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FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS! .

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a1

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Bob Evans .Farm Festival opens today
FROM STAFF REPORTS

10 GRANDE It's
time to come "dOwn on
the farm" again as the
31st Bob Evans Farm
Festival opens its threeday stand today with a traditional mixture of crafts, activities, food and entertainment.
One of the area's largest tourist attractions, the festival exposes thousands of
visitors each year to how life was on a
working farm in pioneer days, and celebrates home-based crafts and goods with
a number of local and regional
exhibitors and demonstrators.

l'our
C"olee•••
Ford

APR

interest

60
Months
on •ost
For

The festival opens at 9 a.m.
and doses at 5 p.m. on the
!ann site off Oluo 588 at
Rio Grande. For details can
1-aoo-994-FARM (3276); or
visit IN'oW&lt;.bobevans.com.

interest

event a regular stop.
"It's a unique setting that offers guests
the opportunity to sample pioneer life as
it was decades ago, and at the same time
to join a farm harvest celebration of
today;' said Farm Manager Ray McKinmss.
Admission is $3 per person and parking is free .
The festival features work by more
than 150 traditional craftsmen, many
made with tools and techniques nearly
forgotten today. Demonstrations are set
m such crafts as spinning, weaving,

·US. getting itifo
from opposition
forces on ground

Pluse see Festlvel, A3

BY MAn KELLEY

RoAD

APR

Lincola

..,_

I yea'•

The festival
opens each day
at 9 a.m. and
doses at 5 p.m.
on the farm
site off Ohio
588 at Rio
Grande. Since
early this week,
fields across the
highway from
the festival site
have
hosted
campers and
RV
owners
who make the

Rumsfeld:
Air defense
still threat ,
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ORK

Flying feelS
Here are some I'8IUitl of an
Associated Presa poll of 1,008
randomly salactad adults lbout
flying on airplanes. The poll-

conductad Ocl. 5-10 and hn a
margin of error of plua or mlnua
3 pen:antage points.

WASHINGTON -Amer- Everybody ._ ,_.. llbout
ican bombers are increasingly dlthlnmt lhlng.. How do you
setting their sights on Taliban fNIIIboutllylng In M ..........?
troops in Afghanistan, part of Would you till IIIII whMhlr you
an effon to demolish the .,. llfrald of It, wtNIIher It
regime harboring terror sus- bolt•a you lllghlly ot Wwllhil...,lhlll'tl
you'no not .t •llllfrlld of It?
pect Osama bin Laden and his
ai-Qaida network .
Airstrikes early in the campaign have hit anti-aircraft
batteries, command centers,
airfields and other fixed targets. Now the strikes are moving toward more mobile targets, such as Taliban troops or
convoys, military otftcials say.
Not afraid at all
Men
Bombing Taliban troops is
Women
meant not only to kill the
Tolal
militia's fighters but also to
spread fear, confusion and Don1 knowlrefueed
desertion in the Taliban's ~ 3%
Min
ranks. Military planners hope1%
Women
that will weaken the Taliban ' _ 2%
. TCial .
enough for it tll . either c.ol- .
,---·· - · · · - - · · - lapse on its'tlwnot !all to tlie ·-·Ona·
w··c··-,::._--·~--·to::::_··
.
b
l
fi
.
'd
0 u•I'UponHI
u•
vanous re e orces ms1 e tllrrortlt lllllocb of 11ap1. 11 hal
Afghanistan.
liMn the move to ~)tao. armed
Without shelter from the m~tehala aboard CDRIIMn:..l
Tali ban, military officials say, alrplllna flights. Do you trior
bin Laden and· his al-Qaida or oppoH having ennec1
network will be much less of a manhala aboard COIIIIIMI'CIIII
threat and much easier to airplane flights?
track down.
In favor
That process of disruption is
already starting, officials said ,;O;ppo~se:::d::__ _ _ _ _..,
Thursday.
.l~-'7'-''!.,._,_ _ _ _ _ _.J
"We've got them on the Don't knowlrefueed
run," President Bush said of •1::.3%!!__ _ _ _ _ _--l
al-Qaida members during a ..............................................................
prime-time news conference.
. Do you favor or oppose giving
Although U.S. planes have the military the 1uthorjty to
begun daylight bombing runs •hoot down pa-nger plan••
over the Afghan capital, Kabul, thllt appe•r to have been
and the Tali ban home base of hljacl&lt;ad for a 18rrortlt purpou?
Kandahar, the airstrikes stili . In favor
60'·, have not eliminated all threats
to American planes, Defense
Secretary Donald H . Rums·
feld said.
" We have to acknowledge ILW
the reality that there is still an
air defense threat to the United States," Rumsfeld told
reporters.
Defense officials also have cials have said the current
not said whether the bombing fight was against terrorists, not
would let up today, the Mus- Islam.
lim day of prayer. Bush,
Rumsfeld and other top offiPIN• - Attedui, A3

200l•otllels~

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iM

0
.0

!IOAIHII:PAIRS- Traffic floWs alongside a section of West Main 'OOntlnue efforts to repair a slippage problem caused by a

APR
36months

BY TONY M. LEACH

SELECT
USED CARS TO
QUALiflED'
APPUCANTS .
J
'

'!'

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

\

2-wheel

$2495

4-Wheel

your IIIIIO&amp;biNnt to
just•nybady.••
"--y upon tt1e poaplo
tftllt"-!fOU'

veblcle-.t.
!FACTORY TRAINI!D
ftCHNICIANS

1

or loss • Olesel

:

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I

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1

of the ' road and immediately
decided that it 1 should be
repaired before ¢e onset of
winter," said Blaettnar.
Plans call for specific portions of the road to be
removed, the s,o,rm sewer
blacktop
repaired and ne
poured.
Blaettnar ad de 'that while
construction crews are on
site, a new line to channel
excess water from 'it\' adjacent
hill will also be instilled.

"The project is slated to be
finished by Nov. 23 ," said
·B laettnar.
"However, progress is moving along rapidly and I would
anticipate that the repair .
work will end long before the
.scheduled date of completion."
Blaettnar added that the .
project, which costs around
$90,000, will be funded by a
$70,000 grant and a $20,000
local match .

1

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$44

formed on a section ofWest
Main Street that has undergone a significant amount of
slippage following the collapse of a storm sewer located
underneath the road.
"The collapsing of the
storm sewer has caused the
soil underneath the street to
wash away and settle, which,
in turn, has caused the road to
slip toward the river," he said.
"We· received several complaints about the unevenness

W.lu.ttn all mator brendl: Qoodvu.r, AI'Hione, GMfH'&amp;I,
Michelin, BridgutoM, ~. lJNIROYAL, 8F Goodrlctl.
Mounting •nd bt."'nclng may be Pita.

Motorcratt•
•
quarts~~!!ft~~~.~
WSt.,t. ER BLADES
Or Jng
lii:·L~u~oo~·~C~h~;k~a~nd;ll~ll~~~llu;ld~s~·A:II:In~29:m:l:nu:m:•_.'~------~t--------FORD MOTOR CO.
SPLASH GUARDS
FLOORMATS
I
I
Sto~ing
00
IICJJORCRAFT

• Servlcelncjf. up lo 5
Molorcraft oil filter • Perlorm Multi-Point Vohlclolnopectlon

Why trust

POMEROY - Motorists
should expect slow-moving
tratftc
near
the
Pomeroy/Middleport corporation line now that work has
gotten under way to repair a
portion of roadway that has
been slipping toward the
Ohio River.
.
• Pomeroy Mayor John
Blaettnar said Thursday repair
work is currendy being per-

We w111 mae~ or beat any tompalitor's
advertised price on the some tire.

be

$1 Q95

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TIRES

$4995:

Check and adjust camber and toe. Ad&lt;lltlonil parts Bn&lt;l
labor

,,

_

Pomeroy launches Main St project

'

----- ---- --

co~

Street near the Pomeroy/Middleport corporation line as workers lapsed storm sewer underneath the road. (Tony M. Leach photo) ·

-sso4o

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD
·Starting
Ot ·

$8150

Installed

BED RAILS

Sentinel
] s.ctlont - 11 ......

calendar
Classjfieds
Comics
Editorials

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

Good ~TART report addresses local assets

Hlp: 701
Low: 101

TOday's

Details, A6

BY BRIAN J.

Lotteries

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

AS
OHIO
84-6 PldlJ: 0-4-5; Pldl4: 7-5·2~

87

Bltdlll'l 5: 4-15-17-19-26

A4 W.VA.
A3 Dally 3: 2-5·2 Dllily 4: 3-5-5-2

81-3. 8

A6

REEO

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishins Co.

MIDDLEPORT - "There seems to
be a pervasive attitude of singularity
within Middleport- that the community is on its own and alone."
That's one observation included in a
community report issued by the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development, in conj un ction with Middleport's
Good START program.

"With so me thought, residents could
see that this is not necessarily tru e;' said
Melody Sands, who helped Middleport
develop its Good START plan of action.
Long- and short-term objectives are
outlined in the report, developed using
results of a community-wide survey of
residents and business owners, and work
by committees that met earlier this year.
The Good START (Small Town
Assessment and Readiness Techniques)

program began in Middleport late last
year with a community survey, which
asked residents to rate village services, ·
businesses, and other aspects of the community.
Corpmittee members reviewed preliminary results of that survey and identified
goals for the community.
Identified as sh9rt-term priorities were:

Pleese see START, A3

Oclober is

Physical Therapy Month
nlhe Science of Heallng•••the
Art of Caring"
I

140-446-9800 •

HOURS:

I

Mon - Fr19·7:

sat.9-5
Prices

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

.DYAIITAII

• •

•

For more information on the physical therapy services Holzer Medical
Center provides, please call (740) 446·5121 in Gallic County, or
(740) 992·2104 in Meigs' County.

•

'

'

...

www.holzer.org
\•

�•

•

j

Frtct.y, Oct. 12, 2001

America at War

The Daily Sentinel

Memorial services, a aoss-cou
mn mark a month since the
BY JEIIRY ScHwARTZ
AP NATIONAl. WRITER

REMEMBERING - New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani is
seen at the World Trade Center disaster site after a short inter·
faith memorial service at the disaster area in New York. One
month after two hijacked airliners toppled the World Trade Center, hundreds at the site stopped for a moment of silence at
8:48am to remember the missing and dead. (AP)

The Rev. Michael Moynahan held up an envelope.
He had been asked again
and again: Where was God
when those planes struck the
World Trade Center? Where
was God when 11 members
of his parish, St. Michael the
Archangel Roman Catholic
Church of Hartford, Conn.,
were murdered?
So at a service marking the
month that had passed since
terrorists left their indelible
mark, Moynahan tried to
explain: God was in the firefighters, police and ordinary
people who reached out to
save others, at the expense of
their own lives.
And at last the priest held
up the envelope that contained $22.75 money
raised by 8-year-old John
Paul Macurdy at a lemonade
stand, money that would help
families of the victims of the
Sept. 11 attacks.
"God is right in this envelope," Moynahan said.
A month is too soon to
make sense out of something
so senseless, but Americans
tried to do that Thursday.
There were countless memorial services; there were fundraisers for the families; there
were informal gatherings of
people who found themselves wanting to do 'some-

thing, anything, to mark the
day.
Ed Figura was among the
dozens who made their way
to a field near Shanksville,
Pa., where United Flight 93
plunged to the ground,
killing all 44 on board. There
is reason to b~lieve the passengers fought the hijackers
and brought the plane down
before it could strike its brget.
"Just the thought of people
on an airplane. saying, 'Hey,
we're not going to let these ·
guys get away with this' just
makes you want to live your
life better than you had
been," said Figura, a 55-yearold salesman.
At the World Trade Center,
there was a moment of
silence at 8:48 a.m., the time
the first plane hit there on
Sept. 11. Workers at the ruins
paused from the cleanup
duties, took off their helmets
and joined .arm in arm.
"Sometimes it feels like
yesterday," Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani said. "Sometimes it
feels like a year ago, or
more."
At the Pentagon, there was
a red rose on the seat of each
relative of each victim - the
125 people in the building
and the 60 passengers and
crew whose plane was bken
over and crashed by hijackers.

FBI issues waming that attacks could co~e
1

WASHINGTON (AP) - A new FBI
warning about the possibility of more terrorist attacks doesn't mince words: Every
American at home and abroad needs to
be on alert for the next sevetal days.
The FBI issued its most stark and specific warning Thursday based on intelligence suggesting additional terrorism
could be imminent, but said it had no
specific information about where or
when.
The government also a~ knowledged it
didn't know how six of the 19 suspected
terrorists in the Sept. It hijackings made
it onto U.S. soil.
"Certain information, while not specific as to target, gives the government the

reason to believe that there may be addi- had received an increasing amount of
·tiona! terrorist attacks within the United intelligence . in the past two d:tyJ about
States and against U.S. interests overseas terroFists plotting to wreak more havoc
over the next several days," tbe FBI said. , through this weekend.
. l/,
"The FBI has again alerted alllpcallaw
The possible threats ranged from diploenforcement to be on the highest alert, matic sites overseas to · possible· truck
and we call on all people to immediately bombs in the Ul)ited Sates, the official
notify the FBI and local law enforcement said.
of any unusual or suspicious activity," an
Police on 'l'bunday ·sharply restricted
FBI statement said.
truck traffic in a 40-block zone around
President , Bush said the warning was the U.S. Capitol.
precipibted by a "general threat" the govIn Houston, authorities investigated the
ernment received. "I hope it's the last, but apparent theft of 700 pounds of explogiven the attitude of the evildoen it may sives from a storage site. Federal agents
not be:· he said.
· said it was too eady to teD if the theft
A U.S. intelligence official, speaking on from AirJac Drilling Inc. was terroristcondition of anonymity, said authorities related.

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KABUL, Mghanisan (AP)
- The Taliban claimed Friday
at least 200 people had been
killed two days earlier in an
airstrike on a remote village
east of Kabul. It was their
largest casualty claim to date,
and could not immediately be
independently verified.
"We're still digging bodies
out of the rubble;' said Zadra
Azam, the deputy governor of
Taliban-controlled
eastern
Nangarhar province. He said
viUagers from nearby ·· had
rushed to help with the rescue
and recovery effort.
1 The village, called Karam, is
very close to the town of
Darunta, about 80 miles east of
Kabul, in an area where Osama
bin '-"den is believed to train
fighters for his Al-Qaida network.
In addition, the Taliban's official news agency said at least I 0
people were killed and several
homes were destroyed in
Argandab, north of the Taliban
stronghold of Kandahar. Bombs
also destroyed homes in Karaga,
. north of Kabul, the news
agency said.
The United States has said
repeatedly that the raids are not
~1rge tin g civilians. There was no
inunediate Pentagon comment
on the latest Taliban claim, but
mih~1ry officials '.noted they do
not intend to corrunent on

every such report.
Panicky Afghan civilians
arriving at the Pakistani border
reported fleeing airstrikes that
• hit close to populated areas.

"I have never seen such a

sight. Bombs were dropping in
and around the village, and
there was fire and ·smoke evetywhere:• said Agha Jan Agha, a
farmer fiom Kalamtar, near the
Taliban stronghold of Kandahar. "I grabbed my family and
some clothes - we must have
walked about 10 kilometers
(six miles) in the night before
we found a car that would
bring us to the border."

Anthrax is dangerous
but difficult to
use as a weapon
WASHINGTON (AP) Eitzen then refused to say
Anthrax generally is faal if which
countries
are
inhaled and not treated thought to have experipromptly, but it isn't partie- mented with bioterrorisin
ularly easy to use effectively weapons.
as a weapon, the comrnanBut Rep. Chris Shays, Rder of the Army's lead bio- Conn., pointed out that the .
logical defense lab told Defense Department openly lists them on its Web site:
Congress on Thursday.
Although anthrax spores Bulgaria, China, Cuba,
can be sprayed from crop- Egypt, Iran, Iraq, Israel ,
dusters, "It's not as simple as Laos, Libya, North Korea,
it's made out to be in the Russia, South Africa, Syria,
newspapers," Col. Edward Taiwan and Vietnam.
Eitzen testified before the
It was not the only time
House Intelligence terror- the question of inadvertentism and homeland security ly helping the enemy aro1e
subcommittee.
during the hearing.
"The old-timers from the
Reps. Ray LaHood, R old offensive program back Ill., and Gary Condit, Dbefore 1970 tell us that · Calif., asked other witnesses
these particles tend [o stick whether former uniformed
together," Eitzen said. "So military leaders and governthere are certain additives ment security experts were
that are required ... to make saying too much on netthe particles not dump. If work TV about the war on
they clump, they'll just fall terror.
"I've had about enough
to the ground, and they
won't provide a good of it," said Richard Allen, a
aerosol."
former national security
Although Eitzen, who adviser now on the Defense
heads the Army's Medical Policy Board, which advises
Research Institute of Infec- the secretary of def~nse. '"!
tious Diseases at Fort Det- do agree that they enlighten
rick, Md., was testifying at the public," he said, but
an open hearing, he said: "It there seems to be :·excess
really bothers me some- revelations of what we ha*
times when things like this in place and how a piece of
are talked about in the open equipment works."·II would
press, because it's almost like be better if Os'ama bi;n
giving the terrorists a road Laden were left wonderhig
map of what they need to about such things, I\ lien
do."
said.
"You want to stop there
Anthony Cordesman of
and not do that," said Rep. the Center for Strategic anti
Tim Roemer, D-Ind., International Studies, whb
whose questions had elicit- now appears regularly oh
.ed the earlier answel's. ·
ABC, rejected. the 'c'i'iticiso1.

·..

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Village of M'iddlep·o·f l

"B ~ L'.E.S.S·
.. .f

II

PROTEST -Chanting ant~U .S. slogans young Afgtlan refugE11!s
run with sticks as they burn tires to block a road during a
demonstration in Karachi, Pakistan. Leaders of major Islamic
political parties had called a nationwide. strike for Friday to
protest U.S.-Ied military strikes in neighboring Afghanistan. (AP)

APPl.E61JJTER MAKING DAY

All Day, Saturday. October 13, 2001

"Homemade apple buHer made the old-fashioned way"
(Some already mads up)

• Petting Zoo
• Free Hay Maze
• Amish Cheese, Jams &amp;
Jellies '
• Stoneware Pottery
Spoon Jars
(most local towns available)

'

• A~ples &amp; Cider
• 2 Floor Craft Sections
(Check us out 1or Chrlslmas Gifts)'

• Free hayride every Friday,
Saturday to the "Pumpkin Patch:
and "Spooky Trail"

·Rebound sends
Wall Street to

Donation

LOCAL BRIEFS
Driver tkketecl

the U.S. disaster relief effort!
will ~ accepted.

CHESTER - Jennifer D.
Norman, 19, 412 Broadway,
Racine, was cited for failure
POMEROY - An action
to yield while ruming left by
the Gallia-Meigs Po~t of the for dissolution of marriage
Sate Highway Patrol follow- has been filed in Meigs
ing a two-car ;ccident County Common Pleas
Wednesday on County Road Court by Heather D. Smith,
Syracuse, and Jerry L. Smith,
. NEW YORK (AP) - and investors are feeling a lit26 (Texas).
Boosted by some healthier- de better:' said Matt Brown,
Troopers said Norman was Racine.
than-expected
earnings head of equity management at
westbound at 4:30 p.m. when
reports, Wall Street surged Wilmington Trust. "This is a
she attempted a left rurn onto
higher Thursday, carrying the rebound, though.
.
Chester Township Road 422
POMEROY
two
Dow Jones industrials and
"I think the market is still
(Morgan) and collided with
other market indexes to levels going to be pretty reactive to
an eastbound car driven by Columbus men were senlast seen before the Sept: 11 both good and bad news. If
Sherry A. Selbee, 34, Hock- tenced this week in Mei19
County Common Pleas
terrorist attacks.
there were further developingport.
The Dow's dose left it just menu domestically on the terNorman's car was moder- Court.
Kelly J Daniels pled guilty
;195 points below its dose of rorism lioitt, that would be Brandy Graham, Taz's Marathon representative, right, pre- ately damaged, and slight
to
a fourth -degree felony
·Sept. 10; the blue chips have very negative for the market:' sents Jane Beattie, pastor at the Meigs COOperative Parish, damage was reported to the
charge of assault on a police
'JIOW recovered 85 percent of
The Dow closed Thursday with an $850 check for the purchase of supplies at the orga- car driven by Selbee.
officer, and was sentenced to ,
the1,369 points they lost after up 169.59 at 9,410.45, nization's food bank. The money Is the result of proceeds col18 months in prison. A secthe atbdcs. The Nasdaq com- extending a 188-point rally lected during Taz's Marathon and the Goldwing Road Riders
ond charge contained in
posite and Standatd l!c Poor's fi:Om Wednesday.
Association Chapter E-3's annual car and bike show, which
·sao indexes finished just Broader nock indicators took place In August. Also piCtured Is Allen Graham, member POMEROY - Units of Daniels' indictment, for felo'above their doses of a month were also sharply . higher of the Goldwlng association. (Tony M. Leach photo)
the Meigs Emergency Service nious assault, was 'dismissed.
Henry D. Webb was senago.
Thursday. ·The Sl!cP 500
answered three calls for assis·tencted
to two IS-month
Analysts again cautioned gained 16.44 to \.097.43,
tance on Thursday. Units
consecutive sentences on
the Good START committee responded as follows: .
that the .advance, which fol- regaining all of the 126 points
charges of possession of crack
CENTRAL DISPATCH
lowed another spurt higher it lost after the atbcks. The
in developing its plan, said
3 p.m., Sbnert Road, James cocaine and trafficking in
·Wednesday, should not be read Nasdaq shot up 75.21 at
identifying goals is only the
·as a fundamental market 1,701.47, also malting back all
beginning of the improve- Hanning, O'Bleness Memori- crack cocaine, both fourthhewn PilpA1
degree felonies.
·
.recovery or a sign that of 272 of the points it lost.
ment
and development al Hospital.
Webb's . operator's license
POMEROY
investors are no longer worOn Sept. 10, the last day of
~ Community clean-up and process.
was
suspended for six months.
6:49 p.m., Main Street, auto
_Ficd about fallout liom the tnding before the attacks,. the fix-up.
"This can provide a benchA third count against Webb,
terrorist attacks or U.S. retalia- Dow dosed at 9,605.51, while
• River-related business mark for community atti- fire, Mark Reitmyer, no
for
conspiracy to commit a
·. tion.
the S&amp;P 500 was at 1,092.54. development.
tudes, a marketing tool for injuries.
felony
drug
trafficking
"The passage of time has The Nasdaq closed that day at
businesses, and an
RUTLAND
• Youth programs and recre- specific
\
.
official record of Good
4:12 p.m., West Main Street, offense, was dismissed.
healed some of the wounds ... 1,695.38.
ation;
• Central business district START activities;· Sands said. Tiffany Hensley, Elaine Put·
"It provides information man, treated.
revitalization.
aub~eets
about
the
community,
the
• Public ~lations and proMIDDLEPORT - Midsurvey and its results, and the
motions.
dleport Literary Club will
• Redevelopment of school 'strategies and goals developed
POMEROY - Judgment meet at 2 p.m. on Oct. 17 at
through the process."
buildings.
"The report, however, is actions have been filed in the Pomeroy Library, with
The following areas were
identified· through the survey secondary to goal-oriented Meigs County Common PhyUis Hackett as hostess. Lea
.process as long-term develop- action," Sands said. "The Pleas Court by Conseco Ord will review and compare
process that led to the devel- Finance Servicing Corp., "The Painted House" by John
ment goals:
• River-related community opment of this report is the Tempe, Ariz., against Chris- Grisham, "The Coalwood
'
single-most important part of tine A. Martin, Rutland, and Way" by Homer Hickham,
development.
and "The · Hour Before Day• Community clean-up and the project, and the ability others, alleging default on
BOCA RATON, Fla. ' (AP) terrorist group.
. and willingness of the citizens promissory notes totaling light" by Jimmy Carter.
Investigators have sent bags fix-up.
-. While investigators searched
• Youth programs and recre- of Middleport to work $37,790.53; and by Equicred'for deadly anthrax spores in the of evidence taken liom the
together in the process is also it Corp. of America, Jack. mailroom of a superQlafket office to the U.S. Centers fur ation.
sonville, Fla., against Charles
• Downtown revitalization. most important."
.tabloid, a third worker exposed Disease .control and PrevenRACINE - A speicial
"Without
the
continued
E. Johnston Jr., Racine, alleg• Business development arid
to the bacteria rerumed .to her tion in Atlanb to be tested.
commitment·of the people of ing default on a note in the meeting of Racine Chapter
job, saying she is taking antibiAbout 300 people who expansion.
124, Order of Eastern Sbr,
• Planning for economic the ViUage of Middleport to amount of$14,961.16.
otics and feels fine.
worked in the building or
will be held at the lodge hall
read the report, change those
. "When I ·first round out, it entered it are still awaiting growth.
on Monday at 7;30 p.m. to
• Issues affecting elderly. priority issues which over
was like the wind k.1octred out results from swab tests' for
celebrate the chapter's 1OOth
time do not reflect the true
housing ~nd health.
of you.You don.'t know what all anthnic.
,.
RACINE - A pancake anniversary. A visitation will
• Infrastructure, utilities and direction of the village, and
of it means:• said Stephanie . Dailey 'said she found out on
· act on the recommendations, breakfast will be held on Sat- be made by the Worthy Grand
Dailey, 36, ·as she rerurned Wednesday that she had· tested cemetery.
urday from 8 to I 0 a.m. at the Matron and Worthy Grand
• Village government, the report has rto value."
home Thursday liom the tern- · ·positive for anthrax. According
A preliminary plan of Sutton Building of Carmel- Patron. There will ·be enter.porary offices . of American to ·state and federal officials, she police, streets and axes .
tainment and refreshments. All
Cleaning up and beautify- action developed through the Sutton·· United Methodist
Media, Inc.
was quickly treated with antibiSTART · process Churi:h on Bashan Road. A OES members are urged to
Good
The American Media build- otics and hasn't exhibited the ing the community and·capifreewill donation to benefit attend.
ing was sealed off after anthrax flu-like symptoms that can sig- talizing on the Ohio River as includes the .pursuit of cooperative promotions with other
was found on ~e keyboard of a na1 the early sbge of anthrax a draw for visitors and tourists
have been consistently identi- Ohio River communities, a
·photo editor who died last infection.
more unified community of
"dressed" in costume and per.week. Traces also have been
Bob Stevens, 63, a photo edi- fied as proactive steps which
merchants to address the retail
develop
the
commight
help
forming
dance routines in the
:found in the mailroom where tor at the Sun, one of six
climate in Middleport, and
.
those
munity,
for
both
farm's horse arena.
:Dailey and a man still hospital- abloids housed in the Amerithe formation of a revitalizaanswering
the
surveys
and
"It's the type of unique
:ized · from anthrax exposure can Media building, died Oct. 5.
fromPapA1
ti.
o
n
committee
to
pursue
entertainment visitors can
both worked, a l2w .enforce- of inhaled· anthrax. Mailroom those serving on the Good
downtowl)
revitalization handmade dolls, pottery, only see at the farm festival,"
START
committees.
.men! official said Thursday.
employee Ernesto Blanco, 73,
Sands, who worked with opportunities.
quilting,
leatherworking, McKinniss said.
· · While the anthrax case has was still hospitalized Thursday
Children's activities feature
blacksmithing, horseshoeing,
generated concern about but his wife, Elda Miguel, said
and butter, cheese and a hay bale maze, barn loft
bioterrorism, the FBI has said it his fever was almost gone and
ern alliance representatives,
jump, pedal tractor pull, barnsorghum making.
-bas no evidenc~ linking it to a he was feeling better.
Haron Amin and Daoud Mir,
Attractions include horse- yard animals, face painting,
. gave Sen. Bob Smith, R-N.H., drawn wagon rides, herding lead horseback rides and
a largely upbeat assessment of demonstrations, horseshoe horsedrawn wagon rides.
fnMn PapAl
the situation at home. Smith . pitching, chainsaw carving, More details on the festival
In their largest casualty claim · said they told him the Taliban's clogging and line dancing.
cari be obtained by calling 1Aocl&lt;well- 1s~
Fedofal Mogul-~
so far in the war, the Taliban "air power has been taken
~P-44
800-994-FARM
(3276); or
Returning this year is an
Rocl&lt;y Boola- 5
USB-17~
allows
them
to
down,
which
An:h Coal- 20
said today that at least 200 vilequine mounted .drill team from the web site at
AD Shell- 53~
Ganneit- 83~
Nao-40!.
move
more."
lagers
had
been
killed
two
days
Seal8-41
General Elactrtc- 39
performing musical routines www.bobevans.com.
AmTeci&gt;SBC- 45~
He
said
they
indicated
Shonly'a-~
GKNLV...:_4
earlier in airstrikes on a remote
Ashland Inc. - 41 ~
and tricks on horseback. The
Wai-Mart- 53~
HaJtoy Davlda&lt;ln- 47~
AT&amp;T-19\
refugees and soldiers were get- popular tractor square daneeast
of
Kabul.
The
settlement
Wandy'a..-27
Kmart-n
Bank One- 30~
WCf1hlngton -13i.
Pentagon had no comment and ting the food dropped by U.S. ' ing is back for a third year,
Kroger25
llll-7\
Lands End- 31 ~
Bob Evana-1sl.
the Taliban's claim could not be forces, and that motale was featnring eight farm tractors
Lid. -11\ ·
1!orgWamer- 44l
high, boosted by what they said
Dally atock rapor18 ... immediately verified.
NSC-11
Chlwnpion - 2~
were
hundreds of defections
The United States was getOak HI Fi1anclal-16~ lh8 4 p.m. cloolng qualeo
Charnilng Slq1l- 5~
of lh8 pt'&amp;vloua day't ting information about Taliban fiom the Taliban.
OVB-24\
Oily Holding- 9l.
llanuctlona. provided
BST-33~
Col-15
Osman said Wednesday's
targets from Afghan rebel
by Sml1h Par111e18 II
Paoplel-18
00-14
Admt Inc. of Gallipolis.
Premier-· 8~
forces, Rumsfeld said. At a Pen- raids included seven targets,
:euPont- 41\
tagon briefing, Marine Maj. including Taliban troops, vehiGen. Henry P. Osman, a senior cle repair facilities and anti-airplanner for the Joint ChiefS of craft sites. He displayed fuur
pictures
Sbff, said U.S. officials were in before-and-after
damage
to
targets.
showing
touch with the so-called north(U8P8 213-8110)
ern alliance but were not coor- Among them were surface-toOhio Yaltoy Publlllhmg Co. •
Publlahed evety afternoon, Monday
dinating targets with the rebels. air missile sites, a motor pool, a
through Frfda~. t11 Court St.,
That decision, Osman said, was radio station in Kabul and
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
Correction Polley
poatage
paid
at
Pomoroy.
parked aircraft.
Our main ooncem In all stories Is
a political one.
ilomborfTllo
AssOciated
P,...
and
to be accurate. H you know o1 an
Cooperation
with
the
Ohio Nowspaper AIICCiatlon.
error In a story, calllhe newsroom the
Pool-: Stf1d addl818 comocAfghan rebels is complicated
at (740) 992:2158.
•
tiof18 to The Dally Sentinel, 111 CoUrt.
REVIVAL
for the United States, since
Sl., Pomeroy. Ohio &lt;15789. ·
1111. Hermon
Newa Departments
neighboring Pakistan doesn't
Subscription ratea "
The main QUmber is 992-2158 .
United Brethren In
want the rebels to come to
11y comor or motor,.,...
Departmenl extentlons are:
one$2
Christ Church
power and many warlords in
$8.70
Benet'lll mllllgef
Ext. 12 one month
One$104
the anti-Taliban alliance have
. 50 ......
Nawl
Ext.13 Dolly
repubtions for corruption and
Rev. Doug carpenter
SUbocrlbtl8 not dtl~nng to pay tha
can11r may remit In advance direct to
atrocities against civilians.
· Evangelist
or
Ext. 14 T1lo Dally Stntinel. Crodk will bo given
Rumsfeld
did
not
voice
sup(of
North carolina)
comer oach · No ouboalpll"" by
Other services
mall permitted " ..... .,._ home
port for any particular opposi- Special Singing Nightly
earner l8f'VIclls available.
tion group and said Afghans ,
•
ACIYertlllng
Ext. 3
Ev,eryone Welcome
would
shape
the
furure
of
their
r..llsil~
The;church Is located on
Clrcullllan
Ext. 4
Inside Molga
country. As f11r bin Laden's
13weoka
$27.30
Wickham Road. just off
whereabouts, bbth Bush and Texas Road, In the Texas
CIUIIIIed Ada
Ext. 5 26Weeks
$53.82
52 Weeks
$105.56
Rumsfeld said the Saudi exile
Community
To sand e-mail
probably remained in hiding in
Molga County
newaOmydallysenllnel.com
Robert sanders,
13Wteka
$29.25
Afghanistan.
26 Wteka
,
$56.68
On the Web
52 Weei&lt;l
$109.72
1 ~stor
On Capitol Hill, two north¥NtW.mydallysentinel.com

