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••
Page Alo :
•
• •

The Daily Sentinel

Monday. 0 ct . . . 21. 1001"
•

Rams no longer perfect; Flutie gets Bills
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Doug Flu tie
got the best of his old ream, rubbing it
in by scoring the winning touchdown.
Flutie scored on a 13-yard dash with
I: I 0 remaining Sunday, lifting San
Diego past Buffalo 27-24.
After the Bills went ahead 24-20 on
rookie Travis Henry's 3-yard run,
Ronney Jenkins returned the kickoff
72 yards. On the next play. Flutie
dropped back to pass, then scrambled.
Phil Hansen got a hand on Flurie's leg,
but he broke free and dived in to win
it.
Ed EUis blocked Jake Arians' 44-yard
field goal attempt with 7 seconds left,
keeping Buffalo (1-5) from giving its
owner the win he so badly wanted
against the Chargers (5-2), who are
loaded with ex-Bills.
Autie also threw one touchdown
pass, finishing 21-of-33 for 254 yards
and no interceptions. Rob Johnson,
knocked out of the game briefly in the
third quarter and then staggered on a
hit by Orlando Ruff in the fourth
quarter, was 24 of37 for 310 yards and
one TD, with one interception.

lears Jt 49ers ll, Of

CHICAGO (AP) - Mike Brown
intercepted a pass intended for Terrell
0wens in overtime and returned it 33
yards for the winning score as Chi~ago
(5-1) rallied from a 19-point deficit.
Rookie David Terrell caught two
touchdown passes in the fourth quarter, arid fellow rookie Anthony Thomas
rushed for another score and a key 2point conversion as the Bears won
their fifth straight.
Thomas had 127 yards, his second
straight I 00-yard game.
Garrison Hearst, who missed the last
two seasons with an ankle injury,
scored his first touchdown since
December 1998 for San Francisco (42). Owens burned Chicago for an
NFL-record 20 catches in a 17-0 win
last seas*,... lbllns ]I
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Kurt Warner
threw four interceptions, helping the
Saints recover from an 18-point deficit
and making St. louis (6-1) the last
team to lose this season. It was Warner's first career home defeat after 16
victories.

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

John Carney's 27-yard field goa]
wnh one second left won it. Joe Horn
had cwo TD receptions and Sammy
Knight had two interceptions for the
Saints (4-2), who scored 25 points in
the third quarter. The Rams had seven
turnovers.

Redsldns JS, Ciiaab 11
LANDOVER., Md. (AP) - Kevin
Lockett hit Derrius Thompson for a
31-yard touchdown on an option pass
and Eric Metcalf, signed Wednesday
after sitting out a year, had an 85-yard
punt return. It was his 1Oth punt
return for a touchdown, extending his
NFL record.
Washington has won two in a row
after starting 0-5; defending conference champion New York (3-4) lost its
third ·straight.
·
New York's Michael Strahan had two
sacks to set an NFL record for most
sacks (12 112) over a_five::S"me span.

Cowboys 17, cardlnllls ]
IRVING, Texas (AP) - Dexter
Coakley returned an interception 10
yards for a touchdown, helping the
Cowboys (2-4) to a two-game winning streak. Arizona (2-4) lost its 12th
straight regular-season game at Texas
Stadium.
Third-string quarterback Clint Stoerner had a 6-yard TD pass for Dallas.
Emmitt Smith sprained his right knee
after he ran for 83 yards, giving him
2,076 for his career against Arizona.
He's the first player to have 2,000 yards
against three teams - Philadelphia
and the New York Giants are the others.

lues 41, \llth11 14
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Mike hlstott,
starting for an injured Warrick Dunn,
ran for 129 yards and three touchdowns, and Brad Johnson threw for
214 yards and two TDs.
The Bucs (3-3) scored on seven
straight possessions while holding
Minnesota (3-4) without a first down
until Cris Carter's 40-yard reception
five minutes into the second half.
The Bucs played the second half
without Keyshawn Johnson, who left
with a right knee bruise.
· Randy Moss was held to three
catches for 49 yards, and Carter finished with four receptions for 51 yards.

Raiders 20. EIJ'tl 10

PHllhDELPHIA (AP) - Oakland
(5- t) held Philadelphia (3-3) to just 11
first downs and 195 yards. Donovan
· McNabb was just 12-of-27 for t 33 yards
passmg.
Former Eagles running back Charlie
Garner ran for 77 yards and one touchdown, as the R.oiders gained 354 yards
and held the baD for 40:09. The Eagles
were O-for-10 on third down before
finally converting with 4:46 left in the
game.

fully capitalize on turnO\IefS. The Panthers gained just 162 yards. 92 on the
ground against the league's worst run
defense.
R.ashard Anderson went 94 yards for
the longest fumble return in Carolina
history. bur John Kasays e:-.ua point
attempt hit the dght rpt"*

BFMNll,

10

DENVER (AP} - Nc!w Englands
Tom Brady lost his touch, throwing four
fourth-quarter interCeptions.
Denard Walker and Deltha O'Neal
each had two interceptions for the Broncos (4-3), who have won 12 of 14 against
the Patriots (3-4). Rod Smith caught six
passes for 159 yards and a touchdown.
Walker returned his second interception 39 yards for the clinching score with
2:24 remaining. Brady, filling in for the
injured Drew Bledsoe, had thrown 162
career passes without being picked of!:

top :
peifonners:

Sunday~

Mllp County's

•
New
Orleanc.
defense: picked off Klri
Wamer four limes,
forced
seven total
turnovers

5

•

• Mike Alstott Tan~~

II v

Bay: three TO's 129 ~~
yards rushing
..

• Corey Dillon Clncin-"'.
natl: 96 yard TO run, 18-f.
rushing yards

•

Doug Flutie

san.·•

\\M is your opinion cllhe
a.rent Anthrax situation and
what precautions. if any, are
you taking to avoid exposure?

Diego: Scores winning~
TD to beat BIHs in retum"
for Buffalo ownerships' ·

Nlw..,.,

slaps to face.

=-:be
C81lllous, but
they llhoiAal't

Volt .....

W.llll.: I feel

~mat-

a, hav:teYer,
~c:a'l'be

afraid of living
your life. w
~ .delliala from ~r nonnal
~.then the 1Brrolisls have

Dolpl*ts 14, S ..... 10

careflj when

opa iug their
mal. Howev-

DEERE FOR

ALL .SEASONS

LT153 laWII Tractor
•13-hp engine
• 38-inch mowing deck
• 5-speed shift-on-the-go transmission

W55 Lawn Tractor
•15-hp engine '
• 42-inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission

paJa-

noia nAeour
lves. We just
havetooonllnue living lka It's any Olher day.

JlmFn.,
Ruillnd: The
maller sl1ot.*l
be taken seriously, but I do
lllnk people

~
I'm not taJdng
special

precautions myself ~people .
feel they need Ill SO, tlien it'S
their ~ I'm rolfidel ~ our government will suoc ssslully handle

dO

. . pt"'Oblarn.

----

.

.. ~ ......!« ~
"'-·-· ~

don1
anthrax eJCPOsure, bull
certainly do
understand
lMrj people
are afreid. HI
worl&lt;ed in a
big city or a
post ofllce, I
would probe·
bly be scared, however, I'm not too
wonied about any anthrax &amp;lCJlO"
sure In this 8198.

ever lhou\t1l

sendpeopte

anthrax VIa ·
the mail? I
feel our oounby has to be cautious,
but I'm personally not afraid of gel·
ting my mail. No matter what the
crisis, I'm sure my bills v.ill get
through, anthrax or no anthrax.

Sentinel
I section - I 0 Pllpa

Calendar

.2

Comics
.Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

www. JohnOeere com

LIKE

A

DEERE

JoHN DEERE

CARMICHAEL'S FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

EAST END CYCLE SALES INC.

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

2402 Third Avenue
Huntington, WV 25703
304-529-3309
•

•

·s.. d.. lorfor doloilo.

~

'

-··

-

Three remain
injail on
$50,000
bonds
•

. '

'

New·cases of anthrax found
FBI issues
new tenvrism
•
warmng
WASHINGTON (AP)
Officials investigated how a
New Jersey woman who does
not work for the postal service
.developed skin anthrax and
doctors in New York City were
monitoring a suspected case of
the inhaled form of the disease
in a hospital worker.
The circle of anthrax contamination widened as new traces
of anthrax spores were found in
the Capitol Police office of the
Ford House building, which
w.lS already dosed because of
positive tests in its mail room.
'

Hlch: 70s
. Law: 301
Details, 3

Anthrax
also
was
confirmed
late Monday in a
downtown
Agriculture
Department
office mailroom and
technicians
were con!!!~~~!. sidering a
'plan
to
pump chlorine gas into the
shuttered Hart Senate Office
Building to kill any lingering
anthrax spores there.
FBI officials, meanwhile,
issued a broad new tenprism
warning, putting law cnforcement offices on the highest

alert.
New Jersey officials said a
lesion on the forehead of a 51year-old woman from Hamilton Township was diagnosed as
anthrax, apparendy the first case
in the State not direcdy linked
to a post office. She developed
the sore on Oct. 17 and was
treated at a hospital and
released. Skin tests returned
Monday were positive for
anthrax.
Officials said the infection
may have come from mail contamination, but the woman told
authorities she did not recall·
opening a suspicious parcel.
Anthr.IX testing was planned for
her home and office. She works
near a Hamilton mail process-

Pion -

OHIO
Pick 3: 3-9-1; Pick 4: 4-7·2·5

5,7. 10 Cash 25: HI·1D-17·18-23

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Ph•se- Vets, AJ

Atlllcks, Al

By BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Three
I peorlJel remain in jail on
1
charges including illegal
' manuf'acrure of metham' .phetamine following their
arraignment on Mond~y.
I R.qb~rt T. Schoolcroft, 38,
1:1elpte,' Michael W Barker,
28, Mineral, WVa., and
Can4y A. Benson, 24,
Ravenswood,
W.Va.,
appeared before County
Court Judge Steven l. Story
Monday, and are being held
• or s~o.ooo prop~rty bonds.
Schqolcroft IS charged
1
'Vith illegal manufacture of
,. metljal)1phetamine, a felony
of t~e secortd degree, presc!nting false information to a
hiw ' enforcement officiat
speeding and driving under
suspension.
Benson is charged with
I

illegal
manufru;ture
of
methamphetamine and possession of drug paraphernalia, and Barker with illegal
manufacture of methamphetamine.
The three were arrested
during a routine traffic stop
near Racine Thursday, after
State Highway Patrol Trooper B.L. Call learned that
Schoolcroft and Barker w~e .
wanted by law enforcement
officials in Washington
County and Charleston,
W.Va .. respectively.
The patrol reported after
the incident that all of the
ingredients needed to manufacture methamphetamine
were allegedly found in
Schoolcraft's car. The materialf were removed with assistance from a hazardous
materials team from the
Drug Enforcement Administration.
Methamphetamine is a
stimulant drug chemically
related to amphetamine and
is sometimes caUed "speed,"

PlnH- 'Melli~ AJ

'

Pentagon ge~ring up for !rriore
intense
attacks
IJ
••

9 1111Ck1J111 5: 4-6-8-29-30
4 W.VA.
3 Dtllly 3: 3-&amp;5 Dtllly 4: 5-3.0.3
3

REED

appear in court · ·

AMERICA AT WAR

Lotteries

!.C!l!la~ssrnif.!l:ie:l.!d::r..s_ _ _...26~

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to the customer. Stop in to your local John Deere dealer to see for yourself our time tested reliability.
You'll find that our standards haven't changed much over the years. Ask about easy financing options
at your participating dealer today.

•

.

Today's

J.

forces during the war to
apply for and receive a high
school diploma.
The application process
begins at the local Veterans
Service Office, said Meigs
County Veterans Services
Officer Max Cale. Once the
application is completed, it
is forwarded to the appropriate school district for
processi11g.
Cale said he is not sure
how diplomas will be
awarded, but one thing is .
for sure: No diplomas will
be awarded by Pomer'oy,
Middleport,
Rutland,
Chester, Olive-Orange or
any other high school
which has since closed due
to consolidation. Diplomas
will be awarded only by
high schools now open.Veterans who left Pomeroy

1Meth' lab suspects
....

=::t'
fear any

that some
lunatic would

•18-hp, V-Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
• 48'inch mower deck • Zero-turn radius with power steering

ostumes of all shapes and sizes could be
found aboard the Rubles' Party Barge
Sternwheeler Friday· during the Meigs
County Tourism Board/Chamber of
Commerce's annual Halloween Cruise to
Nowhere. Prizes were given out for the best costumes and musical entertainment was provided by
local DJ, Tom Payne. (Submitted photos)

counbyis

l'onleroy: lfs
an insane
wortd we live
in today. Who
would ha\19

SST18 Lawn Tractor

c

1119 overreact·
~.The

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

ruise to
ow ere

er, we shotJd-

n' let

BRIAN

POMEROY - It may be
"too little, roo late," but
World War II veterans who
were called from the classroom to serve their country
may now receive their high .
school diplomas ..
House Bill 77 , sponsored
by Rep. Nancy Hollister,
R.-Marietta, and others,
including
State
Sen.
Michael Shoemaker, DBourneville, became law
earlier this month.
It allows honorably-discharged veterans of World
War II who left school in
order to serve in the armed

pie~

pass.

Ed ~llldy,

RUNS

Bv

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Judy tc.y,
Mkllllji IIOi:
If&amp; defo iiBiy a
SCII1y siluationand

•

NOTHING

.

won.

· SEATILE (AP) - Jay Fiedler's 39yard m pass to James McKnight with
6:16 left lifted Miami (4-2). Fiedler was
intercepted twice by "Willie Williams in
the opl'lling quarter, but he beat the veteran cornerback with the winning TD

A 42-yard field goal by Rian Lindell
gave Seattle (3-3) a 20-17 lead in the
Ravens II, Jasuars 17
final period. But lindeU missed a 28BALTIMORE (AP) - Veteran yard field goal with 1:56left.
Randall Cunningham and rookie
The Seahawks forced four turnovers.
Jason Brookins sparked a fourth-quarJels I:J, PluidlllbiS 11
ter rally by the Super Bowl champions.
CHAR.LOTIE, N.C. (AP) - The
Th R
(4 3)
'] d 17
e
avens
tra1 e
-6 Jets, who had a league-low three
before Brookins ran in from the. 2 and turnOvers in their first six games, had
c unnmg
· ham threw a d.1Sputed 2-yard four, yet still managed to extend Camlihd
Q d
1 ·1
roue own pass to
a ry sma1 . na's losing streak to six games. New York
Starting in place of the injured Elvis got its touchdown on · Chris Hayes' 7· Grbac, Cunningham went 23-for-31 yard return of • blocked punt, and John
for 222 yards.
HaUs second field goal, with 4:53 left,
Jimmy Smith caught seven catches won it. Hayes returned a blocked punt
for 119 yards and a TD - his sixth by Jamie Henderson in the first quarter
100-yard game against Baltimore 'for New York (4-3).
d
K
M
C
rd
11
h
d
10
h
Facing the league's worst defense, Car- TOO SMALL? - Chargers quarterback Doug Autie (7) breaks away.
an eenan c a e a
catc es
for 118 yards for Jacksonville (2-4), olina (1-6) failed to move the ball or from Buffalo Bills defenders en route to a 13-yard touchdown run durwhich has lost fo1,1r straight.
ing the fourth quarter Sunday. (AP)

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• 2-year consumer warranty

New law allows
issuance of high
school diplomas

peri:.lfs a

...

A

eligible for
graduation

...

WASHINGTON (AP) Future
U.S. commando raids or other grd,und
fighting against Tali ban and al-Qaida
troops might be based from an airfield
inside Afghanistan, defense offic1als
said.
They said setting up a U.S. base at an
Afghan airfield is one of several possibilities the Defense Department is
considering.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rums-

I II

I

feld said when the ! bomlli · g began
Oct. 7 that air power alone would be
i11sufficient in Afghanistan, ~11d special
opqations forc_es would )'lay a key role
m the campa1gn tq! c~prure or kill
Osama bin Laden .
Troops on the ground probably will
be needed to deal with bin laden and
other leaders of his• a1-Qaida terror
network, but past w¥s n tfghamstan
- notably the form¢r ov1el Union 's

Questions about Anthrax?
,wa.. to know the facts?

I
I

Informational lown Meeting
on Anthrax

i

failure after I 0 years of fighting have shown the high cost of a conventional large-scale ground invasion.
R.umsfeld was asked about a USA
Today report that said U.S. forces may
soon establish a forward base in
Afghanistan that would support 200 to
300 commandos. The newspaper,
quoting an unidentified defense official, said the base might be in northerq
Afghanistan.

!

MEDICAL CENTER

Wednesday, October 31, 2001 • 5:30PM I . Discover the Holzer Difference
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center I ! ! !
www.holzer.org
Sponsored by Holzer Medical Center, Holzer Clinic ond the
Gollio County Health Deportment.
Ill

·'

�B~J the

_The_Da_ily_Se_ntin_ei_ _ _

Bend

PageAl

Mothers' unconditional love helps gay daughters come out

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

l

Ela Wilson

•
DEAR ABBY: This is fur "A .
Mother Who Cares a Lot," who
asked, "What dn you say when your
daughter tells you she lw turned
into a lesbian?" I have some advice
for her.
You hug your daughter and say:
."I' m so glad you told me. Your dad
and l want you to know we love
you. We realize that coming out is
difficult, and we'D do whatever we
can to help."
. Your daughter has not "turned
·into" anything. She is what she is
and has been since she was born.
Your protestations that; you are
"respectable people" who "raised
h&lt;'r properly" suggest underlying
.ignorance and homophobia, which
.is probably what led to her trying
to meet your expectations by marrying. She has evidendy realized
she could no longer maintain this
pretense.

GLENVILI..E. N.Y.

Abigail
Van ·
Buren
ADVICE
You say you "try to be loving and
kind." WeD, try harder. D!d you
Jove your child when she was an
infant? A toddler? A young girl?
Well, she's still your child. And she
needs that Jove now more than
ever, to hdp her face others whose
reactions will be similar to your
own. She "is" what you created.
She has grown up, and now it's
time for you to do the same. PARENTS OF STRAIGHT
AND
GAY
CHILDREN,

so, this is their once-in-a-lifetime

DEAR PARENTS: That's
excellent advice, and bless you for
· offering it. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I understand the
emotion involved in the "corning
out" process because I, too, am the
mother of a lesbian. The daught,f
of "Mother Who Cares" diaii t
"turn into" a lesbian but, of course,
was :always gay, and unwilling or
unable to acknowledge it.
This is a wonderful opportunity
for thos~ loving parents to stand by
· their daughter and to accept and
respect her for having the courage
to Jive the life she was born to.
What kind of parents are we if we
protect and nurture our children,
encourage them to be honest with
themselves and follow their dreams,
only to .reject them when they dO?
"Mother"
didn't
mention
whether she is their only child. If

opportunity to prove their unconditional love. "Mother" should
learn about bomosexu:ality, t:alk
with her daughter about her feelingJ, express her own feelings, and
use this experience to bond the
family
closer
together.
WOULDN'T
CHANGE A
TiliNG, TUMWATER, WASH.
DEAR WOULDN'T: More
terrific advice. Thank you for
telling it like it is. Read on:
DJ!AR ABBY: Thank you for
the mention of PFLAG in your
recent column. ·PFLAG does a great
job providing helpful information
for parents struggling with the
corning-out of a son or daughter.
My daughter W3S married and
re:alized it was not to be. She preferred her own gender. She has a
doctorate in education, and is very
lovable and outgOing.

