franchise-record 48 homers and
11 '! JU3Is, sat out in observance ofYom Kippur, the holiest holiday on the .Jewish calendar. He had played in 415 straight
games, the longest active streak ;n baseball.
Diamondbacks 15, Brewers 9
Pinch-hitter Steve Finley hit an RBI single in a five-run
sixth inning and added a grand slam in the seventh as Arizona
beat Milwaukee at Bank One Ballpark.
Tony Womac k drove in four runs for the division-le.1ding
Diamondbacks. Finley's homer was the 200th of his career.
Jeromy Burnitz hit a grand slam for the Brewers after Richie
Sexson was ejected for arguing a called third strike. The previous night, Burnitz and Sexson became the first pair of team-.
mates to ;•ach hit three home runs in a game.
·Cardinals 5, Astros 1
Slumping Mark McGwire homered twice to lead Darryl
ll&lt;ile and St. Louis at Enron Field.
McGwire had been 1-for-19 with 10 strikeouts before hitting a shot that bounced onto the train tracks above the leftfield fence. McGwire later hit his 27th home run of the season
and .58 1st of his career.
Braves 4, Marlins 1
Cftip1per Jo:n~s hit his 37th home run, Ancruw Jones hit his

ue

Ea=

w

•Atlanta •
Philadelphia
New York
, Flonda
Montreal

t

82

)

81
78

71
74

70

82

64

88

GB

Pet.
539
533

1

•

513

12
t8

.t61
.421

Central

Hous1on
St Louis
.Chicago
Milwallkee
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

W

L

Pet

90
87

62
66

592
569

82

70

539

65

87 .. 428

62

90

.408 .

58 95
West
W
L
Arizona
85 67
San Francisco 84 69
81 72
l.os Angeles
San Diego
76 76
67 85
Colorado

.379

Phllfdelphl• B, Cincinnati 0
St Louis 5, Houston 1
San Diogo 3, Colorado 1
Arizona 15, Milwaukee 9
San Francisco 6, Los Angeles 4

GB

3'&gt;
8

25

28
32!1.·

Pet
.559
.549

529
500

.441

GB
1~

·~9

18

Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Mets 2, Montreal 0

Atlanta 5, Florida 2, 11 innings
Pittsburgh 13, Chicago Cubs 1
Cincinnati 8, Philadelphia 1
St. Louis 3, Houston 2
San Diego 8, Colorado 7
Milwaukee 9, Arizona 4
L0::1 AngeleS 9, San Francisco 5
~

Wednesday's. Gamea
N.Y. Mets 5, Montreal 2
Atlanta 4 , Florida 1
Chicago Cubs 8, Pittsburgh 4

Thuract.y'a Games
. San D•ogo jJonos 8· 181 at Colorado
(Jenoings 3-1), 3:05p.m.
N Y Mets (Chen 7-6) at Mon1real (Ohka
1·41, 5 35 p.m.
Cincinnati (Davis 7·3) at Phlla&lt;lelphla
lDaal12.e), 7:05p.m.
Houslon (Reynolds 12-10) at Chicago
Cubs jTapani 9· 13), 8.05 p.m. ·
Milwaukee ~Quevedo 4-4) ai Arizona
(Johnson 19·6), 9:35p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 17-9) at . Florida
!Clement 9·10), 7:05p.m.

Friday's Gemea
Hooston (Oswalt 14·2) at Chicago Cubs
!Lieber 18-6), 3:2Q p.m.
·
Montr.ol jYoohll 4-!il 11 Clnclnnllll
!Acevedo 5-6), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia Welson 15-e)' at Aonda
(Dempster 15·11), 7:05p.m.
N Y. Mots !Trachsel 10.12) at Atlanta
(Giavine 14-7), 7"35 p.m.
~it1sburgh (Ritchie 11-tJ) at St. Louis
jSmith 6·2), 8:10p.m.
Milwaukee (J.Wright 10-12) at Colorado
(Neagle 9·7), 9:05p.m
Los Angeles (Adams 12·8) at Arizona
!Schilling 2Hl), 10:05 p.m.
San Dielf.) (Middlebrook 1·0) at San
Francisco (Estes 8·8). 10:35 p.m.

Meigs

from Page

Opener

BY THE ASSOC IATED PRE SS

Andy Pettitte threw only
three pitches against th e
Tampa Bay Devil Rays. The
third was a line drive that
smacked him squarely on
the back of his pitching
elbow.
X-rays were negative, but
Pettitte is expected to miss
his n~xt start.
"The best news is on
Andy, there's no damage,"
said Ted Lilly, who replaced
the left-hander in the first
inning and led the N ew
York Yankees past the Devil
Rays 5- I Wednesday night.

Pet

G8'

.596
.507
.490

13~

Minnesota jAadlce 13·10) at Chicago

.397

16
30

.368

36

Whhe Sox jD.Wrigll14·2), 2.05 p.m.
Anaheim (Valdes 9-11) at Qakland (Udle
I H), 3:35p.m.
Baltimore (Douglass 1· 1) at Boston
{lowe 4-101, 7.05 p.m.
T010nto {L10n 5·3) al Tatrlj)a il!'Y {Rupe
5·11 ), 7:15J&gt;.m. ·
Detroh {Cornejo 3-3) at Kansas Oty
!MacDougal 0.01. 8:05p.m.

Centro!
W
L
Pet
07 15 .572
80 72 '.S26

C-lond
MIMOSO!a
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City

79

73

82 90
59 93
W.ot
W
L
109 44
94 58
74 78

•·Seattle

y·Daktand
Anaheim
Texas
70 83
X·CIInched division
y·ctlncheo wild card spot

GB
7

.520
.408

8
25

.388

28

Pel

GB

.712
.618
.487
.458

14'.1.

34~

39

TUoodly'o Gorneo
Baltimore 12, Boston 7
clo.. tond 11, Toronto 7
Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Yankees 0
Seattle 13. Texas 2
Detroit 6., Ka nsas City 4
Minnesota 4, Chicago While Sox 2
Dakland 9, Anaheim 3

Thurld1y'a Gema

· Frtdty'a Gamea
Boston {Nomo 12·9) at OetroH ~Weaver
12·15), 7:05p.m.
,
Mlnneoo111 (Milton 14-7) ot Cleveland
(SeboL~II 15-5), 7:05 p.m.
Bani more !Johnson HH 1) al N.Y. Yan·
kees (Mussina 15·11), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Escobar 6·7) at Tampa Bay
{Aekar 2·131, 7:15p.m.
Chicago While Sox !Garland 6-6) at
Kansas City jDurbin 7· 1~) . 8:05p.m.
Te•a• (Myelle 3-4) at Anaheim lO&lt;Iiz 1210), 10:05 p.m.
Qakland jMulder 20·7) at SeatllelGarcia
' 17-61, 10'05 p.m.

Wedne1d1y'e Game•

Toronto at CleWillnd, ppd., r'llln
Seattle 7, Texas 5
Boston 9, Baltimore 6
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa.Bay 1

The Yankees are sc hedu led
to play Game I in the first
round of the playoffs on ·
either Oct. 9 or I 0. In the
even t Pettitte is unavailable
for the playoffs, manager Joe
Torre considered several
options.
''We have a n experienced
hand in Sterling Hitchcock ," Torre said. "But it
(Lilly's performance) gives
you an option. Before this
thing is O\'er, we'll see if we
can .get him out there a time
or two and see how Consistent he can be," he said .
Shane S p e n c~r homered,
1

doubled and drove in three
runs for the Yankees.
Lilly pitche d into the
eighth inning.
The Toronto at C leveland
game was rained out.
Lilly (4-6) gave up seven
hits, including a home run
by Jose Guillen, and won for
the first time since July 5.
H e struck out six and
walked none.
Lilly replaced Pettitte with
runners on first and second
with no outs, and got out of
trouble with a double play
and a tap to the mound. Jay
Witasick relieved with two
outs in the eighth.
Mariners 7, Rangers 5
At Arlington, Texas, Bret
Boone ·ran his RBI total tci
135 w'ith a two-run single as
Seattle completed a threegame sweep.
The Mariners, who have
swept a club-record 15
series this season, extended

straight at home, extending
a club record.
Red Sox 9, Orioles 6
At Boston, Doug Mirabelli went 3-for-4 with a
homer and Casey Fossum
(3-1 ) shut down Baltimore
into the seventh.
A day after the Red Sox
were eliminated from playoff
contentio n, they got th e
solid pitching and timely
hi tting they've been missing
all year.The Red Sox had 12
hits, six in a six-run third, to
snap a four-game losing
streak and win for just the
fifth tim e in 23 games.
White Sox 6, Twins 3
At Chicago, Ray Durham
hit a two-run double and
drove in thre e runs , and Kip
Wells (10-9) pitched well for
six innings - aside from
throwing four wild pitches.
Chris Singleton drove in
two runs for th$
Sox, who won for .'o nlv1t he

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - · The first
big decision of the Jim Tressel era comes
i Th11rsd•y night.
The Ohio State coach will step to a
bank of microphones and declare who
will start at quarterback Saturday against
Indiana. It could well be the benchmark
of Tressel's first season - and may also
have an impact on future seasons.
. Incumbent Steve Bellisari has started
two seasons. Experience is good. However, the Buckeyes are just 14-10 under
· BeUisari, who hasn't completed even half
• - of his career passes and is coming off a
.. . stinker of a game against UCLA. That's
bad.
Sophomore Scott McMullen has the
" ·height, arm and head that causes pro
scouts to swoon. That's good. But he has
never been on the firing line with a game
teetering i,n the balance. And that'~ bad. HOT SEAT _ Ohio State quarterback
Bellisan s dreadful 5-for-23 passmg day Steve Bellasa ri who has started for the
- and .the offense's alm~st total lack of past two seas~ns in Columbus, may be
producttvtty m Satu.rday s . 13-6 loss to yanked by coach Jim Tressel. (AP)
UCLA- has thrown the position up for
·
·
grabs.
.
catch the ball, and the running backs
Tressel made it clear that even though · failed to take any of the pressure off BelBellisari wasn't very good, .he wasn't lisari by doing something extraordinary
alone.
like, oh, gaining some yards.
"Someone asked me if it wasn't simple
As a result, Bellisari's worst trait as a
. • to just make a change at quarterback dur- quarterback- poor decision-making• : ing the course of that game:' Tressel said. was on display most of the afternoon in
· ·" The only thing that makes that simple is the Rose Bowl.
_. :if 10 guys are doing the exact right thing
Tressel, offensive coordinator Jim Boll, and the one guy isn't. Obviously, that man and quarterbacks coach Joe Daniels
. wasn't the case."
didn't tell Bellisari or McMullen that
The offensive line would have had there was a "Starter Wanted" sign on the
trouble blocking Calista Flockhart. The quarterback job this week. The teamwide receivers didn't run good routes or .mates and friends figured that out when

CINCINNATI (AP) -Jon
Kitna's optimism is rubbing off
; instead of wearing off.
When he signed with
c ·· Cincinnati in the offieason, the;
~ · 'free agent quarterback immedi., 'ately started .talking about the
playoffi - a place the Bengals
· haven't been in 11 years.
. ; · · Fans shrugged. One quarter: ·: back after another has said the
- ' : same things in the past decade,
· ·· only to get beaten down by the
. '

two-run double in the eight inning Wednesday. (AP)
"We've put in a few things
to take adva ntage of that."
Lyons'
longes t
came
11
against Hannan last week, an
84-yard dish to open the
Hannan). I don't know if
seco nd half. T he Eagles won
it was on purpose or is they
hadn't seen any (game) fil m the gaine, 50-0.
"It takes a lot of practice
or wl}atever., We hope
and our wedge is blocking
(Trimble) kicks to him."
The Tomcats present a really well;' said Lyons. "It
unique challenge this Friday allows me to get up the field
and everything. This year,
as they like to kick it low.
"We've watched Trimble we've put in a lot of work
on film and they usually and it's expected. So we're
kick it on the ground, a ready to go. We get .up for
squib kick;' said Christman. every game."

Retums

continues to be a threat at tailback.
R.J. Gibbs remains Eastern's fullback
with Garrett Karr taking the snaps.
But, the Eagles will not necessary go
soaring into the game unhampered. A
handful of injuries still haunt Eastern on
both sides of the ball.
"We've got a few inju ries. In the Hannail game, we had a few guys get hit by
our own people," said Christman. "It
doesn't look like they're going to get to
play this week. We've got a few kids that
are going to have to fill in for us. I think
we're be all right."
. Christman wouldn't go into names of
those affected and those who might miss
Friday's game.
"You never know what might happen
between now and the game," said Christman .

"We hope that we are starting to
peak," Christman added. "We think that
we are. I guess we'll find out. Physically,
we've been playing prerty well. Mentally,
we ltaven 't. Our kids know th at."

Show your support and
appreciation to
our brave firefighters.

~A~

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one touchdown in its last five
games, Kitna threw for one and
ran for another.
The Beng.lls acquired Kitna,
who · threw 19 · interceptions
and had .17 fumbles for Seattle
last season. No other team was
willing' to offer him a shot at a
starting job.
Kima has co mpleted 65 percent of his passes for 358 yards
without an interception.

•

Feud
'"""Page 11

for 65 yards, and Brice
Hill scampered 46 yards on
two carries for onr touchdown.
Eric Needs led
Federal Hocking with a
16-48 effort and Federal's
lone touchdown. Needs
has since graduated.
Last year, thirty-three
(33) penalties were called
in a shower of yellow cotton. Southern ' was whistled. 19 times for 15 5 yards
and Federal was flagged
12-times for 125 yards,
while two penalties were
declined.
Although three of those
Southern factors above are
still on the Southern roster, only two ·Will be in the
line-up. Southern team
leader Matt Ash was ejected last week and must sit
out a game. Joe Cornell,
who was moved to the line
this season, will again
return to the backfield.
There, he enjoyed some
good numbers as a junior
and had considerable success against Federal Hockmg.
Also, senior Brice Hill
will again be available. The
senior speedster is a threat
in any game atid compliments .t he fine throwing of
quarterback
Brandon
Pierce. Pierce has put tip
some
good
numbers
despite being under constant pressure from oppose
ing defenses.
Aaron O hlinger and
Ju stin Allen have been
consistent receivers this
season and have picked up
the slack w\ten opposing
teams try to isolate Hill

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with double coverage .
Anthony Coffman is also a
receiving threat and ha'
joined B.J.. Marnh out as
steady ,performers in th~
backfield. They will be
expected to pick up the
slack left by Ash's ah&lt;enre
offensively, while Pierce
and Marnhout will be
looked upon defensively.
Southern will have to
contain senior Zack.Wires,
who ran wild for a time
against Alexander with 65
yard and 70 yard run s. The
70-yard version was a
kick-ofTteturn . Wires had
80 yards rushing.
Kenton Butcher ca ught a
Cody Ball touchdown pass
late in the game for 53
yards.
Southern will have to
control Federal's special
teams, especially the ki,c kofT and punt return squads.
Federal has plenty of
open - field
speed
and
Southern has bet•n suset·ptible to giving up large
gainers in this area. A Matt
Thomas tackle was the
only thing that saved a
possible game-losing sco re
at South Gallia .
Southern also must co ntain the rush, yet be wary
of the passing game as Ball
can unload, while still ,yet
unpolished at q\tarterback.
Looking back . in to the
crystal ball, Southern took
a 14-0 lead to th e locker
room at halftime last year
in a game that saw South' ern have 189 yards total
offense to Federal's 49.
SHS took the ea rly
momentum be hind the
support of the hometown
crowd, and may have to
overcome Federal's home
field advantage this week. ·
Game time is 7:30 at
Federal Hocking.

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main thing," Kitna said Wednesday. ''I expect to win every
game I play in. That's how I
approach everything. I never
look at anybody and say, 'Aw, I
can't wait until this game's over
so I can get to next week."'
A 21-10 victory over the
Baltimore Ravens on Sunday
demonstrated that the Bengals
are much different with Kitna
running the offense. Against a
defense that had allowed only

-

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WEEK
:..::::=.,.OCTOBER 7·13

Salute your favorite Fireman ·
Fire Department with an
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9TH

losing. Surely, Kitna was just
continuing a Cincinnati football tradition.
Two games into the season,
the Bengals are unbeaten and .
Kitna is a major reason. He's
avoiding the mistakes that got
him benched in Searde,and he's
getting one of the NFL's leasteffective passing games to work.
Better yet, his attitude is
spreading.
"I think the attitude is the

..

-

TIMELY HITTING -The Yankees' Shane Spencer rips a

they walked out of a practice and were
confronted by ~alf a dozen TV cameras
and 20 reporters.
Bellisari, never timid, said he wasn't
worried about losing the starting job.
"If I go out with that mindset of worrying about losing it, I might as well just
give it up," he said. "That means I don't
have confidence in myself."
He also said he understood why he was
being blamed for the Buckeyes' first loss.
" It's the quarterback's job," he said.
"When things don't go right, they look'
for answers from the quarterback."
McMullen neve r said anything disparaging about Bellisari. The two could
be seen playfully poking at each other
just seconds before they stepped into the
glare of the cameras.
McMullen simply said he would welcome the opportunity to play more and
to show what he can do.
•"! can't worry about these 'controversies,"' he said. "·I just have to keep playing
hard."
Tressel .heaped praise on McMullen:
"He's got a good awareness. He has the
ability to focus ·on what (defense) needs
to be read and he can move it from his
mind to his arm quickly."
Likewise, Tressel said only good things
about Bellisari 's competitive nature and
fi~
.
Tressel is obvio usly torn by the
impending decision, at times almost
working it through in his h.ead as he .
speaks.

-.Kitna's optimism rubbing off on other Bengals

57th road victory. The major against the Twins. i'
·
league record · of 60 by the ·
Royals 8, Tigers 6
1906 Chicago Cubs is out qf' At Kansas City, Carlos
reach because Seattle has Beltran hit his 20.th home
only two more road gj'mes. "run and the Royals took
Athletics 3, Angels 1
advantage of five errors to
At Oakland, Barry Zito snap a five-game; losing
won his seventh consecutive streak .
start and Eric Byrnes, Mark . Blake" Stein (6-8) overBellhorn and Ramon Her- came Randall Simon's
nandez hit solo home runs first-inning grand slam to
as Oakland won its sixth gain only his second vic tostraight.
ry si nce July I.
The A's won their 14th

getting too high and being too emotional and losing onr heads."
Trimble has been primarily as running
frOm
11
team which, unlike Eastern's explosive
attack, has slowly moved the ball up and
three seasons .... ou~ non-league season, down the field .
our league season and if we win enough
Jesse Brunton, Kyle Andrews and Mike
games, a playoff season. Of courie, this is Jago have shared carries for the Tomcats
the most impor.tant, the league season. this season. Another rushing threat is
This is the opener. Unfortunately, it's one . quarterback Bobby Trace, who led the
of the roughest teams in our conference Tomcats with 62 yards on 20 carries last
. to open up the league."
week .
Eastern's attitude during practices this
" It's going to be a tough test for us:·
week has spoke volumes on how·big of a · said Christman. "They're real good
gaine this is for the Eagles.
defensively and their offense, they don't
"To this point, this is the biggest game make mistakes. They have long drives,
of the season," said Christman. "I think which burns up clock and keeps the
everyo ne knows that. You can tell if you other team's offense ofT the field . That's
come to our practices and see the coach- something we can't allow them to do to
es are excited, the kids are excited. us. We've got to have our offense play. "
There's a lot of hitting going on. We're mg.
·getting prepared for the biggest game of
The Eagles ba~kfield conrinues to get
the season at this point."
better as freshman Bryar. Minear
:' It's a big game. The kids are •up for it. received greater playing time against
We j ust hope we can keep them from Hannan last week, while Brad Parker also

Page

Booton
Toronto
Baltimore
Ta"1'8 Bay

90 · li1 "
76 74
74 77
60 91
54 97

Pettitte injured as Yankees win; f\s still winning

from Page

"Wellston is a very talented
fo otball team," Marauder
CQach Mike Chancey said.
11
"This game is going to be a
very big challenge for us.
32-of"83 'o n the year for 39 Wellston has the best football
percent. He has thrown for player (Brad Young) that we
338 yards and been picked off will see this season, but they
five times. Derrick "Buzzy" are not a one player team.
Fackler has caught 15 passes They have a lot of weapons."
for 206 yards. Derrick Knapp
Kickoff is 7:30 Friday
has pulled do~n five for 30 evening, from C.H. Jones
yards.
Field in Wellston.
1

x-New YOI1c •

AMERICAN LEAGUE

1~-------33r~~mncrAruLattw~awa~~JBrud~.------~--------1 -

Padres 3, Rockies 1 .
With Rickey Henderson sitting out, San Diego beat Colorado in a rare, low-scoring game at Coors Field.
Ben Davis, batting only . H 1 in his previous 26 games, had a
home r, double and single, and drove in two runs.·
Henderson stayed one run short of tying Ty Cobb's major
league record of2,245. H e also has 2,995 career hits.
Henderson, who grew up in the Bay Area, has said he would
like to reach both milestones tlus weekend when the Padres
visit San Francisco.
Mets 5, Expos 2
Mike Piazza left in the first inning because of a bruised right
thumb, but Glendon Rusch pitched New York past Montreal
·
at Olympic Stadium. ·
. Piazza was taken to hospital for X-rays, which were negative,
after being hit by Mike Mordecai's foul tip. Piazza was back in
the Mets' clubhouse after the game, and hoped he might be
able to play Thursday.
Cubs 8, Pirates 4
Ricky Gutierrez had three hits and drove in two runs as
Chicago stopped a four-game losing streak.
The Cubs won in their final road game of the season. Gary
Matthews Jr., sent from Chicago to Pittsburgh earlier this year,
had a pinch- hit, three-run homer for the Pirates.

El!t
W
L

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

BUCKEYE FOOTBALL·

Tressel QB decision a no-win situation

·•

i&lt;ansas City 8, Detroit a
Chicago While Sox 6, Minnesota 3
Oakland 3, Anaheim 1

Amerlelln LNgue

.' .-

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

�Thursday, September 27, 2001

Page Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'd1ursday, Septeber 27, 1001

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Bonds makhes McCwire's

National Lt

record with ~ree .•. walks
BY TH~ ASSOCIATED PRESS

~

Needing three to match Mark McGwire's record, Barry
Bonds got them at Dodger Stadium. Walks, that is.
· Boncls stayed at 67 . home runs, but tied Big Mac's NL mark
·of 162 walks and helped the San Francisco Giants rally in th e
---..,,.,...-.., ninth inning Wednesday rught for a 6-4 victory over Los Angeles.
''!.r:zona won, so we had to win," Bonds
said. "It was a good game, a lot of pressure for
both sides. It was fun."
The Giants overcame a 4-3 deficit in the
ninth, with Bonds scoring the go-ahead run
after a walk. He went 1-for-2.
San Francisco remained l 112 games behind
Arizona in the NL West and three games
Bonds
behind St. Louis in the wild card race.
"Every one now is our biggest win of the
year,' Giants manager Dusty Eaker said. "It was our biggest
comeback against a quality guy."
McGwire set the major league record of 70 home runs in
1998, the same season he drew all those walks. Babe Ruth
walked a record 170 times in 1923:
The Giants are offThursday, and begin a three-game se~ies at
home friday night agains t San Diego. Bonds has· rune games
left.
Benito Santiago's sacrifice fly ofT Jeff Shaw tied it in the
Giants' ninth, and John VanderWal hit a two-out, two-run single ofT !esse Orosco.
Robb Ncn earned his league-leading 42nd save in 49
chances, getting Adrian Beltre on a fly ball to the warrung track
with runners on first and second for the final out.
J "Vandy won that game, man, and Robb closed it," Bonds
saiJ. "Go talk to them, let them have the credit. I'm just glad
we won, that's all that's important right now."
Shawn Green, who has a franchise-record 48 homers and
11 '! JU3Is, sat out in observance ofYom Kippur, the holiest holiday on the .Jewish calendar. He had played in 415 straight
games, the longest active streak ;n baseball.
Diamondbacks 15, Brewers 9
Pinch-hitter Steve Finley hit an RBI single in a five-run
sixth inning and added a grand slam in the seventh as Arizona
beat Milwaukee at Bank One Ballpark.
Tony Womac k drove in four runs for the division-le.1ding
Diamondbacks. Finley's homer was the 200th of his career.
Jeromy Burnitz hit a grand slam for the Brewers after Richie
Sexson was ejected for arguing a called third strike. The previous night, Burnitz and Sexson became the first pair of team-.
mates to ;•ach hit three home runs in a game.
·Cardinals 5, Astros 1
Slumping Mark McGwire homered twice to lead Darryl
ll&lt;ile and St. Louis at Enron Field.
McGwire had been 1-for-19 with 10 strikeouts before hitting a shot that bounced onto the train tracks above the leftfield fence. McGwire later hit his 27th home run of the season
and .58 1st of his career.
Braves 4, Marlins 1
Cftip1per Jo:n~s hit his 37th home run, Ancruw Jones hit his

ue

Ea=

w

•Atlanta •
Philadelphia
New York
, Flonda
Montreal

t

82

)

81
78

71
74

70

82

64

88

GB

Pet.
539
533

1

•

513

12
t8

.t61
.421

Central

Hous1on
St Louis
.Chicago
Milwallkee
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

W

L

Pet

90
87

62
66

592
569

82

70

539

65

87 .. 428

62

90

.408 .

58 95
West
W
L
Arizona
85 67
San Francisco 84 69
81 72
l.os Angeles
San Diego
76 76
67 85
Colorado

.379

Phllfdelphl• B, Cincinnati 0
St Louis 5, Houston 1
San Diogo 3, Colorado 1
Arizona 15, Milwaukee 9
San Francisco 6, Los Angeles 4

GB

3'&gt;
8

25

28
32!1.·

Pet
.559
.549

529
500

.441

GB
1~

·~9

18

Tuesday's Games
N.Y. Mets 2, Montreal 0

Atlanta 5, Florida 2, 11 innings
Pittsburgh 13, Chicago Cubs 1
Cincinnati 8, Philadelphia 1
St. Louis 3, Houston 2
San Diego 8, Colorado 7
Milwaukee 9, Arizona 4
L0::1 AngeleS 9, San Francisco 5
~

Wednesday's. Gamea
N.Y. Mets 5, Montreal 2
Atlanta 4 , Florida 1
Chicago Cubs 8, Pittsburgh 4

Thuract.y'a Games
. San D•ogo jJonos 8· 181 at Colorado
(Jenoings 3-1), 3:05p.m.
N Y Mets (Chen 7-6) at Mon1real (Ohka
1·41, 5 35 p.m.
Cincinnati (Davis 7·3) at Phlla&lt;lelphla
lDaal12.e), 7:05p.m.
Houslon (Reynolds 12-10) at Chicago
Cubs jTapani 9· 13), 8.05 p.m. ·
Milwaukee ~Quevedo 4-4) ai Arizona
(Johnson 19·6), 9:35p.m.
Atlanta (Maddux 17-9) at . Florida
!Clement 9·10), 7:05p.m.

Friday's Gemea
Hooston (Oswalt 14·2) at Chicago Cubs
!Lieber 18-6), 3:2Q p.m.
·
Montr.ol jYoohll 4-!il 11 Clnclnnllll
!Acevedo 5-6), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia Welson 15-e)' at Aonda
(Dempster 15·11), 7:05p.m.
N Y. Mots !Trachsel 10.12) at Atlanta
(Giavine 14-7), 7"35 p.m.
~it1sburgh (Ritchie 11-tJ) at St. Louis
jSmith 6·2), 8:10p.m.
Milwaukee (J.Wright 10-12) at Colorado
(Neagle 9·7), 9:05p.m
Los Angeles (Adams 12·8) at Arizona
!Schilling 2Hl), 10:05 p.m.
San Dielf.) (Middlebrook 1·0) at San
Francisco (Estes 8·8). 10:35 p.m.

Meigs

from Page

Opener

BY THE ASSOC IATED PRE SS

Andy Pettitte threw only
three pitches against th e
Tampa Bay Devil Rays. The
third was a line drive that
smacked him squarely on
the back of his pitching
elbow.
X-rays were negative, but
Pettitte is expected to miss
his n~xt start.
"The best news is on
Andy, there's no damage,"
said Ted Lilly, who replaced
the left-hander in the first
inning and led the N ew
York Yankees past the Devil
Rays 5- I Wednesday night.

Pet

G8'

.596
.507
.490

13~

Minnesota jAadlce 13·10) at Chicago

.397

16
30

.368

36

Whhe Sox jD.Wrigll14·2), 2.05 p.m.
Anaheim (Valdes 9-11) at Qakland (Udle
I H), 3:35p.m.
Baltimore (Douglass 1· 1) at Boston
{lowe 4-101, 7.05 p.m.
T010nto {L10n 5·3) al Tatrlj)a il!'Y {Rupe
5·11 ), 7:15J&gt;.m. ·
Detroh {Cornejo 3-3) at Kansas Oty
!MacDougal 0.01. 8:05p.m.

Centro!
W
L
Pet
07 15 .572
80 72 '.S26

C-lond
MIMOSO!a
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City

79

73

82 90
59 93
W.ot
W
L
109 44
94 58
74 78

•·Seattle

y·Daktand
Anaheim
Texas
70 83
X·CIInched division
y·ctlncheo wild card spot

GB
7

.520
.408

8
25

.388

28

Pel

GB

.712
.618
.487
.458

14'.1.

