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.- "VVI DO • IM LMtly 5entllltll
FLY YOUR FLAG
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STAFF TO SUPPORT YOUR COUNTRY!
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AMERICA AT WAR
j<..
Is assess bomb damage
u.s.
l•creased
. .:formance
Quieter
W~SHINGTON (AP) - Pentagon. officials are reviewing the
results
of
bombing
over
Afghanistan, now into a third day, at
the same time a jittery American
public confronts the fear of fresh
strikes by terrorists on U.S. soil.
"The best defense against terror is
· .a global offensive against terror
:Whenever it might be found," Pres·ident Bush declared Monday, juggling his roles as commander in
·chief and comforter in chief to a
nervous nation.
L.Oa:·-
•
"On all efforts, on all fronts, we're
going to be ongoing and relentless
as we tighten the net of justice," the
president said.
Early Tuesday jets bombed the
Taliba1,1 stronghold of Kandahar in
southern Afghanistan, Taliban officials said, Taliban soldiers replied
with heavy anti-aircraft fire. There
was no immediate confirmation
from the Pentagon that the attacks
were from the U.S.-led coalition
that be~n bombing Afghanistan .o n
Sunday, although they likely were.
Pentagon. officials said five longrange bombers and 10 sea-launched
warplanes took part in' Monday's
strikes against military and terrorist
targets at selected locations inside
Afghanistan, and all returned safely.
AIJ:hough smaller than Sunday
night's bombardment, the attack
included the launch of 15 cruise
missiles, launched from ships.
At least three bomb explosions
reverberated through the Afghan
capital of Kabul. Taliban gunners
responded to the attack ~ith a
crackle of fire into the skies over
the city.
Targets in Monday's raids included areas around the capital, the Taliban's · home base of Kandahar, and
Afghanistan's north, where · an
opposition northern alliance is battling the Taliban, the Islamic movement · that controls most of
Afghanistan.
A spokeswoman for the United
Nation• in Pakistan, Stephanie
Bunker, said four workers for the
Afghan Technical Consultants,
which had an office in a village two
miles east of Kabul, were killed iri
Monday night's attack<. Their office
was not far from a Taliban communications tower that may have been
a target.
Also in Islamabad, Abdul Salam
Zaeef, the Taliban envoy to Pakistan, told reporters the United
States "is aiming firstly to hunt the
sitting Islamic government in
Afghanistan and then every committed Muslim, in the name of terrorism."
HOSESYSTEM
ODNR updates
on
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t
·m1ne proJec s
.I
FROM STAFF REPORTS
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RUTLAND - At one
time, the coal industry
thrived throushout the
western half of Meigs
County, but today, mostly all
that remains of the oncethriving industry is abandoned strip and underground mines that continue
to have a negative impact on
the environment and the
lives of Meigs countians ..
Barbara Flowers of the
~ib Department of Natural Resources' Division of
Mineral Resource Management, formerly the Division
. .-.-lei'=
~
~·
-s2o~~U.In
of Mines and Reclamation,
discussed Ohio's Abandoned
Mine Land and Acid Mine
Drainage programs at a
meeting Thursday night at
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department.
As part of her presentation, she gave a brief
overview of the impacts of
old mining throughout the
watershed. A state inventory
of the Leading Creek watershed shows 2,009 acres of
abandoned stdp"'lttine! with ·
3,272 acres atop underground mining, she said.
PleMe ... ODNI.AJ
IIAFlTY PRECAUTION- Mark Asher, equipment operator for the west Vlrglnlli Department of Highways, keeps watch on' tfie
Ohio side of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge following Sunday's U.S military strikes on Afghanistan. Bridges are being watched as a
safety precaution In case of retaliatory terrorist attacks. (Tony M. Leach photo)
W.Va ..keeps vigil over state bridges
'
BY TONY
M. lEAcH
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OMEROY In the
wake of Sunday's U.S.
military . strikes
on
Mghanistan, West Virginia · Department of
RouRo..h
Highwa.ys is keeping vigil over all
bridges within the state, including WVDOH, said as a safety precaution,
those spanning into Ohio, in case personnel have been positioned at both
of possible retaliatory terrorist ends of area bndges to ensure that the
. . ty
. structures will not be targeted by vengetl
ac Y1 •
fuJ terrorist cells.
Ross Roush, crew chief supervisor for
",Following the recent military strikes
the Mason County Division of on the Taliban, concerns over retaliatory
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terrorist attacks in the U.S. have increased
dramatically;• said Roush.
"Our. crews are keeping their eyes open
for any strange vehicles or unusual activity around or near the bridges," he said.
"Basically, the lookoutS are being used as
a visual deterrent in case of possible terrorist activity."
"It is clearly evident that terrorism can
occur anywhere and we want to be prepared for any sifUation that could arise,"
he added.
Ross said the watches are scheduled to
continue for the next 72 hours and that
meetings will be held soon after to determine if the surveillance will resume.
ABANDONED MINE PROJECTS - Elarbara Rowers of the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources' Division of Mineral
Resource Management gave a brief presentation Thursday
· In Rutland outlining ODNR's projects within the Leading
Creek watershed.
·
QSP Sarles
.sgg
574
"Following the recmf
military Jtrileu on the Talillan,
concerm over retaliatory
te"orist attacles in the US.
have increased dramatlcally.,t
SEI'ITiNEL NEWS STAFF
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BY BRIAN J.
REED
SENTINEL NEWS 'STAFF
AS OHIO
A3
Middleport. seeks renewal of levy
2001 Ohio V.lloy' Publishing Co.
MIDDLEPORT - Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli asked for the support of Middleport residents in renewing a levy for
operating expenses next month, and
asked Village Council to help in the
campaign when council met in regular
session·'bn Monday evening.
·
lannarelli emphasized that the renew-
al of the three-mill, five-year levy is
"vital" to the continued operation of
the village government and village services for residents .
"We need to be su re that the residents
understand that this is a renewal, not a
new tax, and that it's very important to
the village that it be passed," Iannarelli
said.
In other business, Council hired
Randy Mullins as the new building
inspector. Mullins met with council last
night to discuss the position and his.
new duties.
. lannarelli said that department heads
have been supplied with a new form to
track vehi.cle maintenance, which will
be completed and turned in on a .
month!)' basis.
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SO<J6.14-17985
The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet
Sunday, October 14 from 2:00 - 4:00 pm in lhe Hospilal's French 500 Room.
· ·This monlh's topic: •oiabetes Meal Planning"
Presenter: Jennifer Stallings, RD, LD
Oclubir 15, 16 ancl17 from 6:00:9:00 pm in lhe
Hospilal's Fiflh Floor Classroom.
All are welcome! For more informotian, call
1740) 446·5080
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ME D I CAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org
(.
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•
America at war·
The Daily Sentinel
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Opposition to U.S.-Iecl attacks continue
•
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Tom Ridge nanning the Office of Homeland Security
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WASHINGTON (AP) In a windowless space I 0
paces from the Oval Office,
Tom ~dge reported for duty
Monday at the new Office of
Homeland Security. His
assignment! figure out where
America is vulnerabl• to terrorist attack and try to ensure
it doesn't happen again.
"The task before us is difficult, but not impossible;• said
Ridge, who resigned as Pennsylvania governor just three
days earlier to accept the
daunting challenge laid out by
President Bush.
In an executive order, the
president instructed Ridge to
bring all federal, state and
local agencies together in
drawing up a plan "to detect,
prepare for, prevent, protect
against, respond to and recover from terrorist attacks within the United States."
It ~ was a mouthful that
Ridge stum!>led over as ho
restated his mission to an
audience of family members
and government V!Ps in the
East Room. He also said his
job will be to find the gaps in
America's law enforcement
and intelligence operations,
and close them.
His pqrtfolio bulged 'with
weighty mandates:
-. Set priorities for spying
overseas and make sure intelligence agencies have all the
money and technology they
need.
-Develop a system for
detecting any release of biological and chemical agents,
and for containing their
spread.
-Review hospital capacity
and supplies of vaccines and
pharmaceuticals.
-FortifY security for power
plant&, phone 'systems, railways, highways, 'shipping
ports, and food and water supplies.
Ridge will be working with
bureaucracies that have a tradition of turf battles over
tponey and jurisdiction, a
potential obstacle that he
acknowledged with a plea for
cooperation.
"The only turf we should
be worried about protecting·is
the turf we stand on," he said.
N~
JOB - President Bush listens to Gov. Tom Ridge at the
swearing-ln ceremony, in the East Rooom of the White ·House
for Ridge, as tiead of a new Office of Homeland Securtty.
Photo)
.
(AP
I
The six-year ·goveinor and
former six~term congressman
began work on the second
day of U.S. military strikes in
Afghanistan. That operation
will likely spark terrorist
reprisals, according to intelligence community warnings.
As if to underscore that
threat, Vice President Dick
Cheney .~emain~d at a secret
location and left Supreme
Court Justice
Clarence
Thomas to administer Ridge's
oath.
Ridge, 56, a b!llky Army vet
decorated for his bravery in
Vietnam, bent to kiss his
daughter Lesley, 15. "I love
you," he whispered.
PapAl
'IU11tl.,. OciDt• t. HOI
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Four workers killed in
Afghanistan raids, calls
for protection of civilian$
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)
- U.N. officials appealed
for the protection of civilians in Afghanistan on Tuesday after confirming that
four workers for a U.N.affiliated
mine-clearing
agency died in raids outside
the capital. It was the first
independent confirmation
of civilian casualties in the
U.S.-led air assault.
"People need to distinguish between combatants
and those innocent civilians
who do not bear arms,"
U.N.
spokeswoman
Stephanie Bunker told a
news conference in the ·Pakistani capital, Islamabad,
hours after the deaths.
Airstrikes continued into
the daylight hours on Tuesday. with jets bombing the
Taliban stronghold of Kandahar at
midmorning.
Before dawn, a lone plane
dropped a bomb north of
Kabul, Mghanistan's capital.
The mornin9: attacks followed a second night of U.S.
airstrikes that took aim at
areas around Kabul and in
northern Afghanistan, where
a rebel alliance has been
fighting Taliban troops.
The Taliban claimed Tuesday that dozens of people
have been killed in the U.S.led raids, launched after
weeks offruidess.attempts to
get Afganistan's rulers to
hand over Osama bin Laden,
the chief suspect in the Sept.
11 terror attacks in the
United States.
"In this freestyle game,
Washington is aiming firstly
to hunt the sirting Islamic
government in Afghanist,:m
and then every committed
Muslim in the name of terrorism," Abqul Salam Zaeef,
the Taliban envoy to Pakistan, told reporters in Islamabad.
Zaeef also said the Taliban's supreme leader, Mullah Mohammed Omar, was
safe in the wake of the latest
airstrikes. After the first raids
late Sunday, an aide .to the
mullah said he had left his
office only 15 minutes
before missiles struck the
building.
Kabul residents spent
another sleepless night amid
the roar of explosions arid
the rattle of anti-aircra'ft
guns. Farmer Adam Khai;~
and his family of five were
fleeing Tuesday on a truck
piled high with belongings,
heading out of the capital !O
an eastern district to escape
more·strikes.
They had been sleeping in
their basement during the
bombardment, he said. "All
night the women and children were crying," he said.
"They were very worrieds~red."
Targets in Monday night's
raids included the airport in
Kabul and a hill where a TV
transmission tower is located, according to the priva~e
·Afghan Islamic Press agency
in Islamabad.
In Washington, the Pentagon said all its planes
returned safely.
There was no immediate
confirmation that the airqaft carrying out Thesday
morning's raids were part of
the U.S.-led coalition,
though it appeared likely.
Kandahar's location in the
south of Afghanistan is far
from any airstrips belongitfg
to the anti-Taliban northeUt
opposition, and the rebe~'
aircraft capability is limited.
The Taliban held the
United States responsible for
the latest strikes. ·
"This morning ... American aircraft made three
strikes, but due to the use of
anti-aircraft guns, these ai[craft
fled,"
Talibaj1
spokesman, Mullah Abd11l
Hai Muttmain told the
Afghan Islamic Press. He
said there was no imntediate
word on injuries of,daniagt.
The strike on Kandahar,
the seat of the Islamic T~
iban militia that rules most
of Afghanistan, came shortly
after a lone, unidentified jet
screamed through the earLY
dawn sky over Kabul, dropping a bomb north of the
city near the airport.
II
I
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WASHINGTON (AP) working around the clock to
The. number of people arrest- . find the people who were
ed m the Sept. 11 terrorist involved in the attacks and to
· attacks rose to more than 600 disrupt any future plans for torpeople as the FBI investigated rorism in America;' the atrorWith Much
an anthrax contamination at a ney general said.
building in Aorida that housed
The
FBI
investigated
Appreciation
several tabloid newspapers.
whether the anthrax episode
"We're counting on each in Boca Raton, Aa., was a
American to help us defend criminal act:
our nation in this W:.r;· AttorBob Stevens, a photo editor
ney General John Ashcroft said at the Sun tabloid, died after
Monday in announcing
apparently inhaling anthrax,
mvestlgaton still were seeking .and a mailroom employee in
229 people who were either the same building, Ernesto
suspects in the artacks or were Blanco, had anthrax bacteria in
believed to have information his nostrils. The deadly bacteria
Putor Jolm Smith
important to the case.
was found on a computer keyWith Jluch ApJ>redatfon
Authorities have arrested or board at the tabloid office ·
FromYour Congregation
detained 614 people in the ter- where both men worked.
rorism probe so far, Ashcroft
A state health official doubtWlfhout
said.
ed there were innocent explaWith other terrorist attacks nations.
viewed as more likely now that
"The chances are one in a
U.S. forces have begun bomb- billion" that two such cases
WU/tl'ldure
ing Afghanistan, the FBI has would occur, said Dr. Landis
advised 18,000 local law Crockett, director of disease
enforcement agencies and control for the Rorida Depart27 ,000 · corporate security ment of Health.
FilJ out coupon below
managers to be on high alert.
"There then would be
The
Warnings also have been sent another explanation, and that
111 Court
tb telephone companies, elec- would be that foul play would
trical power companies, banks, be suspected;' Crockett added. 1Putor'• Name____~-----oil and gas fucilities, computer
Virginia officials, mean- 1Church:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
comp~rlies , water
service while, . said Monday evening 1Me~:, ___________________
providers and railroads.
they were alerted to a possible I
Nuclear facilities are on the anthrax case in a Virginia man 1:=v,:-ur---::N-:-am-e-:_ ____:_ _ _ _ _ _ __
highest state of alert and are who either previously worked
screening all employees and for the Sun or had· a contracothers who have access r.o tual relationship with the
plants.
Rorida paper. It was not clear
"Our national law enforce- when he had last .been in
\'
••WJ.J & MasttrCard Acupr~
ment network ... will continue Aorida.
t!'at
gling to maintain the backi'ng
of Arab and other Muslim
states even as it warns that it
may take its war against terrorism beyond Afghanistan.
The airdrop of relief packages to the Afghan people is
part of the effort. So are
repeated assertions by President Bush and other senior
U.S. officials that .the fight is
with terrorists, not Islam.
"The United States of
America is a friend to the
Afghan people, and we are the
friends of almost a billion
worldwide who practice the
Islamic faith," Bush said Sunday in announcing that the
joint U.S.-British strike. on
Afghanistan had begun.
A warning the fight may r,o
beyond Afghanistan was contained in a letter to the United Nations.
f
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Fncldie Bogess
., COIT.-\,GEVILLE, W.Va. - Freddie Eugene "Bud" Boggess,
fl , Cottageville, !lied at Jackson General Hospital in Ripley,
WVa., on Monday, Oct. 8, 2001 .
He was born July 4, 1949 in Pomeroy, son of Hilda and
'Edward Beckett of Ripley, and the late Glenver Leon Boggess.
.I;-Ie was a truck driver for Ron Anderson Refuse.
; , Surviving in addition to his parents are his wife, Dorothy
f~y~rs Boggess; two daughters, Norma of Middleport and
,fo:le!Issa of Cottageville; a stepdaughter, Mary Wilson of
,Spencer, WVa.; a son, Jason Boggess of Henderson, W.Va.; two
lialf-sisters, Gail Whitcomb of Chillicothe, and Carol Sue Gib!on of ~lkhart, Ind.; three stepsisters and a stepbrother; two
~randchijdren ; and several cousins, nieces and nephews.
, • Semces will be 1 p.m.Wednesday in Ewing Funeral Home,
P,omeroy, with burial to follow at Letart falls Cemetery.
'Fnends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 tonight.
Markaark
_,.
ont~5.
Onty8e00
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lannarelli said that the
purpose of the forms is to
encourag~ regular maintenance in an attempt to avoid
costly repair bills . In addition
to completing the reports,
supervisors are to have full
maintenance checks performed on a11 vehicles three
times per month, including
police cruisers, street and
water department trucks,
backhoes and other equipment.
