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                  <text>SPORTS: Meigs Legion plays on, Bl

Meip County's

LINCOLN
AMERI CA N

lUXURY

Mercury

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Wesam Construction Inc. of Chester was apparent low
bidder on the new Meigs Middle
School with a combination base bid
for general trades and masonry of
$4,992 ,353.
Bids were opened Thursday after-

4 Door, Rear Air,
Power Equipment
$23,995 MSRP

$27,020 MSRP

Auto, AC, Power
Equipment

V-8, Auto, AC,
Leather,
Moon roof

$11,995
5 Speed, AC,
Power
Windows
&amp; Locks,
Cruise, Tilt

Leather,
Loaded, Only
34,500 miles

Auto , V-6, AC,
4 Wheel Drive,
15,000 miles.

Be Sure to ask
your sales consultant
about extra protection
with a

mLI NCOLN
Mercury~

Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
"We Can Help"ll

AC , Power
Equipment
4 Door

$9,995

Call Us First Or We Both Lose!

FORD EXTENDED
SERVICE POLICY ··

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

WHIIL ALIINMINT

'24 '49
11

2-wheel

11

4-wheel

Check and adjust camber and too. Additional parts and
labor may be required on some vehicles.

TIRII
We will meet or beat any competitor's
advertised price on the some tire.
We leature all major brands: GOOdyear, Firestone, General,

Michelin, Brldgestone, Continental, UNIROYAL, BF Goodrictl.
Mounting and balancing .may be extra.

!: '49~8· ~~rN~'~ANCI
IIACICAGI

I
1 • Service includes up to 6 quarts of Motorcraft all new Motorcraft oil filter •

1 Rotate and inspect 4 ~res • Perform multi·polnt Inspection: tnspecc brake

1 system; Check and fit all fluidS ; Check and~ air presst.nln Blllirn:
1 V'oually inspect e•haust syetem; Check-- of hom. oxtorior lllfll)l,
I IUm signa~, and hazard wamlng llghiS; check bolts and ho&amp;ee; Checl&lt;

I

wlnds~eld Mper operatioo; Inspect half shaft (ij eq~~l&gt;pecl) Cllec:lland
lubrk:ate stoenng. llnl&lt;age and
apptk:able. DlaMt veh-

pans,""""'

fbooxtra

•

•21~-==- . . .~~~~;a~~~: ;i~'r:.::v
Quallty.Qu

• Service includes up to 5 quarts of MotorcraH oil
and new Motorcraft oil filter• Perform Multi·Point
Vehicle inspectio n • Check and fill necessary fluid~
• All in·29 minutes or less • Diesel vehicles may be
. exira.

~-------------·~

WIIV truat

vour lnvutm•"' .. Juat
IIRJII8Qm lttiV 111188 tlto
·
11181111 t1t1t knew
vour Vlltltll lloat. 1~

MO'rORY TUINID •1:~
TIOMNIOIANI ' • '• I'

---------------------

PORD MOTOR CO
PLOORMATI

Sta~ng$4400
MADE TO FIT YOUR VEHICLE/

Sf rf"

OfOflnQ

$·198 •

Sta~~ing

'

'8150

,

·

lnetalled per
pair plu• tax.

denied.

POMEROY -A grant
from the U.S. Department
of
Agriculture/ Rural
Development will assist
low-incom~
M eigs
County residents with
minor home repairs.
Grants Administrator
Jean Trussell discussed the
program with Meigs
C ounty commissioners
during
their
regular
meeting on Thursday.
Trussell
said
the
$90,000 grant comes
from USDA 's housing
preservation program and
can be used for projects
.. , s~..as roof ~epa,iF9, electrical system up'grades,
heating system improvements , construction of
a~cessibility ramps, and
installation of aerator septic tanks, among others.
The program will be
available only to those
homeowners considered
"very low income," and
will require no mortgage
security, as some projects
in the past have required.
Renters are not eligible
to participate .
Trussell . estimates that
between 15· and 20
households will benefit
from the program . Applications will be available
after 9 a.m. on Aug. I, and
applicants will be given
appointments to review
applications and to ask
questions about the program.
. The commissioners m~t
with residents of Rutland
Township Road 17 5 with
complaints about a recent
chip and seal .road repair

Sentinel
:z Sedlonl -

Calendar
ClasSifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

242

Installed

perce nt, there is always th e possibility
that the Ohio Schools Facilities
Commission will require rebidding
on. some portions of the project
work, as they did for the new elementary building.
The new school will be constructed on land adjacent to Meigs High
School.
·

motions

ToUy's

--------------------- ....~ .. -- ----------------.I PLASH
BID RAILS
Sta;n,
GUARDS

'5040

The low bids came in $801,844 or
10.3-perce nt over· construction estimates.
They will now be reviewed by th e
t onstruction manager, The Quandel
Group, who will come back to th e
Meigs Local Board of Education
with recommendations.
Because the overage exceeds 10

Fife, Priddy

Pin•• ... Gr•nt. Al

Installed

Sta~ing

Pipe, ' plumbing, $366,000; Brewer
and Co., fire protection, $94,555;
KAL Electric, electrical, $901 ,349;
and DE Williams, tec hnology,
$234,830.
Total of all the low bids was
$8,517,957 with six being over the
constru ction manager's estimate of
$7,716, 113.

Crow nixes requests for
withdraw of pleas

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~
Auto,AC ,
Power
Windows&amp;
Locks ,
Cruise, Tilt,
13,500 miles

noon .at the Meigs Local Board of
Education offi(&lt;e.
Other low base bids on the project
were Hilliard G lass, windows,
$245,260; C&amp;T Design and Equipment, food service, $136,310; Southern Hill, casework, $164,000; Geiger
Brll.thers, heating, ventilation and air
condition ing, $1,383,300; Aposde

Meigs
unveils
$90,000
grant

. Keylete Entry,
Premium Cloth Interior
Power Equipment

SPECIAL FINANCE DEPARTMENT

www.mydaily~entinl·l.uun

~

Yaurus

Loaded!
2TO
CHOOSE
FROM!

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

so cents • July 27,1001 • Vol . 51, No. H6

Auto, V-6,
Power
Equjf:Jment,
Adjustable
Pedals,
14,500 miles

Friday

12 ......

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

A IIAIKET OF GOODIES - Ll!ur~ !111tley of Whiz Kids 4-H_ .
project. She mad~ "Dottle-Bars,"'..&amp; no-bake peaout b~tter

,,, ~

FOOD PROJECTS-.·

·PASs TASTE TEsT
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OMEROY- 4-Hers came with
baskets and boxes filled with
foods, · completed proj ec t books
and pretty posters to the Meigs
County Extension Office.
It was time for the projects they had complet ed to
be judged in preparation for exhibiting at the Mei gs
County Fair Aug. 13-18, and recognition for their
summer's work.
·
Fifty-two 'projects were judged by Cindy Oliveri,
Ohio State University Extension di strict specialist
· for family consumer sciences; Joyce Shriner, H ocking CountyExtension agent, and Judy Clark of Gallipolis.
Grand and reserve champions were named and
several of the 4-Hers were given honorable mention
on their projects.
·
Judging results in the various ca tegories were as
follows;
Fast Break for Breakfast: Carrie Myers, grand

Hlp: 801
Low: 101

POMEROY - Robert Fife's request to
withdraw his guilty plea from a 1993 criminal case has been denied, and Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill called Fife's daims that he was
afr aid to file the ,motio n until the former
prosecu tor and assistant prosecutor left
'
office "patently absurd."
In ·a nearly identical j udgment entry,
Crow h as also denied a similar motion on
the part of Fred M. Pr\ddy, convicted o~
drug charges in 1999. Both Fife and Priddy were represented in their motions by
Columbus attorney Thomas J. DeBacco.
Fife was convicted of trafficking in food
stamps and r~ceiving stolen property, and
forfeited . a firearms collection and
. $245,000 in cash as a term of his plea
agreement.
,
He was_originally accused of operating
an illegal pawn shop from his South Third
Aven ue home in Middleport.
In his motion, he asked to withdraw his
guilty plea, citing manifest injustice on the
parts of former Prosecutor John Lentes and
former Sheriff James M . Soulsby.
C row, in an entry filed Wednesday, wrote
that Fife filed his motion in error, that he
should have petitioned for post-conviction
relief, and that, regardle ss, his request comes
far too late.
"Fife did not appeal his original conviction, and the time for direct appeal has long
expired," C row wrote. "It is untimely by
over 4- 1/ 2 years."
C row also wrote that Fife's claims that he
feared retribution from Lentes and Knight
· were absurd, and that such fears did not
prevent Fife from filing for post-conviction
relief before the one-year deadline after
co nvict ion.
"The cou rt finds this argument patently
absurd," Crow wro te. "If the departure of
Lentes and Knight was Fife's primary concern, th en one would expect him to have
filed in ea rly Janu ary 2001, when Lentes
left office, not five months later."
" His ·recourse was to timely challenge

A CHAMPION -

John Cooke has been w;nn;ng
awards for his 4-H cooking projects for several years.
At this week's judging in You're the Chef project, he
was named reserve champion for his a beef stew.
Judging his project was Joyce Shriner, Hocking County
Extension .agent (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
champion; Clarissa Arnott, reserve cham pion.
Party Fun with Foods: Erin Bush, grand champi- •
on; Carrie Wiggins, reserve champion; Chrissie Gregory, Kayl ee Kennedy, Tia Pratt, honorable men-

Please see C.H, Al

' .1

PleiH see Motlcm1, Al

Cou~cil ponders finding new ambulance

Details, A2

Lotteries

Bv ·ToNY

M.

LEACH

to EMS Director Gene Lyons req uesting that an extra medic truck. be sent to
Racine.
The truck would be used by Racine
volunteers while the squad is being
repaired and would be available for various calls in the immediate area.
Fire C hief David N eigler met with
council to show members a $8,000
check received from the State Fir~ Marshal's office for the purchase of three air

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

AS

RAC INE -"(he problem of finding

OHIO
.B2-4 Pick 3: 7-9-5; Pick 4: 3-().4-()
BS llucMre 5: 1!}19-2().3().32

a replacement emergency squad was
dis cussed during Village Council's regular me eting ,
Followin g a lengthy discussion about
h aving no emergency stj uad in the village since a wi rin g fire on Jun e 27 disabled the Racine's squad, council
approved a letter from Mayor Scott Hill

A4
A3 W.VA.
B1.3.6 Deily 3: 7-7·2 Dally 4: 4-4-2-8
A2 Q 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

GaJ.~Ia

tanks and assorted masks.
Neigler said the three masks were
purchased and are currently on the
dep artment's fire tru ck and that applications for two other grams have been
filed.
Co uncil also approved a request made
by Neigler to upgrade the department's
two oth er masks so that all the 'masks

P!use see CoundL A3

County Fair Time!

Look kir the Holzer Medical Center Mobile Unit
;:durir1o the Fair, July 30 - August 4. Free screenings
and health information will be provided.
Schedules will be posted daily.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference.

For more information, call
•

·-

'

'

1740) 446~5679
,.

I

�•
Friday, July 27, 2001

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, July 28
AccuWeathere forecast for

•
h!'E~:J

•

-···.,

•
o a.••~-• · •

•

\/~~~~W. VA.

&gt;~

KY.

02001

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

.... _._ .....

Inc.

Cloudy

Shower1 T·&amp;forma

Rain

Flurries

Snow

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI (AP) - A car crash
victim in a coma virtually her entire
pregnancy has given birth to a healthy,
nearly 8-pound daughter. ·
The woman's doctors say that the case
could raise important questions for
physicians arid challenge the current
notion that a pregnancy should be terminated early on in a comatose woman
due to the problems of keeping the
mother alive.
Doctors said it is one of few known
cases in the United States in which a
comaiose woman was able to carry a
baby to full term.
The mother, Chastity Cooper, 23, of
Erlanger, Ky., has slowly improved since
the November accident but still ca~not
move or talk.

Saturday... Showers
and
thunderstorms likely. High
near 80. Southeast wind 5 to
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Saturday night ... Showers
and thunderstorms likely. Low
in the upper 60s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. High in the lower
80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 60s and high in
the mid 80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 60s and high in
the upper 80s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Low near 70 and high in the
lower 90s.
Thursday... Partly ·cloudy.
Low in the lower 70s and high
in the lower 90s.

Fugitives may be with woman

0'
"I think th~re's no question that she's a
fighter and that this is a big part of what
got her through," Dr. Jamal Taha, a neurosurgeon who was on duty when
Cooper-was brought in from the accident, s~id• in an interview Thursday. "She
was very, very sick, and we thought it
would be unlikely that she would even
live, much less have a chance of coming
out of the coma."
Steve Cooper said Thursday he rejected any ;uggestions that his wife's pregnancy be terminated.
"We believed she was in God's hands,
and ending the pregnancy wasn't an
option. We just decided to leave it up to
God," Steve Cooper said. " I was scared,
like any normal person would be. But I
prayed every night. I had the feeling

Thief takes S1OOK in jewels

.lee

Showers forecast for Saturday
Temperatures will start to
warm up again on the weekend and there's a chance of
_Jresu med showers. and thunderstorms, forecasters said.
Highs will be 75-85 . .
There is an even greater
chance of storms on Sunday,
when highs will be in the 80s,
the National Weather Service
said.
Tonight, skies will remain
mostly clear and lows will fall
into the mid-50s to mid-60s.
Sunset tonight will be at
8:50, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 6:26 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low in the mid
60s. Southeast wind 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 per1
cent.

STOW (AP) - A man smashed a display case with a
hammer and stole several trays full of jewelry from a store
in this Akron suburb.
·
·
· Police Lt. Rick Myers estimated their value at $100,000.
Executive Coin Co. owner Bill Miholer was near the
smashed cases and ran after the robber, who jumped into a
waiting car about 1:40 p.m. Wednesday. Miholer was able to
provide a description to the police, and the incident was
caught on security cameras.
An employee recognized the robber as someone wh&lt;i&gt; visited the store earlier in the week with a partner.

Fak- shots spur lawsuit .

laws, but also the Ohio Constitution.
A city councilman asked ifYoungstown co uld have a local
referendum on allowing a casino, which promoters say
would bring 5,000 jobs to the city. But Ohio's attorney
general said that state law would trump a city charter.
"State law prphibits gambling of any kind in Ohio except
for charitable purposes or the state lottery," said Joe Case,
spokesman for Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery.
Nonetheless , the Casinos for Youngstown Committee
plan to tal&lt;e 500 signatures to city council supporting· casi- ·
no gambling.

Saliva tosser faces charges

CANTON (AP) -An Alliance woman is suing her ,former gynecologist for injecting her with salt water for eight
Years instead of a hormone replacement therapy.
Christine Marschi!)ke, 49, filed the medical malpractice
lawsuit Thursday in Stark County Common Pleas Court
against Dr. David G. Robinson of Alliance.
Marschinke said the doctor stunned her at the end of an
exam last summer by spontaneously admitting he had been
giving her the placebo monthly ever since she began seeing him, A placebo is a harmless but ineffective substance'
usually used in medical studies to compare with actual
medications .
\ .
The woman also recalls that when she asked why Robinson hadn't told her, he replied, "Well, the other women get
very upset when I tell them ." She said she worries other
·
determine if Searles had violated his probation for failing
women were deceived.
to pay child support.

Vidim aids 'in suspect's capture'
m,an

MANLEY'S
RECYCI.JNG
CENTER
503 Mill Street • Middleport

NOW OPEN SATURDAYS
8:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Monday - Friday 9:00a.m. : 4:00 p.m .

,,,,

Police officer kills man in gunfight
icher said, based on the num-·
her of shell casings recovered
at the scene, "it appears there
was very active gunfire."
The man was pronounced
dead at University Hospital at
12:32 a.m.
Streiber said Haas and the
suspect were 20-30 feet apart
during the shootout.
The suspect fired at least
two rounds from a sawed-off,
pump action, 12-gauge shotgun with a · pistol grip, the
'hief said. Haas fired his 9mm~
handgun and- a· shotgun at the
suspect.

How Proud We Are!
'

Molly r.n;l:aPet

Clinic opens new baby ·I.CU
CLEVELAND(AP) - The
Cleveland Clinic will open
the doors Monday to a new
17-bed intensive care unit for
premature babies, despite criticism from some ,health care
advocates that northeast Ohio
does not need the additional
beds for babies.
On Thursday, the clinic
unveiled the new state-of-theart, $4.4 miUion facility. The
neonatal intensive care unit
(NlCU) provides emergency
care for low-birthweight
babies ·and babies suffering
. various developmental ailments.
Clinic officials say the unit
creates a new opportunity to
merge the hospital's national

surgical expertise with stateof-the art care for infants.
"We do things here that
nobody else in the city is able
to do," said Dr. Douglas
Moodie, chairman of clinic's
division of pediatrics.
With the new neonatal
ICU, premature babies can be
treated and housed at the clinic, without needing .ro" be
transferred.
The new facility will be the
fifth neonatal ICU in the area,
bringing the total number of
critical-care beds for babies in
the region to 191.
Some health care advocates
say the region has no need for
the.Jdditional neonatal ICU
•
beds.

"It would seem on the surface that it is not ·needed," said
Diane Lardie, director the
Cleveland-based Universal
Health Care Actian Network.
"If we were setting priorities in this town, I'm not sure
a NICU unit would be at the
top of the list," she added.
Bob Howard, director of
planning at Children's Hospital Medical Center of Akron,
said the hospital averages 31
children on any given day in
its 59-bed NICU. The need
for neonatal care has declined,
Howard said, because the
medical community has
increased its emphasis on prenatal care for expectant mothers.

740-992-3894

Woo4

Danielle Nicole
King

Columbus Cymnulf,Co Acodemy
A vory opocial liHhl·glri who
brlnp happinesslp everyone
who knows her.

. Little Meigs Cheerleaders
We love you and are very
.
proud of you!

Nana &amp;

p,.,,a

0

job. About 28 people live on
the mile-long road, used
primarily as a flood road
between Hysell Run and
Happy Hollow roads.
Residents complained of
persistent dust on the road,
and were referred to the
Rutland Township Trustees,
who performed repair work.
Commissioner JeffThornton said the road might be
eligible for additional repairs
under the Issue II flood
damage repair program, and
said the commissioners will
investigate the possibility of
an application through the
program.
The
commissioners
_japproved
appropriations
requests and adjustments for
the EMS office, the juvenile
court, the. engineer and the
Department of Job and
Family Services.
A resolution was adopted

from PageA1
operate in the same manner.
Council a)so: .
• voted to have a 2-mill
levy put on the fall ballot as
a replacement levy instead of
Ia rene"lallevy;
• approved the purchase of
a replacement microphone
for the police cruiser radio
and agreed to have the
cruiserUs
transmtsston
checked and repaired;
• approved a request made

All Stars Unlimited
Off to ~ good start!
Love, Dad; Mom &amp; Anna

Sr. All Stars, Meigs
Varsity, 4 Time All
American, USCAA Best
Cheerleader, 1\nnbling .
Team, Dance Team

Mom

Channing Shope - 6~
Cl1y Holding - 11'1.

Stars

Unlimited

Worthlng1on - 14'1.
Dally "'PPff8 are
the 4 p.m. closing
quoiN of the previous
day't lraneactiont, provided by Smith Part·
nera atAdveatlnc.

15'1.

OVB-25

BST-~.

PeopiM- 19'1.

to extend the DJFS and
Community Action Agency
summer youth employme.n t
program from July 27 _untH
Aug. 10.
The
commissioners
from PapAl
reviewed a notice from the
Ohio Division of Liquor their actions in a court of
Control, regarding the pro- law, not to 'lie low' until they
posed transfer of a liquor ·left the scene," Crow wrote.
license in Salem Township .
from Cecil D. and Vickie J.
Frye, doing business as Little
Coal Bucket, to Edward L.
Mitchell, also doing business
ftamPapAI
as Little Coal Bucket.
The board also:
.
.
f tJOns.
A
d h ·
." pproveh 1 e payment 0 f
Adventures With Foqd:
b111s m t e amount o ·
.
$$250 704.89 with 122 Katlyn. Sauvage, grand
'
'
champ10n; Bnttany Parsons,
entries;
reserve champion; Heather
• Accepted bids for bitu- Brooks, Kelly '!Yree, Audriminous materials for August anna Pullins, honorable
from ,.\sphalt Materials of mentions.
Marietta and Middleport
The Global Gourmet:
Terminal of Gallipolis.
Rachael Morris, grand
Present, in addition to champion; Nancy Pickens,
Thornton, were Commis- . reserve c4ampion.
sioners Mick Davenport and
The Outdoor Chef: Zack
Jim Sheets, and Clerk Gloria Newell, grand champion; .
Kloes.
·
Morgan Weuy, reserve
champioll; Laura Bailey,
honorable mention.
by Mr. and Mrs. Bo Frazier
Let's Bake Quick Breads:
on the construction of a Lindsey Houser, grand
wooden fence on· the edge champion; · Sarah Lantz,
of their property;
• approved Leary Construction to work on the village water tank. Council
members said that cmltracting with the company will
continue the warranty on
POMEROY Meigs
the tank.
'
County Recorder Judy
Also attending the meet- King has reported the foling, besides Hill and Neigler, lowing recent real estate
were Councilmen Robert transactions:
Beegle, Joe Evans, Greg TayKaren E. Weaver to Phillip
lor, and Fred Wolfe; Street ]. Weaver, deed, Village of
Commissioner John Hol- Syracuse.
man; Clerk Karen Lyons.
Bobbie Renee PriCe,
Bobbie Renee Bowman,,to
Bobbie Renee Bowman,
Galiryve.L. BoWm.ari, Jr., deed,

"If Fife's claims have merir
now, then certainly they had
merit in 1993."
· Fife's May civil case against
Lentes, Soulsby an·d others is
still pending in Craw's
court.
reserve champion.
Yeast Breads on the Rise :
Sara Cammarata, grand
champion; Jessica King,
reserve champion; Erin 'T'aylor, honorable mention.
You're the Chef: Jennifer
Chadwell, grand champion;
John Cooke, reserve champion; Derek Taylor, Nancy
Pickens, honorable mention .
Meals in Minutes: Kara
Osborne, grand champion;
Lindsey Houser, · reserve
champion.
Food and Fitness Choices
for You: Jennifer Grady,
grand champion; Ashley
Boyles, reserve champion.
Mini Meal Magic: Ashley
Life, grand champion; Olivia
Davis, re~erve champion;
Andrea Buckley, Amber
Pooler; honorable mentions.

EMS runs

7:36 p.m., Butternut
Avenue, Jessie Buchanon;
POMEROY - Units of HMC.
the Meigs Emergency Ser,
vice answered 11 calls for
as.istance on Thursday. Units
POMEROY - Registraresponded as follows:
tion
for community ladies
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:19 a.m., Ohio 143, retreat, Aug. I 0 and II, Ohio
Elbert Brooks; Holzer Med- Valley Christian Assembly,
ical Center;
Darwin, now being taken .
9:.26 a.m., Broadway Deadline is Aug. 5. Cost is
Avenue, Charles Bryant, $20 for overnight stay and
treated;
three meals. Call 992-1640
12:07 p.m ., Ebenezer for re.gistration forms.
. Street, Margaret Andrew,
HMC;
4:34 p.m., Wetzgall, Patty
Shane,' Pleasant Valley HosCHESTER Tuppers
pital;
Plains-Chester Water Dis7:12 p.m., Carpenter trict has lifted a boil advisoRoad, Matthew Tripplet, ry that was placed on the
treated;
area of county roads 26 and ·
8:30 p.m., Collins Road, 82, north to Russell Road,
Chambers Road, O'Neal
Mary Searles, PVH;
11 :04
p.m.,
Starcher Road and Bailey Road.
A water sample taken on
Road, motor vehicle acci·dent, Brittany Lathey, Brandi Wedn "sday is · considered
Dye, refused treatment.
safe.
POMEROY
II :26
a.m.,
Martin
Avenue. electr~tal fire, Mary
SYRACUSE - A special
Ann Hendrix' residence, no
injuries.
combined workship service
12:55 a.m., Broadway for Forest Run, Minersville
Avenue, Penny Smith, PVH ; and
Asbury
United
7:11 p.m., Oliver Street. Methodist churches is Sunday at II a.m. at the Asbury
Michelle Stahl, HMC.
church in Syracuse.
RUTLAND

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llcnllo Tho Dally Senllnal, 111 Court.
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l l y - .. -

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pootago pold 01 f'ometoV.

Mavis I. Mullins to Tom
R. Harmon, Martha R.
Harmon, deed,Rutland.
Cecil Dwight Frye, Viccoria June Frye, Cecil Dwight
Frye, Victoria June ,F rye,
Vicki J. Frye, deed, Rutland.
Crossland
Mortgage
Corp. to Wells Fargo Mortgage, Inc., merger.
Joseph
E.
Bowland,
dec.eased, to Nelda Pauline .
Bowland and Farmers Bank
and Savings Co. , affidavit,
Village of Middleport:
·
Cecil D. Frye, Vicky J.
Frye, to Edward Lawrence
Mitchell, deed, Salem .
David K. Gardner to
Marinda
K.
Gardner,
Marinda K. young, deed,
Village of Rutland.
Christine
Martin,
ChristyUs Family Living, to
James D. Webster, deed, Vil!age of Pomeroy.
Clarence A. Molden to
Clint G. Mullins, Mary 0.
Mullins, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
Betsy L. Molden to Clint
G. Mullins, Mary 0.
Mullins, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.

