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.....;a__, the Bend.' .

PapAl

• _The_D_any_Se_ntin_'e_l_ _

she met my son, ''Lee," he was a
happy, popular and well-respected
man with a good job. She made it
plain ' after the wedding that her
career came first and money was
very important. She criticized his
friends and made it uncomfortable
when he would see them. Rita
bought all his clothes. If he bought a
shirt himself, she would complain.
He would put it away just to keep
peace.
Rita got an opportunity to move
about 1,000 miles away. Since she
made more money, Lee transferred
and moved. I found out later she had

berween them.)
- SEEN IT AU 1N ATIANTA
O.,.r son turned into a silent
DEAR SEEN IT AU: While I
young man who was starting to have never failed to acknowledge
drink too much. They had no that women can be controlling or
friends, as Rita didn't like anyone abusive, you are correct that more
Lee met. Lee liked basketball. Need- letters appear in my column about
less to ' say, she criti~ized the people abusive men. That may be because
he play,ed witll. Ydu ~l !he picture.
men are conditioned not to comLast ~ar, Lee W.lked out. He had plain when their feelings are hurt. .
ADVICE
had enough. He is staying in the , Or that the abuse women suffer is
. same town because he wants · to more physic:d - and verbal abuse is
solicited the job arid insisted on the remain involved iri his daug!!ter's easier to hide.
move to get him aYfOy from "bad life. He is happier now than he has
Whichever type of abuse your son .
influences"- his friends and family. , been in yean. He has stopped drink- suO'erell,l'm pleased that he is free at
Rita and my son have a 5-year-old ing and has made friends who like to last.
daughter, "Lily."
DEAR ABBY: Thank you for
do what he does. Lee takes Lily
Visiti~g them was a nighttnare. We
every other weekend and does a lot publishing the letter from David S.
had to watch whatever we said. We of baby-sitting when Rita h115 to . Boyer, M.D., warning that early
went to dinner one night at a medi- work overtime. Rita is a bitter lady detection and treatment of diabetes.
um-priced restaurant. When Lee who still has no friends. ·
can prevent eye disease and blind- ·
picked up the check, Rita had a
Abby, please advise your readers ness.
temper tantrum, saying they couldn't that men aren't the '!nly ones who
In your response, you advised anyalford to treat people to me:ds. (They can be controlling. I have seen first- one with a family history of diabetes
make more than $100,000 a year hand what damage a woman catt do. to have annual physical and eye

Abigail
Van .

Bureh

LOCAL EVENTS ·

•••

Community CII111CW le pub- at the meeting following lunch.
. lllhed - . (1M llfYice 10 nonprofit oroupa wlahlng to
MIDDLEPORT - InterdenomMIIOUI'ICI IMellnga IIIICI .... Inational pastors prayer, Middleollle~~anta. The celencllr Ia not port Firat BapiiSI Church, Friday,
d11lgned 10 ProniOIII Nlea or 8:30 a.m. Uae rear entrance. All
fund ,.. .,. olany type. lllma pastors welcome.
- prlnlld only • IIIIIC8 per·
mltllnd Clrn"ICII bt gwranlwd
POMEROY - Fun, Food and
10 be prlm.d • apeclllc num- Fellowship at God's NET In .
beroldlya.
Pomeroy. Nutritional meals, nonviOlent video games, computer ·
WEDNESDAY
programs, board games, pool
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport tables for teens, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
Uterary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday. Friday and Saturday.
home of Frankie Hunnel. Faye
Wallace to rwvtew 'WIIIhlngton · HARRISONVILLE Har·
Goes to War" by Dlvkl Brinkley. rlsonvllle
Lodge 411., meeting
Saturday, 7:30 p.m Refresh·
. ATHENS ·- BloOd pressure ments.
check, O'Bienesa Memorial Hos·
pftal, lobby, Wednesday, 10 a.m.
SUNDAY
to noon and 2 to 4 p.m. Also trae
POMEROY- Hemlock Grove
colon rectal cancer home
Christilln
Church homecoming,
~ereenlng ldls.
with observance of !35th
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town· anniversary, Sunday. Special
ship Trustees, Wednesday, 6:30 music by the Postmeyers of
Marleltll. Preaching, 9;30 a.m.;
p.m. Pageville Township hall.
Sunday School, 11:30 a.m.;
potluck dinner, 12:30 p.m. at the
THURSDAY
grange
hall, and afternoon serTUPP.ERS PlAINS - Tup- ·
vice,
2
p.m.
• para Plllna VFW Post LadieS
: ~ IIQUiar maeting, lOOrsCHESHIRE - Gospel sing
~J:$) p.m. allhe halT.
Sunday, 2 p.m. Poplar Ridge
Church, Route 554 . from
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Malga County Cheshire. Singers, Hearts In HarPERl No. 74 will meet on Friday mony, Nanow Way, Randy Parat the Meigs County Senior Cen- sons, and Christian Echoes.
ter at.noon. Senalor Mike Shoe- Love oflering to baneflt annual
~. D·Boumevllle, wllf epeak Bend Area Goapet Jubilee.

NEWS AND NOTES
..

•

t
''

Curtis Family
Reunites

and Thomas of Reedsville;
Sally Cunningham and son,
James, of Newark; Cory, Jordan, and Derek Cunningham
LONG BOTTOM -The of Newark.
94th linnu:d reunion of the .
Betty Rose of Newark;
Curtis family was held recent- Harold and PhyUis De Wolfe
ly _at the Long Bottprn Com- of Newark: Elmer Newell of
munity Building and was Pomeroy; Gail Roberts. of
hosted by the descen~nts of Johnstown; ltandy ltose of
Alban and Hazd Curtis. .
Newark; ,Pauland Shelia CurCharles Curtts of Spnng- tis of Long Bottom· Vivan
boro conducted the. meeting McCarroll of Hookstown,
"?th .Ke1th Ashley, the fanuly Pa.; Joe and Patty .Bowman;
h1stonan, not~d the deaths of IDee Pinson; Dora ·swank
tht ~rand~hildren of Hoyt Crispin of Newark; Keith
Curt1s s1nce last year: Walter A hi
f p
Cl
Hurld Curtis, age 94, died Bs de;rdo ofmRero~; arence
0
· acme; Jenny
A ril23 2001 Newark·John
ra ~0
P
·
'
d
'
'
Curus
Reynolds;
Gary N.
Kerm1t An erson, .age 89, C
.
d
f: .1
f
.
d
M
urt1s
an
am1
y
o
d1e
ay 13 , 200 1, Newark; p
K
&amp;. B
. S
k d' d
omeroy;
enny
etty
an d El mer C urtls wan 1e D k
fA!
d. D gl
200 I Newark. One great
u e o
exan na; ou as
grandson, Carl Blackstone, an~ Carolyn B1sseU oflhpp~rs
died April 200 1 N
k Plams; ltoyce, Stacy, Lakm,
'
'
'
ewar
·The illness of Marjorie (Cur-· Lo!Y'nt and Lauren B'!ssell o f
tis) Brewer, formetly of Mel~ County; Leo a~d
Reedsville, was also noted.
MadiSon Bissell of Me1gs
Special cousins to the fami- Cou~ty.
.
ly were introduced They
Fnends of the family
were Mr. and Mrs. Roland attending were Gerald CrawEasttnan and their son Ron ford of Letart FOllis and Peggy
of Meigs County, ' wh~ Mullen of Reedsvide.
descended from Cynthia
Ashley
reported
that
(Curtis) Robinson, ~p,nt of worked . has begun on t~e
Hoyt Curtis.
· -?
, preparatiOn of the manuscnpt
Attended were Charles &amp; for the family hi~tory of the
Elizabeth Curtis, Springboro; descendants of David and
lnzy Newell, Chester;William Sarah (Grow) Curt1s of
and Tina Swank, Hebron; Ghester. This couple first
David, Sherry, Tyler, and arrived in Meigs County in
Linda Griffith of Newark; 1811 where they raised their
June Ashley, Racine.
13 children: Updates on the
Don arid Yvonne Griffith family are requested. Pictures
of Granville; Mary Palme~ of the parents of Hoyt Curtis
Powell of East Liverpool; will be published in the
Brian Bradford of Wooster, upcoming Volume 3 of the
• Ohio; John, Mary, and Scott Meigs County History Book
Newell of Keno; P~ul Curtis; published · by the . Meigs
Charles, Misty, and Wyatt Bis- County Pioneer and HistoriseU of ~meroy; Albert and cal Society. This book is due
Marilyn Pooler of Dayton; out in October, 2001 :
Brent, Michelle, and Donovan
Charles Curtis was re-eleaBissell of Reedsville; Sandra ed president of the ' family
,1 Curtis 'MacDonald, George, "union for 2002.

Soullaeast
District holds
conference
NELSONVILLE - Meigs
County's Return Jonathan
Meigs ~hapter 6f the Daughters of the' American Revolution was represented by five
officers at the Southeast District meeting of the Ohio
DAR in Nelsonville.
Attending were Abbie Stratton, regent; Emma Ashley, vice
regent; June Ashley, historian;
and Anna Cleland, recording
secretary.
State Regent Marilyn Vaglia
opened the meeting by leading in the pledge, the, American Creed and the Nation:d
Anthem. Beverly Schumacher, Southeast District director,
chaired the meeting and
called for a momen.t of silence
in memory of those lost in t~e

terrorist attacks in New York,
' Washington and Pennsylvania.
National officers, honorary
state regents and state officers
were presented.'I\venty of the
22 chapters of the district
answered having regents and
members preSef!t.
Vaglia said her project for
this administration period will
be to continue the restoration
of the Madoilna of the Trail
Statue and to start an endowment fund to continue the
care of the statue and area. A
celebration will be held July 4,
2003 at the M~donna of the
Trail. She also said members
may purchase a DAR State
Pin from any state in which
their Revolutionary War
ancestor served in the Revolutionary War. '
Jane Durek,president of the
Ohio DAR Cameo Society.
said the newly elected officers
will meet Oct. 21 at the Marriot North Hotel Columbus
~ith the annual Victorian Tea

examinations. While this is a goo4.
idea, it does not go far enough.
H:df of the 10 million diabetics in
the United States are unaware thaC
they have this disease. Many diabet~
ics have no family history. At thi• ·
time, screening for diabetes is
ommended ewry three ~ars foiO
everyone over the age of 45, regard..o
less o( family history - and earliel'
and more often for people with spe...
cific risk fact?ri such as obesity. ~
PATRICK A. MAUEll, M.D.£

RUTLAND - A !peal
benefit trail ride recently
raised more than $3,400 for
St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital in ,Memphis, Tenn.
Isabel Dill of Rutland
· hosts the event each year at
her farm on Beech Grove
Road. This is the sixth year
she has led the event.
A tO-mile trail ride was
enjoyed by 68 riders, who
collected pledges from family and friends totaling
$3,492.60.
Prizes were awarded to the ·
top three fund-raisers: Jay
Arrington, Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va., first place; Sara Partlow, Rudand, second place;
and
Micliele
Runyon,
. Pomeroy, third place.
Local merchants donated
snacks ·and drinks.' for the
participants.
Those ridi,ng this year
were: Joyce , Jewell, Alice
Creames and Ann Sargent,
Rutland; I Evelyn Hobbs,
Langsville; Bobbie Lee, Middleport;
Tom
Reuter,
Rachelle Davis, Mindy and
Nikki Butcher, Tammy and
April Butcher, Donna Harper, Rachelle Gloeckner, Sis
apd Nathan Riddel, Alicia
and Anna Butcher, Hailey,
Hannah,
~nd
Holley
Williams, and Valerie Toban,
all of Pomeroy.
.
· Steve, Michel and Dustin
Baldridge, Bidwell; Rita
Duncan, Kellie Elliot, and
Mike Arrington, all of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.; Kim
Thompson, Dwain and . Jo
Ann Barr, aU of Jackson; Jo
and Shanna Adkins, Marcie
Feathers, Leroy Smith, Tim
Harrison, and Pamela Webb,
all of Vinton; Connie and
Jack Christy of .Soutside,
W.Va.
Jacky Fokes and Gerry
Hilferty, Athens; Cindy Burgett, · Jessie Davis, and
Chester and Shirley Purkley,
all of Ewington;· Gerold
Stewart, Lon,donderry; Bur-

f

Hometown Newspaper

•

AMERICA Al WAR

Bush Offers

Phillips and daughtn ]tantw Phillips. :

•
.,•

.

~

...~

be expected," Luke 12:48. "'
Schumacher spoke aboui
patriotism and decried Sep!
tember as being "the wo~
month our couqtrf has eve§;
known."
~
She spoke of the strength of
the nation and remindet
memb~n present that at thf
23rd DAR Continental Con;.
gress in 1914, at the beginnina;
ofWorldWar 1,Mary S.Lock1
wood introduced a resolutiott
"that we hold ourselves in
readiness, ·collectively and:
individually, for any servic":
our country may require of 'If
in this dilemma of war."
':.
During ~orld War II tw4
requests were made of DAR;
members: to enlist in some·
branch · of military or civif
.defense and'to pause each day':
at noon, for a moment of
silent pra~r.
~

"Toda)';" she said, uwe

MAKING MEMORIES - A memory ·album of photographs and written materials telling the story of the past 125 years of the
Bradford Church of Christ will be presented at the anniversary celebration Sunday. Working on the project here are Paula Pick·
. ens, standing, the coordinator, and from the left, Madeline Painter, Gerry Lightfoot, Charlotte Hanning, Lora Bing, Becki Amberg.
er, Nancy Morris, and Evelyn Wood. Others who have helped are Carolyn Nicholson, Kathy Dyer, Jackie Reed, Suzie Will and
Vicki Smith.

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush is offe'ring
$320 million in humanitarian aid for the Afghan people
and neighboring states · even
as his administration prepares for a military campaign
against Afghanistan's ruling
Ta!iban regime.
Bush, in a visit to the State
Department on Thursday,
planned to announce $295
million in new U.S. assistance for Afghans suffering
through drought, famine
and, the threat of _U.S.-led
military action. The money
also will aid refugees crossing from Afghanistan into
sur.rounding countries such
as Pakistan, Iran, Tajikistan,
. Uzbekistan
and
Turkmenistan, senior White
House officials said.
Much of the money is

'

arl

BY CHARLENE

HoEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -

Anniversaries are a

·tiMe 1M rtlllktitlif'2ltd':at SuhMffbbSer!·

..

EVI!NT ORQA.. " •
NIZIR- Isabel~

.:

and hosted her .:.
sixth annual trail.
ride to benefit ·'";'
the St. Jude
.;
Children's
~
Research Hospi-~
talln Memphis, .::
Tenn. rac:ently. ·!;
The I!Wint, whlcllt
Included 68 rid- ~
ers, and collect· :
ed $3,492.60. ·:

.,.

photo)

•'

II

in support of...

vance of the !25th anniversary of the
Bradford Church of Christ, the congregation will be looking at the past through
a ·memory album.
Sever:d women of the church have
been working fever~shly this week to finish the album, tided "Cherish the Past,
Look Forward to the Future." It will be
presented at the afternoon anniversary

service.
_.,
·
The story of the congregation from its
beginni'!g i~ }~76 t~ .to~·'''is t~ld.
througli creative d'ispfay"or pliotographs
and written material. It includes articles
.taken from an old scrapbook about activ"
ities wiJicb took place in the original
church building, located across the road,
an·d incorporates those of the new church
constructed in 1980.
"We decided we wanted to get everything together in a book so that we
·would have
permanent historical

a

recor&lt;),'' said Paula Pickens, who is co0 rdinating the project
:,~~~has a sP.ec~~.. f.amily interest.beca!!.Se
lier liusbands· great-grandfather, Louis
Pickens, preached there for 22 years .
before his death in 1898.
.
Photographs in the 60-page album tell
a story of tent meetings, church growth,
and.social events, and of the men who led
the way, like John Goble, Charles Hysell,
Worthy Johnson, Homer Forest and
Wayne King.
PI. .H IH Bl'llclford. A3

Students wear ·hats to rai~e relief fnoney
It's against the rules in Meigs Local School District to wear C:;::;o"""'......,
a hat to school, but the rule was waived for one day last week, t;;;:;,.--:.::-;
when students were allowed to wear hats· for a good cause.
Students paying $1 to the American Red Cross relief fund
could wear a hat aU day, and some hats were more interesting
than others. Jamie Ellis, Natllan Argabright, Jordan Shank,
Taryn Lentes, Kaylee Kennedy and DanieUe Meadows wore
some of the most interesting hats, and, modeled them for the
camera. The students raised $465, and contributions from
other schools who had the same type of benefit brought the
total to $1,000. Students could wear their h~ts backwards for
a $5 contribution.

!Mttiomll
(!Jrea.rt
CaiiCer
.
.Awareness !MoRtn

Brian J. Reed photo

.

Hlp:701

'IDMy"s

2 s.ctlao11- 12 Pap~

Calendar

C(assifieds

To qualify you must:

Be 40 years old or older

Lotteries

\

Edjtorja(s

A4

OHIO

Sup. LaiiD: 3-7-&amp;17-23-29
lllcbr: ~7.0.1-&amp;2

A3 W.VA.
Bl-2.5 Dally 3:8-8-7 Dally 4: 5-7-().2
A3

c 2001 Ohio Valley PubliShi"' Co.

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www.oblcness.org

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'·

.

area woman
FROM STAFF REPORTS
cia vehicle - Nathaniel, 13,
KANAUGA- A two-car Amanda, 9, and Chelsea
accident Wed~esday at the Garcia, 6, all ofWilkes_:ille.
intersection of Ohio 735
Troopers ·said all occupants
and Gallipolis Township · of the Garcia, vehicle were
Road 207 (Burnett) left a treated and released. They
Bidwell-area woman dead, were wearing their seatbelts
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the at the time of the crash, and
State Highway Patrol report- the vehicle's airbag deployed
ed.
for front seat passengers.
M arguerite H . Walker, 83, Walker was also wearing her
died at Holzer Medical seatbelt.
Center of injuries suffered in
In addition to EMS, Galthe 2:25 p.m. crash, the lipolis
Volunteer
Fire
patrol sa id.
Department responded to
Troopers said Walker was the accident, which 'remains
northbound on Burnett under investigation today,
when she failed to 'yield to troopers said.
an oncoming car driven by
It marked the fourth traffic
Delinda J Garcia, 36, fatality of the year with four
Wilkesvill e, whose vehicle killed in• Gallia County, and
struck the Walker car in the the eighth fatal crash of
driver's side door.
2001 with nine dead in the
The drivers were trans-. · post's coverage area. In 2000,
ported to HMC by Gallia there were 11 fatal accidents
County EMS, along with with 12 killed in the post's
three passengers in the Gar- area of respon1ibility.

said U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, who issued
a request to EPA Wednesday.
"I appreciate AEP's efforts to ·address
the problem," said Strickland, a Democrat
from Lucasville. "However, I believe
Cheshire residents would feel more
assured i( U.S. EPA were overseeing this
serious situation."·
Pollution control technology has been
installed at Gavin to reduce sulfur and
nitrogen oxide emissions, and soot from

smokestacks. But Strickland said a reaction causedf\'; a mixture · of high sulfur
content of coal and summer conditions
produced the "plume,'' or haze experienced in Cheshire.
Throat an~ eye irritation, headaches . ,
and agguvated asthma was. reported to
Stric~and when the haze was present, the
congressman said.

'-

PIMH- Gavin.. A3

Respiratory Fall Symposium
•

Tuesday, October 23 • 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
HMC Education &amp; Confer~nce Center
A one·day event that gives respiratory care professionals
the Opportunity to ledm and review different aspt;cts
- and concepts in the respiratory fie/~

,

;;]' H

'

Holzer Medical Cenler Respiratory Therapy and Education Deparlmenf&gt; ann&lt;iunce their. First Annual ·

Have no health insurance,
including Medicaid or Medicare

M

FROM STAFF REPORTS

CHESHIRE Citizen complaints
about a "blue .plume" emitted from the
Gen. James M . Gavin Power Plant have
prompted a call from · an area congressman to have the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ~versee the plant's emis~ions cleanup.
"The residents of Cheshire have been
exposed to a noxious 'bl~e plume' from
the Gavin Plant on numerous occasions,"

B2-4 l'kll :S: 5-43; Pkk 4: 5·7-().2

BS

Weather ·

Have 'NOT had a mammogram
during the past three·years

AS

Comics
Obituaries
Sports

Q'BLENESS

designed to help Afghans
survive what is expected to
be a brutal winter. The offi·cials spoke on .condition of
anonymity.
Over the weekend, Bush
dipped into an emergency
fund and authorized an
additiol)al $25 million in
relief for Afghan refugees.
The new money brings the
relief package to $320 Iilillion, which will be provided
through the United Nations,
the Red Cross and nongoverrtmental organizations.
Bush hoped to use ~·
package to underscore / his
message that America is
opposed to the Taliban
regime, not Afghans, officials
said. The Bush administration is trying to temper antiAmerican sentiment in parts
of tlje Arab world.

Strickland see:ks oversignt of Gavin cleanup

Law: SOl
Details, A3

Sentinel

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital and
Radiology Associates of Athens are
offering a limited number of free .mammograms

~· receive a certificate: Call t~e O'Bieness . ,
. Community Relations Department (740) 592-9300

an

Church to celebrate 125th anniversary , 1\vo-car crash

at
""'

(Contributed

~

MEMORIES COME ALIVE

here to go about our busine.l
of being the belt 1W can be
what we do." ·
•

0111 organized

•IOn

SllO
to aid A

DEAR DR. MAUER: Consid
ering the fact that many people -;J
battling weight problems, I h~
your letter will remind them that l.
Wit· with their physician about diei ,
and exercise may be, in. order. Bo~
can reduce a persons nsk of devel'!
oping diabetes.
;
Dear Abby is writtm by Paulin~

man Stewart, McArthur;
KeUi Wolf, Roger and Doc
H:iyes, Linda Luc~s, Carol
Walls, Ashley Savage, and
Dorothy Mo~gan, aU of
Albany.
Dean and Cindy Siciono
and Dick Roach, GaUipo!Js;
Dennis, Diana and Josh
Wright, Qak · Hill; Kathy
Richardson, Westlake; Stev
and Karrie Fowler, Apple
Grove, W. Va; Pat Bowser and
Carroll and Kay Osburn,
nidwell . .

. -·

Mllp Couaty's

'

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t

LOS ANGELES

to vbe held there on.April 27.
Roberta -Roush, DAR
Ohio State Historian and
member o( the French
Colony Chapter, Gallipolis; is
preparing a book, "Bicenten"
nial of Ohio - A History of
Ohio" for publication, spon· sored by the Ohio Society
Daughters of the American
Revolution. The book will be
sold at Barnes and Noble
Bookseller+ores.
The DAR National Millennium Administration theme is
"Our Family Tree ... Roots
from the Past Linking to the
Juture." The scripture is "And
the tree of the field shall yield
her li:uit, and the earth shall
yidd her increase, and they
shaH be safe in their land."
(Ezekiel 34-27)
The OHIO DAR theme
for the period 2001-04 is:
"Affirming a Legacy of Service" and the scripture is
"From everyone who has
been given much, much will

·FREE

.

rec..:

.,.

Benefit nets
thousands

•••

••

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
- OhioDAR

•

"• '

•••

·Controlling wife bosses her husband right out the door
DEAR ABBY: Although I have
read your column for ~an and have
seen letters &amp;om women who have
lived with controlling men, I. can't
reni~ reading letters about controlling women.
My ex-daughter-in-law, "Rita,"
coUld be the queen of mean. When

FLY YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORT ·YOUR COUN1RY!

•

For more information, or

MEDICAL CENTER
Disco.ver the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

to register, call Sandy Moore at

5919

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· The. Daily Sentinel
•.

America at War

1hursMy. Och±• 4, 1001

Laden seems to

slip away

:CIA cited growing risk Bin
of attack on U.S. soil
WASHINGTON (AP) The month before the Sept.
11 hijacking attacks, the CIA
received information. suggesting Osama bin Laden was
increasingly -det~rmined to
&gt;t,rike on U.S. soil. In the days
since', the FBI has linked the
htia.fkers to bin · Laden's network through phone interce!m.- money transfers and
training camps.
U.S. officials, speaking on
condition of anonymity,
described to The Associated
Press a trail of eyidence they
~elieve points to bin Laden's
involvement in the attacks by
l9 terrorists who crashed
four airliners.
Among the· key pieces of
evidence, the officials said, is
a series of money transfers
between
hijacking ring
leader Mohamed Atta and a
Middle Eastern man named ·
Mustafa Ahmed. The last
occurred a few days before
the hijackings when' Atta
wired money back to Ahmed

PageAl

in the United Arab Emirates,
the officials said.
The FBI believes the transfers may provide a clear link
to bin Laden. Agents are
investigating whether Ahmed
was an alias for a man named
Shayk Saiid that U.S. authorities long. have believed
helped run bin Laden's
finances, the officials said.
'In documents sent to banks
seeking to freeze terrorist
assets, the government has
qs~d Saiid's and Ahmed's
names
• interchangeably,
records. show.
Ahmed is believed to have
left the United Arab Emirates
on .Sept. II for Pakistan and.
is a major focus of the FBI's
global manhunt.
Other evidence includes
"general but vague" information the CIA developed in
August that heightened concerns that bin Laden was
urging his followers to strike
on U.S. soil after seyeral
attacks overseas in the 1990s.

WASHINGTON (AP) Through luck, guile, timing,
accommodating foreign governments - and perhaps a
dose of American incompetence - Osama bin Laden
survives,
A U.S. attempt in 1996 to
have him arrested in Sudan
and placed in Saudi Arabian
custody failed, as did an
American cruise· missile
attac1c on his camps in
Afghanistan in 1998. A CIA'sponsored plan to have Pakistani commandoes hunt him
down a year later also fell
short.
The United States has 1
done no better in sniffing out
the deadly plots for which
bin Laden is believed tespon•
sible: the bombings of U.S.
emba_ssies in East Africa in
1998, the bombing of the
USS Cole in Yemen in 2000
and the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks in New York and
Washington, with a death toll
of more than 6,000.
Should American intelligence agencies have . been
more alert?

Se..-retary of 'State Colin
PoweU says there were a lot
of signs that "there was
something going on" prior to
Sept. 1 I but concrete information was lacking.
The assessment of former
CIA official Herbert Meyer
is less kind. He sees "a cascading series of intelligence failures" tha~· began yean earlier
when, he !lays, U.S. officials
failed to take the thteat of bin
Laden seriously enough.
Powell epitomizes a "we
shall overcome" mood in
Washington in the wake of
America's deadliest terrorist
disaster. Flanked by members
of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee
on
Wedn_esday, he said, "We will
be patient. We will be persistent. We will prevail:'
Bin Laden appears to disagree.
A&lt;propaganda tape shows
him sayjng, "With small ·
means and great faith, we can
defeat the mightiest militacy
power of modern times.
America is much weaker
than it seems."

ON ALERT - A security guard checks passengers' carry-on
luggage before they are allowed to board their buses at the
Greyhound Terminal
In Los Angeles. (AP)
.

.

TERRORISTI - Exiled Saudi dissident Osama bin Laden, the
prime suspect behind the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks In the United States, holds a Kalashnikov assault rifle in 1998 at a meeting at an undisclosed location In Afghanistan, according to the
source. In the background Is a banner with a verse from the
Quran, Islam's holy book. (AP)
·

awate of the possibility of coordinated attacks and so tbe
response is immediate." .
Transportation Department
officials have been working to
tighten security foUowing th e
terrorist attacks. David Longo, a
spokesmal} for DOT's Fede~l
Motor Carri,er Safety 7\dmi~aation,. said officials are visiting
hazardous material ,tr!Jckirrg
companies to discuss improvirrg
security. Among the suggestions:
Run criminal backgrourrd
checks on individuals with
access to explosives, poison •gases
. and biological agents;
·;

·west Virg'inia ·;·.·
S at Fa m Museum

,:Fall

..

ounty ~""...

