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Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

TUeaday, July. 9, 2002

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

ALLEYOOP

PHILLIP
ALDER

E••l
6 /d !H

"

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t ~ 3I
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•

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!Ill Lilli
A K 10
.fiQIII3

44 Dlntal pllo10 (hypll.)

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471Nt1
4t t.eoQO
'
51 l'lowllowty

Flaw"
llnatr

t KJ H

17 Perfumed

... Q J •

big

lle11cr !:joulh

II Lummox
21 Tiny aphiN
22Mtmory
unit
25 Browne
2t POllLowell
31 lmpulaa
34 0ct1n
35 Wryflct
31 Cater lor
37 Decimal

Vulnerlbl•. NOMh·SnuUt
l NT

WHt
T'IU

Nnrth

) NT

F.a~t

All pa,u

Openlnatead· • 3

~ormal

path

lololntlle

I Lyrtalat -

Olltpul
a Rug telltUra
II Comic Brooke
t 2 oanct Of
Femra
13 Sind hill
14 Frat letter
15 WhHI
tracka
11 "Orinoco

.......

.

54 lmlrll'aldn
W•t
57 Employed
sa Amind
58 111 temper
~ Wlah un-

sa Actren-

Mel1s County's

DOWN
1 Little Ill·

20 Stamtch

muacll1
23 Art colony
1111
24 Nan-flying
blrda

bur

43 Rllaad, 11

What's inside

hOfMI

45 Conctde
45 Birthday

cell
number
2 Fla up an
21 - - " ' 45 Implored
aldhauaa
27 Noticed
48 HerT'I
3 wrntr21 Zingy IIIII refutal
Walker
4 Rio Grandt
~~~na so ~g~hed
town
111n1port
51 Not their
S Touch
1 Zoo atalftr 32 Nolin the 52 Columbua
Iron!
ICh.
7 PIUI
33 "Prtlty
53 Mark of
I Convent .
Wom1n"
ZorTO
dweller
111r
55 TokyO, fOr.
8 Evan ona

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYOAilYSENTINEL.COM

vov we,e oN

Are

ves.

•

'-~~_
()._
i3=ft.._._· ..·

tJ[OOocJ.~

Ttif

All-Stars fit to be tied, Bt

Deaths

·

11

JIJST ~MEMBER,
T~E 5ETTER TI-lE
PLAVER, TI-lE MORE
IMPORTANT TI-lE
MENTAl,. 6AME
5ECOMES ..

l)'

1·
0

I'

I I I I

1

Chaise - Razor· Lanky- Whiten · AISLE

JULY 91

Grandpa and I were watching an exercise program
on TV. He says the exercise that really can change a
persons life is the walk down the AISLE.

NEWSPAPERS
co-All The

Major Sublechl

-~'1bur
)
~r--------

---:.---11
Wcdncsduy, July 10, 2002
Things nr conditionrt lhut
rreviou~Jy

cuu•cd you

stres~.

fruHtrntlon ur lrriwuori may be

swept off the ~ccncs 'in the.
ycur und replaced
with hnJl\'Y limes. Move into
lhc mont1s uhcud with opti·

co111in~
mt~li~.:

nnticipatiun .

CANCER [June 2l ·!uly 22)
·· Your lc•«&lt;Cr•hiJ&gt; qualities
will be considcrahly enhanced
hy Lady Luck herself. Pro·

Ject!l, venture., or entcrprisl!s

1
grovps. cliques or orj!anlza·
tions thai contain inlluential
individual!.
J.,IBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
- Give your full ·ettcrgy to
condilions or situations !hut
have a direct bearlne on your
career. It is in lhis precise
urea where you ' II be ex·
trcmcly fortunalc today. You
could pull off something big.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) ·· Whether you think your
sodal life iN lousy or pretty
nifty . it is about to get a
whole lot better today. Some
fascinating and excitiny de·
vclopment.~ will transpire.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·
Dec. 21) •• Somelhing you've
Wllnted to accompli•h .. not
only for yourself, but for the ·
benefit of your associates as
well .. loo~s like it can be en·
gineered toduy to do exactly
what you want it to.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19) ·· Cuphl may enler the

you pe"onally 111ana~e wi II
work out su.:.:essfully. Can- .
ccr. treat ,l'"ll"elf to n birth·
day gift. Send for your Astro·
Graph prediction• for the year
ahead by mulling $2 and an
SASE I&lt;&gt; Aotro·Gruph. o/o
this n.ew•puper, P.O. Dox 11':&gt;7,
Wickliffe. Ofl 44092. De sure
to state your todiac sign.
LEO (July 23 -Aug . 22) ••
Take It easy today and let
your horseshoe do all the
work. Situations over which.
you seem t&lt;&gt; have the least
:-~ccnc today und shoot arrows
control ure tile very 11nes that
at a relationship rhat you
will ~h&lt;&gt;wer you lvith the . would like to cultivutc. With
greatest benefits.
hi• help, the developments
VIRCiO (Au~ . 23·Sept. 22 1 , you •eck can become a real·
·· You 'II get a &lt;hance today
oty. '
to make &lt;nntum that could
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2U·Feb.
prove very lucky for you. so
19) ··A favorable upswin~ in
nwkc your~clf ''''ailahle to
I

1

Village couftcil
OKs budget
for 2001-03
Bv CHARlENE

jobs to be
eliminated
PIKETON (AP)
USEC Inc. on Tuesday
reduced the number of
shipping jobs thut ' may be
elimimued at its idled urunium enrichment plant in
Piketon from 440 to .140.
But the com puny suid the
reduction at the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plant is
dependenl
upon
lhe
Depurtmenl of Energy
securing Congressional
funding.
The jobs will be eli minuted Iuter this summer. As of
May 31, there were approximately I ,300 workers al
lhe planl.

A·B-C- Patty Asbeck, a teacher at Mld·Valley Christian School, Is dedicated to teaching and
believes phonics Is the only realistic way to teach reading to children. Here, she works with two
of her students In a phonograms drill. (Brian J. Reed)
'

Reading program.
emphasizes phonics
'

l,llck 3: 8·4-3
Pick 4: 7-3-2-8
Buckeye 5: 2·14·18·22~25
Mtp Mllllon1: 26-29·31-44-48
r,&lt;lep IIIII: 40
Pick 3 nl1ht: 9·3· 7
~lck 4 nl1ht: 0·2·7·6
W.VA.
Deily 3: 2+2
Deily 4: 7·8·2·3
Ca•h 15: 3· 12· 17-18·19·20

Index .
2 Section• - 12 ,.,..

2002

REED

BREE~MYOAILYSENTINEl . COM

OHIO

Q

J.

'

ics until the early 190Qs, and look what has
hur.pencd since l· hath~s changed. How many
MIDDLEPORT- For most of us, learning chtldren are there oul there who are struggling
how to read was a matter of "A, B, C."
with reading? It breaks my heart."
That's becau.se umil the early 1970s phonics
During the school year, Asbeck teaches all
was an integral pan of teaching reading to 70 phonogrums 10 her students before
children.
.
·
Thanksgiving. and the students take it from
The practice of teaching the sounds leiters there.
"I never let up/' Asbeck said. "I always tell
make as a pre-curs6r to reading has fallen out
• of favor in recent years, to the detriment of the · the "· parentii· they'll hate me until
learning l'rocess, according to some tj:achers. Thanksgiving, because learning the phonoBut phomcs has been a part of the reading pro- grums is hurd work. Bul once s\udents learn
gram at Mid-Valley Christian School since the those sounds, reading is easier."
school wa~ founded.
.
Many parents, at firsl, argue thullhe process
According to teacher Pauy Asbeck, teaching of learning the phonograms is too difficu)l for
phonics has proven highly successful among 'their children, and some have even accused
students there. The youngest students in the As beck of being "cr.ucl."
school have scored in the top 10 percentile on
The kind-beaned Asbeck uses a number of
their standardized reading tests, and its phon· learning prompts to help her students along. such
ics program rnily be the reason why.
as "An 'E' at the end makes the vowel say its
This summer, the school has instituted u name," and she uSes bingo games and other fun
phonics reading program which has attracted activities to reinforce .the lessons, but ultimately
not only students who attend or plan to attend ·it's a matter of Jri ll, repitition and practice which
the Middleport Christan school, but also slu- makes reading a reality for her studen!S.
dents from the public school system who are
'-ike lhe "whole language" approach to
· struggling with learning to read.
reading now used in public schools, Asbeck
The English language is 97 percenl phone1: ·us.es spelling as a component of reading, but
ic, and learning the sounds letters make - it's a very basic approach . The I ,700 mostphonograms - )lelps· make reading an easier used words in the English language make up
process, Asbeck said . .
Mid-Valley's spelling list.
.
"It's hard work, but I tell my students I'm
''The literacy level was at 98 percent when
tiJis country was founded," Asbeck said. too old to support them, so they'll just have to
"Te11ching reading was always based on phon- learn to read,' AsbeCk said.
BY BRIAN

Lotteries

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Sports
Weather

HoEF\.ICH

HO EFLICHCMYDAILY SENTtNEl.COM

USEC: Fewer

•

mighl do'" in 1hc Iuture. to contacl
Ihe chumbcr.
·
Sleven Story. whn chair' 1he cham·
bcr\ lnm!.portalion committee. dis·
cu"cd the &gt;lallt' nl the Nel,mwille
Bypa". whit:h b mircu in controver;
sy.
Sto ry &gt;ajd Hnc~ing College oftlciul&gt; recently came out in suppon of
I he
Ohio
Department
of
Trm~&gt;pnrtution\ propmed alignment
of the mull. whk'h i' ut the ~e nter of
lhe conlrovcr,y.
The bypa" i&gt; th&lt;' ·l;"l purt of the
CupiHtl Corridor between lnlerstulc. 77
unll Columbu,, anu funding for planning nf the projc,·l will end in
September. acconling to Story.
· " It doc"t 'l look real posilive," Story
sui d. "Thi' project cou ld die on the
vine for the foresccuble future
· bccau'c of the problems wilh c·ommu·
nily supporl."

.POMEROY

BACK TO IASICS

"'=:;&gt;' ' ' .

mutters that affect your career, work world and/or earn·
ings may be In the offing to·
duy. Much of this Is due to a
lucky break you'll get In this
venue.
·
·
PJS(ES (Feb. 20·March
20) ·· Your popularity and in·
fluence are j~rowing substantially at this tune ana you may
see some evidence of this in
your · social uftairs loday .
Conlinue to be your charis..
matic self.
ARIES (March 21·April19)
·· Something about which
you've been anxious looks
like it is goine to work out
be11er than you lhought ,
Learnina of, this today will
aive ·you the security. to move
on it.
TAURus (April zo,May
20) ·· Lady Luck may be in a
rather generous mood today,
und may be inclined to grunt
you several fuvon. Her pres·
ence will be un extremely im·
ponant factor in helping you
fulfilf ~our hopes.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
·· Be alert today for conrinued
opportunities that. could increase your holdings or add to
your resources . .Your dili·
genee yesterday is responsible
for mil luckier thun usual day.

The decision 10 seek funding for Ihe
facililics, which would likely be locm ed in lhe former Vetcruns Memorial
Hospilal building, wu&gt; mude by l1x:ul
ol'fiduls uflcr lhc hospilal mtd its
emergency room were . closed by
Holzer Consolidated Heulth SysJems.
Inc .. which leases the building from
lhe coun1y.
·
"Whut hus huppencd should have
happened here," Davcnporl &gt;aid . "It
shouldn't happen anywhere ."
Susun Oliver. Excculive Director of
the Meigs County Coundl on Aging.
noted 1hu1 county's population contin ues to uge. untlthut cmcrgcn•·y room
services are more imporlunt limn ever
10 I he nldcr populution .
Perry
Vurnudoe.
Econo'mic
Development Director for Meigs
Count~. updated members on efforts
·1o revnulize the Hobson rail yards in
Middlerort, and asked members who
use rui lransport;ttion . now, or whu

High: BOs, Low: 60s
Detall1, A1

I

I

,...------., sion on wheth~r the
coun1y · will receive
up to $650,000 for
the operation of u
clinic is expected
somelimc bcfore
m i d · A 11 g u s t .
Duvenpon said.
lf the community
clinic. funding i~
'----' approved, lhc wun·
DAVENPORT 1 ~ will seck uddi ·
ttonnl funding for n
crilicul ac~css hospital. which would
include a 24·hour emergency room
and ucule cure inpulicnl facility.
·:The idea is 10 provide hcullh care
services in Meigs County so il 's no
longer necess!try for our resident s to
lruvcl outside the coumy." Duvcnpon
said. "The first moments of any illness
ure the most critical, und it's impurtunt
lhul those services be available in the
county."

g decision soon

Weather

I

I

MIDDLEPORT
"Meigs
County's model for heulth cure could
be one lhat olher rural communities
across America can use."
Meigs County Commissioner Mick
Davenport told lhe Meigs County
Chumber of Commerce on Tuesday u
health cure plun designed to restore
health cure services in the county
. could be used by olher poor counties
to do Ihe sume.
Davenport spoke to the general
membership of the chumbcr ut
Overbrook ·Ce nter in Middle pori.
The county's upplicalion for lederul
funding for u community health center
was submitted this spring, and a dcci ·

Robert L. Barber, 56
Pam Hager
Detall1, A:J

w"

BIG NATE

Davenport: Clinic fu
Community health
centerfirst of two steps

11

To stml today. here
is another corker
l'rn111
Ambrose
bill
Bierce: "Miss. A Iitie
31 ora.
35
mMy
38 Paddle
10 Early vee·
with w1iich we brand
cou1ln
· unmarried women lo
13 Stlnd up to
40 Colored
indicalc that lhcy arc
11 Loathed
lllghtly
in the m11rkct. Miss.
ti~~e
Missis &lt;Mrs:) and
Misler (Mr.) urc Jhe
Ttie Per
three most dis1inctly
tlisagmeuulc words in
TeAM IN
the language, in.
~ fCtiOOL.
sound and sense. Two
corruptions ol'
~
~ wA.r
...._,~,·· the ulhcr or
lliY~.W.~. (ef'/ .. If we mllst
P/lACiiGf
have 1 111, lei us be
· ()lJMMY •
consistent and give
one to the unmarried
man . I venture lo sus·
gest Mush, abbt·cvt·
alcd lo Mh."
So, if a Miss is
pluyin~:,t with a Mush
und he makes a diffi·
cult conlrat:l, is it ull
right if she bcwmcs
mushy?
In 1mh1y's deal. you
CELEBRITY CIPHER
arc in three n1Hrump.
· by Lula Campoa
Wcsl leads a fourth Ctltbrlty Cllll1tr oryptogramo ,,. crtattd from quollltlonl by 11mouo
poopll, pall and preunl. Each loner In tho cipher tlllndtlor onother.
highest spudc lhrec,
Tod.ty's clue: K equalt B
Ea:;LwiJHHng with the
acc ·and returning lhc
"BYS!WR !Y BAF SRSEJWSF
spade four : Whal
would be 'your plan? .
ZWBR KBFU
8W JFYOBEL."
It should be uppar·
! y
8 A F
cnl lhal if you allack
"LF8!LFOFR8
clubs, you will go
8 A F
NWLJ ER
· lwo down , losing four
IPTEFY8
spades and two clubs.
TBRPISPF,"
Instead. you mustcol·
lccl the nc11.t eight
A P Q ! R P H8 D
FLRI'YI
lricks. There arc four
diamonds readily
PREVIOUS SOLUTION~ "He
one of 1 kind. He had a
available, so you
awing eo awaet,,you could pour "aut of 11yrup batlll."
- Byron Nal1on on Sam Sn11d
must rake in four
hcurls as well. Should
WOlD
you play out your
OAMI
three top honors, or .
should you finesse
Rearrange lenera of tht
your 10 on Ihe sccund O four
acrombltd warda · bt·
~i?.l.l round?
low to form four tlmplt wordl.
Assuming there is
no indication to lhc
E R L A R Y , ,.
con lr a ry, 1here is a t--f'Tt"-il 'ir2""'".rI.;..;.._,;-"""T-l
rule that answers lhe
. . .
1
question . First, divide ~~==~===~=~....r
by lwo Ihe number of ·
G N. O S T
curds the opponents hjr-llr-"TI--'TII~:--rl--1
have in the key suit, . . . . .
-.a....:::::::=.... and round up if there L-...L.--1-.L......J..--J
is a half. licre, ·that
gives four. Then
M A E G 0 ..~
Wife to husband as they left
6
5
count up ,your top
1 1 1 1
party ,"Youmlghtaswellhavetold
. lricks. Here, you have '-·--'..___._.........,.___.,.. everyone my age after bragging
GOOD!T~AT
three: the ace. king r-'-..,..-------, about how low our home.- ••..
MEANS I DON'T
und queen. If your ·1
D E MU M I
-lsi"
I-lAVE TOTI-IINK
number is less , fi ·
I I I I"·
Comploto tho chuckle quoted
ncsse. So·. after run' . . ' .
by fllllny In tho milling words
AT ALL!
ning your diamond
you doYOiop rom "'P No.3 bolow.
tricKs (per.haps lhcrc
(9 PRINT NUMBERED
s
will becross
heart
diR·
zi=r~LE~TT~E~RS~IN~S~Q~U~AR=E=S~=*=~=*::;=:;:::;=*=~
cards),
to dum·
A UNSCRAMBLE FOR
my's heart king and
_v...;.A;;,;N:;:.sw;.;.;.;ER;...._ _ _..__._I....I-.L-1..-..1..-l.--l
bravely play a low
•
hear! to your I0.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

see

Hometown Newspaper

done

81 Putt on
12 Recipe qty,

a••

~

A

ACROSS ' 41 etn.-

Qinhwln

v.•Quu
·,.,
·

In

NEA Croaaword Punle

BRIDGE

Ro11lh

..

A6
83·5
86
A6
A4

A3
A3

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Ohio Volliy Publishlns co.

.

~

~ng to
'

POMEROY - A budge! of $1,449,345 for the 2002·
2(K13 year was auoptcd at thi' week\ meeting of Pomeroy
Village Counci I.
. · Kathy Hysell, clerk, reported thul the budget was
$50,000 under last year's ftgure. She said that the ftgure
re11ects a loss of revenue
from bolh JQ~;~~J pnd state
sources. The appropriation
Oerk KatJ,y Hysell
of funds to depunments
reported the budget
lakes place in J.anuary.
was $50,000 uni:ler
Meeting with Cout1cil to
discuss a bltilding pormil
last year's figure. She
for moving one mobile
.said that the figure
home and pulling an01her
one in the same pluce on
reflects a loss of reuMechunic Street were
enue from both local
Donna Klein and Russell
and state sources. The
Cundiff. The 1wo said they
had been in . contucl with
appropriation of funds
John A'nderson, village
to departments tokes
adminislrutor, and he
referred them to Council.
place in January.
Klein suid they" already
have u permit from
.
Anderson but need approval from Council. While there was
general agreement among the members 10 issuing the per·
mil, il was uecided 10 confer with Anderson on procedure
since lhe propeny is in the nood pluin.
.
Councilmai1 George Wright reponed his concern about
lhc guard ruiling, a stop sign, and a utility pole 01lung the
sidewalk ncar Lawrence Construction .on Wcsl Main . He
described the site as a safety hazard , "pretty effeclively cutting off the sidewalk," because of extensions into Ihe wplk·
ing path. Tne muller was referred to safety commmce .
member. Todd Nonon .
Wright al1o reported thut Columbia Gus Co. is in 1own
doing some pat~hing on Butternut and a! the intersection
of Union and Mulberry.
He als0 talked ubout a residene" al that intersectitln and '
the need for some general cleanup there as well as anolher
area where used appliance s afe being uccumulaled.
Contacts will be made with the owners.
·
·· An01her area where pothole and storm sewer work is
needed is near the Shank property on Union Avenue,
Councilman Larry Wehrung said. Discussed by Chief of
Police Mark Proffitt were new regulations about "junkers"
parked on the streel and plans by his depanmenl Jo gel
them removed.
· .
Proffitt also reponed on old·fine collection~ noting that
$1 O,SOO has already been brought in. The purchase of tires
for police vellicles and the cost of a phystcal examination
for Brian Pieree in preparation for his promotion to u full time oftieer were approved.
.
Updated radio equipment now in place was discussed by
Prorfitt. The village approved payment of $4,000 toward
the total cost of $11.190. .
·
.
The mayor's report show¢d receipt~ for ;June of $9,334.
Council approved the transfer of funds from the general
fund to the street department.
Attending the meeting were Victor Young, president of
Council, who presided in the absence of Mayor John
Blaettnar, Todd Norton, Wright and Wehrung.
·

Give Up Smoking?
'

The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition
is here to help! For information about
smoking prevention, or to sign-up for a·
Stop-Smoking Support Group, call
'

1740) 446·5940

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

•

.~.holzer.oFg
r

�I

.

•

•

'

•

Ohio
.

The Daily Sentinel

Thuraday, July 11

""·
luenefteld

Iss'"'' I •

. 0 l
•

•l .~.f!!U~,bUI . l!.~~~J ~{

{) ,_,/ 0

o ••••-•~•

SUnn~

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

Wedne1dav. Julv 10, 2002

Wednesd•y. July 10, 2002

Shawl" T·IIOI'ml

Alllr1

Fturrlt•

Snow

child's gender and race after lawmakers revamped Ohio's proficiency test
systems.
All hough the state has received such
info~mation in summary form before,
this will be the first time it will have
information on individual students,
Benton said.
''Really, we' re not collecting anything more than we collect now when
Joey starts the first day of kindergarten." he said.
The depurtment won't have any per. sonal information on students and will
track them only by a number.
The sys1cni requires schools to collect eight pieces of identifying informution, including a student's name,
date of birth, place of birth, ethnicity
und gender. The informutiqn is given to
New York-based PwC Consulting.
which then assigns un identificution
number for euch student.
The education dei?urtment is paying
the firm $ t .25 million to mana~e the
i&gt;rognun . The company, a divis1on of

. Question: My sister-in-law has burning pain in her mouth and face. She has
gone to many physicians and spen1
thousands of dollars without getting any
relief. All they bave told her is that she
1\as "Burning Mouth Syndrome." What
causes this problem, and isn't there
~omethinll she can do besides applying
tce when tt huns?
· Answer: A syndrome is a group of
IIY'!'Ptoms that occur together with suf·
fic•ent frequency that we doctors think
there must be a common underlying disorder. The cluster of symptoms in
Burning Mouth Syndrome, or BMS,
11rovide a good example - pain, usualry of a burning nature, of the tongue,
cheeks, gums and face.
.
There are 11 number of disorders that
can. cause mouth pain. 111-fittin~ dentures, an abscessed tootli, even m1graine
headaches can cause this common complaint. Your sister:in-law "spent thousands of dollars" to find out that she
doesn't have one oflhe other known
disorders but instead suffers from BMS.
This syndrome may be more common
in women than in men. The reason for the
wiggle-word "may" is that women are
more likely to go to their doctors when
they have a new medical complaint.
Men, on the other hand, tend to just complain to their wives rather than to the doctor. So, if a greater proportion of women
with this syndrome go to see their doctors. then more women are likely to end
up seeing doctors who are doing research
in this area. This makes them more likely
to show.up in the statistics.

accounting ·and consultin$ firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers. wtll not
receive any academic information
about a child.
.
The system has "the mos! advanced
security features available" for trans~
milling . and storing information;
Benton said.
Nevertheless. the ACLU of Ohio
filed a public records request with the
education department for all details
about the proJect.
"We're talking about the govemmen·t
collectin~ and collating vast amount of
information about students," said
Raymond Yasvari, ACLU legal direc·
tor. "Once you ·start collecting data and
puttin~ it together in ways not general;
ly available without doing the collect:
ing, all sorts of questions arise."
Akron city's school board decided to
provide only the information required
this year rather than include additional
data - such as a student's middle
name and place of birth - which will
be required next year.
·

lot

\'If MIOcilttd,...

Clearing skies Wednesday. night
BYTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cooler and less humid air
will blanket Ohio on
Thursday us high pressure
moves into the urea behind
lfnes of thunderstorms that
rumbled across parts of the
state.
Thursday wi II be mostly
sunny with highs in the mid70s to the low 80s. Lows on
Wednesday night under clear
skies will be in the 50s.
The storms dumped as
much us 6 inches of ruin on
central und southern Ohio lute
Tuesd~y
and
early
Wednesday, the National
Weather Service said.
The weight of the water
caused the roof of II ~US station to · collapse m the
Chi lllicothe urea, the Ross
County sheriff's office said.
Some roads were closed for
awhile because of flash flooding. Several families had to be
evacuated from their homes in
the Laurelville area of
Hocking County.
·
·
The record high tempera-

• COLUMBUS (AP) - The state is
preparing to assign an identification
number to each of Ohio's 1.&amp;·-million
public schoolchildren to help track und
tmprove academic performance. .
The proposal concerns the American
Civil Liberties Union of Ohio. which
has asked the SUite for details on the
plan.
The Department of Educution says
the Statewi&lt;le Student Identifier
System will be in place this coming
school year. The stute will use the systern to study which programs are effective and which students need extra
help, said department spokesman J.C .
Benton.
