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                  <text>The Daily Se~tinel

·Tribe s~ggers to
All-Star break
CLEVELAND (AP)
things before, but not, likeJohn Rocker couldn't close this." ·
the Indians' fir st half of the
Now the Indians will
season properly. so Cleveland spend the three- day All- Star
managtr Charlie Manu el did break fi guring out wh o's
go ing to pitch.
th e job himself.
And how to catch the
A bothered Manuel qu es·tioned so me of his players' Twins . ·
effort on Sunday followin g
For the second straight
the Indians' 4-3 loss to th e season, th e Indians go into
St. Louis C ardinals that th e• season's unofficial middropped C leveland a seaso n- way point looking up in the
high five games behind the standings. But unlike last
first-place Minnesota Twins year wh~n they were 10 1/ 2
in the AL Central entering · games behind the eventual
division champion Chicago
the All-Star break:
"I think our club needs White Sox, the Indians don't
some time away," Manuel have as much ground to
. said. "We have some guys make up.
who are playing as hard as
And they have 77 games
they can play. But there are left to straighten themselves
other guys, I question if out.
they're giving all they have
'' Last year it· was a real
to us.
strange feeling to be that far
"If they're going to look in dow!)," Shuey said. "In this
the mirror, I just want them case, we beat Minnesota in
to give us 100 percent. I all the matchups with them.
know we have a good club. We feel we're a better team.
But we also have areas we It's just a matter of going out
Jean improve. I think our there and proving it on a
guys can step it up more."
daily basis."
The Indians staggered into
To do that, the Indians'
the break, going just 4·6 on starting staff will need to be
a season-long homestand much more effective in the
that exposed some of Cleve- second half.
",When it all comes down
land's many flaws - spotty
starting pitching, inconsis- to it," Manuel said, "it's
teti.t defense and a tendency about ountarting pitching."
to p!ly on the long-ball.
What was supposed to be
A club loaded with talent Cleveland's strength this sea"and ' boasting an All- Star at son has been it's biggest
nearly every position is 24- weakness as the Indians
21 at home, 1-16 in games starters have logged the
when it scores three runs or · fewest innings in the AL and
less and hasn't played up to put enormous pressure on
its peak or potential for the bullpen.
The problems?
much of 2001. ·
''I'd give us a C-plus," said
Bartolo Colon, expected
"jfeliever Paul Shuey when to be the club's ace, is just 6asked for his first-half grade. 7 and has only one. home
So
after
the
newly win this season. Dave J'urba, .
acquired Rocker, who has a perennial 15-game winner,
been shaky since arriving, has pitched so poorly of late
a 9.31 ERA .in four
gave u·p two walks and a game-winning RBI single in straight losses - that he may
the ninth inning Sunday, be pulled from the rotation.
Manuel decided to have a Chuck Finley has been on
heart-to-heart and challenge &lt;he DL .twice with neck
__his 25-t!!an roster.
_ _· _spasms.
"Charlie's talk was an eye- · Charles Nagy has gd&lt;ed
opener," said outfielder· Ellis out three wins pitching with
Burks . "When the manager no cartilage in his right
brings it out face-to-face, elbow, and Jaret Wright has
you take notice. He's said struggled while coming back

Baseball

.

San Francisco, 7.3.
HITS-Aurilla, San Francisco. 120;
LGonzalaz, Arizona·, 117; Berkman,
Houslon, 115; BGIIes, Pittsburgh. I 09;
VGuerrero. Montreal, 107; Floyd, Flori·
da, 107; Alou, Houston, 104. .
DOUBLES4ielton. Colorado, 30; Berk·
man, Houston, 27; VGuerrero, Montreal,
27; BGIIes, Pittsburgh, 27; ARamlrez,
PiHsburgh, 25; Abreu, Philadelphia, 24;
Aurilia, san Francisco, 24; Kent, San
Francisco, 24.
TRIPLES- Rollins, Philadelphia, 8;
NPerez,. Colorado, 8; Vina, 51. Louis, 7;
LC&amp;s11tto, Florida, 6; DCabrera, Montreal, 5; Kent, San Francisco, 5; Goodwin,
Los Angeles, 5.
HOME RUNS-----Bonds, San Francisco,
39; LGonzalez, Arizona, 35; SSosa,
Chicago, 29; LWalker, Cobrado, 27; Heitori, Colorado, 26; Berl(man, Houston,
25; CJooes. Atlanta, 25.
· STOLEN BASE5-Rolllns. Philadelphia,
28; LCastillo, Flor1da, 25; Pierre, Col·
orado. 23; Abreu, Philadelphia, 23; ·Fur·
cal, Atlanta, 22; Womack, Arizona, ~ 9;
Goodwin, Los Angelos. 18.
PITCHING .(10
Declslons)-Daal ,
Philadelphia, 9·2, ·.eta. 4.89: WMiller,
HoW!tOfl, 11·3, .786, 3.79; Schilli"'l• Arl·
zooa, 12-4, .750. 3.20; Ueber. q,~go.
11·4, .733, 3.42; Penny1 Florida, 7-3,
.700, 3.63; Estes, San Francisco •. 7-3,
.700, 3.51 ; ADJohnson, Arizona, 11-5,
.687, 2.71 .
STRIKEOUT$-ADJohnson, Arizona,
202; Schllllll\l. Arizona. 180; Wood,
Ch~go. 142; Park. Los Angeles, 137;
Vazquez, Montreal, 114; Burken, Atlanta,
. 110; Eaton, San Diego. 109.
SAVE5-Nen. San Francisco, 28; Shaw,
Los Angeles, 24: Mesa. Philarlalphla, 24;
Rocker, Atlanta, 19; BWagner, Houston.
19; Benitez. New York, 18; Hoffman, San
Diego, 18.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-RAiomar, Cleveland, .358;
Suzuki, Seattle, .347; JGonzalez, CfeVe·
1dnd, .347; MRamirez, Boston, .335;
MJSweeney. Kansas City, .333; McGriff.
Tampa Bay, .330; Lawton, Minnesota,
.325.
RUNs-Suzuki, SeaHie, 76; ARo·
drlguez. Texas, 74; MJSweeney, Kansas
City, 70; Lawton, Minnesota, 67; Stewart,
Toronlo, 85; BBoone, Saa«le. 65; Mon·
deli, Toronto, 62.
R~-MAamlrez, ·Boston, 84; BBoooe,
Seanle, 84; JGonzalez, Cleveland, 63;
ARodriguez, Texas, 73; EMartlnez, Seat11e, 67; APalmelro, Texas, 67;
MJSweeney, Kansas City. 65.
HITS-Suzuki, SeaHie, 134; Stewart,
Toronto. 118; MJSweeney. Kansas City,
114;
RAiomar,
Cleveland,
111 ;
MRamlrez, Boston, 110; BBoone, Seat·
de, 110; CGuzman, Minnesota, 107;
JGonzalez, Cleveland, 107. ·
DOUBLE5-MJSmney, Kansas City.
35; EMartlnez, Seattle, 27; Stewart,
Toronto, 26; EChavez, Oakland, 25;
JaGlambl, Qakland, 25; Fullmer, Toronlo, 23; Lawton, Minnesota. 23; Greer.
TeKas, .23.
TAIPLE&amp;-CGuzman, Minnesota, 13;
Suzuki, Seattle, 7; Stewart. Toronto, 6;
Cedeno, Delroll, 8; RAiomar, Cleveland,
6; JEnoamac!on, DetrQit, 6; C8mQron,
Saa«le. 5.
·
HOME RUN5-MAamlrez, Boston, 26;
Thome, Cleveland, 26; AAodriguez,
Texas, 25; APalmelro, Texas, 25; CDel·
gado, Toronto, 24; JGonzalez, Cleve·
land, 23; Glaus, Anaheim, 22; BBoone,
Saa«le. 22.
STOLEN BASES-Suzuki , Seattle, 28;
Cedeno, Detroit, 28; Knoblauch, New
York, 26 ; Soriano, New York, 24:
Mclemore, Beanie, 23; Hairston, Baltl·
more, 19; Cameron, Seattle, 18.
PITCHING (10 Deolslons)-Ciomens ,
New York, 12-1, .923, 3.56; FGarcia,
Saattle. 10-1 •.909 , 3.18; s,te, seattle,
10·1 , .909, 3.54; Millon, Minnesota, 8·3,
.727, 3.73; Radke, Minnesota, 10-4,
.714, 3.58; Sabalhia, Cleveland, 7·3,
.700, 4.72; BWells, Minnesota, 7·3, .700,

4.10.

STRIKEOUTS- PMartlnez,
Boaton.
150; Clemens, New York, 122; Noma,
Boston, 115; Musslna, New York, -11 1;
Zlto, Qakland, 108; Hudson, Oakland,
106; Colon. Cleveland. 101 .
SAVE5-Sasakl, Saattle, 29; MRivera.
NeW Yorli, 29; Ha'Nkins, Minnesota, 23;
Percival, An'ahelm, 21; Foulke, Chicago,
18; lsringhaueen, Oakland, 17; Koch,
Toronto, 16.

•

AROUND THE DIAMOND
Nltlonelleague
Sunday'•

L
Philadelphia
50 37
Atlanta
49 38
Florida
43 45
New Vorl&lt;
38 51
Montreal
37 51
Central
w L
Chicago
51 35
Hou ston
48 38
St. louis
43 43
Milwaukee
42 44
Pinsburgh
33 53
Clnclnnad
33 54
· West
w l
Arizona
51 36
Los Angeles
48 40
San Franci900 46 42
47
San Diego
41
39 48
Colorado

Gamea

Milwauk9e 6. San Francisco 4, 131nnlngs
Monday's Gamea
No games scheduled
Tuesdey'l Game
All-Star Game at Seattle, 8 p.m.
Wednesday'• GamH
No games scheduled

East

w

GB
Pet
.575
I
.563
.489 7 112
.427
13
.42 1 13 112
GB

American League

3
8
9
18

East

Pet
.593
.558
.500
.488
.384
.379

18112

Pet

' GB

New York
Boston
TOfonto
Bal11more
Tampa Bay

.586
.545 3 1/2
.523 5 112
.466 I 0 112
t2
.448

Minnesota
Cleveland
C h ~go

w L
52 34
51 36
42 46
40 47
27 61
Central
w l
55 32
4t 38
41
44

Pet
.605

GB

.586

I 112
.477
11
.460 12 112
.307
26
Pet
.632
.576
.482

GB

5
13

-

Detroit
Kansas City

ae

48
53

.429 17 112
.391
21

w

L
24
43
45
52

Pet
.724
.506
.483

34

Saante
Oakland
Anaheim
Texas

63
44
42
35

GB
19
21
28

.&gt;1()2

San Diego 11, Texas 2
N.Y. Yankees 4. N.Y. Mots I

p.m.

INTERLEAGUE PLAY
Sunday's Gamea
Atlanta 8 , Boston 0
Toronto 9, Monfreal 3
Detroit 9, Chicago Cubs 6
St. Loula 4, Cleveland 3
Floricla 8, Tampa Bay I
Philadelphia 5, Baltimore 4
MinMsobl 7, Clnclnnatl1
Houston 14, Kansas City 5
·Chicago While so·x 9, Pinsburgh 2
Anaheim 1i , Colorado 3
"Seattle 9, los Angeles 2
Oakland 2, Arizona 1

Architect unveils (best
use' plan for buildings
BY BRIAN

J.

REm

SENTIN EL NEWS STAFF

;

POMEROY - "We have a plan that
could revolutionize the way abandon ed
school buildings are used and redeveloped, and that plan i~ now in place;•
Bill Childs told the Meigs Local Board of
Education Tuesday. ·
Childs, chairmap of a Middleport com-

·

STEm&gt;Y STICK - Cleveland second baseman Roberto Alomar, shown here hitting a home run
on July 7, has been one of the few consistent players so far this season for the Tribe. Alomar
has 52 RBI and 111 hits while leading the American League In hitting with a .358 average. (AP
file)

MIDDLEPORT
Activities associated with
Ohio's
Bicentennial, .
;:ncluding a countywide
t .ivil War reenactment,
were discussed during the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce's regular meeting on Tuesday.
Nicole Moretti, southeast coordinator for the
Ohio Bicentennial Commission, spoke to chamber
members about the bicentennial, which begins in
2(:)03, and what communi-,
ties can .d o to begin planning activities io celebrate
their special role in this
- - -celebrated event. -The bicentennial commission is an organization
created by the Ohio General Assembly to help plan
and ·organfze entertaining
and educational activities
to "commemorate
the
events that led to Ohio's
statehood in 1803.
Moretti highlighted five
themes that will shape the
bicentennial; community
participation, commemoration, celebration, education and legacy.
· "Through community
~articipatioin, hundreds of
Ohio communities will
plan to showcase their local
heritage . by holding community roundtables, developing ideas and dedicating
· historical markers," said
Moretti. "Investing m
Ohio's communities in the
oame of the Bicentennial

FRO~!

OUR I'. ACKAGES OR

DESIGN

Sentinel

YOUR OWN!

:a Sections -

, 1~ 1· IN
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c.. , · ~.· . SiJ,."-'" l .• , k t.·s, &lt;)x ,nuur -

\ 'a lltT .. .
_:. t ;trti ng ~~~

S 178 pt.·r pt.•rsoll

1/,•tu·t .t~l i·tl~dmmn .. .'!. ( l ny~. :.!

f ,·1 , I u ri .\ ;/ /'1 111/,//1/, •I

niHhts,

( ; ~ p i tolll i l l. Cram! ~ a1inn :.1 l. c ~~~~~t,r i om
· Ri ( l ~~..· ... st ;trtin ,H i ll $172 pl·r person

1/ ,

,\ 'o uthtnl .\'win.•J · .•) \1 .•.,:_,, ·
l W C.. ) nig ht s .. lli ~ h ! a1 1t l ()a k~. ·

Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

1:1 ,.._

Veronica Grimm, 8, and Jacob Dunn , 9, looked as if they traveled back to Egyptian times as they
posed In handmade costumes they created during the Summer Enrichment Program, held every
day this week at Meigs Middle School. Besides Egyptian history, participants in the week-long program also learned about volcanoes. acrylic painting, science experiments and other interesting
subjects. Another Summer Enrichment Program is scheduled for July 23-27. (Tony M. Leach photo)

~
v

Hl1h: 80s
Low: 50S

$54 million jackpot spurs Super Lotto fever

Details, A2

Lotteries

CLEVELAND (AP) - Despite th e
larges t jac kpot in th e O hio Lottery's
. 27 - year history, so me regular players
acted as if their weekly ritual was no
big deal .
Still, the $54 million Super Lotto Plus
jackpot. fo r Wednesday ni ght 's drawing
attracted more border- cro sse rs and
som e brand- new playe rs. .
Lines stretched out convenience store

82-4 .Pick 3: 4-8-1 ; Pick 4: e-4-a-3

85 IIIICMYI 5: 3-22-24-28-37
A4

A3 W.VA.
BU.6 Daily 3: 4-6-2 Dilly 4: 9-1-2-4
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.\hc n cl li ~~ i ~n., t· .. . ~l.l l' lil ll.!

.d $.._171 p~· · 111 ., , , 1n

'•'

ilfollfr,

I~

rl·. ' •
1 rt 1, I)

ill. o,.,.r .. ' &gt; ~~tic '\
l lln.o~j• h

Providing respon~e services to the at-risk elderly
in their home to enhance their independence,
quality of life and peace of mind.

'

•••·'···-"-.'•··:~!·.

· ••'"J ,........... t .n••'('
,.,,.:.1 '.,, •. ,.~,·; ·•M'urbu .. ~
~·

;,1't ., 'tl&lt;' f

•.,

· "Tomorrow is when it'll. get real
busy," added Bosco, who's calling in an
extra employee for the rush.
.
Bosco, who usually ignores smaller
jackpots, even bought himself a few
ti ckets.
Two Richmond, Va., women attending a convention in downtown Cleve-·
land split three tickets Tuesday at Gateway Newstands.
''

Lifeline

tu;tl! ..t L .·\\ 'w •J ... :·;t ;t rlin'H al
~:l Ll Ill·I· lh· r -. u••
•J:,

doorways lwer lun ch hours and after
work . Lottery offi cials said sales soar
wh en jackpots , swell - even th o ugh
chan ces of wil) ning never improve from
I In 14 milli.on .
T hree tim es as ma ny West Virgi nians
and Pennsylvanians as t1sual are shopping at ABC Carryo ut in East Liverpool on the tr i-state border, manager
Charles Bosco said .

.·~

ll.l.'fllllt) n.-y.,juJ.. ..", cby ~ . '2 n i~l t l:-, S t;c:,· ~ ~~ f , i ,.; tori ~..· Ci 'l tlld
ll, •tt'l. l'l. t,\' .\ Lt g lluf i:t ( ~ rt HT .

J

expected to bring 30 new
jobs to the community over
the next three years.
"The funding is designed
to help stabilize the economy of the area and lead lis
BY BRIAN J. REED
down a path of improved
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
prosperity for southern.
TUPPERS PLAINS- A Ohio;• Carey said.
.
steel f~bric ation manufacturMeigs ~ounty Economic
er wiU be the first industry to Development Director Perry
locate in the industrial park Varnadoe said ground will be
&lt;at Tuppers Plains, in part broken on the new facility in
· through · state
funding early August.
'\""'\':ll'ffllinett·by State R t;p;.John
The $100,000 state grant
Carey, R -Wellston.
will be combined with local,
Carey announc ed Tuesday financing to build the .plant.;
,_thatllQO~OOO in_fi.lnding fu.r - Details-about the faGtory -will
th e construction of a build- be announced at the time of
ing at th e park, requested by the groundbreaking, Varna·
th e Ohio Depar tment of doe said.
Administrative Services, was
The business will be
app roved Monday by th e owned by a Coolville man
Ohio State . Controlling who currently works in the
Board.
steel fabrication business, and
The award is part of a who will "bring customers
$200,000 total package for with him,"Varnadoe said.
-...
southeastern Ohio. Another
The Tuppers rlains site,
$! OO,OOO will be awarded to located on the former Ohio
Wellston for restoration of
Valley Manufacturing Co.
the Harvey Wells House. The
.
d
d.·
property, 10 owne
an
house will serve th e city as a
museum to honor Wells, th e developed· by the Conunu·city's founder, and as a con- nity Improvement Corpor.afercnce center and he,ad- tion, a non-profit organizaquarters for the Wellston tion dedicated to economic
development.
Historit al Association•.
Meigs County's $100,000
The ClC has used a comwill be used to build a 5,400 bination of private and pubsquare-foot building in th e lie funds to develop the site
Meigs County Industrial with water, three-phase elecPark, which will, in turn, be trical service, paved roads
leased to WECAN Fabri ca- and other infrastructure.
tion, a company which will
The fabrication business
fabri cate steel products for will be the first industry to
the construction industry.
locate at the site, just off
The proj ect, Carey said, is Ohio 7.

Carey announces
funding for
building .

AS OHIO

A2

ADDRESSES BOARD - Bill Childs, chairman of a citizen~ ·
committee addressing the future uses of Middleport's three
school buildings , pressed th e Meigs Local Board of Education
to agree to transfer the buildings to the village following the
presentation of the results of a feasibility study at the board's
Tuesday evening meeting. (Brian J. Reed photo)

IndUstrial
park to get
new tenant

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Smnm,·r .\jJ,:fi4ll. . .:1. {'ti nst..·c uti n .·
dt\ys unlimiu.•c.l gTl' t'llS f(_.es . . .S99
pt•r pt· r~nn 1 ' llu. "'l!-&gt; l U ll in cluded .
{\ \ ,.i l ;tl ~ l . .· ,\ \.•.\ I ;',.s\.· pkml"'·c L=i
/ J, ''· ' /1 , •I u:./u, 1~ · t '.1/'t(, ·f !7t.'Tl, ( J.l'/!1 11• 11'
Ill.• /II• •f

Please see Plans, A:S

BY TONY M. lEACH

CHOOSE

/ll l fl l tJ•., I .I ! I ,., . .

board to give Middle port ownership of
th e buildings once they are vacated.
The board is required ·to demolish
abandoned buildings unless suitable uses
arc fo und for them : and $2 mill ion is
included in the new co nstructio n budget
fo( demolition and/ or asbestos abatement
in the event that the sc hool board chooses to usc the buildings for its own uses.
The district will move out of th e Meigs
Middle School - the former Middleport
High Sc hool, Middleport Elemehtary

lime travelen

Taday's

I :If(. .•1 , If' / ., //, ·,. •, ,, ,J

mittee charg~d with plannin g future uses
of Middleport's three school buildings,
said the Meigs Local Distri ct and Middleport Village could become the "poster
children" for creative uses of. old schools,
in an era when more and more old
s&lt;;hools are becoming aba~don ed.
C hil ds, Middlepo rt Mayor Sandy
lannarelli, C ouncilmen Stephen Houchins and R oger Manley and a numb~r of
Middleport residents atte nded the regular
board meeting to hear Mari etta architect
Stephe~ Gegner's ideas abou t the bu ild·iPgs ' fUture uses. and to encourage the

Chamber
ponders
Ohio's ·
birthday

Pluse see Birthday, Al

~.,: •• ~

992-2156

reveals·plans

Tampa Bay at Montreal, 7:05 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Florida, 7:05p.m.
Clewtlllnd .r Cincinnati, 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Pittsburgh. 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Phfladelphia, 7:05p.m.
.Boston a1 N.Y. Mets, 7:10p.m.
Baltimore at Atlanta, 7:35p.m.
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 8:05p.m.
Detroit at St. Louis, 8:10p.m.
CoiQrado at Texas, 8:35p.m.
Arizona at Anaheim, t0:05 p.m.
·
San Francisco at Seanle, 10:05 p.m.
Los Angeles at Oakland, ~ 0:05 p.m.

c onsistent starter.

Manuel said he would
meet with assistant general
manag.er Mark Shapiro and
pitching coach Dick Pole
during the break to decide
what, if any, changes ne ed to
be made.
"We'll try to see if we
c ~n 't straighten it our," he
said . "But I don 't know
exactly what we can do."
Manuel is also bothered by
Cleveland's defensive lapses.
After setting a league record
by making just 72 errors all
last season, the Indians went
into the break with 35 . in
their last 39 games.
"It's the little things, things
we work on all spring training," Manuel said.
I
The Indians are also waiting fot veterans Kenny
Lofton (.303 on-base average), Travis Fryman (0
homers) and Wil Cordero (0
RBis since May 24) to give
them something.
Cleveland has time and 12
games left against th\' Twins.
But as the Indians learned
last season wpen they missed
making the playoffs by one
game, the calendar tu.rns
quickly from July to August
and August to September.
"This year everybody
knows we can play this
game," Shuey said. "We're a
good team."

Hometown Newspaper

1\Htlday'o Game
An-s..r Game at s.ttle, 8 p.m.
W-y'ollames
No games sclleduled
Thu.....,y•oa.mo.
. Chicago While Sex at Ch~go Cubs. 2:20

from shoulder surgery.
· Rookie C. C. Sabath ia, 20,
has been th e club 's most

~~n•'l-"~ 1~

Subscribe Joday.

Meigs County's

Monday's Games
No games scheduled

•

rH·&gt;~·~•&lt;&gt;:•,

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. YOUR LOCAL
.
TEAMS.