,. Sa,turday, October
and

Siren

Sunday, October 7

'499

1

LOC_AL STOCKS

The Dally Sentlnet .. Page A 3

· LOCAL BRIEFS

•

'D'oyM.Dultulm
POMEROY - Troy M. Durham, 37, Porn~. died on
Monday, Oct. 1, 2001.
He was born on June 18, 1964 in Charleston, W.Va., son of
Freda M. Bailey Durham of Pomeroy, and the late Oswald E.
Durham. He w.os employed as a heavy equipment operator. _He
was a graduate of Meigs High School.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his 6ve sisters, Daisy
1 I ~nson of Austin, Texas, Charlotte !ami of Lake City, Calif.,
· md Jodee Atkinson, Jennifer Morris, and Darla Lacey, all of
. Atlanta, Ga.
: He wa. also prec~ded in death by his brother, E•Jgene
, Durham: and his sister, Sandra Hoffinan.
• BY TliE ASSOCI...TED PRESS
Graveside services will be noon Friday at Meigs Memory
Rain is possible Friday and
Gardens in Pom~roy. with Jan Lavender officiating. Friends may Friday night as a cold front
, VISit the fam1ly at their residence, 814 E. Main St., Pomeroy, on chugs across the' region, Cote: Thursday from 4-9 p.m.
casters said.
: Arrangements were by Fisher-Acree Funeral Home; in
That same . frontal system
- Pomeroy.
will sweep colder air·into the
area, creating a chilly and dty
weekend.'
Highs on Friday will be in
the 70s. Temperatures .on the
weekend will remain in the
40s and 50s.
Sunset tonight )ViU be at
7:09, and sunrise on Friday is
at7;31 a.m.
Weather forecast:
MIDDLEPORT -- LionCI E. Boggs, 75, of Middleport,
Tonight... Partly . cloudy.
. died Wednesday, October 3, 2001 at the Holzer Medical
Lows
in the upper 50s. South
Center, Gallipolis.
,
.
· He ·was born on April 24, 1926 in Charleston, West Vir-. wind 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs
ginia.- His foster parents were D. S. and Ava Harold. He was
a sergeant in the Army Air Corps during World War II and in the upper 70s. Southwest
was awarded six battle stars and the bronze star.
He was a 60-year resident of Middleport, and former
owner and operator of the Middleport Departmen.t Store.
He was a sports enthusiast, golfer and gardener. He was a
graduate of Middleport High School, Class of 1944. He was
rtomPIIpA1
a local golf champion, all S£0AL high school first team
basketball and football player.
.
It piGtures Sunday school
He was a member of the Middleport School Board.
classes
in vario1,1s activities,
He was a member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, a member of the VFW and a 50-yea-r member construction projects, along
with celebrations and dedicaof the Middleport Masonic Lodge, F&amp;AM Lodge 363.
He was a direct descendant of Francis Boggs, American tions marking special occaRevolutionary War Veteran, and will long be remembered sions.
for his wit and charm.
' According to a history
He is survived by his wife, Mary Lu Hartinger Boggs of written by Norma Russell,
Middleport; daughters, Joy Patricia R.iley of Marietta, and the location of a cemetery in
Mary Ava Grimm of Middleport, and sons, Jeff Ueanie) the Bradford community was
.B oggs of Cincinnati, and Jim (Wanda) Boggs of Raleigh, a determining factor in where
North Carolina; grandchildren, Nancy Riley of Cincinnati, the original church was built
Laura Riley of Columbus, and Adam Grim o(Middleport.
125 years ago.
He was preceded in death by a son, Dennis Boggs; and his
S.M. Russell 'owned the
foster patents, D.S. and Ava Harold.
land, and agreed to let the
Services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, October 6, congregation without · a
,2 001 at Fisher-Acree Funeral Ho111e in Middleport. Offici- church build one on the
ating will. be· AI Hartson and burial will f9llow in property, but would not deed
Riverview Cemetery.
the .land to th!ml.
Military graveside services will be conducted by FeeneyThe Russells were generous
Bennett Post 128, Middleport American Legion. Friends people and provided the luin- ·
may call on Friday, October 5, 2001 from 5-8 p.m. at the her for the church from ttees
funeral home_. Masonic services will be conducted by groWn on the farm, gave $200
F&amp;AM Lodge 363 at 7:30p.m.
f~r supplies, and boarded the
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to The Dennis
workers while they built it.
Boggs Scholarship Fund; in care of Mick Childs, 765
The church was built with
Broadway Street, Middleport, Ohio.
two doors, one on either side
of the front with a pulpit
between and seats set against
I
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.'- Emm~ Florence (Townsend) the wall and an aisle down the
Carleton, 99, of Ravenswood, formerly of Pomeroy Pike, center. .
It was heated by two potPomer!IY· . died on Wednesday. October. 3, 2001 at
bellied stoves and lighted with
Ravenswood Care Center in Ravenswood.
chandelier-type
lamps fueled
She was born in Belleville, West Virginia, on November
20, 1901, daughter of the late Charles and Mary Louise first by gasoline and later by
Pryor Townsend. She lived and worked on a farm most of oil. ·
The women entered the
her life in Belleville and Pomeroy.
·· She is survived by one brother,.Chades "Alvie"Townsend
and his wife, Eleanor, ofBelleville; 6ve nieces, Clara McVey,
Helen · Landis, Anna Lou Buck, M~ry Lou Foutty and
Sharon Bell;.four nephews, Gene, Edwin, Charlie and Larry
Townsend.
f1omPapA1
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
husband, Guy Th~rman Carleton, on June 19,, 1976; three
AE P has ·been working
~others, Harry, Clarence and Cecil Townsend; two sisters, .
S;hellie ·Petty and Bertha Congdon; three nephews, Harry under Ohio EPA oversight to
Jr., Carl and Robert Townsend; and a niece, Carolyn correct the problem, Strickland sald.
Townsend.
In a letter to U.S. EPA,
, Services -will be held at the Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy on Saturday, October 6, 2001 at 1 p.m., with Strickland cit~&gt;d a study
Edwin Townsend officiating. Burial will follow at Chester released by Region V of the.
federal EPA 'critical of Ohio
Cemetery.
: Friends may call at the funeral home an hour prior to the E.PA's enforcement of the
Clean Air Act.
s!rvice.
"My interest in having U.S.
EPA' take the lead role in
"
. [)
' oversight of the Gavin opera-

(Rain Dote Odober 7)
Antiques at 10:00 am 1959 or older
Claaaea:4500,5500,6500, 7500 ·
1st Gear 10% over stclck RPM
Farm Tractors at 1:00 PM. AFPA Rules
Classes: 5000, 6000,' 7500, 9000, 10,000
9000 Turbo 10,000 Turbo
$$$ Payback: $150.00 + 100% Entry +

Trophies $$$
Trophies and payback SP,Onsored by The
WV State Farm Museum
Pull put on bY the American Farm Pullers

Assoc.