Lawmakers.upproved the concept of
the system .two years ugo when they
overhauled ·the way the department
collects data . The system will also help
Ohio comply with the federal educulion bill s1gned by President Bush in
January,
Lust year, districts sturted reporting
proficiency test scores bused on · u

AMERicAN PRIDE Parole board recommends
releasing mobster

lure for July ·10 Ill the
Columbus weather station .
was 103 in 1881 and the
record low wus 45 in 1963.
Sunset Wednesday night will
be at 9:02p.m. and sunrise on
Thursday at 6:12 a.m.

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Ohio Purole Board has
approved the release for un
ugmg mobster convicted in
one of Cleveland's most
· infamous .gang assassinalions.
The board voted 7·2 on
Tuesdar to free Ronald D.
Carabb1a, 73, on Sept. 24.
said Andrea Dean, n spokeswoman for the Ohio
Departme·nl
of
and
Rehabilitation
Correction.
Curabbiu, •who lived in the
Youngstown suburb , of
Poland, was to be released
from
the
'Chillicothe
.
Correcuonal Institution to
Youngstown around May 20
and pluced on parole for five
years.
Objections from Jaw
enforcement
officials
delayed his parole and led to
a second hearin$ Monday to
review the deciston.
D~an said the board felt
thut no hard evidence was
presented to show Carabbia
should stay in prison and
that Carabbia had done the
things asked of him while
·
behind bars.
Cuyahoga
County
Prosecutor William Mason

WEATHER FORICAST:

Today... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms through early afternoon ...Then becoming partly
cloudy. Highs in the lower
80s. West winds 5 to 10 mph
becoming northeast late this "
morning. Chance of ruin 50
percent.
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s.
Northeast winds 5 to I0 mph.
EXTINDID FOIIECAIT:

· Thursday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Northeast winds I0 to 15
mph. ·
Thursday · night ... Mostly
clear. Lows SS to 60. .
Friday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs near 80.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Man who lashed son 126
·times gets 18 years in prison
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Feb. 19. She alerted officials
suburban Columbus man has at his school.
been sentenced to 18 years in
Deborah Wirth, the school
prison for beating his 7-year- . nurse who examined Isaiah,
old son 126 times with an said his injuries, which
electrical cord and belt included open and bleeding
because he ate a cupcake wounds, were the worst she
without permission.
had seen on a child in her 29
Isaiah Stenson, 26 .. of years of nursing.
Urbancrest, pleaded gutlty. Assistant
county
Tuesday to two counts of · Prosecutor Ron Welch said
felolllous assault .and one the boy, now in the care of
count of endangen,ng ch•.\· Franklin County Children
dren: the~ told the JUd~c. I Services. has had three sur~dtdn t meant.~ hurt my son. I eries to replace sktn
love my son.
d t
d. h b .
Franklin County Common es roye m 1 e eatings.
Pleas Judge Dale Crawford,
Stenson's attorney. Fred
visibly angry. cut off Stenson B.enton, su1d t~e .boy had u
before he could suy another h1story ~f behav10rul probword .
lc~s d~ung to w~en he lived
"Mr. Stenson, I've looked With h1s mother tn Toledo a
at the photographs, and that's year ago.
.
the biggest pile of crap I've
Benton s.a•d the boy
ever heard in my life," he repeatedly m1sbeha~cd while
said. "Nobody can cause the 1n the care of h1s . father,
damage that you caused to despite Stenson's efforts to
that child without intending work w1th the boy. The cupto hurt that child."
cake incident was the last
A school-bus
driver straw.
noticed that the boy, whose
"Clearly, I believe this was
name also is Isaiah, was list- a loving and caring father,
less, pale and glassy-eyed but I think he became fruswhen he got on her bus on trated," Benton said.

Balloon Crazy

()&amp;nnlfer Williams Torres, of Sheffleld .Liike, Ohio, and
her husbend Jose Torres, of Lorain, Ohio, duck as wallwishers throw bird seed at them after being married at
the Lakeview Park gazebo In Lorain. The couple
showed their patrotlsm with the bride wearing a .rad,
white, and blue flag dress and the groom wearing his
Marines blues. (AP)

Alzheimer
home fined
for assaults
NEW PHILADEL,PH!A
(AP) -' An assisted living home .that cures for
people with Alzheimer's
diseuse agreed to a
$10,000 penalty and state
monitoring
for
six
months after six female
residents were seJ~uuUy
assaulted by a male re~• ­
dent..
Altcrra Clare Bridge
Cottage, located in New
Philadelphia 40 miles
south·of Akron, reached a ,
settlement Tuesday with
the Ohio Department of
Health td keep its residential-care - facility
license.
"We consider this significant because we
rarely fine residentialcare facilities," said Jay
Carey, a health department spokesman.
Critics say the agreement and the temporary,
· improvements it requires
underscore the need for
better oversight of the
state's assisted living
homes .
"For Sl 0.000, they get
away with it, and the fox
is still watching the hen
house,"
said
Kathy ·
Recco, who alerted police
to abuse at the home. Her
mother lived there almost
two years.

und FBI Agent Joe Bushner
opposed his release, arguing
. that he still hus criminal ties.
"! huve u hard .time understanding why . anybody
would allow u gangster out
on the street after we got
him, particularly u gangster
of this nature," Mason said
Tuesday.
Carubbia has been behind
burs since December 1977
following his arrest in connection with the car bombing
death that October of rival
mobster Daniel J. Greene.
The Cleveland waterfront
boss was killed on Oct. 6;
1977, when a remote-controlled bomb· detonate·d outside u dentist'~ office in the
Cleveland
suburb
of
Lyndhurst.
.
Carabbia was 50 when he
entered the state prison sys,
tern in November 1979 after
being convicted of aggravated murder and aggravated
arson in Greene's death.
"We believe he has done
everything a human being
could possibly do in that situation to establish he should
be released," Carole Rendon,
one of Carabbia's Cleveland
attorneys, said Tuesday.

EXTRA! EXTRA.!
Coming Friday, July 26, 2002 ~

·

The

.

Lebanon.

· Wilbur T. Burke, Debra K. Burke,

10 ODOT, deed, Sallabury.
•

Thomu C. Lewis, Barbara M.
Lewll, to COOT, deed, Lebanon.
Jamn N. Smith, Conatance C.
Smith, 10 COOT, deed, Bedford.
• Helen Ooreey, Hllen Wilcoxen,
~awrence Wilcoxen, Tammy J.
Wilcoxen, Carol 'tbung, Roelde D.
'tbung, Charln Oorll)l, 10 OOOT,
4~td, Lebanon.
• JELM Enltrp&lt;llll, CCNSOL,Ino.,
1p OOOT. deed; Sutton. '
.
. Jame• E. Diddle, JD Orillln Co.,
\"lrgll F. Ludwig, Ruby Ludwig,
elwood Jonn, Karen Jonea, Burgan
Mallinger, Ruth Mellinger, 10 OOOT,

AEP-38.&amp;6
Alch Coal-21.18
~Teclv'SBC- 30.1!11
Alao-44.68
~tnc.- 38. 39

BBT-37.68

Daughter of
Frank and Janet Johnson
Someflnetown, OH
. Plcturte mull bl In by
Thurlldly

July

11,

Plotufe1 can 1M picked

July 29th, 2002.

AT&amp;T-10.0{
Barl&lt; One- 37.28
BLI-18.85

Bob E\11111S - 28.20
BofgWamer- 58.25

City Holdilg- 23.90
Champion- 2.88
Charming Shope- 8.12
Col-24.55

•

Reader Services
Our main concern In all atoriee "
10 btl accurate. If you know of an
error In a IIOI'Y. call the newsroom
~ 'l92·2158
aI (740 ' vv•·
.
.

Complete ·the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet sized picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. Enclose payment with picture.
·
Send to:

Newe Deplrl"!enta
Tho main numbar 11 992-2158.
• Oepartmerit extentlone are:
•
: 0tner11 m1n1011'
Ext. 12

The Daily Sentinel
Child's Name (s) &amp; Age (1):'--::----'---~---------,--

·-

•

: CIMeHitd Adl

Parent's N a m e = - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Clty &amp; Stale:...__ _- ' - - - - ; . -------------••• The above lnrormatlon will be used In t!Je ad. •••
Hurry In ror Best Selection

Kurt Alexander of Yorktowrt, Ind., pilots his balloon, 'Rainbow
Rider, · over Charles Mill Lake In Mifflin. Ohio. Thlrty-flye hot air
balloons are In Ashland, Ohio. for Its annual Balloon Fest which
runs through Sunday with balloon races, and many other tam·
lly oriented activities. (AP)

'nd Save up 10 SO% Otr
In-Store In-Stock uuloe llem1 ooly!

ICPENNEY CATALOG MERCHANT

MERCHANT STORE 8659·5
US 2nd Ave, .GIIIipollt, OH 456JI
(740) 441•UU • Mon-Sal 10-6

'

Phone Number:

•

To und •mall ·
On the Web
www.mydallyHntlnel.com

addren correc·

' Thomas M. Thalli, Shalla Thalli,
to Shelby J. PICI&lt;ena, Angela M.
Plekena, deed. Lebanon.
Thomas J. Thalli, Shalla Thtlaa.
10 Shelby J. Pickens, Angela M.
PlekeMs, easement.
Pamala J. King
Chlldreas
Pepper Dawn Co., Wlnlar Koren
Cole, David Wayne Shamblen, Jr.,
deed, Lebanon .
Freda M. Grueser to Christopher
T. Shank, Carol A. Shank, deed,
Salisbury.
Lawrence Hayman, Jennie R.
Hayman, to James Kenneth Sizer,
deed, Lebanon .
Freeman A. Enoch, daoeued, to
Leonia S. Enoch, deed, VIllage of
Syoaouaa.
Evelyn M. Wyolnakl, Floyd
Wyclnakl, 10 Bruce A. PoaUethwall,
deed, Rulland.
J~n
L. Hagarty, Dorothea
Hagerty, to Mike Roahon, Jr.. Wayne
Akere, deed, Columbia.
.
Velma M. Dugan,' Maxine Dugan,
10 Lori 0 . Burton, Robin A. Dugan,'
deed. Vlllags of Pomeroy.
Catherine E. Lowery, 10 Catherine
Lowery, Alan Thomaa Lowery, deed,
Scipio.
John T. Dennie, Yvonne Dennie, to
Thomas P Brooks, Oorolhy Jane
Brooks,·deed, Sallabury.
Bruner Land Co., lno., 10 Dana J. ·
Aldridge, PetriOia L. Aldridge, deed,
Olive.
William Winebrenner, Margarte E.
Winebrenneo, affidavit.
'Rendall R. Carpenter, Sr., Peggy
Ann Carpenter, to Robert C. Hill, Ella
Mae Hill, deed, SuttonNIIIage of
Syracuae.

lo

BITS·N-PI ECES
Naming storms
The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
announced in 1978 that it
would alternate men's and
women's names ·in the naming of hurricanes.
. It was seen as an attempt
at fair ~lay.
Humcanes ha~ · been
·named for women for years,
until NOAA succumbed to
pressure from women's
~roups who were demandmg that Atlantic storms be
given unise11 names.

on their claws, not on their
paws. This method of walkmg is called "digitigrade."
When cats scratch furniture, it isn't an act of malice.
They are actually tearing off
the ragged edges of the
sheaths of their talons to
·expose the new sharp ones
beneath.
.
Cats have a third eyelid
called a haw and you will
probably only see it when
kitty isn't feeling well.

Deaths
Robert Lee Bieber
COOLVILLE - Raben Lee Barber. 56. Cool\ 1lle, d1ed
Tuesday, July 9, 2002. at St . Joseph's Hospital. Parl..:rsburg.
W.Va.
He was born en Feb. 11. 1946 in Coolville. ;on of Helen
Burkhammer Kaylor of Tuppers Plains and the lat., Walter
Barber. He wus u self,employed logger.
In addition to his mother. he is survjved by hi&gt; will:-, Ann
Barber; four sons. Bobby Barber of Pittsburgh, Pa .. David and
Robin Barber of Cincinnati, Jim and Amy Barb.:r (lf Tuppers
Plains. and Bill Barber of Cincinnati; two gr~ndchildren ; und
one brother, Terry Kaylor of Tuppers Plains.
In udd1t10n to Ius father, he wus preceded m death by a
great-grandmother, Minnie Clem.
Services will be held at II a.m. Thursday ut Wh1te Funeral
·Home in Coolville with Tim Henson' officiating.l:lurial will be
. in Coolville Cemetery.
·
Friends may . call at the funeral home from 6 to &amp; p.m.
Wednesday.

Pam Hager
TUPPERS' PLAINS - Pam Hager, Tuppers Plains, died
Tuesday, July 9, 2002, at her residence. Arrangements will be
unnounced Iuter by White Funeral Home.

LOCAL BRIEFS
three levels of compe tition
include grades 1-2 . 3-5 und 68. Essays will b..• judged on
creativity und degree of
PO MEROY - For anyone learning.
F'
·
·
interested in Ia1 in football
1rst place wmners w1ll
.
. P Y g . • ' rece1ve a wet,;kcnd ~Ctl\wav
at M~I)(S H1~h Schoql. u 10- for four to an Uhio State J)ark
day . mstrucuonal penod Will Resort . Second place purticibegm
at ~.30 P;m .. on pants will recei ve tickets to
Tuesday at.Me1~s Ju~tor H1gh Ohio's theme parks.
Foot~all Ftelq m Mtddlep?rt·
For informati on or to
For mformanon. call Mtke request un essay contest regisChancey at 992-0064.
tration form. cull 1-800BUCKEYE, or go online at
www.OhioTourism.com/kids.

Instruction
begins

Answer calls

POMEROY Mei~s
Emergency Services units
answered the following calls
ori Tuesday:
·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:57 a.m., Laurel St.,
Middleport,
David
Cunningham, treated;
II :47 a.m., CarpenterDorsey
Dyes ville Rd..
Jordan. treated:
12:21 p.m., Portland Rd .,
John Coffman, Jackson
·
General Hospital;
. RUTLAND
5:52 p.m., New Lima Rd.,
with assistance from Medic
5, Bobbie Rossiter, Holzer
Medical Center.

SEOE.MS
to meet
GALLIPOLIS
The
Board of Trustees. for
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Management
Services
(SEOEMS) will meet in spe. cial sesston at 7 p.m ..
Tuesday. July 23 at Lewis
Family
Restaurant
in
Jackson. For information,
call 740-446-9840.

.Summer essay

contest
COLUMBUS
First
throu~h eighth grade students
in Ohto have until July 31 to
submit essays for the Great
Ohio Adventures in Learning
summer essay ~ontest.
Contest particifants must
. submit an essay o 400 words
&lt;ir less that describes what the
learned while visiting one of
the Great Ohio Adventures in
Learning attractions . The

Children's

consortium
.

meets July 23
'

ATHENS - The Southern
Consortium for Children will
meet at 10 a.m., Tuesday,
July 23 at the group's offices,
8044 Dairy Lane in Athens.

New pastor at
Grace UMC
GALLIPOLIS Grace
United Methodist Church now
has a new associ~te pastor, Rev.
Barbara Jean Carriere. Cuniere
said she is excited about her
new adventure in Gallipol is
and is looking forward ro being
in ministry with the. various
youth. youn~ ndult . college student, miss1ons ;md Grace
Alive! ·- the contemporary
worship service - programs ut
Grace UM&lt;;.
Carriere's previous appointments were m Athens. where
she served as the associate and
campus minister at First
United Methodist Church; and
in Delaware, where she served
as pastor at Strantford St. ·
Paul's UMC and as .pastor ut
Madison Mi lis' Deer Creek
Co-op.
Carriere is originally from
Montana. She began undergraduate work in architecrure
at the University of Minnesota
and after that moved 10 and
received a B.A. in Biblical
Studies and A.A. in Christian
Education at NortlvAA~st Bible
College in Kirkland. Wash.
Carriere received her Master
· of Divinity at , United
Theological Seminary in
Dayton.

Cat trivia
Cats are the only domestic
animals that walk directly
I

-ov.

13:ze Wtokl
152 Wltkl

$27.30
$63.82
II Oil.!WI

"-~lottlteCoumr

13:ze Wltkl
152 Wltkl

.28.:13
HU8
11011.72

_
.
.
.
.
.
.
_
.
.
.
rr

4991Jehland Avenue
Athens, Ohto

,

tAN • ftFJolr, .............., .....

-----------------------------------------------·'
HURRYII PICTURE DEADLINE IS
THU.RSDAY Jull' 18, 2002!
"

Ext. 6

neweOmydallyunUnel.oom

Submitted b y : - - - - - - - - -

.

,

Poltml11er: Stnd

Ilona to Tho Dill)' Stnllnel. Ill Court
St,
Ol11o 4676g·
·

Mill
sublalallan
lnlldt lllolgt c;,;oiij---

Ext. 14

: ClrcUIIIIOn.

lllombor. Tht Aloocllled Prou ana
lhl Ohio IIIIIWijllpor Alloclall9n.

Eil. 4

or
· ;, Advertl1lng

F'omllrov. Ohio. Slcond-ctuo pootogo
paid 11 Pometoy.

Ext. 3

Ext. 13

Other aervlcea

-----------------------------------------------·

(UPI 213-110)
Ohio Velley Publlohlng Co.
Publlohlld ..,.ry oftornocn, Monday
through Frldey, 111 eou" s1.,

Subecrlptlon rates
ly 01rrter or motor routt
Ono'12
0no 111011th
18.70
Onoywr
1104
Dill)'
150 oenla
Suboorlbort not dt~ring lo pay lhl
c.trrllr rilly ramh In IMnct dlrtctiO
Tht 0111)' Stnllnol. Crlldll will bo glvtn
c.trrllr uah -k.No llllbiOrlpllon by
mall ptrmllled In aruo - . hOmt
c.trrler urvlce IIIYIIIable.

•
- Newt

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Home National Bank 10 samuel A.
Galloway, Joyce A. Galloway, deed,
BallaburyNIIIage of Middleport.
Enterprise United Methodist
Church to Harold M. Davia, Sherry
G. Davis, deed, Salisbury.
John E. Houdaahelt, Patricia
Houdaahell,
to
Donald
W.
Houdashell, deed, Sutton.
Alberta 0. Davia, James Leonard
Davia II, to Dennie L. RuCker, Carrie
L. RuCker, deed, 011._
Thomas E. Anderson, deceased,
to Martha Franoee Anderson, aflidavit, RuUand.
• Martha France• Anderson to Joy
Anderson, deed, VIllage of RuUand.
Sl8118n 0. Cotterill, Barbara C.
Cotterill, to Susan Lynn Jones, deed,
Scipio.
·
William G. Russell, Mary E.
Runell, to Bernard V. Fultz, Maxine
Fultz. tallmtnl, Cheater.
".
Rlohard L. Buloher, Sandra K.
Butcher, to NaUonal Gaa and Cll Co.,
right of way, Sullon.
Lynn E. Shular, Erneat M. Shuler,
Mary L. Shuler, to Home National
Bank, deed, Letart.
. Lyle Reed Sinclair, deceased, to
Joyoe Sinclair, aflidav~.
Bruce Myere, Dorothy Myera,
Ruth Myera, William Argabrlte, Mary
Pugh Argabrlle, Lloyd R. Myerrt, to
Georgina Thompaon, deed, Orange.
Lucille Yeauger, Oorolhy L. Boyer,
Clarence E. Boyer, to Earl W. Wlnee,
Earl W. Wlnaa, Sr., deed, Sallabury.
Virginia Malohar Alllaon, VIrginia
Melcher Italiano to Margaret R.
Melcher, affidavit.
Inez v. Spurlock, deceased, to
Boyd T. SpurlOCk, affidavit.
Merrl Angela Morrla, decaled. to
Clyde R. Morrie, affidavit, Cheeter.

Pepeloo - 46.27
Premier - 8.35
RoOky Boola- 8;1 5
Fedelal Mogl.l- .68
RO Shel- 55.89
Flratar- 22.20
RoOkwell- , 9.20
Oennatl- 72.71
llerllflll Eleolrlc - 28.30 Searl- 51.40
OKNLV- 4.60
Wendy'e- :!8.71
Ha~ey Oevld8al- 60.09 Wai·Marl - 64.85
Kmart-.81
Worthington - 17.93
Kroger -19.89
Dally atoac rtpOrlll are 11e
Lld.-20.81
.4 p.m. Ciotl1g quotas of
the pr!Moul day'e traneNSC-22.33
actiont, proylded by Smith
Oak HHil.- 21 .85
Perlnll1 at Advtlllnc. of
0\/B-24.00
Galllpolll. .
Peoplel- 30.49

OuPI:lnt- ol4.85
00-19.00

.. Correction .Polley

after

deed, Lebanon.
James O.M. Proffitt, Batty Proffitt,
to OOOT, deed, Lebanon.
George Davia to ODOT, deed,
Lebanon.
Gary L. Olbbl to OOOT, deed,
Sunon.
Century Aluminum to OOOT,
deed, Lebanon.
R.O. .Carney to COOT, deed,
Lebanon.
•
Horace W. Kerr, 'Dorothy M. Karr,
Frank Herald, Jr.. Jamea E. Diddle,
to ODOT. deed, Cheater.
Columbla Natural Resourcaa.
Thomaa B. Hart, William Reid Hart,
William Ralph Hart, George Henry
Hart, 10 OOOT, deed, Bedford.
Jam11 W. Hobalatter, Mary
Hobetetter, to ·ooor, deed, Sutton.
Larry A. Vance, Sharon L. Vance,
to OOOT, dMd, Scipio.
John .M. Roueh Ill to John .M.
Routh Ill, ChriiU M. Routh, deed,
Rutland.
Marie Jonn, Barbara Jonn, to
Bank One, lht~ff'l deed, Vlllaga of
Po:lmeroy.
Larry Rouah, June Routh, to
Harold Law10n, deed, Sutton.
·
RICky Lee enter, deceaaed, to
Argyle L. Deeter, Florence E. OHler,
deed, Lebanon.
Florenoe E. Onltr to Argyle L.
DHitr, deed. Lebanon,
Alan R. Peulee, Rote Mary
Peaelll, to Kindy R. Peaslee,
William T. Peaalaa, Andrew R.
PeaaiH, deed, Salisbury.
PatriCk H. O'Btlen 10 J.B. O'Brian,
Roberta C. O'Brien, right of way,
Rutland.
Arleen Lawhorn to Roger
Thompson, Mtllall Durham, deed,
Solplo.

The Daily Sentinel

.
..

2002.
up

With this limitation in mind, the statistics show that women have this disorder
about three times more often than men. .
Burning Mouth Syndrome · usually
begins without injury or other memorable event to denote the first episode of
pain. II typically be~ins some ume after
age 50 -- with d1stinct incidents · of
mouth pain. The sufferer often awakens
feeling fine but has increased discomfort
as the day wears on.
Researchers have tried to link this disorder with low levels of estrogen, zinc,
vitamin C and other measurable metabolic parameters such as kidney function and diabetes. Desrite these efforts
medical science hasn t identified the
e~tact underlying cause for this problem.
The lack of a known cause doesn't
mean that there aren't some treatments
worth trying for BMS. This is because
we do know something about how the
sensation of pain is experienced. For
instance, we are awafe that specific
types of nerv.e stimulation are carried by
sensory nerves to the brain~ where they
are interpreted as pain. Medicines that Athens, Ohio 45701. Past c·olumm· are
either modify the transmission of these available
online
at
''pain signals" or reduce the brain's www.jhradio.org/jm.)

LOCAL STOCKS

•

Emma johnson

~

&lt;..

Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special·Edition filled
with photographs of local
children • ages newborn to fout:
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 26th issue.
Be sure .your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved! ·

Family
Medicine ·

response to them are of some value.
While non-prescription pain medicines work in this fashion. ~ny suffe.rers requtre stronger prescnpuon pam
drugs for adequate relief. Painkillers
alone work for some individuals, but
others get relief when they add an antidepressant medicine to their treatment
measures. Antidepressants may benefit
the person by its mtluence on pain signuts and also by helping with the
depression that frequently goes along
with any chronically painful condition.
Medicines that are useful in controlling some types of et)ilepsy can also be
beneficial for individuals with Burning
Mouth Syndrome.
Carbamazepine, the generic name of
Tegretol, and gabapentin (Neurontin)
are the ones most commonly tried.
Instead of prescribing these, your sisterin-law's doctors have chosen to follow
the conservative approach of "do no
harm." In many cases this is wise,
because all of these medicines can have
undesirable·effects - some worse than
the BMS itself. If she is truly miserable
with her pain, however, I would urge
her to go back to the most knowledgeable doctor she's seen and ask about trying one of the medicines that sometimes
gives relief.
. ("Fr~mily Medicine" is a weekly col·
11inn. To submit questions. write 10 John
C. Wolf. D. 0 .. Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine, P 0. Box l/0,

LAND TRANSFERS
POMEROY - Meigs County
Recorder Judy King processed the
lollowlng lrantfera ol real eatata
recenUy:
Jon Richard VanMeter, John
VanMeter, Bttty VanMeter, to ~on
Richard VanMeter. deed, Letan.
. Reda Hlala to Charles R. Hisle,
. deed, AuUand .
lrll Chrllllne Hammett, William H.
Hammell, to Columbua Southern
Power, right of way, Sallabury.
~lchael
Sandare,
Rhonda
Bandera, to Columbus Southern
Power, right of way, Olive.
Dabble Abthlre to Columbua
Southern Pl:lwer, right of way,
RuUand.
, Larry Stewart, Tertii Stewart, 10
Columbua SoUthern Power, right of
way, Rutland.
WIIIVIOO Corp., Franklin Reel
Eetate Co., to Ohio Department of
Trantportatlon, deed, Llbanoo.
Jaffrey C. Harrla, Deborah M.
· ~arrla to ODOT. deed. Lebanon.
• Ruby K. Ludwig to OOOT, deed,

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydallylentlnel.com

BMS can set your mouth cifire

State to begin assigning 10 numbers to all students

Ohio weather

INO.

PageAl

(740) 5P4-6JJJ

~MLB All-Stars fit to
••

---

Nell

be tied-

1-100-451·1'10'

udiolony
arlng aids~
•

•

•

�The Daily S ntinel

•

•

lOU

The Daily S ntin 1
•

111 Court St .. Pomeray, Ohio

'

1'4~168. Fu: 1'4o.Ma-11111'
www.m~tlynnttn...com

Ohio Valley .Publishing Co.

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~t\llil!~ hll\&gt;\l \\)l\\1\l'tllnvNtl• Ill! f\111\!hl!d hJr · tonuncnl.

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'

NATIONAL VIEW
)

' .

visitors must remember
touring US. is not a right
.

• The Vlctorln ('l'exns) Advocl\te.

Pll

Holes continue to plague airport security~~ 11cts

U..\·. a pril'i/ege. 1101 tl rigltt: While we con timte to
bcliev~: thut Attorney Generul John Ashcmtt is cure·
less of the Constitutilln und 1'!-ei.Juently entirely hlll
IV JotiiiH PIIIICIMa
A mun wilh 11 knll'e 111 his huvkp"ck
zeulous in his luw-e nforcement efforts, his plnn to
nmlle 11 lht~llljlh 11 s~cllrlty ~hec lqmlm
fing~rprint und phot,ogmph fmeign visitors und
I
his pus I wee~eml 111 llttlles
requtre those who wtll be stuying longer thun 30
lnternutlnl\ul - tho WHshlnjlhl!HU'\'lll
duys to register with the government is not obje~: ·
ulrpnn whert~ llll'rorhts hnunh.l\1
tionahle on its face.
·
Ame1· l~u11 flll)lht 77 n11 Sllpl, II. Iuter