_Wednesday

. TUesday. July 10,1001

MAJOR LEAGUE
LEADERS
ot the AII-SIIIr break
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATIING-Bt.trkman, Houslon, .365;
Alou. Houston, .362; Aurilla, San Francisco, .356; LGonzalez, Arizona, .3SS;
LWalker, Colorado, .343; Floyd, Florida,
.342: Polanco. St. Louis . .336.
RUNs-Helton, Colorado, 80; LGonza·
lez, Arizona, 75; Aoyd, Florida, 73; Berk·
man, Houston, 72; SSosa, Chicago, 72;
LWalker, Colorado, 72; Abreu, flhlladeJ·
phla, 68.
RBI- LGonzalez, Arizona, 86: Hatton,
Colorado. 84; SSooa. Chicago. 83;
LWa,tker, COloradO, 83; Berkman, Hous·
ton, 79; Ktesko, San Diego, 75; Bonds,

SPORTS: Ripkin bows in style, Bl

Page 86

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�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Tttursday, July 12
AccuWeathe,. forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

o.-

CLEVELAND (AP)- Blacks in Ohio
are imprisoned more chan eight times as
often as whites, the magazine Mother
Jones reported on its Web sire Wednesday.
The study by MotherJones.com ranked
Ohio 1Oth among states with the greatest
racial disparity among inmates last year.
For every 100,000 blacks in Ohio,
1,870-were in prison in 2000 while 221
of every 100,000 whites were inmates,
the magazine reported.
,
The Web site of the Ohio Department
of Rehabilitation and Corrections said
51.8 percent of the inmates in Ohio's 34
prisons are black. Forty-seven percent of
the 45,259 inmates are white.
There are 92 whites and I 00 blacks
awaiting execution on Ohio's death row,'
the prison system 's Web site said.

)

?

0
W. VA.

0

KY.

0 2001 AccuWeather, Inc.

Clovdy

Showers

Wednesday, July II, 1001

T·slorml

Rain

Flurries

SnOw

Ice

Lower humidity entering area
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Northerly winds behind a
high pressure center will bring
cooler and less humid air to
the tri-co unty area, the
National Weather Service said.
; Temperatures will be slightly below normal, with highs
on Thursday and Friday ranging through the lows 80s.
Lows will be mostly in the
50
~~mny days and starlit nights
· are predicted through Tuesday.
The extended forecast also
calls for slightly warmer ternperatures starting on Sunday.
Sunset tonight will be at
9:02, and sunrise on Thu rsday
is at 6: 12 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Mostly clear and
cooler. Low in the mid 50s.

The magazine's online report includes
an essay by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who
said the justice system "appears strUctured
to affirmatively exploit race ·and class
inequality."
But The Plain Dealer said other .experts
felt it was wrong to conclude that incarceration rates should reflect the general
·population.
"If they are arguing that blacks, being
13 percent of the population, should, only
have 13 percent of the people in prison,
that argument ignores the fact that a
much higher percentage of persons
arrested for serious crimes are black,"
John Murphy, executive director of the
Ohio Prosecuting Attorneys Association,
told the newspaper.
' "Those folks would argue that the

North wind 5 to 10 mph.
sunny
Thursday... Mostly
and pleasa nt. High in the
lower 80s. North wind 5 to 10
mph .\
Thursday
night ... Mostly
clear. Low in the mid 50s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Mostly clear. High
in the lower 80s ..
Saturday... Pa;tly
cloudy.
Low in the mid 50s and high
in the lower 80s ..
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 50s and high in
the lower 80s.
Molfday... Partly clou.dy. Low·
near 60 and high in the mid
80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy Low
·near 60 and hi gh in the upper
80s.

Various shootings leave 1 dead ·

Veterans
look to ·

...

cliF»ICJIIICI l»ill

MARIETTA
(AP)
AKRON (AP) - A man accused of fatally shooting a con- Thousands of Ohioans who 1
venience store owner will be tried a fourth time, the Summit left school in the 1940s to
Counry prosecutor decided Tuesday.
serve in t~e country's World ·
. The three prior trials of Michael Roper, 25, of Ak~on, ended War 11 effort are ettin the
m hung Junes. Prosecutor Shern Bevan Walsh sa1d 30 of the 36 h
•
bra'10 g h · gl · 11
jurors in the trials vo ted co convict him.
c han eel d:0 1
t e!T ug
.
.
I
.
d
I
d
.
0
b
b
d
sc
oo
'P
omas.
~- _M1stna s were ec are m cto er, ~~-ru ~y ~n___ May_in_~h_e~11-Mariett:I--On-Thursda ,
case agamst Roper, who 1s chargea wnh aggravateCI murCier m G B b "{; fl I
· y
the April 17, 2000, death ofTaleb " Tom" Husein, 49, of Akron. b~v;h ~ a
ans tohSJgn a
Husein was behind the counter at the Lakeshore Carry Out f,
~ woubl pa~. the wa~
when a gunman entered and fa tally shot him in the face.
,~,r
ld'~~orlla
Y lsc argel
wor .war veterans to app y
to their local board of education ·for a high school diplo-

....

"f-6

benefit from ·

Fourth trial .set in slaying

L' ------ Now Is.The

'

....

.

Fraud case yields jail tenn

- DAYTON (AP) - A judge sentenced a man to eight years
i'n jail for swindling his creditors out of millions. · . 1
. Judge Mary E. Donovan ignored prosec utors' demands for a
~ente n ce of nearly a century.
·With credit for time served in the Montgomery Counry jail,
Knshan Chan, 3 1, a former real ·escate salesman from Springboro, should be free by the time he is 39.
"I am very humbly sorry for the actions thar I took," Chari
said Tuesday.
~

Probation issued in sex sting ".
" XEN IA (AP) - A Texas man receiv~d five .years' probation
and was labeled a se,x offender afterbeing colwicted of trying
\O cor~upt a minor.
: Eugene Kellogg, 56, arranged to have sex with .a 15-year-old
girl he met on the Internet. When he showed up at Shawnee
~ark in Xenia, he was met by police, not the girl. "She" ended
up being a male Xenia detective working on an Internet sting.
· Kellogg in April pleaded no contest to the charge, and prosecutors recommended the sentence imposed Tuesday. Kellogg
said he considered his arrest an i'ntervention that changed· his
life, a!1d he now is in therapy.

Parents of 13 seek custody
CANTON ((&gt;P,),- T he parents wlio lost or gave up custody

•

Birthday

To Put Your Child Or Grandchild In The
-..;!
Daily Sentinel

"Shining Star''

Vietnamese man ·wins contest

. c;oSHOCTON (AP) - A 15-year-old used a stolen gun to
participate in a deadly game of Russian roulette, the county
sheriff said.
··
: Thomas J. "T.J." Guilliams was with another juvenile when
·the shooting took place Monday, said Coshocton County Sber.
·
:;,f!Timothy L. Rogers.
· :. Rogers said he was not sure who took the gu n, but it was
~ke n - from a Guilliams' acquaintance.
. · Guilliams was . pronounced dead at the scene by Robert
Gwinn, the county coroner.
:' The sheriff's office continued to investigate Tuesday.

bicentenniaL .
The four-day reenactment
is set for September 2003 and
will include more chan 100
from Page AI
confederate Cavalry who will
will benefit the qu aliry of our rid e from Wilkesville. and
lives, as well as future generaC . move . east to Harrisonville,
tions."
'
Chester, Bashan and eventuai"The bicentennial will be a ly to Portland, the site of the
very special birthday parry Battle'ofBuflington Islan d.
Var io us skirmishes, living
that will be filled with a variety of exciting, fun and edu- history ca mps, period balls,
cacional activities; including and farm raids ~ill take place
fireworks , parades, regattas, during the reenactment, said
pageants, and festivals," she Markijohn, and will culmi·:rdded.
nate in a memorial service at
• "We hope to celebrate two the Buffington Island battle
~enturi es of Ohio's history monument.
"This will be a tremendous
and culture, while at the same
time, recognize Ohio's path opportuniry for many •area
toward statehood and the businesses;• said Markijohn.
accomplis hments of noted "A large number of reenac.
,
tors and their families, as well
0h toans.
: Moretti said that ihe bicen- as many spectators wiU be
converging on Meigs County,
ten,nial will be an educational . thus creating a very lucrative
.experience for all, and th at environment."
through exhibits, television,
In other matters, , Meigs
·p rinted materials and a wide Counry Commissioner Mick
·range of other~nitiatives , the Davenport spoke .. briefly
~est of Ohio will be show- about the chamber's golf
~ased to the world.
tournament set for noon on
· Accompanying Moretti was July 26 at ' Pine Hills Golf
=---.~----:.:::~}--------1Jf~---1 -Jtlr ~J! Markijohn,__re_p~esen=.__ _Course.
,
- tative for the . Sixth · Ohio
Entry fees are $50 per perCavalry Reg1men t, who son and includes cart food
informed those in attendance and refreshments. The t~urna­
of a plan to hold a full scale ment's format will be a fourCivil War reenactment of person scramble and teams
Morgan's Raid throughout will be chosen through a
Meigs Counry during the blind draw system.

RUTLAND
Board
members were recently elected by the Meigs Counry Soccer Association durirtg its regular meeting.
Virginia Hart was elected as
secretary and Dr. Thomas
Roell as president. Several
r&gt;embers are still needed and
individuals wanting to coach a
team will be provided training
by the· association.
Registration forms for soccer sign ups ca n be picked up
at local libraries, Johnson's
Video in Middleport, Meigs
County Chiropractic, Rutland
V11lage Office, and the Meigs
County Health Department\
Team placement will be
det~r~uned by how man~•
part1c1patmg parents there are
to coach fro.m_ea~h area.
The assoC!at1on s next meeting is 6:30 p.m. on July 24.
For more information, contact Amanda Ramage at 7,422121.

·

ma . .
Many people left school
during the early 1940s to
serve in the military and when
they returned, family obligations often kept them from
finishing high school.
James S. Badgett, 79, left
Marietta High School in 1941
in the middle of his senior
year when he joined the U.S.
Navy.
"I think it's wonderful. ... It
is something I never had that I
really wanted," Badgett said .
"When I got back from the
service, I got married and then
we had a son. There was just
no time to go to back to
school."
The bill is popular among
veterans and among chose
who want to honor the World
War II generation .
"This is kind of a feel-good
thing' No one can be against
something like this," said Roy
Ash, who heads Washington
Counry's veterans service
office in southeastern Ohio.
The veterans bill was sponsored .by State Rep. Nancy
Hollister, a Marietta R epublican, and the idea came from
Badgett's son, Butch.
Bu t~ h Badgett is a former
commander of the Marietta
Sons of the American Legion.
He said the idea originated
from one of his Legion maga•
zines chat discussed the
nat!onwide effort to convince.
states to honor World War IL
veterans with a high school
diploma.
So far, 19 states · have
approved measures.
"Any recognition we q n
give to these veterans we
ought to do. We · are losing
them all the time. The sooner
we recognize these people, the
better," Butch Badgett said.
" What's also nice about this is
that the diploma can also be
given posthumously."

Feature On Friday, July 27, 2001!
Example:

ii' .

.

LOCAL BRIEFS

Issue raises
questions

' ''

•
••

•·

COLUMBUS Ohio
Depamn..e nt
of
Health
. (ODH) has issued the following information about Toxoplasmosis due to recent questions related to the death of
five kangaroos and three wallabies at the Columbus Zoo.
After consulting with
· experts at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
they concur with ODH that
there is no public health risk
associated with kangaroos and
wallabies that . are infected
with the Toxoplasma parasite.

)' .

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"Shining Star''
and how proud you are!
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Correction Polley
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News Dapartrnentl ·
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By ..nor o r - route
Ono$2

one monlll
one-

' .
... \,

Sing planned

LOCAL STOCKS

Dinner slated

AEP - 48%

Arch Coal - 24), ·

USB -~3

Gannett - 641

Rockwell - 15~
Rocky BooiS ~ 4'.1
AD Shell - 55,,

General Electric - 45),
MIDDLEPORT - Order ~TecllS"g'C - 40%
GKNLY -9'},
Sears - 41
Harley Davidson - 48
of Eastern Star chapters of Ashland Inc. - 39~
Shoney's -'.1
Kmart -1 0~
Wai-Mart - 47'.1
Meigs County are having a AT&amp;T - 20~
Wendy's - 24,,
Kroger - 24 ~
BankOne -34~
.
dmner
at M'ddl
1 eport Masonic Bob Evans -18
Lands End - 39),
Worthington - 13
Ltd. - t5 ~
Daily stock reports are
Temple, on July 21 at 6 p.m. to Borg~mer -,49
Oak
Hill
Financial14
'
l
,
tha
4 p.m. closing
100
31
benefit the District 25 steer- Champi Shop• 6,,
OVB
-25
quotes
of the previous
POMEROY - Junior and .
. . The ham loan)~~~
mg
commmee
City
Holdi~ - tn
BBT -35~
day's
transactions,
proRita White will be presenting
Peoples- 19~
vided by Smith Partners
of baked chicken dinner is by DuPont - 45~ ,
a musical program at 5:30 advan ce ticket only.
Premier - 8
at Advest Inc.
Federal Mogul - 1&gt;
p.m. on Thursday at the Meigs
Those interested in purchasSenior Center.
The free musical program is ing tickets should contact one
development of the other two
of rhe following members :
open to the public.
properties.
Ruth ann Fox, 247-45()5;
Childs said a 29-county
Kathy Molden, 304-773Appalachian
foundation now
from Page AI
6094; Avonell George, 742being formed under the
MIDDLEPORT _ Four 2768;, Pauline Atkins, 742School
'
and
th
e
Central
of Governor's
.
d
direction
local individuals were recently 2634; Or Kath ryn W m on,
arrested following a fight on 985-3846, by July 14.
Building, once the district's Office of Appalachia Dire,tor
Tickets for the dinner and new elementary and middle Joy Padgett could serve as a
the Speedway parking lot in
Middleport.
entertainment are available for school buildings are ready to model for a Middleport foundation, and redevelopment of
Middleport Police Chief a $7.50 donation, and are occupy.
Last year, when the village the buildings could be comBruce Swift said Jacob Wilson available to the public.
and Jimmy Flora: both of
voiced interest in assuming pleted in phases, beginning
Pomeroy, Elisha Dickens and
ownership of the buildings, with the elementary building,
Dwayne Madison, both of
th e board asked that the vii- financed through th e sale of
Middleport, · were arrested
POMEROY -- A Pomeroy !age present proposals for how existing village properry
including the Race Street vilaround 9:13 p.m. on Monday man was arrested and charged the buildings could be used.
after an employee of Speed- with inducing panic by the
Gegoer, who was hired by lage hall now in use.
The board and Superintenc
way, located along General Meigs
County-----sneriff's the village using funds from a
Hartinger Parkway, phoned Depart~ent following a threat state development grant and dent Bill Buckley commendofficers about a fight that was to
JUmp · fro~
the money raised from members ed Gegner, Childs and the
.
of the M1ddleport H1gh committee for their work on
taking place outside the busi- Pomeroy/ M~son Bndge.
ness.
·
____ Sher)ffRalph E.Trusse.!!_sau;l __ School Alumni- Association, .. tbe fea~bili~~tu~dy'-but the.
Upon arriving on the scene, that ·deputies responded to a showed design sketches for board took no action to agree
officers discovered Wilson, call on Monday ~bout a. man possible uses of the building to a transfer.
Buckley said that the board
Flora, Dickens and Madison who was prepanng to JUmp and discussed the assets and
would
consult with legal
on the premises with clubs from the bridge.
liabilities in each building's
counsel about the co rre ct
Upon arnvmg on the scene, construction .
'
and baseball bats in their possession.
de~uties dis covered Jerry
The plans were flTSt procedure for transferring the
All four individuals were Unbe ha.ng,~g on tho; outs!de revealed in a public hearing properties, and about forming
the foundation if, indeed, the
arrested and charged with of .the. bn~ges handr:ul threat- held in Middleport last
board would have a role in its
felonious assault and disorder- emng to JUmp. Traffic to the month, and include prelimiformation.
ly conduct, and are currently bndg~ was clo~ed and nary plans for a jail and
being held in both the Mid- deputies talked Unb.e down municipal building in the
.Pearl Street elellJllntary builddleport Jail and the Meigs and ~laced hlm under arrest.
..
Unbe was trans~orted to ing, commercial or governCounty Jail.
Assisting with the incident the Melgs ~ounty Jail where a ment storage space in the
were members of the representatiVe fro'? Woodland Central Building, and comPomeroy Police Department Centers spoke With hlm. He munity college or techni cal
and Meigs C&lt;&gt;unry Sheriff's was later released and hJS school classrooms in the Middie School.
Department.
court date scheduled.
Childs, who was appointed
to head up a citizens' committee to investigate the
buildings' future uses, urged
TUPPERS PLAINS
the
district to agree on the
Vacation Bible School, "Son
POMEROY -A damaged
Country Junction," . will be vehicle and two theft inci- record to transfer the buildheld at South Bethel Church dents are currently being ings into village ownership as
near Tuppers Plains from July investigated by .the Meigs soon as possible so that Gegn15-19 from 6:30 to 8:45p.m. &lt;;;ounry Sheriff's Department. er's plans could be impleeach evening. Classes are availBrent Jones, representative mented as soon as the buildable to all children through for the Ohio Department of ings are vatated of students.
grade 10. The church is locat- Transportation
He sugg.ested chat the board
(ODOT),
ed on Silver Ridge Road, informed deputies that a state immediately agree to transfer
acr()SS from Eastern High owned grader was damaged · the elementary building to
School.
while it was parked on Joppa the village, and that a nonprofit foundation · be estabRoad.
Jones said sometime over .lished, either by the board ,or
the
the weekend, someone shot the village, to oversee
., .
POMEROY A boil
advisory issued · by Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District
Excellent Value.
on Monday for Ohio 7 from
·Dig ita~ Performance.
Good Times to Forest Run
Road, Forest Run from 7 to
Come In and leam about
Block Plant Road, Johnson
tha latest In lower cost 100%
Road and Will Hill Road has
Dlghal hearing aid technology
been lifted.
from
. Wldaxi
..
A sample taken Monday is
considered safe.

·-·

Plans

Four arrested

Man arreSted '

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Plan vas

lnddents
probed

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Mall subsalplion
lnolde Melgo COunty

$27.30
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outlldo Melgo COUnly
13 Weeks
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26 Weeks
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52 Weeko
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Winners named

$8.70

$104
50 cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay the
carrier may remit In actvanca direct to
The Dall\' Senllnel. Cred~ will be glv..,
carrier each week. No B&lt;Jbllcrlpllon by "
mall permitted in areas where home
carrier service Is available.

Deily

ClaooHied Ada

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Court.

Subscription rates

' 13 Weeks
Ext. 5
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

To sand a-mall

Arrest made

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Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Coul1 St.,
Pomeroy,
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Ext. 4

newsOmydailysentinal.com

Plan meeting

fines and a bench warrant.
Donald J. Steinmetz, Middleport, was arrested for failure to display a registration,
driving under an ALS suspension and driving under the
influence. He was placed in
the Meigs County Jail pending his court appearance.
Gary R. Reitmire, Pomeroy,
was cited fot driving under
the influence, failure to control and unsafe vehicle after an
accide.1t early Saturday mornmg.
Justin M. Seymour, Middleport, was cited for driving
without headlights and driving under the influence. He
is to appear in Meigs County
Court.
Micha el E. Hawkins, Middleport, was 'cited for failure to
control and leaving the scene
of a property damage accident
on Friday evening. He will
appear in Meigs Co,unty
Court .'o n the charges. ..-

Advisory lifted

Circulation

www.mydaHysentlnel.com

'

"Kangaroos and wallabies
do not shed this organism in
their feces," said Roger Krog- ·
wold, D.VM., assistant state
public health veterinarian for
the ODH's Bureau of Infectious
Disease
Control
(BIDC) .
Barbara Bradley, chief of
B lDC, said a person would
primarily become infected by
eating undercooked meat that
is contaminated with the Tox·oplasma parasite. Another
route of trans111ission would .
be fecal-oral, in other words,
coming into contact wi~h the
feces of an infected cat and
. carrying the organism to your
mouth.
Washing hands thoroughly

through the grader's window,
damaging equipment inside.
. In other matters, Robert
Johnson, Langsville, reported
that someone stole several
tools from his tool box sometime Saturday night. Missing
from the tool box is a grease
gun, fence pliers and a drill.
Timothy Thomas, Pomeroy,
CARPENTER - .A Lead- reported
that
someone
ing Creek Watershed meeting entered his vehicle while it
will be held on Monday at was parked at his residence
6:30 p.m . at the Columbia and stole a box full of CDs.
Township 'Firehouse. The
Anyone with information
meeting is open to aU resi- can call the sheriff's office at
dents of the Leading Creek 993-3371.
Watershed and will be used to
gather communiry input on
water quality issues.
POMEROY -A number
of people were rec ently arrested and several cited by the
BIDWELL _ Poplar Ridge Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Freewill Baptist Church, . Department. '
located on Poplar Ridge
Dale Stewart, Racine, was
Road, off Ohio 554, will have arrested and placed in the
a night· of special singin
Meigs Counry Jail Tuesday
Sunday at 6:30 . p.m. S~r~n evening for failing to pay old
Kay and Ray and Delor!s
Cundiff will sing, and Pastor
John Elswick invites the ublie.
p

Program
scheduled

~ . &amp;HINf!'.g~rAR \ ,

:l

\ Game tums deadly for teen

POMEROY - Christy Ann Koenig Martin 28 of
Pomeroy, died on Monday, July 9, 2001 at the home of her parents, m the lovmg embrace of her family.
She was born on October 12, 1972 in Gallipolis, daughter of
Leonard H. Koemg Jr. and Sandra Jean Marshall Koenig. She
was a 1991 graduate of Eastern High School and ~as employed
as a wa1tress.
She attended the Church of Christ on Sandhill Road in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia.
·
Surviving in addition to her parents are her husband, Royal
F. Martm Jr. of Pomeroy; two sons, Dustin Mark Salser of
Racine, and Joseph Royal Martin of Pomeroy; two sisters and
brothers-m-law, Sheila A. and Mike Whitlatch of Chester, and
~onn;_e J. and Scott Williams of Pomeroy; two brothers and a
mter-m-law, Leonard E. and Marlena Koenig of Point Pleasant,and David M. Koenig of Pomeroy; her grandm&lt;Jther, Doris
Koemg ofTuppers Plains; and several aunts, uncles, nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by her paternal grandfather,
Leonard H. Koenig Sr.; and her maternal grandparents, John A.
and Virgini~ M. Marshall.
Services will be held on Thursday, July 12, 2001 at 1 I a.m. at
Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with Pete Allinder
officiating. Burial will follow at King-Massar Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funera1 home on Wednesday, July 11 ,
2001 from 7- 9 p.m.

Place our

°

CINCINNATI (AP) - A Vietnamese man will get a chance
play in a concert at New York's Lincoln Center after winning
the 45 th World Piano competition.
C uong V:an, 28 , too k the gold medal in the competition ending Tuesday. Joannis Pocamousis, 28, from Greece won the sil·ver medal and Serhi1 Morozov, 27, from Ukraine, took the
bronze rnedal.
Van will also give concerts at the Smithsonian Institution in
Washington and overseas.
·
· M d1
.
e a winners will return to Cincinnati in the next year to
·:g1ve
· concerts an d d o outreach programs for area students.

Members
elected

Christy Martin

mu.rder rates are as high in Shaker
Heights as they are in a black neighborhood, but they would have a hard time
arguing that point."
Fritz Rauschenberg, research director
of the Ohio Criminal Sentencing Commission ,, disputed assertions rhat the justice system is somehow racist.
"African· Americans live 'disproportionately in big cities, and big cities haw
higher crime;' he sa~d. ''Therefore, urban
residents will build criminal histories
faster.
"It's obviously a tough and sensitive
issue," Rauschenberg added. "But \Vhat
we've found was that when you control
for the level of offense and the criminal
history of the offender, the disparity
empirically kind of goes away."

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

after changing cat litter, after place, and Brian Wilcox, of
handling raw meat and before 414 Sixth Ave .•. $20 for third
eating are always good pre- place.
ventive measures, said Bradley.
The
wmners
were
announced on July 4 by Mary
Wise, president of the Arcs
Council.