For more info contact WV Slate Farm

~~~·

Saturday &amp; Sunday
October6&amp;7.t.ll!!~

The Daily Sentinel
•
:' Reader servlceS

tJata ()~

DARWIN ?- Jerry L.
Hedges, 19, Laurelville, was
cit&lt;!d for failure to control by
the ~a-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol followillS a one-vehicle accident
Wednesday on U.S. 33.
Troopers said Hedges was
eastbound in Bedford Township at 6:46 a.m. when the
pickup truck he drove went
off the right side of the road,
struck a ditch and overturned.
wind 1010 15 mph.
The driver was not injured,
Friday night ...Showers like-. and his vehicle was severely
ly with a slight chance of damaged.
thunderstorms. Lows 50 to 55.
Extended forecast:
Saturday.. .Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
POMJ;:ROY - Marriage
Saturday
night...Partly licenses have been issued in
cloudy. Lows in the upper 30s. Meigs Co~nty Probate Court
Sunday.. .Partly
cloudy. to Lewis L. VanMeter, 48, and
Mary jane Wilbanks, 45, both
Highs in the mid 50s.
Monday... Pa'rtly
cloudy. of Racine; and to Mark Allen
Lows in the mid 30s and highs Kimes, 35, and Mary Jane '
.near 60.
· Whan, 33, both of MiddleTuesday... Partly cloCidy. A port.
chance of showers during the
night. Lows in the lower 40s
and highs in the mid 60s .
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
POMEROY -A divorce
with a chance of showers. has been filed in Meigs
Lows in the mid 40s and highs County Common · Pleas
in the mid 60s.
Court by Rebecc·a Susan
Grate, Reedsville, against
Herbert
L.
Grate • II,
church on the left side and sat Reedsville.
there and the men went in
, A divorce has been granted
through the door on the right to Mark A. Kimes from Linda
side and sat there. In the early L Kimes.
1900s, the .two doors were
moved to the center and the
men and women mingled. .
The front of the church
POMEROY -Two counburned in 1932 when the bell i ty roads will be dosing on
in the belfry was stt'uck by Tuesday for repair work, a
lightning. When it was tebuilt, spokesman for the Meigs
the front was extended to County Highway Departprovide more room. In the ment ·a nnounced today.
late t950s, three classrooms · County Road 1, known as
were added to give more Salem School Lot Road,
space for the growing congre- between County Road 27,
Dyesville and C-27 Point
gation.
Tll'e 6nal service was held
in that church on Sept. 20,
1981. The next Sunday, the
congregation worshiped in
their new church building
across the road.
Sunday's celebration under
the direction of Doug Sham- .
blin, pastor, will begin at 9:30
a.m. with Sunday school followed by a 10:30 a.m. worship service, with Mark Seevers as the speaker. A carry-in
dinner will be served at noon,
and the anniversary service
will be held at 1:30 p.m.
The celebration will contin_ue through Wednesday
with 7 p.m. services, with special speakers Clifford Smith
on Monday, Dr. George Pickens on Thesday, and Danny
·Evans on Wednesday, and a
variety of music.
The Auxiliary of Fraternal
Order of Eagles 2171 has
tion is underscored by your made a $1,000 donation to
release of a primary review of the local New York Disaster
OEPA's enforcement of 'the Relief Fund . Judy Sisson, repCAA," Strickland said.
resenting the auxiliary, made
"(It) specifies that OEPA the presentation to Barbara
does not have the procedures Dugan of Peoples ·Bank, N.A.
to check the accuracy of · In Pomeroy, whera the
statements made by regulated account has been estabentities, and OEPA currently lished. In making the donaemploys fewer employees tion, the auxiliary challenged
than it had indicated it wou!a other local civic organizatiQns
need to run this program," he to contribute to the fund, as
.well. (Brian J. Reed photo)
added.
''In my opinion, these ate . - - - - - - - - - two basic needs for running a
program that earns the confidence of the public," Strickland said.

•

Correction Polley

At

.

.

Granted divorce.

Roads to dose

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Qenerlll m1n1ger

Ext. 12

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Published every afternoon, Monday
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111 Court St. ,
PomaiO)',
Ohio.
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postage pal~ at Pomeroy.
Member: The Aasoctaled ~ress and
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Country Store &amp;. Kitchen
are Open Daily
Route 1, Box.479 (Fairground Road)
Point Pleasant, WV
304·675-5737

Bradford

Gavin·

Antique
Bottle Show &amp; Sale

~,m MAFPA • "~';te Farm

Lionel E. Boggs

Emma Carleton

Steam &amp; Gas Engine Show* Quilt Show
* Appl~ Butter/Sorghum Making
* Trador Pull* BoHle Show* &amp;Much More ·

Tractor
Saturday, October 6th

'

Pomeroy, llkldt.port, Ohio

Obituaries

until federal Jaw enforcement scrutiny.
.
~cials ruled out a terrorist
-..Are we on heightened alert?
The answer to that is yes," said
attack did the buses roll again.
Such a response probably Rep. Jack Quinn, R-N.Y.
would not have taken place "Everyone's going to err on the
priorto Sept. !'1, when terrorists side of safetY:'
Though apparently unfoundcommandeered four commercia! airliners and used them to eel, the initial fear was that the
destroy the World Trade Center . bus attack could have been part
and smash into the Pentagon.
of a larger terrorist operation,
"It had a significant impact on
"No one is going to assume
my decision:' Greyhound Lines · it's one crackpot. We have to
President Craig Lent:zsch said
assume it's multiple crackpots;'
A member of the House said Bret CaldweU, a spokesman
Transportation and lnfrastruc- for the Teamsters Union, which
ture Conunittee said transporta- represents bus and truck drivers.
tion systems are under intense "Our nation is much more

'·

'

Temps will drop ·this weekend

Transportation officials try to guard
against terrorist. attacks
.
WASHINGTON (AP} Wake-up calls hanlly seem necessary in the aftermath of last
month's terrorist attacks, but
government officials got another
one with the attack on a Greyhound bus.
Although no one said it \'1M a
terrorist act, Wednesday's incident along Interstate 24 in Tennessee put the bus company into
a heightened security alert and
caught the attention of federal
officials who already had been
examining security for buses,
trains, trucks and subways.
Greyhound
immediately
moved to shut down its nationWide · bu's sysiem ' for the ~rst
time aft~r a driver was attacked'
by a passenger en route from
Chicago to Orlando, Fla. Not

•
'rhu...clly, Oct. 4, 2001

Ono~r

$2
$8.70
$104

·\ ..,.-10 cents

;;JUU~Kirlbers not dealrtng to pay the
carrier may remit In advance dlrecl to
llte Dilly senunel. Credll will be given

G

camer each · No aubecltptlon by
mall permitted In area• wnera home
earner eervlca 11 ava.llable. ,

MaO
subsalllllnn
lnoldo Melgo eot',;ty_..
13 Weeks
26 Weeks

S27.30
$53.82

52 Weel&lt;s

$105.58

OUIIIdl M11111 County
13W$29.25
211 w- $58.68
52 WHlco

Pomeroy Church of the Naza~ene
.

.. .. '

.

I ·.

~ednesday-Sunday

October 3rd · 7th
7· pm Nightly
Sunday
Setvices
..
10:30 am &amp; 6:00 pm
With Rev. Glenn McClung
Preaching &amp; Singing
&lt; I

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NEWS . .
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FOLKS.
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992-2156

Rock, wiU be closed to repair
the road from where it settled
due to longwall mining. The
work wiD take about 10 days.
The detour will be County
Road 6 known as Mine No. 2
Road, turn right on County
Road 27 to Point Rock and
that will bring motorists back
to County Road I.
The second closing will be
of County Road' 17 4, Happy
Hollow. It , too, will take
about 10 days to replace a box
culvert. The road will . be
closed to everything except
local traffi~. The area of the
work will be close to the
New Lima Road, it was
reported.

Sentenced
on charges
POMEROY -- Three men
have been sentenc.e d on criminal charges in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
'
• Kenneth Michael Smirh,
on two counts of gross sexual
imposition, fourth degree
felonies. He was sentenced
two two 18-month sentences,
to be served consecutively,
and was ordeted to participate
in the . Southeastern Probationary Treatment Alternative
program. He was also ordered
to participate in the Community Corrections program,
and must register as a sexual
predator.
• Donald Steinmetz, to five
yean in prison on a thirddegree felony DUI charge,
12~ days of which is amandatoty term. ·tfe was also sentenced to an $850 fine.
· • Mark K. Cox, on a charge
of possession of crack cocaine,
a fourth-degree felony, and
trafficking in crack cocaine, a
fifth-degree felony. He· was
sentenced to 18 months in
prison on each count, to be
served consecutively.

'··

�,
\

..

\

Opinion

, The Daily Sentinel

Byt;b
•.~!._~~~~dl!.__._ ____;~~Pa~g~e
~other-in-law driving couple out of their mif?ds and home

Th~·Daily·Se. ntinel

PageA4
.'

lhunay. Oo tiber 4, 2001
I ,......,,

II

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy,

7~·2158 •

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Fu: 882-2157

•

Abigail
Van
Bu,ren

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A. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeftlch
General Manager

DIMe Kay HIH
Controller
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l..«urr to"tttt Milllr.,. wbilll&amp;. nu, 1'-U k Ia. .....
fMbjffll4 «fifhtt 1M...., IJI , , . . W _ , .....,., ....

ND IUU/fllftl hrun .,ill t. ,uMrW Lltkn IINHIJtl t. • ..- ,.., ... c kJ
il••n. llol pn7tHNlllin.
1'111 opilllolfl UJI('UIM Ill liN eoluut hknr_... dN C'Miftll., ~· Olflo 1tllr1

hbiUiobo,c.. ~ - - ....,..,..,.__

STATE VIEWS

'

se move

-

Clarltsbu'JI Exponent· Te_ltgram

Tod~y is Thursday, Oct. 4, the 277th day of 2001. There

are 88 days left in the year. ·.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 4, 1957, the Space Age began as the Soviet
Union launched Sputnik, the first man-made satellite, into
orbit.
On this date:
In 1777, George Washington's troops launched an assault
on the British at Germantown, Pa., · resulting in heavy
American casualrtes.
In 1822, the 19th president of the United States, Rutherford B. Hayes, was born in Delaware, Ohio.
In 1895, the first U.S. Ope.n golf tournament was hefd, at
the Newport Country Club in Rhode Island.
In 1931, the comic strip "Dick Tracy," created by. Chester
Gould, made its debut.
·
In 1940, Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini conferred· at
Brenner Pass in the Alps, where the Nazi leader sought
Italy's help in fighting the British.
'
In 1958, the first transatlantic passenger jetliner service
was begun by British Overseas Airways Corp: with flights
betwe.en London and New York.
In 1970, rock singer Janis Joplin, 27, was found dead in
her Hollywood hotel room.
In 1976, agriculture secretary Earl Butz resigned in the
wake of a controversy over a joke he'd made about blacks.
In 1978, funeral services were held at the Vatican for
Pope John Paul I.
In 1990, for the first time in nearly ·six decades, German
lawmakers met in the Reichstag for the first meeting of
reunified Germany's p~rliament.
Ten years ago: In Madrid, Spain, 26 nations, including
the United States, signed the Antarctic Treaty, which
imposed a 50-year ban on oil exploration and mining in
Antarctica.
Five years ago: A judge in Philadelphia issued an injunction preventing Major League baseball umpires from striking for the remainder of the postseason over ~n incident in
which Roberto Alomar of the Baltimore Orioles spat on
umpire John Hirschbeck.
.
One year ago: Amid fresh bloodshed in the West Bank
and Gaza, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright brought
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leader
Vasser Arafat together for talks in Paris. In :~en apparent
attempt to buy time for Slobodan Milosevic, Yugoslavia's
' highest court invalidated parts of the presidential election
after thousands of opposition supporters forced police to
back off from seizing a strikebound mine.
'Today's Birthdays: Comedian Jan Murray is 84. Actor
Charl ton Heston is 77. Couniry singer Leroy Van Dyke is
72. Actress Felicia Farris 69. Act 0 r Eddie Applegate is 66 .
Author Jackie Collins is 60. Author Anne Rice is 60.
Actress Lori Saunders ("Petticoat Junction") is 60. Actor
C lifton Davis is 56. Actress · Susan Sarandon is 55. Actor
Arma11d Assante is 52. Actor Alan Rosenberg is 51. Producer Russell Simmons is 44. Musician Chris Lowe (The
Pet Shop Boys) is 42. Country musician Gregg !'Hobie"
Hubbard (Sawyer Brown) is 41. Actor David W. Harpe&lt; is
40. Singer Jon Secadii is 40. Actor Liev Schreiber is 34.
C ount ry singer- musici'an Heidi Newfield (Trick Pony) is
3 I . l!..ock musician Andy Parle (Space) is 31. Actress Alicia
Silverstone is 25. Actor Phillip Glasser is · 23. Actress
Rachael Leigh Cook is 22. Actor Jimmy Workman is 21.
Actor Michael Ch.arles Roman is 14.
Thought for Today: "Knowledge is like a garden: if it is
not cultivated, it cannot be harv«ted."- Guinean saying.

Community Calendar Ia published • a tree urvlce to nonprofit groupa wlahlng to
announce meellnga and speclaleventa. The calendar Is not
designed to promote aalaa or
lund-rlllura or any type. 11ema
are printed only •• lfiiCI per·
mill and cannot be guar11nteed
10 be printed 1 apeclflc number of daya.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Slips that lead to laughter
When it comes to the Bible (as in
other things), ' kids say the darnedest
things. But would adults do any better?
Get a copy of the July-August issue of
the Saturday Evening Post and sec if you·
can correct the 22 "Biblical Bloopers." A
sampling follows (mistakes are put iri
italics):
'Joshua led the Hebrews in the batde
of Geritol."
"Moses die&lt;! before he ever reached
Canada....
"When Mary Heard she was the
mother of Jesus, she sang the Magna

George
Plagenz
COWMNIST

meant to say "the dear old Queen."
In a fUneral o'ration for a departed colleague in the clergy, he praised the
deceased as a "shoving leopard to his
flock."
In a sermon he once warned his con-·
gregation that "there is no peace in i
home where a dinner swells." He
intended 't o say "where a sinner dwells."
"It wasn't only Spooner's tongue that
tripped him up. The stoty is told of a
social occasion at which he poured wine.
from his glass on some salt he had spilled_
on the tablecloth, forgetting that it is salt
you put on a wine stain to remo_ye it.
Spooner had . this 'household hint
reversed.
But back to the Saturday Evening
Post, where we started. The magazine,
which was founded in 1728 by Benjamin Franklin, has always been a
favorite of mine. I am of the same mind
as th~ letter-writer who says in the current issue, "Thanks for your good, cleanliving publication," and with another
correspondent who writes, "Thanks for
letting me know there are still people in
the world who enjoy old-fashioned
morals.You keep me laughing and happy
without once mentioning sex."
I also learned in the current issue that,
according to legend, the reason the back
of a donkey looks like it has the sign of
the cross on it is because a donkey carried Christ into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday.
(George R. Plagtnz is distributed by

.,_~

people, love a good joke;• he says. "Some
of the seruational misprints of the ages
"Solomon had 300 wives and ·700
may h2ve been printers' pranks."
porcupines."
:
Verbal boo-boos may be the source of
"Jesus was born because Mary had an
as
many smiles as printed typos. The man
immacillate contraption.''
who made the verbal boo-bob famous
J....---'1:], e magazine
ihat these bloopwas
a distinguished Anglican clergyman
ers are all "genuine, authentic and unrenamed William Spooner.
touched.''
Spooner has given his name to a ·form
If you got stuck on any blooper, here
are the answers: Jericho, Canaan, Magni· oflooey speech known as a spoonerism,
which is the transposition of the initial
ficat, concubines and conception.
Errors like these - especially when soun,ds 6f~ or more words. An usher
they occur in a Biblical context - are a who .~~ys L~t me sew Y?u to your
source of delight to readers. They chuck- . sheet, IS uttenng a sp?onemm.
le at a typographical error in a 1631
Spooner, who died m 1930 at the age
Bible that omits the word "not" in the of86, was a nervous man who had trouSixth Commandment ("Thou shalt not ble getting his words to come out
commit adultery"). This Bible is known straight. After joining a touplc in matrias the "Wicked Bible!'
mony, he told the groom, "It is kisstom-.
In the "Sin on" Bible, John 5:14 ("Sin ary to cuss the bride."
no more") appears as "Sin on more.''
At a gathering of members o( ParliaA collector of typographical,...-eqors ment, he invited everyone to give •: three'
suspects that many of these oisdkes cheers for the q~;eer old dean." He was
were deliberate. "Printers, like other referring to Queen .Victoria, and he Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

Carta."

;

swears

TODAYBY THEIN
HISTORY
ASSOCIATED 'PRESS

dementia. However, if this is the way son ." With that, his dad asked, the response Patti Fairchild Bartee
she normally ac~J, you and your hus- "David, are you sure you want to • told you about in regard to sneezing:
band are going to have to have it out know now?" David said, "Yes, Dad." "Gesunheit" the first time. and
My husband then went into detail. "Gesundheit squared" when the
with her- and Clarence is going to
have to tell his mother that if things I sat fiozen, seat belt-bound, as the sneezing continued.
It reminded me of a similar saying
don't change, the two of you. wiU be car and his words drove .forward.
moving. Jn .the meantime, arrange to When the lecture was finished, my in the German immigrant community where I grew up near Strawberhave all of your mail delivered to a husb•nd said, "Th&gt;t's it, son."
Our 7-year-old boy began laugh- P' Point, Iowa. After a person
post office .box and don't give Ruth
a key.
·
ing so haro that we couldn't help sneezed and was wished "GesundDEAR ABBY: It has been 15 faughing with him. When we finally heir" (health), the person who
years since our young son David settled down and could talk, we sneezed might reply; "Besser wie
asked us, while riding in the back asked David what was so funny? StiU krankheit," which means, ·"Better
seat of our car, "How do babies get chuckling, he replied, "OK, Dad. than sickness!" Gesundheit to you,
Abby. PASTOR OTTO
into mommies' tummies?~ My hus- Now tell me the TRUTH." LINDA
BRESSLER,
TAMPA
ZWANZIGER
(RET.), CEDAR
band immediately· said to me,
DEAR LINDA: Sometimes RAPIDS, 10\VA
"Honey, since you told our girls all
truth
may seem stranger than fiction,
DEAR
PASTOR
about it before; you can tell David,
but your husband · was right to ZWANZIGER: God bless you,
too."
I retorted: "You1re right. But they answer your son's question fully and too!
Dear Abby is written by Pduline
are girls. I'm sure it would be better completely when he asked.
DEAR
ABBY:
I
really
enjoyed
Plrillips
and dauglrrer ]eannt Phillips.
for you - his dad -. to tell our
' .

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

LOCAL EVENTS

Bush smart to freeze bin
· Laden sconsiderable assets
President Bush took what W., feel was an important step in
the fight against worldwide terrorism recendy.
What he did was to sign an executive order to freeze the
asset• of27 individuals and organizations. The president said the ·
list contained terrorist organizations, individuals, terrorist leaders, a corporation that serves as a front for terrorism and several nonprofit organizations.
No terrorist network can effectively do its job to train and
recruit new members if it has no money supply. This is why a
concentrated effort must be made to choke off funds to Osama
bin Ladep and related groups.
Of course, this docs not mean that wa71lington has given up
on military action. It is still preparing to strike at the heart of
where many oudaw terrorists live - in Afghanistan. It is also
stepping up efforts to build up an anti-terrorist coalition.
' Thwarting ter!'JriSt networks by cutting off their money is a
good tactic, but just part of an overall strategy to defeat them.
We must take any measures necessary to reduce the likelihood of many more days like Sept. 11. . ,
.

A!!!!S
1hund.y, October 4. 2001

__.

DEAR ABBY: My mother-inlaw, "Ruth," who is 80, my husband,
",C brence" (50ish), and I (40ish) all
live in the same house. Ruth's husband died bet\&gt;re Clarence and I
were married. She sold her home
and Clarence sold his so they could
;,uy a house together.
·
My mother-in-law is a wonderful
ADVICE
lady. However, she is a complainer.
She becomes agitated . over petty
things. She also doesn't like for obsession with fi'llgality.) '
Clarence to criticize. anything. (His
Clarence is even more upset about
style is more a commentary than her behavior than I am. He says if
criticism.) I don't think Rwh real- things don't change, he and I will be
izes how much complaining she forced to move. What do you think
does.
we should do?- FRACTURED
Even though we've repeatedly FAMILY IN FLORIDA
asked her not to, Ruth "sorts" . DEAR FRACTURED: If this is
through our mail and throws out relatively new behavior, Ruth may
important letters and catalogs she need a physical and mental exam to
feels we don't need. (She has an determine if she's experiencing

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charln W. Govey
Publlaher

__

James .

Kilpatrick
COWMNIST

efforts. The trial court awarded Com.edy Ill the entire amount, plus $150,000
in lawyers' fees. California's Supreme
Court reversed on pne point: Reproductions are "equally entided to First
Amendment protection." Otherwise
the lower court's decision was sustained. Now the aggrieved artist has
asked the Supreme Court to hear his
appeal.
The high court never has ruled
direcdy on some of the questions raised
under California's celebrity law, but
several precedents are relevant. Judge
Stanley Mosk reviewed them in his
opinion for a unanimous court in the
Three Stooges case.
One notable case in 1977 involved
the Gre~t Zacchini, the human cannonball, who successfully sued an Ohio
television station. The station had
videotaped and broadcast Zacchini's
entire performance without his consent. ~his amounted to unjust enrichment, said the Supreme C9urt, an act
not protected by the First Amendment.
In · contrast, the purported heir of
Rudolph Valentino lost his suit against
(Letters to Mr. Kilpatrick slroulil be sent
the makers of a fictional film based on in care of this newspaper, or'by e·mail kil·
the actor's life. California's Supreme patjj@aol.com.)

io

Communicating in today's
business world has changed dramatically over the last few years.
E-mail has become the mode
of conveying information to
customers and sending business
memos to colleagues. Proper email etiquette is essential for
important messages to be
rebyed without miscommunication. Here are some helpful
ways to prevent problems in
understanding office communiques and memos.
· Be specific on the subject
line. Let the other person knoW
~ what you are talking
about. .
Delete the extra verbiage that
may be attached to documents
when forwarding or replying.
"BC" or blind copy should be
used irutead of"CC" for atbon
copy. Eliminate the previous
address list5, memo lines, et(:.
Answer questioll5 by copying
the question first, then respond
to it. If you only answer the
question without restating it,
the person may not know
Kelly Meeks Is pictured with "Cozy Be Quick, • an eight yaar-old which question is . being
who lived up to her name by running the barrel race In the
answered.
Meigs County Fair's open horse show In 14.9 seconds, break·
Don't forget to address the
lng a long.stendlng record of 15 seconds. Winning Is nothing
person who is getting the mesnew to the horse, which has defeated some of the beSt ln 'the
world at events including the Quarter Horse Congress, where
she outran hundreds to finish second In the nation. Meeks
owns half-Interest In the mare, bred and raised by her other
owner, Earl Cleek of Racine. (Contributed photo)

THURSDAY
SUNDAY
TUPPER.S PLAINS - TupPOMEROY- tlamlock Grove
pers Plains VFW Post Ladies Christian Church homecoming,
Auxiliary, regular meeting, Thurs- wilh observance of 135th
day, 7:30 p.m. at lhe hall.
anniversary, Sunday. Special
music by the Postmeyers of
FRIDAY
Mariana.
Preaching, 9:30 a.m.;
POMEROY -Meigs County
Sunday
School,
11 :30 a.m.;
PERl No. 74 will meal on Friday
poUuck
dinner,
12:30
p.m. at the
at the Meigs County Senior Center at noon. Senator Mike Shoe- grange han, and afternoon ser·
maker, D-Boumevllle, will speak vice, 2p.m.
at the meeting following lunch.
CHESHIRE - Gospel sing
MIDDLEPORT -'- lnterdenom· Sunday, 2 p.m. Poplar Ridge
inaUonal pastors prayer, Middle· Church, Route 554 from
port First Baptist Church, Friday, Cheshire. Singers. Heartllln,Har•
8:30 a.m. Use rear entrance. All many, Narrow Way, Randy Par·
sons, and Christian Echoes.
pastors welcome.
Love. offering to benefl1 annual
POMEROY - Fun, Food and Bend Area Gospel Jubilee.

Questiotts and Answers
Bv' VALREA THOMPSON
ATHENS SOCIAL SECURITY OFACE

Q. Will I automatically start
getting Social Security benefits when I turn age 65?
A.
No, Social Security
benefits will not start automatically; you must apply for
benefits. If . you're· nearing
retirement, you should know
that it's best to contact SQcial
Security several months, even
a yea~efore your plann~d
retirement 'date. Then you
can be sure that ypu start·
your benefits when it's best
for you.
Q. I am receiving Social
Security disability benefits.
I've heard that you can continue to receive benefits
while you attempt to work,
but I'm afraid to ask my
Social Security office because
they might think I'm not disabled. Can you tell me about
this?
There are · a number
A.
of special rules, called "work
incentives,'' which may make
it possible for you to continue to receive disability benefits while you work. These
work incentives may also
help with your work expenses, medical bills, rehabilitation and vocational training.
They are designed to eliminate the risk of losing bene1fits while you attempt to
Social
Security
work.
encourages people to use
work incentives. You should
check out our website,
www.ssa.gov /work, or call us
at 1-800-772-1213 for more
information. Our booklet,
Working · While Disabled ..

Celebrities and the law
Court held-that the First Amendment;
protects · forms of entertainment. The·
interests ofValentino's descendant were
clearly outweighed by the value of free
·
expression.
• In a federal case from New Jersey in
1981, the district court ruled in favor of
the heirs of Elvis Presley in their suit
against an Elvis impersonator. The
sourt held that "entertainment that is
merely a copy or imitation, even if skillfully and accurately carried out, does·
not really have its own creative compo-·
nent." Nothing is wrong with imitating
a celebrity for humorous effect or criticism, but enteflainers have no right to
appropriate another's shtick on a continuing basis.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the
2nd Circuit also ruled for a celebrity's
heirs in a f982 case involving a play.
with characters resembling the Marx
brothers. Other celebrity rights cases
have involved pitcher Don Newcombe,
golfer Tiger Woods and basketball star
Kareern Abdul-Jabbar. Vanna White, star
of "Wheel of Fortune," figured in one
case, actress Bette Midler in another. ·
It all sounds innocuous, but a jury
awarded Hoffman $3 million in damages. A panel of the 9th Circuit Court
reverse!). Judge Robert Boocheyer said
~gazine was entitled "to the full
First Amendment protection accorded
noncommercial speech." I doub.t that
Gary Saderup will be as fortunate with
his charcoal draWing of the Three
Stooges. My guess is that he will get
another poke _in the eye, but it's up to
the high court now.

HARRISONVILLE Har·
risonville Lodge 411 . meeting
Saturday, 7:30 p.m Refresh·
ments.

SOCIAL SECURITY

COVERING THE COURTS

Was Curly the 0 ne who slapped
Moe? Or was it Larry who poked
Curly in the eye? Whatever.
They were the Three Stooges, masters
of slapstick comedy. Eighty years after·
- their debut in vaudeville, their old
movies still flicker on our TV screens.
Now the Stooges figure in an appeal to
the Supreme Court.
The case is Saderup v. Comedy Ill
Productions. The lawsuit involves a
celebrity's property right in his own
fame. !,.s a matter of constitutional law,
the litigants are debating First Amend·
ment rights of commercial speech.
More to the point, the appeal argues
that an artist has a right to make a
drawing of a public figure and earn a
buck by selling his work.
. No one disputes the facn. Gary
. Saderup is a California artist with 25
· years of experience making and selling
charcoal drawings of celebrities. Following the death of the last of the
Stooges in 1975, he drew a rough portrait of Larry, Moe and Curly. From the
drawing he made and marketed lithographs and T-shirts. Heirs of the three
comedians, acting through Comedy III,
sued Saderup under a California law
enacted in 1984. The act perir,its the
heirs of a "deceased personality' to sue
any person who uses the personality's
likeness "for purposes · of selling merchandise." T)!.e embargo expires 70
years after a celebrity's death._
The California Court of Appeals
ruled after 'a bench trial that the lithographs and silk-screened shirts were not
entided to First Amendment protection. They were merely reproductions,
rather than original works of art.
Saderup had earned $75,000 from his

Proper English n.eeded
in e-mails, too

Fellowship at God's NET in
Pomeroy. Nutritional meals, nonviolent video games, computer
programs, board games, pool
tables fOr teens, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday.

How Social Security C~n
Help, explains' tire work
incentives in detail.
Q.
Does Medicare pay
for prescription drugs?
A.
Generally, original
Medicare does not cover prescription drugs. However,
Medicare does cover some
drugs in certain cases such as'
immunosuppressive
drugs
(for transplant patient&lt;) and .
oral anti-cancer drugs.
•
Social Security facts
• About 20 percent of
young people will die before . LONDON (AP) - Prime
reaching retirement age.
Minister Tony Blair's teen-age .
•Three-in-10 workers who son was mugged by a gang of
are 20 years old' now will boys who rilled through his
become disabled before pockets but ran away emptyreaching retirement age.
• The number of people
office declined to comgetting Social Security will ment ori stories published
double by 2030.
Wednesday in. the ' Daily Mail
• it's· estimated that the and Sun tabloids about his 17.
value of Social Security sur· year-old son, Euan.
vivors insurance to a 27 year
The papers said. Euan Blair
old with a spouse and two
and an unidentified friend, walkchildren is $374,000; and the
value of disability insurance
is $223,000.
• We've all heard the old
saying ... don't put all your
eggs in one basket. Well, that
applies to retirement too.
Not because Social Security might not be there ·... but
because Social Security was
never intended to · be your
on1y income 1 in retirement.
It's a base to build on.
Plan to supplement your
Social Security with savings, .
pensions, insurance and other
investments. By planning
now, you'll have plenty of '
eggs in your basket later on.

~;

'

Always add your name at the
end, even though both of t\tese
details are ·given at the top of
the e-mail.
Use standard English in your
communiques. Do not type.
everything in caps. This can be
extremely hard to read.
Reread your l)lessage before
sending. Make sure no unintentional rudeness or misconceptions can be detected. Check
grammar, punctuation and
·spelling. Remember that even
though e-mail is more informal, it is still a form of business
communication.

(Becky Batr is a Meigs County .

/ .

1

1•

'h · r~
./T '.'- ·.
.. •.,c•....,.,, ' . .
.

lalll Delllalld. On Dill lt.-"~" I
• ••• J . . . . . . ..~.l~ .

..
Shaw Y•r Pllllr IIIW .JIIucll You
,·. :f'

·'•r~··

~

Alllrtclpll
'Qiem
.~\' ,... .
'

'

\.

'

.. .--------,

With Much
Appreciation

. With
Picture

t

From Yotu .,\,

·~·

Congregatlc~
Putor John Smith
With Much Appreciation
FromYour Congregation

onlf5,00·
Wllhout Pte~ , . •·

·on,f8.00
WUh Pfct;ue

Runs: Friday, October 26.
Deadline: Friday, October 19

Fill out cciu pon below and mail or bring payment to:
The J?.aily Sentinel
Ill Court Street ~ Pomeroy, OH 45769
~-~------------------tPutor'l
Name,___________

1Church: _ _~---------

Attack on·America
c~verage begins
.
on pageA2

tMeaaage:_ _ _ _~-------

1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

:vour Name:. _____·-·=-- - ' - - - - - - 1,Adcbeaa:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1

----~--------~-------. ''Visa &amp; MasterCard Accepted

•

•

Exttnsion agent for family and con·
sumtr sdence I cvmmunity devtlopmmt.)

ing in the Swiss Cottage section

there had been an attempted
robbery. Police said the youths
had confionted two victims and
tried to take a portable CD player. There was some pushing and
shoving before the suspects ran
off empty-handed.

'

sage.

.,.. -·

of north London early Saturday,
were surrounded by a grvup of.
eight to 10 boys who demanded
that they empty their pockets. ·
Police would not release the
victims' identities, but confirmed.

•

l!.

ADVICE

---

PEOPLE ·

Euan

Becky
Baer

•

�•

,

...
·The Daily Sentinel

"Stomach" pain may .be hernia, need surgery
Question: For the Jan five
months I've been having a
muscle cnmp type of pain in
the lower right side of my
stomat·h when I cough or
sneez" hard. When it started,
it occurred once or twice a
month and lasted for a few
&lt;econds. Lately it has been
John C. Wolf, D.O.
l1appening 2tleast once every
Altodate
Pro£essor
J•y, and the pain. lasts longer
of Family Medicine
- about 20 seconds or so. I
haven't found anything that
stops the paifi. I just wait it to examine you and to ask defined in my Americo n Herout. What could be causing additional questions provides itage Dictionary as follows:
thiS~·
· 'fil!'ant c haII enge to my "The protrusion of ari organ
. . ..
a Signo
Answer:
Pam
IS a sognal that d
. k'll Th at sat.d t h e
.
.
U c.
' tagnomc s 1 s.
some thmg ts wrong. noorh .
.
' • or other bodily· stru cture
tunately, it usually only indi- top c otce on my hst of edu- through the wall that norcates the body region tha.t is cated guesses " tbat you have mally contains it; a ruptufe."
'in trouble nther than telling a small herma, because the Though there are many types
us the reason for the poin. symptoms of that dtsorder fit of hernias, the one occurring
Trying to accurately make a the -description of your pain in the area around the groin,
diagnosis about the cause of quite welL
&lt;Dr inguinal region in doctor
your pain without being able
Hernia
IS
accurately lingo, is the most common.

_fim!lp

~diane

4-H youth

recognition
banquet

planned

COUNTY COURT

• Ulsa • me

BEEF

Saltine
Crackers.

scholarships

SpareRibs

Museum -recalls attempts to 'civilize' Indian children

9!
. Fresh
Orange Juice

$j99

59f,.

Gallon

!

Sonshine
Circle meet
RACINE- Plans for giving to God's NET and starting a church building fund
were made, during a recent
mec;~ins,..ofihe Dorcas Son' shine ·' Clrole · held · at the
, church.
""'~ '-•
Lois Sterrett, preside~t,. had
charge 'of the business meet~
ing, with the . secretacy and
rreasurerUs reports being
given by Kathryn Hart and

letha~.

A report on the yard sale
was given at a recent meeting
ofRACO.
It was noted that Down to
· Earl:h farms donated all the
produce to RACO for its
food booth at the Fall Festival. .Plans were made for the
fall food drive to be held in
November., along with the
Christmas in the Park observance on Dec. 13 with enter·
tainrftent and the arrival of
Santa. ....
.
Again this year the group
will sponsor the annual
Christmas decorating contest