~ctability

lw nothing to do

with it. I believe she ~ born this
way and didn't have a choice.
If that mother really cares, she
would not dwell on herself and
grandchildren. Kids dn not Howe"
their parents grandchildren any
more than they owe them a. life
Jived to meet their precpnceived
specifications or dreams. A

MOTHER WHO LOVES HER
DAUGHTER. TAMPA, FLA.
DEAR MOTHER.: That's laying it on the line. If there is one
thing I hope this column has
shown "Mother Who Cares a Lot,"
it's that she's not nearly as isolated
as she thinks slie is. If she's able to
open her mind and her·heart, she'll
discover she has lots of company ·
all waiting to support her. .

Dear Abby is written bj Ptlulittt
Phillips lind daughter Jean~ Phillips.

BY VALREA THOMPSON
Put yourself in this picture. The
rent is due and you need to buy
· food. Tomorrow you can take care
of the rent and food because your
Social Security benefit check is in
the mail. But what happens if your
check isn't there? Losing your benefit check can cause you a lot of
problems. Have you considered
using direct deposit?
·
Give careful consideration to
the safety and convenience that

direct deposit provides you. Besides
helping you avoid die nightmare
pictured above and providing safety for your money, direct deposit
puts you in better control of your
finances. You( money is _in your
account the morning of the scheduled payment day. This is helpful
when you are out of, tpwn or
unable to get to your bank.
Using direct deposit doesn't stop
you from changing . where your
keep your money. Maybe you
moved, found a better interest rate
or you got a better deal. Whatever
the reason, you can change your
direct deposit account to a differ-

ent bank, uvingJ and Joan or credit union. If you decide to change
accounts, you should wait until
after you receive your benefit payment in the new account to close
the old account.
The best way to change your
account is to visit the new bank,
savingJ and loan or credit union
you've selected. You can explain
that you want to open an account
and use direct deposit to receive
your benefit. They'll complete all
the forms and send the information to Social Security.
Or, after you've opened your
new · account, you can call Social

Security toll-free, 1-800-7721213, and change your · direct
deposit information by telephone.
If you c:all us, you ne~d to have
your new account number handy
when you c:all. You can find the
account number on your new personal checks or account statement.
For the last 25 years, Social
Security and SSI benefit recipients
have used direct deposit. We delivered more than 1.8 billion direct
deposit benefit payments worth S
I. 9 trillion, and not one has ever
b~en lost or.'s tolen. Each month like clockwork - the money is in
the bank, ~avingJ and loan or cred-

it union. No lost check, no lost
money, not once in 23 years.
Jsn 't it time for you to experience the security direct deposit
provides? You dnn't have .a bank
'account? Contact your bank, savingS and loan or credit union.
They'll be glad to help you. If you
already have an account, contact
your bank or call Social Security
toll-free, 1-800-772-1213. If you
call Social Security, the repre~enta­
tive will need to ask you a few
questions to determine your identity.

(Valrea Thompson is ma11ager.of the
Social Security office in Athens.)

Parent involvement pays dividends for kids FLY YOUR FLAG! SUPPORT OUR NATION!
BY BECKY BAER

Involved parents make
better students. Children are
more Jik,ely to get better
grades• and test scores, have
better attendance, complete
more homework, are more
apt to graduate, become
more involved in extra-curADVICE
ricular activities, and have a
. better attitude and behavior
when parents are actively work at hand.
involved in their children's
Parents should keep the
education.
house quiet while children
··: Parents · can hdp their are studying. The television
. children do well in school and stereo should be turned
by meeting periodically . off. Make this a time for the
with their children's teach- whole family to read or do
ers. Open communication quiet work. This will send
with the schools is essential the message that all memfor student success . .Parents bers of the family want to
can volunteer in their chil- learn.
dren's classrooms, not only
A regular time for studyto get to know the teachers ing should be designated.
better, but also to see how Most children need some
classes are conducted and play and active time after a
what school life is like.
long day at school before
Parents can prepare their trying to study. Then 20 to
children fo~ homework and 30 minutes of homework,
studying by designating · a with play breaks in between
specific work area. A quiet can result in more producplace with good lighting, a tive work.
·dictionary, pens, pencils,
Parents
can
establish
concerning
erasers and paper will be guidelines
needed. A desk or a table homework. These
may
will work. If the kitchen or include: no television until
•dining· room table is used, homework is .done, study
ithe area should be off-limits some every night, even if
:to others until homework is there is no homework, show
:completed. When the chi!- parents homework and
;dren sit at their study area, school papers every day.
:the routine will help them
Parent! should review
:begin concentrating on the assignments and projects .

Becky
Baer

'

with their children, not only
as a means of helping the
student, but also so parents
can keep abreast of what is
being taught. They shoul.d
et')courage their children to
talk about t.heir activities
and work at school.
Parents should recommend that their children
write down all assignments.
This can become their "todo" list. Each homework
activity can be checked off
as it is completed. This procedure can help them develop time lines when working
an major projects.
A home where parents are
supportive provides a conducive . atmosphere
for
learning. If parents monitor
children's leisure time, they
can ensure a balance of
structured and unstructured
time. This, will help prevent
an overload of extra activities beyond their. schoolwork, while eliminating too
much time on their children's hands.
No free time can cause
depression and lack of motivation for the student, but
too little structure or suppori can lead to dis6rganization and a deficiency of
educational stimulation. ·

·(Becky Bm is Meigs County~ Extension agent for family
and consumer sciences/community development, Ohio 'State
University.)

LOCAL EVENTS
Community Calendar is
.POMEROY - Childhood
published as a free service immunization clinic, 9 to 11
to non-profit groups wishing .a.m.. 1 to · 3 p.m.. Health
to announce meetings and Dept. Bring shot records.
special eventl. The calen· •
:dar is not designed to pro- ' CHESTER Chester·
mote sales or fund-raisers Shade Historical Associ&amp;·
of any type. Items are print· tlon
quarterly meeting
ed only as space permits Tuesday, 7 p.m.. Chester
1and cannot be guaranteed Courthouse. Archives .{:om: to be printed a apeciflc millet m11t1 with Dr. C'lyde
; number of dayi.
Evan• at 6.:30 p.m.

•

•

: TUESDAY
: POMEROY - Melga Soli
. •and Water Conlervatlon
; Dlttrlct to hold a apeclal
· :mHtlngJ..Tuelday, 8 p.m.,
•at the 011'108 to dlaouea par·
:10nnel and Leading Creek
:Waterlhld IMUH.

annex, 8:30 a.m. Wednes·
day.
MIDDLEPORT
Dr.
Michael Pangio will speak
at Abundant Grace Church
in Middleport at 7 p.m on
Oct. 31. Panglo has just
returned from ·Africa and
Nicaragua missions trips.
Pastor Teresa Davis Invites
the public.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Board
MIDDLEPORT - Middle·
of Public Affair~, apeclal port 'Literary Club, 2 p.m
rnee!lng, 1 p.m. Wldnea·
Wedneaday at tha Pomeroy
day.
Library with Bernice Car·
POMEROY - . Publlo penter 11 hoate11. Maxlna
lnapeQIIon of voting equip· Gaaklll will review 'The Old
ment at Melgt County Man and the Sea• by Erne1t ·
Board of Electlona, county Hemingway.

POMEROY Ella Norma Mae Swartz Wilson · 66
Pomeroy, died Saturday, Oct. 27, 'zoot at Logan Hospl;.. i~

0

rtunitvis
nu•••

.,

...
•

Attacks

tant thing," Cale said, "and ~
not having that diploma ,
fnHnPapAI
would have been a hindrance
for those veterans
who were · - mg
· facili'ty· w here at 1east· three
.
all
, . .
.
..
c ed to serVIce before they anthrax-laced letters were han- .
.Htgh School .for the servtce, were able to graduate."
.
for i example, will receive
C:ole has received no appli- died. A ~man who worj&lt;s m.
~heir diplomas.;t;n'.!l'l Meigs.;,~~ns ·to dat.. ~but neryl ~lh~ HdamSil~nter ~ hospt-•
• ..
' ·
". . · .., · . ·"1' ·
•talize unday With mhalallon
·H' h S "- 1
. tg cuoo . ·, , .· '
•, .
Well,·! upenntendennn East- . anthrax. ·
· Veterans wb:ll l~ft Ohto ern Local School District ,j
.
. . ·
·
high schools ii'1·.0ther cou'!- ;anticinates a few' application;
. The addiiJ.Pnal case m New
,ties, but who now Jive in
&lt;·.
Jersey bnng; to IS fhe number
M .· C
.0
from
would-!&gt;e
,
gradual!'!
of
"
Wconfirmed anthrax infections
1
&lt; etgJd' ounty ethan sll happhy Clu\ster and Olive-Orange ·~ • ce the crisis began
.
.or tp1omas
roug . t e H' h ·s h ·1 ·H 1
. .In New York Citv.,. prelimi. ..tS .·. no . tg •· c oo
s. e a so
Pomeroy Vso. Tli
. e(e
&lt;
h anttc- .1
..
·.
·,
.
!pates·
a
.ew
·
post
umous
' rests showed a 61-year-old
r .
h. h
cos t. I o th e veteran.
"Let's face it, it's too litde, app tcatwn~. w tc . are hospital stockroom employee
.t oo ' late," Cale sai.d. "It's a allowed under the new law.
has contracted inlial~tion
good idea, but it should. have'
Well said he will wait for anthrax. Mayor Rudolph Giu-1
been done years ago."
informatio.n . from the state liani s:rid late Monc:JaY that tl)e4
Tl;le youngest World War 11 about how the dtplomas wtll woman had been hospitalized
veterans are now in their be awarded.
since Sunday and was in "very,
mid-70s, Cale said, and a
Botl, he and Cale hope for veryserious"conditibnandon a
diploma issued t\~w will a coordinated effort for respirator.
.
have far less significance awarding the diplomas, and
In a new threat W.rning sent
and be ofless help - than it ~ale said he anticipates that to 18,000 .Jaw enforcement
would have 50 . years .ago, they could be awarded as agencies, the FBI s:rid Monday it
when veterans began theit part of the schools' regular had credible information of terpost-war careers.
spring commenc~ment exer- rorism threats, but no suggestion
· . "A diploma is an impor- CISes.
of the targets o~ methods f\)r
possible attacks. The new alert
was based on intelligence
reports that Osama bin Laden's
terrorist network may strike,
officials s:rid.
(USPS 21)-MOI
"The administration has conOhiO Valtoy Publlohlng CO.
cluded
based on information
Published every atlemoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
developed that there may be
. Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Oh!D.
Second-class
additional
terrorist attacks with'
Our main concern In all stories Is postage paid al l'ilme"'Y.
Member:
The
~laled
Press
and
1o be accurate. If you know of an
in the United States and agains{
error In a story, call the newsroom the Ohio New~r Association.
United States interests over the'
Po.lnullller: Send address correc·
at (740) 992·2156.
tlons to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.
next w~!l;' Attorney General
so.. Pornemy. Ohio 45789.
. News Departmentl
John Asli!lit&gt;ft s:rid. It was the
Subscription rate1
The main ~umber Is 992'2156. ·
second s\fl;h alert issued this
ly carrier or motor routo
Department ~xtentions·~re:
OneS2
month.
·
' .
$8.70
a......r*monager
Ext. 12 one month

·

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

but not lor long.

-

Ohio Tax Amnesty
Now through January 15, 2002

The Ohio Department of Taxation has a money-saving, conscienceclearing program just for you: a limited-time. tax amnesty program for .
delinquent taxpayers who are eligible. If you pay your back taxes in full
before lhe January 15, 2002 deadline, you can avoid any penalties and
pay only one-half of the interest you currently owe. If you or your ·
business has fallen behind in paying Ohio taxes, now is the time to
take advantage of Ibis once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Opportunity is
.
knocking ... but not for long.
Amnesty is available only for certain taxes and to persons or businesses
lhat have not been billed, assessed or contacted for an audit. Keep in

One-

Ext. 13

or

~

.:.

will be staged at the ~nior
C itizens Center, 112 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
Thursday and Friday.

RUTLAND -Wednesday
and Thursday, Norfolk and
Southern Railroad will be
doing crossing work in the
POMEROY - A public
Rutland area.
test of the voting equipment
On Wednesday, a crossing will be conducted at the
on Leading Creek Road, MeigJ County Board of Elecabout a mile from Rutland, tions on Wednesday at 8:30
will be closed at 9 a.m . or a.m.
af\er the buses passes, and ~~~
open early afternoon.
On Thursday, the crossingJ
on County Road 10 between
POMEROY
Meigs
·
High
School
Band
will
sponLangsville and Rudand and
the ones at Dexter will dose, . sor a "Basket Bingo" fundone at a time, beginning at 9 raiser on Thursday at 6 p.m. at
a.m. and they too will be the Middleport American
open in the a~rnoon by the Legion hall on MiD Street.
Twenty~one games wiD be
time school is out.
held with one basket to be
awarded to the winner . of
each game. Ink dabbers will
POMEROY - A divorce · be used. Refreshments will be
action has been filed in MeigJ available for sale. Band BoostCounty Common Pleas er committee members can
Court by Elizabeth Parsley. be contacted for advance
Middleport, agains~ Clinton ticketS at $20 each.
Parsley, Logan, W.Va.
An action for dissolution of .
marriage has been filed by
Cathy Lou Casto, Pomeroy,
CHESTER - · Chloe
and Paul Eugene Casto, Gal·
Weber
of 48330 State Route
lipolis.
Dissolutions have been 248, Long Bottom, Ohio
granted to Mark L. 'Allen and 45743, will celebrate her 70th
Heather R. Allen, and to bi&lt;thday on Saturday. Friends
Daniel E. Gheen and Jill M. plan a card shower for her.
Gheen.

To test

Basketblnp

Divorces filed

Card shower

To meet

·:, •Meth'.

:« E

!.' !

Closed for
repair

BIDWELL- Rex M. Stone, 70, of 836 Thaxton Road, BidweD, passed away unexpectedly at 2:25 a.m. on Monday, OctoLogan.
ber 29,2001. in the emergency department at the Holzer Med- •
She was born june 23, t935 in Gallia County, daughter of the ic:al Center.
.
late Reuben C:alvin and Cecil Gertrude Wartenberg Swartz.
Born Aprilt9, 1931, in RudandTownship ofMeigJ CounShe was a homemaker and attended Syracuse Church of God. ty, he was the son of the late J. Armour Stone and Myrde
Surviving are seven daughters and two sons-in-law,Janine A. Haynes Stone.
Wilson of Clifton, W.Va., Christina Kay Wilson of Pome~.
He was a retired maintenance technician in Columbus,
Rita Jayne McFarland of Mason, W.Va., Arlene L. and Ron where he was employed for more than 40 years before returnConnett of Goshen, Ind., jennifer Ann and Charlie Burton of ing liack to Gallia County.
Pomeroy, Marla June Wilson of Goshen, Ind., and Kimberly
He was .a member of the First Southern Baptist Church in
Sue South of Pomeroy; 20 grandchildren and ·15 great grand- Pomeroy, and the Loyal Order of the Moose Lodge No. 731 in
children; a brolher and sister-in-law, Millard and Wanda Swartz Point Pleasant, W.Va. He served in the U.S. Army during the
of Pomeroy; a sister and brother-in-law, Ethel and Juette Korean Cpnflict and was a 1945 graduate of the Bidwell.Porter
Hossler of South Charleston, W.Va.; and several nieces and High School.
nephews.
·
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in dealh by his
She 'II!"S also preceded in death by four sisters, Fannie Lewis, wife, Betty R.Varney Stone, in November 1989; a sister, Ruth
Lucy Pavis, Merle Manley and Pearlene Bradshaw; and five G~ndel; and three brothers, Shirley Stone, Russell Stone and
brothers, Mason Swartz, Ervin Swartz, James Swartz, Ted Bob Stone.
Swartz and Gene Swartz. •
·
He is survived by a very special friend, Kathryn Green
Services. will be I p.m. Weru;esday in Fisher-Acree Funer:al Costen of Bidwell; three brothers, Vernon Stone and his wife,
Home, Middleport, with Juette Hossler officiating. Burial will Doris, both of Johnstown, Warren Stone and his Wife, Mary,
tbUow at Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at both of ,Pataskala, and Roy Stone of Columbus; and sever:al
nieces and nephews.
the funer:al home from 6-8 tonight.
Also surviving ~are special friends, James Green of Middleport, Bili··Green of Gallipolis, Linda Baisden of Oak Hill, and
Brenda Stader of G:allipolis.
Setvices will be' S p.m. on Wednesday, October 31,2001, in
POMEROY - Walid "Wdlie" Mah'd Z:ihran, 45, New
Bern, N.C., formerly ofPomerqy, died Monday, Oct. 22,2001, Cren4:.ens Funeral ChapeL Officiating will be the Rev. Lamar
O'Bryant.
in New Bem.
·
Friends may call at the chapel from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. on
He was born on July 26,1956 in Zarka,Jordan, son ofMah'd
Wednesday,
October 31, 2001.
Mustafa and Samira DaBud Zahran. He was employed as a carAdditional c:alling hours will be observed from 11 a.m. till 1
penter by Young's Carpenter Service ·and was manager of the
p.m. ,o n Thursday, November I, 200t, at the Moreland ·Funeral
Five Points Food Mart in New ·Bern.
Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Janice L. Home, 55 East Schrock Road, Westerville, Ohio.
Graveside services will follow in Northlawn Memory GarYoung Zahran of Pomeroy, whom he married. Dec. 26, 1981;
dens
in Westerville.
·
two daughters, Liza Jean andVictoria Samira Zahran, and a son,
I.
•
Wali&lt;! Victor Zahrari, all of Pomeroy; his mother-in-law, Mary
K. Young of Pomeroy; three brothers, Libill, Kalid and 0-Mar
!,. crystallized is a smokable
Zahqn; and a sister, Fedwell Zahran, all of Zari&lt;a,Jordan.
and more powerful form of
He. ,was preceded in death by his father-in-~. Victor Young
the drug.
Jr.
f1vmPageAI
The
manufacture
of
Memorial services will be 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. I, 2001 in
methamphetamine
often
Fisher-Acree ryner:al Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. James
unlete"
or"
crank."
involves
the
we
of
over-theKeesee officiating.The family will receive friends at the funerMethamphetamine is used counter cold medications and
.al home from 6 p.m. until the service.
Memorial contributions may be made toward funeral in pill form, or in powdered other readily-available ingreexpenses to Fisl\er-Acree Funeral Home, P.O. Box 151 , Mid- form by snorting or injecting. dients.
.. dleport, Ohio 45760.
·
·

fronaPapiu

• .I

LOCAL ·BRIEFS

RexM. Stone

Walid Zahnin

How much money.can you afford to lose?
With direct deposit
,your money is scife

The Dally. S.ntlnel • Page A 3

Ext.