Rape suspect ruled competent

I

· to

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Obituaries

of 12 children and were once accused of selling a son for $300 sion of efforts co reduce violence in the black community.
on the Internet could get a chance to raise their 13th child. · Police say violence by blacks against Mlacks has escalated since
Frank and Renee Layne of Alliance first must complete a the April riots that followed a white police officer's fatal shootcourt-ordered parenting plan, something they have been unable ing of an unarmed black man.
to do in the past.
Police blocked streets in the Over-the-Rhine neighborh ood
Judge Jim James of Stark Cotinry Family Court approved the about 4:45 a.m. after officers responded to reports of gunfire.
plan Tuesday and set another hearing for December. The 7- When they arrived, they said they saw Deangelo Williams, 24,
month-old girl will remain in foster care until the parental flee from a car stopped at an intersection.
progress can be assessed.
Officer Thomas Haas chased Williams for several blocks.
The Laynes have lost or given away custody of their 12 other Williams fired shots at Haa. and Officer, Arnold Walker who
children amid complaints of improper care and an alleged jojned the chase later, police said. No Ol)e was injured.
Internet offer to sell their o)dest son to a Harrisonburg,Va., man
for $300. The couple denied any sale and said they were merely trying to fi nd the boy a better home.·
·
CAMBRIDGE (AP) -An Amish man charged with' raping
three members of his extended fami ly is now considered mentally competent to•stand trial. The same court had determined
C INC INNATI (AP) - One man was killed, five people him to be incompetent one year ago.
were injured and two police officers were shot at; but not
Norman Byler, 69, of Birmingham, was ruled capable of
injured, in a series of apparently unrelated shootings Monday standing trial at a hearing in Guernsey Counry Common Pleas
and early Tuesday, police said.
Court on Tuesday, one year to the day since his trial originally
Police and black clergy in recent weeks have urged an expan- was to have started. The trial is set for .Sept. 20.

(.1 ~--~~. ·~·

Sunny Pt Cloudy

-·

Wednesday, July 11,2001

Blacks locked up eight times rate of whites

Ohio wellther

IND.

PageAl

I

MIDDLEPORT - Riverbend Arts · Council . has
announced the- winners of iis
annual porch and entryway
decorating contest, judged
prior to Middleport's July 4
celebration. ·
Kimberly ·Staats, 488 S.
Fourth Ave., received a $50
gift certificate for flowers for
first place, Shirley Smith of
359 Pearl St., $30 for sec.;md

, . World L..der' In
fOO" Dfgltal HHrlng Aid ~no10fytt~~ "-.

F IU·. E II F \ H I !'; ( ; ( ' ( ) ~ S l · I. I' \ ' 1 I(

-or

~can For Your Appointment
(100) 151-1«16
499 Alc:llillld Avo, Alhono

oloay
aids~
All A GES , nll TIMES 54 .00

) ~

�)

..

• •

Sentinel

"Pte Daily

.

0 1n1on

'

PageA4
Wednescl.y, July II, 2001

•
I .

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: My IS-year-old
daughter left her journal open on her
bed and, being nosy, I read the page
that was open. She had written that
she had lost her virginity to her
boyfriend.
We have stressed to her how
important it is to save herself for marriage, but it looks like she decided not
to. She had a friend who just found
out she was pregnant three months
ago. I can't believe this didn't make
my daughter think a liit1e bit more
about it.
Should I confront her about what I
read, or let it slide? It's tearing me up
inside because she was brought up
with better values than this.
We have always been very close
and she · usually talks to me about
everything. WeD, at least I thought she
did. Any advice? - MISSOURI

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

Ohjo Valley Publishing Co.

-

'

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
· Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Uttt!n ttl tht ~.-lor an ••tkomr. TlieJ ~· lwulil bf' len them J()(J words. Allleilus
11re subjttl ro tdllln.r and muSI bf' signed und iflcfudr· aJdun and ttltphone numbu,
. No 11nsittttd lenrr! will be publishtd.
should bt in good taut, addres$idg
iJrMcJ, not penonatitiis.
Thr opJ11ifHIJ rxprased inlht c-n/umn belaw au lht cmr.tlf'tUuJ of the Ohio YollrJ
Pubtislrint Co. 'J tditorUd boord, unlus uthrr ..·i'rr m•rrd.

.

'"'''"r

ooooH-VOU

NATIONAL VIEW

lmpradical

Farmer~

\

Cell phone bans won't
·impro~e driving behavior
RUSHER'S VIEW
•
The Bakersfield Californian, on 11si11g eel! phones
w!lile driving: When a driver is distracted by his use of a cell
· phone and fatally plows into another car, it's a tragedy.
When the same thing happens while a driver is chomping
on a Big Mac, swatting a kid, arguing with his wife, dialing a
radio or messing with a fancy directional device, it's also a
tragedy.
So far no one is proposing ro ban Big Macs, kids, wives,
radio or electronic gizmos from cars. But fed~ral and state lawmakers are trying to ban hand-held cell phon es ....
It comes as no surprise th at the industry's trade group, the
Cellular Telecommunication and Internet Association, opposes
&lt;' the ban. But even the National Highway.Traffic Safety Administration is urging caution.
· Wait for actual accident data before jumping on the "banwagon."Why is it so much more annoying when .a person with
a -eell phone cuts in front of your car? Would a swerver with
fast-food get the same scowl?
Driving behavior is an education and enforcement issue.
Draconian equipment bans will have little impact and lots of
headaches.
' Instead, cell phone · manufacturers and opponents should
~ombine efforts to m~ke hands-free equipment cheaper and
more attractive.

I-

T-ODAY IN ' HI-ST-OR-¥ BY THE ASSOCIATED PR(:SS

Today is Wednesday, July 11, the 192nd day of2001. There are
173 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 11, 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortally
wounded former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton in a
pistol duel 'near Weehawken, N.J.
On this date:
ln 1533, Pope Clement VI! exconuilUnicated England's King
Henry VIII.
In 1767,John Quincy Adams; the sixth president of the
United States, was born in Braintree, Mass.
In 1798, the US. Marine Corps was fornl.ally rc-es\ablished
by a congressional act that also created the U.S. Marine Band.
In 1864, Confederate forces led by Gen.Jubal Early began an
abortive invasion ofWashington D.C., turning back the next

United Europe can be a competitor, but also a.friend
Shortly after the end ofWorld War II,
Winston Churc hill made a speech in
Zuric h, robustly endorsing the concept
of a united Europe, in which its component nations would act together economically, politically, and (presumably)
militarily. "Let Europe arise!" rumbled
' the Grand Old Man.
As an impassioned admirer of
Churchill's, I needed no further guidance .. If C hurchill favo red a united
COLUMNIST
Europe, that was enough fot me. And so
it remained for the next 50 years or so.
But in recent years, as the European powers of the second rank as France and
Union.has formed, developed political Germany, Jet alone small er European
mstltutlons, and adopted a common cur- · countries confronting a world that the
rency, I began to be assatled by doubts. United States bestriides li ke the proverFor .on_e, thmg, Margaret Thatcher, bial Colossus, that "in unity there is ·
Churchill s most promment hvmg succ strength." California may have just overcessor, a redoubtable spokesnun for hi s taken France as the world's sixth- largest
legacy and someone whom I adnure economy, but Europe as a whole, from
only less than Churchtll hm1self, makes the Atlantic to the borders of Russia,
no secret of the fact that she has . grave would boast a population of more than
reser~atlonus-about ...tkhe . dllrechtlobn -the c-:100 millimf ana- coulaeasily give tfie
uropean . mon IS ta mg. ,n t e eguh U.S. economy a run for . its . money.
nmgshe, hke Churchtll, favored the gen- Moreover, although the continent's
era! tdea; but she ts strongly opposed to expenditures on its various militaries are
abandomn g the pound for the Euro and laugha\;&gt;le even collectively compared to
loudly .condemns the tendency of cer- those of the United States (on which
tam E.U. members to develop a dtmnc- Europe is not too pro_\ld to depend), it
\'~ely European mthta_ry force (as could, at least in theory, become a colopposed to NATO, Wtth tts heavy lective military superpower if it really
Amencan presence). As a result, I am wanted.
beginning to wondec what Sir Winston
So tf)e impulse to unite is there and
would say today if he were ·alive.
will remain there. It seems destined to
Of course, we must be realistic. It is succeed in some irnportant measure. The
always wise to get out of the way of the
only question left open for the United
inevitable. And it was surely inevitable States is what to do about it.
that the idea would occur to such major
To resist it in toto would be foolhardy.

William
Rusher

E

·.

Peering ahead into the mi~ ts of the 21st
century, it seems likely that the chief
military threat to the United States, if
one develops at aU, will be &lt;;:hina. And
while there might well be an inclination
among certain European nations to sit
out any conflict that arises between the
United States and China, it is absolutely
certain that the United States would
have many influential friends in every
capital. A military defeat of the United
States by an aggressi~ China would be
the very last thing most Europeans
would Want .- not for our sake, but for
their own.
However far Europe moves toward
economic, political, and military unity,
th e rivalries among its major component
nations -- Britain, France, and Germany
- can never be laid totally to rest. Washington will be able- and enti tled- to
play on these in its own interests.
A united Europe, therefore, may be
inevitable and will undoubtedly-p-res-em
new challenges to the United States. But
they can be coped with, ant1 it is not
unreasonable to believe that a united and
democratic Europe will be, in the long
run, our corrtpetitor, yes, but also our
friend.
Correction: In a recent column, I
inadverte,ntly misidentified the governor
ofVirginia, who is also the chairman of
the R.epublican National Committee.
He is, of course, James S. Gilmore III .

(William Rusher is a Distinguished Fef.
low of the Claremoflt lnstitme for the Swdy
of Statesmanship mtd Political Philosophy.)

RED GREEN'S VIEW

:In 1934, President Franklin Roosevelt became th e first chief
; .' In 1955, the US. Air Force Acadet11y was dedicated at Lowry
Air Base in Colorado.
: In 1977, the Medal of Freedom was awarded posthumously
~the Rev. .Martin Luther King Jr.
:In 1&lt;))79, the abandoned U.S. space station Skylab ina de a
spectacular return to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere and
sl)owering debris over the Indian Ocean and Australia.
• In 1980, American hostage Richard I. Queen, freed by Iran
after eight months of captivity because of poor health, left '
Tehran for Switzerland.
' In 1989, actor Laurence Olivier died at age 82.
'; Ten years ago: A Nigerian Airlines jet carrying Muslim pilgrims crashed at the Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, international airport,
killing all 26 1 people on board. A solar eclipse c:1st a blanket of
t1arkness stretching 9,000 miles from Hawaii to South Amerilasting nearly seven minutes in some ()laces.
. Five years ago: An Air Force F-16 Jet trying to make anemergency landing slammed into a house in Pensacola, Fla.,
s~tting the home on fire, ki,lling a 4-year-old boy ·~nd badly
~urning his mother. (The pilot ejected safely.)
: ·one year ago: A Middle East summit hosted by President
c;:linron opened at Camp David between Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak and Palestinian leaderYasser Arafat.The African
Methodist Episcopal Church, the natiorU; oldest black church,
elected the Rev. Vashti McKenzie of Baltimore its first female
blS~op. Robert Runcie, the former archbishop of Canterbury,
died in Hertf?rdshire, England, at age 78. The-American League
defeated the National League 6-3 in the All-Star Game.
:-Today's Birthdays; Actress Brett Somers is 74. Actor Tab
Jiunter is 70. Singer Jeff Hanna (Nitty Gritty Dirt Band) is 54.
Sjnger Bonnie Pointer is 50. Actor Stephen Lang is 49. Boxer
Leon Spinks is 48. Actress Mindy Sterling is 48. Actress Sela
Ward is 45. Reggae singer Michael Rose (Black Uhuru) is 44.
Singer Peter Murphy is 44.Actor Mark Lester is 43.Jazz musiCian Kirk Whalum is 43. Singer Suzanne Vega is 42. l~qck guitarist Richie Sam bora (Bon Jovi) is' 42. Actress Debbe Dunning
is:35.Actor Michael Rosenbaum is 29. Rapper Lil' Kim is 26.
:Thought forToday:"There are philosophies which are unen&lt;!urable not because men are cowa~ds ,' but because ·they are
~pen ." - Ludwig Lewisohn, German-born English author and
&lt;Q't.ist (1882-1955).

ea.

That night out with the wift riskier than you know
BY RED GREEN

I'd like to talk to you middle- aged
guys .ilbout the risks of a night out. I
don't mean an evening with the guys.
Those go pretty smooth. Sure, you 've
totaled the car a few times and been
arrested twice, bur usually the worst
thing that happe'l' is finding the desig11ated driver face down' in the chip dip.
A night out with your wife is a li tt le
more high 'risk.
She wants a chance to reconnect and
share her feelings, which puts a lot of
pressure on an evening of pizza and
bowling, especially when you just want
to bowl and eat pizza.'But you sure don't
want your lack of interest to be interpreted as a lack of interest. So here's how
not to blow it. Do'n't start explaining
your side of things. Just listen. Or at least
look like you're listening. She'll let you
know when she's done. Just be 1mart
enough to smile, and th'ank her for sharing. She'll appreciate your sensitivity.
· Hopefully, she's not sensitive enough to
know that you're not.
Luck of timing, and vice versa
You know there's always a buddy
who'll tell you how much he made selling his old Howdy Doody lunch box
just afier you threw yours Out. Of course
this is the same buddy who sells meat
qut of his truck and always wants to bor~
row a twenty from _you. You just really

DROP US ALiNE.

don't want to hear about those "boy you
should have" situations bec'ause it can
drive you nuts. It's like when an old girlfriend, who still looks like she belongs
on a calendar, calls looking for a little
Gompany. Sure the track is still there, but
rila! train lefi the station about 25 years
ago. Don't .beat yourself up over lost
opportunities. If everyone lined-up who
could have invested in Trivial Pursuit or
could " have marri'ed an investment
banker or whose mom gave .away their
Spider Man 1 comic, you'd be looking Qt
most of the world. Knowing whe'! to do
w h;~t and why is mostly a matter ofluck.
That's why it's called luck so you don't
confuse it with normal.
Middle-aged men never say thi.s
I spend a lot of time talking to middle-aged men and I've noticed there are
a bunch of things they never say. Here
are just a few of them:
·
• "It's all my fault."
• "I don't know anything about that."
• "You drive."
• "I don't need to use the bathroom
right now."
.
• "I've had a lot of luck."
• "I never felt better in my life."
• 'II wish there were more young people in the neighborhood."
.
Miles to go before I sleep
You k11ow a lot of us middle-aged
guys are reading the obituaries and dis~

825 Third Ave., Oolllpolll, Ohio
74C).448.2342

covering that guys a lot younger than us
have dunked their last donut. It's kind of
scary considering all the abuse we've
racked up. When you count up the scars,
the cars, the bars and the times we've
seen stars whic;,h, depending on how
many fingers you have left, could rake
some tin1e, it's a wonder wt:'re still ticking. But l wouldn't line up for wings just
yet. Compare a 1952 automobile with .
this year's niodcl, and you 'II find something rare -- metal. Back then they built
those babies out of steel, not plastic and
foam and corrugated cardboard . Sheer
over-engineering made those old clunkers last. They built a lot of us around
then, too. I think you can see where' I'm
headed with this. I'm not saying that
we're any better than th e lower mileage
young guys are. I'm sure they handle
themselv~s fine. They're fast, agile and
probably a lot easier to deal with on a
long road trip. All I'm saying is that as I .
go down the highway of life, I'!J;! happy
to have the ~a weight. Especially the
way I drive. , \ . ·
.
Quote of the Day: "If it's true that you
learn from your mistakes, I must be a
gen ius." - Red Green

(Red Green is tire star of "The Red Green
Show," a televisio" series seen in tlte. U.S. on
PBS and in Canada on the CBC Network
n11d the awhor of "The Red Cree.. &amp;ok"'
aJJd "Red Green Talks Cars :A Love Story.")

111 Court Sl, PomotOy, Ohio
7~·21158

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE
MOM
DEAR MOM: Your daughtet may
have left the book open in order to
open the door to discussion with
you. She probably didn't know how
to break the news to you any. other
way and feared your reaction.
How you deal with this is very
important. Do not attack her and do
not scold. Talk calmly; tell her you are
disappointed and why. Then review

malady linked to

why it is important for her to use th at the man is supposed to do all the
every precaution if she is ·going to be paying. I have talked to her about it.
sexually active. Use her friend as an It goes in one ear and out the other.
example. I suspect your daughter I don't believe this is fair, and it is
already knows she has gone further straining our relationship because I'm
than she should have and now regrets not as well-off as she is.
it.
What ever happened to equal
DEAR ABBY: The woman I date rights for women and men? Please
(I'D· call her Earlene) is 62 and owns answer soon.This is an emergency. her own home. She also has a truck BUSTED
BUDGET,
that's fully paid for, CDs and an IRA. ANDOVER, OHIO
In other words, she's well-off.
DEAR B.B.: If you're asking
For the last four years we have gone about the Equal Rights Amendment
out to eat frequently because she lives - it lost by a narrow margin. Even
alone and so do I. We eat out at least so, dating rules have changed greatly
four days a week, breakfast and din- since your ladyfriend was a girl. It's
ner. In aU that tim e she has picked up · time to tell the meal server, "Separate
the check only five times. Even when checks, please." If Earlene· doesn't
I pay, she never leaves a tip. She figures agree, maybe it's time to ~ your sep-·
since I'm pay ing the bill, I should do arate ways.
it.
DEAR ABBY: Although I am a
Earlene is from the old school recent reader of your column, I enjoy

'pharaoh.~

200 Main Sl, Point~ W.Va.
304-f71-1333

Dear Abby is written by PauliP~e
Plrillips a,d da~&lt;ghter jeatme Phillips.

...

..,,..

EVENTS :~:

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Commissioners, Wednesday,
10 a.m., rescheduled meeting,
In place of Thursday regular
meeting.

very acute episodes, the medication prednisone is often
used, but it is of no value
when the symptoms are .
milder. The most effective
treatment is avoidance of the
: offending agent. This usually
gives . prompt recovery for
those with their first episode
john C. Wolf, D.O.
of hypersensitivity pneumoAJsociate Professor
nia. For. .those who have had
of Family Medicine
multiple episodes or who have
tion to hefp him get better?
at~d with such disorders as hypersensitivity pneumonia the chronic form of the conAnswer: Farmer's hmg is an bacterid pneumonia, viral from Actinomyces was even dition, there is no treatment
including avoidance allergic-like reaction that can pneumonia, sarcoidosis and responsibl e for the fabled be triggered by different heart failure, Sop1etimes "Mummy's Curse" of King~ that brings much relief.
In your husband's case, this
microorganisms. The most fre- farmer's lung begins as a very Tut's tomb.
quent causes are a group of acute illness with fever, cough¥ou see, Ge~rge Edward means he should avoid moldy
bacteria called Actinomycetes ing, shortness of breath and Stanhope Molyneux Herbert, hay and grain forever. Better
and a family of molds called other signs of respiratory the fifth Earl of Carnarvon, ventilation in the barn helps
Aspergillus. Because these infection, usually within eight developed a "strange illness" decrease the concentration of
microorganisms grow in hay hours of exposure.
and died shortly after being in the offending microorganisms
or grain, farmers who handle
In other cases it begins the newly discovered tomb in in the air, while making sure
these crops - particularly in rather insidiously with the 1922. His untimely death ere- the hay is sufficiently dry
. areas without good ventilation gradual development of short- ated the fertile ground upon before it is baled and that it is
stored properly greatly reduces
- are more likely to develop ness of breath, coughing, wqich the rumor grew.
the condition. Fortunately. not wheezing and chronic tiredOnly after many o thers the amount present in the hay
everyone who is exposed to . ness, Inorganic lung irritants developed similar but less itself. High-efficiency face
either these molds or bacteria like asbestos and silica can also severe illnesses was it discov- masks can also r,educe the
ccmes down with farmer's produce similar symptoms. ered that the tomb floor as amount of mold or bacteria
lung. Only those with particu- That is why your husband's well as th e mummy wrappings inhaled . These steps are often
lar sensitivity actually develop doctor needed to do a number were · heavily infested with sufficient to prevent repeated
the illness, just as your unfor- of tests before the diagnosis Actinomyces. Lord Carnarvon attacks of farmer's lung.
. -_ was-confirmed. - ----diecLo£.an_acute hy.persensitiv- _ ~&amp;mi.ly Medicine" is.Jl.weekly
tunate-husband _has. _
Farmer's lung - as well as · Other bacteria in the Actin~ ity pneumonia - not from a column. The Ohio University
Co Urge of Osteopathic Medicine is
several other lung conditions omycetes family can cause ill- mummy's curse.
Your husband's doctor did- tlow priming "T1te Best of ...
that are due to hypersensitivi- nesses with descriptive names
ty reactions may begin like pigeon breeder's disease, n't prescribe any medication Family Medidne," until Dr. Wolf~
with symptoms that are indis- bird fancier's disease, and because no medication consis- . replacemettt begins writing the coltinguishable from those associ- humidifier lung disease. The tently helps this condition. In umn.
Question: My husband was
havit1g breathing troubles that
were so bad our doctor put
him in the hospital and did :
many tests. He finally determined that he has "farmer's
lung." The doctor didn't give
him any medicine. Instead, he
told him that his breathing
would slowly get better, which
it has. Why didn't the doctor
give my husband any medica-

THURSDAY '
SYRACUSE - Regular meet·
ing, Syr:a._cuse Village Council,
7 p.m., postponed from July 5.
CHESTER -Shade River
Lodge 453, regular stated
meeting, Thursday, 8 p.m.
Refreshments.
POMEROY- Rita and Junior
White will provide music at the
Senior Citizens Center, 5:30
p.m. Thursday.
FRIDAY
GALLIPOLIS- Widows' Fel·
lowship, 9:45 a.m. Friday at
Golden CorraL Those needing
rides should call 992·5666.
POMEROY - "Fun, Food and
Fellowship" for teens at God's
NET in Pomeroy. Nutritional
meals, non·violent video
games, computer games,
board games, pool tables. 6
p.m. to 10:30 p.m., Friday and
Saturday evening.

SATURDAY
RACINE -Annual Charles
W. and Fannie Lee (Wolfe)
Beaver family reunion Saturday, Star Mill Park, 11 a.m. to
4 p.m .. Take a covered dish for
the noon meal.
DANVILLE - Services at
Danville Church of Christ, Sat·
urday at 7 p.m., and Sunday,at
6p.m.
' "
SUNDAY
BARLOW - Watson family
reunion, 12:30 p.m., Ba~ow . ,
Fairgrounds.

..'

MONDAY
CARPENTER - Leading
Creek Watershed Association, ~
6:30p.m., Monday, at Colum·, -:
bia Township Firehouse. Open
to all residents to gather com~ ,
munity input on water quality · ·
issues.
.1
·: i
Community calendar Is published aa a frea Hrvlce to
non·proflt groups wishing lei
announce meetings and speo
ciaI eventa. The calendar Ia • ,
not designed to promote
sales or fund·ralsers of any1 i
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and canno~
be guaranteed to appear.
'

,.

We want your photos! ..
j_ ___lT.rnhe Sen\l[lell\'e)come~_YQ!JLPhQtogrJ&gt;Qh:;,_Here ll!tl. a. few guide- •

1---- '

lines for submissions:
• Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus and
have good contrast. Negatives also are accepted; however, please
Include a print along with the negative.
'
• Black-and-white photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus and have good contrast Negatlves.also are accepted: however,_· '
please include a print along w~h the negetlve.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In focus and.
have good contrast.
..
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallet size
and no larger than 8 x 10.
·
·
'
• Polarlod-type photos are discouraged since they dO not repro-:
duce well on newsprint
•
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high-resolution , hlgi'&gt;&lt;luallty JPEG files.
·
·1•
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"
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not reproduce wel l on newsprint
•
• Please be sure all subjects In photographs are clea~y.ldentlfied
on the back of the photograph or on en ettaehed sheet of paper.