34~

39

TUoodly'o Gorneo
Baltimore 12, Boston 7
clo.. tond 11, Toronto 7
Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Yankees 0
Seattle 13. Texas 2
Detroit 6., Ka nsas City 4
Minnesota 4, Chicago While Sox 2
Dakland 9, Anaheim 3

Thurld1y'a Gema

· Frtdty'a Gamea
Boston {Nomo 12·9) at OetroH ~Weaver
12·15), 7:05p.m.
,
Mlnneoo111 (Milton 14-7) ot Cleveland
(SeboL~II 15-5), 7:05 p.m.
Bani more !Johnson HH 1) al N.Y. Yan·
kees (Mussina 15·11), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Escobar 6·7) at Tampa Bay
{Aekar 2·131, 7:15p.m.
Chicago While Sox !Garland 6-6) at
Kansas City jDurbin 7· 1~) . 8:05p.m.
Te•a• (Myelle 3-4) at Anaheim lO&lt;Iiz 1210), 10:05 p.m.
Qakland jMulder 20·7) at SeatllelGarcia
' 17-61, 10'05 p.m.

Wedne1d1y'e Game•

Toronto at CleWillnd, ppd., r'llln
Seattle 7, Texas 5
Boston 9, Baltimore 6
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa.Bay 1

The Yankees are sc hedu led
to play Game I in the first
round of the playoffs on ·
either Oct. 9 or I 0. In the
even t Pettitte is unavailable
for the playoffs, manager Joe
Torre considered several
options.
''We have a n experienced
hand in Sterling Hitchcock ," Torre said. "But it
(Lilly's performance) gives
you an option. Before this
thing is O\'er, we'll see if we
can .get him out there a time
or two and see how Consistent he can be," he said .
Shane S p e n c~r homered,
1

doubled and drove in three
runs for the Yankees.
Lilly pitche d into the
eighth inning.
The Toronto at C leveland
game was rained out.
Lilly (4-6) gave up seven
hits, including a home run
by Jose Guillen, and won for
the first time since July 5.
H e struck out six and
walked none.
Lilly replaced Pettitte with
runners on first and second
with no outs, and got out of
trouble with a double play
and a tap to the mound. Jay
Witasick relieved with two
outs in the eighth.
Mariners 7, Rangers 5
At Arlington, Texas, Bret
Boone ·ran his RBI total tci
135 w'ith a two-run single as
Seattle completed a threegame sweep.
The Mariners, who have
swept a club-record 15
series this season, extended

straight at home, extending
a club record.
Red Sox 9, Orioles 6
At Boston, Doug Mirabelli went 3-for-4 with a
homer and Casey Fossum
(3-1 ) shut down Baltimore
into the seventh.
A day after the Red Sox
were eliminated from playoff
contentio n, they got th e
solid pitching and timely
hi tting they've been missing
all year.The Red Sox had 12
hits, six in a six-run third, to
snap a four-game losing
streak and win for just the
fifth tim e in 23 games.
White Sox 6, Twins 3
At Chicago, Ray Durham
hit a two-run double and
drove in thre e runs , and Kip
Wells (10-9) pitched well for
six innings - aside from
throwing four wild pitches.
Chris Singleton drove in
two runs for th$
Sox, who won for .'o nlv1t he

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - · The first
big decision of the Jim Tressel era comes
i Th11rsd•y night.
The Ohio State coach will step to a
bank of microphones and declare who
will start at quarterback Saturday against
Indiana. It could well be the benchmark
of Tressel's first season - and may also
have an impact on future seasons.
. Incumbent Steve Bellisari has started
two seasons. Experience is good. However, the Buckeyes are just 14-10 under
· BeUisari, who hasn't completed even half
• - of his career passes and is coming off a
.. . stinker of a game against UCLA. That's
bad.
Sophomore Scott McMullen has the
" ·height, arm and head that causes pro
scouts to swoon. That's good. But he has
never been on the firing line with a game
teetering i,n the balance. And that'~ bad. HOT SEAT _ Ohio State quarterback
Bellisan s dreadful 5-for-23 passmg day Steve Bellasa ri who has started for the
- and .the offense's alm~st total lack of past two seas~ns in Columbus, may be
producttvtty m Satu.rday s . 13-6 loss to yanked by coach Jim Tressel. (AP)
UCLA- has thrown the position up for
·
·
grabs.
.
catch the ball, and the running backs
Tressel made it clear that even though · failed to take any of the pressure off BelBellisari wasn't very good, .he wasn't lisari by doing something extraordinary
alone.
like, oh, gaining some yards.
"Someone asked me if it wasn't simple
As a result, Bellisari's worst trait as a
. • to just make a change at quarterback dur- quarterback- poor decision-making• : ing the course of that game:' Tressel said. was on display most of the afternoon in
· ·" The only thing that makes that simple is the Rose Bowl.
_. :if 10 guys are doing the exact right thing
Tressel, offensive coordinator Jim Boll, and the one guy isn't. Obviously, that man and quarterbacks coach Joe Daniels
. wasn't the case."
didn't tell Bellisari or McMullen that
The offensive line would have had there was a "Starter Wanted" sign on the
trouble blocking Calista Flockhart. The quarterback job this week. The teamwide receivers didn't run good routes or .mates and friends figured that out when

CINCINNATI (AP) -Jon
Kitna's optimism is rubbing off
; instead of wearing off.
When he signed with
c ·· Cincinnati in the offieason, the;
~ · 'free agent quarterback immedi., 'ately started .talking about the
playoffi - a place the Bengals
· haven't been in 11 years.
. ; · · Fans shrugged. One quarter: ·: back after another has said the
- ' : same things in the past decade,
· ·· only to get beaten down by the
. '

two-run double in the eight inning Wednesday. (AP)
"We've put in a few things
to take adva ntage of that."
Lyons'
longes t
came
11
against Hannan last week, an
84-yard dish to open the
Hannan). I don't know if
seco nd half. T he Eagles won
it was on purpose or is they
hadn't seen any (game) fil m the gaine, 50-0.
"It takes a lot of practice
or wl}atever., We hope
and our wedge is blocking
(Trimble) kicks to him."
The Tomcats present a really well;' said Lyons. "It
unique challenge this Friday allows me to get up the field
and everything. This year,
as they like to kick it low.
"We've watched Trimble we've put in a lot of work
on film and they usually and it's expected. So we're
kick it on the ground, a ready to go. We get .up for
squib kick;' said Christman. every game."

Retums

continues to be a threat at tailback.
R.J. Gibbs remains Eastern's fullback
with Garrett Karr taking the snaps.
But, the Eagles will not necessary go
soaring into the game unhampered. A
handful of injuries still haunt Eastern on
both sides of the ball.
"We've got a few inju ries. In the Hannail game, we had a few guys get hit by
our own people," said Christman. "It
doesn't look like they're going to get to
play this week. We've got a few kids that
are going to have to fill in for us. I think
we're be all right."
. Christman wouldn't go into names of
those affected and those who might miss
Friday's game.
"You never know what might happen
between now and the game," said Christman .

"We hope that we are starting to
peak," Christman added. "We think that
we are. I guess we'll find out. Physically,
we've been playing prerty well. Mentally,
we ltaven 't. Our kids know th at."

Show your support and
appreciation to
our brave firefighters.

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one touchdown in its last five
games, Kitna threw for one and
ran for another.
The Beng.lls acquired Kitna,
who · threw 19 · interceptions
and had .17 fumbles for Seattle
last season. No other team was
willing' to offer him a shot at a
starting job.
Kima has co mpleted 65 percent of his passes for 358 yards
without an interception.

•

Feud
'"""Page 11

for 65 yards, and Brice
Hill scampered 46 yards on
two carries for onr touchdown.
Eric Needs led
Federal Hocking with a
16-48 effort and Federal's
lone touchdown. Needs
has since graduated.
Last year, thirty-three
(33) penalties were called
in a shower of yellow cotton. Southern ' was whistled. 19 times for 15 5 yards
and Federal was flagged
12-times for 125 yards,
while two penalties were
declined.
Although three of those
Southern factors above are
still on the Southern roster, only two ·Will be in the
line-up. Southern team
leader Matt Ash was ejected last week and must sit
out a game. Joe Cornell,
who was moved to the line
this season, will again
return to the backfield.
There, he enjoyed some
good numbers as a junior
and had considerable success against Federal Hockmg.
Also, senior Brice Hill
will again be available. The
senior speedster is a threat
in any game atid compliments .t he fine throwing of
quarterback
Brandon
Pierce. Pierce has put tip
some
good
numbers
despite being under constant pressure from oppose
ing defenses.
Aaron O hlinger and
Ju stin Allen have been
consistent receivers this
season and have picked up
the slack w\ten opposing
teams try to isolate Hill

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with double coverage .
Anthony Coffman is also a
receiving threat and ha'
joined B.J.. Marnh out as
steady ,performers in th~
backfield. They will be
expected to pick up the
slack left by Ash's ah&lt;enre
offensively, while Pierce
and Marnhout will be
looked upon defensively.
Southern will have to
contain senior Zack.Wires,
who ran wild for a time
against Alexander with 65
yard and 70 yard run s. The
70-yard version was a
kick-ofTteturn . Wires had
80 yards rushing.
Kenton Butcher ca ught a
Cody Ball touchdown pass
late in the game for 53
yards.
Southern will have to
control Federal's special
teams, especially the ki,c kofT and punt return squads.
Federal has plenty of
open - field
speed
and
Southern has bet•n suset·ptible to giving up large
gainers in this area. A Matt
Thomas tackle was the
only thing that saved a
possible game-losing sco re
at South Gallia .
Southern also must co ntain the rush, yet be wary
of the passing game as Ball
can unload, while still ,yet
unpolished at q\tarterback.
Looking back . in to the
crystal ball, Southern took
a 14-0 lead to th e locker
room at halftime last year
in a game that saw South' ern have 189 yards total
offense to Federal's 49.
SHS took the ea rly
momentum be hind the
support of the hometown
crowd, and may have to
overcome Federal's home
field advantage this week. ·
Game time is 7:30 at
Federal Hocking.

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main thing," Kitna said Wednesday. ''I expect to win every
game I play in. That's how I
approach everything. I never
look at anybody and say, 'Aw, I
can't wait until this game's over
so I can get to next week."'
A 21-10 victory over the
Baltimore Ravens on Sunday
demonstrated that the Bengals
are much different with Kitna
running the offense. Against a
defense that had allowed only

-

FIRE PREVENTIO
WEEK
:..::::=.,.OCTOBER 7·13

Salute your favorite Fireman ·
Fire Department with an
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9TH

losing. Surely, Kitna was just
continuing a Cincinnati football tradition.
Two games into the season,
the Bengals are unbeaten and .
Kitna is a major reason. He's
avoiding the mistakes that got
him benched in Searde,and he's
getting one of the NFL's leasteffective passing games to work.
Better yet, his attitude is
spreading.
"I think the attitude is the

..

-

TIMELY HITTING -The Yankees' Shane Spencer rips a

they walked out of a practice and were
confronted by ~alf a dozen TV cameras
and 20 reporters.
Bellisari, never timid, said he wasn't
worried about losing the starting job.
"If I go out with that mindset of worrying about losing it, I might as well just
give it up," he said. "That means I don't
have confidence in myself."
He also said he understood why he was
being blamed for the Buckeyes' first loss.
" It's the quarterback's job," he said.
"When things don't go right, they look'
for answers from the quarterback."
McMullen neve r said anything disparaging about Bellisari. The two could
be seen playfully poking at each other
just seconds before they stepped into the
glare of the cameras.
McMullen simply said he would welcome the opportunity to play more and
to show what he can do.
•"! can't worry about these 'controversies,"' he said. "·I just have to keep playing
hard."
Tressel .heaped praise on McMullen:
"He's got a good awareness. He has the
ability to focus ·on what (defense) needs
to be read and he can move it from his
mind to his arm quickly."
Likewise, Tressel said only good things
about Bellisari 's competitive nature and
fi~
.
Tressel is obvio usly torn by the
impending decision, at times almost
working it through in his h.ead as he .
speaks.

-.Kitna's optimism rubbing off on other Bengals

57th road victory. The major against the Twins. i'
·
league record · of 60 by the ·
Royals 8, Tigers 6
1906 Chicago Cubs is out qf' At Kansas City, Carlos
reach because Seattle has Beltran hit his 20.th home
only two more road gj'mes. "run and the Royals took
Athletics 3, Angels 1
advantage of five errors to
At Oakland, Barry Zito snap a five-game; losing
won his seventh consecutive streak .
start and Eric Byrnes, Mark . Blake" Stein (6-8) overBellhorn and Ramon Her- came Randall Simon's
nandez hit solo home runs first-inning grand slam to
as Oakland won its sixth gain only his second vic tostraight.
ry si nce July I.
The A's won their 14th

getting too high and being too emotional and losing onr heads."
Trimble has been primarily as running
frOm
11
team which, unlike Eastern's explosive
attack, has slowly moved the ball up and
three seasons .... ou~ non-league season, down the field .
our league season and if we win enough
Jesse Brunton, Kyle Andrews and Mike
games, a playoff season. Of courie, this is Jago have shared carries for the Tomcats
the most impor.tant, the league season. this season. Another rushing threat is
This is the opener. Unfortunately, it's one . quarterback Bobby Trace, who led the
of the roughest teams in our conference Tomcats with 62 yards on 20 carries last
. to open up the league."
week .
Eastern's attitude during practices this
" It's going to be a tough test for us:·
week has spoke volumes on how·big of a · said Christman. "They're real good
gaine this is for the Eagles.
defensively and their offense, they don't
"To this point, this is the biggest game make mistakes. They have long drives,
of the season," said Christman. "I think which burns up clock and keeps the
everyo ne knows that. You can tell if you other team's offense ofT the field . That's
come to our practices and see the coach- something we can't allow them to do to
es are excited, the kids are excited. us. We've got to have our offense play. "
There's a lot of hitting going on. We're mg.
·getting prepared for the biggest game of
The Eagles ba~kfield conrinues to get
the season at this point."
better as freshman Bryar. Minear
:' It's a big game. The kids are •up for it. received greater playing time against
We j ust hope we can keep them from Hannan last week, while Brad Parker also

Page

Booton
Toronto
Baltimore
Ta"1'8 Bay

90 · li1 "
76 74
74 77
60 91
54 97

Pettitte injured as Yankees win; f\s still winning

from Page

"Wellston is a very talented
fo otball team," Marauder
CQach Mike Chancey said.
11
"This game is going to be a
very big challenge for us.
32-of"83 'o n the year for 39 Wellston has the best football
percent. He has thrown for player (Brad Young) that we
338 yards and been picked off will see this season, but they
five times. Derrick "Buzzy" are not a one player team.
Fackler has caught 15 passes They have a lot of weapons."
for 206 yards. Derrick Knapp
Kickoff is 7:30 Friday
has pulled do~n five for 30 evening, from C.H. Jones
yards.
Field in Wellston.
1

x-New YOI1c •

AMERICAN LEAGUE

1~-------33r~~mncrAruLattw~awa~~JBrud~.------~--------1 -

Padres 3, Rockies 1 .
With Rickey Henderson sitting out, San Diego beat Colorado in a rare, low-scoring game at Coors Field.
Ben Davis, batting only . H 1 in his previous 26 games, had a
home r, double and single, and drove in two runs.·
Henderson stayed one run short of tying Ty Cobb's major
league record of2,245. H e also has 2,995 career hits.
Henderson, who grew up in the Bay Area, has said he would
like to reach both milestones tlus weekend when the Padres
visit San Francisco.
Mets 5, Expos 2
Mike Piazza left in the first inning because of a bruised right
thumb, but Glendon Rusch pitched New York past Montreal
·
at Olympic Stadium. ·
. Piazza was taken to hospital for X-rays, which were negative,
after being hit by Mike Mordecai's foul tip. Piazza was back in
the Mets' clubhouse after the game, and hoped he might be
able to play Thursday.
Cubs 8, Pirates 4
Ricky Gutierrez had three hits and drove in two runs as
Chicago stopped a four-game losing streak.
The Cubs won in their final road game of the season. Gary
Matthews Jr., sent from Chicago to Pittsburgh earlier this year,
had a pinch- hit, three-run homer for the Pirates.

El!t
W
L

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

BUCKEYE FOOTBALL·

Tressel QB decision a no-win situation

·•

i&lt;ansas City 8, Detroit a
Chicago While Sox 6, Minnesota 3
Oakland 3, Anaheim 1

Amerlelln LNgue

.' .-

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

�PBgB

8 4 • ThB Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, OhiO

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

'::.

•Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

~------------------------------------~
'([ribune - Sentinel - 1\e

CLASSIFIED

James J_ackson living t-~-~~~~~
PUBLIC
:up to h1s own hype - NOTICES

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Countl.es U~e
No One
Else Can!

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

In one week With us

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YOUR AD NOW~

Sentinel

l\egi~ter
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

'([ribune

~

Monday thru Friday

Oallv Jn•Column : 1: 00 p. m.
Mondav - FrhUiv ror Insertion
Jn Next 01~ '1 Paper
Sundav In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
· HOW IQ WRITE A.1'i AD.
Sho u ld I n cl ude These Items
To
Get Response ...

r

PERSONAl S

4""-~v~• -I .
i·-·~~
..~~.

1

All Olsplev: 12 Noon 2
Business Oavs Prior To
Publication
SundiV Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday ror Su ndays

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

S

Private Party Ads Under $1 00

&amp;

20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ad s

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue. Gallipolis, OH 45631

• Start Your Adl With A Ke~word • Include Complete
Oescrlptlon • fnc tude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And AddresS When Needed
• Ad l Sl'l ould Run 7 DIVI

Successful Ads

\ \ \O ll:&gt;i! 'l•. \11-.\ Is

~

r

rio
HOOSI!li
I AI'ARIMEMs Ii ..-~~--FOR--RFNr~~~--ffi-R_RFNr._.~--=-·--·~_.

HEU· WMm:o

~

·~

~

.

~-------• Yard Sale, saturday, Sept Help wanted carinw for the Oolllpolla Car- Collo90 Nloe oldtr homt, 2 BR, liv· Final Oaya, Nallonwldo In- Collage eultable for single Gracious living. 1. and 2 Buy or sell. Riverine Anll·

29. New Hope Rd, Chester, &amp;ldert-;. Darst Group Home, (Careere erose To Home)
Why waoP Start meeting Ohio, Oh.
now paying minimum wage, Call Today! 740·446-4367,
0 hlo singles tonight. call toll
new shills: 7am-3pm, 7am·
r-800·21 4 ·0 452.
lree t-800 ·766·2623 e.t
AUCI10N AND 15pm, 3pm-rr pm, tr pm· l!'lllr:R;::eg:..;t;90;·~05;:;·,.:,r2~7.;;4,::B;.
. -,
162t
_
Fu:A MARKET , 7am, call 740.992·5023.
WAN'I'W

r

lng room, dining room, ventory
Reduction!
k~chen, pantry, utNity room, (3041736-3408
•
full lila attic, gao fumaco, Umlted Or No c~t? Gov•
..,tral air, Rad114. $35,000,
9a k F.;'' Only
(740)949-2070
~~~ In

llBl Ai\NOl'i\CHII~,115

villi, WV 304-736-3409.
:;:;..~'&amp;~=-m~. plua
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
Only $19,850. F'" Dellvary Houoea for Rent 2 bed·
&amp; Stt Up. 1 ~ 928 • 2426
rooml &amp; 1 beth, located on
tho Ollila/ Lawrance County
New t4K70, S bedroom. 2 line. Call botwo«j 8:30pm·
both, only S995 down &amp; tt :OOpm. (7401258-6803 ·
St89 • 2 ~r mont• call
.u ....
''•
Pilot P-rogram, Renters
Harofd 740-386-438?.
Needed, 304·738--7295.
Now Double Wide. $195 OUiel Country Setting 3br
Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 bo. lor rent or aale on lan&lt;l
Bath. FrM Dellvary &amp; Set· 2
up. 1-88fHJ28-3426
contract. Available October
111· C&amp;ll (304)B1S· 2884

Homeworker•
Nooded 1.._ _ _T,.oiiDoiioii__,..
Rick Pearson Auction Com- $635 Weekly Proce!sing '
. ,_ __ _ __ _,.. pany, full ttme auctioneer, Mall. Easy! No E•peri· All Make Mowers, Lawn

Disney Beach Vacations, 6 complele auction service .
nights, wce hotel. will sacri- Licensed t68,0hlo &amp; Wool
fice tor $199. (6 14)898· Virginia, 304·773·5785 Or
304·773·5447.
2726
-~--:'!":"'---.....,

ence

Needed.

Call 1· Tractors, Tillers Repaired.

800·652·8726 Ext . 2070,
24Hrs.
:---:--,.--,-,.--,--Local reta iler looking lor exWANTF.D
perlenced losa prevention
New ro You I hntt Shoppe
TO BUY
aiBOCiate for in star&amp; loss
9 West Stimson, Athens
prevention position. Please
740·592· 1842
send resume to Loss Pro·
Quality clothing an&lt;l house· Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. ventlon Supervisor, 6027
hold 11ems. $1.00 bag sale Silver, Gold Coins. Proof· Kyle Moore Road , Hunllng·

-------- ·-------pi
r
I

Free ~lck·up, Delivery Ava ol·
able. 21 Years EMperionco.
Call Mike. (740)446-7604

-•--alne
1n thll MWIPII* tt
aubject to 1M hdtrel
Fair ttouatng ADt at 1111
wtllcll- H Nlogafto

David's General Contracting
Plumbing, electncal, paint·
lng, .decks, roots. Call
(7401256·9373 (3041633·
6265

-· ·on~

let
11 dtPI• ...,.l,..,lonm- or

E)(parlenced Grandma will
baby sit Monday- Friday,

M T.S. Coin Shop, r5t Sec· LPN'a/ RN's needed lor Po·
=·=ue, Gallipolis, 740· ~~~~~~~:stc~:~,.,":r;u~~
GI\'EAWAY
ty, Pomeroy and Racine
Areas. Please Call Primary
Care Nursmg Service at
3 kottens, 2 calico, 1 black F,ii~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ (800)518·2273. Ask tor
wsa"1ha.blue eyes, (740)992· 11t0
~
Phylis.

ages 3 and up at my home. , ..tgtlln,
Call (7401446·0613
•
.-an~-

~~~":~I= 1.,0=:

Full service house cleaning,

er'a,

r

1

I

u--..
,..
our ..~ .. ~

. F1ve Longha•red kittens. 2

r

ca ll

l

pan-time, pick up applica·
tlon at location &amp; bring back
betwoon
9:30am
&amp;
tO:OOam, Monday thi\J 5at·
urday.
Nerid 7-Lad•es~a-Beii·Avon.
4

l ntematlo~~~ ~:~ess

alter

~AND
I~
·
' FOUND'

e•pandlng. S251$75hr. PIT
FIT ••a s•• 3713
~ • ~·
·
www.megabucks4you.net

References ava1lable Call

(7401446-2977

hair, blue collar. Vary sweot
&amp; gentle.
Answers t~
Spank~rs.
, Malo.
A~ttwellar/Chow. mix, b!ack
with brown Aollle markmgs
o~ lace, chest, paws. Chow
tarl &amp; tongue. 75 tbs, 2 112
years old , long hair, red collar. A tittle shy but friendly.
Answers to Bruno. Please
call Gonger or Jeff (740)992·
2511:0~4-,A_a_w_a_rd-' - - - - ,
_

r~

71i

YARI&gt; SALE

58

~=~~;.~ :::~

""

y
SA
AR!&gt;
u ;GA I.UI'OLL~

2 Family 9040 St Rt 7 s.
Sept. 28 &amp; 29. t0-6 Tale·
scope , dishes. name bran&lt;l
clothes, furniture, lamps,
nome Interior
-,...--- -- - - 3 Family. t152 St At. 325S.
9:00·5:00 FlldayiSalurday.
Toots, Lawn Cha irs. Fan ,
Bench. Clot hong, Misc.
Carpon Sale· t899 Sho..
string Aldgo. Saturday, only,
9am-? BaDy items. baby
clothes and lots of odds &amp;
ends.
Garage Sale· Hugo 3

day.
'
Garage Sate· 75 Slate
Street on Saturday, Sap·
tember 29 only Household
goods, childrens clothing,
e•erc ise equopment, picture
frames and more.
tnsode &amp; out, 4 rooms full,
sweeper. all clothes $.50 &amp;
under, 1699 McCormick
Rd., 10am·1 . .26th, 271h,
28th
Saturday 9129. B· t 2. 2359
Graham School in CentenaAntoques, clothes, lurnl·
turo, NFL cards and collect·
ables, reco•ds.

ry.

14

YAR!l SAI..t:•

I'&lt;&gt;MEROY/MJI&gt;fJLE

~n~t~~~~c;;n;t~~!sit~~~j
Chester on AI 7, Thursday
&amp; Friday.
- - - - - - -- - · Gara""' sale· october 1-4,
·Bradbury Churchparsonage
beside
WYVKJWMPO,
39558 Bradbury Roed. Mid·
dleport, 9:00·4.00

"':::::..~In
IIVolloblo an on_,

Pomeroy,

QUality l'louseeleanlng,

~:~~~~~:an~~~~c~~~s~.::

House for Sale. ,5

r

..!.,~-

·~""""

132 aorta wllh pond, Iota of
atondlng tlmbor, lovely 4
bedroom, 2· 112 bath home,

~~~':'~

•

'0

(? 4 ~) 256 .~~3 lf no anaw!.

:.:;

spot Cali (740)-448-26Br"'
(740)256-6593 after 4pm for

~~~-~;:!~~:;__.:__,
Aooma
llusiNi!si

opmenta~ Dlsabolltlas Is W t dt
1o Ida" I Middlepon, 6 rooms, bath,
11
l~lng for LPN. 16 hours th:ne hoc~e
111 "1 ~renovated, good neighbor·

per week. Apply In person

OH

"(7:'11i40rol:.;44.;.t;.-03~1~0----,

r

AND

A Leading provider 10 serv· lute best Call for a free aatl· and Balh. r 112 acreo.
mate. (740'256·rt3t or r· S25,000
at
Ewln_gton. ~.
lcoo to Individuals with Men·
r
174014443 6598

vantageous but not ro·
quired. Please lax your re·
sumo to 1·606·836·9617 or
E-mail
to

aor for

r

hood, $36,000, lmmtdlala
possession,
phono
(7401365·9124, no Sunday
calls, Lloyd &amp; Fom Grimm.

i

I

down. (740)448·3093

M

ca~eelandOzoomnet.net or An

equal opportunity em·
Ma1l to Arby's, 201 Stewart player (740)448·4814

Ave.,

wonhlngton,

KV

==·..o.;,.=:.::.:.::.:...:...__

Tara

OIIILEn-~

lll'll!""'-':"----.,
r16
I

WANTS YOUI
Bob Evan•
Restaurant In
Gallipolis, OH, Ia
looking to fill
positions fora
lull·tlme night
cook and a fUll·

Be Your Own Bosal
From Homel
Earn $500·$8000/MO
~TIFTE • · N
0

time night bua
person. Stert
out ~!th good

pay, u.nefltl,.

ecessary

!JI;PBIIUOCe

t-8 68•270 .()064
www.Never9To5Agaln.com
Caauol Port nmo Dlrecl
caro Stall
A leading provider of oerv·
Ice to tndlvlduata with Man·
tal Retardallon and Dovel·
opmental Dleabllltlos Ia
looking for casual part time

fun family ·
atmosphere,
piUS
opportunhy for
advancement.
Apply 11:
Bob Evon•
315 Upper River Rood

~

prallled al

In peraon at Middleton Eo·
tales . 8204 Carla Drive.

(

$g~;r;.r :u~~nl\,;;~~:

Gllllpolla, Ohio

740) 448-6 369

Opponunlty
Employer.
FIMIOV.
Sales Person. Must ))avo 2
CNA's HHA'
C rtlll d yoaro eKperle nce In sates of
home,;,ake
~ e lumbar &amp; hardware. Send

!..J..,

vida In ho~; oerv,."/~;
eldariyldloabled In Mason &amp;
Putnam county aroos. Coli
1·888·453-4992
Full·tlmo dental aoolotant
position. Muat bo avalloble
Monda" thru Saturdau
•
"
8am·8pm. Please submit re·
eume to 995 Jeckaon Plkt,
Galllpolla OH 415131 .
'
FUNDRAIIING
DIREC'IiOR
Nel&lt;ll&lt;llor your orea
lo wO&lt;k with ochoolo,
PT,to;a and coachoa.Eat. Co.
Avg. 111
f!IO.MOK
140.141 1140

!'·

Garbage Service Needo De·
pandablo drtvor/looder with
COL. Experience driving
top-heavy trucks a plus.
(740)388-9686

Gat paid for Evaluating Cuo:%':.r =lcr.;n o';"'~~~~:
PleaH vlalt -.·-"·t~
""" ~"" ..,..
none .com to complete a
convonlonlappllcltlon.

:~,':~1°f~~~~PD~~it'r.'~:

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know. and NOT to eend
money through 111e moll until
you have lnveatlgeted the
offering.
Start Your Bualneaa Today... Primo Shopping Contor Space Available At AI·
fordable Rale. ~ VoHay
Pia••· Call740
tOr .

r . , ____,.

