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Baseball

•

The Daily Sentinel

=4

By the time Kenny Lofton
'
crossed home plate for the final
run, about half the fans had ~ . Visiting Anaheim rallied for
already left Jacobs Field, and two runs to tie the game in the
five All-Stars were out of the
sixth inning after Ted Lilly hit ·
game.
Scott Spiezio, breaking the tie
Checking out early w.s on Bengie Molina·s two-out
understandable Sunday night. A double in the eighth off
comeback like this comes Ramiro Mendoza (7-3).
The Yankees led 2-0 in the
around only about every 76
years.
.
. · ·fifth when Derek Jeter was hit
The
Cleveland
Indians
t1ed
1eft han d by R amo n
. . l
rd b
. a near h's
1
ITUJOr eague reco ·, econung Ortiz (10-7). Lilly responded
the first by h.mmg
. Sptezto
. . m
. th e h e1met
team
with the first pitch of the sixth
smce
mnmg.
Home plate umpire Eric
1925 to
overCooper warned both teams,
come a and there were no other hit
12-run batsmen the rest of the way.
deficit
.to win, defeating the Seattle
Mariners 15 ~ 14 in 11 innings.
· " I can't explain it," Lofton
said. "It was unbelievable. I've
Rolando Airojo (3-3) gave
never been in a game like that
up one run in six innings,
in my life. My voice is gone
Doug Mirabelli had three RBis
fiom hollering so much."
and Manny Ramirez hit a 455Cleveland trailed baseball's
foot homer off a light tower in
best team 12-0 after three
left field at Fenway Park.
innings and 14-2 after five. But
the Indians rallied with three
runs in the seventh, four in the
eighth ,and five in the ninth
before winning it on Jalbert
Mike Sweeney went 4-for-5
Cabrera's single in the 11th.
with
two homers and five RB!s
Cleveland ·became the third
team since 1900 to make up 12 as Kansas Ciiy avoided a threeruns in a game and win. The game sweep at Minnesota.
Royals starter Paul Byrd (4others~ re the Chicago White
Sox (1911) and Philadelphia 4) .allowed two runs and seven
hits in six-plus innings. Joe
Athletics (1925).
"It's the turning point of the Mays (12-9) gave up 11 hits
season," said Cabrera, who and four runs in 6 2-3 innings.
came in when manager Charlie
Manuel pulled All~Star Roberto Alonur.
·
Ichiro Suzuki, Edgar MarCory
allowed
tinez, John Olerud and Juan
three
hits
in
eight
innings
to
Gonzalez also had early nights
as Manuel and Seattle counter- lead surging Oakland over
part Lou Piniella figured the slumping Detroit.
-T he Athletics have won five
game was in the bag.
of
six and 20 of27 to get with"It's just one of those things
that happen," Piniella said. "It's in 2 1/2 games of wild c:trd
. almost impossible to do, but leader Boston. Detroit has lost
live straight, scoring exactly ·o
rhey did ir."
one
run in each game.
John Rocker (3-4) struck out
. the side in the 11th as the lndi-· ans snapped a three-game~los­
~
ing streak to move within a
half-game of Minnesota in the
Jose Cruz Jr. homered twice
AL Central.
and
Esteban Loaiza (8-9) won
Jim Thome hit two homers,
and Russell Branyan and Marty his third straight decision as
Cordova also homered for Toronto beat Baltimore.
Cruz went 3-for-4 with
Cleveland.
Lofton singled with one out three RBis for the Blue Jays,
in th_e II th off Jose Paniagua who swept the three-game
(3-3), and Omar Vizquel sin- series at Sky Dome. Cruz hit a
gled. Cabrera's bat shattered as two-run homer in the thittl
his hit dropped into left field, and a solo shot in the fifth off .
and third-base coach Joel Skin- Josh Towers (6-7).
ner waved home Lofton.
Vizquel's bases-loaded triple
off Kazuhiro Sasaki completed
Cleveland's five~run ninth and
tied it.
Pinch-hitter Russ Johnson's
The Mariners (80-31) had safety squeeze bunt with one
their four -game winning streak out in the ninth inning broke a
stopped, and for one of the tie and helped give Tampa Bay
only times this season, things the win at Chicago. .
The Devil Rays rallied for
didn't go their way.
"We don't like losing if it's two runs in the ninth after
this way or 1-0," reliever Norm blowing a 4-1 lead an inning
Charlton said. "We don't earlier when Jeff Liefer hit a
expect to lose."
three-run homer off Victor
Zambrano (4-1).

VI

,]

Pittsburgh 5, Colorado 4

National Laague

san Francisco 8, Philade'phia 4

E•st

w
Attanla
Philadelphia
Florida

NewYM

60

L
48
51

58

55

83

51
61
Montreal
47 85
Cantral
w L
Chicago
83 47
Houston
62 49
St. Louis
56 54
Milwaukee
47 62
G.lncfnn~tl
46 M
Pi11sbur~h
43 67
WH1
w L
LOSAnge!H
83 49
Arizona
62 49
San Francisco 62 50
San·O!ego
54 57
Colorado
46 65

GB

Pet.
.568
.540

Arizona 2, N.Y. Mots 1
Clnclnnotl 10: son Diogo I
LOS Angeles 3, Chicago Cubs 2, '10
innings

3
7
.504
.455 12 112
.420 18 112

Monday'• Gamu
No games scheduled

GB

Tueaday'a Games

Pet
.573
.559

1 112
7
.509
.431 15 112
.418
17
.391
20

Royals.10,
Twins 5

Athletics 4,

~r~s~

Blue Jays 5, -

Monday, August &amp;,1001

GB
P&lt;l
.562
.559
112
1
.554
.486 a 112
.414 18 112

Saturday'• Games
Atlanta 14, Milwaukee 2
N.Y. Mets 4, Arizona 2
Los Angeles 3, Chicago Cubs 1
Philad~phla 12, San Francisco 2
Houston 4, Montreal 1
PiHsbufllh 6, Colorado 3
St Louis 3, Florida 0
san Diogo 2, Cincinnati o

Toronto
Bahlmore
Tampa Bay

Kansas City 10, M i - 5
C-nd 15, Seottle 1•, 111nnlngs

.

E""1

w
67

L

"

47
59
45 67
37 74
central
w L

63
53

"

Pet.
·.600

.573 3112
.473 14 112
.-102 22 112

.333

30

P&lt;l
.568

GB

i96

-y··-

Gl

Oakland (Hiljut Hlj at Deltolt (Hoi! 7-9),
1:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Sohoonewels 8-6) at N.Y. Yank... (Hnchcocl&lt; Hl), 1:05 p.m.
18mpa Bay (Wallace 0.2) al Chlolgo .
WMo Sox (Wright Hlj, 2:05 p.m.
Texas (Beii4· 1J al Bos1on (Nomo 11-5),

SPORIS: Germaine leads Rams win, Bl

St. Louis 3

Atlanta 12, Milwaukee 8
Housloo 4, Montreal l

..

·-~··

.......

_

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper
-

so cents • August 7, 2001 • Vol. 51.

8
16
19

GB
19
23
31

- l e (Abbon 11-2) 01 Cleveland
(Nagy 4-4~ 7:05 p.m.
Baftimoro (Johnson 9-6) at Kansas Ctty
(GOOfliO D-2), 8:05p.m.
TIJeoday'a Games
N.Y. Yanlceos (Mussina 11·9) at Tanw

www.mydaily~Pntinel . wm

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

No . 144

Bay (Stunze 6-9), 7:15'p.m.

Clonland (Sabathla 1~) 01 Min....,.
1a ( - HJ), 8:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Maduro D-3) at Kansos Ctty
(Suppan 5·9), 8:05 p.m.
Oelroit (Penyjohn ~) at Texas (Myen.
H), 8:35p.m.
Toronto (Halladay 1·1) at sealtle (Pineiro
2·0), 10:05 p.m.
Boston (Seberhagen 1-1) at Ookland
(Mulder 13-6), 10:05 p.m.
-'
ChicaQo White Sox(K.Wells 6-7) al Ane·
helm (Rapp 4·9). 10.05 p.m.
.

Dirt moving at Ravenswood on schedule
BY BRIAN J. REED

Don T-illis, project managt;r for
the first phase, said Monday that the
dirt moving process is right on
schedule, but that the laying, of pipe
for the project is about a month
behind.
Tillis said that the. pipe work is
behind schedule because of changes

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

GREAT BEND - About 3.1
million yards of dirt will be moved
before the first phase of the
Ravenswood Connector project is
completed, and 10 percent of that
dirthas already been haul ed away.

in the project plans made recently,
designed to save both contractor
and ODOT money.
"The change in the plans were
made by Beaver Excavating, the primary contractor on the project, and
should allow for a cost savings,
which will be split between the

contractor and OOOT."
The seven-mile project is expected to be finish ed by June 30, 2003.
About 60 peopl e are working for
Beaver Excavating at the site; others
are working for a number of sub~
contractors who are on and off the
site on a regular basis, Tillis said.

Hernadets hitting and pitching lead .Giants to victory
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

in the fourth and sixth inning,.

