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' '

iunbap limH -itntintl

HEAT,TH

&amp; 'F ITNESS

I
.:~

Pennington out 12
weeks with broken
wrist, 6

Sunday,August24,2003

'

Drug·screens may seem to be an in~asion of privacy, but may be ·necessary
ly to file a wqrker's com pensation claim.
• Function at about 67 percent of their work potential. .
The hidden costs for your
business are high employee
turnover, reduced produch vity, increased healtlf care
Substance abusers:
Dr.
Stephen
costs,
employee theft, and
• Are three times more .likeinferior quali!Y of your prodly to be late for work .
Popper
ucts and damaged equipment.
• File I 0 times as many
So it appears obvious that it
If yours is the typical busi-, grievances.
would
be more expensive for
ness, then:
• Need disciplinary action
an
employer
NOT to .have a
: • Up to 32 percent of your 10 times more often.
drug screen program. .
·
employees lptow about drug
• Are 47 percent more li,kely
What about the employee?
• Have three times as many
to be fired, even when you are
sales in their workplace.
MoSt workers appreciate a safe
• 20 percent of your work- unaware of their abuse problem. absences from work.
ers aged 18-34 use marijuana
• Use three times more sick worlcing environment. All the
onthejob.
·
Studies by Industry Week leave days and medical benefits. · reasD!IIi listed above that impact
• Are five times more like- the employer's bottom line &lt;tlso
: • 5.6 percent of the nation's show that your employees

. Drug screens. They may'
to be an invasion of your
privacy, but are a consequence
of our culture and times.
If you are an employer, you
ate ultimately concerned with
the bottom line. Workplace
drug abuse is expensive and
invades all aspects of your business life. The statistics tell it all:
~eem

workers aged 18-34 use
cocaine ... 75 percent of these
admits to using it on the job.
• 47 percent of your industrial injuries are linked to
alcohol use.

who use drugs or alcohol:
• Are alnio!t four rim:s rroe
likely to be involved in an OCcident

impact the employees' safety and Common problem'l are fa' irdsense of security in the work- vkklals to take medicatioo that is
place. Violence in the uuvlmlace not their own (e.g., from spouse), .
was vit:tually unOOan:J ~r~iillhe . &lt;T take their own nulicatiOn that
1970s. Since then, it has more wasprescribedforadi!Jerentocca- .
than lriJ?led. Most experts agree sion. Bod! of these instaB;es are
that soctal issues, ¥.ally sulr abuses of medicalion and may be
stance abuse, illegal drugs, lay- repott00 as a positive liug screen
offs. and poverty are major conThere are several type of
tributors to occupational vio- drug screens: pre-hire, ranlence. Top management is just dom, for cause, and post
now starting to reco~nize the accident. A coherent, focused
enonnity of the financial COil'ie- program protects both the
quences associated with an inci- · employer and employee·.
dent inVolving workplace vio(Dr. Stephen E. Popper, D.O.,
lence. The three most affected PhD.. M.P.H.. is the occupationareas are costly litigations, lost a/ medicine director ar Ho/zgr
productivity, and damage control. Clinic. Co11mct him at 740-446Employees have responsibilities 5100 if you hnve a11y questiom
reganling drug scnee.ns . also. concerning the anicle.)

!JJrdJJ

J.

Bobbie Karr, who along with Becky ·
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com
Anderson ·organized the contest for
the Pomeroy Merchants Association
POMEROY - A tournament to in the schools last spring.
determine Meigs County's champion
Fourth an~ fifth grade students in
marble players will be held at I p.m. ' elementary schools across the county
Sept. 6 at the . amphitheater . in competed against each other for
Pomeroy as a pan of the Morgan's school champion, and those champiRaid reenactment celebration.
ons will compete for the title of
"We selected marbles because that Meigs County champion in their
was a game children would have respective grade levels at the bicenplayed in the time period when tennial celebration.
•
The scl\ool winners will receive
Morgan 's Raid happened," said
BY

MILD LAYTON

'l'be Home lbow of
P.O. Box 141

WV
U.S.

,,,

BY BRIAN J, REED

breed@ mydallysentinel.oom

(jj{))(Jl!lll f.3~(J)!JMD!J) ®IJ'

MIDDLEPORT

fJXf.J'JIIiJ@IIJ(/[J &lt;l!IJJ @(j}IJ'

PasseQgerS on the majestic Delta

liril®riJI!JIJ(jJIJ' /J{)i[){jj)@[J.,

Sonya, Dan, John
Housing Consultants
P.O. Box 949 Arnoldsburg Ad. Spencer, WV 25276
(304) 927· 2338 (304) 927-5535 (888) 927-2338

Email: rlchl @thahome•how.com
Phona: Toll Fr11 888·827·2338

www.TheHomeShows.com

INSIDE
• Ohio draws higl pen:entage of educated immigrants.
See Page 2
u·s s· g.trcmAir •
Fon::e 1l1.1S9l1Tl. See Page 2
• Court news. See Page 3
• Community calendar.
See Page 3
.

• Ale

.

WEAriiER
Iunny, HI: lOti, Lliw: 108

Stutes Realty
14 WlnterpiiH.'e. Dlrettlons: 3 miles out 8t. ltt.ll88 to WlnterpiiH.'e Drive. 1st home on left. Prlc:e
Recluc:ecl: Wily below market value. (lreen t:lementary. Oreen Township.
OYer 3000 sq. ft., 4 bedroom, 21/2 baths, Bedroom suite 6 laundry on main level. CUstom built
solid oak throughOut, lg. kitchen/lots Of 8mlth oak cabinets. 21/2 car sa~age. lleautlful nome.

G:tiB

-·

--

trophies. The fifth and sixth grade and 5th grade Kevin P~yne.
champions will receive larger ones.
Bradbury Elementary, 4th Tyler
"We look forwai-d to the tournament," Cundiff and 5th grade Cindy Kauff;
said KaiT, "and we're hoping lots of Southern ·Elementary, 5th ' grade
people will come out and watch." .
\!icki Freeman. ·Cyle Rees and
The school winners who will com- Cheyenne Dunn, 4th grade Adam
pete in the county tournaments are : Warden · and Wil Crow; Eastern
Pomeroy Elementary, 4th grade Elementary, 4th grade Ashleigh
Brandon King and 5th grade Ryan · Dully and Dylan Hensley, 5th grade
Van Matre; Salisbury Elementary, Chelse Riffle and Dakota Collins.
4th grade Alaine Arnold and 5th
If it rains, the tournament will be
grade Bobby King; Harrisonville . held in the gazebo on the lower end of
Elementary, 4th grade Aaron Roberts the parking lot in downtown Pomeroy.

Middlep.o rt ·unveils
b.icenten_
nial marker

0@FJ(,S {jj)I!)IIJ(/{lJ[)'J

Feet Rfllt At Home.

•

Marble tournament scheduled as part of Morgan's Raid festivities

SPORTS

The Home
Show
Spencer,
•

Indians down
DevllRays,6

•

• Southern gets Berned
in opener. See Page 6

New 2004 Clayton ~anufatured Home
or .tppllances, Oas or l:led:rlc, Set up and Delivery lnduded.
~ust be on your own property.
Under $300 a ~onth. (f'luot ..._ 5"" dowrt-pOr&lt;h ~ pennanent fCMJndlltlon NOT lndu~ed)

.

Queen joined the people of
Middleport in dedicating a his- .
torical marker commem9fllting
the communl~'s history and that
of the Ohio River on Saturday. The marker's placement is in
observance
of
Ohio's
Bicentennial, and was sponsored by American Electric
Power. John and Frank Blake,
as descendants of Middleport's
earliest settlers, the James
Smith family, unveiled the
marker in Dave Diles Park.
Because
side of the
bronze
is dedicated
of-the river in'ihe'
· community's life and history,
.di Delta Queen was invited to
stand offshore during the dedication, and played calliope
music as ,Part of the ceremony.
. The Riverbend Community
Band also performed, and
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli, State
Rep. Jimmy Stewart, R-Athens,
Kristina Markel of the Ohio
Historical Society and Laura
Galvin of the Ohio Bicentennial
Commission gave remarks.
The marker. and dedication
c eremony were organized bY.
John ·and Frank Blake, descendants of Middleport's eat11est the Riverbend Arts Counctl
settlers, unveiled the histoncal ma~er celebrating the village's and the village, and AEP purhistory and the role of the Ohio River in it. (Brian J. Reed)
chased the monument. ·

The
High School marching band w0 re Its new uniforms for the first time before a packed crowd at the.football ·season home opener against Berne Union Saturday
night. (J. Miles Layton)

Marching band takes the
field in new uniforms
Mus LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailyser\tinel.com
BY J.

•

RACINE A large .
crowd cheered as the
Southern High . School
marching band moved onto
the football field for the first
time wearing their new uniforms at Saturday night's
home opener against Berne
Union.High School.
"I think they look great,"
said Jeanette Oldaker, band
director and music teacher. "I
would just li(f.e to take the
time to thaqk everrone in the
conu:nunity.for thetr support."
The band has been marchin~ in little more than Tshtrts and pants for the past

Pluse ... Unlfoms, 5
'

tireen School District.
3 Bedroom, 2 full Bath, Fireplace and full Basement. Tons of Living
5pace, Brick with Attached Two-Car fiarage, New Roof. Also has
Additional 24x24 Building.

0 U i l 0 ~•

----~ /pcu~::e~~----

If Interested, PnONr:: (740) 645·2088
1

Stiffler is f'miliar voice at festivals

DetalleonP.,.2

•

ebrations to entertain the
crowds. He's performed at the
breed@mydailysentinel.com
Middleport July 4 celebration
for the past two years, and
WILKESVILLE- Alhough sang "The Star-Spangled
' he lives just across the Vinton Banner" and "America, the
County line, David Stiffler is
becoming a familiar face _ Beautiful" at Saturday's dediand a .familiar voice _ in cation of a new ~istorical mooMeigs Cotlnty.
ument in Middleport:
Stiffler, of Wilkesville •. is a
An active Mason, Stiffler is
highway workef for ' tl'w:, Ohio set to sing at the Orand.
Department of Transportation Chapter event for Order ol
in Vinton County, but he's also -.pastern Star in (,iolumbus
a powerful singer whose rendi- soon . He also .peftorins at
lions of country and gospel smaller Masonic events, such
songs at festi vats and events as installations. and opened for
large and small are becoming gospel recording artist Carroll
very popular.
Robinson at the Bob Evans
David Stiffler performed two patriotic songs at
Stiffler sin"gs mostly at Farm Festival last year.
Saturday's historical ma~er dedication In Middleport. churches, he said, but he also
"I perform at small and large
(Brian J. Reed)
'
visits festivals arid holiday eel- events, but I perform mostly at
BY BRIAN J. REED

INDEX
1 SECilONS- 10 PAGES

Calendars

3

Cbissifieds

6-8

.e&lt;&gt;mics
-

8802 &amp;t. lit. 588, 8
from
to Rodney. 2 story home-excellent condition, lg. family room w/brlck wall, w.b. fireplace, beam~
ceilings, dining room, lots of bookshelves, screened florida room, nice
kitchen, lg. pantry, also: Rental·:! bedroom cottage.

...... ....

several years . The Southern
High School Band Boosters
and a number of alumni
came together ~ . for a
fundraising drive to raise
the money necessary to purchase the uniforms which
came in last spring. The
ovemll cost of the uniforms
was more than $22,000, 6ut
the group raised $26,000.
There is approximately
$4,000 in reserve which will
be applied toward the uniforms needed for future
growth of the band. From ·
modest beginnings there are
already 32 band members and
they are mainly underclass-

lB.. ~ -

441-4111

'9

pear Abby

3

Editorials

4

Stutes·Realty

Movies

3

City at Its Best. Tucked aWBy at the end ofthe street on 4 lg. lots, a Ig. brick home. formal LR. w/ftreplace, 2 bedrooms, 1st noor, 2 bedrooms upper level,
2 bath, kitchen &amp; dining room, sc:reened summer room, full furnished basement. Breezeway room-&amp; garage.

Sports

S

J.D.

441-4111

· ;Weathet;"

6,10

2
.
:@
. 0003 Ohio VoUey Pubitohtna c,;,

..... _

church events," Stiftler said. "I
have done it for nine years, and
I do it just for the fun and
enjoyment of it."
Stiffler is a busy man . In
addition to his full-time job
with ODOT. his singing and
his Masonic work, he is also
the co-coordinator for the
Vinton . County portion of the
Morgan's Raid re-enactment,
set for Sept. 5. That time-consuming volunteer work has
slowed down hi s "touring" as a
lllUSI CJan.

"I don' t sing in public as
much as I used to," ~tiffler said,
"I just don 't have time since I'm
involv~d in so much. but I still
enjoy doing it when I can."

Free _S tnoklng-~ssatlon
for Pregnant Women' and .'New Mothers

Beginning Tuesday, September 9
(and ending October 28, 2003}
•

6:00 PM' • 8:00 PM

Pomeroy Library· 216 West Main Street

Support Person Welcome • Refreshments • ·Door Prizes

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

~

To register lor this FREE clinic, or lor more information, pleqse call (740} 446-5940
.. --·-----

·-

.,

---.----- -- -·--·------

- ·-

---"'---- -···· ·- ..:.~

'•

�.OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
,.

Ohio weather ·
Tuesday, Aug. 26

..

•

.,

o[Columb.. 170'/80"

I

w.""

---~-·tl't:•

• &amp;My Pl Cloudy ' Cloudy

· Showetll

T-storms

Rain

Flurries

Snow

Ice

Mostly sunn¥, warm
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today... Mostly sQnny and
wann: Highs 83 to 88. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight...Mostly
clear.
Lows in the mid 60s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
. Highs near 90. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
. Tu~sday
night. .. Partly.
cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s.
. Wednesday... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the mid
80s. Chance of rain 30 pen:ent.
Wednesday night...Partly

cloudy with a ·chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday... A slight chance of
showers and· thunderstorms
during the day...Otherwise part"
ly cloudy. Highs in the mid 80s. .
Friday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers and thunderstorms during the night.
Lows in the upper 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.
. Saturday... Moslly clpudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Lows in the
upper 6()s and highs ~ear 80.

Three central Ohio high
schools have combined
price tag of $1 05 million

.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Some residents of three central
Ohio school districts are upset
about the features and costs of
high schools that are set to
open soon. Each of the schools
cost about $35 million.
Olentangy
Liberty,
Pickerington
Nonh
and
Westerville Central high schools
- with air conditioning, automalic-flush toilets, handsfree
wash fountains, dry~ boards
instead of blackboards and security cameras - are a testament
to what's typical in modem
school buildings.
The last new high school in
Pickerington, built 12 years ago
and now called Pickerington
Central, cost about $22 million.
By comparison, Columbus
Independence High School cost
$4.1 million to build 27 years
ago. That'sabout$13 million in
today's doUars.
Paul Abramson, a school-district planner for 30 years, says
that Ohio schools aren't particularly fancy and that districts pay
more for schools today because
student needs are more varied
and features once considered
luiuries now are standard.
In 1970, the norm among
high schools was 120 square
feet per student, said
Abramson, of Larchmont,
N.Y. By the mid-1980s, it had

'

increased to 15&lt;i square feet.
1\vo decades later. 200 square
feet per student is typical.
That's what Westerville
Central will have. Libeny
will have 189 square feet;•
Pickerington Nonh 174.
New schools also must
accommodate students with
speCial needs, requiring additional classrooms and features
such as elevators, wide hallways and doorways for
wheelchairs, and low sciencelab tables and bathroom sinks.
That translates into a bigger building and more square
footage and more cost, said
Bruce Runyon, the architect
for
Olentangy's
and
Pickerington's new schools.
Technology, science equip- .
ment and security also add to
the cost. So do facilities used
by the community, such as
stadiums, Abramson said.
Ohio schools generally land
in the middle in terms of cost,
said Dwayne Gardner, chairman of Planning Advocates, a
Delaware company that helps
school districts plan.
A high school that opened in
the spring in Hebron, Conn., for
a student . body of 1,200 cost
$70 million and included a
recording and television studio,
a greenhouse and a wireless
computer system.

'

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
.Comctton Polley
Our main concern In all stories Is to be
accurate. If you knoW of an error In a
story, calllhe .-sroom al (740) 992·
2156.

OIW 11111ln number 11

(740) 892-2158.
DepMtmente~•~n••~:

News
Edllar: Cha~ana Hoeflich, Ext 12
Aepartar: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reparter: J. Miles l.aylon. Ext. 13

Advertising
Oulllde -

Dave Harris. Ext. 15
9'An.!Circ.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext. t 0

Clrcul.lon
Dl1111ct llgr.: TBA, Exl17

General Manager
Charlene

H~ich,

Ext. 12

E-mail:
llt!WliOmydallysentlnel.com

Will:
www.mydallysentinel.com

I

, Page2

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Monday, August 25, 2003 ·

Monday, August 25, 2oo3

Ohio .~ high percentage of educated immigrants·

Teen unhappy as full-time host for foreign telative Court Qews

CLEVELANI;l (1\P) Recent immigrants to Ohio
are more likely to have a college degree than foreigners
arriving elsewhere in the
United States. according to a
demographer.
Although Ohio attracts
fewer immi~rants than most
places, the tmmigrants who
do come to the state belong
to an elite class·.
"It's a small number, but the
number is more selecuve,"
said Wtlliam Frey, a University
ofMichigandemographerwho
spotted the trend.
About half of the foreignborn adults who arrived in
Ohio between 1995 and 2000
graduated from a university,
and more than two-thuds had
at least some college !;ducalion, according to an analysis
of U.S. Census information.