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Best Cheerleader, Little
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LOCAL BRIEFS

Steve.n A. Blouin, Roger J. Pomeroy.
Blouin, Doreen Blouin, to
Janet Barney to ·Donald
Paul A. Simpson, Janet M. Lambert, Jr., deed, Salem.
Simpson, deed, Chester.
Donna Gilmore Savage,
Dennis E. Sergent, Sandra Edward Savage, to Donald
Kay Sergent, to Linda S. Matthew Gilmore, Linda
Wesolowski, deed, Salem.
Gilmore, deed, Scipio.
. Phillip K. Simms, Roberta
Martha F. Wolfe to Martha
J.
Simms,
to
Dinah
J.
GryszF.
Wolfe,
deed, Letart.
.
'
ka, Eric Gryszka, deed,
Martha F. Wolfe to Cecil
Columbia.
Edward Wolfe, Sharon L.
C:hristopher D. Young, Wolfe, deed, Leta_!t.
.. _
0
Elame K. Holmes, to
Martha F. Wolfe to Cecil
.
Debra M; Woodward, Robert J. Holmes, Patricia Edward Wolfe, Roland W
Debra M. Wood, Gregory S. M. Holmes, deed, Scipio.
Wolfe; deed, Letart.
Woodward, to Karen E.
David young to Daphne
Clyde E. Davis, Ronald E.
Weaver, deed, Village of G. Young, deed, Olive.
. Davis, Robert · Davis, Glada
Middleport.
Don V. Burke, Bonnie G. M. Davis, deceased, Mary
James S. Stettler, Pamela S. Burke, to Henry Edw(lrd Kathryn Holter, to Edward
Stettler, to John D. Frank, Rife, Scott .Hennington, D. Anderson, deed, Salem.
Kila A. Frank, deed, Olive.
deed, Salem.
Gary R. Lemley, Serena
Belva
H.
Willard,
Horace Russell Abbott, Lemley, to Tuppers Plainsdeceased, to Denver, L. deceased, to Grace I. Chester Water District, right
Rice, Nora .E. Rice, affi- · Abbott, certificate of trans- of way, Orange.
davit.
fer, Salisbury.
Edward A. Young, Malea
Denlver L. Rice Nora E. . Gary Reed to Kevin . C. Young, to TPCWD, right of
Rice, to Scott E. Brohart, Klug, Sara E. Klug, deed, way, Chester.
Kandee K. Brohart, deed, Olive.
·
Billie A. Davis, Leanna
Bedford.
. .
Walter F. Roush, Anna L. Davis, Leanna Davis, John
Drew Williams to Duane Roush, Sharon Marie Did- M. Davis, to TPCWD, right
E. Abshire, deed, Village of die, Linda L. Fields, Debra of way, Chester.
Pomeroy.
Anna Gress, deed, Sutton.
Roy Bailey, Crystal Bailey,
Rebecca Dye Valentino,
Charles Pickett, Anna to TPCWD, right of way,
Albert Rudolph Valentino, . Pickell, to William E. Chester.
to Thaddeus Dye, Linda Green, Christine A. Green,
Thomas E. Mitchell,
Dye, deed, Columbia.
. deed, Bedford.
Deanna Mitchell, to April
Jackie Todd Cummins, . William
E. Greene, E. Henderson, Darre]J L.
Peggy
Sue
Cummins,
to
William
E.
Green,
Christine Henderson, deed, Lebanon.
·Catholic Charities Inc. which has been generous with contribuJames D. harris, Barbara F.
tions to the Meigs Cooperative Parish In the past have con- Ohio Power Co., right of A. Green, Christine A.
way,
Letart.
Greene,
to
Charles
Pickett,
Harris,
to Dennis Durst,
tributed another $3,500 to the flood relief program adminisRobert C. Hill, Etta Mae Anna Pickett, deed, Bed- Barbara F. Durst, deed,
tered by the parish. Here the Rev. Father Walter Heinz presents the check to Nancy Thoene of the parish. The contribu- Hill, to Ohio Power Co., ford.
Chester.
tion came to replenish the fund which last provided assistance right of way, Sutton.
Martha Boyoton to ConRoy G. Mullins, deceased,
to Meigs countlans s!ruck by flooding and tornado damage
Johnny B. Hoback, Jen- seco Finance Servicing, to Mavis I. Mullins, certifinifer Hoback, to Ohio sheriflUs deed, Village of care of transfer, Rutland. ·
this spring.
Power Co., right of way,
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The Daily Sentinel

Love Mom &amp; Dad

Kastle Balser

AEP-43~

POMEROY- Dannie Jacks, Pomeroy, died Friday, July 27,
·2001 at Oh10 State University Hospital in Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.

Grant

The Dally_Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL STOCKS

Dannie Jacks

·charities

~-

State says no to c'as•"no

·
officer.
Defore Friday, a total of 73
shootings since the riots had
!eli 85 people wounded or
killed, compared with nine
shootings and 11 victims for
the same period last year.
According to police Lt. Col.
Ronald
Twitty,
officers
responded at 12:15 a.m. to a
report of a man with a shotgun 111 the Millvale neighborhood . The first officer did not
locate the man but Haas
responded after another call
was received.
Police Chief Thomas Stre-

everything would be OK."
· "I've been scared all the way, but she is
strong and she's always been a fighter,"
said George Manning Jr., Chastity's
father. ''I'm so proud of her. I keep
telling her she's my baby and always will
be."
"!just keep thinking she'll come back
like she was, but even if she doesn't,
we're aU there for her and we will work
with her," said Kathy Manning, Chastity's mother.
Taha said this poses new issues for
other doctors who may have to care for
comatose, pregnant women. He said the
questions include how long into a coma
would doctors seek to keep a fetus alive,
and at what stage of the fetus' existence
this decision would be made.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A man convicted of throwing
saliva on an undercover police officer has been charged in
other cases where he is suspected of throwing a bodily fluid
on the clothing of women.
Thirteen women identifi'ed him as the man who threw
fluid on 'them while they walked down the street, authorities said. As a result, an additional 30 misdemeanor· charges
have been filed against Anthony Searles. In all, the charges
can carry up to eight months in prison. .
The new charges are multiple counts of inducing panic
and criminal mischief. In addition, the 42-year-old carpet
cleaner could find himself in prison for up to a year for
violating his probation on an unrelated charge.
Searles appeared Thursday before Hamilton County
· Common Pleas Judge Norbert Nadel for a hearing to

'
HAM1LT9N (AP) - ·A 17-year-old led police to ,a
ELKTON (AP) - The girlfriend and 2-year-old son of she said shot her boyfriend, dumped his body in a river and
one of the men who escaped from a federal prison last then raped her.
wee# could be travehng w1th the two men, the U.S. MarB'utler County sher'iff's deputies arrested James S~dan Jr.,
shal's Service rerorte.fi..Jhu_rsday. _
. .
~ ~Jl-,-at his Hamilton home Thursday and charged him wi~h
Lorena Bnseno-Solono, 24,_ and her son With es.c~~ed aggravated murder and rape.
·
convict Juan Gonzales- ValenCia were last seen at vtsltmg
Using information provided by the 17 -year-old, t~e
hours Saturday. the day Gonzales- Valen~ta and R~fael He~- police followed Sedan's muddy ~ire tracks to his home.
rera escaped from the Federal CorrectiOnal InstitUtion m
Authorities identified the dead man as Ronald Thennis,
20, after pulling his body from the Great Miami River. An
Elkton. .
. lnyest1gators sa~ the four may have left Elkton .saturday autopsy was planned.
'·
m Bnseno-Solaro s burgundy or maroon 1989 Butck Elec·I
tra with Washington state plates, said Supervisory Deputy
Daniel O'Donnell of the U:S. Marshal's office in Akron .
They were probably on the way to the Chicago metroYOUNGSTOWN (AP) _ A proposal to build a $600
politan area, he s;~id. "We believe their ultimate destination million casino here would require rewriting not only city
may be the Mexican border."

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
Cincinnati police officer shot
and killed a 22-year-old black
man in a gunfight in a West
Side neighborhood early Friday morning.
Police said the unidentified
man, armed with a shotgun,
fired first at officer Thomas
Haas, who is white. The officer
was not injured.
The shooting was the latest
inciaent in a rash of violence
that has hit Cincinnati since
three days of rioting in April
over the killing of an unarmed
black man by a white police

Deaths

Frld8J, July 27, 2001

Crash victim in co.ma .gives birth to daughter

Ohio weather.

[ Mlnolleld

PageAl

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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~~.....·j~ ~e1. l 5~n. il 1:.:~. to(o, u~ . t~t·

�•
Friday, July 27, 2001

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Saturday, July 28
AccuWeathere forecast for

•
h!'E~:J

•

-···.,

•
o a.••~-• · •

•

\/~~~~W. VA.

&gt;~

KY.

02001

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

.... _._ .....

Inc.

Cloudy

Shower1 T·&amp;forma

Rain

Flurries

Snow

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI (AP) - A car crash
victim in a coma virtually her entire
pregnancy has given birth to a healthy,
nearly 8-pound daughter. ·
The woman's doctors say that the case
could raise important questions for
physicians arid challenge the current
notion that a pregnancy should be terminated early on in a comatose woman
due to the problems of keeping the
mother alive.
Doctors said it is one of few known
cases in the United States in which a
comaiose woman was able to carry a
baby to full term.
The mother, Chastity Cooper, 23, of
Erlanger, Ky., has slowly improved since
the November accident but still ca~not
move or talk.

Saturday... Showers
and
thunderstorms likely. High
near 80. Southeast wind 5 to
I 0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Saturday night ... Showers
and thunderstorms likely. Low
in the upper 60s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. High in the lower
80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 60s and high in
the mid 80s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the upper 60s and high in
the upper 80s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Low near 70 and high in the
lower 90s.
Thursday... Partly ·cloudy.
Low in the lower 70s and high
in the lower 90s.

Fugitives may be with woman

0'
"I think th~re's no question that she's a
fighter and that this is a big part of what
got her through," Dr. Jamal Taha, a neurosurgeon who was on duty when
Cooper-was brought in from the accident, s~id• in an interview Thursday. "She
was very, very sick, and we thought it
would be unlikely that she would even
live, much less have a chance of coming
out of the coma."
Steve Cooper said Thursday he rejected any ;uggestions that his wife's pregnancy be terminated.
"We believed she was in God's hands,
and ending the pregnancy wasn't an
option. We just decided to leave it up to
God," Steve Cooper said. " I was scared,
like any normal person would be. But I
prayed every night. I had the feeling

Thief takes S1OOK in jewels

.lee

Showers forecast for Saturday
Temperatures will start to
warm up again on the weekend and there's a chance of
_Jresu med showers. and thunderstorms, forecasters said.
Highs will be 75-85 . .
There is an even greater
chance of storms on Sunday,
when highs will be in the 80s,
the National Weather Service
said.
Tonight, skies will remain
mostly clear and lows will fall
into the mid-50s to mid-60s.
Sunset tonight will be at
8:50, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 6:26 a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Low in the mid
60s. Southeast wind 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 per1
cent.

STOW (AP) - A man smashed a display case with a
hammer and stole several trays full of jewelry from a store
in this Akron suburb.
·
·
· Police Lt. Rick Myers estimated their value at $100,000.
Executive Coin Co. owner Bill Miholer was near the
smashed cases and ran after the robber, who jumped into a
waiting car about 1:40 p.m. Wednesday. Miholer was able to
provide a description to the police, and the incident was
caught on security cameras.
An employee recognized the robber as someone wh&lt;i&gt; visited the store earlier in the week with a partner.

Fak- shots spur lawsuit .

laws, but also the Ohio Constitution.
A city councilman asked ifYoungstown co uld have a local
referendum on allowing a casino, which promoters say
would bring 5,000 jobs to the city. But Ohio's attorney
general said that state law would trump a city charter.
"State law prphibits gambling of any kind in Ohio except
for charitable purposes or the state lottery," said Joe Case,
spokesman for Ohio Attorney General Betty Montgomery.
Nonetheless , the Casinos for Youngstown Committee
plan to tal&lt;e 500 signatures to city council supporting· casi- ·
no gambling.

Saliva tosser faces charges

CANTON (AP) -An Alliance woman is suing her ,former gynecologist for injecting her with salt water for eight
Years instead of a hormone replacement therapy.
Christine Marschi!)ke, 49, filed the medical malpractice
lawsuit Thursday in Stark County Common Pleas Court
against Dr. David G. Robinson of Alliance.
Marschinke said the doctor stunned her at the end of an
exam last summer by spontaneously admitting he had been
giving her the placebo monthly ever since she began seeing him, A placebo is a harmless but ineffective substance'
usually used in medical studies to compare with actual
medications .
\ .
The woman also recalls that when she asked why Robinson hadn't told her, he replied, "Well, the other women get
very upset when I tell them ." She said she worries other
·
determine if Searles had violated his probation for failing
women were deceived.
to pay child support.

Vidim aids 'in suspect's capture'
m,an

MANLEY'S
RECYCI.JNG
CENTER
503 Mill Street • Middleport

NOW OPEN SATURDAYS
8:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Monday - Friday 9:00a.m. : 4:00 p.m .

,,,,

Police officer kills man in gunfight
icher said, based on the num-·
her of shell casings recovered
at the scene, "it appears there
was very active gunfire."
The man was pronounced
dead at University Hospital at
12:32 a.m.
Streiber said Haas and the
suspect were 20-30 feet apart
during the shootout.
The suspect fired at least
two rounds from a sawed-off,
pump action, 12-gauge shotgun with a · pistol grip, the
'hief said. Haas fired his 9mm~
handgun and- a· shotgun at the
suspect.

How Proud We Are!
'

Molly r.n;l:aPet

Clinic opens new baby ·I.CU
CLEVELAND(AP) - The
Cleveland Clinic will open
the doors Monday to a new
17-bed intensive care unit for
premature babies, despite criticism from some ,health care
advocates that northeast Ohio
does not need the additional
beds for babies.
On Thursday, the clinic
unveiled the new state-of-theart, $4.4 miUion facility. The
neonatal intensive care unit
(NlCU) provides emergency
care for low-birthweight
babies ·and babies suffering
. various developmental ailments.
Clinic officials say the unit
creates a new opportunity to
merge the hospital's national

surgical expertise with stateof-the art care for infants.
"We do things here that
nobody else in the city is able
to do," said Dr. Douglas
Moodie, chairman of clinic's
division of pediatrics.
With the new neonatal
ICU, premature babies can be
treated and housed at the clinic, without needing .ro" be
transferred.
The new facility will be the
fifth neonatal ICU in the area,
bringing the total number of
critical-care beds for babies in
the region to 191.
Some health care advocates
say the region has no need for
the.Jdditional neonatal ICU
•
beds.

"It would seem on the surface that it is not ·needed," said
Diane Lardie, director the
Cleveland-based Universal
Health Care Actian Network.
"If we were setting priorities in this town, I'm not sure
a NICU unit would be at the
top of the list," she added.
Bob Howard, director of
planning at Children's Hospital Medical Center of Akron,
said the hospital averages 31
children on any given day in
its 59-bed NICU. The need
for neonatal care has declined,
Howard said, because the
medical community has
increased its emphasis on prenatal care for expectant mothers.

740-992-3894

Woo4

Danielle Nicole
King

Columbus Cymnulf,Co Acodemy
A vory opocial liHhl·glri who
brlnp happinesslp everyone
who knows her.

. Little Meigs Cheerleaders
We love you and are very
.
proud of you!

Nana &amp;

p,.,,a

0

job. About 28 people live on
the mile-long road, used
primarily as a flood road
between Hysell Run and
Happy Hollow roads.
Residents complained of
persistent dust on the road,
and were referred to the
Rutland Township Trustees,
who performed repair work.
Commissioner JeffThornton said the road might be
eligible for additional repairs
under the Issue II flood
damage repair program, and
said the commissioners will
investigate the possibility of
an application through the
program.
The
commissioners
_japproved
appropriations
requests and adjustments for
the EMS office, the juvenile
court, the. engineer and the
Department of Job and
Family Services.
A resolution was adopted

from PageA1
operate in the same manner.
Council a)so: .
• voted to have a 2-mill
levy put on the fall ballot as
a replacement levy instead of
Ia rene"lallevy;
• approved the purchase of
a replacement microphone
for the police cruiser radio
and agreed to have the
cruiserUs
transmtsston
checked and repaired;
• approved a request made

All Stars Unlimited
Off to ~ good start!
Love, Dad; Mom &amp; Anna

Sr. All Stars, Meigs
Varsity, 4 Time All
American, USCAA Best
Cheerleader, 1\nnbling .
Team, Dance Team

Mom

Channing Shope - 6~
Cl1y Holding - 11'1.

Stars

Unlimited

Worthlng1on - 14'1.
Dally "'PPff8 are
the 4 p.m. closing
quoiN of the previous
day't lraneactiont, provided by Smith Part·
nera atAdveatlnc.

15'1.

OVB-25

BST-~.

PeopiM- 19'1.

to extend the DJFS and
Community Action Agency
summer youth employme.n t
program from July 27 _untH
Aug. 10.
The
commissioners
from PapAl
reviewed a notice from the
Ohio Division of Liquor their actions in a court of
Control, regarding the pro- law, not to 'lie low' until they
posed transfer of a liquor ·left the scene," Crow wrote.
license in Salem Township .
from Cecil D. and Vickie J.
Frye, doing business as Little
Coal Bucket, to Edward L.
Mitchell, also doing business
ftamPapAI
as Little Coal Bucket.
The board also:
.
.
f tJOns.
A
d h ·
." pproveh 1 e payment 0 f
Adventures With Foqd:
b111s m t e amount o ·
.
$$250 704.89 with 122 Katlyn. Sauvage, grand
'
'
champ10n; Bnttany Parsons,
entries;
reserve champion; Heather
• Accepted bids for bitu- Brooks, Kelly '!Yree, Audriminous materials for August anna Pullins, honorable
from ,.\sphalt Materials of mentions.
Marietta and Middleport
The Global Gourmet:
Terminal of Gallipolis.
Rachael Morris, grand
Present, in addition to champion; Nancy Pickens,
Thornton, were Commis- . reserve c4ampion.
sioners Mick Davenport and
The Outdoor Chef: Zack
Jim Sheets, and Clerk Gloria Newell, grand champion; .
Kloes.
·
Morgan Weuy, reserve
champioll; Laura Bailey,
honorable mention.
by Mr. and Mrs. Bo Frazier
Let's Bake Quick Breads:
on the construction of a Lindsey Houser, grand
wooden fence on· the edge champion; · Sarah Lantz,
of their property;
• approved Leary Construction to work on the village water tank. Council
members said that cmltracting with the company will
continue the warranty on
POMEROY Meigs
the tank.
'
County Recorder Judy
Also attending the meet- King has reported the foling, besides Hill and Neigler, lowing recent real estate
were Councilmen Robert transactions:
Beegle, Joe Evans, Greg TayKaren E. Weaver to Phillip
lor, and Fred Wolfe; Street ]. Weaver, deed, Village of
Commissioner John Hol- Syracuse.
man; Clerk Karen Lyons.
Bobbie Renee PriCe,
Bobbie Renee Bowman,,to
Bobbie Renee Bowman,
Galiryve.L. BoWm.ari, Jr., deed,

"If Fife's claims have merir
now, then certainly they had
merit in 1993."
· Fife's May civil case against
Lentes, Soulsby an·d others is
still pending in Craw's
court.
reserve champion.
Yeast Breads on the Rise :
Sara Cammarata, grand
champion; Jessica King,
reserve champion; Erin 'T'aylor, honorable mention.
You're the Chef: Jennifer
Chadwell, grand champion;
John Cooke, reserve champion; Derek Taylor, Nancy
Pickens, honorable mention .
Meals in Minutes: Kara
Osborne, grand champion;
Lindsey Houser, · reserve
champion.
Food and Fitness Choices
for You: Jennifer Grady,
grand champion; Ashley
Boyles, reserve champion.
Mini Meal Magic: Ashley
Life, grand champion; Olivia
Davis, re~erve champion;
Andrea Buckley, Amber
Pooler; honorable mentions.

EMS runs

7:36 p.m., Butternut
Avenue, Jessie Buchanon;
POMEROY - Units of HMC.
the Meigs Emergency Ser,
vice answered 11 calls for
as.istance on Thursday. Units
POMEROY - Registraresponded as follows:
tion
for community ladies
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:19 a.m., Ohio 143, retreat, Aug. I 0 and II, Ohio
Elbert Brooks; Holzer Med- Valley Christian Assembly,
ical Center;
Darwin, now being taken .
9:.26 a.m., Broadway Deadline is Aug. 5. Cost is
Avenue, Charles Bryant, $20 for overnight stay and
treated;
three meals. Call 992-1640
12:07 p.m ., Ebenezer for re.gistration forms.
. Street, Margaret Andrew,
HMC;
4:34 p.m., Wetzgall, Patty
Shane,' Pleasant Valley HosCHESTER Tuppers
pital;
Plains-Chester Water Dis7:12 p.m., Carpenter trict has lifted a boil advisoRoad, Matthew Tripplet, ry that was placed on the
treated;
area of county roads 26 and ·
8:30 p.m., Collins Road, 82, north to Russell Road,
Chambers Road, O'Neal
Mary Searles, PVH;
11 :04
p.m.,
Starcher Road and Bailey Road.
A water sample taken on
Road, motor vehicle acci·dent, Brittany Lathey, Brandi Wedn "sday is · considered
Dye, refused treatment.
safe.
POMEROY
II :26
a.m.,
Martin
Avenue. electr~tal fire, Mary
SYRACUSE - A special
Ann Hendrix' residence, no
injuries.
combined workship service
12:55 a.m., Broadway for Forest Run, Minersville
Avenue, Penny Smith, PVH ; and
Asbury
United
7:11 p.m., Oliver Street. Methodist churches is Sunday at II a.m. at the Asbury
Michelle Stahl, HMC.
church in Syracuse.
RUTLAND

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Mavis I. Mullins to Tom
R. Harmon, Martha R.
Harmon, deed,Rutland.
Cecil Dwight Frye, Viccoria June Frye, Cecil Dwight
Frye, Victoria June ,F rye,
Vicki J. Frye, deed, Rutland.
Crossland
Mortgage
Corp. to Wells Fargo Mortgage, Inc., merger.
Joseph
E.
Bowland,
dec.eased, to Nelda Pauline .
Bowland and Farmers Bank
and Savings Co. , affidavit,
Village of Middleport:
·
Cecil D. Frye, Vicky J.
Frye, to Edward Lawrence
Mitchell, deed, Salem .
David K. Gardner to
Marinda
K.
Gardner,
Marinda K. young, deed,
Village of Rutland.
Christine
Martin,
ChristyUs Family Living, to
James D. Webster, deed, Vil!age of Pomeroy.
Clarence A. Molden to
Clint G. Mullins, Mary 0.
Mullins, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.
Betsy L. Molden to Clint
G. Mullins, Mary 0.
Mullins, deed, Village of
Pomeroy.

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Best Cheerleader, Little
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LOCAL BRIEFS

Steve.n A. Blouin, Roger J. Pomeroy.
Blouin, Doreen Blouin, to
Janet Barney to ·Donald
Paul A. Simpson, Janet M. Lambert, Jr., deed, Salem.
Simpson, deed, Chester.
Donna Gilmore Savage,
Dennis E. Sergent, Sandra Edward Savage, to Donald
Kay Sergent, to Linda S. Matthew Gilmore, Linda
Wesolowski, deed, Salem.
Gilmore, deed, Scipio.
. Phillip K. Simms, Roberta
Martha F. Wolfe to Martha
J.
Simms,
to
Dinah
J.
GryszF.
Wolfe,
deed, Letart.
.
'
ka, Eric Gryszka, deed,
Martha F. Wolfe to Cecil
Columbia.
Edward Wolfe, Sharon L.
C:hristopher D. Young, Wolfe, deed, Leta_!t.
.. _
0
Elame K. Holmes, to
Martha F. Wolfe to Cecil
.
Debra M; Woodward, Robert J. Holmes, Patricia Edward Wolfe, Roland W
Debra M. Wood, Gregory S. M. Holmes, deed, Scipio.
Wolfe; deed, Letart.
Woodward, to Karen E.
David young to Daphne
Clyde E. Davis, Ronald E.
Weaver, deed, Village of G. Young, deed, Olive.
. Davis, Robert · Davis, Glada
Middleport.
Don V. Burke, Bonnie G. M. Davis, deceased, Mary
James S. Stettler, Pamela S. Burke, to Henry Edw(lrd Kathryn Holter, to Edward
Stettler, to John D. Frank, Rife, Scott .Hennington, D. Anderson, deed, Salem.
Kila A. Frank, deed, Olive.
deed, Salem.
Gary R. Lemley, Serena
Belva
H.
Willard,
Horace Russell Abbott, Lemley, to Tuppers Plainsdeceased, to Denver, L. deceased, to Grace I. Chester Water District, right
Rice, Nora .E. Rice, affi- · Abbott, certificate of trans- of way, Orange.
davit.
fer, Salisbury.
Edward A. Young, Malea
Denlver L. Rice Nora E. . Gary Reed to Kevin . C. Young, to TPCWD, right of
Rice, to Scott E. Brohart, Klug, Sara E. Klug, deed, way, Chester.
Kandee K. Brohart, deed, Olive.
·
Billie A. Davis, Leanna
Bedford.
. .
Walter F. Roush, Anna L. Davis, Leanna Davis, John
Drew Williams to Duane Roush, Sharon Marie Did- M. Davis, to TPCWD, right
E. Abshire, deed, Village of die, Linda L. Fields, Debra of way, Chester.
Pomeroy.
Anna Gress, deed, Sutton.
Roy Bailey, Crystal Bailey,
Rebecca Dye Valentino,
Charles Pickett, Anna to TPCWD, right of way,
Albert Rudolph Valentino, . Pickell, to William E. Chester.
to Thaddeus Dye, Linda Green, Christine A. Green,
Thomas E. Mitchell,
Dye, deed, Columbia.
. deed, Bedford.
Deanna Mitchell, to April
Jackie Todd Cummins, . William
E. Greene, E. Henderson, Darre]J L.
Peggy
Sue
Cummins,
to
William
E.
Green,
Christine Henderson, deed, Lebanon.
·Catholic Charities Inc. which has been generous with contribuJames D. harris, Barbara F.
tions to the Meigs Cooperative Parish In the past have con- Ohio Power Co., right of A. Green, Christine A.
way,
Letart.
Greene,
to
Charles
Pickett,
Harris,
to Dennis Durst,
tributed another $3,500 to the flood relief program adminisRobert C. Hill, Etta Mae Anna Pickett, deed, Bed- Barbara F. Durst, deed,
tered by the parish. Here the Rev. Father Walter Heinz presents the check to Nancy Thoene of the parish. The contribu- Hill, to Ohio Power Co., ford.
Chester.
tion came to replenish the fund which last provided assistance right of way, Sutton.
Martha Boyoton to ConRoy G. Mullins, deceased,
to Meigs countlans s!ruck by flooding and tornado damage
Johnny B. Hoback, Jen- seco Finance Servicing, to Mavis I. Mullins, certifinifer Hoback, to Ohio sheriflUs deed, Village of care of transfer, Rutland. ·
this spring.
Power Co., right of way,
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POMEROY- Dannie Jacks, Pomeroy, died Friday, July 27,
·2001 at Oh10 State University Hospital in Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.