14

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Ext. 5

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news 0 rnydallysentinel.com

On the Web
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ashcroft urged Americans to
be vigilant and to report unusual circwnstances or behavior. He
also called for patience ih the
face of tightened security measures.
Officials s:rid the source ofthe
!a,test New Jepey anthrax case
was uncertain anii"the' case' was'
uncler investigation.
"I don't think it is appropriate
to draw conclusions abOut what
this htest case may imply:• s:rid
Dr. Stephen Ostroff of the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
Acting New Jersey Gov.
Donald DiFrancesco ordered
anthrax spore testing at 44 post
offices in' seven counties. All
send mail to the HanU!ton processing center. Some of these
post offices had been tested earlier.
The Hamilton center handled
anthrax-tainted envelopes delivered to Senate Majorii)/ Leader
Tom Daschle's office in the Hart
building and to the New York
offices of NBC News and the
New York Post.
Anthrax escaping from a letter
opened in Daschle's office on
Oct. 15 forced closure of the
Hart building. Environmental
Protection Agency officials s3id
Monday they hoped 'exp~rts
would approve a plan to pump
chlorh1e dioxide gas throughout
the building to snuff out any
remaining anthrax. The process
coul,d take 16 days, but would
enable the nine-story · building
- where 50 senators have
offices - to reopen in midNovember.

POMEROY -

A civil

~ction has been filed in Meigs

County Common Pleas
Court by Greenpoint Credit
Co., Westerville, against
Ricpard Chapell, Pomeroy,
and 'others, alleging default on
a retail installment agreement
in the amount of$20,196.69.

Craft show
POMEROY -T~e annual
Winter Wonderland"' of Crafts

,,

POMEROY - Middleport Community Association
will meet on Nov. 6 at 8:30
a.m. in Village Council chambers.

. Dinner set
CHESTER - An election
i:lay dinner will be held· at
Chester United Methodist
Church, with serving to begin
at II :30 a.m. There will be
chicken and noodles and
sandwiches and soup.

•

LOte~l:; ' STOCR: S ·
I

· AER- 42.851

,

Arch Coal- 23.53
Akzo- 41.33
AmTechSBC- 39.64
Ashland Inc. - 41.13
AT&amp;T:...,.15.n
Bank One - 33.78
BLI-7.76
Bob Evans- 18.68
BorgWa~r ~ 43
Champion - 2.49
Charming Shops 4.73
City Holding - 9.60
Col-14.49
DG-14.07
DuPont - 40.81

.Federal Mogul- .52

USB-17.80
Gannett - 63.39
General Electric
37.43
GKNLY-3.70
Harley. Davidson
45.45
Kmart-6.21
Kroger~ 24.52
Lands End- 31 l87
Ltd. -11.20
.
NSC-16.63
Olllc Hill Flnancl.a l-'),
OVB-21'.55

BBT-32.76
PeQP.Iea,- 17

Pepsico - 48.15
Premier- 8.51
Rockwell -14.25
Rocky 80011- 5.35
AD Shell- 52.10
Seare- 39.18l
Shonoy's - .2~
Wai·Mart- 51 .90
Wendy's - 28.75
Worthington - ·13.38
Dally stock reports ara
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactlona. provided by Smilh Part·
nets at Advest Inc. ol
Gallipolis.

Warmer in area by Wednesday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A warming trend wiD send
local temperatures to abovenorll)allevels by Wednesday, the
National Weather Service said.
The!'! also was no rain in the
forecast.
Watm air moving into the
region behind a frontal system
will send temperatures into the
60s oyer the entire area on
Wednesday and Thursday.
Highs this time of year over
much of the state normally are
in the 50s.
·
Slighdy cooler temperatures

add possible .showers are in Saturday's forecast.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:32, and sunrise on Wedrlesday
is at 6:59 a.m.
· Weather forecast:
Tonight... Mostly dear. Lows
35 to 40. Light south wind.
Wednesday... Mostly sunny.
Highs"in the lower 70s. Southwest wind aro~nd 10 mph.

$104

Dolly .
50 ten!&amp;
Subacribera no1 desiring to pay lhe
carrier may remit In advance c:ilrect to
The Dally 5enlinel. CredK Will be gl'"'"
canier ea~h week. No sub&amp;criptlon by
mall pennitted iri areas where home
carrier seNica.ls avaiiBble.

Mall subscripUon

. ln•lde Melgl COunty
13 Weeks
$27.30
26Weeks
$53.62

52 Weeks

$105.56

outalde llolgo County
13 Weeks
$29.25
26 Weeks
$56.88

----•CLY'DE. t &amp;Alllt _ _._ _,

couNnY

YOU KNOW what'
. coverages you need...
see us for the BEST
COMPANY·for you I
Downing Chlld1 Insurance Agency
Pomeroy 992-3381

E.! Jja

$109.72

52 Weeks

ALL AGES . ALL TIMES $ 4 .00

mind, after the amnesty period we will be stepping up our enforcement
and auditing efforts. Don 't miss this deadline!
For more Information calll·800·304-321.1 or vlllt W'!lf.oblorpy

Callus or stop in. We'll eotaf to
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free no oNftldion 4Uofe.

ificic

CARPET
Here's thr! deal... Buy your carpet from us
and we'll giv~ you the ad FREE!!
.,

Pomeroy, OH •

.,

''

..

I

�••

Inside:

0 JJinlon

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

•

'

.BtrtgaiJ, Hnd, BCS, Page A t 0

'

The Daily Sentinel

"

'IUesday. October 30, 1001

'aJ'v£60T10

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 1112·2158 • Fax: 882-2157

·EIPEO Aum£
~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chllrtea W. Govrt
Publllher

•

...

'.

HIGHLIGHTS

•

R. Shllwn Lewll

Managing Editor

Clwtene Hoeflich
0..181111 Mllnllger

Dl8ne Klly Hill
Controller

1

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I

, COLUMBUS (AP)
Phio State is losing some
df:pth ."' guard for the coming
~·

NATIONAL VIEW

.: ~

•

Helping out
It's Congresss' turn to ensure
airlines keep flying
• Grand Forks (N.D.) Herald, on helping the airline industry: A third fewer people got on airplanes in North Dakota last

month than in September a year ago. ... Those ·attacks undermined one of America's' most precious freedoms, the freedom
to travel.
The damage to travel hurts the U.S.' economy, too. Travel is
among the nation's biggest industries, providing livelihoods for
millions of people.
So, it's vital that people get to flying again. That's one way to
strike back at terrorism.
President Bush has done what he can ....
Now, it's the turn of Congress.
Congress should pass an airline security bill this week.
It should put marshals Oll 1r mestic flights.
It should federalize airport security.
The first step·would provide a measur&lt;
·otection agoi _st
in-air hijacking;. At a minimum, there woul I• · an arm ed person in a position to oppose the takeover 0 1 an airplane.
The second step would improve airport security in several
ways.
It would allow for more standardization in ;ecurity. This is
true for hiring and training. It's true for responses, too.
.. . Federalization of the security service almost certainly
would mean better pay. Federalization will raise the status of
airport security workers, too. It would ' emphasize the importance of the work to all of us.
So, federalization would have an important side effect. It
would help boost morale among security workers. And good
attitudes will mean better security.
.
Unfortunately, Congress seems to be hamstrung in its effort
to get an airline security bill p~sed. The contentious issue is
whether to include aid for workers who have lost their jobs in
the bill.
The right answer is, no - not because the workers don't
deserve the help....
But the best way to help those who work in the travel business is to ensure that they have Jobs in the long run. And the
· best way to do that is to get people traveling again. And the way
to do that is to make Americans feel safe in the air....
Pass the airline security bill. Then, turn to a way to help
workers in the airlines until the ·travel industry is as ric)) and
robust as it was before the attacks of Sept. 11.

'

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 30, the 303rd day of 2001. There are
62 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 30, 1938, the radio play "The War of the Worlds,"
starring Orson Welles, aired on CBS. (The live drama, which
employed fake news reports, panicked some listeners who
thought its portrayal of aMartian invaSion was true.)
On this date:
In 17e5, the second president of the United States, John
Adams, was born in Braintree, Mass .
,
In 1885, poet Ezra Pound was born in Hailey, Idaho.
In 1944, the Martha Graham ballet "Appalachian Spring,"
witli music by J,aron Copland, premiered at the Library of
Congress in Washington, D.C., with Graham in a leading role.
In 1945, the U.S. government announced the end of shoe
rationing.
In 1961, the Soviet Union tested a hydrogen bomb with a
force estimated at 58 megatons.
.
In 1961, the Soviet Party Congress unanimously approved a
resolution ordering the removal of Josef Stalin's body from
Lenin's tomb.
In 1972, 45 people were killed when an Illinois Central Gulf
commuter train collided with another train on Chicago's South
Si&amp;.
In 1975, the New York Daily News ran the headline "Ford
to City: Drop · oe~d" a day after President Ford said he would
veto any proposed federal bailout of New York City.
.In 1979, President Carter announced his choice of federal
appeals judge Shirley HufStedler to head the newly created
Department of Education.
·
In 1995, by a vote of 50.6 percent to 49.4 percent, Federalists prevailed over separatists in Quebec in a secession referen-·
dum.
Ten years ago :The Middle East peace conference in Madrid,
Spain, opened with addresses to the delegates by President
George Bush and Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbacliev.
Five years ago: After a four-hour trial, a Chinese court sentenced pro-democracy activist Wang Dan' to 11 years in prison
for "t onspiring to subvert the Chinese government." (Wang
was freed in April 1998 and sent into exile in the United
States.)
One year ago: Comedian, television host, author and composer Steve Allen died in Encino, Calif., at age 78.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Hamilton Camp is 67.
f

I o

,,

..,

(

KONDRACKE'S VIEW
'

~i

As surpius shrinks, economic stimulus should be briif :'.

.,

As soon as possible, ,the Congressional

Daniels indicated he thinks that OpPOr....,
tunism creeps up primarily on the spend•..·
Budget Office should tell Congress how
little is left of the once-huge federal suring side. He declined to sp~ culprits, '
plus, the better to inspire fiscal responsibil·
but administration officials are laiOWI) co,.
ity.
.
be dubious about major improvements ibr,,;
"The numbers will be horrendous, and
'Amtrak, new farm subsidies arid nalion-,~
they should scare people into fiscal disciwide expansion of 'small business brealq,,•
pline," says Republican economic expert
for New York City.
'
UlCIUU:
Others, meantime, point to the big. ~Robert Hormat&gt; of the investment firm
Goldman Sachs.
cut package ofWays and Means Chairman
Hormats, among many others, recomCOWMNIST
Bill Thomas, R-Cali£, as a surpliu sapper.
mends that the econdmic-stimulus packThe bill calls for tax breaks skeMd !o
age that will be worked out between
corporations and wealthy in.dividuab.
Congress and the White House be short- ger.
They would cost $103 billion in liscal ~•.,
term and consumer-oriented, so as to give
Hormats said at a recent forum spon- 2002, 'and $162 billion over I 0 yean. U :
the economy a swift pickup without fur- sored by the New Democrat Network also includes a capital-gains tax cut,~~·:~
ther draining the long-term surplus.
·that CBO should publish an authoritative ination ~f the alternative ~lim tall: foe 'i
There's a con tracy tendency at work new estimate "quickly" as a guide to Con- corporations, and retroactive repayment .~t
which White H.ouse Budget Director gress during its deliberations on appropri- 15 years' worth ofpastAMT paymentSMitch Daniels calls "opportunism" - to arions bills and stimulative tax cuts.
aU of which appear to ~ no chance "of ..
take advantage of the recession and the
"If fiscal discipline collapses;• he passage.
"• •
anti-terror campaign to spend and cut warned, "long-term interest rates will rise,
Even Treasuty Sei:retaty Paul O'Neill···
t:oo:s with abandon.
including ·mortgage rates, causing a dismissed the Thomas bill as "show bwi~ : '
CBO's last projection, published in late decline in the housing market_ the one ness" designed by RepublicaJU to impress:- '
August, revealed that the H)-year surplus, part of the economy that is still showing the party's corporate political base. ·
·"
once estimated at $5.6 trillion, had fallen strength."
Senate leaders Thomas Daschle, D-S.O.,' '
to $3.4 trillion because ofPresident Bush's · Bixby, in an interview, adde&lt;!, "If we're and T~nt Lott, R-Miss., are ready to writC,•
tax cuts, a soft economy and new spend- going to haye a stimulus package, we an alternative stimulus bill and ~~ 'it',.,:;
ing initiatives.
.,
·
should keep it narrowly targeted to have . passed and m'? a House.S~e ~~nfei'-, u:
An Oct. 4 estimate by the Republican an immediate effect not a long-lasting ence, wtth White House parttci,Pattb!l, ~
and Democratic leaders of the House and one.
·'
quickly as possible.
·'
"~
Senate Budget conunittees showed that
"There should be tax cuts targeted to
The president favors a $75 billion pack-~·".
the surplus had plununeted. to just S2.6 low-income people who'll spend it, and agewithonlyafewbilliondoUarsforhew&lt; ·"
trillion because of the recession and post- business cut&gt; to encourage. immediate spending (mainly for uhemployrnenf. 1
Sept. 11 outlays.
investment. It should be a one-year, one- assistance) and has acceded to Democrat- ·
Qaniels believes that number will hold, shot deal."
ic demands for $16 billion in rellaies !Or
but a new study by Robert Bixby of the
The good news is that the Budget com- lower-income workers who PaY·Social
Concord Coalition found thai the surplus mittees and the White House seem to Security taJO:S but noc ·income taxes. ·
could fall to as little as Sl.l trillion - or concur that the stimulus should give the
Meantime, Democrats seem to ·agree
even less if Congress overspends or passes economy a ·short-term jolt; not cut taX that businesses should be allo'Ned tO'
a too-large economic-stimulus package. ·revenue over the long run.
"expense" new purchases of plants and &gt;'
The estimates mean that the non-Social
The danger, though, lies in Congress equipment to encourage investrneilt1 .,.
Security portion of the surplus, once esri- dropping its previous spending and tax- although for a shorter period than lheo·r:·
mated at $2.5 trillion, has evaporate,d. That cutting restraint, using the recession and White House favors.
· &gt;:··
money originally was intended to pay for the anti-terror war as excuses.
The bottom line is that the two sidesc.1
a prescription drug benefit for Medicare
"You see a lot of opportUnism in both should get money into people's hands to&gt; .' :
beneficiaries, among other programs.
parries;• Daniels said in an interview. "In give the economy a ChristrhaS-spendirlf
Now, even the Social Securjty surplus the guise of addressing immediate prob- boost - but without sapping what's I~ "·
- - money that was supposed to pay down !ems, people; are taking actions that would of the budget surpluses.
.. '•
debt and keep interest rates low to spur expand government programs over the
(Morton Kondracke is executive tdiwr· oj·'."
long-term investment - .may be in dan- long run."
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol HiU.) •J1•

MortOn

Koo.L... -'--

--------------------------------......,..-------~
')''- .

RYAN'S VI'EW

Relax, America: There's no need to spook ourselves .· ·
••
BYJoMRYAN
Back in the day, when we were prosperous and at peace, the monster under the
bed changed from week to week, like
supermarket specials. .
Cell phones cause brain tumors!
.Beware of e. coli in we-food burgers!
Too much vitamin C ruins your liver!
Tuna can poison you with mercuty!
Day care . will stunt your child! And
maybe put him at risk to molesters!
Diesel fumes cause miscarriages! Tap
water causes leukemia!
Be careful of flesh-eating bacteria
(though we don't know of anyone who
has, in actual fact, been infected)!
C¢x'nless copy paper Carl cause disfigurement and even death!
Caffeine, sugar, white flour, mille, television, video games, fake nails, red meat, red
dye; nonorganic produce, electrical lines,
· hair spray, plastic containers, UV rays, diet
teas, fat of all kinds - the dangers, people,
are evecywhere!
Details at 11 !
We had so little to be truly frightened of
that we went to remarkable lengths to
scare ourselves. Suburban teen-agers who
grew up during the longest economic
boom in history identified with rap nrusic
that spoke of p&lt;&gt;Verty and hopelessness ;md
violent gango;ters. Other teens took to
wearing long black coats and dark makeup
and toe-to-5Calp body piercings, embrac-

ing a menacing gothic culture that sueceeded wonderfully in scaring the living
daylight&gt; out of their parents.
We manufactured, packaged and marketed fear. Movies such as "Nightmare on
Elm Street" and "Halloween" have so
many sequels that I've lost track. Thrillers
with .Bruce and Arnold packed the theaters. Fear was a tingly .shot of adrenaline
between handfuls of popcorn. We were a
nation.of drama queens and kings.
I had these thoughts as I watched a TV
movie with my son the other night. An
evil warlock's spell transformed everyone
at a Halloween party into the monsters
they were pretending to be. Their masks
became real. The thrill of scaring each
other turned into true terror.
This morning when I checked my email, I found an ad for the antibiotic
Cipro,. used to treat anthrax, I 0 tablets fur
$44.90 plus shipping and handling.
I saw our 'mail clerks wearing latex
gloves to sort the mail. A letter with
anthrax arrived at the office of Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle, expanding
a puzzling web of target&gt; that includes
NBC anchor Tom Brokaw, the offices of
the National Enquirer and a ~icrosoft ,
office in Reno. . •
.
At our airports, troops fiom the National Guard, in . camouflage fatigue5, are
patrolling with automatic rilles.
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention is figuring ·out how .far it can

.

stretch its smallpox-vaccine supply. should .
terrorists unleash the virus on us.
,
The national . security adviser says
Osarna bin Laden might be sending secret,
messages to his operatives through tel~ , ,
vi¥&lt;! statement&gt;.
.
·
The president, warning about' the likeli•' '·'
hood of another rerrorist attaCk. has depu-~ ·:.
tiz.ed aU Americans to be lookout&gt;.
·'-:
A spell has been cast on our decades-'"· '
long Halloween party.
· ~ 1'
Demons no longer disappear with !he'
flip of a mask or the click of a remote roil-'"'
tJQl.
·
L" ··
The challenge once was.to keep us fionr "'
giving in to manufactured fear. Now it ii"·
to keep ourselves fiom giving in to reaf:
fear - while recognizing that we are, br
fact, in danger. So~e are coping by stoek- "";
piling gas masks, water, nonperishable"· ·
food, antibiotics and guns in their homts; ' :'
as if we are about to be invaded or nuked:'•
Others talk crazily of moving, at least tem-''1
polllrily, to Canada. Perhaps, though, in'ationality is the surest sign of sanity.
•··
In this Halloween season, I tihd a curi- ''
ous relief in the cardboard gh05ts and gob-:' '
!ins in the neighborhood windows and m~ · .,
hlack-crepe witches. J understand what II .. ,
luxuty we enjoyed all these years, whell' .. ,
fear arrived behind llimsy masks of cellu-:- :
loid and newsprint, before we knew abou~ .
evil crawling .out fiom a cave.
• 1•
(Joan Ryan is a columnist for the San Fnln~ ~' ,
dsro Chronicle.)
""•

'·

Doylan Robinson has
to fo~ his senior
seuon to concentrate on acad-

ilecide!l
~'

linics.

: Robil)son, a native of
~n. played in 31 games as a
.~homo"' and junior after
11tting out the 1998-99 season
~cause he did not qualify aca,&lt;:!emically out of Buchtel High
S,chool.
, 1 He battled injuries, playing
in 22 games, as a sophomore.
He wu involved in ·a car acciilent Dec. 3, 200o and played
'
.
. .
JUSt nme games as a Juruor.
Robinson ii ineligible academically for the first quarter
,Ibis ~ 'and would not have
become eligible until early

Januacy.