DEAR ABBY: I am 13 and
come from a big family.
About a month ago, some reiattves came to the United
States and they're living with
u~ for a w~ile. They haye two
k1ds -- a gtrl a year older than
I and a boy two years younger
(I' II call him Joe).
. . My dad is constantly pushmg me to play with Joe and
mdude him in everythin~ I'm
domg. UsuaUy I'm Ol( wtth it,
but sometimes I just want to be
alone to think or read or spend
time with friends my age. 1
Wherever I go, Joe follows
me. He doesn't understanll
English very well, so it's hard
tu explain that I need time
awuy from him. lfl talk to my
mum or dad about it, they call
me selfish and say I should let
Joe come With me. I like Joe,
but I don 'I want him with me
ALL the time! Am I being
seltish? What should I do,
Abby? -- WANT TO BE
ALONE IN TENNESSEE
DEAR WANT . TO BE
ALONE: Look at it this way:
Joe is a stranger in a country
and culture that's new to him.
He is surrounded by cpeople

"These people often get in
based · on their education,
because they have no family
here," said Margaret Wong,
·an immigrant from Hong
Ko~ who founded . a
Cleveland law fii!II. spectal·izing in immigration issues.
Wong said many Asian
Indians and Russians who are
new to Cleveland · received
visas because of their technical savyr or doctoral degrees.
She ·S31d many are drawn to
the region's colleges.
S~ ~ers were forced to
flee ctvd wars and revoluttons
.and join the refugee stream.
· "When there's turmoil in a
country, the intelligentsia are
the ftrst to be t.argeted
because they're constdered a
threat to the new re~ime,"
said Algis Ruksenas, drrector
of the International Services

Center of Cleveland.
He said· the Cleveland area
resettled
about
6,000
refugees during the past 10
years. Many of them are professio.nals. fro~ . fractured
socleues m Afnca and the
former Yugoslavl3.
Ohio and other Midwest
states at~ are likely to attract
immigrants from Europe and
Asia, while the rest of the
nation draws heavtly from
the developn;tg nallo;'ls of
Latin Amenca, Frey S31d.
. O~o may a(tra~t educated,
tmDilgrants, but tt has trouble keeping them, a repon
released Friday by · the
Census Bureau shows.
The repon tracked .the
movement of the foretgnborn population across the
nation from 1995 to 2000.
The Census Bureau found

that Califo~a. ~ew York,
New Jersey, Flonda, Texas
and Ulinois took most of th~·
nation's immigrants from
1995 to 2000 But much of'
the foreign-~m population ·
.
.
..
then fan~ed out 10 a secondary mtgrallon."
Immigrants tended to move
to the same places as everyone
else. They poured into Arizona,
Nevada, North CarOlina and ;
A 'da. B 1 they also streamed
. on
u
mto Iowa and Tennessee and
added · new cultures and ianguages to Michigan, Indiana:
and Wisconsin.
Ohio had a net loss of for· eign-bom residents, mean.
mg the state .lost more foretgners than tt welcomed m
the late 1990s.
•

Artifacts ·missing from Air Fore~ Museum
DAYTON (AP)- About ing from the .total .inventory.
1,000 artifacts, including · The newspaper reponed
technology NASA and the that among the ttems missing
Wright brothers used, POW but not included on the list
items and military weapons; are weapons and the wooden
· were reponed missing from patt.ern o used to cas~ ~he
the U.S. Air Force Museum e~gme that enabled avta'!on
last year, an audit of the ptoneers Wtlbur and Orvtlle
museum found.
Wright to achieve the first .
The 2002 audit by ihe powered flight in 1903
Wright-Patterson Area Audit
According to the mu~eum,
Office concluded that the the engine mold was
museum's personnel "did removed from active invennot always effectively man- tory to a restoration collecage muSeum property."
tion in 199~ and was reponThe audit was obtained by ed Ollssmg. m J~nuary 2001.
the Dayton Daily News,
The audit satd the person
which reponed Sunday m~sl re~ponst~le for the
about the lost items. The mtssmg ttems ts the musemuseum at Wright-Patterson · urn's former chief of collecAir Force Base is the tions, ' Scott A. Ferguson.
world's oldest and largest Auditors.said he disposed of
military aviation mus~um.
museum property while
The museum's director, Maj. bypassing required oversi~ht.
Gen. Charles MetCalf, said the
Fe'l!uson is ~nder indtctnumber of missing items has , men! m U.S. Dtstnct Coun,
been reduced to 510. That's a charged with se~ling an
small number compared to the armo~ed .velucle m 1999,
more than 57,000 items the knowmg tl had been stolen
museum holds, he said.
from the museum in 1996.
But he acknowledged that His attorney, Larry Greger,
to
comment
the number only includes declined
items missing from active Sunday. Messages were left
inventory and doesn't know at Dayton-area listings under
how many items may be miss- the name Scott Ferguson.

"It's quite obvious if you
have a leak at that level, you
could lose your shin before
you knew it," retired Air
Force Col. Richard L.
UpP.slrom, the museum's
civtlian director from 1985to
1996, said of the indictment.
The audit showed that during Ferguson's tenure, museurn officials poorly documented and often didn't foUow procedure when . the_y removed
items from active mventory.
The auditors' review of 123
inventory adjustment vouchers, used to document
removal of museum property,
found that 122 lacked proper
authorization and documentation, with some "signed by
unauthorized personnel."
Metcalf said Ferguson's
failure to properly document
items has led to many problems in tracking inventory.
Krysta Strider, the museum's
current chief of coUections,
said that on one occasion,
Ferguson's paperwork indicated that 85 items had been sent
to the National Air Intelligence
Center. When Metcalf called
that organization, it said it had
received 11 items.

Tha,l incident helped lead
to · an investigation of
Ferguson and his indictmen\, :·
Metcalf said similar things ·
happened at other times.
·
"Thousands of artifacts are
miising said Albert Harris .
'
Jr., a former museum w~rker
who says he was pumshed
· when he blew the whistle. · .
bi 1997, Harris told a fed- ·
eral . investigative agency ·
that as early as 1993 he
reponed his suspicions of
thefts to his supervisor.
.
He also told the u.S&gt;
Offi e of Special Counsel:
tc .
.
•
that ttems shtpped , from ;
smaller museums were cart- i
ed off before they were .
logged into inventory.
'
The agency eventually dis-.
missed Harris's complaints. .
Travis Elliott the OSC's ·
acting director :for congres- ~
sional and public affairs said
. .
'.
the OSC mqutry d7t~nm~ed
only wheth~r Hams clatms
should be mvesttgated. He ·
said the agency determined '
that they were insufficient to ·
warrant such a probe.

Activist group offers outline for talks tq end boycott.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
black activist group has
offered Mayor Charlie
Luken an outline for talks to
end the economic boycott
against the city that would
inclu'de parties that have not
been involved in the boycott
negotiations ..
Luken has rebuffed previous calls for talks from the
Coalition for a Just
and
other
Cincinnati
activists, saying the boycott
groups .are disjointed and
making a long list of unrealistic demands.
The mayor didn't return

phone calls seeking comment Sunday.
On Saturday, Luken said he
hadn't seen the Coalition for
a Just Cincinnati's proposal,
but wondered if the group
was trying to bring others to
the negotiating table that
would support its demands.
"Most of their demands are
outside ofthe city's control,"
Luken said. "Maybe they're
trying to broaden discussions
with people who. can affect
some of this stuff."
~ group pro{K!Sed Friday
to IIICIUde the City manager,
Hamilton County commission-

ers, the Ciricinnati Business
Committee and the Cinc,innati
Boycott Council in talks.
The NAACP also recently
asked the mayor to talk with
activists and he said he plans
to meet with Dr. Galven
Smith, president of the organization's local branch.
Activists began the boycott after a white police officer fatally shot an unanned
black man in April 2001.
The victim was wanted on
earlier charges of fleeing
police and had run again
from police when he
encountered the officer in a

dark alley, police said.
Last year, the mayor
rejected a similar blueprint
for talks the group offered,
calling it "a road map for
going over a cliff."
The current proposal calls
for the negotiating parties to
agree on a mediator anct:
address demands regatding
economic apartheid, police
accountability, civil and
human rights and reform of
government and elections.
A steering . committee
would also resolve disputes,
according to the propOsal.·

Garden plant cited as threat to vegetable crops
COLUMBUS (AP) Gardeners have rediscovered
a lovely, tall blue flower
thought to repel insects. But
state researchers are discovering that the plant's less desir- •
able characteristics include
crowding out vegetable crops.
ApP.le of Peru was
descnbed as "a serious threat
to vegetable crops" by Joel
Felix, a horticultural scien-

tist at the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development
Center at Wooster. Not many
herbicides affect it, he said. ,
Felix 'Suspects gardeners .
may have spread the plant
without knowing it.
The flower is grown mainly
by thole trying to recreate the
settings in VictoriarHT.! gadens·
by trading in heritage seeds,
which are seeds of plant varieties

that were once common but
rarely seen today. They're !laded
among ~ners and sold by
mail Order, but researchers are
umure where the Apple of Peru
first entered Ohio.
The plant poses can grow
up to six feet high with
fiends about 18 inches long,
and crowd out other plants. It
has affected fanns in Africa,
Australia, Europe and South

America. In ' the United
States, it has invaded Georgia
peanut fields and Nonh
Carolina tomato fields.
The plant was found in a
few Ohio fields last year but ·
is spreading. Felix thinks it
infests about 2,000 acres
now, but others say the plant
is more widespread in northwest Ohio. Each plant produces thousands of seeds.

a in?

J

with whom it's · difficult to
communicate. He must feel
very uprooted and alone. Try
to get him involved in activities-- like sports-- where language is not so important.
That way, he will meet kids
his own age and have a chance ·
to excel. It will give you time
to yourself, and he won't be so
dependent upon you:
DEAR ABBY: My daughter, "Jeanine," and three
grandchildren ages 6, 7 and 9
live with my husband and me.
Jeanine pays us $25 a week
for rent and buys some of the
groceries. She works in a convenience store pan time and
takes some college classes.
I am happy to help my
daughter and pay tuition to a
private school for the grandkids. However, our utilities
have skyrocketed· since she
and the children moved in two
years ago. Jeanine bas a bank
account, and last week I
looked at her checkbook. I was
shocked to see that she gives
her church $50 to $60 a week.
She has also written a check
for $2,000 to the same church.
I confronted Jeanine when

Local events
Big tree contest Dorcas Bethany
to begin
Church makes
POMEROY - Contestants love offering ·
can nominate the largest
Beech (American Beech) tree
in Meigs County and win a
$50 savings bond at Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District's annual banquet on
Oct. 7.
Entry forms can be picked
up at the SWCD office and
must be returned by Aug. 29.
In order to be nominated, the
tree tnust be located in Meigs
County.
1be tree does not need to be
located on contestant's property, but landowner's permission is required before nominating a tree. If two nominations are received for the
same tree, the first entry
received will be accepted.
Q\leSti!JnS may be directed
to Education Coordinator
Vicki Morrow at 992-4282
Monday through Friday duril{g regular office hours.

RACINE- A love offering
was made to God's NET to be
used for the purchase . of
school supplies for disadvantaged children at a recent
meeting of the Sonshine
Circle held at Dorcas Bethany
Church.
Also discussed was the possibility of providing sack
lunches for the school chi!dren coming for Morgan's
Raid reenactment activities on
Sept. 4 and 5. Thousands of
school children are ell:pected
io be bused in for the Civil
War events. While some will
be bringing their lunches others will be purchasing theirs
here at $3. Several groups are
being asked to paniciiJale. in
providing the sack luncheons.
Members also discussed
tours to ·the Becky Thatcher
and The Living Christmas
Tree. Kathryn Hart will get

parents, we've been looking
Harrison. Pomeroy, speeding,
through baby books for names
$30
and costs: Thomas E.
and have run into a problem.
Harton,
Racine, speeding, $30
My wife and I would like to
and costs:
name our baby after me if it's
Leonard
A.
Hicks,
·
POMEROY
Cases
a boy, but we're unsure if
Dear
Lancaster.
seatbelt.
$30
and
resolved in the Meigs
that's a no-no because of my
costs:
Billy
J.
Howard.
New
Abby
County Court of Judge
oldest son. My first wife had
•
Steve Story between Aug. 9 Haven. W.Va .. failure to conno interest in naming our son
a11d Aug. 17 are as follows: trol. $20 and costs: Adam K.
after me . Would it be OK to
Susan R. Zirkle, Pomeroy, Jagers, Gallipolj.s, speeding,
give our baby the ''Junior"
tinted glass, $20 and costs; $45 and costs i Charles F.
she got home and thin~s have title, or should we continue to
Kimberly A. Bailey, · Kitts Johnson, Long Bottom. seatnot been the same smce. I search for another name? -Hill , speeding, $30 and bell. $30 and costs; Douglas
know · I shouldn't have NEW DADDY AGAIN
costs:
Anthony
G. P. Kealon, Cu lloden. W.Va.,
DEAR NEW DADDY: As
snooped, but shouldn't she
Barringer, Limcaster, speed- · seatbelt. $30 and costs;
gwe more toward this house- long as "Junior" hasn't been
Jonathon D. Keesee,
ing, $25 and costs: Diana
hold than she contributes to used before, I see no reason
Bowles, Pomeroy. . seatbelt. Middleport. seatbelt-passenthe church? -- FEELING why you shouldn't name the
$30 and costs; Holly N. ger. $20 and .costs: Bui Li,
USED IN MACON, GA.
baby after you. However, a . Broderick, Pomeroy, speed- Chicago. Ill.. speeding. $30
· DEAR FEELING USED: word to the wise: Include your
and .costs: Richard A.
ing, .$30 and costs:
In this case, absolutely. But it 9- year-old in the naming
Henry R. Buchanan, McCormick. W. Lal'ayette,
won't happen unless you put process if possible. It will give
Pomeroy, stop sign, $20 and seatbelt, $30 and costs, equipyour foot down and make it him "ownership" and head off
costs; Harry J.. Butler, ment misuse, $35 and costs;
clear that she must. I'm all for
E.
Morrison,
Henderson, W.Va .. speeding. Stephen
contributing to the church, but any possible resentment.
$30 and costs: Bruce L. ·Minford. tinted glass, $20 and
(Dear Abby is written by
charity begins at home, and
Chapman, Point Pleasant, costs. speeding. $45 and cost~:
that means paying a fair share Abigail' Va11 Buren, also
Annanth R. Nail Puram,,
W.Va., stop sign, $20 and
know11 as Jea11ne Phillips, and
of household expenses.
Dublin.
speeding. $30 and
costs; Ian Coffman, Vincent,
DEAR ABBY: My wife is was founded by her mother.
speeding, $50 and costs: costs: Michael L. Neal,
seven months pregnant. This is Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
James A. Conlen, Aatwood, Pomeroy. seatbelt. $30 an4
her first child. '( I have a 9-year- Abby at www.()earAbby.com
Ky., speeding, $30 and costs; costs: Jonathan B. Searles,
old son from my ·first mar- or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Adam C. Doczi, Middleport, Albany. speeding. $30 and
riage.) Like most expectant A1tgeles, CA 90069.)
costs; Robert L. Sparks,
stop sign, $35 and costs:
Regina
1-).
Duffy. Beaver. speeding, $30 and
Pickerington. sjJeeding, $30 cosls; Tammie L. Taylor, .
and costs: Aaron M. Durand, . Racine, speeding, $30 an~ .
AtiJens, speeding, $30 and costs; Shawn M. Thomas,
costs; Jeffrey C. Evans, Albany, stop sign, $20 and,
Toledo, speeding, $30 mid costs: William G. Thomas,:
information on both events residents along with a 90th
costs; John ·K. Fishman, Parkersburg. W.Va ., seatand repon back to the group. birthday card for Maria
Cottage City, Md., speeding, belt. ·$30 and costs:
.
It was decided to have a Delgato of Middleport. ·
Julie A. Thompson, Long ,
$50 and costs; Nathaniel H.
Jo Lee, Letha Proffitt, and
bake sale booth at Racine's
Flanders, Waterford. speeding, Bottom. seat belt, $30 and
costs; Catherine Whitlow,
Fall Festival on Sept. 13 at Hazel McKelvey had the pro$50 and costs:
·
Star · Mill Park. Evelyn gram for the evening . .Lee
Steffani
B.
Glenn. Cleveland. speeding, $30 ·
Foreman, vice president, con- read "How to Get to Heaven"
Southside, W.Va., speeding. and costs; _Karen E. Wills,
$30 and costs; Adam L. Middleport, seatbelt, $30'
ducted the meting. She read . and "A Sunday School
Gregory, West Chester, speed' . and costs; Karen E. Wills, '
"A Call to Prayer" and Lesson". Protlitt read "God
ing, $30 and costs; Matthew P. Middleport. seatbelt, $30·
"Because God Loves Me", Bless
America"
and
Grueser, Shade, speeding, $50 and costs: Brad R. Young,
using
scripture
from McK~Ivey read "This Old
and costs; John W. Halstead. Chester. sealbelt, $30 and
Chronicles 7:14 and John World". They gave each
St.
Albans, W.Va., seatbelt, costs: Sylvester Young, '
member attending two patri3:16.
$30
and costs; John C. Newcomerstown. speeding.,.
Hart introduced Judy otic book marks, and served
Harmon, Syracuse, seatbelt, $30 and costs. seatbelt, $30
Gilmore, wife of the new refreshments to Blondena
$30
and costs; Audra M. &lt;md costs.
minister. Officers' reports Rainer, Shirley Beegle, .
were given by Han and Julie Thelma Walton, Edna Knopp,
.'
Campbell.
Bernice Theiss.
Mattie
Thank you notes were read Beegle, Betty Proffitt, Edie
from Paul Rose, Suzanne Hubbard, Ann Boso, Peggy
Sayre, and Carolxn Adams. Hill, Mabel Brace, Mildred
Donations were acknowl- Hart. Mary Cleek, Sheila
.,
,.Subscribe today. • 992-2156
:.
edged from Suzanne Sayre for Theiss, Manha Lou Beegle,
Gilmore,
Evelyn
the stamp fund and from Judy
Linda and Clyde Davis for the Foreman, Julie Campbell,
Roger Hubbard l'\1emorial Kathryn Hart, and guest,
ijolly Stump.
.
• fund.
.
Purchase of a new piano
Next meeting , will be on
light and offering plates was Sept. II , with Rainer . and
Hubbard to have the program
discussed.
Numerous cards of encour- and Foreman and Proffitt to
agement were signed for area serve refreshments.

Meigs County
court

·ProUd to be apart of your life..