Councilman
Stephen
Houchins asked that the vii- ·
lage see that summer flowers
are removed from the downtown shopping district, and
encouraged local merchants
.."; AL~A~- Mark Oark, 81, Albany, di~d Sunday, Oct. 7,
;!001 1~ Riverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
. ' Born Sept. 21, 1920 at Pagetown, he was the son of the late
·
John L. and Weltha M. Nelson Clark.
, , He ~a retired contractor, former mayor ofAlbany, a mem- ·
PapAl
.~er of the New Mal'5hfield Church of Christ, and a veteran of
,dle U.S. Army in World War II.
·
·
In addition, 58 miles of
. , He is survived by his wife, Elizabeth King Clark; two sons,
streams within the watershed
,Wayne (Linda) Clark of Beallsville, and Steve (Donna) Clark of
affected by mine
.(\thens; and seven grandchildren and three great-grandchil- are
1
drainage. Thirty-six miles of
dren.
stream are dogged with sed, He v.:a' also preceded in death by a son; Raymond A. Clark;
iment from coal mines.
, two brothers, James and . Robert Clark; and a sister, Louise
The division has also iden'Dixon.
tified four acres of coal refuse
, 1 Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday in Bigony-Jordan Funeral
· along with dozens of open,
_Home, with Jeff Wallace and Buford Brown officiating. Burial
,will be in Athens Memory Gardens, with military graveside partially open or unstable
mine portals and shafts, and
; ,~;ites by the American Legion K.T. Crossen Post 21. Friends
potential domestic water
,}llay.callat the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.
supplies polluted b:y mine
: I·
drainage, she said.
There are many health an4
safety hazards associated with
~.Ohio
old surface and underground
~·
'Wednesday, Oct. 10
mines, Flowers explained.
•
Some problems connected
foreCast for
to abandoned strip mines
MICH. "· •
include erosion and sedi- ·
mentation, landslides, dangerous highwa1ls and acid
mine drainage; problems
•
with old deep mines may
include subsidence, mine
openings, mine gases and
acid mine drainage.
Other serious safety hazards are old auger holes, vertical ventilation shafts, and
stream flooding, she added.
· ODNR: 'has 'not been idle
to those concerns, Flowers
said~ She also had a list of
program accomplishments
within . the Leading Creek
watershed.
W.VA.
Under combined federal
KY.
and .state programs, about
Inc.
1,000 acres of abandoned
strip mioe land has been
reclaimed at a cost of $6.6
million, she said. Twenty~
, · -··• Pl. ClouciY Cluucly so- r.....
Rail
F'uiTies
Snow
""
seven mine entries have been
sealed, along with four vertical shafts, at a . combined
price of$104,000.
1\venty-six acres of landslides have been stabilized at
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Extended forecast:
Skies will be sunny in' the
Thursday... Partly cloudy. a cost of $2:5 million and .1
acre of burning coal refuse
region on Wednesday, · the Highs in the mid 70s.
National Weather Service
'Ihursday
night ... Partly extinguished. There are also
reported.
. cloudy with a chance of projects pending to address
· Highs on Wednesday will be showers. Lows in the mid 50s. problems with residential
70-75. Lows tonight will. b~ in
Friday... A chance of show- water supplies.
1
In addition, 146,000 tree
lthe 40s.
· ers during the day.. .Otherwise
seedlings
have been planted
: Sunset tonight will be at partly cloudy. Highs in the
on
abandoned
, mine land
:02, and sunrise on Wednes- upper 60s.
day is at 7:36a.m.
Saturday... Paftly
cloudy. under th.e division's refor1
Weather forecast:
Lows in the mid 50s and highs estation program, she said.
The federal Abandoned
Tonight...Mostly clear. Lows in the mid 70s.
~n the mid 40s. Light and val'iSunday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows Mine Land program is fund•13ble wind.
.
in tlie lower 50s and highs ed by a severance tax on
mined coal of 35 cents a ton
j .Wednesday... Mostly sunny. near 70.
for
strip-mined coal and 15
:~Highs in the mid 70s. SouthMonday... Partly
cloudy.
lwest wind 5 to 15 mph.
Lows in the upper 50s and cents a ton for underground
mined coal, she explained.
: Wednesday night ... Partly highs in the lower 60s.
The state AML program is
~cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
funded by a share of the
I
seven cents per ton of the
state coal severance tax .
Some projects are also fund ed by forfeitures from past
and present mine operators.
(USPS 213-1110)
Ohio V.lloy Publlohlng Ca.
Under the forfeiture proPublished every afternoon, Monday
.gram, two forfeited mining
through Frldav, 111 Court St.,
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
permits have been reclaimed
Our main concern in all stories is postage pald at Pomeroy.
along with 18 acres of strip
ta be accurate. If you know al an Member: The 1\osoclated Press and
error in a story, call the newsroom the Ohio NewsPaPer Association
mine reclaimed with a total
PO.UU*: Send address cOrrecal (740) 992·2156.
llons to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.
of S1 14,000 in forfeiture
St. , Polllllfoy, Ohio 45769.
program expenditures since
News Departments
Subecrlptlon rates
The main number Is 992-2156.
1976·.
By carrier or motor roule
Department extentians are: ·
' Flowers said future proI
OneS2
One
month
18.70
Gef1el'al m11nager
Ext. 12
jects include a stream study
one yor
$104
of Thomas Fork and the.
Dilly
50 cents
Ext. 13
Nawo
Subacnbera not desiring lo pay the
reclamation of strip mines
carrier may remit In advance direct to
Ext. 14
or
within the Thomas Fork
The DallrSentlnel. Credit wilt be giveM
carrier each week. No subSCrlpUon by
area.
Other projects in the
Other services
mall pennltted in areas where home
work include the reclamation
. Ext. 3 carr1er service i8 available.
AdVtlrtlolng
of strip mines in the Titus
MilII subsa iptloft
Ext.'4
Circulation
Road area, a waterline extentnst<M Meigs COUnty
••
13 Weeks
$27.30
sion
to as sist landown ers
•' ......w
Ext. 5 26 Weeks
Claoollled Ada
........
$53.82
with ac id mine drainage52 Weeks
$105.56
To send e-mail
impacted
water supplies, and
Aatn ou..lde Meigs County
rewsCmydallysentinel.com .
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With
Picture
Colin Powell
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
,~-.---~-·~·
Number of those in
Powell will stress
custody more than ·
·cooperation in visit
600
in
Sept.
11
atiBcks
to Pakistan this week
WASHINGTON (AP) · Secretary of State Colin PoweO will aim to strengthen the
U.S. coalition against terrorism when he goes to India and
Pakistan at the end of the
week.
PoweU's visit will be a show
of support for Pakistan's beleaguered president, Gen. Pervez
Musharraf, whose support for
the United States is not widely endorsed by the Pakistani
people.
.bn Monday, mobs stormed
Quetta, a city near the Afghan
border, Jobbing firebombs
while chanting glory to
Osama bin Laden and hatred
for America.
Still, Powell's agenda is · a
broader one, according to a
senior U.S. official. He seeks
more information-sharing on
terrorism with both Pakistan
and India and greater financial
cooperation in choking off
support for the al-Qaida network headed by biit Laden in
Afghanistan.
Cooperation on the military
level also needs to be upgraded, said the official, speaking
on condition of anonymity.
Beyond stops in India and
Pakistan, Powell's travel plans
have not been pinned down,
including the day ' he will
depart the United States.
In its war on terrorism, the·
Bush administration is strug-
{Undtly, Oct. I, 2001
!
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Jh~ Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
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to plant winter flowers in
their place.
Council also:
• Paid bi1ls in the amount
of $36,207.47 for general
fund and $411,987 . 17 fo r
rhe Board of Public Affairs,
with Councilmen Roger
Manley and Bob Pooler voting in opposition. .
. • Cfeated a new "sewerage
•mprotement fund" for the
deposif and pay-out of grant
and loan funds from the
Ohio pepartment of Development, Ohio Public Works
Commission and the Ohio
Water Development Author'and
appropriated
. ity,
$600,000 in funds for the
sewer improvement project
now underway.
Council members Kathy
Scott and Bob Robinson and
Clerk Bryan Swann alsq
attended the meeting.
ing funding for a study in the
Little Leading Creek area,
which includes the communities of Rutland and Harrisonville, and a study of
Mud Fork stream, she
remarked.
Priority i's given to projects
which address the health and
safety
concerns,
she
explained.
The meeting was held to
garner community input on
water quality issues through~
out the Leading Creek
watershed. The Leading
Creek watershed encompasses' about 150-square miles
from Albany in Athens
County to the Ohio River at
Middleport.
It includes most of the
western half of Meigs County, along with a small portion
of northeastern Gallia County. A similar meeting was held
in July in Columbia Town'ship.
The . meeting was held by
the Leading Creek Watershed
Committee, an informal
community group sponsored
by Meigs County ·Soil and
Water Conservation District
as part of its Leading Creek
Improvement Project.
Input gathered from the
meetings will be incorpotated into a community-driven
watershed management plan
with the end goal being
improving the streams within
the watershed . .
The greatest water quality
concerns involved abandoned strip mines and the
accompanying sediment and
acid mine drainage. ·
Several people attending
the meeting pointed out
auger holes and other safety·
concerns on their property.
Other concerns aired included (llegal dumping ' in
streams, the existence of old
landfills, and the trespassing
of off-road vehicles in strip
mined and reclaimed areas.
Jim Freeman, Leading
Creek watershed coordinator
for the Meigs SWCD, also
spoke on the Leading Creek
Improvement Project, funded
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, which can provide .
funding
to
qualified
landowners interested in
implementing conservation
practices on their land.
Landowners can receive
funding of up to 90 percent
for some conservation projects, he explained . J;unding
is also available for landowners wanting to install filter
strips between streams and
crop fields or pastures.
However, funding has not
been released for projects
located downstream of Park.
er Run, he explainea .
Jerry lies, watershed agent
for the Ohio State University Extension Service, moder~ ted the meeting and gave a
brief presentation on the role
of local watershed groups.
Watershed groups help
landowners identify water
quality issues in their watershed, he explained. They also
help landowners find funding
to address water quality
pr.oblems.
Local watershed groups
also ·participate in streamrelated activities like stream
clean-up days and voluntee r
water sampling, he pointed
out. Leading Creek and Little
Leading Creek were the targets of an inaugural stream
clean-up in ~pril.
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The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3
LOCAL STOCKS
AEP - -45~
Ald1 Coal - t
Alcza-41
AmTechSBC -
n
o45t.
Flderal M<1gui - \
USB - 16t
Peoples - 16'1t
Gannett - 60'1.
Aoei<Mtl - 15
General Electric -
Ashland Inc. - 40
GKNLY - 3!.
AT&T -
Harley
19\
Bank One - 29~
Bll- 7'l.
Bob Evans - 17l.
Premier -
36l.
Davidson
42 ~
Kma~ ~ 7~
Kroger- 24 ~
BorgWamer - 42 ~
Champion - 2 ~
Charming Shops - 5
BBT-33
RO Shell - sH,
Sears - 37'1.
Shaney's -~
Wendy's- 26'1t
Worlllingtoo - 12
Lid. -1o'!t
NSC - 15\
Oak Hili Financial 15 ~
OVB-24'1t
Raci<y Boats - 5
Wai-Mart - 51 ~
lands End - 30
City Holding- 10
Col - 15~
DG-t~.
DuPoot - 37'1.
a\
Dally steel< reports .,.
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes ol the prel/louo
day's transactions, provided by Smhh Pa~
ners al Advest Inc.
LOCAL BRIEFS
and Literacy Education·
(ABLE) program will hold
POMEROY - Units of an open house on Wednesthe Meigs Emergency Ser- day from 9 a. m. un ~ l 2:30
vice answered 10 calls· for p.m., and 6 to 8 p.m. f
The public is inv;.ted to
assistanc~ on Monday. Units
attend and to learn more
responded as follows:
about the ABLE program,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
3:33· a.m., Pageville Road, where adults can study for
Tina Brooks. Holzer Med- the GED test and improve
basic skills.
ical Center;
The center is located at
a.m., Barringer
9:27
Ridge Road, Harry Crisp, 111 W. Second St.
treared;
10:45 a.m ., Rowe Road,,..
Theron Johnson, Jackson
General Hospital;
12:26 a.m., County Road
RUTLAND - Rutland
28, Alan Crisp. treated;
Church
of Christ will hold a
5:14 p.m., HMC Clinic,
Ida Wilson. Camden-Clark homecoming day celebration of the church's 172nd
Memorial Hospital;
9:34 p.m., State Route anniversary on Sunday. A
124,Amanda Moore, HMC. social hour will be .held at
830 a.m., with coffee, juice
POMEROY
11 :27 a.m. , Overbrook and sweets, and a time to
Nursing Center, Brian visit and view pictures and
history of the church, and
Hayes, HMC;
7:23 p.m., HMC Clinic, worship and communion
will be held at 10:30 a.m .,
Juanita Clark, HMC;
9:43
p.~..
Mulberry with Earl Slack, former pas.
tor, as speaker, and music by
Avenue, Lisa Haggy, HMC .
Jane Wise. A carry-in dinner
TUPPERS PLAINS.
11:05 a.m., State Route will be held at noon, with
124, assisted by Reedsv,ille as meat, drink< and table serFirst Responder, Rosey vice prpvided. Slack will
speak during the afternoon
Niday, CCMH .
service at I .p.m., and
Dwight Icenhower, local
Elvis Presley impersonator,
will sing gospel music.
Pastor Leonard Wright
RUTLAND Leading invites the public to attend.
Creek Conservancy District
will make water line repairs
on Hysell Run Road on
Thursday; and all ·custpmers
will have a service interrupTUPPERS PLAINS
tion from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Eastern
Athletic Boosters
A boil advisory will be in
effect for those customers will meet Wednesday 7 p.m.
until further notice, once at the high school. All parent's and friends of the athservice is restored.
letes grades 7 through 12 are
urged to attend.
EMS log calls
Plan
homecoming
Repairs
planned
Boosters
to meet
Road closes
MIDDLEPORT - Salisbury Township Trustees will
close McElhinney Hill Road
(T.R. 361) on Wednesday,for
approximately five hours, to
make repairs.
Perfof111ance
slated
Wrestling
benefit $et
RUTLAND - Sl from
each ·admission ticket sold
for the professional wrestling
to take place Saturday at 8
p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center ' wil1 be donated to
the American Red Cross,
according to sponsors of the
event.
POMEROY Ralph
Cooke and Junior and Rita
White will be presenting
musical entertainment at the
Meigs Senior Center on
Thursday at 5:30 p.m.
The performance is free of
CARTHAGE - Revival
charge and the public is welservices will be held at the
comed to attend.
Carthage
Community
Church Oct. 25-27, 7 p.m.
Speakers will be Dwight
Davis of Belpre on Thursday,
and Keith Kapple of Mariet.CHESHIRE - Descen- ta on Friday and Saturday.
dants and relatives ofVal and Special music will be preAudith Well will hold a sented each evening.
reunion on Saturday at the
WEST COLUMBIA
Kyger Creek Clubhouse in
Salem
Church in West
Cheshire.
A potluck, starting at 12 Columbia will have revival ·
p.m., will be held during the services, O ct. 17-20 at 7
'p.m. each evening.
reunion .
Revival
services
Reunion
scheduled
1
Open house set
POMEROY
Pomeroy Center
The
of the
Meigs County Adult Basic
IPRIIIG V.~ lf'l CIIHi,\,\
446 ·4524
fll
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7
FR11W~1 · THURS10N1~
TUES IS "BARGAIN'NIGHT"
$3.75 ADMISSION
(CIRTA'" FEATURES MAT IE UCLUOI!D)
LANDER (PG13) 7:30 1o 9:30
DON'T SAY A WOAD (A, 7 :00 6 SUO
JOY RIDE (R) 7:15 & 9:15
SUMMER CATCH (PQt3 7:00 I 8:15
AX KEEBLE'S BIG MOVE (PG)
7:00 & 9:15
TRAINING DAY R 7:00 & 9:30
ERENOIPITY (PG13) 7:10 & 9:10
.,
�..
Opinion
The Daily Sentinel
:Coming Thunday:
PageA4
'IUelcltly.
o-••· '·
Previews OJ all Friday's
-prep football action
!
2011
Tuescbly. Cktober t. 2011
111 Court St., POIJ)tfOy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
TuEsDAY'S
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
;HIGHLIGHTS
•
R. Sh-n Lewll
Managing Editor
...•
'
ote;;:r;m
'
Charlene Ho.ftlch
Genenl M•nager
~
...wrm...,
meet
RACINE - The Southern High School Athletic
Boosters will meet Wednesday
ay 7 p.m. in the high school
• cafeteria.
AI parents, boosters, fans,
and community residents are
urged to attend.
NATIONAL VIEW
reat
• The Indianapolis Star, on destroying chemical
depots: It finally seems to be sinking in at the Pentagon that the vast quantity of deadly VX nerve
agent stored here in Indiana is a mass casualty dis~
aster w;titing to happen.