&lt;I&lt;VI'=M'II\L

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
No Fea Union We Wlnl
1·688·562·3345

lloMEl

FOR SALE

Apart- 7 1/2 and Size med. Coat

FOR JUC~~t

•

Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1

month. . Depoo~

"-"="'YI=·-----

0

1

r •

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

HUNTING OR

130418715-4088

1

~~a':aar,a $50.; ;wr:;

fumlshed apt. Upper Duple• FirewOOd for sale, $150

MI. Vomon Ave. No Pets. loed. l740)441-9478
No Smokera. $265, + Elec· Furniture, appllanctll. dryer.

trfc. References. $200. D• waterbed, music equipment,
posit. (3041875-2651
. stereo's, etc. Low prlcea,
Vory nice, 2·3 bedroom (740)448-7625
apartment, In town, large
kitchen, LR, $500/mo. Rat· Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
erences &amp; deposit required. Repairs. Problema? Need
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr.
(740)446-3844
740-446·4525
ll:lll"--~----, Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4
SPA&lt;E
for$10. Open sat. 6-Spm. &amp;
FUR RtNf
evenings. Dewhurst Greenhouse MI. Alto. (3041895-

I

i u---_u-·-

3 bedroo~ hoUH lor ullin
MlddlepOn , call Tom Ander·
son altar 5pm, 1740)992·
3348

~i:thJ.o~~gy~:,~r~~·Y ~r~ =1~.·~:m: :Sb~ ~·~~~~

tat limo buytra· Govern·
rntnt loane· b~OI.nl &amp;
~
3 Ook·

r::i.,

2· 12•40 mobil~

bile homt, 11,1100 or 14,100
fo\ ~ rh':' (740)44t-02t9
cal or : pm.
2axll0 3 Or 4 Bedroom On·

00

ly · $345.00 Por . Month
6.99% FIKI&lt;I 1 - Rata,
1-888•926-34211
Athlon&lt;l FlootwOOd 2002
Doublowldo •21221 lioll
FIN BBB-805-I5It'; rO rnln
from Hunll""'~
.,._..
Alhlond F l - Bagram.
ber ....... al
i x70
•~:.""'e · 2002F 4~-'
~.:;..,. 11 NO ,.. """
&amp; Satu •
FIN 1
805-&amp;Bfti

-eee:

Aooumablo loona• Many
::r."(7•:~~11or do.
·
r--:
·
Deluat homt .... 16 445

new 2000

t and 2 bedroom apan·
manto furnished and unfur·
nlohed, oacurlly clopoolt re·
qulrl&lt;l. no poll, 740-992·
2218.

tat%

~,:r~Y,!~r~':~:

.i;,

rio

llouirHoiJI
ro~

Applloncea: Reconditioned
waahere, Dryuers'li, Ra90ngD ea,
Refrigratolll, P o
aye
Guaranteed! We Sell New
Mayrag Appllenc .., Franoh
City Maytag, 741J.446·7795 . .
For Safe·. Rocondlti·Jned

=·

•

76

Ho~or,

~:~~~'

btcl=:

•

;:Or:i:e';:tll

;.-vr

heat, :II

"';;..,

!:!!",
742 7 3 s'/:'
~hat 5pm: ·~,;.~·hom-;and·hil~·
:C~Iki.;: ~~~; ~~;: ::7.~~·
rentala. Commt~lal otoreIronto ovollablo for leaH.
Vecancleo now. ·
Fumllhod e~lct.ncy all utll·
ltloa pold lhere bait. Stas
month, 19 2nd AVenue.
(7401446-3945.

9

St80· G E rofrf ,.,., froor
lree,' . St50; ga Skagge
Appliances 76 Vine Srrott
G 111 11 ' 17•• , 44• 7••8t
a po s,
_, •• Hours t0am-4pm, Mon&lt;ley·
r~y. saturday by appoint·
mont.

Ohio,
·

1-eoo-

Whila't MOlal Detector
Spectrum XLT, altowa ftn&lt;l
dlplh S600 (paid ovet
1600 Ukt ~ (304)6755418 ·
:::--:---:-:-----Wln&lt;llow Air Conditioner.
Workl Groat. S50 oeo.
(7401992-7116

i

•.

..r_.........._, IIIII!'--::~_, ,::=:::::::==:8/H R

l..rio----._, ........

l.o.tloiiiiliiiii.......

BloCk. ~Ck, sewer pi pea, Jonn Deere 6820 titan II
windows, lintels, etc. Cleudo combine. Call (3041675· 1956 Chevy Balolre, 4 dr.,
Wlntero, Rio Grande, OH 4308
raetora to o~lnal, r07,000
Call740-245-512t.
actual mllee, 16200 OBO.
740 742 8900
1 1 '
·
.......,
lJvlmocK
~
· - - - - - - · 1979 Ford T·Bird 351 modi·
~
fied, runa, bOdy neado ·
Aclorablelull bloodod Mlnla· 4 year old AOHA Incentive ...
'300w; ·-res, passo'r .
L..
Fund Mare with 120 clays
u
~:riiJ
tura Collies, 5 w-s .old, 1 WI
d 4276.
11
11
$75, malea &amp; females. ridng.
meko • aroun
(740)44t.Q865 .
proopect.(740)44t ·1015
1993 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Supreme, 4 door, Rod Exta·
ve "'tNt Hound pu~ Rl&lt;l rock hens for sale rtor, Bleck lnrenor, PW, PL,
A"'
...-- $2 00
h 304 773 711,
plea, vel ch8Ckl&lt;l, 8wk old. ·
eac
•
•
PD. AIC, $2500 OBO.
$175. (3041576-2126
"'304- 773-6395 ·
(740)446·9236
u.. &amp;
AI&lt;C Sheltle pupploa, aa·
...,.y
t 997 Cavalier 49,500 mllea,
blea, Tri, bl blar:l&lt;, bluo
GIWN
. 35-45 MPG, c/d, air, auto,
Mlnlalure
_new tir... pay off $7,000,
merit; AKC
Schnouzars. aaiUpepper, Buck 1 bola sale fi&lt;IUOr&amp; (7401949·2221
block/silver, $300 each'
·
•
(flml), vot checkl&lt;l &amp; ohota, beleo $1 .00 other hey up to r997 Lumina, 14,995. 1992
(740)888·1085
12.00, round balta 515·00 Grand Am, $1,7Q5. 1990
each 304-676-4869
Gran-Prix, $1,986. 1993
Malo MlnlaMo Dachshund--------::- Covallor, 12,196. r992 Cor·
poppy. red, Vel tackl&lt;l, flrot Hay · &amp; Bright Wlro Tie olea, $2,485. COOK II().
lhota. Porontt on premiHo. Sk~w. Year 'Roun&lt;l Oallvary 'liORI. (740)o448-01 03
$150. (304)1176-5984
&amp; Voluma Olacount Avella·
bit.
H"ltage
Farm. 1998 Ford Contour LX, 4
Mll!iiCAL
(304)675·5724.
.lil8nuJMI;:Mli
cylln&lt;ltr, 76,000 mllao, dark
groan, 4 door, NADA
iljjr;;~:i;io;~-, 17,000 uklng $5,700. Ro·
Flute, LaBlanc Vito, uud 3- I'
duel&lt;! 11200. (740)446•
2124.
4 llmoa, now $515, aetl
$350, mualc otandl ceea,
booka (740j367 7028
2000 Camry LE. Exctllent
.
•
1891 Chevy cavalier Runa Condition. $17,000 080 or
FRuns &amp;
good, but neado · Call take
over
paymonto.
VI!:GE'Il\IIWl
(304)662·2539
,(7...:
40:!1::.245-05:::.:::.':..:9':-:-:-::"-

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·-.iiiiiiiliiiiiiiil,_pl
.,
Aloharda

Brothera

t985 Hariay Sportaler, 1000

Fruit custom,

Farm.
APPLES
AND
MUCH MORE. 24 mllto
North ol Qofllpotla on Coun·
ty Rood 46. (740)286-4684.

$4500. 1979 Mua·

j

Wns

I

s. o"'

oc

FOR ALE

·

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97 Aatro Van, 56,000 miltl,

j

Auro r,.n••
"·~ &amp;

l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio;.lllliiioa

ACCESSOIU&amp;'i

~

Aro you looking lor englnea
or tronsrnloaR&gt;no? Give me
1 cell ar (740'44e·05t9
1
ludgol Prlcad Tranoml•
alono All Typeo, Acceaa Tc
Over 10,000 Tronamloslona
Trenofer Caaes, 740·24&amp;
15177, Cell: 339·3765.

r

•xcellent

(

•

...

(

,,I

•

s

RT. 7 PIZZA &amp; RACINE
PIZZA EXPRESS

Buy any Large
Pizza
Get Second

1/2 PRICE
992-9200 949-4900

740-992-0298

Advertise your
message

Q\IES

19119 Coachman Catailne
37 foot, 2 slide outs, loeda&lt;
(7 ,24_5.9480
40r

•

on the "T" in Middleport, Ohio

CAMPEHS&amp;
H
OIUM

•

SUE'S SELECTABLES

.

M

In d00 r

New Business Opening
Oct. 1

___,;_,.;_ _ __

·

Ll"ght

Work
1 888
I 974.
J B
0

wench. Hao Door Aacko.
Eu:cnu Ll
(7401446-8691
RErluGE~ION
--~..,..-=-:-:-:--:: ~
r998 Honda TAX 300, 2
wfiMI drive, Good Cond., Realdenllal or commerclot
WOO, (7401949-3061
wiring, new service or ro·
pairs. Mastorllcansodelec·
t8851oedod2dr. B ~!.~.~~
trlclon. Ridenour Electrical,
fully
• _,..,..
WV000306, 30&lt;\•675·t 786.
al1t&lt; llpm.
. lllll:"'":'""~::-~'::"""1

1992 Ford Bronco XLT 4M4
300, B cyflndor', 5 apoed, air,
1111, cruiM, w/1, new
"'"· aluminum - I s, IK·
cetlant conrllton, 14900.
(7401902·7584

tang, 4 speed. V-6, good
condition, $1,400 . 1979
Chevy motor homt. et&lt;COI·
lent cond~lon, $3,500; r99r
Gao . Priam, automttlc,
I \In I "I 1'1'1 II.._,
$2,000. 1887 Novo, 5·
1907 FOrd F·150 XLT, met·
,\ I I \ I "It h 1,
speed, SBOO. 1()(125 motor• 1967 Ford 4X4 XLT Lariat. alllo blue, 75K, 4K4, flare·
croas bike, $1 ,000. Bear New paint ctean. rune great. aide, a· lift, 33' tlras, w1th
Act angina ,Anaiyler with 4 13500 1304087s-aas9
Leer roppor, very clean .
gaa. Great lor begiMera,
·
(74014&lt;18·6323.
$300. (7401388·9518 or 2000 Toyota Tacomo Ex·
(7401386-8071.
tondl&lt;l cab, 4, 4, loodl&lt;l, ·11196 Jaep Wrangler, stand·
52 Caae
&amp; 5' Bruah hog
27 600 milts Sr5 600' ard no AIC, alum. wheels,
'fer 111100 &amp; SmeH chlld'l 1997 Pontiac G rand Prl~ r 9i7 CheVy TMk 350• 2x4: , 53,000 mites, olden&lt;led. 7·
'
S 00 QT. Appro,;. 87,000 mUe1.
' ~r. 100 ,000 mile warranty.
'Oo-Kan 5 horae,
1
(7401742-4008
looks rough, runs groat. 304·6'15·6694
304·675·
(740)843-5217
11100. (3041S76-308S
28r7 aMer 4pm S10,000.

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

fllsDodgaorFord'98down
loaded, negotiable,
mont condi· Unoonditional
llletime guar·
$350 (7~\992·5&amp;32
' laather,
tlon , $6,700
antee. Local references
fur·
• · '
•
(740)379·2268 .
nlahl&lt;l. Establishad r975.
v, &amp;
Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
....
92. Pontiac Tranapon,'ioed· 0870,
1-600·287·0576 .
•
Rog&amp;l'l Waterproof ing.
ad. lookl good, runs good,
Che
3,000 ClBO. (7401441· ,..,...,.--..,--:--::-1 Bluer, 1658
1885
vy
c&amp;cGanoraiHomeMalnte·
4K4,
alklng
St 800 ll'll"_ _ _ _ _ _.,
(7401992-2r87
nonce· Painting, vinyl Sid·
MOI'OIICYCLE'l
lng, carpentry, doors, win- ·
dowo, beths, mobile homo
1990 Ford Bronco liLT, 4' 4• ..._ _ _ _ _ __,.. repair and more. For lree
AJC,
good
condition,
estimate call Chet, 740.992·
$3,000. (7401992-4034.
t 905 Yamane Kodiak 400.
8323
_.,_ _.._.,_-:~~· 4•4. Hao Snow Blade and
·

olr, crulot, lilt, PW, rL,
AMIFM CooNUe, ~uaf , air
bago, ABS, ooato 7, like
new, (7401379·2r34 leovo
menage.
99 Ford F·250, 4M4, tully
loaded, power, old pO!yor,
tow package, blOCk &amp; gold,
4 300 miles
$21 000
-86 Chollrollt Celebrity, loll r/401992 •5532'·
'
'
4
of new partl, n.w motor,
1G94 314 ton, extanded cab,
ely, auto, Sr ,000 firm, 4x4, SLE, fully lol&lt;led, good
(7401992·6532.
condition, bucket soalo,
TRUCKS
82,000 mlleo, Sr2,000.
S
(7401446·1068

j

$

83 Oodga Ram 8 cyf. 225
auto, very good cond. muil 1992 Ford E•plorer 4K4
aell304-675-8832
Eddie Bauer, Blue/Tan:
Leer full alze truck topper, r03,000 milaa . . aunroo t,

condillor l•wtllttilii

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

l~tlltlil1i .

8i Dodge Camper Van, sa
contained, eKcellent cond
tlon, garage kept, low mllr
age, must sell. leavln · - - - •
state. Celll7401709·4444

•

(

•

814 4 751

..

Huge Inventory, Dlocount
Prices, 011 Vinyl Skirting,
Doors, Windows, Anohora,
Water Heaters. Plumbing &amp;
Electrical PaM, Fumacat &amp;
Heat Pumpo. Bannat1o Mobile Home Supply, 740·446·
9416 www.orvb.com/ben·
nett

iaooJ rnonu,

(304)662·2018
4 bedroom, unfurnlahl&lt;l.
FrH ~lloat and oook
with.
. Dtpoalt ,...
qulred. Mutt algn a Jouo.
No peta, 1100 a 2 btcltoom.
(7401248-6522

°

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabul~ In
Stock. Coli Ron Evant, t ·
1101).537·9526.
•
MOIIILE HOME OWNER$ •

•--lliUUUU&gt;iiiiiii--r'

,eq....:cl:

Mobl~ ~

lng &amp;
COIM
screened In polio poroh, 2 - · US 80 EU1, All&gt;
car garage S78,000.
ono, 011, 741J.B92•tt;72
EKcetlont Con&lt;lltlon r899
Commerlcal loll for aate or Sh ltz •--··to ,~ 80
loaso. in Pt. PltoHn1 ·304·
u ~-t n. uX • 3
727 •33 ra call between Bedroorn,2fullbotha,Appil·
Spm·t 2.
ancoa Included, Waahor
/Oryor. CIA, S~rtlng, t8x20
Declr. Gao Hoot: (74014462895

urupecified cardiac event."
A call to the university's team physician
was not immediately returned.
Senn fell to the ground with 19:06
remaining and Ohio State trailing 2-1
Wednesday night at Lee Jackson field. The
match was ended at that point.
Ohio State's match Saturday against
Wisconsin also was suspended.
Senn was four-year letterwinner and
starter at center midfield at Granville High
School and was an all-league selection.

THE NAME, AND FOR other minerals , the
All coal, oil ond gaa,
THE USE Of THE
proper preservi11on of and other mlntralt
BOARD OF MEIGS
the highway rna• not underlying the above
•
COUNTY
be Impaired.
deocrlbod property.
COMMISSIONERS.•
PARCEL 2tJ.WVR1
and all exlallng rlghlo
Sllu•tad In the
MEG·t24-22.72
to mine, extract, and
townahlp of Choater,
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
remove the aame,
County of Melgt, State
ANO INTEREST IN
ahall be, and the ume
ol Ohio , 1nd In FEE SIMPLE IN THE
hereby are, excepted
Section 33, Town 3N ,
FOLLOWING
and reoervtd unto
Range 12W,
and
DESCRIBED
Ownara, and their
bounded
and PROPERTYWITHOUT helra ,
encuton,
dacrlbed aolollow1:
LIMITATION OF
admlnlatratora,
Being a porcel of
EXISTINGACCESS
oucc1nora
and
land lying along the
RIGHTS, ANO
anlgn•
lar1ver ;
l1lt •Ida of the
EXCLUDING COAL,
provided, how1ver, In
centerline survey,
OIL AND GAS, AND
oa mining, tlll,.ctlng,
made
by
the
OTHER EXISTING
and removing aal d
dapartment
of MINERAL RIGHTS IN coal, oil and gal, and
Tranoportatlon, and THE NAME, AND FOR other mlnerall, the
btlnn - located wl1hln
THE USE OF THE
proper preaervllllon ol
•
the boundary points of
BOARD OF MEIGS
th hi h
parcel No . 20 as
COUNTY
•
g way may no1
delineated upon the
COMMISSIONERS
be Impaired.
Department
o1
Situated In the
Pursuant 1 Civil
Tranaportitlon'a right· Township of Chaster, Rule 12 (A)(t), said
ol·way plan MEG-124· County of Melga, State persona mentioned
22.72, and recorded ot Ohio, and In abavo shall take
on A!W Plat Sheet No. Section 33, Town 3N, further notice that
18 I n PI at g oo k 5 , R angt 12 w,
an d they have 28 daya
Page 97. ol the bounded
and • 11 or the complaUon al
1 ~•
recorder'a
Olllce, descrlbedaa lollowa:
Service
by
Melga County, Ohio.
Being a parcel ol Publication within
It Ia understood that land lying along the which to anawer or
aold parcol ol ·land right ai da ol the otharwlae deland
contains 0.640 acres, centerline survey, agalnat Plalntlll 'a
mora or leas Inclusive rna de
by
the petition.
ol the prea~nt road, department
ol
The original ol any
which occupleo 0 .227 Tranaport11lon, and . such anawer or o1har
acras, more or leso .
being located within pleading delendln,g
Thta parcel wao the boundary poln1a ol agalnat Plalntlll •
based upon a s urvey Parcel No. 20 u petition muot be IUed
made lor the Ohio delineated upon the wl1h the Clerk of the
Department
of Department.
of Common Pleas Court
Transporlallon
In Transportation's rtght· 91 Melga County, Ohio,
1999· 2000 b McCo ol·way plan MEG 124· at Melgo County
Aaaoclatea ~nc. an~ 22.72, and recorded Courthouoe ,
100
ME
' 1
Second Street PO
1
'
compan as nc., on RIW Plat Sheet No.
'
• .
under the direction of t8 in Plat Book 5 Box 151 , Pomeroy,
Kevin
L.
Stacy, Pa'ge 97 , of lh~ Ohio 45789 ; and, a
Registered Surveyor Reeorder'a
0111ce, copy ol any such
Meigs County, Ohio.
answer or other
7531
Prior Instrument
Ills understood that pleading defending
A 1
.
agalnat
Plalntlll'a
e arence . 011 lc 1a 1 said parcel ol land
Record 1 on Page 793 contains 0.409 acres, petition muot bl
and Official Record 5, more or leta, lncluolve served upo~~IRLEY E.
Page 253 • Melg,o ol the preoent road,
CHAPMAN (0081828)
g~;:,:ty Recorders :~.:. :~:~~l~i~~ 34
Aasla1ant Attorney
Th~.
abo v a
This parcel was
General
deocrlbed 0.840 acrea, baaed upon a aurvey 37 Weal Broad Slrell,
more or laaa, ol which made lor the Ohto
Suite 350
the preaenl road Department
of
Columbuo, Ohio
occupies 0.227 acres, Transportation
In
( 4)3 2!~ 1 32
more or less, are to be t999·2000 by McCoy
.,.,....
deleted lrom Audllor'a Assocla1ee, Inc. and
FAX (814) 468·17151
Parcel 03~0378.000.
M•E Companies Inc.,
E·mall:
OWner, lor hlmoell under the direction of schapmanOag.atata.o
and
hla
hairs Kevin
L.
Stacy,
.
h .ua
executors,
' Reglatered Surveyor
Attorney lor Plalntlll
admlnlatratora,
7531
.
A !allure to anawer
•ucceaaora
and
Prior Instrument or otharwlte deland
aaalgna, r•urvea all Ra1erence : Official within aold 28 dlya
ulallng right• of ·Record 1 on Page 793 will reault In Ptolnllll,
lngreaa and egresa to and Olllclal Record 5 pursuant to Civil Rule
and from any residual 1'age 253 __Melg,j 55, asking the court to
area.
Counly . A~corder's grant- a judgment- byOlllce
r;lal,.ull agalnat any
All coal, oil and gae,
Th~
a b 0 v e auch person who·talla
and other minerals described 0.409 acres , to
a nawer
or
underlying the above more or less , ol which olherwlae defend.
described property, the praaent road
Gordon Proclor,
and all existing rights occupleo 0.234 acres,
Director
to mine, extract, and more or leas, are to be
Ohio O.parlmant ol
remove th·e same , deleted from auditor's
Tranaportllllon
shall be, and the same Parcel 03·00376.000.
9/20, 27
hereby are, excepted,
Ownar, lor himself
and reserved . unto and
his
he ira,
Owners, and their executors,
heirs,
executors , administrators,
admlnlatratora,
succeaaars
and
successors
and asolgna, reserves all
aaalgns
forever ; existing rights of
provided, however, In lngreaa and egress to
so mining, extracting , and from any residual
and removing said area.
coal, oil and gaa, and

Opportunity. (740)441 - 1982 •

mOdtt '""'tOo :1 a

btdroom 2 ~ 111 ::::!:: ..!.._
• - •~
trlc. vinyl &amp; ohlnglo, lew

•

====::c.____

I

r•o

7"

3740 leave messa'ge. or

waahera, dryelll and ref~· - - - - - - - - t Bedroom Apartment, Re· eratora. Thompsons Appti· Movl~st Solll Brown
frlgorator, Range,. AIC In·
~- ~,? ~=-n Av.. eanbnt &amp; 4 &amp;0hCalhllra.' SI2505 .
eluded, 1269 Plue Depoall &amp; _...:.......:"'------ •· 10
Rot.no.-. HUD Approved. Kincaid dining room HI· Weight Machine StOO.
(7401441-1518
pedeotal tabla with 21sovu, (3041BB2·3B87 •
r Bo&lt;lroom Apt., Range, 6 cholra &amp; hutch. Solid NEW AND UBED fUR· .
Rofridgoraror, AIC Included . wood. All~ $460. Phont NANCES FOR IAL!I Wt
Houlis
Dtpoelt and ' Reference (740)446
after 5pm .
lnltall, Free Eatlmllll, If
(7401446-1370
Main Stroot Furniture
you doni Call Ul, Wt both
6308 1'
1&amp;2 bodroom, near
(304)875-1422
oconomlcal utllltiM, 1279 to
515 Main Street, Point
.
t ..a Bedrooma For.aloHd 137G ~r month plua utllliiH
Pleasant
Nureea unlfOrml. Slzt 2x
-From SlUG/Mo., 4"' (740)-448-2957
and 3•. 3 aota paid over
~F 30LI~r"' ~~:
Now &amp; Uol&lt;l Fumlture
$100. Sell
for
$40.
· or
filii,
tbr. Apt. $300. a month, all New 2 Place LMill,lroono 17401992·7118
3323 el\1: r709. .
•. utlitieo lnoludo&lt;l: 1200. Sa· Sultto, $399. Buy, qo,l,
AEIIDEN11AL HOM!
1304167
1 bedroom, · AJC; t both, ~~ Dtpoolt.
&amp;· Trade.
OWNIRI
kitchen
11H IPf)llanooe,
Now and Uud Furniture
2nd Avonuo, Gotllpollo, '3 Rooms and Bath. 46 Olivo llors below Holklay Inn, l&lt;a· Tappan HI EWicienoy 110%
f380/mo. (7401448 4859
Strott. Ulllltloa Paid. Stove neuge. Wo ltll grave monu· Gu Fumeceo, Oil Furno·
1 lovtl 3 bod- 1 &amp; t/2 an&lt;l Rol~rotor No p.._, mania an&lt;l VIOII . Houro coo, 12 .S atr Het1 Pump &amp;
both, .;_,1111 llr, {cor ga· 1496 '"ua depotlt. Reloro": Monday thru Seturday 11· Air Conditioning Syllemo
""" In Mlddtt...., 1428 Cll Riqulrod. (7401446 3pm. (740)-448-4762
FIN 8 Vur W•~:~T, 9oJn.
""
""'··
3945
nodo Hoatlng &amp;
lng, . t •
pluo depoai1 &amp; rolorenceo,
Nloe uNd tumlturaiiPI!tlln• 8 0 0 • 8 1 2 • 5 1 6 7
(740)992-etl26.
647 5th Avonut, r bed· cas.. (74014&lt;18· 1004 or WWWIH'Ibcom/bennad
room, weaherl dryor hooi&lt;· (740"''"-2180
-:--'--:',-...:.:.c_.:..:;.
__
2 bedroom homl OloM to
.. "
'ft'lll'\':11
f'T"'V"
•
R
up. (7-)-448-·Storoge vans with rotl up
;:"• · lvar view,
APART Solid O.k Tr- Table w/8 doors 38 H to 46 H ,11100'
;nm".;.~
:~~~~LIUDOI!T PR~ chllro, matching hutch/ buf• NOh .. Nica (740)448.7600
ClllcX,
Rill
Cll AT JACKION 1 .. let. I yaarw old, perfoct oon· ::::=::-:::-:':':-:-.;;..,~~~
40
.,...·and dopollt
TATII, 52 WII1WOOCI Drlvt ~~~;· .:~r~:io~ !::
DRILI.ID.
(740)-448-:1644,
from 1287 to 1383. Wolk to daya anytime· Saturda~ &amp; :;.;;=:.:::=-7--=-:-,...-~~lhop a movieS. CaM 740- Sunday
Wllorllna Special: 314 200
llldroom HouN, !Iongo, 4&lt;18·21518. Equal Houolng
'
.
P$1 121.85 Per tOO; 1' 200
NC, RllriQOJU&gt;r lnoludod. Opporrunity.
Whirlpool waohar, wtllta, PSI $37.00 Por 100; All
"--1~ lnd Relorenoeo
•·· d "' s~ Whirlpool Bratt Comp- Flttl
~)-448-r370
. Chritty'o Family Living
~~
duty In Srock.
1'1111
Bedroom ••
month ~~40
Umo
•• R d ., ~~ :
~ryor,
'ne
: / dutv: RON EVANI INTIRI'III..
1
3
75 1
7

.
· FORRFNr
~Omtl,

1 1,800 IICh, 1• OIC38 mo-

ro1

1

o

Mobile Homt lot lor rent In (3041895·3789

Call {7«J~~•!5t4 Public hunting. Available In $3&amp;01 mo. For more lnfor6•5pm, M·F, O( Arheno, GaiTia, Jookoon, matlon call. (740)448·2738

-------Beautiful River View !doll
For 1 Or 2 People, Raferen·
cea, Otpoalt, No Pels, Fo•
tor TreMor Park, 741J.441 ·
Or81 .