....
'

. I

Community calendar
Tuesday, Aug. 26
RACINE - RACO meeting
6:30 p.m. at the Lagon hall in
Monday, Aug. 25 ...
Racine. Guests will be fairgate
POMEROY -Veterans \Wrkers. Potluclt dinner will be
Service Commission, 9 a .m .• served. New member5welcome.
117 Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.
'
Thursday, Aug. 26
POMEROY - Citizen's
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Against Pollution (CAP) · will Garden Club, 6:30 p.m . at the
meet at 7p.m. at the Cheshire home of Chris Chapman.
Community Park near the
boat ramp. All concerned are
urged ·to attend.
ThursdaY, Aug. 28
Tuesday, Aug. 26
SYRACUSE
Meigs
POMEROY - Childhood
County Board of Mental
immunization
clinic at Meigs
Retardation and DsYelopmentaJ
County
Health
Department, 9
Disabi l~ies, 4 p.m. Carleton
to 11 a.m., and 1 to 3 p.m.,
School in Syracuse.
112 E. Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.
Bring child's shot records and
m(!dlcal card if applicable.
Child must be accompanied
by parent or legal guardian.
Monday, Aug. 25
MIDDLEPORT - OH-Kan
Coin Club, 7 p.m. at the
Trolley House, Mloddleport.
Maria
Delgado
will
Auction to follow the meeting. observe her 90th birthday on
Public welcome.
Aug. 25. Cards may be sent

Public meetings

FRI8/15/03 · lHURS 8/21/03

to her c/o Norma Torres, 742
General Hartinger Parkway,
Middleport, 45760.
Sylvia Robenstine will observe
her 90th birthday, Sept. 2. She
resides at rose lane health
Center, 5425 High Mill Ave., NW,
Mass~lon, Oho 44646 and cards
may be sent to her there.
"140·753·3400

MOVIES

Other events

1 0 ",,f

·~~~

TUES BARGAIN NIGHT

$3.75 ADMISSION

WED TIIRU SUN

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30 PM MON &amp; TUES

Opening
Tuesday Aug. 26th!