pre-a~ck

File dissolution

levels

EMS ftlns

START

Third employee
.exposed to anthrax
.returns to work

File suits

Special meeting

Benefit planned

Festival

Bless PI'C!)'er Pr(!gram asks residents to pray for 5
people for 5' minutes, for !5 weeks In your
ne1gh!)or~ood. Look for Prayer Walkers '" your
nc•ghborhood. Ask them to pray for v.ou
Questions ca.ll (740) 992-0930. Sponsoreil bY the
Middle
Ministerial Association. ·

Karen's
Greenhouse
· &amp; Country Garden Center

·

Friley•. Ckh ... 12. 2001

The Community Through A
Prayer Walk &amp; Prayer Program
October 14, 2001
3pm ~ Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center
Chili Dinner follows for Prayer Walkers
• Heath United Methodist Church ·
Lefs Make Middleport a Blessing Again!

Taliban claim at least 200
dead in airstrike,;protests
break out in Pakistan
'

PageA2

The Dally Sentinel • P•ge A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Pictures will run:
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October31

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�Opinion

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PageA4

_The_n_any_Se_ntm_·e_I

Fltci11J. Odaber 11. ;J001
•

DEAR ABBY: You printed a letter about school bullies. I went to
. school more than 20 years ago, and it
: hasn't changed. My family was poor.
~ My clothes in high school wer&lt; yardsale stuff: One. morning I walked into
school and kids stopped and pointed
at me, laughing. I remember a teacher
coming into the hall to see what was
going on, and he laughed, too. I was
: wearing colors that didn't go togeth: er, but it was the best I could do. My
.
' life was a nightmare.
I had gym class that same day. We
were going outside to play softball
but had to choose up teams first. The
two popular girls were always team
captains. They chose their teams and I
was left standing alone. The teacher
said, "Bonnie, you get Carol." Bonnie
said loudly, "I don't want Carol. She
: stinks at this game. She stinks at every
•

111 Court 8t., hmeroy, Ohio

740 111-2111 • Fu: -..2111

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chi..... W.Gowy

A. 8h1Wn LIWII

Publllher

lbMglng Editor
01.-K8yHUI
Control....

NATIONAL VIEW

•
nous
LAunching war result of an
alliance that requires unity
• San Francisco Cbroalde, on the beginning of the war·and
the challenges ahead: The televised scenes tiom Afghanistan last
Sunday looked like the start of so many other Rcent U.S. military campaigns in faraway places: fuzzy white flashes and
streaks of light against a ghost-green backdrop. The screen
betrayed no sense of context, no portent of American danger,
no real hint of the possible devastation to human life or military targets.
Dut the strikes had a far more ominous feel for Americans
than the similar-appearing scenes from Kosovo, Sudan or Iraq.
The ·United States has no illusions that this mission can be
accomplisfled with aerial bombs alone. And there was little
question that these bombings would provoke a counterattack
against civilians on U .S. soil.
The Bush administration was peniWiw in arguing that Sunday's series of military strikes were an essential early step in its
multidimensional assault on the terrorist network responsible
for the Sept. 11 hijackings that turned four airlinen into missiles against American civillans. The ruling niiban had 26 days
to stop providing safe Rfuge for Osama bin Laden and other
terrorists. The U.S.-British bombing assault was needed to clear
a path for this nation and its allies to punue terrorists as well as
to get humanitarian relief to the Afghan people. Indeed, airlifts
of food and medicine were included in the Day One strategy.
It was both heartening and tactically smart to show the world
that our quarrel is not with.the Afghan civilians who haw been
victimized by Taliban rule: .. .
The most pressing challenge for the Bush administration will
be to maintain an alliance broad enough to forestall bin Laden's
desire for a wider war.
These arc precarious times, and Sunday's inevitable thst wave
of bombings offers no real sense of satisfaction or security. This
is a war that may be determined by our ability to redefine it to
eliminate .the threat of a ruthless and most unorthodox adversary.

TODAY IN HISTORY

j.

II '

.,

'I

'·'

•

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
game." Then the team captains argued
over who was going to get stuck with
me. I wanted to die.
When they all ran outside, I lagged
behind, slipped back into the l~ker
room, and changl'd back into my old,
worn-out, mismatched clothes. I
went home. Nobody missed me. I
went into our garage and looked for
something poisonous.! wanted to kill
myself and get it over with. I hated

the kids, I hated the teachers and I
hated myself. ! turned the old broken
radio on low. Its case was cracked, but
it still worked, and I just cried and
cried.
Then I got serious and found a
bottle of termite poison. I had almost
worked up the nerve to drink it
when the radio played Dolly Parton's
" Coat of Many Colors." It was ~ song
about a ~rl who wore a coat pieced
together tiom rags because her family ~ poor, and the kids at school
laughed at her. And I thought, " Look
where Dolly is today - she didn't
run home and kill herself. She got
·through it."
I went back to school the next
morning and ignored everyone. I
ignored the cruel comments as if I
didn't hear them. I told myself I was
an outsider in hostile territory, but I

had a goal to achieve, ~d I poured
everything I had into thy studies, my
grades. I graduated and -nt on to
college in another state.
I'm successful and happy now and
have a loving family. I work with disadvantaged kids in my spare time. Life
is wonderful. Thank you, Dolly. And
thank you, Abby. CAROL, A
SURVIVOR
DEAR CAROL: Thank you for a
letter \hat I know will give hope to
other young people who are the victims of taunting and ridicule. I'm
struck by its dual message. The first is
about the ability of music to heal suffering. The second is about the ability of the human !Pirie to rise above
suffering and to prevail in the face of
difficult odds. I'm sure you are saving
lives in the work you arc doing with
disadvantaged youth. You are a shin-

ingexample of the success that comes
tiom perseverance.
·
DEAR ABBY: You were all wet
in your advice that the new parents
continue to shower together indefini!ely. Privacy issues aside, they :ue
leaving their little one unsupervised if
they do it when she is awake. Should
something happen, they wculd not
he;u any warning signs of trQuble. LUCY IN CHEYENNE, WYO.
DEAR LUCY: You are absolutely
right. That didn't occur to me. Thank
you ror speaking up.
DEAR ABBY: Did the police
oijicer tiom Toledo ever get promoted to "loo-tenant" after he was locked
in the bathroom?- MIKE IN L.A.
DEAR MIKE: Clever! (I'm
flushed with laughter.)

Dear Abby is writtm by Pdulint.
Phillips and ·daughtn Jeanne Phillips.

-.-----------~----------------~------------------------------------------

MILITARY NEWS

SAINTS AND SINNERS

No time like now to reactive the 'chancel' cabinet
An open letter to President George
Bush:
You ar~ to be congratulated for the
impressive circle of advisers you have
gathered around you to guide us
through the grave crisis now confronting our nation.
But have you forgotten one of the
country's most valuable resources - its
clergy?
We need somebody to reassure us in
these troubled days when the sun is out.
of sight and there is no gleam of light on
the path, "and a1j we can hear is the drip. ping of the sad rain .I' We need someone
to remind us that "though the wrong be
oft so strong, God is the ruler yet."
This is clergy turf,.and we need those
who occupy it to remind us, when the
sun appears tQ be setting on our dreams,
that the sun also rises; that, as Camus
&amp;aid, "good is also inevitable"; that God
is smiling through his tears because he is
happy with his dream for his creation,
"sad only for what men keep doing to
it."
The grim morning headlines and the
somber evening news have made us forget that the good life is still available to
those who seek it with all their heart.
The president could put select a group
of prominent members of the clergy to
make up a sort of "chancel cabinet."
(The chancel is the area in the tiont of a
church where the clergy officiate.)
It would be like Andrew Jackson's
"kitchen cabinet" in the White House in

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST

The idea of a chancel cabinet would
not be unprecedented. President
Franklin Roosevelt in 1935 sought the
advice of the clergy. "Because of the
grave responsibilities of my office;· Roosevelt wrote to the ministers, "I am turning to clergymen for counsel and advice,
feeling confident that no group can give
more accurate or unbiased views."
· Roosevelt later remarked on how
helpjUI the ministers' replies had been.
Religious leaders and educators once
defined the country's values, but today
the media shape our agenda.
As author Eric Alterman says, "A tiny
group of high!y visible pundits make
their living offering inside political
opinions in the media. ~ut these pundits
are largely divorced from the travails that
make everyday life in the U.S. ·s uch a
struggle. They live in neighborhoods like
Georgetown or Chevy Chase, , with
green lawns, safe · playgrounds, good
schools and an extra room for the maid.
Their biggest problem in life is the traffi c...
These put~dits are not good monitors
of American life. An informal chancel
cabinet would better serve as the president's eyes and ears, focusing on the
people's hopes and fears, their dreams
and insecurities.
' ·
Mr. President, let's give the clergy back
their role in the nation's public life.

the 1830s. The kitchen cabinet was an
informal group of Jackson advisers that
included newspaper editors, longtime
friends; family and official Cabinet
members. Because of their unofficial status, they were pictured as keeping out of
sight by coming into Jackson's office
through the White House kitchen and
up the back stairs.
Jackson hoped the kitchen cabinet
would be a "moral force" that would
help to keep the shaky Union together.
Our problems are different from Jackson's. But with fear, hate and anger rampant today, a moral force may be what
the country needs.
Such a Clergy Commission on the
Good Life c.ould serve as our national
conscience and as a rep&lt;;&gt;sitory of good
ideas tiom the collected wisdom and
moral concern of men and women
whose sensitivity and integrity would lift
our country's hopes and get us to "swing
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
our lanterns higher."
Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Oct. 12, the 285th day of 2001. There arc 80
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 12, 1492 (Old Style calendar; Oct. 21, New Style),
Christopher Columbus arrived with his expedition in the present-day Bahamas.
On this date:
In 1870, Gen. Robert E. Lee died in Lexington, Va., at age
63.
In 1915, English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by the
Germans in occupied Belgium during World War I.
In 1933, bank robber john Dillinger escaped tiom a jail in
Allen County. Ohio, with the help of his gang, who killed the
sheriff.
In 1942, during World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt
delivered one of his so-called "fireside chats" in which he recommended the drafting of 18- and 19-year-old men.
In 1960, Soviet premier Nikita Khrushchev disrupted a U.N.
General Assembly session by pounding his desk with a shoe
during a .dispute.
In 1964, the Soyiet Union launched a Voskhod space capsule
with a three-man crew on the lint manned mission involving
more than one crew member.
In 1968, the summer Games of the 19th Olympiad officially
opened in Mexico City.
.
In 1971, the rock opera 'Jesus Christ S11pencar" opened at
rhe Mark Hellinger Theatre on Broadway.
In 1973, President Nixon nominated House minority leader
Gerald R . Ford of Michigan to succeed Spiro T. Agnew as vice
president.
In 1976,.it was announced in China that Hua Guo-feng had
been named to succeed the late Mao Tse-tung as chairman of
the Communist Party.
Ten years ago: Testifying for a second day on sexual harassment charges leveled by law professor Anita Hill, Supreme
• Court nominee Clarence Thomas told the Senate Judiciary
Committee he'd "rather die than withdraw," and repeated his
denial of Hill's allegations. ·
Five years ago: President Clinton signed into law the Water
R esources Development Act, which authorized federal water
projects across the country. Thousands of Hispanic-Americans
marched in Washington to push for simplified citizenship procedures and a $7 minimum wage.
One year ago: Seventeen sailors were killed in a suicide
bomb attack on the U.S. destroyer Cole in Yemen. Chinese
writer Gao Xingjian won the Nobel literature prize.
Today's Birthdays: Accrcss Antonia Rey is 74. Blues singer
N appy Brown is 72. Comedian-activist Dick Gregory is 69.
Former Senator Jake Garn, R-Urah, is 69. Opera singer
Luciano Pavarotti is 66.

Fttd8y. Octab• 11. 2011

Girl overcomes school ridicule by determining to succeed

-

The Daily Sentinel

Page AS

WEST'S VIEW

New war sends us scrambling for ddinition of terror

Local man
receives award
BASHAN - ChiefWarrant
Officer Two Jonathan Bissell
"recently received the Army
Award
for
Maintenance
Excefience from Gen. Eric
- Shinseki and Sgt. Maj. Jack
· Tilley.
Bissell represented his Battalion, the Sixth Battalion,
- 32nd Field Artillery (MLRS),
- of Fort Sill, Okla., in a ceremony held in Washington.
• As the Banalion Maintenance Officer, CW2, Bissell
·led his banalion to a second
place finish in the worldwide
competition, which pitted his
:banalion's maintenance programs against every other
~ mechariized Battalion in the
'Army.
1 Having serwd with 6-32 for
. rour years as a warrant officer,
Bissell has · recently been
selected for promotion to
·.lieutenant, and after comple·tion of training, will move to
: Fort C;unpbell, Ky,, to serw
·with the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault).
After enlisting in 1990, Bis. sell progressed to the rank of
staff sergeant before being
·'selected to become a warrant
· officer in 1997. His awards and

Tracewell
graduates

basic training
LETART, W.Va. Navy
Hospitalman Jefferson N.
Tracewell Jr., recently graduated from the Basic Hospital
porps School at Naval Hospital Corps School, Great Lakes,

Ill.
Early last ·month, about a million years
ago, the United States and Israel turned
their backs on the international community and walked out on·a United Nations
conference on racism in Durban.
Remember why? As Secretary of State
Colin Powell crisply explained at the
time, "You do not combat racism with a
conference ... that singles out only one
country in the world, Israel, for censure
and abuse."
Those, of course, were the goOd old
days, back before our nation had to
acknowledge how much 6,000 people,
two hundred stories. five rings and four
airplanes meant to its peace and wellbeing. In retrospect, washing our hands
of Durban's rising bile came naturally
enough, an expression of high principle
rather than high emotion. In other
words, it was pretty easy back then to
behave well . As far the United States was
concerned, it was still a war of words, not
deeds.
No more. Now, as our government
tries to stitch together a wide-ranging,
international coalition .against terrof§jl,
we find ourselves seeking · cqri:iiil'on
ground - some ground, any ground with many of the same states' that' only
weeks ago we left in our diplomatic dust.
And it turns out, those same states, largely members of the Arab and Muslim
world, are slandering Israel again, this
time not regarding such old saws as
"racism" oru co)oniallsm,"but on the dire
topic of terrorism, '
It sounds fantastic. But having left the
international coalition wide open to any
country "committed" to ending terrorism, the United States has left something
else wide open: the definition of terrorism itself. As a result, Arab and Muslim

leaders have cranked up a massive disinformation campaign to depict Israel war-weary, terror-targeted Israel - a.&lt; a
fountainhead of" terrorism" second only,
perhaps, to Osama bin Laden.
First, there is the name-calling. From
Mecca's Grand Mosque in Saudi Arabia,
Islam's most sacred mosque, Sheik Saleh
bin Hamid declared his support for an
international coalition to fight terrorism
- citing Israel as "a living example of
terrorism in practice." Yasser Arafat, one
of the great charlatans of modern times,
briefly displaced his suicide-bombing
countrymen in the news this week to
"demand" that the nations of the ·world

stop Israeli "terrorism." Meanwhile, in

"terrorism in all its forms"- except, 'o f
course, pizza-parlor bombings in Tel Aviv
and other examples of"the resistance of
the Palestinian people." The Jerusalem
Post picked up on this working definition of terrorism from the state-run Syria
Times: "Terrorists are those forces of evil
that violate human rights and kill innocent people." Sounds reasonable, right?
Just wait: "They are not only the terrorists of New York and Washington," the
Syrian newspaper editorial continued,
"they are also the Israeli occupation
troops that kill defenseless Palestinians in
the West Bank and Gaza. Bring them aU
to justice." Good thing Syria just won a
seat on the U.N. Security Council.
The fact is, Osama bin Laden, AI
Qaeda, and the Taliban won't be - at
least, shouldn't be - our sole objective
forever. The global terrorists that threaten the democracies are a far larger and
more complex enemy. By our government policy, though, we have chosen to
avert our eyes from crucial links in the
lslamist terror network including
Hezbollah; Hamas, and Islamic Jihad those vaunted "resistance" fighters of the
Arab and Muslim world who still aren't
on the list of groups whose assets we
have tiozen. Could it be that we have .
accepted a morally and expressively deficient definition of"terrorism" in order to
fight terrorism? The stakes are higher
now than they were in Durban, but the
principle is the same. And what principle
- what purpose - is served if it turns
out that our objective - - defeating terrorism -- has been rendered literally
meaningless?
.

mostly Muslim Malaysia, Prime Minister
Mahathir Moharnad offered to support
the international coalition if only the
United States and Britain w 0 uld pick
their terrorist-targets better: "I would
support them;' he said,"ifthey wanted to
take action against Israel." Acting on the
counsel of Messrs. bin Hamid, Arafat and
Mohamad might not do much to end
the threat of terrorism as we know it, but
it would obviously do wonders .for keeping that "international coalition" together.
Second, there is the "debate" about the
"meaning" of terrorism. At a reCent summit in Qatar, the Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC), the world's
largest Muslim body, came up with an
utterly baseless distinction between
blowing up American civilians and blowing up Israeli civilians by condemning
the former as "terrorism" and hailing th e
latter as "national resistance." Enlarging
on this same theme, Syria, a state-sponsor
(Diana West is a col11tn11ist m1d editorial
.of terrorism if ever there was one, joined writer for 77~e W..shington Times. She can be
with "moderate" Jordan to condemn CO litacted via dianaww(atsigtJ)attglobal. tJet.1

During the 14-week train. ing, Tracewell learned a wide
· range of medical procedures
· used to provide first aid and
·assist Navy doctors and nurses.
. · Tracewell also received an
: introductory instruction for
. service in a variety of medical
· ·environments, from fleet hospitals and shipboard medical
.. departments to fleet Marine

LOCAL EVENTS

Community Calendar 11
publllhecl u a trw Hnllce to
~ grou~ wllhlng to
announce rn.tlng1 and lpeclll eventa. The calendar 11
not dellgned to promote
11!111 or fund-rill..,. vi any
ty~.ltam1 are printed only aa
apace permlta and cannot be
pranteed to be printed a
4peclflc number of clay1.
RECEIVES AWARD- Gen. Eric Shlnseki, chief of staff, Army,
left, presents CW2 Battalion Maintenance Officer Jonathan
Bissell, middle, with the Army Award for Maintenance Exce~
lence. (Submitted photo)
decorations include: The Parachutists Badge, the Air Assault
Badge, the Meritorious Service Medal, the Army Commendation Medal
(sixth
award), the Army Achievement Medal (third award), the
Southwest Asian Service
Medal, the Non-Commisioned Officer Dewlopment
Ribbon (numeral two), and
the Good Conduct Medal
(second award).
In addition, his military
schools include: The Jungle
Operations Warfare Course,
The Air Crew Survival
Course, The Air Load Planner
School, and the Survival,
Escape, Resistance, and Evasion School (SERE) .
BisseU is a 1990 graduate of
Eastern High School and

a1996 graduate of Central
Texas College, with an associate degree in general studies.
He plans to graduate tiom
Cameron University next fall.
Bissell is the son of Glen
Bissell of Racine and Naomi
Bissell of Bashan, and is married to the former Anabel
Baoules of Chiriqui, Panama.
The couple have one daughter, Ashley, age three.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Revival
through Sunday, · 7:30 p.m. at
Wesley Bible Holiness Church.
75 Pea~ St.. Middleport. with
the ReV. Noel Scott as evange11&amp;1. Don Quale Family will sing.
The Rev. Doug Cox, pastor,
invttea the public.
MIDDLEPORT - Widow's ·
Fellowship,
Friday, noon,
po luck, lunch, Middleport
Church of Christ
POMEROY- Fun, Food and
Fellowship at God'a NET. Nutritional meals, non-violent video
games, compuler programs,
board games and pool tables
are available Irom 8 lo 10:30

p.m. on Friday and Saturday.

16-21 with Pale Decchl, evangelist.

LONG BOTTOM . - Hymn
sing, failh Full Gospel church.
RUTLAND -Rutland Church
Long Bottom, Friday. 7 p.m. lea- of Christ homecoming, Sunday.
turing Jim Blair and lhe Social hour 8:30 a.m., worahlp
Gospelalres.
and communion, 10:30 a.m.,
with Ear1 Slack, lormer pastor,
SATURDAY
as speaker, music by Jane
POMEROY
Return Wise. Carry-In dinner at noon,
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, with meal, drinks and table serDaughters of the American Rev- vice provided. Slack to speak at
olution, Saturday, 10 a.m., 1 p.m. Dwight Icenhower, local
Pomeroy Ubrary. June Ashley lo EMs Presley lmperaonalor, 10
speak.
sing gospel music.
POMEROY- Modem Wood·
POMEROY - Melgs County
men of America, Burflnghem,
Humane
Soclety, general memSaturday, 5:30 p.m. Halloween
belahlp
meeting,
Pomeroy Pubthemed party. Come oostumed,
lic
Library,
Sunday,
3 p.m.
prizes. Cider, donuts and pizza
furnished. Take covered dish.
MONDAY
LETART - Letart Township
CHESHIRE - Reunion of
descendants of Val and Audllh Truslaea, Monc!ay 5 p.m. al the
Well Saturday, Kyger Creek office building.
Clubhouse, noon polluck.
POMEROY - Revive! nrvlcetl
at Mount Hermon UnHed
SUNDAY
·Brethren
In Chrlll Church,
REEDSVILLE - Homecom·
7:30 p.m. Spethrough
Sunday,
lng at the Reedsville Fellowship
Church ·of Nazarene In clalalnglng each evening, public
Reedsville Sunday. Revival Oct. lnvlled.

~all is the right time to

forces and medical administration offices.
Graduates' newly acquired
skills and knowledge will
enabl&lt;; them to provi~e quality health care to Navy and
Marine Corps personnel and
their families. Tr•cewell's first
assignment after school. will
involve direct patient care,
however, with his training,
Tracewell can work in several
areas, including first aid and
assisting with minor surgery,
pharmacy and laboratory
analysis, patient transportation, and food service inspections .
Tracewell is the son ofTeresa E and Jefferson N .Tracewell
of Letart, and is a graduate of
Ripley High School in Ripley, W.Va .