A

osu mens' ·soccer p·l·ayer odl•es

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - An Ohio State
men's soccer player collapsed during a
match at.the University ofAkron and died
early Thursday morning.
Connor Senn, a 5-foot-11, 162-pound
freshman from Granville, collapsed during
the second half of the match. The IS-yearold was attended to by the medical staffs of
both schools and then traruported to
Akron City Hospital where he later died.
Ohio State's sports information department said the cause of·'death was "an

dloablad. EHO.
frame with madreoa &amp;
apringo, $20. 1304l875-r534
Vary Nics small t bedroom

j

INEATHSECCOUOiriMOON
Ohio.
P
L
AT f
ltlo understood thlt
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO uld p1rctl ol land
Gordon Proclor
contllna 9.271 1crea,
Dlrwctor
more or lell, lnclualve
Ohio o.p&amp;rlmlnl 01
ol 1he preaent ro1d,
~!'nr.tlon,
which occuploa 0.173
•c-. mo,. or fell.
Thla parcel wu
o.'i.:!~ler, 1111 • b1Md upon 1 aurv1y
Judge Crow .
m•d• lor the Ohio
CaHNo. o 1..cv -t 1
D1p1rtm1nt
of
LEGAL NOTICE FOR · Trlntportotlon
In
PUBLICATION
1181-2000 by McCoy
Joy lath Stobart· Aaaocl1tea; Inc. 1nd
M• E Companle1 Inc.,
Add
U
r•••
nknown, under the dl,.ctlon ol
~:~~••• CU::'k~:~~: Kavln L . Stacy,
·and Unknown owner• Reglaterad Surv•yor
753t.
of •ny lltlll, 1111•, or
Prior lnatrumont
lnte,.at In or to th1
aurf•c• ol, or In or 10 Reltrlnce : Olllclol
record 1 on P1ga 793
thl coal, oil, gsa •nd 1nd Offlclei' Ricord 5,
any •nd 111 other P1ge 253, Melga
mlnarlla, altull•d on County Rtcordtr'a
or In th• premia•• Offlct
doacrlbed In lhla
01 • the
above
Petition 11 Pa,...l 20. deacrlbed area 8 280
WilL, 20-WVA and 20. ac,.a, more or ... 11,
' oI
WVA1 w Ill I 1 k1 noIIce which I hi pruen1
thll !hay have beln road occuplea O.t73
named •• delendanll acreo, mora or len,
by Gordon Proctor, ,,. to be dtleted from
Director
Ohio Audltor'a Parcel 03·
Deparlmlnl
ol 00371.000; and 0.&amp;&amp;1
Tranaporlatlon, who ac,.a more or leaa ol
~:~~~~n~N:dl~1 · whlc~ the prea~nt
In the comin:.,- Pin: ro•d occuplea 0.000
Court
ol
Moina acrll, moll or leto,
Coun"' Ohio, whlch.la a,.lo be deleted from
'"
Auditor•• Plrcel 03 •
1o
an
ac 11 on
lpproprlata cert•ln 00378.000.
property lor highway
Owners, and their
purpona, n•maly the halra,
executon,
moklng, conatructlng, ldmlnlat,.tora,
or lmprovln" of Still aucceaaora
and
Rout• 124,• Section ualgna lorevlr, are
d I ft ~- hlreby dlveated olany
22 728
vaiu.~f:ld ~ X'":' lnd 111 abutter's
..,._
rtyp opertyhl right&amp;
lncludlnn
.... prope
aoug
•
•
to be epproprlilld Ia ICCIII rlghta In, ov•r
more
1peclllcall• end to the lbove
deacrlblclll iollowa:' deacrlbed real eatato,
PARCEL :ZO..WLA
Including auch rlghto
MEG-124-22 72
with reapect to •ny
ALL RIGHt mLE
highway
leclllty
AND INTEREST IN FEE conalructad thereon.
SIMPLE IN THE
All coal, oil and gao,
FOLLOWING
and other mlnarala
DESCRIBED
underlying 1h• above
described property,
PAOPEATY,
INCLUDING
~nd
axlatlng rlghto
0 m ne, extract, and
LIMITATION OF
remove the aame,
ACCESS, BUT
EXCLUDING COAL, ·ahall be, and the ume
hereby a,., •xcaptlll
OIL AND GAS, AND
OTHEAEXISTING
and raaorved unto
MINERAL RIGHtS
Owner&amp;, and their
Situated In 1he helra,
executora,
townahlp ol Chaatar, admlnlalratora,
County of Mllga, Stile auccuaora
and
of Ohio and ln·Sacllan aulgna
Ia rever
33, To~n - 3N, Aange provided, however, In
12W and bounded ·and so mining, extracting,
deac:rlblciMiallowa : and removing said
BIIng • parcel ol coal, all and gao, and
lond lying along . the other mlnarala th1
1111 and right aida al prapar proaarvatlon
tha centarllna al • for lha highway may
ourvey, mad• by the not be Impaired.
Deparlmlnl
of
PARCEL2tJ.WVA
Tranaporletlon, •nd
MEG ·124-22.72
being IOceled within
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
1he bound1ry point&amp; al
AND INTEREST IN
Parcal No. 20 •• FEE SIMPLE IN THE
dalln11t1d upon the
FOLLOWING
D1p1rtmenl
of
DESCRIBED
Trtlnaporlltlan'a right· PROPERTY WITHOUT
al•way pl1n MEG·124·
LIMITATION OF
22.72 and recorded on
EXISTING ACCESS
RIW Plat ShHI No. 18,
RIGHTS, AND
In Plat Soak I, Pag• EXCLUDING COAL,
17, of the Recorder'• OIL AND GAS, AND
Office, M1lga County
OTHER EXISTING
' MINERAL RIGHTS IN

0

acro tfiO!o, """"'adjoining laundry room, quiet location.

Plkl, ScloiO an&lt;l Hocking
County, also Lawio Co., KY.
For more Information and
LYIUDIUI."~
FIIIE mapo conract:
1 Anthon.LAnd Co., Ltd.
I'UR ""'-&amp;
t
2t~
12•65 2 badloom, goa hoOt,
-.olclond.oom
lalrcondlllon, l2,500; t4x51 LOOking To Buy A New
2 be&lt;lroom, Ill tl101rfo, good Hontt? Don' Hovo Land?
condition, 16,1100. (740)o448- Wt Dolll Hurry Oniu tO Lota
4734
. (740)387·7015 Lelt 304·736-7295'
(740)44r ·1337
.
'
.
Prima 2·112 aero lot lor
r8 Wldo. Only St96.00 Per building on·locatl&lt;l on quiet
Month, 8 .99% FIMed lntlmt road, IICluded area, Out·
Rate Wdh Air . And Un- ai&lt;lo of city llmlta In Spring.
d8rplnnlng Hl66-1128-3426 !laid Townahlp. Aaktng
1993 Cia,.nn 18,80 mobile 117,500. Coli lor morelnlo.
•(7401440,4614 Dayo; or
homt 3 br., 2. be. liking (740)o448-3246 Evenings.
5886
000
304
773
:'::,
'
'
altar

BEREA. Ohio (AP) -James Jackson we finally fotind one that's probably
raised eyebrows back on draft day in going to be here for a while."
April when he said t]le Cleveland
Browns coach Butch Davis had JackBrowns could call off their search for a son at Miami so he knew what kind of
feature running back.
player he got when the 5-foot- 10, 210. Jackson arrived saying he was the man. pound Jackson was selected with the
; 1\wo weeks into the season, there's no 65th overall pick in this year's draft.
:doubt he is.
Jackson, who backed up Jacksonville's
The rookie gained 124 yards on 31 Fred Taylor in high school, sat behind
car ries In · Cleveland's 24-14 win over James for two years with the Hurricanes.
the Detroit Lions on Sunday, and But as a part-time player he made the
}lobody - not even former college most of his chances, averaging nearly 7
:teammate Edgerrin James - is qu'es- yards per carry for two years before
Jioning Jackson anymore.
becoming a starter._
.
; "Hopefully, I can go out and get a few
Davis joked that there were many
more of those," Jackson said Wednesday. times when Jackson made him look bad.
"1 wasn't sore, so I think that's the most
"They wanted to fire the coach every
jJositive thing:·
other week," Davis said. "Edgerrin was
• Jackson's 124 yards were the most by a tearing the country up, nobody was
:Browns running pack since 1987, and he tackling him and half the people in the
:bec~e the first Cle~eland back to get . stands thought we were playing the
: )00 yards m a game smce Earnest Byner wrong running back. · .
'James would get his nine carries and
: in 1995.
; He also tied Jim Brown's rookie team would get his 134 yards and have two
:record for attempts and perhaps more 60-yard runs, and everybody would say,
:importantly got James, Indianapolis' star 'See, coach. I told you we're playing the
.;back and Jackson's close friend, to cut wrong guy! He was a good player, and is
; him a little slack.
a good player." ·
, Following a 14-carry, 37-yard effort in
Unable to sign a top free agent back
Jlis NFf.. debut against Seattle, Jackson during the offieason, the Browns seemed
said he caught grief from James and oth- resigned to go into this year with a runer&lt;.
ning-back-by-committee
approach .
"I heard a lot about it on the phone James, however, has changed their thinkfrom my home boys," he said. "Edgerrin ing.
and those guys."
Davis has been reluctant to name
But as he got back to the locker room either Jackson or Jamel White as his
starter during the exhibitioh season or in
on Sunday, his cell phone was ringing.
"Three minutes after the game they the first two weeks of the regular season.
were calling me up;' Jackson said. "They
He still won 't .
just said, 'Good game and we're proud of
"James has started the first two games,
you .' I didn 't rub it in."
and at this time there's no reason to
The Browns' storied history was writ- think that won't continue," Davis said.
Jackson said he could only remember
ten by Hall of Fame running backs such
as Jim Brown, Marion Motley and Leroy one other game when he carried the ball
Kelly. But in their first two years back in as much as he did on Sunday. As a junior,
the league, Clevelan~'s mshing game. was he rushed for 129 yards on 33 carries
not existent, and the· club paraded in all agairut Penn State.
kinds of backs looking for a decent one.
He had prepared himself for a painful
In 1999, Terry Kirby and Karim wake-up call on Monday, but was sur1Abdul-Jabbar got their shots. And last prised to find that he dido 't ache from
year, Travis Prentice and Errict Rhett got head to toe.
the most carries. But there were count"It wasn't bad," he said. "A lot of
less others who came and went.
coaches were asking me all day, 'How's
"I don't think I could list them all," the body?' And I said, 'I'm serious,
quarterback Tim Couch said. "I think coach. I'm fine .'"

t/2 Bath, Fully Cerpered, Dell 486 computer, Win·
r9Q5 t 4K52 single wide for Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· dowa 95, aoun&lt;l card, 14"
rant or aalo. call (740'949- too, Stan S365/Mo. No Pars, monllor, Keyboerd, mouee, ·
Lease Plus Security Deposit word processor, games,
0044 between 6pm·S~
.
Required, Days: 74Cl-446· apeakara, works good.
r995, 3 bedroom, 2 both 3461; Evenings: 740.367· St20. IBM Pentium Desk·
mobile home In Green Tar· 0502, 740-448-0101 .
tops. Internet Ready with
J8Ct trellor ooun. $450 por ApartmontAval1ablo,_ New P~nter. $350 plus lax.
and Rotor·
·Cell
. -(740kdl4a46·29a2 aHor ,7P"'.,
encu required. Call
'TWin Rl- Towora
7468
(740I4&lt;18·
·
. 1304167.5-81178.-EIOCIIfcJiflchalr,_
-j
bta nd 4 h$50;
1 ~~"'-c----1
-,.

·I ~u:-:=;ect~ri= t~ ,:: ':z:r :~i;·~~~y~:BUIIJIINGS

1740 446•3246 lfttr 5pm.

I

3 Bedroom on Ro"tt a,
ter 176 McCormick Road (3041675·5032
aalllpolla. OH 4563 t
'
7 room &amp; bath, with IIOVI &amp;
SECURITY GUARDS
refrigerator, 522 Gronl Si.,
MlddO!port, (7401992·9064.
Temporary security guarda Allordable now home 3
lor up to 6 montha Must
'
·
bedroom, LR, Kitchen, Din·
hove oloan pollee racord, lng Room, bath, aHachtd
good work hlslory, rtllablo garage, nlcoleVIIIot, Prlead
tranaponatlon, valid drlvera 1 h 70' c 1 1o
llctneo, homo phono ond nt o •· 11 rmorodomuat hove black ateel too talla. (740)4&lt;18·280r .
Hilty ahoes. Pay otana at For Mia by ownar: Nloe bl·
16.50 per hour, 32·40 hOurs levol home on t ICII near
por wtok. Call 17401669· Chealar. Throo btclroorn,
2874 Monday-Friday aam· two bathe, one-car garage,
4pm for appointment.
·lamlly, room with fkaplooa,
aun room. Now '*'tral lloat•
SUBSTITUTE TE~CHER lng &amp; ale syatom Ont ml·
'AIDE FOR CHILD CARE nute ott Routt 7, but all!""·
CENTER. Muol have on In· vote. (7401985-398r
"''
teroot and desire to work

Contar 201 High Street.
Point Pieaoent, WV 25550
Wanrl&lt;l oomeono to work
.....
M
on ga.-ga route. ust be
25yoaro,3yearodnvlngox·
1
peronco
, call ovanlngo,
URGENTLY
NEEOED· 17401386-8976
plasma donora, eam 145 lo
$60 lor 2 or 3 hours weekly.
Call Sera· Tee, 740·592·
6651 .

S12uoo. Mike

I

SF.Rvt&lt;Ei

rto

Townhouse

air, laundl)' room , front
'
Middleport, $125 per month
porch &amp; 2·112 Clr gera~.
RICRI!ATION LAND
8 year old Ranch style (740)992-3194
Independent Herballfe OleImmediate po1111110n. Ap- Ranging In 5 ICrt to tOO house. :?: bedroom, 2 bath,
tributor, Call For Product Or

"·--~-·

•

menta. Vary Spacloua, 2 that merch. (304)675·2801

a..,

w/gao log fireplace, control ·

41183.
'"--tttivriiii"""iiiiiii"Jiiiii""iio'• offer.
-,..:.:,-=----,.~~~...........~ '
from
AREA REPS, Individuals ~ BOB EVANS
IN,OTICEI
)

with good schooVcommunlty
contacts to place and super·
vise an ••change studoot.
Compensation and travel in·
878
contlve. HlOO·S64-4
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Sell . Shlrioy Spaal8, 304·
675·1429.

I,

:~.:'::;,:~~~.;';'~;

.$350/Mo., 741J.441Hl008.

H

alternoo~ shift· some Ot5r ask IOf Ron. If no 2·112 bath&amp;; big kitchen R(7~0~~~~4jrorn 125•900· De'"'slt, utQitO!o. No p0\s.
1
me~~aga.
w/oak cabinets, DA, LR
Qalllpolla
Ferry
Area.

at Mlddlelon Estates, 8204
Carla Drive, Gallipolis, OH.

MERaiANoL!I:

Nice large apanmant, 3 ..__oiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiltorl
bedrooms, large llvlngroom,
·
washer/ dryer· hook-up, 27 cu. ft. Kenmore Side by
$450 month, references &amp; Side Refrigerator with Ice
deposit required. (7401448- ~".k."r. $100. (7401256·
.:.80:..:30:.:_::-------- ~
:----:------

land, (7401742·2014.
2
t t/2 both, 14 wide
Office · building In Miners· with large expando &amp; c:envitO!, BOO fl&lt;l. ft., ale, COY· rralolr,(740)992·2r87
ered ptrklng, ceiling fan, _ _,;,.__:._____
$27S'rno., 814-878·1661 .
3 bedroom mobile home tor
~&amp;
rent, $300 month, S200 de....,,~
poa~. all electric, water
· ACREAGE
paid, (304189&amp;·3865.

weekends. Apply in person answer, leave

family, some1h1ng for every- Ga llipolis, OH. An Equal

one. lnlants to adults, some
antiques. 2 moles lrom River
Valley High School on Little
Kyger Road , Friday· Satur-

~,.=

~~~n t, 0~~~~rir:t".'/:::

Run
Ad .,
(740)992·3509

owner.

-N-8-Bu-~-. ...
--,()pon,...--lng_OC_·

Opponunitlea.
·
r.,:r tat. Sue's Sa"""'blea
New 2 Bedroom. Heat on the T In Middleport
Pump, Washer/ Dryer Hook· Ohio. (7401992-&lt;1296
up. 7 mPH from Hospital on
r80. (7401441·0117
Ml'ic:ELLANr.ol

Newly constructed, alngle
3 bedroom mobUe home In
state areal Promotion and R.N. Supervisor· Full nme clean up, move almost any· story 1600 sq. foot home. Nice · 4 ac;:re tract nar Middleport,
no
pets,
car~r adva~ment oppor- A leading provider of serv· thing. Other odd toba· Call Located 10 minutes from GIHipofil· easy terma, (740)992·5858.
tunit1es are available! E~~:cel- ices to individuals with Men· (740)446-7604
· Holzer Hospital, 20 mlnutu (740}448-3583
lent Salaries and Benefit tal Retardato'on and Douet·
Br;..._
2 baths
14x70
•
Will power wash houses, Irom PI easan II/a1'~Y u....-1
""""" ·. i·•ia , _ . Eq
• E 3__
••
,~ • Newtu
1 ~, 17·"""2 21 67 '
Packages a-vallablet Expari- opmental Disabilities Is trailers, anything. Call tal , off SA 160 on 1 private ,,.... n vr.-. UMirran •· ,.,,""'"'....,
ence In food service is ad· looking fqr an A 'N Supervl· (740)441 -4238 or (740)448· 1-1 /2 acre lot. 3 bedroom, litH, 3•8 •ere loll, walt of 3 br 1211:60$200 a month +

I

;:~:;::~·

-lao-lor 1'111
e.ttte whloh t.ln
• - olthlllw. Ow

at Middleton Eatales. 6204 Lea 0 message on volca
Carta Drive, Gallipolis, OH.
v
·
An equal opportunity em· maol.
.
- - ' - - - - - - - siva uOII expansion 1s taking player (740 )446 •48 t 4
place within the local trl· ':-"-::·..:....,;,:,...:.;,_;,____ Will haul away, clean out,

6

-~~~ly.....,.

Openings ln a d&amp;ycare,
1

GaUipotia,

tv

Thla--wflnot

Goor:;ge;.;s:;,;:P:;;orla..;.,.b.,.lo-=sa-w-m-:1~11,

tal Retardation and Devel· 888-781-2412.

..__ _ _ _ _ __.... ARBV'S RESTAUR'NTS
Found lost dog silver/grey ARE CURRENTLY SeEK·
wlbtack face. Found right lNG CANDIDATES FOR
abOve high school. wearing ALL LEVELS OF STORE
b
11
11
(304)682 M
· ANAGEMENT. _
Aggre,a·
2 ~~~"an"yt~,;~ ar.
Lost 2 Farm dogs from
Burlmgham. MISSing sir.ce
Sept 8th. Female: Black
LabJDoberman milt with
~hite patch on chest, 60
1 s.,
years old, medium

dloc~rnlnetfon."

$7.00 hour, very honest.

Restaurant now don't haul your logs to the
h iring all 3 locations, full or mill just call 304·615·1957.

'

Kitten Calico to g1veaway.

~~~~~ 5 " 6343

prwfwrwnot,llmltdon or

~-------pi McClure's

black· 1 black/ whole· 2 100 WORKER$ NEEDED
gray/ white Call (740)388Assemble crafts, wOOd
6670
~ems . Material providad.
Free kltterlS to a 'good
To$480+wl&lt;.
home, (740)992-7285
Free ~~~'/wrrr;:':~.~~i/4 Hr.

ques, 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740992·2526. Russ Moore,

Now Taking Applications- Antique Oak Cider Press.
35 Weal 2 Bedroom Town· $100. (740)256-644!$
; Mllon8l Prtce Reducad. 3 Bedroom, Why rent? government house Apartmenta, lnchJdea
l&lt;rty ''"'"''UG~ tr•l 2112 Bath, 2 Car Garage, 2 baCked loans from 1490 Waler
Sewage, Trash, Baby bed, &lt;lraoalng 1able,

l::.oc:~"m::not~ rti..._Jon, .::

e'w'ery Thursday. Monday sets,
Diamonds,
Gold ton, WV 25702.
th ru Saturday 9:00-6:00.
Rings ,
u.s. Currency, -

~~------..,

couple 1250 00 Lincoln bedroom apartments 81 VII·
Ava. 0111 Ho.,.;.tead 304- lege Manor and Rlvel81de
Apartment&amp; In Middleport.
67&amp;-5540 uk for Nancy.
From $278.$348 Call 740Doublewlde for rent, 2 bed· 992·5064. Equ~l Housing
01

:"rbouro·

1'80

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

BROWNS' NEWS

•
•

CallY Cowlty, OH

To Place
Your Ad,

Pomeroy, Mlddlapon, Ohio

•

"

�PBgB

8 4 • ThB Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, OhiO

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

'::.

•Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

~------------------------------------~
'([ribune - Sentinel - 1\e

CLASSIFIED

James J_ackson living t-~-~~~~~
PUBLIC
:up to h1s own hype - NOTICES

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Countl.es U~e
No One
Else Can!

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

In one week With us

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR AD NOW~

Sentinel

l\egi~ter
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

'([ribune

~

Monday thru Friday

Oallv Jn•Column : 1: 00 p. m.
Mondav - FrhUiv ror Insertion
Jn Next 01~ '1 Paper
Sundav In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
· HOW IQ WRITE A.1'i AD.
Sho u ld I n cl ude These Items
To
Get Response ...

r

PERSONAl S

4""-~v~• -I .
i·-·~~
..~~.

1

All Olsplev: 12 Noon 2
Business Oavs Prior To
Publication
SundiV Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday ror Su ndays

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

S

Private Party Ads Under $1 00

&amp;

20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ad s

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue. Gallipolis, OH 45631

• Start Your Adl With A Ke~word • Include Complete
Oescrlptlon • fnc tude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And AddresS When Needed
• Ad l Sl'l ould Run 7 DIVI

Successful Ads

\ \ \O ll:&gt;i! 'l•. \11-.\ Is

~

r

rio
HOOSI!li
I AI'ARIMEMs Ii ..-~~--FOR--RFNr~~~--ffi-R_RFNr._.~--=-·--·~_.

HEU· WMm:o

~

·~

~

.

~-------• Yard Sale, saturday, Sept Help wanted carinw for the Oolllpolla Car- Collo90 Nloe oldtr homt, 2 BR, liv· Final Oaya, Nallonwldo In- Collage eultable for single Gracious living. 1. and 2 Buy or sell. Riverine Anll·

29. New Hope Rd, Chester, &amp;ldert-;. Darst Group Home, (Careere erose To Home)
Why waoP Start meeting Ohio, Oh.
now paying minimum wage, Call Today! 740·446-4367,
0 hlo singles tonight. call toll
new shills: 7am-3pm, 7am·
r-800·21 4 ·0 452.
lree t-800 ·766·2623 e.t
AUCI10N AND 15pm, 3pm-rr pm, tr pm· l!'lllr:R;::eg:..;t;90;·~05;:;·,.:,r2~7.;;4,::B;.
. -,
162t
_
Fu:A MARKET , 7am, call 740.992·5023.
WAN'I'W

r

lng room, dining room, ventory
Reduction!
k~chen, pantry, utNity room, (3041736-3408
•
full lila attic, gao fumaco, Umlted Or No c~t? Gov•
..,tral air, Rad114. $35,000,
9a k F.;'' Only
(740)949-2070
~~~ In

llBl Ai\NOl'i\CHII~,115

villi, WV 304-736-3409.
:;:;..~'&amp;~=-m~. plua
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
Only $19,850. F'" Dellvary Houoea for Rent 2 bed·
&amp; Stt Up. 1 ~ 928 • 2426
rooml &amp; 1 beth, located on
tho Ollila/ Lawrance County
New t4K70, S bedroom. 2 line. Call botwo«j 8:30pm·
both, only S995 down &amp; tt :OOpm. (7401258-6803 ·
St89 • 2 ~r mont• call
.u ....
''•
Pilot P-rogram, Renters
Harofd 740-386-438?.
Needed, 304·738--7295.
Now Double Wide. $195 OUiel Country Setting 3br
Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 bo. lor rent or aale on lan&lt;l
Bath. FrM Dellvary &amp; Set· 2
up. 1-88fHJ28-3426
contract. Available October
111· C&amp;ll (304)B1S· 2884

Homeworker•
Nooded 1.._ _ _T,.oiiDoiioii__,..
Rick Pearson Auction Com- $635 Weekly Proce!sing '
. ,_ __ _ __ _,.. pany, full ttme auctioneer, Mall. Easy! No E•peri· All Make Mowers, Lawn

Disney Beach Vacations, 6 complele auction service .
nights, wce hotel. will sacri- Licensed t68,0hlo &amp; Wool
fice tor $199. (6 14)898· Virginia, 304·773·5785 Or
304·773·5447.
2726
-~--:'!":"'---.....,

ence

Needed.

Call 1· Tractors, Tillers Repaired.

800·652·8726 Ext . 2070,
24Hrs.
:---:--,.--,-,.--,--Local reta iler looking lor exWANTF.D
perlenced losa prevention
New ro You I hntt Shoppe
TO BUY
aiBOCiate for in star&amp; loss
9 West Stimson, Athens
prevention position. Please
740·592· 1842
send resume to Loss Pro·
Quality clothing an&lt;l house· Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. ventlon Supervisor, 6027
hold 11ems. $1.00 bag sale Silver, Gold Coins. Proof· Kyle Moore Road , Hunllng·

-------- ·-------pi
r
I

Free ~lck·up, Delivery Ava ol·
able. 21 Years EMperionco.
Call Mike. (740)446-7604

-•--alne
1n thll MWIPII* tt
aubject to 1M hdtrel
Fair ttouatng ADt at 1111
wtllcll- H Nlogafto

David's General Contracting
Plumbing, electncal, paint·
lng, .decks, roots. Call
(7401256·9373 (3041633·
6265

-· ·on~

let
11 dtPI• ...,.l,..,lonm- or

E)(parlenced Grandma will
baby sit Monday- Friday,

M T.S. Coin Shop, r5t Sec· LPN'a/ RN's needed lor Po·
=·=ue, Gallipolis, 740· ~~~~~~~:stc~:~,.,":r;u~~
GI\'EAWAY
ty, Pomeroy and Racine
Areas. Please Call Primary
Care Nursmg Service at
3 kottens, 2 calico, 1 black F,ii~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ (800)518·2273. Ask tor
wsa"1ha.blue eyes, (740)992· 11t0
~
Phylis.

ages 3 and up at my home. , ..tgtlln,
Call (7401446·0613
•
.-an~-

~~~":~I= 1.,0=:

Full service house cleaning,

er'a,

r

1

I

u--..
,..
our ..~ .. ~

. F1ve Longha•red kittens. 2

r

ca ll

l

pan-time, pick up applica·
tlon at location &amp; bring back
betwoon
9:30am
&amp;
tO:OOam, Monday thi\J 5at·
urday.
Nerid 7-Lad•es~a-Beii·Avon.
4

l ntematlo~~~ ~:~ess

alter

~AND
I~
·
' FOUND'

e•pandlng. S251$75hr. PIT
FIT ••a s•• 3713
~ • ~·
·
www.megabucks4you.net

References ava1lable Call

(7401446-2977

hair, blue collar. Vary sweot
&amp; gentle.
Answers t~
Spank~rs.
, Malo.
A~ttwellar/Chow. mix, b!ack
with brown Aollle markmgs
o~ lace, chest, paws. Chow
tarl &amp; tongue. 75 tbs, 2 112
years old , long hair, red collar. A tittle shy but friendly.
Answers to Bruno. Please
call Gonger or Jeff (740)992·
2511:0~4-,A_a_w_a_rd-' - - - - ,
_

r~

71i

YARI&gt; SALE

58

~=~~;.~ :::~

""

y
SA
AR!&gt;
u ;GA I.UI'OLL~

2 Family 9040 St Rt 7 s.
Sept. 28 &amp; 29. t0-6 Tale·
scope , dishes. name bran&lt;l
clothes, furniture, lamps,
nome Interior
-,...--- -- - - 3 Family. t152 St At. 325S.
9:00·5:00 FlldayiSalurday.
Toots, Lawn Cha irs. Fan ,
Bench. Clot hong, Misc.
Carpon Sale· t899 Sho..
string Aldgo. Saturday, only,
9am-? BaDy items. baby
clothes and lots of odds &amp;
ends.
Garage Sale· Hugo 3

day.
'
Garage Sate· 75 Slate
Street on Saturday, Sap·
tember 29 only Household
goods, childrens clothing,
e•erc ise equopment, picture
frames and more.
tnsode &amp; out, 4 rooms full,
sweeper. all clothes $.50 &amp;
under, 1699 McCormick
Rd., 10am·1 . .26th, 271h,
28th
Saturday 9129. B· t 2. 2359
Graham School in CentenaAntoques, clothes, lurnl·
turo, NFL cards and collect·
ables, reco•ds.

ry.

14

YAR!l SAI..t:•

I'&lt;&gt;MEROY/MJI&gt;fJLE

~n~t~~~~c;;n;t~~!sit~~~j
Chester on AI 7, Thursday
&amp; Friday.
- - - - - - -- - · Gara""' sale· october 1-4,
·Bradbury Churchparsonage
beside
WYVKJWMPO,
39558 Bradbury Roed. Mid·
dleport, 9:00·4.00

"':::::..~In
IIVolloblo an on_,

Pomeroy,

QUality l'louseeleanlng,

~:~~~~~:an~~~~c~~~s~.::

House for Sale. ,5

r

..!.,~-

·~""""

132 aorta wllh pond, Iota of
atondlng tlmbor, lovely 4
bedroom, 2· 112 bath home,

~~~':'~

•

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(? 4 ~) 256 .~~3 lf no anaw!.

:.:;

spot Cali (740)-448-26Br"'
(740)256-6593 after 4pm for

~~~-~;:!~~:;__.:__,
Aooma
llusiNi!si

opmenta~ Dlsabolltlas Is W t dt
1o Ida" I Middlepon, 6 rooms, bath,
11
l~lng for LPN. 16 hours th:ne hoc~e
111 "1 ~renovated, good neighbor·

per week. Apply In person

OH

"(7:'11i40rol:.;44.;.t;.-03~1~0----,

r

AND

A Leading provider 10 serv· lute best Call for a free aatl· and Balh. r 112 acreo.
mate. (740'256·rt3t or r· S25,000
at
Ewln_gton. ~.
lcoo to Individuals with Men·
r
174014443 6598

vantageous but not ro·
quired. Please lax your re·
sumo to 1·606·836·9617 or
E-mail
to

aor for

r

hood, $36,000, lmmtdlala
possession,
phono
(7401365·9124, no Sunday
calls, Lloyd &amp; Fom Grimm.

i

I

down. (740)448·3093

M

ca~eelandOzoomnet.net or An

equal opportunity em·
Ma1l to Arby's, 201 Stewart player (740)448·4814

Ave.,

wonhlngton,

KV

==·..o.;,.=:.::.:.::.:...:...__

Tara

OIIILEn-~

lll'll!""'-':"----.,
r16
I

WANTS YOUI
Bob Evan•
Restaurant In
Gallipolis, OH, Ia
looking to fill
positions fora
lull·tlme night
cook and a fUll·

Be Your Own Bosal
From Homel
Earn $500·$8000/MO
~TIFTE • · N
0

time night bua
person. Stert
out ~!th good

pay, u.nefltl,.

ecessary

!JI;PBIIUOCe

t-8 68•270 .()064
www.Never9To5Agaln.com
Caauol Port nmo Dlrecl
caro Stall
A leading provider of oerv·
Ice to tndlvlduata with Man·
tal Retardallon and Dovel·
opmental Dleabllltlos Ia
looking for casual part time

fun family ·
atmosphere,
piUS
opportunhy for
advancement.
Apply 11:
Bob Evon•
315 Upper River Rood

~

prallled al

In peraon at Middleton Eo·
tales . 8204 Carla Drive.