Grant

The Dally_Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL STOCKS

Dannie Jacks

·charities

~-

State says no to c'as•"no

·
officer.
Defore Friday, a total of 73
shootings since the riots had
!eli 85 people wounded or
killed, compared with nine
shootings and 11 victims for
the same period last year.
According to police Lt. Col.
Ronald
Twitty,
officers
responded at 12:15 a.m. to a
report of a man with a shotgun 111 the Millvale neighborhood . The first officer did not
locate the man but Haas
responded after another call
was received.
Police Chief Thomas Stre-

everything would be OK."
· "I've been scared all the way, but she is
strong and she's always been a fighter,"
said George Manning Jr., Chastity's
father. ''I'm so proud of her. I keep
telling her she's my baby and always will
be."
"!just keep thinking she'll come back
like she was, but even if she doesn't,
we're aU there for her and we will work
with her," said Kathy Manning, Chastity's mother.
Taha said this poses new issues for
other doctors who may have to care for
comatose, pregnant women. He said the
questions include how long into a coma
would doctors seek to keep a fetus alive,
and at what stage of the fetus' existence
this decision would be made.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A man convicted of throwing
saliva on an undercover police officer has been charged in
other cases where he is suspected of throwing a bodily fluid
on the clothing of women.
Thirteen women identifi'ed him as the man who threw
fluid on 'them while they walked down the street, authorities said. As a result, an additional 30 misdemeanor· charges
have been filed against Anthony Searles. In all, the charges
can carry up to eight months in prison. .
The new charges are multiple counts of inducing panic
and criminal mischief. In addition, the 42-year-old carpet
cleaner could find himself in prison for up to a year for
violating his probation on an unrelated charge.
Searles appeared Thursday before Hamilton County
· Common Pleas Judge Norbert Nadel for a hearing to

'
HAM1LT9N (AP) - ·A 17-year-old led police to ,a
ELKTON (AP) - The girlfriend and 2-year-old son of she said shot her boyfriend, dumped his body in a river and
one of the men who escaped from a federal prison last then raped her.
wee# could be travehng w1th the two men, the U.S. MarB'utler County sher'iff's deputies arrested James S~dan Jr.,
shal's Service rerorte.fi..Jhu_rsday. _
. .
~ ~Jl-,-at his Hamilton home Thursday and charged him wi~h
Lorena Bnseno-Solono, 24,_ and her son With es.c~~ed aggravated murder and rape.
·
convict Juan Gonzales- ValenCia were last seen at vtsltmg
Using information provided by the 17 -year-old, t~e
hours Saturday. the day Gonzales- Valen~ta and R~fael He~- police followed Sedan's muddy ~ire tracks to his home.
rera escaped from the Federal CorrectiOnal InstitUtion m
Authorities identified the dead man as Ronald Thennis,
20, after pulling his body from the Great Miami River. An
Elkton. .
. lnyest1gators sa~ the four may have left Elkton .saturday autopsy was planned.
'·
m Bnseno-Solaro s burgundy or maroon 1989 Butck Elec·I
tra with Washington state plates, said Supervisory Deputy
Daniel O'Donnell of the U:S. Marshal's office in Akron .
They were probably on the way to the Chicago metroYOUNGSTOWN (AP) _ A proposal to build a $600
politan area, he s;~id. "We believe their ultimate destination million casino here would require rewriting not only city
may be the Mexican border."

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
Cincinnati police officer shot
and killed a 22-year-old black
man in a gunfight in a West
Side neighborhood early Friday morning.
Police said the unidentified
man, armed with a shotgun,
fired first at officer Thomas
Haas, who is white. The officer
was not injured.
The shooting was the latest
inciaent in a rash of violence
that has hit Cincinnati since
three days of rioting in April
over the killing of an unarmed
black man by a white police

Deaths

Frld8J, July 27, 2001

Crash victim in co.ma .gives birth to daughter

Ohio weather.

[ Mlnolleld

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�••

0 IJIRIOR

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Friday, July 27, 200 I

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: Several years ago,
you asked readers who had been
diagnosed with schizophrenia to
write and describe their experiences
wiih the mental bealthsystem for the
Group for Advancement of Psychiatry. We received hundreds of candid,
thoughtful and provocative letters,
and while their treatment and reacADVICE
tions were diverse, many shared similar experiences,
,
They described their struggle with limitations, restrictive agency policies
a terrible and frightening illness and and insensitive or unskilled clinicians.
the importance of their own inner
There were many inspirational letstrengths, as well as support from ters about lifesaving care, yet we
mental health professionals, family, physicians were appalled by bow .
friends, religion and work. What was often treatment was perceived as
vital was feeling cared-for, respected impersonal, fragmented and dehuand listened- to by a knowledgeable manizing. Without social, personal,
doctor (or other professional), who residential and vocational supports,
would stick with them over the long . medications rarely helped. However,
hauL
·
we were touched and impressed that
Many readers complained that so many ·of your readers were
their .care was hindered by insurance resourceful in overcoming the limita-

.Ohro Valley Publishing Co.

Abigail.
Van
Buren

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

I.R~rrs tt• thl! l'tlitor are "'fllt'imU. fhty ••lw11IJ b~ leu 'than 31JO 1mrds. Alllm~rs
are subjl'(t to editing and must bt signed a11d indudt addrtss and tel~phont num~r.
No unsigned lttter.J ..,;u he puhlid•td. J..ntr.ts should bt' in guod IDSit, addrnnng
ismn ntn pvno'!ofitil!s.
. .
He opinions exprtned in lhi' l'olumn bi'/0'14' are tilt t'ottstmus tJf rhe Oh1o Vutll'y
l'~tblislling Co.'s edit11rial hoord, tmltn oth erwisfl 11oled.

NO.. l\\t;
• z,soo A'Nl*:K!

OHIO VIEWS

'

'J

Rear

Ruling raises questions about
what people think, not do

~

New study spurs thoughts on course of human species
If you're looking for summertime readsecret for another 200 years.
ing, let me reconm1end ·a short book
Ironically, the Plague itself caused the
entitled "In the Wake of the Plague delay of the '"ientific method. Work was
The Black Death and the World it Made,"
underway at Oxford, but the disease decc . : .
by Norman E Cantor (The Free Press,
· imated the scientific community. Thomas .. .
2001). I grant you, neither the title nor
Bradwardine, appointed Archbishop of. .
the subject matter is the sort that you
Canterbury by the King, intended to use . ·
would normally consider for a summer
the Church's power· and money to push · . ·
day curled up in a hammock in .the shade
~Yhtn:&gt;n'h.:..r. academic research toward biological
of an old tree.
¥VctUU.li.JI.,L5 investigation. But two months after his
But, it is fascinating reading, and there
appointment, the Black Plague killed
is something to it that makes you think
COLUMNIST
Bradwardine. Such deaths put advances
.·that Galileo, Copernicus, and others were ~· ·
about the course the human species has
embarked upon, and why. I. recently can friars were preaching that the pesti- to uncover later, on hold.
·· '
Over time, the European world repop- .
interviewed .Cantor for an episode of. lence was God's punishment wrought
PBS' "Think Tank," and I learned a lot upon sinful people. •
ulated.The impact of the biological disas- ·
from a wise man. ·
The 'IStrologists had their own rake on ter . sunk in; science resumed its forward
The Black Death, believed to be the matter. A special commission in march. Something had to be done, and
bubonic plague, possibly mixed in with France determined the problem: Saturn people decided they'd. better try: We've
anthrax, killed between 30 and 50 per- was in the house of JupiteL Of course, come a long way.
cent of Europe's population from the nothing worked. In Cantor's view, the
But the tale is not over. As recently as
years 1348 to 1349. Cantor writes that it failure of the existing tools of humankind 1918 more than 50 million people were
"was the greatest bio-medical disaster in accelerated the birth of modern science killed worldwide by "The Spanish Flu,"
European and possibly world history." A and modern medicint. Medieval medi- whose true biological composition is still
contemporary Florentine writer referred cine, ·Cantor says, was not quackery. Sur- not understood. New plagues and potento "the exterminating of humanity."
geons could do work on limbs, although rial plagues are still with us. PharmacoloWe still remember it, 650 years later. not internally. Ma:ny herbal remedies gy and bu?tecb, p~bhc and pnvate, are
When children hold hands in a circle and were know11 ~effective for . headaches _ mostly staymg one JUmp ahead (and CUI- ~
sing, ''Ring- around tfie ros1es/ A- pocket- stomachaches'and some 'infectioQs. Som~ rently wrestling with the . scourge of
ful of posies/ Ashes, ashes/ We all fall of these have been reappearing these days AIDS). Gover.nment agenoe~, hke the
down " they're reciting the symptoms, dis- on shelves marked "alternative medicine." Center for D1s~ase Control m Atlanta,
coloration and mortality of the Black
Doctors didn't have mi croscopes nor and others hke 1t around the world, are
Death. (Do kid1 still play that game? Can- did the understand that diseases could domg work that was stalled 650 years ago.
tor recalls the ditty from his c'hildhood in
·
y
h ·
B
C
It's a gnm story, yet hopefl1l, mformaspread throug m1crobes. ut, says an- .
d ddl I
d'
•d
the 1940s, and so doL)
h
ld h
.h .
nve an o y peasant rea mg.= a car h
h d ·
tor, t ey cou
ave come up w1t mtcro.
ld 1
1
But, Cantor believes, we also relate to
Th
.
f
.
.
carrymg war -c ass ypoc on nac,
e sctence
o opttcsd was qmte
d'1gested It· more or 1ess calmly. 1 d'd
the epidemic in far more important ways.· scopes.
I
.
1 n •t
developed. Peop e were alrea y wearmg
d "! h W: k f h PI
"
d
The medieval social structure h onore d corr~ctive lenses. Researchers at Oxford retath bn t eh .batel.to t led beague .as a ~y
two fields of endeavor: the military, and,
.
.
"d
.
h
.
a e eac , u cou
.
Umverstty were eve1opmg t e science
principally, the Church. Neither soldiers of physics. Modern medicine could have
nor priests understood the bubonic come earlier. .
Ben Watteflber;g, a seniorfellow at tlwAmer:
plague's cause: infected fleas traveling on
. ican Enterprise lmtirure, is tl1e hast-essayist of
the backs of infected rodents, principally
Alas, it was a road not taken. One bar- tire PBS special "71re First Measured Centublack tats..
rier was that the Church did not allow ry" and co-author of a new book of tlze same
In the early days of the Plague, the the dissection of the human body. Man title (AEI Press, 2000). He is the lrost of' the
churches were fulL Bishops put on their was created in the image of God, and dis- weekly p11blic television program "11tink
fin est vestments and carried crosses and · secting the body was regarded as blasphe- Tank ."'I'Ou may send comments to him via esaint's reliC'S , through the streets. Francis- my.The secrets of the opened body stayed mail: lMltmailaol.com.

J3en

ln theor y, t his sounds good .

Bu t the pricc .in terms of lost privacyis very, very steep.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Jul y 27, rlw 208th day of2001.There are 157
cbys left in th9 y.ear.
Today's Highlight in History:
O n Ju ly 27, 1789,.Cong rcss established the Department of
Foreign Affairs, th e forerunner of the Department of State.
O n ·this date:
In 1794. Fre nch revolmionary lea der Maxinulien Robespierre was overthrown and placed un der arrest; he was executed the f&lt;Ji lowi ng day. .
In 1861, Union (;en. Geo rge 13. McClellan was put in co mmand of th e Army of the Poton.1ac.
In 1866, Cyrus W. Field finally succeeded, after two failures,
in laying th e first underwater telegraph cable between North
America and Europe.
.
In 1940, Bugs Bunny made his "offi cial" debut in the Warner Brothers an imated cartoon "A Wild Hare."
. ln 1953, the Korean War armistice was signed at Panmunjom, ·
ending three years of fightin g.
·
In 1960, Richard Nixon was nom inated for president at the
l!..epublican national conve ntion in C hi cago.
In 197 4, the H ouse Judi ciary Committee voted 27-11 to rec- .
om mend President Nixon\ impeachmen t on a charge that he
had personally engaged · in a "co urse of conduct': designed to
ol:is tru ct justice in the Watergate case.
In 1976, Air Force veteran R ay Brennan became the first
person to die of what came to be known as Legionnaire's Disease followin g "'"American 'Legion convention in Philadelph~.
.
.
.
· In 1980, on day 26 7 of the Iranian hostage c'risis, the deposed
Shah of Iran died at a military hospital outside Cairo, Egypt, at
age 60.
'
hi 1995, the Korean War Veterans M emorial was dedicated in
Washington by Prestdent C linton and South Korean President
Kim Young-sam .
.
.
Ten years ago: Fighting escalated in the breakaway republic
of Croatia, as a Yugoslav air force jet fired on Croatian forces
and groun d fighting erupted into clashes with federal tanks and
troops.
. Five years ago: Terror struck the Atlanta O lympics as a pipe
bom b exploded at Centennial Olympic Park, ki lling one person and inj urin g more than 100. American Gail Devers won
th e women's 100-meter dash .
' One yea r ago: Yugoslav [&gt;resident Slobodan Milosevic called
presiden ti al, parliamentary and local elec tions for the followin g
September. (The election would result in Milosevic's fa ll from
power.)
.
Today's Birthdays: TV produce r Norman Lear IS 79.
Rhythm- and-blues si nger Harvey Fuqua IS 72 . Actor Jerry Van
. Dyke is 70. Sportscaster Irv Cross is li2. Actor John Pleshette is
59. Singer Bobbie Ge ntry is 57 . Actress-director Betty Thomas
i1 53. Olympic gold medal figure skater Peggy Fleming is 53.
\

"

Frlcl.y, July 27, 2001

tions of their illnesses.
Stigma and prejudice from medical
professionals, institutions and the
general public were additional obsta'cles to recovery. Dozens of letters
contained painful stories saying that
peing regarded as mentally ill slowed
the person's progress. It is essential
that people with mental illness be
seen as capable human beings, who
are much more than the illnesses with
which they struggle.
Reading the letters was enlightening. In response, we have written' a
report, "Now That We Are Listening,"
summarizing important issues in
treating schizophrenia and providing
excerpts of some of the letters. The
report is free to your readers.
Thank you for helping us and
other psychiatrists to understand how
our patients feel about their care. THE COMMitTEE ON PSYCiflATRY AND THE COMMU-

NITY
GROUP
FOR
ADVANCEMENT OF PSYClUARTY
DEAR COMMITI'EE MEMBERS AND DEAR READERS:
A great m,any medical consumers
would love the chance to air their
feelings about how they' have been
treated by "the system." Thank YOU
for allowing my readers to level with
you. I had the opportunity to review
many of the letters .readers sent to
assist your study. While it came as .no
surprise that patients were willing to
tell me things they wouldn't ordinarily tell their doctors, I was struck by
their frankness.
·Those interested in obtaining a
copy of the Hooklet, "Now That We
Are Listening." may do 50 by sending
name and address to: McKassen,Attn:
Maria Harryn, 800 Business Center
Drive, Suite 100, Horsham; PA
19044. Be sure to include the title, of

LOCAL EVENTS

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

• The Dayton Daily News: A Columbus court has found
a 1nan guilty on child-pornography charges even though no
actua l childrc·n were mvolved and even though th e pornography neve;. was distributed.
·
·
13rian Dalton, 22, had simply written material in a journal. As
a result, he has been sentenced to seven years, and his probation
on a previous charge has been revoKed. He faces 10 years in
pnson.
.
.
Wh at he wrote was apparently unspeakable. Wh en the jury .
was being read passages, it asked to have the reading stopped.
One juror was reported to be in tears .
Still, th e prosecu tors aren't saying th e children in the "journal" were real. T he notion that a man can go to jail for writing
tiction for hiS own reading would not likely stand up on
appea l, and it shouldn't. The point of child-pornography laws is
to punish people for their acts involving real people. No legislature occo urt has ever said govern me\]t should start ruling on
what rho!Ights are acceptable. That would be a new world,
·
indeed.
• Tribune Chronicle ofWarren: The U.S. Supreme Court
rec ently put the brakes on police departments seeking to use
heat se nsing cameras ro detect marijuana plants growing inside
someone's house. Tile cou rt said police must have a search warrant before they can use tech nology that lets them see what is
going on in ~ide ;I pe·rson 's home.
But new tec hnology is spurring all sorts of government initiatives to keep track of people. .
.
• About 611 comm unities now use cameras to catch people
_Itlllning nc&gt;d lights. _
_
·~
• Th e National' Park Service is testing a program that uses a
combi11ation of radar and ca meras to catch speeders on park
rl&gt;ads.

'

Page AS .

Schizophrenia patients tell it like .it is to doctors' group

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher ·

By the Bend

' The Daily Sentinel

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
SYRACUSE - Food and Nazarene Church, concert
clothing give-away, Syracuse series, Sunday, 6 p.m. Forgiv·
.JFirst Church of God. 2 to 4 p.m. en from Gallipolis to sing.
Friday. First come, first served.
RAVENSWOOD Joy
LONG BOTIOM - Mt. Quartet of Pensacola Christian
Olive Community Church, College, to present program,
Long Bottom, revival, under· Sunday, 7 p.m. at the Second
way, 7 p.m. each evening. Baptist Church, Ravenswood,
Special speaker, special W.Va.
singing.
POMEROY DescenSATURDAY
dants of Tommy Gilkey and
PORTAND - VanMeter Melda Jane Hudnall, annual
reunion, Saturday, 5 p.m. at the reunion, Sunday, Roadside
Portland Park. Covered dish Park on Route 33, .south of
cookout.
· Darwin. Those attending to
take covered dish and folding
SUNDAY
chairs.

POMEROY Services
Sunday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Poplar Ridge FWB Church,
State Route 554 . . Rev. Bill
Banks of Gospel Lighthouse
speaking; special singing. John
Elswick, pastor invites public.

MONDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County Fait Board, Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Coonhunters Building.

Judging results
announcecl

, TUESDAY
POMEROY - Community .
vacation Bible school, Grace
Episcopal Church Tuesday
through Saturday, 's to 8:30
p.m. Classes for ages four to
12.

The Community Calendar

Is published as a free service
to non-profH groups wishing
to · announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
Is not designed to promote
sales
or fund raisers of any
RACINE - .Vacation Bible
school,
Racine
United type. Hems are printed only
Methodist Church, Monday as space pennlts and cannot
through Friday, 6 .to 8:30p.m. be guaranteed tQ, be printed
a specific number of days.

L,.c;,.ebrate the sounds of summer with friends
d family in the open air under the stars.
I

I

· · Bend Blues Bash Festival
Saturday, July 28, 2001

Submitted for your approval: a briif history of hell

George
Plagenz

.

'

POMEROY - Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Vennari of Pomeroy and Mrs.
Mildred Bailey · of Bidwell
were Mrs. Deanna, (Ewing)
Nichols of Atlanta, Ga., and
her niece, Michelle Schepp of
Clearwater, Fla.
Mrs.Vennari and Mrs. Bailey
are sisters and cared for the
Ewing children when · they
lived in Middleport in the
1940s.
Mrs. Ni~hols is the daughter
of the late Howard and Nancy
Rawlings Ewing.

'11

Mark's
Pocket
Knives&amp;
Collectibles

evildoers will go to a pl;lce of" everlasting
fire prepared for the devil and his angels."
But hell no longer holds the terror for
us that it once did. There was a time when
'the fear of going to hell was enough .to
keep many a person on the straight and
narrow and away from a life of crime and
evil.
But the fear ofh~ll occupies the thinking of only a relatively few today, if we tan
believe the surveys. Once a central Christian doctrine, belief in hell has been losing
ground for the last 300 years, some theologians contend.
A God who makes us shake in our
boots and cringe in fear when we have
pointed our lives in the wrong direction
offers .a better ·hope for a kinder, gentler
and happier world than a God who sets
no boundaries for us. But nothing scares
us.
To quote from something that appeared
in this column at the time of th,e
Columbine shootings, "if only Oylan Klebold and Eric Harris (who carried out a
deadly mission in a Colorado high school)
had believed in a God who holds us
accountable, they may have been 'scared
straight' by this God who loved them."
Timothy McVeigh, too.

Penonal

POMEROY -- Creative
writing judging results were
announced today by the
Mei~ County Extension Service.
They were Taryn Lentes,
grand champion; Ashley
Boyles, reserve champion;
John Cooke and Tyler Lee,
honorable mention in creative
writing.
In writing and reporting.for
tee~. Rachael Morris was the
grand champion.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Is Timothy McVeigh burning in bell?
The answer depends on several things. Is
there a hell? If so, what's it like and who
.
goes there?
Christianity teaches that repentance for
sin will keep even the worst sinner from
going to hell. Did McVeigh repent of his
awful crime in Oklahoma City before he _
.was executed?
The concept of hell has an interesting
history in th e Bible. The ·orthodox
COLUMNIST
· churches teach that hell is punishment for
sin. But God's punishment to Adam and
Eve for sinning in the Garden of Eden to pay in the afterlife for those happy
was a life of hard work ending in death.
times? Shouldn't' theY. get their just
"Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou deserts?
return" was God's judgment on the
And so the idea of hell emerged as a
human race. Presumably, physical death place of torment and suffering for the
was going to be the end of each individ- . wicked. During the Middle Ages, especially, part of the bliss and happiness of the
ual.
The idea of a resurrection from . the saved, as pictured by contemporary artists,
dead appeared at the time of the prophets consisted in gazing on the torments of the
alongside the Jewish expectation of a great damned in hell .
crisis in history in which the kingdoms
Even in these modern times, clergy
that had oppressed the Jews would be have sometimes gone out of their way to
overthrown .and the Jewish siate restored give vivid, l11rid descriptions of what
ro its former glory.
awaits the wicked in hell.
It was the prophet Daniel who first
Bible fimdamentalists quote from the
foresaw the righteous who had died rising visions of the end of tl1e world in the
from their graves to share· in the new book .of R evelation which speak of "the
golden age. Then the thought occurred, lake that burns with fire and brimstone" as
what about the unjust who had enjoyed the last abode of the wicked.
good times on earth? Shouldn't. they have
Fundamentalists point out that Jesus said

Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS

e.::: rei
! ·~ ~; ~ .~'--1~
G1 :; =-=

.the booklet with your request.
DEAR ABBY: I'm sending an
original to add to your "you know
you're getting older when ..." collection. It came to mind when I read
about applications being submitted to
have the Coliseum in Memphis and a
local bridge spanning. the Mississippi
River, added lo the register:
"You know you're getting old
when a structure built during your
lifetime is added to the National
Registry of Historic Places." ELMER L. RAY, MARION,
ARK.
DEAR ELMER: Your contribution is a hoot. I'm guessing rriany of
our .friends and neighbors will
squirm each year when new additions to the Registry are announced
Your definition fits more of us than
rrtany wotild like to admit:

OBBIES
GIFTS
(Formerly Ashley's)
ancl see what we have.
We have our Seaaonal
summer items on clearance
(from lawn ornaments to
pool toys) ..We also have
may gift items, unfinished
woocl, and craft supplies .
Don't forget those special
occasions with

Greeting Cards

217 E. Second

49¢·every day.

Pomeroy

992-5908

EMJOV
THE
CONCERTI

5ItfCHES
(~IFf SHOP

We have

cold soft
drinks!
102 Es6t Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

, ' Whitley's
tarry Out &amp; $tate
Comir of Court

. (Cfor;ge R.Piagenz is a columitist for Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

MalnSbMI

\

'

.

�••

0 IJIRIOR

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Friday, July 27, 200 I

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: Several years ago,
you asked readers who had been
diagnosed with schizophrenia to
write and describe their experiences
wiih the mental bealthsystem for the
Group for Advancement of Psychiatry. We received hundreds of candid,
thoughtful and provocative letters,
and while their treatment and reacADVICE
tions were diverse, many shared similar experiences,
,
They described their struggle with limitations, restrictive agency policies
a terrible and frightening illness and and insensitive or unskilled clinicians.
the importance of their own inner
There were many inspirational letstrengths, as well as support from ters about lifesaving care, yet we
mental health professionals, family, physicians were appalled by bow .
friends, religion and work. What was often treatment was perceived as
vital was feeling cared-for, respected impersonal, fragmented and dehuand listened- to by a knowledgeable manizing. Without social, personal,
doctor (or other professional), who residential and vocational supports,
would stick with them over the long . medications rarely helped. However,
hauL
·
we were touched and impressed that
Many readers complained that so many ·of your readers were
their .care was hindered by insurance resourceful in overcoming the limita-

.Ohro Valley Publishing Co.

Abigail.
Van
Buren

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

I.R~rrs tt• thl! l'tlitor are "'fllt'imU. fhty ••lw11IJ b~ leu 'than 31JO 1mrds. Alllm~rs
are subjl'(t to editing and must bt signed a11d indudt addrtss and tel~phont num~r.
No unsigned lttter.J ..,;u he puhlid•td. J..ntr.ts should bt' in guod IDSit, addrnnng
ismn ntn pvno'!ofitil!s.
. .
He opinions exprtned in lhi' l'olumn bi'/0'14' are tilt t'ottstmus tJf rhe Oh1o Vutll'y
l'~tblislling Co.'s edit11rial hoord, tmltn oth erwisfl 11oled.

NO.. l\\t;
• z,soo A'Nl*:K!