crushil11!ilil11n the fllli1UlJIIll1.
. We do huve so.me reservution.s. Fm exumple. why
An ufrpurl s~l\lener tl\1\lcll~lthe knit~
· limit these req1mements to Mtddle Eus ternea·s und
1111 11 1111111lhW hut 11\llllecllllltu pi'H11plly
?eople from Muslim nn.tions'! They ure not.lhe only
lito u s11pervl~ur. Sn the pltS-~011 •
·report
orctgnet·s who huvc til wtll tow1u'd the United
ger wn.1uhle In nmke his wuy pnss SIMl·
Stutes. Howeve,r. we do not shure the view of those
,COLUMNIST
rlty, 111111w wuy In 1111 ulrpml cmwnurse
who criticize the requirement us ethnic profiling. n . Whlll'\'l he IVUN 1'\'liiUy Ill hntlt\1 his lllght.
flnt·tunutely, the sectu·lty ht'\'lUch \11\1 • • ·
,
term increasingly upplio;Jd in wuys thlll mnke no
not
end
In
dlsus11W.
1111Wt'illy
l'
l
lSII
Itell
In
U meener~ huve such llit11~ully N[llll•
sense whntsoev.er.... It is only prudent !O try to"Jll'!l·
the evuc uualun nl' ~.ooo penplll 1111 d tln11 Wllupnn~ «ml llKtllnslvlls pu~lo.lld
teet ourselves lrom those who would hke to see us
Llelnys nf ~0 I1IJ1hls I'm un hmu· nnd 11 lnslde lYJI!IIIUOuntl Qlli'I'Y•nns the w11y 11
~ome to harm , who verhully threut~ n to bring nhout
hull'. A11nlnst this tmck&gt;lmp. nn'l~luls 111 lypl~ul pnMMI.llll!llr wmtiLI. mw Qllll lmn~·
the 1ww Trunspnt'lllllnn Security hill hnw e11slly 111 plcul llll NNen~ers ••
such hurm in udvunce und cheer und/or bonst uhout
Admlnlstrntlon (TSA) nckl1nwledj!l.ld l~ko the llll'l\ll'lsts wh11 Ymnmtmdll t'llLI
itufter it huppens.
ahl s week thut screeners 111 ~2 nt' the lllphl 17 ~ Qlll1 stmtll!llll WilllllonN
.;. Ashcroft hus gone ton fur in holding people
n111hm's htrjlest uh·pm·ts l'uii~Litu Lll!tll\1\ lhl\llt~h ulrpnrt securll~, Tmlecil, In l\11
without ~hnrge,. in den~ing rhet)l twc~ss to lej,vil
)lllll~ un&gt;l bomhs In ltlmnNI 11 L)ttmwr ol' um!~t'i:nvqr uudlt nl' J.. ult•rm·IN, Yllll•
counsel; 111 pushtng the mlen.:epttnn ol persotHII e·
lllld~l'~nv~ t· hlSIN lusl month .
\!U~I~tl Irom Novemilet· In eu t•ly
USA Tndny l'lt'NI Lll.&gt;~lnseu the ills· l•eht'll l1t'y, nlt'JlOI'l NQI'Illli\Ct'N J'ulllld In
muils und similnr ubus·es . But the new requireliwnts
IU!'hlns reslths -·whi ch tlw 1111 en&gt;·~ ~on · dei~QI humh'eiiN nf knlw-. )luns unll
fnr foreign visitors mukc sensl.l. Trnvel in the United
•luN~ll "se~·~rl ly - senM hlv ~ ll11nt·m11 • Nl nuthu ed explosives, Hleu llhlly ~1111 •
~~~~~e~ by f'orei~n~rs i~ u privile~l.l, nor n right, just as
linn", It 110ie&gt;llhul ,Qret~tli;II'N ol1en l'ulled Q\llllll\1 In 11 wuy NQreener' u.u~hl 10
II ts lor truvelm loretgn co~lllll'les by Amerit.:uns.
111 find slmulule\1 WllllfWilN nn umle•·cuv· shmtld e~/ '\Wtl'rmn u putenllultlll'l'llrlHI.
er UjllllllN ulier nwtnl deteclnr ulurms
Aucnrd 11Jl tn nn ltti\lt'llltl l)nvet·nmlltn
smuuled. And thlll mel.lnet·s alio hud memn, whlch wus uuthorell hy lim
tmnhle sputtln~ slmuluteu hnmllN. Whlll TrtlllN)lllr{UIIon Perut·tment's lns[lectol'
pm•tlou lut•ly 11'11\lhles IN lhtll unller•·nver IJilllet'tll. hweNiipllllli'N QtllldltQINl 7HJ
ullents
olu nni1Jilllltli1Y Yn\lsuullen 11 ths foNts 111 nlrpurt screenlnl! ~h~ck j1nintM
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
1n hide the erNut1. woupuns uml oxpln· und h.undt•oa~ mnt•o t o~l ~ ln lllh~t· III'OIIN
Tnouy is' Welinesliuy, July IO,Ih~ 191 sl duy nf'2002 . There
NiveN l'rnm ~creonei'N, In fnct, tht~y were ol' ulrilorl ~ec ut·lly.
ure 174 duys lef'l In the yeur.
.
told
tu uvul\1 lryln~ In ''llt'll'ully onncoul" Scr~llnl!rN fulled In ltn~nvet' knlvoM In
Tuouy's Highlight In l·llstnry :
tho
ltetm.
To pock lhlllt' PIIIIN lnNiend tpnlre thun 70 Jl,ili'Qillll ol' 111m. Thoy
Fnrty yeur• ugo, on .1\lly 10., 1962. the T~lstnr ~nmmunicu­
like u ''lyplcul pnN~enpe 1·, " Ylll. Nc t'O 11• lnl ect t,n dtllovt luke tmtn!J~ In ti() I'!Ot'•
lion&gt; sutellil~ wus luun~heli from Cupe Cunuverul. Flu.
~I'N fulleo tn IJt~t oct ove n nhvlnu~ cenl nl toNio. And lh~y lulle;l 10 M
\mt
On thJ, clute:
WllllllClno In Ill lenNI hull' the leNIN onn• ~Uil~ In ~() llOI'~OI\1 of' IONIN, No lCNN ll~·
In IN50, Vkc·Pre~id~nt Millut'll Flllninre IIS&gt;IIIlWd tlw pre~­
t.lttctel.l 111 three mujnr ttlrpnrt N - qulotln~. inveNtl~uHli'M llllltHI~IlLI In
Jdcncy, following the deuth of Pre•luenl Taylor,
Clnclnnutl. Juckimwlll umll..ttN Vo~us Ne~rotly hnnrd.nlt·lllttllllN ot' ~11111 ~~~~~~N
In IHI.JO, Wyoming hecume th~ 44th slate.
And In '40 perpent nl' leNIN 111 rwn ulr; In lho ult'jlntl 1urm1w In no111'ly ~0 JlUr·
In I() 19, President WI loon per .~nnu lly delivered the Treuty nl'
lOt'" In CuiiFornln - J..ns AnjloleN coni of 1\lNI~ .
.
Vcrsuillcs 10 the Sen111c und urged it' rmlflcution.
nternnllUillll
und
SilCI'IIIIli.lllln
Nnw, Clll110 tho IUIONI IONII' NU ll o MUG·
In 1940, dltring Wnrld Wur II . the ll·hluy Battle nf Bt•ltuln
lnternutlumtl.
!lllMtln~ tluu Necurlly ~crecnltlU huN hlll'il•
hegun us Nazi forces heganallacki ng southern Englund hy nlr.
In i943, U.S: and British l&lt;ll'ces Invaded Sicily.
In 11)51 , unmstke talk' ulmcd ut ending the Knrean cnnl'll ~l
begun ut Kuesung.
·
·
In I973, the Bahumus hecamc indcpendentuflet· three centuries of Elritish ~olnniltl rule .
·
In I'lH2, Pnpe John Pt~ul II munco Al'chblshnp Joseph I
llel'llurdin nf Cin~innuti to swt•ecd the lute Curdl nul Jnh~;
Cody 11' heud of the Ardtdioce•cnf Chicagu,
.
In 11)91 , llnri&gt; N. Yelt.,J ntook 1/le 1•uth of oflkc W•lh~ l'lrsl
elceied prc,ident of the Ru.,Ju n republic.
In t&lt;J9'l, the U.S. wnmen'• 'ncccr lcum won the Wnl'id Cull
hcuting ChitHI ~-4 un penally kicks 111 the l~nse llnwl 1;
Pu~uot:nu, Calif.
' .
Ten year&gt; ago: A federul judge In Miumi ~entenced former
Panamanian leader Munu~l Nol'iegu, ~onvlcte!.i of dru11 und
mckclcenng dJUrges, lo 40 yeurs in jlrisou. A jlldge Inter cui
Noricgu's "Jtllctwc hy I0 years,
·
Fiv~ ycurs a~n: President Clinlllll, visiting Pnlulld, I&lt;Jid
~ hecr111 g Pplcs 111 Wursuw tlllll "never uguin will your f'111e he
decided hy mhers'' following his successful t.Jrfve to hrlng
Poland, Hungary and the l't.ech Repuhllc 11110 NATO lly 1()1)9,
Scientists in London Mtid DNA frnm u Neunderthul ske l ew~
surported a theory lhut all humanity de~ccmoed from 1111
"African Eve" 100,()()() to 200,0&lt;KI years ttgu.
. ,One ye;ll' ago: The Whi_l~ House hacked off a plan In let rciJ,
gtout. gruupt. th;n recetvc ledcntl muncy, such at. the Stllvutlnn
Army. 1~nore local luwo that ~an d.iscriminatiun uguinst guy~
and lesbums. For the 11econd lime 111 11 mnnth 11 jury In New
Y&lt;irk rejected the dcalh penulty for one of the' men convicted
!n the bomhm!ls of two , U.S. cmhn~~~e~ In Afrlcu. nptlllll·
~~~~~cao for life 111.1m~nn wtthoul parule. The Americun L.euj!ue
defcuteo the Natwnul Leagu~. 4-1, in the All -Slur Oume.
· Tnday'• ·Birthduy~: "Mr. Wir.urd" Don Herhert i~ 8!. Former
NBC und ABC New~ C&lt;lrreipllndent D11vio Brinkley I~ 112
Eunice Kenncoy Shriver li HI. Former bo~er Jake LuMoual~
HI. Wrlter-produ~:er l:lurl Hamner Jr. 1~ 79. Former New York
City Mayor Dqvid N. · Dinkln~ iH 75. Bmlldway compoiier
Jerry Herman i~ 69, Director lvun Passer . is 69, Actnr
Lawrence Pressman i• 63. Actor Mills Watij&lt;JJJ is 62. Actor
~ohen Pin~ io 61 . Ro-;k m~oician Jerry Miller (Muhy Or~J!C)
to S'J. Tenn1s player V1rgtn1a Wade is j7, Ac!Dr Rnn Glu~¥ i¥
57. Actrc•• Sue Lyon h 56. f'olk ;lng~r Arlo Guthrie io !~ .
. Country-folk •inger- •ongwrit~r C'herrl Wheeler io SI. Rock
•ingerNeil Tennanl Wet ~h''P Boyij) 1~ 48. Bunjo player Bela
Fleck '" 44. Country (llUMctu~ Hawkslmw Wilfillll iBR~49)1~
42. Rock mu"cmn Pet~::r DtStef'ano IPorn11 for Pyros) is 37. ·
Country Mnger Gary u:Vn~ (i{uocal Flat•) is 32.
'

Joseph

I~ impM ~~I ~In~~ llw
Sltw~ ~~~11 llw S~J11 .

unlil't\'llll't ,nttill
II INtw illllll' ~' '
TSi\ ol1'ldul~ ln'l'" tlwr~ '' mi l'llll~~
1\lt' umht~ nltlt'm: til~ lljlriW\ 111'1 hm~l
0\'~1' I'QNp1111Sihilil}' Jill' lliljlllll \~~lltf1V1
ill 1 1~hrurtry: IIi~ ·'~'"~11111)1 ~y~ll'll\ l~lfl
!!Ill llllJlt't'dnhl&gt;' hl'll~t· h)• lht~ 1111.1 oltli~'
)'~1\ 1',
.
"'fllllt ' ~ llXII~IlY. why Wr '1'1~"~1 Hltl\l~tituiJ
llwsll ti!•t~," ~Hill Mm•l lillllt\ u11 np~n~
~pnkllkpiH'Mlll . "'l\1 ~l'l' wh~t\1 lh~ !''"~
l~tm Ill\'," Sh!! ~llltll lm ll~lli1~Y wllu~
· tlw 1'\lNltli~ Ill lwlp lt'Hlll m~wly hh'l'\.11
s~t'll~twt·~ . llltt, thut'' IHit'tlly u t'tltltl\lrt\1
lli!~IIIINI! mm1~. II' not mo~l. nl' thcj
,11l.O!Mlm Nil •~1'\!1'1\l'l'' Ihi' ll!ll'lWY plllll~
Ill hll'\l h~IWill'll 110\V Utili IIi~ l'tlti ot' II~
YllUI' will ~nnw l'nHntlw t'\ll't'lltll '~1'111'11• •
~I' 11\\lll. 11\l'i\lllilljl '~1'1'1'1\1'1' Ill llill 1.2:
1111\ 01' ult·~~lli'IN III'Ollilll llW ~UIII\li'Y Ihull
l'uil~lllil llli1M olWlllliN WllllpOilN In otiC'
OUI 01' l'lllll' uniJill\!llVIll' lllNIN ,
:
Tlw l'lyllll\ JlHhll~ IM hllitll\ u~kl'tl hll'
lwllllVIl IIHII llll'\1111'1 Nl'~lll'iiV will
lmpt1lVIl 01\~ll llill ' 'SA 1\tlly Itt~~' llV\t~
li'!ll\1 !ll'i I'll II' Nllt'lll'liy 1'11'1 \IN 'It'll II mt•Ihul\''
Nltnply lii' ~\I'Nilllin~ Ill~ i'll'lll~l . l )II~~ 1~\l.i
~I'U I &gt;~\'llt'lty llhWint'o tltr It\ plu~~ 11111ll
nmlm· ult·pot'IN, Otw~ tlw ~~' I'Q~Il~t· ltuw1
I• full~ fll\l~t·uilt~d. llul thult'I'IIHtln• 11~
lw Mlen. ln•l~~~. 10 111' th~ ,12 uh'jlltt'l~
IQNII'U hy lh~ TSA uli'lllilly huw i'~~~~l'ui'
N~~ut·lly \lh'IMill'o on htHU'ti. A111i ~ ~t·c~n ''
~t'M utlho~~ llii'JlUI'Io htul ilfillly tllll.-illllt'
Nlll\lO l'ullut'Q t'lll~ "' ll1o•~ 111 uit'jltll'l•
wlthmtt M~~u t•lly llit'~t· tut·• · Amluttpntl
NQ~~t'lly will r~mulu wo~ l'ully ltttult:\
lJliiiiO until l'~li~rul ol'i'l••lul• u~kuowT•
~dllil th~ nhvlnuM: Thut lit~ pt·~ollll\
N~l'll~ llllt' i'lll'~ll lo IIIII lljl Ill IIW joh Ill
jlt'OIIl~lllll! AmNI~un ult' u·uv~lrt·~ i't 'tll\1
lllll~ tllllll llli'I'OI'I~IN , 'l'hlll lhl'tl' ~~~~~~~ u!.
hu WiJOlf.loltlll IIII'IIOI'Ill' lti llW 'l'l'l'l'l1t'r

Pe1·kins .

l

TODAY IN HISTORY

!

llhun\l tnc~~!'l!li~ let\ t\lr the
1''-cstdcnt tlf the lngh!W•l•lti
lollel! mrtcctK A~~tldtllh:ltl
Wl!f\1
111\l
Jl\llll~dlttll!l)l
fl!llll1\l!tl,
fhc lndtil!l\1 tl~Cllfl'l!d dllt·
111~ il wcckcntllttlllk Nhll} Jlllll
cMt 111' L,,~ Alll!clell
hlh'ftl«lhmol Alrtll\11 ,
A ttlllt'lMI 's vltll!tltlll}l!
~howlltl

Mt)l'~l!

hohth1~

10, 1001

Judicial Watch suing Vice President Cheney
~el Larry I&lt; layman ~aid
Tue~day night In Miami.

MIA,Ml (AI') - Vice
Dick thctlcy 1111d
lhlltbut·h:m C'tl. 1 the oil
clllllpt!ny he tall for five
ycatM, arc being accuMcd or
OI!I!U(II\llng rmud by Q
Wtllchdtll! ljhJUp.
WdNhlnll,toU - baMcd
Judlclut Watch Mnld II
woultl fllll u MhiHchlildct
lttWMUII on Wetlnc!dny
llgaln!l
Cheney . ttnd
lll'll~ltlenl

Messages ,ceking com ·
men! from Cheney and the
While !louse were nol
Immediately returned tale
Tue~day .
"We don't believe thai
there· ~ any merit to this
ca~e . " Halliburton ipukcswomun Zelma IJrund1 suid .
. 'flu! lawsuit , which i '
e~jlectcd
to be · filed
Wednesdtty In fcdcrul ~ourl
In DaiiM. ulso name~ 10 of
Halliburton 's bourd members. Klayrnun suit! uudilor
Arthur Andersen LLP will
also he 11a111cd in the iuwsull.
,
Andersen · spokesman
Patrick Dorton declined to
commcnl.
Under 'Fexas law, Ihe luw sull cun only specify lhul it
seeks damages greater than
$200,000. Judicial Wa1d1 is
seck ill~ fat more .
"We te looking l'nr rnil llon~ of dollan in damages .
We're looking lo hold Vice

lfalllhtll·ftm .

Chcllt'Y lVII! chalrtl\811 t\11d
chief cxccutl vc nf the nil
flclti •KCtVkCM !!,1~111 fttllil
1995 to 2000. llallibuttt\ll
tlllllllUI\ccd on May 28 lhttl
11 tcccl vcd MIICc ftolll the
Sllcutllh!M tlntl Exchtlligc
Ctlmn;l~.~~~~~~ 1h11t 1hc comml!!hllt \\IUM1 hl\Jkll\~ llHtl
lhtlllbutt\JII M dCCOUI111111!
litctltmiM - udoptctlltt 199!!
- ftlt l'ejillttlng Cll!l OVCt•
til liM llll l!tlllMttll~tl011 job~ .
The SHe hll! tllil nlcd ut1y
chttrjjc~
ttguiiiMl
llullllluttml.
Judl~lul Wutch u\lcgc!
tho~e uccounllllg pructlces

\IIIli llttlldtnt biDk Ohlnty

resulted in the overvnluullnn or Halllburlon's· !hare!,
tlccclvltll! tnvc~torM .
"We're sec kill)! ilclllal and
IJLII\Itlvc dutnllgC! fot allegathm! of Mecurllle! fraud,
l'tlr d1lli1L!il1!! accounting
ptncllcc! and ntll advlsl Ill!
the jlUhJic or lhe~C
change!," Judicial Walch
chultman and genera l coun·

Jm:kMilll IIJ hiM 1\!ct, thruwlny
his b1ltiy tmltl.ll cnr, thl!ll Mttik·
lntt him Ill the 1\\~c with o .
1\M~IIult.
dllMctii\Mt. 1'wtllllhcr ol'!kctN
"I will tmt lll\tll!r lillY ~I~'&lt; kll~l'~"'' It\ 11\lct·vctll!, with tll
~UI\l81M~'\'~ tol~fllll' the tYtw lcll~t \l\1c tryln* Ill pull uwny
ul' lionllutit I nh~l'rwd 111 Ihe the 11t'~tnl't'k~· ~ ntnl.
vltlt!tltllflll," -l)mn lllltl· u ljllli~c unl:l ~hctlll" M ot'l'l·
ll"Cklltl t.'lly ltnll 1\t!\VM ~\lll · ~11\IM MUlti the lccl\ lUll~l!d Ill
1\!t'I!IWI!. "In m~ opinion the tlcputli!M nntl WIIM ~tlltl&amp;atlvc,
diMttl\lt nlltH'n~y M ut11~c while the boy'~ 1\llhcr,lhll tlri Mhoultl n~t ."
vet tll' the ~ur 1h111 wn~
M~llnwhlll!, luwycrM 1\Jt Ifl,. lllt)fllllltl1 t~nld hiM KtJI\ ~OOill!t­
YMtonltl Dmllwtm Julikllnn 1.1tci:l nntt. Mtltilc nttn~kctl him
lmtl hiM l'utht!t' 111un ltl UllllttlVokcd . .fhc t'umiiY,'M
nnntlul\\ll! thcla' ltitcnt 1ut11~ u h1wycr, Jtlll llllilkii\M, Mttltlthc
lnw8ult Wctlne8tluy ntthctlltl· lccn IM tlcveloptllctllnll~ til~·
llt'ul llourtlmuMil In tluwnlttwu nhlcli with 1111 nH'I!Mtl'l'col'tl.
\,oil An~llii!M,
The lccl\ wu~ btJokcd 1\.w
t' AS'rLI:l ~OCK. CrlltJ. (M1) - Pedcml
'nlll J1DI1111ltl It hliM ll)ll!lll'tl hl\JcMlll!tllll)ll ut' UMKllllil tltl U
wotkc11t Wlillt ttl leutl Mothct Natul'\1 n
ll \ll\Ji l l'li!htll li\VI!Miit!.lllllll\, lll!ll~l! niH~cr: hiM f\lll11!f WtiM
'rlw
lnQli!WOt\li 'Poll~ll . lll ll!tl 1\Jr tlrlvllt~ with 11 MUM•
lumd Itt he111i11~ the bl~~~:ke11cd lt\tltli1!II!IIIJI!
len hchlntl by tultJmtlo'~ llll'!lc!t wlltlnre.
D~iltlt1m~nt. tim L.n~ Alll!lll~~ lll!ltdl!d ll~llt\MI! ,
(;um\ly M
hl!rltr 1\IIU tllMirl~l 1'hc vltlctl WIIM I'C~OI'tll!il by
Stnnll pllilleK will 8preud flllll·l!to\\llng
lllltJrnay 11lMil llf\1 hwcMillllll, n 1111111 whtl wn" Mlll)'hll! nl 11
rye 1111tl bl!tll!)' ~cctl l)n lhc btllft!n hills
hiM•
111\JIIlll\Cfl\Mli the litl'l'et.
where the wllilllf\1 bu111cd .Jj!!,IXKJ ncres.
11m $24.!! 1t11llluu pint! Is tlcslgncd to prevcrit ertJsltJ11 In the tti'l!u ~outhwcst o(

Pre\ldcnl Cheney and oth ers accuunlahle," Klayman ·
~aid . '"We huvc no luilh in
the Bush udmtlltstrul.ton and
we have no fatlh 111 the
Sccuritic' and r.xchan ge
(' U 111111 i" I0 11 ' '
Ill V C' li !(it
tio11 :·

Judicial Wat ch. u private.
cunscrvulivc ~ roup . has
SLICO lot ~ll'cc '' to re c ord ~
of the Cheney led energ y ·
lusk Ioree that drall ed lite
Bu'h adminl\lral ton \ ene rgy poli cy

•

Th e ~ll qw tiom tlg.ain'l
Cheney l:amc on the ' 11111 C
cluy lhul l'nc"dcnl Hu ' h
~ulled lor lou glwr penall1c'
to fight. th e corporate l:m·
ruptlun . that '"" cngull'cd
several high profile compa- ·
njcs i.n , c~ e.nl llHmlh, .
Buoih him ;l'll flll ' conll'
under critil:tslll for trunsu ~­
liun' he mad e while u direr
lor ul l-lurk co l:ncrg y Corp.
in the curl y l'llJII, . lie Ita'
denied any "'"'ngdotng .

Forest Service announces $24.8
ion .rehab
plan for site of 138,000-acre Colorado wildfire

PBRKINS' VIEW

llmt'l ill

tlt' ll\~f)'

tllll!llllto (ltlli&gt;.'l! lwumhl}' 11nd
thll \lu~tl!r t~t' t&gt;nkcr Jl!fi!I\\Y
Mmu. h\l!h.lWtJotl M11ytw
R\l\ISil\lllltiJt)ftl N~ll\llltlctl by
Mll)'lng thl\tthclll1k'l!t slmultl.
00 t11"1!tl 1111tl chllti!l!tl with

•'

Forei~n
&lt;.:

teen to
suit lnst pollee
. LOS ANOtlLHS tAP) -

O.n Dloktl'lon
Publl•hlr
Chllr*'• Ha.tllch

Page AS

ncctl t&lt;l kccj'i In place thai 80JI we have predou~ little or." l&lt;cnillill said.
Oull!lde Du11111go a ~0-year-old grocery
8tore worker WWI ~lng questioned uller
nllcgcdly setting at lcWit seven small Ore~
nettt her l1omc even WI u73;000-acre wild·
nre bltlle raged nearby.
. ·
Annie Francis Juhnson WWI liiTCsted
Sututduy on· susiJiciOII of rourth-degrec
~nvet.
tU'!Junlsnld Holllsl-loiiUMd, La Plutn County
. tturest Servlt'l! ulllduls htl)lC the jjlll!li!CII sherifl's Jnvestlg11tot. Officials said they
wllll!ttlW lll!tt Mough loptcvcnt ttlln llt!m knew of no motive.
Wl1llliln~ nwny tlm stJJI. On !hitter sutft1Ccs 1
111c t1tsl of the llmll.l l blllles at the D-Bar·
all-tcfftlln vehicle~ will mkc the ~llll und K &amp;ubdlvlslun begUM June 9 Uhd Ole last
pltlllt "()(!(J", which "fmuld sprout u week was klntlll!d July 2. To nght the flame~.
nllcr ~hUitlnl!·
t1rellghtcl'!l diverted resources from the
"It! II 111Ct! 10 ljl!t thl~ done IJc(orc lhe nl'!lt llll'gcr ~lidllre, which Ultimately destroyl!d
big Mlolffi," Maid Kct1 Kenuun, 11 soli !ll!lcn- ~6 llomcs.
tl~llcndlnl! the effort, While mulching cnn
In eastem Arttonn. remaining Jlrenghlbcl!llt this week, hmd lltut will be rtLkcd cl'!l spent 1\tcsday l'llllaltillg l1111d In the
tftU~l 1\l'!lt be 8UI'\'eycd (ot' thOUslilld8 of ~molactlng llltetlot or !hUt sUite's largest
. tlhlhllllllh:ll!l~ullll'tllltuts, he ~nld .
· . t1re, which bumcd across 468,631! llCtes
The 111\\, whillh ~lllfted June li, Willi ~tm· tttul tlll!~ll'tlyl!d 46? htllllt!S , It Willi declllt'ed
utllll!tl 111~1 week 11ner de~ troy Ing 133 C()Mtullled Sunday, .
htlm~~ u11d 11 · bu~lness, l'orcst Servl~e
l"lrel1ghte11 were pl11rttlng grau 1111d
~!ltlployee '1\!rry Bllrton hll!l plcttded int1o- buildl11g dirt bttrtict8 illoHg· the t.Julldoted
lltUTAI.ITY - lfiiiOWOOd , O~llf, , Milyllr RMIIIWIIII Com, 01111·
Cl!llt IO thlll')li!8 lhlll she stllrtcd the f1re,
l1fll lilies i!O Walct WOUld diVert 1\'om the
tor 111ft, II)OIIkll to \hi ffllldlil lf\llldll 11111 ifiUlilWilOd, 011111., City
. 11tc rehu6111tutlol1 pllill could tttke up to btii'C soil Into lll'Cil!l of rernillnlnjj vegetaHAll. Corfl llilld \hill lfliiiiWO!ld I)Oiiell offiOIIf JlllllffiY MOIIII
rour months. 'l1le ljrll!lsetl Were selected Uon. They hopc to lllilsh thelt wotk ill!(ore
~ldOO\ili)IIO lfflilAhiflA 1G•ylliii'Oid 00flll~llfl JiiCkiM'II li!CII ifllll
bt%1ausc tlicy will 110t spruut lle~l yeur, tlie lil\nuill monsoolls blow lmo the siJ!te
11 cor, thllfl atrlkln&amp; him lnlhll f11e11, 81\ould 011 llrlld . 'Tilt uwn·
alluwlnM the 111\111'8 Huturul vegerudon to lrttt!t thlii month.
tillltiofl of thll IMoloont 1\1111 Mt ~111M eoml)illllld, ilfld Corn·
rctui'IJ,
The ~lillie tul11 officials WoiT)' will etode
"Mtltfltjr NliHll\\ tloos u Mlll:itl Job. We just )he llilld, however, Is the besa chance llte·
Olllled for 1110 Wf~ll YJ) Will\ If\ 10 d!lyll, (All)
.
,

r.

Rod Steiger, vvho starred in
'On the Waterfronr and 'In the
Heat Of the Night' dies at 77

town

WILDARE - A well of flame moves along
Interstate 5 near Caigrove Boulevard In .
Santa Clarita, Calif. as a 75-acre brush
fire threatens dozens of homes. (AP)

fighter! have Ia put out hoi ~pots ~till 'moldetlhl( in the interior, said lire •pokc•111an
l'lruce Ptllmer.
" It'~ going to take a gemlc. ~uaking rain
that's spread over several day.•. ~· he suid .
In SWlla Clwila, Culif., u wlldl1re bumed
dungerously clos~ to homee Tuc8day
before Orcflghters were able to get the
blaze under control. AI one JX!Int, 20 hou~­
es were evacuated. Fire oiTiclals !uld the
blllle Wll!l lgnJted by a car along an inter·
state 1111d quickly grew lo 75 ucres.
It was the second brush fire in the l.oli
Angeles suburb in 118 mWJy duy8 . A fire
Monday bumed down one home and dumllged IWo others.

by floodwaters

r.llllkH ,

(,/o,tvplt I'PI'k/11,\ /.1 11 1'11111111111.11 /o1
'1'11~ .~wt OIP/111 ll11/on 'J)•/hmtP 111/tlt•wl
hv
m~t.• /ipt/
o!

.

.ItMPJlh, Pvt·k''''' lilt/"'' '1&gt;-//i,1'IIIII. !

RUSHER'S VIEW

For manY, America remains a nation &lt;under . od' ,:

'

JIAOINO WATIItl - Ftt!d Ma•well slt!i ne~t to the receding
GuadaiUJ:III 111~11r as he takes a break itom cleaning hta flooddamagsd homs ttl New l:ltaunfels, Texa&amp;. Ma~well's home
was heavily damaged WHen the Guadalupl! 11tver raged
through his home. More H11ih 30 Inches of ratn fell in parts ot
south-oentr!ll Tsxli!i duttng thll week, osustng tens of millions
of dollars IH J:ltoJ:Ietty damage. EigHt r;eoJ:IIe Have died . jAP)
Alltor Rod lt11l~r, tlut bf!llfy,
illlf!ll§ll !!~lllr who won th11
AlllldOfflY AW!!rd ll!l bll~l lilltllr
~;~f 108'7 for hit roll! u th11
urtrllllll'lllf\M flllliCII Clhll!f tlf II
§ffl!lli loutllt!rn town in •in
lh!l HIUJt of thli Night,• dlliO
fUIIlidtly, Hll Willi 'f8. (AJI)

UHd rickcd U~ lh~lt mull WI
UAUa ut ihe J1CiAI ot'llcc and
their groccrlc~ ne~t door at
Wh~al~r 'A MercuHIHe. both
bulldirtg~ were ju~t utwvetlie
WUictfiNe,
The high wutet wu~ ull anytJrte wu tulklng about at
Wheelct'~, und the ellchartges
shtJwed u sen~c tj( humm w11s
!lfidUtlrtj(,

"Oh my Ood, I'm drownlrtg," a young woman ~racked
us 8l1e bunt through the door
to get out or s brief thunder~ioHn p~sslng ovetheud.
Ortlciuls Ul the Choke
Ctll1)'1ln Rcsel'\'olr, which the
Frio River feeds into, began
tclt!Ming water 'tuesday from .
the d11m utlls southem end.

lllllfl llli!YIJIJ

on Your Side Every Minute of Every Day.
Wtrt lltrt wiNIII you liNd Ul. Wfrt II tinGle 1C1UtC1 fot ALL

your IMUttnot nMCM:

•1WJ

ljiJtN

. , . . flrotM4II

,

...

Cell me... kip by... H'1 your""*'

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_...

.....,._,___

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�'"

Page A&amp;

n_ai~lys_en_tin_el_ _ _B;;;;;;..y the'Bend
Edwards in concert at Wife leaves hubby for mom

.....
Th.__e

Wednesdly, July 10, 1002

Fur Peace Saturday
BY DAY£ HARRIS
SPECIAL TO THE DAILY SENTINEL

POMEROY - Legendary folk singer
Jonathan Edwards returns to Jorma
Kaukonen's Fur Peace Ranch for a concert on
Saturday at the Fur Peace Station Concert
Hall. .
Fur Poacc· Ranch is located just .off of U.S.
,...-------. 33 north of Pomeroy, off of
County Road 20, on St.
Clair Road:
Edwards is no stranger 10
Southeastern Ohio, as the
Minnesota native auended
Ohio University and has
even recorded Joe Dolce's
''The Ballad of Upsy Daisy"
(also known as Pomeroy
Jail), and. yes, it's the same
EDWARDS
Pomeroy Jail, early in his
career. This will be
Edward's second appearance at the Ranch.
Edwards is best known for his 1971 mega
hit "Sunshine (Go Away Today)." The song
reached top five on the pop charts nationally,
that album al so featured the song "Athens
County."
In 1970, he went into the studio to record
his lirsl solo album. When a song was acci dently erased, he hurried into the studio and
recorded "Sunshine," doing all the harmonics

and nearly all the in~trumental work himself.
The rest tS, us they say; history - a million
seller and instant fume. Edwards went on to
record 13 albums with the likes of Jimmy
Buffett and Emmylou Harris.
,
Edwards got his start touring around the
New England states doing country blues
songs in groups performing under the names
of Headstone Circus, St. James Doorknob and
the Finite Minds, they made an 'album for
Metromcdiii Records under the name of Sugar
Creek.
·
After going solo Edwards toured with the
Allman Brothers Band and B.B. Kmg. Over
the years he has toured with Don McLean (of
American Pie fame), Tom Rush. Jesse Colin·
Young , Steve Folbcrt and AI Stewart. In 1998,
Edwards discovered he was a major star in
The Netherlands, where the audiences knew
the words to all his songs and bought every
CD in sight.
'
Tickets are available at $25 for the conceit.
tickets for the concert and a gourmet dinner
arc also available. for ticket and dinner information call 740-992-7595 or at www.furpeaceranch.com. Tickets are also available at The
Court Street Grill in Pomeroy ar1d at Blue
Eagle Music and Uptown Dog T-shirts in
1
Athens.
Also appearing is special guest Kenny
White.
·

'

AREA AGENCY ON AGING
-,,.
'

:;":. .'

--·

'

- ..·-...

DEAR ABBY: At48 years of age, I finally need your help in figuring this one out. A
year ago, after more than 22 years of marriage. my 58-year-old wife, "Cindy," rx:san
sleeping with her 90-year-old mother. Ctndy
says she does this so she will hear her moth·
er in case she needs help going to the bath·
room.
.
.
Our bedroom doors are side-by-side, and I
can hear her mother clearly from our bedroom. When her mother gets up to go to the