with prize money to be the
same as last yoar. OfficersU
reports were given and D,ave
Zirkle led in ·the pledge of
&lt;11legiance.

: Thank yo .notes were read
from Hazel cKelvey, Herbert Pugh, Norma Torres,
lnd Peggy HilL The group
~njoyed a family picnic at the
McKelvey
campsite
in
j\ugust. New shirts for members will be ordered.
•
: Officers were ' elected and
Jnclude lois Sterret, presi?ent, Evelyn foreman, vicePOMEROY -Winners in
president; Kathryn Hart, sec- the drawing for a Middleton
retary; Lillian Hayman, trea- Doll and a boat replica were
lurer; Julie Campbell, assis- . announced today. The money
lant treasurer, Mabel Brace, raised on the two items will
historian; Edie Hubbard, go into the Sternwheel
'
Riverfest committee fund.
photographer.
; Cards of sympathy were Deb Hatfield won the doll,
!igned for Eber Pickens, Fred and winner of the boat
Smith, Patty Pape, Virginia repUica was Hoyt fontalbert,
~alser, and Beulah Neigler. owner of the Roy C. SternCards of encouragement wheeler.

Stemwheel
Winners

Crinkle Cut

Hunts

French
Fries

Tomato
· Sauce

"' $149

•

5($

Soz.can

•

Quaker
Asst. Instant

Oatmeal

$1~:

Wylwood

Chee

Tomato
Juice ~- ·

Singles

99 ~-

46 oz. can

12 oz.

Hillshire Farms
Asstd. Var.

Smoked$1~9

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

}

BY .I)AN LEwERENZ

~

~SSOCIATED P~ESS ~§ITEfl·

~ C:ARLISL't. Pa.- With its
neatly trimmed lawn aRd
. plain, white gravestones, the
small, well-kept cemetery
near the rear gate of the U.S.
Army War College at the
Carlisle Barracks looks at lint
like many other Army cemeterie&lt;.
But a braid of sweetgrass
here and a beaded hair clip
there identify the site not as a
soldien' graveyard, but as the
final resiitig place for more
than 100 American Indian
children who died far . from
home.
From
1879-1918, the
Carlisle Barracks was home to
,the Carli1le Indian Industrial
:school, the model for a
'nationwide system of government-run Indian boarding
schools intended to "civilize"
American Indian children by
;tea,ching them farming and
,trades while squelching their
language and traditions.
Many of the old school
buildings are still in use at the
Carlisle Barracks, where a
walking tour takes visitors past
the plantation-style superintendent's home, two buildings
that served as school hospitals,
the school gymnasium named
for legendary athlete Jim
Thorpe, the home of football
coach Glenn S. '~Pop" Warner
an~ the grandstand where fans
watched Warner's teams. Th"e
cemetery is not included in
the ~alking tour, but is easy to
spot near the rear gate.
Downtown, the Cumberland County Historical Soci-'
ety has dedicated a portion of
its muse um to the Indian
school. Although the Carlisle
• gallery is small, it includes
much information about the
history of the Indian school
and artifocts, including uniforins, tools and photographs.
In one of the more intriguing displays, a collection of
student artwork shows a partial evolution in the school's
purpose. Early on. the school'~
art curriculum focused almost
;entirely on classical art, teach,ing students the basics of
,painting images such as still
:lifes. But in the early 1900s,
:under the direction of Win:nebago artist Angel DeCora,
:the program began to

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enco~r-

The former superintendent's residence at the Carlisle Indian .
lndustrial School Is shown In Carlisle, Pa. The building currently houses the commandant of the ~arllsle Barracks. More
than 10,000 students passed through the Carlisle Indian
Industrial School, many of them the sons and daughters of
prominent Indian leaders. (AP Photo/Pat Little) ·
age students to incorporate
colors_and images from their
tribal tnditions into their art.
. The Carlisle Indian Industrial School was founded by
then-Capt. Richard H. Pratt,
who believed that combining
education with agricultural
and technical training would
help make Indians more productive members ofAmerican
society.
Four years after founding
the school, Pratt wrote in an
address to a convention of
Baptist ministers: "In Indian
civilization I am a Baptist,
because I believe in immersing the Indians in our civilization and when we get them
under holding them there
until they are thoroughly
soaked." ·
oN
More than 10,000 students
·passed through the Carlisle
Indian Industr ial School.

•

·
d
f t h em th e sons an
many
o
·
.
d'
daughters of promment In J- r
an leaders.
, ,
Pratt proudly pubhetzed the
school, which quickly became
fomous. The CarIis1e In dian
Industrial School Band played
at the 1892 Worlds Fair in
Chicago and at the opening of
the Brooklyn Bridge and y;as
a regular fixture at presidential
inaugurations.
Actors Chauncy Yellow
Robe (Lakota) and Sylvester
Long
(Cherokee)
were
Carl·isle students. as was
William Paisano, who later
became governor of the
Laguna Pueblo.
The school's greatest fame
came on ·.athletic fields, producing stars such a.&lt; H&lt;~ll of
F~me pitcher Charles Albert
Bender (Chippewa): At the
191 2 Olympit Games in
Helsinki. finland, Thorpe (Sac

l

BY ERIN EVERETT

HELENA, Mont. - When
and Fox) won gold medals in
Meriwether Lewis finS pushed
both the decathlon and pen- ·•
his
"great experiment" into the
tathlon, and Louis Tewanima
Missouri
River near present(Hopi) won the silver medal
day Great F~ in 1805; 1\e
in the 10,000 meter run.
surely
beamed.
·
Thorpe also was an All-Amer"She lay like a cork," he
ican halfback ahd played prowrote
in his journal.
fessional football and baseball.
But the iron-framed boat
The school probably was
that
Lewis designed floated
best known for its football
only for a moment before it
teams, coached by "Pop"
leaked and sank, taking with it
Warner, a non-Indian. Warner
his high spirits. "The circumis credited with developing
stance
mortified me not a litthe single-wing and doublede," he wrote.
wing . offenses during his
L~s and expedition cocareer, which included coaching at Georgia, Cornell, • commander William Clark
gave the boat_a proper burial in
Carlisle, Pittsburgh and Stana field near the river's great
ford.
falls. It was never mentioned
But as the cemetery testiagain.
fies,' not all memories of
But now, archaeologist Ken
Carlisle were happy ones.
Karsmizki intends to find it.
Often when students arrived
Karsmizki, of the Columbia
their .hair was cut (a sign .of
Gorge · Discovery Center in
I:J!Ourning among SiouX\aild
The Dalles, Ore., has enlisted
some other High Ptains
the help of an Air Force robot
tribes) and they were told to
equipped with a giant metal
pick a Christian name.
detector, and will set out the
Students were discouraged
second week of September to
from speaking their native
find the boat he believes is still
languages and practicing t;raburied.
ditional religions. The military
The boat, dubbed by some
discipline at the school was
"the holy grail of the exploharsh, and some students were
ration," would solve a braineven confined in an old
teaser for archaeologists and
guardhouse built by He.sian
historians if it is found.
prisoners during the Revolutionary War.
The graveyard holds the
remains of 106 children who
died-' at Carlisle, but Barbara
Landis, a research specialist for
the historical society, said
h b
·
many more w o ecame cntically ill _ perhaps several
hundred - were simply put
on trains and sent home to
die.
Alana Bubnis, museum
curator for th~ Cumberland
County Historical Society,
says the museum plans ,to
expand its gallery space and
update its Indian school display· to inClude more personal
stories from the school.
"We would like to work in
some of the oral histories that
were done several years ago
when many of the surviving
Carlisle students were interviewed," Bubnis says.
"That, along with displaying some of the things in our
collection thar we just don't
have gallery sp~ce for now,
would give , a much more
complete picture oflife at the
Indian school."

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Archaeologist enlists
robot to find boat : I
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Fresh

RACO funds

'-&amp;-o{ISLE B

Bob Evans

$1~!.-

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Stamps

Family Pack
Ftesh Ground

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LAND TRANSFERS

food

POMEROY-- The second
annual 4-H Youth Awards
and ·Leadership Recognition
Banquet and Dance has !:&gt;een
scheduled for Saturday,
. October 20 from 6 to 10
p.m. in the Meigs High
School cafeteria.
All Meigs County 4-H
members and family, 4-H
advisors, sponsors and friends
9f 4-H, are invited to attend.
. 4-H members to be recognized and honored · during
the banquet il'ldude: achieve!flerit record nominees, state
fair delegates, savings bond
recipients, 4-H Junior Fair
Board representati.ves, "Extra
Effort" members, Fashion
Board members, 4-H Camp
Counselors, trip delegates,
State 4-H All\bassadors and
scholarship recipients. 4-H
club advisors, 4~H sponsors
and friends of 4-H ,will be
recognized fot their dedica' tion, support and contribu.
ttons to the county 4-H
youth development program. ·
Reservations are to be
made by · Monday, at the
OSU, Meigs County Exten, sion
Office, . Mulberry
RACINE - A total of .
· Heights, . P.O. Box 32, $3,407.59 was raised for
Pomeroy, OH 45769. For scholarships for Southern
more information, residents seniors at the yard sale held ,
·' may contact David R. Sept. 13 ,and 14 by the
: "Chip" Haggerty, County
Racine Area Community
: Extension Agent, 4-H.
Organization. •

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$30

w-..

Hccept
• WIC .

were signed for . Evelyn
Brady, Ronald Hart, Herbert
Pugh, Audrey Ours. Ethel
Orr, Ellen Arnott, Harold
Eager, Douglas Circle, Maria
Delgato, Chaty Cordero, Bill
Rice, Ruth Smith, Edison
Brace, Harlan and Alta Ballard, Anna Lee and Glenn
Tucker, Vicki Boso, Raymond Proffitt, Esther West,
Martha
Stutler, Naomi
Neville; June Turner,- Pauline
Wolfe, Peggy Hill, and Margaret Cottrill, and Lizzie
Carpenter.
Linda Russell ~nd Blondena Rainer had the program.
Attending were Lois Sterrett, Gladys Sterrett, Edna
Knopp, Blondena Rainer,
Shirley Beegle, Edie Hubbard, Evelyn Foreman, Mildred Hart, Mabel Brace, Ann
Boso, · Martha Lou Beegle,
Mattie Be,egle, Bernice
Theiss, Ruth
Simpson,
Kathryn Hart, Linda Russell,
Letha Proffitt, and a guest,
Violet fisher.
Next meeting will · be at
the church on October 11
with Peggy Hill and ,Ann
B
h . th
d
ofrso h avmg e program an
re es ments.

ecord

I

Thursday, October 4, :Z001

and costs, seat belt; Leonard l. bus. $30 and COSts, speed.
costs. speed: s - J. Gartoer. EJclo.
Carole;,. Bing to Regina -t.ife. to Janet Elaine Connolly. affidavit.
Lucas. Alhens. 430 and 0051$. seat
Klrsten N. Kirk. Grove City. $30 rado. $30 and costs, seat be~; Fred- dead, Rutland.
Orange.
belt, S20 and costs, driving on a and costs, speed: Harry T. Watts. die R. Collet, Murfreesbaoo. T..,.,
Rita A. Lewis to Family Homes.
Carl E. ~. Miry F. Notclosed rood; Bernard B. Sllueaer, Athens, $20 and coslll, stop sogn; $30 and costs, speed: Jaimie L Inc.• deed, ChesW.
·
tingham,
to Jeffery J. Notti"'iham.
POMEROY - A number Athens. $30 and oosts, speed: Sandra G. Southam. Shade, $30 and Myers. Pats-. $30 and COlli,
Dwlghl D. Hill, Lorna J. Hill. to Valerie l. Nottingham, deed, Chester.
, of cases were recently Pamela J. GlaZe, Cootvllte, $30 and costs, . speed; Waner A. Newton, speed; Chutily Jude. Vonlon, $30 G«xve Molool, Nora l.lalool, deed.
Randall L Brown, Penny R. Brown,
to Jeffrey P. - . , , Carol L.
proce&lt;sed by Meigs Counry costs, seat belt: Billy J. Thompson, Marietta, $50 and costs, speed; and costs. - t beh; William C. ._...,_
Columbus. S50 lrid coell, failure to
M. Hobbo. Miauilburg, S50 Howard II, Clnc*lnati, $35 and . . -,
MichMI L..- Bing to Dwight P. ~. deed, Salisbury.
• Court Judge Steven L. Story. oonlrol,
E. Halfllll. Bidwefl. Medley, JOI'CI M. Medley. died, SUI·
Charlotte Lee Thompson, oe.id M.
$30 and ..... bell, S50 and coots, speed; Jenniloo' R. Young, pooaesolon; Tho&lt;e fined were:
and COlli. failure to ~ ¥llid reg- Pomoroy. $30 and coots, - t ball; $20 and coots, _ . conlainer; SooU ton.
Thompson, to Charlotte Loe Thomp.~arMS R. lngela, Emra P. Ingell. son, David M. Thompson, dee~.
• Brian K. Armes. POfToei'CY. $:ill and istration: Lim K. oar.~ Mlddlopor, John D. Brown, McAnhur. $30 and M. F..-._. Clnc*lnati. $35 and
to Shawntngels, deed, Middlepoo1 Vii· Columbia.
.
_.coots, seat bell: Nocholas A. Spurlock, $30 and coell, speed: .1a1on Scar- coots, seat bell; Jellrey S. Keeton, costs, poosesolon.
berry,
Columbus,
$30
and
costs,
seat
Flatwoods.
Ky.,
$30
and
costs,
!age.
Daniel
E.
Knotts,
Dixie
R. Knoal. to
, TIJPP8f1 Plains, $500 and costs, reck·
Charles D. Jeners to Charles D. John King, deed, Olive.
• less operation; R. Leroy lander~. bell; Franklin E. Test. Columbus. $30 speed; Denise E. Arnold, Pornfroy,
Jeffers, Branda K. Jaffer~. deed, MidSharon Barr to Tupper~ Plains·
! Pomeroy, $19 and costs, $30 and and costs, seat belt: Charles W. $35 and costs, speed ; Marcus L.
dleport Village.
Chester Waler District. right of way,
costs, seat belt; William L. Noble, Mcfadden, Albar1y, sao and costs, Laster. Painesville, $30 and costs,
POMEROY
M.eigs
Charles Wolfe. Sr.. Lots Wolle, to Bedford.
·
r.uysllille, costs only, driving on a speed; Robert W. Stewart, Alhena, speed;Nalhan W. Faught, Wellston,
Charles Wolfe Jr.. Elizabeth Wolfe.
Daniel E. Knotts, Dixie R. Knotts. 1o
closed road; Danny T. Salyers, $30 and costs, speed; Richard P. Han $30 and costs, seal belt; Robert P.
TP-cwtl, rlglit of way, Olive.
· Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt: Jr., Galipolis. $30 and costs. speed; Sellars. NashpOO, $30 and costs. County Recorder Judy King dead. Letan.
Russell
K.
McConnell,
Tena
Alta,
sj.eod;
Grant
R.
Hallman,
Newark,
reports
the
following
recent
William
R.
Kovatch.
Charyl
A.
Ben]amin W. PtJtman, Lena E. Put: lelsie W. StOmis. Racine, $25 and W.Va., S50 and costs, speed; Brian
Del ., $30 and ocists. speed, $30 and t
r
f a)
Kovatch, to Gary L Duff, deed, man, to'TP-CWO. right of way. OliW.
costs, si!o and costs, no child D. Carder, Tuppers Plains, $25 and costs,
seat belt; lelana Fultineer, ranSters 0 re estate: .
Salem.
Clararioe Bradford. Teresa A. Jor·
' restraint: Daman J. Blanks, Middle·
coots,
child
restraint
Coolville.
$30
and
costs,
speed;
_
.iames
W.
Hobstener,
Mary
HobHazel
A.
E!ar1on.
Larry
E.
Barton
to
dan,
Laoo Jordan, Brenda J.
port. $22 and costs, speed, $30 and
Christopher T. Nel)er, WesUaka, Andra Boggs, Gallipolis, $30 and stetter, to Statu of Ohio. dead, Sutton. Grata Mae Donaldson. dead. Olive. Stephen Weller, to TP-CWD, right br
costs. seat belt: Rodney K. Allen.
James W. Hobstener. Mary HobStephen F. Baloy. Joyce c. Baloy, way. Lebanon.
Portland. $850 and costs, 10 days ]aH $30 and costs, speed: -Laura l . Ricl&gt;- costs. speed: Charlene A. Carpenler,
J. Todd Usle. Christy u\ie, to Tr·
slfspanded to three, six month mond, Rutland, $30 and costs, Lancaster, $30 and costs. speed; stener. to Statu of Ohio, dead. Sutton. to Nathan M, Baloy. deed. Pomeroy
Jlft18S W. Hobstener, Mary Hob- V'llage.
CWO, right of way, Sutton.
license suspension, one eyar proba· speed: Timothy Brinager, Racine, $30 Andrea E. Jones, M-port. $30
Jeffery L Hill. Tammy lfitt. Timothy
Roy L. Jenkins to TP-CWD, right of
tion, ]ail and $500 suspended upon and costs, seat belt; Mitchell A. Will&lt;· and costs, speed; Keith B. De~mann, stellar. to Slate of Ohio, deed. Sutton.
Racine, $30 and costs. seat belt; Athens. $30 and costs. speed;
James W. Hobstettar. Mary Hob- L Hilt, Debbie Hill, Christopher way. Sutlon.
·
,
oompletion of RTP SChool. driving er,
John
l.
Driggs,
Long
Bot1om,
$20
Joshau
A.
Williams.
New
Philadel·
statler,
to
Stale
of
Ohio.
dead,
S&lt;Jtton.
Wayne
HiH.
Billy
Hill.
Sr
..
Ruth
HiH.
to
Vernal
H.
Well.
Louise
Well.
to
TPunder the influence; Brian E. Gliftin,
James W. Hobstetter. Mary Hob- Wanda M. Roush, deed. Racine Vi.~ CWO, right of way, Bodford.
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Reedsville. $20 and costs, left of cen- ana costs, seat belt: Paul S. Kelley, phia, $30 and costs. seat ben: Bar·
Frankfort,
Ky
.•
$30
and
costs,
speed:
bara
A.
Delong.
Canal
Winchester,
stoner.
to
State
of
Ohio.
dead,
Sutton.
lage.
Vernal
H.
Well,
Louise
Well.
to
TP·
ter; Ralph W. ingles Jr., Wate~oo. $30 Richard P. .Buci&lt;ley, Pomeroy, $30
James W. Hobstetter, Mary HobFrancis Allen Case to Thelma CWO, right of way, Bodford.
,
and costs, .seat belt; Benjamin and costs, speed: Michael A. emely,. $30 and costs, speed; Robert L.
Kellin w. VanMatre, Ann E. VanOwens, Cooiv1ile, $30 and oosts, seat Dover, $30 and costs, speed; Kelley Vanscoy, Park9fsburg, W.Va.. $30 stetter. to State of Ohio, deed, Sutton. Hayes, certificate or ransfer, Chester.
- r t H. Roush Jr., Carrie M. Metre. to TP-CWD, right of way,
' belt; Daniel M. Bamen, Athens, $30 0 . Opal, Alexandria. Va., $50 and and costs, speed: Charles W. Vuiller, · James· w. Hobstetter. Mary Hob•
.
and costs, speed; lucas Cline. costs, speed; Craig T. Chapman, Weirton, W.Va., $30 ·and costs. stutter, toStateofOhio.dead, &amp;lllp!l. · Roush, to Paul B. Roush, Tina C. Chester.
speed;
Mlcahet
D.
evans,
Syracuse,
James
W
,
Hobstettar.
Mary
~ROil!llr,'1!ee(f'letart.
Charles
Russell
to
Michael
A.
Logan, $30 and costs, Sjl9od; Darren
Pomeroy.
$20
and
costs,
closed
road:
$30
and
costs.
speed;
Russell
L
stoner,
to
Stste
of
Ohio,
deed,
Sut!Oh.
Adele
F.
Cullums,
deceased,
to
Klinger,
deed,
Salem.
,
A. Qno. Flatwoods, Ky., $30 and
David R. Farmer, Reynoidsb)Jfg. $38 Wooten, Vienna, W.Va., $30 and
James W. H.obstettor, Mary Hob- Dwight Cullums, Michael A. Cullums,
Soulhem Ohio Coal Company to
costs, speed; Kenneth E• Spence, and
costs. speed: Dennis R. Casali, costs, speed: Jeffrey A. Roy, Raleigh. stoner, to State of Ohio, deed: Sutton. Ronald D. Cullums, affidavit. Columbus 9tl'uthem. Power, deed,
Logan. $30 and. costs. seat ben; Douglas,
$30 and cc;&gt;sls, speed: N.C.. $30 and costs, speed: Edward
James W. Hobstetter, Mary Hob- Pomeroy.
Columbia.
Deanna C. Shepard. long Bottom, Brynn M. Moss,
long
botom,
$20
and
0.
Omolo,
Columbus,
$30
and
costs.
Stetter,
to
State,pf
Ohio,
dead,
Sutton.
Michael
A.
Cutiums,
Ronald
D.
Cui· SOCCO to Ohio Power Co., dead,
$30 and costs. speed,
costs,
stop
sign:
Mark
B.
Searles,
speed;
Delbert
S.
Bowers,
Tenn.,
$30
James.
W
.
Hobstettor.
Mary
Hobturns,
laura
Cultums,
to
Dwight
CuiSalem.
Oscar A. Campos, Clayton, N.C., Albany,·$30 and costs, speed; John and costs, speed; Herbert L. Grate It, Stetter, to State of Ohio, dead, Sutton. lums, dead, Pomeroy Village.
Beechel D. Breeding, deceased, to
$30 and costs, speed; Raben M.
W
.
Cooper Jr., logan, $30 and costs, Raodsville, $30 and oosts, speed,
James
B.
Kittle,
Nada
Kittle,
Nada
F"""""'
Bank
and
savings
Co.
to
Michael
o: Breeding, certificate,
Blackston, Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
belt; Gay A. Burke, CoolVille. $30 $20 and costs, failure,to display; Den-· l. Kittle, to Phillip Ohlinger, Candi John R. Jeffers, Brenda K. Jeflor~. Salem.
speed; John E. Steele, Foster, W.va., eeat
dead. M~ VIllage.
Manning Marcinko, Gloria L.
$30 and costs, speed; Jeremy l. and costs, speed; Michael E. V'ockory, nos L Barga, New Matamoras, $30 Ohlinger. deed. Village of Pomeroy.
lancaster,
S30
and
COSts, speed; and ooslll, seat belt, S20 and costs,
larry
J.
Ball,
Rita
D.
bal,
to _
J
ohn
Gary
Dill,
Flossie
Dill,
to
Christy
A.
Marcinko.
to Mallnlng Marcinko, GtoComns, McArthur. $30 and costs. Amber N. Coriell, Wadoworth, $30 expired registration; Racinda Kimes, McKinney, Sheila McKinney, deed. Haning, dead. Chester.
'
ria.
L.
Marcinko,
easement, Otvle.
speed; Jan A. Chadwell. Columbus, and costs, speed; David W. Kennedy, Pomeroy, $30 and costs, seat belt; . RuUand.
,
Wayne
Mewnn
Chase,
deceased,
Eugene
Triplett,
Karen R. Tnplan to
$30 and costs, speed: Vina E. CtipnHurricane, W.Va .. CUfford E. Gille· Jamie L. Null, Coolville, $30 and
Lee Owtina. Clarol\ce A. lambert, to Pauli'IO Chase. certificate, Scipio. Jackie R. Welker, deed, Village of
er. South Bloomingville. $20 and spie,
· Huntington, W.va.. $30 and costs, speed.
·
Sajly J. Lambert, deed, Olive.
Manning D. Webster, deceased, to Pomeroy.
costs, seat belt; Steven A. Creoosts,
speed: lloyd A. Davis, Park·
Judy
C.
"'"sser,
Pomeroy,
$30
and
Frences
Imboden
to
Robert
lmboDiane
R. Mayer, L erik Mayer, limo- · Simon H. Gelswhite, Mary
means: Portland, $20 and costs, seat arsburg, W.Va., $20 and costs, costs, speed: $30 and costs, seat den, Lilly Kennedy, deed, Rutland.
thy
fi.
Meyer,
deed, Pomeroy Villaga. Geiswhite, to Ohio Power Co., nght of
belt; Billie J. Sellers, Portland, $30 improper pessing: Rajesh N. Parikh, belt; William Sears Jr., Amelia. $30
Angela
L
Delong,
Angela
I.
Sherry
Atherton
Mary Luong, way. Racine. ·
and costs, seat belt; Joyce A. Hime, To;oy, Mich., $30 and costs, speed; and costs, speed; Patricia A. Dyer, Kennedy, to Jeffrey A. Delong, deed, Carol Lawless, deed.toOlive.
Nona E. Nelson. deceased, to
Melrose. Fla., $30 and costs, speed. Thomas C. Craig. Shawnee, $50 and Bidwell, $30 and costs, speed; Salisbury.
Denise
L Lyons to James L. Lyons Carol A. Mourning. deed, mineral
Carol J. Justis, Racine, $30 and
speed; Stephen E. Domsffe. Robert D. Armstrong, Rinard Mills,
Arnold Spencer, Francea H. Jr., deed, Columbia.
righlll.
1
costs, speed; Edgar RiHie, Leon, costs,
westerville,
$30 and costs. speed; $20 and costs, failure to display; Don- Spencer, to Richard A. Abbott. Doris
Donald G. Jones, Sr., Ella E. Jones
Keith Bateman, Shirley A. Bet_eW.Va., $30 and costs. seat belt; Rena Cynthia Nagy, Cincinnati, $30 and ald R. Folmer Jr., Pomeroy. $117 and M. Abbott, dead, Olive.
to Donald G. Joaes Jr.. Melissa J. man. to Emanuel Namenyi. Pam$
langstreth, Rutland, $30 and costs. costs, speed; Eric C. WiNiams, Fort cqsts, overload; Kenneth M. Hoover,
State o1 Ohio to Meigs County Jones, dead, Olive.
E. Namenyi. deed, Solem.
speed; Jospeh Hoffman, Mason,
Pickerington,
$30 and costs. speed; Community Improvement CorporaRoger
S.
Hooto.
Molly
A,
Toban,
Terrance K. Brewer to Mary 1\A.
Wayne,
Ind.,
$50
and
costs,
speed;
w.Va .. $30 and ci&gt;sts, speed; Kevin Scott A. Hall. Leon. w.va .. $20 and Vicki A. Howard, Guysville, $30 and lion, deed, Chester.
V9fa
M
.
Hook,
to
Secretary
of
HousBrewer,
deed, Middleport Village. •
Harris, Middleport, $20 and costs, costs. seat belt James E. McCurry, costs, speed; Kenneth E. Riggs, Port
Cheri
Campbell,
Douglas
K. Camp- ing and Urben Development, shelifCecil
Maynard Jr., Deborah Kay
seat belt: Robert L. Ritchie Jr., McDonald, Tenn., $20 ai1d coots, seat Charlotte. Fla.•$30 and costs, speed; bell, to Curtl88 S. Allman, Kathy H. All· IUs deed, Middleport Village.
-Mayne~- Racine Village, ·
Racine, $30 and costs, seat belt; belt Christopher J. Gibson, Cotum- Jonathan M. Shevei, Athens, $30 and man, deed, Columbia.
·
Okay
Kolmer
Connolly,
deceased,
Racine
Villa~
&gt;
Noble C. ~kenS, Dunbar, W.Va..

This is often referred to as an inherited weakness in the gically repaired- the sooner
inguinal hernia. In this disor- basic muscle structure, what the better. Fortunately, surgider the muscle fibers that we doctors call a congenital cal repair gives lasting relief
make up the abdominal wall defect, or because of injury to from the symptoms.
tear in two or separate. This the muscles. 25 percent of
About 700,000 people have
makes a weakness in the men will ultimately develop hernia surgery every year.
abdominal wall much as a one, as will two percent of There are several different
broken cord or belt in a tire women.
surgical techniques used
weakens it.
Hernias never get better ' depending upon the particuBending over, stnining' to on their own. The\' may Jar type of herni:1 and the
lift an object, having a· bowel remain as an occasional nui- skill and experience of the
~ovement or · coughing sance, become a persistent surgeon . None seem to have .
mcreases the pressure inside problem, or on rare occasions a decided advantage in terms
the abdomen. This increased develop into a surgical emer-: of longterm success rates, all
pressure causes the weakened ge,ncy. The proper treatmrnt of which are very high.
area to bulge - just a; the depends upon the degree of
I'd suggest that you see
tire bulges at the area of bro- problem the hernia is caus- your doctor soon to deterken cord. The bulge stretches ing. It may be sufficient to mine if your symptoms are
the inju~ed muscles and may just understand the disorder due to an inguinal hernia or
even enlarge the_ tear. Obvi- and continue watching her- to another condition. If you
~usly, thiS stretchmg and tear- nias that are only occasional, do have a hernia, your surmg ts uncomfortable. I think ly a problem or ones that are geon can talk with you about
this is ~hat has been causing . very large but painless. Ones the potential benefits as well
your dady pam.
that cause frequent discom- as the risks of having hernia
Hermas stem from an fort, like yours, should be sur- surgery.

NEWS AND NOTES

·For

Page A?

"What we would learn that
nobody knows is exactly· whlt
that thing ]ooked li~e - tHe
·engineering;' · Karsmizk.i .salil.'
"What was it that they had
imagined and then constructed?"
The journals say Lewis
designed the frame, \,;.hich WJS
fabricated by Harper's Ferll)'.
arsenal in West Virginia. The
expedition carried the 22Qpound frame to the great faJ\s,
and assembled it at the exploren'White Bear Island camp. 1
The frame came in I 0 se~­
tions, so it could be adjust&lt;;&lt;!
depending on the availability 9f
materials for covering it. fully
assembled, the govermneyt
vessel wns 36 feet long, 2 1~ 2
feet deep and 4 112 feet wide.
The frame was covered wi1h
elk and buffalo hides a0 d sealed
with a mixture of beeswax, animal fat and charcoal.
"But it didn "t work,"
Karsmizki said. "It floated
briefly:•
Lewis believed that with
more time, he •could have
repaired the boat.llut pressured
to get across the Rocky Mountains before winter, Lewis and
his crew buried the boat along
with a cache of other items
they intended to salvage on
their return trip the following
year.

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NEW AniTUDE - Cleveland Browns
Dayton
McCutcheon (33) Is congratulated by teammates Wall Rainer
(58) and Earl Little (20) an Interception Sunday. (AP)

NFL, NADA

Sosa, Cubs· assaUlt Reds
'

All

than anyone else.
"But when you show up to the stadium,
and you expect to perform and you expect to
play well, it makes all the difference."
And that's the biggest change in the 2001
Browns. When first-year coach Butch Davis
took over in January after Chris Palmer was
fired, one of the first messages to his
players was forget the previous two seasons . .
Apparently, they have.
·
Statistically, last year's ·squad holds a slight

agree for ·
Super
. Bowl date

.

Sammy hits
No. 61; Lieber
.wins No. 20

NEW YORK (AP) -The
CHitAGO (AP) ·_
Super Bowl is one of the
JHm .
IY.C .All
When the season is over,
world's biggest extravaganzas.
.Trimble
t-o 4-2
Sammy Sosa and Jon
Now it's running into anothWatertord
. 1-o 5-t
Lieber will both sit down
er one- Mardi Gras, and the
Southern
1·0 3·3
and think about their
combination could mean that
'amazmg seasons.
Eastern
0-1 · 5·1
New Orleans will have its
Miller
0-t 1-5
For the next few days,
biggest party ever.
Federal Hocking 0-t 0.6
though, there are games to
The NFL finally · got its
Friday's Games
play.
postseason in order WednesFederal Hocking· at East11m
Sosa hit hi,s /ilst home
day when it agreed to pay the
Southl)m at Miller
·
run, and Lieber became the
National Automobile Dealers
'
t
eam's
first
20-game
winMeigs at Nelsonville·York
Association $7.5 million to
ner in nine years as the
switch dates. That means the
Belpre at Williston
· Chicago Cubs beat the
· Super Bowl will be played
Alexander at Vinton County
Cincinnati
Red•
13-7
on
Feb. 3, while the car dealers,
Trimble at Watertord
Wednesday.
who were supposed to meet
"It's hard to believe. It's
in New Orleans that week,
an awesome feeling," said
will take the week before Jan.
27,
the orisiaal date.. fa. Q.
,JIG . •
6ij_• . Lieber, whose p~~~ ....
caileer1lef
w:iS"T2
~
Super Bowl.
Raven
' 6-0
year.
"(!Jut)
I'm
really
not
All this stems from the
Oak Hill
,
4-2
going
to
look
into
that
NFL's decision to call off the
3-3
Ripley
the
offieason.
R.ight
until
second weekend of the reguWahama
3-3
now,
I
just
want
to
see
this
lar season - Sept. 15-16 Hannan
0.6
ballclub
win
90
games."
because of the terrorist attacks
South Gallta
Q-6
After going 65~97 last
of Sept. 11. Those games will
f!ldev's Gamea
year, the Cubs' goal was
be played jan. 5-6, and the
Gilmer CountY at Wahama
"worst to first." They man- ·
playoffi will be pushed back a
Guyan Valley at Hannan
aged it for a while, leading
week,'forcing the first FebruSoutl:l Gallla at. Gauley
the NL Central from the
ary Super Bowl ever.
.
Bridge
end of May until mid- ·
That's where the Mardi
Portsmouth East at Oak Hill
August.
.
Gras comes in - the later
Ripley at Sissonville
They were eliminated
· date puts the Super Bowl into
St. Marys at Ravenswood
from postseason conthe first week of that event.
tention Tuesday night, but
. Sixteen parades are scheduled
have still won 86 games
to roll ·through New Orleans
with four left to play.
streets on Friday, Saturday and
"It wouldn't look good
Sunday, the two days before
for our· team to say, 'We
the game and the day of the·
don't have a chance to go
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
contest.
.
to the playotfs; and come
The NFL has seen that
- . C.C. Sabathia wasn't takbefore
- . last January, the
ing the credit for becoming
THANK YA'ALL, tHANK YA'ALL VERY MUCH- Chicago's Sammy Sosa acknowledges the
PleeHSoN,
115
much smaller Gasparilla festiClev~land's winningest rookie
crowd after hitting his 61st home run of the season Wednesday in Chicago. (AP)
val in Tampa snarled traffic for
in 46 years.
more than eight hours in the
; "Everything just kind offell
city.
in for me:• the 21-year-old
But that's for the future.
left-bander said after he won
For now, the NFL has its
liis 16th game Wednesday
full regular-season schedule
tiight, leading the. Cleveland
intact as we\1 as a full playoff
Indians to a 4-1 victory at
we 've played all year. computer ratinb"·
BY BUTCH COOPER
schedule. And the S7 .5 milKansas City.
·'
OVP SPORTS STAFF
Making the same misStill, this couldn't be a better weeklion is piddling compared to
. Sabathia (16-5) gave up just
TUPPERS PLAINS -. They have a
takes 'and it caught up end to get back in the win column.
the sums the NFL would have
tWo hits in five innings and
t.o us. We played a pretFirst off, it's homecoming for the .
new purpose now.
had to pay back to the netb_eat the Royals for the fourth
The Eastern football team will try to
ty good football ·team Eagles.
works had it canceled one
time in five starts.
and we ended up losSecondly, the Lancers, who were one
prevent what happened last week from
week of playotfs.·
.
: The last Cleveland rookie ·
ing. We've got to fi~he top teams in the TVC a couple
happening again this season.
·
"We deeply appreciate the
t~ win 16 ,ga'mes was Herb
those mistakes."
- of }'~&gt;Irs ago, finished 0- 10 last year and
They must.
willingness
(lf Phil Brady and
~ore (16-10) in 1955. ·
The Eagles are no are currently strugl9ing at 0-6 after a
.After a 35-6 loss at Trimble, the
America'
s
fiew
car dealers to
: "I just wanted to help the
longer fighting for a tough 26-15 loss to Southern.
Eagles (5-1, 0-t TVC Ohio) will try to
work with us," commissioner
toam win any way possible
Christman
undefeated
Last year, Eastern rolled over Federal
rebound
Friday
against
Federal
HockPaul Tagliabue said. "Tllanks
tLis year, and the guys have
season
....
they
are
fightHocking,
63~8. as Brad Wilford rushed
ing.
to their leadership, our fans
scored a lot of runs for me;•
ing for their playoff lives as teams for three touchdowns on 137 yards and
"I
think
it
was
a
wake
up
call
for
us,"
and
teams can look fotward to
he said. "I've heel) getting
they've
already
beaten
haven't
been
fullback
R.J
Gibbs
had
136
yards
run
-·
said Eastern head coach Scott Christ' a full complement of playoffs .
1\lcky."
.
produci11g wins , and much needed
man.
"We
told
(our
team)
Monday,
we
; The Royals have been anypoints for the Eagles in the OHSAA
PleaH see Orteans, B5
played pretty much the ·same game
tJ:ring but fortunate against the
6&lt;-foot-7 Sabathia, who has a
1;57 ERA in 28 2-3 innings
agrunst Kansas City.
. "If It w.Sn't for that 'right
fielder with Seattle (Ichiro
Suzuki), he'd be rookie of the
year," Royals · first baseman
The win over Vinton County and they 'were a regional time starting last season line for the Buckeyes are two
BY DAVE HARRIS
Mike Sweeney said. "He's had
OVP CORRESPONDENT
last week was their TVC quartemnalist in the state rushed for over 600 yards returning starters .at guard in
a. great year. What is he, 21?
ROCK SPRINGS - The opener.
playoffi.
• .
· including 64 in last years win Rocky Harkless (6-4, . 235)
Jie's a great pitcher ·and he's
Meigs Marauders end a thr~e­
and.Jeremy Wachenschanz (6The Buckeye losses have
Nelsonville-York defeated at Pomeroy.
.
not a big klutz out there."
game road trip this Friday come at the hands of Logan the Marauders 35-7 last xear
He is joined in the back- 0, 185).
Cleveland, which captured • evening when the Marauders (50-6), Fairfield Union (42- at Bob Roberts Field · in field by junior Adam VanDyke
On defense the Buckeyes
the AL Central tide last weektravel to Buchtel to take on 26) and Trimble (14-6).
Pomeroy. ·
at fullback for his second sea- play a 4-4 and a 5-3, Nelend, won't have any problem
the reigningTVC Ohio DiviNelsonville-York
coach
The Buckeyes lost 15 son as a starter. Calling the sonville-York's defense is led
Nelsonvillesion
champion
1 sending their young pitcher
Kevin Meade is in his ninth starters from last season and signals behind center is by Harkless at defensive end.
to the mound in the playoffi.
York Buckeyes.
'
year ay the helll} of the Buck- welcome back 15 letter win- Meade's s?n, Jason, a 5- 11. Harkless, a senior has started
Nelsonville-York
is
3-3
on
"Nothing seems to bother
eyes. Last year the Duckeyes...._n,ers. Senior tailback Chase 180 pound junior who was a every game in his hlgh school
the season, With wins over finished the season · at 8-3 Elliott returns at tailback , for · part- time starter last season .
him," said acting manager .
career going into this season.
Athens
(22-7),
Green
(41-0)
Grady Little, filling in for ailoverall and 5-D in the TVC, the Buckeyes, Elliott, a part
Anchoring the offensive
PluM - Melp, 85
and Vinton County (47-6).
ing skipper Charlie Manuel.

..

Meigs prepares to face tough N-ville squad

.oaoaER
'

t-o

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Believe it or not,
the Cleveland Browns were 2-1 and tied for
first place in the AFC Central after three
weeks a year ago, too.
That was the high point of 2000.
The Browns then went 2-2, 2-3, 2-4, 2-5,
2-6, 2-7, ... on the way to a 3-13 finish.
But this 2-1 has an entirely different feeling.
"Last year," said kicker ·phiJ Dawson, "we
· .were 2-1 and we all said, 'Wow'!This year, we
expected to be 2-1. It's not an arrogant thing
and it's not that we're saying that we.'re better

Eastern in ·must-win mode now

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October 4. 1001 .

5&amp;6

MIDDLEPORT.
OHIO
,.

'

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,.,.

�•

Page·Bl

:The Daily Sentinel

Bonds stays at 69 homers; Arizona
:Atlanta lead by two; Nl Central tied
straight decision, allowing
three runs - two earned and eight hits in six innings.
Atlanta, trying for its record
lOth straight division title; can
clinch tie by winning T hursday's series fin&gt;le.
"If we lose," Philadelphia
' manager Larry Bowa said, "it's
a moot point. We have to
win :·
At Turner Field, Atlanta had
13 hits as Marcus Giles homered and Andruw Jones drove