OHIO VIEWS

'

'J

Rear

Ruling raises questions about
what people think, not do

~

New study spurs thoughts on course of human species
If you're looking for summertime readsecret for another 200 years.
ing, let me reconm1end ·a short book
Ironically, the Plague itself caused the
entitled "In the Wake of the Plague delay of the '"ientific method. Work was
The Black Death and the World it Made,"
underway at Oxford, but the disease decc . : .
by Norman E Cantor (The Free Press,
· imated the scientific community. Thomas .. .
2001). I grant you, neither the title nor
Bradwardine, appointed Archbishop of. .
the subject matter is the sort that you
Canterbury by the King, intended to use . ·
would normally consider for a summer
the Church's power· and money to push · . ·
day curled up in a hammock in .the shade
~Yhtn:&gt;n'h.:..r. academic research toward biological
of an old tree.
¥VctUU.li.JI.,L5 investigation. But two months after his
But, it is fascinating reading, and there
appointment, the Black Plague killed
is something to it that makes you think
COLUMNIST
Bradwardine. Such deaths put advances
.·that Galileo, Copernicus, and others were ~· ·
about the course the human species has
embarked upon, and why. I. recently can friars were preaching that the pesti- to uncover later, on hold.
·· '
Over time, the European world repop- .
interviewed .Cantor for an episode of. lence was God's punishment wrought
PBS' "Think Tank," and I learned a lot upon sinful people. •
ulated.The impact of the biological disas- ·
from a wise man. ·
The 'IStrologists had their own rake on ter . sunk in; science resumed its forward
The Black Death, believed to be the matter. A special commission in march. Something had to be done, and
bubonic plague, possibly mixed in with France determined the problem: Saturn people decided they'd. better try: We've
anthrax, killed between 30 and 50 per- was in the house of JupiteL Of course, come a long way.
cent of Europe's population from the nothing worked. In Cantor's view, the
But the tale is not over. As recently as
years 1348 to 1349. Cantor writes that it failure of the existing tools of humankind 1918 more than 50 million people were
"was the greatest bio-medical disaster in accelerated the birth of modern science killed worldwide by "The Spanish Flu,"
European and possibly world history." A and modern medicint. Medieval medi- whose true biological composition is still
contemporary Florentine writer referred cine, ·Cantor says, was not quackery. Sur- not understood. New plagues and potento "the exterminating of humanity."
geons could do work on limbs, although rial plagues are still with us. PharmacoloWe still remember it, 650 years later. not internally. Ma:ny herbal remedies gy and bu?tecb, p~bhc and pnvate, are
When children hold hands in a circle and were know11 ~effective for . headaches _ mostly staymg one JUmp ahead (and CUI- ~
sing, ''Ring- around tfie ros1es/ A- pocket- stomachaches'and some 'infectioQs. Som~ rently wrestling with the . scourge of
ful of posies/ Ashes, ashes/ We all fall of these have been reappearing these days AIDS). Gover.nment agenoe~, hke the
down " they're reciting the symptoms, dis- on shelves marked "alternative medicine." Center for D1s~ase Control m Atlanta,
coloration and mortality of the Black
Doctors didn't have mi croscopes nor and others hke 1t around the world, are
Death. (Do kid1 still play that game? Can- did the understand that diseases could domg work that was stalled 650 years ago.
tor recalls the ditty from his c'hildhood in
·
y
h ·
B
C
It's a gnm story, yet hopefl1l, mformaspread throug m1crobes. ut, says an- .
d ddl I
d'
•d
the 1940s, and so doL)
h
ld h
.h .
nve an o y peasant rea mg.= a car h
h d ·
tor, t ey cou
ave come up w1t mtcro.
ld 1
1
But, Cantor believes, we also relate to
Th
.
f
.
.
carrymg war -c ass ypoc on nac,
e sctence
o opttcsd was qmte
d'1gested It· more or 1ess calmly. 1 d'd
the epidemic in far more important ways.· scopes.
I
.
1 n •t
developed. Peop e were alrea y wearmg
d "! h W: k f h PI
"
d
The medieval social structure h onore d corr~ctive lenses. Researchers at Oxford retath bn t eh .batel.to t led beague .as a ~y
two fields of endeavor: the military, and,
.
.
"d
.
h
.
a e eac , u cou
.
Umverstty were eve1opmg t e science
principally, the Church. Neither soldiers of physics. Modern medicine could have
nor priests understood the bubonic come earlier. .
Ben Watteflber;g, a seniorfellow at tlwAmer:
plague's cause: infected fleas traveling on
. ican Enterprise lmtirure, is tl1e hast-essayist of
the backs of infected rodents, principally
Alas, it was a road not taken. One bar- tire PBS special "71re First Measured Centublack tats..
rier was that the Church did not allow ry" and co-author of a new book of tlze same
In the early days of the Plague, the the dissection of the human body. Man title (AEI Press, 2000). He is the lrost of' the
churches were fulL Bishops put on their was created in the image of God, and dis- weekly p11blic television program "11tink
fin est vestments and carried crosses and · secting the body was regarded as blasphe- Tank ."'I'Ou may send comments to him via esaint's reliC'S , through the streets. Francis- my.The secrets of the opened body stayed mail: lMltmailaol.com.

J3en

ln theor y, t his sounds good .

Bu t the pricc .in terms of lost privacyis very, very steep.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Jul y 27, rlw 208th day of2001.There are 157
cbys left in th9 y.ear.
Today's Highlight in History:
O n Ju ly 27, 1789,.Cong rcss established the Department of
Foreign Affairs, th e forerunner of the Department of State.
O n ·this date:
In 1794. Fre nch revolmionary lea der Maxinulien Robespierre was overthrown and placed un der arrest; he was executed the f&lt;Ji lowi ng day. .
In 1861, Union (;en. Geo rge 13. McClellan was put in co mmand of th e Army of the Poton.1ac.
In 1866, Cyrus W. Field finally succeeded, after two failures,
in laying th e first underwater telegraph cable between North
America and Europe.
.
In 1940, Bugs Bunny made his "offi cial" debut in the Warner Brothers an imated cartoon "A Wild Hare."
. ln 1953, the Korean War armistice was signed at Panmunjom, ·
ending three years of fightin g.
·
In 1960, Richard Nixon was nom inated for president at the
l!..epublican national conve ntion in C hi cago.
In 197 4, the H ouse Judi ciary Committee voted 27-11 to rec- .
om mend President Nixon\ impeachmen t on a charge that he
had personally engaged · in a "co urse of conduct': designed to
ol:is tru ct justice in the Watergate case.
In 1976, Air Force veteran R ay Brennan became the first
person to die of what came to be known as Legionnaire's Disease followin g "'"American 'Legion convention in Philadelph~.
.
.
.
· In 1980, on day 26 7 of the Iranian hostage c'risis, the deposed
Shah of Iran died at a military hospital outside Cairo, Egypt, at
age 60.
'
hi 1995, the Korean War Veterans M emorial was dedicated in
Washington by Prestdent C linton and South Korean President
Kim Young-sam .
.
.
Ten years ago: Fighting escalated in the breakaway republic
of Croatia, as a Yugoslav air force jet fired on Croatian forces
and groun d fighting erupted into clashes with federal tanks and
troops.
. Five years ago: Terror struck the Atlanta O lympics as a pipe
bom b exploded at Centennial Olympic Park, ki lling one person and inj urin g more than 100. American Gail Devers won
th e women's 100-meter dash .
' One yea r ago: Yugoslav [&gt;resident Slobodan Milosevic called
presiden ti al, parliamentary and local elec tions for the followin g
September. (The election would result in Milosevic's fa ll from
power.)
.
Today's Birthdays: TV produce r Norman Lear IS 79.
Rhythm- and-blues si nger Harvey Fuqua IS 72 . Actor Jerry Van
. Dyke is 70. Sportscaster Irv Cross is li2. Actor John Pleshette is
59. Singer Bobbie Ge ntry is 57 . Actress-director Betty Thomas
i1 53. Olympic gold medal figure skater Peggy Fleming is 53.
\

"

Frlcl.y, July 27, 2001

tions of their illnesses.
Stigma and prejudice from medical
professionals, institutions and the
general public were additional obsta'cles to recovery. Dozens of letters
contained painful stories saying that
peing regarded as mentally ill slowed
the person's progress. It is essential
that people with mental illness be
seen as capable human beings, who
are much more than the illnesses with
which they struggle.
Reading the letters was enlightening. In response, we have written' a
report, "Now That We Are Listening,"
summarizing important issues in
treating schizophrenia and providing
excerpts of some of the letters. The
report is free to your readers.
Thank you for helping us and
other psychiatrists to understand how
our patients feel about their care. THE COMMitTEE ON PSYCiflATRY AND THE COMMU-

NITY
GROUP
FOR
ADVANCEMENT OF PSYClUARTY
DEAR COMMITI'EE MEMBERS AND DEAR READERS:
A great m,any medical consumers
would love the chance to air their
feelings about how they' have been
treated by "the system." Thank YOU
for allowing my readers to level with
you. I had the opportunity to review
many of the letters .readers sent to
assist your study. While it came as .no
surprise that patients were willing to
tell me things they wouldn't ordinarily tell their doctors, I was struck by
their frankness.
·Those interested in obtaining a
copy of the Hooklet, "Now That We
Are Listening." may do 50 by sending
name and address to: McKassen,Attn:
Maria Harryn, 800 Business Center
Drive, Suite 100, Horsham; PA
19044. Be sure to include the title, of

LOCAL EVENTS

WATTENBERG'S VIEW

• The Dayton Daily News: A Columbus court has found
a 1nan guilty on child-pornography charges even though no
actua l childrc·n were mvolved and even though th e pornography neve;. was distributed.
·
·
13rian Dalton, 22, had simply written material in a journal. As
a result, he has been sentenced to seven years, and his probation
on a previous charge has been revoKed. He faces 10 years in
pnson.
.
.
Wh at he wrote was apparently unspeakable. Wh en the jury .
was being read passages, it asked to have the reading stopped.
One juror was reported to be in tears .
Still, th e prosecu tors aren't saying th e children in the "journal" were real. T he notion that a man can go to jail for writing
tiction for hiS own reading would not likely stand up on
appea l, and it shouldn't. The point of child-pornography laws is
to punish people for their acts involving real people. No legislature occo urt has ever said govern me\]t should start ruling on
what rho!Ights are acceptable. That would be a new world,
·
indeed.
• Tribune Chronicle ofWarren: The U.S. Supreme Court
rec ently put the brakes on police departments seeking to use
heat se nsing cameras ro detect marijuana plants growing inside
someone's house. Tile cou rt said police must have a search warrant before they can use tech nology that lets them see what is
going on in ~ide ;I pe·rson 's home.
But new tec hnology is spurring all sorts of government initiatives to keep track of people. .
.
• About 611 comm unities now use cameras to catch people
_Itlllning nc&gt;d lights. _
_
·~
• Th e National' Park Service is testing a program that uses a
combi11ation of radar and ca meras to catch speeders on park
rl&gt;ads.

'

Page AS .

Schizophrenia patients tell it like .it is to doctors' group

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher ·

By the Bend

' The Daily Sentinel

FRIDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
SYRACUSE - Food and Nazarene Church, concert
clothing give-away, Syracuse series, Sunday, 6 p.m. Forgiv·
.JFirst Church of God. 2 to 4 p.m. en from Gallipolis to sing.
Friday. First come, first served.
RAVENSWOOD Joy
LONG BOTIOM - Mt. Quartet of Pensacola Christian
Olive Community Church, College, to present program,
Long Bottom, revival, under· Sunday, 7 p.m. at the Second
way, 7 p.m. each evening. Baptist Church, Ravenswood,
Special speaker, special W.Va.
singing.
POMEROY DescenSATURDAY
dants of Tommy Gilkey and
PORTAND - VanMeter Melda Jane Hudnall, annual
reunion, Saturday, 5 p.m. at the reunion, Sunday, Roadside
Portland Park. Covered dish Park on Route 33, .south of
cookout.
· Darwin. Those attending to
take covered dish and folding
SUNDAY
chairs.

POMEROY Services
Sunday, 6:30 p.m. at the
Poplar Ridge FWB Church,
State Route 554 . . Rev. Bill
Banks of Gospel Lighthouse
speaking; special singing. John
Elswick, pastor invites public.

MONDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County Fait Board, Monday, 7:30
p.m. at the Coonhunters Building.

Judging results
announcecl

, TUESDAY
POMEROY - Community .
vacation Bible school, Grace
Episcopal Church Tuesday
through Saturday, 's to 8:30
p.m. Classes for ages four to
12.

The Community Calendar

Is published as a free service
to non-profH groups wishing
to · announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
Is not designed to promote
sales
or fund raisers of any
RACINE - .Vacation Bible
school,
Racine
United type. Hems are printed only
Methodist Church, Monday as space pennlts and cannot
through Friday, 6 .to 8:30p.m. be guaranteed tQ, be printed
a specific number of days.

L,.c;,.ebrate the sounds of summer with friends
d family in the open air under the stars.
I

I

· · Bend Blues Bash Festival
Saturday, July 28, 2001

Submitted for your approval: a briif history of hell

George
Plagenz

.

'

POMEROY - Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Vennari of Pomeroy and Mrs.
Mildred Bailey · of Bidwell
were Mrs. Deanna, (Ewing)
Nichols of Atlanta, Ga., and
her niece, Michelle Schepp of
Clearwater, Fla.
Mrs.Vennari and Mrs. Bailey
are sisters and cared for the
Ewing children when · they
lived in Middleport in the
1940s.
Mrs. Ni~hols is the daughter
of the late Howard and Nancy
Rawlings Ewing.

'11

Mark's
Pocket
Knives&amp;
Collectibles

evildoers will go to a pl;lce of" everlasting
fire prepared for the devil and his angels."
But hell no longer holds the terror for
us that it once did. There was a time when
'the fear of going to hell was enough .to
keep many a person on the straight and
narrow and away from a life of crime and
evil.
But the fear ofh~ll occupies the thinking of only a relatively few today, if we tan
believe the surveys. Once a central Christian doctrine, belief in hell has been losing
ground for the last 300 years, some theologians contend.
A God who makes us shake in our
boots and cringe in fear when we have
pointed our lives in the wrong direction
offers .a better ·hope for a kinder, gentler
and happier world than a God who sets
no boundaries for us. But nothing scares
us.
To quote from something that appeared
in this column at the time of th,e
Columbine shootings, "if only Oylan Klebold and Eric Harris (who carried out a
deadly mission in a Colorado high school)
had believed in a God who holds us
accountable, they may have been 'scared
straight' by this God who loved them."
Timothy McVeigh, too.

Penonal

POMEROY -- Creative
writing judging results were
announced today by the
Mei~ County Extension Service.
They were Taryn Lentes,
grand champion; Ashley
Boyles, reserve champion;
John Cooke and Tyler Lee,
honorable mention in creative
writing.
In writing and reporting.for
tee~. Rachael Morris was the
grand champion.

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Is Timothy McVeigh burning in bell?
The answer depends on several things. Is
there a hell? If so, what's it like and who
.
goes there?
Christianity teaches that repentance for
sin will keep even the worst sinner from
going to hell. Did McVeigh repent of his
awful crime in Oklahoma City before he _
.was executed?
The concept of hell has an interesting
history in th e Bible. The ·orthodox
COLUMNIST
· churches teach that hell is punishment for
sin. But God's punishment to Adam and
Eve for sinning in the Garden of Eden to pay in the afterlife for those happy
was a life of hard work ending in death.
times? Shouldn't' theY. get their just
"Dust thou art and unto dust shalt thou deserts?
return" was God's judgment on the
And so the idea of hell emerged as a
human race. Presumably, physical death place of torment and suffering for the
was going to be the end of each individ- . wicked. During the Middle Ages, especially, part of the bliss and happiness of the
ual.
The idea of a resurrection from . the saved, as pictured by contemporary artists,
dead appeared at the time of the prophets consisted in gazing on the torments of the
alongside the Jewish expectation of a great damned in hell .
crisis in history in which the kingdoms
Even in these modern times, clergy
that had oppressed the Jews would be have sometimes gone out of their way to
overthrown .and the Jewish siate restored give vivid, l11rid descriptions of what
ro its former glory.
awaits the wicked in hell.
It was the prophet Daniel who first
Bible fimdamentalists quote from the
foresaw the righteous who had died rising visions of the end of tl1e world in the
from their graves to share· in the new book .of R evelation which speak of "the
golden age. Then the thought occurred, lake that burns with fire and brimstone" as
what about the unjust who had enjoyed the last abode of the wicked.
good times on earth? Shouldn't. they have
Fundamentalists point out that Jesus said

Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.

SOCIETY NEWS

e.::: rei
! ·~ ~; ~ .~'--1~
G1 :; =-=

.the booklet with your request.
DEAR ABBY: I'm sending an
original to add to your "you know
you're getting older when ..." collection. It came to mind when I read
about applications being submitted to
have the Coliseum in Memphis and a
local bridge spanning. the Mississippi
River, added lo the register:
"You know you're getting old
when a structure built during your
lifetime is added to the National
Registry of Historic Places." ELMER L. RAY, MARION,
ARK.
DEAR ELMER: Your contribution is a hoot. I'm guessing rriany of
our .friends and neighbors will
squirm each year when new additions to the Registry are announced
Your definition fits more of us than
rrtany wotild like to admit:

OBBIES
GIFTS
(Formerly Ashley's)
ancl see what we have.
We have our Seaaonal
summer items on clearance
(from lawn ornaments to
pool toys) ..We also have
may gift items, unfinished
woocl, and craft supplies .
Don't forget those special
occasions with

Greeting Cards

217 E. Second

49¢·every day.

Pomeroy

992-5908

EMJOV
THE
CONCERTI

5ItfCHES
(~IFf SHOP

We have

cold soft
drinks!
102 Es6t Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

, ' Whitley's
tarry Out &amp; $tate
Comir of Court

. (Cfor;ge R.Piagenz is a columitist for Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

MalnSbMI

\

'

.

�\

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

....

------~.~
u~
,.:,:
.,~
, .~..~
,~
M~~~
o~
v '~
'"~
' V~)~
.•~.~
.-~
,.~,~
. --------P~1or· Rc~. Walter E. Hcuu
S&lt;1t C~on 4 4:Ci-.'i . l ' P m., Ma•~- !UO p m.
t."burcb ot Jb&amp;U Chn,t Apostolit
Sun C~'ll'l ·tl 4 V~· ! ~ a m ,
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Sun. Ma~~ · IJ •JO a m .
Pastor: James Miller
Dllll('y ~ass - ti:JO 11m.
Sunday School - 10 :30 a.nl.
Evening - 7:)0 p.m.

( 'o uun
,.. •uat
,... io ua l
y

Secood &amp; Lynn. POincro)

Rev. Craig Crossman
Won.hip I0:25 a.m.
Sunday Sc hool 9: 15 a.m.

~soor ;

:!I :! W. Mam St.
Min 1~t e r:

316 E. "-bi n St. Pomeroy
Rev. J lllllC~ Bernacki, Rev. K ~thar i n

Sunday ~hool -· 9:JO a.nl .
Wur"hl p- !0:30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Servkt's- 1 p.m
Wu,tQdt Chun-h or Chrisl
3 3~2t-tCh •l dn: n 's Home Rd.
Suniliay School - II am .
Wtlf!:,htp - IOa.m.. 0 p.m
Wcdne,day Sc r '' l t:l: ~- 1 run

Liberty As.vmhJy or God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason. W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Servi(.:es- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Holy Eochan ~• I I :00 a. m

Cr«-k Bapllsl Church
Prke Hollow Rd., Rulland
Pastor: JOhn Swan§On
Sunday School - I O:OOa.m.
Morning SerYice I I:00 a.m.
Ev.:ning Service_ - p:OO p.m_.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Hopt Baplb:i Church (Southem)
~70 Grant St., Middlepo n
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II o.m. und 6 p.m.
WednesdaJ'Servk e - 7 p.m.

Rud11nd Fint B11ptist Chur-ch
Sunday S4.:hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 am.

Pomeroy First Baptist
Eust Main St.
Sun day School - 9: ~ 0 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
1-' irst Soulhern Uaptlsl
-' 1872 Pome my Pil.::e
Paslor: E. Lamar O' Bryanl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.nl.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Worship - 9:30 11.111 .
Sunday Schno l · 10:]0 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
Ist and Jrd Sunday

Mt. Union Bapll&lt;it
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
·sunday School-9:45a.m.

Even ing - 6:30p.m.
, Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

28601 St. _R t 7, Middlepon.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening · 1:00 p.m.
Thursday Services. 7:00

Vktory Bapllst lndcpendanl
52.5 N. 2nd SJ. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - IOa.m., 1 p.m.

Sundny SchQOl - 10 a.m.
Worshi p - II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - J 1 a. m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbcn Craig. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.

Antiquity Baptiil
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:45 a.m.
Sllnday Evening · 6:00p. m.
, Paslor: Mark McComas

The Chul'th or Jesus
St. R1. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
SundaySchool l0:20-l l a.m .
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05.'12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9- 10:15 a. m.
Homemaking mee tin~ . hi Thurs.- 7 p.m. ~

I ,ullll'ran

Pastor: Davi d Ru ~se ll ·
Su nday Sc hool · 10:00 a.m.
Worship · I I a.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Seco nd St. , Pomc: ruy
Rev. ,Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School- 9 : 4~ a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

( ' hri~1ian l nion
Hntford Chu~h ~rChrl!t In
Christian Union
Hartford. W.Va.
Pastor.Jim Hughes
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Grahllm United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. {1st &amp; 2nd Su n),
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun-)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

( 'hurl'll ol' (;oil

Su nday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Choreh of God
Mile Hill Rd.. Racine
Pastor. Brice Uu
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Melp Cooperatin Parish
Northeast Cl uster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor5hip- I I a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Rulland Churr:h of Gnd
Pastor; Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.

RM&lt;h&gt;llle
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday or Month · 7:00p.m. service

74o-992-5141
hol.lhlw·lllndor
590 EliiM 511111• r-.y, 011 4S769

992-3785

Insurance
ProductS+
~Financial

. .ENCIES lne. Services

J.u I. AaM, Jr.· Dlrldor

Marketing Pro1De1'1tv

Pomeroy

992-6877

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740-667-3110

7411-992-5-444

216 E. Second Pomeroy
740-992-3325

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E, Main
992-5130

Full line of

Bill Quickel

264 Soollr Soaorl lVL • 'I" 1 1, 01145760

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

EWING

NEW HAVEN

. HOME

FUNERAL HOME
'We accept Preneed Transfers'
882·8200
Lundy Brown

Director

Regan Brown
f 74
Street

•

106
•

SWISHER &amp;. LOHSE
PHARMACY .
We Fill Doctors'
Pre,crlptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Ingel's Carpet

Established 1913

169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992·2121

992·7028

Dignity and Service Always

~

St. Rt. 124. Racine
Pa.10r: William Hoback
Sunday Sohool - 10 a.m.
Eve ning · 7 p.m .
Wednesday Se~iL-e~ - 7 p.m.

""
·,:
,.

•

..-.
"

~

~

Mlddlep&lt;Jrt Peniet:-1

..

Third AYe.
'Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
E'venlng - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

l'n·.,ln ll'rian
Syracuse Flnt United Prab)U:rian
Pas10r: Rev. Krisana Robin son
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Worship -

11 a.m.
;

HarrisonviUt Pmbyter:lan Churdt
Wor'ihip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School. 9:45a.m.

'

Middleport Prabyterlan
SundPy School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

'

Sun~y Schoo l ~

9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedrtesday 7:30 p.m .

I

y

'

'

Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky .
Saturday Services:
· Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wouhip- 3 p.m.

Pastor; Lawrence Bush
Sunc.Wy School-9:30a.m.
Evtning • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

l nitl·d Brl'1hn·n ••
MI. Hennon United Brethren
In Chriol Churth

Unlled Faltb Church

Rt . 7 on Pometo)l By-Pass
Pastor:-Rev. Robert E. Smith , Sr.
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerYice - 7 p.m.

Tcxus Community ofT CR 82
Pas tor: Raben Sanden

Sum:hly School - 9:30a.m.Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SerYices • 7:30p.m.,

Syncuse Church ofthe NazaRne
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen~iees- 7 p.m.

meaforb
l\.eal lf~tate

-

S&lt;·ll·nlh - 11;1\ \tlll·nti ' l

Faith G01pel Chun:h
lonz Bottom

Sunda y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Lo"'BoiiDm
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 19:30 a.m.

Won;hip • II a.m.
Wedocsday Scr.· ice ~ • 7 p.m·.

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.

Morse Chapel Cllurch
Sunday school ~ 10 P.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

ReednJIIe Fellowship
Ch1,1rch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Pastor: Bob Randolph
. Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Churth of God or Pmphocy
Rd. off St. Rt . 160
Pastor: P.J. Ch11pman
Surul1y School - 10 a.m.

Haztl Community Church
OffRt 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Oyesville Community Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
. Wonhip - !0:30a. m., 7 p.m.

Joppa .

O . J~_ W hi te

Syi'IKulf Mission

Middleport Churtb of the Naurene
Paslor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 1o;jo a.m,, 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p·.m.
Pa~tor : Allen Mtdcap

God'tTempleofPrai5e
.31665 McQ'Ji re Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio :

PeateeGstal ASM:rably

Mt. Olive Commanhy Cburtb

Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Evening Serv ices-6:30p.m."
Wedne~y SeNicc ~- 6:30p.m.

~

Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pas10rs: Jim Morris
Services: SPturday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Community Church
57~ Pearl St , Middl~pon
Pastor: Sam Ander'son
Su nday School 10 a.m.
E\lening ~ 7:30 p.rn.
Wednesday Sen~lee • 7:30p.m.

14118ridgeman St., Syracuse
Rel'. Mike Thompson,Pastoc
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
E\lenin g - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

'\ :11:1 l'l'IH'

Chnltr
Pastor: Jane Beattie

SyriU,!'USe Fi111t Churth or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru ssell
Sunday 'School and Wor!ihip- 10 a.m.

'~

Full Gospel Cburth or the Living Sarior

'*

CooMUe United Methodbf Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline:
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m .
Tuesday Se"ices . 7 p.m.

Thr&lt;b Churth
Cn. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
·Worship - 10:30 a.m.

•

Hai'rriSOnl'ille Community Chun:h
Pw;tor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Thursday Sel'\lice • 7 p.m.

Hoc:kingport Church

Rejolclna Lift Churr:h
• .500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman ~·
•
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m. • ""

Salem Community Cburd11
Lie\ling Road, West Colu mbia, W.Va.
Pastoc: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School9:30 am
Sunday evening service 6 pm '
Wednesday service 7 pm

Wednesday 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednasday Services· 10 a. m.

'

Tomaakto

Stil'ersl'llle Community Ch,urclt
Pastor: Wayne R. Je well
:
Sunday Services · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m...
Thursday - 7:00p.m.
'"

Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
-wt
Services: Th urs. Niles 7:00 pm
~
New church No.Sunday service established,

. Faith Valley Tlbernacle Church
Bttiley Run Road
Pas tor: Rel'. Emmett Rawson
Sundoy_E\Iening 7 p.m.

Grund Street
SunQay School - tO a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday SerVices - 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodltt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
PllStor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Services - 7:30p.m.

S.c:rtd Heart C1tholk Chul'th

992·3978

\ll'lhodi~t

l'nill'd

•

The Believers' Frllowsblp Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
1-'as1or: Rev. Marg~tret J. kobinson
' Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Sunday. 2:30 p.n'l.

Radno
Pnstor: Brian Harkn es~
Su nday School • I0
Worship - II a.m.-----

a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wt~ lnut and Henry Sts ., RaveniWOOO , W.Va .

Church or Christ
Intersection 7a nd 124 W
Evange list: De nni s S11rgcnt
Sunday Dible Study - 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wedm:Mlay Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Morolng Star
Pastor: Dew~t y ne St utler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

WIJ..etart
PlUltOr: Brian Harkne~s
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Wonhip ~ 9 a,m,
Wedneada)l- 7 p.m.

St. Joha Lutheran Chul'th
Pine: Grove
Rc\1. Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:00a.m.
SundAy School · I 0 :00 a.m.

( a1 holir

MillWork
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. •
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dcw11ync Stu:ler
Su nday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:45 a.m .
Bible St udy Wed . 7:00 p.m.