(

$g~;r;.r :u~~nl\,;;~~:

Gllllpolla, Ohio

740) 448-6 369

Opponunlty
Employer.
FIMIOV.
Sales Person. Must ))avo 2
CNA's HHA'
C rtlll d yoaro eKperle nce In sates of
home,;,ake
~ e lumbar &amp; hardware. Send

!..J..,

vida In ho~; oerv,."/~;
eldariyldloabled In Mason &amp;
Putnam county aroos. Coli
1·888·453-4992
Full·tlmo dental aoolotant
position. Muat bo avalloble
Monda" thru Saturdau
•
"
8am·8pm. Please submit re·
eume to 995 Jeckaon Plkt,
Galllpolla OH 415131 .
'
FUNDRAIIING
DIREC'IiOR
Nel&lt;ll&lt;llor your orea
lo wO&lt;k with ochoolo,
PT,to;a and coachoa.Eat. Co.
Avg. 111
f!IO.MOK
140.141 1140

!'·

Garbage Service Needo De·
pandablo drtvor/looder with
COL. Experience driving
top-heavy trucks a plus.
(740)388-9686

Gat paid for Evaluating Cuo:%':.r =lcr.;n o';"'~~~~:
PleaH vlalt -.·-"·t~
""" ~"" ..,..
none .com to complete a
convonlonlappllcltlon.

:~,':~1°f~~~~PD~~it'r.'~:

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends that
you do business with people
you know. and NOT to eend
money through 111e moll until
you have lnveatlgeted the
offering.
Start Your Bualneaa Today... Primo Shopping Contor Space Available At AI·
fordable Rale. ~ VoHay
Pia••· Call740
tOr .

r . , ____,.

&lt;I&lt;VI'=M'II\L

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
No Fea Union We Wlnl
1·688·562·3345

lloMEl

FOR SALE

Apart- 7 1/2 and Size med. Coat

FOR JUC~~t

•

Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1

month. . Depoo~

"-"="'YI=·-----

0

1

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

HUNTING OR

130418715-4088

1

~~a':aar,a $50.; ;wr:;

fumlshed apt. Upper Duple• FirewOOd for sale, $150

MI. Vomon Ave. No Pets. loed. l740)441-9478
No Smokera. $265, + Elec· Furniture, appllanctll. dryer.

trfc. References. $200. D• waterbed, music equipment,
posit. (3041875-2651
. stereo's, etc. Low prlcea,
Vory nice, 2·3 bedroom (740)448-7625
apartment, In town, large
kitchen, LR, $500/mo. Rat· Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
erences &amp; deposit required. Repairs. Problema? Need
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr.
(740)446-3844
740-446·4525
ll:lll"--~----, Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4
SPA&lt;E
for$10. Open sat. 6-Spm. &amp;
FUR RtNf
evenings. Dewhurst Greenhouse MI. Alto. (3041895-

I

i u---_u-·-

3 bedroo~ hoUH lor ullin
MlddlepOn , call Tom Ander·
son altar 5pm, 1740)992·
3348

~i:thJ.o~~gy~:,~r~~·Y ~r~ =1~.·~:m: :Sb~ ~·~~~~

tat limo buytra· Govern·
rntnt loane· b~OI.nl &amp;
~
3 Ook·

r::i.,

2· 12•40 mobil~

bile homt, 11,1100 or 14,100
fo\ ~ rh':' (740)44t-02t9
cal or : pm.
2axll0 3 Or 4 Bedroom On·

00

ly · $345.00 Por . Month
6.99% FIKI&lt;I 1 - Rata,
1-888•926-34211
Athlon&lt;l FlootwOOd 2002
Doublowldo •21221 lioll
FIN BBB-805-I5It'; rO rnln
from Hunll""'~
.,._..
Alhlond F l - Bagram.
ber ....... al
i x70
•~:.""'e · 2002F 4~-'
~.:;..,. 11 NO ,.. """
&amp; Satu •
FIN 1
805-&amp;Bfti

-eee:

Aooumablo loona• Many
::r."(7•:~~11or do.
·
r--:
·
Deluat homt .... 16 445

new 2000

t and 2 bedroom apan·
manto furnished and unfur·
nlohed, oacurlly clopoolt re·
qulrl&lt;l. no poll, 740-992·
2218.

tat%

~,:r~Y,!~r~':~:

.i;,

rio

llouirHoiJI
ro~

Applloncea: Reconditioned
waahere, Dryuers'li, Ra90ngD ea,
Refrigratolll, P o
aye
Guaranteed! We Sell New
Mayrag Appllenc .., Franoh
City Maytag, 741J.446·7795 . .
For Safe·. Rocondlti·Jned

=·

•

76

Ho~or,

~:~~~'

btcl=:

•

;:Or:i:e';:tll

;.-vr

heat, :II

"';;..,

!:!!",
742 7 3 s'/:'
~hat 5pm: ·~,;.~·hom-;and·hil~·
:C~Iki.;: ~~~; ~~;: ::7.~~·
rentala. Commt~lal otoreIronto ovollablo for leaH.
Vecancleo now. ·
Fumllhod e~lct.ncy all utll·
ltloa pold lhere bait. Stas
month, 19 2nd AVenue.
(7401446-3945.

9

St80· G E rofrf ,.,., froor
lree,' . St50; ga Skagge
Appliances 76 Vine Srrott
G 111 11 ' 17•• , 44• 7••8t
a po s,
_, •• Hours t0am-4pm, Mon&lt;ley·
r~y. saturday by appoint·
mont.

Ohio,
·

1-eoo-

Whila't MOlal Detector
Spectrum XLT, altowa ftn&lt;l
dlplh S600 (paid ovet
1600 Ukt ~ (304)6755418 ·
:::--:---:-:-----Wln&lt;llow Air Conditioner.
Workl Groat. S50 oeo.
(7401992-7116

i

•.

..r_.........._, IIIII!'--::~_, ,::=:::::::==:8/H R

l..rio----._, ........

l.o.tloiiiiliiiii.......

BloCk. ~Ck, sewer pi pea, Jonn Deere 6820 titan II
windows, lintels, etc. Cleudo combine. Call (3041675· 1956 Chevy Balolre, 4 dr.,
Wlntero, Rio Grande, OH 4308
raetora to o~lnal, r07,000
Call740-245-512t.
actual mllee, 16200 OBO.
740 742 8900
1 1 '
·
.......,
lJvlmocK
~
· - - - - - - · 1979 Ford T·Bird 351 modi·
~
fied, runa, bOdy neado ·
Aclorablelull bloodod Mlnla· 4 year old AOHA Incentive ...
'300w; ·-res, passo'r .
L..
Fund Mare with 120 clays
u
~:riiJ
tura Collies, 5 w-s .old, 1 WI
d 4276.
11
11
$75, malea &amp; females. ridng.
meko • aroun
(740)44t.Q865 .
proopect.(740)44t ·1015
1993 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Supreme, 4 door, Rod Exta·
ve "'tNt Hound pu~ Rl&lt;l rock hens for sale rtor, Bleck lnrenor, PW, PL,
A"'
...-- $2 00
h 304 773 711,
plea, vel ch8Ckl&lt;l, 8wk old. ·
eac
•
•
PD. AIC, $2500 OBO.
$175. (3041576-2126
"'304- 773-6395 ·
(740)446·9236
u.. &amp;
AI&lt;C Sheltle pupploa, aa·
...,.y
t 997 Cavalier 49,500 mllea,
blea, Tri, bl blar:l&lt;, bluo
GIWN
. 35-45 MPG, c/d, air, auto,
Mlnlalure
_new tir... pay off $7,000,
merit; AKC
Schnouzars. aaiUpepper, Buck 1 bola sale fi&lt;IUOr&amp; (7401949·2221
block/silver, $300 each'
·
•
(flml), vot checkl&lt;l &amp; ohota, beleo $1 .00 other hey up to r997 Lumina, 14,995. 1992
(740)888·1085
12.00, round balta 515·00 Grand Am, $1,7Q5. 1990
each 304-676-4869
Gran-Prix, $1,986. 1993
Malo MlnlaMo Dachshund--------::- Covallor, 12,196. r992 Cor·
poppy. red, Vel tackl&lt;l, flrot Hay · &amp; Bright Wlro Tie olea, $2,485. COOK II().
lhota. Porontt on premiHo. Sk~w. Year 'Roun&lt;l Oallvary 'liORI. (740)o448-01 03
$150. (304)1176-5984
&amp; Voluma Olacount Avella·
bit.
H"ltage
Farm. 1998 Ford Contour LX, 4
Mll!iiCAL
(304)675·5724.
.lil8nuJMI;:Mli
cylln&lt;ltr, 76,000 mllao, dark
groan, 4 door, NADA
iljjr;;~:i;io;~-, 17,000 uklng $5,700. Ro·
Flute, LaBlanc Vito, uud 3- I'
duel&lt;! 11200. (740)446•
2124.
4 llmoa, now $515, aetl
$350, mualc otandl ceea,
booka (740j367 7028
2000 Camry LE. Exctllent
.
•
1891 Chevy cavalier Runa Condition. $17,000 080 or
FRuns &amp;
good, but neado · Call take
over
paymonto.
VI!:GE'Il\IIWl
(304)662·2539
,(7...:
40:!1::.245-05:::.:::.':..:9':-:-:-::"-

llllr-------,

iir::::::::::::::::l j
"'

r

olf740m)u!2~

I

'.,-'=:,:..=;..·-::--:-:-:--:

r

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r

·-.iiiiiiiliiiiiiiil,_pl
.,
Aloharda

Brothera

t985 Hariay Sportaler, 1000

Fruit custom,

Farm.
APPLES
AND
MUCH MORE. 24 mllto
North ol Qofllpotla on Coun·
ty Rood 46. (740)286-4684.

$4500. 1979 Mua·

j

Wns

I

s. o"'

oc

FOR ALE

·

s

.1,

r

1

97 Aatro Van, 56,000 miltl,

j

Auro r,.n••
"·~ &amp;

l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio;.lllliiioa

ACCESSOIU&amp;'i

~

Aro you looking lor englnea
or tronsrnloaR&gt;no? Give me
1 cell ar (740'44e·05t9
1
ludgol Prlcad Tranoml•
alono All Typeo, Acceaa Tc
Over 10,000 Tronamloslona
Trenofer Caaes, 740·24&amp;
15177, Cell: 339·3765.

r

•xcellent

(

•

...

(

,,I

•

s

RT. 7 PIZZA &amp; RACINE
PIZZA EXPRESS

Buy any Large
Pizza
Get Second

1/2 PRICE
992-9200 949-4900

740-992-0298

Advertise your
message

Q\IES

19119 Coachman Catailne
37 foot, 2 slide outs, loeda&lt;
(7 ,24_5.9480
40r

•

on the "T" in Middleport, Ohio

CAMPEHS&amp;
H
OIUM

•

SUE'S SELECTABLES

.

M

In d00 r

New Business Opening
Oct. 1

___,;_,.;_ _ __

·

Ll"ght

Work
1 888
I 974.
J B
0

wench. Hao Door Aacko.
Eu:cnu Ll
(7401446-8691
RErluGE~ION
--~..,..-=-:-:-:--:: ~
r998 Honda TAX 300, 2
wfiMI drive, Good Cond., Realdenllal or commerclot
WOO, (7401949-3061
wiring, new service or ro·
pairs. Mastorllcansodelec·
t8851oedod2dr. B ~!.~.~~
trlclon. Ridenour Electrical,
fully
• _,..,..
WV000306, 30&lt;\•675·t 786.
al1t&lt; llpm.
. lllll:"'":'""~::-~'::"""1

1992 Ford Bronco XLT 4M4
300, B cyflndor', 5 apoed, air,
1111, cruiM, w/1, new
"'"· aluminum - I s, IK·
cetlant conrllton, 14900.
(7401902·7584

tang, 4 speed. V-6, good
condition, $1,400 . 1979
Chevy motor homt. et&lt;COI·
lent cond~lon, $3,500; r99r
Gao . Priam, automttlc,
I \In I "I 1'1'1 II.._,
$2,000. 1887 Novo, 5·
1907 FOrd F·150 XLT, met·
,\ I I \ I "It h 1,
speed, SBOO. 1()(125 motor• 1967 Ford 4X4 XLT Lariat. alllo blue, 75K, 4K4, flare·
croas bike, $1 ,000. Bear New paint ctean. rune great. aide, a· lift, 33' tlras, w1th
Act angina ,Anaiyler with 4 13500 1304087s-aas9
Leer roppor, very clean .
gaa. Great lor begiMera,
·
(74014&lt;18·6323.
$300. (7401388·9518 or 2000 Toyota Tacomo Ex·
(7401386-8071.
tondl&lt;l cab, 4, 4, loodl&lt;l, ·11196 Jaep Wrangler, stand·
52 Caae
&amp; 5' Bruah hog
27 600 milts Sr5 600' ard no AIC, alum. wheels,
'fer 111100 &amp; SmeH chlld'l 1997 Pontiac G rand Prl~ r 9i7 CheVy TMk 350• 2x4: , 53,000 mites, olden&lt;led. 7·
'
S 00 QT. Appro,;. 87,000 mUe1.
' ~r. 100 ,000 mile warranty.
'Oo-Kan 5 horae,
1
(7401742-4008
looks rough, runs groat. 304·6'15·6694
304·675·
(740)843-5217
11100. (3041S76-308S
28r7 aMer 4pm S10,000.

I

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG

fllsDodgaorFord'98down
loaded, negotiable,
mont condi· Unoonditional
llletime guar·
$350 (7~\992·5&amp;32
' laather,
tlon , $6,700
antee. Local references
fur·
• · '
•
(740)379·2268 .
nlahl&lt;l. Establishad r975.
v, &amp;
Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
....
92. Pontiac Tranapon,'ioed· 0870,
1-600·287·0576 .
•
Rog&amp;l'l Waterproof ing.
ad. lookl good, runs good,
Che
3,000 ClBO. (7401441· ,..,...,.--..,--:--::-1 Bluer, 1658
1885
vy
c&amp;cGanoraiHomeMalnte·
4K4,
alklng
St 800 ll'll"_ _ _ _ _ _.,
(7401992-2r87
nonce· Painting, vinyl Sid·
MOI'OIICYCLE'l
lng, carpentry, doors, win- ·
dowo, beths, mobile homo
1990 Ford Bronco liLT, 4' 4• ..._ _ _ _ _ __,.. repair and more. For lree
AJC,
good
condition,
estimate call Chet, 740.992·
$3,000. (7401992-4034.
t 905 Yamane Kodiak 400.
8323
_.,_ _.._.,_-:~~· 4•4. Hao Snow Blade and
·

olr, crulot, lilt, PW, rL,
AMIFM CooNUe, ~uaf , air
bago, ABS, ooato 7, like
new, (7401379·2r34 leovo
menage.
99 Ford F·250, 4M4, tully
loaded, power, old pO!yor,
tow package, blOCk &amp; gold,
4 300 miles
$21 000
-86 Chollrollt Celebrity, loll r/401992 •5532'·
'
'
4
of new partl, n.w motor,
1G94 314 ton, extanded cab,
ely, auto, Sr ,000 firm, 4x4, SLE, fully lol&lt;led, good
(7401992·6532.
condition, bucket soalo,
TRUCKS
82,000 mlleo, Sr2,000.
S
(7401446·1068

j

$

83 Oodga Ram 8 cyf. 225
auto, very good cond. muil 1992 Ford E•plorer 4K4
aell304-675-8832
Eddie Bauer, Blue/Tan:
Leer full alze truck topper, r03,000 milaa . . aunroo t,

condillor l•wtllttilii

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column inch Sundays

l~tlltlil1i .

8i Dodge Camper Van, sa
contained, eKcellent cond
tlon, garage kept, low mllr
age, must sell. leavln · - - - •
state. Celll7401709·4444

•

(

•

814 4 751

..

Huge Inventory, Dlocount
Prices, 011 Vinyl Skirting,
Doors, Windows, Anohora,
Water Heaters. Plumbing &amp;
Electrical PaM, Fumacat &amp;
Heat Pumpo. Bannat1o Mobile Home Supply, 740·446·
9416 www.orvb.com/ben·
nett

iaooJ rnonu,

(304)662·2018
4 bedroom, unfurnlahl&lt;l.
FrH ~lloat and oook
with.
. Dtpoalt ,...
qulred. Mutt algn a Jouo.
No peta, 1100 a 2 btcltoom.
(7401248-6522

°

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, Now &amp; Rabul~ In
Stock. Coli Ron Evant, t ·
1101).537·9526.
•
MOIIILE HOME OWNER$ •

•--lliUUUU&gt;iiiiiii--r'

,eq....:cl:

Mobl~ ~

lng &amp;
COIM
screened In polio poroh, 2 - · US 80 EU1, All&gt;
car garage S78,000.
ono, 011, 741J.B92•tt;72
EKcetlont Con&lt;lltlon r899
Commerlcal loll for aate or Sh ltz •--··to ,~ 80
loaso. in Pt. PltoHn1 ·304·
u ~-t n. uX • 3
727 •33 ra call between Bedroorn,2fullbotha,Appil·
Spm·t 2.
ancoa Included, Waahor
/Oryor. CIA, S~rtlng, t8x20
Declr. Gao Hoot: (74014462895

urupecified cardiac event."
A call to the university's team physician
was not immediately returned.
Senn fell to the ground with 19:06
remaining and Ohio State trailing 2-1
Wednesday night at Lee Jackson field. The
match was ended at that point.
Ohio State's match Saturday against
Wisconsin also was suspended.
Senn was four-year letterwinner and
starter at center midfield at Granville High
School and was an all-league selection.

THE NAME, AND FOR other minerals , the
All coal, oil ond gaa,
THE USE Of THE
proper preservi11on of and other mlntralt
BOARD OF MEIGS
the highway rna• not underlying the above
•
COUNTY
be Impaired.
deocrlbod property.
COMMISSIONERS.•
PARCEL 2tJ.WVR1
and all exlallng rlghlo
Sllu•tad In the
MEG·t24-22.72
to mine, extract, and
townahlp of Choater,
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
remove the aame,
County of Melgt, State
ANO INTEREST IN
ahall be, and the ume
ol Ohio , 1nd In FEE SIMPLE IN THE
hereby are, excepted
Section 33, Town 3N ,
FOLLOWING
and reoervtd unto
Range 12W,
and
DESCRIBED
Ownara, and their
bounded
and PROPERTYWITHOUT helra ,
encuton,
dacrlbed aolollow1:
LIMITATION OF
admlnlatratora,
Being a porcel of
EXISTINGACCESS
oucc1nora
and
land lying along the
RIGHTS, ANO
anlgn•
lar1ver ;
l1lt •Ida of the
EXCLUDING COAL,
provided, how1ver, In
centerline survey,
OIL AND GAS, AND
oa mining, tlll,.ctlng,
made
by
the
OTHER EXISTING
and removing aal d
dapartment
of MINERAL RIGHTS IN coal, oil and gal, and
Tranoportatlon, and THE NAME, AND FOR other mlnerall, the
btlnn - located wl1hln
THE USE OF THE
proper preaervllllon ol
•
the boundary points of
BOARD OF MEIGS
th hi h
parcel No . 20 as
COUNTY
•
g way may no1
delineated upon the
COMMISSIONERS
be Impaired.
Department
o1
Situated In the
Pursuant 1 Civil
Tranaportitlon'a right· Township of Chaster, Rule 12 (A)(t), said
ol·way plan MEG-124· County of Melga, State persona mentioned
22.72, and recorded ot Ohio, and In abavo shall take
on A!W Plat Sheet No. Section 33, Town 3N, further notice that
18 I n PI at g oo k 5 , R angt 12 w,
an d they have 28 daya
Page 97. ol the bounded
and • 11 or the complaUon al
1 ~•
recorder'a
Olllce, descrlbedaa lollowa:
Service
by
Melga County, Ohio.
Being a parcel ol Publication within
It Ia understood that land lying along the which to anawer or
aold parcol ol ·land right ai da ol the otharwlae deland
contains 0.640 acres, centerline survey, agalnat Plalntlll 'a
mora or leas Inclusive rna de
by
the petition.
ol the prea~nt road, department
ol
The original ol any
which occupleo 0 .227 Tranaport11lon, and . such anawer or o1har
acras, more or leso .
being located within pleading delendln,g
Thta parcel wao the boundary poln1a ol agalnat Plalntlll •
based upon a s urvey Parcel No. 20 u petition muot be IUed
made lor the Ohio delineated upon the wl1h the Clerk of the
Department
of Department.
of Common Pleas Court
Transporlallon
In Transportation's rtght· 91 Melga County, Ohio,
1999· 2000 b McCo ol·way plan MEG 124· at Melgo County
Aaaoclatea ~nc. an~ 22.72, and recorded Courthouoe ,
100
ME
' 1
Second Street PO
1
'
compan as nc., on RIW Plat Sheet No.
'
• .
under the direction of t8 in Plat Book 5 Box 151 , Pomeroy,
Kevin
L.
Stacy, Pa'ge 97 , of lh~ Ohio 45789 ; and, a
Registered Surveyor Reeorder'a
0111ce, copy ol any such
Meigs County, Ohio.
answer or other
7531
Prior Instrument
Ills understood that pleading defending
A 1
.
agalnat
Plalntlll'a
e arence . 011 lc 1a 1 said parcel ol land
Record 1 on Page 793 contains 0.409 acres, petition muot bl
and Official Record 5, more or leta, lncluolve served upo~~IRLEY E.
Page 253 • Melg,o ol the preoent road,
CHAPMAN (0081828)
g~;:,:ty Recorders :~.:. :~:~~l~i~~ 34
Aasla1ant Attorney
Th~.
abo v a
This parcel was
General
deocrlbed 0.840 acrea, baaed upon a aurvey 37 Weal Broad Slrell,
more or laaa, ol which made lor the Ohto
Suite 350
the preaenl road Department
of
Columbuo, Ohio
occupies 0.227 acres, Transportation
In
( 4)3 2!~ 1 32
more or less, are to be t999·2000 by McCoy
.,.,....
deleted lrom Audllor'a Assocla1ee, Inc. and
FAX (814) 468·17151
Parcel 03~0378.000.
M•E Companies Inc.,
E·mall:
OWner, lor hlmoell under the direction of schapmanOag.atata.o
and
hla
hairs Kevin
L.
Stacy,
.
h .ua
executors,
' Reglatered Surveyor
Attorney lor Plalntlll
admlnlatratora,
7531
.
A !allure to anawer
•ucceaaora
and
Prior Instrument or otharwlte deland
aaalgna, r•urvea all Ra1erence : Official within aold 28 dlya
ulallng right• of ·Record 1 on Page 793 will reault In Ptolnllll,
lngreaa and egresa to and Olllclal Record 5 pursuant to Civil Rule
and from any residual 1'age 253 __Melg,j 55, asking the court to
area.
Counly . A~corder's grant- a judgment- byOlllce
r;lal,.ull agalnat any
All coal, oil and gae,
Th~
a b 0 v e auch person who·talla
and other minerals described 0.409 acres , to
a nawer
or
underlying the above more or less , ol which olherwlae defend.
described property, the praaent road
Gordon Proclor,
and all existing rights occupleo 0.234 acres,
Director
to mine, extract, and more or leas, are to be
Ohio O.parlmant ol
remove th·e same , deleted from auditor's
Tranaportllllon
shall be, and the same Parcel 03·00376.000.
9/20, 27
hereby are, excepted,
Ownar, lor himself
and reserved . unto and
his
he ira,
Owners, and their executors,
heirs,
executors , administrators,
admlnlatratora,
succeaaars
and
successors
and asolgna, reserves all
aaalgns
forever ; existing rights of
provided, however, In lngreaa and egress to
so mining, extracting , and from any residual
and removing said area.
coal, oil and gaa, and

Opportunity. (740)441 - 1982 •

mOdtt '""'tOo :1 a

btdroom 2 ~ 111 ::::!:: ..!.._
• - •~
trlc. vinyl &amp; ohlnglo, lew

•

====::c.____

I

r•o

7"

3740 leave messa'ge. or

waahera, dryelll and ref~· - - - - - - - - t Bedroom Apartment, Re· eratora. Thompsons Appti· Movl~st Solll Brown
frlgorator, Range,. AIC In·
~- ~,? ~=-n Av.. eanbnt &amp; 4 &amp;0hCalhllra.' SI2505 .
eluded, 1269 Plue Depoall &amp; _...:.......:"'------ •· 10
Rot.no.-. HUD Approved. Kincaid dining room HI· Weight Machine StOO.
(7401441-1518
pedeotal tabla with 21sovu, (3041BB2·3B87 •
r Bo&lt;lroom Apt., Range, 6 cholra &amp; hutch. Solid NEW AND UBED fUR· .
Rofridgoraror, AIC Included . wood. All~ $460. Phont NANCES FOR IAL!I Wt
Houlis
Dtpoelt and ' Reference (740)446
after 5pm .
lnltall, Free Eatlmllll, If
(7401446-1370
Main Stroot Furniture
you doni Call Ul, Wt both
6308 1'
1&amp;2 bodroom, near
(304)875-1422
oconomlcal utllltiM, 1279 to
515 Main Street, Point
.
t ..a Bedrooma For.aloHd 137G ~r month plua utllliiH
Pleasant
Nureea unlfOrml. Slzt 2x
-From SlUG/Mo., 4"' (740)-448-2957
and 3•. 3 aota paid over
~F 30LI~r"' ~~:
Now &amp; Uol&lt;l Fumlture
$100. Sell
for
$40.
· or
filii,
tbr. Apt. $300. a month, all New 2 Place LMill,lroono 17401992·7118
3323 el\1: r709. .
•. utlitieo lnoludo&lt;l: 1200. Sa· Sultto, $399. Buy, qo,l,
AEIIDEN11AL HOM!
1304167
1 bedroom, · AJC; t both, ~~ Dtpoolt.
&amp;· Trade.
OWNIRI
kitchen
11H IPf)llanooe,
Now and Uud Furniture
2nd Avonuo, Gotllpollo, '3 Rooms and Bath. 46 Olivo llors below Holklay Inn, l&lt;a· Tappan HI EWicienoy 110%
f380/mo. (7401448 4859
Strott. Ulllltloa Paid. Stove neuge. Wo ltll grave monu· Gu Fumeceo, Oil Furno·
1 lovtl 3 bod- 1 &amp; t/2 an&lt;l Rol~rotor No p.._, mania an&lt;l VIOII . Houro coo, 12 .S atr Het1 Pump &amp;
both, .;_,1111 llr, {cor ga· 1496 '"ua depotlt. Reloro": Monday thru Seturday 11· Air Conditioning Syllemo
""" In Mlddtt...., 1428 Cll Riqulrod. (7401446 3pm. (740)-448-4762
FIN 8 Vur W•~:~T, 9oJn.
""
""'··
3945
nodo Hoatlng &amp;
lng, . t •
pluo depoai1 &amp; rolorenceo,
Nloe uNd tumlturaiiPI!tlln• 8 0 0 • 8 1 2 • 5 1 6 7
(740)992-etl26.
647 5th Avonut, r bed· cas.. (74014&lt;18· 1004 or WWWIH'Ibcom/bennad
room, weaherl dryor hooi&lt;· (740"''"-2180
-:--'--:',-...:.:.c_.:..:;.
__
2 bedroom homl OloM to
.. "
'ft'lll'\':11
f'T"'V"
•
R
up. (7-)-448-·Storoge vans with rotl up
;:"• · lvar view,
APART Solid O.k Tr- Table w/8 doors 38 H to 46 H ,11100'
;nm".;.~
:~~~~LIUDOI!T PR~ chllro, matching hutch/ buf• NOh .. Nica (740)448.7600
ClllcX,
Rill
Cll AT JACKION 1 .. let. I yaarw old, perfoct oon· ::::=::-:::-:':':-:-.;;..,~~~
40
.,...·and dopollt
TATII, 52 WII1WOOCI Drlvt ~~~;· .:~r~:io~ !::
DRILI.ID.
(740)-448-:1644,
from 1287 to 1383. Wolk to daya anytime· Saturda~ &amp; :;.;;=:.:::=-7--=-:-,...-~~lhop a movieS. CaM 740- Sunday
Wllorllna Special: 314 200
llldroom HouN, !Iongo, 4&lt;18·21518. Equal Houolng
'
.
P$1 121.85 Per tOO; 1' 200
NC, RllriQOJU&gt;r lnoludod. Opporrunity.
Whirlpool waohar, wtllta, PSI $37.00 Por 100; All
"--1~ lnd Relorenoeo
•·· d "' s~ Whirlpool Bratt Comp- Flttl
~)-448-r370
. Chritty'o Family Living
~~
duty In Srock.
1'1111
Bedroom ••
month ~~40
Umo
•• R d ., ~~ :
~ryor,
'ne
: / dutv: RON EVANI INTIRI'III..
1
3
75 1
7

.
· FORRFNr
~Omtl,

1 1,800 IICh, 1• OIC38 mo-

ro1

1

o

Mobile Homt lot lor rent In (3041895·3789

Call {7«J~~•!5t4 Public hunting. Available In $3&amp;01 mo. For more lnfor6•5pm, M·F, O( Arheno, GaiTia, Jookoon, matlon call. (740)448·2738

-------Beautiful River View !doll
For 1 Or 2 People, Raferen·
cea, Otpoalt, No Pels, Fo•
tor TreMor Park, 741J.441 ·
Or81 .