1t wasn't Livan Hernandez's
pitching that the San Francisco
Giants were talking about.
"t.ivan can have all the accolades;' said Rich Aurilia, who
matched career,highs with four
hits and five RB!s. " It's nice to
know we've got a gily at the
bottom of the order who can
get on base and put a charge in
the
ball."
Hernandez
went
3-for-3
and
scored
two runs as the Giants beat
Philadelphia 8~4 Sunday. Hernandez, who scored two runs,
has eight hits in his last nine atbats to raise his average to .286.
Hernandez (10-11) pitched
6 2-3 innings to win for the
fourth time in five starts as the
Giants won for the 1Oth time
in 11 games.
He started a three-ruQ . rally
in the third inning with a double - culminating in a ridicu~
lous flqp slid~. He added singles.

D-backs 2,
Mets 1
Curt Schilling won his major
league-leading 16th game as
Arizona edged visiting New
York.
. Junior Spivey's two-out
homer in the eighth inning off
Rick White (3-2) broke the tie.
Reggie Sanders also homered
for the Diamondbacks.
Schilling (16-5) gave up six
hits in eight innings and struck
out 13 to win for the fourth
time in five decisions. He won
despite allowing his major
league-le:iding 30th homer, a
solo shot to Matt Lawton in
the seventh inning.

Astros 4,
-~1

Mo!Ses Alou homered, and
Ron Villone (5-4) allowed one
run in 4 2-3 innings in relief of
the ihjured Wade Miller to lead
Houston over Montreal.

Braves-12,
Brewe1s8

lead Pittsburgh to victory at ·
Colorado.
Reliever Mike Lincoln (1-0)
Andruw Jones had a pair of worked 1 1-3 hid~ss innings as
the Pirates won two of three
~-run singles for Atlanta
rookie Ben Sheets lost his fifth from the Rockies. Mike Fetters
got a save for the second
straight decision . .
Sheets 00-9) allowed 10 straight day.
runs - nine earned - and 11
hits in 5 1-3 innings.
· Dave Martinez went 3-for-4
with two RB!s, and Chipper
Eric Karras' two~out single
Jones and BJ. Surhoff scored
in the ·bottom of the 1Oth
three runs apiece for Atlanta.
inning drove in the winning
run · for Los Angeles after
Sammy Sosa homered in th~
ninth to tie it for Chicago.
Karros was hidess in four atRyan Dempster (13-9) won
bats
with three strikeouts
his fifth straight start on the
road as Florida beat St. Louis to before his hit offTom Gordon
(1-1).
split a four-game series.
The first•place Dodgers
Detjl.pster's seven road wins
this season is one short of the remained one-half game ahead
combined road-win total of of Arizona and one game uJ5
on San Francisco in the NL
Florida's five other starters.
West. Chicago had ill; lead in
the NL Central trimmed to I
1/2 games over Houston.
Terry Mulholland (1-0), the
Adam Hyzdu homered and sixth Los Angeles pitcher,
Jack Wilson scored ~twice _j()~ earned the victory.

,

FROM STAFF REPORTS

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of Education hired Sheryl Roush as
the new high school guidance
counselor during its regular
meeting last week.
Roush, who has served the
dis~rict as a business teacher,
will replace the retiring John
R edovian.
The board also approved
hiring Gwen Hall as an edu~
cational aide, on a one-year
contract; J.E. Kirkpatrick and
David Hawthorne as assistant
football coaches, Je~'ica Brannon as an assistant junior high
volleyball coach, Stephanie
Evans as . varsiry volleyball
assistant coach; and Dorinda
Thompson as substitute cook
and custodian.

as

Dodgers],
Cubs2

Marlins 5,
cardinals 3

••

Rockies 4

GRAND TOUR - Annie Chapman, .a Pomeroy merchant, guided a group of genealogy enthusiasts
around Pomeroy last week. Chapman has been instrumental lh the conversion of the courthouse
"shoppers lounge· into a comfortable and convenient visitors center. (Brian J. Reed photo)

VISITORS CENTER OPENED
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS s'T~FF

OMEROY -The majestic Meigs Counry Courthouse has long been a
communiry centerpiece for
tourists, but now, the building will provide a needed service to
them as well.
The landmark :'shoppers' lounge,"
which for • years has provided a
restroom and lounge area for visitors
to Pomeroy, has been converted into a
visitors center, and that center was
dedicated Friday and immediately put RIBBON CU'niNG - Representatives of the Pomeroy
·Merchants Association and Meigs County Tourism
to use.
A group of some 40 genealogists Office ·opened Pomeroy's new courthouse visitors
center on Friday, In the landmark "shoppers lounge.'
.from around the country interested in
Cutting the ribbon were Mindy Morris, Brenda Roush,
learning more about their Meigs
Terri Haynes, Bill Quickel, Annie Chapman and Mary
Powell. (Brian J. Reed photo)
·
PINH- Vlllton, AJ_

Devil Rays 6,
White5ox4

1

Sunznur SpeeU.l. ..3 consecutive
days unlimited greens fees .•• $99
per person• Hotels not included .
Available May [5.September 15
Dlle.J nal tiu·/m)e Capitol- Htlf. O.twimJr
l'trl/ey or Laktw•.wd. GrtrnJ N11timuzl not
urcluJeJ after Au,qu.ll J I.
.

Top of tbe Trai/... 3 days, 2 nights,
Hampton Cove, Silver Lakes, Oxmoor
Valley ...
starting at $178 per person
Heart ofA/4banza ... 3 days, 2 ~ights,
'tol Hill, Grand National, Cambrian
Riclge ... starting at $172 per person

Southern S;.,ing ... 3 days,
two nights, Highland Oaks.
Magnoli a Grove ... starting
at $171 per person

Toclay's

2 Sections - 12 Pllps

Calendar
Classjfjeds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Weather '

'r:;.
&lt;

Sentinel

Sports

AS

.

'

,I

.

•

•

Hllh:IOI

WASHINGTON (AP) -The idea is
to get health insurance to more low~
income Americans, but liberal advocates
worry that a Bush administration plan for
Medicaid may shortchange those who
already have government-funded .insurance.
And they complain that there are no
guarantees that states wiD use the money
they save from cutting some benefits to
insure more people.

Lotteries

OHIO
82-4 Pick :S: 2·3-7; Pick 4: 2.0.9-3
BS lludwye 5:5-11-18-25-30

A4
A3 W.VA.
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A2 c 2001 Ohio Valley Publshill&amp; Co.

.

'Prices are per person, based on double occupancy

E-mail : reservations@rtjsolf.com
For 1 complete ltate vat~tlon guide ca111.800.ALAIAMA or vlsltwww.touratabama.ort

_lawsuit against
govemment
COLUMBUS (AP) Every minute employees at
Fairfield Medical Center
spend filling out government
forms is a minute taken away
from patient care, the Lancaster hospital's fiscal chief
said Monday.
The • paperwork burden
should ease under a setdement the Ohio Hospital
Association has reached with
the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services
over billing information the
federal agency has demanded
in Medicajd and Medicare
. cases, OHA .spokeswoman
Mary Yost said.
Under the setdement, to
be made final in a few weeks,
H HS "fill stop requiring
hospitals to submit reports
tracking compliance with
billing rules, Yost said.

Meanwhile, the hospitals
will not try to recover S31
million they had paid in fines
for services the government
alleged were billed in error.
The hospitals just want to
get on with the business of
helping their patients, said
Sky Getrys, interim vice
president for finance at Fairfield Medical, 31 miles
southeast of Col).tmbus. The
compliance reports took up
too
much
time
and
resources, he said.
"The government comes
in and uses some very heavyhanded tactics," Gettys said.
" I spent about a month,
probably, to get that report
out this year, probably a good
100 hours. ... Each hospital
spends an hour of paperwork
time for every hour of emer- .

Pleue -

Lawsuit. AJ

The Bush administration unveiled the
plan over the weekend, touting it as a way
to bring health insurance to some of the
40 million uninsured An1ericans without
spending any new money. States may trim
services or increas,e. premiums foi' some
Medicaid participants; in return, they mn
use the extra funds to offer basic insurance to the uninsured.
But officials .at the. Dep·artment of
Health and Human Serlces said Monday

that states will' not necessarily be required
to spend money on the uninsured, and
advocates worry that states facing right
budgets could pocket the savings.
"Contrary to the way this is adverti1ed,
states could reduce benefits and offer
either 1/0 or a very small coverage expansion so they save state dollars," said
Leighton Ku , a Medicaid expert at the
liberal Center for Budget and Policy Pri-

PI..H s• Medlald. AJ

Look for the Holzer Medical Center Mobile Unit
during the Fair,

•

unlimiUd ~lly ft Will! sttll. Cart f~ charged for
Ill rounds. Sub,ifct lO'.van.bnity, Some rntrictipnt
JNy •ppty, Uirts and WK •re not indudl!d in prier . .
Valid Miy 15- Stpttmber 15. 2001.

Hospiq]$ to drop

It's Mason County Fair Tllne!

StJmmer $p@dal does not lnc:ludt hotth.
Mid pre~edMI hott~. Summer Special inclllde'

.

