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The·Daily
Sentinel
.
.

Notlonll Loovue

Phlladelp/lia
Attanta •
Florida·
NewYori&lt;

eott
w l
47
45
41

Pel.
GB
34
36 .556
2
41 • .500 6112
47 .434
12
48 .415 13 1/2

.sao

Los Angeles 8, San Diego 0 ...
san Francisco 5, St. louis 4 f
Nil- 5, Colgrado 4, 131~
N. v. Mets 2. Atlanta 1
Monday"• Qamq
PlttlliMirgh (Schmidt 4-31 ot Clnclnlllll
(Dovlo 1-o~ 7:05p.m.
Houston (Redding CHll al Milwaukee
(Haynes 5-91, 8:05 p .m.
San Francisco (Estes HI at Los Angeles
(Adams 3·2) , 10:10 p .m.

• AITIOflcoon L-ue

e.ot

Boslon_
New York
Baltimore
Toronto
Tampa Bay

w

47
46
39
38
24

l
33
33
42

Pel

GB

.587

Mondly'a G.omoo .
Boston (Nomo ~I at TomniO (l.oalza 5·
B). 1:.05 p.m.
·
Tampa Bay (LopeZ 3-1 0) lli'I.Y. Yan(Mussina 8·7), 1:05 p.m.
Kllnoaa City (Brn! HI o1 Cliio(SobMhlo 741, 7:05p.m.
Minnaoota (l.ohlo 1.01 II Chlc:ago While
Sox (K.Weltt 4-4), 8:05p.m .
Setittle (Abbott 7-2)at Texas (Davia~).
8:35p.m. .
..
Anaheim (Wuhbum 8·4) 11 Ookland
(Hudaon 8-5), 10:05 p.m.
.

.58Z
112
could have won , but I'm glad
. 461 8 112
Rolando Arrojo gave the to get thi s first game out of
36
43 .469 9 112
Montreat
57 .Z96 23 112
34
Boston Red Sox what the ·the way. I needed t9 pitch."
Cenfqj
c:-1
Cleveland India ns desperatel y
w L Pet GB
W
L Pet
GB
Chicago .
47 33 .587
1'\.llnday'a Glfl'MtS
Minnesota
49 31 .613
neeq: a quality start.
Houston
42 37 .532 4112
St. Louis (Mallhews 2·3) at Milwaukee Clovetond
45 . 33 .577
3
Arrojo, tilling in for th e
St. LOUIS
7
(Wrighl 7·5), 4:05 p,m.
Chicago
40 40 •.500
10
38 40 .487
n-doy'oa39 •, 40 · .494 7 112
Milwaukee
Florida (Dumpster 8·8) at Montreal · Kansas City
15
lilooton (Ohko 2·21 ot ctovelona
34 46 .425
injured Pedro Martin ez,
Cincinnati
(Armas Jr. 7-6) , 7:05 p.m.
Delroil
32 I ca .400
1s
16
32 46.. .410
(Woodol'd 1.01. 7:05p.m.
Weo1 ·
.combined with Rod Beck
~lttsburgh
PIHIIIurgh (Ritchie' 4~1 o1 Clnclnnotl
29 5o '",367 •1 7 1/2
Kansas City (Dulllln 6-8) a1 Dotron (U!Jlll
Andy Pe ttine was comWest
. (Deuona ~). 7:05 p.m.
•
W
L
GB
Pel
0.01.
7:05p.m.
and Derek Lowe on a two- mandin g in his first start back
w L Pel GB Chk:ago Cubs (W&lt;JOd 7-5) at N.Y. Mels SeattleN.Y. Yankees (Keisler. H) at Bal1imore
' 59 21 ..738 .
Arizona
(Reed 7-3), 7:10p.m .
50 31 .617
Anaheim
38 42 .47521
hitter as 'Boston beat Toronto fro m the disabl ed list, .pitch( !!e~s 4·81, 7:05 p.m.
•
los
Angeles
44 37 .543
'Philadelphia (Perspn 6·51 al Atlanta Oakland
·38 42 .475
6
·21
Toronto (Michalak 5-5) al Tampa Boy
4-0 Sunday at "SkyDollle.
San Francisco 44 37 .543 . . 6 (Glavlne 6· 51, 7:35p.m.
ing .seven sharp innin gs to
Texas
32 48 .400
27
(Kennedy'2·1), 7:15p.m.
'
COiotado ·
12
Arizona (Schilling 12·2) al Houston (Eiar·
38 43 .469
"I think l proved · [ can lead N ew , York past visiting
Minneoola (Ra&lt;i&lt;e ~I at Chicago While
San Diego
ton HI), B:05 p.m.
37 45 . .451 13 112
Slturdly•a Games
Sox (Lowe 3-0), 8:05 p.m.
·start. It's not easy to come of Tampa Bay.
C&lt;&gt;lorado (Chacon 4-4) at San Diego, N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 4
·
Saa111e (Sole B·ll 11 Texas (Oliver 7·~).
Saturdoy'o Games
(Williams s-6), 9:05 p.m.
Seattle 5, Anahelm 3
8:35p.m.
the bullpen and pitch the way
Pettitte (8- 4) , sidelined
Atlanta 5, N.Y. Mets 2
san Fiancisco (Hernandez 6·10) at letS Boslon 7, Toronto 5
"""'heim (Rapp 2·BI at Oakland (Zno 4- ·
f pitched," said Arrojo, who sin ce June 15 , with a groin
Cincinnati 7, Chicago Cuba1
Angeles (Prokopeo 6-41, 10:10 p.m.
Minnesota 3, Detrolr 2
61, 9:05 p.m.
'
san Francisco 5, St. Louis 2
Kllnaoa Clly 11, Clevetond 7
was .a Starter his entire care er injury, gave up five hits and
Houston 7, Milwaukee 4
Chicago WhHe Sox 4. BaHimore 1
before this season .
Montreal 7, Pittsburgh 6
Oakland 15, Texas '4
one run as the Yankees won
Philadelphia 6, Flonda 4
SUnday'o G.omoa
The Indians know that all fo r the seventh time in nine
Arizona 6, Colorado 5
N.Y. Yankees 8, Tampa Bay 1
too well after yet another gam es:
Los Angeles 7, San Diego 3
Kllnaoo City 13, Clovalttnd 11
Sund1y'1 Gamea
Boston 4, Toronto 0
horrible performance by a
Tino Martinez homered
Minnesota 8, Detrott 3
Chic- Cuba 2, Cincinnati 1
1
starting pitcher.
Montreal
9,
Pittsburgh
3
Baltimore
11, Chk:ago White SoX 3 .
for the career- bes t fourth
Philadelphia B. Florida 1 .
Seattle s, .Anahelm o
Mike Sween'ey, Carlos Bel- straight game, co,nnecting in
·Houston 6, Milwaukee 1
Texas 3; Oakland 1
tran and Raul Ibanez all the . first inning' ofT Tanyon
homered for the third con- Stu rtze (3- 7) .
secutive game as the Kansas
· Palmeiro in the second ·and against Brad Pen'ny (7 · 2).
,l:ity
Royals . outslugged
An_&lt;lres Galarraga in the-fifth .
Cleveland 13- 11 for their
Mulder (8-6) allowed three
season - high sixth straight
runs and six hits in 7 2-3
Calvin Murray hit a three- .
win.
Corey Koskie homered off innings.
run homer in the second off
Wade Miller (10-3) scat· Charles Nagy (2-3) failed Willie Blair (0- 3) and drove
Mike Venafro (2-2) pitched
Kevin Appier (5-S) allowed · Andy Benes (6-6) to over- tered se-ven hits in seven .
to get an out in the second
in three runs as Minnesota 1 1-3 in nings of one-hit three hits in eight ·scoreless come a 4-2 deficit and send innings, struck out eight "nd
. inning· and gave up eight runs handed Detroit' its eighth relief.
Jeff Zimme rman innings and had his ·first visiting St. Louis to its fifth walked two. The Brewers lost
and seven hits. Indians starters
worked
the
ninth for his 11th career RBI.
straight loss.
~traight loss. San Francisco . for just the second time in 14
have an 8.88 ERA the last 12
the Twins have ~on 10 of save.
Robin Ventura hit a solo has won three in a row.
day 'games at Miller Park:
·
games,. including an 18.90
12 games against the Tigers
hom e run off J&lt;?hn Burke~t
Chad Zerbe (2-0j, ocalled
Paul Rigdon (3-5) left after
mark in .- three straight losses
this season, includin g six
(6-6) as the M ets won for just up Friday from Triple-A. 2 2-3 innings when he aggra, to the Royall.
straight at the Metrodome.
the third time in 11 games Fresno, allowed one hit in 4 vated his strained right elbow.
"Everything I threw, they
· Twins starter Johan Santana
and earned a four-game split. 1-5 inni ngs. Robb Nen He allowed four runs , all 'irt
hit,'' Nagy said. "We needed
(1-0) gave up two runs and.
Armando Benitez got his pitch.,d the ninth for his NL- the third inning, and si,x hits,
so mebody to step up, and I
Pbillies finish five-game 16th save despite allowing an leading 25th save.
four hits in five innings.
including a three-run double
didn't."
sweep, reopen two-game RBI single to Andruw Jones.
Barry Bonds returned after io Moises Alou.
Arrojo (2- 2), in his first
lead
missing a game with a sore
start since replacing th e
There's no fold in these
right wrist and went 1- for-1
SOX
Phillies, at least not yet.
.injured Martinez in Boston's
with a double and three
rotation, allowed only Alex
Jason Johnson (7 _5 ) pitched
Five days after Philadelphia
walks .
Gon zalez's leadoff single to
was
swept
by
Atlanta
and
~ell
seve n st rong innings, and Fer"
· Mik e Hampton . hit his
Kevin Btown (7-3), in his
center in the seven th. Shan- nando .Lunar had a ca·re er- ·from··first place for rhe first sixth home ruQ, t.h e most by a
second start since coming off
n on Stewart added a one-out
t 'me s1'nce Apr1'l 9 the
high three RBls as Baltimore 1
•
pitcher in 30 years, but Regthe disabled list, allowed three
infield single in the ni~th off won at Chicago.
Phillies completed the major gie Sanders homered in th e
hits in six innings as visiting
Lowe.
.
Tony Bati&lt;ta and J e rry leagues' first five-game sweep 13th off Gabe White (1 -6),
Los Angeles completed i~s
Vladimir
Guerrero
hit
his
"I've
always
tho ught H airston each• added a pair of m
· fitve years , . mutmg
·
h
I e m aking a winner of Bret first career' grand slain and first four-game sweep of SaJI
Rolando had g reat stuff,'' RBis for ihe Orioles.
Florida Marlins 8- 1 Sunday.
Prinz (3 ~0).
had five RBis to help Men- Diego since April 25-27,
Toronto 's Jose Cruz Jr. said. "I
Rocky
Biddle
(l- 5)
"People coun~d us out,"
After Hampton homered in trea) complete its second 1977 . .
don't think he's had a chance allowed six runs and five hits Ph I'll 1' es manage ar ry Bowa
Brown combined with Al
· tht! eighth off M"iguel Batista, series sweep this season,
to display his stuff in Boston in 5 •1_3 innings.
. said. "They said we would Arizona tied the score in the
Guerrero connected in the Reyes on a ' four-hitter~
this year, but he got the
tle!(er be back in ftrst place. if
bottom half on an RBI dou- · •t hird otfJi~y ~d,~r~gp (4- extending the · Dodgers' wiri~ ·
chance today and he did a
there's one thing this team ble by Mark Grace, who also 8) and has .12 R;Bis in the riing · streak to six. Reyes
·good job."
has proven il) the first half of
hit a two-run double in the three~gam~ series. Guerrero earned his first save of th~
Brian Daubach and Shea
the season is their ability to first irlning.
had hit 153 previous homers; season.
.
.
Hillenbrand homered for the
(
oou11ce back. Every time
9
Marquis Grissom ·hit ~
Hampton, who has four . the most among active playFreddy
Gharcia C. hl) we've hit a pothole, the team
R ed Sox, who remained a
homers 'in his last 12 at-bats, ers without a slam.
·
three~run homer in the se~7
half-game ahead of the Yah- pitched an eig t- hitter or is has boun ced back."
Mike
Thurman
(4-5) end off Bobby Jones (4- 11);
kees in the AL East.
second career . shutout, and
Atlanta's 2-1 loss to the is the first pitcher to hit six in
and Eric Karros added a twQ;i
At Cleveland, B~ltran had Bret Boone h1t a two-run New York Mets help_ed one season since 1971, when alJowe'd three runs and six
run homer in the sixth.
•,
Feq~uson
Jenkins,
Sonny
hits
in
six
innings
at
Olympic
~
RBI
d h
b"n d homer as Seattle completed a
,our
s an
as com 1 e
Philadelphia reopen a twoSiebert ·and Rick Wise did it. Stadium.
with Sweeney and -Ibanez for · ~h~~e-game sweep at Ana- game lead over the ·Braves in
,.
·~
1
) the NL East. T here hadn't
11 homers and 23 RBis in
eRm. k " M
w
·
(
.f h
oo 1e
att
tse 1 - 2
k
.
.
been a five game sweep since
the fi1rst t h ree games o t e
&lt;our--ga me ser1·es.
s_tru_c out m_ne m 5 1- 3
"
·
f,
Pittsburgh did it at San Fran" l'm not surprised because mmngs, allowmg our runs cisco from Sept. 12-I5, 1996.
· h
d t
" B 1 - three earned - and five
d
we ave a goo
earn,
e.
h
I .
" We just nee ed to get
, tran said. "This was another htts. The loss put t e Ange s a back on track,'' fitst baseman
21 . ,games Travis Lee salc!. "We had to
season-worst
great game for us."
Blake Stein (4-6) allowed beht?d the , AL West-leadmg get back to.fue way ~e were
playing in April and May."
one run in three innings of . Manners
relief for the win. Roberto
At Philadelphia, Nelson
Hernandez got five outs for
:
Figueroa ( 1~0) allowed one
his 15th save.
run and six hits in seven
John Rocker got a standing ·
innings for his first major
· as h e race d out o f t h e
B"o
Porter's
three-run .league win , five days after his
ovatiOn
·
·
h.
homer
with
two
outs
in th e recall from the minors . .
Cl eve Ian d b u II pen to pttc a
perfect ninth in his first game eighth inning off Mark MulJimmy Rollins drove in
at Jacobs Field.f-!e stru ck out der lifted Texas over Oakland. three runs, Doug Glanville
'
two.
ln the first . seven innings , had three hits and Scott
''
'•
''I'm glad I threw well." the host Rangers managed Rolen hit a tiebreaking RBI
Ro cker sa id . " I wish we only doubles by Rafael single in the sixth inning

BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS

Yankees 6,
Devil Rays 1

.: TWins 8,
Tigers 3

Mets 2,
Braves 1

Giants 5,
cal'dinals 4

Astros 6,
Brewers 1

NATIONAL
LEAGUE

On"oles .11 ,
White
3

D·backs 5,
Rockies 4

Dodgers 8,
Padres 0

Expos 9. ·
Pirates 3

Man"ners 5,
Angels 0

.

RangerS 3,
AthletiCS 1

At Turnpike.' s.
Service Dept.

I

Miguel Cairo 's double, and that was it for
the C ubs' struggling offense.
· The Cubs have averaged only 2.6 runs over
the past 10 games, 'scoring two or fewer six
-times. It's a tribute to their pitching that
they've gone ,4-6 and lost only a game and a
half in the standings.
T heir staff has given up "the fewest runs in
the National League and has learned how to
make do with little support.
· ~·When we don't score a lot of runs, we end
up ·in games like today's, 2-1 or 3-2,'' manager
Don Baylor said:
T he Reds usually end up losing at Cinergy_
Field, where they have yet to win consecutive
., games on ·a homestand. T~eir 10-28 home
record is the worst in the majors.
Reitsma,~ rookie from Double- A who leads
the staff in startS, had the misfortune of going
l!P against Lieber, who- has dominated the
Reds in all three starts this season .
" Every time he goes out there, he pitches
well,'' Reitsma said." H e·~ a great thrower. I just
wish it wasn't on the day that I'm pitching."
Lieber's one-hit, 3-0 win at Wrigley Field
on May 24 ended the Reds' NL-record streak
of 208 consecutive games without a shutout.
He gave up only five hits and an unearned run
in 7 1- 3 innings of a 3-1 win on May 30 .
This time, he needed more help. Lieber

i

.

Tuesday

· Monday, July.2, 2001 _·

AROUND··. 'fHE • DIAMOND

Arrojo gives Red Sox
.needed pitching boost

tn.mPagelll

•

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I

Reds

•

•

SPORTS:·T~ibe back on track,.·a1

Page B&amp;

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'

worked deeper in ''the co unts and had thrown
93 pitches when Baylor removed him with
two outs in the sixth.
"It was SO hot out there today," Baylor said.
"He had exerted himself to the limit for me."
Lieber gave up six hits - rwo of theill
infield singles - during his shortest start of,
the season. He chose to st:ly on the bench
between innings instead of heading for the air
conditioned clubhouse to escape the heat. .
"As the game went o n, I felt I got a little
accustomed to it," Lieber said. " I can understand Do'n getting me out of there. I didn't •
argue with it."
.
·
..
Gordon has trouble breathing as he got final
three outs for his 14th save in 17 chanc.es.
"Today was a bad day for me. I'm starting io
get a bad cold," Gordon said. " I was winded
o ut there."
' Notes: T he Cubs are 8-2 against the Reds
this season . .. . In his three starts against the
Reds, Lieber has given up 2 1 hits and one
earned run in 22 innings ... . Ken Griffey Jr.
tweaked his left pamstring when he foot
slipped as he mad~ a play in the fifth . Gri~ey,
who tore the hamstnng dunng spnng traming, stayed in · the game . . .. . Jason La~ u e
bec.ame the first Red to strtke out four ttmes
in a game since Greg Vaughn on Sept. 26,
1999 . ... Interim batting coach Mike Greenwell broke his right hand when he was hit by
LaRue's ball during baiting practice. H e'll
wear a c ast for a ~e~k to I 0 days. Greenwel11s ,
filling m for Ken Gnffey Sr., out wtth a bad
back .

QualitJ.,,_..,!.

,I

Meigs County's
so cent~ • July

BY BRIAN

•

SALEM CENTER American Electric Po,.;er has finished min
ing coal iiJ Meigs County, but coal i
s still being dug at Southern Oh\o
Coal Co., under the ownership ofC
ONSOL Energy Inc.
.
. CON SOL and AEP finalized the
sale of the local mines, along with C
emral O hio Coal Co. of Cumberland and Windsor Coal Co. in West
Liberty, W.Va., on Monday.

-----~-----------

s4995
I
.
_,. ,._.,._. __I_,__

--------~~-~----­

r--~--------------,~------~---~------,

I
I

$1995

SPRING
II
MAINTENANCE! I· ·
PACKAGE
I

I -·

MOTORCRAFT .

FAST LUBE · .

.

The mines ' buyer is expected to c
ontinue operating the SOCCO ope
ration, at least for now, AEP reports.
"We had hoped to find a buyer th
at might find additional value in op
erating the mines collectively with
other existing operations,'' said Cha
rles Ebetino, AEP's senior vice presidem of coal mines .
"CONSOL has indicated that i]:
wo uld at least initially continue the
operation of SOCCO's M eigs Cou
nty mines, and would reopen and o

LICJ.•at~••-~IP.I"~~~IiiJ

.. ______

--------

::
.

urchase the min es were ann oun cJ!d
April 30 . Uo th Windso r and Ce ntral O hio Coal are now idle. A press
release isstJ ed Monday by AE P said,
" Sou th ern O hio C o al mines were s
ch eduled for cl os ure had a sale no t
m a t e r i a li z~ d ;"
An · unid entifi ed min e empl oyee s
aid this morning that it w as "bus in ess as usual " at th e min es .
In May, at the time the CO N SO L sale was arm o un ced, the two
M eigs min es, processi ng fac ili ty ami

offices employed 680 workers . • :
· Those employees were notified tQ
eir employment with th e power gia
nt would endJuri e 30, butVikki Mi
chalski, AEP Fuel Supply's sp9kesm
an in C olumbus, said Friday the mi
nes would continue to oper~te until
the sale to C ONSOL was finalized .
Mi chalski reiterated th at posi ~
tion Monday prtor to AEP's announ
cement of the sale, but an employee in ' th e office of the mines' genet-

Please see Mines, Al

BY ToNY M. LEACH

POMEROY - A local man has been arrested and
charged with J¥&gt;Ssession and cultivation of marijuana
following a JYomeroy Police probe.
Police Chief Mark Proffitt said officers were in the
process of patrolling Chester Road last Friday when
a large ~umber of marijuana plants were spotted on a
roofto p of a reside nce.
.
·.
Officers spoke with Mary Sheets, a resident of the
home, and told her marijuana was growing on her
rooftop. Extra units were dispatched-to the scene, and
Sheets was read her rights. Shee~ then signed do cuments giving officers permission to search the property for marijuana,.• · .,
.
. Upon searehin'lftfie 'rooftop, officers discovered 54+
.. f11~rijuaQa , plants in var.io\!S plw._tm ,a9d ~~.
.. A' l~rg amount of potting s~)l ~dd extra pla,ntets
also were reportedly found ol)tside of the home.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY-"It's gettin g to be a real bad problem. They have ,no respect
for children on their bicycles and I'm afraid if somethin g doesn't happen, •
someon e is going tp get
serio usly injured."
Th e
problem . that
Anthony Morris referred
to during Monday's regular
meeting ofVillage Council
is th e issue of motorists
. - ,sp.~gjp~ ..,.thr ~g)J, th ,.
: ' . Locust and State stree1s
area where neighborhood
children can often be
found playing outdoors.
"It's a constant concern
'f or people who have chile
dren," said Morris, whb on
resides Locust Street. "The
authorities have been con·
iacted about motorists
speeding through the area
several times in the past,
and, quite frankly, many
fear that the worst could
possibly happen."
Morris presented council
members. with a petition
signed by a h'ost of individuals who live on both
streets requesting that a
stop s_ign aud several children-at- play signs be erect. ed to try and curb
motorists' excessive speed
and to hopefully prevent
· an unfortunate accident.
. "There is a hump in the
road that motorists have to
go over and th ey can't see
~wha~s on--the other side,"
added Morris. "Signs need

Please see s.fety, A3

Long, ime customers lined up one last time at the Cross' Grocery counter last
week ,. after owner Bill Cross: ennounced ·the store would close. (Tony M. Leach photo)
•

Historic grocery
now history, too
Cross' Grocery
closed Friday ·
BY BRIAN

Sports

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

CLOSED The building which
housed Wald Cross' Sons Grocery
until the business closed on Friday
was built In 1892, and was at th~t
time considered one of the largest
and most impressive ' buildings 1n
southern Ohio. (Tony M. Leach photo) .

Hllh: 801

2 Sedlans - 12 Plllft

Low: 601
Details, A2

Lotteries

AS OHIP
82-4 Pld 3: 11--4-2; Pick 4: 11--4-3-6
85 ·Bud1eye5: 14-21-2.3--27-34 ·

A4
A3 W.VA.
B 1.3 -4.6

Dally 3: 4-3-2 Dally 4: 4-8--5-5

A2

c 2001 Ohio valley Publhhing Co.