~

~~~~ \

• Southwest cuisine and atmosphere
• Western sty le saloon , all legal beverages ·
• Seating for 250. no reservatiQns needed
• On the Ohio River
• Boat dock
• Gift shop

Clubs and
Organizations

FREAKY FRIDAY (PG)
7:10 &amp; 9:10
MATINEES 1:10 &amp; 3:10

Birthdays

•

( ·1

7:00&amp; 9:20

'

'

··-';:-:-

.

- -

•

'•

'

•

.'

,,

: .\ .• •. :-~

;I

I' '

Qally sentinel .·
.

'

'

.

~lribe. ~y ¥ 992-2166 '

ELBOW

..
''·.

Gallipolis
Chiropradic Center ·

PROTECT YOUR CHILD
SHIN
ANKLE

990 2nd Avenue • 441 ~0200

downtown PomCroy.

992-0099

'

Mall Sublcrtpt~n

I

Located on Main Street in

MATINEES 1:00 &amp; 3:20

'·

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon can help!

lnllde Melli• County
13 Weeks .. . ........ . .'30.15
26Weeks ............ .'60.00
52 Weeks ......... .. .'118.80

R - Oulelde Melga County
13 Weeks ... . .. . ... . . .'50.05
26Weeks . . .......... '100.10
52 Weeks ....•. . .. . • .'200.20

Page3.

·Bv .THE BEND

The DailySentinel

·. FOOT ·

Provided as apublic service by the office .ofAgnes A.E. Simon, MD ·

,.

r

On San!rday, August 30, 2003, the office of
Agnes A.!. Simon, MD will be hosting a Kinderprint
sit~ from lO a.m. to 1 p.m. iri conjunction with the
Mason ~ounty · Sherlffh Department.
The FR;E Kinderprint program allows authorities to
instantly track missing children using ready information
such as photographs and fingerprints.
Dr. Simones office is located at 214 Colonial Plaza 2415 Jackson Avenue in Point Pleasant, WV.
For more information, please call 304·675·6090.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.
.

I.

�OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill

Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

VIEW

lbanks
A special memory
Dear EdiJor:
I wish to thank several Meigs County residents publicly for
their assistance to The Wallpaper Project and the From Here: A
Century of Voices from Ohio tout of the state.
Bob Buck. Dixie Sayre, Kathy Johnson, Gerald Powell, and
Donna Greene all gave up a day to perform at the Ohto State Frur
recently. They and cast members from other past productions
formed a team to present shonened versions of the history play
performed in Pomeroy over Memorial Day weekend.
.
· Although our State Fair experience was marred by pounng
rains; the cast's enthusiasm never waned.
Is everybody in Meigs County as good-natured as these folks?
I understand that a subsequent presentation at the Meigs County
fair was well-received, and I thank them for this as welL
If any of your readers missed theseopresentations and are interested in seeing this heanwarming play, I would invite them to
Gallipolis, our current tour stop. From Here will be presented on
Saturday, Aug. 30, at 2 and 7:30p.m., and Sunday, Aug. 31, at 2
p.m. at the historic Ariel Theater in downtown Gallipolis.
Thanks to all who made Meigs County a spec1al memory for
the Wall paper Project tour.
Sincerely,

~onday,August25,2003

Dueling timelines in Iraq
The Washington Post

111 Court Street • Pomerqy, Ohio

READER'S

Page4

lf a terrible week in the
Middle East shook any of
the complacency out of the
Bush administration, there
was little public evidence .
Secretary of State Colin
Powell traveled to United
Nations headquarters to
express condolences for the
U.N. staffers killed in
Tuesday's
bombing · in
·Baghdad and to seek more
foreign contributions of
troops to aid U.S. forces in
Iraq. But he came without
any stated willingness to do
what would be needed to
attract such contributions,
that is, to share political
authority over Iraq with the
United Nations. Secretary
of
Defense
Donald
Rum sfeld continued to
maintain that U.S. troop
strength in Iraq is adequate.
There was no talk of an
accelerated effort of any
kind to improve daily life
for Iraqi s.
The administration seems
convinced that time is on
its side in Iraq. It acknowledges grave problems but
counsels
patience.
As
"regime remnants" are captured or killed, officials
say, Iraq will b~come safer
and Iraqis will feel freer to
work with U.S. authorities.
Maybe that is right. Last
week U.S. forces captured
two of the highest-ranking

and mos\ o dious figures
from Saddam H~ssein's
regime, which sugge sts an
encouraging level of intelligence coo peration with
Iraqis_.
Even
anti-U.S.
newspapers in Iraq publish,
if grudgingly, results of
opinion survey s showing
that most Iraqis are glad·
Saddam Hussein is gone
and do ·not yet want U .S.
forces to depart . In many
parts of the country, local
Iraqi councils are beginning to govern and Iraqi
police are assuming authority.
.
But it seems at least
equally plausible that time
is working against the
coalition. M any
Iraqis
already are surprised and
disappointed by the meager
re sults of the first months
of U.S. rule . Meanwhile,
Oen. John Abizaid said last
week that terrorism "is
emerging as the number
one security threat." While
. U.S. soldiers continue to
come under daily attack,
targets also include ,Iraqis
who . coo per.ate with the
United State s. private contractors and, as the U.N.
bombing showed, anyone
else who is . trying to
improve conditions in Iraq.
That attack set back reconstruction efforts in many
ways, and the continuing
threat of violence . will slow
progress toward rebuilding

the nation's infrastructure.
That in turn means many
Iraqis will rerpain without
electricity or water or, too
often, employment-which
may encourage opposition
to the occupation : and thu s
further set back efforts to
make Iraq more secure.
There's no magic solution
for the challenges .· th e
United. States faces in Iraq,
but a key first step would
be to face them honestly.
Even before · the war, we
and many others· urged the
administration to level with
Congress and the American
people about the likely
costs of postwar occupation. It failed to do so, perhap s, it now see ms, because
the administration itself
harbored an unrealistic
view. Ha s that changed?
Last week, asked about the
challenges of attracting
more troops from countries
that resent sole U.S. authority, Powell said, "I don't
think there is a problem."
But there is a problem .
There aren't enough troops,
there aren 't enough police
and there aren't enough
contributions from countries with competent militaries. In Karbala, a city in
southern Iraq where occupation has been fairly successful. 1,000 Marine s are
about to withdraw in favor
of 455 Bulgarian troops .
But the Bulgarians have no

intention of assuming the
civil administration functions the Marines have been
carrying out, as the Wall
Street Journal reported
Friday, and a civilian team
that was supposed to
deploy there hasn't eveR
been named. Given the
stakes, and the potential for
new problems, this kind of
ragged, ·
improvised,
resource-poor effort is
inexcusable and incomprehensible.
"Opposition to the foreign occupation is becoming stro nger and more violent," the lnternat~onal
Crisis Group says 10 a
report to be released
Monday. The ICG, a private
organization that conducts
useful research in trouble
spots around the world, recommends a new division of
labor that would put the
United Nations in charge of
political transition while
leaving the U.S .-led coalition in charge of security
and the Iraqi Governing
Council doing as much
day-to-day administration
as it can. Whether that precise formula is the right one
can be debated . There
shouldn't "be any debate
about the need for more
intense effort and more
openness to allied cooperation. The longer the administration delays, the greater
the chances of failure

Rachel Barber
Coordinator for
The Wallpaper Project, an Ohio Bicentennial Project

~ELP!

TODAY IN HISTORY

;

Today is Monday, Aug. 25, the 237th day of 2003. There are
128 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Au~. 25, 1944, during
World War II, Paris was liberated by Alhed forces after four
years of Nazi occupation.
• On this date: In 1825, Uruguay declared independenc~ from
BraziL
· ln 1875, Captain Matthew Webb became the first person to
~Wi m across the English Channel, getting from Dover,
~ngland, to Calais, France, in 22 hours.
: In 1916, the National Park Service was established within
the Depanment of the Interior.
: In 1921, t~e United States signed a peace treaty with
Germany.
~ In 1943, U.S. forces overran New Georgia in the· Solomon
!);lands during World War II.
.
, In 1950, President Truman ordered the Army to se1ze con!Tol of the nation's railroads to avert a strike.
: In 1980, the Broadway musical "42nd Street" opened.
"roducer David Merrick stunned both cast and audience durihg the curtain call by announcing that the show's director,
(;ower Chrunpion, had died that same day."
: In 1981, the U.S. spacecraft Voyager II came within 63,000
miles of Saturn's cloud eover, sending back pictures of and
data about the ringed planet.
: In 1984, author Truman Capote was found dead in a Los
bngeles mansion; he was 59.
' In 1985, Samantha Smith, the schoolgirl whose letter to
Yuri V Andropov resulted in her famous peace tour of the
Soviet Union, died with her father in an airliner crash in
!Yiaine.
· Ten years ago: The United States applied limited sanctions
against China and Pakistan after concluding the Chinese had
sold missile technology to the Pakistanis. Amy Biehl, a
fulbright scholar from Newpon Beach, Calif., was slain by a
mob in South Africa.
: Five years ago: Retired Supreme Coun Justice Lewis F.
Powell died in Richmond, Virginia, at age 90.
: Today 's Binhdays: Actor Van Johnson is 87. Actor-producer Mel Ferrer is 86. Game show host Monty Hall1s 82. Actor
Sean Connery is 73. Actor Page Johnson is 73. Talk
snow/game show host Regis Philbin is 72. Actor Tom Skerritt
i;o; 70. Jazz musician Wayne Shaner is 70. Movie director
Hugh Hudson is 67. Actor David Canary is 65 . Movie directOr John Badham is 64. Filmmaker Marshall Brickman is 62.
Rhythm-and-blues sin~er Walter Williams (The 0' Jays) is 61.
~ctor Anthony Heald 1s 59. Actress Anne Archer is 56. Rock
$inger-actor Gene Simmons is 54. Actor John Savage is 54.
Country si nger-musician Henry Paul (Blackhawk) is 54. Rock
singer Rob Halford is 52. Rock singer Elvis Costello is 49.
Movie director Tim Burton is 45. Actress Ally Walker is 42.
Country singer Billy Ray Cyrus is 42. Rock musician Vivian
Campbell (Def Leppard) is 41. Actress Joanne Whalley is 39.
Actor Blair Underwood is 39. Rap DJ Terminator X (Public
~nemy) is 37.j:ountry singer Jo Dee Messina is 33. Actor Kel
Mitchell 1s 25.
.
· Thought for Today: "Tradition is what you resort to when
yeu don't have the time or the money to do it right."- Kurt
Herben Adler, Austrian-born conductor ( 1905-1988).
•

..

....
'' .

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

; . Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
~e less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
tditing and must be signed and include address
'.
lind telephone number. No unsigned letters will
'
h~
published. Letters should be in good taste,
I .
~ddressing issues, not personalities.
; : The opinions expressed in the column below
I
bre the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
.

,\lELP!

Monday, August 25. 2003

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

New pow~r lines, switches
could boost grid capacity
without using more land
CLEVELAND (AP) United States and CanadaWith all the he adaches but not necessarily by erect·
involved in commandeering. ing new transmission towers
strips of land for new power and lines.
lines, interest is growing in
Two companies are developseveral new technologies ing wires made of ceramicthat can wring more capacity ba'ied superconductors that can
out of the existing electricity carry as much as five times the
infrastructure.
power of current steel-reinWhether they're cables that forced aluminum cables while
can carry more juice or digital withstanding the high temperaswitches that can make rapid- lures that produces.
fire routing decisions, experts
One,
lntermag netics
say there is noshonage of ways General Corp. of Albany,
to improve upon the 1960s-era N.Y., has developed a cable
technology that pervades made of strands of ceramictoday 's delicate electricity grid. coated tape. Like convention'The existing rights of way al
underground
electric
are going to be the first areas to cables, the ceramic cables
be exploited," said David have a·liquid core that carries
Kurzman, an altemative ener- a coolant. But instead of fillgies analyst with New York · ing them with oil, these cables
investment
bank
H.C. are cooled by 300-degreeWainwright.
below-zero liquid nitrogen.
Technology is the easy said Glenn Epstein, the compan. A knottier problem is parry's chief executive.
the regulatory morass th e
lntermagnetics has already
industry· finds itself stuck in. completed shon demonstration
"Most of these problems projects and is preparing a
could be fixed today with quarter-mile
connector
existing technologies," said between two electric substaEric Prouty, an energy tech- tions in Albany. Epstein said.
nology analyst with Boston The expensive cable is meant
investment bank Adams , to replace conventional cables
Harkness &amp; HilL "It's more a in urban area~ where capacity
legi slative and policy issue is tight.
In a similar project.
than it is a technology issue ."
The Department of Energy American Superconductor of
·
said as much three years ago. Westborough, Mass., IS overThe agency's report on a seeing a project that will bury
·1 1
h. h
·
wave of power outages that a half-1m e- ong, 1g -capac1hit East Coast cities in 1999 ty cable on New York's Long
found that utilities ' cost-cut- Island to, carry power for
ling had "considerably erod- 300,000 homes . It ·s expected
ed" the grid's reliability.
to be in use by 2005. with
Now the system is under cables ready for commercial
heightened scrutiny again use a year or two later, said
because of the Aug .. 14 black- company vice president John
out, in which a cascade of Howe.
failures and automati.c shut"Superconductors really
downs turned out the lights provide
the
bandwidth
for some 50 million people in increases that are going to be
parts of Ohio. Michigan, necessary to run the grid in
Ontario, New York , Vermont, the future," Kurzman said.
Massachusetts, Connecticut,
In the shoner term, 3M Co.
Jersey
and and other manufacturers
New
Pennsylvania.
have developed high-capaciMany feel that the blackout ty overhead power lines
will turn attention toward made of an aluminum-zircoadding more capacity to the nium composite. The cables,
grid - especially in heavily which already are being
popul ated swaths of the manufactured for sale, can

carry two to three times as
much power as curre nt cable,
said
John
Cornwell,
spokesman for 3M, based at
St. Paul, Minn .
. While superconductors must
Qe buried, the 3M cables could
replace existing lines on transmission towers, and connect
directly into substations without
modifications, Cornwell said.
Other grid-boosting solu·
tions include software and
switches to steer power
around bottlenecks and onto
Jess crowded wires, and line
sensors that transmit temperature and wind data to a util ity control room, telling
computers to reduce a load
when wind stops cooling a
power line, for example, said
Luther Dow of the Electric
Power Researc h Institute in
Palo Alto, Calif.
Investors are 'also looking
into stringing more highvo ltage power lines ferrying
direct current rather than the
usual alternating current,
said Steven Taub, a power
technology researcher with
Cambridge Energy Research
Associates. A few long-dis· lance DC cables are already
in use in North America.
DC lines are cheaper and
can share rights of way with
AC lines. The cables can
carry far more power. and
can be turned on· and off like
water spigots. making billing
more accurate, Taub said.
"S[X!CC is very tight," said Paul
Halas, chief opemting ofticer
GridAmerica, which is taking
over long-tenn control in Cktober
of the grid at the center of the
blackout inquiry. owned by
Akron-based FlfStEnergyCorp.
GridAmcrica, which also
will take over interstate
power transmissions for two '
other Midwest utilities, says
it will invest $500 million in
adding more capacity to the
lines, or building new lines.
"Our best estimate is that ·
the bulk of the effects would
be on existing rights of way,"
Halas said.

Local Briefs

For the Record

Planning
meeting set

Marriage license

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Tuppers Plains Fire
Department has called a
township meeting to ask
the community to help
cook and serve food for
the Morgan Raiders reenactors on Sept. 5, 6 and 7.
A meeting will be held at 7
p.m. Wednesday at the fire
depanment to make plans.

PAIN
MANAGEMENT
OF
SOUTHERN OHIO, INC

Dr. joseph Del Zotto, D.O.

POMEROY
The
Caring an9 Sharing meet·
ing of the Meigs County
Council on Aging will be
held at I p.m. Thursday at
the Senior Citizens Center.
Melissa Gandee of the
Alzheimers · Association
will be the guest speaker.

Diplomat of the American Academy of
Pain Management
A Multi Disciplinary Clinic
Opening September 15, 2003
OFFERING
Massage Therapy, Myofascial &amp;
Osteopathic Manipulation

VFWtomeet

Physical Therapy, EMG Diagnostic
Studies
Disability Studies &amp; Evaluations
Implantable Drug Administrative
Systems
lnterventional Pain Management
Procedures
' Participating with I
Ohio B.W.C., Medicare, United
Health Care
Medical Mutual
By Referral and Appointment Only
· Private Pay is welcomed

TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW 9053 will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
hall in Tuppers Plains.

. •·.

·Keeping·
Meigs .,
. County
·informed ·
•'

NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

..

Dfli'r

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530 2ND AVE
PORTSMOUTH, OHIO
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
740·355·1000
740.441·9058
oil Free 1·888-484--3724
Toll Free 1·888·233·7246
(Accepting appointments Aug 25,2003)
Opening Sept 15,2003

The
Sentine
992-2156

AGRICULTURE

Uniforms
from Page 5

•

. "ELP!

men and junior high students.
Kim
Romine,
Band
Booster president, said the
uniforms are imponant to the
school and to the community.
"I think it is a pride issue
with the school and kids,"
she said as she sold snacks at

the newly constructed band
booster booth . "The alumni
donated over half the money
because of their pride in the
community and in the·
school."
Adam Phillips, freshman
who plays sousaphone, said
the uniforms make a difference.
" It feel s ditYerent now that
we are wearing uniforms
instead of T-shirts." he said .
" It looks a lot better. I have a

feeling down d.eep'·inside that
we are doillg a good thing for
the community by wearing
them."
The next project the band
boosters are workin.g on is
providing instruments to the
marching band. Parents and
students must now pay for
their own instruments which
can be very expensive. For
instance, a tuba can cost
more than $2,900. ·

MEDICAL

Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipmentcom

Holzer Me.dical Center

www.holzer.org
Holzer Clinic

AUTOMOTIVE

www.holzerclinic.com

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
Turnpike Ford nf Gallipolis

www.turnpikeflm.com
ENTERTAINMENT

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org
BUSINESS TRAINING
Gallipolis Career College

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com

The untruth hurts, even online
R. TAYLOR

Thus they go to all tho se on
his mail list, most of whom
have the same ideological
" Hey, take it easy, bent as my pal. I know
Dipsey. It can't hurt." The many of them.
admonition addressed to
I stir up quite a hornet's
my screen name came back nest with my fuzzy diaover the Internet. It was tribes. Oh, well, I'm sure if
tweaking me for objecting one or the other of us get
to an urban legend . · As miffed we'll be able to
usual my friend didn 't orig- patch things up at the annuinate the tale. Those things al Navy reunion most of us
aren't originated . .They just . attend-pretty sure anyhow.
appear and tliey go on forThis e-mail was attributed
ever. It's like the proverbial to Andy Rooney. The style
snake that won't die until was vaguely remini scent of
the sun goes down, except the curmudgeon, but the
that an urban legend goes se ntiments were closer to
round and round the world, those of Ru sh Limbaugh . I
always ahead of the sunset. sent a copy to Rooney at
This one was forwarded CBS and checked with an
to me by ·a n old Navy ship- Internet si te devoted to
mate, a staunch conserva- investigating urban legends.
'tive and a friend of 45 The Internet si te tore the
. years. · He is spending . his legend apart and Roon ey
golden years by forwarding threw a fit. I had enough
rne every right-wing e-mail proof to throw my own fit.
that comes across his. comBack went a rebuttal
puter, and I'm spending telling "all" tflat they'd
mine by throwing ;a fit been had once again . From
whenever he gets my goat. my high horse, I pointed ·
I check the authenticity out that the story was pure
of hi s notes and, using the nonsense and that somehaughty smugness inherent one had done a true disserin my liberalism (I call it vice to a couple of
enlightenment),
refute . American
institutions those that are false . Just to Rooney and the love. of the
make sure that justice pre- truth. Well . Rooney anyvails in this ideological war how. I suspect if we really
1 even hit "reply to all." loved the truth , urban legBY KEtrit

Specia to The Washington Postl

ends wouldn't get very far.
The
hornets
started
buzzing.
You 'd
have
thought I'd challenged their
right to fly
a huge
Ameri ca n flag from the
back of a pickup truck, or
suggested
that
retired
sailors avoid the military
exchange system and pay
sales taxes in order to support their state. Several sent
a note to me insisting that
my rejoinder (but apparently not the lie it self) was
crap and I shouldn't send it.
Almost every letter insisted
that such e-mails can' t hurt.
Ah, how much mischief
ha s been don e under the
gui se of " It can't hurt!"
That makes me as nervous
as a dentist's saying, "You
might feel something." It
can hurt. Not long before
the last election I got an email about Bill Clinton's
impending trip to Viefnam
and China . It claimed the
"draft dodger" was going to
steam into Vietnam on a
Navy cruiser and require
the· capiai n to fly the
Vietnamese flag over our
own. Boy, that one hit my
co·mputer seve ral time s,
each
forwarded
many
times. Nobody a lon g the
line denied it, or even questioned it.

I went right to the top, the
White Hou se itself. An official spokesman was practically waiting for a request
for information. He had a
prepared statement ready.
In liarsh terms it branded
the legend as a hoax .
Clearly the White House
felt a message .trashing the
president could hurt.
As usual I pa ssed the
information back lo '"all."
Again , the responses came
back, " Who cares? It won't
hurt." One guy told me: " If
it ain't true it should be."
Those folks, most of whom
were still steaming over
Clinton's lie about sex,
were willing to embrace a
whopper as long as it
reflected their viewpoint.
The case of Rooney' s email wouldn't influence an
election of course; it merely reflected the originator's
feelings. So, what did it
hurt · indeed? It
hurt
Roon ey-it was an attack on
his credibility. and credibility is his most important
asset.
Why don't we just stop
spreading lies? Or, am I
starting to so und I ike Andy
Rooney?
(Taylor is a retired Navy
officer. His e-mail address
is krtaylorxyz@ aol.com)

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..

POMEROY - A marriage license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Daniel G11y Teaford, 24, and Heather
Dawn Goble, 26, both of Portland.

Caring and
Sharing
meeting
announced

.'

. .

�Inside
dengals have long way to go, Page 10
Wallace
.. hoping for healthy uaaon, Page 10

6

The Daily Sentinel-

.• .
.

\lrribune - Sentinel - 1\e
CLASSIFIED

.
Monday; August 25, l003

•

Astros defeat
Reds 6-3
.

Southern gets 'Berned' in.season opener

; HOUSTON
(AP)
Jeriome Robertson stayed
unbeaten against Cincinnati
and tied the club ,record for
wins by a rookie left-bander
as the Hou ston Aslros defeateP the Reds 6-3 Sunday.
: Richard Hidalgo homered,
tFipl ed and hit a go-ahead
single for Houston. He drove
io: three runs and picked up
his 20th assist. most among
n1ajor league outfielders.
, Robertson (12-6) went
se¥en innings and allowed
two run s on four hits and five
walks. He struck out five.
Bill y Wagner pitched a
s~ore l ess ninth for hi s 36th
save .
.
Relie ver Brian Reith (l -3)
too k the loss, allowing three
runs on three hits and a walk
while getting only two outs.
John Bale went 4 2-3
innings and allowed two runs
and six hits in his fourth start
fpr the Reds.

BY .BRAD SHERMAN
sports@ mydailytribune.com

.

indians down
Devil Rays
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(AP) - Ryan Ludwick hit a
pair of run -scoring singles as
the Cleveland Indians handed
the Tampa Bay Devil Rays
the ir fifth straight Joss, 7-5
Sunday.
Jake Westbrook (6-7) gave
up four runs and nine hits
over five innings. David
Ri ske pitched the ninth for
hi s third save.
Marlon Anderson and
Aubrey Huff drove in two
runs each for Tampa Bay.
Ludwick and Tim Laker
had RBI singles during a
fo ur-run fifth that gave
Cleveland a 7-3 lead . Jhonny
Peralta and Coco Crisp added
sacrifice flies.
Tampa Bay starter Jeremi
Gonzalez (6-6) ·gave up
seven runs and II hits over 4
1-3 innings.

Southern junior running back Kyle McKeavor evades a host of
Berne Union defenders during the Tornadoes famne against Berne
Union Saturday at Southern . (Brad Sherman)

RACINE - Saturday's
season opener st!uted out
bad for the Southern football team, and as the first
half progressed, it only
got worse.
·
An 80-yard opening
kickoff return for touchdown by Berne Union's
Casey Valentine set the
tone for a 48-0 drubbing
of the host Tornadoes at
Roger Lee Adams Field.
The Rockets scored
touchdowns on each of its
seven first half possessions, racking up 238
yards of total offense in
the process. Conversely,
Southern had minus four
yards at intermission.
Southern was simply
overmatched athletically
and had problems matching up with the speedy,
explosive Berne Union
running backs. A committee of eight Rocket rushers racked up 298 yards
on the ground and broke
I 0 runs of 10 9r more
yards for the game.

"We' re not going to
make any excuses at
Southern High SchooL
They were fast, but we
didn't do all the things we
had to do," said Southern
coach Dave Barr. "We' II
get better:"
·
Southern's defense did
get better in the second
half. Even though much
of the first string had the
rest of the night off, the
Tornadoes held Berne
Union scoreless over the
final 24 minutes.
"I'm really proud of our
kids for continuing to·battle the way they did in the
second half," commented
Barr. " And I know we'll
come back to work on
Monday and get better."
Berne Union's John
England was a royal pain
in Southern's side. The
senior running back
gained 75 yards on just
five totes before leaving
with an injury in the second quarter. His teammate, fullback Ethan
Strope, was close behind
with 71 yards.
Southern was led in the
rushing department by

bruising fullback Jake
Nease, who ran for 32
yards on 16 carries.
Dustin Keyes had a few
nice runs and finished
with 26 yards on the
ground.
While there are not a lot
of positives in a loss,
coach Barr found a few. "I
thought that several of our
young kids played rretty
aggressive footbal the
second half," he said.
Freshman lineback er
Ryan Donaldson made
three tackles for loss in a
single series and fellow
freshman Weston Counts
saw some late action in
the backfield and picked
up 27 yards on six tries.
Southern (0-1, 0-0) will
attempt to right the ship
next Friday when hosts
Southern
Ohio
Conference-! powerhou se
Symmes Valley (1-0, 0-0).
"We just have to cut
down on turnovers, we
have to block a little better and we have to tackle a
little better. All tho se
things are fixable and we

Ple..eHeUnlon, 10

Pennington out 12 weeks with broken, dislocated Wrist
NEW YORK (AP) - Jets
quarterback Chad Pennington
is expected to be out 12 weeks
with a broken and dislocated
left wrist.
Coach Herman Edwards
said Sunday the injury is not
career-threatening, but would
not mle out the possibility that
the former Marshall star could
miss the season.
'That's the best estimation at
this point," Edwards said.
"(The doctors are) optimistic
that he will have the ability to

come back. You're talking
about surgery, so you never
know. No one can guarantee
on that."
Vinny Testaverde, a 17-yearveteran, becomes the Jets
starter.
Edwards said that in addition
to the dislocation, Pennington
broke four bones that connect
the knuckles to· the wrist and
also has ligament damage.
He said Pennington had
seven pins inserted in his wrist
and will be in a splint for the

next week. Pennington then
will wear a cast for three-tofour weeks.
Pennington was still at
Lenox Hill Hospital on Sunday
afternoon, a day- after surgery.
Pennington was injured
against the New York Giants in
a preseason game Saturday
ni ght. As Brandon Short came
on a blitz, Pennington rolled to
his right and threw the ball
away. But Short tackled him
from behind, and Pennington
used his wrist to cushion his

fall to the turf.
The 12-week estimation is
the doctors' best · guess.
Edwards said Pennington
could come back earlier,
depending on how his wrist
heals. If he does miss 12
weeks, he could return for the
Jets' game against Jacksonville
on Nov. 23.
"I ' m optimistic," Edwards
said. "If anybody can do i~
Chad has the will to do it."
Pennington · became the
starter in the fifth game last

season, after Testaverde went

1-3.
The young backup engineered a tremendous turn around for the Jets, who won
the AFC East and finished the
regular season 9-7 after a 2-5
start.
·
Pennington led the NA.. with
a 104.2 passer rating and 68.9
completion percentage. He finished 275-of-399 for 3,120
yards with 22 touchdowns and
six interceptions.

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice

PLEAS
MEIGS
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK ·
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 03 CV 40
-VS:-

CHR!STOPHER
D.
SMITH AKA
CHRISTOPHER
SMITH, ET AL.
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order
of Sale Issued out of
the Common Pleas
Collrt
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio, In the case of
the Home National
Bank, Plaintiff, vs.
Christopher D. Smith
aka Christopher
Smith,
at
al.,
Defendants, upon a
Judgment
therein
rendered, being Case
No. 03-CV40 In sold
Court, the Sheriff of
Meigs, County, Ohio,
win offer lor sale at
the front door of the
In
Courthouse
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on the
25' day of September,
2003, at 10:00 a.m .,
the following
lands and tenemen•s,
located at 317 Wright
Street., Pomeroy, OH
45769. A complete
legal
de.s crlptlon of · the
real estate Is as follows:
Situate In the Village
of Pomeroy, Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and · more
fully
deacrlbed as follows:
Commencing at e
point In the 1ntersectton of the existing
easterly right of way
line
of · Mulberry
Avenue and the exlatlng northerly right of
way fine of Wright
Slrllet; thence N 44
degrH,- 52' 28" E
along the existing
northerly right of way
line of Wright StrHI,
671 .72 fHIIO a point;
thence N 53 degrH&amp;
00' 00" E continuing
along said line 426.01
!Mt to an Iron pin and
the ra•l point of

herein
described; thence N