in three runs. R obert Person (15-7) gave
up seven runs and nine hits in
4 1-3 innings. He was 2-1
with a 2.35 ERA in four previous starts against the Braves
this season.
"It's very disappointing,"
Persori said. 'Td give it all back
just to win this game."

Giants 11, Astroa 8
While Ban y Bonds set a
Bonds broke Babe Ruth's
; record - no, not that one season reco rd wi th three
• the Atlanta Braves took a twostraight walks, but remained at
. game lead in the NL East, St.
69 homers. Bondi, who went
.. Louis·and Houston stayed tied
1-for-i, has 172 walks, two
. atop the Central and Arizona
more than R uth's total in
maintained its two-game mar1923.
: . gin in the West.
" If he thinks we're cowardly
With
just
four
days
left
in
fo
r
walking him, maybe he's a
•
; the regular season, .no NL
little high on himself," Hous; team has clinched a playoff
ton rookie T im R edding said.
spot, a stark contrast to the AL,
Bonds, who hasn't homered
since Saturday, has four game'
' where the four postseason
left to reach the record of 70
teams have been decided.
set by Mark McGwire in
"We're nou taking anything
.
1998.
fo r grantee;!," Atlanta's Tom
Houston, which would have
Glavine said after beating the
clinched a playoff spot with' a
Philadelphia Phillies 8-3
win, has lost five straight and
Wednesday night. "People all
seven
of eight.
year have been counting them
Jason
Schmidt
(13-7)
out, and ihey keep coming
improved
to
71
since
being
back."
acquired from Pittsburgh on
Glavine (16-7) won his fifth
July 30, allowing three runs
and five hits in 5 1-3 innings at
Enron Field. Nelson Cruz (33) was the lose r.
D-backa 4, Rockie1 3
Curt
Schilling
(22-6)
allowed three runs and nine
hits in eight innings with eight
strikeouts, becoming the first
22-game winner of the season.
. Byung-Hyun Kim pitched
the ninth for his 18th save as
Arizona won for the sixth
time in seven games. In the 16
times that Arizona and San
Francisco have played on the
same day since Sept. 7, both
have either won or both lost
on that day.
Shawn Cha·con (6-10)
·allowed four runs and six hits
in six innings for visiting !=olorado. Todd Helton hit hii
. 47 th homer.
Brewers 9, Cardinals 7
Richie Sexson drove in five
i H'LP1NQ HIMSELF - Braves• . starter Tom Glavine drops a runs with his 42nd and; 43rd

...

.

'

l

I

a

r~crl:e bunt dur1ng Wednesday's win. (AP)

'

· ·

'

., home~ a: Milwaukee sctpped

,._y-.al

Eliot
Allanla

-lphia
New York
Florlda j
Monlreal

W
85
83
81
74

L
73
75
84

66

92

76

Pel.

538
.525
.509
.o468

2
4 112

11
19

.418

Celllrel
HouBion

St. Louis
Chicago

Cincinnati
MitWaukle
Pi11tllolrgll

W

L

91
91
86

87
67
72

Pet
576
.576

08
5
25

..

t:l

.544
.411

66
60

92
99

:.m

W

L
68

-

Arizona
90
San Franciaoo 88
LooAraoftt 84
, San Diogo
n
Colorado
71

31 t/2

70
74

87

.487
.449

~

•

'

•

Mariners 4, Angels 3
Bret Boone singled in the
Igo-ahead run in the eighth
tinning, and Seattle moved
·i within one of the American
1League wins record by beat. . ling Anaheim .
· Suzuki had four hits for
: jthe Mariners (113-45), who
:rallied from a three-run
·deficit and then threw out
::the potential tying run at the
·plate in the ninth.
•
·
' Seattle needs one win in
:its last four games to tie the
·AL mark set by the 1998
New York Yankees (114-48)
and' three to match the
major league record set by
the 1906 Chicago C ubs
(116-36) .
Suzuki set the AL record
for singles in a season with
190.
Yankees 2, White Sox 1
Paul O'Neill hit a two- run
homer, leading New York
over visiting Chicago. .
O'Neill hadn 't played
since Sept. 7 because of a
stre ss fracture in his left foot.
He singled in his first at- bat
before homering off Jon
· Garland (6-7) in the sixth for
a 2-1 lead.

~i~e Mussina

(17-11)
Lou Merloni went 4-for~llowed ~e run and five hits 5, including a two-run sinm seven mnmgs to wm hu gle.
fifth straight decision.
Tampa Bay (59-99) lost for
Tigers 9, '1\vins 5
just the third time in 10
Deivi Cruz drove in three games, but equaled the franruns, and Eric Munson hit chise record for losses.
his first career homer to help
Blue Jays 7, Orioles 6
Detroit defeat Minnesota. .
Cal Ripken extended the
The Tigers improved to .. worst slump of his· career to
just 4-14 against the Twins 0-for-32 as Baltimore lost to
this year.
Toronto.
Rookie Nate Cornejo (4Ripken went 0-for-3 with
4) won his 20th game of the a walk. The slump has
season - 12 in Double-A, dropped his batting average
four in Triple-t. and four from .261 to .243.
with the host Tigers.
Jose Cruz Jr. homered in a.
Minnesota's Eric Milton club-record fifth straight
lasred just four innings, game, and Felipe Lopez
allowing fiv e runs and six drove iQ four runs for the
hits.
visiting Blue Jays.
Red Sox 10, D. Rays 3
Before the game, the OriDerek Lowe got his first oles acquired Tim Raines Sr.
win as a starter in four years from Montreal. R aines pinch
as Boston won at Tampa Bay. hit in the seventh and Tim
Lowe (5-10), Boston's for- R aines Jr. started, enabling
mer closer, allowed two runs th e duo to join Ken Griffey
and five hits in six- plus Sr. and Ken Griffey Jr. as
mmngs.
only the second father and
Calvin Pickering and Shea son to play at the same time
Hillenbrand hit back-to- on th e same major league
back homers in the fourth team.
inning for Boston , which
Athletics 5, Rangers 4
won for just the seventh
Jason Giambi hit two
time in 30 games.
ho mers,
including
a

PUBLIC NOTICE
MEIGS COUNTY DEXTER WATER ExTENSION PROJECT
EARLY PUBLIC NOTICE FLOOD PLAIN DEVELOPMENT
Meigs County has· applied for and been awarded a CDBG FY' 2001
Community Housing Improvement Program, In the target area of the whole of
Meigs County. The project ·consists of the rehabilitation of owner occupied
homes. Specific units to be addressed In this p~gram are \lOt yet Identified. It
Is anticipated that some will be located in the 100 year base floodplain. Federal
regulations require that the public be given the opportunity to comment on
rehabilitation work proposed for a noodplaln area. The County Is securing
public perceptions of possible adverse Impacts that could result from the
.pro,tect and possible minimization measures. Send written comments to Meigs
County Grants Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 7, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769. Comments will be received until 1'5 dayslfrom date of this publication.
•

Mel~

Gounty Commissioners
Meigs County, Oblo
'
.

...

96

W

L

115
98

45
60
.83
86

WMII

O.kland 5, Texas 4

San Franolsco (Ortiz 16-9) II Houtlon
(MIIclcl7·2), 7:05 p.m.
Philadelphia (Duckwot1h 3-1 ) at Allanla
(8ufl&lt;e11 11 ·12), 7:35p.m.

TO&lt;ooto 7, B.altimola 6
DeVoll I , MI..-. 5

)I·New YOlk
Boston
TOJOiito
Baltimore

94
78
77
63
• 59

Ta"l)a Bay

Pet

62
79
81
94
99

W

L

• -CII.aand

80

17

Mimesota

82
82

76

Chicago

GB

n

Pel

GB

.573
.519
.516

8 1/2

''
1

N.Y. Var*eee 2, Chicagc) While Sox 1
Bolton 10, Taf11'11 B.ay 3
a...t.nd 4, K•nau City' 1
Seallle 4, Anaheim 3
~ Thurad•y•s Gamu
Mlnnel018 {Mays 17· 13)."81 Detroll {Pel·
1\llohn 1-6) , t :OSp.m.
~- (COlon 14-11) el Kenua

.603
.497 16 1/2
.487
18
.401 31 112
.373
38

&lt;:antnll

620
.475
.456'

dty'a Gan-.

DlooO ( M - 1·1). 5:05p.m.

E••t
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L

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.715 -

City (D1111&gt;in •tel, 2:05 p.m.
Bo .. on «f\lomo 12·1 0) at Baltimore

(Maduro 5-6), 7:05 p,m.
N.Y. Yankees (A.Hernandez 0-2) at
Tampa B.ay (Bierllrodl 2·4), 7:15 pm.
Texas (Myette 44) at Seattle (Tomko 2·
1), t O;OS p.m.
Oakland (Mulder 20-8) at Anaheim (Onlz
13·10), 10:05 p.m.

9

•
their six-game losing streak
and the Cardinals' six-game
~inni ng · streak. Visiting St.
Louis lost for just the third
time in 18 games.
. Jamey Wright (11- 12) won
despite allowing five runs ~nd
eight hits in five innings: Chad
Fox got three outs for his second save.
Bud Smith (6-3), working
on 10 days' rest, allowed six
runs and six hits in three
innings. J.D. Drew homered
twice for St. Louis.
Dodgen 12, Padrea 5
Rickey Henderson tied Ty
Cobb's major league ,record of
2,245 runs, but visiting Los
Angeles got three- run homers
from Gary Sheffield and Paul
Lo Duca. Henderson needs
three hits to become the 25th
player to reach 3,000.
Sheffield homered in the
first off Bobby Jones (8-19),
who has allowed 37 homers~n
33 starts. Eric Gagne (6-7)
allowed two runs · and three
hits in six hmings.
Mets 3, Pirates 0
Steve Trachsel • (11-13)
pitched a two-hitter for his .

son and his first shutout since
May 6 last year. Desi Relaford
and Mark Johnson homered
off Todd Ritchie (11-15) at
Shea Stadium.
Expos 2, Marlin• 0
Vladimir Guerrero and
Orlando Cabrera hit RBI

(3- 1) won in ·retieffor visiti ng
Montreal, and 'Scott Strickland
got six outs for his eighth save.

TV ·
• ec-..-•••~llwaadu310
.

·-.. --100

·--~ .... -300

·

228 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

KIWI

l. Jeff Goldon,

t.

Scott RIIP• 3.0111
Tltd Mu..,_., 2,M 3

Dele .kt.mt. 3,580

Tltllrit ""apU, 2,913

Elton Sewye1, 3,514

1.(:1.1 . . . , . _
2. (21 Rlok)o Rulld

3. (II T..,a_
1. (111 -~8.(11 - H - k

Oneaflllebeet

_

Did - · Juel not well enouch

••-...tY
...........

ApplrtlltiW OK after hlrd htt
lllovCIII ~home In ..........

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•• (tl RUIIY 'NIIRICI Tille Wllk It WM IPIIdllrC
untH

IIANSAS CITY. Ken. Surprlaln&amp; no one, Jeff
Gordon, wt.o had already
won twk:e on tM Sundays
when tracks netd tnelr first
Winston rac.t, did It aaaln.
to 1 race tnat conslated Of
one cruh after another. on
a brand-new triCk where the
asphalt surface
new
and traacherous, .Gordon
drove hll Chevrolet to
victory In me Protection One
.400 at Kansas ~dway.
Gordon drlvea throu&amp;h the
trouble? Gordon outlasts 811
competition? It's a 1tory as
old aa tne day he arriVed In

William oqe
sun valley Fire
Department~

.... ~
··················......
this coupon to your photo and·rt:~ail "dr (,

~hamplon , won for the
Second week In a row and
fourth time thia season
because freth tires made ,
no difference to those trylni
to track him down .
.,T-he MarcM:r t ires put a
~double whammy• on
Green's purauers, wtto hid
difficulty pea&amp;lnf: beCause or
tht lack of adhesion and
difficult)! Cltchlnt GfMn
because their newer tifls
were no better than his old
ones.
Green won by 2.129
teconds, with Hank Patktr
second, Grac Biffle third ,
Matt tcenseth fourth and
J1son Keller flfttt .

NASCAR.
CIIAfTSMAN TIIUCK
IUICH IIIAND NATICIIIAL
KANSAS CITY, Ken. - The
drlvera chance from time to
time , but hard tires seem to
be wlnnln&amp; every race .
The latest example waa
Sttun:ley In Kansas ,
Spetd'Hay'a lnau&amp;ural Butch
G111nd National 1111ce, the Mr.
Goodcents 300, where Jeff
Green piloted a Ford to
victory by remelnln&amp; on the
track when other leaders
pitted undtr cauUon on lap

'"0 •

~'!·. ~

· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio ,.f. ~

...
I

I
I

173.
Green, the ral&amp;ning series

.!~P:h:o:ne::#::::;::!~::~::~:;;;;;;;~

........

SOUTH BOSTON, VI. - TO&lt;I
Musarave won for the ~ftn
time in the Netzero 250 and
enabled Dod&amp;e to clinch the
series manufacturers' title.
Musarave ted 185 of the

200 laps In a race marred
by 77 cautlort-flll taps.

Dennis Sitzer finished
second , just under a second
behind Muswave. Scott
Rigs, who h1a also won
five recee •.flnlsned third .
Jack Spra.ue and Joe
Ruttman rounded out tht
top flve.

NAICAtl--'1-oDvttan_hlo ........:
· without Question. Nadeau's car bumped Bunon 'a to lit
off the craat.. It looked aa ttJouQ,I'I Todd BO&lt;:lint't Fol'&lt;l
may t.ave pinched NadtMI'a car In the turn, howewr, and
that may nave contributed to the lncktent.•

~

otlnloel ...........

on~~ - ·-

Another.
Great Checking Account~;
•

---·
.............__
•-1111. thHJit,; '

ioflonM,.-Inlljo
entYM, ....... ....

_,_

~ We're Your Bank for

Cifeill

X

l?lel-::::·:•:n: II FM I '_,

-II P w? _...,_
p

p
II dfw.e....,.
....

. . . 1111-,?111.
all the Will to ttMt back and
areouatly worked b&amp;ck up to
. the fiont,•

tNt ,..,. •Tt'lla year I'W
roeiiV bHn auuannc • 1o1 -

on qUI!IIfylna. 1can't •eem
to 'aet after' thl car. A lot
of It 11 fi\IYIMI the tires
{G,oo&lt;lyoar 1\01 pnwlde&lt;l
dlfftttnt, hlrdtr
~
compounds this rear) and
J~•t trylnJ too hard. W.
fHIIIkl we've fNIIY been
picklnt up a lOt. •

.,. Monte Dutton

NASCAR ThiS week

Rido:y RIKki and Ru~ Wal loce h&amp;d
tnng~ in three of the ~vioo~ four
so dwioosly one

of~

blgcr
'fUC!ilicm soJns: into n f"rooa1im One
400 w~ \lo'httm !he !'NO Ford !kiWn
rould bwy lhe lwchet. ·

"I ~III II' ~~ lo!iay,flllt ol' aiJ.
i~ thai I like Rid.)' Rucki," Wailace5aid.
" I do. nnd I really ~llfleC I hi~
dri~· in~ .

Ca\\
today\

You....... - YorkCitr,--

X
Ptnneytvanla and wttat
neppenea there . We hid 1
lot or flraflitlter• n.re m11
wMMnd, 1nd thl t waa just

hiM!Mpu'P "Whlt
hii)F)IntCF !Itt Wllk WIS •

a &amp;ood tribute for the fins
and alto for New York City
and tne American people.
·.rmprOUd to be an

rMI wekHp c111 to

Amtrlctn. and I'm not lfraid,

IIIII the teri'Dfllt .u.cb

everybc)dy in the wtlole
world u..t anythlnl can
t'lappin. I think O.Orte
Butn and t'll l side are
'oln&amp; to dO evetytnlng It
takes to re&amp;~ l n our
Drlnrt "I was really paUtnL tre.edom because of what
1started wor1dfC ~ .m; up happened. Our hearts and
prtl)'er&amp; were tor everybody
nai1Way throuctt the race.
There was e little scuffte up In New York and
there In the front, and I fell Wllhlnjton and

----

ufetywlte. 1pey a lot of
- ~ to my car and what
I!IIWi do Inside my c.r, I think
MrYDodY hll been klnd of
a1rald thiS It, like th~ say,
the tfifd of the free. What
happened s coo ple of weeks
hopefully. we can
that atral&amp;htened out, s nd
we can all&amp;et beck to
Outlneaa:

aao.

eet

CuPid you cJtplai n to me why
Mk hllfl Wallrip wu plated 10 fl f
bac k after he wreck~ hi s nr dUt·
ina Happy Hour .rlnal practice)1 1
alwayAthouJhtthl1 OIK% tt. )' qu• l·
lllf:l for lhc race IIIII i\ where they
waukhtll1 .
RllootbtWtldy
......... N.f .
Tu Jlflrl ;, lht ptot llhm ,\~ qutJI•
ff/M fiw. )~lf.t mull Jtnrl lhf! fPff /11
'"' .ullllt f'nr ,I'IJ II quail/ltd 111. In
thl.f ('(/Jt, \oltillrip K•rtti-trl IIIJ !;IV ill
j orrtJ

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Mil~ /

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11/lht

X
Our NASCAR ThiRW«k .
At the Busc h race on Sept . 2~

111

Du~ cr .

• •••••••••••

•IID'I: TOI'PJ Stewart hat
flnlatled eilhth or better
In five sual&amp;ht races.

1. What driver helped deslan end build,_
bobsleds for the u.s . Olympic 111m?
2. in what year di d Goodyear introduce Inner llners for
racing tire s?
3. In what year was North Wilkesboro Speedway buil t?

• Jertmv Mayfield
hat finished 13th or '
worse In Ilk ltrai•ht

996 t 'I iUIP&lt;&gt;Q.,(tJUOIO "l
I~IMINW
'

L•Bt 'l

races.

••••••••••
"I like this. Tho!;e two gu)'~ (RWd
"But when I p the shot in tlw: ft'lll'
end at BriSiol, that rtaU)' ruftkd m) goinJ to~)'. A.~ f;a- liS I'm o;;ont'ei'TJCd, lind Waiba) om run imu c;a:h olher
feerhenl. ldidn't think lhal was the 'o\oa)' I'm no1 ..rally ~lling to canmcm on i1 for thtec ~o~.'Ceks in a row ( ~J.'Iuall y three
11111 of' fourl.lllld (NASCARJ dl:~e'lrl·t
Ricky Rudd ~ ve r dml't. He doc5n 't unymvre.
"We had~ rr«1 ing trd!1y in pcw i!Je tlo anythi nl! uboljt it . 11 ~~•"' n~e 10
dti ve that way. I think the chumpi ·
on.r.hip is so improant to him th i~ yeu.r wtth NASCAR, And Rus~y und I fot:l grand t opu&lt;ohnnd .\hu; ~ .
" h '~ altoose u hypocritil.'lll ~ i!UIItion
thm he iOI ~al•iJm&gt;Si vr . and he tooli li t e if~ a dtil!k:nd iN~t Wld it' ~ o~er
here . The verenul~ ~o~.ere really the ones
a std lhal!.publbiy ~ldn't hive with."
NCjuallintabout ~lc C Eumhardt ! Junior
"Unklt&amp;IWcly. with me. if you bun~
anr.l•nc: fu- tht: P'l" thn.-e ur four ~~
on me,you're aoifw toJ:'I banpfba!'k
DOUBLE STANDARD! Rookie o~~ttwr i.lrivi111 chan•:teri"K:!.. I think
!llld ther1 il'scYCn ,, it'~done tmd over."
'R udcf \\IllS 8 SW:IH dtal mol'e ttr..t e ~rruordirruil'l! Kevin Hllr\licl..oft ~rid · liN ""'eek Dale Jumor ~o~.oo tht- f1IC(' lind
a,ner 11 ll'lrdinl! bet\1-ttn the rwu und d ttd forb: in~ ~what lhc b«&lt; bu~ . 11inbhcd 'iuh. HlKl I th ink. the main
re ii~ hnlthl: upp;ortunny to ltn~ wer u topic Willi Ricky Rllll!lruld Rll'il')' WuJ.
NASCAR oif~eials Fridiiy.
"I don't know." Rudd ~id . ' 'l' ~ t qut:., llon obotll ~het hcr NASCAR 111..-e. ·RubberhcOO' llf'od · conche'o~~l .' 1
bmi Ill if u k10~ timc .unJ I ~\JCl\S I'm lr'\'Uh OC(('mll' UIMf neW('Ilmtr'i the lhin~ it wi\'i . .,. 1lind 1hat lttl!i t'o(inter·
t'&gt;lint~ . Qt.~ iuu' l). NASCA R lkll.'!l nu1
not ~ j,&gt;n-.J Ill wh..t the prt"fltl' rtar&gt;·
~""·
'.1'hMf., u fu n q uc ~tion ,'' Hllf\'k l. fitJd 1/lilt II!&gt; ' lklnl l-.' ll!U l 1\l lhc: &gt;pl!l\. I.L\
tio111b ~ppo:&lt;tltu~ other thmi In )oil)'
there wu~ tlt"l!pp.•lntment .Thuf,; pn~D- oijlid. ey('s li)'hl:in! up.

Del .. n eryonc lluJhed '
when Jimmy 5peflcer advi!K'd ftl ·
low drivert to be paliet~l . Well. set·
in1 Ron Homaday doJiina Jerr
Ootdun, IICtlllllly totkhint him, dut·
inK thr Win~ton Cup race on Sept.
2J Wit I jok~ .
He drives li te 1 tank! I' ve wtn
htm take out moft dfiYen than Gor ·
don could ever do. luht a rcw I•Pl'
eutltt 1M! ran (Ricky) Cr a~en up liM!
trKk Into Gordon . who had no
room10 JO 11 n ywbc~ ei!IC.

.IIHI.:
a
,., u.ce.

Bah h1.1mttu1 !

1Jftdl Kelly Pturn1 thy Btlf:h. Fla. ·

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

XcR£WOfHhU
• After wtnnlftC the

Ridenour
Supply

Prutwtlon One 1100, ....,
0onJon Nld: "My MCrwf:

ts a t... lld by Robbll
Loomis. One thlnll that

•DOd
,..._lanwhon
thly'rl extremtly

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985·3308

at illllttlnll• tot or

waoto•newtrak

.... _quleklyto
1 ntW tnYironment. I
tflttnk thtl tHin t\81

·-p·--myjob
c:ertalnty llOtttn us to

..-,. ....,. .. tDday.
Battllnl r.r.

wlftntn&amp; tM r.c• hMt

uller."

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ga 111 rr bnrlwp mflrlllllt.

tmd 1h11s Wttllrlp 116d w
Ia! / t lld r&gt;}lht ft~t/d,

&lt;

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rl11ppy H n llf m u/ Wt/J 1/IW b/t Ill
rlarl In Iris prlmury •·ur. Ht om.1

992-2155

(740) 9~2-2136 (740) ,446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667-3161 '

--

(") ' t71
cm-n
e. fl':l

Cct.CD

Dnr NASCAR This Week,

Call The DailY se·n tinel for details
Dave Harris or D-e bbie Call

Gallipolis

...-------··1

.ood

MOtortpOrtS

---

Dcllr NASCA.R This Week.
I've bren 1 fan uf NA.SCAR for
many ye•~ . I'm wo ntlcring wh y
Ru!.l)' Wallat:e gnt aw11y with Jpin·
niiiJlhcn·ICaclcr Rkk)' Rudd (II
DoYCf). How can a ~ar IOinJ I bp
dOWII JOI IWI)' With spinnl nJ 0111
thr: ltllder'!
Rut.ty Ill.~ been 1m11nd for m1ny
ycu1 and know1 brner. I' \'C bee n
Vt:!'J di!lllppoinled in hit un1pot11·
mutikc fllfi n11thi1 year. When will
NA.SCAR fine him fOf bis actions?
He'IIO ru brhind in poinlJ - I Clll
unde!lotand why the No. 28 tr1m is
roo upwt. Rudd hu 1
dlancc lo
wi n the champiomblp thil year.
Why don one bonehu d 111:1
away witll 10 much'!' Th is i ~11· 1
Rwril raeina. II'! Wiruton CUJI. Ind
the drivers are supposed to be pro.
fmiooal. I hope NASCAR will
puni sh Rusty for hi s lt tions.
NASCAR wnuld be br:ller off with·
out drivers lib !lusty. Tbanb for _
liltenina.
r
Mtll- Cun'k1'
Pl:rkiMVIllt, VI.

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(F' III Farmers Bank

r.'l'dttl HOidt.ill}fltum. N.C.

lt!ly the bigeeq thina .OOt thai '~ WI I'm

"He's been driving 11 little 1nnJcr
billllll......... *'Ut hit . !hun I haw:.ord ,w·v~ ioltuM ~
fur a Ill)' who L'l doinJ ll'i well ~ lw ill
!his )'tlll'.fllltCillll)' with havilll! II !Jn
1111-(Po.)
1111he clwmpionship tu1d ;~II ."
A 44·
· But'/

The HiFf Account

Pomeroy

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AROUND THE GARAGE

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rif!llt 2001 nasv~t . Ht '/1 b&gt;t oo~· lc
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fix l~t f)Qywna 500. whirl! ll'ill "'
ttlt~ iJrd by NBC 11rxr ytor. Fo.r

r~!!l·=•i@~
...........
c,.,..,., Rudd, Wallace say on-track dispute Is a 'dead-end' Issue
...... ___... ....,. "' .
Tej__lor,.,..._
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Waltrip wnrhfi.r Fax, a11d lis
C'fH!trurr wos jM ml!y 11ft fiw hu{!

Oonbtlry,

WhdaNot

Burton blamed Nldeau for his Cl'llh 1ne1 tnraw heel
pads and &amp;cates at Nadeau's Chevrolet as It passed
hll wrecked Oodp undlf caution.

• First 50 Checke Free wlth ·minimum balance

eommtnta•tor_ Wh11 t h• ppcntd 10
hi m1 Where is he'1
JIM Coolftl
IAdowki,G•.

Conn.
CNw otMt: Tony Furr
Cor: No. 25 UAW·Oolphl
Chevrolet Monte Carlo,
owned by Hendrk:k

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

1997 .
Notlblt: Stldl)'. it was In this
race a year ago, on Oct. 13,
2000. 1hat TOOJ Roper lost his
life in a crash .

Darrell Wal!rip· hu been my

23 el DcYor, Dol.
Ap:31

:zooo, It Hampton. Gl.)

m,.,.Ocl. 12. 2000

Rr.ce rw:onl: t&lt;enny t:wln,
Foro. 131.823 mph, June 6,

fJVoriU' driver ~i nce the blllai nnitlJ .
r loved him a~ • NASCAR 'port~

of Winston Cup racl~.
however, that victory alone
dld not s~&amp;nal l mmediate
entry for Nadeau Into the
tl&amp;ht circle of title
contenders. In flct,
NldeiU hiS ltrUUled In
1111 sophomore nason at
Hendrick Molorsports.
He ttas been rurmlnt
better as of late, as
dfmonstl'lted bY 1

.-=

180.373

lklll' NASCAR Thi~ Wod ,

Jerry Nadeau amrmed
the faith of car owner Rick
Hendrick with a vtctary ln
ttte 2000 season finale at ·
Atlanta Motor Speedwa'J.
In tnt comDetitlve w011d

--:131
ttlrtl, on1 win, tiKtop-5
nnlthlt. 14 top-10
flniWs, 0 PI*•• owr
18.!5 million In eamlnp
Stlrt (June 15,
1a97, It BrOOklyn, Mich .),
poll {none), win {Nov. 20.

Deltndlnl cfllmpiOn: Bryan
Rertner
Tntek quaiiiJ''"- Monf:
B1yan Reffner, Ctlevrolet,

Your1\arn
LIPPinr...O. .......

8yMonWDutton
NASCAR This Week

-=
--

Speedway, Justin (t .s.tnlle
track), 167 laps/ 250.5 miles
WMn: 8 p.m., Friday

••••••••••••

Jerry Nadeau

WhaTaHot- ·

IIUO Of THE WEEK

Ward Burton ¥1, Jerry tladtiU

Designed to make you money/

:Sll¥erlldo350

HCOnd-Pitce flntlh $ept.

fROM lAST WHK
WIIIITOII,CUP

-

Wlttre: Texas Motor

WinSion Cup Series

4. (41 D. - J r . Very · - - · · . . ,

:1.0.(-) _ , ........

Name of Firefighter_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
Departmen.....,.-:-------- - - - - - - ' Your Name._ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ __

_...,.

CIIAFISMAN TRUCK

.. PftOfllf·· .

ca, GitJbl , 2 ,111

• NA.SCAR Thla Week writer Monte Dutton ranks the
top 10 drivers headlflllnlo thls weekend's race. last week's
ranklfi&amp;S are In parentheses,

wa•

The Daily Senti~el

c:or-.

TOP liN

"'

in with your payment to:

- - Jofl

flull)' Wll«&lt;e, 3.125 T~ ftejntl , 3,451
RiellY ~k. U 07
0. E.nl'llnll .if.. 3.• 98 Mike MclAuflllt'l, 3.360T&amp;~ry Cook, :1.805
~ HaNidl. 3,4!t!i
Jimrnil John!IOI'I, 3.3.u Dennla Sittler, 2.788
8obbw ~ . :3.A03 Ctl«&lt; UtUe. 3.298
Rick c~. 2.&amp;40
~- .... 3,:230

Chevrolet.160.306 mph, Oct.
Trllek 'I" 'll)lnc r.cont:
11. 1999
Matt Kensetll. Chevrolet.
Nobltlle: Tony Stewarl has
178.956 mph, Oct 6 , 2000
won 12 Winston Cup races but
Race reconl: ~k Martin. .
Ford, 151.952 mph, May 28.
none ~r than 400 miles,
1995
IIUICH GRMD NATIOIW.
NabtJir. Busch Grand
National recular Jimmie
Whit: lit11e Tr~s 300
.lohnsoo wt ll attempt to race in
wtwe: l owe's MotOI'
both the BGN and Winston
Spoe(looy. Conoord. N.C.{l.S. Cup races at LMS. ·
mile track), 200 laps; 300

''f'IIUI fMOIIII: oile miles
Eemhardl Jr.. Chevrolet.
WMn: 1 p.m ., Serur'day
18&amp;.034 mph, May 24, 2000
De... C I chlrllplon: Matt
Trick •

$Qflrpt. 3.075
Jot Ruttrnan, 3.038

Jlton Killer. 3.90!

s.o. ..loiVIrow" Binion. 3,2'20

I~

~re~~s,~.

4.101

G&lt;een !Ia&amp; dlotls at

r ; drcdwRfon: Bobtr;

S.llfW M.tin, !.104 Oret IIMI, 3,14'

I. Tony SIIIW8rt, 3,658

4.
1.
I.
f.
1.

~.

WMt: LJAW.GM Quality 500
Whlfe: lowe's Motor
· Coneom. N.C. {l.S.
mile track), 334 laps/501
miles

~te

,_
..t.ck

Jeff GrMn, 3.9U

Aieky Rudd, 3.888

l

-TON CUP

-

2001 POINTS SIANI&gt;INGS

_.....U06
.

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

12:30 p.m., Sunday

Noon ·Sundl)o• NBC

Frl8d Chicken

992-5432

Ad

~

•

1 p.m. · Saturdl)o • TNT

Kentucky

Show yot,~r support .a nd
.· · appreciation to . :
our brave firefighters:

1x2 ad with or

·

8 p.m. · fiiday • Wrl be shown on delayedtape basis at 1 aJll .. SatUf'd8'1, on ESPN2

FeMiirlng

Salute your favorite Fireman
Fire Department with an ad
recognizing Fire Prevention W~ek 1
Tl 'ESDA\', OCTOBER 9TH

without photo.l.

24RBI:s~-~~

Acevedo (2-5) . Scott Stewart

WEEK
OCTOBER 7·13

r •

tiebreaking blas!,'in the seventh, as Oaklallil headed to
the postseasoll''''With a 17game home wiiming streak
by beating Texo;s.
Eric Chave7,·, and Miguel
Tejada also homered - giving them 31 apiece - as the
A's won for the 25th ·time in
29 games.
.
Cory Lidle (13-6) won his
fifth straight start.
In the last 29 games,
Giambi is hii~ing .424 with
10 doubles, nine homers and

doubles in the eighth off Juan

Crow's
. Family
Restaurant

Drlv•Thru Window

firs: ~o~,pl~:e,::~ of the sea-

AME~ICANN"CEAG

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

p.m.

2

-neldly'e Gom11
N.Y Melo 3. F'ittsburgll o
ChtctiQO CUba 13,' Clncfnnltl7
Montreal 2, Florida 0
Atlanta 8, f'lj-lphia 3
San Francltco 11, Houston 8
Milwaukee 9, St louts 7

93

62

75
Texas
12
x-dinchect divilion
y-di! IChed wild card

American La.gu.
6
13
19

115

1 Anlhelm

los Argelot (Prokopoc 8-6) at San

YE.
:
\Manners ~lose 1n on season w1n records

:!

·
y.O.Idand

Culle pv.-1J..~ 2:20 ,....
Colorado (Noogie 9-7) at Arizona (WIII ol-

Pet.

.570
.S$7
.532

at

25

.418

1. - -

(Yoahii HI) al Florida (Pemy 910). 1:05p.m.
St Louit (Moola 21 -8) ot
(Haynoa 8·16), 2.06 p.m.
Clnoln."lllll (A o edo U) 81 Clllcego
1). 4'35

-

Colroi1
1&lt;on1111S Cily

• • ColoradO 3
l.ol Araoltt 12, Sin Diego 5

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
sup_
port of these area
businesses who make
this pag.e possible.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

·j

8Y THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

Pomeroy,

'nlunny, Odob•r ot. 1001

NATIONAL
LEAGUE
.

.

l'hureday, Oct. 4, 2001

II

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I

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.\.

Ohio

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Page B 4 • The Dally Sentlnei;;.._ _ _ __;._ _ _ _ _ __;.~~;_;;;•_;;M~Idl;;d~lepol~rt;~·-~~--~--------.~

Thui'Hey, Oct. 4, 2001

Thursday, Oct. 4, 2001

t

m;ribune - Sentinel - l\e

CLASSI .F IED

I -

Apl.,

t&amp;2

bedroom,
90DIIOI'IIic8t
utllltilla.

Meigs, .Galli a,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

- · to
· For -.
1279

san
per month p1ua(740)4ole-21157

us

TAT!I, 52 W - Orivt Carpet Shampooar $30.
to $383.CallWalk
to McCoy Canlater Sal, $60.
•74().
(740)4ole-9428.
~-Equal Houtlng lndlptoldto• Harbttlle Oft.
:::.:::==---tributor, Coli F&lt;&gt;&lt; Product Ot
~~rt=-~F~ Rd~l:'~: Opportuntty, (740)441-1982
land, Ohio, 7~742-7403. lntemattonel Low Boy 195,
Apattmont. hOme 11111 ktllar 5' bel~ mowar, hydraUlic lift,
. -. Common:tal ator• $2.600 OBO. (740)4411·
1ror111 ovtltablo lor - .. 0365
oow.
...,..~
AEn•TfONJ";~TORS
~·
~
Call
Repolrtcl, Now &amp; Rlbui~ In
'J'Mn T-.
Stock. Call Ron Evans t.
. (304)117!HI878.
IJ00.537-9526.
'
tor appitclllon. HUD aubti·
&lt;IHd apt.lor ~end -LP_G_a_s_S-tov_e_w-ith_F_a_n,
· EHO.
(3040675-5958
2
Very nice, ·3 btdroom -ILE HOllE OWNERS
aportmont, In town, torvo
·
Hui,.
Prtcas. lnvento&lt;y,
Or Vinyl Olocount
Sklning.
17401446 3844
lloorl, - . . Anc:hora,

Private Party

~ds

...,. ,,.,_-

Under $100

20 WOrdl 1 DIYI • Eoeh Item Prleed
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per

P~rson

Mall To: Dhto volley Publishing, 825 Third
· ~venue, GaJIIpolls, OH 45631

=

• Adl Should Run 1 DIYI

r

. 14 !amity yorei All 2nd, 3nl. Sap!. 28111. Oct I11·15th. I.2 Flnot Time Yard Sate Galllp.
&amp; 4th. t0om-6pm, 04 Syca· mite, out Routt 218. Cl)aln otto FonyJum at JJtoln L.ano.
Why walt? Start meeting moro Stroot, Galllpotlo, Ohio Sows, Htatora, Bookl, FolloW Btgnl. Gravely T...,.
Ohio singles lonight, call loll
,
Many Other lltml.
tor, Home Interior and more.
tree 1-600·766·2623 ut 4 Family Yard Sale. Fridar.
. .Fri !llld Sot. Qam.?
1621
&amp; Saturday. Clothfng, Chio· Thu-y. Friday !llld flltur·
·
d&lt;en to Plus Sizto day. 191~ StAt 141, Gatllphold llama, Longabtrgar olit. Wood Yard OoooroANNo!JNCEMFNI'S Basketa, Outside Ughto. tiona, t-n com, Gourdo.
AIJCI1IJN Al'll
~
· Lots ol Misc. 131 Lowor - · Dllhoo. Clolhoo,
fuA MARian'
I'ERsoNAIS
.

.

r

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I

Garfield EKt.

Disney Boach Vacations, 6

nights, nice hotel, will sacri- Bidwell

I

•

flee lor $199, (614)898·
2728.
1 John ~aut Manin will be
responsible
tor • my own
debts
10-03-01
.
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens
740-592·1842
Qualily clothing and hOuse·
hold items. $1.00 bag sale
every Thursda)' Monday
Sa
9.00· 6.00
thru turday · · · ·

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Church Street, Hotdogs, metal whaot bonch, old
bean dinner, baked goode, trunk, -lng, cunatna,
,cofleo, PoP. (yord solo Chriatmoo llomloll!l """"'
ltemt) octtober 5-6, 10 to

5pm.

Big Yard Site. Del , • 2, 3,
4. 9·5. I86 ~mblolid&lt;l Dr..
Kerr. A&lt;rott from Poll 01·
flee. Now 10011. knives,
mlac, otc.
.
Sa
Four Famity Yard
le- In
front
ol
Crown
City
Fire
0 t Saturday Oc:ltOber
61'1:' lnd Sunday, Dctober
7th. 9am·??. Riding lawn
mower mtcrowava boyo
clothoi tile ... 8 aHin. Loll

r~-------'I
GIVEAWAY

U.M.

Shoat, TDya, Couch, 1r

· color TV, 13• B&amp;.W TV, 3
church, piece yard fumltu,., oak~

More.

3 trtendly dogs co giveaway
to good home. (1) 4 months,
(216 monchs old. (74o)446· .Garage Salt· 1100 2nd
9552
Avenue, Filclay &amp; Saturday
9·3f)m, lurntturo·. clothe..
3 kittens. 2 calico, I black weight btncll &amp; wtlghta.
with blue eyes, 1740)992· carpet.
·
5818.
::::.!:...~---:::-':-:-c:- Garage Sale· Thulldly l
Gulnne Pig at 195 North Friday, 2 mttn E. of Porter
Park Dnve (304)675-7421) on 550. Baby ltomo &amp; ntoo
.
c-.
S!btrtan Huskies/ Shopard
PUppies lor giveaway. All Garage Sale. 1052 2nd
wHh Blue eyest (740)446· Ave. t014·1015.'9am·6pm.
3687 (740)446·4247,
Teon Boys and Gllla Jr. P•
~
lite Ck&gt;thea. Boys toyo !llld
......,, AND
· loada ot mlco.
·
. FOUND
Garage Sole. F,....y, 1015
C h nd and Saturday tOle. 9am·
OST 2 W
L
atkar oon ou 5pm. Rain or Shine. 841
dogs In Georges Creek Shoeatrlng FUdge Road.
area. Both ·lemates. lamlly Down 7S One mile pall
pots. (740)44! ·0969
218 on o'rohlrd HHI Rotcl.
t· 2 Farm """s !rom Follow Signa, t2th houot on
Los·
. """';
taft on Shoootrtng. Brick
Burlingham. M1ss ng a1nee house with tl•g pole In front
Sapt 8th. Female; Black Movin Sala Tont of Ball.

r ,

• Lab/Doberman

I

mix

Dennie' (740)4ole-2847
Gigantic t day Yard Salelll

Dctobor 5th at 15854 Buto·
Ylllo Pikl, 9am· Oorkl 366 &amp;
486 complote computori (all
worldng), colot TV's, Lanier

copter

(worka),

glutwaro,

years old, long halr. red col· bookl, clothn, computer
tor. A little shy but tnendly. parts, morltors and moral
Answars to Bruno. Pleaoe Rain or Shlnel Follow the

call Ginger or Jeff 1740)992· atgnst
2504, Reward! ·
·

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YARD SAU

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l'oMI!Aov~

•

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Ka tofRd '11q
~
Y
• an lbltl, quUtt, houHWarll,
boys dolhal, huntinG plies OCt 6th ~ Ocl 8th.
a-3. 'raJn ·canC.t~' no OartV
- ·
31omHyyarduto,Momtlf1o
tarlonl, oxerotaa ~tpmont.
Miry Kly COII!It-, UAd
furniture, clothea, 1hoe1,

houuhold ltem1, Thura,
one day only at Donald
FHch rnldonoo lOt 40271
Sumner Rd. •
~ lilt Raclna St
•
• ·
Rt.
,1Cr011 li01!1Nntri-F"
con Legion Building.
"•
Sat, 10/H, t!Hpm, lumf.
turo, Iampo, oewlng mo·
chino, TVa ralllol, bllndt,
tooto, woiQht tilling equipmont, word pro&lt;;OIIO&lt;I,
typawrtteoo, CIOclll, CB ra·
diOa, etotl11ng &amp; toyo
Garage aato, Thur., Friday,
(rain CII1Ctl dat..Satullley)
9am-6pm. Oflofd.Rt.7on
Willi Hill Ad (Golf COU!II
Hill).
Computer g1mn,
freezer table antiquo
chatra.' antiques, colttotl·
bitt. goft milo.. 10011, cfotho
tng (potlto, junior (5), chillirena)

s

lor

. ~~~·2~~ ~~8t~~~~hn·

I

sons Oreenh?ust. Clothing

all

~zes, co a, ~· ~-

~(7~~~~ Avcn. NurtlngV:.llllotant 1tolnlng
-

·

_........, .fly OffRcctclprlngo Rohabllfla. All roll-~
11
lnthllnaw ;1;1 Ia
NlwiY - . - - 1am
,.__
••
ltllld C0111P11Y1 to IOol&lt;lng ~ .~R•'":.:.,...1oeat-;:••~1
......... to tilt-

l"'PRifll
"' .,.atllpo
to majOt ....,.
orgontzolkinl. W. ell-

-ttl

I

--1.,------·

lor 26 poopto 10 Ill Ylluoblo - 76 • oc...,..nga ~.
poaltloua u - Pomeroy, Ohio. tntoiOtlld
to ruo funllo !llld lhould 11&gt;1J1Y In

~

WANJDI
TO IvY

,

Ablotuta Top Dolllr. U.S,
S/lvtr, Qold Cotna, Proof·
Mil
Dlatnondl
Gold
Rf..;.,.
us
c'urrtnoy·
.._.
' '
'
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Saoond i"!"""' Galttpotlt, 7
Cente&lt;, 333 Pogo Ill..
- · -2·
Middleport, OhiO 457110
Wonttcl to Buy: Standing EOE
Timber. (740)378-2758.
Hatp wantod coring lor 1111
atctorty, o,ra. Group Homo.
now peytng minimum wloe,
,_lhllla: 7im·3pm 7omBpm Spin.11pm 'ttpm·
17am: can 740-11112·ito23.

* -

1"0

Hml WANIDI

11112-4781 PTIFTWorl&lt;
F"""MomtAbtolutelyFrtt
tnlot www.bRicht23.com
ARE~ REPS Individuals
wttn good~
...-toptaoo!llld-·
vlN on uc:toango atudont
~and travtllflo
contlvo t-800--78
.
AVON! All Artall To Buy or
SaiL ShlrioySptora,30+
875-1429
·
·
BarttndOr N - at Elkl
Lodgt. Ptck·Upf&lt;Witootlona
at Tl1e Etkl Monday- Friday
Noon till 5.00pm
CUuot Port nmo DtCere Stiff

Homt ~ Agonoy - ·
tng Port•llmtl Por Dltml
Ct'W STNA. CompotHiva
llfery with btnollll. Apply
at 760 Firat~-. Galllpotio Of Ph&lt;&gt;nt , _ , .
1383 (lOll frat)
·

Praleltlonal Tank Truck
Tranaport Drlvtrl Qrowa L.oodo&lt; Entorprill Trlnll·
portotton Compeny Tno
Duality Link lmmtclloto
oponlnga lor.profHIIonato
with ~r llrOwt com
~.. I!!~ pany.
:,' D .~ :Ondt Sign~

an~uo. Ban~IHo n.\.;,~

~warda Progrom •up.To·

Dote Equtpmont 'Compo·
· 'k) p
ny·Mat~hlng 401,
10•

I

3 family yard sale· Satur·

"ram

.
,I

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fwftllllllltlllul Dr ..........
origin. or..,. hr... rlton to

paerww., limflltion or

T?ltl'ftl npa;JFwfl.I nell

IIIIOW~ijjly-

11

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- - to In

--11tnf&gt;r

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Low••.,.

(140)4ole-71104

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Pomeroy, MlddltRQrt, cell Tom Ander-

~~ =~~

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more &amp;amo3pm' rain can- Putnam county

arn•.

Call

uoo

H11 th' U IIOCI M1 lh~lat
C
n
DriV11'11 wantad· no COL SUBSTITUTE TEA HER
Ch!Rh btttmtnl, oomtr ot . 23yra lnd up good drivinG ~IDE FOR CHILD C~RE
Third Avenue I Main atrllt rwcord, drug lorHn, bl,. CENT~A. Mutt hive an InMiddleport, Ohio.
flta, •eniora weloome, 1· terest and dellre lo wark
Thuro., Fn., &amp;Sat., all day, 600·531-t663.
.
~ younlog cl)lldron. R}!'!
Noble SUmmit Ad Mlddllto. Maglo Veal'S 0 ay .....,.
port, good varllry.. ,

Garbage Service N.eda 0. Center 201 High Strtet.

pendtbla drtvor/IOadtr with
Tupporo Piolno UM Churot&gt; CDL. EKperionot driving
Baumont Sate, Frldoy top-heavy truokl a pluo.
1015, 8am·7pm, Sot., 10/S, (740)366·9am·2pm, clothing, dllhaa.

r

ttomeworlcere

Point P - . WV 26S8G
Tlltmarklll
NOWngHIAINOII
Exponcltng 0111oo In Nttcl
o120 Enorgotlo lnciiYidUIII

NNdtd If you

1

New level home on 1 acre near
Conltruc:tlon/Rtmodollng. Cheater. Three bodroom.

TION.

eon.- Yout'Hif TO

i:o": ::Osra;:,z-=k~~

Sat· ,....,, •·ra·~-. 74"·•n ~ ... '""
~·

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e year Old Ranch alyfa "

houtt. 3 bodroom, 2 both. .

BeautifUl River Vltw llleal