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Hey, Did You Know•••

ALABAMA'S

It's almoll time to go the
p11lls again on November 6th1U

And, Did You Know•••
The Meigs County TB Clinic
operatea on Its own.levy?? ·
We do not riceive W money
frtm Meigs County Health
Deputmentll

FOR RESERVATIONS &amp; TEE TIMES

1-800-257-3465
www.rtjgo/fcom

'

*Fill Value -Add Highland
Oaks in Dothan, Hampton
Cove in Huntsville or Silver
lakes in Anniston/Gadsden
to your package and get
unlimited golf for that day
at that site. Hotels. carts
and tax not included.

Connie Cotterill, RN
Carol Littl•• Office Manager
Shannon Smith, Clerk

*0Wln!Br Tntll Sompllr-Play
Hampton Cove, Silver
lakes. Cambrian Ridge and
Highland Oaks. Valid Nov.
15, 2001 tD Feb. 14.2002.

Does not include hotel.
cilrtS or tax.

E-mail: retervationsitrtjgolf.com
for • complete stlte viCition guldt call
.
1.100.ALA8AMA or visit www.tourtlabarM.org

.•

'

..

�•
•

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Ftlday.

Oda•., 12. 2101

Saturday, Oct. 13

I • - lfr"nv I •

·I Col....- ln·/77" I

Inc.

WASHINGTON (AP) Ohio
needs prompt action from J&gt;resident
Bush and Congress to regain solid economic footing, Gov. Bob Taft said
Thursday.
"We're concerned about what could
be a prolonged downturn or recession;•
Taft said, citing increased unemployment and a state budget facing a largerthan-expected deficit of $600 million.
Congress is expected to begin work
Friday on an economic stimulus package to help the nation's economy recover from the slowdown of spending apd
travel that foUowed last month's terrorist attacks.
The White House is pushing for a
new round of tax rebates, and House
Republican leaders, including Ohio

Rep. Rob Portmall';....
favor a plan heavy on
growth-stimulating
ideas such as a reduction in the 20 percent
long-term
capital
gains rate for investments made afier the
Sept. 11 attacks. ·
On Thursday, Taft
added his ideas to the
mix, meeting with members of Ohio's
congressional delegation over his fourpage economic "wish list," which started with a caU for increased funding for
highway and sewer projects.
"This investment accomplishes two
goals: It puts money into local
economies and improves the economic

position of communities with modem
infrastructure," Taft ~te. . ,
.
The governor sa1d Oh1o s economy
was faltering before last month's aaacks,
but "now the . situation is much more
severe."
Rep. Dennis Kucinich, who is c~ir­
man of the liberal House Progress1ve
Caucus, supports increased spending on
roads. schools and other projects.
"Congress must act boldly," he_ ~aid
about the caucus' proposed $200 billion
package, which would also increase
unemployment benefits and provide taX
rebates.
·
Republicans have tended to favor taX
relief over increased spending. Their'
package is expected to cost between $7~
billion and $1 14 biUion.

questioning Pierce~ readiness for office.
,· ..
.
Pierce responded Thursday by calling Campbell s pos.non as ~
Cuyahoga
County colllltlissionera "part-time job."
COLUMBUS (AP) - Spending culll and the elimination of
Ft. Cblly Cloud&gt;
Shown r-..
AU~
"""""
,._
1ct
400 to 800 full-time jobs will be necessary at Ohio State University over the next year to deal with the faltering economy; Presi'dent William Kirwan said.
SHELBY (AP) - An experimental sidewalk is being tested in
But faculty salaries will get a boost, Kirwan said Thursday in his
this north-central Ohio town that could make snow removal a
annual State of the University address.
·
He said the university will try to handle the job cuts through thing of the past.
·
increasing to 10 to 15 mph.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
.
Saturday night ... Becoming attrition.
Concrete that conducts electricity has been poured in fiont of
A low pressure system pushThere are about 31,000 employees at the school, 23,000 of Shelby City Hall and the city utility building in the first fuU-scale
ing out of the Southern Plains cloudy. Showers likely, mainly
will bring showers to the tri- after midnight. Lows in the whom are fuU-time. The university has about 3,000 faculty mem- test of the technology being developed at the University of
bers and 16,000 administrative and civil-service workers.
JCounty area Saturday and Sun- lower 60s.
Nebraska-Lincoln.
Extended forecast:
day, the National Weather SerThe 'concrete contains steel electrodes that can be warmed so
vice· said.
Sunday...Showers ending by
snow and ice melt as they 'hit the sidewalk.
' Sea ttered showers will noon. Some afternoon sunThe system can hi' turned on and off with a switch in a cin:ui~
CLEVELAND (AP) - A Wai-Mart manager received a box and a gauge can control the temperature, said Nebraska Pro:
become more numerous Sat- shine. Highs in the lower 70s.
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy $500,000 jury awanl Thursday afier claiming he was fired because fessor Chris Tuan, one of the civil engineers who developed the
urday night.
Highs on Saturday will be in and cooler. Lows in the lower he is white.
system .
Robert Serger, 37, sued Wai-Mart in U.S. District Court, saying
the 70s. Lows Saturday night 40s.
will be in the 50s.
Monday.·.. Partly cloudy. A he became a scapegoat afier 37 black employees were searched
Sunset tonight will be at chance of showers during the when a money bag turned up missing at the Cleveland Heights
\CINC~ATi(AP) - Mayor Chiirlie Luken stressed the
6:57, and sunrise on Saturday night. Highs in the mid 60s.
store in 1999.
is at 7:40 a.m.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy and
Serger testified that he was fired because Wai-Mart feared a pub- need for a strong. experienced mayor, and challenger Cou~
FuUer emphasized a need for a change in leadership as both men
lic-relations
disaster.
Weather forecast:
cool with a chance of showers.
.
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s and
"I've waited two years for this," Serger said. "What they did was answered questions at a public forum Thursday night.
Luken
had
most
of
the
first
hour
of
the
two-hour
forum
to
himLo\vs near 60. South wind 5 to highs in the upper 50s.
wrong, and this proved it."
self because FuUer arrived late. He told about IOO audience memtO mph.
Wednesday and · Thursbers
that the city's first direct mayoral election in 76 }-ears will pro-:
Saturday... A mix of clouds day... Partly cloudy and continand sunshine. Highs in the ued cool. Low in the upper
vide an opportunity for the mayor to be the chief architect and
upper 70s. Light south wind 30s and high in the upper 50s.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A university profi:ssor will research spokesman for a new "vision" of the city.
'
some of the nation's top police programs in an effort to settle a
"My thought is that the mayor and city manager will be as one,
racial profiling lawsuit filed ag;linst the city of Cincinnati.
. with the mayor providing the vision. and articulating it and the city
John Eck, a University of Cincinnati professor, was hired by Aria manager implementing it;' Luken said.
Group. The mediation firm is leading the effort to settle the lawLuken, 50, also stressed the need for the mayor to build a strong
suit. Eck and his research team will suggest ways to improve com- coalition between his office, the city manager and the city council,
munity policing in Cincinnati using other cities' successes_as examples.
His recommendations will be combined with ·citizens' ideas to
CLEVELAND (AP)- City mously.
create a settlement agreement. That agreement is scheduled to be
DAYTON (AP) - Some workers at the National Air lntelli-.
transportation officials are ·The
Detroit-Superior presented to a federal judge in December.
gence Center were confined to. their building for several hours
preparing to convert a six-lane Bridge, also caUed the Veteran's
' "We're trying to match what the citizens have Said they want Thursday after a suspicious substance was found inside.
downtown bridge into a four- Memorial Bridge, is one of a with programs we know have worked;' said Eck, a criminal justice
Hazardous materials crews investigated the substance, found it to
•
lane Parisian boulevard with handful of main thoroughfares expert.
be harmless, and released the workers, base spokeswoman Pat
bicycle lanes and panoramic crossing the Cuyahoga River
Tilton said.
views of downtown Cleveland. to link the city's downtown to
Tilton said "more than a handful" of workers were affected. Sh~
National advocates of alterCLEVELAND (AP) _ A man pleaded guilty in U.S. District said she had no additional details, such as the nature of the subnative transport say the the working class West Side.
The four-lane bridge built in Court to charges. of wire fraud, admitting that he stole $4.6 mil- Stance or how it entered the building.
Detroit-Superior
Bridge
The center, on Wright-Pattet'on Air Fon:e Base, is the Pentarestoration project is one of the 1917 was ·one ofthe•busiest in lion trom two companies where he was chieffinancial officer.
gon's primary producer offoreign aerospace intelligence. The cenMichaei!Jukuts, 38, could be sentenced in December to up to
few in the country where a the nation by 1930.1n 1969 it
ter measures the aerospace capabilities of other nations, evaluates
city has agreed to give up traf- was expanded to six lanes ~nd five years in prison for funneling money fiom LuK Inc. ofWoost- technologies of potential adversaries and develops targeting and
fic lanes to make more room taU metal barriers were erected· er and Complient Corp. of Solon into a Swiss bank account he mission planning intelligence materials.
to meet safety standards.
· controUed.
·
'
.
for pedestrians.
The expansion "turned a
"It's iad and very unfortunate;' said Frank Beeson, a Wooster
The bridge restoration plan
pretty
civic
experience
into
a
business
leader. "He had a great business mind and worked reaDy
is vital to the "greening of the
city;' Councilmail Joe Cimper- highway experience;' said Lil- hard. But he just put too much effort in the wrong direction. This
CINCINNATI (AP) -A piano teacher was sentenced Thurssends a statement to others in industry to take heed of the people
fl'"" said. He sponsored a City lian Kuri, executive director of watching
day
to seven years in prison for admitting he sexuaUy assaulted a 7their money."
Council resolution to endorse Cleveland Public Art, the lead
·
Bukuu was arrested July 1t afier LuK audits revealed that he year-old girl who went to him for piano lessons.
the plan, and it passed unani- sponsor of the restoration.
Charles
Bingman,
69,
admitted
he
assaulted
the
girl
at
his
suburpude five payments, totaling $4.3 million, to a New York City
ban Blue Ash home. He was sentenced in Hamilton County
bank account, then funneled·the money to the Swiss account. ·
Common Pleas Court after reaching a plea agreement with' prosecutors.
The girl told police Bingman undressed her during a July 11
CLEVELAND (AP) ·- Mayoral candidate Raymond Pierce piano lesson and forced her to lie on the piano bench and on th~
· caUed opponent Jane Campbell a "political opportunist" a day after floor while he fondled and kissed her. ·
she said the mayor's office "is not a place for on-the-job training."
·
·
The Democrats had been cordial to each other since the Oct. 2
'primary with Pierce calling his opponent "a nice person" and
CINCINNATI (AP) - A Tonnie Storey, 15, of Cincin- CarnpbeU referring to him as a "wonderful man."
,
federal appeals court · has nati, b11t set aside the death
But CarnpbeU ended a televised debate Wednesday night by
thrown out one of the four penalty. The court ruled that
death sentences that convict- Coleman's attorneys didn't
ed killer Alton Coleman adequately represent him
received for a Midwest killing during the sentencing phase
spree in 1984.
of his 1985 trial.
. Coleman,
45,
from
The ruling requires Ohio
Waukegan, Ill., was sentenced to conduct a new sentencing
to death in Ohio for killing a hearing within six n{onths.
$135Pack
Cincinnati teen-ager ~nd a The ruling does not affect
Complete Stock
Norwood woman. He also any of Coleman's other senreceived death penalties in tences .,
Indiana and IUinois for two
The appeals judges said
other murders committed , Coleman's two attorneys
·Russell Stover
during a seven-week series of . failed to present evidence
1
Sugar-~·
kiUings and beatings.
that their client was physicalThe 6th U.S. Circuit Court ly and psychologiCaUy abused
of Appeals on Wednesday as a child and that he suffered
Reg. $In
290 West Main Street - Pomeroy
upheld Coleman's aggravated a personahty diSorder and
Complete Stock
murder conviction for killing mental defiCienCieS.

0~-·~-·,.·

OSU will cut spending

City te di11g elecbic siclewalb

Rain, on and off, for weekend

Wai-Mart •nagar wins case

HonMuls answer questions

:

Ac:bllic brought in on case

Cleveland bridge gets
makeover to attract tourists

Mlitary base locked down

'Court throws out
Cole111an's

Val
Cigarettes

Cards

1/2 Price
..,,,. Rings &amp;
.Candies Earrings

CARPET SALE!

•••
•

;TI-te Daily Sentinel

Taft seeks fast action to aid economic recovery

Ohio weather

02001

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Nation • World

Martian sloiili wwales NASA

WASHINGTON (AP) -The average number of newly laid-off workers
over the past month hit a 10-y~ar high
and consumers retrenched as the terror
attacks damaged the teetering economy.
The latest batch of economic tlata
released Thursday underscored the fragile state of the· U.S. economy, which
many analysts believe will faU into
recession this year.
"The job market wiU continue to
deteriorate and consumer spending wiU
go backwanl for a couple of quarters;•
predicted economist Clifford Waldman
ofWaldman Associates." A real recovery
in the economy is six to nine months
away."
The four-week moving average of

Poll: flying fears decline
WASHINGTON (AP) -Women are now three times as
likely as men to say they're afraid of flying in airplanes, accord. ing to an Associated Press poll that suggests the public's fear of
flying is returning to dose to what it was before the Sept. 11 ter1\)rist hijackings.
Six in 10 women said they are bothered now by flying, including just over a quarter, 27 percent, who said they ~re afraid,
'according to the poU, conducted for the AP by ICR of Media,
Pa. Only three in 10 men said they are bothered by flying; 10
percent said they are afraid.
"With aU this going on, I have no desire to fly," said Janice
lnselberg, a 47-year-old preschool teacher from Fort Washington, Pa. "When I was younger, I loved to fly." TraditionaUy, women have been more wiUing than men to
,admit to pollsters their anxieties on many matters, including
their fear of flying. The differences between the genders on flying fears have not always been as pronounced, however.

PBS can air aclve: 6slng

WASHINGTON (AP) -As television makes the switch to
•l:ligital broadcasting, public TV stations can run commercials for
the first time.
.&gt; The Federal Communications Commission, in a 3-1 vote,
ruled Thursday that the stations can display advertisements on
some of the new data or subscription services - more likely to
be viewed on personal computers and special TV attachments
than oh the family set.
, .Digital is a new, more efficient technology that aUows broadcasters to transmit much more programmmg over the same
~hannel than is possible with traditional analog technology.
John Lawson, president of the Association of America's Public
Television Stations, said examples of how some stations plan to
use their extra digital capacity include fee-based services_such as
,£allege courses aired in rural areas, subscriptions to televised lectures, and even textbooks.

Settlement talks scheduled
WASHINGTON (AP) -· Under pressure from a judge to
iettle their antitrust case, Microsoft and the government have
inade little progress in private talks and face the intervention of
a mediator, officials said Thursday.
,
·
Despite twO weeks of nonstop negotiations, the two sides had
not moved close enough to a settlement by the Friday deadline
set by the new judge in the case, according to governm~~t officials familiar with the talks "who spoke on conditton of
anonymity.
.
· U.S. District Judge CoUeen KoUar-Kotelly has told both Sides
ihe wants the case settled by Nov. 2, and that she would appomt
a mediator this Friday if progress had not been made. Both sides
have resisted having a mediator in recent weeks.
One of Microsoft's key avenues of appeal was turned down by
the Supreme Court earlier this week. At this point,. say legal
experts, Microsoft has two choices: Either have a hand m choosing its penalty, or have it imposed upon them by Kollar-Kotelly.

:..

Fttdlly. Odoll•12, 2001

Number of laid-off workers hits 1a-year high

WASHINGTON (AP) - A planetwide ' dust storm that
began in June is stiU raging across Mars and may force NASA
engin~en to slightly change the flight path of a spacecrafi set to
'Orbit the red planet in less than two weeks.
• Scientists said the storm, photographed by both amateur and
professional astronomers, has erupted into the most massive
Mars dust storm ever seen from Earth.
Photographs fiom the Hubble Space Telescope and fiom Mars
Global Surveyor, now orbiting the planet, show that dust is
'obscuring virtually the entire surface of the red planet.
Mars is covered with "a ~eil of hazy, reddish dust," said Jim
'Garvin, head of the Mars exploration program at the National
'Aeronautics and Space Administration.

.'

PageA7

claims for unemployment benefits rose
last week to a seasonally adjusted
463,000, the highest level since Dec. 14,
1991, when the country was mired in
its last recession, the Labor Department
said. The. moving average smoothes out
week-to-week fluctuations.
Consumers cut back on their purchases in September; leaving retailers
with their weakest sales performance in
at least two decades, analysts said. Consumer spending accounts for two-thirds
of aU economic activity and has helped
to keep the economy out of recession.
"The shock effect from the aaackt
and job losses that were pretty significant in September all weighed on eonsumers," said Tim O'Neill, chief econo'mist with the Bank of Montreal and

Harris Bank.
Reports from the nation 's largest
merchants showed that department
stores, particularly . Federated Department Stores and Dillard's, and specialty
apparel stores again languished as consumers were hesitant to make apparel
and other discretionary purchases.
Discounters, particularly Wai-Mart
Stores Inc., fared better. So did other
stores including Mi chael's, lm arts and
crafts retailer as consumers retreated to
their homes.
Still, Jeffi-ey Feiner, managing director
of Lehman Brothers, said his company's
retail index, which tracks 22 companies, registered its lowest September
reading - a 1.4 percent gain - ·in the
20 years since it was first compiled.

'.

Green will face billionaire media mogul Michael Bloomberg
next month in the general election as they attempt to guide
New York City through a daunting recovery process following
the Sept. 11 attach Dn the World Trade Center.
·
Green and Bloomberg are vying for a seat that Giuliani, a twoterm Republican whose popularity has soared for his leadership
afier the aaacks, must give up because of term limits.
''l'U give you a mayor who came back in this campaign and
·wants to le.~d a.New York comeback," said Green, who came in
second in the primary but had enough votes to advance to the
runoff.

their efforts to achieve a "more peaceful world."
Annan, who has devoted almost his entire working life to the
world body, was lauded for "bringing new life to the organization," that has often taken great risks in the promotion of human
rights and conflict resolution since the end ofWorld War II.
Annan, who was woken shortly after 5 a.m. in New York with
the news, said he was humbled and chaUenged. "It honors the
U.N. but also chaUenges us to do more af!,d do better, not to rest
on our laurels;• he said.
The prize winners were decided following the Sept. 11 terror
attacks on the United States and the citation specificaUy noted
that Annan "has risen to such new chaUenges as HIV I AIDS and ·
international terrorism, and brought about more efficient utilization
of the U.N:s modest resources."
SOLON, Maine (AP) - Evander Andrews left the family
farm to join the Air Force and know more of the world than this
speck of a town. Today, his family and town know more of the
world too - almost more than they can bear.
MOSCOW (AP) -The chief of the conunission investigatMaster Sgt. Andrews, assigned to the 366 Civil Engineer
ing
the crash of a Russian airliner that went down last week over
Squadron, reportedly became the first American soldier to die in
the campaign against terrorists. He was killed Wednesday in a the Black Sea said Friday the plane had been hit by an anti-airforklift accident while building an air strip in Aludeid, some- craft mi5sile, the lnterfax news agency reported, and a Ukrainian
investigator suggested his forces could have been responsible.
where in Qatar, a peninsula in the Persian Gulf.
"We're bitter that a young man like, this was taken," said his
The Tu-154 airliner went down Oct. 4 off the Black Sea coast,
aunt, Dassie']ackson. "At 36, he's got his whole life ahead of near the Russian city of Sochi, alter an explosion on board. All
. ..
hlm.
78 people, most of them recent Russian imrnig~nts to Israel.
Three Air Force officers and a deputy sheriff strode to the were killed.
door of the family home before dawn Thursday to stir his parHours after the crash, U.S. officials said that the tragedy had
ents, Odber and Mary. They were handed an official notice.
been caused by an S-200 missile fired mistakeuly by Ukrainian
forces during military exercises on the Crimean Peninsula,
which juts into the Black Sea.
Vladimir Rushailo, head of the investigatory conunission, told
OSLO, Norway (AP) -The United Nations and Secretaryreporters in Sochi that the plane had indeed been hit by a rnis-·
General Kofi Annan won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for
sile, Interfax reported.

Hometown moums first casualty

· Missile downed Russian plane

U.N., Annan win peace prize

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.. Concems spur toy box recall

WASHINGTON (AP) -A ·canadian company is recaUing
about 4,500 toy boxes because the lids can faU suddenly, trapping
or strangling young children.
.
Palliser Furniture Lrd., ofWinnipeg, Canada, has not receiVed
any reports of injuries, but issued the recaU as a precaution, the
j:onsumer Product Safety Commission said Thursday. Spaces
near the lid's hinge also can injure fingers.
An industry standard requires toy boxes or chests with hinged
lids to use supports that keep the lid from falling.
The recaUed toy boxes have a label inside or on the back with
"PaUiser" and the model number. The recaUed boxes have model
~umbers: 580- 283, 581-283, 582-283, 583-283, 584-283, 589283 and 598-283.

'
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•

Iris' death toll now at 21
NORFOLK,Va. (AP) -The death toU from a nasty Atlantic
?storm that capsized a U.S.-chartered diving boat rose to 21 after
~ two more bodies were recovered from the wreckage.
Three people remained missing in the aftermath of Hurrican~
Iris, which swept through a narrow corridor of southern Belize
.; on Monday. The storm packed 140 mph winds that wiped out
::entire viUages, flattened homes and eliminated banana crops. At
:tleast 13,000 Belizeans wery rendered homeless.
·
.
~ The storm capsized the MVWave Dancer, a U.S. boat With 28
.!{'passengers and crew aboard - including 20 members of a
.; Richmond, Va., dive club - . moored n'l the relatively protected
;:: port at Big Creek, 80 miles south of Belize City.
·
:!: Belize officials said the hurricane's storm surge of 13 to 18
~feet with a ferocious wind and high waves, snapped the Wave
~Da~cer's lines and toppled it.

••

r
~

Fla. probes Martinez donations

ORLANDO, Aa. (AP) - State investigators are looking into
} claims that local homebuilders illegaUy funneled money mtothe
:~ t 998 campaign of Mel Martinez, now the U.S. Secretary of
~ Housing and Urban Develo~ment
.
.
.
Martinez, Orange County s former cha1rman, IS not a susp.ect.
The Florida Department of Law Enforcement investigation
comes as the three-year statute oflimitations on illegal campaign
""contributions is about to run out.
·
~ State law prohibits companies fiom giving more than $500 to
:t:a single campaign dunng an election cycle.

~

~

i

Green wins nanoff race
NEW YORK (AP) - Public Ad~ocate Mark Green emerged

$as the Democratic nominee (or New York mayor, defeating Fer:nando Ferrer in a runoff overshadowed by te.rronst attach a~d
~ specul~tion about incumbent Rudolph Gtuham staymg m
office. I
(

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Whether it is news from around the world or in your neighborhood, your
newspaper carrier brings important news and Information right to your doorstep
each day, rain or shine, hot or cold.
Whether your carrier Is a youth or adult, on foot or motor route, your
newspape~ canier delivers the Dally Sentinel to your home, providing you with

the convenience of home delivery that you have come to rely upon. We are proud
of their outstanding service.
We invite you to join with us in saluting your carrier on International
Newspaper Carrier Day on October 13, and, tbank them for their efforts in a job
more than well dQne.
\

The Daily Sentinel
1 1 1 Co u r t Street • Pomeroy , 0 H. 4 57 6 9

740.992.2156
..

. ·-

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,..)

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Pw A 8 • The Dally S.ntlnel

.._, PJ C\lopmMI

( alholil

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t6t Mwhony ..... l'&lt;&gt;nl&lt;toy. 99MA98
Putor. Rev. w.Jitr E. HeirU
S.. Con. 4 :4~-!: Up.rn.: Mass- ~:30 p.m.
Sun. COIL 4 :4S.9:15 a.m.,
Sun. Mus - 9:30a.m.

IUwerVallfy
Apooolic Wonhip Cen~er
873 S. )rd Ave:., MKidkpott
Kevin Kmkk, PlsKJr

O.t~y

Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6:00 p.m

Mu.s ·8:30a.m.

Wedncsdly. 7:30p.m.: Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.

~c....llaldoe­

Sua. Wonbip - 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wtdnesday Service • 7 p.m..
Carletolllalti
o..m.
Rood
PM&amp;ot: ROOen Vaoce
Sw.Jay Sdlool - 9:30 "-"'
WOflllip Service: lO:lO a.m.
No Suaday or W«&lt;Aud..y Ni&amp;bt Setvka

ntolty Chrdo
Sect.nd &amp;. Lyon. Pomeroy
Pastor". Rev. Craia CrolsrnMl

~-SI.Pool

Won.bip 10:23 a.m.
Sunday School9:13 a.m.

Wonbip - IOa.m.

Pastor. Rc.,. Herbert Gratr
Suaday School· 9:30a.m.
Wontrip- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdaelday Services· 7 p.m.

Bald KMb. on Co. Rd. ll
PuKr. Rev. Roa« Willford

....,., Clrlkdl"- dw N
Pulor. Ju Lave.b
,

hllor. Jane Baait
Slolllday S&lt;:boal- 9 a.m.

1\lcadly Services· 7:30p.m.

Albwy(SytiOIIIC)

- y Ourdl "Cloriot

Apostolic Failh
New LJ.ma Road
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

212W. MrU.raSt.
Ministtr: Anthony Morris
Sunday School · 9;30 a.m.
Worship-- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedoesday Sctvim • 1 p.m.

U..rty A,_,bly &lt;II God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason. W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Stnrices- 10:00 a.io. and 1 p.m.

Pomtroy Watlkk Cburd11 ot Chrilt
33226 Otiktren's Home Rd.

326 E. Main St., Pumeroy
Rev. James Bernacki, Re.... Kalharin Fosler

Sund..y School • 11 a.m.
WorWp·IO..m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Little Cftt'k laptill Cburdl
Price Hollow Rd., Rullarid
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11 :00 a.m.
Evcnilli Service • 6:00p.m
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.

llolilll""

Mlddloport Cllu... of Clortot

Main Street, RuUand

!itb and Main
Pastor: A.l Haruon
Youth Minister: Bill Frazier
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 8:13, I 0:30a.m.. 7 p.m.
Wednc6day Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service-7 p.m.
Daovlllt Holne~~ Churdl
310.57 Slate Routt 325. Lane•vUc
Paslor: Gary 1ackfon
Sunday school • 9:30a.m.
Sunday W«Ship- 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 1 p.m.
Wednesday prayer service • 1 p.m.

Keno Cho"b or Christ
Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Paslor-JefTrey Wallat.-e
1st and 3rd Sunday

Hope Baptist Chun:h (Soudw:m)
570 Grant S1., Middle)»lt
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Worship- II a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m.

First Southern Bapdd
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday S&lt;:hool • 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4ji a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00 p.m.

Instrumental
Wonhip Service- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10: IS a.m.
Youth-5:30 pm Sunday
Bible ,Study Wednesday 1 pm

Pastor: Mart Morrow
6th and Palmer St., Middleport
Sunda)l S4;:hool • 9:1.5 a.m.
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
Racine Flnt B•plftt

Br.dhury Church ol Christ
Pastor: lim Eaton
39.5.58 Bradbucy Road. Middlepon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:40 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servicea • 7:00 p.m.

Rutbad Church of Christ
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship -I 0:30a.m.. 7 p.m.

ML Union Baptist:
Pll!ltor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Scbool-9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 6:30p.m.

Hickory Hills Churth of Christ

Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wedne!lday Service!! - 7 p.m.

Bdhlcbtm S.ptist Cbui.:h
Great Bend. Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor ; Daniel Mecea

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday Wmship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Smdy - 6:00p.m.

Okl Bethel Frte WIU Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:00p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:00

· Faltll B•pd81 Chun:h
Rai lroad St, Mason
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Gilhcn Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor.iliip '_ 10:45 a.m.