Christ of Latter-Day Saints

Church or Christ
Pastor: Na1han Robinson
Sunday st:hool 9:30a.m.
Nonnan WiJI~ri~Uent
'Su nday worship · 10:30 a.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler
Sund&lt;Jy Sc hool • 10 a.m.
wOrship. 9 a.m .
Wed.nesdily Sen.·ices- 10 a.m.

Lattu-lhl\ Sain1s

Second Baptist Church
Raven swood. WV
Pastor. David W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMorning worship I l am Evening - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

l&lt;"alth FuU Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worship 1'0:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m . •
Wednesdoy SerVice - 7:30p.m.

Surday Servic_e s • 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m. •

Wol'!lhjp • 9 a.m.

lkthany

FRIDAY's

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike: Co. Rd.
PaSior: Rev. Blackwood

•
New Lire Vh:tory Cenltr
3713 Georges Creek Rood, Galli polis, ·OI-f;
Pas tor: Bill Staten
·

Carm~I-Sutlon

Rotlall!i Fm WID Raptis!
SOlem St.
P11stor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday St:hool- 10 a.m.
Eve ning ~ 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Snowville

Failll Fellowship Crusade ror Cbris(
Pastoc: Rev. franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.

c nnon Tabernacle Churth
Cli fton, W.Va.
Su nday Sc hool· 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Abqndant Gra« R.R I.
923 S. Third St., Middlcpon
Palitor Teresa Davis
Su nday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Laurorl Cliff F~ Melhodlst Chun:h
Pastor: Donald Balis
SUnday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00 p.m.

Reeds\lllle Chul'th of Chrtsl
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday Schooi: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Wedncsd~t y

Agape Lift Center
.. Full-Gospel Chureh"
Pastors John &amp; Pauy Wade
603 Second Ave. Maso n
773-5017
Service time: S1.1mlay 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday 7 pm

Worship - I 0: l ~ a.m.

Sunduy Sehoul· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Yo uth - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service!i • 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St.. Mason

Sunday Sef\/ k-es: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service s - 7 p.m.

Salem Center
PaStor: Ron Fierce
Sunday Sc hool - 9:15a.m.

Hyse ll Run Holiness Churth
Re\1. Mark Michael

De~ter

Hlll•lde Bapdst C hu~h
St. Rt. 143justo!l'Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James B_. Acr~e. Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wonhip·I0:30a.m.,6 p.m.
Wcdne!iday Service~ -7 p.m.

Harvest OurrUch Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Coo k

Rutland
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wol'!lhip - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 1 p.m.

Wesle)'lln Bible Holiness Chun:h
15 Pearl St .. Middlcwrt.
Past@r: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wo'rship - 9:JO p.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesd ay ScNicc- 7: 30 p.m.

E\lan,;e list Mike Moore
Sunday Sc hool - 9 a.m
Wor.l hi p - 10 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser~:ice s - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Robert Musser
Su nday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser.·ice 7 :30 p.m.

Ash Stl'ftt Church
Ash St. . Middlepon- Pastor: Greg Sear.s
Sunday School • I 0:00 a.m.
Sunday Seli'itt~ - 6:00p.m.
Wedne sday Service· 7:00p.m

Paslor: Keit h Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

1/2 mi te off Rt. 325
Pnstor: RC\'. O ' Dell M,ou k y
Sunday Sl' hool - 9:30 a.R:J .
Worshi p - 10:30 a. m.. 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday Se rvice - 7:30p.m.

Hickory JIIIIJ Chun:h or Christ

Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Dao iel Mecea
Su nday Schoo!- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.·

Chaptl

Rock Spring.

Pine Grol'e Bible Holi11ess Chun:h

Bradford Church of Chri!il
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradh UI)' Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Min ister: Bill Amberger
Sund11y School - 9:30 a.m.
Worlhip • 8:00 u.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesd11y Services - 7:00p.m.

Lanpvllle ChrbtJan Church

Hemlock Grol'e Christian Churth
Putor: Richard Nease
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30 t~ . m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Pu~ tor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9: 30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prn yer.mccling- 7 p.m.

Rutl11nd Chul"('h or Christ
Sundily School - 9:30a.m;
Worship · 10:30 u.m .. 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Ba pdst Churth

Old Bethel F,.. Will Baptise Chun:h

Ro!ie or shamn Holiness Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd .. H.utland

Zion Churth of Christ
Pomeroy. Hanisonvill e Rd . (Rt.l 43l
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School- Q:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnellday Services • 7 p.m.

Bradbury O mrch or Christ
Pastor: Jim Eii ton
Sunday School - 9:ID a.m.
Worship - I 0:30 il.m.

Sllnr Run Baptlsr
Pastor: Ste\len K. Little
Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship- lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service s- 7:00p.m.

Mi nersvi lle

P~arl

BY DAVE HARRIS

announce
retirement

.

PITTSBURGH (AP) Quarterback Mike Tomczak
will announce his retirement
Friday after 16 years in the
National Football League.
Tomczak said he will make
the announcement during ·an
11:30 a.m. press conference at
the Steelers' training camp at
St. Vincent College in Latrobe
on Friday.
"PittSburgh is home. It's
where I have spent the best
years of my career and life,"
Tomczak said in a statement.
" I met my wife Michelle
here, and we are raising our
two wonderful children, Bryn
and Beau here in Pittsburgh." .
Tomczak, who played for
the Steelers from 1993 to
1999, said he has accepted a
job as an analyst for ESPN
Radio in Pittsburgh.
He was waived by the
Detroit Lions earlier this year.
Tomczak entered the NFL
in 1985 with the Chicago
Bears as an undrafted free
agent out of Dhio State University.
He was the backup quarterb~ck for C_hicago dulj~_tl~e_
1985- 86 Super Bowl season .
Tomczak was with Chicago
until 1990 before playing in
Green Bay and Cleveland,
each for one season.
Tomczak has. f6,079 career
passing yards on 1,248
attempts. He threw 88 touchdowns and also rushed for
525 yards and nine touchdowns. 1

Annstrong still
in ·control
MONTLUCON, . France
(AP) - · Belgium 's Serge
Baguet won the 17th stage· of
the Tour de France, while
Lance Armstrong maintained
a five-minute overall lead ,and
remained on track for his
third straight championship.
Baguet edged Danish rider
Jakob Piil in the final sprint to
claim his first stage win.
Armstrong retained the
overall leader's yellow jersey,
with an unchanged advantage
of 5 minutes, 5 seconds over
his closest rival, Jan Ullrich of
Germany.
'

Nicklaus strong
in Senior British
Open

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"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

W. Main St., Pomeroy

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FlOWER
106 BU'ITERNUT AVE.

PoMEROY,OH 992-6454
"Rowers for all occasions"
SNOUFFER FIRE &amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport. Oh

Meiij-6County~ Olde&amp;t Fwrut

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh
•t.t u1 •hd your tltouafltt •dth ,_etll can.•

74().992·2644 740-992.:eaa

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9ift Sfiop
518 E. Mlln St. Pomeroy, OH

992·1161 .
Office Service &amp; Supply
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

Meigs Legion 14,
Athens Spartans c

0\11' CORRESPONDENT

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday Sc t.ool • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m. :

Wri ip • I0:30 a.m.

Sunday Schoo l - 9 B.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Re v. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:3oa.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
WedncsdPy S e~ic e · 7 p.m.

Fairview Blble'Churth
letllrt, W.Va. Rt . I

Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Ouhl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Bob Robin5UU
SunJuy School - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Meigs Legion advances to bracket final

While'• Chapt:l wa~ey....

Wednesday Se rvices - 7:00 p.m.'

Call'ary Pilgrim Chapcl
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles Mc Kenzie
Sunday Schoo19:30 a.m
Worsh ip - I I a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednc sd&lt;Jy Ser\·ice - 7:00p.m.

f'rmlom Gospd Mlalon
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31
PI.Stoc Rev. Roger Willford

Sunday S4:hool • 9:30 Lm.
. Worship- 7 p.m.

Communily ofChNt

Su nday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - II :00 a.m.

Friday, July 17, 2001

No Sunday ur Wednesday Night Service&amp;

( &gt;tlll'r ( 'hurrla·.,

Wednesda y prayer service· 7 p.n1

Hearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pas!ur:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Pastor: Mark Mortaw
fllh and Palrnc:r Sl. , Midd leport
Sunday School - 9: 15 a. m.
Worshir 10: 15 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wetlncsday Service- 7:00p.m.

Suf'lllay School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor!&gt;.hip - I I_a.m•. 6 p m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

P.m.

' llealh (Midd leport )
Pastor: Rob Brower

Page 81

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday School - 9:30 aa.m.
Worship Servia I0:30 ll.m.

Pastor. William Justis
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship · 1 6:4~ a.m.
Sunday SeNice • 6:30

Worship · 9 a.m.

Kt&gt;nu Chun:h or Chrisl

Ki~asbut)' Road

Chester Churdl of lbe Nazarene
Pastor. Rev. Herbcn Orate

Portland First Church or lhe Nazarene

Fom1 Run
Pa!i tor. Bob Robinso n
Sunda)' School - 10 a.m.

Danville Holiness Churth
J l057 State Route 325, Lungsvile
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Su nday school - 9:30a.m.
Sullday wonohip - 10:30 tu n . &amp; 7 p.m.

Wednesday Serv il-e ~- 7 p.m.

First Baptisl Chul"('h

Racine First Baptlsl
Pa &gt;tor: Rit-k Rule
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10~40 a. m.. 7:00p.m.
Wedne!'!duy Service.~ - 7:00 p.m.

Rev. Amos n ilis
Mai n Street, Rutland
Sunday Wo.,;h1 ~ 1Cl : lXl a.m.
· Sunday S~: rv i cc-7 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

Kurt Hilmer feels fine, Page BJ
Diamond Roundup, Page 86

Wedntsday Servk:c: • 7 p.m.
C•rleton lnttrdenomlullonal C hur~:b

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednaday Sen-i~ - 7 p.m.

Pa.~ t or:

Youth Mmister: Hill Fr,a1.ier
Sunlhty School - '1:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:15, !0:30a. m., 7 p.m.

Tllpprn Plain Churdt or Christ
lnstrumentBI
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10: I~ a.m.
Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednestlay 1 pm

EnterprbtPastor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sct.ool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Inside:

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Sun. Wor5hip • 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.

Rutllnd Clutrc• of the Nu.arrnc
Pastor: Rc\'. Samuel W. Basye

Flah•·oocli
Pnstor: Keith Rw:kr
Suf¥1ay School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

y

Middleport Church oll'hrisl
5th o1nd Mam
Lll~

Fus1~-r

Su nda)· School ;md

Pom~troy

Pastor: Jan Lavender
Sunda y Sd'lool • 9:30a.m.
Worsh•p . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednc=sdlly Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

Ctntnl Chi!ttr
Asbury fSyracusej
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Worship • I I a.m.
WOOne.&lt;iday Services - 7:30p.m.

Gract Epis(opal C hu~h

Anthony MOfris

t"Vmtrny,\. nurcn Oltnt l"'iiUftne

Pastor: Jane Beattie

Tuesday Services · 7:30p.m.

y

New L1ma Rued
Sunday, to a.m. aOO L ID p.m
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

1\tpptn PS.Ins St. P.uJ
Sunday &amp;•bool - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 Lm.

( 'hurd1 of ( 'hri'1

Church of Jtsu!. t:hrist
Apo!.tolic Faith

Friday, July 27, 2001

.

NEWC ASTLE, Northern
Ireland (AP) - · Jack Nicklaus
. eagled the first hole and finished with a 1- under 70 to
finish two strokes behind the
first-round leaders in the
Senior British Open.
South Africa's John Bland
and England's Denis Durnian
opened with 68s on the
Royal County Down course.
New Zealand's Bob Charles'
topped a five-player group at
69. South Afri ca's Player shot
72, and Arnold Palmer
opened with an 84.

a

•••••
Prep football starts in· four
weeks, and you can follow it
all in The Daily Sentinel and
the Sunday Til;nes-Sentinel.
0·

ATHENS - Meigs Post 128 has advanced m the
championship game in the losers bracket Friday
evening against Lancaster after pounding the Athens
Spartans 14-0, in Eighth District American . Legion
district tournament · action Thursday evening at
Athens High School's Rannow Field.
Top-seeded Lancaster dropped a 4- 2 decision to
Athens in Thursday's second game. Lancaster defeated Meig; 19-0 in the tournament Tuesday, to drop
Post 128 into the 10wer bracket,
Meigs, with the second win over th e Spartans in
the tournament, pounded out 17 hits en route to the
win. Dustin Gibbs received the offensive support on
the mound for Post 128, as he fired a seven-hitter for
the win .

next game: Friday 6 p.m.
at Athens Rannow Field
Meigs opened up a 5-0 lead after the first two
inning, after scorin ~ two in the first and three in the
second. But Meig; exploded for nine runs in the seventh inning to go up 14-0 and after the Spartans batted in the bottom of th e inning, the game was
stopped due to the ten run rule.
Jeff Brown had the big bat for M e i~ in the ninerun seventh with a pair of doubles in . the inning.
Allen Skinner went 3-for-4 for Meig;. with three
singles,

John Stanley and Michael Warren both went 3for- 5 and both had a pair of doubles, and Brown
added a single to go along with his two doubles to
lead the Post 128. hitting attack.
Gibbs went the distance scattering seven hits. Chris
Kidder wa.• the starter and loser for the Spartans.
Ryan · Lawson came in the fifth and Justin
Guinther in the seventh .
Meig; is now 14-17, while reb'lllar season champion
Lancaster will take a 23-18 record into Friday's game.
Fmt pitch is at 6 p.m. The winner of the Meig;/Lancaster game will meet Athens in the championship
game at 12:30 Saturday afternoon . .
If Athens loses that game Saturday. another game will
be played Saturday at 4:00 for the district championship,
since Athens is the only undefeated team left in the
tournament.

Chicago edges Indians

Browns
still in

Glover shines
in last-minute
start

talks with
Warren

CLEVELAND (AP)
Gary Glover figured on
having a routine day at the
ballpark.
He would play cards, get
in a pregame· workout,
dress and head to the visitor's bullpen at Jacobs Field
and wait for his turn to
pitch.
That all changed at 4:30
p.m.
"They said, 'Get ready',"
Glover said. " And I said;
'For what?' And they said,
'You're starting.' It was a
big surprise.'' '
Glover was name d an
emergency starter when
James Baldwin was traded
Thursday to Los Angeles
and made his first bigleague start- as -the- White"
Sox beat the C leveland
Indians S-4.
"I was hoping to get in
maybe four (innings), five if
I'm lucky," said Glover,
who allowed two hits in 3~
iimings. "I guess I fell a litde short."
Jo se Canseco finally
solved Charles Nagy, going
.3 -for-3 with a three-run.
homer off Cleveland's
starter as the White Sox
split the four-game series.
Canseco came in just 4for-45 (.089) with two
homers lifetime against
Nagy (4- 4) before hitting

PIHH 1ft Glover, B:S

BEREA, Ohio (AP) Browns coach Butch Davis
said Cleyeland's biggest question mark entering training
camp was its revamped offensive line.
·•r Well, now Davis has an
:·unexpected dilemma on the
. other side of the ball,
Tackle Gerard Warren, the
Browns' top draft pick (No. 3
overall),
rematns
unsigned and
it
appears
unlikely he'll
report Friday
when
the
cll!b begins
two-a-day
practices
with
its full
Davll
roster.
"I can't say if he will be here
or not," Davis said Thursday
when he gave the club's rookies the day off. "We're going to
try and get it (deal) done as
soon as possible."
Davis said La] Heneghan,
·the club's salary negonator,
met with team president Carmen Policy and that they had
"talked about the possibility of
concessions."
Joel Segal, Warren's agent,
would only confirm that
negotiations are continuing.
Policy said the main hurdle
in talks is Segal, who may be
waiting for other "teams to set
the market by signing their
picks. Only three players
selected in the top I 0 - and
I 0 of 31 first-rounders - had
signed as ofThursday.
Warren is sandwiched
between offensive tackle
Leonard Davis, picked No. 2
by Ari zona and Cincinnati
defensive end Justin Smith, the .
No. 4 selection.
" By doing a deal with us he
could help set the market as
opposed to being controlled.
by the market set ~y others,"
Policy said.
The Browns had been optimistic about having Warren, a
speedy
6-foot-4,
322pounder, signed in time to
attend a team meeting Thursday when Davis planned to go
over team policies and procedures.

'31
' .

WHUPPIN' STICK -Chicago White Sox Jose Canseco smacks a three-run home run off
Cleveland Indians pitcher Charles Nagy in the fifth inning Thursday. (AP)

Miami picked to win Big East
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ. (AP)
- Miami has its sights set on a national title, so it's no surprise the Hurricanes
were chosen as overwhelming favorites
to win the Big' East Conference..
"In the six years I've been here, I feel
we've been expected to win the . Big
, East every year," Miami coach Larry
Coker said Thursday at Big Easf media
day. "Certainly the expectations are
there and we welcome them. We're glad
they're there."
Coker, the Hurricanes offensive
coordinator for six years until he was
promoted when Butch Davis left for

the Cleveland Browns, may be a firstyear coach but he's been around champion-caliber teams for many of his 20plus seasons in the business:
Until 2000, though, Miami hadn't
won or shared a Big East title since '96,
when it was co-champ with Virginia
Tech and Syracuse. T he Hurricanes
were co-champs with the Hokies in '95
and won the Big East in '94, '92 and
'9.1.
Miami received 21 of 24 first-place
votes from a poll of media representatives who cover the league on a re~u lar
basis. The Hurricanes, who went 7-0 to

win the Bi~ East last season and then
fi nished No. 2 in the nation with an 11 1 overall record, return 14 starters.
Among them are quarterback Ken
Dorsey, who threw for 2,737 yards and
25 touchdowns, and two stando ut
offensive linemen - tackles Bryant
McKinnie a.nd Joaquin Gonzalez.
On defense, All-American safety Ed
Reed leads a unit dtat allowed 15.9
points per game in 2000.
Miami plays o ne of the tougher
schedules in the nation, with non-conference games at Penn State on Sept. 1

Ple1se 1ft Ill bst. BJ

Cris carter clarifies talk of·retirement
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Minnesota Vikings receiver
Cris Carter · said Thursday
that conunents he made in
May about possibly ·retiring
after this season were misinterpreted.
"I never said that this is
definitely my last season,1'
', Carter said in a report on the
St. Paul Pioneer Press' Web
si te. "People have said. I said
that. I never said that. I said

•

the way I feel, this will probably be my last year. They
said, 'Can you guarantee
that?' I said no I can 't guarantee that."
Carter, one. of only two
players in NFL history with
more than 1,000 receptions,
said during a speech in May
that he planned to retire after
this season.
"From w hat I said in May, I
felt like it would be my last

year," said Carter, entering his
15th season from O hio State.
" I never said this is definitely
going to be my last year. . I
have a certain feeling as far as
w hat I'm going to do and just
go about my. business and
conduct myself j ust like I
always have."
Carter told ESPN Radio
on Thursdav nig~t he has not
decided whether or not he
will retire.after the upcoming

season.
"I'm not closing the door
... I never closed the door,"
Carter said. "Coach (Dennis)
Green and I have had extensive conve rsatio ns on the ·
matter, and right now, the
way I feel and the way the
team is put together, I feel
very, very good about (possibly playing more than one
more year)."
Carter
ranks
second,

•

behind Jerry Ri ce, in career
receptions and touchdown
catches. He caught his
1,OOOth pass last season and
finished with 1,020. Rice has
1,28 1.
Carter played in his eighth
consecutive Pro Bowl and led
the Vikings with 96 catches
for 1,27 4 yards last season.
H e's the Vikings' career leader
in touchdowns (1 04) and
receiving yards (11,512).

�\

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

....

------~.~
u~
,.:,:
.,~
, .~..~
,~
M~~~
o~
v '~
'"~
' V~)~
.•~.~
.-~
,.~,~
. --------P~1or· Rc~. Walter E. Hcuu
S&lt;1t C~on 4 4:Ci-.'i . l ' P m., Ma•~- !UO p m.
t."burcb ot Jb&amp;U Chn,t Apostolit
Sun C~'ll'l ·tl 4 V~· ! ~ a m ,
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Sun. Ma~~ · IJ •JO a m .
Pastor: James Miller
Dllll('y ~ass - ti:JO 11m.
Sunday School - 10 :30 a.nl.
Evening - 7:)0 p.m.

( 'o uun
,.. •uat
,... io ua l
y

Secood &amp; Lynn. POincro)

Rev. Craig Crossman
Won.hip I0:25 a.m.
Sunday Sc hool 9: 15 a.m.

~soor ;

:!I :! W. Mam St.
Min 1~t e r:

316 E. "-bi n St. Pomeroy
Rev. J lllllC~ Bernacki, Rev. K ~thar i n

Sunday ~hool -· 9:JO a.nl .
Wur"hl p- !0:30 a.m., 6 p m.
Wednesday Servkt's- 1 p.m
Wu,tQdt Chun-h or Chrisl
3 3~2t-tCh •l dn: n 's Home Rd.
Suniliay School - II am .
Wtlf!:,htp - IOa.m.. 0 p.m
Wcdne,day Sc r '' l t:l: ~- 1 run

Liberty As.vmhJy or God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane
Mason. W.Va.
Pastor: Neil Tennant
Sunday Servi(.:es- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Holy Eochan ~• I I :00 a. m

Cr«-k Bapllsl Church
Prke Hollow Rd., Rulland
Pastor: JOhn Swan§On
Sunday School - I O:OOa.m.
Morning SerYice I I:00 a.m.
Ev.:ning Service_ - p:OO p.m_.
Wednesday Service - 7:30 p.m.
Hopt Baplb:i Church (Southem)
~70 Grant St., Middlepo n
Sunday school - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - II o.m. und 6 p.m.
WednesdaJ'Servk e - 7 p.m.

Rud11nd Fint B11ptist Chur-ch
Sunday S4.:hool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 am.

Pomeroy First Baptist
Eust Main St.
Sun day School - 9: ~ 0 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
1-' irst Soulhern Uaptlsl
-' 1872 Pome my Pil.::e
Paslor: E. Lamar O' Bryanl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.nl.. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.

Worship - 9:30 11.111 .
Sunday Schno l · 10:]0 a.m.
Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace
Ist and Jrd Sunday

Mt. Union Bapll&lt;it
Pastor : Joe N. Sayre
·sunday School-9:45a.m.

Even ing - 6:30p.m.
, Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

28601 St. _R t 7, Middlepon.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening · 1:00 p.m.
Thursday Services. 7:00

Vktory Bapllst lndcpendanl
52.5 N. 2nd SJ. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - IOa.m., 1 p.m.

Sundny SchQOl - 10 a.m.
Worshi p - II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor : Arius Hun
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - J 1 a. m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St., Middleport
Pastor: Rev. Gilbcn Craig. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:4S a.m.

Antiquity Baptiil
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:45 a.m.
Sllnday Evening · 6:00p. m.
, Paslor: Mark McComas

The Chul'th or Jesus
St. R1. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486
SundaySchool l0:20-l l a.m .
Relief Society/Priesthood 11:05.'12:00 noon
Sacrament Service 9- 10:15 a. m.
Homemaking mee tin~ . hi Thurs.- 7 p.m. ~

I ,ullll'ran

Pastor: Davi d Ru ~se ll ·
Su nday Sc hool · 10:00 a.m.
Worship · I I a.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Seco nd St. , Pomc: ruy
Rev. ,Donald C. Fritz
Sunday School- 9 : 4~ a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

( ' hri~1ian l nion
Hntford Chu~h ~rChrl!t In
Christian Union
Hartford. W.Va.
Pastor.Jim Hughes
Sunday School • II a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.

Grahllm United Methodist
Worship · 9:30a.m. {1st &amp; 2nd Su n),
7:30 p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun-)
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

( 'hurl'll ol' (;oil

Su nday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Mt. Moriah Choreh of God
Mile Hill Rd.. Racine
Pastor. Brice Uu
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Melp Cooperatin Parish
Northeast Cl uster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor5hip- I I a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Rulland Churr:h of Gnd
Pastor; Ron Heath
Sunday Worship - 10 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.

RM&lt;h&gt;llle
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
First Sunday or Month · 7:00p.m. service

74o-992-5141
hol.lhlw·lllndor
590 EliiM 511111• r-.y, 011 4S769

992-3785

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Marketing Pro1De1'1tv

Pomeroy

992-6877

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville. Ohio
740-667-3110

7411-992-5-444

216 E. Second Pomeroy
740-992-3325

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E, Main
992-5130

Full line of

Bill Quickel

264 Soollr Soaorl lVL • 'I" 1 1, 01145760

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

EWING

NEW HAVEN

. HOME

FUNERAL HOME
'We accept Preneed Transfers'
882·8200
Lundy Brown

Director

Regan Brown
f 74
Street

•

106
•

SWISHER &amp;. LOHSE
PHARMACY .
We Fill Doctors'
Pre,crlptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

Ingel's Carpet

Established 1913

169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992·2121

992·7028

Dignity and Service Always

~

St. Rt. 124. Racine
Pa.10r: William Hoback
Sunday Sohool - 10 a.m.
Eve ning · 7 p.m .
Wednesday Se~iL-e~ - 7 p.m.

""
·,:
,.

•

..-.
"

~

~

Mlddlep&lt;Jrt Peniet:-1

..

Third AYe.
'Pastor: Rev. Clark Baker
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
E'venlng - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.

l'n·.,ln ll'rian
Syracuse Flnt United Prab)U:rian
Pas10r: Rev. Krisana Robin son
Sunday School ~ 10 a.m.
Worship -

11 a.m.
;

HarrisonviUt Pmbyter:lan Churdt
Wor'ihip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School. 9:45a.m.

'

Middleport Prabyterlan
SundPy School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

'

Sun~y Schoo l ~

9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wedrtesday 7:30 p.m .

I

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'

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Mulberry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky .
Saturday Services:
· Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Wouhip- 3 p.m.

Pastor; Lawrence Bush
Sunc.Wy School-9:30a.m.
Evtning • 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

l nitl·d Brl'1hn·n ••
MI. Hennon United Brethren
In Chriol Churth

Unlled Faltb Church

Rt . 7 on Pometo)l By-Pass
Pastor:-Rev. Robert E. Smith , Sr.
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday SerYice - 7 p.m.