Medicaid plan might willleave ·_poor worse off

Low: 101
Details, A2

a.y anJ Beyon3...3 days, 2
nights, Stay at histori c Grand
Hotel. play Magnolia Grove,
and Lakewood .... sta rting at
$213 per person

The board accepted the resignation of Grant Newland as
bus driver.
The board approved student fee lists for high school
and elementary school, and .
approved an increase in school ·
lunch prices for $1.50 for students and S2.50 for adults.
The board approved the
followihg vendors for supplies: Broughton's Dairy, dairy
products; Heiner's Bakery for
bread and bakery products;
Warehouse Tires for tires and
tubes; G&amp;M Supply for oil,
grease and antifreeze; and
Englefield for gasoline and
diesel.
The board's next meeting
will be held on Aug. 15 at 7
p.m. at the administrative
office in Tuppers Plains.

.

Pirates -5,

CHOOSE FROM OUR PACKAGES OR DESIGN YOUR OWN!
I

The project takes the super-two
highway from the Ritchie Bridge at
the Ohio River to the intersection
of Ohio 124 and County Road 35
(Portland).
Phase Two of the proje'ct is also
under cons tru ction near Five
Points.

Bush named new
Eastern counselor _.

Orioles 4

CARDIAC KIDS -Cleveland's Kenny Lofton, center, celebrates after scoring the winning run In the 11th Inning against
the Mariners Sunday. (AP)

Tuesday

5:05p.m.
112

Sundly'e Gemee
Oakland 4. Detroit 1
Toronto 5, Baltimore 4
Boston 6, Te~eas 3
Anaheim 4, N.Y. Yankees 3
Tampa Bay 6, Chicago While So• 4

Sunday'l Games
F.lo~da 5,

---

,_,..,. I.Nguo

St. Louis (Kite 11·7) at Montreal (Vazquez \.Minnesota
· 53 48
10.10), 7:05p.m.
Clevel82 48 .564
Anzona (Lopez 0.2) at Florida (Clemen! Chbtgo
54 55 .495
6-7), 7:05p.m.
Detroit
46 63 .422
Los Angeles (Adams 7-4) al Pittsburgh Kansas Clly
67
(McKnlghl 1·1 ), 7:05 p.m.
WHt
S.n Franclaco (Schmidt 7-6) at Cincinw L Pet
nati (Davlo !;-1), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle
so 31 .721
San Olegc&gt;"(Jones 7-13) al Philadelphia Oakland
61 50 .549
(Ouci&lt;wo~h D-0), 7:05p.m.
Anaheim
57 54 .513
Milwaukee (Haynes 7-13) at N.V. Mets Texas
49 62 -"1
(Chen 4-5), 7:10p.m.
Houslon (Mik:t&lt;i 2-ll) at Atlanta (Maddu•
Saturday'• Games
14-6), 7:35 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 5, Anaheim .o4
Colorado (Neagle 6-6) at Chicago Cubs Boston 10, Teqs 4, 1St game
(Tapanl 8-6), 8:05 p.m.
~ton 6, Texas 2, 2nd game
seattle a, Cleveland 5
Toronto.2, Baltimore 1
Oakland 10, Detroit 1
Minnesota 6, Kansas City 2
Chicago While So• 8, Tampa Bay 6

Red Sox6,

Rangers 3

B&amp;.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Cabrera's hit caps Tribe's
record 12-run comeback
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

- ~age

FOR RESERVAI70NS &amp; rEE 17HES

1-800·257-3465
www.rtjgolfco'!l

I

August 7 • 11

· MEDICAL CENTE

Free screenings and health information will be provided. ,
Schedules will be posted daily. For more information, call
(740) 446·5679

..

. Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer .org

•

• .• .

\ ;.,

�•

Ohio

The·Daily sentinel

Wednesday, Aug. 8
AccuWeather- forecast for

I-

0

Tueaday, Aug. 7, 2001

lw/112" I •

()

0

•ICOlumbus 172"11111' I

W. VA

COl:_UMB!-IS (AP) - A judge fined
Buckeye Egg Farm $65,250 Monday after
finding the company guilry of improperly
disposing of wastewater and failing to stop
a large outbreak of flies.
Judge Gregory Frost ofli9Qng, Counry
Common Pleas Court said he was tempted to jail Buckeye Egg officials, as the state
asked. He said he was disturbed by an
employee's falsification of a record involving ~ wastewater discharge May I.
"This incident did not involve 'sloppy'
record keeping. It was intentional falsification, pure and simple," Frost ·wrote. "The
court makes note of this incident and the
real possibility of an incarceration sanction
to put the defendants on notice that no
further conduct of this type will be toler..
ate d.

Frost said it did not appear that any top
Buckeye Egg officials condoned the falsification.
•
The ruling came the same day that state
officials filed new contempt of court
charges against the company, the state's
largest egg producer, following a spill of
contaminated water into a creek.
The state is seeking $30,000 in fines per
day and jail time. It is the seventh such set
of charges 6led against the company.
Attorney General Berry Montgomery
61ed the charges in Licking County Common Pleas Court.
"Buckeye Egg cannot . continue to
ignore their obligations to the law, the
environment and their neighbors," Montgomery said in a statement.
Telephone messages seeking comment

•

ed verdict," concluding that the protesters have no evidence
police acted improperly.
Sumy Pt. Cbldy Cbldy
s.-. T·""""' 11m' Smw
leo
The five protesters were arrested during an April I 0, 1998,
protest against the baseball team 's use of the red-faced caricature logo. Backed by the United Church of Chrisr, the proresters argue Chief Wahoo and th ~ name "Indians" is an
affront to Native Americans.
During the opening Day protest, the group burned a 3-foot
and muggy. Low 68 to 72.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wahoo
doll outside Jacobs Field. Police arrested the protestWeather· forecast:
Extended forecast:
Thursday... A chance of ers, claiming that burning embers from the dol,; were endanTonight ... A 30 percent
- chance of showers and thun- showers and thunderstorms. gering passers-by.
: derstorms early, otherwise High in the upper 80s.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
mostly clear and muggy. Low
67 to .71. Light and variabl~ a chance ofshowers and thunEUCLID (AP) - The body of a dead man found in the
derstorms. Low in the lower
wind.
back
seat of a car that 'officers pulled oyer apparently was a
Wednesday... Continued hot 70s and high in the mid 80s.
'
Saturday... Partly
cloudy victim of drug abuse, police said Monday.
. and humid under hazy sunCharles
Mabry,
44,
of
nearby
Richmond
Heights,
apparent: shine. A 30 percent chance of with a chance of showers and
showers and thunderstorms in thunderstorms. Low 63 to 68 ly died of a bad dose of some type of illegal drugs, Detective
Dave Boresz said.
the afternoon. High 89 to 94. and high in the mid 80s.
Cuyahoga County Coroner Elizabeth Balraj said an autopLight and variable wind.
Sunday and Monday... Dry.
Wednesday night... A chance Low 60 to 65 and high 81 to sy showed no injuries. She said any determination regarding
.
of showers and thunderstorms 86.
early, otherwise mostly clear

() ·--~-·

Police find body in back seat

cy by reason of murder and faced a Tuesday morning arraignment in Cuyahoga County Juvenile· Court.
Schoolmates and neighbors said they didn't notice any
_changes except a slight weight gain in a girl they described as
shy and quiet.
.
The baby was probably killed Saturday night, said Bob
Coury, first assistant euyaboga County 1&gt;rosecutor. Shaker
Heights police responding to a 911 call found the body in a
box.

Wobbly anthem gets boos
CANTON (AP) - Fans in her hometown booed and
laughed as Macy Gray struggled through the national anthem
before the Pro Football Hall of Fame exhibition game. .
Wearing a Cleveland Browns jersey and a large cap, the
Grammy winner sang an offbeat, tentative version of the "Star
Spangled Banner,'~ on Monday night as her signature raspy
voice grew ever more wobbly.
Boos and laughter started when she stumbled over the
words, A low-flying formation of planes drowned out the
·
end.
Hours earlier in a brief telephone interview with The
Repository from her parents' home, Gray, whose real name is
Natalie Mcintyre,'said she .only agreed to the performance to
·please her mother.

Deputy, wife face accusations
CANTON (Al') - A Stark Counry sheriff's deputy and
his wife have been charged with having sex with te~n-age
.boys.
·
John Conley, 30, and Carmen Conley, 28, were indicted last
~accused of sexual contact with three boys, ages 13, 14,
.aJtf'!' 5, who live in the same trailer park where the Conleys
lived near Canton.
Conley worked two years for 'the sheriff's department and
- joined the patrol division in April 2000. He has been on
: administrative leave since June, during the investigation.
County officialS took custody of the couple's two sons, age
7 and 2. The Conleys are not accused of abusing their own
children.
u

Voters to decide expansion

Fumes at naall affect 25
CINCINNATI (AP) - twenry-five people were overcome by carbon monoxide 'fumes Monday at a . s.u burban
Cincinnati shopping mall, which was partially evacuated until
the fumes were vented.
Firefighters in suburban Sycamore Township evacuated
about one-quarter of the Kenwood Towne Centre mall for
about two hours. The fumes came from a propane-powered
saw being used in a store under construction at the mall,
township fire chiefWilliam Jetter said.
Most of the people taken to three hospitals were construction workers and employees of stores near the construction
site, Jetter said.
The !SO-store mall was reopened early Monday afternoon
after firefighters vented the fumes.
.