Worship- 9:00a.m.
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.

SL ·Paul Lulhel'll• Chur.:h

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy
Sunday School - 9 : 4~ a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

Gnlwn United Mdhodlst
Worship· 9:30a.m. (1st &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rcl &amp;: 4th Sun)

ML Olh•e United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service• ~ 7 p.m.

Andqulty Bapdsl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Sunda)l Evening • 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Rutland Chun:h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
Sunday Worship · 10 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday SerYices- 7 p.m.

Rutland Fne Will Baplkt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.·
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

'

Chester
Pas1or: lane Beanie
WMhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Thursday Servica - 7 p.m.

Syi'ICUM: Flrsl Churda or Gud
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Russell
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Second O.ptifl Churth
Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: David W. McClain

Joppo
Pastor: Bob Randolph
Warship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Thur&amp;day Service - 7 p.m.

Syrw:usc Mlsilon
1411 Bridgeman St., Syt'ftCUSC
Rev. Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wedne.'lday Serviee - 7 p.m.

j

Bill Quickel

!fnurds Florist

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL

HOME

Meigs County!: Oldettf FlorUt

352 East Main

169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

Pomeroy, Oh

6
W

Dignity and Service Always

Pastor: Teresa Waldeck
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:4!1 a.m .. 1 p.m.
· Weditesday Services· 1 p.m.

•Lgt qc ltAfld _y1tut tltoqghte wllh ~~1111 eatt•

992-7028

740-992-2644 740-99~!-62!1111 106

•

Eatabllahed 1913

992-2121
Ave.

882-8200
Lundy Brown James Anderson

Directors

tr.'i

'~•

I

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I nill'cl llrl'lhiTil
~

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In Chrt.f Churth
Texas Community off CR 82
Pru;tnr: Robert Sanden
SUnday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 &amp;.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Full Goepel LlghthouR.o
3304.5"Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pll!tor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · IOa.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
lUesdny &amp; Thursday -7:30p.m.

Eftn Ualled Brethren In Cluist
2 1/2 miles nonh or Recds\'llle
on Stale Route 124
Pastor: Rev, Robert Markley
Sunday School- II a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wcdnesdll.y Youlh SerYice- 7;30 p.m.

"FHtur/ng Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

Po~OY,OH

992-6454

740·992-S 14 I
....... fltW·IIhctor
590 EAstM StrMI • '-ty, OH 45769

740·992-5444

m:eaforb
l\eal &lt;f~tatt
218 E. Second Pomeroy

.......

(~

~

!.J

.....

,
sur E. Main St.
CJ..,....,..,.

. . . . .,a.. . . .

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!Always &amp; 'Forever
fjift Sfiop
Pomeroy, OH

992-1161
•

BY ScOTT WOU'E
OVP CORRESPONDENT

TVC

Ohio Division

IHm

M

All

Wellslon
Nelsonville-York

2-o

2-o

4·3

Belpre

1·1
1·1

3-4

Vinton County
Alexander
Meigs

5·2
1-6

0·2 2-5
0·2 1-6
Hocking Division

IHm

M
2·0

Trimble

2-o

~outhem

All
6-1
4·3
6-1

Eastern
1·1
Waterford
1·1 5·2
Miller
0·2 1-6
Federal Hooking 0-2 o-7
Today'aGamea
Eastern at Miller
Waterford at Soulhern
Alexander at Meigs
Nelson.-York at Wellston
Vinton County at Belpre
trimble at Fed Hocking

Non-league
IHm

All

Ravenswood

Olj,kc,liiU, ,

7·0
, .,,. •• • 5.2

Wahama
~-3
Ripley
3·4
South Gallia
1·6
Hannan
0·6
Today'a GarMS
Wahama at South Gallia
Hannan at Meadow Bridge
Oak Hill at Lucasville Valfey
South Char1eston at Ripley
Clay Co. at Ravenswood

•••••

Jordan solid in
first game back
AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP)
Michael Jordan
looked terrific in the first
quarter and merely average in
the second, appearing in a
Washington Wizards uniform
for the first time and playing
17 first-half minutes in a 9585 preseason loss to Detroit.
Jordan played the opening
8:08 of the first quarter and
the first 8:25 of the second,
scoring eight points on 4-for8 shooting with three
rebounds, two turnovers, a
steal and a block. He did not
play in the second half.

·Lewis fined for
headhunting

Lehman leads
lnvensys Classic

Jr.· DlrldiM

'Flowers for all occasions".

Cla•n• nn

•

All

264 Swill s.c-1 AvL • 1'1 I p11, 0H 45760

J-s R.

FLOWER SHOP
106 BUITERNUT AVE.

•'

SEQ

logan
4.0 7-o
Gatlla Academy 4.0 6-1
Marietta
2·2 5-2
Athens
2·2 4-3
Jackson
2·2 4-3
Point Pleasant
1·3 2-5
Warren
1·3 2·5
River Valley
0-4 0.7
.
Today'a Gamee
Point Pleasant at Warren
Ga!lia Academy at Athens
River Valley at Jackson
Marietta at Logan

· HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (AP)
- Jets linebacker Mo Lewis,
who's knocked two quarter'backs out of games in the last
:three weeks, was fined
$12.500 by the NFL for a
forearm -to-helmet hit on
Buffalo's Rob Johnson last
Sunday.

ttJ,,n, llau ;funeral

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
"We accept Preneed Transfers"

'

P!IStor: Rev, Kri81UW Robinson
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

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Unlkd Filth Cburtb
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robed E. Smith, Sr.
Sunda)l School -9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ScrYice • 7 p.m.

0\urchofthe Nazarene

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

l'n·,ln ll'rian

Mu1berry Hts. Rd., Pomero)l
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Satunlay Services:
Sabbath School • 2 p.m.
Wo111hip • 3 p.m.

Mt. Olive C,_•unity Churd
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 1 p.m.

Reedsville Fellowship

PHARMACY

'y
St. Rt. 124, Racine
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School -·10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

..,, \('llllt-ll:ll \til l" ltli't

Faith G01pel Chun:h
Long Bottom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:43 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Chun:h of lhe Nllurtne
Pastor; Allen Midcap
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servicea - 1 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE .

.

Middleport Presbyterlan
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Mone Ctt.pel Cburdl
Sunday school - I0 a.m.
WDrship - II a.m.
Wednesday Servk:e • 7 p.m.

Sy1111:uH Ch•n:h of lhc Nuanne

Service &amp; ;;au1~1J
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

l'l' 11 I lTO., I a I

Harrisonville Prtlbyterian Churth
~
Worship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Dyavllle Community Clllurdll
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.~ 7 p.m.

\ataiTIIl'

w •

••

Salem C01111111wdty Cbun:b
lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
PuiOJ: Clyde Fentll
Sunday School 9:30am
Sunday evening service 6 pro
Wednesday lltrvlce 7 pm

Huel Commually Churth
Off Rt. 124
Paslor: EdsCI Hart
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.

Sunday School - 9!30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
140·661·3110

Ingel's Carpet

Faith Valley 'li.hemaclc Churth
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Raw1011
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.

Torc:h Churth
Co. Rd. 63

'

CUlton T•btnu.dc ChuM
Clifion. W.Va.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 P·D.L
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

Mlddltpott Community Cbun:h
57.5 Pearl 'S t., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday Schooi!O a.m.
l!vening ·7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Hockingport Ch•rtb
Grand Street
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesd~)l Servicc!l- 8 p.m.

Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Melp Cooperallve hrUh
Northeast Cluster
AI£red
Pastor; Jane Beattie
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m.• 6:30 p.m.

Harrisonville Community &lt;llun:b
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m:
Wednesda)l - 1 p.m.
I

Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services- I0 a.m.

I nill'cl \ll'lhodi-.1

Rejoldna Lift Churcll
.500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman
WOI'!Ihip- I 0:00am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

God's 'Jemplc of Pralle
3166.5 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
'
Pastor: Wayne 8a1colm
Services: Thurs. Nitcs7:00 pm
New church No Sunday service
established.

Tbe Bel&amp;tftn' Fellowship Minidry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pl.!ltor: !ttY. M~~Earet J. Robinion
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

•lhtl Church

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Sa¥6or
RL338, Amiquhy
Pastor. Jesse Morris

Pastor; Steve Reed
Sunday School - 9:~ a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday • [ellowship service 1 p.m.

Cooi.,Wc United Mellllodill Parilh
PasiOJ: Helen Kline
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St
Sunday School· IOa.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Thesday Services - 7 p.m.

IHm

I

Services: Salurday 2:00p.m.

Rad""
Pastor. Brian Harkness
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Chnrth
Walnut and Henry Sis., Ravenswood.
W.Va.
Pa!itor. David Russell
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Wo11ibip ·II ~.m.

Putor: BriM May
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship · 7:00p.m.
Wedne.Jday Bible S1udy - 7:00 p.m.

Full G..... Cllu ... or the U""'

Follh FuU Gospel Cburdl
long Boltom

trio
named
AII-WC

SEOAL

I..erart, W.Va. RL I

New Life VIctory Cenur
3773 Qeoraes C~k. Road, Oallipolils, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Sunday Servic,es · 10 a.m.&amp;. 7 p.m.
Wednesday· 1 p.m. &amp; Yooth 1 p.m.

Abundant GI'Rl'e R.F.I.
923 S. Third SL, Middleport
Pastor Tereu Da\'is
Sunday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

EaatLelnt
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday • 1 p.m.

Pine Grove

Mt. Moriah Churth of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: Brice Un
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

SaAem ce.~er
Pa!lror. Ron Fieicc

'Mo,.....SIIIr
Putor. Dewayne Stutla
Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m. ,

Sl. John Lutbtnn Church

ML Moriah Baptist

Appe ure Center
"Fuii-Oospel Chun;h"
Pa&amp;IM John .t: Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-3017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 1 pm

'

Carmei..Sutton
Cannel &amp; Bashan Rds.
Raeine, Ohio
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sul)day School • ~:~0 a.m.
Woohip - 10:45 a.m.
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

I .ul hnan

Fourth&amp;.Main St .. MiddleiX'n

.

Bethany
Pastor: Dtwayne Stutler
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Won;hjp - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Services- 10 a.m.

Sacrament Service 9·10: 15 a.m.
Hmncmakina: meeting, lsi'I'hu.nl. - 7 p.m.

Pastor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School- II a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Rutland
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor~~hip - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servka • 7 p.m.

Snowville

noon

Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.

47439 Reibel Rd., Chcsrer
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • 9 a.m.

St. RL 160,446-6247 or 446-7486
SundaySchooll0:20-ll a.m.
Relief Society!PriesthOod 11:03-12:00

Hartford Churt'h of Chrillln

"'"at Outreath Miniltrlel

Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
Wonhip - 10:15a.m.

The Church ot Jesus

( "hri-.lian I niou

forat Rua Baptist
Pa!lior : Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

\

ChriRofLatte~O.ySalnU

Churtb or Christ
Intersection 7 and 124 W
Evangeli1t: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study-9:30a.m.
Wonhip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.in .
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Vlctol')' S.plkt lndcpr:ndcnl
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Plllltor: James ·E. Keesee
Worship ."10a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kcilh Roder
Sunday School- 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p.m.

&lt;

Outer Cbun:h ol Chrbl
Pastor: Nathan Robinson
Sunday school 9:30 a.m.
Nonnan Will, superintendent
Sunday worship- 10:30 a.m.

Sunday Unified Service
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

IIGckSprin&amp;t

112 mile ofT Rl. 323
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship" 10:3Da.m.. 7 :3Q_~t:_m .
Wedne.&lt;.day Service • 7:30p.m.

Lalll'r-Da\ Saint-

Reedsville Church or Christ
Pnstor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.

Hii.Wde S.ptkt Chun:h
Sc. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 1
Pastor: Rev, James R. Acree, Sr.

Pine Grvve Bible HoUDCISII Church

Laurel CWf Fne Methodist Churdl
pastor: Donald Balls
Sunday School· 9:30.a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedne~ay Service 7:30 p.m.

Ash St., Middlepon· Pastor: GleM Rowe
Suodiiy School - 10;{10 a.m.
Sunday Sef'\'ice- 6:00p.m.
Wednelday Service-7:00p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday S4;:hool- 10:33 a.m.

Falrriew Bible Chu.rdll

Sd•enYIUe Community c::hudt
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thunday • 7:00p.m.

Pw!Chopd
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Hy.U Run HollneM~ Cll•rch
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

LaDp\'lllc Cfi.rktlan Church

Putor: Michael Ouhl
Sunday School · 9:10a.m.
Worship - 10:.30 a.m.
Wednesday Servim - 7:00 p.m.

Meigs

Prep Football

Cal"'•l1 Bible Cburch
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.
Pastor. Rev. BbiCk:wood
SUnday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Community or~
Ponland-Radne Rd.

BATTLE FOR THE BELL

HIGHLIGHTS

Cool\'ille Road
P'utor. Re.... Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9:JO a.m.
Worship-I0:30a.m.
Wcdnelid.ly Servk:e - 7 p.m.

Faltb Felowshlp Crusade ror Christ
Paslor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: FridPy. 7 p.m.

'

Worship - 10 a.m.

Wf:*yan Rlblf: Holineu Churth
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Posmr: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Worship-9:30p.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bradford Church or Christ
Comer of St. RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minisler: Doug Stlamblin
Youlh Minister: Bill Amberger
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -8:00a.m., 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:00 p.m.

Sliver Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson
Sunday School - I Oa.m.
Worship- lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00 p.m.

Pastor. Ricbud Nease
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Bible Shldy- 1 p.m.
Community of Christ

Pastor. Bob RobillJOO
Sunday School: - 9 a.m.

Ruse or Sba.roa Holiaeat Cburdl
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland
Pasloc Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9:30 a.~.
Sunday worship· 7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 1 p.m.

Tuppers Plain Chu~b of Chrb:l

F1rst O.pdst ChuM

Hemlock Grove CUild.u &lt;ltu~h

Ml....-m.

Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles McKenzie
Sunday Scboo19:30 a.m.
Worship· II a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Zion Churdl of Chrill
Pomeroy, Hll!Tisonville Rd. (Rt. 143)
Pa!ltor: Rnger Wat!IOII
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Pomeroy Finl S.ptbt
East Main St.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- !0:30a.m.

'-'BobRobiSuhday School - 10 a.m.
WQOibip · 9 a.m.

cat,..., Pilarlm Chllpd

Bta....,allow ltidae Cliiii'Ch ol Cbrllt
Paslor:TeiT)' Stewan
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wedne:May Services · 6:30p.m.

Ratlaad t1nt Baptist Cliurcla
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Wurship- 10:4.5 a.m.

( llh1·r ( hurdH·,

Heath (Mlddloport)
Pa5tor: Rob Brower
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip- ll:OO a.m.

F~Y's

w•tte•s Clutptl Wt*y•

FOftlt Rua

Page B1
FriUy. October 12.2001

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Woclhip- 7 p.m.

Portlud Flnt Cburtb ulthe NuaJ'l'IM
P'altot: William Justis
Sunday Scbool-10:00 a.m.
Momina: Worship- 10:4.5 a.m.
Sunday Service· 6:30p.m.

Flalw....
Pastor: Keith Radl:r
Sunday Schoot - 10 a.m.
Wonbip- 11 a.m.

' " '. . . . . .

-~­

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdneida)l Scrvica • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Keith Rader
Sundly School· lO a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Cola .....ty Churdll
Pastor: Re¥. Amos Tillis

I

Putor: Re\'. Samutl W. Buye

Eft.......

Sunday School and
Holy Eucharisc II :00 a.m.

playoffs, P11ge 82
MAC preview, Page 83
OSU, WVU football, Page 88

Kin......,.

Sunday Sc:hool- 9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 UL ud 6 p.m.
Wcme.day Sctvioa- 7 p.m.

a....... Cluu'dl of the Nuarue

Puler. Bob Robin10n
Sunday 5(:bool - 9:4.5 a.m.
WOtlhip - II a.m.
Wednesday Serv~s • 7:30p.m.

Gro&lt;o Eplo&lt;opol Cburdo

oe

The Daily Sentinel

13asebt~ll

Sunday SdJool - 9 a.IIL

I ••

Ceolnl~

CbiUdo &lt;II ...... Chriot

---

Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.aa.
WedDe«tty SM'teet - 1 p 111.

Wonbip - •HO UIL
Sullday Sc:bool- 10:30 a.m.
Ftnt Suaday d Moalll - 7:00 p.m. aenice

Inside:

Soudl 8ttllel ~ 1leett
Silver RidJt

Plsmr Mite Adkin1
Sundly Scbool- 9:3() a.m..

Sundly Sdlool- 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10;301.1L

Sw.lay !kbuol - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednclday Services • 7 p.m.

--c..-Qordo

Vanlald and Wud Kd.
.Puwr. J~~mei Miller
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
EvcniQI - 7:30p.m.

lAIII:a...

CHrdl ol God of PI 1' '
OJ. Wbito Rd. Q{f St. JilL 160

Sunday Sctlool 10 am

MorniJla W&lt;.lnhip II am E~nuJa - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Clooiftol- ClorlltA........

Frldty. Oct. 12. 2001

Pomerov. MlddltDort. Ohio

. LAS VEGAS (AP) -Tom
J;.ehman shot a career-low 62
to tie a PGA Tour record for
36 holes and put himself at
the top of a trio of revitalized
veterans in the lnvensys ClasOic at Las Vegas.
: Lehman's 10-under 62 followed an opening 63 and gave
him a three-shot lead over
Fred Couples and four over
Ghris DiMarco (61). John
Oaly shot a career-low 62 and
was another shot back with
thrd, rounds left.

TME 8EL1 - Officials from Marshall and Ohio listen to ISP vice president Jim Woodrum speak during a press conference
announcing the Holzer Medical Center as sponsor of the "Battle for the Bell" as the bell can be seen in the foreground. Pictured is, from left to right, La~ West (Marshall Athletic Director), Bob Pruett (Marshall head football coach), Brian Knorr (Ohio
head football coach), LaMar Wyse (Holzer Medical Center CEO) and Thomas Boeh (Ohio Athletic Director). (Butch Cooper)

HMC announces sponsorship of
Marshall/ Ohio game
~ow, \he "Batde for the
Bell" has taken a big step as
GALLIPOLIS - Okla- the Holzer Medical Center
homa vs. Nebraska, West Vir- announced Thursday that
ginia vs. Pittsburgh, Michigan they will sponsor the game
vs. Notre Dame.... and yes, over the next two years.
Michigan vs. Ohio State.
"For Holzer Medical
These
have
Center, it's obvibecome
great .... . - - - ously a way for
interstate rivalus to continue.
ries over the
our effort to
past several
reach
into
decades.
the regional
Another one
area that we
that may be
serve and to. that
thrown on to that
expansion,"
_said
list someday is Ohio vs.
Holzer Medical Center CEO
MarshalL
LaMar Wyse. "It's a new
Since Marshall rejoined the opportunity for us, as a medMid-American Conference ical center, and we're just
as a NCAA I-A school in very proud to be part of it"
1997, the Ohio game became
Marshall and Ohio are
·a natural rival with the two scheduled to play on Nov. 17
HMC CEO LaMar Wyse speaks to members of the media durschools being separated by
PIIIH
HI
Holzer,
BJ
Ing
Thursday's press conference. (Butch Cooper)
only 150 tniles, give or take.

BY BurcH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

ALBANY - In only two
years the newly formed
Southern Cross Country
team has made great strides, .
steadily improving to a point
of pladng in the league meet
this past Wednesday at
Alexander High School.
Southern placed fifth to meet
winner Vinton County in the
boys' league meet which
included teams from both the
big-school Ohio Division and
small-school Hocking Division. The Southern girls fin-.
ished fourth. The always
strong Meigs club finished
third overall in the girls division and fourth in the boys
division.

Placing second through ten
were Belpre (50), Alexander
(60), Meigs (94), Southern
(115), Wellston (155), Federal
Hocking, Miller, and Waterford. The latter three schools
did not register scores.
Alexander (32) claimed the
girls division championship
with a win over Vinton
County (35), Meigs (67),
Southern (99), Belpre, Federal
Hocking, Miller, and Wellston. The latter four schools
did not register •cores.
According to the league
c·harter, the top five finishers
finish .are first team all-conference selections, and sixth
through tenth earned all-conference second team honors.
Matt Lilly covered the course
in 18 minutes, 41 seconds to
gain the top ·boys individual
honors compared to 19:22 for
runner-up Zack Reynolds of
Vinton County. Rounding
out the first-team selections
were Alexander runners Nick
Schell (19:29) and BJ.Allman
(19:37), and Mike Moore of
Belpre (19:46).
·
Second team selections
were Nate Emmert ofVinton
County
(19:49),
Matt
Williamson of Meigs (20:00),

PluseHIXC.BJ

PREP V-BALL

Mariners come back and
Eastem
closes
even playoff series at 1-1 season w/win

SEATTLE (AP) - The Seattle Mariners
bounced back, just as they promised.
The Mariners didn't panic after losing the
opener of their AL playoff series against the
Cleveland Indians. Instead, the Mariners did
the same thing they've been doing all year.
They won again.
,
Jamie Moyer took a shutout into the seventh
inning, and Seattle hit a pair of two-run
homers before making an out in the first as the
Mariners evened their AL playo£1' series at one
game apiece with a 5-1 win Thursday over the
Indians.
Pressure? What pressure?
"It was as close to a must-win game as you
want it to be," Mariners manager Lou Piniella
admitted. "We came out and pitched well and
played good defense, and the bullpen came in
and held the lead. It's been om formula all
year."
Of the 117 wins the Mariners haw during
their record-setting season, none meant nearly
as much as this one.
"There was a lot of pressure for u; 10 get a
victory," third baseman David Bell said. "Going
to Cleveland down 2-0 wouldn't have been
good."
The 38-year-old Moyer made sure it wouldn't happen.
Making just the ·second postseason appearance of his career, the 20-game winner aUowed
five hits and one run by fooling the Indians
with a fastball that rarely breaks 80 mph on the
radar gun.

t

BY Scon WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

"That's all 1 have to offer," Moyer said. "I
can't reach back and throw 95. I'm pretty comfortable with what 1 have, and over th e years
I've found a way to utilize that and use it to my
· benefit."
The Indians should know. Moyer beat them
twice during the regular season and has now

TUPPERS PLAINS - During an emotional Senior
Night at Eastern High School, the Eastern Eagles pounded the Waterford Wildcats 15-3, 15-8 to put an exclamation point on what has been another outstanding season.
Eastern completed the regular season at 18-3 overall
and 15-1 in the league and is idle until Saturday, October
20 when
they play the winner of the
Waterford/Crooksville game at 7:30p.m.
Eastern's senior girls finished an outstanding career
with four conference championships ,a the varsity level.
Several of the senior varsity players were also part of a sixyear reserve streak that saw the Eagles compile six straight
undefeated seasons of 17-0. The sixth year came this season and was capped last night with a I 5-12, 15-6 win
over Waterford.
All seniors started and playc&lt;l the first game with .
senior substitutions only in the first game. In all, nine
seniors played the entire first game and also started the
second game.
"Everyone played well tonight," said Eastern coach
Pam Douthitt. "The seniors were up for their final game
and went out with style. Janet Calaway and Whitney Karr
had exceptionally good nights"
Calaway dominated the se rving with a 20-of-20 night,
17 points and ten aces. Calaway's serving handcuffed the
Wildcats most of the night and was· a key factor in the
Eagles' win. Whitney Karr took care of any returns Calaway didn't handl e with her ten aces. Karr rode the nets
for a I 0-12 spiking night with a team-high seven kills.

Please "'.Jrlbe, Bl

Plea~see V~ball, BJ

I CAN'T HOLD BACK - The Tribe's Juan Gonzalez tries to check his swing •in the ninth
Inning Thursday. (AP)

l

�I'

I

Page'Bl.

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel

ZIJ!S. Bobcats must play on
without top ground-ga1ners

·vankess now faced with must
win situation after ·second loss ·

.

'

I'

have won their last 17 home games, and
Barry Zito (17 -8), another of the leftbanders who have given the Yankees difficulty this year, starts Saturday against
Mike Mussina (17-11).
Hudson held the Yankees to one hit in
the first five innings, then escaped jams in
the sixth and seventh.
Pitching inside to keep hitters from
extending their arms over the plate, he
retired 12 in a row after Derek Jeter's
first-inning single and allowed six hits in
all.
lsringhausen walked a fine line. Beniie
Williams doubled off the glove of third
baseman Eric Chavez leading off the
ninth, and Tino Martinez walked, creating more drama.
But with fans imploring New York to
rally as it has so many times before,
lsringhausen threw a called third strike
past Jorge Posada and retired David Justice and Scott Brosius on popups for his
second save of the series.
New York earned its titles by winning
October games like this, but the A's
seemed unafraid of the Yankees' success,
.
mystique and rabid fans.
"In this kind of atmosphere, it's a little

nerve-racking," lsringhausen said. "It's
total adrenalin ."
After two-out singles by · Chuck
Knoblauch and Jeter put two on in the
sixth, Hudson worked the count full on
Paul O'Neill, the emotional backbone of
the Yankees through their championship
years.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

"The crowd was really into it, going
crazy," Hudson said. "It's usually when the
Yankee magic comes out."
O'Neill, perhaps playing in Yankee Stadium for the 6nal time, lofted a harmless
flyout to shallow center.
"They've beaten us at our own game,"
he said. "These are the close games we
normally win in the postseason."
Singles by Martinez and Justice gave
New York runners at the corners with
two outs in the seventh. After a mound
visit by Oakland manager Art Howe,
Hudson got Brosius to hit an easy
grounder to second for a furceout.
"I lied a little bit;' Howe recalled. "I
said, 'This is your last hitter, so give it
everything you've got."'
The A's, whose 102-60 record was second-best in baseball behind Seattle, got
just enough offense to beat Andy Pettitte.
Oakland was 0-for-8 with runners in
scoring position, leaving the A's at 0-for19 in the series.
_.
Gant provided a run fn the fourth with
Oakland's fourth leadoff homer of the
series. And Brosius' error, followingJohnny Damon's ninth-inning triple off Mariano Rivera, scored another run.
Oakland headed home happy. but also
remembered how they lost Game 5 at
home to the Yankees in the first round of
last season's playoffi.
"We know who we're playing when
we get back home," Isringhausen said. LONG ~ - Oakland's Ron Gant watches his home run ill ·
"We were on cloud nine when we went the fourth Inning against the New York Yankees during Game ~
of the American League Division Series Thursday.
{AP
back there last year, too."*
'
'
Photo/Robert Deutsch, USA Today)

Tribe's Finley anxious for another chance

;

SEATTLE (AP) If all
goes according to Chuck Finley's plan, he won't be waiting
so long for his next playoff
otart.
Fifteen years? Try next week.
The Cleveland left-bander
made his first postseason start
since 1986 in the Indians' 5-1
loss to the Seattle Mariners in
Game 2 of their AL division
serie~ Thursday.
\· If the best-of-five series
reaches a decisive fifth game,
Finley would be back on the
mound at Safeco Field on
Monday. If Cleveland takes
Games 3 and 4 this weekend at
Jacobs Field to win the series,
he'll be in the AL Champi-

onship Series.
Finley is desperate for
another try after his frustrating
postseason comeback. After
throwing just 14 pitches, Game
2 was basically decided.
Seattle hit a pair of two-run
homers off the 38-year-old
Finely .in the first .inning on
the way to the series-tying victory.
"Hopefully, I'll have a
chance to redeem myself;' Finley said. "I have to limit my
mistakes."
.
This was supposed to be' a
postseason revival for Finley,
who last pitched in the playoffi
15 years ago as a rookie for the
Cal.ifornia Angels.