RACINE - Meigs Coun_ty's oldest business has closed'
its doors. '
T he doors at Waid Cross'
Sons Grocery in Racine were
locked one final time on Friday, as its owner Williati1 C ross
entered retirement.
· With a history datin g back
to 1840, the landmark store

was the oldest con tinu ou s
f.1mily-owned busin ess in the
county, and is considered one
o f, the o ldest businesses in the
Northwest Territory.
When it . closed on Friday,
Waid C ross' Sons Grocery was
owned by th e fifth ge neration
of C ross men. It originated as
a trading post for the employees of Lu cius ·Cross, who
operated a tannery anc! mill at
GrahamUs Station, the ccrmmunity now known as
Ra cme. The store was origi-

Please see Grocery, A:S

MARIJUANA DISCOVERED - More than 540 marl·
juana plants were discovered by Pomeroy Pollee on
the rooftop of a residence along Chester Road. Scott
McKinley, Pomeroy, was arrested and charged with
p&lt;;&gt;ssession and cultivation of marijuana. From left
are Patrolman Joe Kirby Jr. , Police Chief Mark Proffitt
and Patrolman Mic hael Ash inspecting the evidence.
(Photo courtesy of Pomeroy Pollee )

Board approves suminer_employees
'

'

Sandy Needs were approved as teachers
for Summer school iniervl!nt.i on program.
N eeds will be employed on an as-n eeded
basis.
Th e following suppl emental contracts
were approved:" Michael Pratt, eighth
grade girls .basketball coac h; Ken Tolliver,
va rsity golf coach; Jennife r McBride, varsity chee rleading advisor; Scott C hrist.Limrin, Dixie Sayre, Linda Faulkc and• man: outside fat iliti0S coo&lt;dinat o r; Jaytie
FROM StAFF REPORTS

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Lo cal
Board· of Education approved summer
employees, supplemental contrac ts and ·
sub stitute teachers f(,r th e upcoming
school year duri"ng its regular m eeting last
week.
Care1yn R itc h ie was emp1oyed as a b us,
driver ·for sun~ner sch ool, and. C indy

'----------------------...1Weather

Piuse see Maltju1na, A:J

LAsT CUSTOMERS'-

Sentinel
Comks

M. LEACH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SeNice
Includes upoiltofiner
5 quarts
of Motorcraft
I ·--"'"'""'"'"-"""'-"""' 1I I •and
new Motorcralt
• Perform
Mum·F'olrttl

I -ChoOcondllloiiiUd&lt;CI-..:tlw _,."...,..,.,&amp;,., ·1VehlclalnspectiQn • Check and flllneceuary ftulllsl·;~
II •~:-hllfim~-ChoOc.,.,
=.";T',.,;J-....:::,~e".==~ml1 I' All in 29 minOtes or leu • ~iesel vehicles may bel
....... ~. , extra. ·
·
·
.J

perat e th e Windso r Coa) an d Central Ohio Coal operati ons," he ad de
·d.
CO N SOL has not indicat ed "officiall y what it plans to do wi th an y o
f th e properti es, but the ag ree-·
m ent also includes coal st1pp ly'agrce
m ent s w ith CO N SOL to purchase about 34 million to ns o f coal f
_r9m th e affected min 's and other C
ONS O L affil ia te mines thro ugh 20
08 .
C ONSOL's preliminary plans to p

.

rating:

BY TONY

lbdly's

advertised pri(e on lhe some tire.

.

·ul,.

Edjtorjals
Obituaries

.1 I

www.mydaiiysentinel.com

Council
ponders
.safety
.concetn

.I
w. 1ea1ure a11 major- Goodyear, Flreotone, Gene&lt;ll,
1 Check and adjust camber and toe. Additional parta and 1 1 Mlcllelln, Brfdgeslone, Continenlal, UNIROYAL.·BF Goodrich. 1
labor mav be reouired on some vehicles.
.J L•
Maunlino antfbolllln&lt;IM mav be extra.
.J
L

4-wheel

J. REED

OVP NEWS STAFF

Calendar
Classjfjeds

2.wheel -

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

J , 2001 ·Vol. S1, No 221

ines sold and

r----------------,
r-------·--------1WHEEL ALIGNMENT II
Tl RES
I $2495 $4995 I·I· We will meet or beat any (Ompe
I
I .

Hometown Newspaper

Collins, volunteer cheerleader advisor;
Stephanie , Evans, volunteer assistant volleyball coach ; and Pam Douthitt, varsity
vo lleyball coach.
Jessica Bartels, Jenny Long and· Everett
Ross were also approved as summet
employees.
I .
.
The board approved the following subsdturt tcac?ers: John Barcus, Betheney

Ple1se see-Board, A3

.·Recreation Festival
'

'

the· 36th Annual River Recreation Festival
will be held in GalliP&lt;&gt;Iis. Cily Park July 4-7..
Free screenings and h~lth Information will be availa~le at the Holzer Medical Center MoQile Unit.
We'll be looking for you!

.'
f

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference.

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The Daily Sentil)el

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PageAl

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Tuesday, July 3, 2001

TUesday,JuiJ :s, 2001

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Wednesday, July 4

conditions. I
MICH.

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112"111 '

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I Mansfield 160"183' I •

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that the findings conflicted with what
he had seen. The man, visibly shaken,
quickly left the church ·hall Where the •
meeting was held and wouldn't talk
with reporters outside.
•
Another man asked how a weapon
that required up to 14 pounds of force
to pull the trigger.could be accidentally discharged. Flask said the officer in
question "pulled the trigger. He ad!!lits
..
r
t hat.
The shooting occurred' after a car
and foql chase that was prompted by 'a
call to police complaining about illegal
drug activity in the area.
Jimmy Nelson, 23, was charged with
felony fleeing and eluding, and his .
cousin Chaz Flannery, 18, was charged
with complicity to the same counts .

CLEVELAND (AP) - The mayor
" I find no fault on the part of the
and police department say evidence officers," Flask said.
shows that the police did not intenMayor Michael R. White said that
tionally fire the bullet that struck a 6- conclusion had been reviewed by the
year-old boy last month.
police · chief, the ciry's safety director,
Police Chief Martin Flask said Mon- the city prosecutor, the county coroner
day that Detective Michael Meyer's and one . of the mayor's executive assis.. gun accidentally went off during a tants. " All five have come to the same
struggle with a Sl,lspect wanted in a eondusion,"White said. ·
drug case on June 19,..
· ·
The mayor acknowledged that som~
Some residents 1 of the city's . people will be unhappy with the ctty s
Collinwood
neighborhood
had conclusion. and told about 40 people at
claimed th~t the police had fired at the a neighborhood communito/ meeting
suspect as he fled.
1 ·Monday 'night th~t he concurred with
The bullet grazed the suspect's shoul- the findings.
der, then hit 6-year~old Trevon
"We have no vested interest in the
Williams in the abdomen. The boy was outcome," he said. "We want the
in fair condition Monday at Rainbow truth."
Babies and Children's Hospital.
One man stood and told the mayor

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KY.

George Lemley

o •••~••~•

Rai~ possible on the Fourth

Missing boys sought

II"
Athlete dies in co ISIOn

RACINE - Joseph Sayre, 59, of Racine, died unexpectedly
on Sunday, July 1, 2001 at his home .
He was born on December 22, 1941, son of Laura Mullins
Sayre of Clendenin, W.Va., and the late Jes!e lr.'Si'9're.
He was retired from American Electric Power, where he was
a training coordinator, and a shift engi11eer with AEP in
Cblumbus. He was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church in Pomeroy.
Surviving in addition to his•mother are his wife, Dixie Circle Sayre; a son and daugh ter-in-law,Joseph,Jr. and Hope Sayre
of Florida; 'two stepgrandchildren, Ryan and Jessica Lab of
Florida; three brothers, James Sayre, Basil Sayre and Randel
Sayre, all of Ohio; and four sisters, Garnet Taylor, Mary Jones
and Wanda Walden; all of Clendenin, and Mavis Posa of Akron.
· Besides his father, he was preceded In death by his first wife,
Elizabeth Matthers Sayre; a son, Jefl' Sayre; and three brothers,
Ohley, David and Clark. ,11 ., ,' •
·.
•
Services will be held on Thursday, July 5, 2001 at 10 a.m. at
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy with the Rev..
. Fa~er Walter Heinz officiating.
Burial will follow at Our Lady of Loretto Cemetery in Long
·
Bottom.
Friends may call at the White Funeral Home in Coolville on
LITTLE HOCKING - Zetta Milarn. 86, Little Hocking, Wednesday, July 4, 200.1 from 2; 4 and 6-8 p.m.
··
!died Monday, July 2, 2001 at Arcadia Nursing Center in
' Coolville. · ·
.
She was born on June 11, 1915, daughter of the late Henry
owned and operated by the
and Ollie Lafferty.
.
•
.village or a gas, electric, comSurviving are two sons, Henry and James Milam; five
munications, or refuse · com. daughters , Georgia Marshall, Vyona Chute, Fay Billings, Elizfrom Page AI ' . ·pany, or a vehicle being used
abeth Eaton and Frances Albert; three sisters, Kay Hurt, Fay
in authorized public activiWesley and · Ruth Tolliver; and several grandchildren and to be installed so that dfivers ties, such as parades, firew0rks,
'great-grandchildren,
cari know that there are ·chil- sports events, musical produc· She was also preceqed in death by her husband, James dren playing in the immediate tions and other activities
Alfred Milam.
J
vicinity."
which have the approval of
· Services will· be 11 a.m.Thursday 'inWhite Funeral Home,
After hearing Morris' the village.
Coolville, with th e Rev. Bob Auxier officiating. Burial will be request, council appointed a
Council also approved an
in Everg ree n Cemetery, Belpre. Friends may ~all at the funer- safety committee to investi- amendment to the weight
gate the ·incident and then limit ordinance that would lift
al home from 6-8 p.m. Wednesday.
report back with their find~ weight limits on ,various
ings . during the next sched- streets throughout the village
uled council meeting.
to accommodate large vehiIn other inatters, council cles that deliver to .downtown .
HOCKINGPORT - Kenneth Reynolds, Hockingport,
approved the second reading businesses.
. died Tuesday, July 3, 2001 at his residence.
Arrangements will be announced by White _Funeral Home, ·of an orclinance that would
Areas affected by the
prohibit any person or orgaCoolville.
amendment are West Main
nization that engoged in any
Street, Court, Lynn, Sycamore•
performance or used .any
electronic device in any man- and Mechanic streets, and a
portion of Butternut Avenue
VINTON - Wilma M. Newell Scarberry, 77,Vinton, died .' n~r so as to create a public
(Main Street to Second
Saturday, June 30, 2001 at Cape Fear Hospital in Fayetteville, . dJstur?ance, or, to _operate or
Street) .
· N.C., from injuries su1tained in an auto accident.
pernut the operatton of any
The second reading of an
Bo · March 17 1924 in Clifton, W.Va., daughter of the late sound amphficall?n system
rn and Alva' M. Stewart N ewe II , sh e was a h omema
.
'-- r. from
so that ordinance that would provide
Clarence
...
h wuhm
d . a veh1cle
'nl · d'bl
1a1 y au 1 &lt;e at family health insurance for
· · are two sons · and a .daugh ter- m· 1:aw, s tep h en P.· t eli
e soun ISfpSO
Survtvmg
police chief was heard and
· and Dame!
· D. and Penny scarb erry afro stance
Scarberry of Columbus,
h oh' or more teet council agreed that possible
.
. 1aw, D Ou"'al"u
of Clarksburg, W.Va.; two b roth ers and a S!Ster-mEm t e .ve IC1he. d
t ..
11 amendments would be added
Newell of Clifton and Dean and Martha NeweII o f Mason,
dxceptlons
h rd't at o· no dta
1 e a during the third reading.
•
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W.Va · and seven grandchildren
·and five great-grand ch.'ld
1 ren. un erd t eto mance
b · me u ted
In open discussion, council
· '•
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.., soun sys em emg opera
She was also preceded m death by her husband, Menry n
.
d'
h'
approved
the purchase of five
1
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ll d to request me 1ca or ve ICUScarberry, in 1994; two sisters, Sharon Jan.~ !'le:e an
Jar assistance or to warn of a · Bradford pear tr~es . for land·Nina M . Dailey; and two brothers, Robert M1ke . Newell · hazardous road condition, the scaping purposes at the newly
vehicle emitting the amplified constructed Water Works
and Clarence "Buck" Newell .
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday in. Fogelsong Funer~l Hom_e, sound is an emergency or Park. The cost of the new
Mason, with AI Hamon offictatm~. Bunal wlll be m public safety vehicle or one trees will total $150.
Rjverview Cemetery, Middleport. Fnends may call at the
funeral home from 6-8 p.m. Thursday. '

Council bans fake gilns

Town dedicates
patrol boat ·

Safety

Juron get abuse case
NEW PHILADElPHIA (AP) - The. case against a man
charged with 71 sex-related counts iqvolving children was
.headed to a jury Tuesday.
.
The charges against Dayid Matheny, 43, of Newcomerstown, include rape. felonious !exual penetratio.n. and sexual
battery. If conviCted of all charges, he could face several hfe
prison terms .
.
A Tuscarawas County Common Pleas Court jury heard
closing arguments Monday and was told to return Tuesday to
.
begin deliberations.
. ..
Eight witnesses testified dunng the tna l that they were sex•
ually abused by Matheny when they were children.

Kenneth Reynolds

1'omb Raider' ride opens

. · S rbe
Wil ma
ca rry

KINGS MILLS (AP) -Paramount's Kin gs Island will open
a ride in 2002· based upon the popuJar "Lara Croft: 'Tomb
Raider" film.
,
"Tomb Raider:The Ri.d e" will drop riders into dark ·caverns
and feature computerized special effects. Guests will be able to
experience the ride while waiting in lind. ·
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'"From the momen\ you enter.the tomb and begm wmdmg
through the caverns, there will be special effects and things
occurring at different points," park · spokesman -Jeff Siebert
said.
~Park officials wouldn't say how much the new ride 'would
cost to conftruct. The park is about 25 miles north of Cincinnati.

Coming Friday, July 13, 2001

Mayor pleads; will keep Job

The

Dorothy Anrt Swiger

· Daily Sentinel

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•

NOTICE Tp CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for the Milling and Resurfacing of Mill Street
.located In the VIllage of Middleport In Meigs County, Ohio, will
be received by the Meigs County Commissioners at their
office at the Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 until 10:00 A.M,
Thtlrsday, July 5, 2001 and then at 11:00 A.M.. at said :office
opened and read aloud for the following:
The Milling of 978 S. Y. and Asphalt Resurfacing of 2,850 L.F of
Mill Street Tn Middleport, Ohio In Meigs County, Ohio Bidders
must note required prevailing wages on this project, Included In
the bid packet.
·
·
Specifications, and bid forms may be secured at the office of
Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Otilo
45769- Phone # 740-992·2895.
·
"A deposit of 0 d~llars will be required for each set of plans
and specifications, check made payable to
·
The full amount will returned within thirty (30) days after receipt
of bids.
·
Each bid must be accompanied by either a bid bond lh an
amount of 100% of the bid amount with a surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners or . by certified
:check, cashiers check, or letter of credit upon a solvent bank In
1he amount of not less than 1 0% of the bid amount in favor of
· . ·
the aforesaid Meigs County Commissioners.
BldBonds shall be accompanied by Proof of Authority of the
·
offlc!al or agent signing the bond
Bids shan be sealed and marked as Bid for Village of
Middleport -Mill Street lmprovements _and mailed or delivered to:
Mei~s C(»unty Commissioners, .Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Attention of bidders Is called to all of. the requirements
: .contained In this bid packet, particularly to the Federal Labor ·
: Standards Provisions and Davis-Bacon · Wages, various
: :Insurance requirements, varlous equal .opportunlty pi'ovlsi~ns,
: and the requirement for a payment bond and performance bond
for 100% of the contract prl.ce.
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No bidder may withdraw his bid within tffirty (;30) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof..
· . '
; Meigs Co. Commissioners to reject any or all bids.
· Jeff Thornton, President
· Meigs County Commll!sioners

Emma Johnson
Daughter of
·
frank and Janet Johnson
· Someflnetown, WV
Picture• mull! be In by Friday
July 6, 2001 . Picture• c'an be
picked up alter_July 20th, 200.1.

I

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
· with photog.raphs ' of local
children - ages newborn .to ·four
years old. The Baby Edition will
·appear in llie July 13th issue. ·
Be"Sure your child, grandchild,
or relative is involved!

COOLVILLE - Dorothy Ann Swiger, 59, Coolville, died
Sunday. July 1, 2001 in St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg,
W.Va.
Born May 11, 1942, she was the daughter of Anna Rivera
Clark of Michigan, and the late Harold Clark, and was a
member of Gospel Baptist Church ofTorch.
Surviving are her husband, Donald Swiger! ~ son, Brian
. Swiger; four daughters, Deborah and Chnstme SjOI!ger,
Tammy Butler and Julie Herod; a brother, Dav1d Cla~k; fo~r
sisters, Diana Messner, Nancy Clark, Carolyn M01ze and•
Helen Clark; and five grandchildren ..
- Services will be 10 a.m. Friday in White Funeral Home,
Coolville. Officiating will be Pastor Jay Hubbard. ~urial will
be in Mount Olive &lt;";emetery, Vinton Counry. Fnends may
call at the fun eral home from 2-4 and· 6-8 p.m. Thursday.
'

Monday evening, and that "t
oday's our last day." ·
Sogan was out of the office
Monday, and would not be r
from Page AI
eturning to the mines' Point
al manager, Lance Sogan, sai . Rock office complex, th e w
oman said.
d the mines would be dosed

Mines

.~

The
Daily Sentinel
.

Co~plete the form ~low and erlcl::se a sn~pshot or wallet sized picture plus

.

a $7.00 charge for .each pho~ograph. If more than one child is in the picture,
please enclose a11 additional $2.00 per child. Enclose )'l!yment with picture.
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to be accurate. II you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 1!9~·g15§ . -·
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Child's Name {s) &amp; Age {s):_ _ _ _~_ __.__...,:__ _ _ _- : - - - -

News Departmenti .
General manager

Ext. 12

'New a

Ext. 13

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Ext. 14

Other servlt:es

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Ext. 3

ClrculaUan

Ext._4

Cloaallled Ada

Ext. S

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FRIDAY July 6. 2001!
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through. Friday, 111 Court St.,
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. 111 Court Stre~t. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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Zetta Milam

EXTRA! EXTRA!

The ordinance, which passed unanimously, covers toy guns,
props, trick cigarette lighters and pellet, air and starter guns,
· "The purpose of this is to get some of these (fake) guns off
PUT-IN-BAY (AP) - This
·the market," said Councilman Bob Keith.
. Lake Erie island resort community has ded icated a
$142,000, 26-foot patrol boat
provided by the state. ·
·.MEDINA (AP) -Tile Medina· mayor has pleaded guilty to
Village Councilwoman Joy
a misdemeanor theft count for asking a City Hall secretary to Urge cracked a champagne
"

bottle against the bow to dedicate the Harbor Patrol L
.
Ohio ranks eighth in the.country when 1! comes to regiStered boats with an estimated 418,000 boats registered yearly.
· said Jeff H~edt, chief of the Divisio'n ofWatercraft at the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources. .
-· ..
The division's Marine Patrol EqUipment Loan program provides patrol boats to waterfront com~unities to increase
marine safety. The new Put-in-Bay boat IS on loa]J to th~ Vlllage through the program .
'

.

Joseph Sayre

MIDDLEPORT- George ,David "Dave" Lemley Jr., 46,
Middleport, died Sunday, 'july 1, 2001 in Holzer Medical
Center.
· Born Feb. 5, 1955 in Mason, W.Va., son of the late George
David Sr. and Helen M. Lyn~h Lemley, he was•a graduate of
Meigs High. School and a carpenter.
Surviving are his-wife; Kathy L. Blankenship Lemley; 1\vo
daughters and ,a son-in-law, April and Josh Starcher of
Pomeroy, and Sarah Blankenship of Middleport; .a son,
Andrew Blankenship of Midclleport; two grandchildren; . a
brother, Christopher Lemley of Cheshire; a sister and brother-in-law, ·linda and Robert Shaver of Gallipolis; and several
nieces and nephews .
.
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He was also preceded in, peath by a sister, Deborah K. Lemley.
·.
Services will be 8 tonight in Fisher-Acree Funeral Home,
Middleport, with the Rev. Ralph Butcher officiating. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 6 tonight until the time of
serv1ces.

lnc.

do personal chores for him on city time.
. •
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The plea by James S. Roberts, 60, on Monday in Medina
Sunny ~· Ooudy Cl~ · Sh~EII'I T-slolms
Rain
Flurries
Snow
Ice
County Common Pleas Court will allow him to keep his job
and continue his campaign for election to a fourth term..
1
' 1 believe this is a fair resolution a.nd it brings finality to this
case," said special Prosecutor .Kevin· Baxter, who· handled the
case for Medina County Prosecutor Dean HolryJan.
Roberts left court without commenting. Defense lawyer
BY TH E ASSOCIATED PRESS
the chance for showers and
Stephen
J. Brown said the mayor would not comment until he
Showers and thunderstorms thunderstorms. High in the
are in the forecast for the July mid 80s. Southwest wind 5 to is sentenced Sept: 10.
Fourth holiday, but they will 10 mph. Chance of rain 50
be hit-and-miss and not wide- p er~e nt .
spread. ·
Wednesday night...Mostly
ZANESVfLLE .(AP) - Authorities used police dogs to
Temperatures on Wednesday cloudy with the chance for
·will be a !itt!~ warmer with showers and thunderstorms, search fo r two boys reported .missing by their parents over the
weekend.
highs in the .low to mid-80s. Low in the mid 6os.
Robert J. Allen, 15, and Luke Medaris, 10, were last seen at
Relative humidities also will
Extended forecast :
noon
Sunday when they told family members they were
oe on -the 'rise, the National
Thursday.' .. A chance of
· Weather Service said.
showers in the mornirig, then going to the woods behind their homes to look for frogs to
··
•
But, after Wednesday, no becoming partly cloudy. High feed to a pet lizard. ·
An all-night search by Muskingum deputies and Washingmore rain is expected until in the lower 80s.
•
Saturday, forecasters said.
·Friday... Mostly clear. Low ton and Wayne Township firefighters turned up no sign of the
boys.
_
: Sunset tonight will be at 55 to 60 and high 80 to 85.
A search using the State Highway Patrol's helicopter was
9:04, and sunrise on WednesSaturday... Partly cloudy. A
call~
pff Monday.
~- ". at 6 :os· a.m.
chance . of showers and thun....,y
Weather forecast:
derstorms from early· after·
~
~ . T-onight ...Becoming mostly •iwon on. Low 57 to 62 and
cloudy followed by the .chance . high in t~e mid 80s. ·
LEIPSIC (AP) _A Leipsic High School football and basefor showers and ~hunderSunday... Partly cloudy. Low ball player who was bound for Bluffton College this fall has
storms . Low in the mid 60s. 60 t.o 65 and h1gh m the m1d ·
been killed m a car-freight train accident.
Light southwest wind. Chance BOs.
Shawn Steffan, 18; who was driving the car struck by the
""of rain 50 percent.
Monday... Pardy cloudy. Low Norfolk Southern train· Sunday night, was pronounced dead
· ' Independence day... Mosdy in the lower 60s and high BO at Rita's Putnam County Ambulatory Care Center in Glan. cloudy, warm and humid with to 85.
dorf.
A passenger, Matthew J. Dewar, 19, was in serious condition
··
Monday in a Li= hospital, The train crew was uninjured. The
crossing did not have gates or warning lights.
•
Steffan was the, captain of the football team his senior year
. ~ . AKRON (AP) -The city council has voted to ban th~ sale and the catcher for the baseball team, which had just gone to
. qr brandishing of fake guns.
•
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the regional finals.
· The council's vote Monday night was intended to _prevent .
~!:~~ from firing on people they mistakenly believe are

Br corrl« or motor routo ••
,...