THURSDAY, IUDUIT 23, 2001
• IOUTHERI • MElli • EASTERN

CLEVELAND . (AP) - A
contractor is prepared to admit
that prosecutors can prove he
bribed US. Rep. James A. Traficant Jr., according to a tentative plea deal circulated by the.
government Monday. . ·
The U.S. Labor Department, apparently inadvertently,
faxed the 12*page plea agreement to news reporters in
Ohio. The agency helped prepare the case against James R.
Sabatine, 49, of Canfield.
The document was faxed
along with a news release first
distributed last week announc*
ing a federal tax count and a
racketeering charge against
Sabatine.
The document outlined an
agreemeni under which Sabatine would plead guilry to
bribery and tax evasion. Sabatine would specify that prosecutors have the evidence
needed to prove he had bribed
Traficant with $2,400 to gain a
railroad connection for his .
road-paving business.
The document does not
directly state that Sabatine
would plead guilty to bribing
the Democrat.
Traficant, who has represented the Young.town area in
Congress for 18 years, was
indicted in May on charges of
accepting cash and thousands
of dollars worth of free work
at his horse .farm in ex~hange

for helping businessmen gain
contracts. A non-attorney, he
. BROOK PAR~ (AP) - Vote~s in this Cl,eveland suburb plans to represent himself.
will decide Tuesday whether their communiry should give up
The .Fort Wright, ~y.,
homes and land so Cleveland Hopkins International Airport regional Labor Department
;can complete expansion plans.
office, which faxed the plea
: The mayors of Brook Park and Cleveland have agreed to document, referred questions
·swap Brook Park land including more than 400 homes and to offices in Washington,
. the International Exposition Center in exchange for the sub- where spokeswoman Sharon
urb taking ownership of Cleveland's NASA Glenn Research . ·Morrissey described the disCenter.
closure as inadvertent. She
: !(the issue passes, Cleveland would pay 468 homeowners declined further comment.
:"fair market value" for their homes, so they can be demo!Traficant spokesman Charles
'ished to make way for airport-related development.
Straub refused to comrrient on
If voters reject the agreement, the airport still will be able the plea agreement and said he
: to finish building a s~cond runway large enough to allow two did not know whether Trafisimultaneous landings. But the ciry would not be able to add cant has seen it.a third runway, whic:h proponents say will be needed by
But he said Traficant is wor;20 15, or build a commercial park connected to the airport.
ried about the prosecution's
tactics in the case.
"The government shows up
at y0ur door after screening
CLEVELAND (AP) - A Cuyahoga· County judge dis- your background and says, 'We
missed a lawsuit against the ciry brought by protesters who
know what you did here, here
claimed police violated their civil rights during a protest
and here .... We can make it all
:against ChiefWahoo, the Cleveland Indians' logo.
go away. Just give us something
' The judge dismissed the jury Monday and issued a "directon Traficant,"' Straub said.
•I
lit

Judge dismisses charges

were left Monday for Buckeye Egg officials.
Frosts ruling. involve the sixth set of
charges. filed against Buckeye Egg in May.
Those ·charges accused the company of
failing to properly dispose egg wash and
other wastewater in violation of state law, a
1998 state permit and a Man:h agreement
with the state to deal with such problems.
The charges also accused the company
of failing to prevent a severe outbreak of
flies at Buckeye Egg's facilities in Marseilles
and Mount Victory in April.
Although the company took measures
to stop the outbreak once it was clear th~
fly population was exceeding acceptable
levels, "the efforts of the defendant were
too little and too late" for neighbors, Frost
said.

drug use must await further testing.
Police were called to Hillandale Park in this Cleveland suburb about noon Sunday because of reports of people with
rifles, Detective Mike Grida said. They turned out to be
paintball guns.

Hot, muggy weather continues

Government
Teen charged in baby death
outlines
SHAKER HEIGHTS (AP) - A 16-year-old girl who
concealed her pregnancy has been charged in the death of alleged
her newborn, found in a box in her home in this Cleveland
Traficant
bribe
suburb.
· Maryeya Thompson was charged Monday with delinquen-

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Aupst 7,lOOl

Deaths

Judge fines Buckeye Egg more than $65,000

Ohio weather

IND.

~geAl

LOCAL BRIEFS

PO~ELL -. Opal M.Johnson Halley, 87, Powell, formerly
of Galltpohs, dted Sunday, Aug. 5, 2001 in Kobacker House of
Riverside Hospice in Columbus.
Born May 8, 1914, she was the daughter of the late
Chauncey L. and Ruth Elliott Johnson, and was retired from
the State of Ohio. She attended First Church of the Nazarene
in Gallipolis.
She w~ also preceded in death by her husband, James E. Halley; a son-in-law, Dick Alder; a sister, Bonnie Swindler;. four
brothers, Junior Johnson, Harold Johnson, Clarence E. "John"
Johnson and Vance Johnson.
,
She is survived by one son and daughter-in-law, Rolland L
and Sue Halley of Columbus; three daughters and two sons-in-·
law, Wanda and Donald Plant of Powell, Linda and John Hill of
Surprise, Ariz., and Anne M. Alder of Roswell, Ga.; four sisters
and three brothers-in-law, Pauline Clark of Gahanna, Tressa and
Marland Cremeens of Gallipolis, Addie and Edmund D'Andrea
of Columbus, and Barbara and Michel Huber of Philadephia,
Pa.; three brothers and two. sisters-in-law, Kenneth and Mary
. Ellen Johnson, Merrill and Jane Ann Johnson and Billy Joe
Johnson, all of Gallipolis; nine grandchildren, seven greatgrandchildren and three step-great-grandchildren; and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in First Church of the
Nazarene in Gallipolis, with the Rev. Jim Lusher and the R,ev.
Bob Fulton. Burial will be in the Johnson plot in Pine Street
Cemetery. Friends may call at Cremeens Funeral Chapel from
5-8 p.m. today.
.
The body will lie in state at the church one hour prior to the
funeral service.
·
Memorial contributions may be .made to the ' Hospice at
Riverside, Riverside Methodist Hospital, 3535 Olentangy
River Road, Columbus, Ohio 43214-3998. ·

Frances C. Minor
CHESHIRE - Frances C. Minor, Cheshire, died Sunday,
Aug. 5, 2001 at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center in
Pomeroy.
.
Born July 15, 1911, daughter ofth~ late Delbert and Maude
Chase Rice, she was an assistant postmaster at Dexter Post
Office.
She was a member of Dexter Garden Club and Dexter
Church of Christ.
. She was also preceded in death by her husband; Gerald
·
Minor; and a sister, Garnet Bachner.
She is survived by a son and daughter-in-law,Jack and Nancy
Minor of Cheshire; a daughter and son-in-law, Geraldine and
Orville Bratton, also of Cheshire; four grandchildren and three
great-grandchildren; a brother and sister-in-law, Harold and
Matjorie Rice of Rutland; and several nieces and nephews.
. Services will be 11 a.m. Wednesday in Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home in Middleport, with the Rev. Paul Stinson officiating.
Burial will be in Standish Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 6-8 tonight.
·

maintained that some of the
bills should have ·been
grouped and others sent indifromPipA1
vidually, the suit said.
The False Claims Act
hour of emergency time."
allows fines of $5,000 to
Verlon Johnson, program $10,000 for each wrong
officer for the Centers for
billing claim, so hospitals felt
Medicare-Medicaid Services,
they had to settle, the OHA
which administers the two
said.
programs, had no immediate
A federal judge in Clevecomment on the settlement.
The suit was filed .i n Octo- land dismissed the lawsuit on
ber 1996, alleging that several jurisdictional . grounds. It
Ohio hospitals had been should not have been filed
"forced" to settle claims of against HHS, but rather to the
General's
overbilling Medicare and U.S. Attorney
Medicaid because of how office, the court ruled. The
bills for lab tests were present- 6th U.S. Circuit .Court of
ed to the government, the Appeals reinstated the lawOHA said. The government suit.

Lawsuit

LOCAL · STOCKS
· usB-23~
Gannett - 69

AEP-44~.
Akzo-40~

AmTechSBC- 43~
Ashland Inc. - 3~.
AT&amp;T-20),
Bank One- 38),

BLI- 12'1,
Bob Evans- 18~
BorgWarner ~ 52~
Champion- 3
Charming Shops- 6~
City Hoidlng- 11~

Col- 21
DuPont - 42l.
Federal Mogul- 1

.

General Electric- 41 ),
GKNLY-10
Harley Davidson
51'·
KmM-12~

Kroger- 26~
Lands End - 37~
Ltd. -16%
NSC-20
· Oak Hill Financial -

t6'·

OVB-25

BBT-37~

Peoples- 21%

Premier- 9
Rockwell- 16~
Rocky Boots - 6),
RDSheil-55'1.