He anticipated the challenge
of facing the team with the
best record in baseball this season. Firiley came into the game
with a 19-8 record versus Seartie during his 16-year career.
He wound up making an
early exit.
Finley stared at the ground
as he escaped into the dugout
after giving way to the righthanded Riske. Finley allowed
. five runs on five hits in 4 1-3
innings. Three . of those hits
were home runs that cost
Cleveland the win.
Finley gave up two-run
homers to Mike Cameron and
Edgar Martinez in the first
inning and a solo shot to

David Bell in the 6fi:h. It was
quite a contrast from his recent
outings; he allowed just two
homers in his past 11 starts.
Still, Manuel won't hesitate
to send Finley back out.
He settled down, but the
Indians were already behind 40 with no outs in the first. Following Martinez's homer, Finley retired 12 straight batters
before Bell's shot sailed over
the left-center 6eld fence.
"Obviously, I was pumped
with adrenalin," he said. "I welcome the opportunity to come
out here and do it again."

Pornetoy, Middleport;

MAC FOOTBALL

-Frlay. OLWier1l.l001

AL PLAYOFFS

NEW YORK (AP) -With youth and
energy, brashness and determination, the
Oakland Athletics have pushed the New
York Yankees to the brink, just one loss
away ·from the end of an era.
Tim Hudson, just like Mark Mulder
the night before, extinguished New
York's offense. Ron Gant backed him
with an early home run, and Jason lsringhausen survived a ninth-inning rally as
the Athletics held off New York 2-0
Thursday night and headed home with a
2-0 lead in the fi~;&lt;t-round AL playoff
series.
After becoming only the fourth team
to win the World Series three straight
times, the Yankees must win three consecutive games to get a chance to extend
their run.
"We didn't expect to come in here to
Yankee Stadium and win two games
against that club," Hudson said. "We battled, we stayed poised and we found a
way to squeeze a couple of runs across."
Oakland, beaten 3-2 by the Yankees in
last year's division !ieries. has won eight
straight over New York going back to the
Jregular season -and the Yankees haven't
led afte~ their last 76 innings against the
A's.
New York's veterans look a little bit past
their prime, unable to muscle their way
out of trouble anymore.
"I don't know about old. But they're
certainly making us eat some dust right
now;'Yankees manager Joe Torre said.
New York's taSk is daunting: The A's

Frld8y, Oct. 12, 2001

All-mr

aary (Fox)

~-­

Aia&amp;kwli.Mgue
s-ttle va. a.u....NI

-,,Oct. I
Clevaland 5, Seattle 0
~.Oct.11

Seattle 5, Cleveland 1 , - tied1·1
~Oct.13
5eottle (SOle 15-5) at C-..cl (Sobalhla
17-5), 4:20p.m. (Fox 0&lt; Fox Family)

8undly, Oct. 14
SeatUe 1t Clevttand, 1:12 p.m., (Fox Family Of FX)
•.

llonclly, Oct. 15

CleYellnd at Seattle, 4:20 p.m., wnocesaary (Fox)
New Yortl VI. Olllhlnd
WOCI~, Oct. 10
O&amp;kland 5, New YOI1&lt; 3
.TIIUI'OCIIry, Oct. 11
oakland 2. New Yort&lt; o, OOkland leads

-·2.()

Sllunloy, Oct. 13
Now Yort&lt; (Mullina 17-11) at Oakland
(Zito 17-11), 7:50 p.m. (Fox)

lkmly, Oct. 14

'

New Yort&lt; ot oakland, 4:30 p.m., Wnecesury (Fo•)
Mo!Mioy, Oct. 15
OOidand al New Vorl&lt;, 8:17p.m., If,..,...

-Looguo

. - - ... SI.Loulo
1\ftldly, OCt I

lost their luding rushers for
the me of the season, further
muddling what already wu a
wide-open race in the MidAmerican Conference's East
Division. The personnel drain
may well influence games in
both diviSions.
Brandon Payne, a junior
who has rushed for 2, 405
yards in his career, sustained a
knee injury last week in
Akron's loss at Western Michigan.
The Zips (2-3, 2-0 MAC
East) are now without their
most dependable offensive
· weapon as they head into the
gristmill of divisional games.
This weekend they play at
Miami (3-2, 0-1 East) in a
~ritical showdown.
;. "He's been our feature
~ack and a marquee back in
the MAC for three seasons;•
_EOach Lee Owens said of
Payne.
: Wil:h 36 touchdowns, Payne
shared the Akron career
record. Breaking the record
Will have to wait.
' "It's a blow to lose Bran- ,
don," Owens said.
Ohio lost junior Chad
!3rinker, who has a cyst in the
!Pace between his skull and
brain.
Brinker was
averaging
almost 100 yards a game and
7.4 yards per carry. He led the
Bobcats (0-4, 0-1 East) in
rushing in each game.
· "If he can play again, great,

~turday.

In other games, Bowling
Green (4-1, 2-1 East) is at
Western Michigan (3-2, 1-0
West), Marshall (3-1, 1-0 East)
(1-4, 0-2 East),
visits Bu
Nor
n Illinois (2-3, 0-1
t} is at Kent State (1-4, 02 East) and Ball State (0-4, 00 West) goes to Eastern Michigan (1-4, 0-1 West). Toledo (50, 2-0 West) takes a week off.
Miami and Marshall have
each won their last three
games.
The Bowling Green-Westem rnatchup pits bullies from
the East and West.
The Falcons (4-1, 2-1 East)
have already won twice · as
many games as a year ago. It
promises to be the billll:est
turnaround in the conference
since Gary Darnell came to
.Western and inherited a 2-9
team that went 8-3 in his first
year in 1997.
"They remind me a whole
lot of our team in '97 ," Dar-

-~.Oct.10

4.1 , - tlod 1·1
Frfdoy, Oct. 12

Arizona (Ba- 11-8) at St. Louis (Kilo t 611 ). 8:15 p.m. (Fox Family)
.
;
Soturdly, Oct. 13
Arizona at St. Louis, t:12 p.m.,,(fox Fam·
llyorFX)

' ..

;

SundaY, Oct. 1t : "

J

{

~.-

St. louis ar Arizona, 7:~ p.m., If neces·
aary (Fox)

surgery soon, said he 'II be
back in 2002.
"I am confident that. this
experience will help me to
become not only a better
football player, but a better
person as well;' he said.
Payne and Brinker were No.
2 and No. 3, respectively,
behind Toledo's Chester Taylor
among active career rushing
nell said of the Falcons, ''They
luders in the MAC.
The Bobcats play at Central play with a great deal of emoMichigan (2-2, 0-1 West) on tion. Their feet never touch

Houlton VI. Atllntl

'

TIIHdly,Oct.9
Atlanta 7, Houston 4
WOC111Hday, OCt. 1o
Atlanta t, Houston 0, Atlanta leads serles-

.

2~

Frtdey, Oct. 12
..,
Houslon (Reynok1S 14-11) at Atlanta (Bur·
kotl12·12), 4:20p.m. (Fox)

-y.oet.13
..
Houston at Atlanta, 1:12 p.m., If ~ssary..
(Fo• Family "' FX)
'
·
'II
&amp;undly, Oct. 14• Atlanta at Houston, 1:12 p.m., if necessary
(Fox Family "' FX)

Tribe

. ,....._, .• a....
CAlgary 4, Dolroll2
Ottawa2,Flort&lt;!a0

N.Y.f-e.Pmobu""3
llufloJo 2. Ptll~ 1
WUhinglon 5, N.Y. Alngorl2
-2.Boaton1

Tomnto 3. Clroflna 2 TllllfOCIIY'I l.ol Anallet 8, St. Loull 5
N.Y. 1 -B. 1&gt;1ew JofMy 4
Nu!wllt 1• COigory 0
Chicago 3, 0

•

balls.
In the fourth, the Indians had
runners at first and second with
one out. But Moyer retired Ellis
Burks on a fly ball, and with a
runner at 'third, he struck out Jim
Thome.
Moyer, who could start a
Game 5 if necessary, gave up
~onsecutive singles to start the
seventh and was replaced bY Jeff
Nelson.

N.Y. RanglfS at Ollawo, 7 p.m.
Cooallna .. - · 7 p.m.
Sl. Loufo a t - · 7 p.m.
New Jolooy at - 1 . 7 p.m.
Dolrollat N.Y. iallndo&lt;o. 7 p.m.
~at Florida. 7:30p.m.
Cotgary at DIIIU. Bp.m.
Edmol•ou a t - · B p.m.
Wuhlngton at Pl1oenfx, 10 p.m.
~atVIncouvtr,10p.m.

SUnday'o Gamet

_ . atCOfumf:&gt;uo. 7F~··­
p.m.
llufloJo at Ootnllt, 7:30p.m.
Chicago at
8 p.m.

Mil•-·

XC
Brad Nc~ally of Vintl)n County (20:12),
Jason Stanley of Meigs (20:14), and Trent
Haery otvinton County (20: 19). ·
Southern's Joe Manuel and Aaron Sellers
were 16th and 17th overall, while '!yler
-Roberts was 29th and Macy Rees 31st.
Meigs' Grant Arnold finished 21st, Ross Well
was 26th, and Southern's Josh Smith and
Dustin Barnette were 33rd and 34th respectively.
·
Forty-six runners participated in the event.
ln. the girls division,Alexander edged Vinton
County by just thtee points. Although Kristi
Oches (22:39) of Federal Hocking claimed
first place honors, Alexander and Vinton
County dominated the first and second team

fromPageB1

-,·.-

WUhlngton at Anohlllm, 10:30 p.m.

Boalon at Son JoN, 10:30 p.m.
Tompe Bay at 1.oo Angoleo, 10:30 p.m.

Wncouvor4.Dalfll1
Edmoutou &amp;. Colonldo 3
SOn JoN 4, Tompe Boy 3

fnNnPipB1

given up just one earned run
in his last 20 innings ~
Cleveland.
· Mike Cameron ' and Edgar
JMartinez hit two-run homers in
the first offlosing pitcher Chuck
Finley, and Bell added a solo shot
for the Mariners, who after losing Game 1 said everything
would be fine as long as they
came out and played their game.
For the second str.right game,
the Marinen managed just six
hits. But this time, three homers
gave them five runs.
Following an off day on m~
day, the best-&lt;:&gt;f-five series
resumes Saturday at Jacobs Field
in Cleveland. Indians rookie
C.C. Sabathia, who didn't face
the Marinen this season, will
start against Aaron Sele.
1 Sele had two no-decisions
against the Indians and started
the Aug. 5 game in which the
Mariners built a 12-0 lead before
Cleveland staged baseball's
biggest comeback in 76 years to
win 15-14 in 11 innings.
Moyer wasn't going to let
there be .any kind of miracle
comeback in Game 2.
Staked to a 4-0 lead in the
fin;t, Moyer had the Indians
swinging over, through and
above his assortment of sinken,
curves and seemingly juicy fast-

-rvh at Bu"aiO, 2 p.m.

Edmonton at Minnaota, 6 p.m.
C111cago. Bp.m.
Tampa Bay at Anaheim, Bp.m.
~at

honorees.
Behind Oches in second was the first of
three Alexander girls-Jennifer Liming (23:29),
Ashley Meadows (2:3:58), and Lindi Jones
(24:08). Meigs !mdrea Burdette W.IS fifth to
claim the last spot on first team with a 24:37.
Second team honorees were Amy Stover of
Federal ' Hocking 25:08, while the next four
spots went to Vinton County Vikings. Second
through fifth on the second team were Vikings
Sarah Lash, Cassie Rice, Kalli McCorkle, and
Mary Ellen Ratcliff.
.
In the girls division Meigs Shannon Soulsby,
Heather HyseD, and Brandi Thomas were
12th, 13th, and 15th overall. Mindy O'Dell of
Meigs was 23rd. Southern's Carolyn Bentz led
teammates Bridget Barnes, Ashley Roush,
Amy Lee; and Rachel Marshall with finishes of
20th, 21st, 25th, 26th, and 27th respectively.
Overall33 girls participated in the girls division.

as a regional Medical c~nter.
We need regional exposure to
out growing list of regional
services that we continue to
offer;' said Jeff Barnes, Vice
President of Marketing and
: in Huntington.
Business
Development at the
:
"'The
Battle
of
the
Bell'
has
1
Holzer Medical Center. "This
~ally grown;' said Marshall
is
a regional rivalry."
~thletic Director Lance West.
"Holzer Medical Center is
"As Holzer's come on board,
centrally
located between the
it's come to another level. It is
two
universities,
so it only
~ special day, today, with the
makes sense that we step up
announcement~··
to
the plate from a business
: His counterpart
from
perspective and from a com,t.them agrees. '
munity perspective."
· "The ManhaliTOhio rivalThe original bell concept
is one of the special one's
took form five years ago in
icross the country," said Ohio
Athens when ISP Sports vice
Athletic Director Thomas president jim Woodrum, who
Boeh. "We have tremendous was working at Marshall at
iespect for Marshall and we the time, met with an Ohio
have tremendous respect for representative, discussed the
~hat they have done, not only project.
as members of the MidISP holds the multi-media
American Conference, but rights for Marshall and Ohio.
ilso our close association with
"We're going to start playthem across the river."
ing a fo.otball again, so we
: And now, it's officially need to make it something
known as "The Holzer Med- specJal," said Woodrum·. "You
ical Center presents the Battle have to \lave something
memorable and ex~iting."
for the Bell."
What is today known as the
: "Holzer Medical Center
€ontinues to grow and evolve Holzer Medical Center pre-

Holzer
LomPageB1

* Proud of our Country
* Proud of our Community
* Proud of our Product

ry

Keep up with all the News
Local- Sports- State- National- World
For Home Delivery Call Today!

The Daily Sentinel
"MeigS. County's Hometown Newspaper"
0
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(740) 992-2155
'
.

.

the ground."
Playing a team like Western
(3-2, 1-0 West) can bring a
team down to reality rather
quickly, first-year Bowling
Green coach Urban Meyer
said.
"In my mind, there's a few
programs right now that are
ahead of the class." Mever said.
"The team we're playing this
week is a legit contender.
They can play in a lot of different confe~ence&lt;. I think
they'te an extremely talented
team."

*

Arizona 1. Sl. Loula o

St. Loufo

but we are elated to 6nd out

Akron :ind Ohio suffered that this will most likely not
mammoth losses even before affect him in the long term,"
their games on Saturday.
Ohio coach Brian Knorr said.
The Zips and Bobcats hath
Brinker, who will undergo

t

.

,,

sents · the Battle of the BeD
formed.
"We're very proud to be'
able to bring· together the
three great institutions ·of
Marshall University,. Ohio
University and Holzer Medical Center," said Woodrum.
The Thundering Herd has
won the first three games
since the series with the Bobcats resumed.
"Until last year, it really
wasn't much of a rivalry.~' said
Ohio head coach Brian
Knorr. "We hadn't had much
success. Marshall's had a
tremendous program and
what Coach Pruett has done
down there is tremendous:·
Ohio, though, leads the
overall series 29"13-6, including a 38-28 win last year at
Peden Stadium.
"It really has (grown);' said
Marshall head ·football coach
Bob Pruett. "I think the game
has meant the conference
championship two or three
out of the four years. Last
year, it meant a sure bowl for
us, and Ohio beat us. It's just
two great programs,','

dt.1o

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3

Couch misses head-to-heads with Akili
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tim Couch misses
~Smith .
The quarterbacks we"' drafted two picks
apart in 1999, shipped to opposite ends of a
state to revive mnchises and renew a rivalry.
They barely got it going, lacing offonly twice
before rheir careers went in different directions.
Couch is coming of age in aeveland, on a
team coming into its own. The Browns are 31 heading into their game Sunday with
': ,ruth's team, the Cincinnati Bengals.
What is Smith doing? Pretending he~ Tim
Couch during practice '!5 he runs the scout
team - the job of the third-string quarterback.
"Yeah, it's weird;' Smith said Thursday, slipping on his orange quarterback jeney.
"They've got some pretty good plays I'm running for our llefense."
Instead of Couch vs. Akili at Paul Brown
Stadium, it will be Couch vs. Jon Kitna, a
. newcomer who has no idea what this rivalry
is supposed to be. Smith will .play only if the
two quarterbacks ahead of him get hurt.
"I . had nor really thought about Akili
because of all I've had to do here, but I really
hope things work out for him," Couch said "I
kind of feel bad for him that things have not
worked out. Hopefully he'D get back on the
field."
He's not even close. Smith is languishing
behind Kima and Scott Mitchell, his future in
Cincinnati as murky as ever. No one expected
this when he and Couch were coming out of
college as part of the quarterback draft of '99.
The Browns chose Couch with the fint
overall pick. The bypassed Smith took it as a
snub, vowed revenge and got it by leading the
Bengals on a last-minute touchdown drive and

V-ball
LwnPIIgeB1
Kart's kills were of the
booming variety and put an
exclamation point on the
Eastern win.
Calaway also had another
good setting game with
eleven assists, gQing 24-of-33.
Alyssa Holter went 3-of-4
with three points and two
aceS, and Tammy Bissell, Tiffeny Bissell, and Amanda Yeager 'went 3-of-4 serving with
two points each. Tiffany
Spencer was 3-of-3 with two
aces and two points.
Tammy Bissell was 5-of-6
with three kills, while Ashley
Hager and Kass Lodwick
each had a kill. Tiffeny Bissell
went 3-of-6 setting.
Eastern won the reserve
game led by Brandy Bissell
and Jessica Dillon with eight
points each, Stacy Smith with
five, Becky Taylor three, Krystal Baker four, and Andrea
Warner two.
Eastern is idle until Saturday, October 20 when it plays
in the sectional tournament
at Alexander. ·

an 18-17 win in Cleveland on O ct. 10, 1999.
Then, he beat h.is chest at the Browns' bench
and mocked the Dawg Pound as Couch
watched and fumed.
A rivalry W2S reborn.
Couch got even by leading the Browns to a
24-7 win last season in the inaugural game at
Paul Brown Scadium. He was out with a broken thumb when the Bengals won lasr year's .
rematch 12-3,leaving the quarterbacks even in
their head-to-head series.
"I believe it's 1-to-1," Smith said playfully.
"He got me here last ~ar and I got hun up
there. I wish I had the opportunity to play
against 'him this week, but I don't.
"He's looking good right now, playing good
enough for his team to win."
The Browns are starting to reap the benefits·
of being faithfUl to their young quarterback.
Couch is developing into what the Bo/fl$
envisioned.
"One of the major reasons you would take
a job like this is you already have a mnchise
quarterback on your roster, as opposed to trying to get one in the draft and going two or
three years before you get one," firsr-year
coach Butch Davis said.
Bengals general manager Mike Brown
thought he had a fi::lnchise player when he
chose 'irnith with the third overall pick in '99.
He never gave him the chance to make it
through a full season.
Smith was elevated to. starter in 2000, but
had a huge handicap - his rap two receivers
were rookies. Coach Bruce Coslet, who was
supposed to develop Smith, quit after the third
game•.
By December, Smith was out of favor and
out of the team's long-term plans.

Emily Giffin with twelve
points, J. Riley and S. Hunter
each had seven, and Alison
Christman three.
Chapman led SHS with
30-of-30 passes and a 14-of14 setting night with six kills
and an ace serving. Kati Sayre
was 26-of-28 spiking with
. nine kills and one ace serving.

Pullins had an ace in an 11of-11 serving night, Emily
Hill was 20-of-29 spiking
with three kills, and Amy Lee
had two kills.
Southern dropped the
reserve game 4-15 and 1-15 .
Brauer, Kiser, lane and Codi
Davis each· had poin~S for
Southerf).

ENJOY DELICIOUS

PIZZA ALL DAY

Southem falls
to'Dtmble
TRIMBLE - Southern
claimed the first game of the
match, but fell hard to the
Trimble Tomcats after a grueling 13-15 loss in the second
game.
The Tornadoes
dropped the finale 15-1.
Southern is now 7-10 overall.
Rachel Chapman led the
Tornadoes with 13 poit:tts,
Amy Lee had five, Deana
Pullins five, and Katie Sayre
three. Trimble was led by

13, 2001··
lOam .. Noon

SATURDAY,

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5 fot $10.00
with mention of the ad
Saturdq Onl

Register to win a 4-Wheelerl
(fo be given away

�••wl

11-ae B 4 • The Dllty Ss

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Oct 12, 2001

•

Friday, Oct. 12, 2001

ibune - Sentinel - ne
CLASSIFIED

•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dlllly Sentinel • Page B 5

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Days r11y[)epoaf1
740--.. 61. • n :
348 ' Evonl go. 740,387D502. 740-448-() 101 ·
·

j

I

r

-~1 o- r - ~~

=

mentt, Very Spac:ioue, 2 5:30pm.

j

'I -·

cop11ng appllco1lor•lor

1BR. HUilaublldlzed apt. c:;.cliY ~· C&lt;lfid,':
lor olderiyEandOH don sSoo- Dlohwaaft•r.

Tara Townhouoo Apart-

,!'frill'

I

Gooos .

TwinRIYorToworenowao-

Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartmenll a1 VIIlage M"""' and R,.,.,_
Apartments In Mkldleport.
From 5276-S348. eau 740992-5084. Equal Housing
Opjlortunlllell. ·
I
I
Low noome or the elderly,
pnmary utii~IH Included In
rent. call Janice (74019927022TheMaples. .
Middleport, Beoch Sl-. 2
bedroom fumlahed apart-

72

j

r•llol::o:~fSIIJQ~~LD~.,,I

I

m ,

=-'

\lll\ 4 ll\\111',1

=sr~c...~;jC:Haariyarlata.

I"'

i.

F
--

AllllmtlrNTS
FOR REirr

I

SPAai

~
n-~ """"'

air, cruise ~ tlh, PW, PL,

VB.

oan1o1 s. s-, a1 11.,
In punuenceolen
Ord•r of Sill
ell_.... to me '"""
olld court, In lho
....,. entitled aollon,
I wiN oller lor Ule at
public aucllon 11 the
door of !he Melga
County Cour1houl8,
P~, Ohio on
Thur:aday, Novtmar
15, 2001, .. 10:00
a .m. the following
dncrtbld nail Mille:
Sltueted In tha
County of Melge,
Stet• or Oh io,
Townahlp
ot
L•banon, Section
118, Town 12 end
Renge 112 of lhe
Ohio Compeny'o
Purchua:
lleglnnlng at the
Northweat com•r of

AINFM Caasotte, dual air
bage. ABS, ooata 7, Hke
new, (740)379-2134 leave
message.
"'97=F"',"'so'--4. 4-,-E-.-,.-nd-edCab, Lana~ 13041633 BII04
or (740)688-7602
the ume real utete
97 Land Rover, 74 ,800 11 that conv•y•d
: Promottono. Americas Top lion: Call 1740 )4.48-8627
miles, loaded, 2 eunroofa, !rom Gold I• . Hertley
~ 100
package
only
4x4, heated teat, 6 d•sc co to Etthar Delley by
.. $9.00/monlh for the first 1993 Buick Century, 89K, changer, leather seats, ex- dftd detld June a,
&gt;r-·
52,495; 1992 Coroloa, collenl concthlon, blue oxte- 1t41, end r•cord•d
'
103K, one owner, 52,495; riot W/lan lnltrlOI.·(7401709- Auguet 24, 1141, In
;ean PRO DIGITAL todayfl 1993 CavaiiOf, 96K, 52,195;
,Your Local AuthoriZed DISH 1993 Grand Am, · 103K, H
. dl8d book 1155 et
P... 275 ol tho ·Notworl&lt; Re!aller 740-669- 52,595. COOK MOTORS,
MoroRcY&lt;Ull
recorda Of Molge
'11211 or 888-310.2495 Also (740)«6-0103
County, Ohio; thance
, c::heek us out online 0
:www.dlahrelellera.com/pro- 1993 Meroury Coprf. 64,000
In ~ • soulhweaferly
-dW
mlfoll. 5 apd. NC. S1300.
dlraCIIon
a dlollnce
.
(740)048-47116
of 15 rodt along the
Tractor T030 Ferguson, '---'-.- -- - - nne o.l Section t11to
cop. wllh High and low 1gg5 Hyundal E~nlro , PS,
• · ronge. $2300., 6ft. King Cut- PB, PW, Air, brand new
en Iron pin; thane•
' ter flnlah mower New $950., tranamilalon ooder warranEalladl ....nceo112
~ 88 Ford 150 Truck Good ly. New liming bef1 &amp; robuiH '-...,;
rode to the cent•r of
'Condition. 13150. (3041576- head. $4,200 (7401256- 11uc1go1 Ptlcad ,.,._,,._ the Townohlp road;
.2667
6800
IlOna All Typoa, Acoess To lh•nce elong the
..Weslo Cadence heart rate 1995 Pontiac Grand· Am. Over 10,000 Transmlllions, cenl•r of Townahlp
sensor
Dx9
treedmill Good Condition. 54,180 Tranaler ca.ea, 740-245- road I di....IICI of 18
. $150.00 DP exorr:iee bike mlln. S8800. Cal (7401441- 5877, Call: 339-3785.
Rodo In a Nort~erly
525.00 304-773-5710
9366
CAMPtliS &amp;
diNCIIon; lhanca In •
: Waterline Special: 314 200 1998 Ford CDntour, Dark
MoroR HOMIS 1 W.oterly direction a
dlotenca of 3 rode to
. PSI $21 .95 Por 100: t ' 200 Green, Looks Good, 77,000 ~
place
of
· PSI 137.00 Per 100; All miles, $5000. Call (740)446- 1998 Prowler 295, Fiber- the
, Brus Compreoolon Fl1tinge 2624 ·
gla61 sides, Queen Bed, 2 beginning,
,. In Stock.
1999 Plymouth Braezo. 4 Bunks, I.Gaded. (740)245- CONTAINING 0 .75
, RON EVANS ENTERPII&amp; Door. Auto, NC, Aft 11ower, 0710
ICfea,moraorlou.
, El Jackaon, Ot&gt;io, 1-800- MWM Caasotte. Michelin,
.
There Ia reurved,

.:.D327r------;
r4)
I

r

._· r

537·9528

' 1

ao,soo,

clean,

sesoo. 1998, 8 H2 fl. truck camper

with queen bed, goo &amp;
llr--::=::::::--1
B UILDING
I!C7~40~)3~79-~'Z7~-oa~----=c-:
.
elec1rio. Refrigerator, balh1999 Windstar SE Van, Red room. TV &amp; roof· antenna.

.

SuPI'I.II!S

•with

Tan lnltrtor, Seals 7, Wirod for oable TV. 57,000.
Four Doors with aulo open- (3041675-3353
BloCk, brick, sewer plpas, "'· Keylols Entry. Air, Pow'-I I\\ II I "
- windowS. lintels, etc. Claude er Windows, L.ocU, seats,
· Wlnte" Ft:lo Grande OH Rear Air, Rear Back Up l'llr---:.._~~
--.-.,
. • CaJI74ci-245-5121 . •'
Senaor, CD Player, Good
numr.
•

r

Tires, Extra Clean. Excel·

I=•·

#&gt;o

;
'

lent

' roG'!Uu:

~

riD

lMPRovntDNJs

CondiUon. 57,600 t.....;iiiliiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitr
C~ll (7401446·6176 ; , 'BASEMENT
-4pm
WATERPRDDF1NO

' - 4 female Golden Retriever 2000 Dodge Durango SLT, Unconditional llfa.Ume guar·
pupa 6 weeks old, lull 2 wheel drive, 16,000 mllea, antee. Local reterences fur-

.:· blooded (7401985-3852. lealher fntonor, overhead
S50
air, CD + caaaotte, remote
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ enlry, 515,500 080.
• AKC Yorklea. Bom Augull (740)256-6169
24th.