One- ·
one month
One yur

$8.ro

tnaido Melgo CoUnty

13 Weakll

52 we&lt;iko

$27.30
$53.82
$105.56

Rotoo oullido Melp County
13 Weeks
26 Weell8
~

weells

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The Dally Sentinel • Page A .3

LOCAL BRIEFS
·Spedal board
meeting set
POMEROY - A special
meeting of the Meigs local ·
Board of Education will be
held Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
board room.
Purpose of the meeting is to
discuss and take action on bids
received for the. new. elementary school.
Assuming some or all of the
bids are rejected, a new bid
date will be established in th'e
near furure, hopefully on July
17 with the Midclle School to
bid on July · 19. Basically, the
board will have to declare. an
"urgent necessity" in. order to
make the process work, said
Superintendent William Buckley.

529.25
$56.68.

$109.72

Junior White will provide
music at the Senior Citizens
Center, 5:30 p.m. on July 12,
not Thursday as previously
announced;

Outage set

TUPPERS PlAINS
Tuppers Plains-Chester Wat~r
District plans an outage qf
water service on Thursday,
from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m. in th)!
following locations in Cheste.r
Township: Route ?,A from
Good Times to Forest Run
Road, Forest Run R~ad from
7A to Block Plant Road,John:son Road, Will Hill Road, an~
Flatwoods Road from Ohio ::J
to Royal Oak Resort.
Customers affected by the
outage will be under a boil
advisory until further notice.
Customen; in the affected area
should boil their drinki1;1g and
cooking water for three nli!'POMEROY - In obser- utes before it is consumed.
vance of Independence Day,
Meigs County Health Department will be closed Wednesday. Normal business . operaPOMEROY -Tax books
tions will resume on Thursday ' for the second half 2000 real
at 8 a.m.
estate taxes will close on July 9.
This will include all extensions
in time to pay taxj!s, accorcling
to Meigs County Treasurer
· POMEROY - .Rita and Frank.

Offkedosed

Books open

Co11ection

items were his and that She~ts
had no knowledge of t~e
marijuana.
from Page AI
Evidence
was . phptographed and taken to police
Ditri'n g the search, Scott headquarters by officers. ProfMcKinley, Pomeroy, arrived at fitt said the marijuani!:;.
the residence and was advised weighed around 1,122 grams.
of his rights by officers.
McKinley was . charged for
McKinley also signed docu- possession and cultivation of
ments allowing officers to marijuana, third degree felony
search the premis~s.
. offenses, and incarcerated. in
A large bag of marijuana Meigs County Jail.
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and a number of High Times
Units assisting in the am* ·
magazines were. discovered in were Patrolmen Joe Kirby Ji. ,
a bedroom where McKinley Michael Ash, MeigS County
said he and Sheets slept. Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell, and
·
McKinley told officers the Deputy Adam Smith.

Marijuana

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Grocery

Board

LOCAL ST'OCKS

$1 0&lt;1

Mltl subsatplion
26 Week•

&gt;

· ·Claughter, Electa, and her husband, Dale, entered into a
cons(racy · to steal several
parcels of her father's real
.from Page A1
estate. A resulting trial left the
nally operated by Lucius · elder Cross considerably
Cross' wife, Thirza, from their poorer, and the business with
farmhouse, and was moved -little room for growth.
into a building in Racine in
Bill elms has owned and
1860.
.
• operated the store since 1968,
The Cress family moved and is the last son in direct
the store into the existing . succession to own the s.t ore.
school year.
building in 1892,- at which
Cross said that while retire- '
In other action, the board:
time the large three-story
• Approved.the adoption of
ment is the primary reaso n
building was considered huge
textbooks for .science series
for
closing the store, compefrom Ptlge AI
and known by most in the
grades seven io 12 as submittition from the Mason, W.Va.,
area as .. t he b'Jg st ore...
. Bay, Ils.e Burris, Abigail Cau- ted by the textbook selection
Waid Cross' sons, Staqley Wal-Mart and other larger
thorn, Theresa Cooper, Jen- committee.
and John W., and grandsons, retailers, and other economic
nifer Cummins, Rebecca
• Agreed to advertise for
John Dillon " Dee" and Miles factors played a part in die
Evans, Mary Hill, Lisa bids to repair and seal asphalt,
Cross, and, finally, Dee's son, closing.
,Honaker, Kimberly Janey, and approved a proposal from Willia m, successively operated
Maintenance on the aging
Bethany Justis, Christopher Black Top Contracting for the .
buildin ~ and equipment and
the business.
Kennedy, Donna Clark-Kern, · preparation of paving the driIn the early days of tlie 20th other rising costs of doing
Ramona Lewis, Christa Mid- · veway to th e bus garage.
century, the J:msiness' trade busi ness were also contribut- ,
cap, Mary I?owell, Nathan · • Approved final appropria-·
took a hit, when Waid Cross' ing factors, Cross said. . ;
Robinette, Kimberly Roush, tions for FY 2001, advances
. Wanda Schuler, Bobby .St~n- and transfers to close the
ley, Abbie Straton, Jac qu eline financial year, . and financial
Wolfe and Steven Wood..
.statements for May; ·
The board accepted the res• Approved the purchase of
ignations of Jerri Hawk and equipment for th e · high AEP - 46l,
USB -23'/,
Rockwell - 14t
Marcie Ford, and hired Linda school kitchen, and accepted Arch Coal- 26~
Gannett- 67
Rocky Boals - 4~ .
General Electric - SO),
AD Shel- 58).
Smith as a high school science the donation of a Titmus Akzo - 42
AmTechSBC - 40~
. GKNLY - 9~
Sears - 4~.
.and rpath teacher, on a one- Vision Screener;
Harley Davidson - 4 7),
Ashland Inc. - 39l.
Shoney's-~
year contract.
• Approved Jan. 22. Feb. 22, AT&amp;T- 22l,
Kma~-11 ~
Waf.Mart - 4&amp;
Kroger - 25),
Wendy's - 25~
The board approved the_ and March 6 as calamity days; Bank One -~.
Bob Evans- 18~.
Lands End - 40
Worthington - 13 ~ .
posting of an educatipnal aide · • Approved members in BorgWamer- 48l.
Ltd. - 16
Dally stock reports are
Oak Hill FinanCial - 14l• the 4 p.m. closing
position . for an elementary Educational Media Resource Champion-3
OVB-25
Shops - 6~
quotes of the pr8\ik:iJs
siudent, and approved profes- Center, Ohio High School Channing
City Holding- 11l.
BBT-36\
day's transactions, prosional growth reimburse- Athletic Association; Coali- • DuPont-48
Pooples - 19
videdbySmilhPartn4rs
Premier- 7~
at Advest Inc.
ments for Glenn Douglas and tion of Rural and Appalachi- Federal Mogul- 1~
.. an Schools, Southeastern
•sh eryI R oush .
.
Sara Lawrence, Scout Face- Ohio Special Educ~tion
'myer, Arki Horner, Jonathan · R egional Resource Center;
Young,Jacob Zuspan, Trenton
• Set a reception for retirees
Deem, Joanna .Eastman, on July 18 at 7 p.m. in· the
Action Facemyer, Travis elementary school cafetoriKoenig, Stel{en Hudson ,. urn, set a special board meetBran'don' Batey, William ing for July 2 at 7 p.m, at the
;· Deem, R.yan Siu ith, Efic . administrative office and the
Batey and Travis Batey were regul ar meeting on July 18 at
approved as opel}-enrollment 7 p.m. in the elementary. cafestudents for the 2001-02 torium.

Daffy
50 cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay the
car'rler may remll in advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Credit will be gl•en
carrier each week. No subscrip1ion by
mall permitted In areas where home
carrier lefVIce Is available .

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bituaries

Deaths

. Shot that wounded 6-ye~r-old was accide~tal

Ohio weather

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.H OF JULY CELEBRATION

~IDDLEPORT

.
'

• o p.m. - ·Parade

)
. 7 p,m. Program
.
.l':f7:20- 9:30p.m. Entertainment
.. ·. . .9:30·- FIREWORKS!
'•:~.,.,\ ·Fun, Food, Fireworks!!!
'fl.;:· U.. Call7 40-992-5458

I

llWllm
PWlHAlBOR
THE ANIMAL
SWORDFISH ·

-

......

.,.,~~,

~

~ ·

7:45
7:45
9:35
9:45

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

�.

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•IOn ·
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The 'Daily Sentinel
......

"' ;JI.

The Daily_Sentine~
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R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

The Daily Sentinel

~'JDRS

(Can.-do' kind offormer Meigs man.
makes strides .in his job

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Our congratulations to .Alan Wallace, who
was recently presented a community meritprious service.award l\y the Arlingt811,Va., c:'::ham·
ber of Commerce. ·
Al an , who grew up in Middleport and
returns often to visit his mother, Faye, entered
tbe Federal Fire Service in 1982 and has been
at the Fort Myer Fire Department since then . .
A plaqu e was presented to him at the chamber's Valor Award Cere1nony, where he was
praised for his professionalism, the pride "he
takes in hi s work · and his abiliry to motivate
others.
An Arlington Gazette article described him
.as a "can- do profes.sional and a jack-of-aile
trades around the .station ," and noted there
seems to be nothing beyond his scope of
expertise or unworthy_of his attention.
it was alsp noted that he was a major "s upporter of the installation's recent terrorism
response exercise.
Over the past seve n years, during his offtime, he has volunteered at the Vietnam War
Memorial and for the past three years at the
Women in Milit ary Service to America
Memorial. He is now training to become a
vo lunteer guide at the U.S. Capitol.

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sllb)lct to editing ond mrut bt signrd and include addrtn atulttltphone numlwr.
No 11nrigned Iitten· will ~ publirlred. Unerr should be ;,. good liult, tUidnuilfg
iuuts, not PINOIUilitits.
-.
Tire opinions uprt!Ued in thr r:ohJmn be/uw ur! the cmrst11sus of tht Ohio \~lle;y

IUf

Pubh"shing

Co.~ ~ditoriaJ

biXlrd, rmleu Olherwise nottd.

NATIONAL VIEWS

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New·ties
Iran spotential_ business partn~rs
could be US. oiL compat:ties
I I

. • American Press, Lake Charles, La., 011 fran and U.S. oil
compa11ies: With a new White House administration may come
an end, or a loosening, of the U.S. sanctions on Iran. Twenty
years after the release of the hostages, the country- once the
scourge of the West, or at least the United States - has forged
country would have - been spared the right but one on the lef{ as well. In a
ties and trade elsewhere in the world with considerable success ·
criminality and incompetence of the perverse way, the radical left has been the
over the past four years.
·
Dear Editor: .
conservative Nixon and Carter years, the right's ally. It split up the two key parts"of
There may be new parties doing business with Iran soon.
1 would like to opine 011 the June 27 tragic election of Reagan to the presi- the liberal coalition - white working
They are U.S. oil companies.
"R us h er •s View " column, "Recalling the dency would not have · occurred, and class ethnics and African- Americans.
President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and their fel-.
time when America chan d its · d.. Clinton would have never. been elected. Conservatives worked to fan hatred
low oilmen in government m~y well shift · course on Iran.
[ confess to a visceral d~ike o:"~:sh- · But all these things did happen. Why? among the two groups and bring the
Potentially lucrative businesses await; they're almost certainly
er and the snide, self-righteous sniping . Is It because the public ad?pted cOnser- white ethnics into their stable. In addibeing lost because of .the sanctions. . ..
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tone of his columns. In a previous col- vatlve pnnCJp!es as ItS gmdmg hght as tion, the so.cietal sicknesses served up by ·
Opposition within the oil industry to sanctions is not a new
umn,
he called former Sen. Jacob Javits a Rusher woulc have everyone ?eli eve? radical cultural leftists allowed the right
development. The Post report includes these 1996 remarks by
man who died ·of an incurable muscle No. The sad fact IS that conservatives tn- to appear as the voice of reason.
a top Halliburton executive: "There se~ms tb be an assumption
' disease, a "liberal toad." For me, Rusher umphed because liberals gave. away the
that somehow we know what's best for everybody else, and that
It i~; therefore, no surprise that Rushrepresents all that is ugly and vindictive game: The tragedy ·is that · it need not er begins his column with an attack ·
we are going to use O!lr economic clom to get ~vcrybody else
about conservatism.
have happened. In the '60s, a new radi- upon the '60s cultural upheavals. At rhe
to live the way we would like." The sanctions, he added, were
·"self-defeating."
Nevertheless, he is right .about one cal left developed which distanced itself begii:ming, i mentioned Rusher's nasti. The oil executive? Dick Cheney, now vice president of the
thing: conservatism has triumphed. The from the bread and butter lunch bucket ness. It is a tdit common to c.onservaUnited States ....
left politi~ally is fractured and demoral- issues of working class Americans, and tives. What. causes it? I suspect they real• Ewnsville (Ind.) Courier &amp; Press, an home schooling and
ized and the country has jus\ wound I!P began focusing on radical cultural issues. ize that without cultural issues to hide
rhe National Spelling Bee: The winner of this year's Scripps
This had the effeCt of destroying the behind, the public would .never buy
eight years under a Democratic presiHoward Nati"onal Spelling Bee is Sean Conley, a !J-year-old
dent who governed essentially as a . Roo.sCYelt liberal coalition which had their act. The knowledge of this fills
educated at home until he went to private school this past year,
Republica!] - well to the right of been in oreration since the l 930s, and them with resentment. Tq their great
just as last year's winner ..was also home-schooled.
Eisenhower. .
which was responsible for everything fortune however, tlie left stays locked in ;.
· Those facts would nor say much about the value of homeIf Humphrey had won in 1968, he rhat was right about America.
_multicultural battles over epidermis and :
schooling if there were no broad-based studies showing that
almost certainly would have negotiated a
To a '60s left radical, the worst thing genitalia.
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children taught by their parents are more academically accomsettlement in Vietnam. Half the names one co uld be was a liberal, so Roosevelt
jeffrey Fields :
plished on average than children taught in public schools. There
on the wall would nor be there. The liberals faced not \)nly an enemy on the
Middleport • .
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are.
Home-schooling is growing rapidly; it is the path being
taken by more than 1 million students, perhaps as many as 2
million. Parents, it is noted, are taking advantage of all kinds of
resources -Web sites, special publications, libraries, community colleges, tutors for some s':'bjects, variops associations where
their children ca" acquire social skills - .and are. doing so at a
cost much more affordable than private schools. The parents; it
is noted, are usually college-educated members of the middle
class.
The Supreme .Court has gone part of
However, under INS pro~edures applied
Home-schooling has its drawbacks, it is not a success in
·
the
way
toward
correctin!l
an
injustice
,
by
the Justice Department under President
every instance and it is not something all parents are suited for.
Bush and former President Bill Clinton.
· perpetrated by anti-immigration zealots in
All of that is obvious. And it should be obvious that it is an edu1996, but Congress nee&lt;ls to finish the job.
they were arrested and slated for ouster in · .
cational option that is serving our. society well.
what amounted to ex post facto adminisThis week the High Court permitted
some legal inunigrants-fucing deportation
rration of injustice.
By a 5-4 decision on Monday, the
. for once committing crimes to have their
cases reviewed by judges, but unl ess ConSupreme Court said that Congress had not
gress acts, thousands more scill face ouster
explicitly withdrawn the constitutional
• BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
' • even though they have turned their lives
right of habea~ corpus froni i1mnigra~ts
Today isTuesday,July3,the !84th day of2001.There are 181 .
around.
and that .there could be court hearipgs for
days !eli in rhe year.
•
For decades prior to l 996, the law per- .
COLUMNIST
those who had the .1996 law retroactively
Today's Highlight in History:
initted individuals facirig deportation to
applied against them.
On July 3, 1930, Congress created the U.S. Veterans Adlhinistraappeal to an immigration judge. Between a U.S. citizen, thereby attra cting the atten- • With a lack of compa~'ion that's typical
.
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1989 and 1995 more than half of those tion of the Immigration and Naturaliza- for them - and expressing a deference to
On this date:
who appealed- about 10,000 people ricin Service. Instead of being sworn in, he Congress that· is atypical - the court's
In 1608, the city of Quebec ~ founded by Samuel de Chamwere allowed to stay, despite having once ~as arreste&gt;f and locked up for five ~onservatives opined tliat Congress had
plain.
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months. He could be deported or indefi- ~mended to, and could, st(ip the COUfts of
broken the iaw. •
In 1775, Gen. George Washingron took command of the ConThey were able to persuade a judge that nicely detained.
.
j unsdictlon over such cases.
tinental Army at Cambridge, Mass.
they had paid for their offenses, maintained
In :mother case, Jose Velasquez of Aldan,
In_' another line o.f cases, justices Antonin
In 1863, the' three-day Civil War Battle of Gettysburg, Pa., ended
dean records, had jobs and fantilies and Pa., a U.S. resident since 1960. and: the Sc~ha and Clarence Thomas and Chief
in a major victory' for the North Confederate troops retreated.
were likely to stay out of trouble.
·
father of three children who are American Justice William Rehnquisr often find that
In 18Qj), Idaho became the 43rd state of the Union.
However, in. the same anti-immigration citizens, faces deportation to Panama for the· Constitution denies Congress the
In 1898, the U:S. Navy defeated a Spanish fleet in &lt;he harbor at
frenzy that produced California's Proposi- . haVing pleaded guilry to ·a minor drug power to overcome states' rights to effect
Santiagi&gt;, Cuba, during the Spanish-American War.
. soc1al -good. .
.
tion 187 and a federal welfare bill denylng charge in 1.980.
In 1944, during World War li, Soyiet forces recaptured Minsk.
aid to legal "aliens in 1996. Congress. passed
At the time, he was fined and served five
The court's majority, however, did not
In 1962, Algeria became independent after 132 years of French
laws making deportation mandatory for years' probation. But he was arrested by the exte1~d the right of app~al to all legal
rule.
legal iriunigrants who had committed any INS and kept in detention for four months mutugrants facmg deportauon. Legtslation
In 1971, singer Jint Morrison ofThe Doors died in Paris at age
to do so passed the House last year, but was •
crime punishable by a year or more in during which he lost his busint&gt;ss.
27.
pmon.
Sirid1V.ong and Velasquez are members stymied in the Senate.
'
In 1986, President Reagan presided over a gala ceremony in
And in her own excess of zeal, form er of the Texas-ba,ed Citizens &amp; lmntig~nt&lt;
It's been reintroduced this year by Rep.
·Attorney General J.met Reno interpreted for Equal Justice, which is headed by L1 u- Barney Frank, D-Mass., with the backing
New York Harbor that saw the relighting of the n:novated Statue
of Liberty.
the law to apply retroactively to persons . ric Kozuba Her Canadian-born husband of Rep, Lamar Smith, R- Texas, one of the '
who had committed crimes or agreed to Daniel, is a' U.S. veteran who served thre~ ·· anti-immir;ration hard- lin erS responsible
In 1988;~the USS Viricennes sh~t dowri an Iran Air jetliner over
plea bargains prior to the law's enactlnent. years in prison for possession . of metham- for pa"ing the 1996 law, and by Sens.
the Persian Gulf, killing all 290 people aboard.
As a result, a series of grotesquely m~ust phetamines. He's lleen clean since 1990.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Bob GraTen years ago: Former corporate enemies Apple Computer and
cases einerged, such as .that of Riel&lt;: SiriHe actually won a waiver from deporta- ham, D-Fla.
.
IBM publicly join«tl forces in a broad pact to sW:!p technologies
davong
of
Springfi
eld,
Va.,
'
a
laotian
tion
in
1993:
But
after
the
1996
laws
were
The
bills
would
return
the
law to its pteand deyelop new machines. A FortWorth, Texas, police officer was
refu~ee who arrived in America in 1981 passed, the waiver was retroactively 1996 state. Immigrants who commit
· videoclped beating a handcuff~d prisoner in his patrol car (the offian~ who is a legal resident alien.
revoked , opening him up to deportation cnmes could scill be deport&lt;;(!, bur at least
cer was suspended, but.later reinstated after a grand jury refused to
tltey'd have the right to conVince a judge
In 1995, he and some high school pm'ccedings.
indict him).
friends
stole
a
car
radio
and
were
caught.
In
many
cases,
those
f.1eing
deportation
they'd
,gone straight. In other words, they
Five years ago: Russians went to the polls to re-elect Boris Yeltsin
He pleaded guilty, received a two-year sus- had pleaded guilty to offenses on the would be accorded simple AmeriCan 'juspresident over his Communist challenger, Gennady Zyuganov, in a
pcnded sentence and performed 50 hours understanding - based on the pre-1996 "tice.
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runoff. A blaze destroyed a fireworks store in Scottown, Ohio, filled
· of community ~ervice.
bw - they would be able to ~pply for
(Morto11 Ko11dmcke is executive editor if Roll
with Fourth ofJuly shoppers, killing nine people and injuring 11.
Thlfe
year.;
latcr,.he
appljed
to
become
waivers
of
deportation
orders.
Call,
tire uewspapl'r if Capitol Hill.)
One year ago: President Clinton made a congratulatory tele'
phone. call to Mexican Presi9ent-elcctVicente Fox, a day after Fox's
election. A 1970's steel observation tower that preservationists said
\
had desecrated the biittlefield of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania was
825 Third Ava., Galllpolie, Ohio
111 Court t.. Pomeroy, Ohio
200 Main St., Point Ploonn~ W.va.
demolished.
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74().446·2342
74 992·2156

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OUR READERS' VIEWS

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

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DROP US ALINE.

304-675-t~·

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Two Meigs High School graduates were win·
ners of $500 scholarships from the Auxiliary
of Veterans Memorial Hospital. Here libby
Fisher, president, presents checks to Trlria
Noland, left, and Melissa Pauley. Both are
graduates of Meigs High Schoo(, work at Vet·
erans Memorial and are enrolled in ·the nursing program at Hocking College. (Charlene
'Hoeflich photos)

HEALTH RECOVE.RY SERVICES, IN_C.

COMMUNITY
The renovation represents a lot of hard work
on rhe part of a lot of volunteers, and they are
to be commended for hanging in there ·over
the years and can now share in the pride of the
completed project.
• • •
Many will remember Nanga Roberts· from
the Meigs County Humane Society's Thrift
Shop.· She volunteered there for many · years
before having to quit because of deteriorating
vision. On July 25, she'll be 90 and friends at:e
plarining,a· card shower.
• • •
Sherry and Dave Goodwin are firm believ- .
ers in the power of prayer and are asking tor
prayer .for their younger son, Nathan, who has
a brain tumor.
He has been confined to St. Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg, but the family late last week
was making preparations to move him io· a
Columbus hospital. This is their second son to
have a brain tumor. Nicolas had one four years
ago, had surgery, and is getting along fine now.
• • •
If you're r\ot at a local celebration Wednesday, be sure to check out the Indep enden ce
Day parade in Washington, D.C., on television .
Meigs County is represented for the first time.
·
(Charlene Hoifliih is gmeral manager of The
Daily Sentinel i11 Pomeroy.)

Sally Ebersbach, treasurer, presented $250
scholarships from the VMH Auxiliary to, from
left, Emily Stivers, who will take the nursing
program at the University of Rio Grande; Chris
Pickens, who will attend Ohio University where
he will major In biomedical engineering
research; and Jessica Nance, who Is enrolled
at Hocking College In nursing. Others receiving
scholarships but not present for the picture
were Cara Ash, who will attend Rio Grande for
pre-pharmacy, and Amy Frecker, who will
"att~nd Hocking's medical assistant program.