Tcxus Community ofT CR 82
Pas tor: Raben Sanden

Sum:hly School - 9:30a.m.Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SerYices • 7:30p.m.,

Syncuse Church ofthe NazaRne
Pastor Mike Adkins
Sunday School -9:30a.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen~iees- 7 p.m.

meaforb
l\.eal lf~tate

-

S&lt;·ll·nlh - 11;1\ \tlll·nti ' l

Faith G01pel Chun:h
lonz Bottom

Sunda y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Lo"'BoiiDm
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 19:30 a.m.

Won;hip • II a.m.
Wedocsday Scr.· ice ~ • 7 p.m·.

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.

Morse Chapel Cllurch
Sunday school ~ 10 P.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

ReednJIIe Fellowship
Ch1,1rch of the Nazarene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Pastor: Bob Randolph
. Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Churth of God or Pmphocy
Rd. off St. Rt . 160
Pastor: P.J. Ch11pman
Surul1y School - 10 a.m.

Haztl Community Church
OffRt 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Oyesville Community Church
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
. Wonhip - !0:30a. m., 7 p.m.

Joppa .

O . J~_ W hi te

Syi'IKulf Mission

Middleport Churtb of the Naurene
Paslor: Allen Midcap
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 1o;jo a.m,, 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p·.m.
Pa~tor : Allen Mtdcap

God'tTempleofPrai5e
.31665 McQ'Ji re Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio :

PeateeGstal ASM:rably

Mt. Olive Commanhy Cburtb

Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Evening Serv ices-6:30p.m."
Wedne~y SeNicc ~- 6:30p.m.

~

Rt.338, Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris
Asst. Pas10rs: Jim Morris
Services: SPturday 7:30p.m.

Middleport Community Church
57~ Pearl St , Middl~pon
Pastor: Sam Ander'son
Su nday School 10 a.m.
E\lening ~ 7:30 p.rn.
Wednesday Sen~lee • 7:30p.m.

14118ridgeman St., Syracuse
Rel'. Mike Thompson,Pastoc
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
E\lenin g - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 7 p.m.

'\ :11:1 l'l'IH'

Chnltr
Pastor: Jane Beattie

SyriU,!'USe Fi111t Churth or God
Apple and Second Sts.
Pastor: Rev. David Ru ssell
Sunday 'School and Wor!ihip- 10 a.m.

'~

Full Gospel Cburth or the Living Sarior

'*

CooMUe United Methodbf Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline:
Coolville Church
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m .
Tuesday Se"ices . 7 p.m.

Thr&lt;b Churth
Cn. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
·Worship - 10:30 a.m.

•

Hai'rriSOnl'ille Community Chun:h
Pw;tor: Theron Durham
Sunday - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Thursday Sel'\lice • 7 p.m.

Hoc:kingport Church

Rejolclna Lift Churr:h
• .500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pastor: Emeritus Lawrence Foreman ~·
•
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m. • ""

Salem Community Cburd11
Lie\ling Road, West Colu mbia, W.Va.
Pastoc: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday School9:30 am
Sunday evening service 6 pm '
Wednesday service 7 pm

Wednesday 7 p.m.

Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednasday Services· 10 a. m.

'

Tomaakto

Stil'ersl'llle Community Ch,urclt
Pastor: Wayne R. Je well
:
Sunday Services · 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m...
Thursday - 7:00p.m.
'"

Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
-wt
Services: Th urs. Niles 7:00 pm
~
New church No.Sunday service established,

. Faith Valley Tlbernacle Church
Bttiley Run Road
Pas tor: Rel'. Emmett Rawson
Sundoy_E\Iening 7 p.m.

Grund Street
SunQay School - tO a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m.
Wednesday SerVices - 8 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodltt
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
PllStor: Rev. Ralph Spires

Services - 7:30p.m.

S.c:rtd Heart C1tholk Chul'th

992·3978

\ll'lhodi~t

l'nill'd

•

The Believers' Frllowsblp Ministry
New Lime Rd ., Rutland
1-'as1or: Rev. Marg~tret J. kobinson
' Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m
Sunday. 2:30 p.n'l.

Radno
Pnstor: Brian Harkn es~
Su nday School • I0
Worship - II a.m.-----

a.m.

Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Wt~ lnut and Henry Sts ., RaveniWOOO , W.Va .

Church or Christ
Intersection 7a nd 124 W
Evange list: De nni s S11rgcnt
Sunday Dible Study - 9:30 a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wedm:Mlay Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Morolng Star
Pastor: Dew~t y ne St utler
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

WIJ..etart
PlUltOr: Brian Harkne~s
Sunday School - I0 a.m.
Wonhip ~ 9 a,m,
Wedneada)l- 7 p.m.

St. Joha Lutheran Chul'th
Pine: Grove
Rc\1. Donald C. Fritz
Worship - 9:00a.m.
SundAy School · I 0 :00 a.m.

( a1 holir

MillWork
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. •
Racine, Ohio
Pastor: Dcw11ync Stu:ler
Su nday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:45 a.m .
Bible St udy Wed . 7:00 p.m.

Christ of Latter-Day Saints

Church or Christ
Pastor: Na1han Robinson
Sunday st:hool 9:30a.m.
Nonnan WiJI~ri~Uent
'Su nday worship · 10:30 a.m.

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS

Pastor: Dcwaync Stutler
Sund&lt;Jy Sc hool • 10 a.m.
wOrship. 9 a.m .
Wed.nesdily Sen.·ices- 10 a.m.

Lattu-lhl\ Sain1s

Second Baptist Church
Raven swood. WV
Pastor. David W. McClain
Sunday School 10 amMorning worship I l am Evening - 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p.m.

l&lt;"alth FuU Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p.m.

HIGHLIGHTS

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Worship 1'0:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m . •
Wednesdoy SerVice - 7:30p.m.

Surday Servic_e s • 10 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m. •

Wol'!lhjp • 9 a.m.

lkthany

FRIDAY's

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike: Co. Rd.
PaSior: Rev. Blackwood

•
New Lire Vh:tory Cenltr
3713 Georges Creek Rood, Galli polis, ·OI-f;
Pas tor: Bill Staten
·

Carm~I-Sutlon

Rotlall!i Fm WID Raptis!
SOlem St.
P11stor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday St:hool- 10 a.m.
Eve ning ~ 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Snowville

Failll Fellowship Crusade ror Cbris(
Pastoc: Rev. franklin Dickens
Service: Friday, 1 p.m.

c nnon Tabernacle Churth
Cli fton, W.Va.
Su nday Sc hool· 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Abqndant Gra« R.R I.
923 S. Third St., Middlcpon
Palitor Teresa Davis
Su nday service, 10 a.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Laurorl Cliff F~ Melhodlst Chun:h
Pastor: Donald Balis
SUnday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:00 p.m.

Reeds\lllle Chul'th of Chrtsl
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday Schooi: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

Wedncsd~t y

Agape Lift Center
.. Full-Gospel Chureh"
Pastors John &amp; Pauy Wade
603 Second Ave. Maso n
773-5017
Service time: S1.1mlay 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday 7 pm

Worship - I 0: l ~ a.m.

Sunduy Sehoul· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Yo uth - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service!i • 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St.. Mason

Sunday Sef\/ k-es: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service s - 7 p.m.

Salem Center
PaStor: Ron Fierce
Sunday Sc hool - 9:15a.m.

Hyse ll Run Holiness Churth
Re\1. Mark Michael

De~ter

Hlll•lde Bapdst C hu~h
St. Rt. 143justo!l'Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James B_. Acr~e. Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wonhip·I0:30a.m.,6 p.m.
Wcdne!iday Service~ -7 p.m.

Harvest OurrUch Ministries
47439 Reibel Rd., Chester
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Coo k

Rutland
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wol'!lhip - 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services - 1 p.m.

Wesle)'lln Bible Holiness Chun:h
15 Pearl St .. Middlcwrt.
Past@r: Rev. Doug Cox
Sunday Wo'rship - 9:JO p.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesd ay ScNicc- 7: 30 p.m.

E\lan,;e list Mike Moore
Sunday Sc hool - 9 a.m
Wor.l hi p - 10 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser~:ice s - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Robert Musser
Su nday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Ser.·ice 7 :30 p.m.

Ash Stl'ftt Church
Ash St. . Middlepon- Pastor: Greg Sear.s
Sunday School • I 0:00 a.m.
Sunday Seli'itt~ - 6:00p.m.
Wedne sday Service· 7:00p.m

Paslor: Keit h Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

1/2 mi te off Rt. 325
Pnstor: RC\'. O ' Dell M,ou k y
Sunday Sl' hool - 9:30 a.R:J .
Worshi p - 10:30 a. m.. 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday Se rvice - 7:30p.m.

Hickory JIIIIJ Chun:h or Christ

Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH
Pastor : Dao iel Mecea
Su nday Schoo!- 9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.·

Chaptl

Rock Spring.

Pine Grol'e Bible Holi11ess Chun:h

Bradford Church of Chri!il
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradh UI)' Rd.
Minister: Doug Shamblin
Youth Min ister: Bill Amberger
Sund11y School - 9:30 a.m.
Worlhip • 8:00 u.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesd11y Services - 7:00p.m.

Lanpvllle ChrbtJan Church

Hemlock Grol'e Christian Churth
Putor: Richard Nease
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30 t~ . m.
Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.

Pu~ tor: Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school- 9: 30 a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prn yer.mccling- 7 p.m.

Rutl11nd Chul"('h or Christ
Sundily School - 9:30a.m;
Worship · 10:30 u.m .. 7 p.m.

Bethlehem Ba pdst Churth

Old Bethel F,.. Will Baptise Chun:h

Ro!ie or shamn Holiness Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd .. H.utland

Zion Churth of Christ
Pomeroy. Hanisonvill e Rd . (Rt.l 43l
Pastor: Roger Watson
Sunday School- Q:30 a. m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnellday Services • 7 p.m.

Bradbury O mrch or Christ
Pastor: Jim Eii ton
Sunday School - 9:ID a.m.
Worship - I 0:30 il.m.

Sllnr Run Baptlsr
Pastor: Ste\len K. Little
Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship- lla.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service s- 7:00p.m.

Mi nersvi lle

P~arl

BY DAVE HARRIS

announce
retirement

.

PITTSBURGH (AP) Quarterback Mike Tomczak
will announce his retirement
Friday after 16 years in the
National Football League.
Tomczak said he will make
the announcement during ·an
11:30 a.m. press conference at
the Steelers' training camp at
St. Vincent College in Latrobe
on Friday.
"PittSburgh is home. It's
where I have spent the best
years of my career and life,"
Tomczak said in a statement.
" I met my wife Michelle
here, and we are raising our
two wonderful children, Bryn
and Beau here in Pittsburgh." .
Tomczak, who played for
the Steelers from 1993 to
1999, said he has accepted a
job as an analyst for ESPN
Radio in Pittsburgh.
He was waived by the
Detroit Lions earlier this year.
Tomczak entered the NFL
in 1985 with the Chicago
Bears as an undrafted free
agent out of Dhio State University.
He was the backup quarterb~ck for C_hicago dulj~_tl~e_
1985- 86 Super Bowl season .
Tomczak was with Chicago
until 1990 before playing in
Green Bay and Cleveland,
each for one season.
Tomczak has. f6,079 career
passing yards on 1,248
attempts. He threw 88 touchdowns and also rushed for
525 yards and nine touchdowns. 1

Annstrong still
in ·control
MONTLUCON, . France
(AP) - · Belgium 's Serge
Baguet won the 17th stage· of
the Tour de France, while
Lance Armstrong maintained
a five-minute overall lead ,and
remained on track for his
third straight championship.
Baguet edged Danish rider
Jakob Piil in the final sprint to
claim his first stage win.
Armstrong retained the
overall leader's yellow jersey,
with an unchanged advantage
of 5 minutes, 5 seconds over
his closest rival, Jan Ullrich of
Germany.
'

Nicklaus strong
in Senior British
Open

ll"r·nw'c Fl1mlllvRestaurant

"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

W. Main St., Pomeroy

992·5432
FlOWER
106 BU'ITERNUT AVE.

PoMEROY,OH 992-6454
"Rowers for all occasions"
SNOUFFER FIRE &amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE
992·7075
172 North Second Ave.
Middleport. Oh

Meiij-6County~ Olde&amp;t Fwrut

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh
•t.t u1 •hd your tltouafltt •dth ,_etll can.•

74().992·2644 740-992.:eaa

!)[/ways &amp; 'forever ·
9ift Sfiop
518 E. Mlln St. Pomeroy, OH

992·1161 .
Office Service &amp; Supply
137.C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

Meigs Legion 14,
Athens Spartans c

0\11' CORRESPONDENT

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday Sc t.ool • 9:30a.m.
Worship • 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study · 7:00p.m. :

Wri ip • I0:30 a.m.

Sunday Schoo l - 9 B.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Coolville Road
Pastor: Re v. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:3oa.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
WedncsdPy S e~ic e · 7 p.m.

Fairview Blble'Churth
letllrt, W.Va. Rt . I

Ponland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: Michael Ouhl
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Pastor: Bob Robin5UU
SunJuy School - 9 a.m.
Worship • 10 a.m.

Meigs Legion advances to bracket final

While'• Chapt:l wa~ey....

Wednesday Se rvices - 7:00 p.m.'

Call'ary Pilgrim Chapcl
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles Mc Kenzie
Sunday Schoo19:30 a.m
Worsh ip - I I a. m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednc sd&lt;Jy Ser\·ice - 7:00p.m.

f'rmlom Gospd Mlalon
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31
PI.Stoc Rev. Roger Willford

Sunday S4:hool • 9:30 Lm.
. Worship- 7 p.m.

Communily ofChNt

Su nday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - II :00 a.m.

Friday, July 17, 2001

No Sunday ur Wednesday Night Service&amp;

( &gt;tlll'r ( 'hurrla·.,

Wednesda y prayer service· 7 p.n1

Hearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pas!ur:Terry Stewart
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services-6:30p.m.

Pastor: Mark Mortaw
fllh and Palrnc:r Sl. , Midd leport
Sunday School - 9: 15 a. m.
Worshir 10: 15 a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wetlncsday Service- 7:00p.m.

Suf'lllay School • 9:30 a.m.
Wor!&gt;.hip - I I_a.m•. 6 p m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

P.m.

' llealh (Midd leport )
Pastor: Rob Brower

Page 81

Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday School - 9:30 aa.m.
Worship Servia I0:30 ll.m.

Pastor. William Justis
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship · 1 6:4~ a.m.
Sunday SeNice • 6:30

Worship · 9 a.m.

Kt&gt;nu Chun:h or Chrisl

Ki~asbut)' Road

Chester Churdl of lbe Nazarene
Pastor. Rev. Herbcn Orate

Portland First Church or lhe Nazarene

Fom1 Run
Pa!i tor. Bob Robinso n
Sunda)' School - 10 a.m.

Danville Holiness Churth
J l057 State Route 325, Lungsvile
Pastor: Gary Jackson
Su nday school - 9:30a.m.
Sullday wonohip - 10:30 tu n . &amp; 7 p.m.

Wednesday Serv il-e ~- 7 p.m.

First Baptisl Chul"('h

Racine First Baptlsl
Pa &gt;tor: Rit-k Rule
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10~40 a. m.. 7:00p.m.
Wedne!'!duy Service.~ - 7:00 p.m.

Rev. Amos n ilis
Mai n Street, Rutland
Sunday Wo.,;h1 ~ 1Cl : lXl a.m.
· Sunday S~: rv i cc-7 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel

Kurt Hilmer feels fine, Page BJ
Diamond Roundup, Page 86

Wedntsday Servk:c: • 7 p.m.
C•rleton lnttrdenomlullonal C hur~:b

Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednaday Sen-i~ - 7 p.m.

Pa.~ t or:

Youth Mmister: Hill Fr,a1.ier
Sunlhty School - '1:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:15, !0:30a. m., 7 p.m.

Tllpprn Plain Churdt or Christ
lnstrumentBI
Worship Service- 9 a.m.
Communion - 10 a.m.
Sunday School - 10: I~ a.m.
Youth- 5.30 pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednestlay 1 pm

EnterprbtPastor: Keith Rader
Sunday Sct.ool - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Inside:

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Sun. Wor5hip • 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.

Rutllnd Clutrc• of the Nu.arrnc
Pastor: Rc\'. Samuel W. Basye

Flah•·oocli
Pnstor: Keith Rw:kr
Suf¥1ay School · 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.

y

Middleport Church oll'hrisl
5th o1nd Mam
Lll~

Fus1~-r

Su nda)· School ;md

Pom~troy

Pastor: Jan Lavender
Sunda y Sd'lool • 9:30a.m.
Worsh•p . 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednc=sdlly Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

Ctntnl Chi!ttr
Asbury fSyracusej
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Worship • I I a.m.
WOOne.&lt;iday Services - 7:30p.m.

Gract Epis(opal C hu~h

Anthony MOfris

t"Vmtrny,\. nurcn Oltnt l"'iiUftne

Pastor: Jane Beattie

Tuesday Services · 7:30p.m.

y

New L1ma Rued
Sunday, to a.m. aOO L ID p.m
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

1\tpptn PS.Ins St. P.uJ
Sunday &amp;•bool - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 Lm.

( 'hurd1 of ( 'hri'1

Church of Jtsu!. t:hrist
Apo!.tolic Faith

Friday, July 27, 2001

.

NEWC ASTLE, Northern
Ireland (AP) - · Jack Nicklaus
. eagled the first hole and finished with a 1- under 70 to
finish two strokes behind the
first-round leaders in the
Senior British Open.
South Africa's John Bland
and England's Denis Durnian
opened with 68s on the
Royal County Down course.
New Zealand's Bob Charles'
topped a five-player group at
69. South Afri ca's Player shot
72, and Arnold Palmer
opened with an 84.

a

•••••
Prep football starts in· four
weeks, and you can follow it
all in The Daily Sentinel and
the Sunday Til;nes-Sentinel.
0·

ATHENS - Meigs Post 128 has advanced m the
championship game in the losers bracket Friday
evening against Lancaster after pounding the Athens
Spartans 14-0, in Eighth District American . Legion
district tournament · action Thursday evening at
Athens High School's Rannow Field.
Top-seeded Lancaster dropped a 4- 2 decision to
Athens in Thursday's second game. Lancaster defeated Meig; 19-0 in the tournament Tuesday, to drop
Post 128 into the 10wer bracket,
Meigs, with the second win over th e Spartans in
the tournament, pounded out 17 hits en route to the
win. Dustin Gibbs received the offensive support on
the mound for Post 128, as he fired a seven-hitter for
the win .

next game: Friday 6 p.m.
at Athens Rannow Field
Meigs opened up a 5-0 lead after the first two
inning, after scorin ~ two in the first and three in the
second. But Meig; exploded for nine runs in the seventh inning to go up 14-0 and after the Spartans batted in the bottom of th e inning, the game was
stopped due to the ten run rule.
Jeff Brown had the big bat for M e i~ in the ninerun seventh with a pair of doubles in . the inning.
Allen Skinner went 3-for-4 for Meig;. with three
singles,

John Stanley and Michael Warren both went 3for- 5 and both had a pair of doubles, and Brown
added a single to go along with his two doubles to
lead the Post 128. hitting attack.
Gibbs went the distance scattering seven hits. Chris
Kidder wa.• the starter and loser for the Spartans.
Ryan · Lawson came in the fifth and Justin
Guinther in the seventh .
Meig; is now 14-17, while reb'lllar season champion
Lancaster will take a 23-18 record into Friday's game.
Fmt pitch is at 6 p.m. The winner of the Meig;/Lancaster game will meet Athens in the championship
game at 12:30 Saturday afternoon . .
If Athens loses that game Saturday. another game will
be played Saturday at 4:00 for the district championship,
since Athens is the only undefeated team left in the
tournament.

Chicago edges Indians

Browns
still in

Glover shines
in last-minute
start

talks with
Warren

CLEVELAND (AP)
Gary Glover figured on
having a routine day at the
ballpark.
He would play cards, get
in a pregame· workout,
dress and head to the visitor's bullpen at Jacobs Field
and wait for his turn to
pitch.
That all changed at 4:30
p.m.
"They said, 'Get ready',"
Glover said. " And I said;
'For what?' And they said,
'You're starting.' It was a
big surprise.'' '
Glover was name d an
emergency starter when
James Baldwin was traded
Thursday to Los Angeles
and made his first bigleague start- as -the- White"
Sox beat the C leveland
Indians S-4.
"I was hoping to get in
maybe four (innings), five if
I'm lucky," said Glover,
who allowed two hits in 3~
iimings. "I guess I fell a litde short."
Jo se Canseco finally
solved Charles Nagy, going
.3 -for-3 with a three-run.
homer off Cleveland's
starter as the White Sox
split the four-game series.
Canseco came in just 4for-45 (.089) with two
homers lifetime against
Nagy (4- 4) before hitting

PIHH 1ft Glover, B:S

BEREA, Ohio (AP) Browns coach Butch Davis
said Cleyeland's biggest question mark entering training
camp was its revamped offensive line.
·•r Well, now Davis has an
:·unexpected dilemma on the
. other side of the ball,
Tackle Gerard Warren, the
Browns' top draft pick (No. 3
overall),
rematns
unsigned and
it
appears
unlikely he'll
report Friday
when
the
cll!b begins
two-a-day
practices
with
its full
Davll
roster.
"I can't say if he will be here
or not," Davis said Thursday
when he gave the club's rookies the day off. "We're going to
try and get it (deal) done as
soon as possible."
Davis said La] Heneghan,
·the club's salary negonator,
met with team president Carmen Policy and that they had
"talked about the possibility of
concessions."
Joel Segal, Warren's agent,
would only confirm that
negotiations are continuing.
Policy said the main hurdle
in talks is Segal, who may be
waiting for other "teams to set
the market by signing their
picks. Only three players
selected in the top I 0 - and
I 0 of 31 first-rounders - had
signed as ofThursday.
Warren is sandwiched
between offensive tackle
Leonard Davis, picked No. 2
by Ari zona and Cincinnati
defensive end Justin Smith, the .
No. 4 selection.
" By doing a deal with us he
could help set the market as
opposed to being controlled.
by the market set ~y others,"
Policy said.
The Browns had been optimistic about having Warren, a
speedy
6-foot-4,
322pounder, signed in time to
attend a team meeting Thursday when Davis planned to go
over team policies and procedures.

'31
' .

WHUPPIN' STICK -Chicago White Sox Jose Canseco smacks a three-run home run off
Cleveland Indians pitcher Charles Nagy in the fifth inning Thursday. (AP)

Miami picked to win Big East
EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ. (AP)
- Miami has its sights set on a national title, so it's no surprise the Hurricanes
were chosen as overwhelming favorites
to win the Big' East Conference..
"In the six years I've been here, I feel
we've been expected to win the . Big
, East every year," Miami coach Larry
Coker said Thursday at Big Easf media
day. "Certainly the expectations are
there and we welcome them. We're glad
they're there."
Coker, the Hurricanes offensive
coordinator for six years until he was
promoted when Butch Davis left for

the Cleveland Browns, may be a firstyear coach but he's been around champion-caliber teams for many of his 20plus seasons in the business:
Until 2000, though, Miami hadn't
won or shared a Big East title since '96,
when it was co-champ with Virginia
Tech and Syracuse. T he Hurricanes
were co-champs with the Hokies in '95
and won the Big East in '94, '92 and
'9.1.
Miami received 21 of 24 first-place
votes from a poll of media representatives who cover the league on a re~u lar
basis. The Hurricanes, who went 7-0 to

win the Bi~ East last season and then
fi nished No. 2 in the nation with an 11 1 overall record, return 14 starters.
Among them are quarterback Ken
Dorsey, who threw for 2,737 yards and
25 touchdowns, and two stando ut
offensive linemen - tackles Bryant
McKinnie a.nd Joaquin Gonzalez.
On defense, All-American safety Ed
Reed leads a unit dtat allowed 15.9
points per game in 2000.
Miami plays o ne of the tougher
schedules in the nation, with non-conference games at Penn State on Sept. 1

Ple1se 1ft Ill bst. BJ

Cris carter clarifies talk of·retirement
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Minnesota Vikings receiver
Cris Carter · said Thursday
that conunents he made in
May about possibly ·retiring
after this season were misinterpreted.
"I never said that this is
definitely my last season,1'
', Carter said in a report on the
St. Paul Pioneer Press' Web
si te. "People have said. I said
that. I never said that. I said

•

the way I feel, this will probably be my last year. They
said, 'Can you guarantee
that?' I said no I can 't guarantee that."
Carter, one. of only two
players in NFL history with
more than 1,000 receptions,
said during a speech in May
that he planned to retire after
this season.
"From w hat I said in May, I
felt like it would be my last

year," said Carter, entering his
15th season from O hio State.
" I never said this is definitely
going to be my last year. . I
have a certain feeling as far as
w hat I'm going to do and just
go about my. business and
conduct myself j ust like I
always have."
Carter told ESPN Radio
on Thursdav nig~t he has not
decided whether or not he
will retire.after the upcoming

season.
"I'm not closing the door
... I never closed the door,"
Carter said. "Coach (Dennis)
Green and I have had extensive conve rsatio ns on the ·
matter, and right now, the
way I feel and the way the
team is put together, I feel
very, very good about (possibly playing more than one
more year)."
Carter
ranks
second,

•

behind Jerry Ri ce, in career
receptions and touchdown
catches. He caught his
1,OOOth pass last season and
finished with 1,020. Rice has
1,28 1.
Carter played in his eighth
consecutive Pro Bowl and led
the Vikings with 96 catches
for 1,27 4 yards last season.
H e's the Vikings' career leader
in touchdowns (1 04) and
receiving yards (11,512).

���.

.

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel '

-

--

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-F"riday,

July 27, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Olllo

~LEYOOP
•

.•

aJUDOI

-

Remodeling

· N.wGar•o••

• EIKtriC81 &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Guttara
• VInyl Siding 6 Pllntlng
• Patio and Porch Decks

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pom•roy, OhiO

22 Years LOCal

Lose Weighl Now
Ask Me How
Whether you 're trying to

lose weight. tupplement
your diet for maximum
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gre•taJt with the best

person1l care products,
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something t01everyone.
C1ll your Independent
Harblllfe dlslributor,

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(740) 985-3921

Wa can pertonellze a .
pi"OQI'Im for you!

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo
On Thursdays
At 6:30p.m.
Main Street
Pomeroy, ()l,io
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coveroll
Starburst
Progressive top line

Lie. JI00-50

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or992-2153

YOUR
~Q~~B~U
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All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Quality Driveways,
Factory Authorized
Pallos, Sidewalks• .
Case-lH Parts
25 years experl.ence
Dealers
Free Estimates
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740·742·8015 or
1·877-353·7022

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;

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Excavating

~
Hauling • Umeslone

740117-D381

Hill's Self
Storage
211670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

• Gravel Sand •
Thpsoll ' Fill Dirt
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Bulldozer Services

740.949·2217

(740) 992-3470

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

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44087 Wlpple Road

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HOURS: Man- Frl 11-5; 5119·1

21271 mo pd

Slzas5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

Howardl.
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Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
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949-1405
591·5011

~·

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.