Sears-45~

Shoney's-'1.
Wai-Mart- 54'1.
Wendy's - 27). \
Worthington -14
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern In all stories·Is
to be accurate. II you know of an
arrpr in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

HEY FRIENDS AND FAMILY...
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''

To perfonn

Paving begins

-·

Incidents
reported

Driver injured.

One-

State Highway Patrol reported.
InJured was Jason L. Warner, ·
35615 Oak HiU Road, troopers said. Two passengers were
also in the car, but the report
did not indicate if they were
also transported in the 8:15
p.m . accidenr.
T mopers said Warner was
southbound , three- tenths of a
mile south of Ohio 7 in
Orange Township, when the
car he drove went off the left
side of the road, struck an
embankment, and rolled over
onto the road.
The car was severely cLimaged, and the accident
remains under investigation.
Amanda R . Clark, 21,
50620 Bigley Ridge Road,
Long Bottom, was cited by
the parrol for left of center
following a two-car accident
earlier Monday on . Olive
Township Road 26 i (Bigley
·
Ridge).
Troopers said Clark was
eastbound, 101 feet east ofTR
114 (Curtis) at 11:20 a.m.
when the car she drove went
left in a curve and collided
with a westbound car driven
by Angela G. Poole, 29, 50639
Bigley Ridge Road, Long
Ilottom.
Damage to both cars was
slight.

EMS runs
POMEROY _ Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered nine calls for assistance on Mon d ay. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
4·: 56
a.m.,
M u lb erry
Avenue, Joseph Boyd, Holzer
Medical Center;
10:06 a.m., Rocksprings
Rehabilitation
Center,
N erma Eakins, Pleas;mt Valley
Hospital;
1:00 p.m., Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center, · Clio~
ton Gilkey, O'Bleness Memorial Hospital;
, 3:06 p.m., Collins Road,
Annette Marshall, PVH;
8:14 p.m_, Cpunry Road
28, motor vehicle accident;
Andrea Warner, St. Joseph
Memorial Hospital.
POMEROY
12:58 p.m., Rocksprings
Road, auto fire, Tom Carr
owner, no injuries;
9:03 p.m., North Second,
Rebecca Snyder, HMC.
RACINE
8:48 p.m., Ohio 338, James
Milliron, Jackson General
Hospital.
RUTLAND

Visitors

Medicaid

from

from

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Scamwaming

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STRAIGHT TALK about
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YOU, not some 'big far
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•

POMEROY - Local residents are being alerted by the
County
Sheriff's
Meigs
Department to a possible
scam involving credit card
applications.
'
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell .
said his department recently
received a report · from a"
unidentifted person whq
applied for a Master Cml
through
First
Freedo~
National Bank.
The person claims that the ·
bank allegedly made several .
unauthorized
withdrawals
from their bank account.
·
Trussell said that attempt,;
are being made to have the
money returned and that th~
incident remains under inves-.
tigation.

Man arrested
POMEROY
A
Reedsville man h as been
charged wirh inducing panic
following an alleged suicide .
.threat.
According to the Meigs
County Sherifr's Department,
Dale Treadway of Reedsvillt::
was charged with ·inducing
panic after deputies responded to a call about Treadway
threatening to commit su icide
· with a shotgun.
Upon arriving on the
scene, deputies discovered'
several shotguns inside the
home. The weapons were
confiscated and Treadl'/ay was
arrested.
Treadway is currently being
peld in the Meigs Coujlty JaiL

Lodge meets .
CHESTER -'Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold its regular stated meeting on Thursday at 8 p.m. Refreshments'
will be served.

Issued license
POMER.OY -A marria~e
license has been issued in
Meig. County Probate Court
to Stephen Matthew · See, 25,
and Cynthia Ann Call, 24,
both of Middleport.

Reunion set
POMEROY - Wood family reunion is Aug. 26 at noon
at the Virgil King Farm on
Smith Road in Pomeroy.

and will be operated by
will consider applications
Pomeroy Merchants Association along with the Meigs
from states even if they don't
PapAl
Counry Tourism Board.
Page AI
reinvest the savings into
Local businesses, including
health insurance.
began their Friday tour at the Anderson's Furniture, Mitch's liberal Center for Budget and
new visitors center.
Produce, the Fabric Shop, Policy Priorities.
Medicaid typically conMary Powell and Annie Always &amp; Forever, Chapman
HHS
spokesman
Bill
Chapman, who regularly guide Shoes and Ohio Valley Bulk Pierce said he doubts that sumes 15 percent of state
tours in period costumes, Foods contributed items for states would want to cut ·budgets, and governors are
escorted the history buffi along
co mplaining
the renovation of the room, benefits without providing constantly
Pomeroy's
streets
and
and the tourism office has ten- new coverage. The proposal about its rising costs, suggestexplained some of the history
tative · plans to staff the center is a response to state interest ing they might be open to
behind the communiry and ·
during the busier tourist times. in covering more -people, he cutting the program. At the
some of its more historically
Commissioners are no'\V said.
same time, becau se increased
significant b'!ildings.
"States would be under a state Medicaid spending
planning
a
major
renovation
of
The visitors center will now
tremendous amount of presserve as the official starting the courthouse facade.
attracts increased federal
Sanding and painting of the sure if 'they took benefits
point forthese tours, which are
spending, states have been
provided free through the building are expected to be away from someone," Pierce reluctant to trim the proPomeroy Merchants Associa- completed by the end of Sep- said .. "We're just trying to
gram .
tion. It wiU also provide a place tember, and interior improve- . give them the ability to be as
for visitors to pickup brochures· ments are planned as well. creative as they possibly can."
Therefore, he said, HHS
and visitors guides, and, of Both projects will be funded
course, a convenient "pit stop" through state capital improvement dollars obtained through
for rest periods.
The room iS provided by State Rep. John Carey, R Meig. County commissioners, Wellston.

$2
$8.70

Sublalbera not daslrlng to pay tho
carrier may remit In advance direct to
Ext. 14
The Dally Sentinel. Credit wiD be given
carrier each week. No ou~llon by
services
mall pennlnod In areas wh..., home
· carrier aervlce Is ayaHabte.
Ext. 3

Circulation

Luncheon
canceled

By carrltr or motor routt

Ext. 12.

or

over the weekend while
parked along Fourth Srreet in
POMEROY - Units of Syracuse.
the Meig. Emergency Service
In other matters, Royal
answered 15 calls for assis- Oak Resort representatives
tance over the weekend. Units reported a Pepsi machine was
responded as follows:
vandalized during an attempt
to break into the machine.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday, 12:36 a.m., Ohio Entry was not gained into the
681, Louise Posey, Camden- machine, Trussell said.
Clark Memorial Hospital;
Jeff Durst of Reedsvine
5:49 a.m., Plum Street, reported someone entered
Anthony Svoaroa, Holzer in to his trailer and stole several guns.
Medical Center;
12:12 p.m., County Road
Trussell said all the cases are
31, Mildred Tucker, Jackso)'l still under investigation and
General Hospital;
that anyone with information
Sunday. West Main Street, is urged to call the sheriff's
2:27 a.m.,- Brian Johnson , office at 992-3371.
Pleasant Valley Hospital;
3:15 a.m., West Main Street,
Randy Shields, HMC;
6:55 a.m., Pomeroy Police
Department, Michael Bing,
MIDDLEPORT - · The
HMC;
8:0·1 a.m. , Overbrook Meigs County Chamber of
Nursirig Center, Kathryn Commerce's monthly lun' cheon has been canceled so it
Hysell, PVH;
1:27 p.m., Ohio 338, Pearl does not conflict with the
Russell, O'Bleness Memorial Meigs County Fair.
The next scheduled lunHospital;
cheon
will be Sept. 11.
10:29 p.m., Van Meter Hill
Road, Keith Little, HMC.
POMEROY
Saturday, 5:53 p.m., Second
POMEROY -Junior and
Avenue, Gallipolis, assisted by
Rita
White will perform
· Syracuse, structure fire~
Sunday, 11:39 p.m., Pearl "Golden Oldies" at Meigs
Street, Patrick Milburne, Senior Center at 5:30 p.m.
Thursday. Public is invited.
HMC.
There is no admission charge.
RUTLAND
Saturday, 6:24 a.m., Middleport Police Department,
Norma Snyder, PVH;
MIDDLEPORT ~ Paving
Sunday, 4:19 a.m., Rocksprings Rehabilitation Cen- work will begin on Tuesday in
Middleport.
ter, Clinton Gilkey, OMH.
Black Top Contracting of
SYRACUSE
Nelsonville
will begin milling
Sunday,
2:21
p.m ;,
McClures Restaurant, Gene and· then paving streets in the
following order: North SecPuerr, treated.ond Avenue, to Third Avenue,
TUPPERS PLAINS
Saturday, 6:09 a.m., Grant ' Brownell Avenue, Seventh
Avenue, Grant Street, Powell
Street, Renee Stone, HMC.
Street, General Hartinger
' Parkway,
Pearl '
Street,
Sycamore Street, Broadway
Street, Elm Street, Railroad
Street, and Ash Street.
•
· POMEROY Several
Residents who park on
incidents are being investigat- those streets are asked to
ed by the Meigs County remove their vehicles from
· Sherlff's Department.
cutbsid~ during the paving
Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell project,
Mayor
Sandy
said Derek Mays told deputies lannarelli said.
his 1988 primer gray Plymouth Sundance was recendy
stolen fiom his residence in
Tuppers Plains. Mays also
REEDSVILLE - A Long
reported someone entered his Bottom-area man was transbedroom window and stole ported by Meigs EMS to St.
between $40-50 from his Joseph's Hospital, Parkersroom.
burg, W.Va., following a oneVictor Counts of Syracuse' car accident Monday on
reported his 2000 Pontiac County Road 28 (Bashan),
Grand-Am was vandalized the GaUia-Meigs post of the .·

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One-

•

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Opal M. Johnson.Halley

Arch Coal - 18

The Dally ~nlinel • Page A 3

�•· .