bathroom, I hear Cindy tell her to "go
ahead" and let her know if she needs help.ln
other words, her mother can do this - and
many more things- on her own .
On' the positive side, Cindy may make it '
into the Guinness Book of World Records us
the oldest person still sleeping with her
mother. What do you make of thi~? NEGLECTED IN GEORGIA
DEAR NEGLECTED: You have written
an unusual letter. The answer to your question lies in whatever happened between you
and your wife a year ago that caused her to .
move out of your bedroom and literally go,
"home" to her mother. I recommend some
truth sessions with a marriage counselor to
referee.
.
DEAR ABBY: I have been dating a wonderful man for the past four years and have
no doubt of his love for me - or the belief
that eventually we will be married,
My problem is I'm at the age where most
of my friends and acquaintances are getting
engaged, married and having babies, so naturally the marriage question comes up all the
time .
·
.
· 1 don't mind answering questions like,
"When are you two going to tie the knot?"
However, I need some ideas for a tactful yet forceful- way to answer those rude and
condescending people who ask, "Well. is he
EVER going to marry you?"
.
That question makes me bristle and causes me· to feel defensive when there is noth·
ing to be defensive about. I need a ladylike
reply that will let the offending parties
·understand in no uncerta.in terms that I am

'

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ART /ESSAY WINNERS- Three Meigs Countlans who participated In the Area Agency on Aging
District 7's art show and essay/poetry contest were winners. Bev Codner, seated left, received
three first laces for her paintings titled, "American Goldfinch with Daisies.' "Cape Blanco
Lighthouse," and "Ole Glory." Patrick D. Woods receive a first place on his poem, ·the Hand,"
and not pictured but receiving an award was Dorothy Downie for her writing, "Why?" Seated
front left with the winners Is Patty Pickens, activity director at the Meigs County Senior Center.
and standing iS Sharon Bowman, Community Relations Coordinator for the Area Agency on
Aging District 7. Inc. (Contributed)
·

POMEROY - The Ohio Valley Area
libraries (OVAL) ..of whi'h Meigs is a part, is
offering the workshop. "Introduction to
Fundraising and Development for Nonprofit
Organizations" presented by David S. Guion,
developmenl consultant from Columbus.
The workshop will be held from 10 a.m. to
. ~p. m. on Thursday at the OVAL headquarters
tn Wdl~ton .
:.
Th1s tntroducto"¥ . workshop to fundrats1~g
research, grants wnttng, and development wtll
. provide step by step assistance for a better
understanding of foundations. corporations,
and individual giving. Geared for nonprofit
organizations, the workshop delves into the
intricacies of fund raising on a variety of levels and through various mcahs.
The -workshop will provide the participants
with concrete ideas and strategies for funding
their organitations. Through question and
answer session s and a variety of.handouts, the
presentation will be tailored to the participants' specific needs. providing clarifiCJ!tion
and assistance for specific interests and vary·
ing orga~izational complexities.
Guion, workshop presenter, has worked in
the nonprofit industry since 1986, raising over
$13 'million for a vari~ty of arts organizations
· and educational institutions across the country.
'
Guion received a B.S. in hotel , restaurant
and institutional
management from
Pennsylvania State University. He completed
an M.A. in arl!i cducation/ans administration
from Ohio State University. He is currently
completing his l'h .D. at Ohio State University
. 'in the dcpartmenl of art education/arts policy
and administra(ion.
Anyone interested in learning more about

grant writing and fund raising development
for nonprofit organizations is invited to attend
this workshop. The workshop is free to
MOLO/OVAUSOLO members and is $100
for non members.
The Ohio Valley Area Libraries (OVAL)
Regional Library System provides the library
community of Southern and Appalachian
Ohio with effective and innovative professional and technical training, support services,
leadership, and cooperative opportunities
through collaborative efforts among the members l!,nd other service providers.
For info~mation , contact Jimmie E. Epling,
Director at 740-384-2103 or by e-mail at .
eplingji@o lin.lib.oh.us.
. K. . ~
. nst' Ebhn serves on the OVAL Boar~ a~d
15 a ~cpr~sentauve of Metgs County Dtstnct
Pubhc Ltbrary.

BY BuTCH COOPER
BCOOPERG'MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

ADVICE
taken aback by the phrasing of their ques·
tion. Thanks, Abby. - BRIDE·TO·BE
(EVENTUALLY) rN OXFORD, MISS.
DEAR B-T·B (EVENTUALLY): Reply
with a smile. "When we make the announcement, you' II be among the first to know."
DEAR ABBY: I just read the letter from
"Concerned Grandfather in Seattle."' and I
have to warn him that if he chooses to lie to
his grandson by telling him that his father is
dead, he will only make lhings worse.
. Whether shame or self-involvement was·
the cause. my family kept the truth from me
for 25 years. and it was purely by accident
that I finally found out who my real father is.
Had I not, I'm sure my family would still be
lying to me.
The trust that had been built over my
entire lifetime was shauered in an instant. I
no longer knew who I was or where I was
going.
.
. Eventually I found a degree of freedom in
knowing the truth, but it took a long time
and many dark days to get to that point.
. The_feelings of betrayal by my own fami·
ly still linger eight years later. - PORT·
LAND, ORE., SON
DEAR SON: I believe it. And that's wh.):
I say that honesty is the best policy, even tf
it means opening a can of worms that's difficult or painful to discuss ..
(Pauline Phi/lip.f and her daughter Jeanne
Phillips share the pseudonym Abigail Van
Brmn.
Write · Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.) .

'lomo Vono, Plck-U"'' Tronovoroo • Hord To TuiW Englnoa

. Addlllonlll, 12,000 lllllo/12 Monti! Nollonwldo Wo"onty,
Environmental ,.. Mly Apply
Maintenance
Hral&lt;e
Tune -Up
Special

(Up to, qts. IOW30)

• Rtploce Filte1
• Lub11&lt;01e Ch11~0

I

. Fret vehicle

I

Moinlfnonce lnopettion

I sllgo•

Feed sacks and feed

sack stories

I

•rreon&amp;

· ; Addt.

CHESTER - Remember feed sacks? Did
~~o~s1ggo•
you wear clothes made from feed sacks? Did
your mother put her name on a list to get
·matching feed sacks so she could make a
dress or curtains or pillowcases?
.
Members of the Chester-Shade Historical
Association is planning a display of things
made from feed sacks and stories about feed
sacks for the annual Chester-Shade Days July
19 and 20 at Chester.
•
Those who have feed sacks or items made
from them who are willing to loan them for
display are asked to call Pat Holter, 992-7261
or l'am Schatz, 667-9712.
Anyone with stories are asked to e-mail
them to akfick@frognet.net or send them to
Holter or Schatz. They should be sent no later .
than July 18: Feed sack items are needed by
July 19.

-

Fu••i Injection
Serv1te
...

.

• Install New II • Install New Disc II Re·~~~~~·E~··~·.ooo
Spark Plugs II • so!~a;:r:i~~\:ars 11·
•Inspect Filters,
Trucks &amp; vans ' 11 ·~~~
Belts &amp; Hoses
Additional
I
D~to•
• Other Engine
Inspect Rotors , 11
.
Performance II Turning Included. II .,,,,,,. u.~~ow••,,-.eoupon
Brake lnspedron 1 - 1/ohlclot, , _ w
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WEDNESDAY'S

·HIGHLIGHTS
Goolsby to join
Redmen
baseball
RIO
GRANDE
University of Rio Grande
Head Baseball Coach Bmd
Warnimont knows that year
two of his regime will be a
learning e~perience as he will
have a roster filled with
youth. Among the youth, he
has also signed plenty of talent,
including
Marcus
Goolsby
of Columbus
Becchcroft High School.
Goolsby, an outfielder.
posted some gaudy numbers
~s a senior for the Columbus
school. He hit an eye-pop·
ping .61!1 (42-for-68) with
five home runs and 26 RBI.
Goolsby ripped six doubles
and a pair of triples al)d
swiped II bases, earning
Second Team All-District
honor!&gt;.
He was twice named the
offensive M.ost Valuable
!'layer for Beechcroft and
was selected .to the All-City
team that past two years as
well as All-Central Catholic
League North Division.
"The reason I decided to
attend Rio is because of the
small school atmosphere and
with the baseball program I
feel I can excel," Goolsby
said. ·
Goolsby's talent is not lost
on his new coach .
"Marcus has just a wealth
of potential," Warnimont
said. "His best years are
going to be ahead of him, he
hit .618 in high school which
is almost unheard of."
"He is im extremely athletic player right now but will .
get much better as the years
go on," he added. "He is a
quality young man and will
~ave ~n opportunity to compete as a freshman."
. "He will get some on-field
experience from the outset."

Augusta
National stands
for its privacy

1279 S. Pennsylvania Ave.
Wellston • (740) 384.:.0&amp;08.

.

Wecln•sciiY, July 1o, 2002

Abby

Community Cllendlr 11 publlohed 11 1 free oer- p.m. at 'syracuse Mluton Church, Bridgeman Street.
vtcl to non-profit grou~ wt1hl.na to 1nnounce
LONQ BOTTOM -Jim Blair and the Qospelalres In
mllltnao 1nd 1pect11 evento. The c1tendlr 11 not
cleelgned to promote 11111 or lund-rllttrl ol 1ny concert, 7 p.m. at the Faith Full Qoepel Church, Long
type. llemo ore printed only 11 IPICI permltl lnd Bottom.
connat be guoronteed to be printed 1 apeclllc num·
ber -01 doyl.
MIDDLEPORT - Widows Fellowship, noon at
Middleport Chu•ch of Christ, potluck · luncheon.
Wednt1d1y, July 1o
Members to take either 1andwlchee, salad or .deseert.
LONQ BOTTOM - Joh Elswick will s~ak at 7 p.m.
at Mt. Olive Church near Long Bonom. The,re· will be
811Urdoy, July 13
special singing.
SYRACUSE- Bible study and prayer breakfast, 9:30
a.m. at Syraou•e Presbyterian Church.
Thuradly, July 11
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tu'ppera Plaine VFW meeUng.
RACINE- The famly reunion of Charles and Fannie
Dinner at 6:30 p.m., meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Beaver will.be held al the Star Mill Park Saturday. Bring
POMEROV- Meigs County Qenealoglcal SocietY at a covered dish.
5 p.m. , at Meigs County Museum. Presentation on
8und1y, July 14
.
NaUonal Archives research.
·POMEROY -Burlingham 7230, Modern Woodmen
AmeriCa, annual picnic, 12:30 p.m.at the northbOund
POMEROV - Meigs County Board ol Health meet- of
perk
near Darwin Sunday. Take covered dish and a lawn .
Ing, 5 p.m. In the basement olthe Courthouse Annex,
chair.
Camp to lurnlsh meat, drink and table eervtce.
t 17 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. The Impending environmental health. eanltallon servlcea and nursing aerMondoy, July 15
vtces ratetncreaaee will be di&amp;cu11ed In add~lon to the
POMEAOV -- The T.B. Clinic, 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the
usual and customary bOard of health manera.
Tuppers Plains Fire Departmonl. Reading wl!l be done
on July 17, 4:30 to 5:30p.m. All food handlers are urged
Friday, July 12
. SYRACUSE -Jimmy McKnight wlll be singing at 7 to aHend.

. en.••• Oil

. Page 11

Meigs legion topples·Belpre, 5-3

MEIGS NOTEBOOK
lntroductlo_!ls
to fundraiSing
and development

Gloomy forecast for MLB. Page 82
Tour de France, Page 83

Dear

MEIGS CALENDAR

.... ,

S]

II

l1

II
II
11

ssggo• III sl'Ciooos'g"--;;.
4

-.

Meigs Legion knocks
off Belpre, 5-J
See Butch Cooper's story ... B1

·The Daily Sentinel-

Inside:

_,
.,h

_ NEW YORK (AP) - In a
defiant statement about the Pfi'
vacy of Augusta National;
chairman Hootie Johnson
lashed out at a national
women's group for urging lhe
club to have female members
llefore next year's Masters. .
. The National Council of ·
Women's Organizations, which ·
has about 6 million members
from I60 groups, sent a letter to
Johnson on June 12 after chairwoman Manha Burk . read
reports about Augtista National
not having women among its
300 members.
Johnson said he found lhe
letter to be "offensive and coer·
cive."

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Post 128 American Legion buschall
team got a little vengeance ufter
being swept in a doubleheader at
Belpre Sunday.
The Meigs squad, led by strong
pitching by Nick Merola and-key hits,
defeated Belpre Post 495 at Meigs
High School Tuesday. 5·3.
·
·Merola allowed only four hils. only
one in the first seven innings, struck
oui I0 und allowed only one eurnel:l
run. pitching a complete game.
Meigs broke a 2-alltie in the sixth
inning on a two run single by Merola.
scoring Josh Lynch and Dave

McClure.
McClure. Michuel
Warren und John
Stanley euch went 2for-4 for Meigs (718), us Warren ulso
had a solo home run
in· the first inning
thut gume Meigs u J.
0 lcud.
Meigs added u. run
M•role
in the bottom of the
,
eighth us Merola und
Dustin Gibbs got on base after Belpre
committed u pair of errors wilh two
outs .
Belpre had five errors on the
evening.

Mcrolu scored on u Stunlcy duubh:.
but Gibbs wus out ut I he plutc to end
the inning .
As storms approached the urea
and the thunder begun to make some
noise. the Belpre sq,uad attempted to
make some noise ol their own in the
ninth.
·
With one ou1. Tom Wolfe singled
for Belpre and Scan Wuinwright got
on ufter a bad throw by the pitcher.
Wolfe scored on a husc hit by
Adam Canaday with the ne)l.l 111-bat.
After Meroht s.truck out Casey
Brooks, Belpre loaded the h.ases
when Zach Welch was walked.
Jordun Sampson. though , llcw out
1!1 Gibbs in lett11eld to end the thrcm

and game. ·
Adam Cunuduy &gt;uiTered the loss
for Belpre t6-23 ).
B ~ lpre hud taken a 2-0 lead in the
10p of the fourth a&gt; Jarrod
Morganstern •wrcd on u wild pitch
und Cody Welch came home on a
sacrilke grounder by Cunaday,
Meigs tied the game in their half of
the fol!rth when McClure singled in
Jimmy Smith. · .
Meigs hud been swept in a twinbill
ut Belpre. 9-3 und 11 -4.
Warren had nome runs in · each
game. while Warren und Stanley each
hud two hits in the first game .
Plea.. IM Lqlon, B2

Ifs a midsummer classic alright
The 73rd MLB All-_Star
Game ends in 7-7 tie
MILWAUKEE (AP) - Willie Muys, Hunk Aaron und
Cal Ripken helped baseball begin the night by celebmting
many of its most memorable moments.
By the time the All-Star game ended, the sport had 1moth- ·
er - but one it wants to forget.
Despite Barry Bonds homering and. being robbed by u
spectacular catc~ from Torii Hunter, fans booed and threw
bottle~~ when th~ game was declared a 7-7 tie after II
innings Tuesday night because both teams ran out of pitchers.
"I wunt to take this upponunity to apologize to the funs,"
wmmissioner Bud Selig said. "This is u very regrellablc
situation."
Amid worries about a players' strike and steroids, the
bizarre ending may just have been the first work stoppuge
this season.
"This is terrible . These guys are going on strike and
they're doing this. now'?" fan Tim Dugan nf Chicago said.
"We've been ripped Off."
The sellout•crowd of 41,871 at Miller Park loudly chant·
ed "Let them play!" and "Refun'd!" as Freddy Garcta struck
out Benito Santiago to finish it. A few funs in right field
tossed bottles to protest the decision, which came after
Selig conferred with both managers.
·
Selig. who lives in Milwaukee and formerly run the
Brewers. had hoped the summer .showcase would let base-

Pltele IM Cle11lc, Bl

BAD CALL -Fans In Milwaukee boo the decision to call
the All-Star Game a 7-7 tie after 111nnJngs, {AP)

YOU BUM!- Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants playfully picks up America~ League All·
Star Torll Hunter of the Twins after Hunter's catch robbed Bonds of a home run In the first

Inning of the All-Star Game In Milwaukee on Tuesday. (AP) .

•

.

.

Bengals release WR Darnay Scott, sign Michael Westbrook
"Michael is a proven player who still
tremendous speed. and the factor of
his size L~ somelhing we really like,"
Bel)gitls coach Dick LeBeau said when
the deal was-announced Ia'!! week.
Westbrook said the move to Cincinnati
will be a second chance for him after an
unsatisfying stretch in Washington.
· ''There's two different categories.
There'sapersonal side, thenyilu have my side with football," Westbrook said
"My side with football was disappoint·
ing bec2use I know that I was camp.~
ly underused. You ·can't have me m the
game and throw me the ball once a week.
It was a lillie frustrating for me,"
ha~

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TIIUIMII)I't - .
Allanll II Morii!'MI, I :OS p.m.
PllllldtlpNo 11 N.Y.Moll. 7:10p.m.
Cincinnati 11 Houa!Gn. 1:05 p.m.
Plt111bu~ 11 MllwluiiH, 8:05 p.m.
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. Olkland at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. 'llan-IICIIvttlllld, 7:011 p.m.
Cnlcago Wllllt SOle at Dtlrolt, 7:05 p.m.
Stolll. .l Tampa Bay, 7:15 p.m.
Taxll at MlnnMOII, 1:05 p.m,
Anlnolm at Klneu City, 8:05 p.m.
.
NIIIONILNIIUI~
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Htlton, Coloiado, .341: !Iondo, Bon
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LOa Malill. .011; . . - , CGiarldo, 07;
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PuJoie, St.loul&amp; 21.
.

• PITCHING (tO

Dtolalona~HIIng,

Arilone, 14·3, .82.. , 3.08; RJohnaon,
~. 12-3, .800, 2.47; MocktU&gt;i, - ·
w, .eoo. Ut: Gllvlnt, Alllnll, tt-4, .733.
2.21: - . Now 111r1&lt;. 0-3. :m, 3.t7: ·
OPnz, lot Angolll ' I0-4, .714, 2.81;
JJtMinQa,

c-. ........ us.

• STFIIREOUTS -sohlllng, Arizona. tee:
l\lohniCn, Arl&amp;onl, t71: 8umll1. FlorldL
129: Clement, Chicago. tt5; Oowolt,
Houlton, 113; Morril, St. L()ljl, tOll;
Duclkwoi111, Phl1ldllplila, 103.
• SAVEB-Gip. Lol Angai11, 31:

.Smollz, Alllnll. 3t: ~ ClrGinniU, 21:
MIWIIIIIIftl, PlilllluiQtl, 251 Ntn, San
~nciiCo, 24; JJIIftlnez, c-. 23.

from Page Bl
ball take a one-day .break
from its troubles.
No luck.
And no MVP was picked,
either. Bad timing, too, since
the award was renamed this
.week to honor Ted Williams,
the Hall of Farner who died
Friday.
This was 1he second lie' in
All-Star history, the other
coming in 1961 when it was
stopped by rain.
II also marked the second
time in nine years that an A11Star game finished with fans
booing. In 1993, the crowd at
Camden Yards jeered as AL
manager Cilo. Gaston of
Toronto let Blue Jays closer
Duane Ward wrap ur a 9-3
win while ·Baltimore s Mike
Mussina warmed up in the
bullpen.
.
"The decision was made
·because there were no players left, no pilchers left," ·
Selig said. "This is not the
ending I had ,hoped for. I was
in a no-win situalion."

·.Legion

Wednesd1y, July 10,1001 .

·Zabel leads Tour de France; Armstrong lurking
•
REIMS, France (AP) - would have signed for it right
With Lance Armstrong not away,'' USPS team leader
far off the lead and the moun- Johan Bruyneel said.
,lains still to come, Erik Zabel
T)le USPS team is one of
knows it is far too early to the
favorites
to
win
celebra1e any sort of success. Wedpesday's fourth stage, a
. The German sprint special- 42-mile team time trial from
;ist
rode
through
the Epernay to 1he hisloric town
·Champagne region in the of Chateau·Thierry.
Tuesday's leg took riders
:third stage of the Tour de
·France to finish second 11nd through the World War I bat·
claim the leader's yellow jer- · tleficld of Verdun, where
· sey. He is eight seconds Armstrong won his first Tour
:ahead of Australia's Robbie stage in 1993 - the year he
:McEwen, the winner of captured the world champi: Tuesday's stage.
onship.
Thousands of fans cheered
Armstrong, bidding for a
fourth straight Tour de France. the riders under overcast
;title, was 33ro in the stage skies. In a region that often
·and dropped a spot to fifth honqrs U..S. soldiers who
:qverall, 17 seconds behind died there, many fans waved
· American flags or team jer:the leader.
. · Zabel, who rides for sexs of the USPS riders.
Telekom, took the yellow jer'There are a lot of people in
sey from surprising two-day this region who w()ufd love to
:leader Rubens Bertogliati of see an American win the Tour
: Switzerland. Zabel said again," Alcide Leclerc, 70, of
. · Armstrong's U.S. Postal Verdun, said as he waited for
:service team is a big threat the cyclists to pass.
McEwen won the stage in 4 ·
' entering the team time trial
·Wednesday.
hourS, 13 minutes, 37 sec"We're going to leave the onds, thrusting his fists in the
. champagne tonight for the air as he crossed the line in a
: coaching staff of Telekom. sprint just ahead of Zabel.
: out of respect for tomorrow's Armstrong was part of a pack
· team time trial,'' he said. "No of 185 other riders that
: champagne for me tonight." . clocked the same time as
"U.S. Postal seem to have a McEwen.
Belgian Prime Minister
great chance of. winning the
; time trial, so holaing on to the Guy Verhofstadt, a cycling
· yellow jersey seems uncer- buff who has attended the
: lain," Zabel adaed.
Tour in each of the last 14
~ Armstrong maintained his . years. was on hand in Metz
: strategy of keeping up in the for the start. He expects
flat stages while awaiting the another
victory
by
time trials and mountains. Armstrong.
The 30·year·old Texan
Belgium's Eddy Merckx
. cruised through the wheat holds the 'Tour de France
: fields of easterp France on record of five victories along
· the I 08-mile leg from Metz with three other riders.
.
: to Reims, all part of his plan Merckx, whose son Axel is
IN
CHARGE
Erik
Zabel
bf
Germany
sprints
ahead of the
:10 quicken the pace in the racing this year. won his titles
pack In Salnte-Menehould during the third stage of the Tour .de
: mountains, where he often between 1969 and 1974.
· [eaves rivals behind.
· "I'm not afraid of losing the · France cycling race on Tuesday between Meu and Relms. ea~~"If you. had offere(j me this record," ·he said. "It's not a ern France. Zabel finished second and claimed the leader's
yellow jersey from Swls~ rider Rubens Bertogllatl. (AP)
scenario before the Tour, I problem if it's beaten."
·

Forget Let's play two!' - baseball can't finish one
1

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Ei~ht years
after scuttling a World Senes. Bud
Selig stopped an All-Star game. ·
No winner. no loser. Not even a
player to receive the Most Valuable
Player Award, newly named after Ted
Williams.
Jusl fans cursing al the baseball
commissioner and some throwing
botlles into the outfield.
Selig hoped for a spectacular All·
Star game in the new $400 million
ballpark of his family's Milwaukee
Brewers. Instead, talk of a strike and
steroids was followed by stalemale,
the midsummer classic cut short. perha~s just like this season.
· I feel very badly about it," a
drained-looking Selig said afler
. Tuesday night's 7-7. 11-innin~ tie.
"Frankly, I couldn't feel worse.'
What usually is one of baseball's
best moments ended like a springtraining· game - called because the
teams didn't have any fresh pitchers
left. The logjam ending matched the
status of the angry labor lalks
between players and owners.
Fans knew something was up in the
middle of the II th, when Chuck
Torres bf the commissioner's otlice
brought AL manager Joe Torre across
the field to Selig's box; Selig huddled
for about five minutes with Torre, NL
manager Bob Brenly, umpires. baseball executive vice president Sandy
Alderson and Fox Sports president
Ed Goren.
. With one out' in tbe bottom of the
II th, public-address announcer Rob
Edwards said the game would be
called if i't didn't produce a winner
that inning. A game played for the
fans then ended with angry fans,
"Bud must go!" and "Let them
play!" were amo'ng the non·profane
chants.
.
"They treated it like it was a mean·
ingless game," said David Cuscuna, a
fan from Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
"They're telling the fans this game
doesn't matter. Not" to mention the
$175 face value for tickets. It sends a
lot of bad messages." ·
.
Selig canceled the World Series