Teen lnslltute Is one ol the many prevention services that Health~ Recovery Services
offers In the Meigs, Eastern, Southern schools, the Alternative School .and SEM
School. Other services offered are the Natural Helpers Program, BABES program,
HOOLA Program , Anti-Bullying Program, EXPLORE programs. and ATOD
presentations. Julie Wandling Is lhe program specialist In Meigs County and performs
these services every year In the schools with assistance from other HAS staff. Julie
can be contacted at the HAS office In Meigs County at 992-52n for more Information
on services.
!een lntltltule lludent~ had a busy school year working to make their schools and the
community drug free. The students wllh the assistance of Tl advisor Julie Wandling
held many events this year. Teen Institute students participated In "None lor. Under 2
- 1" week, Prom Promise, and the Day of the Dead. Tl students In all three school
districts participate In "None for Under 2 1" week 'with Information passed out at the
schools for awareness on underage drinking. Meigs and Southern participated In the
Prom Promise sign-up and had a huge response. The third week In April was "None
for Under 2 1" week sponsored by the Ohio Department ol Liquor Control educating
students on the Importance of not participating In underage drinking. The Meigs High
School Teen Institute students prepared an assembly for the school on April 26.
honoring "None for Under 2 1" week. There were skits performed and statistics read
regarding DUI statistics In Meigs County. During the .assembly was also a labeling
-actlvlly that offered audience participation and focused on the Importance of not
judging other people and Identifying the different cliques thai get formed due to the .
mlsl\.tdglng of olbers.

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The asseq&gt;bly was a huge success and allowed Teen Institute students to take a drug free trip to
Sandusk)i, Ohio to Cedar Point and Lake Erie. The Teen Institute students plan a trip every year with
the assistance ol tlealth Recovery Services, Inc. and the GJM ADAMHS Board, Six of the n
lludenta W.re obit to take the trip this year. others had previous obligations, Those attending were
Jaml Hayes, Juley Eblin, Ashley Eblin, Bruce Glover, Stephanie Burdette, and Sarah Stobart with
stall Julie Wandling and Trinity Jenkins.

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Teen Institute Members from Meigs, Eastern. and Southern Junior and High schools also
p-rtlclpated In the Multi..County Teen Institute Retreat this year held at Canters Cave ·ln Jackson,
Ohio on April 11-8. Thla year there wera apr,roxlmatel.y 200 students from Meigs, Athe~s. Hocking,
VInton, Gallla, Jackson, Washington Count es. Below are the students and adults thet attended the
retreat from Meigs County.

I:

Teen Institute Mtmberalrom various counties gathering around during tree time at the Multi-County
Teen lnatltute Retreat. Moat of the atudontt at the Teen lnstltute Retreat on/oy the waim fuzzy board
where thlly can write short notes to others giving them compliments or .encouragement lor the
weekend and lor when they return home. The atudenta are educated during the weekend and made
aware of the varlout toplct that they can take back to their county and uta In their schoolt,and
com mull ltlat. Health Recovery Services, Inc..holds thla ratreatevery year In Jackaon, Ohio.

r

The bendits of Social Security
BY VALREA THOMPSON
SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE, ATHENS
Sure, everyone knows Social
Security provides retirement
benefits to America's workers.
13m fewe r people re:ilize there
is more .to Social Security than
the retirement program.
Even fewer know to what
extent Social" Security provides
for the financial future of most ·
Americans. .
·
Social Security protects more
than \50 million workers and
pays benefits to more than 45
, million people. Consider the
following:
• Social Security pays

as

t '

•

I

Morton . ·
Kondracke

'

•

Charlene
Hoeflich

VMH sc;holarships

Congress should return full rights to immigrants

IN HISTORY

•

It's been a long time coming, what wi1h all
th e renovation, but the grand opening of the
Chester Courthouse, built in 1823, will be July
21 from 2 to 5 p.m.
_
It's the same weekend as Chester-Shade ·
Days, so visitors can combine the pioneer
atmosphere of that celebration witn a visit to
Ohio's oldest standing wurthouse.
The com mittee is busy putting temporary
and permanent displays in place and educationa! programs are being held there periodically. Pbns are also being made to have the
courthou se open to visitors on a regular Monday and Saturday basis.

Liberals battle themselves

T~DAY

Tuesday, July 3, 2001 .

Provides prevention services in the community and fn the
area schools ...

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Ltiltrs to tht Hlitw cue ll.'ekomt. Thty should 1H ltss t/uln JOO t!.&gt;ord . AU !etten

Page AS

3, 2001

fN"ro ~Sit&gt;em CLtN1'ot.a'S
LasT-MJMUTe PaRMI OF ftE!R
HUS~, FoRMQR PRSSi~Nf...

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoefllc/1
General .Manager·

PageA4

•

•

•

~NDeP ~ rHV~'STi,a1i~·

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Re.P\JBLt'aN

)

_:. $811
• A widowed mother and
two children- $1,696
·, A disabled worker with a
spouse and one or more children- $1,31'0
'
The average . surVil(otS and
disability benefits are worth a.
life insurance policy · of
$37 4,000 for a surviving spouse
and two children and a disability policy of$220,000 for·a dis.:
abled worker with a spouse and ··
two children
So, ir is· easy. to see that yo!Jr
Spcial Security taXes provide
for more than retirement benefits - m~ch more.

monthly retirement benefits to
more than 31 . million retired·
workers and their family memhers.
• The agency pays monthly
survivors benefits to about 7
million Americans, ahnost 2
million of whom are children.
• More than 5 million disabled workers under age 65 and
1.6 million dependents (mcluding more than a million chitdren) receive Social Security.
In ZOO!; Social Security pays
an average mo~thly amount for
the following benefits:
• A retired worker - $845
• An agect"" widow(er) alone

The Natural Halpert Retreat 11 another service provided by Health Recovery Services, Inc. with the
aulatance ol GJM ADAMHS Board, Meigs Juvenile Court, and ESC services. Tho Natural Helpere
program Ia a national program adopted by Health Recovery Sarvlces, Inc. that trains studenta to
\Iaten to the problema of their pears while attempting to, asslat them with their problem area.
Students are trained to make appropriate referrals and keep cloae contact with Natural Halpera
Advtaor as needed. This retraat was held June 8 and 9 at the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly. Below
are studenta lind adults participating In tho Labeling exerc\sa allowing them see how It would leal
to be labeled.
·

•'

.

LOCAL HAPPE-NINGS
TUESDAY
ALFRED -Orange Township .
Trustees budget meeting. Tues·
day 7:30p.m., followed by regular
rneeting, at the home of the clerk
.'Osie Follrod.
·
.MIDDLEPORT- American Red
Cross bloodmobile, 11 a.m. to 5
p.m., Middleport Church of Christ.
Free Red Cross T·shirt and hot
dogs to donors.
o

POMEROY - Eagles Auxiliary,
·7:30p.m., Tuesday.
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township
Trustees, regular meeting, 7:30
p.m. township building on Joppa
Road, with a burtiJ'It hearing at

REEDSVILLE -community Bible
FRIDAY
.
.
School, Reedsville, at United
MIDDLEPORT- Mlddlepot1
church of Christ, Family Lne Cen· Methodist Church. June 9·13 6 to
8:30 p.m. each evening.
ter Coffee house program with
music byliquid Jesus and drama
Community Calendar Is pubby To1al Eclipse lmprov, Ninth
lished as a free service to nongrade through college, Friday,
profit groups wishing to
7:30p.m.
announce meetings and speclal,eventa. The calendar Is not
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE- Harrisonville designed to promote sales or
Lodge 411, stated meeting, Satur· fund-railers of any type. Items
are printed only as space per·
day. Masonic hall, 7:30 p.m.
mlta and cannot be guaranteed
to
be printed a specific number
MONDAY
·'of days.
.
RUTLAND- Meigs County

"'

.
"

Republican Party, 7:30p.m. Mon·
day, Rutland Civic Center. Pu[·
pose to name Lebanon Township
committeeman.

7:30 p.m., followed by regular
meeting. Those with business to
discuss should call Clerk.at 376·
6149 to be. placed on agenda.

:

.

Julie Wandling and Health Recovery Services, Inc. would \Ike to thank all ol tho lnd!vlduala,.
agenclea, schools, and businesses thet assist with the prevention services that are provided by
FIRS. HRS aiao hat many volunteers that assist wlth·programmtng that are very much appreciated.
The next upcoming event lor Teen Institute Is preparing their pro/ects lor the Meigs C.ounty Fair.
Teen Institute has been a member ol tho Meigs Junior Fatr Board lor the past three years. II you
would like more Information on the service' that HRS can provide for you please feel free to contact
us at992·S2n.
Below Amanda Miller a senior and seven year member ol Teen lnstltuie volunteers to assist Julie
·
_wllh tho Day of the Dead at Meigs High School.
.'
'

.'

.

�•

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

July 3, 200t

Ohio

Inside·:

/

•

-'

•

The Daily Sentinel
•

Diamond Roundup, Page B6

j

Page B·l

•

Tuescbly, July :J, 2001

Tri
•
..
! 'i

TuEsDAY'S

'

HIGHLIGHTS ·

Racine,
Fed. Hock

ontra

CLEVELAND (AP) -)im
Thome stopped the Cleveland Indians' slide with a nifty
one of his own.
·
"I Sl)W ·the catcher go to my
left, so I wenr to my right,"
Thome said after scoring on a
two-out single by Einar Diaz
in the ninth inning Monday
night, giving Jphn Rocker
and the Indians a 2- 1 win
'
over Kansas City.
Thome said his nimble

post
•

WinS
8Y ScoTT WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT .

POMEROY - The 24th
annual Bill Hubbard Memorial Tournament continued
Monday night at the Pomeroy
Little League · Fields near
Roberts Field in Pomeroy.
l&gt;omeroy defeated Racine 128 in seven innings and Feder:ii' Hocking beat Chester 9-6
m advance to the tournament
semi-finals.
In the regular season and
Bend Area tournament play,
Racine had defeated Pomeroy
three of five times already this
season, however, Monday
Pomeroy evened the score. at
3-3 with a dramatic last~
inning rally. Pomeroy came up
with four runs in the final
inning on walks, errors, and
tiJ;nely hitting.
For winning Pomeroy, Brad
Ramsburg had two singlesi
Brad Soulsby, a double and
tr iple; Clayton Blackston, .a
double. Andy McAngus ha.d ·.
two sipgles, Andy Garnes had
a single: and Josh Williams, :a
single.'
Racine hitters were Erit .
Zeiner, a.single; Wesley Riffle,
a triple and single; Jacob
Hunter, two singles; Patrie!&gt;
Joh.nson, a single; Darren
Teaford, a double; Nick Buck,
two singles; Butch Marnhout,
a single; and Ryan Chapman,
a single.
Brad Soulsby was the win-

move was, based on some-

•

•
1

Southem
boosters to
meet__
RACINE -The Southern
Athletic Boosters will hold an
emergency meeting Thursday,
July 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the
high . school cafeteria to discuss the future of the organi;
zation and the election of
officers .
Parents of students grades
3-12 participating in district
athletics along with interested
community memb.ers, players,
and all coaches should attend.
Especially those parents with
players in any sport grades 712 should attend.

s

~

Play continues
at Wimbledon

'

.

~~4"'T'~A~u~s~tr~a~li~an~~w~~:~~fi~a~n~d . ~

.

.Capriati
faces
Serena
Williams; defending c4ampinn Venus Williams meets
Nathalie Tauziat; 1999 winner
Lindsay Davenport plays Kim
Clijsters; and Justine · Henin
takes on Conchita Martinez.
The me11's quarterfinals,
scheduled for Wednesday,
include Andre Agassi, the
1992 champion, against Nicolas Escude, ranked 38th in the
world. Escude upset Lleyton
Hewitt, ranked fifth. Other
pairings are Goran Ivanisevic
vs. Marat Safin, and Pat Rafter
vs. Thomas Enqvist.
Agassi won his fourth consecutive straight-set match,
beating Nicolas Kiefer 6-3, 75,7-5, then talked about Sam-

•

c

Desilg nate
A Driver...
.'

,\

THAT'S A PLAN!

pras.
Capriati beat Sandrine Testud 6-1, 6-2, while Serena
Williams topped Magdalena
Maleeva 6-2, 6-1.
Ivanisevic, a fan favorite
because of his big serve and
on-court antics, eliminated
Greg Rusedski, a Canadianborn Briton, 7-6 (5), 6-4,6-4.
Davenport beat Jelena
Dokic 7-5, 6-4. Venus
Williams beat unseeded
Nadia Peqova, 6-2, 6-0 and
has lost just 16 games _in eight
sets.

SPONSORED BY THESE AREA BUSINESSES
Valley Lumber &amp; Supply ·Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry
992-6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

992-2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Baum lumber
9 5-3301

CHESTER, OHIO

..

The Shoe Place &amp; Locker 219
992-5627
.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
'

K&amp;C · Jewelers ·
992-3785

WIMBLEDON, England
(AP) - The matchups for
Thesday's women's quartem' nal matches were set after
seven straight-set matches
Monday at Wimbledon.

MIDDLEPORT, 'OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home
992-2121

POMEROY, OHIO

Downing.;.Childs-Mullen
Musser Insurance
992-2342

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop

PB Contractors

992-3345

. 985-3948

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

Ridenour Supply

Judgeotden
re-instatement

985-3308 ST. RT. 248, CHESTER, OHIO

Crow's .Fiamily Restauraht
992-2432

POMEROY, OHIO

King Hardware
992-5020

.

·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.
I

Fisher/Acree Funeral Home

Ridenour Gas Service

MIDDLEPORT, QHIO 992-5144

985~3307-ST. RT~ 241r,"CHESTER; OHIO

Home National Bank

RACINE, OHIO 949-221 0 •.
SYRACUSE, OHIO 992-6533

Crow and Crow Attorneys
992-5132

Fruth Pharmac.y
992-649·1

. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Farmers

ank
. ..

POMEROY, OHIO

I

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A
judge recommended t"at the
fired coach ' of the University
of Soutl-i Florida's women's
basketball team be reinstated;
saying ·the school did not
prove she mistreated the
·
team's black players.
Jerry Ann Winters should ·
receive back pay for the
months she has been out-uf a
job and be returned to the
· head. coaching position; said
Florida Division of Administrative
Hearings · J11dge
·William F. Quattlebaum.
But South Florida President
Judy Genshaft issued a statement saying the university
stands behind its ·case against
Wiriters and said the judge
had a "technical" disagreement with how the' school
C?nducted its investigation.
If'

thing he learned from his
father.
· "My dad told me' when I
was young about plays at the
plate," Thome said. "He said
to foUow the catcher and
which way he goes:" ...
The play changed the way
both teams were going. 1
Cleveland liroke a four-game
losing streak and stopped the
Royals' six-game winning
streak.
Diaz •singled off Jeff Austin,
and Thome beat the throw by
left fielder Raul Ibanez with a .
fallaway slide, touching the
plate with his left hand just
ahead of 'catcher A.J. Hinch 's
tag.
"It was an emotional play,"
Hinch said after briefly arguing with plate umpire C.B.
Bucknoi. "I went to the clubhouse and watched the replay,
but didn't find the answer I
wanted."
Thorne reached second to
open the inning against Larry
Cogan (0-3) when Ibanez,
who entered the game in the
eighth as a pinch-hitter,
dropped a routine fly baiL
"I just blew it," Ibanez said.
"You catch millions : of fly
,, ·· llit~g ·pitGher.
all~i'rl
.
In the second game, Federal
drop one and · it costs the
ARE YOU BLIND?- Royals catcher A.J. Hinch, right, argues with home plate umpire C. B.
Hocking defeated Chester ~-"
game. What a stupid play."
. Bucknor after Cleverand's Jim Thome slid home lliJonday at Jacobs Reid In Cleveland.
Thome scored on a single by Indians' Einar Dlaz. The Indians won·2-1. (AP) ·
Plealfl see 1Hbe, B:S
Please see Hubbard. B4
\

S'-'zuki, Mariners poSt All-Star landslide·
. NEW YORK (AP) -lchiro Suzuki piled up even higger numbers ~t
the polls than at the plate.
Suzuki, the major league leader in
· hits and stolen bases, added another
highlight Monday: He became the
first rookie to finish No. 1 in fan voting for starting spots in the All-S tar
.
game.
. Boosted by Internet support
worldwide and paper ballots cast in
his homeland for the first time, the
. Japanese-born outfiel4er was among
four Mariners picked to start next
week at Safeco Field in Seattle.
"Of course,. I Was surprised. I did
not· expect or imagine that I would

record to 60-2 1, by far the best in

S11zuki, batting . 349 wit}d{ baseball.
'
steals and a lea&lt;~lle-leading
Seattle also will ha~e first baseman
71 rutJs scored, received
John O lerud , second baseman l:lret
Boone and designated hitter Edgar
3,373,035 votes, including
•Martinez in the AL lineup next Tues:
1,217, 680 onli11e ••ote.1.

day.
"I think a lot more guys deserve to
be in there, like some of our pitchers," Martinez said. "They all deserve
to be there, tOo. So · m~ny guys have
done such a great job.'1/
Cal Ripken, who will retire . after
this season, overtook Seattle's David
Bell in the final week to earn his 17th
start atid 19th appearance. The Baltimore third baseman rallied from a
f'

be the starter in the All-Star game,"
Suzuki said through an interpreter
Monday night.
Hours later, Suzuki hit a tying,
two-run homer with two out' in the
ninth inning at Texas. It was his major
league-leading 126th hit of the se·ason.

The Mariners went on tn win 9-7
in 10 innings and increased th eir

·.

Please see SuzukL ..

Sa.Opras upset

Pirates
rock Davis,
Reds' 10-5

at Wimbledon
---

.

CINCINNATI (AP) Jason Schmidt can't figure out
why it took him an iiming to ·
get going.
At least Pittsburgh's slowto-start starter was . fortunate
Monday night. By the time
he got going, his counterpart
was already gone.
Schmidt overcame an erratic first inning, while the
Pirates pummeled rookie
Lance Davis and rolled to o
10-5 victory over the Cjncin- ·
nati .Reds in a match up of the I HELD IT Lt.KE AN EGG - Reds pitcher Lance Davis, left,
NL's two bottom teams.
hands the ball ,to manager Bob Boone, right, after getting
rocked ' in the ·second inning against the Pirates Monday.
Aramis Ramirez doubled, Catcher Kelly Stlnmitt (31) watches. (AP) ·
homered .and singled in his
first three at-bats, driving in
five runs and giving Schmidt · as the Reds closed to 4-2 ar1d rarely wins on the road (Pitts(5-3) a reprieve from his got Pirates manager Lloyd burgh) and th e other that
rarely \yi~;s at home (Cincin.
unimpressive first inning.
McClendon fuming.
nati).
.Schmidt hit Bill Selby on a
At the end of the• inning,
He didn't care to talk about
1-2 pitch to load tHe bases.. McClendon pumped sorne
then hit Kelly Stinnett with emotion into the matcbup of
Please see Reds, a:s
an 0-2 pitch to force in a run two troubled teams, one that

44,000-vote deficit to pass Bell and
Anaheim's Troy Glaus and win by
45,000 votes.
·
Suzuki, batting .349 with 27 steals
and a league-leading 71 runs scored,
received 3,313,035 votes. The seven-.
·time batting champion from the Orix
Blue Wave got 1,217,680 online
votes.
. .. ,.
The comm issioner's office was stilt
counting how many Internet votes
came from Japan, and was not expected to know the total for a couple of
days.
Suzuki was picked on 682,815 of
. the ~35,000 paper ballots cast m

'
-WIMBLEDON, Eng- to his knees, rolled on ·his'
land (AP) - The R.oger side and cried.
Federer era might be start• The top-seeded Sampr;;,
ing at Winibledon.
f~lt weird also. He hadn't
Who?
lost at Wimbledon since
The 19-year-old Swiss the 1996 quarterfinals and
star wears a white bandan- was 56-1 in his previous 5~
na and a ponytail' and has matches there. Richa~
unshakable composure that Krajicek · beat him and
stood up to - and over- went on to the champicame - seven-time Wim- onship, the only one Sambledon chani pion - Pet~ pras hasn't won since 1993.
Sampras on Monday.
" "You know something
ln. contrast to the cool so great isn't going to last
demeanor he showed in forever," he said. "Today, I
shocking Samjiras· for a just came up a litde bit
berth in ·Wednesday's quar- short.''
terfinals, he threw the
Sampras has · b~en vuloccasional · tantrum and nerable for a while. He
"was getting kicked out of hadn't won a tournament
practice sessions nonstop since la!t year's Wimbledon
when l was 16," be said.
and struggled to a five-set
He beat Sampras 7-6 (7), victory in the second
5-7, 6-4, 6-7 (2), 7-5. round
against
Barry.
When the last ball whizzed Cowan, tfie world's 265thby the dethroned king of. ranked player.
'
•
Wimbledon; Federer's calm
Federer, seeded 15th, '
finally broke. He dropped next plays Todd Martin

.

0

•

�'
-OITio

Pomeroy,

~tibune

C L A 5 ·s

- Sentinel I F.l E D

·JET
1991 _Oldsmobile S1erra,
AERATION MOTORS
81,000 m1les, 4 d6of. 6 cyt·
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laegister·
~rtbune
Sentinel
•
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
992-2157
To Place

!

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

Display Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Mon day -Friday for Insertion
Publication
·
In NeJCt Day 's Pa pe r
Sunday ln· Co lumn : 1 00 p m. sunday Olsplav 1:00pm
Th ursday for Sundays
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r

• 2001 •

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9814
Lost female fawn color box-

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· 631bs, name Is Snacker los!
In' Mason Co. reward 304·
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r
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__

10

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needed. Wortdng With males
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3140_ _ _ _ _ _ _
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I

YARD SALE-

~~--oiGiiiALLil'OIJSiiiiiliiiliiliil._.l

112 Green Terrace Court,
Ffiday 6th &amp; Saturday 7th,
crafts and more
8130-713, 5 m1les out 'Route
218 S from Route 7 Good
children summer, school
clothes, adult also, m1sc
etc. 9am-?
1

''

AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304·
7s._1
_6_
_4_2_9 _ _ _ _ __
Bartender wanted , Days,
Sonny's Bar &amp; Grill
(740):!67-0650

CMA needed busy PhySl·
clans Office. Copy of Certtfl·
catiOn preferred Please
send resume to Pt. Pleasant
Chol Center 2500 JeHerson
Big Yard Sale across from Ave PI Pleasant, WV
Kerr post · office Saturday, 25550 Fa&gt; IO (:304)675·
3713
Monday and Tuesday, 95pm
COME GROW WITH USI
Fum1ture Sale· headboards,
footboards,
nlghtstands, Oh1o valley Publishing Co
end tables, lamps, ' lamp ts looking for sports corre·
shades and much more spondents for the In-county
July 2 &amp; 3 only. 341 Circle reg~on Interested applicants
Dnve
should call (740)446·2342
:c_-=-:,_""CC",--c-- Ext 18 to sel up an InterJuly 3rd, 830 1st Avenue, view
~~· girls &amp; adu1n clolhes, Domino's Pizza now taktnQ
-----~-- applicatiOns at Pomeroy
Monday· July 2 &amp; Tuesday and Gallipolis locat1ons only
July 3 9-Spm, 2 mdes north
off·Ho~er Hosp1tat on F1oute Family Addichon COmmuni, 60 Dining room sel living ~ Treatment ServiCes- An
room fum 1ture, men &amp; wom- outpatient Alcohol and ~g
·en's clothing plus-s 1ze .. counseling agency !S ikiclothmg, baby ~lathes, mise ceplmg resumes for the fol·
bab)l Items, shoes, size 9 , low1ng positions·
Ice coolers, sheets, dishes,
sleeping bags, sew1ng ma- Theroplat- Supervisory pochine, mise hOusehold Sition. Responsible for as·
1tems, dolly and old stuff. sessmenta, dlagnoseng, reAaln or shine
,
.. v~ew of client charts, consul·
ll!lr"""":':"'"~:--....;., tatlon, quality assurance,
SAUland ellen\ caseload, ole Ex·
P1: I'UlAsANr
penenced In chemical de•
pendency Is a plus. LPCC
or LISW required
·Two lamlly porch sale.
At 62, 3 112 mtles out Wa· Prevention
Educator·
teJ:too Ad, Leon W~t K Seeking an energetic lndl·
Baker's reSidence Thur &amp; v1dua1to work with the youth
Fri. Julv 5th &amp; 6th. 9am· 4 and adults 1n Galha and
pm, Ra1n or shine, TV, vcr, Jackson counties Aespon stereo , household Items, s1billes include, but are not
lum1ture, baby Items, tools , limited to alcohol, tobacco
·antiques. prom dresses, and other drug presents·
clothes and much more
tlons, trainings, fatrs, com·
- - - - - - - - - munlty even1s. ole A mtnl·
·Yard Sale July 5th, 6th, 7th mum ola Bachelors Degree
10 am-? boys to 18 mon ' Wllh knowledge of alcohol.
girls 6·10 ,plus size&amp; adult tObacco and of!lers Experl·
olothlng , baby Items, oak ence In developing and lm·
coffee tablo,18' girls bike, plemenllng new programs Is
toya , Iota ol good Sluff a plus.
Gallipolis Ferry turn onto
Crab C,..k Ad lollow signa Son\J reaurrie by .July 16,
2001 lo· FACTS, 45 Olivo
~--~-----,~ Slreel, Galllpolla, Ohio
7401446
(
"
~
•
712· 7/3, Kelley Drtve, AI 1
oil Georges Creek Ad , Ex·
cellent Clothes, Numerous
household Items, 8am·4pm

r

,r

yARD

~

:~~ E'Oe:·~~'lH

p 11raon Aucton
1 comrilok
n
pony, lull limo auotlonur,
complelt aucllon torvloe.
l.lcenled •50.0hlo &amp; Wttl
Vlrglnlt, :304· 773·5785 Or
30-'-773 •15447

1

·r

W~

I

Homtworkara Nlledt&lt;j $!35
Wtokly Proctotlng Mtll.
Eatyl No
Exparltnot
Nttded. Call 1·800•862•
18728 Exl 2070, 24Hro
.