1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

..

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor
Diane Kay Hill
Controller

UUtn to tht editor art tt't'icomt. Tllty shoMld be Ius thon 300 worth. All/arm
ar~

sllh}tcl tu eclitinlflmd m11sl be sig11td und lnrludt uthlrus and lt~lt~phon~t IUtm~r.

No lutlltntd lttltn witt ~ p11blishrd. Ltttrrs .rhuuld bt in good 14stt, addrtslfng
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TP!t oplnioru uprtnttl in tilt column below arr rhe cumt~uws of tlrt Ohio WzlltJ
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_The_na_ny_Se_ntin_ei_ _

TuesdiiJ. Aupst 7, 2001

WITH THAT

NEW STEM CELL

Abigail
Van

RESEARCH
·CENTER

Buren

IN10WN,

I: MISS THE

PROTESTERS.

~

can't.win
• Tallahassee (Fla.) Democrat, on rile stem cell dilemma: The
moral question of whether to spend taxpayer dollars to finance
stem cell research presents President Bush with a nasty choice.
Should th e government underwrite medical research that
kills fertilized human eggs now being stored in fertility clinics
in order to extract such genetic material?
If Bush sticks to his opposition to such funding, he faces loud
and rancotoas condemnation by those wno back cutting-edge
research in battling lethal diseases, such as Parkinson's and
Alzheimer's. If the president relents, he betrays the absolute
convictions of those who believe human life begins at conception.
.. . Religiously, I would think the choice now hurtling toward
Bush like a runaway train engine is more calamitous. How does
he justify using tax dollars, which people must pay or go to
prison, to finance the taking oflife? ...
.
... This is the moral quandary now sitting on the president's
desk.lt requires a decision worthy of Solomon, a daring leap of
faith .
This is not a tax cut, where you can divide the ddferences.
This is one baby that will not be cut in half.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bend

Tuesday, Aupst 7. 2001

-

DEAR ABBY: My sister, two
brothers and' I are in our teens. We
are being raised by a single mother.
We're finally beginning to realize
how hard she works to keep a roof
over our heads, food on the table and
smiles on our faces.
Although Father's' Day has passed,
we hope you'U print this poem we
ADVICE
· wrote to her to show we appreciate
everything she does for us. Abby,
would you please? - THE OLD-·
There are things our dad should
EST OF FOUR IN PHOENIX
do
DEAR OLDEST: I'm delighted
.But instead you filled his shoes.
to share your original poem with
And did so well in his position
other single mothers who also bear
When he left, we didn't miss him.
the full responsibility of their chil 7
No one could have ever guessed
dren- and do it well. Read on: _
A pretty girl could be the best
TO FATHER ON HER SPE· At doing stuff reserved for Dad
CIAL DAY
Without us driving you quite mad.
We're writing you a poem to say
And we're not sure who spread the
Have a Happy Father's D~y.
lie
.

NATIONAL VIEW

No matter how Bush deddes
on stem cell research} he}lllose

~BJ the

Page AS

Mom's
proud
teens
honor
her
on
Father's
Day
.

'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740.992-2156 • FIX: 992·2157

PageA4

.

'

About how Dad should be a guy.
'Cause even though you wear a bra
We couldn't ask for ·a better pa.
The calendar might clearly say
This is father's special day.
And you might think it rather
queer
That you will get two days this
year.
1\vo decades wouldn't be enough
To show how much you mean to
us
We don't care if you're a girl
You're still the best dad in the
world!
DEAR ABBY: I strongly agree
with your response to "Inmate on a
Dead End;' who said he was "on a
one-way trip down a road that leads
nowhere." He felt hopeless about his
future behind bars . .
My husband is living proof that

LOCAL EVENTS
KONDRACKE;S VIEW

Congress should consider riform at the Smithsonian
Maureen Dowd needs to visit the first
.' ladies. Not Laura Bush, but those who .
preceded her as they are memorialized
in the antiqu·ated exhibits on display at
the Smithsonian Institution's National
Museum of American History.
Then the tart-talking New York Times
columnist should visit the vivid new
exhibit on the American presidency
with its videos, interactive displays and
pundreds of objects, ranging from
COWMNIST
Thomas Jefferson's writing desk to
Dwight Eisenhower's golf clubs.
Dowd ought to spend tim~ at the Smithsonian ··secretary who's neither an
museum because 'she, among others, has academic nor a scientist.
attacked the idea that major donors to
The cost of repairing buildings will be
the Smithsonian ought to get prominent $1.5 biUion over 10 years, according to
recognition, including "naming rights," the report. That money will have to
in return for their gifts.
come mainly from Congress.
In a column in June, she took the side
To acquire those funds, NAPA called
of staffers, historians and academics who for a better financial management syscharge that Smithsonian Secretary tern, replacing semisecret "cuff" budgets
Lawrence Small is "Disneyfying and that individual museum directors hav.e
dumbing down" the hallowed institu- useli to keep t~eir financial conditions
·
hidden from top Smithsonian officials
tion.
. Actually, Small is in the process of sav- and Cong'fss.
ing the Smithsonian · from crumbling
The report states that although the
physically and becoming crashingly bor- federal govetnmencprov!des 70 percent
ing· to young Americans reared on of the Smithsonian's funding ($494 milmovie special effects, video games and lion for fiscal 2002), many employees
regard the government as "an intrusive
the Internet.
Small ,raised the $10 million to bring presence" and have little sense of"public
pandas back to the National Zoo and · purposes, public accountability (and)
attracted a record 3 I million visitors to public interest."
the institution last year, but he's still
It notes that the staff regards itself like
being sniped at by inside critics, some of a university faculty, a group notorious
whom call him a "Philistine" or "a suit," on many campuses for disparaging the
administration that raises money to pay
partly because he lacks a Ph.D.
On a deeper level, the attacks are part its salaries.
of a struggle over who will control the
The report calls for the Sntithsonian
Smithsonian -the secretary or 16 indi- to be "more responsive" ro the Offi~e of
vidual museum directors and their staffs, Management and Budget and appropriwho have become accustomed to oper- ators in Congress. Congress ought to see
ating independent fiefS.
that this happens; it will strengthen
Small is also an object of criticism Small's hand in relation to his "faculty."
because, as an ex-banker, he's the first
Besides replacing decrepit buildings;

./

Morton

Kondracke

' .

including falling ceili ng plaster at the
"castle" on the Mall, Small needs to
modernize th e displays h1 the .museums.
Many of them contain exhibits that
grandparents are seeing. for the third
time -- first as children, then as parents,
and now again. Small is intent on updating the museums' contents by raising
private funds, which he's done in prodigious amount&lt;: $206 million last year, up
·S60 million from the previous year.
The difference between the first
ladies' exhibit and the American presi- :
dency is a small example of what a difference adequate funds can make.
The multifaceted presidency exhibit,
closer to the 21st century, prominently
announces that it was financed by busi · ,
nessman Kenneth Behring, the Hj5tory
Channel, Congress and Chevy Cha.&lt;e
Bank, among others.
Behring gave the Smithsonian $80
million and earned the right to secnnrl
billing for the American history museum
as the "Behring Center."
In an interview, Small said he'd like to
bring Smithsonian history museums up
to the-standard-of the Holocaust Museum, "telling a powerful story . usillg
objects, audio, visual, physical setting&lt;;,
three- dimensional exhibits and photographs in compelling, dignified, schol- :
arly researched ways."
Small has made some mistakes during '
his 18-month tenure, notably trying to
shut down a National Zoo research
facility designed · to save endangered
species and giving one major donor the
right to name most members of a panel .
picking honorees in a "Hall of Achievers" she endowed with $38 million.
Overall, though, he's doing the right
thing. And Congress should help him .