A

osu mens' ·soccer p·l·ayer odl•es

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - An Ohio State
men's soccer player collapsed during a
match at.the University ofAkron and died
early Thursday morning.
Connor Senn, a 5-foot-11, 162-pound
freshman from Granville, collapsed during
the second half of the match. The IS-yearold was attended to by the medical staffs of
both schools and then traruported to
Akron City Hospital where he later died.
Ohio State's sports information department said the cause of·'death was "an

dloablad. EHO.
frame with madreoa &amp;
apringo, $20. 1304l875-r534
Vary Nics small t bedroom

j

INEATHSECCOUOiriMOON
Ohio.
P
L
AT f
ltlo understood thlt
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO uld p1rctl ol land
Gordon Proclor
contllna 9.271 1crea,
Dlrwctor
more or lell, lnclualve
Ohio o.p&amp;rlmlnl 01
ol 1he preaent ro1d,
~!'nr.tlon,
which occuploa 0.173
•c-. mo,. or fell.
Thla parcel wu
o.'i.:!~ler, 1111 • b1Md upon 1 aurv1y
Judge Crow .
m•d• lor the Ohio
CaHNo. o 1..cv -t 1
D1p1rtm1nt
of
LEGAL NOTICE FOR · Trlntportotlon
In
PUBLICATION
1181-2000 by McCoy
Joy lath Stobart· Aaaocl1tea; Inc. 1nd
M• E Companle1 Inc.,
Add
U
r•••
nknown, under the dl,.ctlon ol
~:~~••• CU::'k~:~~: Kavln L . Stacy,
·and Unknown owner• Reglaterad Surv•yor
753t.
of •ny lltlll, 1111•, or
Prior lnatrumont
lnte,.at In or to th1
aurf•c• ol, or In or 10 Reltrlnce : Olllclol
record 1 on P1ga 793
thl coal, oil, gsa •nd 1nd Offlclei' Ricord 5,
any •nd 111 other P1ge 253, Melga
mlnarlla, altull•d on County Rtcordtr'a
or In th• premia•• Offlct
doacrlbed In lhla
01 • the
above
Petition 11 Pa,...l 20. deacrlbed area 8 280
WilL, 20-WVA and 20. ac,.a, more or ... 11,
' oI
WVA1 w Ill I 1 k1 noIIce which I hi pruen1
thll !hay have beln road occuplea O.t73
named •• delendanll acreo, mora or len,
by Gordon Proctor, ,,. to be dtleted from
Director
Ohio Audltor'a Parcel 03·
Deparlmlnl
ol 00371.000; and 0.&amp;&amp;1
Tranaporlatlon, who ac,.a more or leaa ol
~:~~~~n~N:dl~1 · whlc~ the prea~nt
In the comin:.,- Pin: ro•d occuplea 0.000
Court
ol
Moina acrll, moll or leto,
Coun"' Ohio, whlch.la a,.lo be deleted from
'"
Auditor•• Plrcel 03 •
1o
an
ac 11 on
lpproprlata cert•ln 00378.000.
property lor highway
Owners, and their
purpona, n•maly the halra,
executon,
moklng, conatructlng, ldmlnlat,.tora,
or lmprovln" of Still aucceaaora
and
Rout• 124,• Section ualgna lorevlr, are
d I ft ~- hlreby dlveated olany
22 728
vaiu.~f:ld ~ X'":' lnd 111 abutter's
..,._
rtyp opertyhl right&amp;
lncludlnn
.... prope
aoug
•
•
to be epproprlilld Ia ICCIII rlghta In, ov•r
more
1peclllcall• end to the lbove
deacrlblclll iollowa:' deacrlbed real eatato,
PARCEL :ZO..WLA
Including auch rlghto
MEG-124-22 72
with reapect to •ny
ALL RIGHt mLE
highway
leclllty
AND INTEREST IN FEE conalructad thereon.
SIMPLE IN THE
All coal, oil and gao,
FOLLOWING
and other mlnarala
DESCRIBED
underlying 1h• above
described property,
PAOPEATY,
INCLUDING
~nd
axlatlng rlghto
0 m ne, extract, and
LIMITATION OF
remove the aame,
ACCESS, BUT
EXCLUDING COAL, ·ahall be, and the ume
hereby a,., •xcaptlll
OIL AND GAS, AND
OTHEAEXISTING
and raaorved unto
MINERAL RIGHtS
Owner&amp;, and their
Situated In 1he helra,
executora,
townahlp ol Chaatar, admlnlalratora,
County of Mllga, Stile auccuaora
and
of Ohio and ln·Sacllan aulgna
Ia rever
33, To~n - 3N, Aange provided, however, In
12W and bounded ·and so mining, extracting,
deac:rlblciMiallowa : and removing said
BIIng • parcel ol coal, all and gao, and
lond lying along . the other mlnarala th1
1111 and right aida al prapar proaarvatlon
tha centarllna al • for lha highway may
ourvey, mad• by the not be Impaired.
Deparlmlnl
of
PARCEL2tJ.WVA
Tranaporletlon, •nd
MEG ·124-22.72
being IOceled within
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
1he bound1ry point&amp; al
AND INTEREST IN
Parcal No. 20 •• FEE SIMPLE IN THE
dalln11t1d upon the
FOLLOWING
D1p1rtmenl
of
DESCRIBED
Trtlnaporlltlan'a right· PROPERTY WITHOUT
al•way pl1n MEG·124·
LIMITATION OF
22.72 and recorded on
EXISTING ACCESS
RIW Plat ShHI No. 18,
RIGHTS, AND
In Plat Soak I, Pag• EXCLUDING COAL,
17, of the Recorder'• OIL AND GAS, AND
Office, M1lga County
OTHER EXISTING
' MINERAL RIGHTS IN

0

acro tfiO!o, """"'adjoining laundry room, quiet location.

Plkl, ScloiO an&lt;l Hocking
County, also Lawio Co., KY.
For more Information and
LYIUDIUI."~
FIIIE mapo conract:
1 Anthon.LAnd Co., Ltd.
I'UR ""'-&amp;
t
2t~
12•65 2 badloom, goa hoOt,
-.olclond.oom
lalrcondlllon, l2,500; t4x51 LOOking To Buy A New
2 be&lt;lroom, Ill tl101rfo, good Hontt? Don' Hovo Land?
condition, 16,1100. (740)o448- Wt Dolll Hurry Oniu tO Lota
4734
. (740)387·7015 Lelt 304·736-7295'
(740)44r ·1337
.
'
.
Prima 2·112 aero lot lor
r8 Wldo. Only St96.00 Per building on·locatl&lt;l on quiet
Month, 8 .99% FIMed lntlmt road, IICluded area, Out·
Rate Wdh Air . And Un- ai&lt;lo of city llmlta In Spring.
d8rplnnlng Hl66-1128-3426 !laid Townahlp. Aaktng
1993 Cia,.nn 18,80 mobile 117,500. Coli lor morelnlo.
•(7401440,4614 Dayo; or
homt 3 br., 2. be. liking (740)o448-3246 Evenings.
5886
000
304
773
:'::,
'
'
altar

BEREA. Ohio (AP) -James Jackson we finally fotind one that's probably
raised eyebrows back on draft day in going to be here for a while."
April when he said t]le Cleveland
Browns coach Butch Davis had JackBrowns could call off their search for a son at Miami so he knew what kind of
feature running back.
player he got when the 5-foot- 10, 210. Jackson arrived saying he was the man. pound Jackson was selected with the
; 1\wo weeks into the season, there's no 65th overall pick in this year's draft.
:doubt he is.
Jackson, who backed up Jacksonville's
The rookie gained 124 yards on 31 Fred Taylor in high school, sat behind
car ries In · Cleveland's 24-14 win over James for two years with the Hurricanes.
the Detroit Lions on Sunday, and But as a part-time player he made the
}lobody - not even former college most of his chances, averaging nearly 7
:teammate Edgerrin James - is qu'es- yards per carry for two years before
Jioning Jackson anymore.
becoming a starter._
.
; "Hopefully, I can go out and get a few
Davis joked that there were many
more of those," Jackson said Wednesday. times when Jackson made him look bad.
"1 wasn't sore, so I think that's the most
"They wanted to fire the coach every
jJositive thing:·
other week," Davis said. "Edgerrin was
• Jackson's 124 yards were the most by a tearing the country up, nobody was
:Browns running pack since 1987, and he tackling him and half the people in the
:bec~e the first Cle~eland back to get . stands thought we were playing the
: )00 yards m a game smce Earnest Byner wrong running back. · .
'James would get his nine carries and
: in 1995.
; He also tied Jim Brown's rookie team would get his 134 yards and have two
:record for attempts and perhaps more 60-yard runs, and everybody would say,
:importantly got James, Indianapolis' star 'See, coach. I told you we're playing the
.;back and Jackson's close friend, to cut wrong guy! He was a good player, and is
; him a little slack.
a good player." ·
, Following a 14-carry, 37-yard effort in
Unable to sign a top free agent back
Jlis NFf.. debut against Seattle, Jackson during the offieason, the Browns seemed
said he caught grief from James and oth- resigned to go into this year with a runer&lt;.
ning-back-by-committee
approach .
"I heard a lot about it on the phone James, however, has changed their thinkfrom my home boys," he said. "Edgerrin ing.
and those guys."
Davis has been reluctant to name
But as he got back to the locker room either Jackson or Jamel White as his
starter during the exhibitioh season or in
on Sunday, his cell phone was ringing.
"Three minutes after the game they the first two weeks of the regular season.
were calling me up;' Jackson said. "They
He still won 't .
just said, 'Good game and we're proud of
"James has started the first two games,
you .' I didn 't rub it in."
and at this time there's no reason to
The Browns' storied history was writ- think that won't continue," Davis said.
Jackson said he could only remember
ten by Hall of Fame running backs such
as Jim Brown, Marion Motley and Leroy one other game when he carried the ball
Kelly. But in their first two years back in as much as he did on Sunday. As a junior,
the league, Clevelan~'s mshing game. was he rushed for 129 yards on 33 carries
not existent, and the· club paraded in all agairut Penn State.
kinds of backs looking for a decent one.
He had prepared himself for a painful
In 1999, Terry Kirby and Karim wake-up call on Monday, but was sur1Abdul-Jabbar got their shots. And last prised to find that he dido 't ache from
year, Travis Prentice and Errict Rhett got head to toe.
the most carries. But there were count"It wasn't bad," he said. "A lot of
less others who came and went.
coaches were asking me all day, 'How's
"I don't think I could list them all," the body?' And I said, 'I'm serious,
quarterback Tim Couch said. "I think coach. I'm fine .'"

t/2 Bath, Fully Cerpered, Dell 486 computer, Win·
r9Q5 t 4K52 single wide for Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· dowa 95, aoun&lt;l card, 14"
rant or aalo. call (740'949- too, Stan S365/Mo. No Pars, monllor, Keyboerd, mouee, ·
Lease Plus Security Deposit word processor, games,
0044 between 6pm·S~
.
Required, Days: 74Cl-446· apeakara, works good.
r995, 3 bedroom, 2 both 3461; Evenings: 740.367· St20. IBM Pentium Desk·
mobile home In Green Tar· 0502, 740-448-0101 .
tops. Internet Ready with
J8Ct trellor ooun. $450 por ApartmontAval1ablo,_ New P~nter. $350 plus lax.
and Rotor·
·Cell
. -(740kdl4a46·29a2 aHor ,7P"'.,
encu required. Call
'TWin Rl- Towora
7468
(740I4&lt;18·
·
. 1304167.5-81178.-EIOCIIfcJiflchalr,_
-j
bta nd 4 h$50;
1 ~~"'-c----1
-,.

·I ~u:-:=;ect~ri= t~ ,:: ':z:r :~i;·~~~y~:BUIIJIINGS

1740 446•3246 lfttr 5pm.

I

3 Bedroom on Ro"tt a,
ter 176 McCormick Road (3041675·5032
aalllpolla. OH 4563 t
'
7 room &amp; bath, with IIOVI &amp;
SECURITY GUARDS
refrigerator, 522 Gronl Si.,
MlddO!port, (7401992·9064.
Temporary security guarda Allordable now home 3
lor up to 6 montha Must
'
·
bedroom, LR, Kitchen, Din·
hove oloan pollee racord, lng Room, bath, aHachtd
good work hlslory, rtllablo garage, nlcoleVIIIot, Prlead
tranaponatlon, valid drlvera 1 h 70' c 1 1o
llctneo, homo phono ond nt o •· 11 rmorodomuat hove black ateel too talla. (740)4&lt;18·280r .
Hilty ahoes. Pay otana at For Mia by ownar: Nloe bl·
16.50 per hour, 32·40 hOurs levol home on t ICII near
por wtok. Call 17401669· Chealar. Throo btclroorn,
2874 Monday-Friday aam· two bathe, one-car garage,
4pm for appointment.
·lamlly, room with fkaplooa,
aun room. Now '*'tral lloat•
SUBSTITUTE TE~CHER lng &amp; ale syatom Ont ml·
'AIDE FOR CHILD CARE nute ott Routt 7, but all!""·
CENTER. Muol have on In· vote. (7401985-398r
"''
teroot and desire to work

Contar 201 High Street.
Point Pieaoent, WV 25550
Wanrl&lt;l oomeono to work
.....
M
on ga.-ga route. ust be
25yoaro,3yearodnvlngox·
1
peronco
, call ovanlngo,
URGENTLY
NEEOED· 17401386-8976
plasma donora, eam 145 lo
$60 lor 2 or 3 hours weekly.
Call Sera· Tee, 740·592·
6651 .

S12uoo. Mike

I

SF.Rvt&lt;Ei

rto

Townhouse

air, laundl)' room , front
'
Middleport, $125 per month
porch &amp; 2·112 Clr gera~.
RICRI!ATION LAND
8 year old Ranch style (740)992-3194
Independent Herballfe OleImmediate po1111110n. Ap- Ranging In 5 ICrt to tOO house. :?: bedroom, 2 bath,
tributor, Call For Product Or

"·--~-·

•

menta. Vary Spacloua, 2 that merch. (304)675·2801

a..,

w/gao log fireplace, control ·

41183.
'"--tttivriiii"""iiiiiii"Jiiiii""iio'• offer.
-,..:.:,-=----,.~~~...........~ '
from
AREA REPS, Individuals ~ BOB EVANS
IN,OTICEI
)

with good schooVcommunlty
contacts to place and super·
vise an ••change studoot.
Compensation and travel in·
878
contlve. HlOO·S64-4
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Sell . Shlrioy Spaal8, 304·
675·1429.

I,

:~.:'::;,:~~~.;';'~;

.$350/Mo., 741J.441Hl008.

H

alternoo~ shift· some Ot5r ask IOf Ron. If no 2·112 bath&amp;; big kitchen R(7~0~~~~4jrorn 125•900· De'"'slt, utQitO!o. No p0\s.
1
me~~aga.
w/oak cabinets, DA, LR
Qalllpolla
Ferry
Area.

at Mlddlelon Estates, 8204
Carla Drive, Gallipolis, OH.

MERaiANoL!I:

Nice large apanmant, 3 ..__oiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiltorl
bedrooms, large llvlngroom,
·
washer/ dryer· hook-up, 27 cu. ft. Kenmore Side by
$450 month, references &amp; Side Refrigerator with Ice
deposit required. (7401448- ~".k."r. $100. (7401256·
.:.80:..:30:.:_::-------- ~
:----:------

land, (7401742·2014.
2
t t/2 both, 14 wide
Office · building In Miners· with large expando &amp; c:envitO!, BOO fl&lt;l. ft., ale, COY· rralolr,(740)992·2r87
ered ptrklng, ceiling fan, _ _,;,.__:._____
$27S'rno., 814-878·1661 .
3 bedroom mobile home tor
~&amp;
rent, $300 month, S200 de....,,~
poa~. all electric, water
· ACREAGE
paid, (304189&amp;·3865.

weekends. Apply in person answer, leave

family, some1h1ng for every- Ga llipolis, OH. An Equal

one. lnlants to adults, some
antiques. 2 moles lrom River
Valley High School on Little
Kyger Road , Friday· Satur-

~,.=

~~~n t, 0~~~~rir:t".'/:::

Run
Ad .,
(740)992·3509

owner.

-N-8-Bu-~-. ...
--,()pon,...--lng_OC_·

Opponunitlea.
·
r.,:r tat. Sue's Sa"""'blea
New 2 Bedroom. Heat on the T In Middleport
Pump, Washer/ Dryer Hook· Ohio. (7401992-&lt;1296
up. 7 mPH from Hospital on
r80. (7401441·0117
Ml'ic:ELLANr.ol

Newly constructed, alngle
3 bedroom mobUe home In
state areal Promotion and R.N. Supervisor· Full nme clean up, move almost any· story 1600 sq. foot home. Nice · 4 ac;:re tract nar Middleport,
no
pets,
car~r adva~ment oppor- A leading provider of serv· thing. Other odd toba· Call Located 10 minutes from GIHipofil· easy terma, (740)992·5858.
tunit1es are available! E~~:cel- ices to individuals with Men· (740)446-7604
· Holzer Hospital, 20 mlnutu (740}448-3583
lent Salaries and Benefit tal Retardato'on and Douet·
Br;..._
2 baths
14x70
•
Will power wash houses, Irom PI easan II/a1'~Y u....-1
""""" ·. i·•ia , _ . Eq
• E 3__
••
,~ • Newtu
1 ~, 17·"""2 21 67 '
Packages a-vallablet Expari- opmental Disabilities Is trailers, anything. Call tal , off SA 160 on 1 private ,,.... n vr.-. UMirran •· ,.,,""'"'....,
ence In food service is ad· looking fqr an A 'N Supervl· (740)441 -4238 or (740)448· 1-1 /2 acre lot. 3 bedroom, litH, 3•8 •ere loll, walt of 3 br 1211:60$200 a month +

I

;:~:;::~·

-lao-lor 1'111
e.ttte whloh t.ln
• - olthlllw. Ow

at Middleton Eatales. 6204 Lea 0 message on volca
Carta Drive, Gallipolis, OH.
v
·
An equal opportunity em· maol.
.
- - ' - - - - - - - siva uOII expansion 1s taking player (740 )446 •48 t 4
place within the local trl· ':-"-::·..:....,;,:,...:.;,_;,____ Will haul away, clean out,

6

-~~~ly.....,.

Openings ln a d&amp;ycare,
1

GaUipotia,

tv

Thla--wflnot

Goor:;ge;.;s:;,;:P:;;orla..;.,.b.,.lo-=sa-w-m-:1~11,

tal Retardation and Devel· 888-781-2412.

..__ _ _ _ _ __.... ARBV'S RESTAUR'NTS
Found lost dog silver/grey ARE CURRENTLY SeEK·
wlbtack face. Found right lNG CANDIDATES FOR
abOve high school. wearing ALL LEVELS OF STORE
b
11
11
(304)682 M
· ANAGEMENT. _
Aggre,a·
2 ~~~"an"yt~,;~ ar.
Lost 2 Farm dogs from
Burlmgham. MISSing sir.ce
Sept 8th. Female: Black
LabJDoberman milt with
~hite patch on chest, 60
1 s.,
years old, medium

dloc~rnlnetfon."

$7.00 hour, very honest.

Restaurant now don't haul your logs to the
h iring all 3 locations, full or mill just call 304·615·1957.

'

Kitten Calico to g1veaway.

~~~~~ 5 " 6343

prwfwrwnot,llmltdon or

~-------pi McClure's

black· 1 black/ whole· 2 100 WORKER$ NEEDED
gray/ white Call (740)388Assemble crafts, wOOd
6670
~ems . Material providad.
Free kltterlS to a 'good
To$480+wl&lt;.
home, (740)992-7285
Free ~~~'/wrrr;:':~.~~i/4 Hr.

ques, 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E. Pomeroy. 740992·2526. Russ Moore,

Now Taking Applications- Antique Oak Cider Press.
35 Weal 2 Bedroom Town· $100. (740)256-644!$
; Mllon8l Prtce Reducad. 3 Bedroom, Why rent? government house Apartmenta, lnchJdea
l&lt;rty ''"'"''UG~ tr•l 2112 Bath, 2 Car Garage, 2 baCked loans from 1490 Waler
Sewage, Trash, Baby bed, &lt;lraoalng 1able,

l::.oc:~"m::not~ rti..._Jon, .::

e'w'ery Thursday. Monday sets,
Diamonds,
Gold ton, WV 25702.
th ru Saturday 9:00-6:00.
Rings ,
u.s. Currency, -

~~------..,

couple 1250 00 Lincoln bedroom apartments 81 VII·
Ava. 0111 Ho.,.;.tead 304- lege Manor and Rlvel81de
Apartment&amp; In Middleport.
67&amp;-5540 uk for Nancy.
From $278.$348 Call 740Doublewlde for rent, 2 bed· 992·5064. Equ~l Housing
01

:"rbouro·

1'80

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 5

BROWNS' NEWS

•
•

CallY Cowlty, OH

To Place
Your Ad,

Pomeroy, Mlddlapon, Ohio

•

"

�·-

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001
.• Thursday,

..•~•

Sept.

27, 2001

Pomeroy, Middl~port, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

'

WICK·s
Hauling &amp;
Excavating

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Roa

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Sizell5'x 10'

to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

P/B
CONTU&lt;TORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771
74~985·3948

CONCRET£/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footrn, Walls, Steps •

Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Dri.-es • Stencil ·
Crt~e Frre Estimatt.s
Sening Ohio and W.V.

wv 11031712

JONES'

~;e~

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

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Tr:ee Service

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
3-0

CONSTRUC1ION
Free ea11malea,
Insured
Specialize Jn new
cOnstr•ctlon,

remodeling, plumbing,

Male Shut In
Home visit

Haircuts
Available

I

CINNIFS
CIILDCIIE

.........

•••

Gutters· Down
Spout
Free Estfm•tes

SUI.J

949·1405
591·5011

, ... 11 .....

&amp;67-&amp;329
HOME CREEK

General
Contracting
Excavatm,r ·Dozer anil
Backhoe
Septic Syetema
UtWtle11

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 Sl. Rt. 7 Soulh

NewHomea

Coolville, OH 45723

992-7943

748:887:GU3

Phone 992-7445
CeO 0110 591-9254

llnh$U.95•1nrlll'llN
I

• Complete
Remodeling

L&amp;L Tire Barn
740·992·5344

2127 1 mDpd

441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

1-740-992-6142

Free estimates
on repalres,
In-home service
available 24 hours,
used systems 386
and up, used
hardware and

Good Dealsl

DREHEL'S
(740) 742-2925

Q

Advertise

in this
Thrley's space
97 Beech St.
Mattress for $50 middleport, OH
Sales
lr1R'v1R 6 10'1120')
per
=!-'992-31!4
:month f-p-=--o:992-6635
..
1

I'VE BEEN

Sunday 9::W- Sunday School;
10:30- Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday E•e. 7:00

I

•

IIAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE tiC, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

• FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

~ ·J,eT'$ FAce .I·T, t~l'lle,
/ Tt~e ONLY vi AY
we'Ll, eve~ ~UN
A MA~AT~ON

KENSINGTON
WINPOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 119.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Pomerov,

IS IF

we

o~c; AN rze

oNe.

THE BORN LOSER

.r""""'" r:'DPI'C'f£/'\YctWU5
f'Oi:. f&gt;... IU-J~ TOOl&gt;.._"(
WWLO("~ 0C

.te~hi'D 5/&gt;..~YOOR.C~
~\TI-'f. Offi:rl!TE
3-JI&lt;\1,,--........... -~

OH

· .

aft;

·;· l~

-=~;

Racine, OH 4!711

.

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.

O#t/11 N•WNpGJHf'A.!:~i-illtloll

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Gar"'les
'Replacement
Windows, Room

~Snodgrass' Upholstery .

IN THE COMMON
ol a aurvey, made by
Owner, his hatn,
Cotumbua, Ohio.
PLEAS COURT OF
the department ol execu1ora,
43215-4132 '
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO Trenepor1atlon and ·administrators,
(814) 488-3038 ·FAX
Gordon Proctor,
baing located within succeuoro,
and
(814) 488-1756
Additions • Rooftng
"Htlptn; You ro Rtcovtr Your lnvt:llt!tnt"
Director
the boundary points of assigns forever, ara
Email:
COMMIICIAlandRESI.DE!InAl
Ohio Department of Parcel 207-WLR as hereby dlvas1ed ohny wcolaOag.atate.oh.us · FREE ESTIMATES
Tranaporta11on,
dallneated upon tho and all abutter'a Attorney for P.lalntlff
Plaintiff, ·
Dapartment
of rights,
Including ---"'A failure to anawer
v.
Transportation's
access rights In, over or otharwlaa defend (NO SUNDAY CALLS)
.Wea1vaco Corp., etal, Right-of -Way plan and to the above within aald 28 days
814&lt;!49-2202
Reclnt,Ohlo
Defendan1e.
MEG-124·31 .57, Shaet described real estate, will reault In plaintiff, ·" _
_ _ _ _ _ __. ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ---'
Judge Frederick W. 15 of 42 and rocordad Including such rlghll pur~uant to Civil Rule
Crow, Ill
In Plat Book s, Page with respect to any 55, aaklng the court to ~~--~-~
Ceu No. 01-CV-108 20, recorda of the highway
fecit tty grant a judgment by tBita
&amp;tea
Legal Notice For
Recorder'•
Office • constructed thereon.
default agalnat any
Melga County, Ohio.
All coal, olt and gas, auch peraon who lalla Custom Computers
Publication
Unknown owners of
1111 understood that and other minerals lo
answer
or Service, Repairs, and
any eatata, title, or 1he s1rlp olland above undarlylng the above o1herwlae defend.
Upgrades
lntereat In or 1o the deocrlbed contains described property,
Gordon Proctor,
ourface of, or In or to 0.120 acres, more or and all exla11ng rights
Director
the cool, oil, gao and less.
Ohio Department or
10 mine, extract, and
any and all other
This deacrlptlon Ia remove 'the aama,
Tranoportatlon
.
mlnerala, altuatad on baaed on a survey ahalt be, and the eame 9120, 27
or In tho premtaos made by BALKE hereby are, excepted - - - - - - - daacrlbtd In this ENGINEERS lor the and r..orved unto
Public Notice
'We'll fix _it or elsel"
Petition a1 Parcel 207· Ohio Dapartment of Owners, and their
740-667.0600
WLR, will taka no11Ce Tran•portatToh, In heirs , executors,
East State Street Phone (740)593-667
_that I hoy havo been 2000, By Joseph D. admlnlatratora,
PROBATE COURT ·
~A~+~·=.;,.=j
Athens, Ohio
•
named I I defendant&amp; Kuhlmann ,
P.S. auccaaaora
and OF MEIGS COUNTY, •
c.mpn.e:."""'
by Gordon Proctor. Reglaterod Surveyor asalgne
forever; OHIO
..__ _...;.;,;,...,....;,;,.
Dlrec1or
Ohio No. S-8823 under lhe provided, however, In IN RE: CHANGE OF
Department
of direction
and 80 mining, extracllng, NAME OF T'yler Ray
Tranepor1atlon, who · aupervlalon of Ronald and removing aald Scarbrough 1o T'yler
lnetltultd Ceae No. 01· F.
Rlaer ,
P.S. coal, oil and gaa, and Ray VIning
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
CV-108, now pending Reglllored Surveyor other mtnarale, tho APPLICATION FOR
Shade River AG Service
ln 1ht common Pleaa No. S-7083.
proper preaervatlon of CHANGE OF NAME
• New Homaa
Court of
Molga
All Iron plna aet are the highway may no1 OF MINOR
• Siding
"Ahead In Service"
Coun1y, Ohio, which Ia to be (314") x (30") by a be Impaired.
(R.C. 2717.011
• Roonng
• Complete Line ol Sullivan'• Grooming Supplloo
an
action
10 (1112") aluminum cap,
Purauanl 10 Civil
The
applicant • Remodeling
• Sullur Coated Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
appropriate cer1a1n stamped "OOOT RJW Rule 12(A)(Il, aotd stales that the • Garages
• 10% off all Prlofert Horae and Llvnlock Equip.
property for highway DISTRICT 10" and 1he peroona mentioned applicant Ia the • Additions
r 11).10-10 All Purpose Fartlllur $4.5015011
purpooeo, namely the aurveyor'o
0 h 1o above ahatt take parent ad 111em of 1ha • Decka
• 1,000 Baler Twine $19.50/Sale
making, conotrucllng, Reglatratlon
or further notice that minor and that the • Home Repalra
•18,000 Baler Twine $21.50/Sole ·
or Improving of State aurveyor's
name , lhiy have 28 dayo minor has baon a
Free
Estimates
and/or aftortheconiplotlonol bona !Ida realdent of ·
Route 124, Sectlon number
Ag
Inc
31 .57, and to fix tha company nama.
the
Service
by Meigs Coun1y, Ohio,
740-992-1101
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
value oflald property.
Polnta lloted with publication within lor at leaat one year
992-2753
The property s6ught (Iron pin oet) are to be which to answer or Immediately prior to
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-385 1
to be opproprlaled Ia· aet by 1ha contractor olherwlae defend the filing of this
more opeclflcatty ao tndlca1ed at lhe agolnal Plalnttff'a application. · A
doacrlbod ao followo: termination ol the pe1l1lon.
certified copy ol 1he
PARCEL 207-WLR conotrucllon project.
Tho original ol any mlnor'a
b I r 1h
MEG·124-31.57
Said o1atlona being auch answer or other c e r t I II cat e
Ia
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
1he Stallon number• pleading defending attached.
Umestonel
AND INTEREST IN FEE es otlpulated In 1he agolnal Plalnttff 'a · Tho
appllca n1
Stniii'S Dtstounts
muiUple load
SIMPLE IN THE
hereinbefore
pellllon mual be llled atatea 1hot the nama
..Distounls
FOLLOWING
mentioned aurvoy and with the Clerk 01 the and address of 1he
DESCRIBED
11 ohown by plano on Common Pleaa Court mother of the minor
PROPERTY
lllo In the Ohio oll.lolga Coun1y, Ohio, Ia: Bobble Jo VIning,
INCLUDING
Departmant
ol at Meigs .cqunty 18 Point Len•:
LIMITATION OF
Tranaportatlon,
Cou rthouaa
100 Pomeroy, Ohio 4576_11,
ACCESS, AND
Martello, Ohio.
Second Stra~t , P.O.
And the name and
EXCLUDING COAL,
Prior lnalrumant Box 151 , Pomeroy, addreaa of 1he father
OIL AND GAS, AND
DB
Ohio 45789 . and a · or alleged father of
•
•
1he min
Is· James
Refarence: • · 224 •
EriC
Fully lnaured
• Room Addition• &amp;
OTHER EXISTING
Page 111 and D.B. 244, copy of any ouch
or ·
MINERAL RIGHTS
Page 939, In the a nawer or other Howard VIning , 18
Remodeling
Owner
Right Away Clearing
· New Garages
Situated In 1he County Recorder 's pltalfhg defending Poln1 Lane, Pomeroy,
1ownehlp of Lebanon, Office.
aga/nst Plaintiff 's Ohio 45769.
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
b
be
The
appllcan1
Coun1yofMelg. S1a1e
• Roo11ng &amp; Guttaro
WUTSHIOE
1111
1
•
The
a o v e po
on mua
requests a change of
· • VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing .
IUBEIIHIP
of Ohio, and In Sec1ton deocrlbed 0.120 acrea, aervad upon:
34, 180 acre Lo11181, more or lesa, of which
WILLIAM J. COLE
name 01 lhe minor
• Patio and Porch Deck1
fiiiiWI... INra
~
2N R
11W
)
from Tyler Ray
, ..........-fll
In this space
Free Eslimales
• •nge
• the proaen1 road
(0067778
Scarbrough to Tyler
.own
Ill
1:11-12:11
and bound,d and occuplea 0.000 acrei,
Aoala1ant Attorney Ray VIning.
V. C. YOUNG Ill
for _
c•rtsl'llller 1111
described aa follows: more or leaa, are to be
General
)
992-6215
124 per month
Being a parcel of deleted from Auditor's 37 Weal Broad Street, (~ . 27 • 2001
Pomeroy. Ohio
22 Ye!t l ~tl
land lying on the left Parcel 07-D0951 .000.
Suite 350
sldeo of ~he centerllna

740•992·7599

8c

1j

"29£3

.