"'

] ~ PORnAND, Ore. (AP) The Trail Diners traded jour~ center Will Perdue to
J;Qe Clippers for 1}te rights to
,l\196,11¢ pick Doroq Sheffer.
,;1 Th~1 . &lt;;~prers _ii)UJlediately
waived the 36-year-old Pertlue, who has played 13 seaIons, ~erasi\tg 4. 7 point&gt; and
~.9 rebounds. He played just
58 ,minutes in hi$ only season
wilh !he Blazers, averaging 1.1
point&gt; and 1.4 rebounds.
Perdue ,had his hes\ years in
ChjqgQ as part of t4e suppo~pas!,t,l', Mi~~IJoJdan,

~ ,Sc9\ti~

Pippen on the
Bulls' first three championship
teams. Perque also won a tide
With the San Antonip Spurs in

1999.
..'"

''' ·'

"
" 'NEWYORK (AP) -The
NBA became the first league
~t'port a decrease in both
average ticket price and fan
COst Index in the 11-~ history · of Team Marketing
· Reports' annual survey'
!. ·T he NBA's average ticket
~ces dropped to $50.10, 2.3
percent lower than last season,
and !he majority of the teams
decreased ticket prices.
·· The Fan Cost Index, the
allerage cast for a group of
follr to aaend a game, fell to
$277.19, a.decrease of 1.6 per-

io

..
'
" Cnsput
· lpuskls, HiD
. .::. on InJuNCt list
teni.

CLEVELAND (AP) -· The
Cleveland Cavaliers placed
center Zydrunas Ilgauskas, forw.~rd "l:yrone Hill and guard
IJelfTrepagnier on the injured
list Mopday, setting their roster
at the maximum 12 players.
llgauskas, 26, has played in .
only 29 games the past three .
seasons while undergoing five
sutgeries on his feet, including
one in February to insert three
~ in his left foot.
\,ast year, he averaged II.7
point&gt; and 6. 7 rebounds before
leaving a game Dec. 22 at
Miami with pain in his foot.
After · a 15-9 start, the Cavs
went 15-43 without Ilguaskas.
The Cavs re-acquired Hill,
33, in a trade with Philadelphia
in August. He played with
Cleveland from 1993-97
before being sent to Milwaukee in a three-way deal that
bmught Shawn Kemp to the

Ovs.
Hill averaged 9.6 points and
9.0 rebounds for the 76ers last
season, but struggled in the
pjayoffi.

Steelers dominate Titans, 34-7
-

.

PITTSBURGH (AP) Even as the Pittsburgh
Steelers surged to their best
start in fiVl! years, every critique of their unexpected
early-season succe5s started
with the same word.
But.
,
But they won't keep
winning unless their
offense can complement
Jerome Bettis' running. But
high-priced receiwr PliOOco Burress still isn't doing
anything. But Kardell
Stewart isn't throwing well
enough to lead a team
deep into the playoffi.
This time, though, what
had been missing was there
- and thelt' were no ands,
i&amp; or buts.
The Steelers dominated
Tennessee the way few
teams have in recent seasons, staying atop the AFC
. Central by beating · the
Titans 34-7 Monday night
in a game- that didn't seem
that close.
"It could have been 500," Steelers safety Lee
Flowers said.
And it wasn't just who
the Steelers (5-1) were
beating - the team with
the NFI:s best regular sea. son record a year ago but how they did it. The
PftiM 11H SlHiers, AIO

RI,IN OR PASS?- Steelers' quarterback Kardell Stewart {10) rolls o,ut to evade Titans linebacker Randall Godfrey, right, before
throwing a touchdown pass to Hines Ward Monday. {AP)
),

Huskers lead new BCS list
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. .

said. "They earned it. We've
played nine games and they
have responded and won
them all." . .
''
.
In addition to Oklahoma,
five other teams in last week's
IS-team BCS standings lost
over the weekend - UCLA,
Virginia Tech, Maryland,
Washington State and South
Carolina.

WORLD SERIES

Scene changes to
Yankee Land

Michigan (6-1) moved
fiom seventh to fourth place
this ·week, with Texas (7 -I)
fifth and Stanford (5-1) up
eight spots to sixth after its
38 -~8 upset of UCLA.
Nebraska had 2.02 point&gt;
in the BCS standing; - 2 for
poll average, I for computer-

Even with a loss, Oklahoma is still the choice over
. Miami, in the Bowl Championship Series computer but just barely.
Nebraska (9-0) replaced
Oklahoma in first place 'in
the Bowl Champions~p
Series standings Monday after
its 20-1 0 victory over the
Ph·••-•cs.A7
Soonen. Despite Saturday's
loss, Oklahoma (7-1) w~ sec. ond, .12 ahead of Miami (60).
The Hurricanes, . ranked
No. I in the AP media and
USA Today/ESPN coaches'
poll, moved fiom fourth to
third afier a 45-3 win over
West Virginia on Thursday
night. The Huskers and
Sooners are ranked 2-3 in the
AP media and coaches' polls.
The BCS standing; determine which teams play in the
BCS' national championship
game in the Rose Bowl on
Jan. 3. The ran kings are based
on a £ormula that incorporates the AP media and
coaches' polls, eight computers, strength of schedule,
won-lost record and bonus
· point&gt; for big wins.
"Our playe~ deserve to be
rated very high and a lot of
people feel we deserve to be THEY ARE THE GAME- Nebraska's Eric Crouch 171. who caught
No: I in the BCS poll,... a TO pass in Saturday's win over Oklahoma, and the Comhuskers
Nebraska coach Frank Solich moved into the No. 1 spot In the latest BCS standings. (AP)

NEW YORK (AP) - Mark Grace's first day at Yankee
Stadium was a thrill. He hopes the next couple of nights are
even better. .
_
Grace, who had waited his whole baseball life to see the
most famous ballpark in sports, and th~ Arizona Diamondbacks worked out Monday with a 2-0 lead
over the New York Yankees in the World
Series.
When Grace finished batting practice, he
headed straight for Monument Park. While
his teammates kept hitting, the first baseman studied the plaques of Ruth, DiMaggio and Mantle. ·
''Pretty elite company. wouldn't you say?"
ll..L.l..l..u..Ju..J..U . Grace said. "Pretty elite company."
Grace
Later this week, Grace wants to join them
- as a Series champij)n.
The Yankees left a trail of bad swing; and broken bats at
Bank One Ballpark, along with a bitter taste for the umpiring in the desert. Curt Schilling and Randy Johnson were
the main source of New York's problems.

.,--=-....,

PIMH He Series. A7

·i
1t

, -ELECT~

t

. Robert L. Je:well
for

Scipio Town~hip Trustee
Your Vote .Will Be Appreciated
Thank You

)j

~·

lt

·

i

*·
.•.•.• "*"*'*'*'*"*"*"*'*
~-.Ohio

-

Air Jordan ·returns,
in NYC no less.
NEW YORK (AP) - . Asked recendy to recall his favorite
Madison Square Garden moments, Michael Jordan picked
the 1998 "sneaker game" and the 1993
"Charles Smith game."
He neglected to mention the 55-point
comeback game in 1995, the 50-point
opening night in 1986 or the triple-double
iri the 1997 All-Star game.
After Tuesday night, the 2001 comeback
game might make his lisr.
Jordan returns to the NBA at the ·arena
where he's had some of his greatest
moments; including seven games in which
he scored at least 42 points.
"It enthused me to play there every
chance I got," said Jordan, who returns from.a nearly 3 112'year retirement wearing the u,niform of the Washington
Wizards. "There's a lot of memories of playing on that floor,
and I'm n&lt;:&gt;t going to forget them ....

is accepting patients at his following offices:

e (MondR.ys &amp; 'IUesdR.ys)
2410 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

675-7100
I

\

e (ThursdR.ys &amp; Fridays)
138 Main Street
New Haven, WV

.j

l

882-3134

Phase- Jord•n, A7

'

PLEASANT
·. VALLEY
HOSPITAL

H

�P898 A 6 • The O.lly Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Oct 30,

2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'm:ribune - Sentinel - ~e

Jordan

CLASSIFIED

We Cove
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FOIW sale will bo HoY. 14· IAuso Sell! 1995 HyundaJ
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W~ = Elanloa, PS, ·I'll. PW, lvt,

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now paying minimum wage,
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seta, ' DiamondS. Gold .. www.preatera.org f,or appll·
Rings
U 5 Currency . cation, appty In paraon, or
M
c,; 0
151 S ' send all!liloatlon/ nlltUmo lo:
• ·
•
ec·
PREiTERA CENTER
7
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 40Kart Harbl10t1
446 2842
"
.
Employmenl Specials!
3375 Route 80 E.
l
Wanted to Buy: S!Ind ng
Huntington, WV 25705
Timber. (740)379-2756.
EOE/AA
Holiday yard sale· Thursday, November 151, Fifth &amp;
Main, Middleport. CMetmas
decorations, Clraft supplies,
flower arranging Item&amp;. quilt,
Christmas diShet, bicycle,
Okt games, much more.

r~l

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TS:

111

Sh
. op.

18

PC

i

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~
expenauce preferred. Con- MONEY TO LOAN, AUTO,
.laC! Pleasant Valley Homo DEBT CONSOLIDATION,
eo,. SaNices, 1011 VIand CALL (&lt;108)8110-7480
So., Pl. Pleasano, WV 25550 · 24 HOUR RESPONSE
or caU (304)675-7400 or
t-800-746-0078AAIEOE
I'RomistoN.u.

..

aa!::.on
lht. '"" pip 1 .,.

Christian's Construction,
Inc.. 1403 Eastern Avenue,
Gallipolis (7&lt;10)446-4 514
'
Warehouse/ DeHvary per·
son Full-lime benefila l'fJ.
'
'
pi)' at Ufestyle Fumllure. No
phone calla. Apply on per·
son, 858 3rd Avenue, Gallipolls OH
'
.

1141

B~
'fRAINtNG

:•uv-v..- ·

1'.

Hm.m;

JiORSAJ..E

SA l24 E. Pomomy, 740'~
992·2528. Rua Moore; ·

=~.:: ;27~;~r:a: t;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;:-,:;;;;:

~·

::n

I

5-390

·

room, 2 bath. al, electric,
porch, excellent condition.
$16,000
make
offer.
(740)446·712 7

1st lime buyers· Govern·
ment loans- buy loans •
sale· (740)448-3~3 Oakwood Supercenter

I

I

• "' &amp; dtyer.
oewago pold. $375 rent, 95115 or 17&lt;10,......-~w.
Otllce building.-· $375 dopotlt. (7&lt;10)3811- IO&lt;VIrglnla.

0

Bad

On

~8:'f~5-~ Pe~onrh

8.99% Fixed Interest Rate,
1-1188-928·3426
.

an
·~ •. ~
aero Iota, weat of Rio

Grande, lrom $25.900.
(740)245·5747
LAND WANTED &amp; FOR
SALE We buy and aeiiBnd
all othar Southam Ohio.
Contact us for mOre dalails·
Anll1anyl..ondCo.,Lkl.·
1.-21:t-U11
www..aallnd.com

r

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.

•

•

1 and 2 btd"""" ape~ments, tumllhed and unlur·
nlshed, eecurlty depoalt ,..
qulred, no petl, 740-992·
2218.
BEAunFUL

APART·

IIEtml AT BUDGET PRio

Ga

=.c·

r

I

Tara T~;-vnh~~- 1 Apart •
men1I, very ...,.......ous, 2
l!edn&gt;orr18, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1'2 Bolh F II C
led
'·
' u Y arpe '
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poot, Pallo, Start $386/Mo. No Pets,
Loa10 Plua Security Depoolt
Roqulnld, Oaya: '140-448·
3481; EV8fllngs: 740·~70502• 740-448-() 101 ·
Twin River Towera now ac·
.cepllng applicellons to'
1BR. HUD subeldlzod apl.
lor elderly and dllllbiOd.
. EOH.
(""")"7" ~79
~"' ;rvv '
Upttalra Apartment. Stove,
Refrigerator
Fumlahed,
Closo 1o Wai·Man, 34 112
Smithera
Ava..
$2751
month,
$150
depoelt.
(740)448·3670 or (7&lt;10)448·
9061.
1 and 2 Bedroom Apartmentl, Oepoalt &amp; Refer·
once. HUD Approvtd.
17401441-15 19 ,
2 bedroom .apartment In

~2':'~~~;4~~·
.....,...... '

boXee:

j

!fta
fOR.IIFxr

,_ •

I

for

1

r

al'ld Refrigerator No Pets.
$476 plus deposh. Referen·
cea Required. (740~3945

the...,...!

I··'

MIDJ!ANilOlB

MDlaiANJ&amp;:

- .., .
080
5-:

101', good llhllpo. (304)67

'
18 PieCe Place Setting of 7930
oven proof
Ballertna A
SA ~
Dilhea, $75. Exefclle Bllce. rmy
Camonauge/U
S25.(304)674-0155
SomeFIIgs our 31th yooSer.
Nllll Muter
2 Twin Headboards ·S25 ~~Air fon:e M~tetlltft ·
OIICh. Now Vent ...,; Fl,. •
plooo Logs, SIOO Lawn boy Seleo/SoNfco/lnsiOitallon ;
t,lauuer.
~ Scartna&lt; $9.00 8 monlh 100 ChanC.,.P
Co- $25 • ~by~:C~~
136
(7.0)245- 1111 .
'
'
·
.
Big TY. Take oil·
3 L.adlel JacktiS, $7 oach. omoll monlhly peymenta
~1~ ~ ~7.Bot GOod. cnldn requlnld:,
Phone. l-800-71 8-1657. · •
Appliancea: Reconditioned
S3
.. ,
Wllhera, Dryers, Ranges, Hardy Mums ·00 each~·
Rtlrl(pattn. Up To 90 Days :'!JO· ~,.~reinQuaranteedl We Sell New house
Alto. (30ot)895Maytag Applancee, French 3740 leave measage. fit
Clly Maylllg, 7&lt;10·4118-7795. (304)886-3788
. Id
Drallltl', chill o rawltll,
JET
nlghlalend. (304)678-3II04.
AERATION MOTORS '

sam:·
rc.·

S35

"":At.

•

Repai&lt;Od, New &amp; Reoolft In
Dining Room table, 8 chaifa =~~:J ~ Evana. t
&amp; hutch by Keller. Very niCe',
$500 (7&lt;10)4411-0350 aller :-:-------~

2

4pm."

MtalcUO 1ype cooler, 1~·
long, 3 yrs. old, very QO&lt;t!!,

For Sale: Roc:andlllonod condition, $500, (7&lt;10)94(.
,.
eratOfl. Thompeont Appl·
once 3407 Jacklon Ave- -ILE HOME ~All'
nue (304)675-738.11
lnlerthenn &amp; Coleman gu,
'
·
oil &amp; tloctric '"""""" lnGE· Estates Walhers, $75 eluding hi etllclency tteet
oac~. GE and Whirlpool pump oyolemo. WO COO)' •
Dryers, $80 eactt. Coli allor
I 1 II
1 M bll
1 ~· .~:.
8pm. 1740)446 •9088
B!NNETT'S HEATING ·•
CDOUNO (7~)44B-Mtl
G' · Chal 1
kf but or . 1 ~
,
0
reen
r· year·
_...
.......
Falrll' uatd. $50. (7&lt;10)245· --~.--nett
5882

wuhoro, doyers end ntlrig- 2700

l:: ",!.

=::...______

NEW AND UIED

Mollohan Co'POI, 202 Clllrl&lt;
Chaptl Road, Porter, ONo.
(740)448 7444 1·877-830•
9182· F,..
Elllmalft, Easy

NANCE&amp; FOR SALE! We
tnstaU, Free Eatlmatee, ~f
you doni Cell us, we both
L
t (740)
~~ 1 -0098448-630 8 · 1'·

FUA~

=~~~.: ==-~: ::::::..:::c:..:=::...--~
Plonex !00. 2 yaara old. 1'7-

Drive- a· little save alot.