Cultivate trnst in teens
Being a parent' of teen-agers
can be an exasperating experience.
Their quest for independence, along with the parents'
reluctance to give them too
much freedom, can :ause
conflicts in the household.
What can be done to help
ADVICE
parents relieve their own anxiety while allowin~~: their
teen's autonomy?
to do things with their
Here are some ideas to rry: friends, look like their friends,
Become involved in your act like tlieir friends and dress
child's school life. The more like their friends.
active adults are in theineenParents many times will be
ager's live~•. the more they can concerned about peer presknow what is going on. Since sure when teens get together.
teens spend so much time at .Remember that peer pressure
school and with extracurricu- is not always negative. Your
Iar activities; talk with those child's friends can influence
adults who are with them .. them to be a better smdent,
during those times.
participate in a school activity
Teachers, principals, coach- or dress more neatly.
es advisers and school staff see
You as a parent can learn a
y~ur child from a different lot_about your children while
perspective. They obser~e . dnvmg k1ds t? and from
. them in social and acadeftliC school Of practice. L1sten to
. situations, under stress, relax- your children and their
ing and playing.
friends while chauffeurmg
Keep in touch with these th~.m around. you do~'t need
adults. Let them assist you m to eavesdrop; JUSt qu1etly 1~
keeping an eye on your chi~d. ten to their convers~tions.
. Supervised afi:er-school acttvIn i!ddltlO!l to_ tqe1r fr~ends,
ities allow parents to know get to know the1r fr~ends parwhat their teen-agers are ents. Become acquamted w1th
doing an4 w.here they are. ot~er parents . to help you
These organized projects can w1th superviSion of teens .
help put a parent's mind at while they are not m your
ease.
presence. Parents can form J ll
Get to know · your teen's alli~nce to keep watch over
friends. Friends are · very each other's children.
important to teen- agers. ParIt is being a good parent. If
ents may feel that, the time the reports you get from othteen-agers spend with friends . ers corresp&gt;onds With what
is starting to replace time w1th you are seemg,_ then you c~n
the family. This is another way begm to cultivate trust m
teen-agers are seeking theJr them: The mote trust you
independence.
have m your son or daughter,
Teens need to feel like they the more independence you
are part of a group. They want can give them.

it daily. Would you kindly assist me
with somewhat of an office etiquette
dilemma?
Oftentimes in my workplace,
women will actually brush their teeth
using the public restroom sink. Personally, I think it is totally inappropriate for anyone to do such a thing in a
public place, especially rinsing. Could
you please ~hare the appropriate rule,
if any applies, and assist me in scolding such offenders? - GROSSED
OUT IN BEVERLY HillS
DEAR GROSSED OUT: Sorry.
. I respect people ,who are diligent
about their oral hygiene. I see nothing wrong with brushing one~ teeth,
in a publi~ restroom, as long as the
sink is rinsed thoroughly after the
person is finished.

LOCAL

curse'·

Becky
Baer ·

&lt;4y.
i!~cutive to travel through the Panama Canal.

Wednesday, July n, 2001

Mom measures her reaction to· daughter~ lost virginity

MIL&lt;XE·!HQ~

-.

_The_oa_ny_se_nfu_ei~--~BJtheBend

Page A~,

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Phoenix Force here Saturday

Friday, July 13, 2001 • 9:00- Noon
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding

MIDDLEPORT -The Phoeni}( Force, a drama team from
Evangelical Church oiThe Nazarene in Mount Vernon, will perform at 7 p.m. Saturday at Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
The group is directed by Brent and Melissa Midcap, soh and
daughter-in-law of the Rev. Allen Midcap, pastor of the Middle~
port Church, and his wife, Sonja. Brent and Melissa operate a .
youth-orienied p~gram in downtown Mou~t Vernon called
"The Escape Zone," similar to God's Net in Pomeroy. ·
.
Phoeni}( Force will also perform Sunday at 10:30 a.m. at Mld_dleport Church of the Nazarene.

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113 W. 2nd Street
992-5479

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·on • World

The Daily Sentinel

u.s. wary of terror network

Page A&amp;

KINCAID, W.Va. (AP) - West Virginia residents seeking help from devastating flooding instead encountered
lboters who rummaged through the
debris and gawkers who snapped pictures of the twisted wreckage .
In Sonja Wolfe's driveway stood a
"yard sale'' sign atop a pile of mud-caked
futniture- a sarcastic jab at the passersby who scrounged for souvenirs but didn't stop to help ·or bring safe drinking
water.
"We thought if they'd do that, they'd
be dumb enough to take this stuff,"
Wolfe's daughter, Missy R:ichards, said
Tuesday as the family sat on the front
porch.
Police said they had re ceived about 40
reports of looting but made rio' arrests.

'Sandwich' group provides care

Weclnesd•y. July 11,1001

PAX

·Body of missing teen identified

'D'ooper's slayer executed

Missing hiker resurfaces

~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -

da"es from
· bums

A 4-year-old boy died from burns
Tuesday after his father allegedly doused his mother in a flamPENSACOLA, Fla. (AP)- Family members of the 8-year- mabie liquid and set her on fire.
old I"
"oy who survived a shark attack take turns standing at his
The boy, whose name was withheld, suffered third-degree
bedside in an intensive care room crammed with machines help- .

a~!!r!~~!~~s
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Ohio Am
'

Gallipolis) Brian .
Bickle plays a 75 in:
opening round

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Meigs XC begins
.

workouts

ROCK
SPRINGS
Meigs County Cross Country
team will begin conditioning
on July 16 at 8:30 a.m. at the
Meigs High School.
Cross Countty is open to
any M eigs stud~nts, male or
female, entering grades seven
through 12. All interested athletes sho uld come dressed . to ,
run and plan on working out
until 9:45 a.m . on Monday.
Those athletes unable to
attend should attend practices
on July 12 and 13. Informa- .
tion is available from Coach
Mike Kennedy at 992-7552.

All-Star
toumeys slated

R~~A~;vi-sio~';?w~~~~~h

baseball tournaments will be
held at the Alexander Little

,,
MVP- Baltimore 's Cal Ripken Jr. connects for a solo homer in th e third inning for the American League at the
72nd AII·Star game in Seattle Tuesday. Ripken, who will retire after this season, earned the MVP award. (AP) .

Rl.pken·leads AL Wl•n

-

Lle1agu12e sporltds co mpleillx. Akn
'
year o event w · ta e
SEATTLE (AP)- Hey Cal! Care
place on July
to reconsider?
d 19-22 and
ll a 9k
10
Cal' Ripken, baseball's reluctant '
I year ol event wi ta e
p ace.on"Jmr26~
··---·-···
~-;h
~,
gave
h
1
d
h fi
· 'himsel t'6n ' 1'asf Ali~Sfar·
Eac is imite to t
rst
victory lap before retiring. And he
eight teams that enter. With a
gave baseball one .more reason to

e

• 11111-11, II
-

-----·

-------

play-offi will take place on
Sunday of each tournament.
· An entry fee of$65 must be
paid at the drawing on July 16
at 7 p.m. at Alex:mder Field.
There -will be indiviaual trophies for first and seco nd place
and ribbons and medals for
Third place.
To enter, players should
contact Don Phillips· at 689- ,
6259.

There's something special about carrying one of these in
your wallet. We think you'll agree, any card with the Blue
"
·
Cross and Blue Shield symbols offers a higher level of
confidence and a real Sense of security to Its holder.
And if you're

Compaq plans more layoffs

a Medicare cardholder,

Southem
physicals set

YOU CAN CARRY miS CARD, TOOl

HOUSTON (AP) - When Compaq Computer Corp.
announced earlier this year it was restructuring, the company
hoped natural attriti&lt;m would allow it to shave thousands of
jobs .
But a sour economy, particularly in the tech sector, meant
Compaq workers had no place to go. As a result, the Houstonbased computer maker said Tuesday it plans to lay off 4,000
workers.
''Given the weak worldwide economy. our attrition has been
lower than expected, so we have accelerated the process by
including these positions in the latest charge;' said Jeff Clarke,
Compaq's chief financial officer.
.The staffing cuts bring the total number ofjobs Compaq plans

With it, you'll have coverage that can go a long way to

RACINE - Dr. Douglas
Hunter, M.D. will give sports
physicals for Southern High
School athletes participating
in fall and winter sports on
July 21.
Students in grades 10- 12
will be seen on July 21 on the
following schedul e: grade_10,
8 a.m. to 10 a.m; grade 11, 10
a.m. to noon ; grade 12, noon
to 2 p.m. ·
Hunter asked that all -athletes observe the schedule, but
in case of emergency to conta ct his office to arrange
another date or tim e.
All necessary paperwork
and official Ohio High School
Athletic Association physical
forms must be completed and
signed by a parent or legal ·
guardian prior to the exam.
Forms can be picked up at
th~ high school office from 9
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. daily.
. Athletes should wear shorts
) nd t-shirts for their physicals.

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~fi~all-~~H ~khim.
--~-------~- ---~
- -Ie:rst- four - gamecDivisi6nai----- Rip!Cen homered

~~fi~b~

_ Jessie ArbQgasuemained in_a~ c.uma~ in criticalbut stable..con~dition Tuesday at Sacred Heart Children's Hospital where doctors say he likely suffered brain injury although they were unsure
to what extent.
"In speaking with the family, it is a tim€ in their life where
really time has stopped," said Sister Jean Rhoads, vice president
for mission services with the Sacred Heart Health System."They
are very focu sed and centered on Jessie's conditioti and care."
Surgeons reattached the boy's right arm after it was bitten off
by the 7-foot bull shark Friday while he was wading 'in kn eedeep water on a Fl.orida Panhandle beach. The boy's uncle and
another beach goer then wrestled the shark to shore, where a
ranger shot it and pried its jaw open while a firefighter pulled
the arm ou~ of the shark's gullet.

SNEADS FERRY, N.C.
(AP) - A Marine Corps
helicopter crashed into a
river during a mock nighttime ship landing, killing
three Marines and injuring ·
two.
The CH-46 Sea Knight
went down in the New
River near Camp Lejeune
about 11 p.m. Monday.
"They , don't know if it
was mechanical or hum an
error," said l st Lt. Clint
Cascaden,
a I Marine
spokesman. "There were no
reports that the aircraft so
much as squawked" before
the crash .

Page 81

Gerwin

Pharmacy discount planned

Three ·
Marines.die
in helicopter
crash
·

Casey concerned aboJ!l-'trades, Page 83
Around the Diamona, Page BJ
On the Fringe, Page B6

TO

Blaze kills 4 firefighters

4•.,. ear•old

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. July 11. 1001

"We dJdn't think people IA(ould steal
from other people who have suffered in
broad daylight, but we have people
d.oing thar," said Lt. Col. Ed Kornish, a
National Guard liaison officer.
The weekend deluge did an estimated
S20 million in damage, caused at .least
one death and swamped about 3,500
homes in the state. The hardest-hit area
was in the coalfields of southern West
Virginia, where many .residents don't
have flood insurance.
In Mullens, the floods ravaged nearly
all three-dozen businesses in the town of
2,900, which saw water as high·as 12 feet
from the Guyaridotte River and runoff
from steep mountains.;;fhe flooding has
left many on the verge of closing their
doors for good.

WASHINGTON (AP) - As they move into their 40s and
HIGH WATERS - Aoodwaters Isolate
50s, the baby boom generation is finding itself increasingly sandWilliam Sasser's trailer, left, and the
wiched between people needing its care - aging parents on
Long Branch United Methodist Church,
one side, children and grandchildren on the other. '
right, In Pax, W.Va. William and P~ggy
"Caregivers today may be assisting not only .their own chilSasser,
along with other church memdren and parents but also grandchildren, nieces, nephews and
bers,
had
to be rescued from the church
even children of friends and neighbors," said Bill Novelli, execby boat around noon Sunday. (AP Photo)
utive director of AARP. which released a report on the sandwich
·
generation Tuesday.
1t's a familiar tale to Frances Caster, 50, who lives in the Bronx
boro·ugh of New York Ciry. She is raising her grandchildre,n and to terminate this year to 8,500, or about 12 percent ofits work burns on 73 percent of his body Monday night, Police Capt.
force.
Charlie Beck said. The boy died at Torrance Memorial Medica1
frets over her parents in Puerto Rico.
Center, said spokeswoman Ann O'Brien.
The youugsters, a 14-year-old boy and 7-year-old girl, live
The boy's father, Dwayne West, 29, had been arrested for .
with her and her husband. She has legal custody of the children.
investigation of attempted murder Tuesday afternoon, before th~
TWISP, Wash. (AP)- A small wildfire in the rugged forest of boy's died. ·
the North Cascades exploded to 2,500 acres in a matter of
The 32-year-old mother, whose name also was withheld, had
hours,
killing
four
firefighters
and
leaving
another
in
serious
facial burns and was treated and released from Granada Hills
. WASHINGTON (AP)- Older Americans would get pharr undition.
Communiry Hospital.
macy discount cards next year under a White House proposal
U.S.
Forest
Service
spokeswoman
Debbie
Kelly
confirmed
the
aimed at providing quick relief from high prescription· drug
four deaths Tuesday night. She said the four firefighters had been
costs.
missing since an explosive burst of flames overran a group of 40
President Bush will announce the pharmacy discounts later
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A teen-ager found murdered in
this week, a White House official saiillilte Tuesday, speaking on firefighters Tuesday evening.
The
identities
and
hometowns
of
the
dead
firefighters
were
Florida more than five years ago was identified Tuesday as a 15condition of anonymiry.
not
immediately
released.
year-old girl who left h er Philadelphia foster home. ·
The announcement will be one compone(lt of a broad outSt9ked
by
high
temperatures
and
st
rong
wind
gusts,
the
blaze
The body of Latariya Reese was exl)umed Tuesday and idenline of Medicare reform principles Bush plans to unveil late this
grew
from
less
than
1
0
acres
early
Tuesday
to
2,500
acres
by
late
tified through ,dental records. The girl was la_st seen alive outside
week.
afte
rnoon,
Kelly
said.
the foster home on March ·3, 1996.
Bush proposed as a candidate to create a $158 billion plan to
"She said she was going outside," said Virginia Hill, a Philadelcove; prescription drugs for the elderly poor and subsidize
phia
police missing persons investigator who handled the case.
choice in drug plans fo; other Medicare beneficiaries.
uShe never came home."
POTOSI, Mo. (AP)- A 42-year-old Missouri man was executed by injection early Wednesday for killing a state trooper
during a traffic stop in 1985.
SONORA, Calif (AP) - A hiker limped out of the StanisJerome Mallett was the fifth inmate put to death this year in
lal)S National Forest with two injured ankles, one week after he
Missouri and the 51 sr sin ce 1989, when the state reinstated the
was reported missing.
death penal ry. ·
Eric Tucker, 28, said he fell about 40 feet after losing his trail
Mallett had claimed he shot James Froemsdorf, a nine-year
on the first day of his hike, but stayed put until he gained the
strength to find his way out of the forest Tuesday, said Judy Vil- veteran of the Missour i State Highway Patrol; in self-defense
after the patrolman allegedly hit him and pulled a gun on him
lalobos, Tuolumne General Hospital spokeswoman.
Villalobos said Tucker may have broken both his ankles, was on an Interstate 55 roadside in Perry County.
But in a videotaped statement made after his arrest, Mallett
dehydrated and had an elevated blood pressure.
_ 'SALE PRICED·~
said he shot Froemsdorf, 35, during a struggle for the gun.
"He knew how to handle himself and kept his wits about
~
him," Villalobos said.

ram•lly stayS dOSe to Vl"ctim

Inside:

W. Va. families dig·out from destruction of flood

WASHINGTON (AP) - A loose network of terrorists,
mostly Algerians, poses a growing threat to Americans and U.S.
interests, a U.S. security expert says.
A few Americans are among the scores of radical Muslims in
the relatively new threat, which originated with an insurrection
in Algeria in the early 1990s, the U.S. official told The Associated Press:
Some were trained in Afghanistan with the organization head. ed by the Saudi expatriate Osama bin Laden, the official said.
The network has evolved considerably in the last two years, he
said.

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POMEROY Anyone
interested in playing football
at Meigs High School can
~ttend a 10-day instructional
period that begins on Mon~- Players wjll meet in the
high school locker room at
5:30p.m.
For more information, call
992-0064 or 992-2158.

Anlhem Blue Cross ami Blue Sf11111CIIs the tr.ad11 name arcommunlty Insurance Company.
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Please see Rlpken, B:J

••:. ___ .....

•.

Please see Ohio Am, B8

Meigs Legion team picks up victories
,

.

pended last month. Athens tacked on
six more runs when play was resumed
The Meigs American Legion base- on Saturday· to win goi ng away.
ball team picked up a pair of victories · The Spartans scored five run s in the
on Monday evening. They defeated first and second innings, and added
the Athe~s Spartans )n a game that two more in the third after Meigs
was suspended on Saturday by a score scored a run in the third inning. The
of _14-9. And behmd the o ne- htt Spartans tacked on three more runs in
pitcmng of Dustin Gibbs, M eigs won , the fo.urth and six in the sixth inning.
the night cap, 5-0.
Meigs sco red th eir other run in th e
. Saturday's suspended game·~w;rs the top of the seventh.
.
Justin Guinther picked up the win
second game of the day, as Meigs and
Athens finished anoth er suspended for Athens, scattering three hits. Jesse
· contest with the Spartan s rolling to a Brunton had three singles to lead the
21-2 win. In that game, Athetts held a. -winners, Ja son McCumber added a
· 15-1 lead when the game was susBY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

home run and a si ngle and Guinther
mid Nick Dioguardi added a double
and single each.
John Stanl ey was tagged with th e
lo ss for Meigs, his defense didn't help
his cause with nine errors behind
him. Stanley, Drew Bush and Mike
Warren had the Meigs hits, all singles.
In the second game, that was finished on Monday. Meigs scored "five
· runs in each of their final two at bats
en route to a 14-9 win. Meigs scored
in the first inning, Allan Skinner and
Nick Dettwi ller both walked and
moved up o n a pair of passed bails.

J.,hn Stanley then made it a 1-0
M eigs lead 'with a sacrifice fly.
Meigs made it a 3-0 lead in th~
third innin g, Dettwiller was hit by a
pitc h and Stanley slammed a two run
home run.
In the bottom qf the third innins;
the Spartans took advantage of sloppy
Meigs fielding to go along with fivC.
walks t() ti!'_ th_r_llli!l~ at_3-l!ll..
"
Meigs rook a 4-3 lead in the fourtli
inning when Eric Runyon doubleil;
moved up on a wild pitch and scored
on an Athens error._

Ple•se ... Melp, B:J

Parkersburg Legion Post
15 blasts Mason County

M;:rbegins
· d camp

TR0409

_ _;..._ _ _ .,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;..,_ _ _ _ l '"'_

tered barrel of a bat - NL ha norary manager Tommy Lasorda.
· Derek Jeter and Magglio Ordonez
connec ted for co nsecutive home
runs for the AL.
Ichiro Suzuki, the most popular
player in Seattle these days, si ngl ed
· and stole a base as the AL cut its
deficit to 40-31-1. The Mariners got
a record eight players into the game.

BY D ,.N POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

I03 South 2nd, Mason, WV.
',.I

h I I
f h
b
h
b c
w o e ot o t em, ut t is is y tar
the most special," th e Baltimore
third baseman said.
His homer easily was the best
moment in a game that saw Roger
Clem em finally face Mike Piazza.

~ng~~~Iilie~hchu~~~e~~~~=~~thoo~
someone was later hit by the ·shat-

and won the liis wliole career," Arizona outlleldMVP awar&lt;\ Tuesday night, high- er Luis · Gonzalez said. " H e is an
lighting the Am erican League's 4-1 ambassador to the game of baseball
victory over th e. Nationals, th e AL's and to the f.1ns and to the players."
fif'th straight All-Star win.
And h e can still play a little, too.
"This one, I think I came in with · Less than· a month afte r announcmy eyes open a little wider," he said. in g he'd retire at the end of the sea"When you know it's your last so n, Ripken became the first AL
one and you know that th ere will be player to win a pair of All-Star MVP
no more, you tend to look ~round awards.
and take it in and appreciate it."
" It's j ust been a great deal of fun
What b egan as a trip down mem - · rny whole career. The All -Star
ory lane - .Ripken started at short- games, I've been able to go to a

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stop, at Alex Rodriguez's suggestion
- wound· up with him taking a
glorious trip around the bases,
cheen!d ' by Tony Gwynn· atiO every
other All-Star.
"He stepped up and did some-

MASON (AP) - Robert Gerwin
. won't even discuss what a second OhiQ
Amateur golf cham pionship woul4
mean to him.
"Today's just the first round," he said
after building a two-shot lead with a
course-record 8-under-par 64 in Tues- :
day's opening round. "There's a lot of
golf to play. I'll show up tomorrow, tee
off and do my best. I don't look that far
into the future."
The ~oft-spoken 34--year-old industrial sales rep from Cincinnati broke the
competitive course record at He~itage
Club - six hours after it had been set
by Avon Lake's Eric Herberth.
The former pro who subsequently
regained his amateur status beat a col·
lege hotshot, Randy Leen, on the first
playoff hole in the 1996 Amateur at
Miami Valley Country C lub.
This time he had the last tee time of
the day and lapped the entire 144-play,
erfiel~
,
He had never· played the course
before Sunday. Despite his score, he said
it wasn't as though he dominated the
6,850-yard layout.
"This is a hard course," Gerwin said,
"You have to hit fairways and greens. I
can't say I was more comfortable or less
comfortable. I just made some putts."
Starting on th e back nine, he birdied
the 11th hole after hitting a pitching
wedge 12 inches from the hole. He gave
that shot back with a bogey at the 12th
before birdieing the 14th hole, rolling in
a 25-foot birdie putt from the fringe at
I~ and- then- eagling- the par-5·-16th by--- ~
holing a 20-foot chip.
Birdies at the second and fifth hole set
the stage for his fast finish, birdies op the
final two holes. His downhill 12-footer
on the final hole died in the hole.
Long and accurate off the tee, Gerwin
· played the four par-S holes in 5 under.
After teeing off last, h e now is the .
very fi rst person off the t,ee in the second round.
H erberth, a 21-year-old Ohio Uni- \

YOU'RE our- Parkersburg's Josh.Headley tag&amp; out Mason County's Ryan Hodge who attempts to take third base. (Butch Cooper)

POINT PLEASANT.W.Va -· Parkersburg
Post 15 avenged an earli er loss by handing the
Mason Coitl")ry American Legion baleball
team a 16-4 defeat on Tuesday.
Mason Co un ry had beaten Post 15 earlier
in the season in an extra-inning game, bur
Parkersburg paid the Post 23-140 squad back
by heating the ball to the tune of 18 hits.
In contrast, Mason Counry (5-1 1) managed
just five base hits on the night off Parkersburg
pitchers Nick Kunze, Marc Kin1es and Joey
Griffith .
Kunze, th e. Post 15 starter, worked five and
two-thirds innings befere being ejected for
&lt;,

"

arguing balls and strikes. H e had given up just
two h its and was sitting on a 9-0 lead when
Kimes entered the game.
Kunze's opvosite number. Mason County
starter Kenny Durst, struggled in his first
appearance after the Post 23-140 team's
extended layoff. Parkersburg batters hit Durst
for nine runs (seven earned) and 13 hits in his
six innings of work to hand him the loss.
Parkersburg jumped to a 4-0 lead after ha11
a frame on singl~s by Hudkins, John Whitb,ch
and Chad Brownfield, and a double by Matt
Orn. They also added two more in the se~­
ond.
Pleasesee~As~on~ae

--··-

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentlnei!IIII_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~P:o~m:e:r~o~y,~=~~~o~:hl~o~-~~------..,

Wectneaday, July 11,2001.