High&amp; Dry

• Footen, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacement!, ~ Walks
and Drives • Srencil ·
Crete Free Estimates
Senlng Ohio and W.V.
WVI03171Z

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R . Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
M~.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401 KRoll overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
THE OLW.IT'f
COMF¥1H'i''

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992-5479

l&gt;IP YOU ~fA,?
•• ATI..ANT IS .
OPTfP OUT OF
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~=~=··
ROBERT BISSELL

""'

Advertise
In this space

for $25 per
month

CONSTRUCTION

EXPRESS

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•Garagea

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Mohawk Deiller

• Complete

• Hardwood Floortn•

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ONE. .u:.~~ .
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FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notices In Newspapers.
Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.

..

•• • • •

&lt;

Remodeling

740.992·1671

Ohio NIWI~r AuocUJiion

Phone rJ04J 674-6100
LOCUli Strtol, Pt. PINaan
JuatPutK&amp;K
Mobile
Home Pork
......;::::::~::::.:;::::......1
:.

Public Notice

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Bids
will
be
received at the Office
ol Barnard V. Full•,
ttt-1/2 Weal Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
·ror the sale ol the
reatdence ol the lata
Harold and Lillie
Hubbard, located al
755 Park Street,
Middleport, Ohio unlll
Augual 3, 2001 al
10:00 A.M. The
realdence Ia a 3·
bedroom t - 112 bath,
t story house with
attached twa car
garaGe on a lot
approxl mat ely t 00
feet by 110 feet deep.
The
Executor
reaervea the right to
reject any or all bids.
Linda

Foreman,

Executor ol the
Eatete of Lillie
Hubbard
(7l 26, 27, 29, 30, 31'
200t
(8l 1' 2, 200t
7tc
------'--Public Notice
-------NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Meigs Local
Board of Education
wlahea to receive
bldo
lor
the
following: Propoaalo
lor Depoallory ol
Active, Inactive and
ln&amp;erlm Depoalta.
·
All blda shall be
received In, and bid
apeclllcallona may be
obtained
from,
TREASURER'S
OFFICE, 320 E. Main
Street, Pof!leroy, OH
45789, on or . before
1 :00 P.M., Monday,
Auguott3, 200t .
The Meigs Local
Board ol Educallon
reaervas the right to
reject any and all
blda,
and
the
oubmlltlng ol any bid
shall Impose no
llablllly or obligation
upon lha uld Board.
All envelope• mual
be
CLEARLV
MARKED according
to the type ol bid.
Mark E. Rhonamua,
Treaaurer
MEIGS
LOCAL
BOARD
OF
EDUCATION
P.O. Box272
Pomeroy, OR 45769
PH (7401 892·5650
(7) t5, 27, 2001
(Sl 3, 200t
3tc

Public Notice

under the Housing
and
Community
Davelopmenl Act ol
1874, as amended;
and Section 288 ol
Title II oltha Craneton
IN THE MATTER OF
Gonulu National
SETTLEMENT
Artordable Housing
OF ACCOUNTS,
Act (NAHAl, as
PROBATE COURT
amended, lo be ueed
MEIGS COUNTY,
lor lhe lollowlnil
OHIO
project:
Project
Nama:
Accounts
and Colonial Park
vouchera of · lhe For-Protlt Developer:
following named Woda Development
flducla&lt;y has been Conllructlon
flied In the Probale Company
Court, Meigs, County, Location : Clly of
Ohio lor approval • Pomeroy,
Mel g a
and settlement
County
ESTATE NO. 23825
2000
Ohio
- Ninth Account of Department
ol
G·raca
Weber, Developmenl'a
Guardian of lhe Housing Development
person and ••tete of Aoetolance Program
Mark Alan Webar, an Fundo. The Elmer
lncompelenl.
Woda Housing LLC
Unleao 8lceptlona will rehabllltale 48
are flied thereto, aald unlla ol housing In
account will be eel Malga County. T.~e
Park
.l or hearing before Colonial
said Courl on lha Apartments Ia located
27th day ol Auguat, al 300 Mulb.e rry
2001, 11 which lima Avenue tn lhe City of
said account will be Pomeroy. The three
considered
and two-story buildings
continued from day are on a three-acre
to day unlll finally alta and 111 of the unite
dlspoaed of.
will conslall of lwo·
Any
parson bedrooma. The target
lntereeled mity lila population ol thla
written exception lo prolecl will be lhe
aald account or to extremely low-Income
maltera perllllnlng to households. Ten 2lhe execution ol the bedroom unlto will be
lruet, not la11 lhan occupied by and
live daya prior Ia the allordable
to
••a HI lor hearing.
households with
Income• at or below
35% of the Area
Robert E. Buck
Judge
Madlari Income (AMI).
Common
Plue Twenty·aeven
2·
Court,
Probale bedroom unite will be
Dlvlalon
occupied
by
Melgo County, Ohio
allordable
lo
houeeholda with
(7127, 2001
lncomea belwoen 38%
- - - - - - - - AMI and 50% AMI. Tan
unlll will be market
__P_u_b.:..:l.:..:lc...:N..:.o~t~lc:.:e:__ rent'unlts and one unit
will ' be a manager'•
PUBLIC NOTICE OF A unit. The prolect will
FINDING OF NO
receives Ohlo.Houalng
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT Tax Credlll.
ON THE
Source• ol Funds:
ENVIRONMENT
State Of Ohio Federal
(FONSij COMBINED HOME lnveatmenl
NOTICE
· Partnership Fundo
July 27, 200 1
and Olhar Prlvala
Joseph C. Robertson, Funde
Interim Director
Am o u n t
oI
Houatng and
Federai!Stale HOME
Community
lunda lor Private
Development
Renlel Rehabllllatlon •
77 South High Strul $350;000
P.O. Box tOOt ' Total Project Coli
Columbua, Ohio
Eatlmata· $2,003.833
43216-1001
II
hao
bean
To
All lnlerealed delermlnad thai such
Persona, Agencies, Requeallor Raleaae ol
and Groupe:
~
Funda will
no I
The State 01 Ohio conatlluta an action
propoaaa 10 request algnltlcanlly· allecllng
the u .s . Department 01 the quality ol the
Housing and Urban human environment
Oevelopmenl (HUD) to and accordingly the
release Federal tunda State ot Ohio hot

Public Notice

·' .

Public Notice

IJJ-·

decided not' to prepare
an Environmental
lmpacl Slalement
(EIS) undtr t~e
National
Environmental Polley
Act (NEPAl ol 1969, ••
amended.
The Environmental
Review Record (EARl
lor the above lilted
prolect has been
co.nducted by lhe
olete of Ohio. The ERR
documenlo
lha
environmental review
of the prolect and
·more tully aeta forth

Jt'lr Hntd '1b Stvp A 7l'ant~

..

-.

-

.,
~

lancla

8

~=xy

22 L8ntn'o

N'&amp;,.•

PHIWP ALDER

Who has the most
distinctive singing
voice in modern
country music? It is
surely John Anderson.
He is a strong campaigner for conservation arid protection of
the environment. His
most famous song is

•z

r:!~

•1 llalierlna'a

z-.-

Mme

7

polnla
51 Quartz
53 -Nevlda

.u

liMe
24 - -dQ.well . "' .......

25Moun..lna

......
12 wda.)

t15 Egypt'e
Ready for
m.
hlrYHI
47 Sal up
28 Dull par80II
(GOlf boll)
21 Aulotant 41 Kind of30 Allernoon 48 Eagle
IIKk latk
31
y, 50 (ot.)

a

ol Europa

=

onc:a
52 Ceil
37 Swimming
dweller
38 Nlrhoor
M Workera'

18 "Yanl"
ending
21TIolter

ltrong

41 Danca 11P01

u Emperor
23 Flnnllh lim 8hlillllr for
t;OUntry

nlckNme
3-4 ........
7 - •round
(pt.yad
35 Coke and
roughly}
. Papal
38 New - La. • "Ooot"
3t I.a., In t\;11
nnllh
8 Dank
o$0 "A Filii
Clllld-" 10 Opere
Sub11
46 aequenUy
...,_
C.mpbetl
(drink)
tZ Author

'rrr

llheep

-·

about our destruction
of the Everglades.
South did an impressive job of destroying his contract
in this deal. How
would you have tried·
to conserve nine
tricks? West leads the
club jack. (Did he
have a more effective
Start?)
After East discarded
the heart two, declarer won with the
club king and tried
CELEBRITY CIPHER
the diamond queen.
by Luis Campoa
Clllbrtl)' Cipher crypeagrame o,. crMIIdlrom quotalloi1t b y , _
But when
West
pecplo, put lnd - ' · EICh lottlr In ... olphtrplayed tl)e two, hi s
Toelly'l cl.-: S tqtJIIII C
lowest card to indiMKC
OTIXWTXC
IIKTII
cate an odd number,
East ducked . Declarer
YH
TQQRUCJ
IIR
DC
WH CJ
finessed dummy's diay
M K Y I 0
mond nine, but East ·
won with the jack
JCXPTJyiX.
YM
M T 0 C 1'
and switched to a
heart. Now the conMCGCNYHYRI
HYJ
J R
tract had no chance.
Declarer started
STCHTP
with seven top tricks:
PREVIOUS SOLtrriON: "A lot of ~approach rtak u Hft'a
two spades, two
the enemy when n•a realy lorlune a accomplice.' - Stlr1g
0 2001 br NEA, lno.
27 .
hearts and three clubs.
East's tfick-one disfiiAf DAILY
card meant the pros- .
PUZZLII
pect of another club
trick had evaporated.
R•arrong~ letters of rhe
lour ·scromblod . wordo bolnsteaa; South had to
low to form four slmplo words.
score two diamond

lui-·

there was
winni'ng
trick two ,
diamond

tinuation sets up the
second trick . If the
diamond eight brings
out the ace , at least
two diamond tricks

.PEANUTS
Cf.lA~LIE BROWN! 0~ . IT'S
GOOD TO SEE I{OlJ 1

'

T~OU6~T

ABOUT
50 OFTEN!

A~E

'{OlJ SURE
THERE ~ASN'T BEEN

are available. Here,
though, East wins
with the jack and, say,
switches to a heart.
So uth wins and con-

SOME MISTAKE?

Terry Lamm

992-0739

an
cuHingadga, •.
Raadtha
ClassUlad Ads
Public Notice
accordance wllh lhe .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,.

fill
5 llelher-

23 tt.blluaie
271nltrucl

...
- ......

tricks. And
only one
channel. At
finesse the

Advertise

rtqulred procedure
(24 CFR Part 51), and
mual be addrtaled lo:
Lana Vacha, CPO
Director, Columbua
Field Office, HUD, 200
Norlh High Streit,
Columbue,
Ohio
'3215.
'HUD
Will
nol
conal•r obltctlona 10
the Releaoe of Funcla
on b.oaee olher lhan
thoee alalad libcive.
HUD will conalder no
objection•
aflar
Wedneaday, Augual
'21, 2001.
(7)27

ltQUJ

eight. If it wins, a diamond -q uee n con-

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13 New York sa Lala
lndlon

VulrlllniMe: Both

Mon-Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

740-985-3948
CONCRETF/BlO(I(/BRICK

•

.

55 Singer

1 EclgM

..

...... ....

convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,

Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

• Q.
• ', 2

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery··Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio

ACROSS

•

Deolor.Sottllt

740-992-5232

740-tas-aa

.. Qitl

FlO!£ II HOME ESliiATU • "SEEliG IS IEUEVIIIG" •~1023U7

33795l(iland lit/.
Po,_,, Obio

•

w...

1-800-291·5600 • Pomerov. OH

Seff-Storage

Raclno, Ohio 4577t

•

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

~ ~etttittt

ALDER

~.,

,.

~ =

NEA Crossword Puzzle

F-:l~

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT lli.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAVS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

D

.PHILLIP

!!:_-~

KENSINGTON

• Room Addition• &amp;

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5.

7

I

'

.

_

'rlt..;-r-r-T.:._T.-l·
· 0 E GU F I
~=~=~~=~~~~t~
r

I

V A R y G ,~

f

1 1~ 1 "~ ·
1
'---'-....L--J~..I-.J,.
5

I
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EL KTET
1.71

.

e

'

havt!' at h:md .

L.EO Uuly 23-Ang.· 22) -- ·
Your protective efforts wtll
count for little today if you
thw:irt indtvidualism in those
you love . Let dw whole f3m ily bt: aU that thc:y can be by
doing their own thing. Trying
to patch up a broken romance? The A~tro-Graph
Matchtmker can hd p you un dcr.otand what to do to make
the rcbtiouship work. Mail
12.75 to Matchmake-r, c/ o this

Letart Falls,
Tomato, Peppers
U-Pick Beans &amp; Corn
247-4681
PIZZA
Vine Street
Fun Service Dell • Rotiaserte Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk,
Eckridge Meats now .available

newspaper. 1'.0. l!ox 175H,
Murray Hill Station. New
York, NY 10t5n.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 221
..:. SpcFulating mi ght bl· a
whole lot of fun and even
sound good nn paper , but
wlu:n pur to the tc.~t. it cnuld
bl.! anochcr mactcr . Don't
jump inw :mything withou t

Hoi Legs Contest
Sal. July 28, 2001
Cash Prizes
(Every1one can enter)

rropcr rL"SC:JITh .
LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Do nut mak~ :my big tickl!t
purch:asc5 today withuut firs~
cmnultifJR with tho11c who
!lb:t re the coUA. If you dun't,

you'd bette I bc prepared to
\.

'·

·

..

Overheard .in local gvm: "I've·
'
always been called a brain. Bull
l.know brain cells come and go but
•fat cells are . . . . . ,-."
_
Complete lho chuckle quotod
by filling in tho mluing words
you d... olop from step No. 3 below.

I. I. I. I. e

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTERS

I

:;:=IN~T;H~ES=E~S=Q=U=A~R~E~S;:;=;:~:=;:=;:=*=~==*=~

@)

I I. I. I.

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
.

I. I. ·I_

SCRAM-LEI'$ ANSWERS

Whence - Flour- Abash - Frozen - HOLE in ONE

. "I play golff~rthe exercise," the man lamented. Smiltng he added , but inslead I gol a HOLE in ONE .'

Soturday.july 28,21.1111
Unusu&lt;~l co ndirions nuy
prevail for ·you in the year
ahead, but nothm~ you can' t
handle. In fact, instead of
looking elsewhere for lu cky
brc.1ks., capiuli ze nn what you

_

'"::~;:~~==~--'

mond queen , o~ertaking with dummy's
king. If East ducks his
ace, declarer leads another diamond. Now
nine tricks are preserved.
The only lea d to
defeat three no-trump
is the hea rt · queen .
But who would find
that?

JULY 271

1 .1

.

tinues with the dia-

llFRIDAY

0 RHORR

t--r-rTl~l.:._:.;.l"'i;.;,.
·l-j

get ti uc o"r rhc lim· oUrre. ·
SCOR I'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Espt'cially if you find
ymtfklf in the lcader,~hip role
today With uthcn under your
-charge, you nm~t make ccrt:.in you think everything
through from the ~lph~ to the
OmCb~·

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dcc . 21) -- You have che
ability to gain !.':fOUnd through
good discussion ~ tod.;y with
those whos~ thinkinp; you
need to sw.:~y. In order to do
so, however, flexibility in
your thought processt's is a

must.
CAPRI CORN (Dec . 2219) -- A s~ociating with
pab today whtl arc coo loose
with their dollars could trigger
=1 bomkruptcy for your waUet.
H ang .out with those who
have the unu· appreciation for
material valuL~ 01.\ you do.
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Fcb.
19) -- It won't do you any
b'Ood to h:~ vc :m a5tutt• game
plan .· only to suddenly abandon it at the mere su~,,tion
o( someone ehc. Stay on
t:ounl.' and follow your well-

Jan.

laid out blu opriht.
i'ISCES (Ftb. 20-Mar&lt;h 2U)

\

-- Kt&gt;cp 'ynur guud up cocUy
when duling with unknown
or un~ested qu .:~ntitic5. Unfortunately, not everything you
encounter at this time ciln be
taken 3t face value-.

ARIES (Mmh. 21-Aptil 19)
-- Usu:~lly, you're a generous
person, but today you might
nor be willing to share the
fruits with thmc who help l:d
you the uu~t . Fortunately,
you'll. rt=.alire this hefort' it'ri
too lat~ .

TAURUS (April 20-May
2ll) -- G:t back in ~har.1cter as
fan as you can if you find
yourself bein£ too touchy or
r:rratic in thr: handling of people tod;ay . Diplomicy ill whilt
will gel you whal you want.

GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
-- Although it mi ght be easier
to work with people who can
cut it on their ow n, don't ignore t hme who truly need
your help . · Estee m comes
from knowing you've am.dc a
. ditference: in somcone's job.
CANCER Qune 21-July
22) -- Watch out for those
mood swings of youn when
involved wilh othen today. If
you'rt' too sensitive abobt
things, it could tum you inro
an tmotional penon you
won't like.

�.

.

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel '

-

--

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-F"riday,

July 27, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Olllo

~LEYOOP
•

.•

aJUDOI

-

Remodeling

· N.wGar•o••

• EIKtriC81 &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Guttara
• VInyl Siding 6 Pllntlng
• Patio and Porch Decks

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pom•roy, OhiO

22 Years LOCal

Lose Weighl Now
Ask Me How
Whether you 're trying to

lose weight. tupplement
your diet for maximum
nutrition, or tust took your
gre•taJt with the best

person1l care products,
Herbelile fnlerlllltlonlf h11
something t01everyone.
C1ll your Independent
Harblllfe dlslributor,

J&amp;L Enterprise
(740) 985-3921

Wa can pertonellze a .
pi"OQI'Im for you!

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo
On Thursdays
At 6:30p.m.
Main Street
Pomeroy, ()l,io
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coveroll
Starburst
Progressive top line

Lie. JI00-50

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or992-2153

YOUR
~Q~~B~U
~QHH~CIIQH

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Quality Driveways,
Factory Authorized
Pallos, Sidewalks• .
Case-lH Parts
25 years experl.ence
Dealers
Free Estimates
1000 St. Rl. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740·742·8015 or
1·877-353·7022

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;

liJ,

Excavating

~
Hauling • Umeslone

740117-D381

Hill's Self
Storage
211670 Beahan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

• Gravel Sand •
Thpsoll ' Fill Dirt
'Mulch
Bulldozer Services

740.949·2217

(740) 992-3470

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

•lllanmem 1nd fnRI 1111111111r S2t81i
•Lu•u 011 111.911-EikiS Will .
• SJ•II Pill l . .llltlrii•IICIIIIan
lnke $42.95 • 1111' lnli'll SOli
and

Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

DEPOYIAI
PIRft

Pomeroy

740·992-5344

HOURS: Man- Frl 11-5; 5119·1

21271 mo pd

Slzas5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

Howardl.
Wrltesel.
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
. Frtt Estimates .

949-1405
591·5011

~·

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.

High&amp; Dry

• Footen, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replacement!, ~ Walks
and Drives • Srencil ·
Crete Free Estimates
Senlng Ohio and W.V.
WVI03171Z

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R . Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
M~.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401 KRoll overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
THE OLW.IT'f
COMF¥1H'i''

DANG-!!
I'VE REA.l&gt;
THIS

ONE!!

Cellular

.."
~

Jeff Warner Ins.

Tllfnl
188-182-1121

992-5479

l&gt;IP YOU ~fA,?
•• ATI..ANT IS .
OPTfP OUT OF
Tt4f TEST-BAN
T~fATY.

~=~=··
ROBERT BISSELL

""'

Advertise
In this space

for $25 per
month

CONSTRUCTION

EXPRESS

•NewHomea
•Garagea

·ExclUSive
Mohawk Deiller

• Complete

• Hardwood Floortn•

Stop

~

•• -

"'t"':

""

.. 1\-IAV~$

7·1.7

,...

•CarPel

lTOOKmt
ONE. .u:.~~ .
Tfi:AI/ELE.D...

• tonaoleum

a. Compare

FREE ESTIMATES

FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notices In Newspapers.
Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.

..

•• • • •

&lt;

Remodeling

740.992·1671

Ohio NIWI~r AuocUJiion

Phone rJ04J 674-6100
LOCUli Strtol, Pt. PINaan
JuatPutK&amp;K
Mobile
Home Pork
......;::::::~::::.:;::::......1
:.

Public Notice

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Bids
will
be
received at the Office
ol Barnard V. Full•,
ttt-1/2 Weal Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
·ror the sale ol the
reatdence ol the lata
Harold and Lillie
Hubbard, located al
755 Park Street,
Middleport, Ohio unlll
Augual 3, 2001 al
10:00 A.M. The
realdence Ia a 3·
bedroom t - 112 bath,
t story house with
attached twa car
garaGe on a lot
approxl mat ely t 00
feet by 110 feet deep.
The
Executor
reaervea the right to
reject any or all bids.
Linda

Foreman,

Executor ol the
Eatete of Lillie
Hubbard
(7l 26, 27, 29, 30, 31'
200t
(8l 1' 2, 200t
7tc
------'--Public Notice
-------NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Meigs Local
Board of Education
wlahea to receive
bldo
lor
the
following: Propoaalo
lor Depoallory ol
Active, Inactive and
ln&amp;erlm Depoalta.
·
All blda shall be
received In, and bid
apeclllcallona may be
obtained
from,
TREASURER'S
OFFICE, 320 E. Main
Street, Pof!leroy, OH
45789, on or . before
1 :00 P.M., Monday,
Auguott3, 200t .
The Meigs Local
Board ol Educallon
reaervas the right to
reject any and all
blda,
and
the
oubmlltlng ol any bid
shall Impose no
llablllly or obligation
upon lha uld Board.
All envelope• mual
be
CLEARLV
MARKED according
to the type ol bid.
Mark E. Rhonamua,
Treaaurer
MEIGS
LOCAL
BOARD
OF
EDUCATION
P.O. Box272
Pomeroy, OR 45769
PH (7401 892·5650
(7) t5, 27, 2001
(Sl 3, 200t
3tc

Public Notice

under the Housing
and
Community
Davelopmenl Act ol
1874, as amended;
and Section 288 ol
Title II oltha Craneton
IN THE MATTER OF
Gonulu National
SETTLEMENT
Artordable Housing
OF ACCOUNTS,
Act (NAHAl, as
PROBATE COURT
amended, lo be ueed
MEIGS COUNTY,
lor lhe lollowlnil
OHIO
project:
Project
Nama:
Accounts
and Colonial Park
vouchera of · lhe For-Protlt Developer:
following named Woda Development
flducla&lt;y has been Conllructlon
flied In the Probale Company
Court, Meigs, County, Location : Clly of
Ohio lor approval • Pomeroy,
Mel g a
and settlement
County
ESTATE NO. 23825
2000
Ohio
- Ninth Account of Department
ol
G·raca
Weber, Developmenl'a
Guardian of lhe Housing Development
person and ••tete of Aoetolance Program
Mark Alan Webar, an Fundo. The Elmer
lncompelenl.
Woda Housing LLC
Unleao 8lceptlona will rehabllltale 48
are flied thereto, aald unlla ol housing In
account will be eel Malga County. T.~e
Park
.l or hearing before Colonial
said Courl on lha Apartments Ia located
27th day ol Auguat, al 300 Mulb.e rry
2001, 11 which lima Avenue tn lhe City of
said account will be Pomeroy. The three
considered
and two-story buildings
continued from day are on a three-acre
to day unlll finally alta and 111 of the unite
dlspoaed of.
will conslall of lwo·
Any
parson bedrooma. The target
lntereeled mity lila population ol thla
written exception lo prolecl will be lhe
aald account or to extremely low-Income
maltera perllllnlng to households. Ten 2lhe execution ol the bedroom unlto will be
lruet, not la11 lhan occupied by and
live daya prior Ia the allordable
to
••a HI lor hearing.
households with
Income• at or below
35% of the Area
Robert E. Buck
Judge
Madlari Income (AMI).
Common
Plue Twenty·aeven
2·
Court,
Probale bedroom unite will be
Dlvlalon
occupied
by
Melgo County, Ohio
allordable
lo
houeeholda with
(7127, 2001
lncomea belwoen 38%
- - - - - - - - AMI and 50% AMI. Tan
unlll will be market
__P_u_b.:..:l.:..:lc...:N..:.o~t~lc:.:e:__ rent'unlts and one unit
will ' be a manager'•
PUBLIC NOTICE OF A unit. The prolect will
FINDING OF NO
receives Ohlo.Houalng
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT Tax Credlll.
ON THE
Source• ol Funds:
ENVIRONMENT
State Of Ohio Federal
(FONSij COMBINED HOME lnveatmenl
NOTICE
· Partnership Fundo
July 27, 200 1
and Olhar Prlvala
Joseph C. Robertson, Funde
Interim Director
Am o u n t
oI
Houatng and
Federai!Stale HOME
Community
lunda lor Private
Development
Renlel Rehabllllatlon •
77 South High Strul $350;000
P.O. Box tOOt ' Total Project Coli
Columbua, Ohio
Eatlmata· $2,003.833
43216-1001
II
hao
bean
To
All lnlerealed delermlnad thai such
Persona, Agencies, Requeallor Raleaae ol
and Groupe:
~
Funda will
no I
The State 01 Ohio conatlluta an action
propoaaa 10 request algnltlcanlly· allecllng
the u .s . Department 01 the quality ol the
Housing and Urban human environment
Oevelopmenl (HUD) to and accordingly the
release Federal tunda State ot Ohio hot

Public Notice

·' .

Public Notice

IJJ-·

decided not' to prepare
an Environmental
lmpacl Slalement
(EIS) undtr t~e
National
Environmental Polley
Act (NEPAl ol 1969, ••
amended.
The Environmental
Review Record (EARl
lor the above lilted
prolect has been
co.nducted by lhe
olete of Ohio. The ERR
documenlo
lha
environmental review
of the prolect and
·more tully aeta forth

Jt'lr Hntd '1b Stvp A 7l'ant~

..

-.

-

.,
~

lancla

8

~=xy

22 L8ntn'o

N'&amp;,.•

PHIWP ALDER

Who has the most
distinctive singing
voice in modern
country music? It is
surely John Anderson.
He is a strong campaigner for conservation arid protection of
the environment. His
most famous song is

•z

r:!~

•1 llalierlna'a

z-.-

Mme

7

polnla
51 Quartz
53 -Nevlda

.u

liMe
24 - -dQ.well . "' .......