New and Used Furniture
Slore below Holiday Inn,
Kanaugo. We Soli grave
~~~~?'~r~~~ an1dh v!!~!·
1'1UU1a. rnunua)'
ru ,__.
day 11am- 3pm. (740)448·
4782
Roll· Away Bod, $30. Foam
Rullbor 75x37x8, $5. Bor
Stool, $10. Tread Mill, 1100.

Monitor, Printer, Scanner
("77o)~~4~are, $500;
::...:.:::::::.:_::::::.__ __
REIIDENTIALAND .
COMMERCIAL
:·
AMANA· HI Efflcfe~ 92 t
~· fumacH Super 1 E"'
_...
'
',\~·
ctency
Heat Pumpa and ,4Jr
Condltlon'lfl. 10 year parts
and labor Warr~nty Included.
COMI'OIITAIR IIEAnNII &lt;
AND CCIOLINO
1
(740)441..0114
'

HIOII·~IIII-oll11
__..;...=..:.=::...:.::.:,:.__

Ultra Cutting Table, S80.
Cultlng Mat, $20. Exercise
Lazy Rldo,, $75, Back Mu· ~=~\"!n~O:';!
sour, $55. (»4)874-()155
gol lumootl Including oil
lnd
oloGiriO ~· ,.._
Washer and Dryer, SoW Mt.
_... -·-·
Ctll (7&lt;10)245-()610 .... - · HI Elllclency H..l
n'-Pumpt, ftlturlng TappaQS
""""·
FrH lncrtdlble warranty
Whtrlpool Wuher, $95. GE package.
Dryer, $95. Whirlpool A• BINN!TT'8 HEATING a
lrigorolo,, $96. GE ElectriC COOUNO (740)441-9418
Range, $95. Kenmore or 1..eoo.an.8M7.
.
WaSher/ Dryer S&amp;t, $300. www.orvb.oomlbtnnllt"Hot Point Waahar/ Dryer ...;;=:.:......;;..;;.==="set, $300. Very Nice Hot Crib with mattreu; Dof.lbJe
Point Refrigerator, New strollar,
glrll
clothes
ComprtiiOr, $300. All Ap- 18monthl·31'
(304 )875 •
pllanctl
Guarantied. 4027
•
S)cagga Apf:!Nances, 78 Vinll
Slrulel (7&lt;10)448-7398
Firewood lor Sale. $150 pe'
·
lruck Losd.(740)441-9476
l!!ll"-~...........- . , Firewood For sale. Large
SPolmNC
Pick- Up Load, $4S. Call
GooDs
. \~or (?40)256-

j

I

=:-

~t~:.n'~~!"'~~ics~ ~~=

·'

•rlll:ll"'"~~---...., ~~o.
~o•~,·
JlouiFBotD
_....,..
Goons
4 HP 220 vo11 Air~

'="·:....--:-::-::--::-=::- 1,~-------pl

2025

more Info call (140)992~

0587.
Sut'a Sllectabttl on

Ed at COuntry Homes, 7-40992·2187.
·

I

roge aportmanl localed
15 Court Street. 2. Bed· 2nd Avenue, Galllpolla,
1 112 bathe Kllchen Ohio. 2 bod'-'1, ,.,.,_.
rooms.
'
rtqUired $3001 month $300
wllh atove and rtlrigoralor. dopoolt ·(7&lt;10)448-31! 7 ·
Off Street Parking, Ciole to
·
Schools and Downtown Gractoua living. 1 and 2
Area. 559&amp; monlh pluo de- btdtoom ..,.rtmonos tl VII·
poall ond Role,.._, No 1agt Manor arod Rlvorllde
Pela. f1&lt;10)446-4926
Aperlrt10nll In Mlddltpo~.
.
F""" $278-$348. Coli 7402 bod"""" home. cme lo . 992·5064. Equal Houll/ng
town, baHmenl AIWH" view, Opponunldee.
$4251 monlh; 3 bodoooo• In
lown, 1-112 balha. Good 1o- Nice 0&lt;10 BR unlumlahtd
caliOn. $5001 monlh. Reier· apet1menl. Flange &amp; "'lngencea and depoaH required. erator provided. Water &amp;
(740)448-31144.
gert&gt;age peld. Depoall requl,td. Coli (7&lt;10)446-4345
2 Bedroom Houso. Slovo. after 8pm.
Refrigerator
Fu'rnlsht&lt;J.
$2751 monlh, $150 dopotn. North 3n!, Mlddlepon, 1
733 3rd Ave., (740)448· bedroom fumlsl'led apan~
3870 or (740}446-~1.
ment, no peta, depotlt &amp; ref(7")992 • 185.
8 ,8 ~nd
Ave.
Convenient
to
-=~.:.:..-==v.:....:c:;.._
233 2
DoY(I"'town. 2 Bedrooms, 1 Now Ta~lng Applications112 Bolh, Kllohon wilh Slove 35 Wotl 2 Bedroom Townand Rot•-,aoo,, $490/ hou• .a ..... rtrnenta, lncludaa
"W
"""sewage, Trash '
month piul deposit and Ret·
alar
...,... No Pela (7&lt;10)448- $3501Mo., 1&lt;10 448 0008.
4926. ,
.
Small 2 bedloom house In
2br. houM on 2424 Monroe EurN. $300 month, . $300
Ave. No Pets. References &amp; dfPOIII. No pete, references
Deposit. $350. month required. can after 5:00pm.
1304)11115-3815
(740)384·2560

I

.'

_
n-run .n.r.n1

I

btdmom

I

APoummlrs

Looking To Buy A Now CES AT JACK- ElHome? Oon1 Have Lind? ·TATEe, 52 \'ltatwood Drive
Ws0o111Hun)'On~10Lota lrom$29710$383.Wtlkto
LeN, 304·736-7295.
t1top 1 1110111M. Coli 740Nice 4 acre ,,... _, 440·2568. Equal Housing
GaiUpollo- ouy oemta Oppatunily.
(740)448·3563
' COrialy'a Family Uvlng,
331-40 New Uma Rd., Rut·
land, Oh1o, 740--742-7403.
Apartment, home and trailer
renlala. Commercial alorellovsu .
fronts avallabte for lease.
POR RF.NT
Vacanclea now.

15 acooa &amp; a hOUse on Owl
Holter Rd. $57,500. Contact 3 bedroom mobile home rbr ~...~,room houae for rent,
Charlet A. Smith (304)675· sale,
total
electric. ~ mo &amp; electric, Q81
3144
(740)992-5658.
haal, (7&lt;10)1143-5546
3 Bedroom, 2 Bath house In
3 Bedroom on Route 2. 98 . Fleetwood, 1811.80, 3 Patriot. $42&amp;/month plus de(304)675•5332 .
bedroom, 2 bath, Central nnalt. No Pets. Refere....... s
al,,'$20,000. (740)256·1510 •·3
In Middleport
Requlntcl. C740)379-9887
call Tom Anderson aha;
3 Be&lt;l • Cl. G
5pm, 17&lt;10)992-3348.
Assumable loans- Manu Gas H:l,m~,(7.,g)';fs:
,
3br. Large Kitchen &amp; living types available. Call for de- 5859.
.
Room. 314 Basernenl, lolal~ lails. (740)448-3683.
4 Bedroom and 2 Balh In
'omodeled ao 211 71h·S1'881 Big 16' wida, 3 bedroom 2 Gallipolis. $6001 me&lt;lh plus
New - . n. (304)862-3772 balh, save 55, 155, ~all·-ed lull'-'l. (7401441 •1519
.....
..............
&amp; 881 up on you' IOI lnclud·
Newly conatructad single lng skirting &amp; fiberglass Buy homes from 1199/mo.,
;tory 1800 sq. tooi home. steps, Cotes Mobile Homes, Foreclosures, 4% down, 30
located 10 minutes lrom U.S. 60 East, Athena, Oh, yeafl at 8.5% APFI. For 1111·
Holzer Hosphal, 20 minutes 740-592-1972.
~nJI~. 1·800·319-3323 ext.
from Plaaaant Vallay Hospltal, orr SR 160 on a private Final Days, Nationwide In1-112 acre lot. 3 bedroom, ventory
, Reduction! Pilot Program, Renters
2·112 balhs. big knChen (304)736-3409
Needed, 304' 736-7295 .
w/oak cabinets. OR, LR Limited Or No Credit? Gov· Why rent? government
wlgas log fireplace, central emment Bank Finance Only backed loans trom $490
air. laundry room, front At Oakwood In Barbours- down. (740)446-3093
porch &amp; 2·1f2 car garage.
Immediate poeseaslon. Ap- ville, wv 304-738-3409.
MOBilE HOME8
p.alsed at $125,500. Make New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
IUR RENr
offer. Call (740)446·4514 On~ $19,850. F,.. Delivery
Irom 8·5pm, ., M·SpmF, or &amp; Set, Up. 1·888·928·2426 2 Bedroom In Porter, Wa~
740 8 3246
( )44 •
suer
·
New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 er and Dryer. Water, Trash,
Ranch Style Home- fOf sate bath. Only $995 down &amp; Sewage Paid. $375 rent.
., '""' 4 bdmt. , 3 baths, 2 $189.62/ntOOllh. Cell Cheryl, $375 deposit (7&lt;10)388:~,:.ra~, ~~okS:~ ~~ 740-385-7671 .
9325
Gall. Oh.cal between 6:00- \ New Double Wide. 5195 2 bedroom, central heat &amp;
11 :00 pm, In good cond. w Par Month! 3 Bedroom, 2 air, State Route 160, Ever-r
centr81 air &amp; heat $78,000 Bath. Free Delivery &amp; Set· green. Available November
'educed 304-727-3318
up. 1-886·928·3428
1sl.l740)448-6189

I

Very nlc8, 2·3 bedroom

Nice lola, quiet counory ttl· .:...,
~ ~.: •
tlng. wil accommodate more'. (7-40)992..()2g8
1Bx80, $100 per month, call
•

vlo&amp;ldonoflhei•.Our
rNdlta are heNbV

..

Anti· .

(7-40)367.0129
~;~~ School. (304)8.112·
2.7acros, uneven terrain, in ~ Remodeled
S.
Welchtown, $2700, piau&amp; ..........,and
Bed!• 3 Mo2
call (860)563-3753, Leava
Home on 141.~
name and number
Nov. 1st (7.t0~ 118
lndl
c'"" E~-le ••

...........,...for lUll
atm. which Is tn

11993 Clayton 14x80, 3 bed·

AVON I AI Areas I To Buy or - •
SaU . Shlri- •~·,. 304~
...
,
wt""' '
TURNED
DOWN
ON
6 1429·
SOCIAL SECUArrt 18811
WANTED: Expe,lenced
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
RooR.v. &amp; Camanter Fore1..aaa-582.3345
',""' lid driv··-, lice
mans, va .
ar 8
nae,
hand loole. 'ellobla Irons~ion 1r:nrenpes
f
•
e)l

r-" ~
11uy., .... R'-lnlt
17.~ quoo
WOier, TIUh, • 1350
"'~~
1124 Eaat Main on

j

....!:::'""

I

apartment, In town, large Umlltd EdiUon collector
LR ·~-- a~
ldtchln,
• ..,._ .. ...,. ,....- pfatea 1tlll in orgll\ll
&amp; dopolll requlrtd. Nonnan Rockwell, Hum·
C740l 418 3814
meta, Knowlea, McleJand, '

knOwingly-

riD

polo, -

·-~- 1 3 btdroom,lnPor1er, wu1t-

Large Cumlnos Ashlng Nal, ::,_

~e,

Childs Table

what everybody has

wanted

to see for some rime now. I
guess people are anxious to
see how gond he is;' Sprewell
said. "I expect him to play

total in league history. But he
is canting back wilh a team
that won only 19 games last

hard and to get a lot of shots

was lhe team

off."

1986 Buick Leoab,., 3.8. ::11,:.40:c)388-=::.9055=---pw, pi, po, a;,, am/1m cas- 1996 Cho\ly Ext. Cob. 4x4.
sette, cruise &amp; tiH, S2300 6 7 ~. 11 • ~~·
~~~~~~== 080 (740)948-2131
· $12.200
'U:CI
lfll """"'""'.
lion.
OBO.
Leave
1992 G"'nd Prix, SE, V~. ~. Will Return Cal.
A/C, Powe' Wtndowa, New (7&lt;10)146 4880
~;:· S3,000. "(»4)875 " ~5 F·150 4x4, air, amllm
ca1S8118, $10,000; 86 car
I 992 Plymoulh Sundanoo. tralle,, 16', lull metal lloO&lt;.
(~~~~L
Red, 2 Doo,, Approx. (7&lt;10)992·7551.
~
106,000 miles. Good Condl·
Auolrallan Shophenl pups, lion. 51400. (740)448-3674 97 Aal"' VM, ~,000 miles,
NSDR. CurNII't health re- after 5:30pm or leave ~ air, CrJJise, t II, PW, PL,
~ $70 n .. f\WlA""2128 sa
AMIFM Cassetta, dual air
00
'~•
' •·-,-~
ge.
bags, ABS, soaos 7, like
etenlngolleave message.
1993 Buick Pa"' Ave, 4 new, Must sam (740)379f\Qtweller Puppy, male, 11 doOr, this beautilul car Ia a 21341aava messaga.
months old, dOg box, Chair, one owner with 52.000 Get A...-. 1 Wl 1 1987
qtllar, food. Hat aU vacclna· miles with every option,
- 7 or
n er. .
. $150 080. No Pa- IWIUI"f at its best at this loW 4x4• Ranger, 3" body I1H.
,._ (7&lt;10)441-o950 (Days). price, $8800, 17401992• Slandanl. Runs and Looks
&lt;10)441-11656(EYOfllngs) 6719
.
G'oal.
$2500
OBO.
.
1740)245-9502
- - - - - - - - 1993 Dodge Oynal!y,
UKC Rat Terrier pups. $1700 N
TJ
Good
· ew res.
MOTORCY~
$150. C4sh Firm. tails
docked mother &amp; tathll on WM: Car. (740)256-6002
....,
w
pfe!T'iSes. (304)743-3306
1993 Grand Am. 2 door, au- ·
to, $2,595; 1992 Cavalier, 2 1983 Harley Davidson
~------- door, aulo, $1,695; 1994 FLHT, Elctra-~lde, aloe.
Yellow Lab Puppies KC Cavalier, 2 door, 5 speed. blue! 42,000 mtlos, lurpack,
~istered $200. Each. $2,695; 1993 Buick Century 2 Windshields, soft saddle.
Roady lo Gol (304)675· $2,495. CooK MOTORS, 304·875·6335 call aile'
4il69
(7&lt;10)448-0103
Bpm.

soC--

$5. Large Auortment Fish·
,
lng Ll.lrJIS, New and Used, !~pendent Herballfe · Dll$3 each. (740)446-9635 tribUIO,, Cal! For Product Or
Leave Message.
Opportu"ll'- 1740)441-1982·

___

~

ril

mr-~--~~

~
:
l"'

.~&amp;
V.EGETABI..F.S

i.-.-.iiilliiliiiiliii-_.1

. I

Jordan W3S spectacular at
rimes during the preseason,
scoring 41 against New Jer-

sey

and 18 in one quarter
against Miami. But the play-

en guatding Jordan in those
games were rookies Richard
Jeffenon and Brandon

Arm-

strong and the since-released
Donny ManhaU of the
along

with

the

waived Rodriey

Nea,

retently

Buford of

the Heat.

!iii;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;

1999 Ponllao Gnmd Prix
4dr. V-6, auto, AJC. Very
good condition. Asking
59.800. (304)67!HI440

I \I&lt;\ I "I 1'1'1 II-.,
S I I\ I .., II If h.

1° "''"· · FARM

~

••

j

j

Auro PAKI'S &amp;
A~

I

.__oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio-'
Are you looking for engines

' ... a!!'EICMtiiiO ss. mt"!i'llxt. oi transmissions? Give m9
EQuiPMF.Nr
. In good condition, drives, a call at (740)44fHl519

runs, but needs work,
QCT.&amp;
NOV.
FARM $2500; 93 Cavalier, autb, Budget Priced TranamlaSSUIPMENT SPECIALS looks good, runs good, slons All Types, Access To
KEEFER'S SERVICE CEN· $1500, (740)992~566.
Over 10,000 nansmissloos,

~~~~NT?~iP~~YPO~N;

91 Uncoln Towncar and Its

~~'f't~u~=~7J:,0·245-

. a beauty! Air ride, Milo lls;tlt - - ·- .- - - - - -

FIHONE
(304)895·3874
Ntew Holland 7610 l'acl"'
9Qhp 4wd w1th loader rental
unll
780
hours
S25,500.,New Holland 6610
4wd. tractor BOhp, rental
u~it 487 hours, full warranty,
$23,500 ., New Holland
3ll10 '4wd. tractor 42hp 8x2
d?ansmlssion 1 double
.x.tve, $18,500., Used f'.lew'
H_jlland 1725 Compact trac·
tQr Boomer sories 25hp 4wd
11~5 houfs $9,500., Used
New Holland 4630 2wd lrl"ic·
tor 55hp with 7310 loader
997
hours
1
owner
$.14,900., Used Ford 3610
tlactor 2wd 42hp 1 owner
$8,900. , Used Ford 4610
tractor 52hp 2wd ROPS
large pump $9,900., Used
MH L-555 Skk:l Steer loader
82" Duckol &amp; pallett lo""'
$1,900., Used Deutz 4006
4wd tractor 40hp Rops and
~Y
1200
hours
"" 500 \)sed J 0 h0 """- 8
•1 OA
•
·•
"""'
BaCkhoe ~ Loade'
,500., John Deere Gator
2 use~. at John Deere
~~ctory 63 hou,. Dump
ll;d, more extras $5,000 .,
New ~olland · 1465 9" Hay·
tlone $1MOO., New Holland
iss
Rake $3.400., New Holland 130 140 Bu Spreader
$5,200.,New Hoiland 185
~7 Bu Spreader Hyd endg•te tandem a1de $9,500.,
New Holland 3106 Slurry
$preader 137s gal tandem
aMIB $9,500., All New Hoi·
18nd new tractors and
equipment have VALUE
BONANZA 0% financing tor
36 months or cash rebate.

~

.

YANMAA YM 1500 Tractor,
tiiesel. 3 point hitch, $2,150.
Also, new 4' 'tlnlsh mower,
still In crate, $65o. Shipping
available. Located just outside of Hu~ISVIIIe, AI (256)
7'76·9435 WWW.JTl&amp;ynarde·
Qlolpmonl.com

I

was

Miami being left out of last
year's title game in favor of

2

for com-

puter-rank average, 0.32 for

strength-of-s~hedule,

system

Florida State, a

team the

Hurricanes beat ·during the

zero

The Yankees also hoped to see
a different Diamondbacks team .
As in, !he one that went 40-52

year

!his

wl\en Schilling and

Johnson did not pitch.
Hrian Anderson, who has
struggled ;oil season, will start for
night

against 20-game

dimmet (740)446-9523 o' Chfome alop ba,. lor 1998
f7&lt;10)448-1443
&amp;1500 Chevy pick·up
'
·
· ,..,u
'92 Olds Ac:hleva, 2 door, j~ cal&gt;, I-)67H325,
PS. PB, PL, aula, air,
·
amlfm/casaelte,
$1400.
"- IH\Itl '(740)591-7075

9~ c~ Corvene, white
With red Interior. Gtass,roof.
dual climate control, dual
power seats, like new
26 ·000 miles. $ 18,9Y5.
1740l446 -8 9B1
96 Mustang Purple, 47,000
miles, good condition.
$8400., 3 sets of used tires
different prices. (304)675·
4154

r10

HOME

IMPRo~

et to set lhe tone and be able to
give him a lead to work with,"

Joe

Yankees manager
Torre said.
"We need to pitch. We need to

..
.
do1111Jlate.

managed

The Yankees

hitting just .102 ovmll.
The last time a team got as few as

and are

hits in consecutive Series

games was 1971 when Baltimore

Slruggled against Pittsburgh.
Paul O'Neill · (9- for- 19, four
homers), Tino Martine2 (5-for·13, four homers) and ..,.,ra)
other Yankees have enjoyed
career succes&gt; against Anderson .

NewYork is counting on a big
night to spark a comeback similar to 1996, when it dropped two

season.
Okbhoma

bonus deduction for beating

points · -

Oklahoma.

age, 3.83 for computer rank,

Series games at home to Atlanta
before winning lhe next four.
"We are forewarned;' Ariwna

.036 for strength of sched-

manager Bob

The bonus award this season -

is

new

based on a

ule,

I

3.5

7.59

for poD aver-

for losses and a

1.1-

sliding scale from 1.5 points

point deduction for beating

for beating a first-pbce team

Texas earlier this season.

down to .1 for a win over
the

15th-place team. The

Brenly said. "We

know what lheYankees are capable ofdoing.We know what they
have done in .the

Mianti had 7.71 points-

past."

Brenly. meanwhile, wotild not

1 for poD average, 3.67 for

comntit to

bonus is awarded afier the

computer

Anderson. It could

first

strength of schedule, zero for

next, allhough

losses and zero bonus point

on

four

elements

are

added.
Without the bonus-point
element, Miami would have
been second and Oklahoma

rank, 3.04

for

deductions.

be Schilling
he'd be pitching

r

can say !hat ifwe win Game

3 behind Brian Andenon that
Miguel Batista ~I

start Game,/1.

PART·TIME COLLECTOR
Formers Bank &amp; Sovl~s Co .. Pomeroy,
Ohlo Is ~king a perM me collector (a
maximum of 35 hours per week) tor tts
Pomeroy office. We are looking tor
someone wlth collections experience,
~ood communication B&lt; computer skills.
· esponslbllltlesldutles Include but not
limited to moklng doll~ phone coils.
Pfeparotlon/malllng of orm collection
letters. Pfeparotlon of reports. utilization
of computer to facilitate dolly
responsibilities. personal contact with
customers. flllng small clolms. aSSisting full
time collector.
·
Send cover letter and detailed resume
to. Formers Bank, Attn; Human Resources
Director. P.O. Box 626, Pomeroy, Ohlo
45769, Formers Bank Is on Equal HouSing
lendet Member FDIC. and Equol
Opportunity Employer.

. 110 Help Wanted

10&lt;1.'

to

two-man team, and d1ey are mistaken," Batisa said. " I teU people;
Schilling won 22 games and
Johnson ~

21, but who m:&gt;n
50 or so'"
Earlier in the day. many of the
Diamondbacks visited lhe site of
the World Trade Center collapse.

. d1e olher

They greeted firefighters, police
officen and rescue worken,

signed autographs and even were
wished good luck by many New
York

funs.

"I

think

some of us had some

anxiety about seeing it," Grace
I v.&lt;Juldn \ haYe been

said. " But

able to live with mysdfifl didn\

"

.

go.
Houn later, Grace, 36, was like

a little

kid

as

he entered lhe sta-

even was singing as he
walked down a baUway tow:ud

dium. He

the clubhouse.
"T m gOing to stand in lhe
same batter's box as lhe Babe;' he

said. "Afier 14 seasons in lhe
majon, I 6naUy made it toYankee
Sadiurn. And I made for the
right reason, to play in the World
Series."
When

walked

the
to

Diamondbacks

the

outfield

for

stretching. he jogged straight to
lhe mound.
·
Grace

did a slow

tum and

took in ;oil \he sights, pointing at
the famous facade above right
field and lhe monuments beyond
lhe

wall in left-center.

While

he

grounden at

fielded

practice

first base,

Brenly

could hardly contain his excitement.

uThis is awesome;· Gr.1ce said

~~~-~·~~~
UBLIC ·
...•. ,.... ,..,.~

IELEPHDIE DPERATORS
.