On Sept. 25, a full two weeks after the terrorist
disasters in New York and Washington, the Army
posted ar~ed, military guards at the Newport
Chemical Depot in Vermillion County ... 60
miles due west of Indianapolis.
Newport is storing 2.5 million pounds of this
terrible stuff, enough to wipe out the human
race.
The Army is constructing a two-stage chemical
process on site that would convert VX into a
harmless form of salt. But construction and testing problems have caused one delay after another, and the actual destruction process is not even
scheduled to get under way until late 2004. The
last drops ofVX would not be destroyed until
June 2006.
This is unacceptable. America is at war, and a
sense of urgency is needed to rid the homeland
of the monstrous threat posed. by the very pres;..
ence of this stuff.
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TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of2001. There are 83
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
Three hundred years ago, on Oct. 9, 1701, the Collegiate
School of Connecticut - later Yale University - was chartered.
On this date:
In 1635, religious dissident Roger Williams was banished
from the Massachusetts Bay Colony. (He became a founder of
Rhode Island.)
In 1776, a group of Spanish missionaries settled in presentday San francis~o.
In 1888, the public was first admitted to ~:he Washington
Monument.
In 1930, Laura Ingalls became the first woman to fly across
the United States as she completed a nine-stop journey from
Roosevelt Fidd in New York to Glendale, Calif.
In 1936, the first generator at Boulder (later Hoover) Dam
began transmitting electricity to Los Angeles .
In 1946, th e Eugene O'Neill drama "The Iceman Cometh"
opened at the Martin Beck Theater in New York.
In 1958, Pope Pius XII died. (He was succeeded by Pope
John XXIII.)
In 1967, Latin American guerriUa l~ader Che Guevara was
executed while attempting to incite revolution in Bolivia.
In 1975, Soviet scientist Andrei Sakharov was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1985, the hijackers of the Achille Lauro cruise liner surrendered after the ship arrived in Port Said, Egypt.
Ten years ago: President Bush declared "total confidence" in
his nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court, Clarence Thomas,
who was accused of sexual harassment by former aide Anita
Hill.
five years ago:Vice President AI Gore and jack Kemp debated in St. Petersburg, Fla. Two Americans and a Briton shared
the Nobel Prize in chemistry while three Americans won the
physics prize. In the opening game of the American League
Championship series, 12-year-old Jeffrey Maier turned a probable fly out into a game-tying home run by reaching over the
right-field wall at Yankee Stadium and sweeping the ball into
the stands with his baseball glov~ (the Yankees won, 5-4 in 11
,
.
)
I
mnmgs .
One year ago: Arvid Carlsson of Sweden and Americans Paul
Greengard and !'ric Kandel won the Nobel I;>rize in medicine.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Fyvush Finkel is 78. Senate Minority Leader Tren( Lott, R-Miss., is 60. Rock musician John
Entwistle (The Who) is 57. Singer Jackson Hrown e is 53. Actor
Gary Frank is 51. Actor Richard Chaves is 50. Actor Robert
Wuhl is 50. Actor Tony Shalhoub is 48. Actor Scott Bakula is ..
47 . Musician James Pearnley (The Pogues) is 47.Actor Michael
Pare is 42. Rock singer-musician Kurt Neumann .(The
BoDeans) is 40. Country singer Gary Bennett (BR549) is 37.
Singer l~J. Harvey is 32. Sean Lennon is 26. Actor Randy
Spelling is 23. Actor Zachery Ty Bryan is 20. .
III .
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Southem
boosters to
·~
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hlilil,., C4. 'I .Otorl#l baml, r11rku «ltWwiJ- tt«l4.
Eliminate chemical dumps bifore ·
terrorists find them usiful
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Page AS
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The Daily Sentinel
Chllrlft W. Govey
Publlaher
The Daily Sentinel ·
Braves drop
Kevin Millwood
ATLANTA (AP) - Righthander Kevin MiUwood was
left off Atlanta's roster for the
NL division series against the
Houston Astros because the ·
Braves are going with a threeman rotation.
" Manager Bobby Cox said
~ that Millwood \1-7) will be
'~s No.4 starter- following
• Greg Maddux, Tom Glavine
· imd John Burkett - if the
:-Braves make the NLCS.
•'( Cox chose to keep Jason
,"'Marquis on the roster. Mar' quis had 22 relief appearances
'!his season and has speed on .
' the bases. He is 2-0 with a
.'2 .45 ERA since Sept. 1, while
,,'Millwood was 3- 1 with a 4.56
,ERA.
KONDRACKE'S VIEW
Economic stimulus plan should target Christmas sales .
The White House and the Congress are
waiting for Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan to tell them when to start
stimulating the ec<lnomy, but it's clear
what their target date should be: Nov. 23,
the day after Thanksgiving and the start of
the Christmas shopping season.
If consumers don't have more money in
their pockets by the end of next month,
it's likely they won't spend and help lift
the economy out of what indicators and
analysts suggest will be • certain recession.
Consumers are key to U.S. economic
growth, and surveys by the Conference
Board and others show that consumer
confidence, which was in a decline before
Sept. 11, collapsed afterward because of
shock and layoffS.
Putting money 'into the hands of consumers quickly - in the form of immediate tax cuts.rather than rebates- would
also be a short-term, temporary stimulus
and wouldn 't make a permanent dent in
the federal, budget surplus, as would runaway spending or permanent tax cuts.
Whit~ House officials say they haven't
begun talking to Congressional leaders yet
about how big the stimulus ought to be
and what fprm it should take. ,.
They are waiting for Greenspan to
sound a gong- possibly this week - but
if he continues to delay making a judgment, Democrats and Republicans ought
to at least start talking without him.
The two sides have very different ideas
about what it takes to give the economy a
boost; therefore, they. should start putting
proposals on paper +- with numbers and begin negotiating.
The White House and Congressional
Republicans lean toward corporate tax
breaks, while Democrats favor measures
that put money into the hands of working
people and those who have lost their jobs.
Acting like the war president he now is,
President Bush has promised that whatev-
Morton
Kondracke
COLUMNIST
After bailing out airline companies to
the tune of $15 billion, Democrats want
• to help jobless workers too, probably as
part of airline security legislation.
Democratic leadership aides report that
the Bush adrnirtistration is readying a ne'-/1'
supple!llental appropri3tion, which may
be as much as $40 billion, to pay for W¥
preparations.
,
On one thing, both sides agree: The
Social Security surplus can be spent. "The
President mentioned three prerequisites.
for that;' said one olhis aides. "War, ~
emergency, recession - arguably, we'v~
got all three."
On the other hand, there's still' wrangling going on over spending between
Congressional appropri3tors and White'
House Budget Director Mitch Daniels.
.Daniels is valiantly - but poss.ibly vainly - trying to persuade the Congress not
to use the terrorist crisis and the recession
as an excuse to abandon fiscal discipline,
which would endanger the long-term
budget surplus.
'
Even some Democrats say they ate.
worried that excessive spending now
might sap money needed later for ~
Medicare prescription drug benefit an4
aid for individuals without health insur"
1
ance.
1
Still, they want $3 billion to $4 billiorl
more than Bush requested for educatiml
this fiscal year. And even one Republic:ul
House leadership aide admitted that "di~
cipline is going to be hard to maintain" a$
Bush himself proposes new . spending
plans and tax cuts.
1
So, because both Greenspan and former
Democratic Treasury Secretary Robe£1
Rui)in are emphasizing that stimulu1
packages should be temporary, when Bush
finishes boosting airline travel, he should
start on Christmas shopping.
;
er package is put into place will have
bipartisan backing.
That's a good attitude with which to
start discussions, but Bush's advisers and
Greenspan are still emphasizing measures
to encourage corporate investment,
including cuts in the corporate and alternative . minimum tax rates and faster
write-offi for new equipment purchases.
For individuals, Republicans want to
speed up the phasing-in of Bush's $1.6
trillion tax cut and - . in their fondest
imaginings - cut the capital-gains tax.
Democrats oppose this strategy.
Democrats want to slash payroll taxes so
.as to help the 34 million workers who
don't pay income taxes and didn't benefit
from Bush's cuts, as well as boost unemployment benefits, raise the ·minimum
wage and, possibly, increase tax credits for
the working poor.
.
Rep. Bob Matsui, D-Calif. • a member
of the House Ways and Means Committee, said that during the economic boom
of the 1990s, states cut funding for their
unemployment programs in half, leaving
too little in the tiU to handle' the surge in
new claims.
New filings last week rose fiom·390,000
to 450,000 - the highest level in nine
years. The number is expected to climb to
500,000, with 100,000 layoffi in the air(Morton Kondracke is executive editor dj'
line industry alone.
Roll Call, the tJeWSpaper pf Capitol Hill.)
~Presidents
Cup
:" re-scheduled
:~,' PONTE VEDRA BEACH,
·,fla. (AP) - The Presidents
..f:up, pushed back to 2003 to
1 ~GCO~o~t~ th.e postponed
,. Ryder Cup, will be played in
;.,South Africa the week before
:-.Thanksgiving.
'
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Rams trounce =Lions, 35-0
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP)
- There's more to the St.
Louis Rams this year than
just
a
high-powered
offense. ,
The Rams routed 'the
Detroit Lions 35-0 Monday night with their first
shutout since moving to St. .
Louis in 1995. And it was
the first time the Lions
were held scoreless since
1993.
St. Louis linebacker London Fletcher is not jealous
of the attention that the
offense attracts. He's just
ready for more people to
notice what's happening
on the other side of the
ball.
"We don't want to· be
considered a team that
only has a great offense,"
said Fletcher, who had
seven tackles, including a
sack. "We can be great in
all three phases - offense,
defense and special teams.
"I think even if some
teams play their best
against us, it's still not going
PleiH SH MNF, A7
BY 5corr WOUE
OVP CORRESPOND£NT
UNDER PRESSURE- Rams defensive end Leonard little (91) closes In on Detroit quarter-
back Ty Detmer (14) Monday at the Superdome. The Rams shut the lions out, 35-0. (AP)
Ohio ·nobcats:Americas best 0-4 team
ATHENS, Ohio - Heartbreaking.
Unfair.
And even just plain not right.
That's how the Ohio footliaU team
must feel after this weekend.
The Bobcats took No. 23 Toledo to ·
the wire, but the Rockets did what
every team has done already this season
3nd simply beat Ohio Saturday, 48-41.
When Joe Sherrill ran the in ball
from two yards out, it gave the Bobcats·
a 41-34 lead. This came after Ohio rallied from being down 31-14 at on~
point on the second quarter.
But, while most of the crowd of
BY JOAN RYAN
Pres ident Bush's approval rating is 90
perce nt. No other president since the
Gallup poll began six decades ago has
ever hit 90 percent. The man attracting
these ratings is the same o1le who, in
the week of the terrorist attacks,
graced the cover ofNewswe.ek as " The
Accidental President," a reference to a
new book about the Supreme Court's
role in boosting Bush into the presidency.
Clearly, many of the people who
opposed his election are rallying
around him now. Had I been polled, I
would have thrown my support behind
him, too, despite my antipathy toward
hi:m in th e past.
.
I believe, as many Americans apparently do, we ought to show the world
a united front. We are sending th e message that our president's resolve is ours
as well. We can fight among ourselves.
We can call each other nam es. But in
times of crisis, we're Hoss and .Adam
and Little joe. You pick a fight with
our pres ident, you pick a fight with all
of us.
Yet this united front has a discon certing side,' especially for those of us
who tend to think out loud. There are
some things we're not supposed' to say
right now, som e questions we're not
supposed to raise.
If we suggest we ought to ·under-
I
stand why th e terrorists hate us so,
we're accused of sympathizing with
them. Or worse - we're accused of
suggesting that their acts were justified.
If we question the wisdom of all-out
war, we are weak and naive.
If we look to examine the U.S. role
in the Middle East, we are blaming the
victim.
•
I find myself choosing my words and
framing my questions carefully in conversation with anyone beyond my
closest friends, lest I be misunderstood
and thought to be unpatriotic. I have
discovered I have less than perfect
pitch in these matters, perhaps because
for the first time in IJIY life, my country has been so severely wounded by
outsiders . I'm afraid I don't have sharp
instincts on what is appropriate and
what isn't appropriate to say out loud.
For example, I wasn't offended, as
many apparently were, by Bill Maher's
statements on his "Politically Incorrect'' television show last week. He
questioned the courage of America's
recent high-tech wars and, agreeing
with one of his guests , said, "Staying in
the airplane when it hits th e building,
say what you want apout it, it's not
cowardly."
Sears and Federal Express pulled out
1
as spons 0ts of the show, and a smattering of ABC affiliates, including the sta-
Butch
Cooper
"' .
It is our Privilege and honor
to salute all ofthe firefighters and•
safety workers in .Meigs County!
•
•
,,
A salute to
Rutland Fire
Department!
Our strength lies in a united front against enemies\
.
After all, Akron (31-29), West Virginia
· (20-3) and Iowa State (31-28) were
either able to pull away late or hold off
a Bobcats' surge.
And in the end Saturday night, Ohio
dropped to 0-4 on the season after
Toledo's Antwon McCray ran in a pair
of touchdowns last in the fourth quarter.
_
BUTCH MEISTER
"That was an exciting fo'otball game,"
said first-year Toledo head coach Tom
21,918 cheered on the Bobcats in what Amstutz. "To Ohio,! give all the credit
looked like wv. going to be a upset 'for •in the world."
winless Ohio, one just had to have this
Credit, yes. But credit doesn't amount
feeling it wasn't meant to be.
pt.... ' " Cooper, A'J
From
•
Joe's Country
Carryout
'
I
tion in Washington, D.C., dropped the!
show indefinitely.
'
Obviously, they have every right to
do what they like, but it seems to
when we can't tolerate unpopulat
points of view on a show blatantly
called "Politically Incorrect," mayb¢
we're beginning to mistake contrariT
ness for disloyalty. So much of how ~
statement is received has to do witij
timing. We're grieving right now. We'r~
angry.
'
.
We don't want to hear anything neg•
ative about our country or our leadersf
Therefore, we're reluctant to raise th~
tough, uncomfortable questions.
'
Yet if we are going to send our son;
and daughters off to war, I would lik~
to understand who we're fightingi
what we hope to accomplish and how
we plan to accomplish it. I would likci
to h ear as many points of view as I catl
find.
'
We want to present ourselves to thcl
.world as a united populace. But we!
should also want to present ourselvel
as an informed populace, one whos~
indomitable strength is derived nol
from blind loyalty to our president lml
from a true understanding, and belief
' in, our mission.
:
.'
me
A salute to
Racine fire
Department!
"1
.i
.
ljoan Ryan is a columnist for the Sal!
Francisco Clmnide. Send comments to hq
in care of tl1is newspaper or send here-rna~
at joamy(mdiiare.com.)
.!
John~·
Ridenour
- David &. Ann
Zirkle
-Chester Volunteer
Fire Department
"ODII Bitt~ Them Alii
Mtl & T,J,
'?-I '
.~
;.
..
•
••
,.
,
,I
Steve
Pomeroy Fire
Department
Richard Peyton, Jr.
Pomeroy Fire
Department
Stacy Shank
Pomeroy #42
Fire Department
Su
1
~.
BELPRE Struggling
·through the mid-season mark,
the Belpre Golden Eagles
whipped the Southern Tornadoes 15-12 and 15-8 Monday
night in a Tri-Valley Conference lnterdivision ma1ce-up
game. Southern is now 6-10
overall and 4-9 in the league.
Michelle West led Belpre
with nine points while teammates Mykala Stephens and
Alisa Epperly each added six in
the win. Southern was led by
Amy Lee with eight points,
while frosh Susan Brauer
notched seven, Rachel Chapman added four and Katie
Sayre and Deana Pullins three
each.
Southern led early, 5-2, 5-3
then after Tabitha VanDyke tied
the score for Belpre, 6-6, the
Tornadoes fell in to a lull and
)'Vent one whole round without a score as Belpre swept to
an 11-6 advantage. The Eagles
went on to post the 15-12 win.
After falling behind early I 01, Southern came back on a
series ofBrauer serves to within two at I 0-8. Southernis sails
deflated however; as Belpre
soared to the 15-8 triumph.
Chapman was 7-of-7 with
an ace and was 12-of-12 passing, Sayre and Pullins were 6of-6 serving, while Sayre was
5-of"S spiking with a kill,
Emily Hill was 7 -of-7 spiking
with a kill, Brook Kiser was 7of-9 spiking with two kills and
9-of-9 setting, while Susan
Brauer was 9-of-9 serving with
feur aces .
Southern won the reserve
game 15-10 and 15-4 led by
Susan Brauer with ten points.
~---------~----------------------------------------------------~------------~
'
RYAN'S VIEW
.