10 BUY

·
,
~btolult Top Coller U.S.
Silver, Gold Colno, Proof·
seta. Dlamondo. Gold
Alngl,
U S. p urrtncy,·
M TS Coin Shop, 1S t Second Avo,.,e, Clalllpollo, 740·
446·2642

'

Kllohen
Help.tnn
Apply
In per·
ton
Holiday
Galllpolll
'
'

Houltkttper and oara glvor
for ambulotory t ldorty gontloman . 40 houra, wtok·
dayt, Rio Grondo aroo.
(740)245·5203 ovonlng'o
Someone to taka care of
eldeny man In his homo.
(740)446·4051

Immediate Openlnp
Local area business
NEEDS dependable people
In the area or
telephone sales
for the marketing of
Gift Certificate Packagn
Eam up $10 00 an hour
employees paid weekly
.APPly In personal
Ell1e PromoUons
424 Main Street
Point Pleasant, VW
Monday through Friday
9:00am to 3•0Qpm
5 00
10 9 00
ph:,~
p=H

No

Cllll

ln""lv}dual needed for re.·
"'
gionat EMS Field Opera·
!Ions Supervisor. E»eperl~
ence in EMS management
of Ohio public employees
and labor relations 15 essen·
tlal Supervisor planS, manages and coordinates oper·
allons
of station
chiels,
personnel,
vehiCles
andfleld
13
stations throughout southeast Ohio. Excellent verbal
and wnnen comrNJnlcallons
skills and word proceaalng
skills required · Paramedic
certification prer~rred Full
public emplovee benefit
package available. In accordance with OAC 124.11,
It Is anticipated that this will
be an unclassified position
reporting exclusively to the
executive director Send re·
sume to Human Resources
Director~ P.O Box 527.
Kerr, OH 45643 by Ju1y 13,
:.200:.;_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _

110

~~

11

11

HaPWANfED

Free Yard Sale Sign!$
15 Words, 3 Days
.
Words 20¢ Per Word
M.ust Be Prepaid

6

Now In Bo&gt;. 42&gt;50 whhe

oval garden lub lor mobile
home. $85, (740) 24s. 5122
'""' 4pm

he-ee Ifric

=~=----~

RESIDENTIAL HOME
0WNERS
.
·
Tappan HI Efficiency 90%
Gas Furnaces, 011 Furnaces, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
Air Con&lt;htiomng Systems
Free 8 Year Warranty Bennetta Healing &amp; Cooling, 1.
6 0' 0 • 8 7 2 •• 5 9 6 7
wwworvbcom.bonnett
_ _ _ _ _......;...:__
Shop Smith, Mark v, has
band saw, table saw, drill
press, ple.lner, slides &amp;
more. $600. (740)446-4122

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
• Or Garage/Yard Sales
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishi
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

POLICIES; Ohio Valle,. PubDahlng NMI'VH aM rl(lht to edit, reJeCt, or cancal •nv ad 8t eny tltne. Errotl must be repon.ct on t~ flrll ct.r
TrlbuM-5endMI-A41QIIIer will 1M l'ftPC)nllbltl tor no more lhan tn. 0011t of tM .,_,. occup!Mt by the ...-or lnd only 1M flrat lnMrtlon. We
any lou or expen• thet rnuttl from the pYbiiNtlon or om!Hton or an IICIVtrUtement. Correcttan wll W mlcle In 1M fl,.t •v•ll•l»eo .ctltlon
.,. ~WIIya confident!.. • Curnnt r•t. card •pplles. • All reel •t.te lldv.rtJMnMntt .,. aubjaCIIO the Flderll Ftllr Houalng Act or 1HI
eccepta onty hetp Mnlecl adt mtet:lng EOE at.ndMda. W. will not knowingly IICcept anv Mvertlalng In violation of the llw.

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• In clu de Phone Number An d Address W,en Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Cays

" \ 01 \&lt;I \ II \ i'

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

LPN'a
Are you Interested In a flexi·
ble scheduhng, great benefits, competitive wages, Shift
diflerentlal, wage eMparl·
ence, and attendance bonuses? Don't miss this opportumty to begin or contln·
ue an exciting career at
Scenic Hills Nursing Cenler.
We are a progresslv~, long·
term care and rehab111tatlve
center that specializes in
Alzheimer's care We have
the following openings· 2
FUll Time LPNS, 11 p,m lo
7a m tlll·m, Par1·Time llll·in
tor all shifts, and 3p.m to
11p m on our Renaissance
~Alzheimer's) Unit. For more
Information, stop by and
pick up an application, or
call Ste&gt;phanle Kemper al

~.,__.FO."R··~--~1

It

Will power walih houses
and trailers call (740)446·
0151 ask for Ron or call cell
phone (740)339..()950 If no
answer leave message.
'
Will pressure wash houses,
tral)ers, decks boats, any·
thing. Call Ron at (740)446·
0151 or (740)441-4236 II
no answer, leave message

riO

BUSINESS
OProlmJNIIY

6

0

Great Neighborhood, Good
Condll1on, Needs Handy·
man ,
Housel Church,
$50,000
Make
Offer,
(304)675-1618

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO r.ecommends that
you do busl ness with people
you know, and NOT to send

. .I

New double wide 3 br, 2 ba. House for rent In Wlterloo,
$998 00 down only $295. Deposit &amp; references
per mon call noW 1-800· :c
(7_40:;1643..:...·2:;9.:.
.:.
16:.....____
69, ·6777
- " " - - - - - -- -P(Iot Program, Renters
New Double Wide $195 Needed, 304·736-7295
House/ Church tor sate Per Month I 3 Bedroom, 2
M
H
Good Condition. Great Bath . Free Delivery &amp; Set·
OBn.E OMFS
Neighborhood Point Pleas· up 1-868 .928 _3426
FOR R..ENr
ani. Asking $50,000 make
offer, (304)675·1616
Z
D
Ll
d
J
,
ero own
mite tune 2 bedroom mobile hom9
Newer 3 Bedroom, 1 balh, Call Fleetwood Home of Located
In
Kanauga
outbuilding, 3 acres, country Proctorville
Toll
Free (740)441·9219
&lt;'ll.4
(668)565·0167
setting (740)379-21..,..
DUO
12 bedroom, carpet, air, very
~ewty,~struc~edi
~Ingle
FO•R·~:":
roo
nlc~, ideal tor people on
5
ory
sq 00 ome
~
• Gallipolis,
no
pets
·10 minutes from hospital, 5
(740}446·1409
minutes from Charlals Hills,
located on a beautiful, pn· Farm House, Beautifully 2 bedroom, reference &amp; de·
vale 1·112 acre lot 3 bed· Remodeled, 2963 Square posit required (740)367room, 2·1 /2 baths, big kltch· gFroeoulndtP700Ac1'rSeves,ePoralndBa, mln0·, 0632
en w/custom oak cabinets
·
arage, Fruit Trees, ctose 2 BR, All Electric, No Pets,
9
from Smith Cabinets, OR,1 To Holzer
$2~ 5,000. $300
plus
deposit,
40 446-4230
(740):!67·0611
0 ua 111 Y c0nstructi0n• all lhe
BliSINESS
3 bedroom, CJA, $325/mo +

I

Uprighl lreezer, 10 Inch 18·
ble saw, large mk:rowa&gt;Je
oven, large miCrowave oven
storage cart, , large jewelry
chesl on legs, (740)446·
1665

r Mo=~ r. ~._,.m,."R·~-- r ~~
6

I

r

r "•

(740)446-7160 today.
money through the mall unlit
Need 7 Ladies to Sell Avon you have Investigated the
Cell 17401446 .:J358
offenng.
AAA GREETING CARD
Po•~:.,:~~~~~ment ROUTE Super HI Profit W~n·:~:~:~~~~$~~~
Posting dale June 27 , 2001 Loc's local Free Info 800· Call (740)446 _4514 from 8_
277·9424 24 hours
5pm, M-F, or (740)446 _3248
The Uni&gt;Jerslty or Rio Canyout and delivery Pizza after 5pm
Grande Is laktng appllca- 1ranch1se. Financing avalla·
lions for part•llme laculty ble for qualified Individual
MOBILE HoMEs
1
members for the Academic Call Lance or Ne1t 1·800·
FOR SALE
•
Year 2001·2002
310·8848

I

2

~~g:s ~~~~':';"";~,~:

1 Bedroom Apartment, As·
frlgerator, Range, AJC Ineluded $289 Plus Deposi t &amp;
RetereJ"'Ce HUO Approved
(740)441-1519

Used Bricks for sale &amp; Hay

In the fletd to be mowed
(304)675-1096

r10

~---------'
A I
R
d I ed
PP 1ances
econ 110n
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
Rolrlgralors, Up To 90 Days
Guaranteed! We Sell
Maytag Apphances, French
City May1ag, 74(}-446-7795

New

--------Day Bed Complete, Tw1n
Bed 0omplete Full Box
Spnng and mallress, Queen
Box Spnng and mauress,
Table and Chairs, Wardrobe
,!7..:4::0:...14..:4:.6·::97'-4"2'----cFor Sale· Recond1t1oned

r--------,
Are YOU
looking for an
Explosive
Career?

r

I

.,

,

1"

r:

n--

I

I

z

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

Full-time
Permanent
Positions
Available

r

I

r

I

ext.

=~:. p2~k~~e~~~rtZ~~~· :~~:;;.~, ~~ c~::o~. ~~8~~

naa.

:.________

suuTi Sell or

..

rade
In the
C'' "'SlF.'rr0.1"'I

1- _

2001 450 Foreman S. ex~
cellent cond1Uon, warranty,
{740)446-4025

, The Dally Sentinel • Page B :3:

I

r "··-

allowed stx hits iu stx inmngs
d
k
h h
an struc out a season- ig
mne. Once h'e got past that

When Schmidt took the
d
h
d
•
moun m t e secon inning, ·
the Ptrates were ahead 7 - 2 , :

McClendon could sit back
and enjoy the Ptrates' biggest

troubl esome first innmg, he
was fine.

and Davis (1-1) was gone.
The left-hander, one offour

offensive game sm ce Jun e 12

b d
any o y

"The

firsi-mnmg

blues

has failed to make it through·

digit score of the season.

of these days. I'll get loose m

three mnm gs m tWo of his :

the bullpen. Luckily, 1t didn't

four

end up gettmg worse than tt

pttches

was."

P1rates' first

one

of

three

Pirates starters who opened

knew," Schnudt sa1d. "He was , the season on the diSabled ltst ,

ye t
" It • started

'

brochures No ei(J)enence
FT/PT Genuine Oo&lt;&gt;onl&gt;nird lc;ua.ranll•e,dl
Supplies ROsh SASE
PO Box

FW9~

win

and
socks, 7 year old
Morgan Mart, Bay, all Good
trail horses (740)339-1949
(740)258-1147 muslleavoa
meeaage and will ratum
call.

HAY &amp;

.._t......-clWNiiiiiiiio.o_.l
Baled &amp;traw for sale, out of
lleld. 675-4306
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tio
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; Volume Dlocounl AVIlla·
~le .
Herlttgo
Farm.
(304)675·5724

1986 Flreblrd, V-cl, T·Tops,
American Racing Wheels,
$1800,
Adult
driven,
(740)258-11741 Leave mea·
sage
1968 Pontiac Sunl&gt;rd, . 2
door, auto, runt good &amp;
lool&lt;a good, $850 (740)441·
1083
1967 Cavalier Z·24, clean,
runs and drives very well,
good lool&lt;lng, $2100. OBO
Call (740)366-()113

ran

where-

27

games.: '

11 - 31

roaQ:
•

It fi'gures the l eague's worst:
road team would break out at:
Cme r gy

Fteld ,

where

the

Reds have the maJor leagues'
worst home record at 10- 29 .: ;
CASH LOANSI
• Bad Cred1t OK
'Most Oua11ty
·Fast Serva

a1mple low monthly payment
Elln11na,te H1gh , Interest
Save
ln10u1,.n1io white becom1ng debt free
IPr•ogrltmt lor renlers, homeowners and
I w1th credit difflcullieB
1Sptecltllizlr1g In credit cards, collection

Tribe
from Page 81
Roc ker (1-0) allowed the .
first two batters to reach

base~

m the top of the ntnth, but
got

Everyone a AnJone

the

next

three

on.

popouts.

APPROVED
.JU8T CALL

•

Diaz went 3-for-3 to help
Cleveland 1mprove to

1-888-m-2719 Ext..121

if you want the Best

1-15

this season when scoring
three or fewer runs.
•

Mo1j 1ci11e, Supplements and
Courses A'lallable! ~

The Royals tted it at 1 m~
the

eighth off Bob Wick-

man. Rey Sanchez got an
infl.el4 smgle with two outs •.
and Mike Sweeney hit a shot
toward the seats m left-cen - ·
ter_ thax was caught by a fan-;,.
who reached down over the
wall .

Umpires

fai-t

ruled

interference

and

gav:e

Sv.;eeney an RBI double.
Replays showed

the

,
bait

would have bounced off th.e.
wall had the fan not mtervened.

•

Juan Gonzalez gave Cleve,land a 1-0 lead ofT Royals

"

.

starter Paul J3yrd in the SIXth'

* SummeR DRzveR
R~cRuzrmenr
~----~

with an RBI g rounder.

~wnor

DzRecToRy

ahead home r in the eighth

res.pecTed IS iln tndu51')1
We 11re a tnAy OtHerenl
lruc~•ng

1&amp;.~iMrllfi1U10peratora
24 hour Internet IICC.II
to Landttar 1vallabte
1 year expenence
at least 23 years of age
good dnvlng record

$34,000! 1 s t yr
Plus Full Be n e fll s T

2WEEK PAID

COL TRAINING

WANT MORE
MONEY?

up to 36 cpm
wlbonuses

--~ISfAN

• All mtlcs pard
• E1.ce llcn1 Home Time
• Air Rrde Con ve ntton~~ob

Now Hiring
Company Orlve,.
A OWner Operoloro
Great Health Benefits,
Above Average Pay,
Lots of Homellme,
BonUs Program,
No Touch Freight
Call Rob Williams
Mon·Frt 6·61J.5:00 p m.

b~ncfll~ '

23 ycm old wnh COL A

877-491·0777

1o dnve lor a company who
looking lor 0/0's, Co drvr1 &amp;nd
IIIIHI purch Ope!'IIOrl who hive
• p!OiesslonaT &amp;llnude and record