during the 1994-95 strike, and might
have to call it off again this year if

players strike to fend off the economchanges he wanls.
Baseball's only previous All-Star
tie was in 196 I. nt Bos1on 's Fenway
Park, when the game was stopped by
rain after nine innings with the score
1-1.
•
But this game was played in a ballpark wilh a relractable roof. open
under a crystal-clear sky.
"In your wildest dreams, •you
would not have conceived that this
game would end in a tie," Selig said.
"As much as I hated to do it, and with
all of 1he reluctance in the world,
given the people here in.the stadium
and the people watching on television, I really. really had no choice at
the end but to end the game at the end
of the lith inning."
While lhe NFL, the NBA and the
NHL manage 10 pull off All-Star
games, baseball is ' unique, because
players cannot re-enter the game and ·
pitchers can't warm up again once
they've left a game.
·
"You feel obviously somewhat
empty because you don't have a decision," Atlanta's Tom Glavine said.
Managers didn '1 want to extend the
final two pitchers, Seaule's Freddy
Garcia and Philadelphia's Vicente
Padilla, who each went two innings.
"The last thing I want lo do is get a
pitcher hurt and send Freddy Garcia
back to Lou Piniellu saying he can't
pitch," Torre said; referring to the
Seattle manager. ':The thing would
have become even worse fllrce in the
l~th inning if we wenl to some
bizarre-type option."
No one really knew what 10 say
after the game ended on such a sour
note.
"It's an unfortunate situation,"
Brenly said. "[. think it's highly
improper to try 10 place a blame on
anybody for !his thing. But it happened."
Baseball rejected allowing pitchers
to return.
"If somebody hurts his arm or ends
his career because of that, then what
WHAT THE HECK? - Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig throws up his arms
would you say?" Selig said.
As they left the stadium, some while talking with the umpires In the 11th Inning of the All-Star Game In
chanting profanely. many fans Mllwuakee on Tuesday. The game was call at the bottom of the Inning with the
score tied at 7.-7.' (AP)
seemed ready to place blame.
IC

While players said they
understood the decision many games in spring training are stopped for the very
same reason -the crowd did
not.
"With everything going on
in baseball, I'm sure the fans
werj: very upset,'' Hunter
said.
It became apparent that a
tie was possible after the top
of the lith w'hen AL manager
Joe Torre, NL manager Bob
Brenly and umpire crew chief
Gerry Davis went over to talk
with Selig in the front row
neKt to the first-base dugout.
At one point during the
five-minute discussion, Selig
threw up his arms.
"I feel bad for Bud," Torre ·
said. "Bob and I had talked.
You can:t have it both ways.
You cant have all the people .
see all the players."
After Luis Castillo flied out
to start the bottom of the
II th, the stadium publicaddress announcer informed
the crowd of the news, saying
a tie would be declared if the
NL didn't score in the bottom
half.
Fans, however, were not

hits for Logan (0·15), including a double.
Jimmy Smith earned the
save.
fromPapBl
Meigs nailed five home
• Also over the weekend, runt in their 20-10 win over
Wellston.
Meigs picked up wins over
Meigs trailed I 0-8 before
Logan and Wellsion.
·
0
Meigs put to~ether a solid sconng I runs in the.bottom
of the seventh.
defensive per. ormance to
Josh Lynch had two
defeat Logan 5-3.
d'
. h
h
John Stanley (1-0) picked
mgers m t e sevent , a
up the win on the mound, grand stamfand a three-run
while recording two RBI at h~mer. to imsh the game
. h I W
· wtth mne RBI.
th e P1a te. MIC
ae
arren
Merola, Warren and Kent
had a pair of hits for Meigs, . Bumpess also had homers for
while [)(;lug Gleich had three

Williams, of moving their to resolve the family feud
father's body from a Florida over the remains, Heer said.
funeral home to the Alcor
Pam Price and Bill Boyles,
Life Extension Foundation in anorneys for Williams' estate.
Scottsdale, Ariz., where bod- di(ln 't return a call seeking
ies are frozen.
comment.
Ferrell says he wants to pre"All versions were consisserve their father's PNA, per- tent that he wanted to be erehap~ to sell it. John Williams mated and his ashes would
has not returned repeated have been spread over the
calls seeking comment.
• Florida Keys," Heer said
The estate lawyers planned from his Cleveland office.
to ask a judge Tuesday or
Ted Williams was an avid
Wednesday to decide if angler who tished the Keys
Williams' body should be ere- for decades. The last major
mated or frozen, a move to try . leaguer to hit .400 in a season,
told why the game would be
halted.
"They lreated it like it was
a meaningless game," said
David . Cuscuna of Fort
Lauderdale, Fla. "They're
telling the fans this game .
doesn't matter. Not to mention the $175 face vulue for
tickets. It sends a lot of bad
messages."
·
Garcia and Vicente Padilla,
who finished for the NL, each
pitched· two innings. All 60
players - including I0 NL
pitchers and nine in the AL
- were used, prompting
Selig to raise the possibilily
of increasing future rosters.
"They made the right decision. It's only a friendly
game,'' Milwaukee shorlslop
Jose Hernandez said. "The
fans weren't expecting that
ending, but they've . got to
understand. I know they want
to see a great game, but
there's no more guys in the
bullpen."
The result left intact the
AL's five-game . winning
streak. The NL leads the
overall series 40-31 - and
now with two ties.
The night got off to an

Meigs, driving in a combined
six runs.
Smith had three hits including a double, while Gibbs
had a pair of doubles and
Stanley had two hits with a
double.
Gibbs (4-1) was the win· ning pitcher, striking out 17
and allowing only two earned
runs.
Meigs plays host to
Parkersburg in a doubleheader Saturday.
·
II Rock Springs
Belpre 000200 001
Molgo 100102 Ol•

-

-

345

592

entertaining and poignant
start.
Aaron, Mays and Ripken
were part of a celebralion that
honored the sport's past.
Then there was a tribule to
Williams, featuring his
friend, Boston shortstop
Nomar Garciaparra, and two
other Red Sox players unveil·
ing the No. 9 painted into left
field to remember the
"Splendid Splinter.''
Baseball also pauseq to
remember St. Louis pitcher
Darryl Kite and Cardinals
broadcaster Jack ·B14ck. Kite's
No. 57 jersey hung in the NL
dugout and Buck's widow
was in attendance.
Bonds' two-ruli shot off the
facade of the second deck
gave the NL a 4-0 lead in the
third. It was fitting the San
Francisco slugger connected
on this night -. he and
Williams· are perhaps the two
greatest left fielders in history.'
·
. "Thjs i~/reat. This is fun," Bonds sat when he left after
three innings. "What they did
wilh the memorable moments
was great."

the former Boston Red Sox
star died Friday in Florida at
age 83. He 'was to be honored
Tuesday night at the All-Star
game in Milwaukee.
Ferrell's husband, Mark,
said Tuesday that Williams'
son first proposed the idea of
freezing the Hall of Farner's
body more than a year ago.
Mark Ferrell also denied
reports that his wife was
estranged from her father. He
suid she had a falling out with
her half brother over what to
do with their father's body.

"He proposed the cryonics
thing to my wife, and she
went nuts and said, 'You're
not going to do it to my dad,'"
he said. "There was no
estrangement between Ted
and his daughter. The
estrangement was caused by
the cryonics issue in June
200 I, and it was caused by
John Henry, not Ted
Williams.".
Williams and his daughter
lived just miles apart but had
not seen each other since
August, Heer said.

Bonds also got a firsthand
look at Hunter, the Minnesota
center fielder known for
astounding catches. ·
. With two outs in the first,
Bonds launched a long drive
to deep right-center field.
Hunter ~lided into tlie gap,
timed h1s leap and reached
far over the fence - his
elbow was way above the 8foot wall - to pull the ball
back into the park.
Bonds, who has 594 career
home runs, and the fans could
hardly believe that ·he'd been
robbed of another shot. As
Hunter came jogging off the
field, Bonds playfully intercepted the Gold Glove winner ih the middle of Ihe field,
hoisted the Twins star with
two hands and put him over
his shoulder.
"He said, 'Hey, good job,'"
Hunter said. "Then he tried to
dunk me, but I wouldn't let
him."
When Hunter came to bat
in the second, Bonds and severa! other. NL stars stood at
lheir positions and watched
the replay on the center-field
video board .

Hunter called it his best
catch ever.
. "I had to go get that,'' he
said.
Lance Berkman, leading
the majors with 29 home runs ..,
and 81 RBls, hit a two-out,
two-run single off Kazuhiro
Sasaki in the seventh inning
that put the NL ahead 7-6.
The Houston outfielder delivered after Byung-Hyun Kim
blew a lead in the top half.
Omar Vizquel, making a
rare appearance at second
base because the AL had five
shortstops on its roster, made
it 7-all with an RBI triple in
the eighth off Giants closer
Robb Nen.

SeeiUr
ulecfit~n~
•
e lhx1tliU
e. ftJindN 1tliU

NOTICE • NOTICE • NOTICE
Edwarda Moving and Rigging Inc. haa been
contracted to move generators, t.urblnea and
transformers Into the Rolling Hilla Power
Plaht In Wilkesville. Roada will be ahut
down along the following route for the
duration of each move. We will be starting
at the Waterloo Coal Terminal on Hwy. 7 N.
We will proceed to Hwy. 124 going west ,
through Rutland Into Wilkesville. At
Wilkesville we will be taking Hwy ·160 north
to the Power Plant. We would appreciate
your patience and cooperation.
MOVING DATE; July 12 and JulylS

I

PICKEN$
·• W.VA.

1·304-773·1113

01..CV-OIO

'CONSECO FINANCE
SERVICING CORP.
Pltilntlft

...,..

VICKIE ROSSITER,
elll.
o.fii'ICI1n11
COURT OF COMMON
Pt,.EAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
In pun1u1nce ot on

Order 01 llle to .MD

directed from aeld
Court In the 1bove
entitled ectlon, t will
expole to 1111 11
publlo auction lin tne
front tiiPI of tha
Metge County court
Houa1 on Thureday,
Auguet 1, 2002 11
11:30 A.M., or e1ld
doiy, lh• following
dllcrtbld 1'811 Illite:
SITUATED IN THE
STATE OF OHIO, IN
THE . COUNTY OF
MEIGS AND IN THE
TOWNSHIP
OF
RUTLAND:
.
BEING
LOT
NUMIER (17), IN/OF
HUTCHISON
SUIDIVISIDN IN THE
TOWNSHIP
OF
RUTLAND,
FRACTION 2, TOWN I
NORTH, FlANGE 14
WEST, AS THE SAM
IS NUMIERED AM
DEUNEATED UPON
.THE RECORDED
PLAT THEREOF, OF
FIECORD IN PLAT
BOOK 4, PAGE 57,
RECORDER'S
OFFICE, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Current Ownere:
VIckie Ro1111er I
Keith Roaelter
PrOJIIriY II: 33184
New L.lml R01d,
Rutland, Ohio 45n5
pp' 11-G0422.000
p r tor
Deed
Reference: Volumt
10

:\&gt;':.~:~=~DA'r.

'

DOWN THE HILL TO
THE PLACE OF
BEGINNING, BEING
THE
SAME
PREMISES
CONVEYED IY
NELLIE KAFIR AND
DANA KARR TO
PHIL.UP
KREISI!IMI!l'ER BY
DEED FIECORDED IN
VOL. t4, PAGE 178
AND 177 OF THE
RECORDS
.OF
DEEDS IN THE
RECORDER'S
OFFICE, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
current owner:
Shall• ~· Partlow
Properly at: 32788
Stitt Route :s:s,
P-omeroy, Ohio 41718
PI&gt; I 14-otl713
Prior
Dead
Relartnce: Volume
Ill, Plge73t
APPFIAISED A'r.

·sa.ooo.oo

RALPH
E.
TRUSSELL.,
Shariff,
Melge
Co~nly, Ohio ·

·Stars' sons trying to make. their own names

(
•U

lnter•tthet you have
In tha p11m laa'1
deecrlbld 11 lollowe:
SIIUIII In lhl
Townet)lp of Oliva.
Melg1 County, Ohio
In Section 8, T. I , R.
11 , BEGINNING In the
center ol the Cou'nty
. Rood leading lrom
Reedavllle to Joppa
ot tht N.E. corner of
lot deellod by Mljor
Reed to Oudloy Field;
thence In e Southerly
direction elong the
e•• , lint ol lha llld
lot o1 Dudley Rood lo
the center

or

1ht

Tow nahlp Flo ed:
thence Eoaterly liang
11ld Tcwnohlp Roed
to tho lnlorae&lt;:llon of
the nld c ounty
Roed : thence In 1
Northweaterly
direction ,long the
center of tha u ld
County Rood to the
piiCI of BEGINNING
ond conlaln lng 1

1cre, mort or leu.

FOR
LAST
SOURC E OF TITLE
SEE 0 .8 . 309, Pg. 131 .
REIMEFI &amp; · LORBEFI of tnt Melgt County,
Co., L..P.A.
Ohio Recorda of
By: Dannie Ralmar Dltdt. P•rcel No. 09·
00025.000'
(Rill. 10031108)
The
Pl elntlll
Jeme1 C. Wrentmoro
raqueala thlt aold
(Rill. 110041771)
Attorntye lor Plalntlll promla11 ba told,
your lnloreat therein
2150 Edl10n Blvd.
lorocloaed end .lor
P.O. loicHI
Twlneburg, Ohio any other rallel 11
·ehtll be (uti end
44017
equlteblo.
(330) 42&amp;-4201
You aro required 10
enewor 'th o uld
(7) 3. 10, 17, 2002
complainI by the .4th
dey . of Sept. or
Public Notice
Judgem e nt
by
Defeult
will
ba
CASE NUMBER
rendered
ogolnt
l
yo~ .
OO..CV·153
K. McCOWN ,
CONSECO FINANCE MAliK
REG.
NO.
SERVICING CORP. AnOAIIIEY 0068743,
FOFI
Pl•lntlfl
PLAINTIFF
KIM MCCLELLAN •k•
KIM MCCLELLAN
3, 10, t7, 24, 2002
AFIMSTRONG, at 11. (7)
(8) 7, 2002
Dalendanll

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
'
In pUrtUiftCI Of In
Order or Slit to me
dlriCtld from aald
Court In the 1bcva
entitled ICIIon, 1 will
upcee to 111e 11
public auction on the
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Police are and no one answered the intercom. on
Jones declined to reveal what Iverson RALPH E.
front 11opa ol the
prepared to arrest Allen Iverson on Tuesday
outside
his
suburban said or how he threntened him. Jones TAUSSELI.,
Metg1 County Court
charges he barged into a home with a Philadelphia mansion.
HOUle on Thurtdly,
said Iverson had a black handgun but did · ~:~~~y, ~~·
Augu1t 1, 2002 11
gun and threatened two men while look·
The 76ers said Tuesday night they had not brandish it. Chitwood refused to
11:00 A.M., or uld
in~ for his wife.
been advised "charges are imminent."
release further details.
REIMER I LORBER
doiy,
the following
Co., L..P.A.
.
· 'We feel there's enough evidence there
"We will continue to support Allen
In 1993 , Iverson was urrested m a ly: · Dennie Rtlmar dlacrlbld 1'811 Hille:
lltu1t1d In thll!
·now to do what we've got to do- arrest while we await the outcome of these pro- Hampton, Vu., bowling alley brawl and (Reg.I003110I)
. Sllte or Ohio, In the
him," said Philadelphia polic~ Lt. ceedings," the statement said.
then- (Rog.
J•meef0048771)
c. Wrentmore county or Malge 1nd
.Michuel Chitwood, who participated in
Iverson's lawyer, Tom Shuttleworth, spent four months: in prison
· before
,
1n th1 Vlll1ge or
·an investigation of the NBA star.
declinecl comment Tuesday. Another Gov. Douglas Wilder gran tea clemency. Attorneya for Plaintiff Mlddllpcrt.
Iaing all ol Lot No.
Police planned to ask the district attor- lawyer for the player, · Lawrence The Virginia Court of Appeals over- 24&amp;0 Edlaon Blvd.,
.
t'
.
1995
P.O.
lox
188
t
d
th
55
11 orlglnllly ·laid
e convtc 10n m
.
Twlneburg, Ohio
: ney Wednesday to approve charges Woodward · Jr., met with police on urne
out
and platted by
In 1997, Iverson pleaded no contest 10 44017
' .against Iverson of aggravated assault and Monday:
Phllllpl Jon11,
"It's inappropriate for a lawyer to a gun charge after police in Richmond, (330) 425-4201
,making terroristic threats. Iverson led
exctptlng 1 11r1p out
;the Philadelphia 76ers to the NBA Finals comment about a pending investigation. Va .. stopped a car in which he was a pas- (7) 3, tO, 11, 2002
of lhl eouthw111 cor·
ner, 2 1111 by 31 IMI.
in 2001, their first appearance in 18 We have confidence in the legal system senger and found a gun belonging to
·
Currant Owner: ·
years.
ani:! we're going to let the process run its Iverson and two marijuana cigarettes. He
Public Nolle•
Kim McCitllln 1k1
If District Attorney Lynne Abraham course," Shuttleworth, of Virginia pleaded no contest to the gun charge, and
Kim McClellan
·
_approves the clutrges, a warrant would Beach, Va., said Tuesday.
a marij uuna-possession charge was SHERIFF'S SALE . Armttrong
Property 11: 344 N.
be issued and lhe Philadelphia guard
One man inside the apartment said the dropped. He was sentenced to probation.
REAL ESTATE
4th
.str111.
would be asked to surrender, police said. basketball star had a gun. Charles Jones,
Middleport, Ohio
Chitwood
said
investigators
initially
CASE
NUMBER
Prosecutor's have not gotten word from 21. who met with police Tuesday, told
48710
OO·CV.015
police about Iverson, the .district attor- reporters Iverson threatened him and were skeptical of the accusutions against
PPt 15..00272.000
the
player.
'
P r i'o r
De 1 d
CONSECO
BA,NK,
ney's office said Tuesday night.
another man in the early hours of July 3.
ReferenceVolume
INC.,
"When
you
lake
their
story
on
the
face
. "When we receive paperwork from the
Iverson is accused of ~oing to the
H, Plfll486
Pl1lnllfl
Police Department, we will review it," · apartment to look for his w1fe, Tawanna, of it, it doesn't seem plausible,''
APPRAISED AT:
•VI•
said Cathie Abookire, a spokeswoman and cousin, Shaun Bowman, who lives Chitwood said. "But as you start to dig in
. 15.000.00
BHEILAM.
·TERMS OF SALE:
·for the district attorney's office.
there. Neither was there, said Jones, who further and further and further, it became PARTLOW, 11 11.,
C1nnot
be told for
Defend
ante
Iverson has not commented publicly, has lived in the apartment since March. clear to us it's true."
1111 than 2/3rda or
COURT OF COMMON lht 1ppralald value.
10% down on d1y of
PLEAS, MEIGS
1111. c1eh or certlllld
COUNTY, OHIO
check, b1lance on
In pllrauanca of an contlrm1tlon or 1111.
ordtr or 1111 to me
E,
directed from tlld Fl A'L PH
TRUSIEL~.
1
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - pounds and his facial features around their All-Star center. don't 'want to get caught up ;~1~{.~n10 1~!n.·~~~ Sherlll, Mllge
_The
younger
Darryl are alm.ost identical to those Strawberry was an All-Star , with . drugs and women expo11 to 111e 1t Counly, Ohio
.Strawberry and Patrick Ewing of his 7-foot father. Last sea- who led the .New York Mets because that causes nothing public 1uctlon on tha
Jr. have dealt with the ques- son, he averaged 13.8 points to the 1986 World Series title, but trouble."
front atepa or the REIMER &amp;' LORBER
lions and the comparisons all and 8.5 rebounds for Marietta and he later won two World
Still, Strawberry cannot ~;~~~ ~~uT:rur~:~~ Co.,L.P.A.
ly; Oennte Reimer
their lives.
(Ga.); which went 28-0 and Series with the New York avoid every. confrontation.
Auguat 1, 2002 11 (RIII.I003110t)
Now, they are trying to out- was ranked No. 13 in USA Yankees.
Occasionally, he becomes 10:30 A.M., of 11id Jam11 c:wrentmore
.grow them.
. .
Today after the regular season
Back then, the fathers rarely the target for other kids who day, the following (RIII.~ni)
Attorney• lor Plaln1111
- Of the 200 parttc1pants ended. He also was named the crossed paths and the sons think they can prove they're cte;~~~0~0':,.~~~ 21110
Edtaon llvd.
:attending this week's Nike defensive player of the year. didn't meet until a basketball better than him - and his REAL
11 TATE P.O. lox He
:All-America
Camp,
So when people watch the tournament last rear in St. dad.
SITUATID IN THE Twlnaburg, Ohio
44017
;Strawberry and Ewing Jr. eas· sons, it's hard to forget the Louis, when Ewmg's father
"They don't try to hurt me, COUNTY OF MIIGI, (330)
421-4201 •
ily have the most distinguish- fathers.
·
was about to testify at the but they know who I am and ~JA~8" ~::N:~~
able names and the toughest
"Some people do that," Gold Club trial in Atlanta.
they know my game," he said. or IALIIIURY AND (7) 3, 10, , 7, 2002 .
:jobs- carving out their own Ewing Jr. said. "I think it hap"At that time hls dad had "I guess tht:Y're trying to MORI
Pu.bllc Notice
:1dentities.
pens with everyone who has a just been in the paper for make me look bad so they can ~~":lf~1'::~Y AI
: ".Sometimes you get those famous parent."
something; I don't really say
they
did
Darryl I'OLLOWI: IT IRING
THI COUAT 01'
;PCOple who want to go after
What makes it tougher 'for remember what, and the kids Strawberry's son or whatev- . A PART OI'.IICTION INCOMMON
PLIAI
.you becaus,e you're .,Darryl these two, though, is that there were trying to rag me er."
NO. I, TOWN 2,
MEIGI COUNTY,
:Strawberry's
son,"
the they're not just carrying on a about it," Ewmg Jr. said. "He
Both have turned out to be ~~~ge J~J':AJ~:
OHIO
•vounger Strawberry said. legacy; they also have the (StrawbeiTY,) came. up to me reasonably good athletes PURCHAII AND
NOTICI 1'1:11'1
r'Sometimes it gets a little burden of living up to the and .said Don't take it too themselves.
IOUNPID
AI
PUIUCAnON
.hard. But you can't do any· name.
·
seriously, it happens to me all
With a summer and a high FOLLOWI;
CAll NO. 02.CV.021
lhing about it. You've got to
Patrick Ewing, who spe
' nt the time."'
school season still to prove THI
IIGINNING
WElT IIDI ON
01'
· ;deal with it."
last season with the Orlando
That's because Strawberry; t~emselves to college coach- THI ROAD LIADING Mlo.aTATE TRUIT, IV
PLAINT., I';
: For Strawberry, 16, and Magic, said his advice is not the father, has been in and out es, Ewin~ has not yet nar- FROM POMIROY TO
va.
;Ewing Jr., 18, the struggle to to."for;Y.
. .
of drug treatment centers and rowed h1s coUege choices, ~~':,~
P~rr HAROLD E. SMtTii,
AKA HAROLD
~rawl out of that long shadow
~e s al~ay~. go~ng to. be courtrooms many times in while
Strawberry
lists IOUTHERL.Y I'ROM
I.
IMITH,
.IR., I!T AL.
o~s · an everrday challenge, Patnck Ewmg, sa1d Ewmg, recent years. He is now serv- Maryland,
Kansas, THI IOUTHEAIT
DII'INDANTI.
:especially g1ven some of the ,the father. '!hat's something ing an IS-month term in a Pepperdine and California as CORNIA 01' A
similarities.
he has 10 adjust to."
Florida prison for a parole his finalists .
TRACT . LATIL.Y Herold . E. Smith,
Strawberry like his father,
Adjusting has been part of violation after being convict·
Wherever they go,. Darryl ~~~~J1; PIM'IR 1111 Harold E. lmlltl,
·is long and l~nky at 6-foot-3, the sons' lifestyles almost ed o~ d~g and solic.itation of Strawberry and Pat Ewing Jr, THINCI RUNNING Jr, will take notice
that on M1roh 14,
.:i72 pounds. He . also plays from the moment their fathers prosutuuon charges 10 1999. know the battle for their own lOUTH ON THE LINE 2002
:baseball at Mater Dei High · burst onto the scene in the
But even in Indianapolis, , identity will continue.
~:a:,~J'."':~
Mid IIIII Trull, IV
:School in Santa Ana, Calif., 19~0s as two of New York's there's no escape for
"My dad tells me 10 stay UP THI HILL TO filed Ita complelnt
:but basketball is his favorite biggest stars.
Strawberry, the son.
positive and to do what I have WHAT
w At 11111nat you In the
Court o Common
·sport. He averaged 12 points
The New · York Knicks
"On the playing field, to do,'' Strawberry said. "He FORMERLY
Pleu of Metga
:Snd 7.0 rebounds last season. made Ewing the first pick of you've gdt to go hard all the wants me to make a name for ~::.J~:':.~H ~~~d County,
0 h Io ,
Ewing, who 'prefe~ to be the 1985 N~Adraft and s~nt . time,'' he said of what he has myself because he messed L.INI NORTH ao requ11ttng the Court
called Pat, is 6·8, we1ghs 213 15 years bUJldmg a franch1se learned. "Off the court, you up."
FElT:
THENCE to termln11e •ny

Aio:

Oldttmue, 111,

HARDWARI!
MABON,

CAll! NUMBER

.
·Police say th,ey have evidence to arrest IVerso n

Attomey: Ted Williams asked in will to be cremated
INVERNESS, Fla. (AP) Ted Williams asked in his will
to be cremated and have his
ashes scattered over his old
fishing grounds in the Florida
Keys, the lawyer for a daughter of the baseball great said
Tuesday.
John Heer, attorney for
Bobby-Jo
Ferrell,
said
lawyers for Ted Williams'
estate told him about the contents of the will. Heer hadn't
seen the will himself.
The daughter has ·accused
her half brother, John Henry

l'uhll&lt; ''~""' In ' '"'"'' "'·[
\001r Rl&amp;t&gt;&lt; to Kno•,lltllom&lt;i K11h1 1" ' ' "'' 11"'•·1

$23,000.00
TERMS OF SALE:
C1nnot bl Sold tor
- - - -- - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - : - - - - - le11 1hln 213rda of
thl lipprtllld Vllue'
on day or ule, c•h
or c•rllfled check,
.