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827
Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring
Pressure

MARKET
Maplewood Lake

,.,....
lt. Rt.U4

lletw_ ..... .

Gets·•
. . . . . Anllable

TRI-COURTY
TRfiRSPORT

ES'fltal'

HE 5AV5 IT'S TERRIBLE TO 60
T~ROLI6f.l LIFE WISHING
'(OU WERE 50METHIN6 ELSE

I NEVER WANTED TO BE
ANLfTHING BLIT A DOG .,

Berllce,

...,

tuUHeolw

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$49 Service gas, fuel oil, and
heat pumps lor winter

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE CAN HELP

BLACKBURN'S

TREE SERVICE

•:

BuckaiSarvlca

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Blackburn

Advertise

..........

'

GRAVEL
SAND

ll
-\ I

·

about

2=.1

11 tmmoaaur· 38 Avoldod
able time
capture
20 .......
41 ~s
tidbit

1001-

23 Ufe a104'Y,
· for lhort
24 Slugger
25

28
27

43 llamle'a
guy
44 Inclined (tol
Gllirlg
45 111111 term
Bua. abbr. 48 Polnltd a
Body armor
gun
Po!Hictan 48 DrMrY
LandOn
50 "DIIIC1ng
Hockey
Queen"

a=Y

r",.!..r

LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
. REBAR &amp; REWIRE

I

1I

I I

41'

t

ltalldapta.
Caapeltawltb

Top- Trim· Removal

.

t=8et

...........t

bird

47 Stormed

If
I4I I I r .~ 1;~~~ ~!~:~~~ ~~6~uA~~~::

'

or

. '

lawn Furniture,
Boot Trellora,
Utlll1y Trallera,
Car Heulefl,
Anything MOlal

Pb.94t-a'IJ4

46 Razor-llllltcl

II l I

"QJutlity WOrk"
Car•, Tractora,

ft.EA

Puzzle

O

1.----'-'==..:.::=="'-'=----.:..J

. Shade River

\ '

BARNEY

471169 S&amp;alt Roule 124

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know,
Delivered Righi lo Your Door.

·-

Page B 7

Your partner opens
30
with a weak two-bid,
announcing a decent
51
32 Tar org.
Ertcaon
six-card suit with 5-9
33 Prune
52 Cuft
high-card
points
(branchia) 53 Pu-'34 Aour-aack
Balril
when nonvulnerable
abbr.
55 Hare, In La
and 6-10 when vul38 MllUntalna
Havre
nerab le. The responder, without the
high-card values to
contemplate a game,
· should still be happy
to increase the preemption when having
a fit with partner.
The basic guideline
is supplied by the Law
of Total Tricks. If
you have three-card
support, raise to at
least the three-level.
(With nine combined .
trumps, bid to the
nine-trick level.)
With four~c ard support, jump to game.
The aim is to make
life as hard as possible
CELEBRITY CIPHER
for the fourth hand.
by Luis Campo•
In particular, he must
Celabnty
Cipher
cryptogram•
are created from quotation• by tamouo
bear in mind that the
people, past and present. Each letter In the ciphtr lllndl for another.
responder could have
Today's clue: K equals G
a powerful h and fine
GIE
TNZEA
VM
NZF
'N H H
for game but not
str ong enough to
DWVHF,
AE\TFCPVIA
V C F
consider a slam. Then
LA ,
entering the auction
CNEIZF
GVPR
DWYAF
could be very expenA VI H . '
EWF
sive.
KVP
NCP
However, if the _opNHFJNCPFZ
TVTF
ponents pre-empt
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Gettlng 1hnto ~ ::"'~~=~~~ ~~~~:~. Hke
you, try to get into
spelunking down a cave wl 1 ou
. the auction, especially
(Columnlstl Ellen Goodman ____ .
. .• -·when short in their
suit.
.THAT DAILY
WOlD
GAMI
North's overcall- of- - - 'UULII
four
no-trump
Reorronge letters of the
showed a two-suiter.
four scramblod words be·
South, who co uld
low to form four slmple words.
judge his partner held
D I WN 0 W
clubs and diamonds,
had great minor-suit
holdings and the
spade ace. Hoping his
v0 AcH
partner didn't also
3
have two heart losers,
he jump ed to six
clubs.
GL I B E
After winning with
dummy' s heart ace,
sta
declarer called for the
club ace -- if anyone ,.-..,-~..,.,.--=---=-.,.---. age it isn't dancing, it's commitD_N-rP---rE-r:-Lrr-i· ting suicide - -- -- - -at a time.
was void, it would be 1--.,-L-r
6 7
Com plere rho chuckle quorod
West. Then declarer I
.
.
.
.
by lil/ing in the miuing words
played another club,
you develop from step No. 3 below.
and sat forever when
East followed with
the eight. Were the
clubs 2-2 or 1-3? The
odds slightly favored
East's being 6-1-4-2,
SCRAM-LETS ~NSWERS
6-2-3-2 or 6-3-2-2,
Ground - Drawl - Pllrge- Aghast- LUGGAGE
rather than 6-2~2-3,
I've
figured out why airports make you walk so fa r to
6-1-3-3 or· 6-3-1-3.
get to your plane. _
It's to give a head start to your LUGSo , South went up
GAGE.
with h is king and
claimed 12 tricks
when the quee:~

FREE IN HOM£ !IT1MATEI•"SlEINfi t8 IELIEVINQ"• WVICU477

··~· ·

INT

Raise
ante
BY
ALDER

1·800·291·5600 • 740·992·4119

.. ,

,.....

Noon• r..,,

--

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Wut

Opening le1d: • X

1-30«75-7814
1-800-150-9077
Residential Conuntrcilll New Construdion
Sales Senice Installation
Specializing in Sheet Metal Ductwork
"Trant• Salts &amp; Senice For
Gollia, Mo.•on, a\ld Mei~s Counli..
Licensed and ln.•ured
WV 005176

Llcenee #f'53009580

--

NOTICES

Vulnerable: North·South

PtttWP

software.

Your Replacement Parte Source

I I t S I

Dealer: r.ast

TRAIIE'

REGUlARlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

992-9158

Pricts

ROBOTMAN

For more information, come to our church sUe.

N-12 DOUBLE WAll
PLASTIC
FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT

JERRY 'S
USED
COMPUTERS

General Machining

¥

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.

24'120'

740.992·1671

WINTER STORAGE

Bob Ball

740-992-o739

• I 7 I

•• J
.. K 1 3 t

ALL 'DA't!!

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

I!&lt;! meroy

HOURS: Mon · Frl8-5; Sat 8-1

Vouchers accepted in
Meigs County.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason
County

Advertise
In this space
for $25 per
month .

....
...

aKQ liiT6
~ tt t

!!oelolh

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTR~CTORS

• Garages

and

I S I
Q I

f

Crossword

48 Prtnc:lpiM
1 R:r,ut~tton 53 one and
11 V n
1ht other
'""ul.t~1':t4 q cryauM
12 Dltp liMp Sf Quilling
13 Allonlohll
-tat
14 Portabtt
57 llonogrem
bod
pl
15 llu lunch Sf Did-'
11 Walking
51 Pen brand
atlck
80 Tolatoy and
17 Gtto ready
auocaglta
to pray
81 Make an
19 Squirrel
onw
away
62 Behind, 1o
21 Slugger llel
1ht captain
22 Totataup
23 Crepoa'
DOWN
c:clualns
, whlrt
26 Spouse
28 Charged
particle
3 Singer
21 Ember
Steger
31 Threshold
4 Brag
35 "That
5 Kilo or lb.
hurtal"
37 Wldeapread I Runfaat
31 Crock ufea 7 Fronll
8 Trophy
40 Jamoa 9 Holle
Jonea
42 SpHc:h ' 10 "Japan"
end
problem I
12 Boston
44 Grandhoopsltr
racing

....

... ••. .. .....

•New Homes

217E. 2nd. Pomeroy

Welding &amp; ~razing
Custom Fabrication

Jeff Warner Ins.

·ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTtUCTION

Slllllll'lllllnlllllrll..a 111.85

44087 Wlppte Road

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Sepl. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
Arrival:
10:00 a.m. -4:00p.m.
Release:
April 27, 2002
·
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
remonl, or anytime access is wanted to
fairgrounds 'other than stated dates.
Building space is first come first serve. .
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

•

0

COOK IN'

•lu•ea Ill StJ.95 • EDIIIIl Weill

by appointment
(740) 696-0757

Mack's Pocket

¥ K QJ

Pan

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

urvlng
4 Spoiled

MJ? Il

·A~ 1 16J
JIDI~

J !

~ream

1

• .AA

SoMI.

CONSTRUOION

ACROSS

• "1·

"'"l
• J '

992-5479
LAMM'S

ALDER

.'

•
•

Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

All Makes Traclor &amp;

eltclrical, home mainttnance, and repair

porches, &amp; de&lt;ks.
Owner
Charles R. Dill

.,

Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,

,

NEA

PHILLIP

N~11

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;

DEPOYIAG
PARft

ENTERPRISES

llllamtlllllll .... Ellllllll* IK.III
I

Maintenance-

Jiiiii/WIU
24111.

~-4

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
-Mtddleport. -Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Roofing • Home

I1,11'2'TL

I

,c.-

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Howardl.
Wrltesel

The Dally Sentinel •

____

d~opped --whew! -~~--

l n the yra r :1hc:~d you're
hk.dy ro do h~m·r in Jiitu atJOil~
t b;lt involve JlL'o plc you
know, bot h on a sona l and
busincs~ lcvl·L In your rase,
friends hi p l.'nh:mCl's joint cf4
fNt~.

LlllllA (Sept. 23-0Ct. 23) _You'll du cs'pcci:dly we ll todJy in ttl"tivitiL'S th&gt;l t h ;av~ ~ lc111cnts of friendly compettUon.

t.

'Your

'Birthday

~f1igh gear tod:~y. Friends

maY.

~t:H"drti :lt how c-a~ily
~nt i ripate what ,they

you

br

Lhinking.

It'~

no

p~rlor

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22J;m . 19) --Through the kindthou ghtful ness of another you nught be shown a
way today where you can

m•.'!;; or

~c.:ncrate

itddition;,l income.

skills agaimt a wortiry opponent . Gl't ~ j ump on life by

up your alley.
AQUARIUS U;sn. 20-Fcb.

understanding the influen ces

19) -- Concentrate on projeers or endeavor~ today in

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

sign.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Should you get in"
volved in ~omcthing that is

similar to 'a ~iU1oH1o n you've
handled successfully in the
past, me the s:.me fo nnula to day. It will work just :u well
:~.gain.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 21) ~ - Y ollr powcn of
in .~ i~ht ma y be .w orking m

T"'URUS (April 20-May
20) -- More effective plans to
further yollr :.mbitious interem can be devised today by
u!ing your imagination. What
you envi,ion will work.
GEMINI (May 21-junc 20)
- - Although you shou ld n't
expect the same rc1ul~s from
today's lucky speculauon tomorrow, enjoy your achieveme nt now while chance is on
your side.

trick,

It'll be somethi n ~ that's right

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

back you up .

so put it to good use.

ting your mcnt::&amp;l :m_A phy§ical

Wk kliffc. O H 44092-0 167 .
De smc to state your Zodia c

m posi tiom of power will

:.rc

Once more. you'll enj oy pit-

dut 'll govcm you in the year
ahcacl Send fo r ym1r A~tro·
Graph prcdictio m by mailin.s
$2 to Astm~ Graph,. c/o tim
new~p~pc r , P.O. Box 167',

10

w hi ch you co111 truly take
pride once they ue cum·
plctcd. This type of effort will
enhance your feelin g! of self.
won h.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20)

-- Don't leop before looking
today, but do study any buSIness or investment proposal to
which you'll be exposed to
th.t t you fed has pO[Cntial.
Ch;mccs arc, it docs.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- You'll make it know,n today that if you promi5e something to someone else, your
commitment can be relied
upon. ConsetJUt'n lly, people

-'

CANCER Usm&lt; 21-July
~2) ~- h looks like you might
dc:monstratt:: your management skills todny on how well
you handle both yotlr own ih··
teresu and someone else's.

. LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) -Although thi• 111lght h• an exceptionally bu•y day for you,
nevertheleu, you'll make
yourself available to penons
who seck you ou~ for advice.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S•pt. 22)
-- Look for new ways to add ~
to your remurccs or improve
your material security today.
For you the pickings are

good.

�·-

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001
.• Thursday,

..•~•

Sept.

27, 2001

Pomeroy, Middl~port, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

'

WICK·s
Hauling &amp;
Excavating

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Roa

Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-949-2217
Sizell5'x 10'

to 10'x 30'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

P/B
CONTU&lt;TORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771
74~985·3948

CONCRET£/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footrn, Walls, Steps •

Flat Work,
Replacements, • Walks
and Dri.-es • Stencil ·
Crt~e Frre Estimatt.s
Sening Ohio and W.V.

wv 11031712

JONES'

~;e~

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

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Tr:ee Service

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
3-0

CONSTRUC1ION
Free ea11malea,
Insured
Specialize Jn new
cOnstr•ctlon,

remodeling, plumbing,

Male Shut In
Home visit

Haircuts
Available

I

CINNIFS
CIILDCIIE

.........

•••

Gutters· Down
Spout
Free Estfm•tes

SUI.J

949·1405
591·5011

, ... 11 .....

&amp;67-&amp;329
HOME CREEK

General
Contracting
Excavatm,r ·Dozer anil
Backhoe
Septic Syetema
UtWtle11

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers
1000 Sl. Rt. 7 Soulh

NewHomea

Coolville, OH 45723

992-7943

748:887:GU3

Phone 992-7445
CeO 0110 591-9254

llnh$U.95•1nrlll'llN
I

• Complete
Remodeling

L&amp;L Tire Barn
740·992·5344

2127 1 mDpd

441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

1-740-992-6142

Free estimates
on repalres,
In-home service
available 24 hours,
used systems 386
and up, used
hardware and

Good Dealsl

DREHEL'S
(740) 742-2925

Q

Advertise

in this
Thrley's space
97 Beech St.
Mattress for $50 middleport, OH
Sales
lr1R'v1R 6 10'1120')
per
=!-'992-31!4
:month f-p-=--o:992-6635
..
1

I'VE BEEN

Sunday 9::W- Sunday School;
10:30- Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday E•e. 7:00

I

•

IIAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE tiC, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

• FRANK &amp; EARNEST
•

~ ·J,eT'$ FAce .I·T, t~l'lle,
/ Tt~e ONLY vi AY
we'Ll, eve~ ~UN
A MA~AT~ON

KENSINGTON
WINPOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 119.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Pomerov,

IS IF

we

o~c; AN rze

oNe.

THE BORN LOSER

.r""""'" r:'DPI'C'f£/'\YctWU5
f'Oi:. f&gt;... IU-J~ TOOl&gt;.._"(
WWLO("~ 0C

.te~hi'D 5/&gt;..~YOOR.C~
~\TI-'f. Offi:rl!TE
3-JI&lt;\1,,--........... -~

OH

· .

aft;

·;· l~

-=~;

Racine, OH 4!711

.

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.

O#t/11 N•WNpGJHf'A.!:~i-illtloll

New Homes • VInyl
Siding • New Gar"'les
'Replacement
Windows, Room

~Snodgrass' Upholstery .

IN THE COMMON
ol a aurvey, made by
Owner, his hatn,
Cotumbua, Ohio.
PLEAS COURT OF
the department ol execu1ora,
43215-4132 '
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO Trenepor1atlon and ·administrators,
(814) 488-3038 ·FAX
Gordon Proctor,
baing located within succeuoro,
and
(814) 488-1756
Additions • Rooftng
"Htlptn; You ro Rtcovtr Your lnvt:llt!tnt"
Director
the boundary points of assigns forever, ara
Email:
COMMIICIAlandRESI.DE!InAl
Ohio Department of Parcel 207-WLR as hereby dlvas1ed ohny wcolaOag.atate.oh.us · FREE ESTIMATES
Tranaporta11on,
dallneated upon tho and all abutter'a Attorney for P.lalntlff
Plaintiff, ·
Dapartment
of rights,
Including ---"'A failure to anawer
v.
Transportation's
access rights In, over or otharwlaa defend (NO SUNDAY CALLS)
.Wea1vaco Corp., etal, Right-of -Way plan and to the above within aald 28 days
814&lt;!49-2202
Reclnt,Ohlo
Defendan1e.
MEG-124·31 .57, Shaet described real estate, will reault In plaintiff, ·" _
_ _ _ _ _ __. ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ---'
Judge Frederick W. 15 of 42 and rocordad Including such rlghll pur~uant to Civil Rule
Crow, Ill
In Plat Book s, Page with respect to any 55, aaklng the court to ~~--~-~
Ceu No. 01-CV-108 20, recorda of the highway
fecit tty grant a judgment by tBita
&amp;tea
Legal Notice For
Recorder'•
Office • constructed thereon.
default agalnat any
Melga County, Ohio.
All coal, olt and gas, auch peraon who lalla Custom Computers
Publication
Unknown owners of
1111 understood that and other minerals lo
answer
or Service, Repairs, and
any eatata, title, or 1he s1rlp olland above undarlylng the above o1herwlae defend.
Upgrades
lntereat In or 1o the deocrlbed contains described property,
Gordon Proctor,
ourface of, or In or to 0.120 acres, more or and all exla11ng rights
Director
the cool, oil, gao and less.
Ohio Department or
10 mine, extract, and
any and all other
This deacrlptlon Ia remove 'the aama,
Tranoportatlon
.
mlnerala, altuatad on baaed on a survey ahalt be, and the eame 9120, 27
or In tho premtaos made by BALKE hereby are, excepted - - - - - - - daacrlbtd In this ENGINEERS lor the and r..orved unto
Public Notice
'We'll fix _it or elsel"
Petition a1 Parcel 207· Ohio Dapartment of Owners, and their
740-667.0600
WLR, will taka no11Ce Tran•portatToh, In heirs , executors,
East State Street Phone (740)593-667
_that I hoy havo been 2000, By Joseph D. admlnlatratora,
PROBATE COURT ·
~A~+~·=.;,.=j
Athens, Ohio
•
named I I defendant&amp; Kuhlmann ,
P.S. auccaaaora
and OF MEIGS COUNTY, •
c.mpn.e:."""'
by Gordon Proctor. Reglaterod Surveyor asalgne
forever; OHIO
..__ _...;.;,;,...,....;,;,.
Dlrec1or
Ohio No. S-8823 under lhe provided, however, In IN RE: CHANGE OF
Department
of direction
and 80 mining, extracllng, NAME OF T'yler Ray
Tranepor1atlon, who · aupervlalon of Ronald and removing aald Scarbrough 1o T'yler
lnetltultd Ceae No. 01· F.
Rlaer ,
P.S. coal, oil and gaa, and Ray VIning
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
CV-108, now pending Reglllored Surveyor other mtnarale, tho APPLICATION FOR
Shade River AG Service
ln 1ht common Pleaa No. S-7083.
proper preaervatlon of CHANGE OF NAME
• New Homaa
Court of
Molga
All Iron plna aet are the highway may no1 OF MINOR
• Siding
"Ahead In Service"
Coun1y, Ohio, which Ia to be (314") x (30") by a be Impaired.
(R.C. 2717.011
• Roonng
• Complete Line ol Sullivan'• Grooming Supplloo
an
action
10 (1112") aluminum cap,
Purauanl 10 Civil
The
applicant • Remodeling
• Sullur Coated Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
appropriate cer1a1n stamped "OOOT RJW Rule 12(A)(Il, aotd stales that the • Garages
• 10% off all Prlofert Horae and Llvnlock Equip.
property for highway DISTRICT 10" and 1he peroona mentioned applicant Ia the • Additions
r 11).10-10 All Purpose Fartlllur $4.5015011
purpooeo, namely the aurveyor'o
0 h 1o above ahatt take parent ad 111em of 1ha • Decka
• 1,000 Baler Twine $19.50/Sale
making, conotrucllng, Reglatratlon
or further notice that minor and that the • Home Repalra
•18,000 Baler Twine $21.50/Sole ·
or Improving of State aurveyor's
name , lhiy have 28 dayo minor has baon a
Free
Estimates
and/or aftortheconiplotlonol bona !Ida realdent of ·
Route 124, Sectlon number
Ag
Inc
31 .57, and to fix tha company nama.
the
Service
by Meigs Coun1y, Ohio,
740-992-1101
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
value oflald property.
Polnta lloted with publication within lor at leaat one year
992-2753
The property s6ught (Iron pin oet) are to be which to answer or Immediately prior to
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985-385 1
to be opproprlaled Ia· aet by 1ha contractor olherwlae defend the filing of this
more opeclflcatty ao tndlca1ed at lhe agolnal Plalnttff'a application. · A
doacrlbod ao followo: termination ol the pe1l1lon.
certified copy ol 1he
PARCEL 207-WLR conotrucllon project.
Tho original ol any mlnor'a
b I r 1h
MEG·124-31.57
Said o1atlona being auch answer or other c e r t I II cat e
Ia
ALL RIGHT, TITLE
1he Stallon number• pleading defending attached.
Umestonel
AND INTEREST IN FEE es otlpulated In 1he agolnal Plalnttff 'a · Tho
appllca n1
Stniii'S Dtstounts
muiUple load
SIMPLE IN THE
hereinbefore
pellllon mual be llled atatea 1hot the nama
..Distounls
FOLLOWING
mentioned aurvoy and with the Clerk 01 the and address of 1he
DESCRIBED
11 ohown by plano on Common Pleaa Court mother of the minor
PROPERTY
lllo In the Ohio oll.lolga Coun1y, Ohio, Ia: Bobble Jo VIning,
INCLUDING
Departmant
ol at Meigs .cqunty 18 Point Len•:
LIMITATION OF
Tranaportatlon,
Cou rthouaa
100 Pomeroy, Ohio 4576_11,
ACCESS, AND
Martello, Ohio.
Second Stra~t , P.O.
And the name and
EXCLUDING COAL,
Prior lnalrumant Box 151 , Pomeroy, addreaa of 1he father
OIL AND GAS, AND
DB
Ohio 45789 . and a · or alleged father of
•
•
1he min
Is· James
Refarence: • · 224 •
EriC
Fully lnaured
• Room Addition• &amp;
OTHER EXISTING
Page 111 and D.B. 244, copy of any ouch
or ·
MINERAL RIGHTS
Page 939, In the a nawer or other Howard VIning , 18
Remodeling
Owner
Right Away Clearing
· New Garages
Situated In 1he County Recorder 's pltalfhg defending Poln1 Lane, Pomeroy,
1ownehlp of Lebanon, Office.
aga/nst Plaintiff 's Ohio 45769.
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
b
be
The
appllcan1
Coun1yofMelg. S1a1e
• Roo11ng &amp; Guttaro
WUTSHIOE
1111
1
•
The
a o v e po
on mua
requests a change of
· • VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing .
IUBEIIHIP
of Ohio, and In Sec1ton deocrlbed 0.120 acrea, aervad upon:
34, 180 acre Lo11181, more or lesa, of which
WILLIAM J. COLE
name 01 lhe minor
• Patio and Porch Deck1
fiiiiWI... INra
~
2N R
11W
)
from Tyler Ray
, ..........-fll
In this space
Free Eslimales
• •nge
• the proaen1 road
(0067778
Scarbrough to Tyler
.own
Ill
1:11-12:11
and bound,d and occuplea 0.000 acrei,
Aoala1ant Attorney Ray VIning.
V. C. YOUNG Ill
for _
c•rtsl'llller 1111
described aa follows: more or leaa, are to be
General
)
992-6215
124 per month
Being a parcel of deleted from Auditor's 37 Weal Broad Street, (~ . 27 • 2001
Pomeroy. Ohio
22 Ye!t l ~tl
land lying on the left Parcel 07-D0951 .000.
Suite 350
sldeo of ~he centerllna

740•992·7599

8c

1j

"29£3

.

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827
Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring
Pressure

MARKET
Maplewood Lake

,.,....
lt. Rt.U4

lletw_ ..... .

Gets·•
. . . . . Anllable

TRI-COURTY
TRfiRSPORT

ES'fltal'

HE 5AV5 IT'S TERRIBLE TO 60
T~ROLI6f.l LIFE WISHING
'(OU WERE 50METHIN6 ELSE

I NEVER WANTED TO BE
ANLfTHING BLIT A DOG .,

Berllce,

...,

tuUHeolw

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$49 Service gas, fuel oil, and
heat pumps lor winter

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE CAN HELP

BLACKBURN'S

TREE SERVICE

•:

BuckaiSarvlca

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Blackburn

Advertise

..........

'

GRAVEL
SAND

ll
-\ I

·

about

2=.1

11 tmmoaaur· 38 Avoldod
able time
capture
20 .......
41 ~s
tidbit

1001-

23 Ufe a104'Y,
· for lhort
24 Slugger
25

28
27

43 llamle'a
guy
44 Inclined (tol
Gllirlg
45 111111 term
Bua. abbr. 48 Polnltd a
Body armor
gun
Po!Hictan 48 DrMrY
LandOn
50 "DIIIC1ng
Hockey
Queen"

a=Y

r",.!..r

LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
. REBAR &amp; REWIRE

I

1I

I I

41'

t

ltalldapta.
Caapeltawltb

Top- Trim· Removal

.

t=8et

...........t

bird

47 Stormed

If
I4I I I r .~ 1;~~~ ~!~:~~~ ~~6~uA~~~::

'

or

. '

lawn Furniture,
Boot Trellora,
Utlll1y Trallera,
Car Heulefl,
Anything MOlal

Pb.94t-a'IJ4

46 Razor-llllltcl

II l I

"QJutlity WOrk"
Car•, Tractora,

ft.EA

Puzzle

O

1.----'-'==..:.::=="'-'=----.:..J

. Shade River

\ '

BARNEY

471169 S&amp;alt Roule 124

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know,
Delivered Righi lo Your Door.