tl'len C•U todlyl 2 yrl m!n e11p

amt good salety recorp

requ~red

~

Sprlnglield. MO
1·800· 7 43·0284

80()-435-401 0
www.landstar.com

• Sta rt

company We

l"'~whobo.,,·;w•bl'ealllf)")U

•

•

Gonzalez's btd for a go.:

~~~~

r:!k

was thwarted by center fielder Carlos Beltran, who
caught th e b all above the

mark~

wall near the 405-foot
er.

"I was lucky because

at

first I d 1dn't feel it in my.
glove," B eltran said. "When · I
came down,
Rookie

I

knew I had it;"

C . C.

pttched

seven

Sabathia
sco reless

innmgs and gave the Indians'
beleaguered rotati o n a break.
The 20-year-old nght-hander allowed two hits. walke,d

••••••

Drlnn

...-.u. ..

1 The

Y-In ' •
llaHin'lhe
ca-.OfUfel

Bridge

to Your

"They hit fastball$ pretty

Success

good, "' I h ad to mtx It up,"
Sabathia said.

Trucking
lnduslry's

Easiesl

• Qufllty Home Trme
• Super P:~oy 6c 8enefiu
• Htgh Weekly Mtl cs
Plr.u Much Much More
Mus~ Have Clan A COL
w!Humat

three. and stru ck out eight. "

• Lease

Sabathta retired the first 11
Royal s

before

Sweeney · m

walkin g

the fourth. Joe

Randa hned th e n ex t pitch
at second ba setnan Roberto
Alomar, who r eached up and

CALL TODAY Ill

had the ball g lan ce off his

NAVAJO EXPRESS

glove.
The

1·800-800-1440

crowd booed when

the offictal scorer ruled tt a
hit.
Jermaine Dye then walked,

'----------;====::\!
110 Help Wanted

FINO

.,...------'.;;-~

WHAT YOU

loadmg
I 0.1ys Ou l

NEED IN

I [ Jilys H o nw

1

1·1 D.tys 011 t
I O.ty•, ll un w

· Homa mo11 W1filendt

·No Hu:mat

_

•Avg elk/mila ~e dlld &amp; empty
• Midwlll 10 So\J lhl8oulheU1

• 100'% No Tough Frslght
• 15% Drop &amp; Hook

Cal JQhn loll frN

888-428·5759

CELADON

The
Daily
Sentinel

Your Aoad Home!
Call Pat toH~rret

the

Wtth one out m the Royals' fifth, the S£Orer ch_anged
hts call to an error, reinstating the potenttal no- httter.

wall -

next batter, Hinch,
off the

l)lus bflnelrt p.cl&lt;sge
2 ~rs OTR CI.UI·A Exper

BOD-843·3384
Operators
$1.10 per m1le
Tractor Purchase

f&gt;edictlt1on ol a Urnlld Fami!~

left- field

near th e spot where

Sweeney's

11 L.ar.u Purch1111:
P~r• m Avall•bk

but

S~bathia stru ck out Beltran

The

&amp; 11anc8 on God

bases,

to e nd the threat .

doubled

CLASSifiEOS

CALL
992-2155

:

More Funlll
We've Got the Mites!

Atgl on11 1 Longhs ul

'

I U \ '"I'I IIU \Ill 1'\

road,

r ecord ts worst m the NL.

OWNER OPERATORS
t Stan .12cpm all Mtln or
@ 804 • Fud Sun:harge'
• B ase Plates &amp; Permtls

cuHIng
Read the
ClaaaiDed Ada

the

they've lost 21 of

• E~tcc llc n t

old Walker Morgin

on

Ptttsburgh's

DRIVj:RS

~---Gii.~~." Block wllh blaze

a three-gam• .

broke

losing streak and got a

to:

Pomeroy, OH 45769

·:

al so had three htts as Pitts- :

I

l

!

Bnan Giles and Jack Wtlson:
burgh

Caah/Check With Copy I 'I·
Invite The Entire t-Jelgb~grhogd
Tg Your Yard Sale I

Classified Ads
111 Court Street

of;

"Tl!~
going my w:~.y.:

shouRiil't have, and they were·

I

The Daily Sentinel

kind

satd .

htt for doubles."

to1d bo.rd

I
1

o ut

Davts

probably threw c urves that

Over 15 Words,
20~ Per Word

Used coocrete blocks, broken concrete or rock,

home~ · .

It happens. There were a cot,~:::.
pi e of sttuattons where ~ ·

Yard Sale Ads Only

Mall

rough ,"

pttc hes weren't

For 15 Words
1 to 3 Days

•

21-mmute :

innmg, whtch

ended Davts' toughest game :

,\ 11\l "ltll I\

WANTm
roBUY

a

tn

50:

W tth twO OUtS 111 the second :

Lhasa Apso Puppies AKC
8wks old 1st shots, wormed
$260-$300 (740)797·1911

444 lntemallonat, 40HP,
Tractor wUh front end load·
740 379·9:!61

threw

b le and a two-ru n double by :

I

I I H\ 1 '1 1'1'111 '

H e

Der ek Bell .
R amir ez's three- run

I . •. _!~~ I

Long Ha~red Ch1huahua
puppies lor sale (:304)695·
3815
.

starrs.

featured Ramirez's RBI dou- .

'

I

r

rooktes tn the R eds' rotatton, •

contmue," Schmidt said. "One

r
'

•

and only their fourth doubleSchmidt ,

I"'

FOR

JUSt trying to fire us up a little
b' "
tt.
From
that
pmnt
on,

jie,.;.Bo-ATS-~,;;&amp;""'S•MALE-OTOAS--.""1

WaiMino Special· :J/4 200
PSI $21 95 Per 100, 1" 200
PSI $37 00 Per 100, All
Brass Compra,_slon Fittings
In S)oc~
""
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS- 1965 Ford F-700 Dumpi[UCk Coleman Shenandoah popES Jackson, Ohio, 1·800· , Osp wtth 2sp Axle, asking l:lp camper, excellent cond1~
$6500 or trada lor Chevy liOn, (740)446-9470
537·9526
4x4 truck 675·5828
"'I It\ It I . .,
Yamaha Keyboard, 4 Yea"' - - - - - - - - Old. cosl New, $1400, t966 Silverado, 4x4, $:!695, iirrilo;;;;;;;~H~o;ME;;;;;;;;;;;;I
Used Only 6 Monlho, $800, 1994 S·lO, $3695; 1991
•·-o~~
(304)675-5962 Any11me
Gao Tracker, 4x4, $1995;
llMrK ·~·~,.~
1968 S-10, oxlonded cab,
B
$2195 COOK MOTORS
BASEMENT
~~--oiiiiiiiiiii;;._.l (740)446-0103
WATERPROOFING
-'
- - - - - -- - r Unconc:tltionat l!letime guar·
Block, brick, sewer pipes, 20(M) CMvy 8-10, low ml· antee Local references fur·
windows, llnlels, ale. Clauda logo CD player,alloy wheels nlshed Eo1abllshsd 1975
Winters, Rio Grande, OH ale ·301-87H515
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446Call740-245-5121
0670,
1·600·267·0576
96 Grand Cherokee Limited Rogers Waterproofing,
Cedar boards, over 200 304-675-1879 leave masdoors, Interior and exterior sage
lr:l:IOI"'"--:"~---.,1
windows, cabinets, lots ol
V.4-ANiWDs&amp;
building suppllea, all new,
,
&gt;MnCU• ~·~. . ~ •
50% off. Call (740)441 .0279
after 6pm
C&amp;C General Home Malnte1978 Chevy 4WO 48,000 nenca- Palnllng, vinyl sldPun:
original miles. Great shape, ing, carpentry, doors, win-;
.__ _FORiiiiiiii"liALEtiiiiitoo_.l $3700 (740)256-6215
dows, baths, mobile homo
•
repair and more. For free
AKC Cocker Spaniels, 6 1987 16 lool aluminum esllmate call Chet, 740·992·
weeks old, 3 lomalea, 2 slop van, 8.2 diesel, $2200 6323.
•• II
(740)441 ·9476 (740)379· - - - - - - - rna I88• $300 each• ~ ge on 2758
Llvlngalon's Basement Wa·
aquariUm, 55 aqua;rtum sell
ter Proofing, all basement
or trade. Both with accesso- 1990 F250 4x4 diesel XLT repairs done, free esli~
rtes
Call after "4pm Lariat. 123,000 mllea, Alu· mate&amp;, lifetime guarantee.
(740)256-6505
mlnum nms With oversize 14yrs on job eKperienca
AKC Female Pekingese, 3 1""'· Call 17401256"1647
(304)695·3667.
·
monlt1S old, had eho1S, and 1991 Ford B&lt;onco, 4x4, full
Eucnuc.uJ
wormed; Toy Poodle, 7 size, excellent condition, In·
monlhe old..(740)446·3398 side and oul, garage kept
RDluGERA110N
AKC Registered Basaet Call 17401245"5560
.
Hound Pupp1es. 1st shots 1997 Mountaineer, 4 wheel Residential ar commercial
and wormed
Miniature drive, excellent condition, 5 wiring, new seMce or radachshund 1 male, 2 fe· Iller engine, 56,000 miles, pairs Master Licensed elec·
male, (740):!67·7705
1o1a11y loaded, (304)773· lrlclan Ridenour Electrical,
=:.:::.:::;_.:=_......;._ _ 5182 or (:304)674·1523
WV000306, 304-675-1766
AKC Registered Chinese
Pug puppies. $350 Will
lake paymenls (740)368·
9325

672

Gl

2000 Honda 400 EX show prompted it.
room c011d111on $4500 675.. I d
,
h. k
t276
on t t tn

r

r

AND Blln.DINGS

f
....._
1'0111
.- ..6~ 81

1996 1200 Sport star lots
ol exira's. Cuslom Parts
the outburst after the game,
Great Cond1t1on $8',000.
(740)446·7351 call 7pm- and those who h eard It
9pm
weren't quite sure what

f s:

I

i

j.

~

92 Dodge Shadow 2 dr.
,~
hatch back, sun roof, apo~ler
$2400. 304-862·2755
16' Bass Tracker, 8HP
94 Dodge Shad ow, 5 Johnson, Trolling Motor,
Finder,
Trailer,
speed, a~r, $1000; Yamaha Depth
motor scooter, new tires. $2600. (740):!67-7693
$1000 (740)441-()181
Lively's ,1\uiO Sales· 1988 1989 Slrato's Open Bow
Chevy G. 20 Van. 51400 , W11h lraller, Soals 6, Excel·
1987 Fotd Aerostar $tOOO· lent Condition OMC 3 0
'
• 160 HP ln·Board With
1990 Plymouth Sundance. Cobra Out DriVe Asktng
$t 200; 1980 Foro Muslang, $4600. Call Evenings
$800, 1987 Chryoler LoBar· 1740)44lHI440
on. 4 - ·· $850: 1966 Che· !:...:::!.:._:__::.:..:.:.__ __
vy Cavalier SW, $450: 1985 Sea Ooo 1999 GSX·AFI w/
Pontiac Parl&amp;ienne SW trall&amp;f, cover 35 hra., Mint
$800, 1980 Ford Pln1o, Std , Cond1llon, $8500. (216)233$600, 1985 Dodge 600 4264
·
Convertible, $900, 1990
Mercury Sable, $1000, 1967
,t\l!IU PAKrS &amp;
Chrysler LeBaron, 2 door,
A~
.
$900, 1991 Ford Taurus
$1200, 1992 Eagle Premier, Are •y,
Lookl
F E
$1200; 1985 Chevy Cavaou
ng or nller, Convertible, $1000, g!nes Or TransmiSSions?
1988 Chevy Astra, Sland· Give Me A Call AI 740-446·
ard, $800, 1991 Chevy Lu· 0519
mlna, $1000, 1990 C h e v y - - - - - - - Lumina. S1andord, $1000. luclgat Prtcod Tronoml ..
1985 Chevy cavalier, $350, 11on1 AH Types, Access To
1988 Buick Elactra, $850, Clvsr 10,000 Transmlsalons,
1973 International SchOOl Transfer Cases, 740·245·
Bus, 5 speed. $800.; 19781 5877, Cell: :!39·3765
ton Van, $2000, 1988 eagle
&amp;
Premier,
$1000
Call
~
(740)366·9303 From 9am·
. MaroR HOMES
5pm, Monday- Frtday, Set·
urday 9am-3pm Closed 1984 motor home, t993
Sunday.
Dodge Plck·up. 6' ullllty
Volvo Classic, 1960 Spo~s lraller (740)682·7830
Sedan, excellent condition,
,
$2000 OBO. Musl seal 99 Sprinler, :!6. air conde
(304)875-1618
llpn, slereo, 2 bedroom,
queen size mattresses, na\1·
TJuJCXS
IMien llcerissd, slide 0u1
SALE
room,
hardly
used
..__ _ _ _ __. (740)245·5535

r

\111(111 \ " 11 ' 1
.,.,,....~~----.,
HOUSEIIOIJJ
GooDS

deposit, rel~rences, no washers, dryers and relrlg·
pets Evergreen, near 160 erators Thompsons AppllBusiness rental property lor (740)446-6189
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave·
sate· Middleport. Desire Beaulllul Alver VIew Ideal nue, (304)e7'S·7388
'
quick sale Priced below ap- For 1 Or 2 People, Releran- GOOD USED APPLIAN·
pralsal, at $55,000 Brings cea, Oeposlt, No Pets, Fos· CES washers, dryers, re$1,000/mo rental Income. ter Trailer Park, 740·441 ~ tngerators, ranges Skaggsf
(740)339-1028
,
0181.
Appliances, 76 Vine Street,
Call 740·446·7398, 1-888·
Instructors are needed In Start Your Business To- 14• 70 Southam Dream, Charm 1ng church building In Looated In Point Pleasant 818•01 28
the areas of English, Read"~ dav Prime Shopping Cen· free Delivery free Setup on- great PI Pleasant location Behind Fox P1zza on Sand- - - - - -- - - lng and Learning Strategies, ter Space Available At AI· ly $9995 1-888-928-3426
$40 000. 304-675-1618
hilt Road Call (304)675- Like new Almond Whirlpool
Basic Wr1tlng, Composition 1 fordable Rate Spring Valley
:..:;:.:.:;:.::.:.:..:..:.:.:...:.:::__ 3423
washer, $100, 2 tale model
16 Wide. Only $195 .00 Per Owner Retiring- Building
and II. A Bachelor's degr" Plaza, Caii740-446-0t01
White Whirlpool Washers,
Is requtred. Master's prefer·
· Month, 8 99 % Fixed Interest For Sale In Galllpolts, Oh1o,
APAKIMENTS
$65 each; Dryers, SSO each:
I'ROfli.X'iiONAL
Aale Wllh Air
And Un- o n Aou 1e 7. He.s Large
red Classes begin August
derplnmng
FOR .nuu
Call arter Spm, (740)4461•888 •928 _3426
27,2001
--~S:ER;;;VI,;,:;;CES=-_.1.
Parking Lot. Has 4 Rentals,
9066, 116 Orchard Hill
994 Norris 14»e76, total Also Lata Of Ftqor Space, 1 and 2 bedroom apart- Aoad, Galltpohs
All candidates should sub·
1 II Ilk
11 1 1 Good
Income.
Call
m~ a leller of lnteresl, cur·
TURNED DOWN DN
eec rc, e now can a a r, (740):!67-7866
menlo, lum~hed and unlur- Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark
rent resume and the names SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? 2 bedroom, $15,900 740·
ni~hed, security deposit re· Chapel Road, Porter, OhiO
and addresses ollhree rei·
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
446-()175
lnis &amp;
qutrod, no pe1s, 740-992- Free Estlmales, 90 Days
22 8
888•582 "3345
erences. Resumes w1ll be
1995 Clayton 14M~, 3br, 2 lw--~~A:,:CREA,;:-G::;E_.;";J
~
"
Same As Cash, Flnanc1ng
rev1ewed as recetved lnlor·
ba wtth slorage building on ~
Available V1sa An&lt;! Mastermation must be submitted
rented lot304· 675-6748
1 Room F m'IShed Eff
card
1·877-830·9162
l/2 acre lol on Oshal road
u
ICIOO· 740,44&amp;-7444
to· Phyllis Mason, SPHR. rtO
HOM&amp;&lt;i
All Ullht1as Pa1d, Shared ;_(_ ) ' - - - -- - 1996 16, 60 Mobile Homo. No single wldes. 57000 cy,
Director of Human Aesour·
Bath 919 Second Aven e
IDR SALE
Vinyl S1d1ng, Shingled roof, 875·7756 al1er Spm
•
u ·
Ma1n Street Furniture
ces, Um&gt;Jerslty of Ala
C
A C hed 1 1 · --:.._..:..:...:..:.:.....:::...._·_ _ Gallipolis, OH $125/mo.
(:3041675 _1422
Join lnloCIJion In making
1
antra "· at ra cel· (740)446-3945
c•U• on behalf of nonp10flt Grande, P.O BoK F27, Rio
lng through out three bed· 2 Lots, oned Commercial,
515 Mam Street, Po1nt
organluUona to r1l" lunda Grande, OH 45674 E-mail 1 bedroom house· remod·
WI hi The v 11
Of A
pmason@rio edu EEO/AA eled, AJC, close to golf room, 2 lull baths, Must
t n
I age
IO BEAUTIFOL
APART·
Pleasant
lolnd NMW m...,t.f.htpa
740
24
E--m-'-pl-'-oy'-8r'------- course, city pool on Mill move, call aher 5pm, Grande &lt; 1 &amp;-5856
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
Creek. (740)446-2200
(740)446·6308
2 prime lots ready for build· CES AT JACKSON ES·
New &amp; Used Furniture
Hair stylist and nail techs
28)(60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On- lng on- located 10 minutes TATES.~ 52 Westwood Drive New 2 Piece Llvlngroom
needed for fast growing 3 Bedroom on Route 2, ly $345.00 Per Month from hospital, 5 minutest lrom $297 to $383. Walk to ~~~~~s, $399 Buy, Sell,
busy salon In town. Call (304)675·5332
8.99% Fl&gt;ed Interest Rale, lrom Chanals Hills. (1) 2 5 shop &amp; movies. Call 740· _:;.;..:.._ _ _ _,.-__
(740)388·0498 for mlorma·
acres, $20,000 and (1) 1 5 446·2568 Equal Housing New And Used Furniture
1•888 . 928 _3426
tlon, leave message It no 3 bedrooms, 2· 112 baths, .:..::::...::::..:::;:.____ acres, $15,000, or take both Oppor1unlty.
Store Below Holiday Inn,
=•n.::sw="'.:.·- - ' - - - - - - ~~~:.m!':.s'$~~~~;,· n~: AMAZING Little or No Cred- lots for $30,000 · Call Beautiful· Recently Reno- Kanauga We Sell Grave
It Needed, Special Govern- (740)446·4514 from 8--Spm, vated 2,000 Square Foot, 3 Monuments And Vases
WEARE
~~~,j~~ Near Holzer ment Financing, (304)755- M·F, (740)446·3248 aller Bedroom Plus Slorage, (740)446--4782
EXPANDING OUR
7191
5pm.
New Kitchen $6001 Monlh ~
ADVERTISING
Country living· OW on 5 Beautilul spacious stngle· 60 Acres US AI 35 End ol Downlown Gallipolis, Con:
ANnQUEli
SALES STAFF
Are you a person that en- wooded acres $2500 &amp; Wl/jes~ $4Q9 down. Pay·_.. new Four Lane In Hender· tact Kelty (740)446-9961
1.~-------.,.J
joys meeting people? Are move ln. (740)446-3570
ments as low as $199/mo son. C1ty Water and Mineral
'
you sell motivated and en- . - - - - - - - -.. only 0 Oakwood· Gallipolis nghts $17S,oo0 (~)937· Furn. .lshed 2 &amp; 3 Room Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·
(740)446·;l093
2518 or (:304)545-6491
~~~r;:'~~k~~~'::'eler~~ quos, 1124 Easl Main on
Joy bemg creative? Are vou
• lookmg for a career with a
Factory
Gaol
32xBO
ces &amp; Deposit Required. SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740long
established
and
Furnished 992·2526 or 740·992·1 539
$10,000 Discount only Cemp Silas For Aenl On Ullllllos
growing company? Are you
$1000.00 Down, Delivery, Kanawha Fllvar, a mile&amp; (740)446-1519
Russ Moore, owner
Interested In a position that
and setup paid by FaC1ory from Point Pleasant, electric Furnished 2 bedroom apart- High board bet!, dresser,
offers tnsuranc'e, 401 ·K plan
1·800·691-6n7
only.
(304)675-1722, ment across from park tea cart &amp; wooden playPen
and paid vacation time? All rul ntate ldven111ng
In thla newapaper 11
Are you a person that has
Final Days, Nallonwlde In· (:l04167 S.4144 Afler Spm
f&lt;JC. 'no pels. Reloronces: (740)446-1665
IUbject to tha Federal
sales eMpenence7 11 so 11
\lentory
Reduction!
For
sale
OOuble
car
garage
deposit,
$325
month
wdl be beneftcial It not. We f1lr Houllng Aet of 1MB
(304)136-3409
on 1.34 acre olland.
(740)448·8235 (740)446MlscEuANEous
which
makH
It
111~11
to
Will train For Interview con22 fl Crest l1ne boal w/ lrall· 0577
MERCHANDISE
HvlrtiH "any
sideration send your re·
Limited Or No Credit? GOII· or $500 304-578·9929
Gracious living 1 and 2
prtftNOce,
limltiUon
or
sume w1th a cover letter tell·
emment Bank Finance Only
• Setoc:hedule
AI Oakwood In Barboursbedroom apartments at VII·
lng us why you are the per· dlecrtmlnMion b ..ld on
• Weekly Bonuo
r1ce, color, religion, ux
son we need to· ,
v1lle, WV 304·736·3409.
Looking To Buy A New laga Manor and Riverside C,~:~d~~;:"'~~.~~~~~~
• Every Friday and
HOlM? Qon1 Have L.J!I'Kl 7 Apart(Tl8nls In M1ddlepon Line
flmlllal etltua Of natlon11
Cl\anes Govay, Publisher
origin, or any Intention to
We Dol II Huiry onlY 10 Lola From 1278·$:148 Call 740. $1 ,000
Ohio Valley Pubhshmg
s.turday off
992·5064 Equal Houstng Pnce Free Estllmotte9:--C&gt;iu- Only 1· New OW ropo- SO loh, 304·7:!6·7295
make any auch
(The Oa1ty Tribune), ,
• Paid Vacation
Opportunltles
For Quotes On Other Sizes
down to qualified buyers on825 Third Ave,
preference, limitation or
Eve,Y 6 Monlhl
II You Don't Call Us,
ly 0 Oakwood· GallrpoiiS,
Gallipolis. Ohto 45631
dlscrtmlnatton."
• S.v•n Paid
; : : : : : : : : : : : : : : Nice one BA unfurnished we Both Lose! Mobile
(740)446-3093
apartment Range and re- Homes Our Speciality , •
Holldeya .
Thla newaplfMr will nol
H~~
frlgerator provu:ted. Water 740 ~ 446 • 6308 1_800 •291 •
Prrvate Property And New : 10
40
knowrngty acc;ept
~
and garbage paid Deposit 0096
Ooublew1de, One Payment.
B~
ldver11Hmenta for real
11
(304)7:!6·7295
Call now to
1'RAINrNG ~
required. Cell ' (740)446· - - - - - - - 1.,--oiFOII:iR,:RENr-~-~1 4345
alter 6pm
Black Fiberglass Century
.
e1t1te which llln
Schult mobile home, 2 bed·
8Ch8dUI8 an
vlofdon ot the law. Our
Cargo Cover Fils Chevy
1
·3
Bedrooms
Foreclosed
Now
Taking
ApplicaHonsroom, e»ecellent condition,
SB, $350 (740)446·2350
Interview:
Galllpolll career CoU19e
reldera .,. hereby
range, relrlgerator, washer, Homes From $1991Mo, 4% 35 Wast 2 Bedroom Town(garears Close To Home)
lnformtd thlt all
30 Years at 8.5% house Apartments, Includes Cemetery Lots for Sale. 5
1-888-237•5342 Ca11Todayi74IJ.446·4:!67, dwoiUngoodvo~IHdln dryer central alr conditiOn· Down,
APR. For LlsUngs, 800-319· Water
Sewage, Trash, logether In Pro\lldence
lng. (740)446·9470
1-600-214·0452,
thlonowop~peroro
:!323 Exl 1709
$350/Mo., 740·446-ll008.
Cemetery on Teens Run
2201
Reg 190-05· 12748.
IValllble on'" equal
Single Parent Program,
Road (440)647·2265
opportunity bull.
Special Financing Avallabll 2 BR with attached garage.
New Carpeting and AJC. Twin AlverTowera now ac- Craftsman Riding Lawn
7191
Or, atop by:
1186
WANfED
14 Bedroom Houaa In Rio (3041 755 •
cepting
Reterencea and Deposit
Mower, Price $600, ask for
appllcallona for t BR.
242 Third Avenue
To Do
Grande, Could Be Used Unbellovoblt new 16 wide Required. 1410/ monlh InJr., (740)258·1102
"'----iiliiiiO.IIIii'•,J As " A111tal Propertv. 3 Dr, $4ee. down ,$281. 1 cludes watar No Pets 5 ml~ HUD ouboldlzed apl. lor
Gallipolis, OH ·
.
(740)24&amp;-5856
month only al Dokwood nute • from Holzer Hospital. oldany and disabled EOH Firewood, $150 Ou"'p load,
(740)37g·2758•
L..---...:.......;.-,.-.J Al l Make Mowers, Lawn
• Homtt Nitro wv 31Jo1.78S. (740)446·6114
(304)675-8679.
Ne·•·• Expenenc~ Crew Traclora, 1111tro Repaired 6 room houte wlbath on
Orlvo a lillie 11,. 1
3 Bedroom HouH In Syra·
.Four Cemetery loll at Ohio
lor s";;llng and Finishing
M lh
Valley Memorial Gardena.
Cu•• • Ohl o, .4"0/
o
on
Tara
Townhouto
Apart·
Asking $450 a 101 (740):!68
Sectional Houolng. Send Cell Mike (740)446-7604
(304)!75-0680 atk lor Suo
HUC Approved (304)!75· mtnto, Vory Spaolouo, 2 91)23
·
'
Prlclng lnformollon and ox·
H111
(740)742 2022 1"
5332 or (740)882·8118 Bedroom1, 2 Floort, CA, 1 ~=--:--:--:---­
ptrltnot 1o: Soulhtrn Bru~.
·• h:1~
1
1
1
"'
•
"
Mobllt
Hamt
Loti
lo•
ta!t
n mowng, ca 5pm
wHktndo only
112 llolh, Fully Carptled, SNro riding lawn mower,
~omoo, 1'0 Box !2i, Jack· (740)245·
'
"
Toll F,.. (888)505.0187
Adull Pool &amp; lloby Pool, PI· :!6 Inch out $245.00 304-- •
ton, OH 45840
I 741 Ctnlonary Road 3 BR
:::.::...:;;..:..::::..;.:.____ Goort~ll Portable Sowm II, 2 Balh Family Roo;, wllh Now 14 " wldt 5499 down Now 3 BR Homo wllh II· l lo, Slo~ 1385/Mo. No Poll, !75·2834
Nttdtd'
AN/Phytloal don'l haul your logo lo lht FlrapltOt, Huge 2 Car Ga· only $199. par man. call llohed garagt/ opener. CIA LIIH Plul Soourtty Oopooll : : - - - : - - -- - Thtl'tplol lor loll growing mill juot oall :l04.676·1i67 rage 17401448•1155
now 1' 800 "681 o8 777·
Clly Sohoolt Rtftrtnctti Roqulred, Doyo: ?40·44!· Framed Mlrroro, Truckload
3481 ; Evtnlngo 740-367• Hit, groal price Sao ot lr·
Home
Htolth Agoncy.
Now 14 Wlda, 3 Bod room. Dopotll Requlrod. No Peto.
vln'o Glut Service, 1273
StnU R11umt or Fax lo:
T&amp;A
Btaullful c ltOIUdtd whitt Only 119,850. F,.. Collvery 115251 monlh. lncludtl wo· 0502, 740·44!·0101 .
Eaatem Avenue Gallipolis,
Ptlt Sommer
roollng 150.00 aoquart.all cedar log homo 1 750
.,.ll!tl_lllll. .-111!1 (740)448·4423 1
Modi·Homt Hullh Agonoy ph&amp;llt of home repair, lrto oquare leal, longue &amp;li~OYt &amp; Sol Up 1·888·828·2428 tor. (740144!·1114
P.O Box 987 Galllpolla, OH tollmoltl &amp; rtlroncoe 304· cedar lhroyghout lhe Inside Now 18 ft. wide 5499. par
Grubb'o Plano· Tuning &amp;
45031 Fax 1-740·441·1979 !75·77:!6
huge olono flreplace, cov: mon. onr. 1270. par mon
Cl alllpollo Clty,
.,,.
Aopalra. Problemo? Need
2
bedroom,
ered back &amp; lronl po10h 16 call now, ·800·891·6m.
$400/ month 1740)441·
Tuned? Call The Plano Cr.
URGENTLV
NEEDED· Wood Eallng Hlllaldu
'
Dllchea
Elo
Mowing' fool side deck, 7 6 woodod
740-448-4525
1519
plalf'na donor~ earn $45 to Clean-uP Removal 01 Un ' acres 32x42 s-teel garage New bank repo- 5498 down.
S60 for 2 or 3 noura weekly wanted items Odd Jobs. 24x48 4 stair horse stable Eaay term•. hee delivery &amp; Clean 2br. Houee referen~
Independent Horbollle OloA
Call Sera-Tee. 740·592· Call Slavo( 7401446$169.000 Clark Chapel sel·up. 3 bedroom, 2 balh, cea, depotll, No Pots.
uw.
u;., ~
tnbulor, Call For Producl Or
7604
8651
Road. (740)388·9689·
(740)446·3563
Opponunlty. l740)44t - t962
(:304)675-5162

L.·

1990 Blue 1500 GL Gold
wing 35,000 miles CB, Extens. 2 Helmets $7500 862·

.,.,--,,..------- 1993 Ced1llac Fleetwood
MOBILE HOME OWNERS Broughman, 49 K Miles,
M1n1 Loaded (740)446·
41
Huge ln&gt;Jentory, Discount ~
.::9::1~-----­
Prlces. On VInyl Sklnlng. 88
Camaro
T-Tops,
Doors. Windows, Anchors.(,7..::40:cl3:.:7.:9·.:93:.:7_::4_'- - Water Heaters, Plumbing &amp; ElectriCal Parts, Furnaces &amp; 88 Olds Cutlass Sterra
Heat Pumps Bennens Mo- needs some work 82 Cadll-bUe Home Supply, 740-«6· lac C1maron runs Q09d,
9416 wwworvb com/ben· needs some work $700 'tor
nett , both or trade fOr runn1ng
NEW AND USED STEEL ptckup (304)S76"31 61

In one week ·w ith us_ · · ·

AdS

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohl~

~.,re..~.~
...~..._~I-Fi.a..•R*•
....~IF_·...
~~
.....~
..~~-------~--------------------~----------------------~~----------------------~·~
· A•~
Reds

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

•

Word

,

Tuesday, July 3, 2001

dnve

ti ed

the

score three mnings later
Notes . Sabath1a is 4-0.with
a 1.90 E~A v s. "Kansas Ctty.
. . . Sweeney h as 21 RB!s tiL

www arnerlcancontral com

20

ga m es . . . The

Royals

• were seeking thetr first four-

This dtre ctory ts a product of
The ,Am e.n ca n Communit y Netwo rk
1 -800 -906 -}364

1::~:=~·~~':;~~~;.~~;1

gam e

sweep

tn

C l eyel and

smce June 1973. .
It w;.s
Cleveland's sixth wm m Its
last. at-bat at Jacqbs Field this
year.
I
I I

�.'

.

· · Page B4 • The Dally Sentinel.

.
-----

..~..__ . _

•

Tuesday, July 3, 2001

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohl9 .

Tuesday, July

'

, Pomeroy, Middll)port, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel. Page B·S

l!LULLJE~Y00000P~--~~~--------------~"~~~~~~~========~~==============~~~~ :

3, 2001:

.

T' ElUV U5 SOME·
THIN G T 'EA.T.'

&lt;&gt;

"PRO-CLEAN"

The One Man Corporation

Residential Pressure Washing, Single Wldes,
Double Wides, Boat's Oed&lt;s. RVs, aM
camper's, swimming pools and farm-equipment·
I've pressure washed things from tilling station
Jl81!&lt;ing lots, RVs and homes to a.corporate
Lear-Jet ·
I also- Degrease automobile and truck motor's
as well as diesel and Industrial equipment
engines, such as bulldozer:s. backhoes; and
endloaders. If I can help you call me after 5:00.
Jlml Scott 992-3002
or email at: onemancorporation@lrognet.net ,

LARRY SCHEY

/cHivRot~T/
Ath e no

Phone (:7 40)593-6671
Ohio

Rocky A. Hupp. Agent
Box 169
Middleport. Ohio 45760

... Local 843·5264
'
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses ; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40LK ~ollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

DIPOYSIG

Howardl.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Hauling &amp;
Excavating

(6 · r.§

IHrrulirrg • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

' PIIft

Writesel
·Roofing· Home ·
Maintenance- ·
Gutters- Down
Spout
FrH Estimates

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts·
Dealers

740887..0183

URNPIKE L~:~~~
j;p~·rr

CO"TRAGORS, INC.
Racine, Ohio 45771

740-985-3948

-\1. ANANCE DEPARTMENT
Bankruptcy? Credll Problems?

CONCRETF/BLOCII/BRICK

"We Can Help"ll

Flat Work,

Call Us first Or We Both Losel

Ask For Mike Hindle
1-800-272-5179 or 446-9800

.

Advertise

F~ters, Walls, Sleps

Replacemeats, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil

Grote Free Estimates
Servlag Ohio and

wv

·

NOTICES ..
Cheater townahip
board ol trutteet will
hold a hearing lor the
2002 Budget at the
monthly moetlng on

in this
space

(under ~omeroy­
Mason Bridge)

ssp per ,

11"colu•n

.--------- ----, ...-!I.._
CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
CAN HELP
GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL

£1

·:

DIRT

I

METAL CULVERT
· GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

big or small Jobs;
small,
landscaping
ShaunSeth
(740) 985-3563
(7 40) 541-3820

July 4th
Chicken BBQ and
Homemade Ice Cream
Racine Fire,Dept
Serving Beings at i 1 a.m.

Classlflea Ads
111 Co.urt Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769

ROBOTMAN

Ext;lusive
Mohawk Dealer

11\GlTio.LLY

BARNEY
I'M GONNA HAFTA KEEP YOU TIED
TO MY APRON
STRINGS,
R
'

.'

1&gt;
j

•
''

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

II

groal11t wl1h tho beol

ing. The winners of Tuesday night's
games will meet in the 8 p.m. semi.
.
Tuesday's . quarterfinal action sees ..
Mew Haven meet Bidwell II at 6 p.m.
At 8 p.m .. Pomeroy·swisher and Lohse
meets Kyger II for a bid at. the tournament semi-finals.
. The tournament will take a break
Wednesday for the July 4th Holiday
while Thursday the semi-finals begin
with games at 6 p.m, and 8 p.m. Friday
night the finals will be held starting
with the 6 p.m. consolation game and
the 8 p.m. championship.
I

personel e~re products.
Herlllllftlntomlllonat hao

oomethlng lor avaryone.
tall your lndopendent
Htrbal~a dlltrlbutor,
Jll Enterprill
(746) 985-3921
We Cln pw1on~llz8 a
progrsm for you I

r~ . Plt+OM

1

74()..949·2217
SIZBS 5' x 10'
lo 1.0' x 30''
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Owner
Charles R. Dill

PhiiH 992-7445
Cell hone 591·9254

IREE SERVICE
Top ·Trim ·Removal
BUCICel Service

Francisco outfielder will be making
his eighth start and his 1Oth All-Star
appearance.
Fully lnaured
Page 81
Giants second baseman Jeff Kent
and shortstop Rich Aurilia also drew
Japan .
starts. They are the first NL middle
"Major league baseball fans know · infielders to be elected from the same
TIM DEEM
baseball talent. I try to play better for team since Ozzie Smith and Tommy
them , I appreciate that I got so many . Herr of St. Louis in 1985.
IONTIIICTIIG
Cotl)plete Home·
votes," said the 27-year-old right
Texas catcher Ivan Rodriguez
Repaor
·
fielder with Gold Glove talent. · ·
earned his ninth consecutive start and
Remodeling
Suzuki was, the first rookie to be • 1Oth. appearance overalL Also starting
Quality Driveways,
New Additions
Garages
electe.!l since Sandy Alomar Jr. for for the AL are outfielders Juan ConPatios, Sidewalks.
WV0282120
Cleveland in 1990. Hideo Nomo was zalez of Cleveland and Ram1rez of
Call Bob
25 years experience
FlEE lSnMITES
a rookie when he was selected by NL Boston.
.
.
. 148-892-1021
Free Estimates
740-949-1405
manager Felipe Alou as the starting
New York M~ts catcher M1k&lt;e PiaZ- .
Till
frill
pitcher for the 1995 All-Star game.
za earned hiS s·e venth start and mnth
740-742·8015
1811-992-1021
The last team to have four elected All-Star appearance. His status is
La&lt; ltWIIId &amp; ootod
1·877·353·7022
614-747-1715
starters was Cleveland' in 1999 uncertain, however, because of a bro!l,.oberro Alomar, Manny Ramirez, ken big toe.
MILL END
Kenny Lofton and Jim Thome. l:lad ·- The other N~ starters are outfield~ring In your repal!_work ..
·FABRICS
_
. Bell -finishe d ahead of Ripken, th e ers Sammy Sosa of the Chr~ ago Cubs
Machine Quilting
we'll get you going for
Mariners would have become the flfSt and Luis Gonzalez of Arizona, fir st
EARNHART
113
team with five elected starters si..;ce baseman Todd Helton of 1Colorado
spring
pillow panels
Cincinnati in 1977.
'
. and third baseman Chipper Jones of
740-992·3673
Every Spring Tune-Up
Rip ken finished with 1,108,383 Atlanta. .
.
.
votes, beating our Bell 's total of
The pitchers and reserves and the
gat a FREE Blada Sharpening.
Pomeroy Eagieo
i ,063,772 .
rest of the 30-man rosters will be
New equipment arriving dally
Club
Bingo
There \Were 716,325 online ballots announced. Wednesday. Seattle pitchSee Manning, Wayne or Jim
On Thursdays
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor;
c.ast in the final week after stadium ers Kazuhiro Sasaki, Freddy Garcia , AI 6:30 .p.m.
voting closed, and a tptal of2,231,137. Aaron Sele and Jamie Moyer all are
lawn mover or weed trimmer.
Main Street
ballots cast online.
candidates for selection.
L4wn and Gard~n Equipment · ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
Alex Rodriguez, who left the
Retiring San Diego star Tony
,Is ol.lr Business n11t o side line.
Mariners after last season as a free Gwynn , who fini shed 1Orh amon g
Paying $80.00·
GRAVELY TRACTOR
agent and signed with Texas, drew his NL outfielders, is expected to be
· pergame
fourth start at shortstop. ·
,
picked by NL manager . Bobby ValenSales &amp; Se~vice ·
sboo.oo
Coverall
'' Starbursl
.
Barry Bonds, leading the Imajo rs tin e .of the Mers . New York Yankees
"204 Condor St.
'Pomeroy
·with 39 home runs , drew an NL- mariager Joe Torre will guide the AL Progressive top line
992-2975
leadin g 2 ,140,'3 15 votes .. Th e San
Lie. #00-50

from

YOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

vr

THAT

/lh Hard1bStopAThvat~

I&gt;EPEI&gt;IDS.
IT!&gt; A
CO- ED

1-304-675-78%4 ·
l-800-lSO·ll077
R~identiat Commmiol New Conslnlction
· Soles · Senice lnslallation
Speciatillina In Shod Metal Ductwork
"Trane• Salrs It Senice For
Gallia, Mason, a'nd Meip Couritles

Licensed and ln.&lt;ured

P:.~ ~~

l 'u.~

lcud

I'll ~~

tz

and proper tim i., ,g
that give an ac ti on its
chara cter and make i t
eith ~ r good or bad."
My source claimed
that Agcsil aus liv ed
from 440 ro 400 l3. C.
Thinking that if only ,
he had survived
longer, he mi ght have
produced mo re insightful prose, l doublc-c hcf kcrl in th ~
Chambers lliographiTtt~S~ GOLf
cal Dictionary ro jearn
that Agcsilalls had actually di ed ' in 3 60
SOLI&gt; M~
D.C., was one of the
ttAV~ A
most brilliant soldiers
of
his era, and had
F~A~ OF
been the King o f
Sparta from 399.
How would you try
to land four spades in
this deal' W est obligI&gt;" .
""' ingly leads a low diaYOO 05\1\0J:il.Y DON'T ~QI.J
inond: nine , queen ,
i-lfi"'T t\1-\~t:f.\Y JOO \~I
king.
The two- diamond
cue - bid showed a
maximum pass wit h
I:AUDITI~]
.spade
support.
I. ~. Pi~k~ . i
This was th e third
.i
board
of · the
~
Wom e n 's
Team
t
Olympiad final in
1988, which .was 1\eld
'---1in Vcnice, Italy.
The llritish declarer
immediately drew
trumps -- bad. Then
she tried a heart to
dummy's nine. However, East, Dorthe
..__' ---;r_..l Schalrz from D e nmark, won with the .
........, ace and correctly
switched to the dub
four. nThree club
tricks later, the contract was one down .
Hettina Kalkerup
displayed the com·ct
timi·ng. She drew
only one round of
trumps -- good --,
played a diamond to
dummy's ace, re turned to hand with a
trump, and cashed the
diamond jack, di scarding a club from
the dummy. Now she
lost. only one heart
and two dub·s, and
Denmark gained 12
.points en route to
victory by 21.
'

fruit

59 Stag
52 Oppolito of
WSW
54 Grease

.,

•

,.
•'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter in the cipher stands for another.
Today's clue: R equals B

'AFZ
DXN

C"-MP.

R,IG.HT

7

\\

WV 005176

OFFICE EXPRESS
BUSINESS SERVICES

•

HI! 15
'!'OUR BROTHER
HQME?

General/Specialized Typing
Temporary Office Assistance
· Mailing Labels/Envelopes
· ·· Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Servkes
25 years Secretorial Experience

. SURE .. HE'S ~ERE
IN THE HOUSE
SOMEWI1ERE ...

LOOK FOR
J.IIM LINDER

740·667·3224 or 740-667.()038 ·
'

'

JONES'

Tree Service

-

I op • Removal • Trim

· PDHZV

'ZDOAF

WDSIFV

'J

....

•

VFB

OSVVZWW

'

CX -

LWJUZOV.'ODWGF
UDWNJ
ZHZOVJX
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I've enjoyed a great career. It's been
a-Joyous rille:",- Dwight Gooden, announcl~lJ ·hls retirement.

O Rearrange

l•tt•ra gf tho
four scrambled words be·
low to form four simple words.

I

TURMET

I

BL E R.E

.I I I' 1 I I

. PEANUTS

Professional Work at
Affordable Rates

RCOTF, . HJVA
WD .NBWCMZ
JL

AOZZV.'
WJUZWW

I

5

5 G A S R I;;;
I 16 11

Overheard in elevator of large
corporate
headquarters: "It's not
I
·
.
.
.
the bears and bulls; involved with
r~--------;, the stock. market that make people
(-.---.-C-'I;_T...;.N_:E;_F....,...~. lose money, it's the-- - • ·- ·-19
Co,;,~leoe the chuckle quored

·s
.. .

I ,I Ia I

O

.
.
.
.
.
by fdling in the mlssing words
'---'--.L.--L-.L.--L......J you develop from step No.,.J "below.

&amp;

PR INT NUMBERtD
LfTlERS

I'

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Hunger' Vaunt - Embed- Tirade - BEHIND
"We live in such an automated world today ." Granny
sighed. "The minute the traffic light turns green, it acti.
vates the horn of the car BEHIND me."

• Stump Grinding

• Bucket Truck

Alltypeso
Roofs,
Specialist
Cell#

'