NIEDID NOW.
WILL TRAIN •

•

BENEFITS AVAILABLE
MANY SHIFTS
AVAILABLE.

I'CALL NOW
t·888·974·JOBS

97 Mazda. low miles, NC. 5 =::-::-...:..-:--:-..,-:c-speed,
power steering, C&amp;C General Home Mainte·
power brakes, $5,800. nence· Painting, vinyl lld:.:17_40")~44-'8-'-'0'-'7-::44-:::-:--:-:-- ing, wpentry, d.,.,._ win·
·::
dowa, baths, mobile rlome
For Sale- (2) t984 Monte repair and more. For free
Carlo SS· (I) for pans· (1) estimatecai!Chet, 740-992·
needs motor and trans- 6323.
Both $1500· (740)•••
-'i~~---'""!'-,
- ·7877 m

r

.

Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

CLASSIFJEDSI

Eu.cnuCAIJ

CUSSIFIEDS!

•

Seld IlK being:
replacement or •
IlK oft mlll 111 rate
notexcHdlng 1 (one)
mille lor each one
dollar of .valuation;
which omounto to ton
ctnts ($0.101 for each
one hundred dollaro
of valuation for five
(5)yeoro.
Tho Polls lor said
tloctlon will open ot
8:30 o'clock A.M. end
romoln open . until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
sold dey.

a

Mailing Our Sale1 ~rochureal
F""' Suppllea, Pososvol
sosn lmmtdlalelyl
Genuine Opportunity!
For Free Information,
Call Toll Free:
1-888-615-1835.

than 6 moa.
Vacations (Hawaii 2001)
•· .,...,,. with children•

Special Buy any large pizza

or

Aooolullon ol tho
Vlllogo Council of the
· Vlllogo of Syrocuoo,
· Syracuae, Ohio,
pooood on tho 2nd
dey of Auguot, 2001,
thoro
will
be
oubmlttod to a vote
of tho peoplo of oald
oubdlvlolon at a
GENERAL ELECTION
to be held In the
Vlllogo of Syracuoo,
Ohlo, 11 the regular
ploaoo ol voting
thoroln, on tho 6th

purpoae of current
••peneea.

By order of the Board
ol Elecllono, ol Melgo
County, Ohio.

Lif;;;);;(:i;,;g.if;;;;;i:is;';~"'ILoana

GRAIN

NOnCE lo hereby
given
that
In

2001, tho qiHiollon ol
lovylng • iox, In
exoeaa of the ten mill
llmltotlon, for tho
benollt ol Syrocuoo
Vlllogo
lor tho

I

by County Bank, ::::;~;I
e..,ch, DE (FDIC), Equtl 0

l ~==r~flli&lt;XiNsOLii5AffiBiliTll·.:t1~::::~··~':~~-~

~on;;com;;;n.;;;;;;;;q;iiiO;;;iT.~

I
LOANS O.A.C.
From $2,500-$125,000.
9% average r •.
One· hour apptoval.
Call F.C.C.S. roll·free
1..a88-605·3319

"'"DEBT CONSOLIDATION"""
almple low monlh ly paym.,•tl
~~~~~~=·~. High Interest
while becoming O&amp;bt
Ptotl""" lor rentere, hOmeowners .
people with credit
t1 i
In credH· carde,
medical bills and
Can 1-800-697·2200
lotCtion calls, reduoe payment• up
50I(c)(3)Noi·FO&lt;·P,olo
50%, tower lntereat. Nonprofit, IMvw.c:smlb'~IJOCredil.otg.

::·:,:,I

u...

NOTICE OF
NOnCE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
ELECnON ON · TAX
LEVY IN EXCESS OF LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
THE TEN MILL
LIMITAnON
LIMITATION
"
Reviled Code,
ReviHd Code,
Sectlono 3501.11(GI,
Secllont 3501.11 (G),
5705.19, 5705.25
5705.te, 5705.25

day of November,

.REFluGMATION
~
Residential or commercial
wiring, new service or re·
pairs. Master ~lcensed elec·
triclan. Ridenour Elaclrlcal,
WV000306. 304-675-1788.

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

OTICES ,,.,. ~~~~ ... ~......~~. ~· · ·1"4 k •:h· ~: ~~:

pureuance

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furnlstled. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hra. (740) 446·
0870,
1-800-287-0576.
Rogers Waterproofing.

HAY&amp;

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Straw. Year 'Round Delivery
If Volume Dlscoont Avalla·
ble.
Heritage
Farm.
(304)675·5724 .

happen

s[J))Ded by. Smiling broadly, Grace

three days' rest.

"I

The final BCS standing&lt;
will be released Dec. 9. ·

a starter \&gt;eyond

BASEMENT

DRIVERS WANTED
•
Rt. 7 Pizza
&amp; Racine Pizza Express
Stop in after 10 am
301 Vine St. Racine
or call
949-4900

Registered Quarler Horse
mare. 16 months old, Bay,
V8ry Gentle. Sonny D BAR
&amp; Impressive StOOd Lines.
$1500. (304)675·8440

only

one run and six hits at Ariwna.

WATERPROOFING

3yr, otd Mule been rode , out.
o1 gated Jack. $1500
(304)578-3259

Horae Trailer Goose Neck,
87 Lazy-N. 2 horse Slra!ghl
load. Good Condition.
,., 800. (304)875-6440

winner

Roger Clemens.
"We certainly need lhe Rock-

Londo,.

etood 9 ~anch . Kent\d(y
Horse Park Equine Man·
\lg&amp;ment Certified. Now of·
r•rlng Western &amp; English
. riding lessons. Foals lor
tale. Horse &amp; Foal training.
l&amp;ssJca Donahue (304)6756538 Al2 N. Point Pleasant.

3 Tuesday

Atiwna in Game

for losses and a 1.3-point

had

should

-----------

;J

Richards Brothers Fruit
m, APPlES
AND
UCH MORE. 24 miles
o ol Gallipolis on Coun-

bonus-point

devised in the aftermath of

in the BCS standings for poll average,

7.71 points to OU's

8.69 points. IronicaUy, the

· fnNnPapA5

Series

six

third -

If we

G.une 3, we'll take it under
advi~&gt;,emerlt:• he said.
Ander;on was jUSl 4-\1 lht•
flomhgeA5
~r. had two &lt;tints o n the disBack ar horne, lhe Yankee; abled list and has 1101 started since
found a chan&amp;" in lhe -.ther.
Sept. 8. Batisa was 11-8 wilh a
Wilh;m October chill in lhe air. · 3.31• ERA, p itc hing mo~tly in
they broke out S\Waoshins for a relief
practice.
"A lot of people dunk !his is a

1m--4-.
93~~------------~------------------------------------5
speed, 2 Door, 114,000 New helmets &amp; intercom.
miles. $2000. (740)256· $9,000. (304)578-3259
1487
For Sale- 1988 Goktwlng
1995 Buick Skylark, Very GL1500- recently aerviced,
G_ood Condition, Sharp, new llres end bal1ery.
$2800. (7&lt;10)245-9060
$7500. (740)446-7877

.b

BCS

4x4, Red,

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

__
Appllt:ellotiS being- lof Mocio t 1938 Turidlll Mauo-, •

In

SIX

championship ring&lt; and v.ilh
the fourth-highest scoring

123,000 milaa. Chrome
Wheels, New n,.., $8000.

I

• .,......
20/mo, 61 .._.76- 3 bedroorna, no pets,,.,...
~ 51
~
lnld
$300
1661.
ences ..."'u ·
7
3
2 12
1.o1s &amp;
monllt. C &lt;10) 79- ~
3 Mobile Homea 1200 Dt__
ACREAGE
posit $300, monih NCh. 1
Located In HarUord. 2
(4) 5 acre Iota for aBle. Acro11 lrom Ntw .Haven

Thla new I IIF wHI not

16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
Monlh, 8.89% Flt&lt;td lniS"'II
Rale With Air And Un·
dorplnnlng 1-888-928·3426

j

C:
r:!:,&gt;'. t!:
riO
v!"at~~ :at

.:.;.,.o..::::.:....::=---

...........

9325

paw~:.._ or

I

SFJlVICtiS

3003 after 6pm.

c ,;__

~ ~..,..._......

on

I

I

..-,.-.,,.,-....
,_-...,origin, or ony lnlontlon to
. - .. youch

riO

,:.:!1'""------,

•

r.

kMMIUon bMed on

ices to work part·tlme at the
Athena OffiCe, 507 Richland
n.ll8ble on.,~
Avenue, Suite 1108, Alh·
opportunllybaue..
ens, Ohio. Q•"bUgrw· A
background In o1t1co proceduros wilh . _.... ualng
lfoMili
a
and Mac "'""'""•'
WIH haul •WO'f, clean out, ·
~ .,., •
reQuired A bachelor's de- clean up or move almost ...,
r"'" ~
•
9,.. wloh a&gt;&lt;perionceln edu, anylhlng. , Coli (740)446·
calion Is P'ola,ed. Musl 7604
.. "
Rio Gntnde Area. 2 lied·
have intemet . reaeamh
rooms, 1 112 Bath, L.A ..
sklls. If applicant Is called
Kitchen, Large Level lot.
for an Interview, a portfolio
B~
'Immediate ' PosseSIIOn.
wllh oampiH of Won! and
""'-·-·
$27,900.(740)448-2801
EXCEL tlocumenls wll bo
vnvu~l~"""
required. Job Oaplpt!gn: .
For Rent or Sale. Small
TI'P' and prepa'o final
tNOTICEI
Houso $250. Monlh + $200.
dntlls ol couroea ol lludy" OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· Deposit
(»4)727-3318
and tllgnment projects; help lNG CO
nd lhal lrom 8pm-1tpm.
COC&gt;Rllnale cuiTiculum P'ol· youdobi.=':h:.O,Ie F Sale 1!ed
H
3
-and proloaalonal devol- you knOw, and NOT 1o tl8nd H:..,,..,. 304""";'5-t'f:·
opmont IICIM11ft O&lt;giUtlzed money lhrough the mail until
· I )6
by lhe SONice center. 00 you have lnVOIIigatOd lhe Fe&lt; aale by owner. Nlco bi·
1 ..,. IIOjlr
~~0,:~1~~uO:~: ollering.
·
leYel home
log curriculum profec:ta· and
Chester. Three bedroom,
help coordinate and di~trib- Start Your Business To~ two baths, onKar garage,
uta resources for curriculum day... Prime Shopping Cen- famlty room Mth fireplace,
pro)OOW.llalm; Negotiable. ~or Space Available AI AI· stm room. New central ileal·
PIU§Q aubmH lgUgr qf lnlgr- ~b~~~~~~~1~~iley ~..';'~~but': ~~:
egt and rerm tq· John c. aza,
·
ate (740}98
1
COstanzo, ESC Superln·
MONh
v ·
Iondono Alhona·Melga Edu·
.
cationai service Center 507
TO l.A:&gt;AN
Vmton
Distress
Sale.
1
Rl hi d A
S
II ~
$ 0,000 caah, G,.., Houso.
c an
venue,
u e
Newer Vinyl ~ding, Roof,
108, Alhena, Ohio 45701. Loan Avallablol All 1ypea ot Fumace. 4 l!edrooma. Out
Apgl!catjon [)ead!n•· Mon- ctedtt
welcome. No fees ot town. OWner mult ute.
day, November 5, 2001. up tront. CALL TOLL FREE .
Main
Tile AMESC Is an Equal 1-IHM!-:107·5028. .
Opportunity. Employe'IP""
vidor.
LOANS! LOANS! LOANS!
Pleuanl Valley Home eo,. Problem Paying Bills? ..On
Stovlcea hat a lull-limo Oebt7 Good, Bad, or no
opening for 8 Physical credit. Bankruptcy Weix
3br. Troller. $3900.
The&lt;aplsl. Must have WV coma. Coli- Froo 1-888- 14 70
and Ohio licenae. P'8\ltous 4fl8.948.11.
(304)458-2549

Gallipolis eo- Collogo
I \11'111\\ll \I
(Co"""' Closo To Home)
Sal88p8""" Full-lime, ben- Call Todayl7&lt;10-448-4367,
-..1 !{\II I -.,
eflts, retail experience refer1-800·214..()4.52,
ed App1
Ul
1e F
R
~ ""12748
IllO
r ·
Y at e&amp;ty uml·
IIELPWANnD ture. No phone
calls. Apply .,db
·
·
MJSCFIJ..•MX&gt;Us
...__ _ _ _ _ __.. In ~rson. 858 lrd Avenue,
'
Gallipolis, OH. ·
•
,
$AcUons$- $$Bring$$·
For &amp;ale· Mauaoteum two
SSSCash$$5
As Easy as ABC! 2 week Sally Beauly Supply In Gal· crypt spaces, Melva Memc&gt;
COL Training· Greal Pay Npolis Is now hiring Inside ry Gardens, $5000, can
Salea Cia,, PIT ~y. Apply (304)8112·3864.
And Benefits. SO
Down Training and UfeUme in Person, No phone cans
UJ'
n~
Placement· No EKperience ptease.
Necessary- CALL NOW!
WHAT A GREAT
TO Do
1-888·209-0617
OPPORTUNITY.
Georges Portable Saw,.ll,
Domino's of Point Pleasant Plnk_erton ~ec:urity Is ac- don't haut your togs to the
and Eleanor Locations now ceptlng applications for the mliljust call304-675·1957.
hirind Fu!l-Tma &amp; Part· Time Buffalo, WV area. Mu!ll -"-'.!::.::..:::.c:.:..;.;:.:,:...:.:;:;.:_
Sale Drivers. Apply in per· nave EMT· B quaHflcatlon. Give plano lessons rln my
son 420 Viand Street. F't. Pt. Uniforms, traWling, benefits, home to beginners&amp;'aduttB,
or call (304)675-5858
sign on bonus provkUKI. For also teBCh chording &amp; trans·
.;._.;...:..;.;;..:..:...:...:=-- ti'IOse Interested please ap- posing,
If
lntar.ested
Phone People Needed
ply at 1032 12th Slreet (1.0)992·5403.
FuiVPart-Time available
Weat, Huntington, WV or '-..:C.-----CaSh paid weekly,
call (304)697 ·4502 or 1· ! would like lo sil with the
· no experience necessary 8 0 0 . 2 4 1 • 7 4 5 4 . elderly in their home. Phone
Call Jan 0 675-n:ro
EDE/MIFIDN.
(304)675-8781

I

TRI-COUNTV CONsTRUeTION.
New
Construction/Remodeling.
•Sieling, *Roofing, 'Drywall,
"We Do It All• Frae Estimaosa. 674-4623/674-3855

11

-

na

head fake.
"It's going to be fun . It~

r

1988 4 door Chevy Cava·
~,;;;;;.,;;;;;;.;;~-., lier. $800. Call (»4)88 2• 1994 F-251!,

but vety dMn ooe or 8mm Rille $100.IIoyulol.
bidioom ll]ll'tmlnt. Cooo- and sCabbard, 70 Round~-·
tJy 8lftinD yet dON to town. at .-moon Bmldolecn: 'in-1993 16tdl0, 3 -aoou, 2 3 l!tdloom Tr.llo&lt;, 3 - 1743 ~ Rol!d· W. , . . _ - o1 a-go. Col(
balh, air, lhlnglo rol&gt;f, vinyl 11om _ , on 588. Rtl!tger· 1M and Traatt Removal In- (SO(l)675-2352
tieing, oleclrlc island - · ·otor, Stove FumiShtCI. - . T . - payo - . ri
$11,000firm. EJ cslantoon- ~ ::rol150(7~ !riC. NC lnd Elec:lrlc 1*1.
dillon (7&lt;10)448-7127
17&lt;10 4
"' _,........ - · tJ'YW, St!Mt, Frig.
,....,.....,~
.
M1.
included. No Pets. Non · - - - - - - - '

In thiiMWIPPIIIr..

Know.,....,,

:'~"1\or~=~~e~

1985 Skytine 14x70, 3 bed- 3 btdiCMh """"· Good COndilion. Cal Mklclloport,
Harold, 7~9948.
(740}982-5858.

'--..;,;iiiioiiiiiiiioo_.l

h

returns wit

reels that evening by
making him look bad wilh a

light

Qooo

::=r
c
'"=~ 1r "=.=-I r "==' 1~.-.·
1

AI,......_ 811utrtllll•

-----==--

Make money '"' Chrislmaa,
S Tum your rummage &amp; S
sell Avon. Call (740)-448·
unwanted items into cash, 3358
740-992-9734 Of 740-742·
McClure's Restaurant now
1&lt;108.
hlmg all 3 locations; lull 01
4 Free Kittens, 2 months pari-time, pick up appllce·
old. 3 Female, 1 male. lion at location &amp; bri baclc
ba&amp;
(7&lt;10)446-9582
9 .30 ng
10rda~ ' MonOay a:u Sat.
Free beautltul kittent, 2
black (perfect for Hollow- u y.
eon), 1 block &amp; yellow llge,, Overbrook Center Ia cur·
(7&lt;10)992-6248.
rently seeking a beautician
to work part time In the factiF&amp;rae5alclo,1~~1.v1~:'"
1onY·~~: lly'a beauly oalon. Candl·
~ .. - 1 ~· daiSS ahould po110sa a valt'~s~~(71:)~~9~~~re id managing coatnOIOIOglst
license aa well aallalllllly Inl.arrliOUNDAND
~ -su,ance. Salary Is based
on commlaalon. lnlerosted
..__ _ _ _ _ __. . candidates ahould conoact
~
lhO 01,..,.., ol Mari&lt;etlng ol
Admlnls"a'"' at (7&lt;10)992·
8472 · EOE
PM-tlme pooillon available
In Melga County Ohio &amp; Mason County, WV, to complate lnturanee exams,
blood &amp; urine COIIOCIIona.
Fax resume to: 304·766·
1684 or mall to Personnel,
PO Box 845, Dunbar, WV
25064.
November 2nd and 3rd.
Johnsons G,..nhouso, 2nd Part-time lax . prapa'e's
needed for busy tal office,
Ave. Baby Clolhes, Chlkhn Pomeroy locallon We win
Clothes, Home lntarlor, train. Send resurn"e to: The
Wlnlar Clothes.
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 7294l'oMEIIoYARD~SAIJ'loiMIDo!E
·
13 Pomeroy Oh 45789
•
•

6

'I'RtJcKs
FOR SAui

Jo rda n

-4-wheele&lt; ot oqoal value "' 88 Chevy 314 ""'· ' 000ill on- season when he
sale
S3000. Cal Robe.. gino,
Ho, PS, f'B , president.
Neal 1o&lt;
(304)675-6540
54.200.NC,
(740)&lt;46-0744

~

............... "
............ lo . . ...,.,,... ......... Acil:ot1 ...
.,..,__,....,,,
Jsln.....,.ot'U...._

'
. Why walt? Start meeting
Ohio singles lonight. call loll
.... 1-BOQ.. 788-2823 exl

r

S

Includes Fre~ Yard Sale Sign!_
All D!splav: 12 Noon 2
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Business Days Prior To
Publltetlon
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Sundty Dls.plt'f': 1 :o'o
1
Ads Must Be Prepaid
Thursday for sundays· ••··••

Word Ads

will St:lrt at smaD forw,ud,
matching up on opening
night wilh Kniclo forw.rd

97 GMC Sonoma SlS.
"I go in wilh no precon18,000 milft, king cat&gt;. ceived ideas other than just to
7500 · 17&lt;10)!192·4100 Of play hard, and whacever hap'
(7&lt;10) 54 '-3532.
Fe&lt; Sale- 1111!6 Font F150, pens, happens;' Jordan said
300 a cyt., aulo, $1850. Monchy. "I'm in better shape
7877
(7&lt;10)448than I thOught I would be. I
-~;;:;;;;;;;:-"l
Fe&lt;
Sale1988
Toyola
I
ton
r
Flallled w/ ,..,.. 51h wheel 1ee1reallYgood n'ght now "' loave . . . . _.
plale. 46,000 llCiuol . . -. · just want to go in and get off
_ _,.. 1986 PlyToouth Rellanl, 4 (;.:~ 1m ti-. $3500. to a good start of the regular
cyo., au1o, one owner,
season, and hopefuDy the
48.000 .BCtualmikis,$1,800,
VANS&amp;
~~~~:_: (7&lt;10)742-2852
4-Wils
team feels the same way."
1987 Font Van, aulo Whee~
SpreweU was also on the
chai' lift., 1987 Ch'YS"" 1986FontF·150 300 6cly
New Yorker, Looka and 4 sp 4x4 runs
's900'
Runs good. (304)675-3734 (7&lt;10)247:2961.
'
'