Ready

to

Go! 84 M&amp;A;ury Marquis, exc&amp;l-

(7401379-2282
·lent condlllon, low mtlea,
Biack and Tan Ral Tonier. 5 loaded. Now engine, $4,000
monlhs old. $100. (7401258- 060. (7401448-1721
: . _1336=--:----:---:::-~· 9l lauzu Trooper LS, V-8,
-=
PW PS Everything works
Cocker Spaniel Puppies. tran'smlssion trouble. sasQ
f ull Blooded. Parenls an OBO. 17401379_2708
.,Premises. 5150. (7401446. 2988
Must sal 1997 Dodge In&amp;·
. . Puppy 3 mon old whHe trepkl V6, power locks
--~~ Pood'... mirrors, grey velour seata,
mala lull bluuuau
nr 80,000 mltea, $6495, eM:el·
Malteu $200. neg. 304· lent condition
875-8130
4162
· Ratterler
pupa.
Tales

Docked. 5100. (3041675-

nlshed. Es!abllshed 1975.
Call 24 Hta. (7401 4460870,
t -800-287-0578.
Rogers Walerprooflng.
c_&amp;_C_Clene--,.-,-Homo--Malnle--nonce- ·Painting. Vinyl lidlng, carpentry, doors, windowt, bathe, mobile home

repair and more. For he
estimate cau Chet, 740-992-

r

632~F-3."':!~....~-.-,

11:

...._

RmuEu:cnocAI1 .1
GERA110N •

.
(740)S'IS5- Residential or c~mmerc ial
wiring, now serviCe or repairs. Master Ucensed eiec.

lriclen. Ridenour Electrical,

Vi'/!~~304-6~~75-17116 .

· 711411

I

1,~--oitiiiiiiiii,;._.l Condition. Uta Newl $260.

(3041875-4934
I Homelotforrontln
, 5125permonlh GoldaWolghiBonch, dumbbella, Olymplo Bor and
welghta, $100. (7401411642~ alfAir tlpn .
r10 J1ouiEHou&gt;
Grubb'o Plano- Tuning &amp;
Gooos
Aepai11. Problema? Need
Tuned? Call The PLino Dr.
7&lt;10-448-4525
3 P - Uvlng Room Su~. ;:-:-;::-'"-'-::::-::----:--:
Good COndldon $125. Oun Henly Mumo 13.00 each 4
Cabinet 140. (740144e-4788 for $10. Ol)on Set. 8-Som. &amp;
l'lllllngs. Dowllurot GroanAppllanoao: Aooondl1fonad houH MI. Aflo. (3041885Wathell, Drvell, Rengea, 3740 loavo meou~e. or
Rotrigrators, Up To 90 Caya (3041881-3789
Guarontoedl Wo Boll Now l.............nt HorbaiWo Dill-"
Mlyteg Appllaf'()to French ....,...C Ml
740 4 ' 7788 1nbu1or Cali F01 Produot Or
lly ytag,
' 46-"
• Ol)pojl;.,ly. ll:401441- 111112
Counlry Fronch Couch,
JET
Walnut WOOd trim. Custom
AERATION MOTORS
made. 90'long. Utco new. R
(3041875-4881 . No calli If· SlopaocklrodC,aiNI owR &amp;ERebuiii11Q
tor 8pm. pieiM
·
on vana. .
800-837-9828.
For Solo: Reconditioned
wuhero, dryers ond
~M~OB=IL~I!...,H_D_M_E_OWN==eR--::-8
::!':.':wW":;=:n ~: lniOrthOnn &amp; Colamen goo,
nue ' (304)875-7388.
oil &amp; olectrio
1umaceahHI
InCludlng
hi e11fcloncy
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clarll pump oyatomo. wo oarry a
Chopel Road, Poriar, Ohio. compla1o line o1 Mobile
(7401448-7444 1-677-830- homo parto I aooaoeorfoll.
9182. Free Esllmatoa, Easy BENNETT'S HEATINO &amp;
llnanolng, 90 daya oemo as CODLINO (740!4*11411
oash. VIsa/ Meller Card. or 1-1100-1172-5987
Drive- a- IIUie uve alot.
www.Of¥b.com/lllnno11

l

0:

Meln Slroet FurriiUAI
NEW AND USED FUR·
(3041675-1422
NANCE&amp; FOR BALEI We
515 Main Slf,"'· Polnl lnllall, Froe Eallma10J, II
Pleasant &gt;
rou doni Cal us, We bolh
1
oosel (HOI448-e3DB. 1Now &amp; Uled FumlluAI 80D-291-0D98.
New 2 P1ece LMngroom
Suites, 13911. Buy, Sell, 11'~~\'::"'~""!~'!'1
Trade.
Nloa
&lt;es.

however, from the

alonaoald l(ect ell oil,
gu and ather
mlnaralo underlying
!he pnomiMt wllh the
rlghl lo lo mine,
namoVI end produce
!he Mme and tor lllllt
right, 1o have tun
rlghl ol lngrooe end
•grtll
to oald
property and ell oth•r
rlghll pertaining. to
uld rwervellon.
Pormanenl percel
number:
07oot051100
Proparty lddiHI:
30588 Berringer
Ridge
Road,
Portlend, Ohio 45770
Prior lnatrum•nt
.,.,.,.., Volume
14 page 411
Appraludat:
$10,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
To blaold lor no leao
!han -lhlrda or !he
epprilaed velue. The
purchaoor(ol etlan
dopOIII $5,000.00
wllh the therlft at !he
lime oluld ulo.
R.... h E. Tru-er,
Sheriff
FRANK6
WOOLORIOGE CO.,
L.P.A., Gnagory D.
Waoldrldgo and D. L.
Maine, Jr.