~~~ t0~~~~~·P::Ie~~

Icrr~~----,1 ·

l'ms &amp;

Cflln up or

rrKwe

ter 'Trailer Park, 74fi.44t. -

0181.

. INOTICEI

OHIO VALLEY.. PUBLISH·
INQ CO. _..,.nclt tllot
-•dob_"wllh_lo
yO;; know, and NOT to tond
onontythrough the matt until

Pike, Scioto and Hocking 2216. .

eo

lhdlan qreek Equeatrlan EatatN, 3-8 acre toll, weat ol

77

eaay

ency,

I utll· ,

.

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IICURITV

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12xee Norrto trat-.r, 2 bod·

lllf'l Sell (740)387 7071
No FH Ur'lleuWe Winl
.
•

••• •••.33411
1_.,..

I

·

I

New 14lC70 3 bedroom 2
bath, onty '$986 down' &amp;
l188.e2 per month, call
Harold 7.40-385-4387.
Now brfc.l&lt; houle on 2·112
·
IChl, 3,000 IQ~I root In· New Double Wide. 1185
ground pool, Ito 01 btllfd· Per Monlhl 3 Bldi'OOt11, 2
lng, Smlth'a cablntttl •rm. Baih. Frea Dattve&lt;y &amp; Stl·
(740)448-01 49
up. 1·888·928·3428 ·

Needed 30+738.7295

'

Tara

Townhouae

· · mente, Very Spaclqul, 2 ·
Rent to own on land oon- Bedroomt, 2 Floors, CA, t ·~
tract, good clean 2 bedroom 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, ·
houee
In
Pomtroy, Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, PI·
(740J896•7244.
tlo, Sten $365/Mo. No Pelt, _
Leaae Pius Security Deposit
Why rent1 govemment Required, Days: 740·446backed toano from $490 346 t: Evenlnge: 740·387·
down. (740)448-3093
0502, 7'10-446·0101 .

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CLASSIFIEDS!

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........... 11
The Marauders are coming
off one of their worst )O!Se$ in
recent years dropping a 64-7
contest to powerful Wellst9n
last Fric:lay evening. Meigs
though has shown some
improvement the last few
weeks, moving the ball with
more consistency, but they
haven't been able to g.;t the
ball into the en&lt;;! zone.
week the Marauders
also have several key players
out due to injuries.Tyson Lee,
Jon Diddle, Kenny Zuspan
and Clifton Chandler all went
out with injuries, Ross Stewart wasn't at the game due to
an illness, and Brandon Bobb
has been out since the Athens
game in week two with a
knee injury. Most of those
will be bac.k, but the Marauders are still nursing bumps and
bruises.
•
The , Marauder ground
attack is led by Jeremy Roush

Last

. Eagl~
· fwomPipB1
ning on 11 carries and a
touchdown.
•
"They haye nothing to
lose,"
said
Christman.
"They're going to pull out all
the stops and I look see some
things they haven't . done all

year against us."

Orleans

playoff field from 12 teams to .
eight and skip a week of playoff games. But that would
have forced the NFL to repay
fwomPIIpB1
the networks for the games
and to a great Super Bowl - ·and . the nerwor~s wanted
weekend in Ne\'{ Orleans. We as much as $80 million.
trust thai the NADA will
Another was to condense
enjoy a super convention as the playoffi, with teams play.
II ..
we.
ing as many as three games in
Tagliabue also praised Tom W days.
Benson, the New Orleans
The third was to switch
Saints' owner; for his help.
dates with the auto dealers, an
Benson, a former auto deal- agreement that took nearly
er, said he talked to a lot of two weeks of negotiations.
friends in the business in The major problem was logisrecent days and wasn't sure a tics - especially switching
switch could be made.
hotel rooms.
In addition to the S7 .5 milAs for· the Mardt Gras,
lion pa~ the NFL agreed organizers met with members
to match NADA payments of of the, hotel industry, ,~ity
up to SSOO,OOO for Sept. 11 leaders and police officials to
relief efforts.
discus logistical problems the
After it put off the second Super Bowl would create.
week of the season, the NFL
Along with the parades,
presented several scenarios for. they need to work out
arrangements for the carnival
the playofU,
.
One was to condense the. balls that accompar:y them.

Browns

fromPIIpB1 ,

edge over the 2001 Browns.
But to the players, there is no
comparison to the last two

seasons.

.

r··
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legion
Euery
Sunday
1:00 p.m.

NEEDED

•

and no penalties."
Christman sees some similarities between his team and
the Lancers. .
"Offensively, they moved
the ball will in both (game)
films that we've seen," said
Christman. "But, they go in
spurts, kind of like us. Sometimes they'll score, sometimes
they will make a mistake and
shoot themselves in the foot.
The other side of the ball
~ould present their share of
problems.
"They lineup in a lot of different looks on defense;: said

"'

r

GUO SHOOT
Rutland
Hmerlcan

with 290 yards in 83 carries
(3.5),andTyson Lee with 180
yards · in 52 carries (3 .5) .
Marauder junior quarterback
Kyle Hannan is 38-of-99 itt
the air for 416 yards. Buzzy
Fackler has been he favorite
receiver witli 17 catches for
235 yards.
Freshman Ryan Fraizer has
played only the 'last two
games, but he is coming on
fast with six catches for 95 ~
yards.
.
:
"Nelsonville-York is a very
talented football team," Mike
Chancey said of this weeks'
opponent. "They throw and
run the ball very well, but the
kids are looking forward to ,
another Friday evening of. ;
tootball."
·'
Over the
years, the :
Marauders and the Buckeyes' '
have hooked up in some good·
old fashioned barn burners. If
1
the Marauders can put it all :
together, this week will be no · ·
different.
Kick-off Friday evening. is
7:30 from Nelsonville-York
High School in Buchtel.

But'llederal Hocking's winless record might not help
much and could knock Eastern, No. 8 in the Division VI,
Region 23 ratings, out of the Christman . uWe've got to
poll· coinpletely for at least work on that ~o it doesn't give
one week, even with a win.
us pt;oblems.
Still, a win's better than a
A key injury gping into this
loss.
week's game is inside line"We've got to ftX some backer Cody Faulk. Christthings defensively, be more man, though, plans to •move
aggressive and play more like jimmie Putnam from the outwe have in the · past,:' said side linebacker to the middle
Christman. "The past three or for a look or two, joining
four games, we haven't played freshman Darren Scarbrough,
Eastern-type of defense , I
Fresh'llan tailback Bryan
think the kids realize that and Minear is also expected to see
we're going to have some some more carries, allowing
more intenjity and play more Brad Parker to rest a little
physical on defense.That's the more.
main thing:'
. "They both, if they're fresh,
"On offense, we've got to do a lot better jobs," said
protect the football. Our goal Christman. "But basically,
this week is to have no we're going to do the same
turnovers, no mental mistakes things we've been doing."

"Totally different,'' said safecuu
words,Cockatoo,
soconcl onotame
It a olont All~ Accoaa'To
llDtuGERATJON
-----~~-=-~~~-:---r-Aualtallan
H
1\f.tscm•&gt;..NWI.ti l•ndablgbsflllbuldotonot Cl'jtrtO, Tranomlllllonl.
110 elp Wanted·
ty Earl Little. "Trust me."
111
245
~
talk.
A!rlcen Gray can be Tranaftr ?• 74CJ.
• Aealdentlal or commeratl ~~;;;~;~~~~~~~;;;;i
Cleveland's defense
is
lot--ttaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioorl· handled and thouldar 5&amp;n, Ctll. 339-3?8S.
wiring, new MMCe or re- 1
. swarming to the ball and has a
watktcl tame. Prlca SIOOO,
CAMI'i:As&amp;
pairs, MllttrUctnttcllltc·
12~50 Off~ Trailer. N.,w!y Blrda mull be taken u a
MO'roR HoMEs trlclan. RJdenOUt Eltetrlc&amp;J,
league-high 11 interceptions
Aomodaltcl.
$4,000. potr, they have bttn togath· L~-oiiiiliililtiiiliiiliiorl WV000308, 304-875-t76e.
(740)441·9369
or fer 14 yeara, birds olthlo ~
after three ~mes. On offense,
Bed wllh Box Sprlng and type llvo 3D to 40 yeora. 1995 !!lro!)Ob~go
NOW~ the Browns· ate running the
Mattraae. ·Cheat Or1wers, 1hl Gray alone 11 wo~ er,
1
00
1
2000
ball effectively for the first
Choir, Table ond Chairs. Ml· $1600 10 5
·
don
crowave Baby Car Seat pau up this deal. Please
time in three ·years and quarStroller ('l40)446·8742 ' call (740)982·9189 after 5
·
o'clock and only serloua
terback Tim Couch has kept
BINIIIII'S AVAILABLE
collero pt-.
iiijr;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
his
mistakes to a minimum.
Couch &amp; 2 chalrl $100. i·
HOME
41~.,,~~--..
MANY IHIII'I'S
Ttchnlce atorao with largo
M!SCAL
The Browns' special teams
lfl8l)lera
StOO.
l&lt;lndllwoocl
Stiiiiiiii
....
AVAILABLE.
wood burner
1400.
Rall'\bOw L_.,.:II\SJ"RVMI;MS~:::iiilliiia• L-ttiiMPIIOiiiiiiiiiVFMIM'
...,
have been solid and so has the
aweepe, With rug anampoo. 8ASEMINT
kicking game:
or S300, Twin tiZO bod wfth Kimball Plano, $I ,000. Call
W~TERPRDOFIHO
. Coming off. a 23-14 road
box O!lrtngo/ maHrHt $100. (.740..;.;.)44-1·.96•1•7--"""'11 Unconditional Hlellme guar·
LOwrty Organ with maglcl fPI
,antee. Local references fur·
win at Jacksonville, the
~·o:..~~.:.ny~:.: Buy, Sell or Trade nlehtd Eotabllohed 1975.
Browns are feeling better
c:onatns
crefta,· etc. 1964 CLASSIFIEDSI
Clll
Hrs, (740) 448·
Nub. fJCceltant ooadltlon
0870, 24 ,·800-287.0576.
about themselves than they
$1600. (304)675-3123
Rogers Walt&lt;t&gt;roollng,

r

an~~rt- ~ ·.

Apart·

I

riO

Ohio. (740)1182-41286

1
men~ (740)448-0390
~

Now Taking Applications- .·
""""""'
35 Wast 2 Bellroom Town·
FOR RENT
houtt ~ltrnonta, Includes
room, 1 bath, good condl· L~---iiioioiiiiiao_.l Water Sewage, Trash,
lion. contrat llr, se,ooo. ~
(740)(167-()121)
. Pilot Program Rtntara $350/Mo., 740-446-0008.
u--

·

tober 1at. Sue'1 S.lectablet can Grey Parrot, can talk, ....._ .
iiijj';;·~~---.-,
an lhe "T" In Middleport large vocabulary, clean no Bud~ Prtc«&lt; 'TrlnamteEl£cntK:AlJ

Hontyluckte Hills Apa"· ·
monte. Located on Colonial
Drtvo behind Highway Po·.
trol Poat, Two Btclrooms
now ovatlablo. Rent start•
$2701 month. Low end mocf.
trait Income. Equai.Hous·
lng Opportunity. (740)4463344 TOo- HI00·150.0750 .•
bedroom

Jhy
&amp;
GRAIN

OVP CORRESPONDENT
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Miller Falcons enOed the
Eastern Eagles in-conference winnipg streak, handing the
Eagles their first league loss Tuesday night in Tri-Valley Conference Hoelting Division volleyball action at. Eastern. Eastern is now 14-3 overall and 11-1 in the league.
Eastern had a tough time with the Falcons in Hemlock,
but .after winning the first Mme 15-12, Eastern stumbled,
c-··
dropping the last two games 12-~ 5 and 7-15. Eastern Coach
Pam Douthitt was not pleased with her team's los., but was
still optimistic about the rest of the season.
"We did not play team ball tonight;' said ·Douthitt.
"Miller showed up to play and they out-played us. We knew
this would be a hard game to win, The match went three
h
d
d
games at MiUer. But now it is all be indus, an we nee to
look ahead to the next game."

I~::C.~~~~-=~:

j

~;......=:.::..~--- .

Modem

r

BY 5cDTT WOllE

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

term1, OilPortunltln.

2 be. 111111 pump, central air (740)448. 9!83

HOMES
FOR &amp;I..£

•

offer. Colt (740)448·4514 Home? oonniava Land'! btclroom lpl"menta at VII· '
from 8-8pm, M·F, or WI Ootll Hu Orly 10 Lote lago Menor and Rlvoratdo
(740)44e-32411attor6pm.
L_. ~· 7-~5
Aportmonll In Mlddlepo".
""' ~ _ , . . ·
From 1278-$3411. Call 740ThrH y..r old, 1600 ·oq. Ntoo 4 aero tract nNl' 892·5004. Equal Houolng