~~~==:!!

'· ELrrE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

constncUon,

.5UZU kI•

.,

[AUDlT!NG]

J

Specialize In new

remodeling, plumblag,
electrical, hOme main·
tenance, and repair
porches, &amp; decks.

1'11.11

E.. :.:t

F£.YING!

Jeff Stethem

29670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

No rth

l 'a~5

I "'J~J

- IAL.LS YOlJ .

''

JMk. PINOM.

Free estlmotet,
Insured

W(·~l

l'llss

41 Feels
Intense
de tire
(for)
42 "t don,
think to"
43 - arterlosl
(ventricle
partt)
44 Some
tennis ·
ohots
45 Wide 111.
47 Hookllke
porto
48 Give
and49 Tropical

.

[AUD!Tll't]

CONS1RUCT10N

1\ .I 5
7 .; 5

"It is . c i,rc uJnsta n t.:c

992-0739 ·

3-D

-

·C~rPel

KEEPS THE

I

One n eeds to be
doubly ca reful in this
li fe, T otb y's con tract
requires :~cc u r:lt c tinling by declarer. So , I
searched f&lt;&gt; r a quotati on with th at key
word in it Up ca me
th.is from Agcsi laus:

Terry Lamm

Cell740•591•2782 740•591•0477
Home 740•9a5•4218 \
Lowest prices guaranteed

Sout h

•New·Homes

l~~~~~~.;o~~~!':.~~-2.~

1

, \KUJ~

,. . ,.

AUPIWC&amp;5

KENSINGTON
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY

~

9 ~

Dealt•r; West
Vulncr11blc: Nurth Sl.lulh

OBSCU~W
FOR F~l'o\lLY

• Garages
• • Complete
• Hardwood floorlni
Remodeling
• Conl!oleum
Stop &amp; Compare
fREE ESTIMATES
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone f304J 674-6100
Locuot Street, Pt. Pitallnt
740·992-1671
Just Pall KldC
Mobile Home Parle

"J

••• ,,

..

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing,

Trucks• Mobile
• H: rr:,··~~~~~·c:;
••Boato
Drllveways
• Equipment cleaned &amp; degreased

" 1
ij IU M li

•

Suu Lh

OUALITY
WINDow ·
SYSTEMS

Hill's.Self
Storage

YOUI diet for maximUm
nutrition, or just look your

.. .
1 J J

SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 911.5"
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Lose Weight Now
AskMaHow
Whether you're trying to
lole weigh~ IUppllll)fnt

.

I:;~~ I

:t
• Q.

SETH'S·
LAWN
SERVICE •

C.L. Spurlock
12:00 noo(l
Sunday July 8th
Forl&lt;ed Run Sportsman Club
'/,slug I'/, shot

the Daily Sentinel

EXPRESS

AVAILABLE ~
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR liM.I'II,L

992-6215

BENEFIT SHOOT

117 !l! Ill

wr~t

Opc n m~

DELIVERY

• Eloctrlcal a Plumbing
• Roonng a OUIItro
• Vinyl Siding a Painting
• Plltlo and Porch Decile
Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill

S••••r

•

•• • r.
" •
.• ·~"
• s
•• '"
r.
"
• '"
•

740-992-1101
or992-2753

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• NewGorogeo

lacll wnlul•y•
11
1
10 col••• Inch
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·21'5~

Cash/Check With Copy
Mall to:

Monday's action set the stage for the
· 6:30 semi-final on Th&gt;lrsday in which
the Pomero)' Reds play Federal Hock-

740-992-7599

CARPENTER
SERVICE

BULLETIN BOARD

Over 15 Words,
20; Per W9rd

Ho~king.

• Baler TWine
• Boler TWine
• T.M. Blcx:kl

YOUNG'S

Public Notices In Newspapen.
Your RJ'pt tu Know,
Delivered Right to Your 1:\oor.

Willi ADRily ••••1••1'

For 15 Words
1 to 3 Days
Yard Sale Ads Only

9-6. Chester hitters were Cody Gerlach, a triple and single; Matt Morris, a
' triple and single;Jusrin Browning, a single; and Corey Shaffer, a double. Feder
al's hitters were not available. Chadwell
was the winning hurler for Federal

Windows • Room
Additions • Roofing
COMMEROAL ond RIIIOINTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