·

Dining Sel B~ck &amp; Bruo
cloth chal~a. gLiea !ablo:
1199 good condHion. Fujlllu
cash raP.Iotor.· lntomst
ready, VI ued at $3,000,
$399 or oHar. Compfoto
Queen Watorbad eel, .$100.
Full headboard willie- brond
new, 545· (740)36 7.0502
Gaa HoaUna Sl-·o.
Good
-

~~~;~~~.~~

.

97 Aatro Van, 55,000 miles,

:cant.

448-2586. Equlf Houalng
•~l'U'II\lUCo':l
Ol)portunlly.
..__ _. .._ _ __ .
'
Chrialy'a Family Living,
33140 New uma Rd., Rut- Buy or aolf. Riverine Andland, Ohio. 740-742-7403. ~· 1124 Eut Main on
·
A 124 E p
7••~
Apanment, home and IrONer
· 1ffiCifOY, ~
ronlafa. Cornmen:lal store- 1182·2526. Ruu Moora,
fronts aval~ble lor leele. ,cw;.;~~IOI~.~~~~~'r
Vaoanclel now.
!S""'o BalaclafJial on lhl"'"
Garage apanmenl In clly. 2 In Mlddfil)ort. Dofla, glusbedruoms, stove, Alfrigola- ware, Aladdin mon111o, and
tor &amp; window air conditioner, mo,., ~740)992..()288
washer &amp; dryer hook up.
No pals. Dopoalt &amp; refeAin- ·r
MNM••NiiXliB
ces(740)448-2143
~ ..

piN.r '

,?z;):\t _g:'ti

•14s.n Activation FM for 2 cyl., 4 speed, 4~~:4, runa
good, $900 (7401247-2981 .
•teeeiver 1ft« 2nd. lncludH
•rnt monlh rr.o o1 011 monlh- 1989 Bronco II, 4l4, ElCII' ly programming IOrviCes lent Condlllon. Low Mileage.
lhl1 you"'-· 12 Month $3.333. 1988 Pontiac SUn:lnd proof ol a bird. Good Condition. Meke
• lfiOIOI credit card 01 deOil a Good Work Car $555.
requlrod.
C740l367.()889
:0. alk about "Chart 1991 Dodge Oynasly, new
~-~- Boun"" andour 1 Utco 9"er transmission, new liming
·~
•7
belt new tires Good condl-

"very--n-::lco-,-:2:-:-3:-:-bed---:-root-m
~
epartmenl, In town, large ..__ _oi.........,iiiiii-_.1
- · LR, $500/mo. Rol· '
.....,.. &amp;dopoolt requlrod. 2 Pump Wlnchaller Slug
(7401448-3844
Barrel Pump Guna. New.
-·· $175 and 5200. Olall Nel3 rooms fumlahod, utilities work Bai- Dish lnd R
pa(7~~;Jf80,..£1ua depoall. ~-r. $35. (7••......._11~•
-,...... ~
--.........- ••
BEAUTIFUL
·~-.
Rlftleauoed
-"'·-.
,.,..""''
..........7. $1. ODMENTB AT BUDGI!T Pill- 1280, Amo Included, eome
CES AT JACKSON El- mousar, some new semi. . - ••- (740'"4.1822
TATEB,52WOelwootlDnve
·-·
.....-

=

r•o

::--:::---:::---:---:

: Rtc1 1- . odd $411.00 per

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mall To : Ohio Valley Publishing, B25 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

011
now i. ·UIId
Dllne)' Beach VacatJono. 6 ed,
3!MI77UtOO
(
nlghiO. nlco holol, will ....,_ '"7-,-'-::---:-,---:-- - ·
naeded
floe for 5199, (6141HI- =
lor llra1 l · aeoond lhCfto,
Com·-~-· wilh 11
2728
~· j,jjj"';M MIGI&lt;O·~
~·"
' ~ OICl)OriotiOO In
oomplolo
-*'Oahap,~ofUai IIIII He,atlo l \'laol fort • III• woge 1 bani:104-77H711 Or Ill jiiOiclge, 77H447.
lo: lmporlal Eleotrlo, 345
Froe 112 ~b pupl)iea.
~yeo...,. Orlw!, Middle(7401366-9088
part, ·Oil 417t11, All: M1r1c
Sola' Blankel fila 27 h. • - - - - - - · vanoy.
'
. MaCiure'a Rtltaurant now
~':,e
Uled
Abaofuto
1bp
DoiiJtr:
U.S.
I'M1no 1113 10o111ono, lull Of
7
- · Oold Colnl, part;ume pldc up oppllcll- (740)446-2977
two balha, one-car-·
MolinE Ibm! 3 ljedroom House In Rio
Lo!rrAND
- · Dlorttonda, Clold 11onatio0auonaljllngbaok
laml~ ooorn wllh flropiaoa,,
., .. ~
Orande. No Pols. $350/
FOINl
Rlnga, u.s. Currenoy,- bltwoan
t ·30am
&amp; ' Goorgeo Portable Sawmill, sun room. Now conlral heat' .....:..
FOR~
• montn
ptuo Deposit.
M.T:S. Crlln lhop,mlllo- lO·ODim Mondey thru iot lion, heul your loge 10 lhe lng &amp; alo eyslem. One mt(740I245- 5439
~~. Cloilll)olll, 740- ...,;... '
- I1'MI )UIM call304-675-1957. nulo off Aoule 7, but atiH pri- New 14x70. 3 bedroom. 2
~-,.
t (740111115-~1
·
5 Room Houoe with Balh
1
Loat dog on tD-4-0 at end
NEW EPHEDRA FREE TAl-COUNTY CONSTRue- va e.
balh, only $895 down &amp; pluo Double Garage.
ol Sendhll Rd,Lotart rod Wonted
TION.
Now For 1011 lg. ranch style $169.62 par monlh, call (740)441- 1619
1
~
family ·
1.011 401111 In 2 -~~ Conotrucllon/Remodellng. homo, 4 br., 3 ba,. w/ Harold 740-385-4367.
~~
':"&amp;'Roofing, 'Drywall, o c - 1n patio porch, 2 Now Double Wide. 5186 ~:..:.~~';'8_ ~~nters
FroO c ; - .
'WI
H Air Froe Eotl- car garage 178,000.
PO&lt; Monlhl 3 Bodroorl• 2
.YARD SALE
malel. 874-4Cl231874-3855
..
1-8611-3117-3841
~
Cornmerical lola lor aa1e or lllth. froe Dellvory &amp; Sol1Joui1:s
.
- ...-oy.oorn
WIU heut away, clean out, lease, In Pt. _
up.
1-11118-9211-34211
Roo304
IfiLrW- 0 . - cantor heaport :::,,n"J' oCa~~J,:;~ 727-33111 caH between
FARMS
,FOR
timo lllld full lime poofllonl 7e04 ·
5pm-12.
JIOR SALE
Why rant? ~vemnionl
.
avaltabll for LPN'a lnd
·
__
•
....
Addlllllrt wan'!Cf lmtnecl- STNA't on all llhlfta. Nrj· WIU power wash houses, New brk:k houu on 2·112
backed loana· from S490
~
"""'::
0111 ~illlllilld ahoufd oall 1rallero, anylhln~ Call acm, 3,000 equare fool in- 132 eorioo wllh pond tole o1 doWn. (740I448-3093
158 Oak Rood, Sul&gt;- llllyl
_
,
,
11
Krllttt _ , ot (740111t12- (7401441-4238 o' (7401'148- ground pool, llorage build- atandln~ Umber t~vely 4
dey Only 9am-8pm, -lor
11472 orlilol) by ourfronlof· 0151 Uk lor Ron. II no lng, S.mllh'e caiJina1a/ trim: bedcoom, 2-112 balh home,
MOBILE HOMES
signs, 2 112 mllee frOm toll 1*1._.....70t
• ...._
·
lido 101 an . . . .lion. EOE - · leeva meauge.
(7401448-0149
2 barns, garage and oollar
JiOR RooHolz8f.
.....--llat•llolng IIOC01)flll
·
houoe mot&gt;lle home ren111
lor """""'""' _ - Ovoltrooi&lt; Canler 11 our•
Newly conatruoled, alngle
•
8 Family Garage Bale. 122 Flro and WI,., Dong~ ranll)' -.g a beautician
story 1800 aq fool horne epot, below
1\ten:eMIIe on 2 bediOom Mobile Home 7
218• ulcfng
Jerioho Rood, Cheehlro, ~~
~
~
tlmallllonln
.
~~t
rio_
Located
10
mlnulel
Ira_;
Roule
$250K. miles out Sand Hill. All Ap7
Ohio. Clothing, HOI nhald
•• , _. .., • _ ,
_.,.
..........._
Holzer Hoepl!al 20 rntnutoe Call ( 40144e-21161 or piLIJICiitl. 2 large decka. All
1-. Mlao., 10112-10/13
tlonlllldBoPI.nolual.'llpo- -JIIoulil-nlfOrroimlNrrY
fromP-.nt.VaCieyHoepl- ~:;e 5&amp;3al!ar4pmlor Eloctrio. $300 monlh S300
o111
Cant
CloMna
e,Moo.
ld
·f1IIIIICIInlr
-.o101og111
·
tal, off SR 180 on a prlvale
·
·
Depoalt.. Also Mobile Home
Garoge Bale- Saturday
INOTICI!I
1-112 aorelot. 3 bedroom,
BuiJl1oi
Lot$150. and5150depoalt.
131h, Sulolay 1~111 on Roulo 1743~1Aaad.Ciol- -UWIIIUIIbllllyln1. (7401448- lUIIIIOO. Bolary Ia OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- 2-112 baths, big kitchen ~ · - v.--~
13041875-5522
7 Soulh, Ann Dr1Yo ol ol 11prr1a. OH
lliU ·
on ootnmiiiiDtl. llllerellad lNG co. rwoommends that wloak cablnat1, DR, LR __ IV._ Aft}~ •
Roocooon Rood. Baby + glril ::::=:-:::-:--"'":'::-::-Oll\dfdlllll llloUid oontlcl you do bual'*"- paopo wlgas log ft...,._, central
2 Br tralle,, amall oleo• lljl &amp;
AVON! All-~ Buv or 1110 ~ o1 Mar1tallng of you kiiOW, and NOT 10 aond air, laundry room, 1ronl O!floe building In Mlne11- repair
around
home
- · oupplles +toys.
lpaara, :lo4- Adrnlrila1ralor 11 (7401fl2- money lhoough lhe mal undl. porch &amp; 2-112 oa' ge"''l". ~lie, 800 sq. h.. ale, 00\1• (740)992-2979
Garoge Sale. 11111. 121h, Balt. 11472. EOE
you hove lnveatl-ted lhe lmmedlala rn••11lon. Ap- ored parldng, coiling len,
131h. 713 Wool Collegt • 7~ 1.,...
~
pral·-"
at 125500 "·"· 52751
2 llh
Br,Ll1 112 bath,
14 wide
Slroet. Rio Grande. SW. ~·' P--~~ ...,..,. Pl ...... l _
_.
Eo••"ollorlng.
- Cell ~740).U8-4514
• · ~
mo.. &amp;1•·•7•·1881
~ ~
'
· - - · ._.....
....,..
.
......offer.
w
~ eKpando &amp; oanRoute 325 6oulh. AntiquO Lors &amp;
llralalr, (7401992-2187
Sofa, WOod Table wilh ~ ::. D~ ~""""" p~ llohecl HunUnglon Firm. -:-..,:-E:-,-,.:-:bl:-loh:-ed--:--V-:-a-nd-ln-g from 8-6pm, M-F, or
Contacl Killey Barvlceo. Aoutel Eeme Big S$. must (740)448-3248 offer Spm.
ACRFAGI!
Chairs, GlaSaWIIIW IIIII Col- 1100 Call ~:aiJ
3 bedroom mobile horne In
leotlble&amp;, Men and Lldlea
r,
___!__
(IIOO)HI-M70
Hill 1 -688·571 ·022~ Ext. Pomeroy- a1 eleotrio briok ~
Middleport,
no
pels,
Winter Ciolhea, Sholl, Loll
CMull 1'1111 111111- Pan-limo Dietary Aldo 2005 (Fionda Only AIN horne, 3 bedroom, 2 balh, 2 Acres more or leaa. Clly (7401gg2-5856.
of household and mile. 8 Ill
- -• lor
100 bid lllcllled 11017)
dining, kllchen &amp; living Now Haven above Elo..,.
m.
5pm,
A ~Clrt~ of ..,..
r·~tlly int --~
3 bedroom, Middleport,
10110 ~w1r1 Men- ~~....""'.hoUkt .:;;-;. Start Your Business To- room, fireplace, all new Sc:hool. 992-3980
$375 per month plus depos·
·
11, rent lncludee waiB&lt;, sewGarage ~·· Seturday Oo- 111 Rttardltlon and Dovof- =~~~ Rohatillllitlofi day... Pnme Shoppng Can· range, micro, air condlllonor
I o~-~~~· Ia. ::::::::!' -a-~~ tor · ~ Aval~bll AI AI• &amp; heal, rool &amp; oarpet, 2.7acrot, UIICMIII10rraln,ln ar&amp;1rash, (7401992.0175
131h. Sem-· 1pm. 4821
~ ..--·
- ,.......,..,
fordable A Spri v11101 glaoaedlnbeckporch, large Wolchtown, $2700, pieiM
State Roule 588. Crolll.
looltlng
lor 081Uif Pill 1lmo llaad
Pomeroy Oh Plaza Ca117
ale.
ng
front ·porch, lenoed In back call (5801563-3753, LNvo 3 Br. 2 balhl, 14l70 Newly
Kldl Slull.
worklrl. ~~~ Ia 457H, An Olncl W.vor,
'
40-448-DIOt . yard, (740)gg2-2571 .
name and number
remodoled, (740)8112-2167
Hugh _,ng Sale. Satur- 11.71 PI' hour.
IOt1ly eo
l!qual CJpponuII
b- nlty Elrtpioyer Enoouroglng .
,........,,
Rio Gronde Aroa, 2 Bed. HUNTINO DR
Beautiful River View Ideal
day October 131h. 1-4. In Crown City acrou from 11101. lt04 Carll Drive. '~ltoa Dtvorofty.
1U looN
rooms, 1 112 Bolh, L.R.,
RICREATION LAND
FO&lt; 1 Or 2 People, Roferon·
.
Kitchen, Lorge Level Lot. Ranging In 5 aero Ill 100 ' oae, Dopostl. No Poll, FooOwsley's Orooery. S1 Rt 7 Oalllpolla, OH. An Equel
l!mployar. P · I r I • I I m o 1881 Nuhua Mobile Home Immediate
Po-lon, IDIIIracla, aome adjoining 101 Trailer Park, 740-441 Boulh. Colpela,. Hou-. ()pporiunlty
Holldey DeooraUono.
houlolclopor~undry alaff
.....,,mbed new 527,900. (7401441-2801
Publ~ hunting. Aval- In 01S1
1
- l o r 100 b i d ,.,...
'
Athono, Oallla, Jaokeon
·
Furniture and Out Door, =
APAim.tPms
Milo., Something lor Evory- Doritlno'l - lilting eppllo nulling faol111y, lnle- din rm: =-pu~· ~:; Sconlo Country Ranch Plko, Scioto and Hooking
D1111no lor .,.,.,go-11
111toutc1 lfiply to :
· ·
.. ~ '
Houaa. 3 - · 1 112 Counly, a1eo lowlo Co., KY.
JiOR RENT
ono.
and Ulo drMrl, 13iilll 'lit
tnga Rahebllllatlcln =~~ng oxc. cond. Balho, 2 Car Garage, Cov· For more lnlonnallon and ~
•
trod Dock. 1 Aoll Lot. All&lt;· PRII mopa oon1ao1:
~rae Sale a1 Johnaon and - o r Imilano only. ConJW, M71t R-.mnge
Oraenhouae. Friday and Apply In ·
.
Roe.!', l'omoroy, Ohio
l'rlotW ling $76,000. 31134 Red Hill Anthony 1.11": =·Ltd. 1 end 2 bedroom apart.
SmMai:s
Aoad, Denville· Molg1 . , 1-101141
mento, fumlohed and untur·
S.turday. .Toyo, Clothaa, &amp;.\IY.WOJIKIIXCILLIHT 45711!, Att: Mike Olmoro,
8hoea, Af&gt;II!LI.-. TVo.
eave
.....
8oip01Vioor.
1!qua1
()ppor1uo
Counly.
(7401742·8004.
www.alolancl.corn
n
- . IIDUrily dopoail ,._
1"'· -..
•• n1y =.=--~ng
Ryan or Mil qulrod, no Plfl, 740-gg2OoiDber 12, 13. 2 I!Jng WI•
··. bornl. Call
- .._ -~~·TURIIID DOWN ON
Indian Creek EQueelrlan E11- U18; .
1
10C1AL IICURITY 1811?
Molllut 1bmJ ~-· 3-8 ICrt lolo, -1 o1
· rctloway bod, ,.. -800-417..... 1!111. 1111V . " - - frtgerltor, hOuMhold lllml,
~ I oom/11170 Tht WII-Min lu-1111
No Faa unfolla wo Wlnl
FOR SALE
Rio Grande, 1rom 1125,900. 1 Bedroom Apanmenl, ~·_,ng, 111 o . - IIII'LDYIIINT
IOolllcl In OllllpaCia II 1-868-582·3345
~
(7401245-1747
lrigerotor, Rengo, li/C In_,.,.,...
lnCI lor lullollme · PI"eluded, 5289 Pluo Depolll &amp;
Yerd Balo-Addlaon Town· - • -artY · - • . IIICI ttmjlorlry '
Bad12.etl with 62•1 !~th
N . 2 ~:n?g DoTo • B,;'LAllndNew? Rolarenoe. HUD Approved.
houll. Oct- 12&amp;13,
rnuet Ill """'
rooma,
- • ~ ~·~
n • ~·
(7401+11 15111
bunk bldo, clothing end 1'01 " " - CIAIII gaiiO in&lt;IIYfdulle
Hor.mi
Carptled. High EHiolanoy Wa Dolll Hurry On~ 10 Loll
CINTI!I
, _ In 1 chelltnglng
Fumeco. Air Conditioned. Loll, 304-738-7295.
112 bedroom, near Holzer,
~.
FOR SAlE
Good Cori(IHion. Priced to Nloo 4 ecre IfaCt
economical ulllllles, 5279 to
Yerd Balo. 10/11· 10114. wo Dlllfll1lly- opl ilnga and -"'inC~ oa- wl1h
Clothe•, Fumlturw, Craftl,
~,:.Ita~
~ lhl~:t 2 Slo~3 BR houae . on Soli. (740)367·7811 . Galllpolfo. oeay to;::
plue utllltleo
11/1 0 mlln out of
umo.
illtplltoriDI ,....,rod, ..." ~- - · --·•• - Soout
Rd
c~,
16
Wldo.
Only 11~.oo Por (7401'148-9583
bill w11f 1f11n 11a fiGitloondfo _.,, ,_ "'""" •~
~
., •- or,
.
••
2- 1 Bedroom Apli. located
on Hemlock Rood.
•
.,. 1 111 1 d OfNI 1 competltl\lt wage nlao olze R, Kllchan I Montn, 8.811"- F[Xed lnllrH1 Primo 2·112 aero 101 tor • - 10 PVH &amp; Shopping
· ., you
lnd ~ lllrltlllllnoludlng balh, for more lnlormatlon Rato Wllh Air And u... bul~lng on-looltacl on quill aroaa. (304IS75-2117
s:.aoz:'OHor,_ morohanclllt . dlooountl, {740)1181-3822
derplnnlngt-888-t28-3421 road, IICiuded aroa, outEuiJt Q. Mal1le II (7411~ 401(1(1, ttook PUIDhlll 28x80 Doublewlde altlll)g on 1983 SchuM MobtloHome. 3 lidO o1 oily llmltlln Spring- 2br. on Mt. Yamon In Point
5001
. ~· profit lhallng, health
lot. Wfth 2x8 wallo, Bedroom 1 1/2 Sotho Call llold Townohlp. Alklng PI-nt. (3041676-7833
Huge yard ulo I croftt, ~~f]~!'!i~:::!~
nallll end oeroor lid• 1hormal g;ne wlndowa . (7401441:1488
. .
$17,500. Call for more !nlo. 3 Rooms and Bolh. 48 011·34820 Sleto Routo 7, Porn- ~AIT
_ , opportun111ta. l"' p~ 10 II. Polnl Pi••~
(7401448·4514 Dayo; or
••
oroy, ICfOII rrom Sklto-a1Mf10d oppilolntlno!ld 10 · ~ 1gg1 Nonla Mobllo Home, (7401448-3248 Evenlnga.
Straet. Utlllll.. Paid. Stove
- · 10112·10/111.
11111) by lf1f Wlf-Mirt ani area. (3041675-3881l 14x70, 2 bedrooma, 2 Wl
,
and Ralrigerafor No Pels.
II•IWa• •-rtmont lnd Ilk for Rooomary.
ba- .,.ry ......., ·cont~•fon
nted Ill buy. 5- 20+ Partl- 5475 plua dopoafl. Aoferon' up'an ..,..
"~•
,.....
" ' Call
ally Wooded
Gall~ County.
Huge yard ule &amp; cralll,
piDk
IPIIflcetlon.
3 Bedroom on Roulo 2. 517,000.
Call
IO&lt; appointaltor ,;.-.
(7401
ceo Raqu Ired · (7••)
- 44834820 Slate Floule 7, Pom~
•
....,._
•
....,
menl
(740)«6-0758
""'"
31145
~iiftoY, URGENTLY
NEEDED- ( _,.,~
' ·
31M5.
oroy, lrorn Skalo+
n
donorl, eem $48"' For Renl or Sole. Small 11183 Cia)1011 181180 mobile way, 10112-10/18.
~=""---~
2or$11oull=· -S2&amp;11.Monlh+S200. horne. 31lr.. 2. ba. liking
Octobe&lt;121h-14th lrorn 8am Handy
poiiOII ,-.a 10 ~!1 Baro·r-., 740-58 • Dopoalt.
(3041727-3318 519,000 304-773-8885 lftO&lt;
1·
unlll 4pm, 1hreo mllea out work with hOme on
"""
lrorn tlpn-11pm.
5pm. ·
State Roulo 143 off of
,
_
a
.
.
,
.,.,....
Priol
RedUOid.
3
Bedroom,
1st dme buyoro· G011em·
Route 7, nrwt ~ on
mtmlllo ,,.. ,.... bolh
lhe 1e11 paat Wolfe Pan Ad. llolllll001
-·'tid
a 112 Balh. 2 Car Garege, ·2 men1 loan•· buy leona &amp;
(7cOIIU 1111:..,.. '
Ftreplaoaa. Patio Ooorl, Ulo- (7401448-3093 Oak·
Yard. ule- Bal. Oct. 131h,
Muoh Molol C1oee to Holi· WOOd Suparr:entar
1
2M Palmer St., Mlddlot)ort, 7 ~ to .111 ,_,
tr'l,
GaiUpolle,
OH
cheap.
·
Call (74CIIU8 3351
(7401441.0310
t
~
II

_.lOra
='Jior

· 52.500. (740)441-

4245 af1ol t!pn.

.. lar programming. Hallie
• liM '"'Home- Plan.

20 Words 7 Oays • Eoch Item Priced
• No commercial Ads

=;:

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

-

Bo-10-Dfgllll
. Selelllle TV In 4 dlfteront Will~-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 11188 Ford CUI Wogon XLT
• """""- FREE - r d poo- r1o
Auros
~- """· 1u11y outoma11c
· - ln!Mallatlor. AmollFOR SALE
whool chair Uft. (740)245: cu Top 100 our moot r&gt;oPU9212

Private Party Ads Under $100

2 bedroom homo tOr
FOR RJNr
- · (7401SB2-5071 p1eaaa ,
HI00-214-0452
•·coli after 4pm,
1 -3 Bedrooma Forecfoled
~i1110-o5-127.S.
...,....
-From 5!119/Mo., o%
liio
Flif-AotoltiA 2tllle030r411edroom,On- Dowrt, 30 y..,. at 8.5.,.
MIIC!UANI!OI.S 1
~~~
~: 800-319·tw••ow.tlool I ,,.. 1-868-92e-34211 ·
D~ lie~ d
1 'mto If · - •
15 Coun Stroot 2 Bed_ _ .. au • - · ..,.._
- - · - - 3 bedoorn10111
mot&gt;lle homo lor rooma, 1 112 baths, K11c11on
125
"'· choal ot . . . _ $ · _ _ . , _ Ale,
electric, wl1ll lkMt and refrigerator.
affor ..,..._., 1111' ~.,...,, 0&gt; (740I992-5858 ·
011- ~arl!lng, C1oee 10
51700prn40I98S-42S2
·
·
Schoola and Downtown
. -1111'ANumable loans- Meny Area. $51151 monlh plua deOelc firewood, $35 a load, tw••ow.llor4•11on« lypeeavollable. Call for de- =I and ao1-. No
two 01 more loada, 130
-mlitalen •
tala. (7401448 3583.
., .. -~
. (7401446--1928
(7401742-2897
or
(740)992Big
11'
·
3
bedroom
2
7286
11111n1w p puwltlnot
2 bedroom home close 10
lu-~-y ~
balh, eave $5,155, dollverad
lim
nr ·
.., --...
&amp; aet up on your lot lnclud- town, balement. River view,
n'ANI1!D
••-r•olllorrool I lklrtl
&amp; llbe I
54251 monlh: 3 bedroom In
ToDo
--llln
ng
ng
rgaaa town, 1-1l2bathti.Go0dlovlolollonoi!M-Our
~~~~: catlon. S5001monlh.R-All~- lnsta~
_ _ .....,
74ChY2·1972.
onc:ealndcllpooltltqulrod.
lnformediMIII
(740)448 3841,
led: ropalrlng lorr:ed air kar· doii~IOUCh.-ln F1n1f Dlyo. Ndonwill lr)heatell; ~wn mowlhle
I
Red cllonf 2 Bodooorn.Houlo, NC, Roe11·. omall anglnea. Mike
:uw I C aro
von orr
u
'"""rotor lncl· ~.
(7••u~ 7.'"
.. 'u on an equal
(3041738-3409
.. .,..
~.
_,......,. and. Rei....,.... (304 Um~edOrNOCrodll?(lov. 21118 Calle11or6:QO
David's 11onooa1 Contraollng
arnnunl Bank Flrunce Only
~. ofoclrlcal, palnlDalcwood In llarbouro- 233 2nd Avo. Convenient.to
lng, dooko, rools. Call
Hor.mi
ville, wv 304-736-3409.
Downtown. 2 Bedrooma, 1
=258-8373 (304)833JiOR SALE
•
11211o111, Kl1cl1on wi1h Stove
New 14 Will, 3 Badooom. aitd . AalrigoraiDr. $4901
1 9
full aarvlco house cleaning, For eale by owner: Nice bl- ~~ J ·8fD~,e;':;ry monlh
and Rei$7.00 hour, vary honest. level home on 1 ec,. near
p. ·
erencee.
eta. (740)44841126
Retoroncea available. Call Che""". Three bedroom,
·

-.,-::.•.:r•

Hay I Bright Wi're Tit :-::::-:::-:-.,..,-:-:-- : - - Straw, Year 'Round De1N1fy U188 Ford F· 150, ..._. pick·
&amp; Volume Dllcouro Avolla- up, XLT · NC, Illerbit .
Heritage
Farm . eo. 130,000 mit&amp;. Fair ~

1978 Corvatta, While wllh 87 Cnevy BIUO&lt; In good ,
Packlgtt otart at only Red lntoriol, T-tops, Au to- ahapa, $3500. OBO 304' 1 3 5 . 11 9 1 m o n t h . malic, 57500. (740)388- 675-7930
: NBC.CBS,ABC ·&amp; FOX 0406
-,-,- - - - -- •IYIMablt In moet areas.
94 Plymouth van, runs
•
1988 Ford, F-150, 300, 8 good, (7401992-gg10.

--

• Stert 'f'our Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
oucrtptlon • Include A Prtct • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
• Jndude Phone NumHr And Addrtu When Needed

I -clll-....

: buy.

(304) 675-1333

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To .
I

r

.• Got Dleh - ..
(304!«175-5724.
• No equipment 111 own 01

Register

Monday thru Friday

c--

: ~I S HEATING 6 Bucl&lt; I bole oalo, oquare
4-WJ)s
• CDOIJNG (7401441-8411 bMt 51 .00 otho&lt; hey up 10
: ar1~752.00, round bales 51 5.00 1985 ChoYy S-10 llfoz01,
• - - - - - • I O U eacll304-675-48119
4x4,
liking
S1800
•
(740)8112-2117

In one week With us

Display Ads

r

~ Flute plus stand and repair
··eQuipment. excellent shape.

·S125. Call (7401448-7077
:after 5:00pm.

Moving· Plano for Sale·
Chlny Wood, Kimbell, like

-new. (7401446-8147 ·

:Cv=~ ·I
Richards

Brothers

Frull

Farm. APPLES AND
MUCH ·MORE. 24 miiH

: North of Gallipolis on COun·
I \In I '-,I 1'1'1 I I..,
\ I I\ 1 .., I Ill t\

2: 5' Bruah hogo, 5:!00 and
. $300. Caaa Book Hoe Buck·;.et. $450. Caoo Fronl End

Loader Buokol, 5450. Can
Separat11

Tln

Cant, $1500. Comar o1586

,,.1nd

Add1vllt1

Road.

·(740)2·5-5538 .
52 Caoo DC wiln 5 ft. drag
typo bruah hog. Both run
• wotl.
51350 for both, or
$1060 for traclor, $300 for
brush hog aeparatety.

-(740)643-5217
~ J.D. 4830 tractor; J.D. 6600

. combine, 8 row head; Nl
325 two row com picker;

; (74011M11-2072.
YANMAR YM 1500 TraclDr,

· dlooel, 3 point hitch, 52,150.
Also, new 4' flnlah mawar,

sllll In crete, $850. Shipping

: available. Located just DUt·
, lido of HUntavllle, AI (2581

nB-9435 www.maynarde·
'qulpment. com

r

·NIIDED NOW.
WILL TRAIN ~

BENEFITS AVAILABLE
MANY SHIIITS
AVAILABLE.

Attomoyollir
Plllnttll, 800 Saulh
l'lart SIIHI,
Columbue, Ohio
43208;
T•le: 814-221·1882.
(101U.1t, 26,2001
(11 2, I, 2001

...

.........

=~~~~~=

Po;r:::;: ~~:..

PROTECTION
AGENCY, P.O. lOX
1041, COLUMBUS,
I
to ecc•pl or r• oct OHIO 43211·10"
FRANKl
eny or all bklo.
(TELEPHONE: 114WOOLDRIDGE CO..
844·21211. "FINAL
L.P.A., Gregory O.
(10)12,22,200 1
ACTIONS :
ARE
Waoldrtdgo end D. L- -- ·ZI::c:,__ _ _ _ _ · ACTIONS OF THE
Melno, Jr.
OIRECTOR WHICH
Attorney• tor
ARE EFFECTIVE
PlalntiH, 800 South
UPON ISSUANCE OR
l'llrt Slnaet,
A
S T ATED
Columbuo, Ohio
EFFECTIVE OATE.
43201; Tela: 114-221·
PURSUANT TO OHIO
1882.
REVISED COOE
In Memory
SECTION 3745.04, A
(10) 12, 1t, 21,2001
Patricia Eblin FINAL ACTION MAY
(111 2, I; 20111
BE APPEALED TO
Phillips

Relph E. Tru-ll.
S .....ll

Council hal tho right

c

J'CALL NOW

WANIDl .

roBUY

Wanted 10 buy: uited Mobile
Horne. Call (7401'148-0 175
or (3041875-~~

JOB SPECIALIST
The Buckeye Jobs for Ohio's Graduates
(JOG) program has an Immediate Dp&amp;nlng
for a full·llme Job Specialist. This position
reports to the Program Manager and Is
locally responslble to the Principal at
Meigs High School. Activities Include
classroom Instruction, academic coaching,
job development and placement, jcb
coaching and coordlnatl.on with · local
businesses. The right csndl.d ate may have
an Associates or Bachelors Degree with a
good work history and an aplllude for
·working with youth . Extens ive work
experience may be accepted In lieu of a
degree and teaching/coaching ability Is
essential. The full-time salaried position
assumes a work year of approximately
1600 hours with reduced summer
acti.villas . Base salary is $"1 5500 plus
retirement plan , medical, dental, &amp; life
insurance benefits. Qualif ied applicants
should send resume with a qover letter by
5 days alter appearance In papsr to :
Buckeye Vocational Services
PO Box 735 ,
Hillsboro, OH 45133
or FAX to : 937-393·9409

'•

::let: P~:~~ a;'l;:
Courlhouot, In lh•
Clly of PQmeroy,
County ol Molge and
Sllte of Ohio on ·
Thuroclley, '111• Blh
day.ofNoV.mber,A.D..
2001 beginning at 11
o'clock A.M. of llld
day, the following
doocrlbod lando and
lenemenla to wit:
Sllualeln 1118 Vllloga
of Recine In• Secllon
No. 18, .Town No. 2,
Range No. 12, Lot No.
8 Sulton Townohlp
Mallia County, Ohio: '

Olftce ol County Audnor
Mol County
.
100 1!.
8lraet
P_..y, Ohio 457111
The Melgo CountJ ludgat Commlltlon hat compleled Itt
apportlonmtnl of Undlvldtd Local Gavernmtnl R•venuo and
Undlvldlecl L-' Govemment R-ua Alelatanoe Pundt lor 2002.
Thill naVInuot 11e beud on pro(IIC!klnt from th• Ohio OHioe of
ludgtl end Man11am•nt and ana only eellmallt of lhl amount of
navanualhlt could be ilotlvld by Melga County. .
·
Tho tollowtna 11 a oomplelll b,.kdown of the proiCICied navenua.
"-'tt
LOCIII
Locol
Govemmenl
QoVImmont
AtVartUI
Rtvonuo AUI.
H,143.00
County •••••••••••• .a.~
14,107.00
Townahlp ........SO.OO%

t ·818·974•JOBS

to~
Cruther·

•

llaglnn lng on the
Elt1 l ido at l~e
Paftlaroy ond Racine
Road 5e IMI tram a
Publk: Nolk:a in N•••spa pe,rs.l
pol nl which baara
Your RIJihl to Know, O.:llnnd Right l.o Your
NOIIII 31 ~­
IIOARO OF IIEYIEW) al !he lnlaroactlon of
. IIY A PERSON WHO P - . y and R..,lne
WAll A PARTY .TO A Road wllh lha W...
SHERIFF'S 8AI.I! OF ·SHERIFF'S SALE OF
PUIIIJC NOTICE
PROCEEDING
line of &amp;ectton 11, u1c1
REAL ESTATE
IIEFORI!
THE paint baing ttl feet
REAL ESTATE
C1li.IDII PLEAS
THE FOLLOWING DI1ECT0 R
I Y from Ihe Soulhw•t
COIIMDil PLEAS
COURT, IIEIQS
APPLICATIONS
FILING AN AP1'!A1. comer of Lo1 No. I In
COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OtiO
AND/OR VERIFIED WITMIN 30 DAYS OF S•cllon 11; !hence
COUNTY, OHIO
C..NIICIIbor:
COMPLAINTS
WERE NOTICE OF THE North 52 dag-. M '
CUt Number:
01CV-070
RECEIVED, AND THE FINAL
ACliON. &amp;It 220 t.ot; lha.01.CY-Oel
- I l l Ohio Inc.,
FOLLOWING DRAFT, PURSUANT TO OHIO South 35 degreoe 41 '
dbeBtnaflcllt
PROP.OBED, OR REVISED
CODE E1t1 132 loot; !hence
Btntllclal Ohio Inc.,
Mortgago Co. ol
FINAL
ACTIONS SECTION 3745.07, A South 53 dagra. . 43'
da-111
Ohio, lkl
WERE ISSUED,. IIY FINAL
ACTlOH W"l 211 IMI to the
Mortgaga Co. ol
T HE
0 HI0
ISSUING, DENYING, North oldie of P-oy
Ohio, Ptalntllllll.
t'oc1ut,old Reilly
ENVIRONMENTAL
MODIFYING,
and Raclno Roed;
Corponallorl, Plolntl1l Oonnll M. Lllvendlr,
PROTECTION
REVOKING,
OR lhanco elong North
AGENCY
fOE PAl RENEWING
A llklloluld 1011dNorlh
1111.,
LAST
WEEK . PI!RIIIT, LICENSE, 38 dag-• Wael130'
.... R. WIIIIImo,at
VARIANCE 10 th• piece of
In purauanceofen "ACTIONS" INCLUDE 0 R
ADOPTION, WHICH IS NOT beginning. containing
Order
of Sill THE
dlnactad to me from MODIFICATION, OR PRECEDED IY A 81/100 of an ecr• •
In punauence of an oald court, In Ill• REPEAL OF OROERS PROPOSED ACTION, RaMrvlng to !he S ....
Order of Sal• lboWI entllled-, (OTHER
THAN MAY IE APPI!ALED of OhiO, ho. .ver, IH
directed to me from I will oller lor ule at EMERGENCY
TO THI! ERAC IY all, gil&amp;, cool and lither
oald court, In th• public auction II !he ORDERS I;
THE FILING AN APPI!AL mtnanall wilh !he rtghl
ebove ~ IIC!kln, door or lhl Melgl ISSUANCE , DENIAl, WITHIN 30 OAYI OF Ia ontry lor !he
I will ollar lor ule a1 County Courthoueo, MODIFICATION OR ISIUANCE OF THE purpoou
ol
public elictlon 11 lhl P01111roy, Ohio on REVOCATION OF PINAL
ACTION. proopoollng
lor, .
door of the Mllga ll)uraday, NoVImbar UCENSES, P!RMITS, E R AC
APPEALS daVIIoplng, producing
County Courthouo•, 112001, at i0:30 a.m. LEASES,
MUST Ill! FILED or opanatlng lor lho
Ponteroy, Ohio on th•
Mtne, and lhe rtght of
VARIANCES , OR WITH:
following
Thunaday; Nov•mar dleolorl- , . . , _, C£RnFICATES; AND ENYIRONMI!NTAL
occupancy lnaofer ae
1 5, 2001, II 11:00
SIIUIIId In tho THE APPROVAL OR REVIEW APPEALS- lha Mma It ttMnllal
a.m. the following Vlllega ol Riaclne, DISAPPROVAL OF COMMISSION, 231 lo ouch proopactlng,
dllcrlbld . .1 - County of Molgl end P L A N S
AND EAST TOWN STREET, deVIIoplng, oparallng
SIIualtd In the s- of Ohio, I-n:
SPECIFICATIONS.
R0 0 M
3 0 0, or producing. Alao
Townehlp
of
Btgtnnlng al th• "ORAFt ACTIONS" COLUMBUS , OHIO rtMrvlng to tha Sbte
Slllobury, County of narthNal-ota ARE
WRITTEN 43215. A COPY OF ol Ohio thl uee ol
Melge, and Stel• or ce1111n 101 dMdled by STATEMENTS OF THE APPEAL MUST 0 u 11 ma
flowing
Ohio, ond In Secllon F.D. Wolf, o-aud, THE DIRECTOR OF IE SERVEO ON THE \hrough utd lando or
28, and daacrlblcl aa to Malinda Dobblne; ENVIRONMENTAL
DIRECTOR WITHIN 3 • butllng upon th•
lollowo:
DAYS AFTER FILING 11omo and 10 much o1
thence eaat One PROTECTION'S
llaglnnlng at an Hundred Nln•t••n (DIRECTOR'S)
THE APPEAL WITH benka thereof ao mey
Iron pin In lha cenla• (11t) leo!; !hence INTENT
WITH THI!ERAC.
a-urylorouch
of lh• Bon• Hollow aoulh It rlghl engle, RESPECT TO THE
FINAL ISSUANCE ,ntoymtnl and lh•
Roed,
on
the Slxtylwo (121 loet; ISSUANCE, DENIAL, OF MODIFICATION protection of auch
northweat corner of th•nce wut at right ETC. OF A PERMIT, TO NPDES PERMIT Flreome from oroelon,
tho
Falrl-n• angle One Hundr•d LICENSE, ORDER, CONDITlONS
cantemlnetlon or
Subdlvlelon.
In Nlnll18n (11tl r. .l; ETC. INTERESTED SYRACUSE-RACINE dlepoall ol udlmont.
Mlddltporl VIII..., !hence North. at rtght PERSONS
MAY REGIONALSDWWTP Ret•rence D•ad :
aetd pin alng North engl•, Slxty•lwO (112) SUIIMIT WRITTEN YELLOW
BUSH .,.,lumo 273, l'lga 717
so diet.... u· w. 313 IMt to th• plac• or COMMENTS OR ROAO
of tho Melge County
IMI from 1 polnl.ln beginning.
REQUEST A PUBLIC RACINE 0H 188UE Dlod Racondl.
!he Bone Hollow
DATE 101D1121101
Prior Rtlar•nc• :
Permanent parcal MEmNG
Rood; !hence North numblr: 1•
REGARDING DRAFT RECEIVING WATERI: Volume 43, Pego 271',
15 degreoa 28' w...
ACT10N8
MMEN-T S OR OHIO RIVER
Melgl County oHiclel
253 r..t . etong uld 00374.000
C0
PERMIT
NO Recorda.
Property lddrHI:
raed: thtnoa North 35 701 Main ltroel,
PUBLIC MEETING OPQCI0003'FD
Audllor'o Parcel No:
dleg-• 1o· -t1:N Raclna, Ohio 45771
REQUESTS MUST Ill! THIS ACTION WAS 11-00253.000 end 1•
ltat etong 11ld rood;
Prior lnalrumenl SUBMmED W.ITHIN PRECI!DI!D IV A 00214.000
thence Norlh 10 nalenance: Volume
30 DAYS OF NOTICE PROPOSED ·ACTION.
Tht
1 b o v1
dagnaM 20' w••• 110 72, page2tl
OF THE DRAFT
FINAL "ISSUANCE datcrlbed property II
lui along Mid road;
ACTION.
OF CERTIFICATION
lurlhtr known II
Apprlludll:
th•nce Nooth n • 06' $27,000.00
"PROPOSED
U.S. ARMY CORPS property IOCIIecl el3rd
Weal 100 IHI elong
ARE OF ENGINEERS
StrMI In lho City of
TERMS OF SALE: ACTIONS"
oald roed; thence To be told lor no Ina WRITTEN
HUNTINGTON
Racln•, Ohio.
North 7t degreoo 10' than lwo-lhlrde or !he STATEMENTS OF DISTRICT
Appraleod
a!
Welt t1 feet elong epprelud value. The THE DIRECTOR'S VARIOUITWPS.
$25,000.00 Minimum .
oald roed, the piece purchaoer(o) ahall INTENT
WITH OH ISSUE DATE bid: $111,1111.17
ol beginning lor lhll d•poalt $5,000.00 RESPECT TO · THE 1GID1/2001
Tonne of 11le: oath
deocrlpllon; lh•nce wllh !he ohartH ellho ISSUANCE, OENIAL, RECEMNO WATERS: or oartlllect check, 10%
Soulh M .dlegreoo'25' llmeoluldule.
MODIFICATION,
OHIO RIYI!R
dtpoolt on 1111 dalo
Wall 403.7 ltat etong
REVOCATION, OR THIS FINAL ACTION and balence paid
• gaa nne, thence Ralph E. TN11811.
RENEWAL OF A, NOT PRECEDED IIY wllhln 30 daye ol ule.
Norlh 84 . d•gre. . ShariH
PERMIT, LICENSE , PROPOSED ACTION ilatph TIVIHII, ShariH
Wilt 1061111; !hanOI
OR
VARIANCE. AND
IS
H - n.
North 8' Ellt 211.7 FRANK&amp;
WRITTEN
APPEALABLE
TO
Covlnglon,
M111111ger
.
1111 lo lha cenl•r of WOOLDRIOGE CO., · COMMENTS , AND . ERAC. PERTAINS :tO
Newmen &amp;ThomH
lion• ·Hollow Rood; L.P.A., Gnagory D•
REQUESTS FOR A. 401 CEII'riFICATION,
Co., L.P.A. .
lhanc• South 14 Wooldridge end D. L , PUBLIC MEETING GRANT, PERTA..S
Jerry M. llryan,
degree• Eatt 448.3 1111111, Jr. Attorney•
REGARDING
A TO HUNTINGTON
Attorney
(gl·28, (1 Ol 5, 12
PROPOSED ACTION DISTRICT CORPS OF
•••• along lha oeld lor PlalntiH, 100
MAY BE SUBMITTED ENGINI!I!RS PUBUC .
road, to tho place of South Purt Street.
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF NOTICE
beginning,
Columbua, OhiO
conlllnlng 1 .35 43201; T•le: 814-221·
NOTICE OF THE (Hl2001001t7.
PROPOSED Ac:TION.
ac:rea, mare or 1111. 1882.
AN ADJUDICATION (1 op 2, 200~
Excapl alllegll rtghta
HEARING MAY BE 1tc
otway.
.(101 12, 11, 26, 2001
Parmanant peroctl (11 12, I, 2001
PROPOSED
ACTION
Ncit1ce
number: 14-01452
HELD
ON
A
IF
A HEARING
Property IMidreae:
PubllcNoflce
REQUEST
OR
31427 Tllyloro DriY•,
Sharlll't Sale ·
OBJECTION
IS
Mlddlepo1t, Ohio
Th• Stile of OhiO,
PUIUC
NOnCE
RECEIVED
IIY
~HE
41i710
Mtlgo County, oa.
OEPA WITHIN 30 Purauant
Prior lntlrum•nl
to the
The
Vllleg•
of
DAYS
OF
ISSUANCE
narera.-: Volume
command
of
end
Pom•roy Will be
OF THE PROPOSED
·82, page 37t
Order
of
S.le
laouod
fiCCIPIIIIII ~led blda
ACTION. WRITTEN
Appna-11:
from lh• Court of
on e1811 CheVy B-10 COMMENTS,
$8,000.00
REQUESTS FOR Common PI••~ of uld
TERMS OF SALE. plokup wllh · a
minimum
bid
of
PUBLIC MEETINGS, County and lo m•
To be aold lor no leM
...,.,.00.
All
billa
mull
AND ADJUDICATION directed, In tho action
!han lwo-lhlrdl of the
a
,..,.lved
no
llltr
HEARING
of Nattonel · City Benk
appnalud valua, Tho
!han
November
5,
REQUESTS
MUST
BE
v. Jamao Patteroon, at
purchaaer(tl aheU
.
depoolt $5,000.00 2001 111 t :00 AM EST SENT TO: HEARING al., dalendanta.
II
!he
Clerk'o
Offloe,
CLERK
OHIO
I,
Ralph
Tru-cl,
wllh the oharlll II the
320 Eall Main Street, ENVIRoNMENTAL
ShoriH, thlll oHer lor
ltmeoluldNie.
,
APPI!ALS
. CO'F"SIION (ERAC)
(FORMERLY KNOWN
T HE
A8
EIMRONMENTAL
REVIEW

H,IQI,OO

Pleaaant VaDey Hoapltal

$215,357.00

Pleasant Valle)' Nursing and Rehablli1a~i?n
Center is a dynamic Long term C"!"' facthly
that provides intcnnedlaiJO and skilled care
needs 10 residents. Come join our health care

.25,032.00
11,410.00
7,381.00
3,175.00

organization where we provide excellence in
care.
·

8J!4QO

$114,107.00

POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
RN· PT/P.or Diem
LPN· FTIPTIPer Diem
CNA· FTIPT/Per Diem
RATE WILL BE BASED ON EXPERIENCE
Beneft1s lnc:lude:
• $500.00 sign-on Bonus for Licensed Nurses
• Flex scheduling (Including 12 hr. shifts)
• Shift Differential

$15,350.00
21,1011.00
13,088.00
17,841.00
8,813.00
18,M7.00
13,120.00
15,200.00
15,4118.00
11,510.00
14,1111.00
1U1Q,OO
$1n,ta7.oo

• Weekend PositiOns
• Training Proaram for new graduates .
• Health Insurance Single/Family Plan
APPLY IN PERSON OR CALL
Angela Cleland DON (304) 67S-5l31i
AAIEOE

$&amp;,572.00
7,t83.00
4,743.00
1,471.00
3,214.00
1,747.00
4,1144.00
5,517.00
5,124.00
4,181.00
5,331.00
4.250,00
$84,107.00
Nency Parl&lt;or Compbtll
Mltgo County Auditor

(10) 12

.

I

'

.

~,

�,_. a

a • The O.lly Sentinel

Frld8y, Oct. 12,2001

PomerOy, Middleport, Ohio

_ Friday, Oct. 12, 2001

The Dally Senlinel • Page a 7

PorMroy, lliddleport, Ohio

:NJ:A Cros•word Puule
PHILLIP
ALDER

IOIEIT IISSEU
COIISTIUCIIOfl

........

..

1TtMot

• •

DOCTORS
r-------------l-' 10% Discount :

: With This Ad
1 1 ' - - rtvw fram

·- .. a-·-...

u :

..... -...

I

,

•---- !;~_I~_IJ!I_--- -'

FREE ES'niiATES

71'1111 ........ . .
,._....,
.., n. sad

.......

: On New.Tires :

• Con ~Ills
Flemodellng
Stop lo Comp~re

Poo••••

f&lt;W-992-1871

•• Q ,•

9QIITJ
t Q .I I

9 ,,. II

.. It I

•

e

•

3D
IXINSTRUCT10N

..........

Free..U....._,

...........
Spodallul•..,.

Geaerlll
Conbactlq

COBil~
remodeling. plambl~~~t

EzcantlnllDo:cel'

..a

Backhoe
Septic Sy.teUtWtles ,
NewHomu

992-7943

eltctrlal, ho• ..-.

Tire Barn
«087 Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

740-992-5344

HOUfiS:

llon·F~N:

teaaace, aH repair
pordltl, &amp; deckJ.

Owner
Charles R. Dill

,._ 992-7445
Cal
591-9254

Release:

Aprlll7, 2002

A fee of $20.00 will be charged for urly
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or aoydme access Is wanted to
fairgrounds oilier tban stated dates.
Building space Is lint come Rrst serve.
Inside Storage: $4,00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf
(740) !l!ll-6954

Q
Thrley's
Mattress
Sales

_

......,.

471it SWill.._ llf
........ OHUT71

(740) 949-2657

.1....,.
._......

Vouchers accep.ted in

Meigs Coonty.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason

County

Bob Ball
1·740·992·6142
or
1-877-604·7350

241111.
RILl
'SJinl'llhl

Public Notice

Sacralllrv

11 lltlll1ad

AI l

(10) 12,2001 .

• Gravel Sand •
Thpooil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch ·
Bulldozer Services

COMMEitlAI ... IBIDIJITW.
FREE ESTIMATES

(740) 891-07117
' • Foolen, Walla, Stepo

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Case-IHParts ·

Flat Work,
Repi1Cements, • Wolkal
aod,DriY&lt;s • Sten&lt;ll ·
Crete Fne Elldmatet
Strvlna Oblo 10d

I&lt;ICIC?!

Cellular

24'120'

1·12 DIUBLE WAll

eff Warner Ins.

PUSTIC

992-5479
~·ve

FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JIINT
BEGiliRlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

,FOVI'IO YOV CAN SAY Af!IYTttiNG
YOV '-l~f TO TttEM, AS LONG AS

KENSINGTON

YOV'~f WAGGIN' YOV/C TAIL.

WIIIOOW8 HEAT
IIRROR TECHNOLOGY

. \

KEEPS Tit!
· 8UMMER'IIIE HEAT
OUT AND WINT!II
•T111e HUT IN
ILOCKIOUTII.ft
OF OAIIAiliNG

•••'

ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT

Bftalll~··
Custom Computers
Service, Repairs, and

Upgrades

1!

'We'll fix It or dsel"

740-667-0600

Tall• Trtnt•

BORN LOSER

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

TREE SERVICE

•-nat

..

,_

•

PRtCIHCI

T~E:£161

~VlTNJ.l~'­

it

\ - - - - - l "N

.

"

(r£N..L'( GET
'100 GO lN.b I

.::::.
Sl

•'·

-2422

7

Fully lnaured

Rocky R Hupp. Agcnl
Box 1R9
rvlidcllcporl. Ol1 1o 45760

~ uno of Sullivan'a Grooming SuppiiH

Local 843-5284
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing.Home
llbzmn'lt

Sulfur Coatocl UI'N, bulk only, $128.00 per ton .
10% off Ill Prlolorl HorN and U-ock Equip.
10o10o10AII , . _ Fartlllllr $UCI50t
1,000 . .lor'IWIMS11.5C/IIIII
18,000 •lor 1Wino$21.5CIIIIIo

.

.

ill

35537 St. Rl7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Pax 740-985-3851

:I KEEP FOR6ETTINI"o
IIIC1T 'TO ASK I-IlM
HN 'TOUE.H IE!&gt; ON A
FRIMY AFJ'~NOON.

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

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE E~E?
Shade River AG Seniee
"Ahead In Service"

Roofing • Guners • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring
Preasure

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

c-.
.-.. .•-• Fumllure,
Boat Trellara,

Utility Trellara,

97 Beech St.

mldlleport, 011
Romodallng

• Now &lt;lor-

•

• Electrical l Plumbing

P.O. Bo1 721-13

~PEANUTS

'

C.rHaulara,
An!lllllng Metal

DUE TO OUR CONTINUED
GROWTH, TURNPIKE
OF GALLIPOLIS IS
LOOKING FOR
SALES:l'EOPLE.
·Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We will train the right person.
We seek aggressive, self-starting
professional salespeople with the
desire to earn well above average
income. We offer a benefit package,
including 401k, medical and
retirement benefits, a five day
work week and nq Sundays.

No Phone Calli Please

See Pat Hill

or Brian Ross
Between 10 a.m. a 7 p.na.

NeYt Homes, Room AddiHons,
· Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

OCTOBER 121
LAMM'S
CONSTRUatON

·NewHomaa
·Skiing
• ROOfing
• Remodeling
• Oaragaa
• Addltlona
• Deck•
• Home Rapalra

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

Spaelallzlng In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free eatlm.tes
1o yra. experience
In the bualneaa
References
available. Owner:
Terry LamiJI

......
74:x;

2~73

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home

Fl'lf Estlmatu

949·1405
591·5011

.,

moltlplet.ood

DIICOIIIIII

VFWMASON

Self-Storage

Dance Sat. Night
9:00
-1:00am

33795 Hiland Rd.

~Snodgrass' Upholstery
"Hrlplirf r.. IO Rrco•tr Yolll ln&gt;ftllllmt"

•

, Pomer.oy, Ohio

'740--992-5232

81~9-2202

,,

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

'•
'•
'.,

WE CAN HELP

.,...

·

Sonlon DIIICOIIIIIs

High&amp; Dry

22J:"""

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R~elnt,Ohlo

~

21 .........

7 ......

211111 .....

-a.'illu·
. Z7111ckond

. aoean..

25

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

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

·-a

17:"'
..
40 llalllll'
conllwt
41 ScHI ...
428aaduclc
43Nol . . . .
45 ....
' : ~ld

...............
41

llanlllll
cloW
Mork Twain, in dis411111 1ad
cussing speeches, said,
2llulllp
50 lletolllll
. ,.., 1801'
Into
"The right word may
3 1 - - - MTum
ICoppal
be efi"ective, but no
32Dooar
word was ever as effective as a rightly
timed pause."
Timing is abo vital
to humor and often
important in bridge.
You are South in
three
no-trump.
Should you be playing on diamonds, on
clubs, or on tint one
then the other?
VVould ·you duck or
win Irick one?
I play that North's
three-diaillond rebid
is game-invitational
but nonforcing. VVith
a strong hand, I either
start with a strong
jump shift on round
one or use fourth-suit
game-forcing on
round two.
VVith one spade,
two hearts and two
diamonds on top, you
'E'K
WAL · R
IAXJRMAOEI.
need either four club
tricks, or three more
E'ZY
HAL
R
GAL
AO
diamonds and one
M~PPEYD.
E
IRW
XYPOGI'
dub. To get at least
four club tricks,
CEIJ
ZYHYLRLY
IYGG.'
though, assuming East
will switch to spades
ZRW
CI'JY
(as readers bad a
PR&amp;VIOUS .BOLUTION:· 'A PloMoo oriGinal coa,ta 1avaral
chance ·to -work · out
thouaand dOIIara - It' a a luKury I ean'l aHord. - Pablo
yesterday), would rePICaaao
quire a 3-3 split,
which is unlikely.
Much more probable
WOlD
is a 3-2 diamond
lAM I
break. However, even
with five · diamond
l.arrange l.ttera of the
tricks, you still need
four ll(ramblod · -d• bethat single dub win- low 1o f11r111 lour llmpll -.is.
1

O

HES Cp y

immediately

'

I

z

jl

I have observed over the years
that when three people are .talk,ing you have a conversation.
·When one leaves you have - - - -

VVith this layout, you
are efi"ectively home.
Note that if you
duck trick one, East
can continue hearts or
shift to the spade king
(or to a diamond!) to
defeat you. If you win
trick one in hand, you
must cross to dummy
in a red suit, then play
the club three, but
that is messier.

I. I. I. I'. I.
g

•

eto
1V
you

Comploto lho chuckle quorod
bv fillin~ In oho rnluln~ words
develop lrom slop No. 3 bolow.

UNT~J~~B~N~~~E lETTUS

III I II I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Endure- Grave- Go;ng- Cornea ·ARGUING
Granny always said that the secret to a happy mar·
riage was to find someone you enjoy ARGUING with.

..
,,,,

Gutters- Down
Spout

Uffieltonel