balance on conllrma·
lion
ol ula.
'

\

'

Classic

Wednactay, July 10, 2002

Page 82

Baseball

The Daily Sentinel

AROUND

•

.

..,

Publl ~

Nollce

The . Vlll ege or
Syrecult will hlvt 1
public h11rlng lor lhl
2003 Budget 1t the
VIllage Hell, July 11,
2002, 8:30 p.m.
Sharon S. Cottrill
Cierk·Trollurer
(7) 10

·The Dally
Sentinel

55
In Memory

Josh11a /s(Jiah
Adams
Ju ly 10, 198.l ·
Jw11• 25, 200 I
Pt•rhuf'' wm arr11 'r
rc'mJy w•t

To hm•e tn ,wy ROOtl·
byr ...
P'rhtt(H yon 'vt•
lhmiRht of tltill~ .r
Y0 11 wi \h wm 'd \tiM Wf'll , w hm (' I
f.'o r mu• !hill!( , I 'd
ha vt toiJ yu11
w wnrrv 11hout

me...
wilit rlrr l .orrl

111

I lravtr1 nnw.
You k11tw thar ~ wh ~rc
I'd br.
I'm 1orr_y that y 014 ·,.,
f ulr'I•R .w d,
Fof' 1'11i .ro happy
now...
f'vt mkt'd lhr l.ord lo
ta.'it till' llurr A,Jd

comfort

)'014

10m~how.

It 's hard aflh t
iNRinnlng, Bw I
know you'll mab It
through.. I hope 11
htlp• 10 know

1'hat l :ll ·be waiting
htrl' / or ynu.
Wt lnvt a11d min you,
Josh, on your 19th
birthday
Dad &amp; Mom- Lanny

and Oarc1a Adllllll
:O iltcr, Brother·inlaw-ChriJil &amp; Pete
BrOther· Willie
Ada1111
Nephew &amp; NIeeeDylan &amp; Trc111

OrandJTIII Hope Oral«!

•

�•

•

•

Wedneaday, July 10, 2002

Wedne1day, July 10, 2002

.r
•

flttibune - Sentinel - l\e stet

CLASSIFIED

Polr Mlnloluro Oon&lt;oyo, 2 95 BuiCk Skylark V·6. AUio,
Mlnlaluro Horooo 1740)245· 123,000 mllll
IVC, 1111,
~
P/W, •odlgra1 lntorlor.
Atglltertd
Tennn1ot Run1 gOOd $2000 090.
Wolkor,
1110tiO&lt;I t5 Mo!dl MiliA Hyl 5opd,
ooddlolracklng, 7yr old 72,000 mlleo, oolt lop,
Pftlnl
Mitre
53.000 whlte/blllck lniJrlor New
(304)56H840
pain!, •uno grool
14~00
OBO 17•0)446"2923
Solld blftclc Wtlklng Hor"o tS·1 h11nd1
E!..•otrlenQtKJ 19g5
oonue lntrl l&gt;ld
rkl01, n~o horoo Call allor {740)446·7668
'
~prn (740)370 2820
1998 Ford Ct:mtour. 48 ,000
Twn Aoglollrod 5 yoor old , mlln 1 Owner (740)44r·
O~~rpll , OrRy,
Po1oheon 0101\
Moo01 lor Sale 17401386· - - - - - - - - 9741
2000 foru Cacorl 1•2 ,
20.500 1n11oa. uoraue kopt,
llko now conOII10n, ,,ri(ll no·
gotl,uto, 13041075·6908

We Cover
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can I

In one week With us

Awns

All Otaptay ; 12 Noon 2
au11neu 01y1 Prior !O
Pubtlc1tton
SundiY Ol tpley : 1 100

Sund•v• P•p•r

Thurld•v for Sunde

"

.r

MOBil£ HOM~
I'OM SAUC

YAim SAI,I\•
I'IIMF:IIClY/MIIijH,I&lt;:

Rd.

1'1-li!,IONAI.~ I.
L-------~ 36216

MISU.:I ,I ANI~ llJS
Mi(K(;IIANUL'il'

AI•AifiM.:N'IN
HIR KI:NI'

liCJ\JS&amp;'I
mRib:Nr

Ch•D•

'

2 br. gorogo opt. 41h 11 Ma· Woodworking Equipment'
~
oon 1300, + dop, coli 4·5 LDII lhlln 1 yoar old .•
(740)319·11887
•
pm 304·676·191 1
Moonlight Eacorla.
aarvloa milo and romalt 11•
rmr--~---...,
cort• and dancers Prompt Garage
.
uli·
SPAcE
Zunllh 27" Conlole TV,,
Rnd ProtoooloMiand Conll· Cotdwtti/Ntnoe, 1/4 milo on
iiiiiP;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oj 1071 Tornodo noedl oomo
f1 &gt;M RI:N'l'
$100 aolo, 1740)992·3916 :.
doni lot. Wo aloo do Blrlh· BoohM Rd, Julo 12th &amp;
tiel...
"
work, oloctrlo otove, rofrlgor·
..._ _ _ _ _ _ _pol.
11' 1 "4-~
'
ator, oouchlohlir, air cond,,
JET
day, Polvote ond Bacholor 13tn. wo1ch lor olgno.
S
Porllaa
6pm.
6am.
"--llllifiri\iiiiKiiiiAiiliJ&lt;~..... now bAth tub 11,000 .
I"' ront, $120
AERATION MOTORS
1740)388·1799.
Y• "'I S•l ,l•',•
-,
(304)458·1001
In Mlnorovlllo: Ropolrod, Now &amp; Robullt llf
070
•· •
~"' "
Cobin wllh 2 Loll book ol 1006 Norrlo 14 , 60 Mobile
Mcllng, a/o Steck, Call . Ron Evant, 1•
Why woll? Start mooting ..__,;,l'oir.iil'liiii
.l•ii:AiiMiiiN'illiro
' .,.a
JYcoon Lako, Edomo Troll Homo. 3br. 2baln, aontral
per 800·537-9628,
ONa alngloo !Onlghl, call ran -,
Rd. (740)446· 1360
--------11 ,, 1 1011 &amp; 101 , Will 1111 Gollil&gt;ollo eog 2nd Avu., 4
tree 1·800·766·2623 ext 3 Fomlly Garage Sale. July
oeparatoly. (304)676-7420
bedroom, 2 bath, No POll,
Murray 15 112 hp., 42' cur :
1821
12· 13. 9•5. 1430 Jorry'o
rtloronaoo,
dopooll, "lji~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ mowor llko now $500 '
740 6
1
Run Rd. 5 mllot oil Rl 2
1
-1 125 • .,
(740)949-0027
'
':
DJO
Hugo Yard Sal1, Thou 1and 1
Fl.~ltrtnOtl Requi1•d
OhiO 45631 ,
2019
NIW Haven area 3 br. 1 ba ,.
C.C)()I_,
Murray Small rider mowor, [
ANNIUJNn:MIWIN olltoma. All Cloa.n oncl prl·
08 Clayton 4br. 10M80 on 1 oor gorag,, avoll. Aug. 15
llko now. 10hp., JO" out,
· - - - - - - · ooo marked Thulldoy oM
Cuotomor 8orvlco
Holp wonted oaring IO&lt; tho All 1111111111 odvo~lolng rontod 101 In Clolllpolla Forry. $400, 1 mon, 304·882·3634 40• Wootlnghouoo double . tro bladoo, OMtra ' bello. 1
Friday Only. July 1 t &amp; 12.
Roprooontlllvo,
oldurly, Dorll Group Homo,
Lola modot omoll 28 ,~ 4
ovan otovo, om&amp;ll oven (304)875·3148
\
C· I Sour Carry OtJI pormh 8AM to 3PM. Rl\ln or Shlno. Par,·tlme pollllon at Tht now patlng minimum wage,
In thll new•p•per II
' OoubiiWido In Rutland Nlwly oeooratld. Clrplt, dOll not bake. Htuvaat N!W AND UBI!D 8TEI!L '
tor tale, Chootor Towntlllp, 178 Milton Rd. Camp Con· Dol~ santlntl, Pomeroy. now on Ito: 7am-3pm, 7&amp;m·
oubltollo tho Podorol
&amp;rea. M&amp;ko Oller. 1304)676· Polnl, Etc. 5 roomi/Ball· gold color $75. (740)448· Slael Boomo, Plpo Aol&gt;or ,'
MoiQI coun 1y, aand 1o11era loy. Don't Mill Thlo Onel
Wookdayo Only. Mull bo 6pm, 3pm ·1lpm, 1lpm· Polr Houolng AoiOIIHI 1
mont Rol.&amp; Copooll. No 3715
ot fnloroll 10: Tho Dolly ft!r""-~----.., pooplo orlentod, oomputor 7om, coll740·992•5023.
wnlonmokollttllogot1o
31160
Peto, (304)575·5152
Fal Concreto, Anglo, Chon· '
Sontlnol, PO Box 7211·20, "'"'
AUL'I1CIN ANII
lllarote, ond enJoy working
odYOr11oo "ony
Good utod 14x70 2 bod·
nol, Flat Bar, Stool Grotlng '
Pomoroy, Ohio 45789.
•lJ&lt;:A MAKK~;r
wllh numboro. Send rooumo Poroon to run weeder oator
proflronoo, llmlllllon"'
room Front Kltohon, Only
MOIIIIJIUOMI:S
CJ:PIIIncoo: Rocondltlonod For Drolno, Drlvowaya &amp; :
to: Sentinel CSA, ClO Galllp· tor lawn carl company, Ilk
dtJorlmlnlllon biHdon
J.OR RloNI'
llhlfl, Drv•~•. Rangel, Wallcwav•. L&amp;L Sorlp Mot·'
18086·00 · Call Nikki 740 "
Footer Paronto.
olio 0o11 1 Trlbuno 826 Third lor Jim, (740)802·163e
,.01, color, rollglon, 11,
RolrlgrtiOfl, ~To 00 Dayo olo Open Mondoy, Tuooday, I
Looal Aoonoy In Ohio Mlk• Auction over Frldoy 5:30, Avonuo Clalllpollo
OH
1omlllllollluo"' nollonot 3115·11848.
Cluoronloodl
' Soli Now Wodnooday &amp; Frldoy, 8om·
lng quallllod oouptoo to be· Anglll' Fleomorkll, 333 46531 or drop by Sonilnol URCIENTLY
NEEOEO· origin, orony lnllntlon 10 Mooon Co. Palnllno Rd . 14M70, 2 Bedroom wllh E•· Moyllg Applloncoo, Fronch 4:30pm, Cloood Thuroday, 1
como Footer paronro In Mocnonlo S!. , Pomeroy, Ollloil.
·
p101mo donofl, earn 150 10
moko ony ouoh
112ooro, 1095 14x78, 2br. pondo, All Elootrlo, Noor City Moytog, 740 ·~ 45 • 7705 · Sarurdoy
&amp;
Sunday. 1
Lawranco, Goltlo, JMkoon, Ohio, lor lnlo ORII (740)992·
$80 por wnk IO&lt; 2 or 3
proforonoo, llmllollon 0 ,
2ba .. E•collont Condlllan, l-lcl11r Hoopltol , 1350/mo For Solo: Rooondltlcnod (740)446-7300
1
Melga 1:mtu. There will be 973,.
hour• welkly, Call Blo l.ltt
diiOrlmlnallon."
Owner Flnlnclng. 1418,500. Aenl.
1250
Depolll. w11her1, dryer• and rolrlg· Porlablt Ktnmore Wl\lhor:
8 10 10 lamllleo ohooen 1o
,.,
,
Conooro &amp; . Etoorll, Malo Plaomo Servloo, 7~0· 592·
(304)1582·5840
(74 01 441 •6054
orotoro Thompoono Appll
bucorno port ol ttll pllol
~·AN'I'Ill
and Female, Sorlouo lnqul· 8661
'
• end oryor ool, 1180: Toll!lon ,
~rojoot Oualillod aov•llconll
Ill lillY
rloo Only. (740)709·0071.
Thlo nowopopo• will nol
Now 2003 14•70 3brl2b1h. 1bi. Trellor lor
rent, anoo. 3407 Jaokoon Avo· flooulc rongo, oxolllam ,
7
738
••
Wonled· oortlflod moononle
knowingly oooopt
Only 190&amp;. down &amp; only WILoundry Roomlbr. Largo nua, 130418 6·
8.
oondltlon, Sf60: New· lull '
"
·
moy rooolvo up 10 140 00
Duke Ctoonor, Polnl Ptaoo· with toolo. Willing to work
odvo~loomonll tor 1111 11 03,20/manlh, Call Harold lonood yard, $350, Mo, Goo&lt;l uood Applloncoo, Ao· tlzo monrno 8 box oprlngo• I
por doy rolmburooment. In· Abooluto Top Oollor: U S, MI. Apply 6·3.
Soturdoyo, Ap~y ot Marl·
nlllt whloh loin
' 740·38&amp;·7811.
1360, Oopaolt,, (304)875· oondltloned and Guaran• otlll In l)llltlo, $160: now ;
lorootod
portloo
Call Sliver, Gold Colno, Praol·
than Sorvloo Contor 420
vlollllon ol 1111 llw, Our
5381 (740)882·0202
toed, Woohoro, Oryero, gr111 collootor otllohmonl l
{140)840·0873 Olk lor Rob· 1010, Dlomondo , Gold EXPE RIEENECCEE C ~AAPEN· Wool Main Sl Pomeroy
roodoro 111 noroby
Now Doublowlda on 1 Aoro.
Ronnoo, ond Relrl•~ratoro, lor lawn tractor and olhor
0
9
orr. II you l&gt;ovo provlouoly Ringo, . U.S. Curronoy,. TER N
• MUll hovo Oh
.,
'
lnfoomod lhololl
Clooo to Town. 4 Btdrooml 3 Sodroom, 2 Bath Trollor, Som':. 11011 11 195 .'Ska~go mllcltomo. (740)441·1417 1
cal\od. plenao Cllll again.
M.i.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· a drlvor'l licente &amp; tr1n1·
2 Bath with Game Room. Ctntr•l Air, Rtltrtnoll and
1
ond Avonuo , Gnltlpolta, 7~0· porrnllon. IOOIO &amp; kncwlodgo Wontod : Somoono to do
Gwolllngo odvontood In
(740)446·3384.
Oopoolt roqulrod, No Poll! Af.plta~on, 78 Vlno
t. , Power Whoolo, balltry ap· '
44
Loo&lt;lno 10 Join • Chrlltlon 445·2842 .
al rolldonllol romodollng. HVAC lnotalllng, Muot hovo
tnll nowopoperoro
17401311·015t, 1140)311· I 40 1 8- 7396
orolod J11p, BMX Chromo
Bond {motot) , Con ploy gul·
Ouollllod oppttoanll oan good Tranoportatlon and
"!~~lbll •,r:._•n oquol
No Crldlll Govornmonl 9770,
Mollohan Carpol, 202 Clork S&lt;lootaro
8"
d!&amp;mllor
uu and •omo plano. Alto
plok up an a6plloatlon at Good with people. Will Start ._..•..,••P•;;~;;";;;"';;o,;''b;;;";;;'•"-• Loant, On~ 3 Ltlt. Mobile homt lor rent, no Chaptf Road, Porter, Ohio. wh ..IJ, Qllltl on handle
looking to otorl • Bond. ~j~·
Chrllllon'o
onotruollon, out port limo and work to·
&lt; 740 ) 4 ~ 8 • 367 '
poll, ~
2-8
1140)448·7444 1-877-830· bill BMX bike opoclallzod
&gt;erearod 0111 174 01 44 1-1
'
1~03 Eootorn Avo, Galllpo· . wordo Fullllmo. lllntorootod 1000 Modular on 2 112 Prolorrod Loono with Inter·
0182. Froo Eotlmoteo, Eaoy 20'. Blko Olomond Back 24'
Ill .
Open
8·5
M·F, plooot aall 1140)441·1238, aoroo ol land on lull ball• 111 Rotoo 11 low 11 8.75% Tokl" Appllcotlono lor o ttnonclng, 00 dayo oamo 11 21-tpoodo, 1304)678·8894
Alk lor JotQPh.
Notlcol Carl Mollhow Coop· 110 lbl.l' WAN"Ila&gt;
(740) 448·461 4
Loavo moooogolf na1 homo, mont. 3 Bodroomo, living with Land Homo Purohooo, Rllrlod Coupll fora 2 Bod· oaoh, Vital M11tor Cord.
·
or will nor bt rooponolblo lor
.. ~ 't
p 11
J b •
•
room. fomlly room wllh llro· (740)448·3093.
room Trallor In Country. Nc Orlvo· ,, 111111 oavo elot,
Sllvor Puncn Bowl, Tower,
.. ov
at I
o '
BUSINt:\'1
piOoo, dining room, u11111y
Polo. Dopo~t Roqulrod.
Elghl Cupo, Novar Ulld,
any dobll olnor lhon my
$18 .35/nr. Pooolblo, Frn
TMAINJNC;
room kltohon with now,..
SummorCioeranco
(140)245·9212
Now and Uood Purnllu'ro ,,~~. (140)606·1282
own.1·8·02
'Clav·t Polloi Jobo'
Coli tor AppLIExam Info.
lrlgorelor &amp; otovo, 2 lull ~lllo1 ma&lt;lolo mull J)O, 2003
Store movod to 130 Bull· Sloopor oofo montho old
$18.36/hr pooolblo Fro• 0011 Federal Hlro Full bonollll.
btlho, hoot pUmp, doubll modolo en lhl way, Btll
APAKJMEM"N
VIlli P.lko. Stoll nouro 10•3. paid 1750 wlilooll half prloo:
. , . . - - - - - - . , fo( appllcallonloxnm lnlo, 1·800·8~2 · 2128 E•t. 80
Clolllpollo c - r Collogo car garago, 1 20'x20' oddl· tlmo to buy II I"&lt;)W. Many
Mon-SII. Call lor dlroollono 1740)949·2681 anor 4pm, .
G
Fedtrol nlro, lulllloneiHa, 1·
.
C
· tCor0&lt;1ro Clo" To Home) llonal garage, above ground homoo yot 10 ohooll !rom,
~OIIav"' I
(740)446·4782
5
lVI•:.\WAY
• 800·842-2128 txt 80
~=~~w~~~umo"i~~ CLA ~~~~ 011 ~~~~~.::2:ri:g2:36 1 , 3EOII. pooL with now dtok .. don't dolay, wo'ro moving
Wood dining room tablo + Tanning Bod, Sunquoot 1
·------·
"llloroooroh"
olo Golllpolto Colly Tllbuno, , Rea N90 •05 • 1274 B.
aotom ""hool 0lt1rlo1 on thom out.
1 and 2 bedroom aport· ohalro· ohalro havo gold up· year old. 1700. OBO. Mull
Single Story houoe 10 ttar "Singoll &amp; Vecol Clroupo, 825 Third Avo., Golllpollo,
Flllwoa&lt;lo Rood ; Pomoroy.
CoiHMoblll Homoo
monto, lurnlohod and unfu•··holotory good oondlllon, ooll duo lo no room, ·
down lor Free Lumber. All Sty ill &amp; Agee' Noohvllto On 4&amp;631
j11U M·~~·"JANvno ~.
740·992·7729
11!2158
nlohod, ooourliy dopo~l II· t200 OB0. (140)245·8259 1304)195•3045
304)882 3856
A
d E 1 S kl N
·~,.
w~•
U.S, II() eoo1 Alhono, Ohio qulrod, no poto, 740·002·
Wotorltne Spoolol· 314 aOQ
•
ocor ' 10 ' 01 ng ow Coko Doooralor oxporl•
2 bedroom houllln Pomor·
Phono 740·5t2·1072
2218.
•
Relrlgoralor, 105, Rolrigtro· PSI$21 .00 p11 100: I' 2o&lt;i
"""
l~llo'l' ANII
TniOnl Coming To Hunung· once prelerrod, day ohllt,
oy, will 1111 on land oonlrool
101· Uko Now, Now Com· PSI 135 00 Por 100· AU
FotiNI&gt;
•on. wv, 1731 1 424 "~ 22 ' lull or part limo, pick up op- 36' Storm dooo oomploto or will ront wllh opllan to Uood Homot. Down Poy• 1 Bedroom Aparlmonlo preooor, $311(). Now MO&lt;III eraoo Comprooolon Fl!ilngo .
731
42
14
•--oioitiiiitiiio_ _.. 1 1 4-2 1.
pl~ollon 01 DO Mlddllpon, with ocroono end hordworo buy, 740·6118·7244
monlo 11 low u 1990, Slorllng 11 1280/mo, Wol.h· Hotpolnt Wuhor, 1175. In Stook .
A ITAAIIAACH
150. ~ Snuuoro 64" long
(740)446·3218,
or/Oryor Hookup, SIOYO and Llko Now Ktnmoro Oryor, RON IVANI INTIAPRII·
Found !I aot or 1cey1 111 W.H. ' Singoro &amp; Voool Groupo, Cuhlor too oonvtnllnoo l10. (740)445·4168
2 Slary Houoo, 4 Bldroomo, wo •avo opproxlmatolu 10 A1!1''olgorotor.
(740)441· 1150, Moglo Chol Eloclrlo I I Jockoon, OhiO; 1·800· ,
Butter Boal Ftamp, below
1tore, ·111.ptrlenoe required,
Corner Lot In Vinton. Good
"
,
R
AI
d 1 175
11
11111u 111 &amp; agtl"
Euroka. 1740)441-9439
Natll'llll~ Aoocrd Exoot (7401902·6542
Blookborrlu
You plok. lnvootmonl
Property, uood nomoo lor undor
·
ango,
mon ,
· 637-0628
•
Frlondl Rldgo 112 gallon (740)388 g754
S2,000, 0111 1•6Q0.837·3238 2 Bedroom Aporlmont on Rt Sklggo App!loncll,. 78 Vlno
.'
111
Loot· Blook/Whlll Chlhuo·
~~~ n~~n~~~~~~o;lng Homo Health Agency hiring (740)2k· 1145. Ltavo mo.:
•.
lor lnlo,
150 Juol pul Holzor 1-loopl· Stroot
huo, ·cnrco', Buak Rldgo
~ •424 •22 0
FT RN. Apply 11 3084 SA oago
2 otory on nlco olzo lot In
Ill. 1400/mo,. Oopoolt AI· 1
BUIIJJING
13
Alii .
.(740)388·g028,
131-424-2141
. 180, Galllpollo, OH or pnono .
Choolor, 3 br. , bl1h, kllchon,
qulrod, (740)441-1510,
.
A-All""
Stn~UI:S
{740)445·3751 .'Aoword'
-=~-==~-- toll troo 11 688·4~1 · 1303.
living room. bllll!)ont, prloo
,
""'"' ..,
AMERICORPSIVISTA
II · Compolttlvo wagoo with
,..,•N'J~•
roduooo, mort lnlo oall
2 btdrOllm oparlmont, " - - - - - - - ·
Thurman oroo "Vollow·Whito nOidod 10 oorvo In Maoon bonofito.
.
·~ "'~&gt;
(740)118613022
1boii1·Cioll Slolton, Chotlor, '
Bleck, brlok, oowtr plpoo,'
1, " '
30 acroo noor Rocooon Oh, 1276 por monlh, Buy or ooll, Rlvorlno Anll· wlndowo, llnlolo, olo. Claudo;
oar Hoad and Tall onavod,
noodo mtdlolno. {740j441 · County. Thlo poroon wlll .bo Jowolry
Sllooporoon
3 bedroom hou11· oom· Pork, 32•40 blook gorago, (740)1182·0221.
.
quoo, IIZ4 eaot Moln on Wln11ro, Rio Gronao , OH•
1111?"'d 1 ~ worll with both Frllndly, Main roqulrod:
0538 or (740)882-6061 .
·
plotoly romodolod, 2 lull good hunllng, 150,000,
SA 124
Pomeroy, 140·, C 1174 · 4 • 1
_.
tho. counly' and tho W~ . Bonolllo, 'Full Tlmo tmm~- All Mokoo Lown Moworo ba1no, new oak ooblnl1o, (740)379-0287
Aporlmonl Calllgo lor Ront. ot2·2525. Ruoo Moore,
Coperrmonl ol Educotlon' 111 Opening. Apply 11 Ao• and Ouldoor Pawor Equip· l\ltrythlng new. Conlrll llr
I I
C
1260,
Llncafn
Avo, ownor,
.
11!1!"_"\'"_,__ _., WV GEAR UP Project coor· qulolllono, 151 2nd Avo., monl Ropllrod , FriO Plol&lt;up &amp; hoat, lull baoomont Loto ~ Aorn, U mloo rom lty (304)876·5640 or (304)675·
flliC"l!AI .~
dlnotoro. MoJor rllponolbiN• CloiiJpollo. No phono Cillo ond Ullvory ovalloD!o. Call of porohoo &amp; docko, Now limit on H8, (740)445-D01 8 4024 Ilk for Nancy
Suo'o Soloctablll on lhl.,.. ·------~
YAKI&gt;SAL~
tloo lnoludo tho rocrullmonl ploooo.
•
Mlk1(740)440·76()4.
llpl~oyotom, 1 oor~arogo,
In 1
::;:;::;:::~ and ocordlnollon ol volun·
ocra moro 01 111 • 6.0 ocroo, In-ground pool, IIAUTI"UL
APA- ·
' CFA Ro~otorod Hlmala~an ,
1
112
~e·s
- ' Cl NnIng w11"" No.. , mlllo
•
' • now 11•-,
~·~,
"'' wlro,
' ond Kltleno. oll(1'0"4"·3
IIIII to IIol II ,.
~" UP McCiuro't Rootourant now Cor,..
from HMC (740)24'·
·~ di"lng
•
· • OO"•
• MINTI cA• IU~IT Pill
' ,.. • 88
P J
1
d bJ
Sl
Powd
Shl
·
• or, rlvor vlow,J:'"' now
''
""'
• moro.
YANUSAI.JI,
10101 goeo en a ••· hlrlngall31ool11ono,lullbr
oam,
oro or
m· 1!084
homoolto, 7, • • ••3.,.
011 AT ~ACKION 1'"
va·rko"lre "'''''''' 1· moJo,
~ • • •
TATII 62 Willwood o~vo
•
"
•
llvot Ouollfloollono: Bocho· porl·llmo, p~k up oppllco· pool Orin In 1 nour, Guor·
GAI.I.II'Ili.L~
lor'o Oegroo (prororrod but lion at lecatlon &amp; Dring bock ont11d Rooulltl Cltlrly 3 bedroom nowl( roma&lt;l· Form lor 1111• pond: Darn, Jrom i2t 7 10 1383, Wolk 10
• 1omoloo, molhar, lalhor 011
"--llliiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiooo_.. not roqulrld) In oom,.,nlca· Dllwoon
0:30am
,&amp; Cloan . 1304)876·40~0 or llod, In Mlddlopor , aall Tom horoo 111111 , oorn orlb, o11op &amp; movln, Coli 740·
p~o~l•~;i r 111 ba • ~:~·
Andorocn
11111
5pm, 14, 70 mobllo homo, o/a, 4 ~ 8 • 2558 . Equal Houolng
r •~
·
w
11rh·l2lh big 3:1emlly ·01 . llono, llchnology, ooolal I O:OOam, Monday lhru Sat· 13041075·0022
rago " "· Clornlng, boby· work, or oducollon ond -'ur_U:'y::-:
. :::-:::::::-::-:-:~::-:-:- Chrlotlan lady would love lc (7ol0)1182·3348.
Molr Counly, 17~0)7~2· · Oppor~un{iy,
P1850,
,_.}1~~·~1~~nd
.
174FOorgod2; 003
M
.·
II
I ld et.otht toal 1I knowledgl Ol lhe county lo -1\lii1V'
~
)fi
omo, 0 ·w ·• •
' be "'"'d Mutt provide
OPININCIIN IOCIAL
Clrt lor lldtr~n 1n11r 3 Sodroom with gorago 011 252
.
.
ColuMO, 2 •bedroom town· 71580
UNICAI.
br/.d'('· eto55~ mllll eaot own tronop(,lallon· PlY In·
IIIIV!t"ll
nomo. (740)368·
5
oppro•lmaloly I ooro On HorN larm, 23 ICIII, mil, houoo, noar Holllr, 1389
INPII11UMI:N'Ili
0
or or on
'
cludn llvl.g ond iduaol)on Thlo lo alull•llmo poolllon In Goorgoo Porllblo sowmlll, Rou11 2, Galllpollo Forry,. trailer, barn, oul bulldlngo, por monlh, Loooo &amp; dopooll A1 Top Soli, Fill Dirt '"'
,
Dllnoo, vtrlouo mlot. 6 otlpond and hoolln lnour· long•torm h•lllh 0111. An don't haul rcur logo·IO lho (304)578·5332
ilnood, IIPIIIII lrollor roqulrod, (740)~40·2067
Solo. Equlpmonl Ronlol, Suzuki Plana, Fully Digital;
mlloo lrom Ho!zor Hoopllal once. Applloonl muot bo LSW lo prolorrod , butln llou mill Juot cal 304·5111-1 951. Brand now homo• lmmodl• opooo, aurroniiY ronlld, Cllllll Mll"&lt;)l Aparlmonto ColOr, !•ckhooE, Bobcal Soli Oflor. Rooon Frank II
on 150 lurn loll Amby Leno willing lo lrovol notionally ol a lloonoo, oxporlonco will
.
llo poooooolon· 1500 oq 11 ICI7K, (740)742·1110 IOIVI 138 muhl Morlan ad,, ~.,; ocrapor, ,raor"' qulpmont (740)448·2840
' and throughoul WV. Sond bl ooneldorod. ~rovldlng HouNholpor
available: 1 112 10111 on qulol Rd
molllgo,
ll·""'lo~N- ......,"ng A;:.ll· (7o10)441o0818
,
3rd houoo on rlghl,
I \H \ 1 '-I I 1' 1'1 II \
:;-:;====~-::-~ name, lddrell, phon• num• qulllty Clrl lor our reef. Once, OCCIIIOMII, regut•r. BR 2 112 r
k "b
!'"'!
vn IWW•~·
,..,..
Cllgonllo Indoor ·Air Condl· btr, r11umo, 3 roforoncoo denio It our morn ooncorn. Cloanlng, cooking, pocking , lnotry 11 j~:if..''rg"~,,:.~ Lot far Silo· ApprOI&lt;, 2 112 cotlono lor I 1 Sodroom, Affordoblo • Convonlonl
t&lt;. I 1\ I "' ll U ''
2
tlanoo Yard Sail Freazoro, to· wv GEAR UP Projocr, Wo are looking lor oom,.ne moving. Whlll\lll noodo wl panlry.
Po; ; oroo. ooroo, oloarod &amp; roody for HUD~ Sublldllod AD1rrmon1 WOL, TANNING IIDI
11
Dryer, Coon Rogto!lr, LOll Holmer Prooco, Mllon wllo "'"" lhooo "''""· If doing, Honoot, rolltblo. li 10 000 {740)445·451~ 1111 building, gravol driveway, '"' ~ldOrly lnd Hond~lj)o I.Dw Monlhly lnvoctlmonlt
FAIIM
ol dllhll . Mtoc, CIOihll, Counly Schoolo, I John you art 1ha1 poroon, Pillll 17oi0)44CI·7504
Opm' ,j0)~ •
ll1tr Willi &amp; tiOCir~ IVOIIIblo , pod, (7oi0)~46•4CI39. Equol
Homo Dlllvory
v
45
3246
17
Somotnlng for Evoryono Morehall Woy, Polnl Pilot· apply 11:
h
'
Parlor
aroa.
Aoklng 1-iauolng Opporlunliy,
P~ll Col01 Callloo
"--tlri"!:QIJiliiliiii'Miiiiirxilriooo~
F•lday and Soourdl~ ;. ~ . ont WV 25650 Poormo;k Holzor SoniOr Caro Conlor Will prouuro woo houllt, 6prn.
113,89&amp;, Call 17~0)445·
Coli Todoy 1·6Q0.711o0'158 ,
· ~
'
'
' "'
,~c-•onrotDr
lrallerJ, 1nd dtolca. Call
..
.. " ...
wwwnpetltlncom
·
Oid 'Trodln rull 1n """ ' doodllno. July ,0, .002. An
Bld-woii, ~Ohlo ··~ ·14
·
' '
·
' Ford 800 Troctor, llvo POW·.
441 •4238 aok· for Ron or Country Homo wllh 11 ·112 ~u141rom 5·5 "' (7...,)1....OH
Equol Opporrunlty Emoloy·
3/~b
2b1 2 Ca
3248ahor "'""·
Clroolouo living. I and 2 C
,,, now llroo, Nlco
1
An Equol Opporlunlty
llovo motoogo.
'
acru
'
"
r·
..,...
boclroom lplrlmtnll at VII· .B. Equlpmonl; 15ft Bolvo·
Jury 13, 2002 goo ro 3 oo "
Employer.
~=~~~~r.~t Y~:~ ~; Moton Co, 1 Aero Lot, City logo Monor ond Rlvor~da doro, Bluo, All Numboro g)f:!ght 14•000· 1304167~·
851 Jookoon Plkl, Golllpo· AVONI ~II Aroaol To Bu:roor
nOlo. ~~ , -n B""•n R". wator, Eloclrlo, povod rd. Aparlmonll In Mlddloporl MaJOh, Chromo Flollbar lor -:--::----:---.,
• lq un. Home In• ...
a.II. Snlrlly Spoaro,
~ " Ownor llnonclng, I 25,000. Flom 1218-1345. Coli 740·. Small Plck·up, (740)388· John
·
lit, 0 1'1 . ~nt
4· Ptll.l Pkrolooklng lor.,.,..
(304)466·1050
Oooro troctor 44&amp;, 2i,
llrlor. Pony Saddlo, Pod, 578·1420,
rllncod COOkl ond drlvoll.
(304)1152·5840
882·600~ . Equal Houolng 0169
Hp, wl mowor dock. bla.. •
Brldlo, Sliding Glooo Doore,
(740"48 0088
"lji~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Houoo In Gllllpoilo. 10 IJtl.
OJ)IIorlunlillo,
.
COOL DOWN·, Contra! Air cor!&amp; IWIIPII onlo 300 hr.::.
Loll of mloc. ltlml and
c •
r"lo
BUHII'IF.Iill
monl Orlvo, 7 Aoomo, 41R.
15800 304· 70 '4721
muon maro. All prlcod 10 go. COL Drlvor Noodod lor PT Houookttrr Doolrod •
n..~.f\IN~
2 ""' 2 112 8olho, Full
Now Taking AQplloallono- Condlilonoro and ~tal· 304 87
4-6 '
"'
. ,
Trolll Coiltollon. Mull hovo houro dolly/
doyl por '
..,...,,.
"•
• B
1 Lo
L 1
35 WoOl 211odroom Town• Pumpo, II r,ou don'l coli uo
• 0·4248.
•
Moving OUI lllo•Largo 1111 IMPtrlonco driving top Wllk. For I Confldl!lilllln•
(7~~~~350 rgo
0 , r1U
flouJrJl
houll Aporlmtnlo lncludoo W. bolh 011, Ftll ~Ill·
W .
118&amp;0 S!. Rt 1 South noor holyY lluoki, PII\IIOUI b · llrvlow, Coll(304)273·882~
INOI'ICII
I'OR RJIN'r
Wllor
Sowa ' ~ h 1111111. (1ol0)448-6308 lnd
ANil'JJ .
Cloy SchooJ, Boonll baby porlonco Orlvtng Cl.orbag1
OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH· Houooln Mllldltporl: 3 bod· ..,_ _itiiiiiiiii;..P 1380/Mo., 740·4j;:oorf:' ' I o800·2ii.Q0118.
.
•
'Ill Ill!\'
ootiiC!Ion, c l o l -'1 Trucoo o pluo. 1140)388·
Wyn)IOM a! Qllllpolla
lNG
rocommondo lhll room , quill Olroof. oornor
a."
F
0 1100' PI
Til
'
· p&lt;uo .oJroo, mon'o, and Cfllld· Q8l5ft
Wyngolo o1 Gllllj)OIII our· you dO buolnooa with poopro lot, 2 car gorer· mull 111 1 •3 ....roomo orocloNd Pllloonl Volloy ADtnmonl FI~Ptllr:. p~;J;m,r"''N"ood wonlld 10 Buy: Ulod. Mo;
rono. CroH ouppry Homo,
ron!ly hal a poolllon avollo· ~·knew, lnd NOT 10 ilnd lo 1pproclato
7~0·1182· HorMo From 11011/Mo., 4% Aro liking AIIPIIcoilono\-lor ... ....7
p
bill Homo
11 ~~;)
loyo, bat!&lt;l11, Uno. houll- Fuii·Timo Pooltlon. Excol· blo '"'' porl·llmo oooil. Tho ;.;Q;,.y lhrough tho mall unlll 2619
.
Oown, 30 Vtlrl II 8.6% 2BFI 3IA ' 411FI AppiJco. '"'Ill '·~ lono Or, 025 01 , I
""44CI•
304
575
7
4526
woroo. mloo. July 12· 13 lonl Pay tor IMPtrloncod quollllod 01ndldoll J111111 bl YCIU hovo lnvolllgolld lha
APFI . For Ulllngo, 500·319· 11oni aro Itkin MOnd.y lhru 11).4481 1 "
·
Rocktprlngo
Thull July 1 tlh &amp; Frl July
Full 12th