37 dogrHs DO'OO" W
along a line paaslng
an Iron pln at 131 .32
feet a total distance
of 499.39 feet to an
Iron pin; thence N 2
degrees 00'00" W
along a line, 1n.09
feet to an Iron pin i
thence S 94 degrees
00'00" E along a Una,
2n.oo feet to an Iron
pin; thence S 17
degrees DO' DO" E •
along a line, 332.00
feet to an Iron pin;
thence S 26 degrees
30'00" E along a Una,
2t .OO feet to an Iron
pin; thence S 53
degrees 00'00" W
along a fine, 121.00
feet to an Iron pin;
thence S 26 degrHs
30'00" E along a line,
125.00 1HI to an Iron
ptn In tha existing
nartharty right of way
of Wright Stre,t;
thence S 53 da9rHs
00'00" W along the
existing
northerly
right of way line of
Wright Street, 43.00
feet to the point ol
beginning and containing 2. 725 acres.
Subject to all legal
highways and easements of record. ·
Description for the
above
described
tracts
being
the
result of a aurvey
made by Richerd C.
Glasgow, R.S. No.
5161.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 115, Page
883, Meigs County
Official Records.
Auditor's Parcel No.
16-D0302. 000
The abciva described
real eatate Ia sold "aa
Ia" without warranties
or covonanta.
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
317
Wright
_ Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45768
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
- AT:
$75,DOO.DO. The real
Hlala cannot be eold
for leaathan
two-thirds
the
appraised val!'•· 4.

county In which his
or her business Is
located or the county
In which he or she Is
a resident. If he or
she Ia not a resident
10% down day of THE REVISED CAN and 3905.14(c) of the of and has no place
sale, balance on BE OBTAINED FROM Revised Code. More of business In Ohio,
dell-y of deed. Sold ANY
OF
THE than thirty (30) days he or she may appeal
sub]ect to accrued OFFICES OF THE have elapsed from to the Court of
2D03
real
estate DEPARTMENT
OF the date of service or Common Pleas of
ADMINISTRATIVE from the last date of . Franklin County. The
taxes.
publication and each notice of appeal shall
ALL
SHERIFF'S SERVICES.
OPERATE
Bid
documents of the Individuals list- set forth the order
SALES
UNDER THE DOC- may be secured at ad below has not appealed lrom and
the grounds bf the
TRINE OF CAVEAT tl\e office of The requested a hearing.
EMPTOR. PROSPEC· Meigs
County
After reviewing the appeal.
TtVE PURCHASERS Engineer,
34110 records In these Thl' Order Is hereby
In · lhe
ARE
URGED TO Fairgrounds Road, cases,
the entered
CHECK FOR LIENS Pomeroy, Ohio 45769;
Superintendent linda Journal of the Ohio
Department
of
IN
THE
PUBLIC Phone Number 740- that:
RECORDS OF MEIGS 992·2911 for a $10.00
1. Each of the lndl· Insurance.
COUNTY, OHIO. THE non-refundable fee .
vlduats listed below Ann WDmer Benjamin
MEIGS
COUNTY
of
Each bid must be Is licensed In this Superlntandelll
SHERIFF MAKES NO accompanied
by state as an Insurance Insurance
GUARANTEE AS TO either a bld bond in agent.
(8) 11' 18, 25·
1HE STATUS OF the amount of 10% of
2. Each of the IndiTITLE
PRIOR TO the bld amount with a viduals listed below
SALE.
surety satisfactory to failed to comply with
Public Notice
Douglas W. Little , the aforesaid Meigs the continuing educaAHorney for Plaintiff
C o u n t y tion raqulrementa of IN THE COMMON
8/18, 25
Commissioner of by section 3905.431 of PLEAS COURT, PRO·
certified
check, the Revl- Code for BATE DIVISION
COUNTY
cashiers check, or lat- the 1995·1997, 1997- MEIGS
ter of credit upon a 1998, .
1998-1999, OHIO
Public Notice
and/or IN THE MATTER OF
solvent bank In the 1999·2000
NOTICE TO CON· amount of not less
2000/2001
compll· SETTLEMENT
OF ACCOUNTS, PROTRACTORS
than 1O% of the bid ance perlod(s).
Sealed propoaals amount In the favor of
IT IS THEREFORE BATE COURT
COUNTY,
for tha Meigs County the aforesaid Meigs ORDERED that pur- MEIGS
Paving Project will be C o u n t y suant to section OHIO
received by the Meigs Commissioner. Bid 3905.482
Accounts
and
of
the
C o u n t y bonds
shall
be Revised Code, the vouchers of the tot·
Commlsalonera
at accompanied
by Ohio
Insurance towing named llducl·
their office at The Proof of Authority of
licenses of each lndl· ary has been filed In
Meigs
County the official or agent viduatllated below be the Probate Court ,
Courthouse, Second signing the bond.
and
hereby
are Metga County Ohio,
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
shall
be revoked. The revoca- for approval and setBids
45769 until 1:30 p.m. seated and marked a tion shall be effective tlement.
Local Time, August Bid for: Meigs County September 15, 2D03.
ESTATE NO. 31788
28, 2003, and then at Paving Pro}act and
TIPPIE, WILLIAM E · Second Account of
1:45 p.m. at said malted or delivered
DOB: t0/19/57 t295 Velma Rue, Guardian
office opened and to:
Dusky St., P.O.· Box of the person and
read aloud .
120, Syracuae, OH, estate ol Elizabeth J.
Meigs
County
Burkett aka Elizabeth
The pro]ect pro- Commissioners
45779
vides lor paving The Meigs County
As sat forth In M. BurkeH.
36,854
L.F.
of Courthouse , Second O.R.C. 119.12, an
Unless exceptions
Rocksprings Road Street Pomeroy, Ohio appeal of this Order are filed thereto, aald
(Meigs C.A. 20) and 45769
may be taken by lillng account will be set
paving 6,326 L.F. of (8} 13, 18,25
a notice of appeal for hearing' before
the township roads
• with !he Department said Court on the
· day
ol
within
the - - -- - - -of Insurance. A copy 25th
Community
of
of
tho
notice
of
Saptambar,
~003
,
at
PubliC Notice
Reedsville,
Oliva
said
appeal shall also be which time
Township. The engi- FINDINGS
AND flied with the appro- account will be conneer's estimate for ORDER OF REVOCA• priate court 'Df com- sidered end continthla .
project
Is TION
mon pleas. Such ued from day to day
$231,841.46.
T
h
e notices of appeal until finally disposed
DOMESTIC STEEL ' Superintendent
of ahtlll ba fllld wllhhl of.
USE
REQUIRE· Insurance iesuecJ a flfleen(1 5) deys of the
Any person InterMENTS AS SPECI· · Notice of Opportuo\ity
ested may file wriHen
thi rd c!
1 .tt t-1ica~
FlED IN s·E.CTION for Hearing to each of
lion of tlus notice and exception to . iiald
153.011
OF THE the Individuals Hated
Order. Each lndlvlcf. account or to matters
REVISED
CODE below. The Notice
ual llated below may pertaining to the axeAPPLY TO THI$ PIIO- was served on each
appeal to the court of
JECT. COPl!i$ OF Individual purauant common pleas of the ,~~:lor88~f :~:n tr~!~
I

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

daya prior to the data
sat for hearing.
Common
Pleas
Court,
Probate
Division
Melga County, Ohio.
8125

terms and conditions
of the propo- proj·
eel may be obtained
by Interested bidders
by contacting Robert
Guenttar Jr., Agent, at
(740) 464-3724.
The successful bid·
dar must hava Insurance and secure a
b ld/parform·anc a
bond for the pro[ect.
for
The
Agent
Rutland Townohlp,
Robert GuenHar Jr.,
ree«vaa the right to
waive any lnformalltlea, reject any or all
blda and to hold auch
blda for a period ol
sixty (60) daya before
taking any action and
to award a contract to
the lowest responsive
and
most
responsible bidder.
This proJect Ia being
funded by a variety ol
fadaral grants from
Federal Emergency
Management Agency
(FEMA)
and
US
Department
of
Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).
Robert GuenHer Jr.,
Agent for the
Rutland Townahlp
Hazard
Mitigation
ProJect.
8125

September 25, 2003.
Biela will be opened
and read 11 12:01 PM
on September 25,
2003 al the Office of
RFG Aaaoclates, Inc.,
2558 Bell Street,
Zanesville, OH 43701.
tnatrucllona to blddera, specifications.
and bid form outiin·
lng the tenna and
condltlona of the propoae!l purchase of
aarvlcea may be
obtained by Interested blddara by contacting
Robert
Guentlar Jr., Agent, at
(740) 454-3724. Bid
packeta may also be
obtained 11 the office
of RFG Aaaoclates,
Inc; 2556 Bell Street,
Zaneavllle, OH 43701 .
The three (3) properIlea Included In thiS'
bid for demolition
aervlceo
Include:
33294
SR
124
Langsville OH 45741
33260
SR
124
Langavllle OH 45741
33272-SR124
Langovllle OH 45741
A bid bond for the full
IIIIIOUnt of the bid O.R
a certified check,
cashier'• check or tetter of credit on 1 solvent IMink or aavlngs .
loon -latlon
In the amount ol ten
percent (10%) Of the
bid mull accompany
the bid.
Agent
for
The
Rutland Township,
Roblort Guerrttar Jr.,
rasarvea the right to
1 waive any lnformall. Ilea, reJect any or all
bkla and to hold auch
bkla tor a ' period of
alxty (60) daya blofore
taking any action and
to award a conblel to
the .lowell reapon -

Public Notice
Legal Notice
Robart GuanHer Jr.,
RFG Associates, Inc.
" Agent" lor Rutland
Township will be
accepting
sealed
blde for the purpose
of elevatlon(a) to
structural for HaJard
MlUgatlon In Rutland
Township. Four (4)
residential
structures, 35117 Leading
Creek Rd., Middleport
OH 45760 ; 35116
Leading Creek Rd.
Rutland OH 46775;
623 Marlin
Ave. ,
Middleport OH 45780;
and 35124 Leading
Creak Rd. Rutland OH
45n5, are proposed
residential home for
elevation that will
lnclucle general construction, electrical,
HVAC and plumbi~g
components.
1
All bids shall be submitted In a sealed
envelope
marked:
Bid-Rutland
Township., Hazard
Hazard
Mitigation·
Elevations and must
be received to the
attention of Robart
Guentter Jr. RFG
Associates,
Inc.,
Agent,
Rutland
Townahlp PO Box
2112, Zaneavllle OH
43702 - 2112.Bida
must be delivered or
received at the ofltce
ol RFG Aasoclstes,
Inc., 2556 Ball SlrH~
Zanesville, OH 43701
by Noon, September
25, 2D03. Bld_clera may
bid on any combination of these structures for elevation,
buteech bid price will
be evaluated sepa·
ratoty.
Bids Will be. opened
and read at 12:01 PM
on the same data at
offlca
of
RFG
Associates. Inc,
Instructions to bid·
dera, apeciUcatlona,
drawl,n gs, and bid
form outlining the

Public Notice

Legal Notice
Robert Guentter Jr.,
RFG Assoclataa, l"nc.
• Agent" for Rutland
Township will ba
accepting
acaled
blda for the purpoM
of ·demolition ol
aelactad atructurea
for Hazard mitigation
In RuUand Townahtp.
All blda shall ba aubmlttad In a sealed
and
most
envelope
marked; . •lve
Bid-Rutland reaponalbla bidder.'
Township
Hazard Thla p~ Ia being
Mitigation and mua1 funded by a vllrlety of
be received to the federal urania from
attention . ol Robert Federal Emergency
GuenHtr Jr., Agent, Management Agency
and
US
Rutler1d Townahlp, (PEMA)
of
P.O.
Box
2112, Department
Zannvllle, OH 43702- Houetng and Urban
2112. B•· cen alao Development (HUDL ,
be · delivered . to Robert Guantter Jr.,
Robert Guenttar, Jr. Agent
for
the
at
RFG Townehlp of Rutland
AlCP,
Asaoelataa, Inc., 2556 Hazard
Mitigation
Ball
StrHI, Pro[ect.
Zanesville, OH 43701
8125
by
Noon
on

Gallla County, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
Sentinel
To
\lrribune

Place
Your
Ad ...

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
.

classified@mydailytribune.com

iiO

C- t Beer Carry Out permit
for sale, Ches ter Town ship,
Me1gs Coun ty se nd len ers
of interest to: Th e Daily
Sent1nel. PO Bo11 729·20.
Pomeroy, Otuo 45769.
Compreh ensive
P1 ano
Instruction, Childre n or
Adults, lnqu1re 740 -4462272, Charles A. Murray.
Ga lltpoll s, OhiO, (NeKt door t
o HMC)

t:lr::::--------,
GIVE.o\\\11\Y

10" Satellite dish system,
complete,
rece1ve r,
descrampler, etc 740.3792218
Giveaway, one llt11e s1x-week
old black/while kitten 740367-7328

t

WANTEn
mHIN

Absplu te Top Dollar: U.S.
Gold
Cams,
Silver.
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
U.S. Currency.·
Rings ,
MT S Com ShOp, t 51
Second Avenue. GallipoliS.
740-446-2842.

:u.·~~·•v_!l•n~·-Column:

Houseke eper. PT, Posslbte
FT. Mldmght Housekeeper
Desired . Interviews Now
Being Conducted Many
Benefits Available Pa1d
Vacat 1ons, Free Meat s,
DISCOUntS,
Available
Insurances.
Homelike
Atmosphere Raven swood
111"3
Care
cent er
Washington
St
Rav e n s w c od , WV
References Required. A
Pleasant Place To WorkI!!

1:00 p.m.

POLICIES: Ohio ValleV Publishing reserves the right to tclt, rejtd, or cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be reported on the first day of
i
Tribun•Sentlnti·Rtglster will be responsible tor no more than the coat at the space occupied by the error and only the first insertion. We shell not
any loss or expense that results from the publication or omission of an advertisement. Correction will be made in the first available edition. • Box "~::.::1
are always contldendll. • Current rate card appllll. • All real eltlta advertisement• are subject to the Federal Fair Houaing Act or 1968. • Tt'lia n
accept• only help wanted ada meeting EOE standards. We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng in vtotl!lllon of the law.

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r:
~----A·loTs·L~.
,
.
&amp;.GE·
--~~
r:
r-------------------,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

ro

IIELPWANrEl)

I.

Taking applications Aug 25·
29, must be t8/years-old ,
and an High School gradu·
ate or GEO, MISS Paula's ,
740·446-8224
Therapls1s Needed
AZ Olvereifled Healthcare
is lookin g for full time

Licensed

GALLIA COUNTY
FEATURES

r;VAf'Df!.ATIDN D~
ON~ OF US 1-tA$

Physical
and

Therapists
Asslatanta, Occupational
Therapists and Assistants
and Speech Language
Pathologist for rapidly
Jackso n Pl ant-lookmg lor 8)(pan dmg Home Health
1ndustr1BI electn cian min1 - Age ncy in Pt. Pl easant,
mum 5 years Indu strial and surrounding areas.·
experience . or equiv alent · WE Offe~
educatiOn, and 3 years • Excellent Wage s
eKperience,
please fax ' Comprehensive Insurance
resume with salary history to Packa ge
513·733-91 64, or email- ' Paid Vacatio n. Holidays,
jconrad@alueh em.com
Persona l, and Sick days
·Job Security
'Gre at work1ng env1 ronment
lltlle Ceasars is h1rin g eKpe- Plea se contact Stacy at :
rie nced individuals fo r man- t -800-577·4310
agement posi1ion. Above or ta x yout resume to :
average st artmg wages, 1-937-695- 1375
concurrent with eKperien ce.
Please stop by &amp; talk to Wanted full-time, desk cler k
Michelle Edge lor more 11pm-7am, apply 1n perso n,
details or lax resume to 740~ Holiday Inn, Gai11!X)Iis, Thi s
886-7425, attn.
Scott is the night Audi t shift

P~f'~N\.

wv

Housrs

www.comics.com

Cl2003 by NEA, Inc.

HOMES
FOR SALE
!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommend s that
you do business w1th people
you kn ow, and NOT to send
money through the mail until
you have in vestigated th e
offanng.
Drowning In dept?
Starting a small bussine ss?
Need a fresh start?
.
We can help on all ty pes of
loans. no up -frOnt fees , fast
and easy approvals. catltotrlree 1-866-803-9785

r

~

I'RoFEXI!iONAL
SFRVIQli

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-868-58 2-3345

1{1 \ II Sl\ll
10

Ho~n:s
tuKSALE

ltM~s~l
2000 Clayton Mob1le Home.
14x70, 38R, 28th , great
cond, all up-grades. large
beck deck. $22.000. 740·
379·2928

All real ..tate advertising
in·thla newspaper Is
subJect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makea It Illegal to
advertise "any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, color, religion, aex
tamtllal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
pt"eference, limitation or
discrimination."

Cole's Mobile Homes an
assembled team w1th over
120 years of housing eiCperi·
ence . Patriot Homes out·
standing 1/5 year warranty,
shin gles &amp; msur at1on by
Owen s Corning, vinyl sidin g
by Vi pco, James Hardie s1d1ng available. Jaw "E" thermopane windows by Kinro
carriage carpets &amp; flooring
by Congoled , appliances by
General Electric, faucets by
Glacier Bay &amp; Moen, light
fixture s, c abifi et pulls &amp;
knob s d ~rect from Home
Depot (ea sy to match JUSt a
few good reasons why your
next new f\Ome should be
from: Cole's Mobile Homes,
15266 US 0 East, Athens,
Ohio,
1-74 0·592· 1972,
"Whe re you gel your
money's worth"

This n.wapaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements for rul
estate which Ia In
violation ol the' law. Our
' readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advsrtlnd In
lhis newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up
fo r Immediate possession all
with in 15 min. of downtown New Home 38 R, 2baths. 2
Gall ipolis. Rate s as low as car gara ge, Debbi e Drive,
6%. (740)446·32 t 8
Gall ipolis, view photolinlormation
on
line
www.orvb.com, code 81903
or call 740·245·9268 after
5pm
Nice private country home,
,2600 square feet, 6 be~­
rooms. 2 bathS.- wal k-in
basement, prop ane gas furnace w/central air, com es
with eqUipped kitchen. 2
plus acres, 24x24 barn,
Jlrlde reduced to $80,000,
(740)742· 1049

Expe t~ence d

lead ca rpen·
tars-must be familiar with all
phases of residentia l remodeling. valid dnvers license,
tools. transportation. and
references. Local work, pay
based
on
exper ience.
ApplicatiOns available at
Christians
Construction.
Ave .,
1403
Eastern
Galiipoll~ 446-4514

Full Ttme positions. mostly
days
FleKible schedule's,
apply between t0am-1t am ,
McCiures
Mon-Thur-Sat,
Restaurant 820 Jackson
~ike, Gallipolis, Oh10 4563 1

AaJJCh Style 3BR, ~ baths,
garage. Brick School Road,
Gallipolis, view photO!intor·
on
line
at
matiOn
www.orvb.com, code 81803
Nice couhtry home 3 br. with or ca ll 740·387-7039'
fu ll . basement finished,
ceramic tile &amp;hardwood Remodeled 3 bedroom, t
rtoors,2 full baths ,2 car t/2 bath in good ne1ghbor·
garage, pore barn, work hood in Middleport. (740)
shop,
out
buildmg. 992-7743 or
view
at
healing/coo llng all elect. www.orvb.coml81503
close to town 1.99 acres call Ai'lll'-::":""'....~~~~
304-675·5393
~ _
•
Meadowbrook Orlve 3br.
·
2ba, Hardwood floors. 1arge 2 BR· 84 Oakwood M•H• 14.
1
d
tamlly room. Private, ence wo"de « =.oo 0 • reoled 101.
~
..
back
yard.
ond 74()-44
6. 36 17
garage.(30,1)875·1303

11\\,(l\1

r

tO

,

Overbrook Center is cunent·
B~
ly accepting applications for -----,.,.,.,...,~-- ~o.__.;OPPolmJNrrYiliioiiliiiiliii......1
a Full time 7PM·7AM LPN.
scHoOL
•
FUNDRAISING
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE I
Applications can be picked
Area Olrec1or needed for
up at 333 Page Street
60 Vending machlnea with
es1ablished co. lor local
M iddleport Ohio or call
excellent rocetiona all for
area . Call on coaches,
Cassy
Lee.
Staff
$10,995 BQ0-234-6982
Development Coordinator at PTA's, &amp; Pronclpals, $46K .
81
3-783·2926
74().992·6472

••

j

MOBFORILE"I_Iu~

r__

Modern 1 br. apt. (740)44 6· Call 740-245·5121
0390
Small 3BR house, 47 1/2 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Spruce Stwet, Gallipoli s Now Taking Appli cationstUR S:\LE
$400/depo sit, $400/month 35 West 2
Bedroom

ext 1709

iliii'Eililrrsli.iilii-,..1

1

/

C74;:o;:0!'·4..,4:"6:"-Q•3•
32-:-:-~~, Townhouse
MoBILE HoMES
FOR RENT

L-------,..1

Apartments . • Blu etick Beagle puppy's,
Includes water Sewage. good hunting stock $50, 2
Trash, $350/Mo., 740-446- AKC trained Beagles's $200 ·
0008·
eac h . (740)742· 2728

Twin Rivers Towe r is accept·
1ng applicatiOns tor wa 111ng
hst tor Hud-subsiZed, 1- br.
apartment, call 675-6679
EHO
\ IIIU 11 \ 'lll.._,i

L.o_c_
a•_•_d___
'n---GIe-ow_o_o__
d. r.·O
~04)576-9991
~ .... GOOllS
Mobil Home for rent
44 6_ 1279

740-

oue to remodeling· 40sq
5 acres for saiQ. Great loca - ~-=--~----..., yards of beige carpet. wood
APAillME!Vffl
entertainment center. chantion off Kerr Ad.. 2 miles
~R lbNr
delier. Iron! door, (740)992from AT. 35 and Holzer
~~--ioiiiiliiiiiiia-rl
"3263
Hospital, 10 minutes from
t and 2 bedroom apar1downtown . (740)388·8972
Good Used Ap pliances ,
ments, furnished and unfur·
Reconditioned
and
Nice mobile home lots, quiet nished, sec urity deposit Guaranteed .
Washers.
coun try sett ing, $1 15 per reqwed, no pets. 74D-992· Dryers,
Rc.inges ,
and
month , includes water, 22 18.
Aefrigere.tOI'S, Some start at
sewer, trash . 740. 332-2167
1 br. apt $400. a mon. util. $95. Skaggs Appl1ances. 76
l ot tor sale 1n Rac ine, pd, near PVH 304-675-21 17 ViM St . (740!446·7398"
(740 )992 _5858
leave message.
Mottohan 1Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Roact. Porter, Ohio.
t br. apt. in downtown Pt.
r
Pleasant. no pets 304·675- (740)446·7444 1:877-830 9162. Free Estimates. Easy
3788
financing. 90 days same as
~ br All utiliti es included cash. Visa/ Master Card.
$325 . month. (304)675::3654 Dr1ve· cl·litlle sa'le a!ot.

Ir-------,

l

1550

".O...
USE~
....~

loTs&amp;

AN'IlQUEli

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pi pe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle,
Fdr
-Channel . Flat Bar, Steel
For
Dram s,
Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways l&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Moflday.
For Rent- Nice 4 BR home 1ng. Reterences Required. Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
near Rio Grande. $750.00 No pets. 740·44 6-4a25 or Friday. Bam-4:30pm Closed
per month. Deposit and 446-3936
Thursd ay,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300
Refe rences required. Call Grac1ous livint1. 1 and 2 bedWis eman Real Estate at room apartments at Village
BlHUliNG
740-446·36 44
Manor
and
Riverside
SUI'PUIS
Home fro m $199/month. Apartments in Middleport.
hames 4"'tc From $278-S348. Carr 740· Block. br1ck , sewer pipes,
I orecIosure
down, 30 yea rs at 8.5% apr 992 -5064· Equal Housmg windows, lintels. etc Claude
4 listings caiiB00-31 9-3323 Opportunities.
Wi nters, Rio Grande, OH

3br 1mobile home with w/d.

r

r

Clean 2 br. house in
Pomeroy, $40 0 mo., plus For lease: One bedroom,
depoSit, (740)698-7244
unfJrnished, newly redecorated, second floor Apt ; at
Clean 2br/full basement, corner o1 Second and Pine.
new
carpet,
pamt, A/C: $300.00 per month;
No
Pets. wat er included. Security and
refldeposit.
key deposit. Off street park(304)67 5-5162

Tara
Townhouse
Apar tments . Very Spacio us.
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors . CA. I
112 Bath Newly Carpeted.
Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets. Lease Plus Security
Deposi t Reqw red, Days:
7 40-44 6-3481: Evenmgs :
7 40-367-0502

4BR house al'ld 69.9-acres
Brick 3200 sq-tt., new home.
Clark Chapel Rd. $265k,
740-256· 1226
'wil r repa1r largp appliances
and air conditioners 740·
441-1690

233 Second Ave , 2-story
house 2BR, 1t /2B ath, furnished kitchen, WID hookup, off stre e~ parking , walk
anywhere downtown , t 2
months m1n. $54 5. month,
ref/dep, no pets , 740-4464926
.

14'x65' 2BA, AJC, water
paid .
l arge lot w1t h
enclosed playground and
storage bl dg.
Excellent
neigh borhood references
Mu st sell nice 2 bedroom required . between Holzer
14x70. Vinyl siding and 2x6 and Rio Grande call 740walls. Call Karena 74Q-38 5· 245-52 11
9948..
2 Bed room mobile home m
' New 14 wide only $899 Middleport. $350 . pl us
down and only $167.98 per deposit . No inside pets.
month. Call Ni ~i 740-385- (740)992-3194
7671
2 BR . perfect, air, po rch,
very nice. 740-446-2003 or
New 2003 Doublewid e: 3 BR
740-446·1409
&amp; 2 Beth. Only $t 695 down

Ranch Style 3BR , 2bath s,
garage. Brick School Road. end &amp;295/mo. 1-800-691·
Gallipolis. view photo/infor· 67n
'mellon
on
tine
at
www.orvb.com, code 8t 803
or call 740- 367-7039
ACREAGE

Full time cook. appr} in pet"·
son . Holi day Inn. Gallipolis

112
VInton
Court,
Gallipolis. Ohio 3 BR, 1
bath . central air, lire place,
WID hOOk-up, fu rnish ed
k1tchen. In town location,
quiet street. No pets. $500
month. w/450 dep. Ref
required Call 304·67 5·2525

--------'Cole's Mobile Homes
US SO East, At hens, Ohio,
45701, 740-592-1972
-------Land Home Packages available. ln your area , (740)446·
3384_

Used Furni1Ure Store. 130
Bulav11l e Pike. Mattresses..
dresser s.
couches,
bunkbeds, bedroom su ites,
recliners,
Grave
Monument s, 740·446·4782
Gallipolis. Oh Hrs 10-4pm,
Stop By

Buy or selL R1ve nne
Ant1ques. 1124 Ea st Main
on SA 124 E . Pomeroy. 74oBEAUTIFUL
APART· 992-2 526 Russ Moo re .
MENTS
AT
BUDGET owner.
·
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood ~ Mtsem..ANF.Ous
MEIIUIANillSE
Drive from $297 to $383 .
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740-446-2568 ·
Equal Cool Down!!
Centra1
Hous1n g Opportumty
Cool1ng Systems, New ana
_ __:_.:..:._.....;___ Used Installed . (740)44~
For Lease. Beautiful, t600 ~ 6308
•
Sq.Ft ., restored, second
floor apartment 1n Historic
Electra Aide II Stairway ele01stnct. Ideal tor professiOn- vator. (great lor handl·
al couple all tnodern
capped/elderly) call (740)
am enit1es. 2 bedrooms;
446 -2423 after 7:00 pm
spacious living/dining: lots
of 'storage. 11 /2 baths. rear
JET
deck; HVAC. $600/month
AERATION MOTORS
plu s utilities. Secunty and
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
key deposit. No pets.
Stock. Call Ron Evan s. 1References required. 740. 800·537-9528.
446-4425 or 446-3936

mKRmr

Goodwin

Gooo;

Apartment Ava ilable Now.
RiverBend Pl ace . New
Home &amp; Hunt1ng
Haven , V'N now accepting
land available in three
applicatiOns for HUD-subslareas. 3 to 33 acres, with on
dlzed , 1 bedroom apart·
11 +acre tra~ t touching
ment. Ut1lit1es mcruded Cell
Wayne Nat1onal Forest
(304)882-3 121 Apartment
available for qualified sen· Owner Fin ancmg Ava ilable.
ior/disabled pe rson. EHO
Call for FREE mapsl
800-213-8365
Apa rtment tor rent 1n
www.cou ntrytym e.com
Sy racuse, $200 depo sit,
$3 15 per month , must have
HI ' I \I "'
sufficient income to qualify,
(740)378·6111

A ~~N~INtt

~~

HOUSEHOUl

HlR RENT

ThOmpsons Appl iance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
re-conditioned autom atic
washers &amp; dryers. refrige ra~ ·
tors, gas and electri c
ranges, ai1conditioners, and
2BR apt , $375/mo ultilites wringer washe rs W1 ll do
inc luded ,
$300/deposit, repa1rs on maJOr brands in
740-992-2274
shop or at your home.

Recreational Land &amp; Scemc
Homesi1es available
throughout Southern Ohio

n'~ l:rT1-1E~

APARTIIIENfS

2-BR, 2 bath, living-area,
and kitchen, A/C, and appliances , $400 call 740-44648 59

Country Land
CoUntry Living
Country Fun

lwright{!!ic.net

Wanted- som eone over 2t
yrs
of age to help with OJ &amp;
Need 7 ladies to sell Avon,
karaoke busmes s, must
Call 740-446·3358
have valid drivers license.
Need to earn Money? l ets wages ne g., call (740)742ta lk the NE.W Avon. Call 7700
Mar ilyn. 304-882-2645 to
Will babys it In my home.
I \1 1' 111\ \ II '\ I
· learn all the ways it can wo rk
Come and enj oy a fun . lov"111~ \HI "'
for yo u.
ing, and educational enviNeeded someon e to haul off ronment. I am a Mother off
HEtJ&gt;WANTED
large truck load of trash call two and have over 5 years
professi onal expenence with
304-675·5 16 t
children . Flex1ble hours.
Addressers wanted imme di· Now Accepting Appli cations Call or leave message 740 ately! No experience neces- ExJCon on 22nd Street, Poin t 256·6338
sary. Work at home Call Pleasant Apply in Person.
405-447-6369
NOW HIRING: A ·leading
provider to individuals with
AVONI All Areas! To Buy or mental retardation and
Gallipolis Career College
Sell . Shirley Spears. 304· developmental disabilities is
(Careers Close To Home}
675-1429
looking for d1rect ca re staff in Call Tod ay! 740-446-4367.
GaltijXllis. No experience
1-800·2 14-0452
Baby -Sitter, close to Greennecessary. $6.35 per hour. wwwgallipOit!rCBreercollege.com
School needed 2:morn1ngs
Pai d traming. If you would
Reg #90-05- 12748
before school and 1-eve ning
like to JOin our team to help
after school 740-446-873 1
in d1v1duals ach1 eve the1r 170
1
ML&lt;;LULANEOUS I
Dietary Cook Applications fullest potential, call 740Are Bemg Acce pted For A 446-8145 or apply 1n person
PT Dietary Cook. Poss1bte at Middleton Estates. 8204 25 Serious People Wanted
FT Experience Preferred Carla Drive, Gallipoli s, OH. Who wan t to LOSE wei ght
Equ al · Opportunity We Pay You Cash for th.e
Interes ted Ap plica nts May An
Apply Dally Mon .-Sun. 9-4 Emj:lloyer F/M/DN
pounds you LOSE!
Ravenswood. W V. Come
Sale, Natural. No Drugs
Now takin g applications for
800·20 1-()832
Join Our Team, You'll Be
desk clerk and housekeepGlad You Did !It
ing. Apply in " pe rson at For Sale John Boat and trailDrummer needed tor estab- Budget In n 260 Jackson er, Metal outdoor building .
lished Pomeroy-based rock Pike. Absolutely no phOne like new. 740-367 -0889
band. Covers and originals. calls!
Led Zeppelin a must - - - - - - - - - Free removal of used appli anc es. 74Q--441 - t690
Pract1ce twice per week.
play out every other week·
end . gilkent@charter.nel or
740·378-6102

Help wanted carirlg lor lhe
elderly, Darst Group Home .
now paying mln1mum wage ,
• new shiHs: 7am-3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm - t1pm , t tpm78m, call 740-992 ·5023.

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Sundays Paper

, • Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

~ELPWAN'liD

classified@ mydailyragister.com

In Next Day's Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviatk)ns

l
r ~NNOIJNCEMEN'I'S I'-------'
\'\'\( H \1 I \ II '\ I "'

us

classified@mydailysentlnel.com

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Visit us at 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street; Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail
at:

Word Ads

..

HOW I0 WRITE AN AD

l\egtster

r

I

------

For Sale Blue Heeler Collie
mi)(ed puppies. 8 weeks
old . 4635 Hannan Tr ace Rd
Yoder Collar Shop
Jack Russell Terrier pups·
$ t 50
each--also
Jack
Ru sse ll Beagle, mixed. $25
1st shots &amp; _worm ed. (740)
698-7055
Restore joint &amp; muscle
strength 1n adult dogs witl'l
all -new Happy Jack®
Flexen)lance. Also repels
fleas &amp; t1cks. R&amp;G Feed &amp;
Supply (740·992·2 164)
UKC Rat Temer Puppies
$125 . Jack Russell , female
puppy. $10&lt;1 740·256·9080

r76

M USICAL
I~,"RUMI-'Nl~

j

line S AIC2·2 t 2 Digital .
Guitar
Amp.,
Model.!i·
Marshalls,
Boogies.
Fencters, etc:. 2- 12"-speakers. ~ oow includes- floorboard orig-$1200., $700:
740-446-8807
Selmer Bundy II Alto
Saxophone, with case
$1200 new. sell tor $400.
740-446-0350

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

•

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel
&amp;

Help Wanted

:M;o;n;;d~a~y,:A~u;g:':'u_s_t_25...;,_2_o_o3_ _ _ _ _....;_ _ _ _ _ _..:._:·www:::,::·my:.:!dailys~ntinel._,c=o=m=·====:====-=====T=h=e=D=a=i=ly=S=e=n=ti=n=ei=·=·P=a=g=e=9=·

Monda~August25,2003

www.mydatlyaentlnet.com

AUEY

Help Wanted

.;;;

Canning tomatoes· u-plck
5&lt;&gt;, we pick $6 bushel ; bell
Peppers by order, $10 a

Ana-to Prevloua Puale

PHILLIP
ALPER

~shol , (740)247-42~

~

· NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

nnlng Tomatoes. You pick

00/bushel.
We
pick
OCVOushel. Please caH a
day ahead to order. O"Brian
!arms Letart Falls 740S~7-21 13
~untry Produce Market
.~aloes,
TomatOes.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
OPERATING ROOM RN
ing wilh current WV license, BCLS and
ACLS requi.r ed. Experience preferred ,

"MelOns. Corn, etc_ in sea~n . Troyers Woodcraft 9

Mu st be able to l ake call and work

'miles west of Gallipolis
along StAt :141

Excellent salary, holidays, _health insur-

Potatoes
for
sate'
(Kennebec. Red Pontiac) .

Mon·Sat. ,

65002

State

Route 124, Reedsvill e, ·a h,

DON'T FORGET!!

ance single/family plan, dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term di sability

25 20 Valley

ANEOE

www. pvalley.org·

Demeo tobacco sprayer. 6
rows wilh folding boom.740-

$4.700, (740)742-()()26

WAIVIID

ro Blll'

r Pin ball machine in

or

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

BUILDERS IDC.

'

lcHiVRO,~T/

740·992-7599

Ir•o

"
~~m

..-DI:~ ~

~!Jl

J ~~

S _,

0),41,411D,M )'

A Beller

A .,..,.5'J

''~pr·ll!p
~.

JONES'

Advertise
in this
spacefor$100
per month.

~m.

Tree Service

•·•' JI\11CONCC-.,._,
·
~r J •WJIJ'

.

~

t:l• ~ ... A:.

•

I',