r

rid

um

f::.'...,~.,:~~2 around

e

::t'i~~ldg,~na~~rv.~~2:. ~

~~-~~•• '10111 S25,m. (

304-n:!-5177
ltort Your Butlnhl To·
Primo 2·112 acra lot lor
day... Primo Shopping ean.
building on- looatod on quilt
ter lpaoo Avolllblt At AI·
MoBuJt HDMII!Il 'rood, oecludtcl IIU, Out·
lordabla Rata. Spnng Vlllay
FOR S4u:
lldl of clly llmlto In Spring.
Ptoza ean 740-4411-lltOt
field Townohlp, Atklng
'
' ·
$17,600. Call lor mo,.lnlo.
l'llotBII!IONAL 1121C85 with 8x18 ollf)lndo
. . 2 !740)4&lt;18-41114 Dayo; or
SI!Rv1cEs
Badrooma. 2 Bath. Newly 740)4411-32411 Evantng1.
Carpeted. High EHiciiiOCy
1
TURNED DOWN ON
~~~n~~~o'P".::l'~~ :;:::;;:::::~
IOCIAL

cludtcthPtuo'oopotlt&amp;
•-roved '.
,Reference· HUO """
•7401441-1519
F lohed filet
a1
'

7401446 3945
Immediate pollllllon. Ap. \1-,..~w ~
..
prallld at 1125,500. Make Looking To Bll\l A New Gracloua living. "1 and 2. ,

you hive lnvntlpatld the ft.hou• at Laldn WV, 3 br., Galllpoll1-

Olloring.

.

County allo Lewla
KV.
For mOre Information'' anci 1 Bedroom Apartment, Re- •
FREE mope contoct·
trlgarator . Ringe AIC In- •

AnthonyLinciC:o Ltd
t.IJ00.21w.ii ·
-.alotend......

Nine COWl bl'td to biiiCi&lt; An-

cond-.

~ hunH1111. Avoltoblo tn nlohod, IIIIOurlty dopo~t r•

Athena, GaiUa, Jackson, qulf'ld, no pets, 740-992· ;

Eastern suffers TVC loss

2620
~=----,---,---,-..,.-

I

i

almoat nute oft' Route 7, but Itlll prj- acre tracts aome acljolnlng menta fumlshed and untur-

anything. CaH (740)448· vote. (740)1N15-3981
7104
Newly conatructad, lingle
.
atory 1600 eq loot homo
Will power waah houMa,
·
f •
tralllt'l, anything. Cell ~::~edH_!'!u.~l~~'.:!n:
(740)441-4238 or (140)4oleo
r _,,_ •
0151 1111 lor Ron. line 11cmPtouontValtoyHotp.
..,_ taove molllge.
tel,
oft SR 1110 on a private
'
H/2 acre tot. 3 bodroom,
2·112 botho big kitchen
w/oak oabl~eto DR LA
w/gas log flrepllee, c8ntr8l
air, laundry room, .front
porch &amp; 2·112 car garage.

3 Regular Chlrotall Bulla.
1304)67HSBI
Nice 8 year old Semi ClHI·
lng Quarter Horu. t 5·3.
Good Blood Uno. Rogis·
ttrtd. St 600. (740)379·

j

$3501 mo. For mOrt lnlor·
malton oolt (740)448·2736

. ACIU!AGE
'Skllna. 'Rooting, 'Drywall, two batho, one-oar garage,
A.PiunMI!Nrs
.
'Wo 0o . It Atr FrH Eotl· family 'I""" with flroptaco,
HUNTING OR
1'011 Jb:Nr
mof11,874-462:W74-3655 eunroom.-cantrllhHI· . RECREATIONLAND
~
WDI haul awlfY clu.n out. lng &amp; ale system. One ml· Ranging In 5 ac~ to 100 1 and 2 bedroom apar1-

8881.

3909
· · 1 ~. u·nton Cam...:
MI!DICAL CLMII
:.:.:.:.---~--- n::..-.~atastwara wiCk;;
ltLUHO
·
Thurtday 1014. Friday 10/5. 0
• ti ,.;,. ...:
FIOIII YOurHomtl
OH . New Carpet, Large and 9am·4pm. 3206 Georget tupperw F1 ns,
No E)IPifienct NICIIUiyl
Small P1eces. Men's " and Creek Ad. Kld'l ClOthing, cor, pictures, heaters, mtdl·
FullorPart•TJmel
lkBNmls
ladles
Jeans.
Baby Toddler Bed, CradJe, mlac. eal kequlpmellrn,_fu~:~:·
Data Enlry for Loci!
TRAINING
Clothes. Also Misc. Items.
true topper, m_,
·
DoctOfl
•
4 family Patio Deck/ Yard ThUllday, Friday &amp; Satur· Toola IMn after .tpm tach Fun Training &amp; Ctrtificatlon
Provtdtd.
Galllpottaear.r Collegt
Sate· ~rldav 5th, saturday day, Octobot: 4, 5 &amp; e. 12 dly. Now ttoma Every Day.
lnekte hOullhold 1111 Frio
Computer Required.
(Cirterl Cloll To Home)
6th, 9am·5pm, 465 Turk&amp;)' Cruzat strHt QaYipollt.
For mo~ lnlonnltion
Call Todayl740 441 4387,
Run , Chesnire, clotnlng, all Yard 'Sale saturday Octo- Sat. at Galllpolla Feny Okl
1·1J00o214.Q4112,
sizes, household Items,, ber 8th II'Ooam· ? 3230 Bu· Rt 2. Slgnt poatOCf, 2000 PI- CaiiTotl Frao:t •
Iaviiie Plkt.
"'"'IOflOkl-0 Ntw/UIOCI 600·518·9326 DEPT 7110
RogllfiCI.OB-127411.
misc.

.

--.,--:-----

j

leoodry room, quiet locaUon.

- .Pili"

Herahbtrgor. SR t 41 In
Ctclmua.

""""'""'con-

3 Br, 2 bolfll. t~x70 Newly
romodtttd. (740)11112·2167
___..........;__ _
bedroom mobile home In
3
Middleport,
no pats,
.
!7401992 6666 ·

I

j

10 Yaar Old mote Donkey.
Brokt to rldo and drive. Don

j

740)8G2~2187

tralalr,

I

Sosa

Muat I t t to appr.ctlf&lt;l. tng &amp; atepo. Cofo1 Mobile lno. Cal 8:30pm- .
· Etac:trlc Ra~ and dill&gt; Homot, us 60 Ell!, Afho n:oopm. (740)2118 6803
lllvld't'G-..1 Contoacttng Wlllllf 1nc1
. (740)378- ons 011 740-5112·1872
Plumbing, •tectrtcal, point• 9887
·
' '
.
u~-u...tng, docki, roole. Colt
Flnel Daye, Notlonwtdt fn.
......u.........,
~29·9373 (304)133- 7 roomo &amp;bath,- &amp;,.. ·ventory
Rtcluctlonl L_ _,:;FOR,:;:,::Rt:Nr:,:.._.l
lrtgorator, ,_ vinyl otdlng, (304)73&amp;-,14()9
~
5 now vinyl wlnclowo, JJI'
'
Fullttrvlct hOult c-'ng, """' outbuilding, or dOubla For Sate By Owner· 3 bod- 199-1 Ntct Cltln Mobile 17.00 hour, vory honeat. ltvtot' lola 533 Grant St room, I 112 bttlui, NICe Homo '"'rant. No Pots.
Ref- avalloblo. Colt Mtddlapor\ (740)992-1108.4: Schult mobile homo. Fl· 14001 month ptua dtpooft
(740)4ole-2877
$60 000 090
nanctng
available. !llld utllltltt. (740)2118-8122
'
(740)441·1496 or (740)446- aftar 7pm.
Qeorgoo "-bto SawmDI, 2 Badroom, UnflrQhtd up. 3583.
_ _;_ _ _ _ __
don1 haul your toga to the lllolro Now heating &amp; cool·
2 btdroom trallar, South·
mllljUIIe&amp;l30+615-t~7. lng Unit, New watar fino, UmltOCIOtNoC...,H?Gov· -omSclloolo.(740)378tine Chain Unk emment Bank Flnenoo Only 2640
Houlloltanlng Commtrolal Fence1111lar ' deck Ne.w At Oakwood In Barboura- :::.;.:.,..,------1
or Rtlldlnllal. (304)773- otorm •wl:e
largo lot villa, WV 304-736·3408.
2 Br Mobile Home, Mkllle8152
· 't 99 Burdatte. PriCed .poo; Now
Wklt. Bellroorn. g&amp;,~ no peta, 17401982•
14
3 Otlhlery
Opening• . In • . doycaro, tnopoctlon. Call (304)67e· Only $19.660.
FrH
•
county ctrttllod or pnvate 2902
&amp;Sat Up 1 888- 828 2426 2 Br t 112 both t4 w1c1o
· •
•
with '1a - ......~... &amp;
pey. Monday·Friday, Bailey 3 bodroom hoUII lor llloln
~ ·...-- DOf1o
RCI.,

.

~

.__ _ _ _ __,.

=m=.' c\f.;j

bedroom, 2 bath, lotllelec-·
ted; rapalrtng loroed air klr· 3 bodroomt. 2.5 balfll, .lull trlc vinyl &amp; ohtnglt, tow HIIUOII lor Ront 2 biJd. IIHtera: town , _ romodlttd. Flroptsco, Ntoo monthly peymenta, dlltv- ·roomo &amp; I both, tooottd on ·
era: amotl engtntt. Mlko vltw. 15 mlnutta l1cm town. - &amp;11tup tncludoutdrt· 1111 Gotllol
County
,

SAI.a:

FOR RliNr

r

Hl88·821l-34211 ~- Fct Uatlnga, 600-3181978 14x70 Nashua Mobile 3323 E&gt;ct. 1709·
Home. Newer lldl ~~~~- 2 bodroom homo etc. to
relrigoralof with too l11llk8f I tO'MI, --...m. Rlvor vllw,
wale&lt; In door, newer gao $4251 month; 3 bedroom In
rango with sell claanlng -.. 1·112 botllo. Good tooven, built-In dish waahor, catlin $5001 month. Refer·
all Birch c:ablr*o In kitchen, . , _ and dtpollt roqut...,.
1I 112 1Jo1!1t (eomo"""""" (740)448 31144.
tied) gaolumaco &amp; hot WI·
.
ter tank, 3 BR .. Ill (llumblng 2 Badroom - · Ringo,
, _ l1cm .,_ iiCIIon IUtlt, AIC, Rtlligarator 1 - .
underpinning
Included,, Depo11t and Reference•.
S7ti00. (740)742-2888
• (740)4ole-1370
111 llmt buyera· Govom· 3 bodroom, 3 blth houle
mont lolnl· buy IOana I with 2 car garage. City
Ale· (740)446-3093 Oak· Sclloo!L Rtlafaooce l de&lt;
wood Superoenter
poalt requl...,. (740)448·
28x60 Ot Bodo
On- 1104 or (740)24~.
3 4
oom,
Rad
ly · $3-45.00 Per Month 4 BR. Elm St.,
ne, ._
8.118% Flx«&lt; tntemt Alto, avo- now,~ mo•• fn. :.
1-888·928~
eluded .water, HWer, &amp;
truh, no pete. (740JII85- _
~HIJmable loans. Many 339V or (301)208-4715
types available. Call 1&lt;&gt;&lt; de740JHS'!!i8'
~':C:u":
Deluxe home, .... $5,446, :'ve. ~I ~ 304new 2000 model Skyline, 3. ~ ' UtiiOr' Nii&gt;cY
'
dlrpl!'"lng

Ir'o -fly-.
lloMJis.
I-' (
S4u:

25

8:3 am
ble,
aaher a 22
miiM witCh tor ligna. 8-!
between
Juna and more. 39 I t
'
10:001m, Mondly thru
141· 'Suey SoltoMo' Hugo 4 fomlty Yard Salt. unlly.
(740)441 ·1880 or (740)448· Del 4 5 &amp; &amp;th Now Haven

I

72811

Huaband t &amp; wtfe Aun

Ptari and Lllllan•a Yard
1831 Wllkly ProcoUII1jl 81 A'Pooplt Poroon' Titan
Salt. 1014·1018. 8 mllaa
YARDSAI.b
Mill. I!Uvl No EIIJIOIIWIWANTYOUIII
1
South on Rt 7 Homtlnterl·
Pr.I"LEAsAHr
11101
Nttdtcl. Call I·
Laada Pro'lldadl
or Gtoaawara Dlahoa, ~
IJOOo852-1728 Ext. 2070, Graot Earnng Potantlll
CtOthtt
4-F fly ~1Rl Sale 1 mila 24Hra.
Groat Envt""'montl '
· ·
nt Rl"- Rd Uvo tn ~titter FCI lntorm,tlon Call·
0 ut ~
NA
..,.. ·
-··
......._
t.aoo.a1o.3520 '
Sunday Clctobtr 7th, Wood Octobtr 4, 8, 8
lor ouuultr, ( 40,....6814
lllllor Derick
crofts, Crooobow, . Wood Community 8111 Gunvtlltl MoC:!uro•a Rttlaurant now
burner, Air Conclltloriar, Rid· Cain Ridge Rd Oct 4•5 hlnng all 3 tocattona..Jutt or
Clothes (Name Brands) . lng Lawn Mowar, ExeroiH From Point Pttiaant ·At. 2 parHime, plok up ipplloa·
LoiS ol household end mloc. Equip~, Air ~k'a: Ta· North to Rt.l7. About e tlon at toootlon &amp;0brlng bock URGENTLY
NEICIO·

~=~sA;,~·t~h~~~~t,rt~l=

dll c lmlnetlon bllld on
...... OOIOr, f'tlltgton, . .

e-.

hauuhokl, &amp; Milo.

day, October 9, tools· bike.
T.V., boy&amp; &amp; gtrts dothoa,
grapevine lrees. cratas &amp;
baskets. Kessel's Produce
&amp; Flea Market, t mile wesl
Holzer Hospital, Jackaon
Pike.
:..::.;::.__ _.,-___
3 Family Yard Sate. Tona ol
Men·a, Women's !llld Kids
East 5~ from 160 lntersec
lion. Friday 0&lt;:1 5th, Satur·
oay Oct. 6th.
3321 Si R1 7 N. Addison,

I·'

::t;•·
&amp;Qulpmtnt, IC.

ldv•'dll•eny

.,......... NmMIIIon ot

~~~.:::

Home. Call (740)448.()175

r"'304)875-5885

8uek a bolt sale, square
Heat
Pumpo,
Bennotta
MDStround
·00 other
hey up to
()jte Home Supply, 740·448- $2.00.
btloa 515.00
"Mobile Home tot for rent In 9416 www.orvb.com/btn· tach304-e75-4889
Mlddtoport, $125 per month
nett
Hay &amp; Bright Wire ·no
.(740)11112-3194
NEW AND USED FUR· Straw, Year 'RooodDtltvery
NANCES FOR SALEI We &amp; Volume Oieoount Avalletns1a11, Free Esttrnatae. 11 bto. . Hentago Farm.
iii"~:o:-;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;~
ib ............,..
u~--·you dont Call us, We both (304)1175-5724.
Loosll (740)4411-6308, I·
Gooos
lf00.29t.()Q96.
Auros
2 Glow· Warm 25 000 BTU PHC e-., lift chair, taupe
LP, vent· Fiee 'haatera. {t;~;5 new. $300 .
FOR S.W.:
Used one aeaeon. St40
ooch. (740)379-2818
Pool Table with S8varaJ Ao- 1977 Dodga Aspen, new
::--:::-:--::----:--:-- COSIOries. Table Ia 83" loitg. ti~M, good bOdy, 31 ,490 ae2 WhHe
Doea (740)446.0196
nttcl now cover. tilal mHH (74QI992-9084
$75
t1Ch.Whlrtpoot
I OE wuhora
Washer SIOO.
$65. t Whtrtpoot D&lt;yer S60.
RESIDENTIAL AND
11187 Buick Loul&gt;ro Prtce te
Kass Lodwick led Eastern with a 12-of-17 serving night,
Call after llpm. (740)446·
COMMERCIAL
Rodootcl. Motor hal58,000 twelve points and three aces; Janet Calaway was 9: of-11
9006
AMANA HI Efllcl
f.
.h
d .
82 miiH. PS, PB. Atr, AMIFM
Appltancea; Reconditioned gulur~cea.su:r''I'11 E"~ CUtttte. (740)4480366
with six point,s;Alyssa Holter 11-o -11 w · an ace an stX
Wlllhors, Ory018, Rongos, clorlcy Heat Pumps and Air 1988 Otda Ciola Broughm, . points; Katie Robertson 5-of-7 with five p · ts; and Tiffeny
Rotrtgratore, Up
110 Days Conditioners. 10 year parts now hooea, good 11181• '"111 Bissell 8-of-9 with three points.
Quarantttcll
WeToSaU
New and labor warranty lncludtct. good, In good shape, call al·
Maytag ~. Fronc:h COMFDRTAIRHEAnHO ter3:30prnt·304-882·3430 ·
Tammy Bissell led the spiking department "th a 12-of7
7796
ctty Maytag, AND(1••~
~ N~
20 night, Whitney Karr was 9-of-17, Kass Lodwi 9-of-15,
·
-rr- 1 -v 1 1 ~
1993 Ford Tarau1. Price
=~
1-IJCit41NH1071
Redootc~ OBO: I.oldtd. PB. and Holter 2-of-4.Whitney Karr had seven blocks, and Lod(740)245-5211 or (740)446·
RESIDEifiiAL HOME
fr~~~it
Calattta. wick six. In setting, Calaway was 37-of-52 with nine assists,
Ot23
OWNERS
while Tiffeny Bissell was 22-0f-34 with five assists.
Contemporary Couch S375: Tappan Ht Efl~tonoy 110% s'~ ~~(~JIIs7'~~
The Eastern reserves won 15-0 and· 15-5.
Oak TV entertainment cen- Gas Furnaces, 011 Fumo·
ra1
""· $275; Mlgnavox Tuner coa. 12 Satr Haot Pump &amp; 2000 Ponttae Grind Am
Eastern plays their next game on the road at Pede
Amp with floor speakers. Air Conditioning System• G~ reel ................. H..ockin•g .......:. ~ .,
'
••
r
' - .
$260.••Aljtn.good ·condition,
Freo e·mr Wirill'·· ' -·--··
· •
,
,._
·
..., 'Btrl- 24,000
mites, $15.500
8
88858
1
,_"
notta Heotlng &amp; Cooling. 1· OBO. (740)992-4017.
For Sale: Reconditioned 8 0 0 • 9 7 2 • 5 9 8 7
64 Mon:ury Marquis, exca~
Brown 'bit an R.BI double,
w'"""rs, dryers end rotng. www.orvb.coiM&gt;IMett
condition, low mllea,
orators. Thompoona ~II· Singer Zig zag eawtng ma- tent
Ricky · Gutierrez followed
loaded. Now engine, $4,000
IUlCIO. 3407 Jo~ A.,. chino In cabinet with chair,
080. (740)446·1721
with what should have been
nue, (304)675-7388.
good condition. $70.
"40)949-2653
95 Lumina, 78,000 miles,
· fiomPapB1
a sacrifice fly,
Mulll-colored
western "
$3,600; 87 Cavalier, $!00;
weave couch &amp; chair w/ Used 230Q Ditch Witch 87 Reliant $900· 87 r..,..
But Kent:! Griffey . Jr.
wood trim $100.00 SIJ4.882. Tra.- and 66 HP Ver· po, $900. (740)2Ht2
here
and
lose
the
games
. appeared to lose the ball in
2825
meer alump grinder calf
tke we don~t want to play. the sun and Gutierrez
Main Street Furniture
(740)IIII4-I 68 I
TRUCKS
(304)675-1422
WATER WELLS DRILLED.
FORSAU
I'm not going to take that;' reached. Joe Girardi then hit
515 Main Streot.l'&lt;llnt (740)1188o7S11
Sosa said.
an R.BI double to deep cenPINtlnt
2000 Dodge Dakota Spoil,
Waterilno Special: 314 200 27,000 mllot,
They · showed
that ter, giving the Cubs a 7 ~5
Now l U.aod Fumtture
PSI $21.95 Ptr I00; 1' 200 dillon, (740)245·9252
2 Place Uvingroom PSI $37.00 Per tOO: All '11111""'-~-~--, Wednesday. With the wind lead.
Suites, $399. Buy, Sell, Brass Compression Fittings lllljl
VANS &amp;
blowing out, Lieber got into
MacRae (0-1) gave up
Trade.
tn Stock.
trouble
early, giving up a four runs - three earned .:.:.::=-.,..,--,-::-c::-- RON EVANS ENTERPRIS. lw--4-ilioiWDsiii-_.1
New and Used FurrlUure £S JackSon, Ohio, 1-301).. .,
atore below Holiday too, Ka· 537·9528
1963 Chevy S.tO 4x4, 4sp. three-run homer to Corky and three hits in two
Miller in the second inning. innings. Orifrey and Adam
nauga. We sell grave roonu·
$1 tOO (3040675 5253
menta and vases. Hours Wedding dress, size 718,
• ·
•
The Cubs tied '.it in the
Monday thru Saturday 11- $150; 112 karat diamond
3pm (740)446-4782
ring. size 8, $200. Call 1985 Chevy S-,0 Blazer, third, and Lieber didn't give Dunn hit solo home runs
4;~~4 ,
asking
$1800
.
(74Cl)37fl.2268
for the Reds.
(740)992·2167
up another hit until the fifth
Nice.used tumiture/ appnan·
o. _ -- ·~
The Cubs added five more
ceo. (740)446·1004 or
""........,..
1994 314 ton, eKtended cab, inning.
(740)446-2680.
I Sl.iJolol.m;
runs in the seventh. The fans
4i4, SLE, lui~ 10a90Cf, good
But that hit was Miller's
condition, buckel seats,
Whlrtpoot waeher, white,
were chanting "M-V-PI Mheavy duty· SSS· Whirlpool Block, brick, III1W8f plpoo, 82,000 mlloa, $12,000. second homer, a solo shot .
V-P!" as Sosa ·stepped to the
dryer, almond, heavy dulY, windows, linta•. etc. Claude (740)4ole-1068 .
that cleared the left-field
$95; Oryor. heavy duty, Winters, Rio Grande, OH
1994 Blazer S·IO, 4-door, fence and bounced down plate in bottom of the sevwhit.. llkt new, St50; O.E. Call 740-245·5121 .
4x4,
wed maintained, new
enth. He didn't disappoint,
eleotrlc range, 30• nice,
tires,
shocks,
clean, Waveland Avenue.
$150; Cl.E. ratrtgtrator, lroSI
-.,
$13,700. (740)448-11968
"I kind of dug myself a sending Chris Reitsma's 2-2
tree,
St60;
Skaggs L~--.:~-,;i;--,.1
pitch into the center-field
Appliances, 76 Vine Street,
97 Astro Van, 55,000 miles, hole there and the guys batGallipolis, (740)446·7398 Adorable AKC Golden Re- air, cruise, llh, PW, PL,
stands
for a three-run
Houra 10am-4pm, Monday· lriever Pups, 7 weeks otd. AMIFM Cass!ftte, dual air tled back," said Lieber, who
Friday, saturday by appoint· Shots current. Parenti on bags, ABS, seats 7, !Ike gave up five runs and eight
homer, No. 61.
menlo
premiaes. (740)379·2839 new, (740)379-2134 leave
Sosa also drove in another
hits in six innings. He struck
(740)379-9263
jjm;;•r;•aa;;:uo::;;;.·- - - -. .
run, giving 'him a leagueout five and walked one
ANriQtJEs
AKC Labrador RetrieVer
MOTORCYam
The Cubs tagged reliever leading 154 R.Bis. That's just
Puppltt. Yellow and Btactc.
•
Antiquo Show· 0Ctobtr667 Ready Now. S~OO· 5325·
Scott MacRae (0-1) for four four shy of his career high of
9am-5pm, Point Pleasant, ~Junday Calla. (l40):!45- 1999 Yamaha Benshoa · runs in the fifth inning .. 158, set in 1998.
wv, wv Farm Mu...,m, ed·
350, oxcetlenl
ell
ff 'th
Lieber is the Cubs' first
ve"tatng, bottlea, Slone· AKC Shettle puppies, sa· now tiros, $3,600 OBO ., Corey Patters?n led o WI
ware, toots, local collec11· bios, Tn, bl btaok. blue trade lor 400EX (740)44t· a single that htt first base and 20-game winner since Greg
blea, gta11ware, marbles merle· AKC Miniature 1718
t':
R
1
pottery. Outer llPIICO avail· Schnauzers salt/popper
"
popped up. Acter ooseve t Maddux in 1992.
able. (740)992-5088
btackfaUver,' $300 each 1999 Yamaha Wolverine.
- - - - - - - : - - (llrm) vet checktcl &amp; shota Excelltnl Condition. Low
Buater'a
Antiques
' Tree
Hours.Stand
DoubleHoldlr.
Gun Holder.
Open,
Antlquea/
~mloh Now
Fur· (7401 961085
·
'
API, :;:=::;;·===~~--------:-------nhure 202 4th Streel. (Be- Full·atock Boston Tarrier TRI, Fold. Ramps, $3700,
HoME
't· .
hind Cnmlnal Recorda) We pupptes, lather AKC. moth· (740)446-3703
,
, IMPIIovJlMJ!i'm .
Buy&amp;Selll(304)875-1248 er luii·&amp;IOck. $100 oach. 88HondaTRX300 2whotl .....lliliiiiiiiioiiiii[iiiiiit.,l
Buy or atlt. Rhlenno Anti· Call (74&lt;1)368-8743
drlva, $2,200, (740)948- C&amp;C Ganoiai Home Mil""'
qutl, 1124 Eaat Main on Registered Lab pul)plea. 3081 .
l\lf'ICt- Painting, vinyl ai:tSR 124 E. Pomemy, 740· One Black Malo. one whitt .
•
tng, carpontry, dooro, wfn.
992-25211. Rull Moore, tamale.
$200
tach,
dowl, botho, moblla homo
owner.
· (740)448-0060
Auro PARIS &amp;
repelr !llld more. For lrea
Now Butlntlt Opening Oc· Two '"""' perrota, one Alri·
Ao FSrii liliES
oall Chot, 740-812•

18 Wtdo. Orly $196.00 Per I -3 Bellrooma F . . - •
Monti!, 8.99% Fixed Interest -From $199/Mo.. 4% :
Rate With Air And Un- Down, 30 Ytora ·at 8.5% .

A loading provider of AN• ~'"!~=:;um= (740)882-35011 ·
10n after 5pm, (740)992· Fttoplaces, Pallo Doora.
-daltohl-ngmotda&amp;~ f.ad.l"'" ~ toR !~"!'• ;:'n~ SUCCESSFUL CANOl· Quolfty -loonlng. lm· 3348
MUCII Moral Clott 10 Hotz·
hea ,
·-•· '11"• lwu~IIUI· I
U9Ylrl
I'll
to d•
,
n.ltlpotl
OH
linkara, tooll, dril... grfnc:f. apmtntal Olaabllltltl II ~ATE nEQUIAE~ENTS
rna 0u1111 • na11cu u1'
3 Bedroom on Route 2, tr 1•
ua
1•
ara, sews, knlvto, dOIII, loolclng lor C8IUII potl timt 21 Yara Old COL with lilted clolnlng. Tho lf&gt;lo._ (304)1178-5332
. (740)4&lt;1t.fl3IO
·
kllohon Homo, - n g lor wortcora. Starting II !llld Tonk
lutt bolt. Call lor If~""' .
IIV&lt;1IYO"'· Oct, 4, s, &amp; l!th, $0.75 per hot&gt; Apply today menta. 'DOT Quol~ 'Two mttll. (740)258-1131 "' I· 3 bodroom. 1·112 both, heal
FAIIM!&gt;
ll-5 Andei'IOnl4&amp;123 St Rt. In ptl'ton at Middllton E• Year8 Experlef!UI Cl~ 888-78 1*2412•
pump, ICrttntd In pcwch,
SAI..i
124
total. 8204 Carla Drive. Orfv!ng Record Sllbla Em· Top To Bottom Cltonera, ltnctd In ,~ck·YI~i;:;:
FOR
.
Galllpollt, OH. An Equtl ployment 8ackafound,
pralllllloniJ end affofda- aiding, Du 1 "'nga, .,.. '
·
441 · 1033 17401367• 66 Am farm, Wlltar, Eto.
Moving ufeo 11!/S-10/8
Fri·
Opportunity
Employer.
OWNERILE~S1:
OPER~·
bta,
homoo.'olllcat,
rentall,
(7401
~,l.! ~~~ 11 ?·~· 00 FIINDV.
TORS NEEDED. Quartorty conii!UCIIon and ro!IIOdollng 0514
· Frao Gao, old Fa1m ho~,. P~na ~um~:"aa': CN.tio HH.tio Cortllttcl MINITitEagoESTPEay GuaDRraiVnEt"Rs' ctetntng. Con do atmoot A good ctun 2 btclroorn opp. 301
u,.,wvto
~
'
· homolNolcoro ntOCIOCIIO
St R
D
lllyth~ (740)1182·1391 or hoult In Pomaroy on lend mll11 10111 Bu 110,
~t;~g : Oet ~th, Vldl In homo oorvtoot"'tt ~~J"~~L ~:;:;- (740 ·2878
comraot. (740)888-7244.
~·~ ::5644 937·
houlthokl tto.:f."~~tllttdl oldtrly/dlubltcltn Muon &amp;
TRI.COUNTY CONSTRUC· For ute 11\1 ciwnor. Ntoo ()j.
,

much

I

Aot ol 1Ill
- - h ltlogot to

rantly -ng in RN to . .
eomplole and direct the Jazzy altattlo whH~halr,
MilS _..lor tne tiiCIIIIy, "'td, btclalda commocla,
Exptlllloot With MOS oorn- like . new, 111d walkar.
ptattona muat. Sallryoorn- (740)11112·2813 ·
w1t1i 'ICPtrittoot.
8tntft1 PICUQI It availa· Olk hwood S35 a load
w"
Sand
. Dl
•
d ••A
.-.
rtiUtTitl 10· • two or- more See 1• ,._,.
r«tor of Nuratng, Ovlr• .(7Co)7Q·2897 or (740)~·

Sreadmaker, Good Sheets; toys, chlklrenl SEGA com- TaaklrYIIIe Rd.,
Radnt,
permlta-NO ESCROW!
mult have blaCk atHI 101
$3.00
putor, houMhokl - · ttl· Oct 415.
Collootablaa tyr. OTR, 23 yrs. old &amp;CDL stilly IIIOtt. PI ttertl at
evlalon, Chrittrnu dlcore· ·crafts Barbie• &amp;
wn-w:Mat required. ~·
;
150
1294 Kemper Hollow Road, tiona, txerci.. bl~.
&amp;
more.'
'
ny Olf\11!'1 Welcome.
$8, perk ~r'it ~i:o~:.
October 5th &amp; 6th. 9ernColi Todlyl •
per Wit • a • ,...
5prn.
MI. Zion Youth Yard Sate. Rummoroai•Oct-5th
PIICIIIIIITruckLt-· 2674 ~·Frtdly 111m118 0406
St Rt 1 South. 2 mttoo Put &amp; l!th 1111 111 3 pm 11
4pm lor
ntmant. .

2 Family Sate, Oet Slh, 6th. the Dam. Frlcloy 8-5, Solur·
9am·5pm. 177 Hlklt Drive. day9·5 LotaofEvaoythlng
Spring Valley, Girls Bike,
.
,
Girls- Boys Clolhos, Etc.
Ootobt' 3,4,5- Stitt Route
218, 1 mJI• above Mercer·
3 family yard sate on Frlday vlllt, 40 eltctrtc ranga,
&amp; Saturday, 1 mile out 588 wooden bo;~~N, Harold Da·
from town. Household, vii rtlldtnel.
•
CIDihes· baby clothes, m!ac.
3 I II
I
627 OCtober 8th• 7th. iam•?.
amY yard •••· 9
3107 Bulovllle Plkt. Uttlt
Clage Road, Patrlo,, am·
8 boyoand tadltl name br~
4pm, Saturday. Ociober · clothing,
txoiCIIt

'* Honolng

I __,.

tecliblot.
otto .
'
1·888-453-4DG2
SECURITY GUARDS
Monday 1ot Tueldey 2nd
'
Drtvar•Clwntr Opatotor '
·
MLIPOLJS
Friday 5th.' Saturday 8th: Oct.4-8th, Laura! St.. PTL: Tho ONLY OIIIIOn • Temporary -~guardt
tt2&lt;lSteteRoult7SOuth, dlepo", Ill IIZII glrlo &amp;
82cpm.ALLIIILIL · lor up to 8
· Muat
. 10/4·J0/7. Johnsons Traller 9--5pm, baby ittma, materru· wornena Jtans, IOta mlao. ··No forced NE or can.da hive clun pollee record,
Park· Rt 7N Sola, Vidao ty elothea, children and 101m-5pm
•No-tOUCh frligtrt • good work h~ks ' : ' :
Camera. Old Quilts, New adult clothing. Uttto tyke Rlnlorn.tudoon garagalllo,
·~AID baM plotll and ~~ •phone !llld
GARD AlE-

bland"':'':'~

::."