Today is Tuesday;-Aug. 7, the 219th day of 201Y1 ~THere are
146 days left in the year. ,
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 7, 1942, U.S. forces landed at Guadalcanal, marking the start of the first major allied offensive in the Pacific
during World War 'II.
On thi s date:
In 1782, George Washington crea ted the Order of the
Purple Heart, .a decoration to recognize merit in enlisted
men and non-commissioned officers.
In I 789, the U.S. War Department was established by
Congress.
·
·
In 1912, the Progressive Party nominated Th eodore Roosevelt for president.
In 1927, the Peace Bridge between the United States and
Canada was dedicated during ceremonies attended by the
Prince of Wales and Vice President Charles Dawes.
In 1934, the U.S. Court of Appeals upheld a lower court
(Morto11 Koudracke is exewtive editor ~{
ruling striking down the government's attempt to ban the
Roll Call, the newspaper of Capitol Hill.)
controversial James Joyce novel "Ulysses."
In 1959, the United States launched Explorer 6 , which
sent back a picture of the Earth.
In 1964, Congress passed· the Gulf of Tonkin resolution,
giving President Lyndon Johnson broad powers in dealing
with reported North Vietnamese attacks on U.S. forces. ·
In 1974, French stuntman Philippe Petit walked a
tightrope strung between th e twin towers of N ew York's
World Trade Cente r.
Vot&lt;~rs in next year's Republi can
governorship.
In '1976, scientists in Pasade na, Calif., ann.o unced that the
gubernatorial primary in California are
The trouble with Riordan, from ~
Viking 1 spacecraft had found the strongest indications to
· likely to face a particularly cruel ver- ·
conservative standpoint, is that h e baredate of possible life on Mars.
sian of one of politics' ol~est conunly passes inspection as a Republican, let
In 1998, terrorist bombs at U.S. embassies in Kenya and
drums: Is it better for a party to stick by
alq,ne a conservative. Another multiTanzania killed 224 people, including 12 Americans.
its principles even if doing so increases
million&lt;rire, he has, over the years, conTen years ago: The five permanent members of the U.N.
the risk oflosing the election, or to jettributed over a million dollars td
Security Council agreed to authorize Iraq to sell as much as
tison just about everything it stands for
Democratic candidates (including
S1.6 billion in oil over six months to pay for fdod, humanin the hop e of improving its chances of
nearly $20,000 to Gray Davis). He
itarian suppli es and war reparations; however, Baghdad
victory in November?
refu sed to endorse Bob Dole for presi~
rejected the resolution.
The DemocratiC candidate will be
def!t,
but has had no trouble endorsing
COLUMNIST
Five years ago: NASA researchers. formally presented their
the incu mbent governor, Gray Davis, a
such ·Democrats as Congresswoman
case for the existence of life long ago on Mars. More than 6
smooth and slippery article who
Malline Waters. He is stoutly promillion American Online cus~omers ,worldwide were left
looked like a shoo-in until the state's own capacious pockets.
choice, favors stron ger gun ~control
stranded when the system crashed for almost 19 hours. A
famous energy crisis, which he had
Beyond that, however, Simon is run- measures, waffies on the death penalty,
flash flood at a Pyrenees mountain campsite in Spain
totally failed to anticipate and has done ning as an unabashed conservative. A opposed the ban on affirmative actioh
claimed at least 86 lives.
almost nothing sensible to alleviate, devout Catholic, he is unreservedly in state and local government, opposes
One year ago: Vice President and Democratic presidential
suddenly made him look appetizingly pro-life, although he says, "I don't plan school vouchers, and opposed res trictcandtdate AI Go~e selected Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieber. vulnerable. Thus far, California's sum- to make it a centerpiece of my agen- ing marri age to a man and a woman.
man as hts runmng mate; Lteberman was the first Jew on a
mer has been an exceptionally cool da." He is also against new gun laws,
What on earth, then, co uld induce '
major party's presidential ticket.
one, easing the pressure on the state's prelerring (like the National Rifle R ep ublicans to nominate him for gov: Today's Birthdays: Songwriter Felice Bryant is 76. Writer.rower grid. But Augu st (summer's peak Association) rigorous enforcement of ernor? Simply the fact that, according
producer Stan Freberg is 75. Bluesman Magic Slim is 64.
in much of the state) and September those already on the books. His pro- to recent polls, he would run much
Actress Verna Bloo'!' is 62. Humorist Garrison Keillor is 59.
(San Francisco's warmest month) still
fessed idol is Ronald R eaga n, who more strongly against Davis than either
Singer B.). Thomas is 59. Singer Lana Cantrell is· 58. Actor
lie ahead, so Republican interest in the
"stood for words like freedom, oppor- . Simon or Jon es . As a recent mayot o)f
John Glover is 57. Actor David Rasche is 57. Country singer
gubernatorial sweeps,takes has perked
tunity, entrepreneurship and less gov- th~. state's largest city, with a proven
Rodney Crowell is 51. Actor Wayne Knight is 46. Rock
·
up notably.
ernment." In a rare doparture from abthty to attract Hispanic voters, his
singer Bruce Dickinson is 43. Marathon runner Alberto
The true-blue conservative seeking
appeal is irresistible to many sincerely
Salazar is 43. Actor David Duchovny is 41. Jazz musician
the nomination is William E. Simon Jr., Bush administration orthodoxy, how- conservative politicians.
Marcus ~oberts is 38. Country singer Raul Malo (The
son and namesake of the late business ever, he does oppose offshore oil
Hence the conservative dilemma.
drilling.
Mavericks) is 36. Actr.ess Charlotte Lewis is 34. Actress Sydmogul, philanthropist, and Secretary of
In terms of political experience, Can Bill Simon, over time, build a
ney Penny is 30. Actress Charlize Theron is 26.
the Treasury in the Nixon administrastrong case for himself? A lot of conThought for Today: "Happiness, it seems to me, consists of • tion . Prom the standpoint of party Simon's record is a bit thin, being conservative California Republicans ""'·
two things: first, in being where yo u belong, and seco nd pragmatists (and they are legion), tined to service under Rudolph Giu- praying that he will.
and best- in comfortably going through everyday life, that ·
Simon's biggest asset is the fact that he li alli as an assistant U.S. Attomey for
(William Ruslter is a Distir~guished l'elis; having had a good night's sleep and not being hurt by
is a multimillionaire who can easily the Southern District of New York. low of the Claremom Itw,itute for. the
new shoes."- Theodor Fontane, German author (1819afford to finance both the primary and But 'then, Reagan's 'record was even Study of Statesmanship a11d Political Plli1898).
'
gl'neral 'election campaigns out of his thinner when he ran for (and won) the losophy.)
·

The Community Calendar Ia
published as a free aervlce to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is
not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

home ol Osie Follrod, clerk.

you don't have to be stuck on a dead
end. When he was 18 he made some
horrible mistakes. He got mixed up
with drugs and the wrong crowd. He
was tried on 15 counts of armed
robbery and convicted on two of
them. He was sent to prison (and
rightfully so) for 15 years, and gave
up hope for ever having a different
life.
Fortunately for him, two years into
his sentence common sense kicked
in. He gave up drugs and started taking the classes offered to him in
prison. After six years of good behavior, he was released on parole which is when I met him.
After getting to know this man
and finding out who he once was,
compared to who he has· become in
the past 10 years, I cannot say
emmgh about how proud I am of

him.
In the four years since his release,
he has ended his parole and is completing his college degree. We have
gotten married, and just purchased
our tint home. These are accomplishments he never believed possible
when he was first locked up.
I want "Inmate" to know that one
is never beyond hope. Prison may be
the best thing that ever happened to
him - it was for my husband. PROUD WIFE lN NEW JERSEY
DEAR PROUD WIFE: Your
testimonial will be welcomed by
many prisoners and their families. It's
never too late for a new beginning.
Where there is life, there is hope.

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

TIME OUT FOR TIPS
'.

Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the hall
in Tuppers Plains, dinner at 6:30
p.m.