~~~i,.

'"\ • • -i'S.
• •• · ·~~
~

&amp; reserved grand

~h_ampion + 2 cows &amp;

calves 304· 773·6000

'r•o

Al.rlnt

3 ..__ _FOiiiRiiSAI..Eiiiiiiio-,1-

A~
FOR SALE

tion, papers, parents on 1993 New Y&lt;lrker, good work
farm , 740-245·0 485 after car, 13,200 miles, $2,750
~5p~mro---:~-::'--, 080 740·441-0643
HAY&amp;
-19_9_5Fo_r_
d ,..
As- p-ire-.-lo_w_m-iles-.
GRAIN
..__ _ _
_ _ _,.., runs good, tooks good,
.,
46mpg $1000. 740-388·
Hay Round Baits. $20. 740- 8743
379-2989
1995 Grandam 99k $2495.

Top - Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

•

I RECKON YOU'VE I-lAD
ENUFF I DOC !!

r

II ~ \\"1'(11~1

\I H l'\

1989 Skyhawk 89K $1695.
1999 Cavalier 41K $3695.

A~JIU&gt;

FOR SALE

Others in stock.

trades

we take

Cook Moton!
1985 Buick La Sabre runs 740--446-0103
good. $300. 1989 Ford
Ecotine 150 Van . Custom
wltv. $1500. (304)675-9739
c;all or come see anytime.

-199
- 5-M-o-rit-e-Ca-r-lo-R-ad-.-h-igh
miles, exc. cond., 1 owner,
very clean $3900.304-895·
3346 seriqus calls only aHer
1987 Ford Escort wagon tor ..:5pm'c:-:-.-:&amp;_w_ee'-:kCC"end
--s.
parts, $250,(740)992·6966 · 1996 Buick Regal $1900.
1989 Cadillac Seville, fully 1998 Ford Conture $2600
loaded, reduced to $2695, 2000 Ford Focus $2900.
1994 Mercury Cougar
(740)742·8907
$1900.
1991 Thunderbird , good 1992 Calvalair. $1000.
cond, no ru st, excellent run- 1998 Ford Escon $2000.
ning cond, $2 ,500. OBO .1997 Mecury Mystic $1600.
740-446-4945
1998 Filebird $4300.
1992 Honda-Civic EX. low B &amp; 0 Auto Sales, HWY
miles, sun-ro ol, CID, darK- ' lOON 740-446·6865
blue, clean, good cond, 99
Chev.
Tracker
auto, air $2500. 74()..379· Convertible, 13,000. miles,
2615
$8,500 OBO. 304-675·6999

.,....,c:-:-_

1996PontiacGrandPrix SE

r

TRUCKS

1994 Chevy RU. $2600
1995 GMC RU. $2500.
1994 Chevy Silverado
$4500.
1998 Ford F-250 314 T. 4x4
$5900
1997 Ford Ranger 4x4 auto,
ale $4600
1996 Chevy S· 10 Blazer
$3900.
1996 Ford Explorer $4000.
1993 Ford Explorer $2300
1998 Ford Wlndstar Van
$3400.

i 997 Dodge Caravan $2500
i 995 Dodge Caravan
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HWY

160N 740-446-6865
1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft.
high cube boll:, excellent
cond. 740446·9416

93 Columbus

HRINc~ I~' Hil S

f (J• 1 CJ''I Y ~·:,

01

T~e proposed work
lt~tludes the replace-

ment of approximately: 40 L.F, +I· of 2~­
ihch combined sewer
at First and..ttanilllon
Stroets; ' the replace,.,ent of approximately 24 L.E of elliptical
combined aawer al
First
and
Main
Streets, Tile conlract
shall Include pave-

ment
saadlng

rapla'cement,
and

appurtenance•

other
for a

complata system to
, (estora the area to Its
oiJgl1111l condition and

Such ather wo.r k as
may be nacal88ry to
completa
lha
j::ontract In accordance
with
tha
Contract Documents.
irhe aatlmated con·
~trucl
coat
for
Combined
Sewer
pvarllow
Rapalra
~ject Is $70,800.
;All proposals shell be
eealed and endorsed
Jor '"Combined Sewer
Overflow
Repairs "
)lnd mailed or dallv-

ered to Mayor Sandy
lannarelll, '237 Race
Street,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760.
Proposals are to be
oQ..blanks furnished
In
the
Contract
Documents,
Plans, specifications,
bid forms and contract documents may
be sacured . at the
office
of
Floyd

Browne Associates,
Inc., 107 North Main
Street, Marlon, Ohio
433022, A fifty dollar
($50.00) non-rafundabla depoall will be
raqulrad lor each sal
of
Drawings
and

son or company Interested In the same.
The
VIllage
of
Middleport
hereby
notifies all bidders
that II aftlrmatlvely
Insures that regard to
any contract enlered
Into pursuant to this
advertlsement,
Minority
Business
Enterprise (MBE) and
Women's Business
Enterprlsa (WBE) will
be
aftorded
full
opportunity to submit
bids In rasponsa to
this lnvhallon and will
not be discriminated.