CNA'S a R!SID!NT
ASSISTANTS
lnlorvlewt Are Now Btlng
Cooductod lor
CNA &amp; R11ident A111111nt
Poolllona 11 YOu Art A Cor·
lng, Enlnuolullc , Oapondo·
blo Peroon, Then We Want
Ycu To Join Our Tlftm
como On Over &amp; Check
ua Cull YOu'll Ba Glod YOu
Dldt compellllve CNA WID·
eo, Paid Vaoatloni, Pafd
Meolo Many Olhor Benolllo
Rnvnowood Cora Contor

~.3!~~~~g:o~~t

1!1111'""------,

IIICIIITIR!D .
SONOQIIAPHIII
Abdominal Soncgraphtr,
rogllttrod orreglotry ollgl·
bit
lor olull limo or part limo
pooltlon, In an outpollonl dl·
11
t E collonl
agnoo a oon .,, ·•
oalary (nogolloblo). Frlngo
~nolltt tnctudo Holldoy &amp;
Vecallon Pay, 401K pro·
gram and Hoollh lnouranco.
Hou11 aro Monday thru Frl··
day, wllh no allor houll aalt.
Sond rooumt to: CLA 650,

TURNID DOWN ON
1400 Sq. II. 3 bt., 2 bl, dOU•
IOCIAL IICURITY /Ill? bll wldl, on 2.30 00111 In
No Ftt Unltll Wt Wlnl . M11on Count~ WV, rtduoed
1·888•582·33~6
lor o"lck oalo 304·031-3503

G:t

~:e~~~~~~~~:~~~;1 1~~::

:!. •·~~:~"'!a1n"J'.7~8~~e·i 0~

2 Bedroom Houoo on Ktno·
on Avonuo, Golllpollo. $5601
mo., Otpolll Aaqulrtd.
17~0)441·161t.
2 Bldroom Hou 11 , Still
R
auto 686 ull put tho
High School 740)o441·151&amp;
·
·
2br, Unl"rnlohod houoo 501
112 2nd Stroot, Now Hoven.
1304)675·3460

I

,

I

j

Rllahle

Happy ''38"

Birthday

vi
L

VA~~ &amp;
4-WDs

fOI Sail 1987 Dodge Panol
Servtoo Van . Claan, Mini
Condition, tow mlloogo,
$11,500. lnloroolod Poroon
Moy oall dolly (304)2 73·
"8"3
6pm, 1304)273·
u
• befnro
'Of
982o4 llftor &amp;pm,

Help Wanted .

:;~lmonl~

Nurse Aides, Personal
Care Aides, State ·
Tested Nurse Aides

I

r

I

Ill

1

D·-·' I

I

2

I

Plean ca!l Debbie MItchell for more
Information or to arranae
a personal Interview 111
(740) !192-6916 or 1·866·9112-6916.

CONTRACTORS
, INC.

C&amp;.C Gtner&amp;l Home Mtlnte·
ntncl· Painting, VInyl 'aid•
lng, ~orpontry, dOoro,
dowo, bltho, mobllo hOmo
repelr ftnd mor1. For fret
ootlmolo ooll Chll, 7~0·1182·
6323,

wl"·

::
Cuo-to-m-:Bu~lt~dln
~g-:'
&amp; -:R:-o-m-o-:d.'
ollng , Ovor IB Voorol!l&lt;po·
rlonct, Frta Eatlmotoa.
Fully lnaured. No JOb Tc
Bl~or _sma.ll. 740·992·1119
01 40 441 8514
·

~;I.JIA:IltiCAI/

R~:I'IUC;I~MA'I1CIN
Rooldonllal or commorclol
wiring now oorv~t or 11 •
par11 , '1.111111 Llconold oliO·
trlcltn, Rltlonour Eloclrlcol,
WVOOOOOCI, 304·075· 1788.

Ohio 45771

740·985·3948
CONCRETEIBLO

BOARD

FURNITURE STORE

Moved to 130 Bulavllle Pike
Store Hra. 10·3 Mon thru Sat.

Call for directions
SALE

Frl&amp; Sat July 12 &amp; 13
10:00.??
Antique furniture, cdlfeCtlbl•• &amp;

i

Mite. New Ha~en Hgte,

Follow

Carpentry/Roofing
Helper 'Needed
740·992·6215

a.

r

l

SAVE AD

co.

c -·

Socrot11y Mull hovo od•
voncod compuror tkiMo and
payroll knowtldQe. -tlon
Avolloblo lmmocflotlly Mon·
dly•Frlday, P 00am·5 QOprn
Ploolo moll '" '""""' ro.
Trr·Mal ConolriiCilon, 13821
S1111 Rouro 15ft.4, Api 2, Bid·
will, OhiO ~6814 No Calli
Pto'a le

11111 10 work apprOI&lt;imlltly
lhlrty riouro por lllld
POIIIII ..clllonl OOOI!Ing
tOIIIo Plllll I!Op by Wyngata 11 300 Brllrwood Orllll
10 compl01o an oppllcollon
EOE
,
~=:--::--,-=~::::-TILIMA~KITINO
1.QM74-JOBI

afforlng
·
811 , 1 Yo"' Buolnooo To·
•·y.. Primo •'"--'ng Con·

-

v•....,..

"' Spoco Alllilabll .At AI·
lordlbll Rllt 2 Nleo E u!lvo OffiCII. Nowly Flo•
mcdolod. Spllng Valloy Plo·
70, Coli (7401~4&amp;-3481.

'

Otdor 2 11011 houll. Cornor 3323 E•t 170f.
3rd, &amp; Cenror, Mooon Do·

Friday, Ofllco II 1.4oalod 'ol
1161 Evorgr- Drllll Polnl
tochod gorapo 110,000, 1 Bodroom, 12711/mo., 5250 Ploooanl, WV Phont Nc lo
1304)816· 187
dopooll, Nc POlo, Roloron·· 1304)8711-11808, ! ,1-1,0
coo Roculrod, (740)445•
9342 olllr t :QOpm
'IWin Fllvorl Towor- aacopllng applicollonl lor
2 Sodtoom HOUII )U11 0111• 1br'. Hud SUillldlled lpl,all
,._ ,.,..._._ • oldl Cl.olllporl ocn 'Stall
IIIII. pold (304)875-5818 I
- 11 • • - Aoult 141 . (740)4ol1 · 151t
EHO

Honda 250 3 - o r. 11H11
Ton lruol&lt;, runo (jOQd, 11181
lntornotlonol oohool buo,
runt good, good rlroo, lUll
olll, ~ Norwood Poria·
bla olw mill, (740)379·11207
,
lndopondoni fforbol~o Olelrlbuior, Call For Pra&lt;IUCI Or
Opporkrnlty, (740)441 - lt82

c

i

~ •

LIVE'rllX:K

1

2 P
Co
••
llr)l
Ill tram Roglo!lrod Ttnno- Walur
Soddlo Brod, 1 1 2yr Oiit
gotdlngo 13,500, Soih own•
or Ffnonolng . (3041682 .
5840
..- .

1'n

the

Classified
Ads

The Daily
"""'"
Sentinel

88 Ponloon ond 85 lroMor,
new floors, new carpet . 2411.
nklfl bQ~U. 2-motora 115hp.,
!50hp, noed minor repalre.
9111 or lrado for tmaller
boat.
S2500.0BO, ,
(304)89&amp;·3046

992-2

.ALLtEL

..

Cellular

992-547.9

.....

I""'H_O_W_A~'R_D_L_,.,

WRITESEL

740-742-3411

•

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

AII Mllkes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
· Factory Authorized

Stop &amp; Compare

Free Estimates
949·1405

.FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

740-667-0363

Hill's Self
Storage

Cuh Cad.sC &amp; Gravely

211670 Bashan Road
Aaolne, Ohio

Parta &amp; Service

750 Eus1 S1i11c S1rcc1 Phone (740); '13 -667 1
AI hens. Oh1o

~~~ MACK'S
Pocket Knlvss

M111ay Farguaon

'

High 8l Dry
Self-Storage

45771

Slzea ll'x1 0'
to 10'x30'
Houra
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
111411 mo

&lt;ltl!OJ

PUtS

Spoul

11aarr,N

.

FREE ESTIMATES!

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359 St. AI. 180
Galllpotta, .OH 45631

33795 HiUiritl Rtl.
P~mtr9J. Ohio

(740) 446·1044

740-992-5232

Monday·Frldsy 11-SPM • Saturday ll-2pm

&amp; Collectible•
~A Cut Abo~e
~the Rest"

Hours:
Mon·Sit 10·4
217 E. 2nd St •
Pomeroy,

OH

(740) 992·5908
I'd 1 mo !WQ

JONES'

Tree Service

• Top • Remo~ot • Trim
• Stump 'rlndlng

• Bucket Truck

(10'1110' 610'1120')

(740] 992-3194
992-6635

. 1.~·;.,
~

'

7~ "';:lt,t,,... 'lfl"t-

9- l«lllll/4111&lt;~

7'lee eeue s'/l(X/.'4«4-~

~ S.'r&amp;"' ~

~

We Care For Your TreesW'

Business Services
AuauetUII•

• Air Condlllontrt
$~
• Btrvlot On All ar1nd1
• Alfldentlel l Light Commeroltl
• 10 yr. p1rt1 l Lebor
• Ho1llng l Air Condlllonlng
·www.lmerlolnlttnderdelr,oom

d,,.,.,heeun·, A~"lt'1•
-;.. rm1cru •. ?..- ~ ·
Aoruru... e.ltur1 ~ tl~
Scolt L. Swain

411'"'"''

Gallipolis, Olllo, • (740) 446-2015
/SA Certljied Arborl!'l

YOUR CODCRfTf
tODDfCTIOD, LLC

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER

(74Q) 742·80111
Quality Concrete Work

Driveways, Patios,
Parking/play Areas.

Sidewalks, Floors
21

•llomodelln1

.,·-Cior
....
• lltoln.. a
, •

~ooflng

l "umlllng
1 ounoro

' • Vlnyllkllng a '•lnllnt

V""
lxperlenot I • '*
.. l!lllmlttl ;
Fr.. Etllmalee

llld ,oroh .,..,...

~r

(toll frttl

877·3113-7022

I

v. c. VOUNQ IIJ
ffl-8215

(F1ctcry Oullll)

In Mtlg1, Alhenl and

txpenenct, Certified

off)
• Decreaee Appellle
• lnoreaee Energy
• Lower your Streaa

~
~

'

• Look &amp; Feel Better

CALL:
Jeanie Howell
740.1192·7038

..,...,

.

Affordable Prloee

our locallcm
• Verlleolo • WotHI

tlmfSTODf

• Mlulo 1 Etc

O.IIVII'Id • Spread

Koofs &amp;. Stdmg
Commcrciul &amp; Rcsidcnuul

~Jr.\

(7411) 992·.1987

'I

Owner &amp; OJ&gt;eruror. John Dcun

" " •

11

IIAkAk:\lfln.llr.-.Ar.-..111':\
!tl~~ lfl!•' fll!•: [1111 tl;11 I II I' 11

Special 9 ton
$135.00

740·742·7037

DeanHW
New&amp;: Uaed
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

1-800·822·0417
"W.Ve 11 t Chevy, Pontiac. Buick. otda
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

BISSELL

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes• VInyl

Specializing

In:

Siding, and.

Additions

011 IO II

I

t

I I

11,1••

~822

J6S flfCTRIC 6
PLUmBinG

IIIIGO 2171

"lm "u•rtt
1-rlo, ftlumblng,

~
liGon Open 4:31

ProgreaMt.,une

II

(74 0) 992

Pommvfalln

·tJO

I

\1 olo!l 1'

(740) 992-07'39

COMMERCIAI.IIId

740-882-7588

I

TerryLamm

flEA

Maplewood Like

IShl•:ld &amp; Full Line
Other Accessories'

Owner:

Window• • Roollna

.mARKET

• Ventvloor • Bua

Remodeling,

Sidlna • New Garaan

• RESIDENTiAL
FREE ESTIMATES

Bedllners •Nerf Bar
• Tonneue Cover

Roofing, Decks,

· -,Olio

ancl lmall Homo
M•lntlftionoe"""'

(340 773·1412

~y blrdlltllt

T1lun4llvt

l'rolmllue
Ctuerlll "' SUndlvs

July4-S.f

Op"n 24 houra.

Spacu Av•llable

7 Days per week.
St. Rt. 1 Tuppers
Plains, OH

740-949·2734

,

C1mpllte1 with

1

Wiler, IIWir &amp;

II! II '

....,.

Gurage11. l,oh:. lluildin g ~ . Cuncrclc •f ,l··1.

Free Eitlmateaf
(740) 112-11al

Walhlng\on countlll,

CALL 887·8329

New Hon1cll &amp; Renludelutg
··srcciuliztng In Lut~llnmc"
&amp; Rubber Roor,··

11/1:1,.

IIIIIIIHtiHIIII. . .

All verll&lt;tl blludo are
made au order al

~ Replacement

· Conole'a
Child CARE

you wen11o

• Loae 10·20 ibo. per
monlh? (and keep 11

R~nna, Sldlna.
P1dndnJ, Ouuers, Deckt

BLIND SPOT

446·4995

Local 843·5%64
Medl~are Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial und Final Expen~e~; Can~er &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rolloven;
m
Mortpae; Mlljor Medical
......'!!:!.....
• Nur1ln1 Home
---

llmR'SIIEIM
Do

SfftliT
COnSTRUCTIOn

The CRAFTY,

144 n~~• Ave. Glilptl1

$29.99ea. rm.

Save Ad Exprle• 8/16/02

New Homes, ·Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Rools,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
• 8r More

T~N

Case·IH Parts
Dealers
1000 St. Rt. 7 Somh
Coolville, OH 45723

• 97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

hal openlnge, 15 yr.

Toll Free1-888-338·7847

Bryan Reeves

11ntl Drlvct~ • Stcmcil
Crete

MANLEYS
SElF STORAGE

2 Avg. Size Room• Cleaned

Captain Steamer
Carpet Cleaner

Sunset Home
Construction

Jeff Warner Ins.

740·141·2217

(740) 247-3901/247-2185

3

I

S I
av ngs

HELP WANTED
Tomato.Pickers
Gary Roush &amp; Sons

17 02 17401

1

nlngo.
1098 Pro cralt Soli SQot.
160HP,
Fuol
lnloclld.
!..:17,:::40:;;13::8:..8·:..8~:.::4.:.1- - 3• 1o It C 1 h
bo 1
' ' cond
' .. "brand
' ouao
a' ·
good
new mo·
tor, newlv remodeled, come
M~M~klng '' 0600· 304 •

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

I"''"

rio

I Find
Sunny

•••·

"SALES AND SERVICE"

rr------.,I

Ronald "M ick" Haning
Christina ' Chris" Haning
740·a92-0780
Cell* 740· 591 -0919
Cell 59 1·8393

4 • 11

CKIBRICK
• Poolors, Wull•. Srop• •
Flut Work,
Rcplucerncmll. • Wulks

"' • n.

Owner:

740-367·0181

P/B

Racine,

• Heeling

or•

.
•

WAitrproolfng,

0

oso. 1740)448·1481

' Foreman: Larry

only 9/lt each/
-74

ou••·

' AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITION INO 1o HEATING

I

Sny~•ro 4003 Addloon Pl'SI,
lwln bod. li' TV, wllnor,
135, NC 1&amp;0. trombone,
lltmpoilno, gotl clulll, bal"
kt111.111 110011, aog llOUIH,
oiOCUIC ltove, loll ol mlOC
9·8, Fri·SII. July 12· 13
.1740)3e7·oe67

.

Wide A"ortmenl ol Herbe, Annuale,
Perennial aIn 4" poll for

Morning Ster Roed • CR 30 • R•clnct, Ohio
IAI!MINT
WATERPROOPINQ
uncondltlonot lllotlml
anttt. ~ooal rtltrenotl fur·
nlohtd , Eotobllohod lt76
Clll 24 Hrt (7o40) 4~8·
0670, Aog111 Baoomont

lj~ N:~~~~~~~un::o o~
66

Haning's Construction

l:leddlng &amp; Vegetable Flata 't.eo
1o· Hahglng Basksts 't.eo

IM1'1111VI1\U:NTN

2000 Mercury Mounlolnoor

• Competitive rate
• Flexible scheduling
• Mileage reimbursement
• Health im·urrJ.nce
• Incentive plan

e

e.

81m·Bprn.

That'e Uel

,.., ...... ,..., - · ..Jolt ...,,, ,. ,.,.,...,.

lloMt~

Pleasant Valley Privale Duly is a&amp;ep1ing
applications for privale duly home care
cases 10 provide hourly care to client who
reside in Mason, Meigs, Oallia, Alhens
. Counlies om OH and Jackson Counly, WV

17 0190 868

r~

1997 Fold Exoloror XLT, 2
Door, Auto, ·AC, 4x4 ,
AMIFMICD, SPOrt Pockogo,
New Tlrtl. Ntw Brlikll,
S9600. (740)441-98A2

Roonng, Siding, lldd-Ons, Electrical.
Plumbing, Decks, Remodeling,
Dryw111l, Painting

Q1111llty, V11rlllty, Low Prlc~s

1087 Ford Mallard Motor
Homo, 2611, aboul 28386
mlltl. Soli Contained. Aak·
lng 111 ,000, Coli (740)3118•
5591

t8Q5 Ford E11p1orer XLT, o4
WD 2 dr, opoot, powoo 1\1·
orythlng, I 19,000 mllot, OM•
celltnl condition , $8,000.
_
74..;0..;·118
;.;,;;.
2·,;.
78
; ;5;,;1_ _ __

llcJATs &amp; MmoH.~
1'011 SAI,f.

••·i

r

1086 Ford XLT, hell ton, 8
cyl, 1u1o, 4 wd., otldlng btek
window, dual tankl, very
good condition, $3,100,
1740)992·37118

Roofing. Home • New Homes
Maintenance· •• Garagea
illr\o:..-..-::-::-:-,_...., ,--:;------, Gutlers. Down Complete
Remodeling

Items
\'\~01 \t I 'II '\I'

1984 Toyota von &amp;op , wHh
lront I bock olr $1085
533·7178 Of (304)576·2218

01 1

Includes Free Yard Sale Slgnl
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

AIJIU PAII"Ili &amp;
Al1 "1·:!.'0KII•) i

""'"Y

[)eo.d'tiree
01lly In • Column : 1 : 00 p.m . .
Mondey • l'rldiY !'or lnt•rtlon
NeJCt DIY'I P1per
S"''diiY ln•Cotumn : 1 : 00 p . m.

~~~~

=·-:--.,.----

To Place
flt'tibune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446·2342 · (740) 992-2156 (304) ·67571333
875·5234 ..
Call ~day...
Fax To
44&amp;-3ooa
or Fax To , 11112·2167
Display Ads

rj)

V•8, IOidod, 74,000 mlloo,
HIM SAl¥.
oil whHI drlvo. 1304)675·
t972 l'oractut eRr 91•
3731!1
11500, 1304)757·0012 1eav' 1992 Ninon pickup, ·~ow 2000 'rll&lt;on Denali. 36 ,000
numbtr
llrll, looks good. runa goCK1 . mllel. ••oellenl condition,
..
M
.
1740)379·2894.
Batore8·30 $211000 11~0)114H0t9
•
1• 77 mercury
"rquls pm
' '
Good Condlllon (740)368·
il208
199~ GMC SONOMA truck,
M6'1UM&lt;.'VtU;&gt;;
UJ84 Flrtblrf,i, new unglne, Tonnuu
covtr, alum
tlrult, I If thOOkl, IT!tl, WheOII , 60,000 mllea, OIICOI·
1960 wllho"l otorea ond lont condition, $4 ,500.00 1993 Harloy Superglldo,
opaakoll,
11300 wllh, 1740)949·1316,.
ocortot rod , 60,000 highway
71\0)992 8887
mllea, lOOking llddlebligt,
1
_
•
2 1954 Ford Trucks or
oxtrao: 2000 Su•ukl
1083 Ford Touruo Station porto, 1740)256·1203
S,V, 550, blue, 11.000
wagon, good aonlllrlon. 86 T80 Kanwortll, Go;;;j mlloo,
SUOO
080.
:• 4go. OBO. (30 416n· Cona111on. ~8000. Coli 1 74 01 441 ·~ 7 79
92
17~0)860·0906. Leave Moo·
t9&amp;3 Ford Tompo, fHJIO, Oftll IIIIJO II no MIWGr.
~~~~~ 7 8 ~ B:lC~~~·:~~~~:
(740)9112·5751 loovo moo· 88 Ford 4, 4 uuck s-apead, IOOmoy-T6 ptpoo, KN 811111 .
10111°1cell alter 81&gt;m.
new t1r11, bed tool box, olld· · tor. boy11on bcaol bcllll,
Clrand·Am
1983
12405 tng bock glou, CO·pto,er, twlot lhrotllo, nun boro, now
10t4 Covallor $1~91 1988 $2 ,000. Noodo clutcl\, 8ply, m"'''' racer llroo.
Joop Chorokll, S1095 1304)895·384~
$4 ,500, (30~)~68· 1001
1991 Goo Metra, 1750 88 Mozda B2200 PU Eol 2002 Hondo el8. Brand
COOK MOTOR8 . (1~01448· Cob, New Exhouot, sior1or: Now. 700 mlln 17,000.
• Ot03
Tlroo. CD Proyor, E•collanr FIRM. I304)676·3813
1996 Camaro Z·28. l.nw Condition. Alk lng $1500 2002 Honda Fortman 41o.
mltoo. Loodod . {304)676· OBO (740)448·9794
(740)448·7311
.
~7R8
97 Coduo Ookota Sport,
u , 4cyl., Grnl condlllon.
llc&gt;ATS &amp; MmuMs
11 ,soo mlleo. Prlco S5ooo,
1~111 Sili.l'~
Hippy Ad
1740)448·1169

l\egister

Word Ads

• •u•s
1'·•
Ko""'

l~lM SAU•:

-REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR ·aD NOW ONLINE

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

~l~K~~~~.:

LI\'IXIIIC.'K

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

1

1./1'2 D!SifiN I'RIM! 1~

:

un DtSiaN YOUTH
1
NATUR! WIN 11" LAY!R
t RIV!R RUN I'ROf!UIONAI. DOG fiOOD:
~~OOOoTHIIULIMITI-NIICUilOMII!WfTH'Ilft~

I
t·

------·

t. •- •- ~~~.f!.-~.
'

I
I
I

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, July 10, 2002

www.mydallyeentln l.com

ALLEY OOP

NEA Cro11ward Puul•

UIDOII:
PHI~LIP

ACftOIS

ALDER

1 VIlli otty

e IMIIY
~
I a Plcke 011

.,.
"''
•

14 ,., /!all
~~

K 10

ta Throat ap-

II IU

i

...

• An t
"' J •• ' ~

•·:•st t

,,..~

.. A~

K J 11.1 ~
t: 11~1

V1,1ln11r•bht. North South
li1111lll

1 ~T

W. .l

NOJlll

f•u

30=

-.:.,,

3 NT

1- ll~f.l(i"l

••

~Ill~&amp;~'

Opt~llll'lltl"•d • 9

31

rue~.

rnMI.

Bidding

31 MillO-

" Cornrnon

1.10-llil

l'll•11•1f~ !-lflr.! t:.lt•ll'll-1
r~nl~lil unm
t•lf.11J _~illl11l•MI'I

r.1n1--m1

!Jmm
!JDtil

II'Jd

r•Jl•Jt~fl

...

~:)Q'~~C{li:J~O ~W \TU\·

LOI'IC.

01~\~Cf.C~

=-. .

34

10 atop
I I Plloked
IWIIY

' ""'Mill

~~~~~~

...

.

•

=~·l

- ....
Q

ZIP~~

Q
Q

,. Pro!MMd

.,

IS

1 HIIJ.ol.

POIIII'IIIll-

'

AC:TI.lo'llLY, 1'1'1
A tHC.H·SC.MOOl
7/W'~ MATH TEACHER,
!UT WHY !WIN
_...-._THE MY~T/QUE'

Ao,_-

1~1Ulo

.,

•

:
:
;
:
·
rl
I

L....