~~~

Air Conditioning : RefrliJIIratlon
$49 Service gea, fuel oil, and
haat pumps for winter

Maintenance-

TRI-COUDTY
TRHDSPORT

Racine Fire Department
CHICKEN BBQ
Sunday, October 14th
Serving Begins at ·
11:00 a.m.

noclla .

SAHGAT

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Bryan Reeves

......

11-""11 Tondtllo

1-·

Free Esllmales

Sunset Home
Construction

I•

lallfllill

I

.•

• Rooting I &lt;lull.,..
• VInyl Siding a Polnllngl
• Plllo and l'ol&lt;lh Dockl

Pomei'Oj, OH 41781

17C

with dummy's heart
11 I I 1· I
king and call for the
. . . . .
club three. Here, if
TAp O
East g11es up with his -1'11""'-,.;""T-T"'"-1·
ace, he gives 'you five
12
I I,
club tricks and nine in · L.......I.L-..J.-..1..-.&amp;.• .....J
all. So, East ducks.
S OH I T ~
But now that you
:
have the vital club
,;,
trick in the bag, pa
to duck a diamond.

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

• RIIOIII Aclclftlonl I

Sind "'Ymtl to;
c/o ~!lillY Sentinel

11.-

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ne~in

(18'110' 610'11281

OPERATOR
WANTED
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Sentinel
992-2155

IN HE.R

·DeaJen
1000St. Rt. 7 South

••d•llvtrlglatlw,lac
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ENTRY

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2001--

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DIPOYIII

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16
16

BISSELL

CDIIIn

In compliance with
Sacllon 5715.01 of
the Ohio Revlaad
Coda, tha Malga ·'
Countlf Board of ·
Revlalon Will meat on
October 24, 2001, at
10:00 A.M. In tha
Melgo
County
Courtroom, Third
Floor of the Malgo·

441Beec:hS1.
Mlcklleport, OH

Advertise

a klndot

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•

WINTER STORAGE
Meip County Falrgroullds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Od. 20, 2001
.
10:00 LDL • 4:00 p.m.

JERRY S
USED
COMPUTERS

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ACROSS

'•

'·

Saturday, Oct. 13, 2001
Lady Luck wants to do
something special far you in
the year ahead, so stick to
concentrating on what's i~n·
portant to you so she'll know
where to place her influence.

You' II be glad you did.
LIDRA (Sept 23-0c&lt;. 23) •
- Although someone might
try to scratc h beneath the surface of your mind today,
you'll be smart enough to
know maintaining an air of
mystery can be advanrageous .
Trying to patch up a broken
romance? The Astro-Graph
Matchmaker can help you undentand whit to do to make
the relation1hip work. Mail
$2.75 ro Matchmaker, P.O.
Dox lh7, Wickliffe, OH
44092-0167.
SCORPIO (O&lt;t. 24-Nov .
22) •• In your contact with
friends today 101ne very beneficial infonnation may unex- ,
pectedly come your way that
u only meant for you. Don't
let anyone try to browbeat it
out o~you .
.
SAGITTAP.IUS (Nov . 23Dec. 21) -- It will be unselfish
~1tures that produce unique
rewards today. Keep your objectives lofty and noble, and
you could find younelf much

\

luckier than usual.

CAPP.ICORN (Dec . 22Jan , 19) •• If you feel you're
quite capable of tackJing a
large mental task, don't let

anybody t&lt;y

talk fOU OU! of
it. Your perception ofyounel(
tO

is accunate .

AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb.
19) --Don't let a combative
auociate today reduce your
chancel for success. Dump
him or her as quickly as possj_,
ble and go it done if necessary. You'll reach your goal
without this penon.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)

-- You have a aift today for

ma!Ung those you're involved
with . feel 1pecial and important. Everyone enjoys feeling
appreciated, 10 even compii. tnent somebody who tnay not
deserve it, but needs ·it.
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
-- By keeping your head
about you when those wOrking at your aide are losing
thein, you can make cenain
no one will disrupt what
you're attempting to do today. AU will tum out succen- ·

fuUy.

•

TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Activities where you

can
will
you
day.

utilize your

~ocial

!kills

be the onl!!s th;at bring

the most satisfaction toYou might be the: One
who helps two pals shake
hands and nuke up.

.GEMINI (May 21-june 20)

-- Creative toUches you add
to your home tod.ay will not
only expre5s your indJVidualicy, but will bring joy to yo ur
family. Don't Let anyone talk
you out of your artistic ex-

pression.

CANCER Uune 21-july
22) -- Think in expansive
terms today and you should
be abl~ to right il dn1ation that
is getting out of hand .
Cha•,ces are it has somethlng
to do with a family n·t ember.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) ••
Owing to two factors you
have go inK for you today,
your ponibilitie• for ac"quitition are quite mons. One factor will be your lntelleeiUal
abilities, the other will be

Lady Luck.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep!. 22)

, -- Arousing the enthusiasm in
othen today to participate in
tomething you'd like to do
may come pretty easy for you .
But watch out for a ·penon
who'd Like to disrupt your
plam.

,,

�PliO* B 8 • The O.lly Sentinel

Frldlly, Oc:t. 12, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COLLEGE FOOl BALL
'

•

•

.

Alvarez: Badgers must deal with present Irish lookin~ for option
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- The shock of last week's
63-32 blitring u Indiana has
subsided somewhat for Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez.
His No. 1 task this week as
the B•dgers prepare to pia; at
No. 21 Ohio State 00 Saturda)l ·s t 0 a1s
t th I
t ·~
ged bet aye~
do al ~t th at e ac: ~n
e.. WiWI~ e game ~t :" ·
e. ~ys use t e s oga~;
'
Whats Important now,

It was no misprint. Indiana,
which had been handled 2714 at home by Ohio State the
week before, led 32-0 after a
qu&gt;rter and never let up. The
Badgers surrendered 449
rushing yards and 631 total
yards in a mauling that left
Alvarez bewildered.
"I can't give you an
an~r." Alvarez said when
asked what went wrong.
Meanwhile Ohio State (31, 2-0) was playing its best
game of the season, dominating both lines and everywhere else in a 38-20 win
over then- No. 14 Northwestern.
"! rhink we gained some
respect from what we did,"
safety Donnie Nickey said. .
The Buckeyes defense has
played well every game,
despire meeting dramatically
different offensive styles each
time. Ohio State permits just
125 yards on the ground and
15 points a game.
"I've been pleased, just in
the four games that I've been
around our defense, that they
don't seem to get frustrated,"
head coach Jim Tressel said.
"When anything new is
thrown · at them, they talk
about it, they adjust, they have
confidence and they play
with great speed. That's why
they're good."
On the heels of Northwestern's spread·attack, the Buckeyes defenders must now deal
with a Wisconsin power game
that is similar to what Ohio
State's offense runs.
With tailback Jonathan
Wells gaining 179 yards,
· including 71 on the second
KEEP IT COMING BROTHER- Ohio State's Jonathan Wells play from scrimmage, the
light, and Jesse Kline celebrate a second quarter touchdow~ Buckeyes relied on brawn
by Wells last Saturday against Northwestern In Columbus. The instead of guile - jus~ like
Buckeys hope to maintain their level of success against Wls- the old days of3 yards and a
cloud of dust.
consin. (AP(Terry Gilliam)

d:

Alvarez said. "We need guys
to ger closer, to rally."
The Badgers (3-3. 1-1 Big
Ten) were routed at home by
a winless Indiana team on
Saturday in one of the stunning scores of the season.
Across the Big Ten if not the
nation, fans had to be wondering if rhe point totals of
the teams had been reversed
or if there was some sort of
misprint.

The Buck"Yfi have gone
against the grain in reverting
to a power game while most
programs have embraced a
hurry-up-and-throw assault.
Ohio State has proven to be
at its best when quarterback
Steve Bellisari is handing off
instead of when he's looking
downfield for a receiver.
"We haven't used everything we could:' said BeUisari, who has completed just
half of "his passing attempts.
"Hopefully this game we'D
put a few wrinkles in."
Tressel expects Wisconsin
to rerum to basics and try to
control the ball with freshman tailback Anthony Davis,
who missed the Indiana game
with turf toe.
"They a.re not a happy
bunch," Tressel said. "ifhey
don't play it fancy. They line
up and say, 'Here we are and
we'll see who'~ better."'
Perhaps the key to the
game is Wisconsin's psyche
more than the personnel,
matchups and strategy. In
addition to the Indiana loss,
the Badgers are still angry
that several Ohio State players
danced on the midfield W at
Camp Randall Stadium alter
last year's 23-7 win in Madison.
"I think they're upset about
what happened," Ohio State
center LeCharles Bentley
said.
The Badgers have spent the
week working on fimdamentals and Alvarez and his staff
have tried to shift the focus to
what's important now instead
of what happened last week.
"I see a lot of potential
there," Alvarez said. "I see a lot
of season !eli:. The only thing
I know how to do is fight and
prepare your team the best
you can."

success against wvu

SPORIS

INSIDE

Highlights of

TEMPO

Artists develop
comic strips for
new America, a

Local taxidennist
chomping at bit for
hunting season, Cl

Friday's action
begin on 11

•

·

SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP) - Note Dame coaches didn't
need much longer than the time it took Carlyle Holiday to tum
a possible Ims into a 67-yard ID run to decide to expand the
Irish option attack.
The run last we..k against Pittsburgh was the longe.t by a
Notno Dame quarterback in 21 years and by fur the bigges~;
offensive spark for the Irish this year. Holiday ran !eli: on the
option but instead of pir.:hing it, cut back to hi! right through
the middle of the Pittsburgh defense and broke tluee tackles on
hi! way to the end zone.
"Hopefiilly it's the ruming point in our season," offensive'
,
cootdinator Kevin Rogers said.
The Irish, usually a smashmouth-style running team, had ~
toOthless rushing attack before beating the Panthers 24-7. They:
had rushed a total of 269 yards in their first three games - an:
a~~erage of86.9 yards per game. Against the Panthers they rushed
for 249 yards. Holiday, playing his first full game, ran for 102
yards of it on 19 carri~.
"He's a guy that obviously you try to customize the gamO:
plan for a little bit more, and try to keep the ball in hi! hanW:
and make a little bit more out of the option game," Rogers said;
Coach Bob Davie said the run by Holiday showed why the
Irish (1-3) decided twc. weeks ago to bench Matt LoVecchio in
&amp;vor of Holiday. who ·"t out as a freshman last year as LoVecchio led the Irish to seven straight victories. It also showed why;
the Jrish plan to use the option more.
:
Still; Davie said he's concerned that Holiday doesn't protec~
the ball better and is wyrried that hi! upright running style·
makes him susceptible ro bard hits.
·
"He's got to realize l:.c's not in San Antonio playing higlj
school football:' Davie uid. "There are some guys who are;:
going to knock him in ha1f."
~
The Irish coaches are pleased with Holiday's development,;
though. Holiday is makin~ better decisions at this point than;
forrner Irish quarterback J;,rious Jackson did when he first start-:
ed, Davie said.
"Jarious had a tendency right away to get a_little wild and try
to make too many things happen," Davie said. "I see Carlyle a
little more within the system as a young quarterback.! feel pretty good about that."
Holiday certainly doesn't lack confidence, though, especially
with the Irish option game.
"If we block it right, we can run the option any time we want
to," Holiday said.
That could post a problt m for West Virginia (2-3), which
ranks 109th in rush defense out of liS Division 1-A teams. The
Mountaineers switched to an eight-man front, attacking defense .
this year and have had trouble adjusting.
"I thought with this new system that we'd be able to stop the
run but it seems like we can't pick up our responsibilities:' said
free safety Rick Sherrod, who leads West Virginia with 80 tackles.

•

tmts•
Gallia

to host
mineland
•
sem1nar

DOWNONTHEF

.'

hits homes

TIMES-SENTJNa STAFF

BYMAni&lt;EwY
casualties.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
A Navy F/A-18 HorI::ounty will host the fall
WASHINGTON
net had aimed the 2,000i:onference of an organizaA
U.S.
bomb
intended
to
pound guided bomb at a
tion dedicated to the reclastrike a helimilitary
helimation of abandoned !Dincopter
at
.
the
copter
at
the
airjog properry Monday and
Kabul airport OPERATION port, . but the
:Thesday.
hit a residential
bomb hit the
· Ohio Mineland Partnerneighborhood a
residential area
ship, which examines reclamile
away
in
the
during
a mornmation issues and tracks
Afghan · capiraJ•
ing raid on the
current and furure projects,
Saturday,
the
seventh
straight
meets annually at different
Pentagon said.
day of airstrikes,
locations around the state,
Reports from
the
Pentagon
~d Ellen Watson, waterthe
ground
said
said.
. )bed coordinator with Galfour
people
The
bomb
tia Soil and Water Conserwere killed and
had a satellite
vatifm.Pistrict.
.
eight injured,
guidance
system
""1ibil organization works
the . Defense
designed
to
toward technology nansfer
Department
said
in
a
steer
it
toward
its
target.
with mining reclamation
statement. U.S. officials A "targeting process
work:' Watson said. "The
said they had no way to
conference will focus on
confirm the number of PllaM ......b. AI
past, present and future
progress needed·in reclaiming strip-mined areas."
The national Mineland
Partnership held its annual
conference in Athens during the summer, she said.
OMP President David
Wright will outline efforts
by the national coalition to
IURI"'PI"NH --Gary Reno-of ..,...,.. fli111111~1ors~s~roe:· liit1~t~I!IIS,
seo' c:oalo&lt;s~ef':llfclf~ol• .,.
death of the 3-year old
form In a demonstration for ~trons of
Bob Evans Farm Festival orr Saturday. Tl)e
Iars ·are reaching Ohio to
son of a· former girlthree-day ceJ~bratlon oHarm life_opened Friday and ends today at 5 p.m. (Kevin Kelly photos)
continue
reclamation
'
I
friend, filec;l his motion
efforts, Watson said.
last month, asking that
The conference begins
Crow vacate his 2000
BY BRIAN J. REID
with a tour of the Ge11.
TIMES-SENTINEL
STAFF
,,_
.!
guilty plea because,
The festival opens today at 9
James M. Gavin Power
POMEROY - Meigs Gillilan said, his plea was
a.m.
and
doses
at
5
p.m.
on
Plant, followed by an
the filml site off OhiO 588 at
County Common Pleas coerced.
inspection of the Kyger
Rio Grande. for details call 1Judge Fred W Crow Ill
Gillilan said that his
Creek reclamation area, On
110().994-fAAM (3276); or
has
denied
Tony
GiUilan
's
attorney, William N.
llisit IINMI.bobevans.com.
Tuesday, the group will setmotion
for
post-convicEachus of Gallipolis,
de down at the Holiday Inn
tion relief.
for a business meeting and
pressured him into a plea
Gillilan,
of
Long
Botseminars.
HAY, THERE - Small but traditional equipment Is used
bargain, without advising
tom, serving a sentence
Seminars focus on such
by Arnold Fitzsimmons of New Waterford In making .
him of all of his possible
of 15 years to life for the
·
miniature hay 1bales for folks at the Farm Festival.
issues. as watershed planning
August 2000 shaking
PIIIH.-RIII.t,AI
and assessment, aquatic life,
water quality, clean coal
technology, and project
planning for Kyger Creek
stream restoration, Watson
!aid.
Restoration includes acid
. . 1tfo1,
.
mine drainage abatement,
ed to join in the celebration," said occasion have arrived.
BY CHARLENE HOER.ICH
At that initi•J''~bting, Stillman C.
!O be discussed by ·watson
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF
Margaret Parker, the society's presiThey are inscribed in white " I 25th Larkins was appo,h1ted chairman, and
. and watershed coordinators
POMEROY - A celebration of dent for the past 17 years.
Anniversary Bell-Meigs County Pio- Aaron Stiver, iecretary, and the organi: for Raccoon Creek, which ' the 125th anniversary of the Meigs
A program and meeting will take neer and Historical Society" and can zation was named "Meigs County
: flows
through several
County Pioneer and Historical Soci- place following the lurwheon, and be purchased for $30 at the museum. Pioneet Association." The name was
· southern Ohio counties,
ety will be held Saturday at the old log Parker encouraged chose attending to They will also .be available at Satur- changed to include "historical" years
Monday Creek in Athens
cabin on the Rock Springs Fair- "bring along an article or a memory day's celebration.
later. .
,.·
·
County and Thscarawas
from the past to share with others."
grounds.
,
The society has an interesting histoOthers ~t that first meeting were
: County1s Huff Run.
"We'll be serving soup beans and
Parker announced that the 125th ry from its begirming on Sept. 7, 1876,
pioneer
family representatives includConference
sponsors
cornbread along with an anniversary anniversary bells made by Fenton in at a meeting .held at the Meigs Councake at 1 p.m., and the public is invit- blue art glass as a momentum of the ty Courthouse, to the present.
PluM HI III'II!Uy, Ae
P11111 ... Galla.A&amp;

Jud e denies
Gilli an·. motion
Finds insufficient

evidence of coercion

society plans.125th cetlbifion

'
I

Hlp: 701

TRI-COUNTY HOMECOMING QUE ·ENS

a..w:tlh
Details, AS

Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
2001 Chevy
Lumina Sedan

~2.,750*
• " - Wli1dowl, Locka, Mlrro11
• Autorillllc, Air Col1jlltlonlng
' Tift Stilling, CruiH Control

2001 Oldsmobile

2001 Oldsmobile

2001 Buick

Pontiac Grand Prix

~2~0iD* . iji~5i* · ~i,i5o* ~l4ii* ~5',i5o*

, Automatic, Air
, Power Seat, Windows &amp;
, CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows, Locka, Mirrors
CD Syllem, Tift l CruiH

Power Sea~ Windows &amp; Lockl
CD System, Aluminum Wheels
Cruise Control, Tift Slte~ng

• 3800 V-6, CD System
• Pow. Sea~ Wlndow1, Locka
• Tift Stllll'lng, CruiH Control

02-7

insert

Editorials

Obituaries
Sports

Stocks•

A6
B!-8
OJ

Wahama-SOuth Gallla, Spotts, B1
c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

• Pow11 Seat, Wlndowe, Lockl
• CD Syaltm, Aluminum Whlelel
• Cruise Control, Tift Steering

Gallic

...

Buick
It's all

County Cardiovascular Health Coalition Health Fair

Sntall Steps, Big Strides
Toward a Healthier Ohio"
11

• Taxes, Tags, Tille Fees tx1nl. Rebate included il sale price of new vehicle listed where applicable. "On awrovod croci~. On selected models. Not responsille for typograpl'kal tn'OI$.
Prices Good Octobtr 10111 Through October 14th.
CHIVIOLI1

MEIGS - Meigs High School
Meigs,
Homecoming Queen Cartie
Southern
Abbott, far left. (Charlene
Hoeflich)
homecoming
SOUTH GALLIA - 2001
courts. A1
Soutll.G;~IIIa High School
Homecoming Queen Alicia
Halley, middle. (Bryan Long)
SOUTHERN - 2001 South· --.... .
ern High School Homecoming
Queen Lindsey Smith, near
left. (Tony Leach)

C2-4

;

•

Stray bomb
near Kabul

BY KIWI Klu.Y

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

•''

•1.25

@
gocXl

Tuesday, October 16 •. 8:00am- 12 Noon
Holzer Medical Center Conference Rooms A-B-C

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the H_olzer Difference

Hosted by HMC Community Health and Wei/ness.
Supported in port by grant funds from the Ohio Deportment of Health.

www.holzer.org

For more information, call the Gollia Co. Health Deparhnent at (740)441-2950
or Holzer· Medical Center at
446·5.679 •

.

..

....

•

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