Belpre
tops
Southern
'I'
r
Shawn ua"·""'
Middleport Fire
Department
L""¥ !'.i&.r
,
�.Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
~
{~tribune
Tuesday, Oct 9, 2000
- Sentinel - 1\.e
~ It r~
t==::lt
CLASSIFIED
~~~
w:..::r:. ~"'8aJ~·::.:;;.
:.~~:.·~~1:t· Marshal's Watts in
I:;."'Gorgeout New 1J.-pc. PS,
AUIF'-4 C1111tta. AM'FW Ctlll' l , Goal lk'
We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!
=
AJt,
-1 ~. flUJgical (740)US ....,,
100% • ·
1
11
~1 i-~~ ~:: ::Jr:. :
~antmiaaion . . - 1y. Now llrr*'o bolt I 2 c:ttalrs 1100. hood. S4.200 (740)256~":' ~ ~ 11800
\Jooc>d burner S400. Rlrinbow 11197 C~·-· 5
:':'
=75-3803 aittt
=~H,... $100. pm.
=
.a2SI
Pooch
&
~ ':?.le~
+-
ir ~hold
u.,,.,
JUfll. leather lnleri<><, ...m.ocr
curta1na, aefts, ofc_ 1964 air co
romote
iaub. eto:OIIont COJ\II11ion entry
$15 500 • 080
• 1600- (304)675-3123
(740)2511-61&9
·
Dining SOt. Black & Braoo, 2001 Chryo/er PT Cnllaar.
~lolh Chalra, glua 18blo, Aulomotic, a1r crv11o 1111
5199 good wwlltion. Fujitar $18,500 _
(304Je7S:
cash regl-. lntemo1 3903 afttt 3:00pm.
teadll, valued at $3,000,
~ dr o11er. Com!>lota 2001 ss Llml1od Ec11ion
can
r.:""~-=
l"o
___
~r I'EasoNAul-----·~
IIF.LP WANTm
IIIIo
Orivera wanlod- no COL,
23yro and up, good driving
Gentleman Seoklng White record, drug screen, bene·
Female Over 50 Years For !its, seniors welcome, 1·
Walks And Friendship. Re- 800-531-6553.
ply To: 553 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
~rtment 403 ·
PAY! Assemble products at
·
home. Call Toll Free
Why walt? Start meeting 1-800-467-5566 Ext. 12170.
Ohio singles tonight, caR tall www.homejobs.com/12170
~re; 1·800- 766·2623 ext Handy person needed to
1
6 ·
worK with home owner on
miscellaneous prOjects both
ANNouNcF.MF.Nrs indoors & outdOOrs: parson1.~-------•·
al references requ1red, call
--.
(740)985-3666.
COSTUMES. Rutland De·
pa rtment Store. Thurs .. Fri., Heavy Equipment Operators needed NOW!! Back·
sat., noon-7pm, Oct. 5th- hoe, Trackhoe & Dozer.
Nov. 4th, (740)74.2-7243, You can be trained and cerragdoiChernatsage.com
Hfled In 21 days. No money
down
. Transponatlon and
Disney &ach Vacations, 6
nights, nice hotel, will sacri- lodging available. Operator&
fice lor $199, (614)898· are standing byl Calltodsyl
1·866-+ta-6669.
2726
i
r
I
LosT AND
fOUND ·
L~-------_.1
..,
LOST 2 Walker Coonhound
dogs !n Georges Creek
area. Both females, family
pets. (740~ 1 .0968
LOST- Pomeranian Route
7S between lower Garfield
Road & construction work.
Family pel, last seen ~nq
picked up by a pick-up
r
I
~~::;::;::~·
i
Y.
S
ARD ALE
1
YARD SAJ.E.
GALUPOUS
Centenary, Friday, OCtOber
121t18·12. Play Station, toddler boys clothes, womens
clothBS and misc.
Saturday October 13th. 211
Campbell Rd. Alo Grande. 1
mile up Charry Ridge.
(740)245-1111.
Maaaio
Tractor, New Kerosene
Heater, New VenUass Fireplace Logs, Effanbee and
Madam Alexander Dotts,
Clothes, Misc.
.
_ _._
Wednesday & Thu.-y.
8:30am-? Glasa, housewares, collectibles, school
desk, tools, clothing, amtque&. State Route 141 •
Centenary
.
YARD
, n. ~?.Pr. r~•
Part-time Dlelary Aide
needed for 100 bed skiHed
nursing facility. lntereated
apptlcants should apply to;
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksplinqs
Road, Pomeroy, Oh10
45769, ATT: Gina Waver,
Supervisor, Equal Opportunily Employer Encouraging
Workplace Oi\lersity.
p a r t • t 1 m e
housekeeper!laundry staff
needed tor 100 bed skilled
facility. Interested
applicants
should
apply to ;
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Canter, 36759 Rocksprings
Road,
Pomernu, Ohio
r
45769, Att Mike Gilmore,
Supervisor. Equal Opportu·
nity Employer Encouraging
Workplace Diversity.
Position Announcement
Posting Dale: 10105101
nursing
HELP WAN'IID
I
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shlnoy Spe11111, 304-
Gr
tubfect toAIM r:~
F•lr HouMig Act of 1tll
located in Gallipolis is look-
whtch rn.1kn
ing lor full-time, part -time
and temporary positions.
tt llleglll to
actYertiM"•nv
prerer.nc:e, limitation or
dl&crlmlr..tlon tt.ed on
race, color, rellgton, ux
flrnlllll ltltY8 or ntltiOMI
orfgln, or 1ny lnt.ntlon to
Candidates must be ener·
getic lndi\liduals who are in·
lerested in a challenging
and rewarding mueer with
the world's largest retailer.
As a member of the WalMan team, you would recalve a competitive wage
and enjoy benefits Including
merchandise
discounts,
401 (K), stock purchase
plan, profll sharing, health
benefits and career advancement opportunities. in·
terested aPplicants need tO
slop by lhe Wai·Man
layaway depanment and
pk:k up an application
maUanytuch
"preterence, limitation or
For Sale By Owner· 3 bed·
rOQm, 1 112 baths, Nice
Schult mobile home. Fi·
nancing
available.
(740)441 ·1498 or (740)446-
diiCrimlnallon."
Thll ntwtpaper will not
knowfnQiy KCept
ldvertiNmenl• for .....
Htete which •• In
'ltOIIIIon of the IIW. OUr
rNden .,.. hereby
lnformedtMt•ll
The
2808 Birch Ave. 8-?. Oct
10., tovs. girts clothes up
too size · 12. lace. (heavy.
wide, thln),miSc.
r~1
Alck Pearson Auction Company, full time auctioneer,
cl)mplete auction service.
Licensed 166,0hlo & West
Virginia, 304·773·5785 Or
304<773-5447.
WANIID
roBuv
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Sliver, GOld Colns, PrOal·
sets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings,
U.S. Currency,M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·
446·2642.
Wartted to Buy: Standing
Timber. (740)379-2758.
I \II' ! 0\ \II \1
'-. I U\ H I ...,
I
-=..~;;;;;...;;....;..;;;.....;_., ·
12x65 with 81116 expando. 2
Bedrooms, 2 Bath. Newly
Carpeted. High Efficiency
Furnace. Air Conditioned.
GOOd Condition. Priced ~ to
Sell. (740)367-7671
I
r•o .
I
1180
,4
"lt10
fiELp WANIED
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _....
-,
CNA's, HHA's Certified
homemakers needed to pro·
vide ln home ael'\llces tor
elderly/disabled In Mason &
Putnam county areas. Call
1·688-453-4992
DirectOr ol Nursing needed
for 100 bed skilled nursing
facility. Experience is re·
quired. Excellent opponuni·
ty lor the right candidate to
work with eKCept!onal management team, nursing staff
..and facility with eKcellent
regulatory compliance. I n~
terestect candidates should
appiy to: Overbrook Center,
333 Page St., Middleport,
Oh 45760 EOE
r
304-
Fi
r
I
j
I
=..
says
I.
1
.
P'rime 2·112 acre lot for Tara Townhouse Apart- Nice used furniture/ applian- .
building on- located on quiBI: monts, Very Spacious, 2 ces. (740)446-1004 or ·
r
·
:.'~~~.~F>:: Lw--='----1·
·-T
=·
Bedrooms, 2 Fklors, CA, 1 (740)446-2680.
112 Bath, Fully carpeted,
L68S8 Plus SoctrrHy DepoSit
Required, Days: J4Q-4463481 : Evenings: "740-367·
0502, 740-4464)101 .
R
1 Bedroom Apartment, e-frigerator, Range, A/C In~
I<I '\ I \I ...,
Cluded,S288PiuaDepotll&
;;:=::;;:===~ Reference. HUO Approved .
1:
~(7_:40::;J44c:..:_l:.-_:1;:_5_:19;__ _ _
llot.9s
2br. on Mt. Vernon In Polrtt
Pleasant. (304)675-7833
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Yeara at 8.5%
APR. For Listings, 800-319-
3323 Ext 1709.
::-:---:----:-- :---:2 bedroom home close to
town, bBsamolil. River view,
$4251 month; 3 bedroom In
town, 1·1/2 baths. Good 10cation. $5001 month. Refer·
deposit reQuired.
(740)446·3644.
':--:B:'.:.,room.c.:__=Ho
ed
'-"-use
-.-:AIC
:::-.--:R:--82
frlgerator included, Opposlt
and References. (304)882·
2198 Call aher 5:00
-~-'----'----'---,Brk:k home In city, newly
decorated, 3 bedroom, bath
and half. Basement with rae
room, ventral air, gas heat,
1107monthTeodolra Ave.;.ty$~50
per
Pus secu,, , eposit, M pets please.
(740)446-2573
ences and
3 Rooms and Bath. 46 Olive
Sire&!. UtiiiUes Pald. Stove
and Refrigerator No Pets.
$495 plus depoell. Roforeocas Required. (740)«83945
3 rooms fumlshecl, utilities
paid, $280 plus dopooll.
(740)446-1340
•p RT
IE "'•UTIFUL
"' A •
MENTS AT BUDGET
PR~
CES AT JACKSON .ES·
TATES, 52 Westwood Prive
from $291' to $383. Walk to
shop & moviaa. Call 740-
!.
~
RHfteso used mi~-. $1CIO· ·
=~~~u::·
autos, $360. (740)446-1 82.2 ·
Cal early or late.
·
_
r
.
1
•~-
r.~u...,u.....-:~
L,~"""""""""""""""""""""_.l
Buster's
Antiques
Now :
Open. Antiques/ Amlllh Fur· .
niture 202 4111 Streot. (Be- ·
hind Criminal Records) wa
Buy & Sslil (304)675-1246
.
Buy or Mil. Rlvorino Anll· .
ques, 1124 Eaat Main on
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740~2-2528. Russ Moore,
:ownar==-- ----:--,-----::--
Now Buslneas Opening Qc- .
Iober 101. Sue's Seloctabfes on the "T" In Middlepoo '·
Ohio. (740lii92.Q298
MJso;:a 1 ANWO IS
r
446-2568. Equal Housing
MntaiAND&IE
I'!
•
,
6 female Golden Retriever i
pups, 8 wl<l old, lull bloodChristy's Famll~ Ll\llng, ed,
$50, (740)985-38&2.
33140 New Uma Rd., Rutland, Ohio, 740-742-7403. ·Bed whh Box Spring and
Apartment, home ~nd trailer Manre 11. Chest Drawers, ~
rentals. commerctal store· Chair, Table and Chairs, Ml· ,
fronts ~vailable for lease. crowava, Baby Car seat, '
Vacanc1ea now.
Stroller. (740}448-9742
'
Fwnlshed efficiency, all util· Cabll18t Stereo sso. 3 LaPilot Program, Renters it!es paid, share bath, $125 dlee Jackets, $5.00 each.
Needed,304-736-7295.
monttl , 919 2nd Avenue. (740)4-ol&-9429
(740)446-394l5.
Carpet Shampooer $30 .•
~hy rer"l'?' ~ovem$ 9 nJ Gracious living 1 and 2 McCoy Canister set, $50.j
d~~~~7~)~6 ~
bedroom apartments at VII- (740)448-&42Q.
•
.
lage Manor and Riverside '-=--~---- 1
Apaomen18 in Mlddlopon
JET
Moou HOMES From $278-$348. C811 7-w: AERATION MOTORS
FOR lbNr
992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportullltlea
~=~~·~~~on' ~\l~nu~~t ~~ '
r
Opportunity.
49
I
·
eoo-537•8528.
14x70, three bedroom, $300 Middleport, Beech Street, 2
a month & $150 deposit, no bedroom fum(shed apart~
pets. (740)742·2714.
ment, no pel&, depoa• & ret~ Kirby aweeper, 4yrs old. Trierences, utiiiUel paid, star sweeper both In excel- .
1994 Nice Clean Moblle(7
• _;40.:;)992~:...0:..1;.:65;:.._
- - - - - t e n t condition. (304)895· ·
Home lor rent. No Pets. 3129
$400/ month plus deposll Apor1mlnl Avolllbfo NOw =::=--:-c==~==
and utilities. (740)296-8122
Clll
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
after 7pm.
lWin Rlvtr Towtrl
lntertheml & COleman Q18,
'
-M
IH---.
~675-8878.
Oil & electric tumaces In2 bedroom
, no pelS, for 8Jlll
. HUD aubsl· eluding hi enlclency heat
$245/mo includes water. dlzed apt.for elderty and pump systems. We carry a
$100 deposit. (740)446·
disabled. EHO.
complete line of Mobtte :
~36.;.1,_7_______
home parts & aocesaorles ..
2 bedroom trailer on 143, no Very nice, 2-3 bedroom BENNETT'S HEATING 6
p8ts, rto calla alter 9pm, apanment, In town, large COOLING (740)44S.M11
kl1chen, LA, $500/mo. Ref- or 1..uo-a72.SH7
(740)992·3743.
erences & deposit required. www.orvb.com/brennetl
2 Br, 1 112 balh, 14 Wldo (740)446·3644
'-.!p.;.....;.....;.....;.____, NEW AND USED ,f UR• ·
with large expando & cen- 1%
oalalr, (740)1192-2167
FOKsi'i~NANCU FOR SALEI w.
nu~~t
Install, Free Estimates, If
3 bedroom mobile home In L.,""""""jii;;;,;;;:;~-.,J you dont Cal us, We both .
Middleport,
no
pets,
Loosel (740)448-6308, 1· •
1
(740)992-5858.
i~;~J:E
800·291-<>098.
r
I
:-:-~:---:::-:-:--:=
3 bedroom, Middleport,
5375 per month plus depos·
it, rent lndudes water. MW·
or & trash, (740)992·0175
N 1y
3 Br, 2 baths, 14x70 ew
remodeled, (740)992-2)87
Beautiful River VIew Ideal
For 1 Or 2 People, Referert·
No
ces, Depostt,
Pets, Foster Trailer Parte, 740·441 ·
0161 .
,-,----,-----,-----:-:::Mobile Home tor R~nt tn Rio
Grande. 2 Bedroom, some
utllltias, Close to college.
$2751 month. (740)2455100
Ntce cieart, 3 bedroom, In
country. (740)256--6574
Pool Table with Sever_allv:;cessortes. Table is 83" long.
Does need new cover.
jiO U<UEHOIJ)
$100. (740)448-0196
ro--.RESIDENTIAL •ND
L---liUUUl-1>~---.,J1
COMMIRCI:'L
"
AMANA· HI EffiCiency
+
2 While Whirlpool washers gaB fumaces, Supef" Hl 92
Etfi$75 each
GE Waoher 1e
H tp
nd AI
·
c ncy ea umpa a
r
$65. 1 Whll1pool Dryer $60. Conditioners. 10 year parts ,
Call aner Bpm. (740)"48- and labot warranty Included.,
9066
COMFORT AlA HEATING •
Appliances: Reconditioned
AND COOLING
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
(1(JI0)441-0114
1--.....88-0078
Refrigratora, Up To 90 Days
Guaranteed! We S..l New R"ldentllll Homl Owners
Maytag Appliances, French Tappan HI etliei.._,
90 pi s
··~,
u
City Maytag, 740-446-n95. gas furnaces Including oil
For Sale: Reconditioned and ~.~act~ iclgas f~rl8.;
washers, dryers and refrlg- ~88 ·
~
ff ency eat
""""roa'0mr.ro
___••
arators. Thompsons Apprt- Fumpsi ea~~~ ng Tappa~& .
~·
• ance. 3407 Jackson A\le· ree ncre I 1 e warran YI
nue. (304)675-7388.
::~~~·s HEAnNG
6
1 and 2 bedroom apart- "Kitchen cabinets, Arlstok- COOUNG (740.,.48-8418
ments, fumished and unlur· raft, good condition, twelve, or 1-800-872·5807.
nished, security deposit re· chestnut brown wood. In- www.orvb.comlbennen .
qulred, no pets, 740-992· eludes countertop and sink. Rocky wortc.s boots, size 11 ;:
2218.
S400 . Call after 6 pm., $40, 3 'Pille boards .• .