·-

Page B 7

Your partner opens
30
with a weak two-bid,
announcing a decent
51
32 Tar org.
Ertcaon
six-card suit with 5-9
33 Prune
52 Cuft
high-card
points
(branchia) 53 Pu-'34 Aour-aack
Balril
when nonvulnerable
abbr.
55 Hare, In La
and 6-10 when vul38 MllUntalna
Havre
nerab le. The responder, without the
high-card values to
contemplate a game,
· should still be happy
to increase the preemption when having
a fit with partner.
The basic guideline
is supplied by the Law
of Total Tricks. If
you have three-card
support, raise to at
least the three-level.
(With nine combined .
trumps, bid to the
nine-trick level.)
With four~c ard support, jump to game.
The aim is to make
life as hard as possible
CELEBRITY CIPHER
for the fourth hand.
by Luis Campo•
In particular, he must
Celabnty
Cipher
cryptogram•
are created from quotation• by tamouo
bear in mind that the
people, past and present. Each letter In the ciphtr lllndl for another.
responder could have
Today's clue: K equals G
a powerful h and fine
GIE
TNZEA
VM
NZF
'N H H
for game but not
str ong enough to
DWVHF,
AE\TFCPVIA
V C F
consider a slam. Then
LA ,
entering the auction
CNEIZF
GVPR
DWYAF
could be very expenA VI H . '
EWF
sive.
KVP
NCP
However, if the _opNHFJNCPFZ
TVTF
ponents pre-empt
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Gettlng 1hnto ~ ::"'~~=~~~ ~~~~:~. Hke
you, try to get into
spelunking down a cave wl 1 ou
. the auction, especially
(Columnlstl Ellen Goodman ____ .
. .• -·when short in their
suit.
.THAT DAILY
WOlD
GAMI
North's overcall- of- - - 'UULII
four
no-trump
Reorronge letters of the
showed a two-suiter.
four scramblod words be·
South, who co uld
low to form four slmple words.
judge his partner held
D I WN 0 W
clubs and diamonds,
had great minor-suit
holdings and the
spade ace. Hoping his
v0 AcH
partner didn't also
3
have two heart losers,
he jump ed to six
clubs.
GL I B E
After winning with
dummy' s heart ace,
sta
declarer called for the
club ace -- if anyone ,.-..,-~..,.,.--=---=-.,.---. age it isn't dancing, it's commitD_N-rP---rE-r:-Lrr-i· ting suicide - -- -- - -at a time.
was void, it would be 1--.,-L-r
6 7
Com plere rho chuckle quorod
West. Then declarer I
.
.
.
.
by lil/ing in the miuing words
played another club,
you develop from step No. 3 below.
and sat forever when
East followed with
the eight. Were the
clubs 2-2 or 1-3? The
odds slightly favored
East's being 6-1-4-2,
SCRAM-LETS ~NSWERS
6-2-3-2 or 6-3-2-2,
Ground - Drawl - Pllrge- Aghast- LUGGAGE
rather than 6-2~2-3,
I've
figured out why airports make you walk so fa r to
6-1-3-3 or· 6-3-1-3.
get to your plane. _
It's to give a head start to your LUGSo , South went up
GAGE.
with h is king and
claimed 12 tricks
when the quee:~

FREE IN HOM£ !IT1MATEI•"SlEINfi t8 IELIEVINQ"• WVICU477

··~· ·

INT

Raise
ante
BY
ALDER

1·800·291·5600 • 740·992·4119

.. ,

,.....

Noon• r..,,

--

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Wut

Opening le1d: • X

1-30«75-7814
1-800-150-9077
Residential Conuntrcilll New Construdion
Sales Senice Installation
Specializing in Sheet Metal Ductwork
"Trant• Salts &amp; Senice For
Gollia, Mo.•on, a\ld Mei~s Counli..
Licensed and ln.•ured
WV 005176

Llcenee #f'53009580

--

NOTICES

Vulnerable: North·South

PtttWP

software.

Your Replacement Parte Source

I I t S I

Dealer: r.ast

TRAIIE'

REGUlARlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

992-9158

Pricts

ROBOTMAN

For more information, come to our church sUe.

N-12 DOUBLE WAll
PLASTIC
FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT

JERRY 'S
USED
COMPUTERS

General Machining

¥

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.

24'120'

740.992·1671

WINTER STORAGE

Bob Ball

740-992-o739

• I 7 I

•• J
.. K 1 3 t

ALL 'DA't!!

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

I!&lt;! meroy

HOURS: Mon · Frl8-5; Sat 8-1

Vouchers accepted in
Meigs County.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason
County

Advertise
In this space
for $25 per
month .

....
...

aKQ liiT6
~ tt t

!!oelolh

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTR~CTORS

• Garages

and

I S I
Q I

f

Crossword

48 Prtnc:lpiM
1 R:r,ut~tton 53 one and
11 V n
1ht other
'""ul.t~1':t4 q cryauM
12 Dltp liMp Sf Quilling
13 Allonlohll
-tat
14 Portabtt
57 llonogrem
bod
pl
15 llu lunch Sf Did-'
11 Walking
51 Pen brand
atlck
80 Tolatoy and
17 Gtto ready
auocaglta
to pray
81 Make an
19 Squirrel
onw
away
62 Behind, 1o
21 Slugger llel
1ht captain
22 Totataup
23 Crepoa'
DOWN
c:clualns
, whlrt
26 Spouse
28 Charged
particle
3 Singer
21 Ember
Steger
31 Threshold
4 Brag
35 "That
5 Kilo or lb.
hurtal"
37 Wldeapread I Runfaat
31 Crock ufea 7 Fronll
8 Trophy
40 Jamoa 9 Holle
Jonea
42 SpHc:h ' 10 "Japan"
end
problem I
12 Boston
44 Grandhoopsltr
racing

....

... ••. .. .....

•New Homes

217E. 2nd. Pomeroy

Welding &amp; ~razing
Custom Fabrication

Jeff Warner Ins.

·ROBERT BISSELL
· CONSTtUCTION

Slllllll'lllllnlllllrll..a 111.85

44087 Wlppte Road

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Sepl. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
Arrival:
10:00 a.m. -4:00p.m.
Release:
April 27, 2002
·
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
remonl, or anytime access is wanted to
fairgrounds 'other than stated dates.
Building space is first come first serve. .
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

•

0

COOK IN'

•lu•ea Ill StJ.95 • EDIIIIl Weill

by appointment
(740) 696-0757

Mack's Pocket

¥ K QJ

Pan

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

urvlng
4 Spoiled

MJ? Il

·A~ 1 16J
JIDI~

J !

~ream

1

• .AA

SoMI.

CONSTRUOION

ACROSS

• "1·

"'"l
• J '

992-5479
LAMM'S

ALDER

.'

•
•

Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

All Makes Traclor &amp;

eltclrical, home mainttnance, and repair

porches, &amp; de&lt;ks.
Owner
Charles R. Dill

.,

Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,

,

NEA

PHILLIP

N~11

Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;

DEPOYIAG
PARft

ENTERPRISES

llllamtlllllll .... Ellllllll* IK.III
I

Maintenance-

Jiiiii/WIU
24111.

~-4

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
-Mtddleport. -Ohio 45760
Local 843-5264

Roofing • Home

I1,11'2'TL

I

,c.-

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Howardl.
Wrltesel

The Dally Sentinel •

____

d~opped --whew! -~~--

l n the yra r :1hc:~d you're
hk.dy ro do h~m·r in Jiitu atJOil~
t b;lt involve JlL'o plc you
know, bot h on a sona l and
busincs~ lcvl·L In your rase,
friends hi p l.'nh:mCl's joint cf4
fNt~.

LlllllA (Sept. 23-0Ct. 23) _You'll du cs'pcci:dly we ll todJy in ttl"tivitiL'S th&gt;l t h ;av~ ~ lc111cnts of friendly compettUon.

t.

'Your

'Birthday

~f1igh gear tod:~y. Friends

maY.

~t:H"drti :lt how c-a~ily
~nt i ripate what ,they

you

br

Lhinking.

It'~

no

p~rlor

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22J;m . 19) --Through the kindthou ghtful ness of another you nught be shown a
way today where you can

m•.'!;; or

~c.:ncrate

itddition;,l income.

skills agaimt a wortiry opponent . Gl't ~ j ump on life by

up your alley.
AQUARIUS U;sn. 20-Fcb.

understanding the influen ces

19) -- Concentrate on projeers or endeavor~ today in

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

sign.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Should you get in"
volved in ~omcthing that is

similar to 'a ~iU1oH1o n you've
handled successfully in the
past, me the s:.me fo nnula to day. It will work just :u well
:~.gain.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dcc. 21) ~ - Y ollr powcn of
in .~ i~ht ma y be .w orking m

T"'URUS (April 20-May
20) -- More effective plans to
further yollr :.mbitious interem can be devised today by
u!ing your imagination. What
you envi,ion will work.
GEMINI (May 21-junc 20)
- - Although you shou ld n't
expect the same rc1ul~s from
today's lucky speculauon tomorrow, enjoy your achieveme nt now while chance is on
your side.

trick,

It'll be somethi n ~ that's right

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

back you up .

so put it to good use.

ting your mcnt::&amp;l :m_A phy§ical

Wk kliffc. O H 44092-0 167 .
De smc to state your Zodia c

m posi tiom of power will

:.rc

Once more. you'll enj oy pit-

dut 'll govcm you in the year
ahcacl Send fo r ym1r A~tro·
Graph prcdictio m by mailin.s
$2 to Astm~ Graph,. c/o tim
new~p~pc r , P.O. Box 167',

10

w hi ch you co111 truly take
pride once they ue cum·
plctcd. This type of effort will
enhance your feelin g! of self.
won h.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marc h 20)

-- Don't leop before looking
today, but do study any buSIness or investment proposal to
which you'll be exposed to
th.t t you fed has pO[Cntial.
Ch;mccs arc, it docs.

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- You'll make it know,n today that if you promi5e something to someone else, your
commitment can be relied
upon. ConsetJUt'n lly, people

-'

CANCER Usm&lt; 21-July
~2) ~- h looks like you might
dc:monstratt:: your management skills todny on how well
you handle both yotlr own ih··
teresu and someone else's.

. LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) -Although thi• 111lght h• an exceptionally bu•y day for you,
nevertheleu, you'll make
yourself available to penons
who seck you ou~ for advice.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-S•pt. 22)
-- Look for new ways to add ~
to your remurccs or improve
your material security today.
For you the pickings are

good.

�.

.....

-·...

••

.

.

. .. .

'

"

Page B 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Homecoming ··

Pomeroy, Middleport,

o·h•o

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

EXPO flower show winners announced
junior horticulture division Toban, Shelia Curtis, Peggy
were Deanna Sayre and Crane and Alice ·Thompson
Breeanna Manuel; and in the and Michaela Hupp, two, in
senior divmon, were ·Pat - dahhas; and Joyce 'Manuel',
Holter, three, Evelyn Hollon, Peggy Crane and Lula Toban
and Janet Theiss in roses; in patio pots; and Peggy
Peggy Crane in chrysanthe- Crane in foliage plants;
mums; Pauline Atkins and Donita Sayre, annuals: Joyce
Donica Sayre in marigolds.
Manuel, celosia, African viaOther winners were Lula lets and succulents.

Bayless is among a growing
number of chef, who focus on ·
using the freshest of ingredients, in his case organic. Like
Bayless, Ch1cago chefs Paul
Kahan of Blackbird restaurant
_jnd John 13ubala of Thyme
restaurant have their own,
albeit snuller, g~rdens and shop

Bus see n
WASHINGTON (AP) ists.
President Bush JS courting
For the
Islamic support for a war on
first time,
terrorism " a Pakistani ddethe
FDI
Do you have a loved one .
ganon trtes to resolve the
said Thursdeployed in Operation Enduring
standoff between the United
clay
that
Freedom? Ohio Valley Publishing
some
of
States and Afghanistari 's TalCo. wants to salute these heroes by :
the
19
iban rulers over top suspect
publishing an occasional list featurhijackers
Osarna bin Laden.
mg their names, a brief bio, and a
that made
Bush planned to meet with
photograph. Drop off these materiBush
suicide
King Abdullah II ofJordan on
als at the offices of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Friday to discuss how the attacks on the World Trade
Reg1ster or The Daily Sentinel.
nations can hunt down terror- Center and the Pentagon have

saluting

local servicemen

EXPO WINNERS - In the flower show at the Meigs County
Town and Country EXPO the winners were Joyce Manuel, horticulture sweepstakes, seated; and Shelia Curtis, right, best of
show, and Gladys Cumings, reserve best of show. Larry
Bunger woh the creativity award.

been linked to bin Laden.
That revelation came with
the public release of pho. tographs of the suspected
hijackers, even though author-.
ities said they were not sure
they had the suspected terrorists' real names.
"What we are currently
doing is determining whether,
when these individuals came
to the United States, these
were their real names or they

changed their names for use
with false identification in the
United States," FBI Director
Robert Mueller said. He
urged anyone who recognized
the men to contact the FBI.
Investigators, meanwhile,
have !ound haunting documents that provide the most
jarring insight yet into the
mindset of the men who
boarded the four doomed
planes on Sept. 11.

AEPto

garage

A Message at Faith) Hope and Charit_y
· tram St. Joseph's Hospital.

:Tranifer to CIC
completed last
week

-·- -·- -·-•
•

•

A

partnership in which to be proud.
In August of 1991i.lhe SiS~enof Saintj&lt;&gt;eph llealth Syslan, Inc. and
HC\en~~ intoa 50 - 50 joinl ""JUre .,..ne•hipofSt.jo!eph's
Hospilal. Mthetime,theslltfo ..re ..~n&amp;apartnerlhatrould
lielpSI.Joseph'sgiOw inlolhefuture•n:~-inglhech~~nges ri
U1el1ealtl&lt;areindo;t~. &lt;fflrlhep:otfi~&gt;)""',Slj&lt;&gt;eph'sHospital

hlllll"""'andp"'!"nli,offenn&amp;tC.oommunicyawidelarrayol
state-of-the-art heallhcareser&gt;ices.
"I thank tht Sistm of Saint ]ostph o[Wiruling
on b#half of agrattful Dioc.tu for thtir
mol!)' lJJOndtrful.Jfors ofdtdicotion
to htolth oort in tht Poriusburgorra.
Tilt Duuu.t is &amp;rtat!J indtbttclto thtm
for tirtltu!J co rryuf&amp; out tht command ofChriJI

7bt Cbalilable Fund bas conmbuled over

13 millimlo more 1/xm /j(} age~/des ibrriughoul
/be eler~tn-roun/y aroJ u...,..._
"Nrw rralities prtsent nt!ll opportunities,
and onl~ Stott ond regulatory
approvals orr recti~td and the
solt compltttJ, tht SUtm of SaintJostph
Htalth ~stem. Inc. will conh·nut
sming tht h!OIIh and wtllntss nudJ
of~A!Jt Vi'Jinio through a foundation
that initiai!J focu.sts on childrtn. "
Sisttr Mo~rtlf O'Bnu
Pl&gt;flllitlll, $1$1m_of&amp;r11l)oaph HtoiiA ~.,.,,/~t.

A

to heal and to urvt all ptoplt. "
Tht Mort Ru. &amp;r"e~rJ W.

•

St~'"1U

8iJhojl ~J l'l'litrll"&amp; - G~orlr1lon

oontlnuotfily impro~

to the community.

put option lo sell (heir remaining 511% 01111eohip in Slj&lt;&gt;eph's
H&lt;&gt;pilal. The S""" reru:hirl thei1 d&lt;dsioo carefully and pra)"rful~.
OO!llidenng theu expenenre \lith HC\ and ..tghing a variety ri
f:JCto~. The;e fodoo inchlie:

An

Stiltr K~t!.lro~ Durirn·
Vr rt Prtutk~l, Stllrrs o{Sor11l}osrpll Htlll~ ~lltm, /11c.

il will oontinue to t1: run.
"~ t.rprriencr shows that HCA il
dedicated and commilttd lo prol!iding
mtptiona! hralthccrr stroiw to tht Mid-Ohio Val/g .
Th9 understand thot till!} communi!J
i5 amiquf and muJt De odminisfmJ locoi!Jr
with tht objutiiJl offulfi~ling
the nttds of tht ~ople it m'WI. ~

The Sisters' mission of charit!;j will
remain an integral part of the Hospital.
Now lhe Sis~~ will Jale their mi~ioo ina"""' dlredion. As part
of the pu~h"" ag:i..nent HCA, agnflto:
• Fol.,. the Catholic Ethical and Rcligioos Directi..,..
• Continue the rommillrtnl of the Hospilal to p101ide chancy
care &amp;MI.,. 1o the unde,.,(
• Kl!ep the P'"iilon ri ~ce President ri M;;.ton &amp; Ethics.
• Pnlli&lt;l! asear oo the itooJd ofTru&lt;tres 1o be apjlOtnled
by the Bishop.
• MainL1in the Pasloral Care Departroolt.

This ~Ilion exph'3 in 2002. The Si.~te~ ha\t doci&amp;!t to exercise the

· and sourct ofpridt and comfon to us. "

To ourpatienu, ph)'idans and St j&lt;&gt;leph's employee, this chilli!'
....l!iU.be ~am"" and tr.msparenl_f-o a 1151/lt ri the man"'l"""'' - - rontrJCt of \he pasl fi"'l"'"; the Hospital is already fllOrallng the way

IICA"s vision for St. Joseph's IIOS[lital is to

services available

"Th1 f.rptrtist, foithfulntss a11d strtnglh of thf
SJH Boord oJTrustm, Senior Managemenl. empl~rrs
and oolunteerJ hovt brtn i:J trrmtndouJ irupiration

lql pri&lt;lricy In the furure fur St. joseph~ Hospit&gt;l.

Dau1d G"fD· MD

part ri the joint \'Cillure ail""'ffi'nt, an opt~n was includ«&lt;
~ving the Sllifo of Saimp.ph Heallh SysJrot, Inc the :tbilicy ll&gt; ~II
(or a 'put" as il is callo:l) their remaining 511% "'""'hip II! HC\.

Jo;eph in anew diM:tion.

remain a

decision based on our
hopes for the communit:,~.

1-o

of the Boanl of Truslf&lt;l, senior m:magement lf~n l!ld
hospilalonpiO)"'·
• The opponunicy 1r1 ~ke lhe mi~ion of Ihe Siste• ri Srunt

educalion, and reifntion ri st.1l1 fori~ facilities. This will

and expand the

"':"mple of Ibis

bas

"""' . /be

mn""'"""'' of owr

143 mU/Ion for •ww loclmo/ogy and copiliil
improwmetl~

fk•&gt;-

a/ /be Haspilal over /be

pa.~

millioneJ&lt;jlansion
project '!!' fll'ned and Sl J&lt;&gt;eph's ocurrently
i;~St)W,ther&lt;'W$21

replacing its cardiac catheterization lab with

a new advanced digital system.
"Th' Mid-Ohio Va/19 btntfits
~having thl t:rptrtiu ofHCA
stroing our communi!J.

Outr thr Jxlst frtlf'.JfD,.;,
th9 hat!t proutn thtmstl~~ts
to bt a good portntr ~ mpondin&amp;

. "S/. ]01&lt;1&gt;h ·, H&lt;»!&gt;ilol, our medical !Ioff,
fmpl~m,

volunttm and tht

tnlin oommuni_!y lllill continut to benfjil

from the uniqut marriagt ofthll!Qiuu,
mijj•'on and prutoml carr
th1 Sistm ho~ JosttuJ at tht HoJpitol,
coupl1d with HCA 't slrt"&amp;'hs
cf acms to capitol and lttlortgi~
to a nd100rl of hospitals throughollt
thr .Stolt and tht country. "
Sltplrtlll M~r~g. CEO

to thr nttds ofour patitn,IJ

flrJt a~d Jorirrwst." &gt;

w"- ask for :,~our continued faith

R&lt;JNrl Lir~cicornr

during this time ofchange.
The SiSleo Oi. Saint J&lt;&gt;;eph beli.., il is a time of change and

,.

SJ

ofthr S}H fl1111r/ ofTrulltfJ

Our emplo!Jees are
our greatest asset.

a time of qJVOrtuni~·. Til')· beli~

thai

Ch~ir111an

Joseph·., llospital is in a

One of the first questions

unique position to continue to

a.~ked

when an

grow and prosper. ofkrin&amp; lhe

announcement like thi5 is made is "How will this

a.;der array of state-ofthe-art heallhc:are =ires. AI lhe

same time, Ule Siste11 belieYe it is the

impact lheemployee of lhe Hospita11" There is no
plan fora,loss of joil&lt;. With avision lhat focu.,
on growth, addilion of sta[ is more likely. HC\

right time to lake their mission in a new direction while maintaining

has f?Cused significant resources on recruitment,

&lt;qJJmuni~

a-...ry 11sible P""''"" ar Sl. Joseph's Hospital and in 1he rommuni~.
One.eKan:~e of this oaremarl&lt;:tble flw l"'" of service to the jlOC!lie
of the Mid-Ohio Valley throu~t tl• miniSiry of 1he Sis~• ri Saint
]as&lt;ph Chantab• Fund, set up •ith funds recei...J in 1996 when the
Sister.i fim entered in:othe joint venture with H~.

,.

St.Joseph~ Hospital
A Time of change.
A Time of Opportunit:,~.

An op~rtunit:,~
to continue the mission.
Wilh the mi~~n. &gt;ision and values of lhe Slsleo of saint jo!eph
firmly In place, OOI.Ill&lt;d
\lith the resoun:es ol
one of lhe leading
h'dltlKare oompanl« In
the nalioo, St jo!epb's
Hospital is uniquely
JXllitiooed to,.,.,. Ihe present and fulure health and ..,II..,. na'ds
of the Mid-OhioValley.
"Thr "li~ion and oolurs ofthe Hospital
nsidr itt thr htarts oft.ar:h ofour fntpl~,
worli'i at St. Jostph 's Hospital.

1h9 carry on tht work of tht Sislm
, through thfir companionate rare. "
Sislrt )110~ Kf!1t"b11M
Viet PrtJiftnt ofMWicfl &amp; fiAia

BY BRIAN J. REm

BY BRIAN J. REm

,,J'9MllRQY: - The for-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

mer Oltio Department · of '

POMEROY - Meigs County Treasurer Howard
Frank met with Meigs- County CommissionersThursday to discms the financial condition of the
county's general fund.
Based on the ·county's spending to date, Frank projects a year-end deficit of$53,147 in the general fund,
which finances all county courthouse office opera-

Trans~---1

Pleue see AEP; AJ

s

tions.

ST
ternwheel
Riverfest 2001
got under way
Thursday afternoon as sternwheelers began docking
at the Pomeroy levee,
concession and artist vendors opened for business
and a fire truck parade,
wltich was dedicated to
rescue workers in both
New York and Washing~
ton, D.C., made its way
up Main Street.
The three-day festival
kicked off with .a flag-raising ceremony by Drew

Today's

Hlp: SOs

Sentinel

L-: 40s
Details, A3

,p~

2 Sec:tlons - 12 Pales

calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

Lotteries
OHIO

82-4 Pick 3: 1-4·9; Pick 4: 3·2-4-6

85 lludwye 5: 17-18-24-32-37
A4 W.VA
A3 Dllily 3: 5-4-7 Dail)' 4: 6-3·5·3
81,3,6 Cash :zs: 2-4-10-14-16-24
A3

.
C 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Webster Post 39, American Legion, and a concert
by Dee and Dallas.
Festivitie~
continue
today with ·perfonnances
by the Meigs High
School Band and Flag
Corps, Midnight . Cloggers. and various live
bands throughout the
evening.
Saturday's
sc hedule
includes a parade, ltistorical \valking tours, the
crowning of' the 2001
Riverfest Queen, chili
cookoff, line-throwing
contest, and the ducky

-·.•

derby. A full line-up of
entertainment will be
available throughout the
day from 11 a.m. till mid-

night and a firework~ display at &lt;) p.m. will close
the festival. (Tony M.
Leach photos)

Please see Budget. AJ

Donations still being collected for NYC workers
BY TONY. M. LEACH

STAFF
POMEROY - ."Supplies and money
are being collected ,by the Pomeroy Volunteer Emergency Squad and Peoples
Bank for delivery to rescue workers moving the rubble that used to be th!! World
Trade Center.
Todd Smith, Pomeroy squad cltief, said
Thursday a large amount of clothing,
canned food and blankets has been col. SENTINEL ·NEWS

lected from people concerned about the
thousands of rescue workers still on the
scene of the worst.terrorist attack in U.S.
history.
"There's a lot of really good people out
there, which is clearly evident by the
large amount of donations we've
received," Smith said as h e piled bag after
bag of donated supplies into a collection
·
.
bm.
. "It makes one proud to be part of such

a great country whose people unite so
strongly in times of crisis."
With so many organizations collecting
donations for both victims and rescue
workers, Smith said a surplus of clothing
and canned food dbes exist; however,
. there are certain items still needed at
Ground Zero.
"We're currently in desperate need of
Ple•se see Donations, AJ

Gallla Fall Business Expo
Look for the Holzer Medical Center Community Health
and Wellness Department at the Expo

Saturclay, September 29 • 1 0 am • 5 pm -·
Sunday, September 30 • 1 pm • 5 pm
Gallla County Fairgrounds
health information will

I
,_,\

According to Frank's records, the county has operated "in the red" six of eight months this year, spending less than taken in only in April and May, when real
es!:ate tax settlements begin.
Frank suggested conunissioners prohibit all officeholders and department heads from using blanket purchase orders to purchase supplies and make other
cxpendirures, to avoid overdrafts in line items at the
end of d1e year. ·
Frank said that, in the past, officeholders have been
issued blanket purchase orders and useCJ the face value
of the purchase orders v.oith more than one vendor,
creating an overdraft in some line items, and conunissioners should hold those officeholders per.;onally
responsible for any overdrafis that result between now
and year's end.
The county relies on a carryover balance at the end
of the year to cover the first two or three payrolls and
other first-of-the-year expenses.That carryover will be
especially important to the commissioners this year
and next year, because of the projected loss of revenue
.from the removal of mining equipment at Southern
Oltio Coal Co.

•

FREE Blood Pressure screenings, Body Fat Analysis screenings and

-

Please see Bush. A3

Frank suggests
•
savrng
measures

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

portation .
garage near
Pomeroy
will soon
be occu- .
pied
by
American
Electric
Power, and
local of!icials expect
the move to benefit the local
economy.
AEP will consolidate local
-field operations into the
1950s-era garage, . w~ich
ODOT vacated last year in
favor . of a new and larger
facility just down Oltio 7
near Five Pain~.
That
consolidation,
according to Economic
Development Director Perry
Varnadoe, will include field
operations in Pomeroy. and
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
ODOT Di.rector Gordon
. Proctor and Deputy Director
George Collins presented the

Terrorists left behind rem
in Arabic giving them stepby-step instructions for their
suicide mission and preparing
them spiritually for death, a
law enforcement official said
Friday.
Published ·accounts characterized the document as a
mission guide that urged the
hijackers to do such things as
smile at their taxicab driver,

Treasurer,
officials
discuss
budget

-·

ODOT

------

• Acongregation becoming smaller and incre:lliing in age.
• A••mg foundation lor """"' «tablishirl by \he hard 110rk

HOME GROWN- Rick Bayless, acclaimed chef, poses in the
2,000-squar!l-'foot garden at his North Side Chicago home.
Bayless, proprietor of Frontera · Grill qJ:ld Topolobampo restau. rants, uses lnuch of the produce grown in his garden in the
restaurants and some at home on weekends, but he also says
gardening is like therapy: .. It brings me really back down to
earth." (AP PhOto)

AMERICA AT WAR

occupy

restaurant," says Bayless, who

films part of his PBS television
program "Mexico One Plate at
a Time" in his back yard and
home and part in Mexico.
"It bring; me really back
down to earth," he says. " I usually get up early and go out
there, and the first thing I'll do
is p1ck all the squash blossoms."

Hometown Newspaper

•

FOOD

Chicago chef~ grow
some in redients
backyar fresh

cou

•

Meip County's

·

JUNIOR
AWARDSBreeanna
Manuel,
right, won
junior best
·of show and
the horticu~
ture award,
while Deanna Sayre
was the
reserve
best of
show and
creativity
award winner.

The Hoskins Family, a Southern gospel quartet which has had
10 national releases. will be the featured singers at Hobson
Christian Fellowship Church Sunday at 1:30 p.m. The singers
have had recordings which have hit the Singing News Magazine charts. They also placed in the top three in the National
Quartet Convention's talent search with an original song. The
church is located one mile !9-Uth of Middleport on Ohio 7_. A
noon at the old Legion Hall . in
potluck dinner will be held
_Middleport.

zote Mexicans so adore.

•

'

'POMEROY -Winners in "Meigs County Fair" class
the ¥eigs County Town and along with the horticulture
Country EXPO flower show sweepstakes award; while
last weekend at th e Rock Deanna Sayre took reserve
'springs Fairgrounds have best of show with her entry
been announced.'
in the "Favorite Design"
Taking best of show with class, along with the junior
her entry in "Pomeroy, The creativity award.
Blue ribbon winners in the
County Seat" was Sheila
Curtis with Gladys Cumings adult arttsttc ~rrangement
were
. reserve bes t o f show 1·n · classes
ta kmg
p
C Sheha CurtiS
. and
h
0
the "Middleport Honey Bear G~gf C ra~e, ';_ ~acd;
Festival" class. Larry Bunger
a Ays . uTmhmgs, myE " ·
f. h
· ·
son, 1ICC ompson, VC1yn
was wmner o t e creatiVIty H II
n ·11 C
d ·
d dJ
M
I 1h
o on, 1
rane, an m
awat • an oyce anue • e the junior division Breeanna
sweepstakes award.
Manuel two and Deanna
In the junior division , Sayre. '
'
Breeanna Manuel won best
Taking blue ribbons in the
of show for her entry in the

CH ICAGO (AP) -When regularly at farmers' markets.
chef Rick Bayless gets a cravCity space is precious, so
1 ing for sweet corn, fresh fruit Bayless doesn't waste an inch in
or a juicy tomato with sweet his garden. Grapes, ~r exambasil 'Prinkled on top, he can pie, are trained to' grow up
walk into his back yard or from a flower bed onto his
climb on top of his garage to garage roof. Two app le trees
gather the . luscious harvest of grow against a garage wall.
his own· garden.
Bayless and his wife, Deann ,
Thete, in· Chicago's Buck- use nmch of th eir produce in
town neighb·orlmod;-;~bwrtlve- their restaurants and scm e--ar- miles tram his Frontera Grill home on weekends. Like their
and Topolobampo restaurants, business, their garden has
this popular chef of authentic grown fast. It now requires a
Mexican food cultivates 2,000 full -time gardener, Sarah
square feet of vegetables, fruit Steedman, but Bayless still
and flowers.
enjoys his time there each
1
He also grows herbs galore, morning. ·
from basil and rosemary to the
" It's like therapy for me. It's
sassy cilantro and aromatic epa- such ·a different pace than the

FLY YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORt YOU

be provided. For more information, call
446·5679

MEDICAL CENiER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org
I

0

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