Involved with the
project will, to . lhe
extent
pracllcable
use Ohio products,
materials, services,
and labor In the
lmplementallon
of
lhelr
project.
Addhlonally, contractor compliance with
the equal employment
opportunity
requirements of Ohio
Administrative Code
Chapter
123,
the
Governor's Executive
Order of 1972, and
Governor's Execullve
Ordar 84-9 shall be

~he~ ;:':,U~~r:~

1111 c'l

Motora,

95 Nissen Pathfinder 4x4,
5-spead, $2600.
97 Ford Ranger 4x4 $4600.
96 Ford Explorer 4x4 $4200.
B &amp; 0 Auto Sales HWV 160
N. 740·446-6865

1

,.. _ 4-_-:. ~'.

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

flea

8ept. 5th .6 8th

Maplewood Lake
on St. Rt. 124

*IIOFIIG
*liME
MllmiiiiiCE
dliMI.ESS

Between Racine
&amp; Syr11cuse.

BUTTER

Large spaces
$7.50
740-949-2734

•FI'II hlllllllll*

949-1405

I

_.-¥

~. ;o:,;

'

.;;::7

Don't leave lhe debt of

~urial
and final ••penses
for your family and
Ioved ones.

~.. .

·

Box

189

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start

6:30

WH"T'~

VOUR

1: THOUGI-IT

rr

Dick Freeman, Jerf Meckstroth -

Eric Rodwell and Bob Hamman Paul Soloway .J
After rive days play, four teams
remained. This deal; no. lOO
l20,
caused considerable controveny in

or

or

the semifin~ll between Malcolm
Drachman - Marc .Jacobus , Eric
Greco - Geoff Hampson and Mike
Passe II - Eddie Wold; and Roy ·

•

I./AS

P!11)BLEI1? r.ONNA &amp;E

;tli~ LIS! NOI.i
WITH '(OUR GIII.LF'lltENI&gt; ALONG.,
'(OLI'LL P,CT ALL

Middleport

l&gt;IFF£1t.E.MT!

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1t for youl

IMPROVEMEJIITS

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition&amp; &amp;
Remodeling

BE'ITY
IN ''RocK\'," AL~ IT IIEl:il()IR€0

• New Garages
• Electrical a Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Palnttng
• Patio and Porch Decks