'
Pomeroy, Middleport,
Ohio

'(!Cribune - Sentinel - ~e ster

CLASSIFIED

AROUND THE DIAMOND
NoU..,..I.Hgue

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Llk~
No One
Else Can!

Philadelphia
Atlanta
Florida
New York

37

w

51
48

St. Loois

43

-rgn
ClnclnnoU

In one week With us

\lr:ribune

42
33

37

.575

36

563

45
51
51
l

35
38
43
44

.489

OB

.558

3
8

.500

Pc1

36

.586

Milwaut&lt;le 6,_
San,Francloco
4, 13 inningo
•• Go....
NogamesiiCheduiOd
T.....t.y'allomo

Kansas City
Seattle

Oaldand

American 4, Ndon.ll 1

Anaheim

--,·oo.mea .
Nogamessc!leduled

Texas

Amorlconloollue

w

-York

SUnd.ly'ollomea

Boslon
Toronto
Baltimore
Tempe Boy

GB

3 112
.523 5 f/2
.466 10 t/2
.448
12
.545

•

Minnesota
Clwelond

Chicago

l
Pet
34 .605

52
51
42

36
46

.477

.566

OB
1 1/2
11

40

47

.460

27

61

307

12 112
26

w

l

Pet

OB

36

.571

5

Central

32 .632

55

49
41

36 46 .429 17 112
34 53 .391
21
Wnt
W LPctCSB
63 24 .724
44 43
506
t9
42 45 .483
21
35 52 -402
28

IHT£RLEAQUE PLAY

JEaot

.488
9
.384
18
.379 18 112

L

40
42
47
48

7 t/2

Pet
.593

W

51
Los Angeles
48
San Franclsoo 46
San Ologo
41
Colorado .
39

t

.~7
t3
.421 13 t/2

53
54

Weot

OS

Pet

33

Arizona

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

l

Centro!

Chicago

C..W. Co.nty, OH

50
49
43
36

Montreal

-

w

Detroll

SUnd.ly'IGimel

Eaot

Milwllukee

To Place
Your Ad,

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

44

.482

8, Boston 0
Toronto 9, Montreal 3
Detroit 9, Chicago Cubs 6
st. loult 4, Clevofand 3
Florida 6. Tampe Bay 1
Phlla~phia 5, Bahimore 4
Mlnnnota 7, Clnclnnltl 1
Altanta

Houston 14, KaflsaS City 5

Chicago Whhe Sox 9. Pittsburgh 2
Anaheim 11, COioraclo 3

13

Seattle 9, Los Angelas 2
Oakland 2 , Arizona 1

0

San OIBQO 1t. Telt8S 2
N.Y. Yankees 4. N.Y. Mets 1
Monday'&amp; G•mee

No games scheduled
Tueeder'a Gtme
Ameflcan 4, Natlon111 1

Wednesday'• Gemn
No games scheduled

ThUI'Sd.ly'l Gamel
Chicago WMe SO• at Chicago CUbs, 2.20
p.m.
Tampa Bay at Montreal , 7 05 p m
N V. Yankees at Florida. 7:05p.m.
Cfewtand •t CfnclnnaH, 7:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Pittsburgh, 7:05p.m.
Toronto at Philadelphia, 7 ·05 p m
Boston at NY. Mats, 7.10 p m.
Battimore at Atlanta , 7:35 p m
Minnesota at Milwaukee, 8OS p.m.
Detroit at St. Louis, 8.10 p.m.
Coloraclo et Te~eas , 8·35 p.m.
Arizona at Anaheim , 10:05 p.m.
san Franc1sco ar SeaHie, 10·05 p m
Los Angeles at Qakland , 10.05 p.m.

1\egister

Sentinel

992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-..;;5;.234::..;,._ _ _ _ _ _ _....;.....;

t(a~t-rlto.tu
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

·1"0

flw&gt;WANIID

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monda y-Friday ror Insertion
In Nt!xt Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

Display Ads

OISRiay: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday ror Sundays
All

11116

Hw&gt;WANnD

Iro

0

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales
To: Ohio Valley
blishl
82
Avenue, Galll1
OH

t
~~&lt;ME Ir ~~ l. ,.ro__~-~iiiiilio_.ll r
=

~

IIFLPWANrnD

L.r___I'ERsON.us
_____l Accepting Applications &amp; OUTPATIENT THERA· Offici Monagar united
Resumes tor PIT &amp;
PIST8· C.ndldales moot Plant Savors a nallonal con·
~

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

POLtCI!S: Ohkl V.ltly Publlehlng ....w~ lhe tight to edtt, Njlct. or..- MJ ad II...,. ..... lnort must btl rtpCWtld on the lint
llibune-SentiMI-RqltW will be rwpon~UM tor no ll'tCtN thin tht 0011 Df thl IPHI Mt! p11 d b'I1M error and only thl ftNI lnMitlon.
not be
•ny lOu or axpen .. that ,..ulb from the publlc.uon Of omlMion of M ~ll CoiiMUOiiwtllbll INidlln the tl,rll l'tllllblt edftlon. •
_,., 111Ays confld.nUIL •CIIntlnt rwt. card . . . . • All- ...... adw¥11wi1AAA . . ~
the ,......, Fair Koullng Act Ol 1NI. • Thll

• Start Your Ads With A Keywora • Include Complete
Dt!scrlptlon • Include A. Price • A'olold Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Oays

Items

\'\\IH '\(I \II\ l'-.

Word Ads

AMAZINO Utt1e or No Crod·
h Needed, Special Govern·
ment Financing, (304)7557!9!

FIT

Clentlemlsn Seeking WMe
F,emale Over 50 Years For
Walks And Friendship. Re·
pty To: 553 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. Ohl&lt;&gt; 45631 .
Apartment 403

Zoro Down. Limited time.
Call Fleetwood Home of
Proctorville. Toll Free
(88B) 58S.0187

Cl11n 2br. House raforon·
cos, deposit, No Pats.
(304)675-5182
Houoo tor rent in Wltlrloo,

MOdem 1 bedroom aponmont, (740)446·0390
Furnished Apartmenl , 3
rooms and bath,
.
52859i00 .
reterancaa. month. All Utililies Paid
9

work. Groat Boneflll lor poososa a Maaler's degree aarvatlon
organlzallon, All root oowudvorltolng
Full Time. Fax Resumea In !IOCial work, psychology, .working with nallve medici·
In 11110 nowopopor 10
loo. Attention Shawn Darst or a related field. Past expe- nal plants, seeks a highly
eubject to tne FecMrtl
FARMS
Deposit &amp;
(304)675-2899 or Drop oft rlenee in mental health sat· self motivated well organFllr Hou•lng Act ot till
Beautiful spacious single(740)f)43.2916
Second
Ave.
phone
at Dollar General Corp. ol tlng prelerred LSW, ISW, lzed Individual with protl· Which llllk" lttllogol to wldoe· $499 down. Pay·
FOR 8.u.E
(740)448·3945
Point Pleasant.
PCC preterred. The suc· clent computer skills and
actvertiM "•ny
' manta as low as $199/mo
F'llot Program, Renters '-.....:..._ _ _ _ _ __
cassful candidate will pro- communication skills, to run preter.nce, llmltlltlon or only 0 Oakwood· Gallipolis Farm House, Beautifully Needed, 304-736·7295.
Twin RlverTowers now eoWhy walt? Start meeting
ADMINISTRATOR
vlcle direct service to all the local or11ce Must be dlaerlmlnatron baled on (740)446-3093
~emodelad, 2963 Square
M
H
ceptlng
Ohio singles tonight, call toll Seeking a licensed nun~lng ages, both sexes and all able to wort~: Independently ll~· color, l'lflglon, HX Brand new for 2002 16x80 Feet. 17 Acres, Pond, InOBD..E OMES
applications far 1 BA.
free 1-800· 766·2623 ext home administrator for a
presenting problems.
have goad understanding of famlllalltltus or n.Uonal
POOl, Several Barns, 1,--·FOR--RENf---.,1 HUO subsidized apt. for .
"•NAGER- Candi· ...nlant conservation
issues &amp; ort"ln,
or any Intention to glamour
vinyl siding,
shingle
roof,
rva, Fruit Trees, Close
•
1621 ,
nurs Ing fac Illty Iocated near C•SE
,..
"""
&amp;
bath,
AJC
and
skirt·
....
elderly and dl sabled. EOH .
miio-------, Alhens The successful
date must possess Bache- horoallsm exce11en1 peamolio ony ouch • lng $29,900. Call lor PAIIIP' To Holzer.
$215,000. 2 bedroom, carpet, air, very
(304)875-6679.
ANNOUN
can·
lor's degree In social wort~: pie skills. Must have a prl1el'lnce, llmltlltlon or proval8()()..349-6411
r40)44~230
nice, Ideal for 2 people an ~111'..;.;;;;:;;:;;;.:;;.:.;;;..._,1 .
~
CEMENTS
didate must have a genuine or equ:valenr education/ ex· broad range of oftice e~epen·
dl1crlmlnaUon."
BI.JSIN5
Gallipolis,
no
pets.
SPACE
•
___
· concem and compassion
parlance. LSW preferred. ence. This person will be
Faotory
9oot
32x80
(740)446 1409
FOR lbNr
for
The successlul candidate working with &amp; laking dirac- Thle ntwapilper will not $10,000 Discount onlv
AND Bt..III.JHNGS
·
~--ooiiiilil.iiilili'-_.1
New To You Thrlf1 Shoppe the residents; have the
will work with severely men· lion from staff and manage·
knowingly accept
$1000.00 Down, Delivery,
, bedroom, central air, quiet
9 West Stimson,
Athens ablll·
tally disabled/ severely ment Please send resume advertllementa tor Nil and setup paid by Factory Ch I g ch rch building in 2
"
167 Mobile home space for rent
740·592· 1842
ty to build a strong team, be emot!onally disabled popu· to. inloC plantsavers.org
1·800~691 ·6777
gre~~~. P~asant location setting, call 74 0.992"2 · In Middleport, $125 per mo. ,
11..te whleh I• In
Quality clothing and house- fiscally responsible, a sell- &amp;all on In Jackson county
violaHon of the law. our
$40.000. 304-675·1618
2 br trailer at Herd mans Ma- ~ ·
hold Items. $1.00 bag sale starter, quality driVen and
WOC¥iland Centers, Inc., Is
rudlra are hereby .. Limited Or No Credit? Go~J·
bile Horne Park In New Ha- every Thursday. Monday results oriented. Must have a
1140
B~
Informed thet ell
emment Bank Finance Onlv Owner Retiring- Building van $300 a mon + $200.
thru Saturday 9:00-6.00.
e~ecellent communication
non·for·prof:t private mental
TRAINING
dwelling• .ctvertiHd In
At OakwOOd In Barbours· For Sale lniGalllpoNs, Ohio, dep. must have good ref. r10 HoUSEHOLD
~
skills In order to develop
heallh center serving GalUs, .
thl• newspaper 1 rw
vllle, WV 304-136-3409.
On Route 7, Has Large 304·882·2219.
GooDs
0
and retain a famlty atmos· Jackson and Meigs Counavallabla on an equal
Parking Lot Has 4 Rentals.
~--..;;:~=--,J.
GIVEAWAY
phere 10 the home. Our or· ties. Competitive Salaries
G1lllpolla Career College
opportunity bUll.
14x70 Southern Dream, Also Lots Of Floor Space, 2 BA, All Electric, No Pets, ..,
ganlzat1on or1ers admlnls· and benefits package In·
(Careers Close To Home)
free Delivery free Setup on- Good
Income.
Call $300
plus
deposit, A.ppllances Reconditioned
tra·
eluding peld vacation and
Call Todayi 74()-446·4367.
ly $9995 1-888·926·3426
(740)367- 7686
(740)367-0611
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
6-B week old black lemale tors autonomy, respect and sick time, 13 paid holidays,
1-8()1).214.()452,
r10
HOMES
,4x70, 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
bedroom. 14x70 Trailer, Refrlgr~\lors, Up To 90 Days
Shepherd puppy to give· suppo:1. Please fax your re- health, life, and disability InReg 190·05-12748.
FOR SALE
c/a, on large lot next to
Lars &amp;
Green Schoot District Call Guaranteed! We Sell New
away to good home. sume along with,salary re· suranc:e offered. Please
woods, 1 car garage, large
ACREAGE
( 7~) 379•9 26 5
Maytag Appliances, French
(740)256-6890
qulrements to (814)636·
aond Resumoe to Shorty
MlscEu.ANEous
b lldl
nd
City Maytag, 7-40-446·7795 ·
1
7481
Gordon, Manager of Human
For sale or lease lg. ranch storage u ng, ront a
BeauUful River VIew Ideal · ~--...:______.
Found calico cat, very
Aesoun;:es, Woodland Canstyle home, 4 br., 3 ba., w/ back porches, lots of trees, 2·7 acres, Walch Town Hill, For 1 Or 2 People, Refaren· For Sale: Reconditioned '
friendly, was hit by car, lost 1 Amazing Oppcrtunltyi Work tera, Inc , 3086 State Route 6HP 2 seal Go·cart. Like screened In patio porch, 2 asking $29·000 · &lt;740l 992· 12700· &lt;937)878"2760
coo, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· washers, dry~rs and roirlg·
5608·
leg free to good home 304- ~~ 101'";~~-Js~Jga'roe 160, Gallipolis, OH 45631 . now.
Asking
$500. cargarage$78,000.
tor Troller Park, 740·441- orators. Thompson! Appii675-6499
EOEI AA EMPLOYER.
7401366-6047
-16 Wide. Only $195 00 Per 2 prime lots ready for build· 0181.
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave·
www.dontworryberlch not President· Immediate Open· [lilt . "'• •~
l;Qmmedct![ lots lor '!!lie _Qr_ Month,-8.99% Fixed Interest ~ lng· on· located 1O·mlnutes
nue; (304)875·7366. -AVON! All Areas! To Buy or 1 t d
1 1 d wtth
, n~ur.u
lease, In Pt Pleasant 304· Rate W1th Air And Un- from hospital, 5 minutes! Mobile home In Racine
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304· ~.~~~s:n:~~"=~c:r and
To Do
~ 27 ·~~18 call between derplnning 1-856·828·3426 from Charials Hills. (1) 2.5 area no pets 740·992- GOOD USED APPLIAN·
875·1429
knowled~ of ooonomlc d..
pm·
acres, $20,000 and (1) 1.5 56sS.
'
· · CES Washers, dryers, re·
w1975 Nashua, 70x14,
2
$15000
take bovelopment
to lead an IT David's General Contracling FSBO 3 bedroom home In beclroom,
,
call
acres,
,
,
Ot
u • . . .. - - - - - - -.. fligerators, ranges. Skaggs ·
YARD SAUlCimarron Coach, needs trade organization serving Plumbing, electrical, paint· Gallipolis~ moslly remodeled (740)992·72705500
or 740-667· lots for $30,000. Call
~
Appliances. 76 Vine Streel, '
, GAILII'OUS
driver to transport railroad 15+ Appalachian Ohio lng, some roofing, etc Call Inside &amp; outside Call for 0481. ask for Kar1 or Karen. (740)446-4514 from 8-Spm,
FOR n-Call 740·446·7396 1·866..
works; Call tor more infor· countlee. Duties Include es· (740)256·9373 (304)633· more Information, aaklng
M·F, (740)446·3248 afler L--ooiiiililoi........,l:liiio'-,.1 818·0128
'\
matlon (740)992.0669
tabllshlng and managing lhe 1!265
$49,900
(740)441-1286 t'96214x70 Falrmonl Town· 5pm.
- - - -- - - - Garage Sale- July 13&amp;14th, Custodial position available organization. promoting the
Open house, July 14th, house, 2 bedroom, 1 large
1 and 2 bedroom apa:1· Harvest Gold Maytag
Friday &amp; Saturday, Sam· through local public heehh location of IT businesses to Georges Portable Sawmill, 12pm. 4pm, 125 Ports- bath wlth heat pump &amp; ale, 80 Acres US Rt.35 End of me:nts lumlshed and unlur· Washer and Dryer Set,
4pm, 1165 Slate Route 588. agency. Responsible lor up- the area, advocating lm- don't haul your logs to the mouth Road.
$7,500, 740-591·4043 or new Four Lane In Ha(lder· nlsheci security deposit re- $150. 2 Dryers, $50 each
Household 11ems, chlldrens keep at two locations s5.25 pro~Jed communication In mill just call304-675-1957.
740·992.()938.
son. City Water,and Mineral qulred' no pets 740_992_ Kenmore Washer, $65.
alothing, car seat, stroller,
h0
35 fl h
frastructure, recruiting and
House for sale by owner 10
right&amp;. $175,000 (304)937· 2218 '
'
Whirlpool Washer, $75 .
toys,
bike,
crafts
and
more
~~k
~u~
ben~ts.
ou~~!:~
retaining
an
IT
wor1darce,
Roofing
and
Repairs
14
yrs.
Walnut
Creek
4
miles
left
oft
2000
Clayton
14~~:70,
2
bed·
2518
or
(304)545-6491
·
Please call after 6pm.~
1
•
submit resume via maUby generating revenue, and co- experience. Fully Insured Sancl Hill Ad 2.2 acres room, 2 bath, central air, on
1 Bedroom Apartment, Re- (740)446-9066
Mutll Yard Sale Crafts, July 23, 200, to 112 Memo· ordlnatlng efforts with other Free estimates. (740}245· Cape Cod with 3 dormers, 3 rented lot In city, (740)446- camp SUes For Rent On frlgeratar, Range, AJC In· Hotpoint washer, harvest .
Dishes, and mise 906 Pme- ·rial Drive Pomeroy, Oh groups. Some travel re- 9341
car garage, 3br. lamllv 17491eave measage.
Kanawh~~ River
miles eluded, $289 Plus Deposit &amp; gotd, $Q ; W~irlpool wash5 $95; Whirlpool
~resl Drive. 7/13, 7/14,7115, 45769.
qulred Salary range $45· Will pressure wash houses, room, lg country kitchen, 28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On- from Point Pleaa&amp;nt,8 electric Aeferencf HUO Approved. er, white,
::
8-_ ?-----....,-- =-=~------ 55K commensurate with trailers, decka, boats, any· dining and laun~ry room, 2 ly $345.00 Per Month only.
(304)675·1722, (740)441-1519
dryer, HD white, $95. Ken·
d
Experienced Title Clerk qualifications, Includes full thing. Call Ron at (740)446· 112 baths, front porch, back 6 99% Flxod lntereot Rate, (304) 675 4144 Alt 5
more dryer, s ; Whirl"""'
S
95
Yard ale Fnday
an 5atur· Wanled. Send Resume to. benehl package. To be con· 0151 or (740)44 t-4
·
er pm. 2 bedroom basement apart·
""236 . 11 deck, and pallo, qualily 1-886-92a.3426
13 14
day July
• · from
CLA 526. r:Jo Gallipolis Dal- sidered call Career Connec· no answer leave measanao. throughout. Must see to ap·
ment, $350, no pets, no Refrigerator,
avocado,
1
8.00am to 5:00pm at 02 ly Tribune, 825 Third A•o., tiona. (740)594·4941, M·F.
•
•· preciate. $175,000. phona Final Oayo, Nationwide In·
CHEAPASDIRTf
smoking, Hud approved, $150; Whirlpool electric
[)'\bble Dnve
Galllpolla. OH 45631 .
9·5. EOEI AA
(304)675-4225
ventory
Reduction! Molgo Co,· One 9.968ac Harrloonvllle
area, ~~';:.·,~~':;~~·tUS&lt;Jit&lt;':.~~:
4
PoMEROYAHDVS~. Gel your own FREE slta on Molhora and olhars eam 10
House lor sale or renl, Porn- (304)736-3409
Tract ONLY $13,200.
(740)742' 3033·
Appllancee, 78 VIne Street.
"'~. lho Internet lrom
SSOO+ PfT, $4000 FIT
BUSINE'!li
eroy, Ohio, complelely re· Model year clear out . only Jackaon Co.- Near Rio 5 room downstairs apart· (740)446-7398
FloanclaiCircull.com
Working
from
home.
OPfoRruNrrv
rnodelod, (740)666-6783
2 olnglewidelleft, priced to Grande, One Sac Tract mont also small trailer :.:...C2_.c:_c_::.:,..__ ____:
gol 2br. 2ba wllh AIC &amp; $12,320. Don't delay! Carl close to downtown Gallipolis Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Basement sale, Rutland Tell others about your olte, (304)738-0162.
NOTICE I
Must sell Do•ter,-prtvato ... aldrtlng call lor pre-approval Nowl
&amp;grocery. (740)446-1156 Chapel Road , Porter, Oh1o.
Church ol God , Fnday July save them money. and earn ---..,--,-,-:-:::$100 t $300 1
Needed Expert od c
I
elude setting on hill top 1·600·349-64 11
Call us today lor FIIEE
Free Estimates. 90 Days
13th. 9-4
live c~stomer ~r e~e~:; 1 Sett·ng
MAPS
Apartment for rent, 1 Br, Same As Cash, Financing
1 an~Ftnia~:g OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· road, 3 bedroom, fireplace,
or
lNG CO. recommends that new deck, 2 otory, out build· Must Sell 1994 Liberty Anthony Lind Co. Ltd.
$225 Mo. plus dopos~ and Available. VIsa And Master·
Large mo'llng sale. Fnday, you attract It's that simple Sectional Housing. Send you clo business with people lng In back, Wildlife, $42,000 14x70, 3 badroom/1 bath, 1-800-213-8388.
utilities, Third St, RaCine
card,
1-877-830·9162
7113, l~rst place. Coolville and It only takes a minute to Pricing informallon and OX· you know and NOT to send II (740)742 2216
I
~I
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(740)446444
Ad Reedsville; little b:t of sign up No e~epenae what parlance to: Southern money through the mail until rm,
·
good cond lion. wall Haro d, www.e c 1 .com
BEAUnFUL
APART· !:.:::!_:,:::.:-7.::
=-,---,-e'l!erylhlng
so ever, Just lime you In· Homes, PO Box 629, Jack- you have investigated the Newer 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, 740"385-4367
Four Cemetery Lott at Ohio MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
Main Street Furniture
son, OH 45640
offering
outbuilding, 3 acres, counlry New 14 Hwide $499. down Valley Memory Garden&amp;. CES AT JACKSON ES·
(304)675-1422
7114 vesll
· nn:::l'i~\',;,'~:f"''~re':.;.1,~
WE ARE
HUing. (740)3711-2134
only $199. per mon. call Section One· Loll 150 0 In TATES, 5~ Westwood Drl•e
515 Main Slreet, Point
8Movlng
4 sale, dSal
am- pm, first nvawey to
"'
Start Your Business To-'
now 1·800-691-6n7.
Garden
of
Chrlatua. from $297 to $383. Walk lo
Pleasant
left at lop of Chesler hill on Help wanted caring lor lhe
EXPANDING OUR
day... Prime Shopping Cen· Newly constructed, single
(740)256-6061
shop &amp; movies. Call 740·
SA 248; lumiture. washer, elderty, Darst Group Home,
ADVERnSINQ
tar Space Available At Af· story 1600 sq. foot home. New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom
446·2568. Equal Housing
New &amp; Used Furniture
dryer. Slovo. 8/c, toys, now paying minimum wage,
SALES STAFF
fordable Rate. Spring Valley 10 minutes from hospital, 5 Only 519,850. Free Delivery Looking To Buy A New Opportunity.
New 2 Piece Livlngroom
c::lo::i:.:he::s::_.m:;;::
lsc:;__ _-.,-- new shiHs. 7am-3pm, 7am· Are you a person that on· Plaza Colt 740.446-o 1o1. minutes from Chart~lsl:fHio, &amp; Sot Up.1 ·888·928-2426 Home? Doni Have Land? .::!:~=:!:...----- Suites. s399. Buy, Sell,
1ard 5pm. 3pm·11pm, tlpm· joys mooting people? Are
'
located on a beautiful, prJ·
.We Oolll Huny Only 10 loll Beautlfu~ Reconlly Reno· Trade
Mulh·lamily, llrst lime
7am. can 740•992·5023.
you seff motivated and on· Vending 1000% profit mar· vate 1·112 aero lot. 3 bad· New 16 H. wide $499 per LeH, 304-736·7295.
valed 2,000 Square Fool, 3 ~~-------,
sale. 10-4, July 12,13,14,
joy baing creative? Are you
g!n.
room, 2·112 baths, big ~tch· rnon. only $270. per mon.
Badroom Plus Storag_e,
1\4 mile on Hysell
ANnQUF.S
175Run ~d., Hetp Wanted person to as· ~c:x;H&lt;ing for-a career with a very easy Must sen QUick en W/Cu&amp;tOi'ii oak ~blrtetf call now 1·800-e91-&amp;777.- -L:.ot• for sale In Jackson New Rlt-clien, -$6007 Month,
corner of Twp.
· some- stat with milking , feeding lang established and 1-80Q-t80.8948124Hrl. from Smith's Cabinets, DR,
County E~Jans ·Dale farms, Downtown Galllpofia, Con· ~~-------~
thlog for everyone
calves and general Iarm growing company? Are you
LA w/gas log II replace, Iron! New 2001 Fleetwood only 4 mi. from Ripley at 177, all tact Kelty (740)'148--9961
·
Thurs. &amp; Fridau, Rock·· work on larger dairy. Must Interested In a poSition that
~ pon;:h &amp; 2·112 car garage. S146·46 per month. Call utll. avajl,able, starting at
Buy or sell Riverine Ant•··
spring• Ad King !e&amp;~dence ba self mouvated Hou~ng offers Insurance, 401 -K plan
SERVIOX
Quality COI')structlon· an the Karena 740·385-4367.
$17,900. call for more Info. Beech Sti, Mlddlepon, 2 quos, 1124 Easl Main on
table &amp; ' chairs, tool s: available for small fa mily. and paid vacal1on time? -· way. Immediate possession. New bank repo- $499 down 304-937-3100 or 304-545- bedroom . urnis~ed apart· SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
clolhes, lots of misc.
Respond with 3 references Are you a person that has
Won't last long $139,000. Easy lerms, free delivery &amp; .:;88;.:38;.:;_.- , - - - - - - mant, utll:lies PBid, deposit 992·2526. Russ Moore,
to Box EB1Q 200 Malij sales experience? II so It
TURNED DOWN ON 1 Call -(740)446-4514 from 8· set-up. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, "The Woodo" one of lhe ::2:~· no pets, 740' owner.
. Yard Sale. Friday. 13th, Street PI Pleasant. wv will be benoficiallf not, We ~~! ~~~~:w. ~~~\ 5pm, M·F, or (740)446-3248 (740)446-3563
newesl l)allla County,
MlSCE!J.ANEOUS
your lucky day, 1t7 Unton 25550
will train Far lnterv:ew con·
-888·5S2after
5pm.
Green
Township
SubdivlChristy's
Family
Uvlng,
"""'n,.,._. ...., .m
1
3345
0
Ave., Pomeroy Dam-?
slderatlon send your re·
New double wide 3 br. 2 ba slon. o4 and 5 acre Iota, 33140 New Lima Ad, Rut· L~-..:"~=::;,u::~~·~~:il.,.l.
Homeworkers
Needed
$635
sume
with
a cover letter tell·
Nice
3
bedroom
home, New $998.00 down only $295. priced In lhe 30's. {740)245- land, Ohio, 740·742·7403
'
.
..n
Weekly , Proc,esslng Mall. ing us .. ~Y you are tho ·~rHa~Jen, new appltancea, per mon call now 1-•~~
.
~ucn~
~w
""
•v
·· - - - -~
9033 or (7~)441·7078
Apartment,
home and storetrailer $1,000.
BACK
2 Ton
AI•
Easy! No
Experience
son
we
n86d
to·
large
backyard,
priced
lo
:6::91:;-6::m:..:..:.:...
renlala.
Commercial
Condilloner,
2
Ton
Coil, 1
1
52
1
740
2
7
5
88
99
96
·----~iiiiioso,.t 8726
Needed. ~all 24'600-6 - Charles Govoy, Publisher ;;p;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;.,;;~ :::::e·~&lt;.:.:.:.cl=.: .'.=.: .:..........,- New Double Wide. $195
fronts available lor lease Line Sot, Installed. $2.295:
R:ck Pearson AuctiOn
. Com·
Ed. 20
H'l
OhloValleyPubllshlng
{The Daily Tribuna)
u
~
-..POMEROY, Homo of tho Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2
-.$1,000 Back, $1295 Net
pany, lull time auctioneer.
eusT•RSEARCH'"
825 Third Ave '
FOR SAl.E
late Gerald Shuster, 1643 Bath Free Delivery &amp; Sel·
.hd
Price Free Estimates. Call
·~ "2001 "
Ll nco In Heights·. 3 bod • up. 1-888-928-3428
Furn:s e · 2 &amp;c 3 Room For Ouotes On Other Sizes
. complete ar.uct:on, service
Ga,lpoiiS, Oh'IO 456
, 31
r10
.._ _
A
Lie sed 00 Oh &amp; W
ooms 1 1/2 baths L shapfi\.JU!II'.lti
~
partmenta,
lean, No If You Don't Call Us•
. Vir~l~la ~· 77~o 5765 ~~ Singers, Bands &amp; Vocal
2 Bedroom, t Balh, $750 ~ llvl;,groorn, larg8 ~ulp- Only 1 left . lot model clear·
FOR ROO'
Peta, No Smoking, Referen. We Both Losel Mobile
'
· ·
Groups, All Styleal Ages.
.
ctownpayment. No Po:nta or pod ki1chenldinfng area, ruN ance- over 2000 square "--..;iiiiisOiiiiiiioo_,.. en &amp; Deposit Required. Homes Our SnAI'iality 1·
304·n3·5447 ·
Major Record Label Seek· tant
Looking lor an offiCO asafa- c~lng. Easy ~arms, ~--.
If
.
Utlliti
F I hod
••v•
•
M t ha P ... nd ...,.
''
....,..., basement, carport, wrap· 3br
teet·huge
room•
beaut ul 1 .3 Bedroomo For-~--....~
es
urns . 740·A46-6308 1-800·29,.
m
I'"~~ Now ArtiSie. Corning
· us ve ayr~ a tact David HI00-333-6910
2 12 balh
w1 h
~- (740'""1519
. nAN'IY.O
'To
fiunllnglon.
WV comi)UtO
. ~ r sl&lt;llls, and oHice
around deck , chain-link
. 1
t retrest. Homoo From 51 99/Mo., 4.,.
,_.,-009
-.:..:..:~:--:-----:----::--:'10 BUY
- ""
~~
p •···•
fenced aroaa, lot edondo
Save big SSS.
now "-··y,
c12 Precious Moment Dolls
:
(9o1 )427-2639
or 0 ...,...nence. ay utii!MN on 28x60, 3BR, 2-bath, full
Un
d tallCall, 800""'""• 30 ears at 8.S%
~
(901)427-9514
. &gt;rperlence. (740)368·9515 basement, 2 acres, bam, fcolromn Ourincovo.lnSH3a71g,500hll.loChar: (1134o9r'!..mo,,re a a APR. For Listings, 81)0.319· Graciouo living. 1 and 2
Ab In T Colla US
~
3323 Ext. 1709. .
bedroom apartment&amp; at VII- (collectables); Soars 35 m"!
so t~le op
r
· ·
The Southam Local Schoof country setting, private, lena Hoeflich, (740)992·
- - - - - - - - - lage Manor and Riverside camera wllh 3 zoom lenses
Sllvo•, Gold Co1na, Proof· McCiuro'o Rootsuranl now DIOirlct hu an opening lor 8 near Rio Grande. (740)245· 2155, daytime, (740)992· Only 1· New DW ropo- $0 2 bedroom homo, 5 minute Apertrnento In Mlddlepon. &amp; llaoh wlloather case.
oets. Diamonds. Gold hiring all 3 IOCatlono, lull or ,High School Spenioh tooch- 5678
5292 evening.
down to quaUfltd buyoro on- from HMC, S420, wator in· From
8-$~. Call 740- (740)669·0414 a~ytlme
Ringo, U.S. Currency,·
pert•tlme pick up appllca· or for tho 2001-2002 echool 3 Bedroom on Route 2.
lly 0 Cla~· Galllpollo, cludod, R""ranctl Dopotit, 892·5064. Equal Houolng
leave moasage.
1
~~·~· ~~~ s:1~ ·po ~~ ~ tlon alloeatlon9 &amp;30brlng bac&amp;k year: All appllcanto moot (304)675-5332
• MOBn.E.,J.f~ (740)446no petl, (740)44H11"'OpponunHiea.
,
E1octrlc range, excellent
v u '
'
between
: em
poa~au the proper cenifJca·
FOR i:JIU..ol!;
Private Property And New
condition,
$75
firm:
44e·2842.
10:00om, Monday thru Sot· "on and complete 1 back· 741 Contonary Road, 38R. ~
Doubllwldl, Ona Pa•mont. 2 bidroom hoWe, 2 bethl,
(740)992 354
I \ 11'1 11\ \II \ I
2
"
'
•·- p1ua ~
•- Now TakingBod
"'Applloatlono•
·
•
urday
ground
chock upon ompiO)'· 2 Batll, Family Room wllh
·IIZZUN·
(304)731H285
· 4 )'Mra okl • ....,
.., 1 IH II I '-8
lln No ••P mont. Phone (740) 840· Firoplact, Huge 2 Oar Go• Hot -.mmor dNio
p
p
lloalt, l\ll petl, no ltnOicfng, !!..W
~.!.~~."'
TOW
.~~
For
lilt
bY.
owner:
2.
Mtdl01 I Bl~
_ 11•
Ingle aront rogram, Hod - - ' • Hanflonvlllti ·~ 11 .....,,..,_,~
·ift~;;.,;;;;.,;;;;....-_,....., notdtd. FT Dill entry· 2880 for further Information. •a~. (740)446·1 155
~"
Special Financing Available, oru, (7.C0)7ofa·303S.
Watar Bowa~, Ttaoh opacoo, 2 vau t, 1 comp. Vat
110
tor 1ooa1 dootOII Fun train- FilUM und lnqulrl111o Mr.
Heat pump .or central air (3o4)1'!s-7181
$360/Mo 1~ ' mark1r; 1t M•lgl Memory
1
lng &amp; certlllcatlon provldtd, t:t.Lo;=rns~~j Brtof'lk LraRnc.".. t ull.~hoome,~t, with lht pun:hau of 111101 :::::.::.:..:::.:..:.::.:..._____ 3 bedraom lltlnttloll_l,. _
li.,
·
~~rdanowl. Vai uo approx.
11 ..11 1Of 13.500
~
Computor roqulrod 1-888·
' ' rn, ~t I , 2 uor In IIOCk modiOli
Unbofiovlblol now 18 "'"I - -· ,.,.,.,_ .... iiWrlhouiO Apart· ••.
202 6617 xV73 wwwoul Sohoola, Box 176, Roolno, garage, large roa1 dock,
·WHIRl·
3 br, MH. - · Ult. 1 roqurod, dapollt ~ltta, monto, Va1 8pocloua, a CU/1, Lollaro lnprimoloC8'
lmmodlals opening for Por·
•
. • Ohio 45771 . SLSO lo an pole barn, 5 flalacr11, Gal· Col "-"II Homo1 1521111
th n1
0 ~--"
~ •·F~ c• tlon Information Cllll Marn .
manonl PIT RN for Pltysl· oourutbllllng.not
Equal Opportunity 'Employ. lipollo City Schoololn Graon US eo ;;o' ~aol, Athono, :::\.. ~Jo ~.
no Pili, 74().99114 .,,., ~· Fui;"~rpo71d1, ry Gardena uk for Lisa, 1',;
clano Olflce. Competlllve Modlool Billing No oxp. :::".;.·===-~==:- Twp. mlnuteo lo Qoillpollo, Qh.4570t
- · Orlvt alinto uvo a
!IPrtl.
MUJI POOf &amp; Boby Pool, p • on
Tut/Thura. Phono &gt;
lalary &amp; Bontfltl Stnd R• nttdtd. FT!PT 0111 ontry -:
ond Holzor Hoapltal. Cora
·PHONI·
3. 11tdroom Hauoe in ly!a• 110, Ifill U8811wt0. No Ptta1 (111111)441-5714.
oumoo to JR09 200 Main lor local docloro. Full ~aln· U~OENTLY
NEEDED· Mil l Road (740)245·5887
(740)582·1872
CUM, OhiO, 14101 lolo~lh Lela l'llilloOUrtty DttJoali
,
Slrut, Pt. Pl.
lng &amp; certification provldod. pluma donora, tam 145 to
Wt nood ulld llng'-1 HUD Approvod {il04)l 71. Rl!llllrtd, Day.: ,.C0·44e· ONbb 1 Plono• Tuning &amp;
Computer roqulrad 1488· NO for 2 or 3 hours Wllkly. Country living. OW on 5 ===::-:-=:-::,.-::~ Trade now for thl honit Of SUI or (74a)HI..I 1I ..._11 I'JIItlnQI: ,4().367, lltpalrs. Probloma? Notd .
Tomalo pioktrl notdotl, 2V2·8817 xt73 www.out· Call Stra·Tac, 740·582· woodtd ICrtl. 12500 l -io Homt Loll for u le. your drtlllll, Cell· lor
woekandl only
0101 7.CO 4410101
Tuned! Call Tht Plano Or.
llob Morrlo. 1740)247·3421 . ooun:t)lflllng.nlt
8851 .
mova ln. (740)4C(!·3870
1bll FNt (668)555·0157
approval 1-100-348·141 .
•
·
740 448 4125
.