(740) 992·5072

month

Get Your ...... Acro11

~~~~

from Page Bl

• Hunter'•

• Economy

• Room Add~lont a
Remodeling

July 10, 2001 at the
Cheater Town' Hall
beginning ot7:00 p.m.
(7}3, 1TC ·
.
•

Hubbard

·Sweet

1o·x1o· 53o.oo
1o·x2o· 5so.oo

.- - for

Olllo N~w,.,.; A.-oc"MtiH

Public Notice

Public Notice

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE

• Now Homo•
• Siding
·Rooting
• Remodeling
• Gorogoo
•AddiUono
• Docko
• Homo Repolro
Free Estimates

•Weaterit

51 Fortner
=~nt
....J-Football'o
George - 53 " ~nllght
7 Holds
reoponolble 55 Straight·
13 Tea type
ened a
14 Eskimo
paper clip
boat (var.) 56 Stock·
15 Catchword
quoting
16 Midday .
machine
17 Starch
57 Snake
18 Mad.
nolaet
specialty sa Cagleat
20 Killed a
dragon
DOWN
21 Relfglous
11 Robl
poem
• 1 Office
23 Playground
hotahot
overhang •
apparetuo 2 She gets
12 Distort
27 Earth
what ahe
19 Be a shrew
21 Vend ·
science
wanto
32 Was alck
3 SlepJIIke
22 Tufted
33 Biblical
plants
moun lain
4 Space23 Gullible
34 Worked at
, launch
one•
(a irado)
lmpoulbll~ 24 Merry tune
ty (al.)
35 Went past
25 Pelvic
5 Genetic
one's
llonea
abbr.
bedtime
26 Intense
6 Ms ..
(2 wds.)
28 Fibber
Moorehead 29 Informed
36 Office tool
39 Wash away 7 Milk
about
40 lila
holder
30 Showy
8 Melancholy
42 W.Coast
trinket
9 Singer
coli.
31 "Ouchl"
46 -do
Ed-.
37 Turns
10 Grain- ,
cotogne
Inside
grinding
47 Nevada's
out ·
neighbor
place
38 Inlet

•

ACRO~S

~r\...
K J 10 \J3

• Replacement

\J

PHILLIP
,.U.DER

l

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vlnrl
Siding • New Garages

WS

l

Nurt ho

BISSELL

Coolville, OH 45723

, I

P/B

'

1000 St. Rt. 7 South

949·1405
591·5011

992-34ro

!\JI Makes Tractor &amp;

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

, .• A.N' TI-t' OTHER.

Wt.•dm:sd;ty, J uly 4, 200 1
It\ vittl th:tt you t rcil t yo ur
oppo rtunities in th e , year
;1 hcad with tlt t.' r~.~~ p~.~c t tlwy
.dl'Sl'rvc. If you Lake liH.' Ill for
granted . yo u 'll be pttttin ~-:
limiqti o n ~ on your potenttil l

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible f,L vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience .
(740) 742:8888
1·888·521·0916

it, wo uld bl·

'

'

1758, Murroy Hill Stotlon, '
New York', NY trol5ro. lle
sure to nat~: yom Zodi;tc si~n.
LEO O•ily 2 3 -Au~ . 221 -- h
im 't ncccuary for you to.kc t.'p

up with an c;stnv;lt-:ant fri ..:nd
rodny who like.·~ w put On niu .
In fact, it wo llld onl y mnkl'

Cellular

you look i15 plumy i\~ ym1r pal.

Be y11undf.

Jeff Warner Ins..
992-5479

VIK.GO (Aug. 2J-Scpt. 22)
- - Agr~ci11~ to S U IIH'th in ~
abplft which )'O U know li ttll·.

simply

bc caust.~

a

dem il ndin~

:modare browbcals ym1 .in lo

big mistakt: .

·St;md your ~rolinJ.
LIURA (St·pt 23-0e~. 23) -

to roast.

- Non e of th e re :tsl)m ymt
conge r up in on.k r to sbck unmday will be acccptl'rl hy the
po w('rs 'd1at be, · ,1tHI you tmy
have tO"'.\ IIS Wcr for it in more
stringe nt Wilys th;tn you :tn-

gnnd lu ck.

C ANCEl&lt; U ~ n&lt; 21-jnl y .
22) -- It might be all too ea~.y
tolb y fur )'O U to pn int a•distortcJ, ro ~y pi t:t llrl' whert'
none l' Xists. If you' re umc,Jlistit.: in your J!iiSC ~S tlll'nts. disappointment is just arou_nd th('
corner. C;uu:er. trl!at yourself .
to a birthday gi ft. Send fo r
yo ur Astra-Graph p ~ di ni ons
for the Y\.'i'Lr aht:i\ll by mailing
S2:o n•\ SASE to Aotro-Groph,
, c/o this newspa~,cr. P.O . Bo:&lt;

:1

could get yo urself into fina nci al proble m" you do n't antiup atc . T he sli ~ lu cs~ mi ~­
lll ll llil. g~o•ment will co m e ho me

· I'ISCES (Feb, 20-Marrh 20)
-- ·fhc l"OIICl' rm of cverybm{y.
mmt be equ;dly co m idc rc d
'y
w day if yo u hope to w jn an
poptd;Jtity ~on tests. Pl:t'Cing ;1\1
the c mrhasis on yo ur pcrson:ll.
I!H crcm wdl mee t' wi th rebu ke .

tiri.p ~tt" .

SCO R.PI O (On.

'

2~-Nov.

22) -- Pbu11g too mu ~ h empha sis on a bc uign Lac\~· Luck
today cou ld get you in il lot of
trouble . Unfonu1u.tcly. she
\\•o n't b e :1.\'iL il abl c whe n

ARIES (MJ r&lt;h 21 -Apri l 19)
,__ Unn't t• ven trv to embel lish
tht.• f.1d~ todJy ,~· h e n :lttcnipt ing "rO sell or p.romOtc ~o m c-

you'll ne ed her the

tlung import..l! tlt tn you. Ymtr

11\0R

cs a~gcrat t om

SAGITTARI US (Nov. 23Dec. 2 1) - - B ccnt.~c there :u c
ncv&lt;Jr a ny gu aran ttcJ th ~ t

pl:J ns will work out cx.nrtly iL S

yolt ~n v i~ ion tl;em , to bt.· on
t h ~o.·

lafc si~lc wdav, have ;~lt~.:r­
llativcs rcJul y. It' ll L.":u c the dt~·t~ppoint n H.'nt.

·

n-

CAI'ltiCOR N (Dec.

J:m. 19) -- Only a mbH:mti.ll
a m o~m t of disd plinr
yo u ovt•r the hu 111p
~·o u hope to bl· an
prml uccr. Anyt hin!J;

r;tilmist&gt;rahly .

will ~ct
today if
d1"cc tivc
len c:111

.

AQ UI,IRIUS (J&gt;ur. 2ll-f cb.
JlJ) ~~- U nk ~~ ~~o u ' rc " r.-reful , .
p nHI~Ilt ~ h ~1ppcr tmhy. yo lt

.,

\vdl b ~o· Ljukkly
pl' rcclved. and yo u'll lmt' ;;~ll
t.~ H'\hbiJi ty .
.
T AUR US (Ar ril 211-J\I ay
2[)) -- Th~o· onl y pc mm y{.)ll' ll
bt• kiddli1p; todny is yo urself 1f
)'liU ht·h~vc y~&gt;u 11\ UH s p v1!d
bwis hJ y in unkr tn be ~c­

c~o•ptcd

by

Yl"l U r

•

rtr her friends.

rmtL',ld , tht.•y" JJ vieW ')-'O LI ~.5

· w.Htcful.
CEMIN I lM.1y"21-Jitotc 20) .
-- Lm-k and dl.ll1~·~.: will l&gt;l· no
when• to be:- fo un d tbd.\y, 5~&gt; if
you hope to acldL'W an lm portam obj cctiw, you 're ~o­
in~; to havl• "to do it the oldfn~hloncd

wa y --cam it.

.'

•

I

.

.

'

�··The

Da~ly

•
•

\page 86

Sentinel

Tuesday. July 1. 200·1

•

AR.O UND THE ' DIAMOND

Glaus hurt twice by defense

· St Louis (Hermanson 6-7) at Milwaukee
Esteban Loaiza (5-9) keyed a
National teavue
(Wnghl 7-5). 4:05p.m.
.
Defense was the undoing of five-run first inning. It was hi\
Florida (Dempster 8-8) at Montreal
Ent
Eall
w L Pet. GB !Armas Jr. 7-6). 7:05 p.m.
W
L PeL
GB
Troy Glaus and the Anaheim fifth homer at SkyDome this
PIHtburgh (Ritchie 4-8) It CIACmnetl ao.Jon
Philiidell)hla
47 34 .580
48 33 .593
Angels .
season, tying the record for
(Dessens 6-4), 7:05p.m.
Now York
Atlanta
47 33 . 587
112
45 36 .556
2
.9
Ch~ago CullS IWOC&lt;f 7-5) a1 N.Y. Mots
Baltimore
Florida
41
41 .500 6 112
39 42 .481
· Glaus had .a home run taken most hnmers by an opponent
Toronto ..
!Reed 7·3), 7: t0 p.m.
Ngw York
12
38 44 .463 10112
36 47 .434
away· when Oakland's Terrence shared by Jose Canseco ·(1991)
Philadalphia (Person 6-5) at Atlanta Tampa Bay
Motttreel
24 58 .293 241/2
34 48 .415 13 1/2
(Glavine 6-5), 7:35 p.m.
C..,tra1
Central
Long, pulled bis drive back and Brady Anderson (1996).
'
Anzona (Schilling 12·2) al Housloo (Eiar·
GB
W
L Pet ; GB
w L Pet
from over rhe fence in the first
Boston built an 11 -0 lead· in
ton 4-8). s·o5 p.m.
Minnesota
47 33 .587
50 31 .617
Chicago
Colorado (Chacon 4-4) at San Di$QO Cl...land
Houstoh
43 37 .538
4
411 33 .582
3
inning. Then the Anaheim first the third inning for Hideo
(Williams 5-6), 9:05p.m.
Chiqlgo
38 41 .481
11
7
St. louis
40 40' .500
baseman made a 12th-innin g Nomo (7-4). Brian Daubach
San Francisco (Hernandez 6-tO) at l os Kansas City
Wodnndoy"o Oameto
•
34 47' .420
16
Milwaukee
39 41 .488
8
Detroit
Boalon (Wakefield 5-2) at Clevoland
32 46 .410 16 112
Cincinnati
32 49 .395 15 1/2 Angeles (Prokopec 6-4), 10:10 p.m.
erro.r that led to the only run . hit a two- rutf homer for the.
Wednesday'• Games
(Burba 1-5), 1:05 p.m.
17
"
Pittsburgh
Weot
30
50 .375
in the Angels·' 1-0 los1. to the. Red Sox and went 8-for-15
Ch~ago Cubs (Tapanl 8·5) at N.Y. Mots
W
L
Pel
OB • Kansas City (SUppan 4· 7) at Oelrel1
West
.
s.an1o
(Weaver 6-8), 1:05 p.m.
~
60 2t .741
w L Pet GB (Rusch 3·5). 1:1 0 p.m.
Athletics on Monday night.
with 10 RBi s in the fourPittsburgh (Betmef 3-4) 11 Cincinnati Oaklal)d
Anaheim (Schoenowels 6·7) at Oekl"l'd
39 42 .48t
21
Arizona
50 31 .617
"Those two plays were real- game series.
(Rellh D-6), 1:15 p.m.
Anaheim
(Lidia 1-4), 3:35p.m. .
•
45 37 .549 5 112
38 43 .469
22
Los Angeles
N.Y. Yankoes (Clemens 11-1) at Balli·
Arizona (Johnson 10-5) at Houston
TelCas
32 49 .395
28
San Francisco 44 38 .537 6 112
ly the difference ," Oakland
Yanke es 7, Devil Rays 1
12
(Reynolds B-6), 4'05 p.m.
more (Ponson 5-5t 4:05 p.m. .
Colorado
38 43 .469
Florida (Clement 4·5) at Montreal (Mattes
Sunday's Games
Torooto (Parris 3-5) at Tampa Bay (Rekar
manager Art H owe said. "We · Chuck Knoblauch broke an
San Diego
37 45 .45t 13 f/2
• 1·9), 4:15p.m.
·
2-0), 7:05p.m .
· N.Y. Yankees 6, Tampa Bay 1
knew Terre nce made a great 0-for- 16 slide with a threePhiladelphia (Coggin 0.0) a1 Atlanta Kllnsas CHy 13, C1oweland 11
· Minnesota (Milton 8·3) at Chicago Whitt
Sunday's Games
(Parez 6 -5), 7:05p.m.
Boston 4, Toronto 0
Sox (Buehno 6-4). 7:05p.m.
•.
Chicago Cubs 2, Cincinnati 1
play, but ..we didn't find out run homer that capped a sixSoa1t1o (Moyer 9·3) at Texas (Ball 1-Q),
St. Louis (Kile 8·6) at Milwaukee (Sheets Minnesota 8, Detroit 3
Monlreal9. Pittsburgh 3
how great until much, mu ch run seventh inning as New
10-4), 8:05p.m .
...
Baltimore 11 , Chiqlgo White SOx 3
8:35p.m.
,.
Philadelphia 8, Florida 1
· Colorado (Suzuki 0-Q) at San Diego Seattle 5, Anaheim 0
Houston 6. Milwaukee 1
later."
_
York completed a fou t-game
'
Arizona 5, Colorado 4, ·1.3 innings
(Eaton 8,4), 9:05p.m. •
.
Texas 3, Qakland 1
•
Glaus nearly gave Anaheim a sweep of visiting Tampa Uay.
San Francisco (Rueter 8~) at Los Ange. Monday'• Garnes
Los Angeles 8. San Diego 0
•
les (Gagne 1·4), 9:10p.m.
Boston 16, Toronto 4
San Francisco 5. St. Louis 4
2-0 lead in the first, but he
Mike Mussina (9-7) won his
N.Y. Mets 2, Atlanta 1
N.Y. Yankees 7, Tampa Bay 1
•'
booted O lmedo Sae.nz's easy fo urth straight start and Luis
Monday's Games
Cleveland 2, Kansas City 1
•
Plttsburgt110, Cincinnati 5
Mlnneaola 7. Chicago White Sox 5
grou nder to keep the game's Soj o snapped a 1- 1 tie Wtth a
"
•
Houston 6, Milwaukee 4 ·
Seat11a 9, Texas 7, 10 innings
final innin g goin g. Miguel . two-run single offAlbie Lopez
,
Los Angeles 8, San Francisco 6
Oakland I, Anaheim 0, 12 Innings
Tuesday's Games
tuuday'a Game•
Tejada singled with two outs (3- 11) , wh'o became the first
•
to score Jeremy Giambi. .
AL pitcher to lose 10 consecOakland hadn 't scored in 15 utive decisio'ns since Derek
Bonds' catch came a day and five runs in six innings.
innings heading into the 12th. Lowe's 11-game slide from led off the I Oth with a double without a homer ~ his
off
reliever
Mark
Petkov1ek
longest
drought
of
the
s~ason
afte~
Mike Darr robbed Eric Herges gave up one run in
Giambi singled -..:ith two outs June I 997 to June I 998.
against Shigetoshi Hasegawa
N ew York extended its sea- (0-1) . Bret lloone, ano ther AJI- - and is 2-for-21 · in ~ose Karros of a homer in San two innings, and Jeff Shaw
Diego.
pitched the .ninth for his 22nd.
(2-4). moved to seco nd on a son-high winning streak to Sm r, reached on an infield sin- seven games.
gle before Martin's RBI hit.
Three have been againSf the
• Sheffield went 4-for-4 and save in 25 chances.
wild pitch and reached tl\ird five.
Jeff N elso n •(3-1) :got the Dodgers.
'
drove in the go-ahead run in
Grudzielanek added three
when Glaus got his glove in
Thins 7, White Sox 5 •
out
in
'the
ni
nth
.
for
the
final
Bonds,
4~fnr-39
with
.two
the
sixth
for
the
Dodgers,
who
hits
and scored three runs f.' r
front of Saenz's grounder; but
Corey Koskie homered
'
Sasaki homers and four RB!s against last won seven straight .games the Dodgers.
:
couldn 't pick it up.
twice and Minnesota won at vi cto ry. Kazuh JtO
hi
s
29th
save.
the
Dodgers
t.
h
is
year,
was
nearly
four
years
ago.
Astros
6,
Brewers
4
earned
Glaus was so upset that he Chicago for its ninth win in
lchiro Suzuki , th e top All- retired on 'a broken•bat
The Dodgers have scored . Rookie Tim Redding g(?t
faced his locker in full uni- 10 games against the defendStar
vo
te-getter,
hit
a
fWOrun
grounder to second in }the. seven or more r~ns in each of his first big league victory arid
form long after his tean~mates ing AL Central champion s.
homer
with
two
o·Jfs
in
the
his first major league hit .as
first;
lost . a hit when Gary the seven wins.
dressed.
Jacque Jones also ·homered
Lo Duca is· one of five Los Houston won at Miller Park:
If it wasn't for Long, it as th e 'Twins offset three ninth off Jeff Z immerman to Sheffield m ade a diving catch
tie
it.
in
left
field
of
his
blooper
'in
Angeles
regulars who · have
Redding pitched six score·~ould've been a shorter game. ~hicago homers and moved
the third; tlied to right in the spent time on the disabled list less innings before Raul
The center fielder didn't think 11 games ahead of the thirdsixth; and flied to left in the .this season, along with Casanova hit a three-run
Claus' shot had enough place White Sox.
eighth.
Sheffield, Karros, Adrian Bel- homer in the seventh. Jimmy
momentum to carry over the
Kyle Lohse (2-0) got the
In the only other NL games, tre and Mark Grudzielanek.
Haynes lost his career-high
wall, but Long had to make a victory, and ·La Troy H awkins
Dodgers 8, Giants 6
Houston beat Milwaukee 6-"1 / cfeen has driven in at least sixth straight decision.
leaping catch.
picked up his 20th save.
The Los Argeles Dodgers
Pittsburgh
defeate
one run in eight straight
Milwaukee right fielder
and
The game featured eight
Mariners 9, Rangers 7 see m to have Barry Bonds'
Cincinnati 10-5.
games.
James Mouton strained his left
masterful innings by starters
AJ !VIartin 's tie breaking sin- number this season.
Bonds robbed Paul Lo Du9
Sheffield's sixth-inning RBI hamstring diving for a ball ·~n
Hudson and Jar rod Washburn . gle in \he 1Oth inning led
Bonds, who leads the majors
of a two-run homer in the • single off Ryan Vogelsong (0- the· first inning. He ·joined
Red Sox 16,. Blue Jays 4 Seattle over Texas in a game · with 39 homers went hitless
seventh with a leaping catch 3) snapped a S-5 tie, and Kar- . injured outfielders · Jef!Tey
Manny Ramirez hit his AL- filled 'with All-Stars.
in four. at-bats Monday night
above the left-field fence to ros · followed with another Hammonds, GeoffJenkins ari!i
Six of the nine AL All- Star as ·the Dodgers beat San Franleading 25th homer and drove
start an inning-ending double run-scoring single to make it Jeromy Burnitz on the Brewin four runs during Boston's starters announced earlier ih cisco 8-6 for . their seventh
play.
7- 5.
ers' bench.
:
highest-scoring game of the the day played in the game'..
straight victory. .
The Dodgers led 7-6 at the
Terry Adams (4-2), earned
season.
. John Olerud, one of four
Bonds has gone seven games
the victory, allowing six hits
time.
Ramirez's three-run shot off A 11-St.or starters from Seattle,

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

•

•

•

Booton (Ohl&lt;Al 2·2) at CleveWMI (WHI·
bn&gt;ok 1.0~ 7:05p.m.
Kansas City (Durbin 6-tl) a1 Detroli (Uma
0.0). 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Kelsief 1·2) at Baltimore
(Men:edes 4-8), 7:05p.m .
Toronto (IAicilalak 5-5) at Tampa ~Y
(Konoedy 2·1), 7:15p.m.
•
Minnesota (Radko 8-4) at Chicago While
Sox (Lowe 3-0), 8:05 p.m.
..
Seanio (Solo 8·11 at Taxa• (Oliver 7·2),
8:35p.m.
Anaheim (Aapp 2-8) at OAkland (lito 4·
6), 9:05 p.m.
·

..

.

~

NAT I 0 N A L
LEAGUE

J

I

Dress
for
101 south Third

sta eat • Racine, Ohio • ·s 771

• Fax: 740·•41·2111

Phone: 740·841·2525
Located . in historic Racine,
Star Supply is the area's most
On %.e. ((T'
customer friendly shopping
740-992-3148 experience.
With over 100,000 items
~~~ available to our customers, we can
fulfill all your basic and individual
needs.
We also carry a full line of Oil field
.supplies such as natural gas
regulators·, Gas line piping
products, repair clamps, etc.
Stop in today and let us know how
1-140-311-8571
we can serve yo.u.
fiX: lQ-311-8512

2BOO I State Route 7

Oteshlre, Ohio 45()20

Ph: 992.;

.

No Job too big or small!
Estimates can be faKed ore-mailed.
Serving Ohio an~ West Virginia

-''Serving Meigs County for Over 40 Years"

!{T
I

•

0

Your Professional ·
: Full-service Jeweler

REPAIRS
APPRAISALS
GIFT REGISTRY
ENGRAVIN.G

Flowers

ALL FLATS·AND

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Dill IIllEY
CIIEII
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BASKETS ·O~Y

$6.00
Vine Street
Gallipolis

.&amp;

Owners

Carolyn 8.- Jon jacobs

Mon-Frl 10-8
Sat- 10-3

Insurance ..Agencies

Full Llne of
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+ Financial Se1:'Vic~es1
coupon

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anager
(

204 W. 2nd ltrHt

" Pomerol., Ohio
7.... -0481

Adjacent from the Courthouse
In His,toric Pomeroy

License CC700077-006
Llconoo Cl .750048-006

•

.r(,/11/1'

White
Funeral
Home
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, OH

45723
667-3110

WEAlHERAT
Southern Heating
and Cooling, Co.
o Gas, 011.&amp; Electric
furnaces

o Humldlfters &amp; Electronic
Air Cleciners

o

Heat Pumps • Ce11lr~11 Alrl

o

• Room Units
Fast, Reliable Service

0

free Es~!mates

1~:8o!::2~~:Jcr

.5tnli"9 Oliw ana'lllost 'I);'Sinfll siJia 1992

~ -

Star
Suppl
• Plumbing • Housewares
•Water Service Line
• Lawn &amp;'Garden
• Shallow &amp; Deep Well
Pumps &amp; Accessories
• Paint &amp; Painting ~upplles
• Automotive .
·• Gas Line &amp; Fittings
• Tools • Key Making
• Electrical • Heating &amp; AC
• AEP Meter Bases
• Glass cutting and many,
many morel!

Best

---·· ---

---

Thomas Hoffinan, CONSOL's corporate spokesman in Pittsburgh, Pa., said
Tuesday morning tha.t I 00 hourly
employees at Meigs· No. 2 and 80 at
BY BRIAN J. REE;D
Meigs No. 3I were laid oft Monday durSENTINEL NEWS STAFF
i'ng the transition of ownership from AEP
SALEM ·CENTER - · The crew at to CONSOL.
Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Mines is
Shortly after the plans for th e sale were
now at 500, following a Monday layoff made public in April, AEP began notifywhich accompanied American El~;;'~ng . the 680 ·.remaining employees at
Power's sale of the mines to CO~OL Me1gs Mmes that thelf employment
En ergy Inc:
would end June 30.

CON SOL has call ed back about ,.,.,..L/'
employees, and was operating the mine as
usual Tuesday. Howeve r, Hoflinan said ,
CO N SO L has found some of those
offered employment with CONSOL are
unavailabl e, and V&gt;(Orkers may be . call ed
from a· panel of worktrs ·including those
laid off in a sprin g 2ooo cut, when 45
workers were laid off.
"The reason for the Monday layoff is
clear," Hoffman said. "The mine is not

Please see LllyaHs.-Al

July 4 survey polls ·patriotism
.'

FROM STAFF REPORTS

OMEROY
Americans
believe
that
"there 's
no
place
like
home," and 49
percent of them say that they •
are patriots.
Love of home\ outweighs
.
love of country, according to
an Independence Day survey
on Americans' attitudes, conducted by Euro RSCG
Worldwide, a major advertismg agency.
The agency's "Auditing
America" study of America's
citizenry shows that 69 percent of Americans ·agree that
"there's no place like home,"
.while only 49 percent of
A1i1ericans polled agreed with
the statement," America is the
greatest nation on the planet."
Love of God came between
the two sentiments, with 62
percent agreeing "In God I
Trust."
· • Baseball reigns as Ameri. ca's favorite backyard sport,
with 34 ·p ercent of respondents proudly declaring ownership of baseball or softball
gear.
• 13 percent of those polled
think that "imported beer is a
waste of money," and 32 percent of regular be.er diinkers
drink the American-made
Budweiser. .
• Am ericans love their
music, with 48 percent saying
"There's nothing like good
old time rock and roll."
. • In the toman~e depar!ment, 55 percent believe
"there's someone for everybody on the planet."
Th e agency released the
results of its survey as a July 4
promotion .
'

www.mydailysentinel.com

R db.one
ays land at
fairgrounds
BY TONY

M.

lEACH

a

ROC K SPRINGS
Coonhound enthu siasts from
around the U.S. will converge on Meigs County this
week during the 2001
National Redbone Days,
which , takes place Thursday
through Saturday at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
The three-day event, hosted by the Shade River
Coonhunter's Ass coc iation
(SRCA) , will include anumber of night hunts , bench
shows, competitio ns and
treeing contests. More than
tOO dogs are currently registered for the various competitions, with more to arrive
· by the middle of the week.
Thursday's activities will
include a covered dish fel- ·
lowship dinner at 5 p.m., fol- ·
lowed by a Redbone-only
hunt. A U .K.C . Licensed Pie•se ' " Reclbone. A3
.,

.

.

HURRAH FOR' THE; RED, WHITE A!IID BLUE- With a flag in his hanc:l anc:l an Uncle Sam hat
on his heac:l , 8-year-olc:l David Aaron Summerall is reac:ly to celebrate the Fourth of J~ly. Here ·his
sister, Melissa Owens, visiting from Easley, S.C., straightens his hat. Oavic:l is the son of Marie
and Michael Rush of Bashan Road, Pomeroy. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Hlp: 80s
L-:IOs
Details, A2

AS
82-4

. 8'5
A4
A3
BU-4:6 .~""'
A2 e&gt; 2001 Ohio v.n., Publ~hi 111 eo.

Bench Show and night hunt
for aU·six coo nhound breeds,
as well as
treeing contest
and daslf race, is scheduled
for Friday's agenda.
Saturday will open with a
N ational Redbone Coonhound Associ;t'ion (NRCA)
annual meeting at 11 a.m.',
followed by more bepch ,
shows and hunts. A Purina
Point Weight Circle Challenge Hunt will also take
place on Friday and Saturday.
Camping and food vendors will a)so be available at
the event, and high scoring
Redbone and opposite sex
will be chosen over all three
nights .
1\vo childr.en's bicycles,
which were purchased' by
the SR CA, will be . given
away around 6 p.m. on both
Friday and ·Saturday. Children 12 and under can par-

SENTiNEL NEWS STAFF

•:

Workers for Greenland Construction prepare to pour cancrete along Main Street on Tuesday during the final phase
of Pomeroy's new water line project. Mayor John .Biaettnar
said work on the new line is scheduled to wrap up In a couple of weeks now that the line is underground and every ·
connection has been made. Progress on the line wa·s
delayed over the winter due to inclement weather and contract negotiations. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Meeting set tq discuss Leading Creek watershed
FROM STAFF REPORTS

CARPENTER - Meigs, Athen s and
Gallia county res.idents of the Leadin g
Creek watershed will have the opportunity to voice th eir coi1ee;ns on water
quality issues at a public' meeting of the
Leading C reek Watershed Co n1mittee
set for Ju.Jy 16 at 6:30 p.m. , at the
Columbia To\vnship Fire D epartment.
people will also be able to comment
on and. prioritize water quality' iss ues

involving the Lea ding Creek ,water-shed,
said Leading C reek Watershed Coordi-.
nator Jim Freeman ·of the M eigs Soil
and Water Conservation District.
Those issues raised will q'e included in
a 'co mpreh ens ive watershed man agem ent plan w ith the end goal bein·g to
improve th e water quality of Leading
Creek and its tributaries, he added.
" A watershed is the land area that
drains or seeps rain ana snowmelt into a

creek, stream or other b~dy of water,"
Freeman explained. "Tire Leading
. Creek watershed consists of slightly
more than 150 square miles and covers
most of the western half of Meigs
County and portions of Athens and
Galli a counties."
The watershed drains land stretching
from the Ohio University Airport m
'

Please

.

see Watenhed, AJ

Recreation Festival
The 36th Annual Riv~r Recreation Festival
will be held in Gallipolis City Park.July 4-7.

, . , . tocllly
flld Itt ue lmOw

Free screenings and health informatidn will be '
available.. at the Holzer Medical Center Mobile Unit. ·
We'll be looking for you! ~

ltowwcan ·

305 Third Street,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

CONSOL calls
back 500

Calendar
.classifjeds
Comics
Editorials
Objtuarjes
Sports
Weather

114 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oliio 45769

Hometown Newspaper

cut 180

2 .SectiDRI - 12 Paps

Jfcros.s .{,_. tlie

Meigs County's

H

50 ce nt~ • Wednesd ay, July 4. 200 1 • Vol. 51, No. 122

Sentinel

.

&lt; •

I

Today's

tJJIIIQllltbl
.
r-------------------------,
1
1
{740} 992-6677
..

.&lt;!Clark's Mitch's
Produce &amp;
Jewe;
ana
(ji .ts .

Fax: 740-992-2616

I •

~entine

-you/
OH

i

Discover the Holzer Differenc;e.

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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24339">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24338">
              <text>July 3, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3143">
      <name>lafferty</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1749">
      <name>lemley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2706">
      <name>milam</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="684">
      <name>newell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="278">
      <name>reynolds</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="335">
      <name>sayre</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="76">
      <name>scarberry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2813">
      <name>swiger</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