- - - - , - - - - - -- {304)675-4439
2lnx121nx12 ioot, $20, Pipe
1 bedroom upstairs apart·
threader, 1 Inch to 2 Inch, •,
ment In Gallipolis. Call "Kitchen cabinets, Arlstok~ StO. (740)992_2369
!
(740)446-2468.
ran, good condition, twel\le,
~-------- chestnut brown wood. In- Used 2300 Ditch · Witch '
1&2 bedroom, near Holzer, ciUdi!s countertop and sink. Trencher and 65 HP Ver·
economical utilities, $279 to $400. Call alter 6 pm ., meer stump grinder call
5379 per month plus utilities (304)675·4439
. (740)694·1681
(740)446-2957
!::C.:.::.:.:...:..:;:.:__ _ _ _ '=!:::-'-'=:::.:----,--=
Matching Kertmore washer Waterline Special: 314 200 '
2· 1 Bedroom Apts. located & dryer. $100. (740}441 · PSI $21.95 Per 100; 1• 200
close to PVH & Shopping 0182 after 5:30pm.
PSI $37.00 Per ,00; All
areas. (304)675-21 17
Main Street Furniture
Brass Compression Ftnlngs ·
(304)675-1422
In Stock.
Modern 1 bedroom apanStreet, Point
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
515 Main
men!, (740)446-0390
Pleasant
ES Jackson, Ohio, 1·&00·
cN:--ow~cc,.a-,-k_cln'-g-A'-p'-p"'li"ca-t-io-n1
8 - New & Used Furniture 537·9528
35 West 2 Bedroom Town·
Wedding dress, size 7/8,
houso Apartmenta, Includes New 2 Place llvingroom s150 ., 112 karat$ v.. Iamond
C ·
Water Sewage, Trash, Suites , $399. Buy, Sell, ring, size 6 , 200. a11
$350/Mo., 740·446-0008.
Trade.
(740)379-2268
I
r . _,___
iimr;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
o·r
~
~
r
.
-......
I
I
=·
riO
100
=-=-------
..-cab.
MUSICAL
~
from ..._AS
~40)44~v~l
aldo, 18•000• (740JV92-4
Adorablo AKC Golden Re- <><(740) 541-8&32.
1rlever PUflll, 7 old.
V. &:
ShoiS currom. Paronla on
~
promlaol. (740)379·21139
4-WDs
(740)379-9283
~
AKC Labrado• Aotrlevor 1985 Chevy !HO lllazar,
Pupplee. Ylllow ond Black, ~•4.
asking
S1800
Ready Now. $ 200• $325 _ (740)992-2167
No SUnday call (740)245·
1868 Foid F-150, 4x4 pick·
5356
up, XLT packogo. AIC, oter·
PurebredBiueHeeierpups, eo,130,000miln. Falrconbolh malo J fomalel, $100 dillon. $2,500. (740)44e.
eaCh, call (740)7-12·1103 of. 4245- 6pm.
1994 314ton,
ter .......
Aeglsterod Lab · puppies. 4x4, SLE, fUiy loaded, good
One Black Male, one white cOndition, buckel aula,
female.
$200
-h. 82,000 mlioo, $12,000.
(740)446 0060
(740)446-1068
wanted: BJMdeJI of 'Reg< 19119 Ford W-r. mobil"
!sterad Statfordatllre . Bull ty MBt, wheelchair friendly,
Torrlor" dogl. 1 am looking low mllel, W l n . - call
f~ a•pup, (740)44&«177 · (740)W.N!II08.
~
T h e lions are anything
but sp~cial. Thetr seasonlong p roblems at quarterback
continue d M onday night.
Ty Detmer, who threw
seven inten:eptions in his last
g=e , w as 15-of-18 for 149
yards and an inten:eptio n whic h Bly retu rned.
Batch, a th ree-year start er
who was replaced after the
fi r.; t game, was 1 1-of-16 for
1 13 yards with an inten:ep ti o n and a fum ble.
Detroit's H er man M oote,
who h as experienced · j ust
abo ut e verything in his 11
years with the Lion s, said
Monday 's
game
ranke d
among the lowest mom e nts
of his ca ree r. .
Detroit safety Ron Ric e
said the Lions' d efense held
St_ Lo uis relative ly in c h eck ,
but the offense · didn't do its
part.
Warner w as 29-of-3 7 fo r
291 yards. H is t o u c hdown ,
passe s were t o A z-Zahir
Hakim for 15 yards, Torry
Holt for 36 and E rnie C onw ell for 1.
for71 ya rds and a touch down and caught nine passes
for 80 yards, praised the
defense.
" What's going on is that
d ~
·
1 ·
our
e.ense 1s p aymg so
good that w e're getting more
opportunities;· Faulk said.
"We kind o f have our swagger back now that w e know
our d e fense will make
fti
k~ ·
o enses wor .or 1t.
" It gives you a sense that
everyone
has each othe r's
I
II
I
!
1
HoME
.,
IMPRovJr.MENJs
BAMIIENT
WATERPROOFING
ur-•JIIIonal ilfetirno guar·
- • ol
1u
a-. '~'
nllh&d. Ea1ablfllhod 1975·
Gall 24 Hro. (740) 4-46·
1<800·287·0 576 ·
0870,
A~ w·•-ng.
~·· _ , _ ,
•et- •·
Mal~to.....,.. PaJnlfng, vinyl lid<
lng, corpantry,
windowo,
botha, .clooro,
- home
repolr and mc<e. For froe
estimate call Chet, 740-992-832:;:3-~!!""--...,.'!-.,
C&C General Home
·r
.::.:a~
··~·
pollsten.
After barely beating 0-4
Ohio, the unbeaten Rockets
as
stated before, knows that.
And Ohio quarterbac k
U
ks
b
Dontre Jac on may e more
of the problem than the solution.
tive yardage,
the B o b cats
were held te minus-2 ya rds on .
h · fi a] dr'
·
t eu n
1ve.
" It's hard for us to try to
score with I :30 left o n the
Mid-American Conference
and any other smaU conference whose teams migh t actu-
Sure, he's a solid running
quarterback, but there are
times w h e n you nee d a passe r,
any be good.
. Besides, t h e po listers a] read y
have their smaU conference
darlings in Fresno State, who
and he isn't it .
This 1·s a team of runners .
Ohio had to be to be the top
rushing team in the .country
S rd
h
prior to aru ay nig t.
Sometimes, though, you
cloc k ," said J ac kson . "That's
just not our offense."
The B 0 b e a ts d. idn't even
threaten to score.
That's the probl em and
were dropped out of the AP . are No. 8 this week. This does"' 25
n't mean the BCS is holding
•OP
·
·"I promise you, that's the their collective breathes and
best 0-4 footban team tn the hoping someone will upset
his
d
country," said Amstutz 2.\ the Bull ogs .
post-game·· press conference
But,· I'm getting sidetracked.
,,
,
d
S
rda Th
Th t'
·
~
th day
wrappe up atu y. . ere s
a s a gnpe •or ano er
.
do b• 10
' mytru'nd"
No matter how well you
no
u '
·
Despite a 4-0 start, it play, going 0-4 is not going to
.
..,o Ie d o ,
seemed as1'f mos~ wnters
were win you any rewa rds .•
·
need a passing threat and Saturday t h at was noticeable as
the Bobcats had a chance late
in the game to get the bill
back down the field.
•
Short passes werre ill the
Ohio offense could muster,
,
one o f w hic h went 10r
nega-
I
'
I
'
•
that 's why this potentially
good team (heck, they're
capable of knocking out Marshall for the MAC East title)
won't be able to reach that
next level and m ake it to a
bowl game.
There's still time . If MarshaU
•
''
'
b ts Ak
d Ohio sw eeps
ea · ron an
the East tilt, the Bobcats can
still win the division .
l
But I doubt it .
1
188
I \1(\\ '-I 1'1'1 II-..
,\ I I\ I -.. 1111 h.
SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE
Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.
NDnCETO
CLASSIFIEDS!
CONTRACTORS
IApiNollce
52 Case DC with 5 ft. drag
typo brush hog. Both run
well. $1350 fof both, or
· $1050 tor tractor, $300 for
brullh hcg _separately.
(740)643-5217
VANMAR YM )500 Troctor,
diesel. 3 point hllch,l2,150.
Also, new 4' tlnllh mower,
ltin In erato. $850. SNtiPino
avallabta. Located jult out•
side of Hun\Sville, i'J (2!141)
778-9435 www.maynartfeoo
qulpment.OCH'I!
WANim
roBuY
Hou1e,
Pomeroy.
12,2001, will receive
-lad bldo tor Salim
School Lot Road .
Paving, at which time
and place the !lido
will be opanad.
The Melgo Counly
Commlulonero wloh
til contract lor Pll•lng
oervlceo. The work
ohell mHI olllnurdo
•• outllnld In the
11117
ODOT
Conetructlon 1nd
M-Illo
Speclllcallono and
conolela of applying
• 40711lek COil, • 301
uphall baH cour. .,
a 402 aaphllll...llng
cou ...... 11M llphlll
llnlilllng course, end
1 one loot wide
cruohad aggregate
berm on Salem
School Lot Road In
Columbfa Townlhlp
of Melga County. The
301 llem will be
placed at varlou•
Wanted to buy: Used Mobile
Homo. Gall (740)448-(1175
r304)6~
3 Registered Charolals
Bulls. (304)675-6581
Moll Ordlr/EoCommoroa Buolnlao.
Nood help lmmodil101y1
$622+/WHk/PT.
$10<11$000/woei</FT. Fullolrllning.
1
Comml. . lonore In
their oHice at the
Melgo Counly Court
Ohio until 10:00 A.M.,
The Melge Counly ~.
October
e~
Fr" booklt.
wwwcomfonll,.ltylls.oom
1566-6441
IOCIIIono II the
dlractlon ollhti Molgo
County Engl-r. The
402 and 404 ltemo
will
be
uoed
throughout
the
10,800 feet length.
The average width lo
20 foal . Tack C011t,
TraHic Control olher
lncldanlelo ohall be
Included In the unit
prlcee bid lor 301,
402
and
404 .
l!otlmaled quantltleo
Include 521 lon of
301, 2807 loll of 402,
1304 ton ol 404 end
1M ton or cruohed
. aggrevota berm.
Conlract
ctocumenta,
I
opeclllcotlono and
other
relative
lnlormollon can be
110
oblalned lhrough tho
oHica of the llalgo
County Engln•r, al
34110 Falrgroundo
Flolld, Pomeroy, Ohio
45781, or by colflng
(740)H2·2111 •
A
nonrefundable 1M of
$15 will be chorged
lor uch aet of
contrect documente.
It lo the reoponolblllty
ol each bidder to
view the roado and to
contact the Counly
Engineer with any
qu•llono regarding
any oopect or the
project .
The
tuccuolul bidder lo
oleo rooponolble for
arranging
work
ocheduleo wllh tho
County Engln-.
All bldl •r• to ...
eoolod and clearly
marked
" Solem
School Lot Road
Povlng • 810" on tho
oulltde of the
envelope
and
oubmllled to the
Malga
Counly
Commlulonero,
Molgo Counly Court
Houae, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45781 on the
approprlole doy and
time. Faxed bldo will
not be.acceplad.
Each bid muot be
accompanied by
ellher a bid bond In
the amounl of 100%
of tho bid amounl
with
1
ourety .
oetlafoctory to lhe
alorooald
Melgo
County
Commissioners or by
cerlllled
check ,
caehler'• check or
Irrevocable leiter of
credll wllh a aolvenl
bank In lhe emounl of
Help
Wanted
TELEPHONE OPERATORS
•
Clera Broughm,
new hoses, good tkea, runs
good, In good shape, call af1er 3:30 pm 1-304-682-3430
1993 Buick Century. 89K,
$2,495: 1992 Corsica.
1031<. one owner, $2,495;
1993 Ca\laller, 98K, S2,19S;,
1993 Grand Am, 103K,:
$2,595. t;OOK MOTORS,
(740)446·0103
1988 Olds
cial."
just waiting for Toledo to slip.
Not necessarily lose, mind
you. Just slip.
No, the pollsters don't hate
Toledo. They . just dislike the
RHidtn11al 01 CommerclaJ
Wiring. MMco or ,.
Dodge Carwvan LE, palnl. Llcanood IIIC·
• (140)448-6415afttt6pm.
1rlclon. R1<1eno1Ar EftlCirlcaJ.
W\10003041, 304-875-1781.
Richards Brolhera Fruit
Fann. APPLES AND
MUCH MORE. 24 miiiO
Nor1h of Galllpollo on Courr
r
fnn PlpAS
said. " W e feel like we're the
h
Earth - Ill
·
g reatest s OW on
an phases o f the game."
M ars h·"
"-" F a ulk , w h o r.m
c
per
L.--~iiiiriiiiiiii._.l.- 18,000 miln.ldng ca!>.llolr
r
MNF
backs and when you have
that togetherness. 1t's spe-
I. r~"·~&
,----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------MoroR HoMEs
Coo
I
as
(31!4)982-3829
87 IIMC Sonoma SLS.
r
The Dally Sentinel • Page A 7
to be good enou gh ."
St. Louis (4-0) didn't seem
to play its best against
Detroit (0-3), but its perl'ormance was still good enough
. to remain the NFL'i only
undefeated team .
.
Ku rt W arne r threw three
tou chdow n p asses and Dre'
Bly ret urned an inten:eption
rds ~
93 ya
.or a score.
" W e're d o minating," Bly
•=
jndependenl HerbaiJa 01o- ~
fOR SAul
'"""""· Cali FOf Product Or
Opportunity. (740)441- 1982 2000 Dodgo Dakota ~
~:::...;:....::;.:;...;.:._.:__.:_;:. 27,000' mlloo, IIXCelonf"""' 1870 22 fool W-go.
•r-~----, dHion, (740)245-9252
runa IJ'N1, need to Mil do
Bl Chow. 112 ton 2WO.
S2.500.
.......
000
~~---iiliiiiiiiio-.,1 ~~
= i = -1-995
-Wl-nnobago-------r.
to wins, and wins don't
Blocl<, brick, plpos, $1700. (304)075-3280
or. 34 foot, auto lovllo, amount to respect to those
windowo, lln1els,
etc. Claude
good COJ\IIItlon.
h d ,
Ia
Winters.
Rio Grande,
OH B8 F-150 2wd. Now Motor awnings,
44,000 mlloo S32.oco. w o on t see you p y.
Cali 740-245-5121.
300 &eyt $2000. OBO (740)446-7802
Just ask the Associated Press
r
ACRF.AGE
r.t0 FOKRENr
~3.58=3·'---------- 1,0..--iiiOiiiiiiio-rl
---- I
ctweUingl ac~YertiMd In
thllnewa~ . .
1v.llable on •n -..~
r
Lor.;&
road, secluded area, outside of city limits In Sbringlleld Township. Asking
$17,500. Call tor more Info.
(740)446-4514 Days; or
(740)446-3248 Ewnlngs.
Warttecl to buy: 5- 20+ Pani·
Final Days, Nalionwlde In· ally WOOded. Gallla County.
ventory
ReducliDnl Call alter 6pm_ (740)4463945
(304)736--3409
In this nerp·pn 11
The Wai-Mart Supercenter .
I
Deluxe home, save $5,445,
new 2000 model Skyline, 3
bedroom, 2 bath, total elec·
lric, vinyl & shingle, low
monthly pa;fments, delivered & setup includes skirt·
ing & steps, Coles Mobfle
Homes, US SO East, Alh1
ens, Oh, 740-592-1972
AH rulu..._ .W.rtl•l~
675-1429.
Secrelllry 1
Social Work Progr-..n . 140
~.,r_MOB. .;,;fORi iui.isl i~i iOMES;,. ,~I
I
r
r
HELP WAN'IDJ .
1110
b1Q1. AIS, 1, Mk1
(740)378<2134 HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) M an hill's Darius Watts
m
go.
turned himself in to poli ce Monday on a mal icious wounding
~.F~•·,~;= c harge stemming from a Se pt . 29 fight.
or (740~7e02 "'
Watts, who W1! rele2.\ed on bond, has d e nied the cha rge.
11 Lind · 74.1110 Coach Bob Pruett said Watts told him that he was not at the
~~
undiscloJed location.
•
-... ·• ·
" WeU , I can't speak fo r Darius, but tbe side that I heard was
::""'
..,.:;:::;;, ~= that he W2.\n't involved in it at an. It w.is a mistaken identity so
0321
we' U just let the judic ial process r u n its cou rse :• Prue tt said
For Sllo1tl86 a.o.y Silver· Monday evening.
ocJo 4x4, 360. 48llL. 4op.,
n'
will
.
d 1
di
h
·
PW. POL, Now nrn,
watts
contmue to practice an p ay pe n ng a eanng,
33r112.50. Aunl good. llOiid Pruett said.