WAS TAKING OFF TA~IA Sill~
GlASSES A1'11 L.ffliNG HER
HAIR CIJWN

V. C. YOUNG Ill
al

MYERS PAVING
Henderson, WV

871-2487 or 448-2912
Cell Phone 674-3311 Fax 304-675-2457

~~~
High&amp; Dry

Self-Storage

tA~I

33795 Hiland Rd.
.Pomeroy, Ohio

- 740·992·5232
THE 944
STORE
- HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Salvage
ParJs &amp; Cars
Rd. #35
Racine, Ohio

County

Driveways t Tennis Courts
t Parking Lots_• Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets
t

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' 610'x20')

992-3194
992-6635

J

CD N K H

TV

AVBBVG
FB'H

MZDY

N

NDWZHB

BTV

W N L' H

0 N J. "

J V D D H

T.M .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·"There are actors who work In

movies. And 1hen there are movie stars. Greer Garson was a
movie slar,"- Teresa Wright

... _

• ..

~

WDII
IAMI .

'blr &lt;Birlhd'l!l:
Monday,Aug . 25,2003

Ofour
Rearrange letter' of
scrambled words
(gw to

I

1

.

I

the

be·

form four stmplt words.

S0 F T RY

1
.
·.

J2

J

•

.

I. I.

R UQ I K
3

1 1 1 1

)-.,~.,_.._'-r-:-.,.-t

hope to gain.
':::;::::=~~~
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 231- Your camou· ,- •
llaging basic facts when conversing with
T E YJ T
~
1ignored most of the advice I
friends today will be easily detected .
~, was getting concerning marriage:.
• They'll see right through your cover·up
...
d
h 1
1
1
and resent your thinking that they are too ":::::::~~~=~m:.,My Mom tol met a mos peop ~
dumb to figure things out.
,.
' get advice but few are smarl
scoRPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 221 - Sell-, . M I L p y S
'enough to--·--- by It
:
doubts can be your biggest enemy today
A
Complete
the
c."'udde
quoted
;
5
In achieving success in the business
V
by fill ing In 1he ml.slln; wcrd• •
world. It you don't believe In yoursell or
you develop from step No. 3 b.low. .
your abilities. why should anyone el!e
believe ln. you?
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Doc. 21)THESE SQUARES
Don't put all your eggs In one basket
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
today. If you get caught off guard and
TO GET ANSWER
ell:perience confusion, you'll have nothing
left to fall back on . Altemate plans should
be a necessity
SCRAM-lETS .I.NSWERS
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. f9) - The
Unmask· Vouch- Index' Outwit- IN your MOUTH
only way something prolnable can daval·
Our daughter was in tears after a heated discussion
op lor you today from a lolnt ventura is to · with my husband. "You put your l o01 down," I observed,
ba very asrute in the wav you handlalho 'and w_ound up with it IN your MOUTH ."
poopla Involved . lllhey detect a bit ol

14

I I

I

No c~es , a

p~,.fe.6

50t1riT daY 1 HoT [.bG'S
-\&lt;&gt;R dinner; No B&lt;&gt;GS,
GoT' an ice·CbLd CHerc'f

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month .

?op. .., L,fe.

1S GooD~

THE GRIZZWELLS
"

I M\'5'5 M 1-t&gt;PI::

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRUCDON

ARLO &amp; JANIS
l RUIUI-I!tR WN~ij ii!E
1\Ul WA~ I.Jf.W,

0

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

0

IT WM A 81~ t:V&gt;~ 1

\

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

\

CA"~ I'~ CI.O-FM~IOUW.

PtOPU. II£&amp;·!PtJRr£D FOR
~OUR I&gt;, JIJ!ri FO~ FU~

0
0

Remodeling

(740) 517·9138
or
(7401 949.0020

N G V,

DVMH

N

SOUP TO NUTZ

r(

WV Contractors Lie, #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

AstroGraph

OMDFVG

caginess, lhey'll renege.
.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - AQUARIUS (Jan , 20·Fab, 19) -II some· · of twigs lied together Is nearly Impossible
one you dislike appears to be getting to break. Stand together as a !amity unit
more anention than you think she or he
today If one member Is being anacked by
deserves at a social gathering today, an outsider.
don't make yourseH took bad by reacting GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - What you
tn a 1eatous manner.
say to others today musl .be backed up
PISCES (Feb, 20-March 20) - This Is wllh sincerity or else you could be labeled
not one of th ose days when you cftn't disingenuous and deceitful. When people
divide your time between work and plea·
can't trust you, they cease to be lriends.
sure. It has kJ be all Work and no pley II CANCER (June 21·July 22)....:. Proceed
you have any hopu of accompltahtng cautiously in all your financial dealings
your goals.
today - your thinking CQUid be a liHie
ARIES (March 21-April 19) fuzzy lor the next couple of days. When it
Overhearing a conversation in which pals doubt. check things out and ask·a lot of
are gossiping about a lrlend who 's not questions.
around should be cause for concern . LEO (July 23-Aug, 22) - II you have 10
Those who talk about one person talk deal with someone today whom you
about you as well when you're not there.
know to be envious of you, don't tell this
TAURUS (April 20,May 20) -A single person more about yourself than yqu
twig can be easily snapped, but a bundle need to.

Free Estimales

22 vears l

992~23 .

Today's clue: K equals Y

8

992·6215
General
Home
Maintenance· Painting, vinyl
siding, ca(pentry, doors,
windows, baths, mobile
home repair and more.
free estimate call Chet, 740.

by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created trom quotations by lamous
people. past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.

I· 1 I" I .1

Pomeroy. Ohio

C&amp;C

CELEBRITY CIPHER

II

UIDA'S PIINTIIG

YOUNG'S

HOME

Ja-+-,-+-

It's quite poulble that ~ou will meet
eomeont and dtvtlop 1 retatlonlhtp that
could prove to be of conlldtrablt worth
In tho voor ohoad . II won't happen by
magic - you'll cultivate tht trltndshlp In
ways that can produce btntfttl.
VIRGO (Aug . 23·S&amp;p1. 22) Disappointment can ba expected today If
you think lhat avary1hlng wllllalllnto your
lap without expending any energy. You
must be prepared to work for what you

Last Thursday of
every month
AU pack $5,00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

, ,1{\ 111 "

alwoys

Monte Carlo. (Tbe first trial was con·
tested in the same venue last year,

BIG NATE

(740) 843-5264

old Fo r .ill 1),/)'.'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gumantes. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call
24 Hrs, (740) 446·
2001 GSXR 600 Low miles
$5600.00 OBO 740-591· 0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
4305

i

~ • ·~

(: . E '

740-992 CASH (2274)

96 Ply. Voyager $5500. lirm
304.S75·2117 leave mes·
sage.

...,

H HUNDRED

Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds

&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

, .

AC

#I

"W .V's

36 Sotu
36 Poet's

Last June, the second slage of the
United States Team Trial was held in
Memphis, Tenn . The winners would
represent the United States in the
Bermuda Bowl world team champi·
onship, which begins November 2 in

South as lhe dealer. Alter South had
oPened, an official noticed the error.
UsuaUv, boards come in sets ol 32. But
the American Contract Bridge League
had produced sets 01120 !one lor each
table&gt;. And the person who did lhe Ia·
beling made one mistake.
There waR no option - the deal had
to be thrown out and a substitute
played. On lhal, the Weiland team
gained seven points - and won the
mRh'h hv fiVP.

1-800-822-0417

..).
~r , -\.::

II ';//

2002 Harley Davidson
Softail, standard $13,000
740-256·9197
: . ••
of bidders I!Jiir:~.;..;-:-~...,.
Contract Documenta, color, or !UIIIonal orl- Ia called to all of the
BoA'ISFOR&amp;SMALEmbRS
checka mada payable gin In conaldaratlon raqulrementa con- __
•
10 Floyd Browne for an award. The
talned In thlt bid
Assoclatea, Inc.
Village of Middleport,
packet, part1cularly to 1969
15' Glastron Boat.
Plant, bid forms and
Is an equal -rtunlthe Fade1al . Labor Depth-Sounder,
Trolling·
contract documenta
ty employer an'd, 1' Standards Provision• Motor, 9.9 Johnson· Motor,
will be available for
requires all persona
and
Davis-Bacon trailer, axe. cond. $1500.
viewing at the VIllage
contracting wllh the
Wages, various lnaur- OBO 740-441-6299 or 740.
office at 237 Race
VIIIage to certify that
ance
requlremenll 441-5472
Street,
Middleport, they are equal oppqrand various equal
Ohio 45760 and also
!Unity employers and
opportunity
provl- 1996 Procrafl Boat 19'
In the plan room of
lhat they do not disslons. Bidders muat 150EFI asking $12,000.
the
F.W.
Dodge
criminate
on
the
comply with the pro- 740-388·8441
Corporallon.
grounds
of race,
visions
of
the
Each proposal must
color, rallglon, sax or
Amarlcens
wllh 2001 1900 FA Maxum open
be accompanied by a
national origin.
Disabilities Act of bow, V-6 10. Jess than 20 hrs
bid guaranty In lhe
Bidders ara required · 1990.
run time, white &amp; cream
lorrn of a bond with
to comply with the
No blddar may with· color canvas cover. $17,000.
MBEIWBE
requiredraw his bid within (304)682-3652
approved surety company as surely for
manta set forth . In
slllty (60) dll)'s lifter
the, execution of the part, this maana that the actual data of tha
contract. The
bid
any bidder, to the
opening lharaof.
aKiant lhat It subconTha
VIllage
of
guaranty and C0)1·
lracl bond shall be
tracts work, shall
Middleport raoervas Tool Box for mld·slze picklor the full amount of
award subcontract•
the right to reject any up, white 2yrs old like new
the bid proposal and · to certified Minority
and all bids, the right with ke s $50 or best offer
In the form as conB u a I n a 1 a
to accept the lowest
· · CAMPERS&amp;
tained In the contract
EntarprlaaJWoman'a
and bftt bid, the right
M01011 HOMES
documenta.
Bualnesa Enterprise
to waiver minot lrregularltlea on , any bid,
Allamataly, a certified . In an aggragata dollar
value of no la11 than
and the right to 1998 Yellowstone Camper
check,
caahlar'a
22 ft., $ new tires, ref, air,
check or laHar of
3.0% of the contract accept the,bld
heat, very good cond.
lor MBE end 3.7% of
proposal which procradll pursuant to
$4000. 740.388·8743
the contract for WBE.
motes tho best lnler·
Chapter 1305-- of the
This percent can
eat of the Village(
RaviHd Code, In the
Include materials and
Carolyn French
amount of ten percent
of the bid will be
supplies. The bid
Clerk·Treasurer
accap!ad as a bid
speclllcatlona pro- , Village of Middleport,
guaranty, Each . provide further delalls on
Ohio.
8125
posal mu•t contain theae requlremanta,
AU contrectora and
912
the -..full name end
address of every per·
subcontractors

:~:~~~s

handle

9 Latin t verb

However·, at the second table. th e
board was incorreclly marked with " B T V

I 'INSTA-CA$H~
·.
Il
ilft Let me show you how
GEt Cash Today · 1 ' .. . ,.
1·
·
affordable and easy it Is to
1
Bring your
1
get the coverage you need.
1
'Laal checking statement
1
"Last pay check stub
I
I *Photo I.D. •Phone Bill with name and address
Rocky Hupp Insurance
I
116 Main at.
I
and Financial Services
I
Pomeroy OH
I

Pomeroy. (7&gt;10)992-3490
INVITATION TO BID
$aated bids will be
tecelved by lhe Mayor
•I her omce located
at 237 Race Street,
lollddleport, Qhlo until
September- 8. 2003 at
12:00 P.M, local lime
for the "Combined
Sewer
Overllow
Repairs" ,
Contract
No. 2003-01 as set
torlh In lhe plana and
tpeclllcatlona on file
In the above offlca. At
ljle time hereinbefore
t!Otnlloned and at the
.hova-lndlceted
oftlca, oealed bids
w]ll
be
publicly
6pened and read
aij)ud. Work to be perfprmed Ia deacrlbed
ilf the bid forma.
¢bMBINED SEWER
~ERFLOW REPAIRS
¢PNTRACT NO. 2003·

IMPORTS
Athens

Rd.

/-I
1999 Ford , raised roof,
Conversion Van,
many
extras, TV, VCR, etc., nice . - - - - - - - - - .
$10,500.
740-446·6865,
~arket
B&amp;D Auto Sales

Riverview

snack

bid six hearts in the other semifinal.)

475 South Church St.
Ripley, wv 25271

1997 Tahoe 4dr 4x4
S10,000, 1997 S-10 ·Blazer
J.,~--oiiiiiioiiiiiiiiio-,1 4dr
4x4, $3500, 1981
1989 F-150 auto low miles, Chevy 4x431410" 51700 · 16
lots of e~~:tras, very good , ft Checkmate Speedboat
• _
11 5hp Mercury $2500 2000 Ford Explorer 4x4,
cond· $1500· 304 ~75 8832 (740)245-{)144
auto, air, $8,995., 95 Jeep
Grand Cherokee Lorado
4x4, $6,995. 96 Dodge
1500, 4x4, auto, 360 motor.
$7,995. 93 Dodge Dakota
4x4, auto, V6, air. $4,295.,
95 Dodge 1500 Club Cab,
Public Notk:es In N••••P••o&gt;•rs.
4x4, auto, nice. $8,995.

. Your RIRhl to Know, Delivered Rl&amp;ht to Your

8 Buclcet

Pass
Pass

club and three club ruffs in the dummy.
Jn a' tight mAtch. this was a potential gain for Brachman. (8oth teams

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

OBO 740·388·9096

!U" SALE

Pass

Dbl.

Weiland - Bjorn Fallenius , Steve

Love, Anltit, Gary II Chate

i

.. 3.

Ead

Garner- Howard Weinstein.
In the first room, Fallenius (Norlhl
and Weiland slopped In lour hearls af·
ter the given auction, "'issing an ext-el·
lent slam. When the spade finesse
worked, Weiland won all J3 tricks: two
spades, six hearts, one diamond, one

90 Years!

4
door-auto-power·AIC,
12 1,000 miles $2950. day·
740·446·1615,
after 7pm
_
_
Fiberglass topper to fit 87
740 446 1244
- - - - - - - - Ford ranger, long-bed in
89 Dodge Dakota auto trans 9)Ccel. cond. $100. call 304V-B $ 1895· 97 Kia 4dr. 5 675-5393
spqed, air. $1995 ·· 90 Ford
Tempo auto. air, $1250. 94 Full length running board for
Ford escort 4dr, automatic. F-150 Ford truck extent cab,
$ 995 . Rlvtrvlaw . Motors
electric
red in color,
(740)985-3840
Po!"OJOY (740)992·3490
;,~;;;..;~~~...,
99 Ford Mustang $6500.
VAN; &amp;
98 Toyota Camry $4900,
4-WDs
98 Pontiac Firebird $4800.
95 Olds Cutlass 2dr. $2600.
1979 F-150 4x4, 351·M, 4
95 Ford Probe $1750.
sp., good condition, $2500
98 Ford Conture $2500 .
00 Ford Focus 5-speed firm, (740)742·2259
$2800.
92 Cavalier $1200.
~sao Dodge Mini Van 3·tone
96 Ford Conture $1600.
Blue and White custom
87 Pontiac Grand Am $300. van.Well
taken
care
ol.120,000 mile&amp;. asking
8 &amp; D Auto Sales tfWY 160 $3500.00 740·667·3493
N 740·448·8865

tribute

6 Metdaw
7 Havoa

Nnrth

when the winners were Nick Nickell

MARIA DELGADO

•
1993 Buick LeSabre. runs 1996 Chevy Monte Carlo
GOATS FOR SALE
2 100% Boer Bucks, 5 we'll , needs some ·work, leather interior, loaded. very
clean, exc. cond, $5,500
mOnths in age. Full registre- $500. 740-4468807

West

By Phillip Alder

~~t:=~~i.,..:;~_::.:_~~~!::-·:..:·:::~::::.:..
-.=!!:~:!:~2:=.:...:..:!l~::::~:!::..l -

Fair cows for sale, grand 11'1!!"-------, 11'1!!-_ _ _ _ __,

~h-ampion

chunka

5 Poellc

39 Cl-er
goddets
diva.
20 Hevo being 41 Beach
22 BHZ or
blrdl
Blondell
42 Wl
23 Poet
enipi!JY8ra
- Lowell
43 Don Ho'a ,
24 Wollonda
·homo
,
25 Cloulcat
44 Atop
pool
46 i&gt;ullay Jlllll
2&amp; Not admit to 47 Nasty look
27 Slop up
41 V011ex
28 Lab 1-:.:J' 50 Dab on
29 Uncia
51 Fleecy
31 Quaker
ltll,.,.t
colonlsl
52 Untold
33 In style
cenlurlu
35 52, lo Llvy

,.....,.....,.....,~

East State Street Phone (7410)~;9~1-6ti7ll
Athens, Ohio

750

FREE ESTIMATES

Wild Horse Cafe
251 West Main St. Pomeroy

A 8 6 2

10 Beever
prajacll
12 Climbing
device

RESIDENTIAL

Applications may now be picked
up and returned at the"

2 Flow slowly

LARRY SCHEY

not

2 Linle Giant incl.(bators wl
iurners &amp; fans holds 48
bs, 5 heat lamps wt bulbs,
i~der box wl heat elefilent. Waterers, feeders &amp;
Other poultry equip. call tor
prices 304-895-3577 after

•

3 Encircle
4 Marmoledo

Opening lead; • Q

Siding • New Garages

LIVE&gt;10CK

1 Sketched

Dea(er: North
Vulnerable ' Both

TFH

New Homes • Vinyl

Happy Ad

"' 9 4, 3
.K1 09852

Pass
Pass

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and

Happy Ad

19 Dawn

-

SouJh

• Replacement

located In Pomeroy, Ohio is
now accepting applications
for Prep &amp; Line Cooks, Bus &amp;
Dish and Tank PersonneL

2

South

BISSEll

The Wild Horse Cafe'

9·2290

992-5479

· Hours

GRAND OPENING
MONDAY,
AUGUST 25,2003

(304) 675-4340

1970 135 Massie-FergusonTractor, between- 1ooo-and1500 hours, like new, $6500.
call740-446·9204

order
429-3333

25550

"' 8 6

76
• Q
QJI0432.KS
Q3
"'K Jt0975

Jeff Warner Ins.

Middleport
(Formerly Tony's Carryout
Ring-A-Sell)

Drive

Point Pleasanl, WV

EQuiPMmT

~rking

Valley Hospital

c/o Human Re sources

F~RM

Cellular

45nt

740-94&amp;-2217

221 Mill Street

For more information:

Pl~asant

East

Racine , Ohio

'

·.

tA9 876

has moved to

and retirement-'

I \H \ 1 " I I'PI I I "
,\. I I \ I ' I I IC I,

o!oAQ7 5

.AJ 4'3

29670 Bashan Road

Whitley's Meigs
County State Store

weekends.

sd• $10

arm tractor Agrl Power
t600, excellent condition,

Hill' S Self
Storage

, Graduate ,bf an approved school of nurs-

0

'

0

'

�J&gt;age to • 1he Daily Sentinel

'

Monday, August 25.2003

www.mydailysentinel..c om

Bengals have a long way to Wallace hoping for healthy se~son
go before beating the best
CINCINNATI (AP)
Steve McNair found all the
Cincinnati Bengals'llaws.
A defense that showed substantial improvement in the
firs t two exhibition games was
no 1.1atch for one ofthe NFL's
top passers. McNair did what.- ver he wanted during the
Tennessee Titans' 23-15 victory Saturday night, giving the
Bengals ( 1-2) a better idea of
where they stand.
The NFL's worst team since
1991 has made progress. but
not nearly enough.
··we got into situations that
we could have handled bettcr." linebacker Kevin Hardy
&gt;aicl. "Toward halftime. we
got a little disorganized. We
JUSt made a ton of mistakes
throughout the game."
The retooled defense had
heen the bright spot in the
Bengals' t1rst two exhibitions.
First-year coach Marvin
Lewis strengthened the line
'hrough free agency ~nd
&lt;:mphastzed a_ more aggressrve
1pproach agamst the pass.
The Bengals were eager to
' ee. how they stacked up
•• gamst the Titans (3-0), who
have looked· good on offense
Ill everx game~ They got thetr
answer m the hrst half ,
McNrur completed 13 ol 17
passes for 167 yards and .a
touchdown. Four of hts
throws went for 20 or more
yards. He was 7-of-8 for 81
yards on a touchdown dnve
JUSt before halftime. He never
was sacked and hardly was
touched.

to blame. The offense and specia! teams also had vint;lge
Bungles moments.
Tight end Tony Stewart let
Jon Kitna's perfectly thrown
pass bounce off his hands at
the Titans' 5-yard line on the
game's first possession. The
ball deflected to cornerback
Andre Dyson for the first of
his two interceptions. He also
"We got beat man-to-man picked off Carson Palmer in
tonight, and we've got to play the third quarter.
.
better," Lewis said. "It's not
Neil Rackers missed a 49just the secondary. The guys yard field goal wide left, and
on the bacl\ end are just part of T.J . Houshmandzadeh . fumit. They're not the whole bled a punt inside Cincinnati's
thing."
20-yard line to set up a Titans
The Titans rolled up 195 field goaL
yards in the. first half against
The backups also failed to
the
Bengals'
first-team get into the end zone on two
defense, using their spread consecutive running plays
formations to stretch the sec- from Tennessee's l-yard line
ondary and open holes.
in the second half.
"We g11 ve up some big plays
''Tonight was a classic ·
in the passing game that we example of what we can't do
·
shou ld not have gtven
up. " - get out of our own way."
defensive
tackle
John said Kitna, who was 12-of-17
Thornton said. " It doesn't for 114 yards. "We can't do
count. but it still matters. By that any more."
·
·the beginning of the week. no
They've done it for the past
one is going to care about this. 12 years, marking them as the
but we have to make sure we NFL's worst team in that time.
have it right for the regular Lewis has them playing a little
seuson."
beuer. but they still can't seem
Lewis knows what will hap- to get over the bumbles and
pen if his team plays the same stumbles that always seem to
way in the season opener hold them back.
against Denver.
"It is disappointing, but at
"There were a lot of posi- the same time, you can'tlet it
tives for what we did, but it's . get you do:.vn," Hardy said.
not close to where we've got "This is still new stuff, and it's
to be 10 beat the Broncos, and still the preseason . We have
we realize that," Lewis said.
one game left, and you do
-The defense wasn't entirely yourself an injustice if you get
down·on yourself. "

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(AP) - Butchie Wallace
walked slowly to the Marshall
locker room from practice, his
left ankle wrapped in ice.
The scene has been repeated many times over the past
few seasons. The only differ'
ence has be4;n the ice's location.
Wallace enters his senior
year in great shape but with
lingering questions about
whether he can stay healthy
for a full season.
Two years ago Wallace ran
for 796 yards and nine touchdowns on a bad ankle imd
hamstring. ·
In 2002 he could barely
remain healthy for a week at a
time.
"Last year I had just pure
bad luck," Wallace said. "It
was like, OK, I sprained my
ankle. Then the next game I
got a concussion. OK, now
I've got to sit out. Then the
next game, I pulled a quad
muscle. Then the next game,
my back locks up.
"So it's like somebody put a

spell on me or something. I
was like, '.why me?' I bust my
taiJ in the weight room every
year, and I keep getting hurt.
''That's behind me now. I'm
not expecting to be hurt at all
this year."
·
At least, not enough to miss
any games.
Two weeks into training
camp. he already had a slight
concussion and a teammate
fell on his ankle during a play.
He was held out of one scrimmage as a precaution.
"It's the nature of the position," said Marshall running
backs coach Ernie Pumsley.
"You :re going to take some
hit~. You' re going to pick up
the blitz. Everyone's going to
try to get to you."
Wallace doesn't need anyone to get to him - his
injuries have already done
that, and he thinks about what
progress he might have made
without them.
Wallace had a pair of I00yard performances last season
but was limited to less than I0
carries in seven games.

First Quarter
. BU - Casey Valentine 80 kick return

Union

· (Jon Pippin kick) , 11:47 .

BU -

Ethan Strope 2 run (run failed) ,

5:50.
BU - John England 32 run (Jon Pippin

from Page 6

k ick), 4:43.

BU - Nick Watson 10 run (Jon Pippin

can get it done in practice."
The Vikings will be coming in off a 21-14 win over
Huntington Ross.
48

Southern

0

0

0 0

-

Second Quarter
BU -John England 23 run (Jon Pippin
k ick) , 8:49.
BU ___: Jon George 4 run (Jon Pippin
kick) , 5: t9.

BU -

SCOring summary

Total yards
Comp-aH-int

313
1·2·0

Futnbles-lost

2-1

Penalties-yards 4-45

·, I ) \

I ' I """' • \

I I

I -~ ;

'l '

• Sampras retires. See

PageB1

so

BU
Firs1 Downs
Rustles-yards
Passing yards

POMEROY Was . Ozzy
Osbourne lost in downtown
Pomeroy yesterday afternoon?
· There was a man dressed in
black stumbling around, talking
incoherently and waving at
motorists on Main Street in front
of Whitley's liquor store. The
slouch was familiar to anyone
who has seen Osbourne on MTV.
The long black hair, colored sunglasses and costume jewelry fit
the prot1le of the man who has
bitten the head off a bat and sang
to the Queen ·of England.
It · was not Ozzy . but Pat
Morgan, a native of Athens.
Morgan was doing a favor for the
owners of Whitley's Liquor Store
by waving at motorists and calling attention to the sign announcing the grand opening Monday at

so-

Passing: BU-Nick Watson 1·2·0 15
50-Phil Pierce 0-1·1 o.
Receiving: BU-John England 1·15.

44-298

34-44
0

~one .

15

WHILE
SUPPLIES
LAST

NO
RAIN
CHECKS

• Community calendar.
SeePageA3
• Time out for Tips. See
Page 'A3
• Liquor agency moves.
See Page A&amp;

WEATIIER
Iunny. HI: 80, Low: 601

c

United

TRIPlE

Bananas

]O/o, 1Ofo, Skim
Borden lO/o Milk

·COUPON

]9Cib

S18!L.

Good For

5COU
so~

UPTD

LoTIERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 4-1-o
Pick 4 day: 8-4-8-o

Pick 3 night: 9-9-2
Pick 4 night: 7-1-6-7
Buckeye 5: 2-12-21-23-32

Each

West Vll'ginia

Dally 3: 8-7-5
Dally 4: 5-9-2-6
c.ah 25: 1-5-7-11-13-21

Not Good On Advertised Items
Coupons tripled once daily.
See Store For Details

Chef Boyardee's
2 cheese Pizzas Kit

l/$4

please w/

add. purch.

Mt• Dew

ll SECilONS -

Products

Limit l

2/Sl 0

please w/

add. nu11r~

J

Showboat

Pork It Beans
Limit l

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
.Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Sports
Weather

pleasew/

.add. purch.

l

.: t I

~rII

I

;

its new location at 221 Mill Street
in Middleport.
"I'm doing this just so they
look at the sign and know
Whitley's moved." he said. "No
matter how old or how young
people are, if you wave at them
they will wave back."
Morgan, 38, is a stand-up
comedian and actor who lives in
Los Angele,s . He said he will be
home for a couple of weeks
before returning to California .
Morgan said another reason he
chos.e to dress as Ozzy is because
that was his Halloween costume
last year. As Ozzy he knew he
would be. recognized instantly.
"Of course everybody recognizes me," he said. "Anybody who
watches MTV knows who I am."
Morgan loved the attention.
"I'm having a blast," he said.
"This is so much fun. Thi s is how
acting should be."

.

-·

.

Employees
to share
insurance cost
J. RE~D
breed@ mydailysentinel .com

Bv BRIAN

Is that rock icon Ow; Osbourne stumbling around
downtown Pomeroy? No. It is Pat Morgan who
dressed as Osbourne to call attention to the
grand opening Monday of Whitley's Liquor Store
in Middleport (J. Miles Layton)

POMEROY - A solid
exercise regimen can be better than an apple a day for
. keeping the doctor away
from senior citizens at the
Meigs County Senior Center.
Joy Bentley, wcllness coordinator, said the exercise program at the Senior Center is
three years old and still growing. In the beginning, it was
just a few people using a couple of exercise machines.
There are now 146 people
registered and there is more
equipment which includes
three exerci se bikes. two
rowing machines. four tread, mills and two weight
machines. ln February, the
exercise room grew larger
making easier for people to
use the new treadmills and
new rowing machine.
Doris Buchanan, 63. exercises three times a week and
has lost 12.5 pounds.
"I exercise so l will feel
better," she said.
Three times a week.
Joy Bentley, wellness coordinator, watches Juanita Roush,
Buchanan
rows two miles on
77, walk on the treadmill in the exercise room at the Meigs
the
rowing
machine, three
County Senior Center. Roush suffsred a heart attack a couple of years ago and started out doing a simple light exer- miles on the bike and three
cise program on the treadmill. Since then , Roush has more miles on the treadmill
tripled the distance and the amount of time she spends on
Please see Exercise, AS
the treadmill each day. (J. Miles Layton)

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel .com
12 PAGFS

A6

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82-4

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A3
A4
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© aooa Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ROCKSPRINGS - For
every acre of wetland the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation removes to
build highways and byways,
it must recreate this same
wetland somewhere else.
ODOT is replacing 2.5
acres of wetland as part of
the 46-acre wetland project
in the Rocksprings area.
Kenny Buckley, project
supervisor, estimates the
project will cost in excess of
$1 million.
Wetlands are important
ecosystems that cleanse land
of chemicals and debris. If

3/Sl

.

r ....

MIDDLEPORT - The
employees of the Village of
Middleport will have a
choice of health insurance
plans. but for the first time,
will be required to pay for
family coverage.
,
Responding to a 28-percent
increase in premiums, village
council
voted
Monday
evening to offer employees
two options for insurance
through Anthem/Blue Cross
&amp; Blue Shield, with varying
increases in co-payments and

Please see Cost. AS

Howard Mullins, 80, is working out on the treadmill at the
Meigs County Senior.Center. He said he is doing it to keep in
shape, and to help with his arthritis .

Wetlands essential to ecosy$tem in Meigs County

INDEX

PEPSI

f I

BY J. MtLES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydaliysentinst.com

BY

Lindt l

\

A workout a day could keep the doctor away

INSIDE

Kahn's One Pound

Sliced Bologna

I I I ..... I ) \ 'i

I

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysenlinel.com

Individual Statistics
Rushing : BU-John England 5·75, Ethan
Strope 9-71, Nick 'lja\son 4·39, Andrew
Curtis 1·37, Torry 011ve 9·34, Jon
GBorge 4-27, Andrew Fenci 6·12, Chad
Hedges 6·3.
Jake Nease 16·32, Weston Counts
6-27, Dustin.Keyes 6-26. Kyle McKeever
1-0, Phil Pierce 5-(·41).

4

~'

BY

.

44
O+ 1
4·2
2-10

11

-·

Ozzy Osbourne comes ~o Pomeroy

SPORTS

Jon George 9 .run (Jon Pippin

kick), 1:13.

Berne Union 48, Southern 0
Berne Union 27 21 0 0 0

k ick) , 1:31.

His recent ankle injury may
not be a sign of things to
come. Wallace bounced back
in another scrimmage two
days later to rush for 73 yards ,
and three touchdowns.
"I'm being cautious with
what I'm doing. I'm going
through practice doing what I
can do. Then again. I'm still
trying to be careful," he said.
"All the coaches want me to
be out there and I want to be
out there, but if I keep tweaking it without being 100 percent, I won't be ready for the
game."
. ·
Pumsley is seeing to it that
Wallace is on the field for the
season opener next Satunlay
at home against Division 1AA Hofstra.
And if good health follows.
his coaches are hoping for the
first 1,000-yard season from a
Marshall back since Doug
Chapman in 1998.
·
"He's worked harder than .
anyone I know,'' Purnsley
said. "Everything's real positive. He's running the ball real
well ."

Browns defense
gets testy, Bt

Reds fall
to Brewers, Bt

the land was compared to a
person's body, then wetlands
would be considered the kidneys. For every acre of wetland destroyed by ODOT. it
must · recreate an acre and
quarter more.
·
Buckley said the 2.5 acre
area where numerous dikes ,
trees and wildlife are being
recreated used to be the site
of an old dump. Trash, old
appliances, cat parts littered
the area. Abandoned mines
decorate some of the hills.
Buckley said a · sawmill
used to dump sawdust and
other things in the area
where the wetland is being
built. While he was touring
the site, he spotted a rusty

broken circu Jar saw blade.
Buckley said the project is
at least 40 percent complete
and will be ljn i s~d by June
next year. At least seven
workers remove debri s.
build dikes or plant trees and
shrubs each week. More
than 80.000 cubic yards of
dirt will be displaced during
this project.
Seven dikes made out of
limestone are being built to
cleanse water as it passes
through. Among other substances cotnmon to a wetland. limestone cleanses the
chemicals and other substances that may be mixed in

Please see wedands, AS

The Ohio Department of Trans portation will move more than
80,000 cubiC yards of dirt to create a wetland in the

Rocksprings area. (J. Miles Layton)

"Grateful Life Tour"

Drive
sponsored by the HMC laboratory Deportment

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Weclne•clay, Augu•t 27

I

(

1 0 AM • 4 PM

HMC Eclucatlon &amp; Conference Center
FREE !·shirt given to all donors!
To register, please call ( 7 4o t 446· 51 71

Prices Go5d July 22 &amp; July 23 Only.

'

•

.,

"

MEDICAL . CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer .org

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