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sore back.
'
Monarchs 78, Comets 76, 20T :
SACRAMENTO, Ca lif. (AP) -':-·
Yolanda Griffith had 29 points and 15
rebounds, and Lady Hardman scored her.
only points on a driving layup with 16.3
seconds left in the second overtime :is ·
Sacramento beat Housto n .
: Kedra Holland-Corn scored 12 poini. ·
for
the Monarchs
(1 1-7). Ttch4.
Penicheiro added 1 1 points and nine
assists, and Kara Wolters finished :with 1P.
points.
•
Hous1on 's T ina Thompson had 26
points and 10 rebounds. She became thf
fifth WNBA player to score 2,000 career
points.
J aneth Arcai n had 20 points, nine'
rebounds and six assists for H o usto n.
Tiffani Johnson added 1 4 points, and
Amanda Lassiter fini sh ed with eiglit
points and 13 rebounds .
·

Casey concerned about payroll dumping

j

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10) .
Edwards htt two free throws with 2:57
left, capping Seattle's 13-3 run that tied
the score at 48.
Rockers rookie Penny Taylor scored
tqree points, made two steals and had one
rebound and one assist in a 90-second
span early in the second half as Cleveland
opened a 41-29 lead.
•
Jamie R edd then hit consecutive 3pointers, her only points of the game, to
spark Seattle's comeback.
Jones, averaging 14 .3 points, left the
team Monday because of a family emergency in Montgomery, Ala. Melvin, averaging 11.4 points, was placed on the
injured list before Tuesday's game. Melvin
fractured her right orbital bone Sunday
during a 63-53 win in Houston . She is
expected to be sidelined 2-to-3 weeks .
Cleveland also waived forward Vicki
Hall, who averaged 4 .6 points before
gomg on the injured list July 1 with a

.' '

•

I

Pokey Reese, who have rejected
long-term co,n tract proposals,
have come up in ttade talks.
John Allen, the Reds' chief
operating officer, was asked
Monday whether the team will
promote mmor-league slugger
Adam .Dunn. Allen said the
Reds have earmarked $20 mtl~
lion m salary for the outfield.
That could ~ean that a player
would have .. to leave before
Dunn arrives.
Casey said he doesn 't think
the team should be dismantled.
'' I really think the team that ·
we have can be a winning club

Meigs

second home run of the contest for the
win .
War ren picked up the win in relief of
Page 81
Josh Lynch. The two gave up eight hits,
walked 13 and strike out nine. Stanley
But Athens scored thre e runs in each has three hits with a double and the
of the fifth and sixth innings to take a two home runs, Davis added a pair of
9-4· lead . But Metgs came back with singles, Runyon, Skinner, Dettwiller all
four runs in the seventh inning to tie added doubles, Brandon Hill and Warthe game at 9-all. Stanley doubled and ren added singles.
Warren followed with a single. Jeff
In the second game, Dustin Gtbbs
Brown walked and Andy Davis drew a fired a one hitter, allowing only a
base on balls. A fielders choice, a walk check-swing single to right off the bat
:}. ·
to Alex Shuler , an error, another walk of Allman in the sixth inning. Gibbs
.:
and a single by Stanley made it a new struck out 12 in the game, including
ball game.
two batters three times each.
Meigs closed out the scoring in the
Meigs scored a pair of runs tn the
top of the ninth inning. A walk. three first inning to take a 2-0 lead. Skinner
. errors, to 'go along with a Dettwiller reached on an error, Warren singled
·• .. ·single, a Skinner double and Stanley's and both runners moved up on a

•

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1998 Jeep Wrangler, Sa. -~
hara Package, Hard Top
L•--oiFORiiiiiiiii-:f.nEiiiiiioso.-l1 and SOH Top, 6 cyl. , 5
speed lrans., PosJ Tree
AKC Lab pups. Born Rear-End, Air Conditioning,
5128/01 . M&amp;F, Chocolate, 'flit Wheel, Cruise Control,
$300, Black, $250. lsi shotl AM·FM Cassetta. Rear Wlp&amp;wormed. (740)256-6463 or and Defroster. 24,000
- - - - - - - - miles. Call (740)245·9904
AKC registered Pekingese
·
puppies, 7 w&lt;s. old, llrat 1996 White Jeep Wrangler,
shote &amp; wormed, (740)843· SoH Top- 5 Speed, 43,000
1005
miles, 5 d1sc co c~r.
.:..:.:::._______ running boards, clean,
AKC Registered Yellow Lab $13,000. (740)367.()3~3
Pups Bwks old, 1st shots &amp;
wormed Parents on Pram- 98 Toyota 4x4, one owner,
laos $250. 675·0341 leave 22,000 miles. (740)992·
message
2356 after 4pm.

"

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Ripken ·
from Page

I

phone Bag

1 Year Warran-

ty Per1ect' Jar Chun;:h or

singing
Group.
Llet
$t749.95. Special $995.00
675-7279or875-7472

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Sweet Cor~. Boughman
Farm, Whole111o Only In
Iota of SO doran or mora
(740)258-e535
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oar. Now llrea All Around,

Pluna
Good.
$4500.
(740)379-2860
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, .•ooch1
Ouclckak &amp; G~2intll50 13
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with a few more pieces," the
Reds' first baseman said. "What
you put into your club is what
you get out of tt."
Cmcinnati h ad a franclllse~ ,
worst .379 winning percentage
(33-54) going into the All~Star
break. Thetr record at home has
been especially dismal.
They are 1 1-31 at Cinergy
Field, where they have been
booed regularly. Their record at
Cinergy is the worst home mark
by a team since 1969, when the
expansion Montreal Expos started the-same-way. -

p assed b all. Stanley then laced a two
run single .
In the third mning , Warren reac hed
on a error and Brown and Dettwiller
both h ad back-to-back singles to make
it a 3~0 game. Metgs closed out the
sc oring in the fifth irlning, Hill tripled
and scored on a sacrifice fly off the bat
of Stanley. Brown then doubled, moved
up on a passed ball and scored on a
Dettwiller double.
.
Gibbs picked up the win, D ettwiller
led Metgs with a double and a single,
Brown added two singles, Hill a tnple;.
and Warren and Stanley each a single.:
McLead was tagged "'·ith the lo ss.
Meigs will host Lancaster on
Wednesday at Meigs High School.

I

wow!'" Gwynn said. ':There's reall¥ only
a couple of people tn thts game_·who
.. ,
could do that.
"It happened on his night."
81 ~
Later, the game was stopped as players
But it was Ripken's night.
•
joined commissioner Bud Selig in a six~
At 40, Ripken supplanted Stan Musial minute ceremony before the sixth
as the oldest player to homer in an Allinning to say goodbye to Ripken and
G•• bill. from Th. Star game. Ripken 's other All-Star Gwynn. Video tributes were shown on
En • r g Y
C 0 • homer came in !'991, when he was scoreboard, which flashed, " Thanks Cal
opera11ve-Natlonal
MVP.
and Tony."
Gae can be ""id at
·
,...
After stepping out to acl$:nowledge a
"It's been a great run," Rip k en told ·
the . People• Bank
.
and The . Home standing ovation, Rip ken hit Chan Ho the fans .
Nallonal hnk.
Park's first pitch of the third innlrtg over
'IWo years ag~. in liaseball's last All ~Star
the left- field fence.
lovefest , Ripken and Gwynn supported
2000 400Ex 4- wheeler 1116
"I swung and made good contact and Ted Williams when he threw the first
$1200., in extras Uke new
IID.I' WAN'IlD
k
d I
$4500 fi"'1 304·875-7423
the ball went out of the ballpar an
ball at Fenway Park .
or 304-675-V511 .
r
felt like I was flying around the bases,"
A fittmg farewell for Ripken. Many
jBoATS&amp;MoroRsl
Ripken .said.
. credit him for saving baseball after a
FOR SALE
.
Gwynn, who will retire with Ripken strike wiped out the 1994 World Series,
1977 Tn·Haul 155 HP In
after this season, applauded from the punctuated by him breaking Lou
Boord Motor. $2000 OBO.
opposing dugout . NL pitcher Curt Gehrig's consecutive games record the
(740)446-9021
•
Schilling caught the moment on his
next season.
::...:.::....:..:...:.:_____ 1
1968 ~- Marathon Cabin
(
camcorder and NL third baseman ChipHis brown hair now gray, Ripken
CruiMrw/Oualaxlo, gslvan·
1 d · h ' g1
R ' '
lzod troller. 4.3 liter anglnt
per Jones c appe mto IS ave as 1p- played
h\s..18th All-Star
and finhaa toilet, oink, 2 burner
ken rounded the bag that had been
ished up wat~hing, from the dugout with
ot&lt;wa, rtt. couch and ieble.
.. ... .a.
d . h h. N 8
olaeflll 4, marlne radio and
wutR
stampe Wit
11
o. .
his 7-year- old son, Ryan .
Lorraine. low hra. great
"It's an amazing moment," Park said .
Ripken's first All-Star game came in
4 000
• · (304)8B2·
I"'
"It was the first pitch ever in an All- Star
1983, when Johnny Bench.and CarlYaS..
game for me and probably the last home trzemski played for the last time .
1998 1a- 112• Stratoa,
160HP Evlnrucfe with now
fi M R ' k "
•
run or r. tp en. .
.
•
•
Gwynn, added as aR honorary mem2001 Pow11111t&gt;ld, S1 5,ooo.
(740)256-!882
Ever humble, R1pken had to · be ber, did not get to hit . The eight-time
coaxed out of the dugout by the sellout NL batting champion from San Diego
1-811-974-JOBS
"
· ld fior a said he was more than content to follow
CLEAN HOUSE
crowd of 4 7 ,364 at Saseco Fte
COG
curtain call.
the festivities from the dugout .
WITH THE
m~~~~gement,
" When he . hit that ball. ( said, 'Oh,
Seattle's Freddy Garcia was the win -

Blrds·hand raised Quakers 98 Toyota Tacoma, 4x4, 5
greens and blues also con- speed, o4 cylinder, air, alui'IVures (304)675·4787
num wheels, 49,000 miles,
.
good condition, asking
~eacocks, Male/ Female' $12,000. (740)'4'46'11696
iPalr, $100, (740)37~2111 Hunter Spee1a18 79 Ram'
lO
M1.51CAL
charger4x4 $1000. OBO
INsniUMENrS • oeo
66 Aorostar
5 Sp. S1500·
(304)675-n82
6 Channel PA aystam. 1740
Brand Now·80 watts, 6 1
MIYfORCVOBi
channel Ml•lng head, 2 10'
Speaker Cablnoll, 2 speak·
Cords 2 Speaker stands 1996 Harley Davidson
~r otand beg, 6 Mk:rophone Sponster 663, loaded, very
Stands, 5 Low z Micro· clean, s,ooo miles on It, call
phones, 6 M1crophono C.· belween
8 &amp; 8pm,
740)949·2375·
bles,
6
M~rophone
Hokle~
&lt;
6 W:ndscreena, 1 Mic~-

!

during the season's second half.
Plagued with injuries, pitch- .
ing problems and inconsistency,
the Reds ended the season's first
half in last place in the National
League's Central Division, raising the prospect of payroll cuts.
The Reds had the secondbiggest payroll in the National
League in 1995, trailing only
Atlanta. They retrenched in the
next few years, slipmg ,to the
bottom third of the league in
payroll while shedding highpriced starters.
·
The ·names of outfielder
Dmitri Young . and shortstop

from

·f

r

CINCINNATI (AP)- Sean
Casey is hoping that Cincinnati's
management won't reshuf!le the
roster and start dumping highsalaried players just because the
Reds are in last place at the AllStar break.
"I don't know what the Reds
are going to do. as far as payroll
goes;• said Casey, the Reds' lone
representative Tuesday at the AllStar Game in Seattle. " It would
be hard to understand that we
put this team together and now
it's going to )&gt;e dismantled."
~ - -'l"he-Reds declined comment
Tuesday"bn what they, might do

fteKible
hoUrs full/Mrf
time hUrry!
PoSifiODS
filling quickly!

uc

CLASSIFIEDSI

'·

in

game

ning pitche r and teammate Kazuhiro
Sasaki completed the three ~ hitter and
got the save. Park took the loss.
Jeter, part of the new bre ed of s hort~
stops who have earned - o n Ripke~'s.
legacy, and Ordonez homered off Jon•
Lieber in the sixth.
Right
before
th e
first pitch,
Rodriguez surprised Rtpke n by suggestmg they switch positions for the first
inning. Rodriguez had to playfully shove
Ripken toward a spot he had not played
since Sept. 1, 1997 .
"\
,
"that started with A- R od," AL man-'
ager Joe Torre said. " H e came up With.
this tdea and said, 'What do you think?'
And I satd, 'I think it's d ynamite."'
Said Rip ken: "It was g reat seein g th e
game from shortstop agam ."
In the second inn m g . C lemens and
Piazza faced each other for the first ttme'
sin ce last season's confrontations . Piazza
!'lissed the All-Star game after b eing
b eaned by Clemens, then had the Rocket throw the jagged barrel of a broken
bat in his direc tion in the Subway Series .
With Clemens keeping the b all awaY.,
Piazza flied out.
Then in the sixth, Vladimir Guerrero's
bat shattered and flew toward the thirdbase coaching box, where it hit Lasorda
in the left hip. Lasorda tumbled over
backward, but came up smiling. Bonds
ran out and tried to put :i chest protector on the form.er Los Angeles manager.