·
~~tonc. " The youngster
he wasn't involve d in it, and in these
•
I
1 h - di ial coitrt run its coune. e rFord Aorootar van, ·a1K cases we Ve a V.'aYS et t e JU c
mllol, auto, 3.0 V-6, air, tainly, if he's c harged and he admits to it, it's one thing. If yo u're
very - · atrklng $3250, .
- 1t
. 's ano ther," h e sa1.d .
(740)992-21152
charged and don' t a dmit to 1t,
==· .::.=r•
r~~;;§~-
12x66 Norris trailer, 2 bed·
B!ENEliS
University ol Rio
room , 1 bath, good oondi·
Grande lnvUes applications
TRAINING
tlon, central air, $6,000.
for the posillort of Secr.-tary
'
(740)367..0120
HOMilS
1 in lhe COllege 01 Liberal Glll1poll• Carwr College
Arts and Scterices tor the {careers Close To Home)
roR SALE
16 Wide. Onty $195.00 Per
~lat Work program.
Call Today! 740•44 6- 4367,
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest
· 1-8()0..214-0452.
· 28x60 Ooublewide sitting on Rate ~ith ~~~~--34~~2
AeSI?Onslbllitles of the fK;~SI-Reg N90.05·1274B.
rented lot . With 2x8 walls, derptn ng 1
~ion tnclude, but are not ltm- ,176
thermal pane windows. 1987 14x50, 2 BR, Bath.
1ted to providing general
MlscELt..ANEous , Priced to Sell. Point Pleas- A/C . Good Condition.
secretarial, clerical and
ant area. (304)675-3689 sasoo.
(740)367·7187,
technical assistance to t~e
ask for Rosemary.
~740)367-7015. 1983 14x50
~lal Wortc. Program; regiS· Qak firewood, $35 a load,
Good Condition. 2 BR, Bath
tanng students ~nd assign- two or more loads. $ 30 3 bedroom, 1_112 bath, heat $6900. 12x65, .2 BR, Bath.
$6Home35wWoroekkolryo ProNce"ssdlodng 1"9 _student advisors; main- (740)742·2897 or (740)992- pump, screened In porch, $2900 .
(740)446-4734,
tatmng budget accounts and 7285
lanced in back-yard, naw (740)441·1337, (740)367Mall. Easy! No EJcperl· records lor the Social Work
siding, buildings, $6 5,000. 7015.
snce
Needed. Call 1- program, providing research
WANTED
(740144 ,_, 033 1740)367·
800-652-8726 Ext. 2070, assistance to the Program
....., Do
1991 Norris Mobile Home,
0514
0
24Hrs.
Director making on-campus
t_l
14x70, 2 bedrooms, 2
=-c='-::----::-- --,- arrangements for LA 10101,
2 Story, 3 BR house on baths, very good condili?",
Ingram Barge Company will gathering and compiling at· All Kerosene wicks Instal- SCOut Camp Ad., Chester, $17,000. Call for appomt~~ ~:~~ 8~~~~=tl~~ tendance records lor LA led: repairing forced air ker· nice size LA, Kitchen & ment, {740)446.0768
"anment for Employment 111e0101 and 1olhodar clerical du- osene heaters: 1awn moM_kw· ba(1h. ror more information 1993 Clayton 16 x80 mobile
Stcurily, 225 Sixth Street. s as ass gn .
ers; sma 11 eng1nes. I a 7401985•3922
hOme 3 br 2 ba asking
(740)446-7804
S ·
·• · ·
ft
Pol PI
W V. .
nt easant, est trgln· A h_lgh school diploma or
2 Bel:lroom, Unfinished up- 519.000 304·773•588 5 a er
Ia, 255500039 on tQ-8-Q1 & equiValent required. Aasoc~- Davtd's General Contract!ng stairs, New healing & cool· pm.
~~ 2-0 1 ~ B:OO ~-~· till ate degree preferred. Prev1- Plumbing, electrical, pamt- lng Unit, New water line, 1st lime buyers· Govern·
~ld pjm. ~0 mndus ~v~ ous office experience help- ing, decks, roofs. Call New gas line, Chain Link menl loans buy loans &
vSec .Pcturrde a ly EOEa ful.
(740)256-9373 (304)633- Fence, large deck, New sale- (740 46_3093 OakUnty ca lo app .
,
6265
storf{l windows, ~rge 1ot, · wood Su reenter
MIFN.
All applicants must submit a
. It 99~Burdeffe. Priced upon
pe
leHer of interest and resume Georges Portable Sawmtll, lnspectio·n. Call (304)675- 28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom. OnMcClure's Restaurant now lncludingthenamesofthree don't haul your logs to the 2002
ly $345.00 Per Month
hiring all 3 klcatlons, full or references on or before Oc- mill Just call304·675-1ll57.
8.99% Fixed Interest Rata,
~n time pick up -~lea Iober 19, 2001 lo:
1-868-928-3426
- •
'
......., •
Ms. Phyllis Mason
Top To Bottom Cleaners , 3br. Ranch attached 1 car
:"tv!e~~~~:~~:g bac~
SPHR, Director of
professional, ~nd atlorda~ garage. Excellent Condition. Umlled Or No Credit? GovHuman Rasou~as
ble, homes, offices, rertla 15 • Brick lront. New Vinyl Bid· emment Bank Finance Only
1o ··ooam • ·Monda•, lhru Ssl·
""
constructlort and remade11 nn. ,. Inn,
new rool. Near Galllpo- At Oakwood In Barbours·
rd
UnivorSity or Rio Grande
II'
u ay.
PO Box 500
cleaning. Can dO almost lis. Call alter 5pm. \Iitie, wv 304_736_3409_
NIKKI 7 Ladles lo Sell Av,Y,.
Alo G;arlde, OH 45674
anything {740)992·1391 or (304)675·5038
can (740)446-3358
e-mail pmason@rlo.edu (740)992·2979
For Rent or Sale . Small New $14 wide, 3 Bedrrm.
--,N--:EW
' ---'E-,P_H_Ec:-0-:-A_A___F_R-o
E-o
Efax (740)245-4909
TR\·COUNTY CONSTRUC- House $250. Month+ $200. 0 n1y 19,850 . FrEis Del very
Lose 40~s In 2 mon1hslll
EEOIAA Erriployer
TION .
New Deposit.
(304}727·3318 & Set Up. 1-888-928-2426
~
C
1
Guaranteed Results.
AN (Full-Time ) case man- onslruct!oniRemodel ng. from 6pm-11pm.
New 14K70, 3 bedroom. 2
Dr. Approvedll
aner, coordtnation- sunArvi~ "Siding, ' Rooting, •Drywall, F
by
Nl bl bath, Ortly $995 down &
•
.. ,..~
'We Do It All~ F'ree Estl· or sale owner: ce • $189.62 per month, call
Free Co nsullatlon
slon of patient care. U· mates. 674•46231674_3855 level nome on 1 acre near Harold 740. 385-4387.
1·888·397·3645
censed In OH . and wv. ::.::::::c.::.::::::::.::::::::::::.. Chesler. Three bedroom. _ _;____c_.;.:__;_.;.:_---,---,-,www.eJihealthy.com
Must ha\le P.P.S experl· Will haul away, clean out, two baths, one-car garage. New DOuble Wide . $t95
OPTOME1'AIC TECHNI· ence and familiar with Medi- clean up or move almost tamlly room with fireplace, Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2
.
care and JCAHO guidelines anything. Call (740)446- sun room. New ventra~ hoat- Bath, Free Delivery & Set·
ClAN position S\laUable lor for' home health. Contact 7604
ing & ale system. One ml- up. 1-888-928·3426
r,:rson klterested In assist- Pete Sommer Medl Home
nute off Route 7, but still prl - .;;::__:_:=:__::::...:_=--ng patients with eye care Health 740.446-3880 RNs· Will power wash houses. vate. (740 )985•3981
Price Reduced. 3 Bedroom,
needs In a progressive; prl· PAN n&eded also
trailers, anything. Call --'-'------"--'---'-'--- 2 112 Bath, 2 Car Garage, 2
\ISla practice In Athens. Ex·
·
(740)441 -4238 or (740)44Ei· For sate lg. ranch style Fireplaces, Pallo Doors,
parlance desired but nol
SECURITY GUARDS
0151 ask for Ron . If no home, 4 br.. 3 ba .. · wl Much Morel Close 10 Hotznecessary. This position ofanswer, leave message.
screened In patio porch, 2 er's,
Gallipolis,
OH
fers benefits,I starting
salary
Temporary
securitu' nuards
$ 8
.lh
allf
I
6
• M
car
garage 7 ,000.
(740)441-0310
commensura e WI qu 1- or up to months. ust
caUons. Approximately 35 have clean pollee record, ii,;;;,;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_., COmmerical lots lor sale Of
F~
hours per week including good work history, reliable r10
BUSJ~
reasa, In Pt. Pleasant
~---:?Rii~~--r'
some evenings ·and Satur- traosportatlon, valid drivers
0PPOR11JNITV
727•33 18 . call between .
days. Room lor career ad- license, home phone and L------:.;,_.1
5
2 ·~----- 55 Acre Farm, Water, Ele.
vancament. If interested must have black steel too
:pm
c::_:-_c1 =
INDncEI
send cover letter and re· safety shoes. Pay starts at
Free .Gas, old Farm house
sume to The Dally Sentlnet, $6.50 per hour, 32·40 hours OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- New brick house on 2-112 app. 30 acres pasture, 10
PO Box 729-12, -P_omeroy, per week. Call (740)669- lNG CO. recommends that acres, 3,000 square foot in- miles from Buffalo, WV
Oh. 45769.
2874 Monday-Friday Bam- you do buslooss with people ground pool, storage build- $149,000. 543·5544 937·
Overt>rook Center has pan 4pm fDI appointment.
you know, and NOT to oond ing, Smith's cabinets/ lrim. 2030 alter 7pm.
money through the mail until (740)446..0149
time and fuiJ time positions Someone to stay with older you have Investigated the
. ·=:---:-....;~-....,
Lor.; &
a.vallable for LPN 's and gentleman overnight and offering.
Newly constructed, s ingle
STNA's on all shifts. Any- help with his personal care.
story 1600 SQ. foot home.
ACREAGE
one Interested should call (740)~316
Start Your Business To- Located 10 minutes from
Kristie Madden at (740)992·
day... Prime Shopping Can· Holzer Hospital, 20 minutes
HUNTINQ OR
6472 or stop by our lronf Of· STATE TESTED NURSING tar Space Available At At- from Pleasant Valley HospiRECREATION LAND
fice for an application. EOE
ASSISTANTS
fon:lable Rate. Spring vauev tal, off SA 180 on a private Ranging In 5 acre to 100
THIS IS YOUR CHANCJ! Plaza, Call 740-446..0101 . 1-112 acre lot. · 3 bedroom, acre tracts, some adtolnlng
Overbrook Center is cur·
TO SHINEII
2- t/2 baths. big kltchert Publk: hunting. Available In
renlly r;eeklng an AN to Holzer Senior care Center,
~ONAL
wloak cabinets, OR , lR Athens, Gallia, Jackson,
complete and direct the the only Lortg· term health·
SERVICI!S
w/gas tog fireplace, central Pike , Scioto and Hocking
MOS process for the facility. care facility In Gallia County __
. air, laundry room. front County, also Lewis Co., KY.
Experience with MDS com- that has a live star rating
porch & 2·112 car garage. For more Information and
pletlon a must. Salary com- !rom Healthgrades, Inc. Is
TURNED DOWN ON
Immediate possession. Ap- FREE maps contact
mensurate with experience. looking tor STNA's ·that SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI? praised at $125 ,500. Make Anthony Land Co., Ltd.
Benefit package is availa- shill& abOve the rest. Acar~ ·· No Fee Unless We Win I off~r. Call (740)446-4514
1-800-213..a:t65
ble. Send resumes to: Dl· tng heart. compassion and
1·868·582-3345
rrom 8-5pm , M·F, or
www.•lctand:com
rector ol Nursing, Over· dedicatk>n are some ol the
(7.ul)446-3248 after 5pm_.
:-::--::---::-----::brook Center, 333 Page St., qualities that we're kloklng
Indian Creek Equestrian EsMiddleport, Ohio 45780 fOf We have a limited numThree year old, 1600 sq. tate&. 3·6 acre lots, west of
EOE
be( of full· time and part· r10
HOME'i
ft .house at Lakin WV, 3 br., Rio Grande , from $25,900.
~ tlme openings on all 3 shifts
FOR SAlE
12 ba. heat pump', central_air (740)245·5747
Overbrook Center Is cur and wages are based upon ..,
304-773-5177
·
renUy seeking a baautk:lan experience If you wQUid like
' largo wooded lot on State
~ ,work part time ln the facll· ,10 be a ~rt of a winning 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, J~st
MOBILE HOI\i&'i
Route 588.
$14,000 .
lty s beauty salon. Candl· team, come see us at 380 remodeled. Fireplace, NICe
FOR SALE
, (740)245·9448
dates ~ho~ld possess a v~l- Colonial Drive, Bidwell. or view. 15 minutes !rom town.
I~ r'!'l81l8gtng cosmoi?IOQ_ISl call (?40)44e-500 1 and ask Must see to appreciate.
L.ooklng To Buy A New
license as well as liability m· for Euta or Manie.
Electric Ra nge and dish- 3 bedroom mobile home for Home? Don't Have land?
surance .. S:atary Is ba~
NEEDED washer jncluded. (740)379· sale,
total
electrfe, ~~ ~ ~~'¥,fg~Y 10 lots
on commiSSton. lntaras
URGENTLY
. 9887
(740)992·5858.
e I,
•
.
candidates
should
contact
plasma
donors,
earn
$45to
Nl
4
the Director of Marketing of $60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly.
Assumable loans- Many ce
acre tract near
Administra1or at (740)992- Call Sera-Tee, 740·592- 3 Bedroom Oil Route 2, types available. Call for de- Gallipolis· easy terms,
6472. EOE
.
(304)675·5332
iallo. (740)446-3583.
(740)446-3583
6651 .
Help wanted caring for the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now payl~ mirllmum wage,
new shifts. 7am-3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm_7am, call 740-9ll2•5023.
Home Health Agency seek·
\ng Part·timef Per Diem/
CNA/ STNA. Competitive
salary with benelns. Apply
at 750 First A\lenu&, Galllpolis or phone t-866-441 1393 (toll free).
~.~:?d~(~:,)tf~~;1C:~
Ms.
Dally In -Column : 1 ! 00 p.m.
Monday -Friday for Inserti on
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper
• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include complete
Description • Include A Prt ce • A.-old Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Wtlen Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Hell> Get Response .. . ·
bouble
~~·
MorollcYa..!li
Pruett .. said Marshill would cooperate " with everyone
- · $45. (740)367-oso:!
- · loW mlloo, IMMAC- ~
• mvolved.
.
Golde WoightBerdl, cturm- ~JE c;:-:;',;,~21
Watts ranks third in the country with 136. 6 rece iving yards
rv
19119 Yomoha Banohoe
. e1ght
8a' ·-"
s. Qty$100.
mplc (740)448~~ .leavo
aome. His
touchdowns ran ks n·ed r10r st·xth •
weights,
__ a m ago ~ no an- 350, • , .. ,.. ooudltiou, 11 per .,-··
""'
4245 a11tr 6pm.
::::::._______ ~ lkolfor • $3.s:f(7~)44fHuntington police detectives did not immediately return a
'
64 Marcury Marquis, e-'- · 400E
da
· h
Brubb'o Plano- Tunlna & lent COI\ditlon, low mlloa. 1716
telephone message Mon y _mg t.
Repalra. PJO!>Iomt? NHd · Now engine. $4,000 19119 Yamaha Wolverine
The arrest is another setback for Marshan this season .
~unod? Call Tho Plano Dr. OBO. (740)446-1721
3504 4 b1
~•t.....,.
740-4<411-4525
• ""· ~- --.-- Last month, a dozen foothill players were suspended for
;-=..:.:.:--:-.::=,..,-.,-.,-- 6 8 - ..... and- $3,500.x (740)2!58-1998.
~made solid wood aa- gooo, very dependable.
receiving extra work benefits.lWo football players must sit out
IIIO.U..
for
MWbom
or
ba·
::'
7
:.
:
:5050::
.
.!:(7..:40~)44=1
·
.
.:1083=-one
aome
and 10 playen will miss three games . Marshall, which
dolls. Nice Christmas
~--$100 (740)446-0181
Muot OBI 11191 Dodge In:
lost its appeal, is anowed to stagger the susp ensions over the first
tropid V8, power loct<o &
f h
Jiardy Mums $3.00 each • miJl'OJII. grwy - . , ...,., lludgol , _ 'fl'lnornle- six g=es o t e season.
jor $10. Qpon Sat. 8·;!!""- & 60,000 miln, - · .,..... olono All~. - T o Marshall officials have dec lined to nante the athletes
evonlngs. DewhuJII ~....,. lenl condUIOn (7-40)985- Ower 10,000 T,.....rlllonl, _
Tranofor c..... 740-245- mvolved.
house ,MI. Alto. (304)895- 4182
..