25Moun..lna

......
12 wda.)

t15 Egypt'e
Ready for
m.
hlrYHI
47 Sal up
28 Dull par80II
(GOlf boll)
21 Aulotant 41 Kind of30 Allernoon 48 Eagle
IIKk latk
31
y, 50 (ot.)

a

ol Europa

=

onc:a
52 Ceil
37 Swimming
dweller
38 Nlrhoor
M Workera'

18 "Yanl"
ending
21TIolter

ltrong

41 Danca 11P01

u Emperor
23 Flnnllh lim 8hlillllr for
t;OUntry

nlckNme
3-4 ........
7 - •round
(pt.yad
35 Coke and
roughly}
. Papal
38 New - La. • "Ooot"
3t I.a., In t\;11
nnllh
8 Dank
o$0 "A Filii
Clllld-" 10 Opere
Sub11
46 aequenUy
...,_
C.mpbetl
(drink)
tZ Author

'rrr

llheep

-·

about our destruction
of the Everglades.
South did an impressive job of destroying his contract
in this deal. How
would you have tried·
to conserve nine
tricks? West leads the
club jack. (Did he
have a more effective
Start?)
After East discarded
the heart two, declarer won with the
club king and tried
CELEBRITY CIPHER
the diamond queen.
by Luis Campoa
Clllbrtl)' Cipher crypeagrame o,. crMIIdlrom quotalloi1t b y , _
But when
West
pecplo, put lnd - ' · EICh lottlr In ... olphtrplayed tl)e two, hi s
Toelly'l cl.-: S tqtJIIII C
lowest card to indiMKC
OTIXWTXC
IIKTII
cate an odd number,
East ducked . Declarer
YH
TQQRUCJ
IIR
DC
WH CJ
finessed dummy's diay
M K Y I 0
mond nine, but East ·
won with the jack
JCXPTJyiX.
YM
M T 0 C 1'
and switched to a
heart. Now the conMCGCNYHYRI
HYJ
J R
tract had no chance.
Declarer started
STCHTP
with seven top tricks:
PREVIOUS SOLtrriON: "A lot of ~approach rtak u Hft'a
two spades, two
the enemy when n•a realy lorlune a accomplice.' - Stlr1g
0 2001 br NEA, lno.
27 .
hearts and three clubs.
East's tfick-one disfiiAf DAILY
card meant the pros- .
PUZZLII
pect of another club
trick had evaporated.
R•arrong~ letters of rhe
lour ·scromblod . wordo bolnsteaa; South had to
low to form four slmplo words.
score two diamond

lui-·

there was
winni'ng
trick two ,
diamond

tinuation sets up the
second trick . If the
diamond eight brings
out the ace , at least
two diamond tricks

.PEANUTS
Cf.lA~LIE BROWN! 0~ . IT'S
GOOD TO SEE I{OlJ 1

'

T~OU6~T

ABOUT
50 OFTEN!

A~E

'{OlJ SURE
THERE ~ASN'T BEEN

are available. Here,
though, East wins
with the jack and, say,
switches to a heart.
So uth wins and con-

SOME MISTAKE?

Terry Lamm

992-0739

an
cuHingadga, •.
Raadtha
ClassUlad Ads
Public Notice
accordance wllh lhe .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,.

fill
5 llelher-

23 tt.blluaie
271nltrucl

...
- ......

tricks. And
only one
channel. At
finesse the

Advertise

rtqulred procedure
(24 CFR Part 51), and
mual be addrtaled lo:
Lana Vacha, CPO
Director, Columbua
Field Office, HUD, 200
Norlh High Streit,
Columbue,
Ohio
'3215.
'HUD
Will
nol
conal•r obltctlona 10
the Releaoe of Funcla
on b.oaee olher lhan
thoee alalad libcive.
HUD will conalder no
objection•
aflar
Wedneaday, Augual
'21, 2001.
(7)27

ltQUJ

eight. If it wins, a diamond -q uee n con-

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing.

• Dryw-tntp

O

1-304-675-7124
1-800-150-!1077
Residential Commtrdil New Comlrudion
S111et Senl~ lnslallalion
Specialidllllin Sheel MNI Ductwork
"Trane• S.l&lt;1 &amp; Stni~ For
Gallia, Muon, a'nd Moil" Countl"'
Licensed and lll•ured
WV 005176

in this
space
for
sso per
month

3=-

20&amp;'
:!.,.,
2t llcndry

Ull.'

ELITE MECH~JCAL CONTRACTORS
Public Nollce

~ 4

1 Fair

2F._.._

"Seminole Wind,"

7

li~E

NOTICES

BY

·

fiEIEmiiiiU

"""" &amp;

J

S~nging

(740) 742-8888
1-888·521-0916

1411-192-tm

- ·- .
A

0pettUtcleod: • J

DIIEEI

Complete Home
Repair
Remodeling
· New Additions
Garages
WV0282t20

f

JUt I I

INT

· JIM'S

C811T11mllla

". j

DOWN

15 Nolalllnl
11 Cwry-y
17 Drying
ldtn
11 0'-ny

.Jiti1J

t

=:.Ida-

,. Wild-

....

t QI

motorcycle seats, boat covers, carpets, etc. .

Chester, Ohio

l lt.'
A 4 J

6 A It I
9 AK I

Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,

WOODSHED

~.JJ4 1

~

•

.

sa

1kiiw1p
hoUIIIAIDik
7 eonc.lllng 57 OM! In .
13 New York sa Lala
lndlon

VulrlllniMe: Both

Mon-Frl 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience

740-985-3948
CONCRETF/BlO(I(/BRICK

•

.

55 Singer

1 EclgM

..

...... ....

convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,

Furniture stripping
&amp; refinishing

• Q.
• ', 2

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery··Plus, Inc.
Rutland, Ohio

ACROSS

•

Deolor.Sottllt

740-992-5232

740-tas-aa

.. Qitl

FlO!£ II HOME ESliiATU • "SEEliG IS IEUEVIIIG" •~1023U7

33795l(iland lit/.
Po,_,, Obio

•

w...

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WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
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• Room Addition• &amp;

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5.

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L.EO Uuly 23-Ang.· 22) -- ·
Your protective efforts wtll
count for little today if you
thw:irt indtvidualism in those
you love . Let dw whole f3m ily bt: aU that thc:y can be by
doing their own thing. Trying
to patch up a broken romance? The A~tro-Graph
Matchtmker can hd p you un dcr.otand what to do to make
the rcbtiouship work. Mail
12.75 to Matchmake-r, c/ o this

Letart Falls,
Tomato, Peppers
U-Pick Beans &amp; Corn
247-4681
PIZZA
Vine Street
Fun Service Dell • Rotiaserte Chicken
Bread &amp; Milk,
Eckridge Meats now .available

newspaper. 1'.0. l!ox 175H,
Murray Hill Station. New
York, NY 10t5n.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 221
..:. SpcFulating mi ght bl· a
whole lot of fun and even
sound good nn paper , but
wlu:n pur to the tc.~t. it cnuld
bl.! anochcr mactcr . Don't
jump inw :mything withou t

Hoi Legs Contest
Sal. July 28, 2001
Cash Prizes
(Every1one can enter)

rropcr rL"SC:JITh .
LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Do nut mak~ :my big tickl!t
purch:asc5 today withuut firs~
cmnultifJR with tho11c who
!lb:t re the coUA. If you dun't,

you'd bette I bc prepared to
\.

'·

·

..

Overheard .in local gvm: "I've·
'
always been called a brain. Bull
l.know brain cells come and go but
•fat cells are . . . . . ,-."
_
Complete lho chuckle quotod
by filling in tho mluing words
you d... olop from step No. 3 below.

I. I. I. I. e

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTERS

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GET ANSWER
.

I. I. ·I_

SCRAM-LEI'$ ANSWERS

Whence - Flour- Abash - Frozen - HOLE in ONE

. "I play golff~rthe exercise," the man lamented. Smiltng he added , but inslead I gol a HOLE in ONE .'

Soturday.july 28,21.1111
Unusu&lt;~l co ndirions nuy
prevail for ·you in the year
ahead, but nothm~ you can' t
handle. In fact, instead of
looking elsewhere for lu cky
brc.1ks., capiuli ze nn what you

_

'"::~;:~~==~--'

mond queen , o~ertaking with dummy's
king. If East ducks his
ace, declarer leads another diamond. Now
nine tricks are preserved.
The only lea d to
defeat three no-trump
is the hea rt · queen .
But who would find
that?

JULY 271

1 .1

.

tinues with the dia-

llFRIDAY

0 RHORR

t--r-rTl~l.:._:.;.l"'i;.;,.
·l-j

get ti uc o"r rhc lim· oUrre. ·
SCOR I'IO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Espt'cially if you find
ymtfklf in the lcader,~hip role
today With uthcn under your
-charge, you nm~t make ccrt:.in you think everything
through from the ~lph~ to the
OmCb~·

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dcc . 21) -- You have che
ability to gain !.':fOUnd through
good discussion ~ tod.;y with
those whos~ thinkinp; you
need to sw.:~y. In order to do
so, however, flexibility in
your thought processt's is a

must.
CAPRI CORN (Dec . 2219) -- A s~ociating with
pab today whtl arc coo loose
with their dollars could trigger
=1 bomkruptcy for your waUet.
H ang .out with those who
have the unu· appreciation for
material valuL~ 01.\ you do.
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Fcb.
19) -- It won't do you any
b'Ood to h:~ vc :m a5tutt• game
plan .· only to suddenly abandon it at the mere su~,,tion
o( someone ehc. Stay on
t:ounl.' and follow your well-

Jan.

laid out blu opriht.
i'ISCES (Ftb. 20-Mar&lt;h 2U)

\

-- Kt&gt;cp 'ynur guud up cocUy
when duling with unknown
or un~ested qu .:~ntitic5. Unfortunately, not everything you
encounter at this time ciln be
taken 3t face value-.

ARIES (Mmh. 21-Aptil 19)
-- Usu:~lly, you're a generous
person, but today you might
nor be willing to share the
fruits with thmc who help l:d
you the uu~t . Fortunately,
you'll. rt=.alire this hefort' it'ri
too lat~ .

TAURUS (April 20-May
2ll) -- G:t back in ~har.1cter as
fan as you can if you find
yourself bein£ too touchy or
r:rratic in thr: handling of people tod;ay . Diplomicy ill whilt
will gel you whal you want.

GEM INI (May 21-June 20)
-- Although it mi ght be easier
to work with people who can
cut it on their ow n, don't ignore t hme who truly need
your help . · Estee m comes
from knowing you've am.dc a
. ditference: in somcone's job.
CANCER Qune 21-July
22) -- Watch out for those
mood swings of youn when
involved wilh othen today. If
you'rt' too sensitive abobt
things, it could tum you inro
an tmotional penon you
won't like.

�.

'

The

Dai~y

Page 8&amp;:

Baseball

Sentinel

The banged- up Boston Red Sox have
hung tough in the AL East all season. Now,
they have some help on the way.
With Nomar Garciaparra looking good
in his minor league rehab assignment and
Bret Saberhagen ready to return to the
majors for the first time in nearly two
years, Boston beat the Toronto Blue Jays 63 Thursday night to remain 2 112 games
behind the first-place Yankees.
Hideo Nomo (11-4) struck out 10 in
seven innings to 'vin his filth straight start,
improving to 7-0 at Fenway Park and I 00 following a Boston loss . .
Top starter Pedro Martinez and slugging
outfielder Cari Everett are still out with
injuries, but Boston finally has a few things
to look forward to. ·
Garciaparra, on the disabled list all season after having surgery on his right wrist
on opening day, doubled off the centerfield wall for his first extra-base hit this
year as Triple-A Pawtucket beat lndianapolis.
The three-time All-Star went 2-for-3
with an RBI and scored a run in the third
game of his rehabilitation assignment. He
made one error at shortstop.
Garciaparra, who has won the last two
AL batting titles, is eXJ)ected to play one
more game at Triple-A before being reevaluated by Red Sox ,physician Bill Morgao,
More than 21 months after his last big
-league appearance, Saberhagen will pitch '
Friday night at Fenway against the Chicago White Sox. The two-time Cy Young
winner and three-time subject of shoulder
surgery said he expects to feel like a rookie.
Nomo allowed four hits and four walks,
and the Red Sox scored three runs in the
seventh inning two . on Manny
Ramirez's 32nd homer - to go ahead for
good.
Nomo improved to 3-0 with a 1.80
ERA against the Blue Jays this season. He
held them hitless in his last five innings as
he won his fifth game in July, the most of
any AL pitcher.
'!Wins 7, Athletics 4
Tom Prince hit two homers, and Torii
Hunter added an inside-the-park hqme
'run for visiting Minnesota.
Yankees 14, Tigers 8
Shane Spencer had a career-high s!X

lUlls, hitting a three- run homer that
capped a seven-run sixth inning as New
York stretched its winning streak to five.
Ra.tgers 9, Orioles 7
Ricky Ledee hit a three-run shot for !lis
first homer this season as host Texas completed a four-game sweep. The Rangers
have their first four-game winning streak
this season.
Mariners 4, Royals 0 ·
· Joel Pineiro (1 -0), making his third
major league start, pitched one-hit ball for
six innings as Seattle avoided getting swept
for the first time this season.
Angels 5, Devil Rays 3
Troy Glaus, Darin Erstad and Garret
Anderson hit consecutive home runs in
the first inning for host Anaheim.

NAT I 0 N A L LEAGUE
Bonds passes his version of M &amp;
M Boys
With two drives, Barry Bon± suddenly
jumped in front of two of baseball's great,
·
est home run hitters.
His first shot gave him more career
homers than Mickey Mantle.Then a grand
slam pushed him ahead of Mark MeGwire's pace in the chase for the single-season record .
Bonds' five RBis Thursday night added
up to an II c3 victory for the San Francisco Giants over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
. Bonds hit his 43rd homer, a solo shot in
the fourth, to pass Mantle for ninth place.
The pair was tied at 536 homers before
Bonds went up by two.
The San Francisco left fielder was
pleased with that, but it clearly isn't
enough for him.
" I've got higher sights," he said.
Bonds' 44th homer of the season, a
grand slam also off starter Curt Schilling,
came in the fifth inning of the Giants'
103rd game.
He became the fastest to 44, topping
McGwire, who did it in St. Louis' 104th
game en route to a record 70 homers in
1998. Bonds said that McGwire's mark is
not in his sights . .
Bonds hap gone without a homer and
had only two hits in his previous 19 at-bats
before his first home run of the night off
Schilling (1 4-S).The slam was the ninth of
his career, first since April 26, 1998.
Cardinals 3, Cubs 1

.

TEMPO

#

Frld.y, July 27, 2001.

Help is on the way for Red Sox; Bonds back on the pace
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~-

McGwire hit two home runs, and rook\e Bud Smith pitched seven innings as St.
Louis won at Chicago.
McGwire has 570 home runs, three
behind Harmon Killebrew for fifth place.
He has homered in three straight games to
give him 16 this season, ni11e in 15 games
since the All-Star break.
Astros 3, Pirates 2
Craig Biggio hit a tiebreaking single in
the eighth inning for visiting Houston,
·and Dave Mli cki (2-0) ended his fourgame losing streak against the Pirates.
Mlicki's winless drought covered nine
starts and four years. Mlicki, who came
from Detroit in a June 23 trade, allowed
five hits and two runs in seven innings. He
hadn't beaten the Pirates since June 21, ·
1997.
Phillies 3, Mets 2
Marlon Anderson singled to start a tworun rally in the eighth inning, then was
carried off the field after an awkward fall
in the ninth as Philadelphia beat New
York.
Jimmy Rollins hit a two-out, tiebreaking RBI single offRey Ordonez's glove as
the Phillies won their third straight and
moved into a first- place tie with Atlanta in
the NL East.
The Phillies .started their I 0-game road
trip with just their fourth win in 43 games
when trailing after seven innings.
Anderson's injury wasn't as serious as it
looked. He only strained his left hamstring
and is day to day. ·
Rick Reed (8-6) took the loss.
Expos 3, Braves 2, 10 innings
Mike Mordecai fouled off four straight
full-count pitches before drawing a basesloaded walk in the 1Oth inning to give
Montreal the victory.
Ken Caminiti and Andruw Jones homered as Atlanta lost for just the fifth time in
24 road games.
Steve Reed (2-1) was the loser.
Dodgers 3, Rockies 1
Eric Gagne allowed three hits in 6 1-3
innings and was bailed out of a basesloaded jam by Giovanni Carrara as Los
Angeles beat Colorado.
The win was the 11th in 13 games and21st in 28 for the Dodgers, while the
Rockies lost for the 27th time in 34
games.
•
Gagne (4-4) faced just one batter over
the minimum in the first six innings.

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MlV celebrates
birthday, C&amp;

Amoricoll.Mp

Nettonol Leogue

Frldlly'o GomH
St. Louis (Kilo 1CJ.7) at ChicagO Cubs
(Bere 7·5), 3:20p.m.
Atlanta (Maddu• 13~5) at Montreal
(Mattes 3-2), 7:05 p.m.
FIO&lt;Idll (Clement H) at Cl!ldnnotl
(Davto 3-1), 7:05p.m.
Houston (Roynotds 9·9) at Pittsburgh
· (Beimel 4-6), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Coggin 1-0) at N.Y. M«s
(Trachsel 4~10) , 7:10p.m.
San Diego (Jones 6·12) at Milwaukee
(Suzukl2·6), 8:05p.m.
San Francisco (Rueter 9-7) at Arizona
(B.Andarson 3~6), 10:05 p.m.
Colorado (Aalaclo 6-121at Los Angeles
(Adams 6·3), 10:10 p.m.

61
58
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Boston
Torooto
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

261~
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N.Y. Yankees (Musslne to-B)al TorontQ:
(Ctrpenter 7·7), 7:05p.m.
•
Clevolond (Colon t-7) at Detroit (Pelw
ty)ohn o-2), 7:05 p.m.
':
Chicago White So&lt; (K.Wells· 6-51 at
Boston (Sabemagen CJ.O), 7:05p.m. •
Tampa Bay (Stur1ze 5-81 at Te&lt;as (Bel!
:J.O), 8:35 p.m.
Minnesota (Lohse 3·2) at Seattl
(Abbott 9-2), 10:05 p.m.
•
Baltimore (Johnoon 9-61 at Anahel"!
(Schoenewets 7·6), 10:05 p.m.
Kansas City (Suppan 4-8) at Oaktanq
(Mulder 1t -6), 10:05 p.m.
,,

s1.25

Gallipolis • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • July 29, 1001

Vol. J6, No. 24

•

niXes
new talks
on contrad

BLUES BASH

•

,,

-•
•

~

BY KEVIN KEUY
TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS Members of the union representing 23 Gallipolis employees
will be meeting "in the near
future" to explore options
after their latest request to
laun ch contract negotiations
with the city was turned
down .
Floyd Wright, president of ·
American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employee&lt; Local 1316, said
he was informed by City
Manager E. V. Clarke Jr. in a
letter last week "there is no
~eed to schedule a meeting
to discuss a new contract."
Clarke also told Wright ·
the current three-year contract with the local will not
be extended beyond its Aug.
5 expiration, a request the
.•

F9r a day at least, Pomeroy was the home for the blues on Saturday, as the first Big Bend Blues Bash got under way. Saturday
morning's light but steady rein held up just long enough for final preparations at one of the stage are.as, and for a battle of the
tiands,Jeaturlng mostly local talent like Break of Qay, pictured here. L~ In the .day,_blues greats like Kelly Richey were expecti!d to telie the stage for the da)"afld nlgnl:Jong restivilt;'held''§fPdl'!reroY's rlverfroht ampfiltlfMt~{Tne Pomeroy BlueS' and 'Jazz
S&lt;?clety organized the event, which also Included beach volleyball, crafters and artisan displays·,. vendors and concessions.
(Brlan .J. Reed photo)
·
·
·

local made to the City
Commission when it met
July 17. The request was
turned over to C larke, who
was unable to attend the
meeting.
\
"We are still ready to talk,
anytime, any place," Wright
said. "There is no good reason why this working relationship should end after 17

years."
Commission
President
Richard Moore declined

tmnment . ..
The city opted not to
enter talks on a new contract
with the local - representing workers in the w:ater,
sewer, street,' and parks and
recreation departments - in
March after the 2000 Census
revealed Gallipolis' population dropped to 4,180, well

Please see Contract, AI

Ciallia Junior

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__organiZers brace
for
&amp;-day
stand
Municip~lities face rush of annexation requests
.

Tcift signs bill that
overhauls law for
first time 35 years

Brand New 2001 Pontiac

Brand New 2001

Brand New 2001 Chevy

Brand New 200i Chevy

Brand New 2002 Chevy

Brand New 2001 Chevy Full

ifiJ5D· ~J~i5i· i55D· 125J5ii· ~rain· ~tiro~
• Sunroof, CD System
• Air Conditioning
• Remote Keyless Entry

• V-6 , 4 Speed Automatic
• Remote Keyless Entry r
Tilt Wheel, Cruise Control

• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Air Conditioning, CD System
• Tilt, Cruise, Aluminum

• V-8 Power, Tilt • Cruise
• Power Windows, Locks; Mirrors
Keyless Entry, CD System

• 4200 6 Cyllndar Engine
•16" Allin. Wheels, Trailer Hitch
CD System, TIH Steering

• 350 V-8, Color TV • VCP
• High Output Rear Air &amp;Heet
• Totally Luxury Loaded!

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
rush appears to be on for cities
to annex neighboring land
before a law changing the
rules takes effect in three
months.
: Gov.llob Taft signed the bill
Friday that overhauls annexation Jaw for the first rime in
35 years.
: "They know that it's going
to take 90 days once it's signed
today to become law and so
¢\'erything they can get by
legally, they're going to do;'
~aid Richard Kelley, an Allen
:rownship trustee in Hancock
~ounty.

BY KEVIN KELLY

The law will give townships
more say in annexation
attempts by Ohio cities. It will
also require municipalities to
make up par.t of the revenue
that townships lose when
cities annex their land.
Conservative state lawmakers gave the bill high priority
this session after former
House Speaker JoAnn Davidson, a Reynolruburg Republican, refused to bring it to a
vote last year.
Opponents fear it gives too
much power to townships and
will lead to additional suburban sprawl while weakening
cities' ability to grow.
In booming Warren County
in southwest Ohio, the city of
Mason has received at least six
annexation requests since
May. All are from property

Hlp: 70s
Low: lOs
Details, A3

Gov. Bob Tart
owners trying to _beat the new
law, said city manager Scot
Lahrmer.
"Mason is a very attractive
community and property

owners who want to be part
of Mason have filed annexation petitions to join us. We
have three that have just been
filed within the last week and
a half," Lahrmer said ·Friday.
According to census data,
Warren County, where Mason
'is situated between Dayton
and Cincinnati, grew 39 percent in population between
1990 and '2000. Mason's population jumped from 11 ,452
in 1990 to 22,016 in 2000.lts
land area has spread from 12 to
18 square mil es.
In . M edina County in
northeast. Ohio, corrunissioners have received seven annexation requests since May,
including five totaling more
than 450 acres from Guilford
Township residents who want .
to be annexed into Seville.

2000 Chevy
Cavalier Sedan

2DOO Oldsmobile

Alero GL Sedan

2001 Pontiac
Sunflre SE Sedan

2001 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

89,950*

•Automatic

• Air Condklonlng
AMIFM Stareo With Cassette)

Buick

@t

It's all gocXl

insert
M

A6
Bl-8

Dl

C 2001. Ohio Valley

Publ~hing

Co.

PleaH see Fair, AI

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County is part
of a project to support an effort by a
number of key communities in Ohio's
Hill Country..J:krjtage Area to identify
strategies for pre~¥ing, rehabilitating
and interpreting Underground Railroad
sites.
The project also looks to pinpoint

ways that a network of communities can heritage: Muskingum, Brown, Scioto,
be strengthened to provide high-quality Galli a, Ross, Washington, Harrison,
visitor experiences for heritage tourism. Columbiana, Jefferson and
Belmont
The project is funded from the Certi- counties, and parts of Wayne National
fied Lo ca l Government Program of Forest.
"For these coinmunities to reap the
Ohio Historic Preservation Office and
Ohio Heritage Area Program of the ·. economic benefits of heritage tourism,
they realize that they must preserve their
Ohio Division ofTravel and Tourism .
Each of the foUowi'ng counties have histori c resources and interpret them in a
taken steps to reco!;"ize their UGRR
Please see ProJect, AI

Gallla County Fair ll111el

' T11&gt;&lt;es, Tags, Trtle Fees extra. Rebate induded in sale price o1 new vehOie listed .n.... applicable. '"On approved credt. On selected models. Not respon~llle for typographical errors.
Prices Good JtMy 25th Throug~ Ju~ 291h.
.
CHIVROU1

TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

C4
02-7

GALLIPQLIS -"There's
something there for everyone, from grandparents to
infants," Gallia County Agricultural Society President
Rob Massie said in summing
up what will attract people
to the Gallia County Junior
Fair's 52nd edition opening
Monday.
The exposition o£ Gallia
youth's agricultural and project prowess runs until Saturday, offering entertainment, rides and related activities alongside a ·number of
demonstrations and shows
celebrating 4-H, FFA and
Girl Scouting accomplishtnents.
The society, through its
junior fair board, sponsors
the event.

An opening ceremony is
set for 1 p.m. Monday, but
judging in tobacco, rabbit,
horse, and small pets and
poultry will have been conducted by then.
The dairy show is also set
for I p.m., followed by a
band concert at 1:30 provided by River Valley High
School. Gallia Academy
High School's band performs at 5:45, with a live"stock skill-a-thon at 6 and
dog obedience at 6:30.
The Little Miss and Mr.
Galli a Col1nty contest, sponsored by Gallipolis .Lions
Club, begins at 6:30 and has
drawn 36 contestants.
The day's highlight is its
concluding event - selection of the 2001 fair queen.
Twelve young women are

Gallia joins Underground Railroad quest
BY KRIS DOTSON

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks

TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

&lt;:.Z&gt; Oldsmobile.

811111De~'

Friday 9 am -10 pm
Saturday 9 am - Mh~nl·aht
Sunday 1 pm - 9 pm

Look for ~e Holzer Medical Cenier Mobile Unit
rto ""'""'·the Fair, July 30 - August 4. Free screenings
and health information will be provided.
Schedules will be posted daily.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference.

For more information, call

(740) .446-5679
!I·

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24400">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24399">
              <text>July 27, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1067">
      <name>jacks</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