'•

�•

•
Wednesday, July 11, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P!ige B 4 • The Dally Sentl.n el

Wednesday, July 11,2001 .

The Daily Sentinel ~ Pa9!.. B

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

Crossword Puzzle

PHII.I,IP
~

"PRO-CLEAN"
The One Man Corporation
Residential Pressure Washing, Single Wldes,
Double Wldes. Boat's Decks, RV's, and
camper's, swimming pools and farm-equipmentl've pressure washed things from filling station
parking lots, RV's and homes to a corporate
Lear-Jet.
I also- Degrea~e automobile and truck motor's
as well as diesel and industrial equipment

engines, such as bulldozer's, backhoes; and
endloauers. 111 can help you call me after 5:00.
Jlml Scott 992·3002 ·
or email at: ol)emancorporation@frognet.net

SMITH'S

BISSELL
BUILDERS INC.

.JI
•

WICK'S

Sldlns ·New Garases
• Rtpla&lt;tmenl
Wlodows • Room
AddU Ions • Roonng
COMMEaGAl and RBIDENIIAl

\\'nt

Roc ky R. Hupp, Ag e nt
Bo x 189
Middleport. Ohio 4 5760

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

•

/4, 10 I

G~

Local 843-5264

Hauling·· Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldo•er Services

Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement , .
~~nsion &amp; 40lK Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

!

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Faclory Aulhorized
Case-IH Parts
. Dealers
,\ooo st Rf. 7 south
Coolville, OH 45723

•

J • 1 4

Free Estimates

949·1405
591·5011

(740) 992-3470

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Racine. Ohio 45771

SPECIAL FINANCE DEPARTMENT
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
'We Can Help"ll
•

740·985·3948
CDNCRETf/BLOCl(/BRICK

Advertise
in this space
for $25 per
month .

RIVERSIDE
STORAGE ·

JIM'S

10' X 10' 530.00
10' X..20' 550.00

• Footen, Walls, Steps

Flat Work,

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

Replacements," Walks

Ask For Mike Hindle

Crele Free Eslimates

and Drives ; Slendl

'

1·800-272·5179 or 446-9800

Serving Ohio and w.v. · Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

Wf'lt

a•

Pa11

\]
•: •

TOPSOIL
Dl RT

I'?'IETAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

il.

(under PomeroyMason Bridge)

(740)'992·5072

Your !light to Know, Delinrcd Right lo Your llnur.

SHERIFF'S SALE
letit end at 277.53
REAL ESTATE
lee') lor e total
CASE NUMBER .
dlatance ol . 427.53
OOCV033
leel to e aurvey nail
LASALLE NATIONAL al the northwut
BANK, AS TRUSTEE corner of a 1.03 acre
UNDER THE
tract; thence leaving
POOLING AND
the highway north 81
SERVICING
deg. 21" eut (pealing
AGREEMENT DATED an Iron pin at 19.18
8-1-1111, SERIES 1999- teet en Iron pin at
2 PLAINTIFF VS.
150.00 feet) for 1 total
CRAGE BROWN, et al dlatance of 325.00
DEFENDANTS
feet to. a point In the
COURT OF COMMON middle of the creek;
PLEAS
lhance along the
, MEIGS COUNTY,
middle .of the creak
. •
OHIO
oouth 0 deg . 00'40"
, In pureuance of an eaol 150.01 feet to e
Order of Sale to me point; thence aoulh
dJ.r actad from aald 81 dag.. 21 'waat
Court In lhe above (paaalng an Iron pin
- - - -entitled action; I· will- ·at·130;00·feet, an Iron
. itxpo1e to oale at pin at 243.33 feet) for
public auclion at the a total dlotance of
Courthouoe
on 280.00 fill to a
Auguat 21, 2001 11 Iurvey nail In the
10:00 a.m. of oald centerline of the
clay, the following highway; thence
dll!acrl- rea( eatalll: along the cente.rllne
l!ltualed of Melga, of the hlghwa~ north
In the Stat~ of Ohio, 17 deg. 16' weat
ond In the Town1hlp 150.00 feat to the
of Rutlond and point of beginning ,
bounded
and containing 1.03
deacrl- as fo1Jow1; acrea, m·ore or leiS,
TRACT
ONE : and being part of a
Situated In Fraction 58.811 acre tract
, 12, lown 6, range 14, daocrlbed In Volume
· .Rulland Townahlp, 232, page10~8, In lhe
Melgo Counly. Ohio, Melga County Deed
,and being more Recorda.
particularly
TRACT
TWO:
dHcrl- ao followo: Situated In fracllon
Beginning at the 12 lown 8 range 14
northwaat corner of Ohio · c~mpany'~
fraction 12; thence Purch .. e, Rutland
eaat 693 feel along townohlp
Melga
-the north line of oald County Ohio and
m0 re
·tnctlon; thence be 1 n
, aouth 280 feet to • particularly
;point t~ce aouth 75 deocrl- 11 followa:
deg. 10 eoot 1154 feet Commencing at the
to a point; thence northweat corner of
north 58 deg. 30'ealt fraction 12 thence
538 feet lo • point; along the north line
lhenca 1outh 75 deg. of fraction 12, eaat
OO'aaat 250.00 feet to 693.00 feet to a point;
,I point; thence aouth thence oouth 260.0
-14 deg. 30' eaat 38.82 feet to a point;
feet to a aurvey nail thence 10ulh 78 deg.
In the canter of 10'eaot 1154.0 feet lo
. l.lutland Hari'loonvllla 1 point; lhence north
Road; lhence along 68 deg. 30 'eut •
the centerline of· eald 538.00 feet to a :
road aouth 17 deg. polnf, thence 1outh
18' aaot (Pilling a 75 deg. OO'eaot 250.0
_I_!IMIY nell 11 127.53 _ feat to a point;

g

.

- M111a1• lcro11 .
Got Your
, With A

,.u,.sl••!••r .'

BULLETIN B'OARD . '

PorMroy, Otllo

HARNEY

'. 740.992·1671
KENSINGTON

•ieight

I
Pl..fASt SPEAIC
r&gt;t,e-CTLY ·To
Ti'lf B~IC~

vi ALl.
~""y~~' T~I\T ~0~ (,O()O, ·" .
(:,li\OY~!

T05:) ME-

~-

SETH'S
LAWN
SERVICE .

10" coloMa lncll Sandar :' .
CALL OUI OFFICE AT 992-2155
1

'

big or small jobs;
small
landscaping
Shoun Seth

RACINE PIZZA
Vine Street
Full Service Deli • Rotisserie Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk available after
Monday July 9thl

(740)985-3563
(7 40) 541-3820

• Truckll • Homea •
Trailer•
• Boata • Mobile Homea • Drlvewaya
• Equipment cleaned'&amp; degreaaed

Jeff Stethem
Cell740•591•2782 · 740•591•0477
. Hom@_740•1!85•4218

Lowest

NOW OPEN

- ELITE MECHANICAL CONTR"CTORS

lUG NATE

JlAW'
l-3cw:67s;7m --~~254J;.ll0'77··­
Reidenlial \ommercial Ne.t C~on

·

.......................

OFFICE EXPRESS
1BUSINESS SERVICES
Professional Work at

PEA~UTS

I HEAR 'fOUR

Affordable Rates

centerline of said

6RANDFAT~ER

HAS
TAKEN VP 60LF

General/Specialized Typlug
Temporary Otnce Assistance

highway soulh 17
dog. 18' eaat 577.53
feet to 1 aplke al lhe
aoulhweot corner ol
• 1.03 acre lracl;
thence leaving the
highway, norlh 81
deg . 21 'eaat . along
the eouth line of uld
1.03 acre tracl
(paaolng an Iron pin
'II 38.67 teet and
150.00 feet) for a total
dlotanca oi260.0 ·feet
to tha middle of LUlie
Leading
Creek
thance along the

Mailing Labels/Envelopes
Cassette Transcription
Numerous Business Support Services
25 years Secretarial Experience

l-IE'S BEEN
PLAVIN6 FOR
ABOUT A
YEAR ..

TI-IAT'S A LON6 TIME TO
BE OUT ON THE COURSE .. .

740·667·3224 or 740-667..()()38

Fullylnoured

middle of aald creek,
ao_ulh 31 dog. 22'42"

~

~

·1

(goH baolla)

s Kate

down
9 Paving goo
10 ·-Town"
11 Go by plal'll
13 nkeepa out
tho bugo
18 filii type
19 Actreu
Bloom
20 Endured
22 Czech

c.pltal

Nelligan
movie
8 ForcefUl
one

==~"'"'·

34 -Newopapor \ :
lddltlona • ' ,.

35 Soundo
'
39 Slim
43 Grinding -elone · • · 45 DelirH
1
47 5-ahepocl ' I ·
molding
'
46 Swift
l
·aircraft
•

23 Arranged

J

A ,

'

·

.~

•

.

2

THE !A$YWAY TO SHOP

TIMDEEI

· youR

COITUCTIIG

CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Complete !'lome
Repa1r
Remodeling
New Additions
Garages
WV0282120

flU ESTIIIIIEI
741-9112-8021
Tllfrll.. .
188-1182-t021
lo&lt;

one ont
or as ow as s25
I•

owntd '

atod

MILL END
FABRICS
Machine Quilting
EARNHART•3
pillow panela

740.992·3673
Pomeroy Eaglas
Club Bingo
On Thuraclaya
At6:30 p.m.
Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Paying $80.00

per game
$300.00 Coverall
Statburat
top tine

Uc.IOO-SO

,Quality-Driveways,
Patios, Sidewalks.
25 years experience
Free Estimates

740-742-8015 Jr
. 1·877·353-7022

tl type~-o
Roofs,
Specialist

by Lula Campos
Celebrity Cipher ayptogrllllll are created from quotations by tamouo ·
people, post and pmenl. Etcll loiter In lhe cipher atandalor ancthtr. ..;

Today's clue: 0 equals C

·

MN

VA

'LVYWIN,

.

OABBYLJNJ,

BWFY

AMNXNJ,"

TIVLODF

MYOAL
' VR N1N

-

DF

MN

••

LA

L V YWI N . '
" ;;
WP A
MN Y Y D
;:
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I'll dlscuas anything- I like to go
perllapsolngarcunclonelleubjocti.'..-RobertF.rOI\ ....... ~ .. -

T A I I' O H N L N f f

DL

g{}}A -

.
C.~"O a
~zzmP~~

THATDAILY

~£[f

Ulto~ loy CLAY I. POLLAN

WOI

Q.e
ol~
~ u~

-~~f~]~;;]!~i~~----~-

0 -Riorrong.o
.lottors
lour ~eramblod
· words bo-·
low 1o form four slmplo words.

I

Now it was better to
WE V l I S
pI a y East for Ion g f----,.,--,-,-,.-:;-T--1
spades . 'So, backing
11 ·Ill I 12 I
his jmdgtnent, .de~Hrer ~.:• .....L-+--'-.....1...._..___,
cashed
dummy's
spade kin,g, then led a
spa de to his jack.
When the finesse
worked, he drew the
· last trump · and lost
only three trjcks, one
in each side suit.
At the other table,
as East had bid hearts,
W est began with the
ace and another heart.
Now it looked as
though West would
be long in spades. So,
the American declarer
immediately cas hed
the spade · ace and
went one down, losing a trick in each
suit.

I

I

HAT CC
1--..--.-:-3 -.-....,,:-1
1 1 1 1
L..__J.L...--..J.-...1.-...L.--J.

r-----:--..,,8 EUAS ~

1---r::--.-T:""...,.--i-

,
. My husband surprised me with

·:a plaque for my home office; It
'read: "Show me a compuiS:i\le
L I W M E 0 _ lshopp_e r and I'll show r,ou a R~r-r:rT-.r.-'T"-r-ison
w;th a - - - - - - - -.
. ·.
1- 7
Complolo tho chuckle quote~
,

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

1 I 1: I I e

_
.
•
. by filling in the missing wori:l•
L-..L........JL......J.-......1-..&amp;..-' you develop from step No. 3 be low;~

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
:~

Thesis· Aisle · Liken- Ocular- US£ IT

Overheard 'at comedy club: "A pun is the lowest focm
of humor, unless of course, you have a chance to

USE

••
..... .. •''

Thursd'y; July 12 . 2001
By .focuSing on developing
better rel ationships with :acquaint:tnccs in the year ahead,
it wilJ open the door to new
oppo rt Unities . The ultimate
benefits will prove t in t it was

Call Bob

740-949-1405
Cell#
614-747-1715

Ruiland, Ohio

Truck 'seats, car seats, beadlin~rs, truck tatpS,

·wdl worth the dfon.

convertible &amp; vieyl tops, Four wheele~ seats,
motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc.

CANCER Qune 21-July
22) -- Today, you might be
inclined to think that your

Mon-Frl 8:30 • 5:00
&lt;?_ver 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888
1·88!J-521.Q916

Bring In your repair work
we'll get you going for
spring
E_
vBry Spring Tune-Up
gat a FREE Blade Sharpening.
New equipment arriving dally
See Manning, Wayne or Jim
or a REAL DEAL on a new lawn tractor,
lawn mover or weed lrlmmer.

I

L4wn and 'GGi'den EijliJpiiMII'tt
II our BUill!i!(no,t o •ldcJ!M.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
Sales &amp; Service
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy

992-2975

I

way of doing something is suM
pcrior to that of anyone else

involved . If that 's dekr.m.b!e
from die other's viewpoint,
. you better find a compromise.
Know where to look for rom:mce :md you'll find it. The
Astro- Graph Matchmaker instantly .reveab wh1ch signs are
ronuntically ·p erfect for you.

Mail S2.75 to Matchmaker,
, c/o this newspapCr. P.O . Box ·
1758, Murray Hill Station,

Cellular

I

New York, NY 10156.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -By trying to ouppre" your
fnutralion1 at the way another

is handling a 'tnutuaJ iOtCIT4!'1t,
you could allow a 1low burn
lO take place Within you. D~t­
ter to exprc:n your tonnrns

· Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479
•

I

•

CELEBRITY CIPHER

IT.'

CLASSIFIED•••

..
1

(•bbr.)

49 lt'a for the
Deer
In foldo
courael
24 Cryatalllne 50 Go twiHiy •.\ ·
Rolautlon
Devlallon
gam
52 CBS
7 Shake25 Old
rival
,.; l
Uling •
epaoreon
couch
Fallhful,
53 Actor
· •.J 1
hero
Bee
e.g.
Gulager
&lt;
27 Up to now 54 Oppoolte 011,
eatore, to • 8 Get - the creek of 32 Atlao page
poet
"nah"

nine

th e odds had changed.

'

Gallia, Maion, a'nd Meip Countl"'
Licensed IUICl fn.~urtd
WV 005176

thence aouth 84 deg.
30'aaat 36.82 feet to a
oplke
In
the
cenlerllne of C.R. No.
3; lhance along the

38

37

--~~~ -four
and IfEast
with aclubs
singleton.
so, -

eor.tr_!

Sale ·Seniee lnslallalion

RACINE PIZZA EXPRESS
Vine Street 949-4900

31

33

uted th e nine, Pietruk
felt confident that
.
.
West had started With

·

IIIHmdlbStopA~

Specializlq In Sheet Metal Ductwork
"Trane" Sal.. It Senleo For

... 18· HOLE
MINIATURE GOLF

29
30

top players in my
opinion. Declarer,
Janusz Pietruk, called
for dummy's 10, and
when East ..:o ntrib- ·

I

4
56
1=
-55 CanonlZid
oneo
56 Triple
57 Lock of holr
58 Optic
oppllc.tor

me .... "

never."
As
you
probably know, thi s
means that if you
have eight trumps
mi~sing
only the
queen, you should finesse on round two .
Yet if you ·have nine
cards, play off the ace
and king, expecting
the queen to drop.
But in this latter case,
that is only about two
percent better than a
second-round finesse.
This deal occurr~d
during the 1972
World Team Olympiad in Miami Beach,
when the Aces faced
Poland. Sitting West
was Jim Jacoby, v.;ho
used to write this column. With an unen viable choice of lead,
h e selected the club
four, as would most

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

COMPLAINT .
PE:PA~T MfNT
\
)

ever,

Sifter
44 The (Gar.)
45 "lllturellyl"

21 Batebaoller
Herahloer

It is hard to call .a
common saying like
"le?d
through
strength and up to
weakness" a lie. True,
there are exceptions,
. but usually that is correct. Another is

~

...... colualli lacll wiitlul•r• ..

ran

only nine lives.".

992·0739

992-6215

Pur

' striking differences
between a cat and a
lie is that a cat has

TerryLamm

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Ettt

Mark Twain wrote,

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing.

• Eloctrleall Plumbing
• Rooftng I Gutt••
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Polio and Porch Decko
Free Estimates

tra~•
•

"One of the most

1-800·291-5600
• Pomero~~
'flEE IN HOME ESTIMTEI • •1f.UIQII •LaVIfQ• •

• New G1r1ge1

~

Locuot street, Pt. Ploaoant
Jutt Patl K&amp;K
Mobile Home Port&lt;

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

• Room Addltlono I
Romodollng

l•ublic Notices in Ne\\·spapl'rs.

•CarPel
• Hardwood floorlna
• Canaaleum
fREE ESTIMATES
Phone f3D4J 614-61 DD

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
. KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT IID.W
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·

•Garages
• Complete
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VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- Ao aggravated friend
amonJI tht poup .1houldn 'I be

AQUARIUS Q;n . 20-Fe~
allowed to sp~il everyone el- ~
se's good time today. Take
this person aside until he or
she calms down.
liBRA (Sept. 23- 0CI. 23) - Diseng;1ge younclf today
from a contested development
where you find yourwlf operating at a dis~dvantagc .
Chilnces are you won't be
Jblc to overcome the odds -so why get beat up over it?

19) - - Know what you're getting yourself imo lOday bcfor~
. volunteering to help anothef
with a complicated ende3vor4
Chances are ·you could be bit~
ing ofT ·more than you en
chew.
•

. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2~
-- Should • friend of a frien~

- SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov .

to thro\V a monkcj
wrench into the group'5 soci
pl:ms todJy, don"t exclude thi
penon, ju~t let him or he
know that the majority rules. I

22) --Don ' t nuke JUY judgments today based on limited

-- Do not try to run the sh0\.11

· infomtation. There is no way

can honestly , .cvalu:~.te :~,n.
other's position by jumping to

you

conclusions. Listen and chew
on what you heu.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 2 t) -- Your biggest
•hortcomlng tochy could be a
need for instan~ gratiflcation
.. thai dhtorts your 1tn1r of
value. Be rsptcially car~ful if
purchasirlg a big tick~t hem.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-

Jan. 19) •• The •upport on
which you may be counting

today from ;mother might not
be forthcoming. It's betttr to

be prepared to fend for your•
sel( than to be •ony.

try

ARIES (March 2t-Apnl 19_1
today when involved in
•

i

•

group endeJvor. If you dq.
you could be accused of bcin~
controlling and. pushy .
1

TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) -- It's good to make pia111
for the future. so' hmg as thct
are re:alinic and take into cont
sideration your immcdi~te re}
quirements. Get them out of
the way tint ;~nd then movt

onGEMINI (May 21-June

2~

-- Be careful that anythini

you do which involves otheO
roday, e1pedally flnanci•l
situacions, doe. not dtttime~
tally ofTei:t thooe Involve~.

You'Dbe held attountablo. ,
I

�•

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Q

,.