HOW IQ_ WRITE Ali AD_
~
Genlokeys$300~:.,~ ~~.~..::!:
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Word
a.,:;
•
MACBLOTIER
~----~
'
In one week With us
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
NEEDED NOW.
WILL TRAIN ~
BENEFITS AVAILABLE
MANY SHIFTS
AVAILABLE.
~CALL NOW
1·888·974·JOBS
not leu lhan 10% of
NOTICE Ia hereby
the · bid' amount In
given
lhot
In
lawor ollho elorauld purauence of a
Malgo
County
Rooolutlon of lhe
Commloalonora. Bid
Board of Counly
bondo ohall be
COmmlealonera of
accompanied by
lho Counly of Malga,
proof of oulhortty of
Pomeroy,
0 h I o,
lho official or agenl · paaaed on the 1st
day ol Auguel, 2001,
olgnlng auch bond.
Allanllon ol tho lhoro
will
bo .
blddero
lo
oubmllted to a vola of
particularly collld lo tho pooplo of said
raqulremanll •• lo eubdlvlalon at 1
conditione
of
GENERAL ELECTION
amploymanl to be to bo hold In lho
obeerved ond oteta Counly of Malgo,
prevailing Willi" rlleo Ohio, 11 lhe regular
10 be Pllld under 11111 placoo of . voting
contrect 11 well •• therein, on lho · 6th
EI!O
policy
doy ol November,
require-nil.
2001, the question ol
Con1rac1or1 will, 10 levying a lax, In
the
extent
exceao ol the ten mill
prlcll.. bla, UM Ohio llmltetlon , lor the
producll, metertalo, bonallt of Melga
urvlcee, and lebor In Counly lor the
lhe lmplamantatlon purpooe
of
of lhlo pro]act.
Malnllnence, capilli
Tho
right
11 conolrucllon, and
reurved by the operation of Carleton
Melgo
County School ond Meigs
Commlaalonarl to lnduolrleo Workohop
re)ICI eny cr oil bids, for persona with
to
waive
Menial Retardallon
lnlormallllea, or to and Developmental
ICCepl any bid thalia Dtoabllllfea.
deemed
moal
Said tax being:
favoreble to theae an addlllonal lax of
1.8 mills at a rate not
part~•·
exceeding 1.8 milia
Jeff
Thornton , lor each one dollar of
Prealdent
wafuallon, which
Board of
amounts to sixteen
Commlaaloners
cents ($0.16) lor each
one hundred dollara
· of valuation lor a
(10) 2, '· 2001
Ztc
conllnalng period of
time.
The Polls lor aald
Public Notlca
election will open at
8 :30 o'clock A.M. and
NOTICE OF
remain open until
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY IN EXCESS OF 7:30 o 'clock P.M. of
uld dey.
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
order ollhe Board
Rovlnd Code,
o Eloctlona, ol Melgo
Sectlono 3501 .11 (Q),
County, Ohio.
5705.11, 5705.25
I
I
Br
In Memory
Oated September 7,
2001 .
John N.lhla
Chairman
Rill D. Smith
Director
(10)9,16,23. 30 , 2001
4tc
Buy, Sell or Trade
In tilt
CLASSIFIEDS! .
'·
\.
L-
�•
Page A 8 • The O.lly Sentinel
Tu ndlly, Oct. 9, 2001
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2001
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy, Mldd~ Ohio ·
"'DGI:
TAl(!; ~T
11>.-TIMeTO
If
The Dally Sentinel • Page A 8
NI:A Cros1word Puaale
WI~~
...
PHI1J.IP
-T"He:TJ~E
ALDIR
WoCIIINE/
ACitOU
44 Cnplan
11nlnorof
b& I ,
......
~-
4 Ulllpft'o
••
II
-.... ...
.--·- ....
,.,. ..·:....-...
--·q
Wasteful?
•
•New Nome~
A Kt
...
Ill
61tllltlll
•
• OIFIJU
•Corp' Us
I
AlrUaHng
Stopa eom..,.
FREE E&nMATES
·740 112·1171
............
.......,.." ...
II0\1~ CRIIK
E'\ II
,..,_
6
'
I
•
I
I
I
~---!••-•J!'lJJ!l_- ... - -·
1/4 mile down rtwr from l'omll II'/
"'".......
.........
CCI£1 fiJCIIUN
--
I:OOitnldloll,
plllllbl....
llloolrltlll, - por'
t.
Jl HH'r ·'
IJ',r !J
(.<H.JPIJTF RS
~
lld'llapart. OH
F-HtiiNIonrepal-, ·
·-
aYIJIIabl• 24 hou,.,
Charles R. Dill
UMCI ll'f•tam• 388
NewHomeo•Vlo)'l
.Thrley's .
Mattress
Sales · · ·
.,..,sc.l. ......u
.._.......,
(7~) ~~9-2657
~~~~~County.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason
County
Bob Ball
1-740•992·6142 .
or ·
•Rtplactlllellt
Wlod11ft• Rooon
Addltloat • JlooiiOJ
!OIIIIII!IN. ... l!!IDIIIIW.
FREE ESTIMATES
740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)
...,..
· • Gnvel Sand •
Thp110il • FW Dirt
.
• Mulch ·
All Makes Tractor &
Equlpmenl Parts
Foclory Aulhorized
Case·IHParts
24'120'
1·12 DOUBlE Will
PlASTIC
FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
8210.00 PER JOINt
' REGUWlY
$327.00 PER JOINT
BAR
KENSINGTON
WINOOWS HEAT
KEE~ ntE
SUIIMERlliiE HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
DAMAGI~O
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT · •
. PRICING
'
'
....
diF
41TIM.,_
41AJI iod
.........
-·
.....
t4f•
IN-'"""
.
=
•·c
Flat
.......................c
Rijilac>eoiiei\U: • Walkt
and. Drlr•' ' • Sttncll '·
35537 St: Rt 7 N•Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Cnte
740-
.
llaCikbum
(7 40) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R Hupp Agcnl
Box 189
M•ctdlcporl. 01110 45760
Local 843·5264
Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &
Dental, Retiremenl,
Pension &-401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
'
Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
• Paint • Flooring
'
.
.•
M~icare Supplement; Life
· NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
~EVY IH EXCI!IS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
AeVIIId Code,
Sulloile 3101.11(01,
17011.18,1705.21
NOnCE OF
NdTICI"OI'
ELI!cnOH ON TAX
Public N.otlce
I!IJ!CTlON ON TAX ·
LEVY IN EXCI!IS OF LI!VY IN I!XCIU OF
THI! TI!N MILL
·THI! TEN MILL
FOil SALE
LIMITATION
'LIMITATION
AeviMCI Coclt,
·• llnlndCoclt,
,.
On
Saturday,
•otlot• 3101 .11(01,
IIOIIonl 3101.11~1,
~ 13, 2001 at
1701.11, 1701.21
5705.11, 17111.211
10:11!1 a.m. IINI HolM
NOTICE Ia htraby
National Bank will :
ginn
that
In
NOl'ICI le haraby
NOTICE Ia her•by ott.r for •••• 11
pureuanca ~f 1
given
that
In
ginn
IIIII
In ·DUbllc llUCilon on 1M
Roaolutlon of the
purauanc•
ol
a
purou.noa
of
•
llank Plriclng lot the
Board ol TOWMI!Ip Reeolutlon of the lleaolutlon of till
folloWing Vllllclet:
Trullaea of til• Board of Townthlp Yllt.ga Counol~of lie
1"1 Okllmolllle
Townahlp of Sullon, Truot.. of llle VIlla.. of IY!'!IOU.., Vln
Racine·,
Ohio, Townalllp ol Olhie,. lyracue•, Ohio, 12GALI4NXM232330
PNHd on the 2nd
1"' Dodg1 4X4
day of July, 2001, ll11dnllle, Ohio, Jllll..d on •1111 2nd
Pl•
..
d
on
tl'•
1111
'
<My
.~
,Auaull,
2001,
·
Plilkup
Vln
!hare , will
b-. d1y of ~line, 2001, · there
will
be ttS7Kf23wtl(J114831
aubmlnad, to 1 vola· thare ' will
be aubmlnad 10 • vote ' 1
·
of tho _
.. ol 11111
aubmllled
to
a
v011
of
of
Ilia
people
of
did
.
1NI
Pontiac Grand
aubdlvlelon at a th• p•opl• of aeld lubdlvlelon 11 a Prtx Vln
.
GENERAL ELI!CT10N IUbdiVIIIOn II I
QI!NEIIAL
I!LictJoN
12G2GK3THIF221872
to ba hlld In lhe GI!NI!RAL I!LI!COON to b• held In the 1
Townlhlp of Sullon, to .. b• held In th• VIllage of lyracuu,
1884
Harley
Ohio, at the retular Townehlp ol Olive, Ohio, It Jh• ~gular Davldaon
Yin
placea of voting
OhiO,
at
Ilia
retUiar
pilei~·
of·•,l(bllng
IIHD1CAPIIIIY20117
. th•reln, on the lth plecee of voting tiM,.In' 09 lhW,' IIII · ·• 2 .. - · ·
•
dey of Novambar,
on
till
1111
d,y.
~
·N,O\rllliller,
The
term1
of
th•
1heraln,
2001, 1M quaatlon of d1y of Nov•mbtr;- jl001·, ttlit qualtloll of .... artcoah.
CO NSTR UCT IO N
levying 1 tax, In
2001, till q.......,n of lev·ylng 1 Jali, In
The HolM Notional
e x - of 1M ler'l mil ••vying • lax, In ex..., of'llla·tan mill Sank raaorvea the • New Home•
limitation, for th•
• Siding
of the tan mill llmlllllon, .for the rlahlto reJIICt any or ·.Roofing
benefit of Sutton excnt
llmlt1tlon, for the benellt of Syracu11 all blda or to remove • Remodeling
Townahlp for the
banlfll
Vlll1ge ,lor tha any unltlrom tht aele • Geragea
purpo1e
of Townahlp offorOlive
lhe purpo.. of currant lll.enytl.,.,
·Additions
maintaining and
o I expanu1.
Arr1ngam1nta may • Decko
oparatlng cema~trlee. p u r P o I •
molntalnlng 1nd
Said 18x being:
be modt to lnapect • Horn• Repalro
S.ld tax ..lilg:
oparllllng cemellrlaa. • replec•meoll of 1 1ny of the obov1
• raplacemenl of 1
tal of I mill 11 1 rate named vehlclot prior · Free Estrrnates
tex of 0.4 mill 11 a · Said 18X btlng:
1
I'II-I
of
1
tax
of
1
nolexoeedlng
I (on•) to the aela ~Y calling 740-992-1101
rate not exceeding
mill
11
1
rete
not
milia
for
each
one 740-948-2210.
0.4 milia lor each exc11dlng I (one) dollar of valuellon,
992-2753
one
dollar
of
for
••ell
one
which
amounta
Iotan
(10)
2,
4,
8,
11,2001
mlllo
v•luetlon, which dollar of valuation, cent• ($0. tO) lor ••ch 41c
•mount• to four which amounleto tan one hundred dollera
TRI-COUDTV
centa ($0.04) for nch canto ($0.1 0)' for each ol valuatlo,n ,for flv•
one hun- dollara one hundrad doll•~• (5) yoera.
TR80SPORT
of valuation for five ol voluellon lor live
The Polla for oald CHECK THE
u..,stonel
(5) yeare.
'
Seniors Discounts
(5) yearo.
· elactl~n will open 11
Tho Polio for aald
Rlultlple lOGd
Tho Polio for 11ld 8:30 o'clOCk A.M. end
ADS
election will open at IIIICIIon will open at ramaln op•~ until
Discounts
8:30 o'clock A.M. and 8:30 o'clock A.M. and 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
romlln opon until ramaln open until llld day.
·
7:30 o'clock P;M. of 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
,
aoldday.
Nld day.
. By ordtr of tht ~oard
of EIIICIIono, of Melga
By order of lht Board By order of tha 8011'11 Counly,
OhiO.
ol EIIICIIone, of Mllga of EIIICIIono, of Molga
.
County, Ohio.
County, Ohio.
Dated Sapllmbar ?,
Doted Sepllm._r 7,
2001.
'
Dated Sapl•mber 7,
2001.
..,
2001.
JohnN.Ihle
John N, lhlt
Chelr11111n
John N. lhle
Chairman
C,halrmen
Rita D. Smllh
Alta D. Smith
Rite D. Smith
Dlrwctor
Director
IJ
OII'IICior
(10) 8, II, 23, 30,
(tO) 11, t8, 23, 3o, (10) 8, 18, 23, 30, 2001
2001
2001
4tc
4tc
4tc
SMITH'S
or
WANT
~~~
.
High & Dey
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohi9
740-992-5232
I
·=
_..
frllnd
BGIII
111!01'•-
I
life 111 •
27 ........
Willlldw
IICI ....Io
.. Zllllll
~I I
.. r:..rat ._..
43c
'
OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS
INC.
I o, 41
21 AIIIUn
..
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 118.5%
OF
:l
t4f•
Complete Uno o1 Slllllvan'a Grooming llupplloa
Slllfur Cootad u...,llulk only, tl28.00 por ton
tll!lo .W..IUPrlofwt Hciroe ond LhMIOOic
IO:to.tb Alfl'urpOM Mllzirl4.._.......,.•..
11,000 llltrl'wlnt I1Uinolo
11,000 llltr .l 'wl,. taUOIIIIa
:=..,
.....
23
I
eff Warner Ins.
992-5479
.l!ulldo•~r Services
/8
ID DIGIJ
10 llmMro 40 HMfllt
J
Cellular
Sldlal • N.,. Ga~
IIHYIII
CO~OORS,
'':=r-aa••ll'
1111oJUthe.ln
DOWN
f
BUILHR8 INC.
Voucllera accepted in
....
II Pollaw
I
BISSELL
bdaerOH 41171
Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
-
1
.........
andUPtUMd
IIOfiWIIN.
LlcenHtl30081180
STORAGE
PIM
tNT
u~1
11 <:n.
..._
,.. ,
,..
,..
....
.. .........
M l.lill'llll
111
IJ
U"Woooo"
11 -PuUCiaelld 10
FIMIIC
AUt II
._
111r
14~11NI
6 J 7I
,._I
II=
NAIA
31.....
481
..
llean-1
Henry
Miller
nurnblr of 10 0t 1J I
.. lllllrlo fiiiL
· .._..
11a1111
:17 Willy
wrote: "The word
112 .......
which gives the key
look
II -lllnd
MAca
to the national vice is
llloo11WLCI
:a tllflllan'a 52 Holt-"
waste. And people
p!W»ol
....
u ·Mil.
who are wasteful are
.......
llOI
F
40=
h11J1J
SIT_.
42Ailrlllft
not
wise,
neither
can
TOMORR'I!!
WHEN'S
tool
tltcy remain young
HE
Gli tRAN~IN'!I
and vigorous. In order
'tANKIN'?!
to transmute energy
----'1M
to higher and more
subde levels one must
first conserve it."
Fair enough in life,
but
not at the bridge
r~
table, where apparent
waste can be the only
........::.__~_._.........~--'--...0. :L---....:1 j
way 10 succeed. Wiih
FRANK & EARNEST
that big hint, you
should find the right
~ SAT P0¥11'1 IUII>f
line in this six-heart
contract.
Diamonds
fAll> "tffLL.o': OfFf-eP
are 3-2. West leads
TO BuY
A.
the spade queen. Did
West have a more efP•ll'lk ·•• ANI>
fective opening salvo?
Ttft~ I'IATlJ•AL
~.
North's hand got
ffLfGTIOI'I
better every time
CELEBRITY CIPHER
~tA.fl> ITS
South bid a red suit.
by Lule C.mpo.
And when South
UGLY tffAI>.
CMb11ty
Clphor
OI)Pia8
emo
quollll_,.•.!f
confirmed a respect"'""'" put .... . . - . - -In hclphor
' ·~
'
'
TGdty'ldul: R equale D
able S-5, North took
"'I~
..... over with Blackwood.
'GWZWRDFK
Z I YP
DY
LIZ
~Efii..VE~'(fl(X)(~ . ·~ ,.,, r WANT TI\E: Tf\INN~i
You have three ·los.SMNDJK.'- liLY
NMZXIDP
AOOUI ~~~
BOC>K.,I·.j\1~ TI'.E . ers to worry about:
two spades and one
DO '<OU AA\JE N-IY
~~ I'Rll{l',
•M
N M Y ' P
Z L L f M C·W
D P
heart. You could risk
Plil:f:F~I-IC:fS!
'(OU'Ve:. C,OT !
the ruffing club fiNLZW
DNOLZFMYF
FGMY
nesse, leading the
QDP
.IWMBMCW."- HLLIIZLH
king from the dummy
and hoping East has
HD~PLY
iull!W.WII
the ace. But".better is
C JW;a
~~~~;gtyc~"I,\U:,~ ti~n~~
to 'trump your· low
spades in the dummy.