II tac!!lty !llld tlltnfn.
wiU bo lntel'llio~OCI 11\1
1M pati·Ume and fulf.tkne IINGIOr lor 111·Mon for patpoeitlonl. W. NYII p01 VII• tlolpt.lion In clau. Equal
Alck PMI'IOn Auclton COrn- oatlonl, paid trak'\lno, paid Opporluntty Employer, Enpony, lUll lmt ,_...,, holldayl, fwd dayo oll_.y CiCJidlllng WorlqJtoot Dlvtr·
comploto auction NN!ct. ptuo btnofita. Colt to-oily
. ....- - - - - - .
~ tee,Ohlo &amp; w.t ~~ lor lntoNiow. I -881· 11
Vlralnll, 3()4.773-!ii785 Or 23J•83C2 ext. 2201.
117U MIDIII.ANf.Ol6
~713-S..7.
C
OV.rtHook enter 11 cur·

Ir

wllh Cloth!, Toddler, women:. Large pallo ute, rain or
Mons. LOla o1 misc. llomo. shine, now ornal tpplllflo

white patch on cheot, 60
lbs .. 6 years old, medium
hair, blue collar. Very aweet
&amp; genua.
Answers 10
Spankers.
Mate;
Aottweller/Chow mix, black
with brown RoHie markings
on lace, chest. paws. Chow
tail &amp; longue. 75 lbs, 2 112

rr

j~

·

i

~

II"

IIIIIWANIDI

-' ~

·------,.1
•

r. ___~iOAN'illvYiiillDii.-,.1

• Start Your Adl Wilt\ A ICtyword • Include Complttt
DucrlpUon • Jnr:lud• A 'rle• • Avoid Abbrev.lttlans
• Include Pftol'lt Number Ancl Addrtlt When Nttdt4

II':

RACINE -Waterrord jumped to an early lead and took
the Southern Tornadoes in two sets, 15-2, 15-10 Tuesday
night in Charles W. Hayman gymnasium in R.aeine.
Southern is now b-8 and 4-8 in the league.
Southern had defeated Waterford soundly earlier in the
season at Waterford. Wat~:foid w.u led by Jaconda Smith
with 12, and Bethany Huck with 8.
The Tornadoes led briefly in the second .game 2-0, but
Huck came back with four. points to give the Wildcats the
lead at 4-1, a lead they never relinquished.
Amy ·Lee led Southern with a 6-of-6 night, dll-ee aces,
and four points; Emily Hill had a 4-of-7 night and three
points; while Katie Sayre, Deana Pullins, and Rachel Chap- .
man each had two points.
Pullins was 35-of-37 passing~ 17-of-19 spiking;
Chapman was 25-of-29 Jl35$ing a ·
-of-17 spiking;.Lee
was 23-of-24 passing with a 3-of-3 n ght spiking; Sayre was
6-of-7 spiking with a block; and Hill was 13-of-15 passing
and 11-of-13 spiking. Brandi Lane, Cedi Davis,Jeri Hill and
Brook Kiser also contributed.
Waterford won the reserve game 5-15,15-9,and 15-10 in
three sets. Susan Brauer led Southern with ten points and
Kis~r had seven points.

~

or by dolls. Nice Chrootmat Phont(740)3"f9.2374
gilt. $100 (740)446.0196

"""' $287
ohop &amp; -

5coTT Wou:t

rNP CORRESPONDENT

jjrijior;;;;;~~F.~AIIM;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

=UTIFUL
-PART· Cabinet $60. 3 LaIIENT1 AT IIUOGET PR~ ditto .-.... $5.00 Nch. ~
Cll AT JACKSON Ell- (1:40)448·942tl
Wantod to buy: Uttcl Mobile

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

~~

1Y

,\.II\1'-IIUk

..

875-5234

1r

condition, """"" (7401992·
7888
~
;.;.:.·_ _ _ _ __

.

I \In -..1 I' 1"l II "

coa Requt..., , (740)4&lt;18· ~)6~l;HmiUige. or n~~~---

(304) 675-1333

~~

..

~~

.,...... stove, new

Meigs

·

Southem netters

sAt.

1\egister

1r

.·

Hardy Muma S3 00 tlch 4 John Deere 5500 traclor
3 Aooml Mel Bath. 46 Olive for 110. Open
8-Spm. &amp; wid't cab, heat, and air
Slrltt ~ Paid. Stove IVCinlnga. aa..tlunot a,_. aync:h-OCI 1r1111. 73 f'4&gt;,
and ~ No Pets. houat MI. Allo (304)6i5- 1100 hro. lltct ,_ 30+57115485 piul dlpotiL Rtl~n~n1
'
2812

YOUR AD NOW

~~

Brolhlro Fruit

21&gt;&lt;.. ground - · kilchon :_-.:.:..;c.::.=:._--- Ford 5,000 tractor. Lou
appillr1CII, "*lei totkl wood era· than 100 hour on engine,
In ownL Qapoait Requl'9d. dto. Ultlor .-m,or ba· Riot nice condiilon. $8,000,

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

r

,_rvi lili i i~AI Ul ; ; ;._.~I" Waterford nabs

tot wilh iMch, Richards

2· t BodoOCNII Apia. located Grut&gt;b'l PillnO- Tuning &amp;
10 PVH &amp; ~ Aaptlro. Probtomo? arM1. 1300)1175-2111
Tunod? Cal Tho Plano Or.
74Q.448.4525
Call (304)675-2144
(300)675-3853

\ '\\ 0\ '\(I \ II \ 1-.

iiiiiiiOo.l

a~M:Rtl-=~~~~·~="..~~c:

We Cove

In one week: With

t;'t

Ringo,

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

,Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

WILL TRAIN ~ ~ •

/'CALL NOW

t·888·174·JOBS

•

have since returning to the
league in 1999.
The Browns lost to the
Seattle Seahawks 9-6 in Week
1 on a last-second field goal,
but they've played much better the past two weeks in wins
over the Detroit Lions and
Jaguars.
Not only di~ the Browns
win every phase of the game
on Sunday, they had the
Jaguars rattled before kic~otr
The Browns concluded
their pregame' wart:nups like
always, punting the ball to
one end and having the
whole team run down to
cover it. They then gathered
in a circle and started to jump
up and down - right on top
ofJacksonville's logo.
The Jaguars didn't . like it
one bit and have complained
to the league office, accusing
the Browns of taunting.

...

�•

P8tt a e • The o.11y Sentlnet

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy,

Mldd~

·.

Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 7
• h

NBA· Crossword Puzzle

P/8
.......... Ohio 41771

• Grntl S.nd • ·
lOpooil • FUI Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Senlca

HowardL.

CIIIICIIE

Wrltesel

........
)....,....

' CONTUCTOIS, INC.
Rail, Ohio
45771
740 114112217

..,

740 IIIII 31148

Ill.

COIKIElf/II.OQIIIICK

......_ w... Stepo.
FIIIWOI'II,

I ,11-.,

Min.
RIP
I !IIJIPIIIII

Repll till •U, • Walks
......Drivel • !jtadl '

C-l'reo!ldlU•
Senin1 Oblo ..d W.V.

Hn( ky n

Hu 111J

~'\•1•

111

Medicare Supplemenl; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final E~pcnses: Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retiremenl,
Pension &amp; 401 K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
~·
• Nursing Home

ill

949-1405
591·5011
111

JONES'

Tree Service
• Top ; Removal • Trim
• ~tump winding

• Bucket Truck

11-~
High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage
33 795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232
3.[)

CONS1RUCTION
Free ut1m1tn,

Male Shut In
Home visit

Insured

HaJrcuts
AvaiLable

Spec\allze In new

by appointment

connrudlon,
remodeling, plumblo~o
eltdrlcal, home m•la·
tenanu, and repair
porchtS, &amp; deckJ.

.....

~n

ENTERPRISES
'

Contracting ·
Ezcavatbuf •
Dozer

ana

Septic System~
UtWtlee
NewHomee

••

...................
.• r. .• ,..
.u,..
V*&lt;::.W.: &amp;Nt-West

IOOO.St. Rl: 7 South

Coo/vtiM, OH 45723

Advertise
In this space
for$25 per
month .........

__

.__

: On New Tires

~- - - !!·Ri~J~1'! 1 • - -- - 1
1/4 mile down river from Pomeroy

I CAN'T TA\C:E

TN IS

FISH\N

• Nearly 2000 year1 experience.
• Workt on Sundays.
• Always Available.

24'120'

1·12 DOUBlE WAll
PlASTIC
RBSTCOME.

. FREE ESTIMATES
7~0·992·1671

JERRv ·s
USED
COMPUTERS

Meip Counly Fllrgrounds
IArrl¥111:
Sept.lll &amp; Oct. 20,2001
10:00 un. ·4:00p.m• .
Aprlll7,l00l
$20.00 will be cbaflled for
lale arrival, early renewal,
or anytime access Is wanted
than slated dates.
ftrst come ftnt serve.

For more Uiforoow~Wn, com• to oMrch•rth silt.
Sunday ll:JO. Sunday School;
10:30. Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp;
Eve.

MITH IIULL GOIPIL

FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT

441 Beech St.
Mlddleporl, OH

KENSINGToN
KEEPS THE

c::;::;
Tu:dey's
Mattress
Sales
"""'Slaw

97 Beech st.
IDiddleport, OH

Routt U4

RMine, OH 45711
Kenneth 'narlty

(740) 949-2657

_:t

Public Notice
FOR SALE
'
On
Saturday,
Octob., 13, 2001 at
10:00 a.m. 1he Home
Natlcmal Bank will
otter lor aale at
public auction on the
Bank perking lot the
following vehlciH:
1111 O~moblle

Vln
12BAL54NXM232330
118~ Dodge 4X4
Pickup Vln
11B7KF23WIXJIUI38
1
11185 Pontiac Qrond
Prix Vln
12G2QK37H8F221872

BLOCKS OUT 98.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
. FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Public Notice

5

!jew Homea • Vinyl
Sldlag • New GllflltS
• Replocomeat
Window• • Room
Addition• • Roonoa
· COMMIICW and RlliDINTIAl
FREE ESTIMATES

nat

\t--~10-V~$."

THF. RORN T.OSF.R
t fo:\U5T Sf&lt;..'&lt;

I'/o\ ...., ...Er'&lt; Y~ ti'{'ll"-i!OIIl milZU-.T !&gt;'"'
E.

fli\~0\IU. ..

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

10 ~ OU£C.Thel£

Roofing • GuttBrs • Siding
Decks • Concrete • ~lactr!cal

814~

Roelnt,OIIIo

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

Plumbing • Paint • Floorlrta
Pressure

'
I
I
I

PEANUTS

FLEA.
MARkET

c....

...,._... Lalla

at. at.114
•twt ......
II

Lawn Fumllltfl,
Boat Tflllara,
U11111r Tral .... ,
CarHo...,.,
Anything Metal

•

, SO. MONSIEUR .. l AM TOLD
: TJ..IAT 'I'OU ARE THE
•: FAMOUS Fl.'I'IN6 ACE ..,

•• r-------~•r--~--~---1

'&lt;OU ARE 50 FAMOUS TllAT
Ti-lE RED BARON SA'fS J.lE
. MUST DESTRO't' '(00! ·

I VE NEVER HEARD
OF ME ..

•

•
•''
I

,r
•

..._.._t.

Ph. 94t-1'7J4

...........

• •=;!

ea.,.a... Willi

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complele Line ol Sulllvon'a Oroomln~ Suppllot
Sullw Cooled Uru, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
10'!1 off au Prlllort H0110 and LivHiock Equip.
10.iD-10 All PurpoM FtrUIIzor ~.501501
t,OOO Boler lWine $1!1.501Bale
18,000 Baler lWino $21.501Bolo ,

Shade Rlvu lg SIIVIi:e, Inc
35537 Sl. R1 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
'

TRI-COUOTV
TRHOSPORT

GRAVEL

''

SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

I

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

METAL CULVERT

paper. P.O. llox 167, Wick-

GEOTEXTILE

liffe. OH 44092-0167. Be

REBAR &amp; REWIRE

sure to slate your Zodiac

NO JOB TOO LAROE OR SMALL

Aomndollng

Advertise
In this space
for $25 per
month

siB~',

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -· Keep ~ potential finan-

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

• Room Addition• &amp;

Oct. 5, 200 1

Education might be your
bcsl tool in the year ahead for
.advancin'g your personal ainu
and Jmbitiom. Empowering
younelf with che late~t i11put
and data gives you the edge
Over competitors.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Rarher than lt~aving anything up to chance today on a
personal matter, check. ou t
sources who 1night help you
clear up a questionable llire.a.
Get a ju111p on life by understanding the influences that'll
govern you in the year ahead.
Send for your Anro-Graph
predictions by mailing S2 to
Astro-Graph. c/o this news-

CONSTRUCTIQN
· PROJECT?

e

SeniiiR DIKOUnts
OluiHplelaad
01-nls

992·6215

Frid:~y,

.

Umestonel

Pom•ov, Ohio
I

I

II

....

48~

· DOWN

8lylnt

41 Door part

511-in

51 Slllllt •

52V-for
53 D'p'arw

ntlgtlbor

f11 II

unno11

57 Spanlah

40 DNIICMcl

heroEI-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Cllmpoa

onct..-i
Eocll-ln tho....,.., ....... !Or---·
Tadly'l due: J squats G

c Ill 'Ddt Qphtretjpl [
pooplt. pall

'A'R

BPS
BPS

AI

...,. . . a..llld from qoqoiGtllltloil,.. by~

TNUVQ

TNUDII.

VQUAIGDL
TSIHSIII

RYVA8AOI'
A'R

DAHS

0

.INDWSU.

OROGSYU.'-

0 I

(IIDOUAIS·

-/£

•

WOIO

&amp;AMI

I

1

1 1

~ S I F T 0 ~~

1 '/ So~,
-

L· A W H 0 L

16
.

.

.

_

People who think that all of our
problems can be solved by solar
energy, may have stay~ out in
/the sun- -- • -- -.
Como/•'• lhe chuckle quotod
_
by fil Jng in the miuing words
you develop f,om stop No. 3 below.

1]~~~~1fffimq==lFT':"'
:1
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Heifer- Munch • Dwarf· Deadly· DANDRUFF
I think my friend is not too smart. She came over to
showoff her new wig and proudly told me it was guaranteed against DANDRUFF!

Pump• : Fur·na,cee
Air Conditioning : Refrigeration ·
$49 Service gas, fual oil, and
heat pumps for winter

WE CAN HELP

~~~~==~

Free Esllmales

47

Wanlor
Pltn.:att

ton.
The solution .is at
hand: Win trick one
with dummy's heart ,...
ace. Do not duck. If
·East keeps the queen,
they cannot untangle _
the blocked suit. And
if East jettisons the

· queen, your 10-nine-·
.__ _. six become a second
stopper. ·
Lead spades twice
toward the dummy
and you collect an
overtrick:

full

WHY DRJVE ANYWHERE ELSEr ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill

45~

38~-

the five.
So, East must · ,.L.
have
honor-double-

1

74o-&amp;67.0600

• Vinyl Siding • Polnttng

431Ma

I
I
==·;;::;·::;~·;;::~·~·
I .14 1
!..=·=~·:::;:·:::;·:::::...,
I I I' I e

~

Gets·• ·
..................

1.t

• Patio and Porch Docka

31 Olda.

I

f

"We'll fix it or elsel'

• NewGar~gu
• Electrlcll &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutttrli

31 Agolntl

:MCal.
.u 'lfalmlllly 14 ~
Z7 "Onoe-a

because declarer could
'::~::~'
~
'E.~S
see two of the three _......;.:..:;......:..;;;.......;; Ulo.~ ~r ClAY 1. POllAN
lower hearts.) Then
Rearrange ·letters of the
the opponents might
four Krambled words b.T
score one spade and low 10 fonn tour ~mplo wordo.
four hearts. Still, what
K u 0 N0 H
would W ~st' s five 1-...,1,......,...-.....,.......,..-.--1
hearts be? Not king1• 1_ 1• 1• 1. .
queen-jack-fifth, be- ~:;~::;:;::;!:~.....J
cause then he would
GN I AG
have led the king, not 1-, ..,,.,3,.......,,-.,.-,.-1

-_.. -

"/11/JlU., Yot1 10 R«owr Yow /nHIIIrllfll"

Custom Computeos
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

sa

_....
aw-

O

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

fii)IW

Free Estimates

31 Huinaruo

- =
-- '
M=ct
22o-..

:aThol

$@ \tg\1

~

• Now Hornarf
• Siding
• Roofing
• Remocfellng .
• Garageo
• Addlliono
• Docko
• Home Repairs

31 , . .......

33 "C11Mic'

· II pooch
k8a ol._

no danger. But what
• OAVQ)
TN N 11 L
0 D P.IJ.~
.,...... 1
if th"Y ~were ..0-2?·' (If • ' • "
'
an
, PREVIOUS SOLUnON: 'There are two Wlyl Of spreading
W t• I d w
es s ea
as
IIQht: lo bel The candle Of the mirror lhal ronecto K.• - Etllll\
honest fourth-highest,
Wharton
·
they couldn't be 6-1,
.

. 740-992-7599

NOnCE: Ia haNby
1114
Harley given
that on
Davideon
Vln
·saturday, October 8,
11HD1CAP18AY20117 2001 , at 10:oo·a.m., a
2
public .. aala will be
The Ierma of the hold ot 211 Woat
..........h.
Second
Street,
The Homo National Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Bank reaervea the Farmera'a Bank and
right to fljoct any or ~Jovlnga
Company, to
ali bldo or to remove aall tor caah the
any unh from the nla following coliatoNI:
at any time.
1187 PORSCHE '
Arrangemanta may .~WPOM01;43HN45
be made to lnapec1
any of the above
1188 PORSCHE
named vehlclea prior 144,WPOAA211UKN15
to tho ule by calling 08
740-MII-2210.
'
PORSCHE
844,WPOAAOIISOGN15
warflnty glvwn.
(10) 2, 4, I, 11, 2001
7041
WITH
For
turthar TRAILER
4tc·
ROOM . ~OR _,
THE
1187 Information,
or for an
PORSCHE 144 IS oppoln1mont
to · ANIMALS
The Farmers Bank
RED WITH BLACK lnapact collolerol,
· Public Notice
Savlnga
LEATHER INTERIOR, prior to aalo del, and
NOTICE: Ia hereby 5 SPEED, PB, PS, contact
Company, Pomeroy,
Shollo
given that on CRUISE. THE 2' 1189 Buchonan 11 182·
Ohio, reaerves the
S.turct.y, Oclober 8, PORSCHE'S 144 ARE 2138.
'
right lo bid at thlo
2001 , at 10:00 a.m .• a BEING $OLD FOR
and to withdraw
public aelo will be PARTS ONLY. WE (10) 3, 4, 5, 2001 J , heale,
e above collateral
held ot 211 Weat WILL ALSO BE 3tc
prlol to sale. Further,
Second Street, SELLING
,
The
Formers Bank
Pomerov, Ohio, The MISCELLANEOUS
·
and
Sovlnqo
F•rmera'a Bank and PARTS . FOR THE
·
Company
raaervao
S.vinge Company, to PORSCHE.
Pu bll c Notice·
lha right to reject any
aall for c11h the
The Farmore Bank
or all bldo submiHed.
following collateral:
ond
ilavlnga
. NOnCE: Ia ha11by
The
above
•1187 CHRYSLER Company, Pomeroy, given that on
doocrlbod
collateral
. FIFTH
AVENUE Ohio, reaervea the S.turdoy, October 8, will be oold "aa II·
1C3BF88PHX743987
right to bid at thla 2001 , 11110:00 a.m., • where Ia", with no .
THIS VEHICLE IS Hlo, and to withdraw public oola will be expr8ta0d or Implied
Nor· RUNNING AT the above collateroi held a1 ~11 Wool warranty given.
THISnME.
prior lo ule. Furth.,, Seaond
Street,
For
lurlher
Tho Formera Bank The Farmere Bonk Pomeroy, Ohio, The Information,
or for an
and
Sovlnga and
Savlngo Fermer•'• Bank end appointment to
Compilny, Pomeroy, Comp1ny reaervea Sevlnge Compony, to
Inspect cOllateral,
Ohla, . r•eervea tha the rlghl to Nject any aoll lor coeh tho prior
to aale date
right to bid at thlo or oil blda aubmllted. following collateral:
conloct
Sheila
Hie, and to wl1hdrow
Tho
abova
1111
MORITZ Buchanan at 192·
lhe above collateral daacrlbed coliolerel INTERNATIONAL
2138.
prior to aole. Furlhar, will be oold "ao la- LIVESTOCK TRAILER
Tho Farmer• Bonk whero lo", 'with no 4WXSS1 824X1003533 (1 0) 3, 4, 5, 2001
and
Savlnga •~proaald or Implied THIS IS A NICE 3tc
'

, , ,

l'\11*' ·•

--___..-,.W•I'II..MI

.

BUILDERS INC.

Eastern High School
Class of 1976 is planning a
25th reunion Saturday,
October 6, 2001, 6:30p.m.,
at the home af Edna ·
(Boggs-) Weber in Rutland.
For details.call Pam
(Kautz) Massie 740-3792785, Debbie (Windon) ·
Chevalier 740-985-3868 or
Edna Weber 740-742·2979.
We could not reach ·
everyone so call us or
another classmate and
please make plans to "nrnA I

~f~El&gt;ITY.

,,

eo "Gorftttcc"

37--

20 ·
-·
llalllng

South could see
seven top tricks: one
heart, two diamonds
and four clubs. Two
more tricks were
clearly avaHable from
the spades. Y ct when
in with the spade ace,
the opponents might
take an embarrassing
number of heart
tricks. However, for ·
the contract to fail,
the defenders would
have to cash four
hearts. So, if hearts
were 4-3, therr was

(740) 992-3194
992·6635
BISSELL

Company reaervea
the right to N(oct any
or all bide aubmitted.
The
above
d11crlbed collateral
will be aold "11 Ia·
where Ia", with no
expNaud or Implied
warflnty given.
For
further
lnlormltlon, or for an
oppolnlment to
lnapact collateral,
prior to aala date
contact
Sheila
Buchanan ai tl2·
2138.
(1013, 4, 5' 2001
3tc _ _ _ __
..;.;;;.._

..

32:.,

-

g111

11 -

ltn'

31 IMgo

51Lgl.
Sllllx

gune. "

(10'1110' &amp;101121')

"

NOT

SOMfTIMf$ ·IT
fLIMINATt5

• ••

OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN

«1530011180

MANLEYS
SELF STORACE

r'

(OV~Sf eNVI~ONMfNT IS
MO~f IMPO~T ANT···

HE~fPITY 0~

SUMME111111E HEAT

aoltware.

Llcen

WtiY, OF

itiVI~ONMfNT1

MIRROR TECHNOLOGY

$327.00 PER JOINT

Free eatlm•t••
on repalraa,
in-home aarvlce
available 24 houro,
UHd ayetema 318
and up, uaed

·

• WINDOWS HEAT

R~GIWLY

992-9158

T0Nt6t4T'S
l&gt;~SATE

hardware and

Vouchers acX"PI•od
Meigs Counly.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason
Counly
Bob Bal~
1-740·992·6142

I

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTROOJON
• Compl.te
Remodeling
Stop &amp; C9mpare

WINTER STORAGE

With This Ad :

1

• Garages

Mack'• Pocket

I

::z: . .

54Ac1rMO

17 "
- ·· •

When· you are the
declarer in a notrump contract, you
always start by counting your top tricks .
Of course you do!
But do you also uke a
canvass of the number
of tricks the opponents are threatening
to collect? Sometimes
that is beneficial.
In this deal, how
many top trick! do
you have? Which
tricks arc the opponents hoping .to take
to defeat you? How
do you stop them?
Assume West's heart
five is his fourthhighest.
North was right not
to show his dub support. With a balanced
hand, go for the ninetrick, not 11-trick,

10% Discount :

-~
sa
~

15 .
. .-. . S$Uire-.IIKGr8w
11 "lllM Allllly
lrlm

.......

... a: ••

CARE DOCTORS
·------------L--

Spacllllzlngin
roollng, plumbing,
drywall,
remoctallng,
oddltlone I cleckl
Ffllelllmates
10 yfl. exparlence
In the bualneaa
Refer1ncea
available. Owner:
Terry Llmm
.__~74:~~;~
739

•NewHam•

IKnl•reo 6 COUoocttbl~
217E. 2nd. Pomeroy
992-11908

Pllone 992-7445
' Cel
591·9254

All Makes Tractor It
Equipment Parts
Factory Autboriucl
Case·IH Parts
Dealers.

992-7943 740117. . .

(740) 896-0757

Owner
Charles R. Dill

IIHYIII
PAIIft '

•
GeJ¥Oral

Bacth~

LJMM'S
CONSOUCT!ON

. . ~)

14-

o,.lllt iMd.! • s

HOME CREEK

·

(hiflple

11=
1s ~··

• Q ••
9 II t I I
t A II. •

,_

" .._

··=·~··

Itt f t
Q'
• q II I J
••• J

urr

...

....

•
•

eff Warner Ins.
992-5479

- av-c.. ,.

S...,.ol

• J J ..
• AJlt5

f,liddh•fFH I (Jhlo -l 1J /UU

FrH Elf/1111111

1

......
,,
• ••

Bo• 1Hl•

Roofing • Home
MllnttnlnceGuttera- Down
Spout

181-&amp;329

' WVI0317U

. ....
_

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO•

41 wt.a ·
th to.111

ACROSS

cial inv.:stment you might be
consi~eri ng under wraps today. Discuuing it with someone who doem't have all [he
facts cou ld midcad your
thinking a~ouc it.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 231

Dec. 2t) --Have fun and enjoy younelf toti;ay. but know
what, when. and wit h whom

to do so. Any wrong choices .
could throw :1. monkey
wrench into what should have
been a plcuomt event
CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22Jan . 19) -- So long as yoi:1
~on't respond neg;tively to an
Unexpected episode, you
should have the ed~c over
'ompetitiorl today. St.1y posi-

problem 5olver a~ well. The
· results will reflect this. However, do not ta-k1:! on more
chan you can comfortably
manage.

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
-- There might be a very rlun
· Une today between being
constructively ~ucrtive or
merely reckless. Tot' the mark '
"• by not doing anythmg on the
spur-of-the·momcnt.
~

tive.

IIQUIIRIUS Qan. 20-Feb.
Although ybu may be

19) ••

CANCER Oune 21-July

e:.ger to advise friends today,
they might nor be too rueptivc to any unsolicited input
Your good laJpeltious will be ·
ac:eepted only if invited.

22} ·- So long as you can adher~ to ~ s~m1ble agenda and
pace yourself wisely, you
should be abl~ to- accomplish
your goah ~a1ily today. When
attempting to ru$11 a job,
howrvcr, mistakes can occur.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Provided you don't plus

the leak• up with one hand
while pullinK the corks out
With the other, conditions in
1enrral today are financially
favorable for you.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Should a social •ituation hit a
snag today from an unex..
pected dim•ption, you're the
one who will know how co

ARiES (March 21-April1 9)

· f.esOivc thinss to cv.:ryone's

-- A serious. unupec:ted
situation can be handled today
by treating it optimistically
without disregarding the gravity of the development .

satisfaction.

·

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-· Financial aspects arc particularl'y good for you today
and you might be the rc.uon
why. Your handlin~ of 'a
heavy gbh~t10n could be ingeni&lt;ms ... '

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- You'rv not only an effective work1:!r today. but a

\

,

�•
•

•

•

•
••
••

•
'Tlwr8dlly, Oct. ... 2001 •

•

Sentinel

LINCOLN
AMII I CAfll t.UXUitY

•

Year

Cltolee•••

FOrd

Lilleola

YOU ARE INVITED AS OUR SPECIAL GUEST TO A
FREE INFORMATION WORKSHOP
2001 UPDATE OF INCOME TAXES. PROBATE, AND
FEDERAL AND STATE GUIDELINES TO HELP
PROTECT YOU FROM NURSING HOME EXPENSE
Dear Special Guest:
This workshop is designed to inform you about Senior Financial Survival in the 2000's.
There are Federal Laws that will enable you to avoid paying thousands of dollars out of
your pocket for taxes, probate, and nursing home costs. The government will not notify
you of your eligibility. You must find out for yourself. Please join us to receive this
important information:

·ON SELECT
MODELS
".A.C..
2-whee1•2411 4-wheel ,

49u:

Check and adjull camber and1oe. AddlllonaJ pa1t1 and

on

~r

,
1

TIRES

We will meet or beot D!IY competitor's
advertised price on th8 same Hre.

w. IeatoN aiiiT\IP' bNnda: Goodyear, fl,..,.., o.n.r.l,
- MlcM!In, Bt.dgnttw~e, Contioenlal, UNIROYAl, BF Goodrich .
Mounting and balancing rrll)' blo ....

Motorcrart•
WIPER BLADES
Stortipg
at

PORD MOTOR CO.

•4400

PI.OORMAT8
starting
at · •

WHEN:
TIME:
WHERE:

$

·FORD FACTORY
BUG SHII!LD
starting
Of

sa1so

Wednesday, October 10, 2001
10:00 AM to 12:00 Noon
Middleport Church of Christ- Life Center ·
437 Main Street
Middleport, OH 45760

SPECIAL GUEST SPEAKER: DON H CHAPIN, ELDER LAW ATTORNEY

Workshop Topics Include:

Installed

•

SPLASH GUARDS

~5Q40 .

BED RAILS

,.

How to protect your assets from Catastrophic Illness And Nursing Home cost without purchasing
Nursing Home Insurance.
• · Estate Recovery Law- One of the newest attacks· on Senior Assets. ·
• How to lower your income taxes and avoid Capital Gains Tax.
• How to avoid Probate.
• Pros and Cons ofthe Revocable Living Trust.
•
• Kennedy - Kassebaum - 1997 Federal ~overnments newest attack on Senior Assets.
• How to avoid "Tax Traps" when transferring assets to children.
• How to increase your spendable income.

PLEASE CALL FOR RES!3RVA TIONS SEATING IS LIMTED.
No Admission Charge. lnv.ite a Friend.
446-8235 or 1-800-447-8235

The Lynch Agency'
3 2 2 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>durham</name>
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    <tag tagId="1396">
      <name>townsend</name>
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