675-13~3

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Girilge/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Holt To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

Now AolcJng
I740J258-MOO

with a laub~l Monday that
Johnson nude ;oil th&lt; high-

the 38-y&lt;:~r-old jordan. He

1982 Font Gra.-. , _ .
lenl Running Condition
Body and ,......, 1n Fai;
Condition, $750. (7&lt;10)268_1426
_______
1986 Cadillac Cimmaron.
Recently Pllinlod. Needl
molor
won&lt;.alief 5:30pm
$350.
(740)448.3674

1\el}t~ter

(304)

~.

oprcxing team when Magic
Johnson nude his comej:lack
in 19'.H&gt; after a . 4 1/2-year
retirement. Sprewell recalled

••
......
....
II -··
" . . . . ....,

brand,_""''"" · , ..,. LatreU SpreweD.

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7

2001.
Dated September 7,

NOTICE lo hereby
given
that
In
purouance ol I
Rooolullon of tho
Boord of Townohlp
Tru1tee1 of thl
Townohlp of Sutton,

Racine,

Ohio,

paoood on tho 2nd
da y of July, 2001,
there
will
be

eubmltted to a vote
of the people of . . ld
subdlvlolon at a
GENERAL ELECnON
to be held In the
Townohtp of Sutton
Ohio, al the regulr;
pleceo of votl ·
therein, on the
:1
dey of Novem be r,
2001, the quootlon of
levying I IIX, In
tXCIIII ol tho ten mill
limitation, for the
btnoflt of Sutton
Townohlp for the
purpoae
or ·
molntolnlng
and
operotlng cemllerllo.
Sold tax being:
1 replacement ol 1
tox of 0.4 mill at 1
rata not exceeding
0.4 mlllo tor each

one

dollar

of

voluotlon, whlch
amount• to four
conta ($0.041 lor eoch
one hundred dollara
ol valuation lor llvo
(51 yooro.
Tho Pallo lor oold
election wlll opon at
6:30 o'clock A.M. ond
remalli open until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of ·
oald day.
·ay order olthe Boord
ol Electlono, ol Molgo
County, Ohio.

John N.lhlt
Chaliman

Dated September 7,
2001.

Alta D. Smith
Director

John N. thle
Chairman

(1 01 8, 16, 23, 30,
2001
4tc

Director

Call 1·80Cl-f!47·

Alto D. Smith
(101 9, 16, 23, 30,
2001
4tc

Get 2nd 112 price
(Same of less value)

\

'

�...
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

lhe Dally Sentinel • Page A 9

Pomeroy, Mlddlepof't, Ohio

' TUMdly, Oct. 30, 2001

NEA Cro81word Puzzle
PHIL!JP

ACROSS 41 ....._ ......

•=

ALDER

lOIII'

A Kf l t
• A J I

••

• Top • R11110vtl • Trilll
• StuMp &amp;rlnding
• Bucklt Truck

&amp;

Q.

....

•

7.1)1

•

•

I

'

•

•

CONTRAaOIS, INC.
flaclne, Ohio 411771

•New Homes
•GirlgM
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop I Compare
FREE ESllMATES
740-992-1871

740-985-3948

COIKlElf/BlOCK/IRICK

-2422

Repllfemeall. • W1lkl
aod.Dri•ea • SUodl •

c- Free Eotl-.o

Senlq Ohio 111d W. V.
WVIIOJ1712

I Kandl

;;j:l

li~

IIIIlS-

4:38

. Eq 1111* start
Prtgresslue ...

TJnags
Pngnsslue Couerlll
enSandays

NOTICE OF

l,uhlic Nuth.·c.~; In NcwspaJn•rs.
\'cmr Right to Knnw,Uc:lin·n.'tl Hight tu \'our Uuor.

Rock Mualc

;BARNEY

740-742·n09
Re..onable Rates

All Occaalona

LEVY IN UCU8 OF

ntiTIN MILL
UMITA110N
lleviHCI Code.
ln-3101.11(0),
11701.11, 17111.21

'229.00*
• FREE INSTALLATION
• FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE
• FULLY WELDED
• SO YEAR WARRANTY

ly order ollhl ~
oflleollone, ofllllgl

County, Ohio.

NOTICE II hartby
atven

thl1
In
pur~uanoa
of 1
llaaolutlon of thl
Bot~rd of Towlllhlp
Truat11 . of the
Townahlp of Ollwl,
llaedavllle, ,Ohio,
pt~ued on lhl lth
day of June, 2001,
there
will
be
aubmlllad to • vote of
the people· of 11ld
aubdlvlalon 11 a
GENERAL ELECTION
to . be held In 1ha
T-nahlp of Olive,
Ohio, at the r~~~ular
placaa of voting
thartln, on the lth
day of November,

Advertise
In this space
for$25 per
month

llllliEPIACUJEIIT
-urlllllifl••a 1111111-

tllotlon will open at
1:30 o'olooll A.M. and
remain open until
7:30 o'oloqk P.M. of
Nkldly.

Dated llptember 7,
1001.
John N. lhll
ChllnMn
111111 D. lmllh

Dl(10) •• 11, 23, 3D,

2001
410

24'120'

WINDOW

Flldory Authorized

992-4119 1-800-291-5600

c_.IHParts

VIall Our Showroom On Slate Route JJ

Dealers

6 MU11 North Of Pomeroy, Ohio, AI County RGIId 11

11100 "· Rt. 7 /loullo

• No Dalen or Coatraeton PluM
Vlao/ Muten:ord

PlAine
FIRST liME.
FIRST SERVED
8200.00 PER JOINT

wv 110l3477.

IEIIWLY
8321.00 PER JOINT

Cellular

lawytng a tax, In

IX- oflhllln mUI

1111111a11on, for the
banaflt of Oliva
Townehlp ·for the
purpoae
of
maintaining and

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

opll'lllng
Said 1bbllngr
-·

a...-lofalbof1

mill 11 I rate not
IXOiadlng 1 (Onl)

WHY. DRIVE
. ANYWHERE
.
Shade River AG Service
'
"Ahead In Service"
Comptoll Une of SUllivan•• Grooming Bupplloa '
SUifW Collod UrN, bulk only, 5128.00 por 11J!1
10% off oil Prlollrl- ond L'-ock Equip.
10.10.10 All PurpoM- S4.IGISCif
1,11110 a.r.r Twlnti1UMIM
18,11110 S.ltf Twlnti21.5111S.Ie

In the

mille tor uoh one
dollar of varuallon,
- h afti0Unl8 to ....

Dally Sentinel

oen11(S0.10)10t-h

one hundred dollara
of VIIIUIIIon for IIVII

Classifieds

(II yeara.

992-2155

Till Poll• for aald

1066 2nd Street • Mason, wv
(1000 ft from the bridge)

.

Tel: (304) 773-5800

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Adcl~lono •

nan adellng

·-~

• l._lcol • Plumbing
•Aoollng&amp;G\111.,.
• Vlnyllldlng &amp; Painting
• Patio ond Pon~h Dtckt

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Fr• Supplies, Postage!
Start ·lmmodia1elyl
Genuine Opportunltyl

Purn.roy, OhkJ

Cot Toll Free:
1·888-815-1835.
S...rii)'A.IIellylo Ct.nge

WORK FROM HOME
MAIL ORDER/INTERNET
SUIOO/MO PTI$SilOOIMO FT

WNCH ..... 1IDINNIR ..... :

11:30am-2:00pm 11 5:(J0pm-7:30pm:
1
14 yrs &amp; under FREE 14 yrs &amp; under FREE 1
1
: 5-8 yrs- '2.99 1 5-8 yrs - '3.99 · 1
1 • 9-12 yrs - '3.99
1
9·12 yrs -'4.99
1

1

1

BUFFET TO GO lLunch
BUFFET TO GO (Dinner •• 'UI)

l&amp;antl, L0011&amp;, ~ud Tracoro

I..
s:

Local 843-5284
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mongage; Major Metlical
• Nursing Home
ouo.urr
THill

•
'

•••

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home
Maintenance-

1D $!00.001 We wanl

Gutters· Down

1

$8C)(;'wk.Jh!'l!!!!'----- - - - - -

Spout
Free t;stlmsles
750 East State Street

·
"A

Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

949·1405
591-5011
~1

Q tc.:rE

PEANUTS
'(ES, SIR,MR.PRINCIPAL ..
I'M 601N6 TO 6NE UP
I5CIIOOL .. E'JER'f800'( 5A'(5

I'M STUPID AN'iWA'i...
'.

.,

'.,.

1

1VE DECIDED TO
DEVOTE THE REST OF
M'{ LIFE TO MAKIN6
M!{ D06 f.IAPPV..

"

rr F.-,rn

DOWN

the-

21 Go to
ut.31 _ ,

1 Tolnci-

.....

2Actor
Chlney
3Havea

33 Turldah
olflclll

-

...cr.

34-

4 DICOol'ltl

. 5 Monpga
INoiND.orne

l loriM

alght

31Buol-

7 SOft drink

(2\0da.l

I ;,.lldlnl'a

.,.

by Luis Campoa
c-..cy c~··~ -from quo1aliona by lomooo

~ putlnd - · !'ICh Iotter In IN clphor olendl lot anotller.

Today'• c/W: R equals 0

' u_p,
MKYH
YH

HMPWXXOC .

MRXCMKCP

ZYXKM . ' -

y I

WIYMCJ

H MT I J

TECPYST

Yl

PCB .

M K Y· H
SKTPOCH

· PTIXCO

D•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Thll baUie will take lime and re..,lve,
but make no mlatako about H, we will win.• - President George

w. Bulh

0 four
Rtorronge letters of
scrambled ward1

the
b•
I.W 10 lorm four simple words.

I

T0

R R E R
h-t-..:._;;...l.;.;..,..l,;_;,..;..
2 ;.,.--l

1
1 1
=·==·==·==·=~·--l

I

~~='~

highest, the guaranGH T 0 N
teed play fs to insert ,
s J6 I I _
WELL-, MA'a'Be 'a'OU
1
_..L.......I..-.1...
-I..__.
dummy's hean jack at
S~OULD TALK IT OVER . trick on e. Whatever
WITI-l 'iOUR CAT, AND
happens, · you con- ~....,,.:.v_U:;.,.:L~M~O.,;E:..,..-ll
5EE WllAT ME TtlINK5 ..
tinu e
with
four
I~
·
d
d
f
d
'-Z(I
roun S 0
Iamon S
to establish the diaL..

I

I I' I

,

My new camera is so simple
to operate. Now, taking the piclure is easier than getting someone to .. ·- at .. --.
0

Complete

the ~l'luclde quoted

V by filling In the min ing words
you do,olop from 11tp No. 3 below.

.,_ PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTER S IN SQUARES

A UNSCRAMBLE
1111' ANSWER

•

"

Sunset Home
·Construction

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I' I I' I

FORI
SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

Hybrid- Exact · Knife - Lunacy- BLANK

. Overheard at college graduation "Kids going through
school are like film going through a camera- sometimes they come out BLANK!"

..

New Homes, Room Addlftons,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
I More

FREE ESTIMATES!

740·742-3411

.'.

'•'
~.

'

.

•,
'

.,

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

'

l,lj ••

W !.:dncsday, Ort . .31. 20UI

f iually an u n p ro~tu c tiv c relationshi p yo u 'v~· formed ma y
p:o by the boOlrtb iu the year
:.ahe:ul. Thi s le a v e~ roo m fo f'
new :l!li:mces to form th:tt will
be more adv an tageous an d

have ~rron gcr bmHk
SCORPIO (O&lt;t . 24-Nov.
22) -- A scrinu.~ confrontation
could ensu e today if the side

pcact.·ma kcr , not a provo- .

Dl
PLASTIC CULVE
METAL

lll!(idlc of a d is.1 grel·rncnc.
St:orpio, treat yo ursel f to a
birthday gift . Sc·1HI for yo ur
t\~ tro-G rap h

r redicti ons fo r
the yc;~ r ahc11d by n1illling S2
.111d SASE to Astro-G ra p h,
do this n ew~pap L'r, P.O . Uox
167, Wicklifi'o , OH 44092-

01(,7. De sure

tg

st.ato you r

SAGI TTAl~I US

(Nov. 23-

Zodiac ~i gn .
D.c. 2 1) •• Shif1inM your re~pnmibilltic• on tn Qnothor ~o ..
d ~y willl~~ond you in hot water

with nYt only with your cho•cn vkrhn. but with tho pow..
"" thot ho " woll.
CA1 1 1U C:l) l~ N (!)", 22J~ u .

IIJ) .... SoL'In l imun

(~ I'll

l.koly lu hu nt lho bunom .,r

'

,15 Twm......,

.. • ee drtnkl
lllrbel
ze·umtuge

I...

cateu r wh e n cau ght in th e

IJ

25 Buoy

try to evaporate.
. ~'£ West'sk heart-sevenf ..
I
'\~
lead 1oo s 1ike top o
L KAYE
nothing, but 1·n case
..-.--1
1
s,....
-~ West has led fourth. . . .
lowest, not fourth- ~======~~

yuu t:~ ke on :in issue between
two people is biased . Ue a

'

11111 tf 11 Crull

1-.- - . . . - - . -. . .

,·m· •I
Al'.!';\~
Ll.Lli.I.!!.!.!c:.__,.,.;;;;,..,.,. •

', ._, f

LI~B

Bryan Reeves

by County Bank,

atart your

1

•• 14.11)

One-hour apptoval.
Call F,C.C.S. toll·frtt
1.a88-eo6-3379

,,~ ~

.. ..,

M1ddlcport. Oi11o 45760

---------------- -----j

·"~~~mL___ , ,~~.,~~·ul ~~p~
l--~~1~·~~2~21~
1
Gov't
bu in"'· a.c;,, DE (FDIC), Equ.l
tM

•t,t ~:

I

LOANS O.A.C.
From $2,500-$125,000.
9'."' averaoe rate.

For Free lnlonnatlon,

Fino-

992-6215

1

1

Box 1 89

""'"'C.

l

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. ~
Rocky R Hupp. Agent
.,

Hours: Sun • Tbur llam • 10 pm
Fri &amp; Sat 11 am - 11 pm

I

PaM

Lord Birkett. a British lawyer and Liberal
Member of Parliament, said on this
date in 1960, '"I do
not object to people
loo kin g at th eir
watches when I am
I=Y HAVE. A
ERYOU,LOWEEZY?!
spe)lking. But I
strongly object when
they start shaking
them to make certain
they are still going."'
At the bridge table,
you must watch your
entries. In this deal,
how would you try to
land three no-trump
after West leads the
heart seven?
You S!:art with eight
ANOTttilr l&gt;INftl~~
. top tricks: two spades,
three hearts (given the
INVITATION.
lead) and three diamonds. The hunt was
on for trick nine. You
probably need a 3-3
club split, so the opponents can cash only
three tricks in the
suit. But playing to
establish the 13th card
in that suit won't
work here, because
Yo, e~mu~ !
W est gets two heart
winners set up first.
Another possibility is
to play for a 3-3 spade
break, but that will
happen only about
one-third of the time.
It is preferable to attack diamonds, where
a 4-3 splis should occur about''fwo:l hlfds
of the time. Yet you
r.:::=:::::.:::-7~--""' must be care fu I. If
~J;ot,.NW:le~ ~~ 'I'E~'
ARE TtlESE you · call for dummy's
CAND"('. G.IVINt&gt; AWAY
. •pLE.f15E $UPP051!11
heart eight at trick
MOI'II!MA.III C.ANDY
. EG.6
TO 8E TH~
.
111\~es A STIIITIMINT! I TtllS
CRISP"("
one, East will cover
tlOUSE.•
with the queen; causing your last hand en-

35537 St. Rt 7 N• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

YOUNG'S

PJu

PioN
PloA

fc.t..._

llaaMIUnr .. llnlce, Ia.:

:s.t 1·-

Pag

"*'

57 G.-y

I

1·12 llllllE Will

Makes 'l'rlctor
Equipment Parts

2001, tho quwtlon of

r...t

Watching

Country, Danee &amp;

10128TF

14
3...

Pu•

lof.

onllr

••••

51 llllfolcl
53 Y-'tlol
114 .........
55 .........

anlrNI
12 T - a·
20 Geographyorg•
......
413 $tjte llnnty
objocla
114 CriYOII
22 R-arwttlng
c11ok:e

Openlnalud: w 7

DlscJockeg
Service

i:ll

N'...O.

.....

"'" '

IHT

'

PUBLIC
NOTICES

11

• K II t
t Ak QI t
• I I 11

h lltll
1t
tNT

EU!I'I Dlrsdlg

• Foottn, Walll, Steps •

Flat Work,

...

Dealtr: SOUUI
Vu lnl!rableo: Nei ther

fateS 1111&amp;0 m1

P/B

AQ I

Q •

t JUt I
• KJ t

hitlll

2Q7 1 mepd

IOIEIT IISSILl
COISTIImOI

12NNHnan
• aut
13 I'll11 A - ol
11 KlnaaiiY ol
"Giitdhl•
17 In I!IPII pll

A Ju••

t 7I t

omc.