However, with hand
entries at a premium,
''•
you must. be careful.
'
'
Ruff the spade
'•
''··
three with dummy's
heart king. Return to
'
. hand with a club ruff
"'
(leading the king to
,,,'
tempt a cover) and
trump your last spade
,,
with · the heart ace.
LUBAM
. .,..1-rlr-3T""l
Next, overtake the ' 1: t;;;;;;:;;.__ _ _ _- " '
';
heart nine with your
10 and · continue
hearts to drive out the
tREOF
~
Is it true 1hat in order to praqueen. When you get
"l!
•• l back on lead, proba- L=~~:;:~~:;~, vent theft of lhair supplies fast
food restaurants use • • • • • •
bly by ruffing a spade ,..
H U T G A C·
'alarms?
or club, draw \rumps
A Complolo lhe chuckle quolod
and run the dia•
V by filling In tho mlu/ng words
L.-.L....L....JL-..&.--''--' you develop lrom Jtop No. 3 bolow.
monds,
Note
that
if
you
I
t ;-.A) E
~
. PRINT NUMBEREO LETTERS IN
ruff either spade with
THESE SQUII>.RES
the heart nine, you
can n.o longer make
IJNSCRA.M8LE ABOVE LETTERS
_ , TO GEJ ANSWER
the contract .with this ~
layout. .And .West
SCitAM-I.ITS ANSW.RS
could have destroyed
.your timing by leadi.feiady. Crush ·Henna • Deadly· CANDLES
ing a trump.
The light company has a sl~nge way ol telling you
thai your bill is overdo. They mall you some CANDLES.
hllrdware•nd
WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
IS CMIJ '
• A II
9 .f Iii 'f J
19
- Spl '" S.MW
$4.00/Jr
0011 I
6 I It I I
• Q. t
•
v:=,
12...
.... w. ........
•n •
Melp County Falrxrouodo
'JAnival:
Sept. 29 & Oct. 20, 20tl .
Jo:oo Lm. • 4:00p.m.
Aprll27, ~ . ·
1ee or $20.00 wUI be cb8fP.d ror
lar•riv11L late arrival, early renewal,
or anytime access Is wanted
other tlulll otated dates.
Is ftnt come first serte;
Q J It 'f
• .f I 'f
.AIItl
Advertise
in
-·
naaodtlllt.
992-9158 this space for
.......... '"""- ..,,.,.
s100 per
' OwMr
L&L Tire Barn
l'oft*oy
...... 992·7445
month
c.ll
591-9254
RI'HI..,I· .._
&
4tC.al•cf
MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
= ~P~E~A~NU~T~S~--------------------------~~-------r.:r
q
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
~~
..H~
(10'1118' &10'128')
[740) 992-3194
992·6635
Speclellzlng In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions decka
Free eallinatea
10 yra. ax parlance
In tlia bualneaa
Refarencaa.
available. Owner:
Terry lllmm
74 992
a
HowardL
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters- Down
Spout
Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$49 Service g-. fuel oil, and
heat pumps for winter
........
.
t
CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
•
'
WE CAN HELP
·
-=:::..IMI:JI-12:11
''
),.;
~
GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
'I
,...
.
,.
'•'
'
METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR & REWIRE
.~
Wednesday, Oct. 10, ~(101
Your ambitious aim~ may
take center stage in thC' year
nhC':~.J with you bfing the 5tar
of the ~how.. Thus. it'll ,be up
to you to make sine the supporting roles come together
forrhe ~od of :Ill.
UllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
- An anociate might want ex·
tra p:1ts on the back today, 50
ir someone ~ays anything be·
littling in order to boo5t him
or her.~elf, set' it for what it's
worth . Libra, treat yourself to
, birth<hy gilt. Send for your
Astro-Graph prcdi,tion& for
the year aht'ad by mailing S2
and SASE to Astr~·Guph 1
c/o this newsp:1per. P.O. Box
lb7, Wickliffe, OH 44092·
0167. De sure to' stale your
Zodiac sign.
SCORI'IO (O,t. 24-Nov.
~
Will liME
fiiii/WIJMr ....
1So41:111'MI.Jrl.
I I
I I I l:f' "
II---.,--T1,gr-'1,r.,-,,-r,--l
II II II
:•
..
Fret EltlllllleS
949-1405
591·5011
e9J"" I
I
-r--
~~~;;;=========~~~~~)J~
I ITUESDAY
OCTOBER 91
150 hasl State Street Phone (140)593·667
Athens, Ohio
LAMM'S
CONSTRUCTION
~~-~~J
.~
(l6~)) ' 1
I
I
'
22) ... Dis<.:uuing a good ide1
DELIVERY· AVAILABLE
io someone you know to be a
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL
pessimist could throw cold
water on your enthusiasm.
Don't scrap anythinB without
talking to an optim.i~ 6nt.
SAGITTARIUS ' (Nov. 23D~!c . 21) -· Unlen you have
Snodgrass' Upholstery
"Htlpilf YCIII IO Rtcovtr r••, lnvtllmtnt"
'
Raelne,Ohlo
'I;
truly sound suggestion~ to of·
fer mmcone who is having
bu~iness problems, don't uy
anything at all. You could in-
a.dvertL•ntly encourage a bad
something tha,t may have happened yesterday. Don't allow
for any ill-chos~n words.
Make peace, not problenl!l.
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)
-- Although you're D4?t lpt to
mak.e any large errors in the
handling of your funds today,
if you have nn attitude of indifference, a number of small
mistakes t:ould add up significantly.
CANCER Qunc 21-July
22) - Honor any promise or
commitment you make to
family ml!mbcrs t>r relatives
today. because they will not
take kindly to reneging.
They're dependin,g on you .
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) - The last thing you want to do
is to pass on inaccurate gos~ip
that could damage another's
reputation, 50 carefully !!icrecn
all lnfonnation you get today
:tbout othcn . It ma}' not be
true.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
·- Don't take as f.:Kt anything
you may hear today about the
devaluation of ~omcthing you
hold in high valu.e. especially
if it is involves stoc k~ or
bonds. Check it out for your-
plan.
CA~RICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) --Keep. in mind today that beauty 1s only skin-
deep . The exterior trapping~
of an impressive spcllbmder
might b~ a.U there is. The subltanC'to of what hr or she cs-
pouleS may be vah1elcss.
AQUARIUS Qon . 20-Feb.
19) -- At tillii!S you're pretty
. good at lellinK others what to
do and how to do it, but to'hy you ('Ould be way off
ba!lc. It would'be wi5e to keep
your suw5tions to you~df.
~ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- Trust in the loyalty of your
friends should some unOattering conuncnU come back to
you today allegedly "id by
another. Your friends are
smarter than you think .
ARIES (March 21-April19)
-- A di~greement could pop
lij) today between you and
yo"r mate if you don't diKuu
somt'thing you want to .do
around the hou§c br(ore doing it, A. me~ting of the nlinds
is called for.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20)• •• Today there could .be
t~mion wilh co-workcn over
self.
1'
'·~
II
'
�•
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!
.Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2001
It takes a lot of traininq to beeonae a Firefiqhter,
but anqone can become • Fire Preventerl
Melp CoUnty's
Use these tips during
Fire P-revention Week, October 7-13,
·to help you get started.
Change Smoke
Alarm Batteries.
A good way to
remember is to change
the batteries when you
tum your cloclc back
to standard time in
the fall.
AMERICA AT WAR
•
WASHINGTON (AP) - America's pilots are bombing at will from the
skies over Mghanistan, while back
home Congress squabbles over domestic defenses needed for what President
Bush calls a "unique type of war"
against terrorism.
"These are extraordinary times;' the
president said Tue>day as he fOllowed
the progress of third day of military
operations, reassured the public about
steps taken to thwart futtire attacks on
American soil and blundy accused lawnuken of leaking classified infornution to the press.
"I'm having breakfast in the morn-
Create at least two ways
out of every room in
the home. Practice
getting out quickly.
Keep a Flashlight
Charged and Handy.
If there's a fire in
the home, it can become
smoky and too dark t~ see.
Use a flashlight to get out
or signal for help.
Matches and
Lighters Are Not Toys.
These are tools for
adults, and are not to be
used without supervision.
, They should be stored in
a secure place where kids
can't reach them.
ans
u.s.
Plan and Practice
an Escape Route.
airline security ..yas hung up in the
House, where Republicans were dug
l\t against a proposal to federalize the
employees who currently screen baggage at the nation's airports.
Economic stimulus legislation, an
urgent priority since the Sept. 11
attacks in New York and Washington.
also has sparked disagreement . .Bush
and Republicans have proposed that
Congress cut wres and Democrats
want any measure to be a blend of government spending and tax relief
Bush also arranged to visit the Justice
Departtnent
during the day and to host
changes.
..
A companion measure to enhance Lord Robertson, the NATO secretary-
ing with rhemben of Congms;' he
added. "I will be glad to bring up this
1
subject:•
There were other issues to discuss at
what has become a weekly breakfut
meeting involving Bush and the four
senior leaden of the House and Senate.
The administration's legislation to
snengthen the hand of investigators in·
pursuit of suspected terrorists was
pending in the House and the Senate,
where Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis.,
blocked passage The>day night, saying
he wanted more time to propose
..
general, at the White House.
Officials have said previously the
alliance would be sending some of its
sophisticated AWACS aircraft for
defensive use over the United States.
That would free US. planes for redeployment in the air campaign against
terrorists overseas.
"I think the American people are
beginning to realize that this is a
unique type of war,'' the president said
Thesday.
Defense Depamnent officials labeled
the bomping, campaign a success thus
far.
" I think essentially we have air
.
SWISHER ., LOHSE
Chamber
.discusses
energy
&nouUer'i
PHAR~ACY
school
pennit
Quality
Print Shop
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
· Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Middleport 992-3345
-:9S2.U955 ~
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Chester
985-3301
~
DowNING CHILDs
MuLLEN MussER
INSURANCE
Pomeroy
992-3381
Pomeroy
GAII.IIIOUS
(7U)CIII778
State Route 248, Chester, OH
Fisher-Acree
Funeral Home
Middleport
Pomeroy
985-3308
992-3785
7~
SHOE PLACE
Ad
992-5141
992-5444
Middleport
992-5627
I
I
g
Funeral Home
Brogan-Warner
Insurance
FAMILY RESTAURANT
Pomeroy 992-5432 .
/
White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Avenue • Coolville
740-667-3110
Valley
& Supply
Co.
(Fa J
-t
••
.~,.nk
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather
fi1
t p
Pomeroy
·-
Middleport
1burBankJn-'*. . ·
· Gallipolis
992-2136
446-2265
Tuppers Plains
985-3161
992-6611
•
Middleport
honprs fir4fghters'
sacrifices
FROM STAFF REPORTS
MIDDLEPORT - "There
were more firefighters killed
on Sept. 11 than are Serving
communities in Meigs County
lflah:701
1 Ptlpl
Law: 501
Details. A3
Lotteries
AS OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 0.7-5; Pick 4: 6-1.().3
85 Ill Jwve 5: 5-9-12·111-22
M
A3 )AI.VA
81.3.
A3
Ddy 3:.9-3-4 Dally 4:6-4-4-8
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Ca.
today."
·
Middleport Fire Chief Don
Stiver. put the ultimate sacrilice of more than 300 New
York City firefighters in perspective Monday, as he, Mayor
Sandy lannarelli and members
of Feeney-Bennet~ Post 128,
Ainerican 4gion, joined to
pay tribute t~'local firefighters. .
New flags .'recognizing the
.work and sacril,i~e oflocalfire-
'
fighters have joined "Old
Glory" at the Powell Street
entrance to Middleport, and
additional flags are now on
order
for
the
Middleport/Pomeroy corporation line on North Second
Ave.
The flags bear the mott~,
"Loyal to our duty."
PI- IH Trlbtde, AJ
Candidates for Meigs High School homecoming queeh are,
from left, Amber Haning, Brittany Williams, Kara Musser, Car·
rie Abbott and Tara Wyatt. The queen will be crowned at 7
p.m. in pre-game ceremonies at Friday's game between the
Meigs Marauders and the Alexander Spartans. Thursday at 7
p.m., there will be a parade starting at the Meigs County
garage and moving to the high school parl<lng lot, where a
cookout and bonfire will be held . (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
AI art Wallace to appear on 'Dateline'
FROM STAFF REPORTS
MIDDLEPORT - One of the
many heroes of Sept. 11 - this one a
local native - will appear on an NBC
news magazine program later this
week to discuss his experiences.
Middleport native Alan Wallace, son
of Faye Wallac~ and the late Dwight
Wallace, will
on Friday's edition
NBC" to discus s his
Sept. 11 terrorist
fighters on duty at the defense headquarters when hijacked American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into a side of
the Pentagon, killing more than 180
people and injuring scores of others.
The local hero helped rescue 15
·people from first-floor Pentagon winbombing of the Pentagon in Arling- dows, and suffered burns and a shoult V:
der injury· during the rescue attempts.
0
~, a.
M.ddl
H.
h
He expects to undergo shoulder
watson, a 1965
1
epor 1 tg
PluM 1H W811Ke, AJ
school alumnus, was one of three fire-
The local hero helped rescue ·
15 people from first-floor
Pentagon windows, and suffirul
burns and a shoulder injury
during the rescue attempts.
and the American Cancer Society sponsors a
Cancer
Furniture Er jewelry
atlon ,Series
u1 Can Cope" ·
A Week Program beginning Tuesday, October ·J6, 2001
5:30 - 7:00 pm (Meal Provided) • Doctors Dining Room of Holzer Clinic
RACINE
949-2210
Middleport 992 - 2635
•
FREE and open to anyone who has cancer or is close to someone
who has cancer. To reserve a place in this special series, or for more
information, please call Kim Painter at (740) 446-5365•
SYRACUSE
992-6533
MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference ·
www .holzer.org
•
I
J
'
Local Boanl of Education.
Buckley said underground
electric service is going in and
the contractor is getting ready
to haul in stone for the parking lots. Seeding on the hillside will start next week, and
after that, footers will be
poured in preparation for
quilding-the shell.
However, it was noted that a
building permit fuJ the milldie
.................. AJ . . -
PAYING. TRIBUTE
Hoi- Medical Center,
Ingels
.
' '
'
Sentinel
:a
Section• -
'
DISPLAY FLAGS- Myron Duffield of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, Middleport
Fire Chief Don Stivers and Mayor Sandy lannarelli, and the Legion's Bill Swisher, who works
.with Duffield on the post's flag program, display one of the firefighter flags now on display at
the entrance to the community. (Brian J. Reed photo)
'lbdlly's .
2
.
Queen candidates
Pieue ... Chlmber, AJ
Pomeroy 992-6682
CROW'S·e
POMEROY - Weeks of
waiting for the Ohio Department of lndwcrial Compliarice to issue a building pertnit
for the new Meigs Local elementary school are over.
"The permit has finally
come tiuQugh at}d the .,I;Ork is
proceedinf' said 's.tp~-·
knt William Bli!'ldey ar Thesday's meei!Lg of the Mei@l'
MIDDLEPORT - A
program geared toward
raising children's selfesteem and methods ~o cut
down on energy costs
topped the agenda ofTuesday's meeting of the Meigs
Count}' Chamber of Com. merce.
Reggie Robinson and
Kim Brozak of Health
· Recovery Services in Middleport di"ussed children
affected by alcohol and
drug abuse and how positive role models can make a
difference in their lives.
"We are currendy living
in a very perilous time and
are struggling on many
fronts," said Robinson.
"The specter of drug and
alcohol abuse is ever present. Unfortunately, today's
children
are
getting
exposed to much stronger
drugs at a much earlier
age."
"I'm here to tell you
today that positive role
models can realistically
make a difference in a
child's life,'' he added.
Robinson spoke of the
organization's Youth Menloring Program, which
strives to involve community and business volun-
TO .........
...004.....17
212 E. Main Street
SENTINEL NEWS STI\FF
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
BAD
BER
StRte248 ·
BY CtwuNE HOIFUCH
BY TONY M. lEACH
:titt & 6afttp
supremacy over Afghanistan," said Gen.
Richard Myen. chainnan of the joint
Chiefi of Sta1f. And for the first time
since the operation began on Sunday,
American planes were dropping their
bombs in dayligllt.
Other officials said the U.S.-led
assault has rained bombs and missiles
on the meager military fOrces of the
Taliban, rulen of Afghanistan. The
result has been to disable all but one of
their air bases, blind their air defenses
and pound a pocket of ground 1r00ps
and several suspected terrorist uaining
camps of the al-Qaida network and ·
o.ama bin Laden. they said.
•1ssues new
costs
Stay Alert ... Stay Safe!
•es
,.
·•
·
·
:
·
�
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10. October
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October 9, 2001
boggess
clark