I

''THOU SllALT NOT 8E AFR~ID
OF TJ.IE TERROR 6'r' NI6J.IT. NOR
OF .TJ.IE PESTILENCE TJ.IAT
. WALKETJ.IIN DI\RK.HE55 ...''

BUT THOSE LINE DRIVES

I

WILL KILL 't'OU!

I' I

.

I I I'' I I

I
1

L~UFAf

diamonds.

I I 1. I I

. . . . . • .
SCIIAM·LITI ANIWIRI

.

I:. I• I.

East got what he· .
deserved, l&gt;pening
with neither opening
Rarely. Tongs • Omega • Medium • MORTGAGE
values nor a decent
Wile to husband as they left party, "You might as
sui t.
well have told everyone my erge alter bragging aboul
how low our home MORTGAGe lsi"

~=r.~~------hchOI \ \ 1' 0. ~iiU I U
wci.!'Jin~ 111 ymtr li_
fc

It

do

iiOITIC

to clcur

uutthc th:adwuull 1m the year
ahc ~d . D11in~

thi• 'l'ill muke

dculin"s 111 he t:unl'uml by
~our hch:1vi~tr . Be comdlitCIH
111 hoth wortl mulllc~d .

LIIJRA tSctll. Z3·0t:l. Zl) ·

\\ ay l'or IJ:q'l'il'£ iiCii\litic,; of
higher qu:.. i1y :md fewer

• Ucl'tli'Cbnymg llr inv~sling
tuduy, chuck the infurnuuion
or the i'inanciul tip you re·

!'ANCEl! CJunc21·July22)

ccive from a wcll·intcntiuncd
friend a~uin~t other huurce5.

hcadm. hL'~~o .

•• Cun:h:\!iiiC ii ~ nn y.vur !"HUt
tml:1y r:m cuUI'if yuu w ose

sotm•thing you Cllll~ider &lt;.!car.
It may not he cxpetHiivc. but

rather an tlcm that hold• fund
mcmnriL'' HnJ can't be re~

J&gt;laced. Knuw where In

h~&gt;k

fur rumam:c ami you ~ll find it.
'l'l11: Astm-Grupl1 Mutchmaker
in'\liJntly I'C\IC~J\ which KignA
urc rotnunlicully rcri"ect for
yuu . Mail $2 .H w Match'
nwkcr, c/o lhi~t IICWJif'UJlCr.
1'.0. flux 1(•7. Wickliffe. Oil

4411'12.
1.1'.0 (Jul y 2 .1 - Au~ - 221 ··

Tudny , whal ynu ctm~ic.J("r a
0ccti II~ 'UI11111C rll cuuld ' tuff!
into u bindtn~ ~mnmitment.
. Think . twice ltL'ftJI'C rtwlr.ing
prnmi ~cr. . becau se
:~udicncc v. ill taLc you ut

any

yuur
yuur

wort.! .

VIIWO fAng . 23-Scpl. 22)

· - What

you .~ay &lt;.~ru.J

do ·nHIY
thing!~!

be

h1day,

\Wtl

what yuu

different

~: au!'lintt till)'

fK!'r#

lii llll 't will1 whop1 you have

Don't IUI.c UliVihln~ a• ~fli•
pel. no 1naner wltu II' H l'r•&gt;m.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .
22/ •• ln•tcud of gelliniJ in·
vo ved in cunverliiution~ on
toplco ubou1 which you know
lillie. do murc liMening. Oih·
c!'rwi•e, you muy be templed
lo IUCtcnd tu knuw more than

you do and iit•und l'olltish.
SAGITTARIUS &lt;Nov. 23·
Dec. Zl) ·• Oe wary ol' Uf·
tempting w give anyl&gt;ody uJ.
vi\:c today, even about things
on which you may po..eh
ClpeMilil:. fl Could be nlil«!ln•
pluyed and cuu•c prublem•.
with yuu taking~he blarne.
CAI'RlCORN IDee. 22·1lin.
191 .. II ii ill uJvi•ed l&lt;lihare
an ••pen Hive .uclivity today
wilh someone who iK usually
reluc&lt;ant 1&lt;1 pay hi• or her fu1r
•harr. I'll g1ve you lhree
guelii'IC~ a• to whu (a~ u~ual)
will end uJ1 paying the hill.
AQUARIUS (Jun. 20·Peb.
l~l •• If yuu lee\ the need In

•cck udvice tmluy. tum w
murc thun unc l'enmn before

utnkin~ uny importnnl deci·
-,ions. It may luke un ug¥regu.
lion of •cvcrul hili of 111lur·
1nu1iun 10 ~cr the whole un·
Hwcr.
PlSCI!S (Feb. 20-Murch
20) •· lle pret&gt;ured to c•erl ~
•econd effort in nrder to oc·
cornpli•h your soul• and am·
h\linn• today. Achlevernenll
rn11y not come Oi ea•ily u
they u•uully do.
ARII!S (Murch 2l·April 19)
•• Wutch out for un acquulp·
IUD(.e with ulterior inolive•
thai" may be tryln,JJ 10 rnunit&gt;U•
late you tuduy. ll yr1u let your
»Uut·d down, thi• peroun will

lie t\liWfled thtil ih~ 11~ · 111 )\If tl\,, Uj)Jit'lllll.'h
to 1lw brl\ljl!l 11 Ill 'lilrt tl\'Uf th~ ~,l,tlnll \'~'r
wu~h !&gt;II Wl''l Mtiht Slt\'1'1.
lie nlll\'\l thllt thl' \le&gt;illlllllillh ttl\' \'ti!WI\11}
1\tlllljj. !.'!ltnlllt.lt\'11 uml will btl ,,)hmlttr\1 till'
Bv CHAIILINI HOIPI.IOH
t'inul
on 1\UJI. I ~
HO(fLICHO!JMYPA"I S ~NliN El COM
('nil llS suld t)HII \Ill~&lt;' th¢ )lltill~ hiiW ~&lt;'11
. POMEROY. - ('nn&gt;ll'tll.'tinu (Ill th\' n~w njlJlt'lll'll\1, tlwn tllll'\'1'11,11111 t\11' hills wlllll\'llln.
Pl&gt;llWt'II)'·Musnn lwld~~ ,, ~'XJ~I·tcd t\~ h~lllll ,. c sukl he C\fll't'h th!,'. rw,i~\'t til ll\' Sl&gt;lll In
in lut~&gt; Jummry 1W \'uriy l'..,bnmry t'l 2UO~. · Nnvemtltll'. IIWIIt'lltltl in l}tii.'\'11\00r. tm\1 jill
IICI.'Ilf\1111!11\1 · &lt;1&lt;'111'!1~ ('ulllm,, 1lep11ty llit'll,'tll~ 111111er ~'m1&gt;tt'll~'tion In Jm11UII'Ynt• l1t'hruury.
ul' Dbtrkt Itl. _ Ohio (}cpi11'111&gt;o:'nt nt
(\111111&gt; u;.~t'li flit' Input 1111 tlw \'\ll\11'1' 111' th&lt;'
'fl'unspwtnllon, lODOTl wh11 &gt;PII~~ n.t n,nwt't llr~hts 111 1111 1111 tlw I.' II hill' 11 hl\'11 t'Xtvll\1 l\11111
ln11
1'1&gt;111\'t'l&gt;)' Mo:t\'hlllli' 1\&gt;sn~IIIIInn 1111 thl) twn ll\\Wt'll nt' ihc hl'idjjt'. He Mtlll lh~
Wclitwsliuy momln)l. .
,
· .
;.!,'ICI.' th&gt;ll hu;. tn Ill' mml&lt;' l&gt;y th&lt;' ~mt ul- July
Collins "~! ld ,., t'l' ·th tl\)l nnw " th1wn to II nul umi thl.' 1'1!1.'1111111\~ndut Inn I;. fnr 11 lillhl l.'nlm.
Lledst\lll&gt;, hJ...~ \vhul 1.'11lnr tlw l.'llhlt' llj~ht~ ,will l11\ll~ruhlt' whitt' Ill' hhtl'.
.
be. tht shmlt' Ill tht' ('~IIWI\'W, llllll SlltlW Ill the
"W~ \\'1111/lht' 1'11;11)111.' ht't\' lnpii.'J\ lh~ 1.'\llill',"
Sll'lll.'llll'til 11\tiWI'Iul;., rht' $Jfl milllnn hrldge. &gt;IIIII Collins: It WtiS iht.l )11'11&lt;'1'111 I,'\111St'l1SUS nf
tn h¢ hull! with slutc umltcdcrlll 1\llltis, IH~&gt; II thll m¢rdumts thut whltll wnuld 11(1 ll(lst shw
20ilfl ~"1111'ktlt'l1 dntl'._
.
severnllntlltlii111S in lt&gt;wn m\'1 outll11~11 in whit~
II Wtlllw huilt .1 ~ 0 li.'\'1 li,IIWI11'iV~I' Irom ,thll lljjhts.
o~lsihl)llll'itl!ll'. wl. llh~' ~6!r~l whl_t, whh Ill\~~
West. Vit·!linlu_, whkh J., lltli'tl~i\~ntinll. ln tlw
Innes - 1wu hm~s lm litillk
11111111 \w!l~s ~\lSI ol the hritl!ld ~nnsll'tMion. IIVIII's while
trlun wul~ \Ill the 11pper &gt;lth.'. IIWOI'\11111 II&gt; ~ubllls hut htis. jllwn no 111\ll'~t't'11l'~ for the
l)ou)l Mill'jWil. fll'\&gt;j\'l'l mllnllj,tt'l', who ulsn
1111~11\kd ilk• 1\Wt,tln~ .
PIHII ... lrldp, AJ

ui'P"'''''

KC tourney starts Friday, 81

Deaths
Audrey Dunfee, 82
Mary lou Young, 74
Elizabeth McDaniel, 66
Kathleen Clonch, 65
Pamela Hager, so
Detalla, A:S

"'\I"'

NIW lltiDGI. - Thtl MW brlt11\ii etltlnllcllnij OhiO Mtl Wiil \
VlrQinl!l (Ill Poi11t:ifOY lllld, Mil on w\1\ lOOk 11~11 \1'111. OtOrQI!
Colllnl. Olat. 10 dt!pYty cilrl!e\01 . for tl1il OOOT prtaM\~tl il
tWIOI Of PIO\Yf'OI hOWiflQ OMIIllW 1111(1 t\l~h\\1111~ 11!1illt Of
lhll llrlt1 o. T1'111 throo VQIU eom!ICt&lt;e\1(111 ptQJflrl w1U Qilt undt!t
WI'.Y in JMYIUy, (000Ti

----~-

Weather
Hlah: 80s, Low: SOs
Detalla, A2

Middleport
•
•

Fun
show

zon1ng -reVIew
set to be in
next wee
•

Bv JDY J. SmLII

Special

N~W S~MYilAI,Y S~ N T IN e k . C OM

meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eustern Locul Boord ul'
Edu~ulion will hoiLI 11 ~P~·
clul me tin11 on July 17 ut I
p.m. nt ihe udmlllislt'ttllon
meeting tu dis~uss pct·son·
· nel mutters.

I'OM~ROY

- ' "1 ·2·3
pnofl" tho lllllj!lcinn tnld u
gmup of children ut the Mel~s
Cuunty
Dlstrl~t
1.1 bmry
Wednestluy., u1tm~th111 lui~ of

I

uttomlun.

Task .force's .firsr mcctill;l
Wednesday

OHIO
Pick :s day: 7·9· 3
Pick 4 day: 8· 2·1·6
Pick S: 8·6·9
Pick 4: 0+6· 7
Bucklya 5: 18·19·20·29·36

Cowho~ IHII~ICinn Mnrk
Wt ~xl ol Jn~kson. \llldorme\J
ui~ks li&gt;r ~hlklren 1urin11 illll
Hhnuy·.~ .summer t\ltKIIIlQ ~~u­
grum. His th~tn~ Wtl' "MnQI~ of
the Circus."
·
Chi ldren en,l1&gt;yetl llstenln11
10 \Wtl circus hooks reml In
lhem und mnklnll pnper elophums und tigers before 1he
performunce.
Wood. u 1\illllme entertnl ner
for ·3~ - yenrs. lcnrneu 1111181C
from huoks. lie encoLII'II!It:dlhe
chi ldren who uuended to
check out u mnglc I'!Clok ~o
they, too, unuld loom nnd hnve
f\m.
·
Woud uiHo mude hullucm
unimn!N, Jlll!!llcd, performed
vurlou~ rope trlckH, ctn&lt;l mAny
nther musk trlckN. Pt•lzeN .
were uwurilcd to Nome nf the
youngsltrN nnd bullt1ons were
givenro ench child presem.
The NU1111ll01' I'CIIdillj,l pro•
grom conllnueswith Billy the
Book, July 17: Murk Wuae. n
vcnirllu~uisl. July 24: und u
puol purty July 31 In
Syrue UHC . ·

W.VA.

Agri-tourlsm expert visits area

Lo'!;.'tr.'ys
CLEVELAND (AP) The Ohio Louery will puy
out $171 ,99 1 to winners In
. Wcdnesduy night's Pick 3
Numbers dtlily gume,
which hnd soles of
$731 ,49R.
li1 the Pick 4 Numhers
nlghl 1\tllllC. pluyers will
shnre $124.200 nnd the
sule• 1'01' the gume cnme to,
$295,062.

SUperl.oUo; 8-11·14-18-2&amp;48
Banua Ball: 45
Klckar: 2· 7·3·4·3·1

Dilly :S: 8·2·0

IV IRIAN

PIM•bll: ~31·37-43-45 (32)

Index
:a ltdlonl - 11 ,....
Calendar
A4
Classlfieds
85·6
Comics
87
DearAbby
A4
Editorials
. A6
Entertainment
BB
Movies
A3
Obituaries
A3
Sports
81·4
Weather
A2
c- 1001 Ohio Volley Publlohlnt c:o.

MII)I)I,P.PORT - The l'lt·~t m~~ti1111 nf 11 MluLII~(llll't
~mnmlnee l'ilVl~wlnll 1lnwnwwn wnlnp tii'I.Hnttll~r' 1111~
f()~Oil111lCilllil111 ~hilll~CN hi lhllN() lll'llillllll ' ~ will he h~J\1
ll~KI WCt'k .
In Muy. MillllhlJlllrl VIIIUJ!Il Coundl IIJ!flt'nvrll 11 $l.H~O
l.'tlllll'u~t with Con/lullunt Jumc• 1.. llm:ttl~t· ul' CtlliUI
Wln~hcNicr In r view tl1o I\16~ /,unlnll r~l!llitttimtN t'cluthtll
111 ihc ~eltlru l hu.llncNN 11iN1rl~t.
.
· Th ro ttt'o vh·tuitlly no I'CNli'l~tlonN on lunli uNc In th~
downtown tii'CII, und llllillht nl' the .tcmolltlnn nf tlw Murk
V hullulnjl \Ill Nn1'th Se~\lil1l Avenue. ofl'kluiN tu•o 1'1111·
~crne1f llhtlllt how the vu~umlril will ))c tlevehtJl~ll.
·
"Whttt IN hulli llil the Nile un\1 huw ntltCI' ltfCitN or lhc
dowmnwn ut·c u•lld in )lllttrN In ~&lt;Hnc will ilet rmine
Ml\1\llcpun'N rclttll tlllli cnmi,IICI'~iull\lture." llut111N Httlll.
llur111~1' huN worked with the vllluye lll.ll'nrc, JlfCJflll'lfll! n
191)4 LiUWitl\IWtl hiiNin~NN Ntrtllc~y_ Whkh WttNLINCd ill lhc
ViliiiiiC'N 11/lNLI~~\lHNJ'\il Mill. fnr iJCIW/11\lWil f' Vituiitllli\111

1\mdIt1ll·
IALLOON JIUN - Mark Wood mokoa 11 balloon onlmal for 11
child durin&amp; hll mealo of thl olroue l)trformonoo at lhl
Pomeroy ~lbrary on Wodnoadl'ly. Chlldrtn nlao enjoyed litton·
Ina to olroua atorlua rued to thom ond orarte. (Joy J. Sottile)

In MuHun County, offel'lnjl ldcuN on llow tu
Improve U!lrl ·IOLit'IHm In tho urou.
POINT PI.EASANT, W.Vu. ..... Sorne f'urm· - • A~tri ·WtJri Hn1 IK when you Invite the P,Uhltc
erN scof'f utlhe ideu of' mowlnjj dnwn purt of' u to come unto yuur furm, whether lt'M o 'lllck·
few ucreN of their crop Just for fun, butlf they your-own," u Form Htund. or u. corn mu1,e, or
considered !hey cpufd earn UN much OM Home mher iype ul' uctlvillcH,'' Maolzold
$100,000 cc sen~Pn by runnin11 u ·~urn muzo' explulncd Ill the MuHon County louriHm mellt·
they mljjht just reconsider.
..
Ina on WedneHduy.
_
A corn mu1-e IK u labyrlmh created by mow"People WJI\1( to 11et buck to rurol orou8.
Ing in corn f'lcld!l, or ollfc·Hir-ed pu7.?.1e people Thai IH one ol' the muln reuHOJI8 people travel
cun wulk throu11h.
_
- to IICt buck 10 their MJIH und Hincc Sept. t I
A mu7.e i~ juKt one of muny wuyN l'urmcrN. - und trovcliniiiH truly the perfect freedom .
can u~c their lun\J fur more Lhun juHt pluntlna People wunt w tuke f'reednm bock from the·
and hurvesting ...... nr uiiri ·LOUrl~m .
11nd Hu It '• HlllllCihlna w11 eon eo pi·
JumeH A. Muetzold, a National Alternutlvc tcrrorlHtH,
tnllze
on
In
IIIIOCJd •enHc.''
.
En1erpri~c and Asri-Touri~m lender with the
Muctzuld
hu~ worked with uaeneleH
Nutillnul ReHourccH on~~ervutlcm Service und
the country and had nunlei'OUf lito·
the U.S. Oepurtment Clf Allrlculture, wuH the throujhour
rieH
of
family
furmH or ~mnrnu tlille• thai
gueNt oF the Oreal K~nBwhu ReHnurce
ConHCrVIItlon ana DevelPpmcrit fur" few \JuyH
I'IHN Nt Tourt.,., AJ
l&gt;amw!lilmyd~llyroiJtwr.oom

Relay. lhe Meuaae.

KUC~ecd:

TAURUS (April 20-Muy
20) •• You tnuy overreucl lo·

J, RIID

H~ CDeMYCA"YI CNT/N L.COM

BY PAM WILUAMION

DallY 4: 4·0·0·4

.....

Tillll'"lay, July II , 21Nl2,

Bridge consbuction to begin In 2003
ODOT chi~{ says pn.~jt·ct
· to be complt·te by 2006

,._

1I 1I I

I'EANUTS

What's Inside

elpetl
4t!MaUN
I Prt&amp;m ""'"" 20 Hun iHIIII
!lover _
SllewiCIIttf 12 HIVII Willi- 4t a.lne alallt
liM
10 Kind ol *'I
-lllthlt
4 Term paper 14 Ytllow..ll'llh sa 1e rude,
~lty
s 81rn011or H Palt
at Tl'ot or can- 113 C"l pro
Dltmond
1 Avoid
.,,..,
dMf
14 """'"
7 Son ol Hell fl' "'
1 Chlrcoal
11 .,orega bin
lll
1 uthOI'- · at Journey

•

I!{.IC:~ 1 Ya.&gt;
""'""'""" ~e: etc.

Hometown News,.per

tm.m

Jcun 1\rp. a highly
ssE;o
rcgun.lctl urlist and
37 Jooqulll'
met, wwt•'. "Soon si·
cnce will huvc
sa rJ!wa
31 lnthltl
pusscd int(&gt; kgcn\1.
40 Puppy
'Mun has tumcil Ius
bu~k on siiL•ncc."
This conld huvc
been 1111 observation
aboul lli'CS&lt;'IIl-duy
top -level hrid!!C .
Young Tur~s bid
whenever !hey hold
13 curds. Somctitncs
these subminimum
hills work well be·
cuus•' lhcy tell partner
whul to lcml. or they
cnublc ilw YT's si1le
to reach either a mnk·
ahle conlract or u
dwnp sacrifict•. Huw••vcr, occasiunully
deuls like this occur.
which arc carefully
~wept untler lhc cur·
pel hy the YTs.
Y&lt;&gt;u nrc Suuth,
pinyin~ in three no·
CELEBRITY CIPHER
trumr&gt; after East
by LUll Campoa
opened une hcurt.
Caltbrlty Cipher oryplaQramt ora Cdllod lrom quotaltonl bV lamout
' fiiOil/1, l)llllnd prtttn1. Each /IIIII In lhl olphor ollndo for anathtr.
Wc.,t leads u fourth·
Toct«y'• clue: l ~utll 0
highest spade three,
Eust winmng with the
Hit
KHVI
!ICC IIIlO I'ClUI'Ilillg the
RVWUOWYI .
"01111
spude four. Whut
wuuld he yl)ur plan'!
w IZOAYWOY PIIZDHOU;
If you ullack clubs,
vz
KIWL
AYWUIA
WKK
· y011 will gu down,
lo sing ft&gt;Ltr spades
zv
PIUHO ,O HOU
and one clult. Instead,
you ntusl cntlcct the
UIZI!UI
PIIOWIL
A,WO
next ci~ht trick': four
diamonds und four
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'Action II the antldOII IO dtlpalr.•
hcurts.
-Joan Buz
•
'Atllrarnenl 11 the ug/1111 word In the language.
Applying ycstcr·
- Ern1111 Hemingway
duy's n·l~. the normul
approuch is to pluy TH,AUTIIDLAII~Y d,I?Q'1l j).,., , ( - }) 'f:1 ~Q.. •
hcurt~ 1 from the top .
, P\.!;:1 J:'QU ~._ ~ P&lt;.r 0
Uut si nce Eust opcnctl
loilttl ~~ C~AY •· 'OLLAN
one heart, making 0 ~•arron;o ''""' of tho . lt':!tfv~:"'::...~-,
him u hcuvy favorite
fo" 1cramblod wardo bo·
lu hold the heurt juck. low 10 form four 1l:nplo wordo.
tlmt pmbably won't
N
1 0 0
work. You should h-.,..;:'l~A~rT--r-_,.~
3
hope Wc~t has a sin - 1 1 2
glctun eighl or nine.
=·=~· ~·=~·..:-'
Go at&gt;vcr
to dummy
~~~~~~~
wilh
tliumt&gt;nd,
then , _ U F T E ~
call for the heart 10. • 1 1 Is 1
If Eust pluys low, you ~=====~
do too . So, let's us· r
R U p S U I "~ : sumc East covers
If sclenllsts really want to end
with the juck, unc.l'
16
1
world hungertheyshouldflnd-out
;f,cst drnp~ the nine.
. . . .
how two ounces of sour cream
" can turn Into five •••••• of·· ·I
lluy ltnothcr diamond
to dummy und lead a
CUp HAN
hcurt In your seven. .·0
A
1 0 h kl
d
Cash Ihe . heart ucc,
~ ~~'ffi,~~ 1~ ~h; ~~11/~g q~~:d,
cross to dumm)Jol in L-..J.I.-..L.-.1...--1-..-'--' yo" dovolo~ from 111~ No.3 below.
di aIll 011 ds a . tTl i rd . -::~:-cp:-::~""II&lt;I-,:T-,N"'U-::-M:-:B::E~:':'E0::-rr
li __,~.---'AI5-,Irl'4-rlsr-nltr-111Tt-rljr-'111fr-11
t1me, pi tty ol f th.e
~ LETTE~S
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
hcurt ktng. and cluirn
;;~===;=~~=~*~=r:T=T:;::T==1
your ninth trick in
tr.'~~AMBLI 1
· I
otl

1-\t.U.O, ~~OR
!ANJNJif.' f\lo.~t. YOJ

Melp County's ·

t:ll.u.l.-~

tm~nt'lnt•l
1111~~~i1

lllnf'll'l !"li'IDi.l lll•lfl
f;][IJfl
lilt•1!l1M ltU-1l;;l

r.

I~ '(0\)(1..

l -I[~Ut~

m•1fJl-1Un fJr..lr~

at Actor- . grlddof
MaJora
Sf Conical
u a.r.ncetentt
1heoot guru 5I Urge!IOY H Clean alllh
DOWN
27 Abbot
a&amp;LIMI'I

a K IU
:~~,;.

lleall!lr

m.1coJmrm r•lrJIJ

It ,OOIIM bill SS clrnonlon

l'tlll-,

•

Wtililfta

43 hncldll-.
WI
44 WIY ol

17 CrtrniOII
41 liNt trim
Tide el.
. St lllldl allen
II CooldHII~ SS Cerllln

tul

"'"'
••• ••~nn
u

llt•lfJ l~f.U.'lf.1
tllf.11J
11.11Ull f.1t1WII t•ll11l:ll I
tJt!lll 1•1l•JU(cl I ~l~ll'~rJ

41 ......... -

r.r.d•a• 41 Gtnttto
II lllel
IMMMI

n

• "Q 10
• Hl

noiM

41 YOUfllll\er

Dll~fiUje the ,,,mln)Jt ~mlc HU old, mu~h &lt;ll 11 IN nutilutcll ,

wlih -1u1c htw, 1-lurl~ler Ht!id .
The W•illlllllilllt' Zunin11 TnNk Pnr~o. 111 ill' ~~))ll Jlm~~l 111
the MILIIIic)lllt'l Plumtillll C'nmmlHNinn. me1111'lm 1•1' Vllhtl!C
Council und reKlilCntH tillY llu~ln~NH llWIH!fN, wlllme111 wllh
Hurt1.lcr un July '17 Ill blll!ill lhe \Jroco~~ ul' rcvl~wlnt~ th~
cxl~tlnj! wnlnll ~nile• un\J d~:rcnn nln11 whut chunllCN n ~d
to be made.
.
Af'ICI' II Jlr!IC~NH of' 1lruf'tinp th ~rtlJXINCd cll!llllld~ IIIIL!Jll'll•
ccdureH rnr clll'orcinjl rhe new co&lt;le•, the I'CC111l1/l11ltldrll
rt:viMionH will bll Nuhmllted tu Vlllu11c l'ouncll !'or lhlllr
approval.
·
.A~cnrlllntll" lturit.ler, the review uf' enl'urcem 111 prcli.'C·
dure• h e•t~eclully lmJlortunr In Mlddlerxlrt.
"There urc u lol ul' ml~underNttlnllhiiiN ulluut Wlllll?llflill&amp; ·
gun ond eunnot Llo, und the nm lllCctlna will try lo upluln
whut wnlniiiN und whut It eun III:COII1pl1Mh.'' Ifun1.1 r Muld.
"The prhnury lllllliiMwcreole ur1 opj1Clrlunlty for prlvutc ro·
lnvcNtrnentlnlhe \Jowntown hltMine•• uiMtrfct .''
·
,
The 1.6nlna effort~ will .rocu~ on tho cenrrul huHinc•~ diN·
trlct. but Hon1.lcr hu~ propn~~ed. und Vllilillt: uuncll will
con•lll r. u bmllller review or thc1,c&gt;nhlllllrLIInunce• vtlluao
-wide. ·
·
The prlmury ubNtuelc for n more crllliJJrehcnNive t~llllna
ovorhoul It the co~t - un tldltlthmul ~H .OOII. Mymn
Durnotd.. ehnirlllon the phmnlna c:omrniN~ilm, 111111 eoun· ·
ell Morutuy he wil~ lnve~lllllltlnaarunt f'undiii!IJ~Ourcc1i for
tho vlllaae·wldc projcel, nnd hu~ rcccl ved 111 len-t nr1 offer
or 11 donutlon from 11 pri~llte rc•ldenl.
unu

ln~\lllNiNICIII

or

I

fi', year'•

day about mnuer. nf •mnll
cnn•equence. If rnu du not
handle youroelf ok•llfully, you
-will turn what •hould be a
molehill inw a moun&lt;11ln.
OllMlNI (May 21 -June 20)
•• VQur Judi•nent may nnl be
up to pur Juday, all bec~uiC
you ncar only tlml wh~eh y&lt;~u
wunt ·to hear. 111 '" dmnJ.
you'll r&lt;1b youmll' of tije
chance IU •r••P lht e"ence of
idea• and "ruution1.
'

Holzer Medical Center it a proud supporter of
American Ce~nc:er Society Relay for Life,

Ausu•t 16 • 17
at the Gallipolis City Park.
For more Information, call Bonnie Mcfarland at
·1740) 446·1679

,

·--

MEDICAL CE'NTER
Discover the Holzer D(fJ(!renc

W\Vw,hol.zer.orl
'

'

•'

i

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