11F-r

I It I

w...

8llnlw

·= ••r--=

......

]

a

Tree Service

ELECTION ON TAX

1 Dog'a ..._ 44
Sfun•

'

yo ur tro ubl es toda y if you
handle relati o n s hip~ like a
straw boss o n tl1 c line. Be rc .cpcctful nf their desires .

volvcd with someo ne rmby
on a p roject and culk cttve l}'
agree w do so m ct h m~ that
turn s o ut to be a mistake .

AQUARIUS Qan. 20- F&lt;b.

share the blame equally instea d ofpoin tin~

19) - · Yo ur :unbltui'U! gc&gt;als

;'I

fin gn .

C ANCEK Oco ne. 21-j uly
22) -- It\ impo rr:m t to bt.•
complctl"ly rc:t li~t ic about
w hat's i11voln•,i rcg ardm g a.n
event yo u'vc ~J.,rrc ed to \. IIHi('r-

are n't apt to be gratitit"d lod::.y
if yo u m r .underha nded t:I C·
t1cs. Ym,1 may nnt l o~c ot;l y
you r repmation', but assod:~ ­
ti o ns as wdl.
PI SCES (Fob. 20-Marc h ~0)
-~ Sensitivity h ;~s no plac e in
the exchange of ideas. If yom
peers aren't exactly cn th r;~ llcd

takc Lcx.lay. E x pc c t~u o n s bui lt
upon f.1u lty fo und ;~ u cm s will

w llap.\C.
· LEO Ouly 23- Au g. 22) - llc very cu l'li.tl to keep yo ur

wir h you r thin kint:: today . .
don 't u kc it pen on aUy. liste n
to their reaso ning. '

pla m to your~c l f t oday in m:~ t ­
tl'rs th:Jt cunccrn your

~.:.u~·cr .

ARIES (Mm h 21- Ap ril1 9)
-- Someone Who did n't have

C()mpctitor any
chances tp best you by tippi ng

a hand in an endeavor you re-

you.r hand prc m:tturely.

Don 't J!i"e

:1.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)

cently ~ ccmnpli~hed might be
.t ryi_ng to take credi t Cor it tod:~y. De careful how you lumdlc this ~ituatiott.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) .,. Against you r b ctt~r
jlldvmunt you could h.•am up
with IOnteon t' today who will
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-- A lt cmp ~i us; to m ¢ flattery
co influenn: ano t he r In to

complying with yolll' phns
will b:.ckll re on you today.
Only ho nest diplomacy ca n
hel p you !("alii your l'mls.

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Bengals not used to winning
CINCINNATI (AP) - Linebacker Brian
Sinunons shook his head in wonder at how
times
changed for the Cincinnati Bengals.
Seven games into the season, they're no
longer losers.
"We've come a long way." Sinunons said
Monday. ''I've never been 4-3 since I've been
here. At this point, we're usually l-6, maybe 07. To be at this point andstill be in the hunt for
the playoffi - that feels good."
Not since 1990 has anyone mentioned the
Bengals and the pbyoffi in the same sentence so
late in a season. 'A 31-27 victory Sunday in
Detroit left them in the middle of the pack
instead of taking up the rear.
The NFL franchise that has lost more games
than any other since 1991 is making a lot of
breakthroughs. The Bengals lnve their best start
since 1990, the last time they had a winning
record and made the pbyoffi.
They've already matched their win total for
last season and eclipsed their win totals for the
two previous yean. The Bengals have won three,
three and four games each of the last three years.
By this point, they usually are trying to find
some inspiration to get them through the rest of
another depressing season. The inspiration
comes more easily these days.
"I'll tell you what: We lnven't won four games
in some of the seasom since I've been here;'
linebacker Takeo Spikes said. "It just feels good.
You sleep a whole lot easier. The bumps and
bruises don't hurt like they used to."
The Bengals will get an extra week to savor it.
This week is their bye week, giving them a
clnnce to rest an injury-depleted defensive secondary.

mve

Steelen.

-I

fftiiiiPqeAS

I

Their only new concern after Sunday's game
was linebacker Canute Curtis, who hurt his
right knee. Tests Monday found no cartilage
damage, so he shouldn't be sidelined for long.
Coach Dick LeBeau decided Monday to stick
with kicker Neil Rackers, who missed another
field-goal attempt Sunday. He was wide right on
a 47-yard attempt, then made one from 39
yards.
Rackers is only 7-for-14 this season and has
missed seven of his last 11 attempts. The l)engals
held tryouts last week, then decided to stick
with the second-year kicker. LeBeau said Monday tint he's committed to _Rackers - in the .
short-term, anyway.
"We've been through some inaccur.ocy with
him in the past, which he resolved," LeBeau
said, referring to Rackers' strong finish as a
rookie. "I still think it is a matter of him just
smoothing out his mechanics. It is not a question of, 'Can he?' It is a question of him just getting it done in 'the game. We're working .on it
every possible way we know, believe me."
There are plenty of other shortcomings to
work on during the bye week as well. The main
one is the erratic effort from week to week.
.The Bengals got shoved around by Pittsburgh, then came back the next week and
played a solid game and beat Cleveland. Chicago dominated them 24-0 a week before the
Bengals went to Detroit and got the win that
moved them to 4-3.
One week, they look like the same old Bengals. The next week, they get inspired to prove
they're not.
'
"Our football teams suffers from modulation;• LeBeau said.

..•

· HUNTINGTON,WVa.{AP)
- Former Heisman Trophy
6nalisa Chad PenningtOn and
Randy Moss are still fresh in the
minds of Marshall fans. Now ·
they have a pair of players to
compare to them.
Byron Lefiwich, Pennington's
understudy, is throwing the footbaD like the Mid-American
Conference has never seen. And
Darius Watts is piling up similar
numbers to Moss in leading the
nation in receiving yards per
game.
They may lnve some work to
do to match the individual feaiJs
of PenningtOn and Moss, but
Leftwich and Watts so far are
stomping on conference opponents.
Leftwich went 25-of-39 for
434 yards and four touchdowns
in a 50-33 victory over Akron
on Saturday night, becoming the
lint quarterback in league history to pass for 400 yards in three
straight games.
Leftwich will go for four in a
row Saturday when Marshall (~
I, 5-0 MAC) plays at Kent State
(4-4, 3-2).
He gets no personal joy out of
the saeak.
"The day. we win the MAC
championship, I will be satisfied
- until the next day, and then I
will. want the next one," the
junior said. "This is the most
important part of the season
right here. Everything counts,
every game we play now is for
the ring. And we understand that
because we have been in this situation before.
"Hopefully, we can come out
and play with an the emotion
and all the enthusiasm that we
had" on Saturday.
Leftwich has thrown for 2,476
yards and 22 TDs .this season. He
ranks second to Aorida's Rex
Gro&lt;sman in Division 1-A total

offense, is tied fur second in
touchdown passes and is third in
passing yards.
Lefiwich is on p:~ce to surpass
Pennington's 3,799 yards in
1999.
"Truthfully, I do not think
Byron can be sto.pped;' said
Marshall recei~~er Denero Marriott. "It is just that point in the
season where the offense is clicking. Byron kn""' all of us py
now. His timing is correa and
that just Jllakes it much easier."
With Marshalls limited teievision ·exposure, Leftwich and
Watts could be the nations bestkept secret. It also would hamper
efforts Marshall has to promote
Leftwich for Heisman considerarion.
So will the fact that LeftWich's
three 400-yard games are against
ieams with a combined record of
5-18.
Leftwich would like to think
he is on par with Grossman. In
Aorida 's season-opening win
over Mar.;hall, Grossman threw
for 375 yards and three scores
while Leftwich lnd 274 yards
andone'ID.
"I cannot sit here and say that
I am • better than that guy
because I do not know him well
enough. I do not watch that guy
on film and I do not know the

Nci'tfl:, '

-·

l '

types of things he C3IJ 00:' 1.4wich said.
•
The speedy Wam has bet2f,
creating the same exciteme$
MOSS' did in 1997, when he won
the Bilemikoff AMid as die
nation's top receiver.
!
Moss caught 90 catches f~
1,647 yards and 25TDs thatyeoi.
Watts, who is averaging nea.!f
144 yards per game, is on pace to
lnve 83 catches, 1,548 yards ~
17TDs.
What Marshall has now thatj:
didn't !nve with Moss was othiiibig-play receivers. On Saturdi
Marshall had three receivers wilt
I00 yards for the lint time tn
ochool~ry.

OMEROY - "It's my
biggest, most awesome
win," exclaimed . Gloria
He~, grand prize winner in the Marlboro Chili
Cookoff Contest. _
~' ~.:.. .ij;! prize -3 bright n;~ 2002 Ford
.
'Rarigei 4-by-4 ·;,,with extended cab,
• $2,000 to.pay the taXes, title andinsur. ance, and $1,900 for the fixins for a
tailgate party, everythiljg fi:om a stereo
and CDs to steak and seasonings, aD to
be delivered just before Christmas.
"It's just unbelie,;able. I've won a lot
of contests but nothing like this. When

•/

•

Chili redpe earns
local woman
(awesome'prize

I got the word that I was one of 50
grand prize winners, I screamed for
what seemed like hours before I came
back down to earth."
It was Gloria's original recipe for
"Quick Calico Chili;' one of seven she
submitted, that was a winner.
. sli'~ &lt;lescribes it 'as a combination of
ingredients representing several countries, a chili neither too hot nor too
mild. Her' recipe includes enchilada
sauce, diced pepperoni, and crushed
tortilla chips, and whole kernel gnlden
corn.
It was while . Gloria was driving

P...H

He

Chilli A3

~

Standard Oak

Leg

Extension

POMEROY - The Meigs
Marauc\er Band has qualified
for state finals competition.
Marching -at Fort Frye, the
Marauders scored 246 points
and received a superior rating.
The band placed third of seven
Class A bands with Field Commander Allison Williamson
placing fint in Class A and winning the best field commander .
At Bloom CarroU High
School, the band received a
superior rating with a score of.
247.5 placing second in Class
A. The Marauders' percussion
section won first place in its
class and field commander

Williamson tied for overall field
commander with the field
commander from Worthington.
Presented trophies for their performance In
recent competitions were the
Marauder flag corps members,
from left, front, Nicki Wines.
Mallory King, Amanda Fetty,
Ashley Colwell, Jessica Hooten
and Undsey Jeffers; second
row, Jennifer Dunn, Kara Buffington, Meghan Haynes and Crystal Jacks; third, Carrie Michael,
Jessica Blaettnar, Kelly Freeman and Detana Eichinger; and
back, JeSsica Howell and Katie
Childs.
FlAQ CORPS -

Hlp: 70s
L-:40s
Details, A3

Tadllf•

Table

Sentinel

With 6 Windsor
Side Chairs

2 SKIIOIII - 12 ......

Vaughan-Bassett

Oak Cannonball
Poster Bedroom
Suite·
(Full or Queen)
Bed, bed rails, triple dresser
with tri·view mirrors &amp; 5
drawer chest.

REED

Calendar
C!assifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

ly? Students and taxpayers in
Southeastern Ohio are prisoners of geography;' DePiero said.
"Buildings, books
and
resources are inadequate in
many school districts, and yet
the state continues to force
local school distticts to seek tax
increases in order to operate;•
he added.
The state's funding of public
universities under Republican

,..... -

...ly.AJ

Eastem Eagles Invite
community support
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Consumer confidence plunges i,n October
'

Lotteries

BY LISt DE BOURBON

OHIO

82-4 Pick 3: 8-3-7; Pick 4:6-0-6-2

BS

POMEROY- "Better days
for Ohio are ahead, but leadership must come first."
House Minority Leader
Dean DePiero, D-Parma, took
an early look at the 2002
gubernatorial race and attacked
. Republican leaders' position on
public funding for education
during the local Democratic
Party's annual Kennedy Day
dinner on Saturday.
Del'iero was fint elected td
the Ohio House in 1998, and
was unanimously elected by
the House Democratic Caucus
to the post of Minority Leader
in June.
While his experience as a
prosecutor in Parma has led
him to focus primarily on
criminal justice issues in the
House, DePiero attacked Gov.
Bob Taft and the GOP leadership for neglecting public
schools, and for failing to
address funding equity issues.
"Does every child in Ohio
get a fair education? Does
every taxpayer get treated fair-

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Eagles fans are seeing
green and white, a&lt; the Eagles
prepare for Saturday's regional
quarter-final playoff football
game against the Trimble Tomcats.
A number of activities
designed to include the entire
Eastern community have been
planned for the days leading up
to the playoff game, said Eastern High School Principal
Rick Edwards.
•
The Eagles arc only the second footba!l team in Meigs field. T-shirts and game tickets
County history to · advance to will be available for purchase at
the quarterfinals, following in that time.
Friday has been declared
the footsteps of Eastern's 2000
"Community Green &amp; White
team.
Day,"
and Eastern supponers
A community pep rally is
scheduled for Thursday at 6 are asked to display green and
p.m., at the Eastern footba!l
PIHH- biles. A3

·Marauder Band advances

With Pull Down
Tray &amp; Massages
&amp; Matching Rocker Recliner
.,

BY BRIAN J.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.Reclining' .
Sofa

-.

DePiero
rallies local
Democrats

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Double...::;.:
~ =
~. c=-!
. ';

-~

POLITICS

A BIG w.tNER- Gloria Herdman is a creative cook. She was Her prize, to be delivered in December, is a new truck with a
a grand prize winner for her original recipe for Quick Calico Chill. party or the tailgate, imd $2,000. (Chal1ene Hoeflich photo)

Dundee '

li.

Hometown Newspliper

·~

Marshall's Byron Leftwich is conjuring Images of another former Herd QB, Chad Pennington of the New York Jets. (AP)

\

Melp County's

"This is the fastest . group;:I
have coached:' Pruen sai¢.
"These guys run better with tit
football after they catch it." :
Josh Davis rurned a rou~
catch into a 69-y.ud touchdoWil
Satunlay. Watts outraced sevo:tal
defenders for a 61-y.ud ·ocoa:_
one of his two TD catches. ;
"Those guys are doing a gre;r
job of malting the defenden miis
and outrunning people;' J.elt.
wich said. "If the. defenden baCk
_.,
off, we are gomg to take t1fe
short stuff and let my receiv!t$
do the rest. They are dointrJ&gt;
great job of ttking it to the hoi~

LOOKS FAMILIAR? -

senes.

offense was much more than Bettis, the
defense that sacked Tampa Bay's Brad Johnson
10 times the week' before was much more
than blitz after blitz.
Burress finally had the big game the Steelen have expected since they made him a firstround draft pick a year ago, making six catches for 151 yards in, by far, his biggest game in
the NFL.
"I've got to go out and prove myself again,
but this does feel good," said Burress, who was
such a disappointment there was talk the
Steelers might soon bench him.
Bettis was held below 100 yards for the first
time since the Steelers' opener, but had a couple of touchdown runs among his 62 yards.
Stewart, who had thrown for only 100 yards
the week before, had his second 200-yard
game in two years by going 13-of-22 for 232
yards and a touchdown against the AFC's lowest-rated passing defense. He also ran for
another score.
•
·
"There's no telling what will happen if we
can keep mixing it up like this," said Burress,
who had only 145 yards receiving this season
until Monday. "-If the receivers can keep going
out and making big plays, that will open up a
lot of room for Jerome. Other teams are going
to lnve to start respecting that."
The Titans (2-4) had beaten Pittsburgh
seven straight times, but it almost seemed like l'\ll'
.,.
~
., .. ·"' ., ,
they didn't know where the Steelers were ~
G.coming from or what they were doing, and • The Slealera haven't 1o1t more than
for good reason.
·aeven In a !OW to an opponen,t 8lnce dropSteelers offensive coordinator Mike Mula- ping 12 Mllllght to G!Mn Bay fiom 1933rkey, aware the Titans expected Bettis to get ...
most of the work, seemed .to show something • Beta. WM held ~ 90 yards by Tennew or different on nearly every series. Kick- Mllll for the ,nln.lh ~time.
er Kris Brown ran for a fint down on a fake • The Stllllll _W H 1n Monday f1l!tit
field goal, wide receiver Hines Ward threw a home~ under ooach BUI Cowher.
pass with the Steelers threatening to score and . • Pllblburgh lalt ~
- , 6-1 In 1898.
tight end Mark Bruener, almost exclusively a

'

LeftWich &amp; Watts = Pennington &amp; Mossl•

blocker, was the primary receiver on one
The Titans' only surprise was that they fell
three games behind the Steelers amid growing
problems, mounting injuries and considerable
self-doubt.
A secondary that has been a trouble spot all
season had a miserable night, with reserve
safety ·Perry Phenix drawing a personal foul
penalty that all but handed Pittsburgh its goahead touchdown, Stewart's 3-yard pass to
Hines Ward made it 14-7 in the second quarter.
Later, Burress stole a ball away from cornerback Samari Rolle and what seemed to be a
certain interception turned into a 43-yard
completion and, after Bettis ran for his second
touchdown a play later, a 24-7 Steelers lead.
The Titans also lost safety Blaine Bishop,
who already had a sore ankle, to a broken
hand, and Eddie George hyperextended a
knee while carrying · 10 times for only 13
yards.
"Without Eddie George, they are totally
different," Flowers said. "It wasn't the same
Eddie George. He was hurting."
So are the Titans, who envisioned playing in
the Super Bowl for the second time in three
years despite losing several key players to free
agency but now might -find it difficult just to
tnake the playoffs.
"You've heard that old saying, 'When it
rains, it pours?' " George .said. "Well, right
now we're in the middle of a hur-ricane."

.'

•

THUNDERING HERD
~

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

llndnye 5: 11-17-23-26-36

A4 W.VA.
A3 Dally 3: 3-6-7 O.lly 4: 7-6-2-1
.B !. 6 Cash 25:4-7·17·19-21·23
A3 c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

well below the 96 analysts had predicted.
AP BUSINESS WRITER
"We obviously expected consumer
NEW YORK - Consumer confi- confidence to be shaken, · but not this
dence plunged in October to its lowest badly," said Oscar Gonzalez, an economist
level in 71, years as the Sept. 11 terrorist at John Hancock Financial Services in
attacks and anthrax fears sapped Ameri- Boston. "This is a very worrisome
cans' optitpism about job security and the report ."
economy.
Stocks moved lower on the news. The
The Conference Board said Tuesday Dow Jones industrial average closed
that its Consumer Confidence Index had down 148 points, or 1.6 percent, at 9,122,
dropped to 85.5 from 97 in September, while the Nasdaq composite index ended

32 points, or 1.9 percent, lower at 1,667.
The index, based on a monthly survey
of some 5,000 U.S. households, is closely
watched because consumer confidence
drives consumer spending, which
acco unts for about two-thirds of the
nacion 's economic activity.

The index compares results to its base
year, 1985, when it stood at 100. The
October figure is the lowest since February 1994.

5th Annual Lewis A. Schmlclt, MD
Memorial Cancer Symposium
Saturday, November 3, 200 1
' 8:00am- 12 Noon
(Pre-registration and breakfast at 7:30 am)

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

www~holzer .org

For more information, call (740) 446·5057.

u

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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