\

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Wednesday, July 11; 2001

.SPORTS: Baseball prepareifor second half,

•

''

O ~bL T-HE- F-R I~-G-E

Thursday

Bl

~--

Tiger has som~ competition -maybe
/

BY DOUG FERGUSON
•

/lP GOLF WRITER

Nothing is ever the way it
seems with Tiger Woods.
Twice tlus year, he has chastised the media for exaggerating
performances good and bad. It
took only two tournaments at
the statt of the season for some- ·
one to mention the word
"slump." Afi:er three straight victories. including the Masters for
a clean sweep of the majors, he.
was deemed unbeatable.
"They make more of it when
you are playing well, and they
make more of it when you are
.playing bad,"Woods said. "That's
just the way it is."
HallWay through the year, the HOT AND COLD- Tiger Woods , shqwn at the Western Open,
recora reflects the same old has played either very well or v.ery pooriy this year. (AP file) ·
Tiger.
$5 -million mark on the PGA first one- fiom being the closWoods has won five times Tour money list at this time a est thing Woods has ever had to
going into the British Open, year ago, twice as much money a rival.'
.same as last year.
Then: None. The closest was
as the next guy. He still has a
: He has one major, same as last comfortable lead over Phil Hal Sutton, almost old enou_gh
. year.
. Mickelson ($835,665), altqough to be Woods' father. He stared
Ayear ago, he holed out frOm there are seven more tourna. down Woods in a dramatic duel
: the 15th fairway at Pebble ments worth at least $4 million, to win The Players ChampiBeach for a seven-stroke come- and Woods won't play in two of onship, and proclaimed that
' ~back. In Germany this year, he those.
Tiger is not a god. Mickelson
:holed out from the 13th fairway
What does it all mean?
stopped Woods' winning streak
to come back from 10 strokes
Tiger is still Tiger, but at least in San Diego and had three
behind on the weekend.
he has something that resembles wins, but that was still two fewer
Blowouts? Nothing will competition.
than Woods - and no majors.
approach the IS-stroke victory
Then again, he could win the
MIA
·at the U.S. Open last year, last two. majors, add another
Now: Ernie Els and David
.although Woods did sleepwalk World Golf Championship or Duval. Els hasn't bee n the same·
lo a seven-shot win at the two,.finish the year with 10 vic- since getting spooked by one
.. Memorial last month.
tories and SIO million - and bad shot in the Mercedes, a
Al\15, there are differences.
tournament that was his to Jose.
nothing will have .changed.
Woods already has finished
The midterm report, looking He lefi: the U.S. Open more
out of the top I 0 five times this at what a difference a year · concerned about his own desire
year (including a r~cjr), com- makes:
than taking on Tiger. Duval
pared with only thre~ times all
Challengers
should get an incomplete for a
oflast year.
Now: Mickelson . and Sergio wrist injury in March. Still, he
He ha&lt; finished at least· 10 Garcia. Both are two- time win- had his worst West Coa&lt;t swing
strokes back in. three . tourna- ners on tour this year. Mickel- in five years and has not conments. The 1999 Bay Hill Invi- son gee; extra credit because of tended on a regular basis.
tational was the last time he was his seven addi tiona! finishes in
Then: Duval and Davis Love
that far behind the winner.
the top three, Garcia because of IlL Duval was mean, lean and
And unlike last year, the his youth and charisma. Mickel- winless. Love was just winless, in
money race isn't over.
son is . one major away - his the second year of a drought
Woods was appmaching the

~on

. hen......,

In the sixth, the Mason County
defense, which had been solid for Mason
Counry up to that point, committed two
o f it1 five errors to give !fie-Wood countians a 9-0 lead.
·
Parkersburg added single runs in the
seyenth and eighth off Mason County
rc;liever .Matt Webb. They plated five in
the ninth inning in a rally cued by Griffith's home run to straight-away center

Ohio Am
from Page II
.· versity golfe• who sat out last year to
w.ork on his game, hit a sand wedge to 5
feet for birdie on his first hole. He added
an eagle and five more birdies.
· Herberth finished tied for third in the
Amateur a year ago, but had no illusions
about coming close to winner Ben Curtis, who won by 17 shots.
"Last year we had a better tournament
for seco.nd place," Herberth said with a
lat1gh. "He was, what?, 93 shots ahead of
everybody else?"
A shot back at 67 was former Wright
~tate grilfe.r Peter Samborsky II. Now a
Ohio Amateur SCores
MASON, Ohio (AP) - Flrtt-round resutt1 Tuesday
from tho 85th Ohio Amoleur goll champlonohlp 81

.

. tho 11,1150-yard, P•·n Herltoge Club:
• Robert (ierwln II, Cfnclnnatl ·

Erik Herberth. Avon Lake
Pete Samborsky. Dayton
Adam Holowczak, Parma
· Glenn Spencer, Kettering
Steve Lohmeyer, Dayton

Matt Savage, Massillon
ChUCk Wemp, Columbus
· Kevin Kornowa, Sylvania
Matt K&amp;mpe, Youngstown

32-37~9

36-34-70
35·35-70
38·32-70
35·35-70
34·36-70

• Neltlyklns, Cincinnati

• Randy Dietz, kent
• . : Jgh~ M2!ltyer, Uma

.

34·37-71

.. .

35·36-71
37·34-71
35·36-7!
35-36-7t
38·36-72
'34·36-72
34·38-72
38·34-72
35-37-72
35;37-72
37·36-73
'38-35-73
38·35-73
37·36-73
37·36-73
35·38-73
38·37-73
.39-34-73
38·3&amp;-73
37-38-73
37·37-74
38·38-74
38-36-74
38·36-74
39·35--74
38-36-74
35-39-74
37·37-74
39·36-74
38-36-74
37·37-74
38·36-74
:JIIo39-75

~ Jonah

K,arzmer, Youngstown
Justin Miller, Kent
Scott Miller, Middletown
Steve Lee, C:O.umbus

.

B.J. Pitzen, Toledo
Blllluncteen, Loveland

Jay Tilton, Greenhills

.

Michael Kelley, Westerville
·Nick Lykins, Cincinnati
;Tim Donovan, Cincinnati

oan Wyant, Marietta
· Danl&amp;l Metzendorf, Warren

. Erlo'PhiPt&gt;O. Hudso
Jaeon Oerkon, Logan
Nick Lambos, Canton

Phillip Trueblood, Uma
Raymond S&lt;Mk, Dublin
Thomas Yeager, Flnday

Todd Wlloon. Clrovo City
Tony Weihe&lt;. Dublin
• Brent Albertson, Dublin

Chrio MINer, Now Philadelphia
Chuctc Smith, Delaware

Jorme Spencer. Sylvania
Jett OtiiOfl, Oul&gt;ln
Jim H~lns, Marietta

Kyle Rol ora. Out&gt;ln
MlchaOI T~o. Cincinnati
.Scott Cope, Zanesvllia
Scott WIIIIOfl, Bay Village
sean Ryan, Springfield

.

Zach Doran, Oublln

litton

Blc~ll.

Goillpolll

32·32-&amp;1
3332·35-6'7
33·35--68
33·35--68
35·33--68

'

'

offWebb.
Mason County finally got on the
board in the sixth when six walks by
.Kt.mze and Kimes, ~he quatterback for ,
Parkersburg High School's football team,
!;!~Ve Post 23-140 a pair of free runs.
Mason added two more in the eight on
a wild__pitch, a_ Parkersburg~.J;r[O r, an
REI-double by shortstop Bradford
Clark, and the second single of the game
by Mason County's Matt Warner, who
made the start at seco·1d base in place of
the injured Andrew Kruk.
Ryan Hodge had the other two hits in
the game. He doubled to ce nter field on

that would span 62 tour events
before he won tl1is year at Pebble Beach.
Best performance in a major
Now: Retief Goosen ·will be
remembered for his three-putt
from 12 feet on the 72nd hole ·
of the US. Open, but he was·
much better than everyone else
for the other 89 holes - the
first 71 in regulation and the
final 18 in his playoff win over
Mark Brooks.
- Then: woods could have 16'puttcd the final hole at Pebble
Beach and still won.
Best final round:
Now: Scott Hoch closed with
a 64 to win the Western Open,
beating out a 66 by Love.
Then: Woods ·and Els
matched S-under 68s, both
eagled the 72nd hole at the
Mercedes, both eagled the first
hole of the playoff. Woods finally won with a 40-foot birdie
putt th at was downhill, into the
grain and had 6 feet of break..
Monday, Monday
Now: Woods Was at three of
the five tournaments that concluded Monday. He won The
Players Championship. finished
I 2 strokes back at the Buick
Classic and wasn't part of the
18-hole playoff at the US.
Open.
Then: Woods was in all three
Monday finishes - · his great
comeback at the Pebble Beach
Pro-Am, the .great duel with
Sutton at the Players, the great
yawn at Memorial with his. fivestroke victory.
Tiger's British Open tuneup:
Now: A tie for 20th in the
Western Open, fishing and golf
in Ireland.
Then: A tie for 23rd in the
Western Open, fishing and golf
in Ireland.
Some things never change.

39·36-75
37·38-75
38·37- 75
39·36-75
36·39-75
40·35-75
40·35-75
36-39-75
37-38-75
- 38·37-75
38·37-75
36·39-75
36·37-75
38·37-75
37·39-76
38·38- 76
39·37- 76
38-38-76
35·4! - 76
38·38-76
37-39-76
38·38-76

Joe Wright. Findlay
Joel Russell II, Franklin
Ken Klnkopf, Hilliard ·

Kurt Peterson, MaSsllon
Mark Bixler, Toledo
Marty Miller, Middletown

Robert De Rofas, West Chester
Rod Spinte; Dublin
Shaun Lasance. West Chester
Skip Snow, Dayton
Steve Oberschlake , Bethel
Taylor Metcalte, Glendale
Brooks Kerrick, Lyndhurst
Chris Yoder, Ashland
David Trier. Tallmadge
Douglas Gage, Dayton
Jesse Hutchins, Fairborn •
John Bishop, COlumbus
Mark Talerico, Aurora
Michael Campagni, Dublin
Randy NaumJ,n, Centerville
Rick Merrow, Bath
· Ronald Eubel , Centerville
Ryan Harmon, Zanesville
Ryan Miller. W. Ale·xandria
Steve Mayes, CQ(umbus
Alan Whanon, Dublin

Andy Montgomery, Worthington
Bryon Harger, Marlon
Carl Tuke Jr., Cincinnati
Christopher Gran, Hartv!lle
Jeff Mallette, Canton
Jim Ebel. Cincinnati
Jon Reed, Athens
Juan MuzqUI.z, M[ddlatown

Justin Bertsch. Sandusky
Kent Russ~l. Columbus
Matt .Marino, Nonh RldgevUJe

Randy Aollors, Dublin
Robert Eardley, Fairborn
Steve Hannaford, Falrbom

Stove Spittle. Dublin
Aaron Dement, Toledo
Brandon Judy, Beavercreek
Brandon Mills, Columbus
Jeff Chadwell, Columbus
Jeff Knox, Solon
Ke-Ith McGIIIvary Jr., Troy'

35-4 1-76

'

37·39-76
39·37-76
38·38-76
41 ·3&amp;-76
39·37-76

41 ·3&amp;-77
39·39-77
38·39-77
38·39-77
35·42-77
38·39-77
38·39-77
39·38-?V
35·42- 77
38·39-77
39·38- 77
43·34- 77
40·37- 77
39·38-77
38·39-77
·39·38-77
40·38-78
37·4!-78
39·39-78
40·38-78
36·42-78

Nathaniel Strong, Massillon
Peter Betzold, West Chester

Rob Heavilln, Powell

-

Ayan SCott, North Royalton
Steve Hiltebrant, Bay VIllage

Bobby Castor. Ashland
Brad Schloss, Clncionat1
Brian Leen, Dayton
Dan Freiburger, Columbus
Greg Frey, Columbus
Jeff Pederson, Cincinnati
Joel Kraner, Dublin
Mark Mickley, Howard
Michapl Cas~elorte, Springboro
Michael Tho~pson, Cincinnati
Ryan Hurley, Columbus
Brian Beebe; Uniontown Daniel Carper, Toledo
David Handke, Pepper Pike
Dean CorbiSsero, Mason
Edward loughrea, West Chester
P.J. Myers,:Westlake
Pete Ebet, Mason
Tim Kelly, West Chester
Brian. Edwards, Louisville, Ky.
Holden Wilson Ill, Cincinnati
Jack Sayers, Springfield
Ross Goodson, Cincinnati
Timothy Hingson, Findlay
Todd Simmons, Hillsboro
Ryan Hayes, Dayton
Skip Juris, Dublin
Joe WesloYer, .Galena
Matt Sands, Columbus
Mike Ed!:, West Chester
Danny Olson, Dublin
Doug Brush, Dayton
John Sherman, Dayton
Michael Heston . Westerville
Joe Heister, Mason

Andy Spencer. Spilngliold
Don Paz, Willowick
Ed Jetlerson, Tam~ance ,. Mich .
Noah Lucas, Dublin
Ch_rls Pagnono, COlumbus
Tim Selden, Port Clinton
Ben Smith, Westlake
Brett Williams. Circleville

.

&lt;W-36-78
38·40-78
41·37-78
39·39-78
37·41 - 78
39·40-79
35-44-79
38·41-79
39·4Q-79
4! ·38-79
3g.4Q-79
38·43-79
39·40-79
4Q-39-79
43·36-c-79
39-40-79 -,
38·42-00
4t -39-80
42·38-80
39·4t--ll0
39·41--liO
41·39-80
4().4{)-80

.

42·38-80
42·39--8!
42·39--81
98-4o-a1
41 ·4G-a1
4HG-a1
4HG-a1
43-39-82
41-41-82
43·40-83
48·37-83
39·44-83
38·46-84
44·40-84
43·41-&amp;1
44-40---64
41-44--85
43-45-41-86
45·41-86
38·48-86
44-43-4!7
38·49--87
46-43-4!9
WD

Meigs County's

2000 FORD
EXPLORER
LIMITED

1996 FORD
EXPLORER
XLT. 4X4. 4 Door

AWD. V-8.
Leather. Loaded!

'

Upgrades
rignt on
.schedule

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 &lt;enh • July 12. 2001 • Vol . Sl, No. 226

,Sand trap!

www.myddilywntilll•l .wm

,·

Courthouse
renovations
beginning soon

$10.995

BY BRIAN

BY BRIAN J•.REED
POMEROY
Improvements at the Meigs
County Courthouse. are 1
right on schedule, and will
include a bonus · project
designed to serve Visitors
and the local business communiry.
Meigs County comnilssioners discussed their plans
to paint and beautity the
facade of the 150-year-old
courthouse during their
regular
meeting,
held
We'dnesday.
The comnilssioners will
soon hire a contractor to
sand and paint the exterior
of the courthouse, using
$50,000 in funds from the
Ohio
biennial budget
obtained by State Rep. john
C::arey. R-Wellston, earlier
this summer.
In addition to a fresh coat
of white paint, the commissioners will add coordinating trim to the windows on,
the front of the building,
light the building's distinctive golden cupola, and add
a decorative "Mepeo-U'nty
Courth91lte"'(tgn, either on
thnJU!Iding itselti-or on th
cou~tliouse groundS, said
Commissioner Jim Sheets.
Bids on the project have
been received;'out no contractor has been hired yet.
The commissioners are
also in the progress of painting and carpeting the
ground-floor room adjacent
to the elevator entrance,
known for decades as the
"shoppers' lounge."
That area, which includes
restroom facilities, will
become a downtown visi_tors center, to be stocked
with brochures and otljer
visitors' information.
Annie Chapman of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association requested use of the
:space and the association
:will oversee its operation.
· The paint job and the vis.·itors center are expected to
be completed before the
:end of the summer, Sheets
;said.
: Any remaining funds
:from the state allocation will
·be used to finance cosmetic

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1997 BUICK
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'

Trent Roush blasts his golf ball from a greenslde bunker at ijlverslde Golf Course In Mason, W.Va. fol·
lOwing an attempt to reach the pa'r-flve sixth hole .Jn two shot!&gt;. Roush took advantage \)f Wednesday's
sunny weather to practice for Saturday's West VIrginia Amateur Qualifier, which will be held at the course,
(Tony M. Leach photo)
·

~

;er,.-~so.i·ng-to:firefighti·ng- ttflits.
'

·t

BY_TONY

•
'2 Sedl0111- 12 Pllpl

!:iti~Ddil[

1992 JEEP

-Clit55ified5
!:!lmi!:;5
Editoriill5
Obit!.!il[i~5 .

SR!:!m
Weittber

M.

WCH .

.

- - The local grants-are
· part of $1. 78 million
POMEROY - . Fire chiefs
being awarded to
from sevewMeigs County departments will travel to Marietta on
14 vol.ilnteer fire
Thursday to receive $44,773 in
departments throughout
grant money during a ceremony
southeastern Ohio.
held in conjunction with Governor Bob Taft's regional cabihet
'day. . / ·
·
·
·
The local grants are part of
$1.78 million being awarded fO
14 volunteer fire departme . ~s

J, REED

·Gary C. Suhadolnik for the purchase of new equipment and
training aids.
A presentation ceremony is set
.for 1 p.m. today at Oak Grove
Fire Department in Marietta.
According to the ODC, the
Pomeroy Fire Department will
throughout southeastern Ohio by receive $9,000; Racine Fire
State Fire Marshal Robert R . Department, $8,000; Tuppers
Rielage and Department of Plains Fire Department, $8,000;
Commerce (ODC) Director
Please see Grants, Al

POMEROY - Indictments on charges includ:
ing sex offenses and several drug counts have been
returned by the Meigs County grand jury.
Four defendants have made initial 'c ourt appearances and denied the charges, while others await
arraignment.
The indictments were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Prosecutor Pat Story:
Appearing in coil{_[ so far this week are:
• Robert E. Avis, '10, Vincent, on four counts of
sexual battery, third-degree felonies, and three
counts of gross se)!:ual. imposition, fourth-degree
.felonies. He. is accused of engaging in sexual con~
duct with a 12 year-old female, of whom he is the
· ·
parent, step-parent, guardian, or custodian.
The relationship of the alleged victim is not
detailed in the indictment against Avis.
·
Avis appeared before Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
earlier this week and pled innocent to the charges'.
His trial was set for Sept. 13, and Public Defender
Charles H. Knight was appointed to represent
him.
• Roger A. Shamblin, 31, Columbus, on a fifthdegree felony charge · of vandalism and a fifthdegree felony charge of possessing criminal tools.
Shamblin entered a plea of innocent to the
charges. His trial has been set for Aug. 7, and
Knight was appointed as his attorney.
• Wendy L Long, age unreported, Racine, on a
charge of trafficking in cocaine, a fourth-degree
~~~

.

The indictment against Long alleges that the
quantity of cocaine involved was a gram or less~ ·
and that the allegi:d offense took place in the
viciniry of a juvenile.
She entered an innocent plea in Crow's cou~ :
earlier this week, and her trial:l'fils set for Sept. 1~. :
Knight W.S. appointed 'toiC"rve as 1:\'er~i:torney. •
• Sq&gt;tt E. McKinley, 33, Pomeroy, on .a count of
cultivation of marijuana and a count of possessiori
of marijuana, both felonies of the third degree. '
The charges carry specifications. The cultivation
charge carries the specification that the amount of
marijuana allegedly involved exceeded 1,000
grams but was less than 5,000 grams, and the possession charge the same.
McKinley entered an innocent plea before
Crow earlier this week. His trial was set for Sept.
13, and Knight was appointed to represen.t him ..
Also charged by the grand jury are:
• Kenneth Michael Smith, 20, Porneroy, on tWo
counts of gross sexual imposition, both fourth-

Please He Jury, A3
.

Meigs

Board seeks·new electrical bids

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY- Meigs Local Board
of ~ducation agreed to reject electrical bids on the construction of its
new elementary and middle school
buildings and re-advertise when it
met · in regular session Tuesday
evemng.
At a special meeting July 5, the
board voted to reject the general

~ ' Hlp: IDs
Low: SOl

Details, A2 ,. .

Lotteries

A~ OHIO
B2-4 PlcU: 4-6-1; Pick 4: 1·3-7.0
(!~ ~ Lall1l: 19-21-29-35-3647
M ICkMr: 6-7-6-7-&amp;-7

~ W.VA.
Dally S: 9-7-5 Dally 4: 8-9-2-6

BJ,3
A2

.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

S~nthtel ·V .

Leather. Loaded!
·34.419 miles

Cirand jury .
retums 10 ·
i-ndidments
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SENTINEL NEWS STAFf

Kunze's first pitch of the game and singled in the ninth .
Three Parkersburg hitters recorded
three-hit games - Pat Hudkins, Matt
Holtgrewe and Kimes . One of Kimes'
hits was a double.
Holtgrewe, Whitlach, Orn and
Brownfield each had two hits for Post
I 5.
Mason Counry's game scheduled for
Thursday with Putnam County has
been canceled. The squad will play again
on Saturday at Ritchie County High
School in a doubleheader starting at I
p.m .

27-year-old accountant in Dayton, Sam- ner Rancly Reifers (1986, 1992) from
borsky was at 6 under through 12 holes . Dublin and Taylor Metcalfe (1976) of
but had five pars and a bogey down the Cincinnati. Reifets shot a 77 and 'Metstretch.
calfe a 75.
Hisbirdieputtsmeasured 7,2,10,6,12
Logan's Jason ·Gerken · is nine otT
and . 12 feet. But not everything fopnd the pace at 73. Former Gallia Acadthe bottom of the cup: Three birdie putts emy standout Brian Bickle sits at
and one par putt lipped out.
75, 11 stroj(es off the lead.
"It's a 62 if the putter gets hot," he said.
The tournament is being played for
"It was lukewarm."
the first time at Heritage. a private· club
At 68 were Parma's Adam Holowczak, that opened in 1996. The Amateur is
. Steve Lohmeyer of Dayton and Glenn scheduled to be played in 2002 at SylvaSpencer of Kettering.
nia Country Club, 2003 at Aurora
Curtis, a former Kent State AII-Amer- Country Club·and in 2004 - .the tOOth
ican from Ostrander, turned pro last anniversary of.the sponsoring Ohio Golf
November and is not back to defend his Association - at Columbus Country
title.
Club.
The !44-player field includes two
other former champions: two-time winOoug lawrence, Vandalia
Gregg Grimes, Middletown

·,

c 2oot Ohio valloy Publlshins eo.

trades bids, an&lt;\ bids for windows,
heating, ventilation and air conditioning, because all bids were at least
10 percent over the estimated cost.
The state . requires that bids which
exceed that estimate be rejected.
No bids were received for plumbing work on the new buildings, so
they will also be re-advertised.
Tuesday evening, t~e board, acting

on the advice of its construction
manager, Quandel . Group, and legal
counsel, voted to reject and readve~tise for electrical bids as well,
although those bids were only :} per"
cent over ~he estimate.
·
Bids on the various elements of
construction exceeded the estimated
cost of $I 0.1 million by more than
$1.2 million . At the board's July 5

. meeting, Superintendent Bill Buckley said the construction manager
had omitted portions of the structu~~
al field in making the original esti.mates, causing the excessive overage
in certain bids.
,
In other business, the board accept~
ed the resignation of teacher Mar~

Please ... Bkii,AJ

--~----------------------------------~------------------~
·~ --~---------------- '
.

Two winning tickets sold in record jackpot~
WILLOUGHBY (AP) - A record
$54 million Ohio Lottery jackpot looks
gotld to losers, even if discounted
lump-sum payments, taxes and a split
betWeen two winners mean an $8 million- payday.
·
Betty Severino, 59, of Willoughby,
didn't win, but said she would welcome
even the lower prize.
"For a five buck investment? You bet
I'd take it," she said outs-ide Cla;k

'

Avenue Groceries where one of two
. winning tickets in Wednesday e-,cn ing's
drawing where sold.
Ruth Cudnik, 54, who also lives in
this ·Cleveland suburb, walked her
mixed-breed dog past the lucky store
and agreed $8 million was attractive.
"Eight million is not bad," she s~id.
"Anything is better than nothing."
. .Nothing is what she won among .the
two tickets bought by .herself and her

husband and two shared with co-workers. "I checked· them. Losers all
four;' she said.
~.
The second winning ticket was sold
at a Spee- d- foods outlet in Canton,
where the staff was hoping for a hometown Winrier.
'
As in Willoughby, the store had no
immediate clue who had won and the
lottery said it· wouldn't know until
claims were filed.

The Holzer Medical Center

Rehab Unit·
10 years of ser-Vice
community.
For more information on· the services the
H~C Rehab Unit provides, call

40·38-78

(740) .446·5070
\

_ I

•

•

----------------------------------~·~·--------------------------------~~---~
'

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference.

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