Most people realize milk is a
major source of the calcium
WEDNESDAY
they need for strong bones and
RlJTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees, Wednesday al 5
CHESTER - Shade River teeth.
p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station. lodge #453, regular stated
Calcium is also important
MIDDLEPORT - Abundanl meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday. for nerve functioning, muscle
contractions and blood clot'Grace Church, Wednesday, 7 Refreshments.
ting.A serving of milk provides
. p.m. Mary Carney, speaker.
POMEROY - Junior and 30 percept of the daily recomMIDDLEPORT - Hobson Rita White to perform "Golden mendation. But did you know
TUESDAY
Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. Oldies• at lhe Meigs Senior
POMEROY
Salisbury Wednesday, Betty Johnson, Center on Thursday at 5:30p.m. that milk also provides many
Township Trustees, 6 p.m . speaker.
Public Is Invited. Free.
· other nutrients that are essenTuesday, township hall, Rocktial for good health?
springs Road.
THURSDAY
See what an eight-ounce
SATURDAY
PORTLAND Freedom
CLIFTON - Gospel sing serving can do for you.
POMEROY .....: Childhood Gospel Mission Church, vaca- featuring Delivered Saturday, 7
One serving of lowfat or
immunization clinic, Tuesday, 1 tion Bible school, Thursday, Fri- p.m. Clifton Tabernacle, Clifton,
skim milk furnishes 10 percent
to 7 p.m: at the Meigs County day and Saturday, 5 to 7 p.m.
W.Va.
Health Department office. Take
of the Vitamin A required each
childUs shot records·. Child
POMEROY - Rev. Clarence
day. Viramin A helps with
,
must be accompanied by par- J. Woodbridge, speaking at the · SUNDAY
LETART FALLS - Christian vision (especially at night) and
ent/legal guardian.
Fallh Valley Tabernacle, Bailey
Hart reunion, Sunday, letart ke.eps the skin, cells and
Run Road, Thursday, 7 p.m . .
Community Center, covered immune system healthy.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, Toesday, 7:30 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW dish dinner at noon.
Dairy foods provide many of
the different B Vitamins.
Riboflavin (B-2) helps make
energy from the foods we eat.
This is essential for muscle
maintenance. A serving supmoney earned wiU be spent. · thank you letters were sent.to plies 24 percent of the
Using it for something for the · Lloyd Middleton, Chris Wolfe, RibOflavin we need.
Niacin, Vitamin .B-3, helps
park was . the general consen- Joe Evans, Brian and MeliSsa
body
enzymes do their job and
_ sus of the grou1&gt;. · _ _ _ ~~ Harkness, Mary Ann Shoults,
assists in the metabolism of
A picnic honoring the vol- . Carl Robinson, J.D. Drilling,
fatty acids and sugars. One cup
RACINE - Schedules for unteers will be held at the Dallas Jarrell and J.F.Young for of milk furnishes 10 percent of
donations.
workers at the Meigs County Aug. 28 meeting.
the recommended requireBrackets for new bannen
The group voted to make ·a
Fair gate were distributed at a
ments.
have
been
ordered
and
donation
of
$200
toward
the
meeting of the Racine Area
Community
Org~nization received, and will be installed fall festival entertainment.
held last week at Star Mill soon, it was noted. A thank , Secretary and treasurer
you note was mailed to Ron reports were given by Lilac
Park.
Thanks were extended to Lambert for helping with the Ewes and Ann Zirkle. Libby
Fisher had prayer for the
the volunteers, who wiU be banners.
A
report
was
given
on
the
potluck
dinner. David Zirkle
working the gate, and a discus·Subscribe today. 992-2156
sion was held on how the Fourth of July celebration and led in the pledge.

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
Fall activities
planned by ..

· RAco- ·

.MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Becky
Baer
ADVICE

A lack ofVitamin B-12 can
cause anemia, nerve problems
and dementia. Even though B12 is most often thought of in
meats, fish and poultry, the B12 found in cbilt foods and
cereals is more easily absorbed.
A serving of milk gives 13 percent of our daily needs. ·
Vitamin D, prevalent in dairy .
products, helps in absorbing
calcium and phosphorus. It
also aids in depositing minerals
into the bones to make them
stronger. Twenty-five percent
of our daily needs is found in a
single serving of milk.
One-fifth of the phosphorus
needed to help make strong
bones, fuel the body's cells,
regulate metabolism in the
organs and become a cqmponent of DNA, is located in a
cup of milk. It provides more
phosphorus than any other
(Becky Baer is a Meigs County
food.
Extension agent.)

COLLEGE NEWS
Graduate OU

Kie.ffer of Shade.
.

.

Named to list

Homemade vinegar and water solution
may prevent swimmer~ ear

RUSHER'S VIEW

~or

'

Potassium helps maintain an :
appropriate balance of fluid
and blood pressure. Muscle
contractions are also regulated
by it, as well as nerve impulse
transmission. Eleven percent of
the potassium needed each day ·
is found in milk. ·
Milk supplies high- quality
protein. This means it contains
all of the essential amino acids
that serve as building blocks ..
for the protein. A serving of
milk contains 16 percent of.
the daily requirement needed .
for building and repairing
muscles and furnishing energy.
Even with the knowledge .
that milk provides many nutrients, some people may not.
drink it for fear of becoming .
overweight. A recent study
showed just the opposite. In
young women, high intakes o(
calcium consumed from dairy :
products (an average of 781
mg per day) correlated with a:
meaningful loss in weight and
body fat for those who ate less
than 1876 calories per day.
Therefore, consuming dairy
foods not only gives you many
of - the important nutrients
needed for good health, but it.
can also help in losing weight. ·

the (victor' in California, what will winning cost?

William
Rusher

Graduate degrees were
received by Rebecca Meier
of
·Middleport,
Jody
Howard · of Pomeroy, Paul
!hie 9f Racine and Kristen

ATHENS The fol- ·
lowing local students were
among those named to the
deanUs list at Ohio University in Athens for the ·
spring
quarter:
Sarah
Smith, Mason, W.Va.', Jacob
Jackson, Jeffrey Creamer,
Jennifer Caldwell and
Nicholas Avis, all of
Coolville; Jeremiah Smith, ·
Langsville;
Amanda
Northrup, . Long Bottom;,
Brandy Perry, Brooke
Williams, Jessica Johnson,
Sarah Householder, Stacey ·
Brewer, and Stephanie
Stewart, all of Middleport. :
Brandon Buckley, Cort~
ney Haley. Heidi DeLong;
Holly DeLong, Jennifer
Shrimplin, Joshua Broderick, Joshua Will, Kelli Bai-. ·
ley, Maureen Heines, Ryan.
Pr~tt, Scott Needs, Traci·
Crow, Wesley Thoene, and·
William Young, all of
Pomeroy.
Leah
Sanders
and·
Michelle Caldwell, both of
Reedsville, and Cynthii
Caldwell, Syracuse.
·

r----~:-----~--------------------~:-~·~··~-~...
\\OUf
.
Doc.u

mHDLEY'S
.:
Rentl
SElf STORHGE
no

\\en\\l\9

97 Beech street

middleport, Ohio

10ft. K 10 ft .................~ .............$35.00
10ft. x 20 n ............................... S55.oo

. .

992-3194 or 992-6635
umlddleports onlg 5elf Storage••
I

.'

�..

•

•

...

•

Page A&amp;

Business

' The Daily Sentinel

tuesday. Aupst 7, 1001

New at Chamber

New location

New beauty shop

The Daily S~ntinel

Inside:
Korey Stringer remembered, Page B3
Brees finally signs, Page B4
Diamond Roundup, Page B6

Page B1 ·-Tuesday. Aupst 7, 1001
.

HALL OF FAME GAME

.

Mularkey: .
offensive
debut

was solid
Tim and Susan Jenkins have opened the Hairstation in the
· Teaford building on Second Street in Pomeroy formerly occupied by The Chateau. The shop is open Monday through Saturday, '9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the operators take eveni~g
appointments. The beauticians, formerly employed at Classic
-cuts in Middleport, shown working on customers here, from
left, Susan Jenkins, Sheila McKinney and Betty VanMatre.
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)

•

MGM Drive Right, which offers driving Instruction has relocat- . New Gallla
Chamber of Commerce member Rev. Bob
ed to East Main Street. Pomeroy. It was formerly located on Grubb began Grubb's Piano Tuning &amp; Repair Service in 1977.
Second Street. The business was established and opened In The business offers complete service consisting of tuning,
the fall of 1997 by Brenda Roush and the late Leta Fetty, In repairing, rebuilding, regulating and key recovering. Bob Is a
conjuction with Leo's Cruise and Travel . MGM, now managed member of the Columbus Chapter of The Piano Technicians
by M.ichelle Bunce, left, and still operated by Brenda Roush, Guild, an association of registered Professional Piano Tuners.
right, is licensed and inspected by the State Highway Patrol. His wife, Lou Grubb, answers the phone, and .does related work.
(Tony M. Leach photo)
Bob can be reached for service by calling, 740-446-4525.

:Stocks trade.lower Monday Census figures paint picture
as Intel confounds market of typical American's lifestyle
NEW YORK (AP) Sullen investors sent stocks
lower Monday, forcing the
·Dow Jones industrials down
more than 100 points as Wall
Street retreated from last
· week's optimism about a
recovery in the semiconductor industry.
Uncertainty about the
economy and earnings ruled
the market after Salomon
Smith Barney reduced its
profit and revenue targets for
Intel and Lehman Brothers
said the chip maker will cut '
·prices in h:ilf on its Pentium
4 processor. The news disturbed investors who last
week bid chip stocks higher
on bullish comments from
.other analysts and Intel itself
"Whenever we think we
can go back in and play
again, something like this
happens," lamented Charles
Pradilla, chief investment
strategist for SG Cowen
·.Securities.
·
: The Dow Jones industrial
average finished the session
down 111.47 at 10,401.31.
One of the Dow's biggest
losers was Intel, which ended
down $1.40 at $30.28.
The market's broader indi·cators also declined. The Nasdaq composite index fell
32.07 tO 2,034.26, and the
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index
fell 13.87 to 1,200.48.
Stock prices had been
.expected to trend higher this
month as investors got a
respite following the dismal
second-quarter
earnings
p1ost compames
results
released in July. Instead, Wall
Street has been stymied as
few companies can say they
expect business to improve
and virtually none can prove
that it already has picked up.
"There is just no indication
that this market will turn on
.a dime," said Alan Ackerman,
:executive vice president of
Fahnestock &amp; Co.
Chip makers tugged the
. tech Sector down with Intel's

Markets roundup
August 6, 2001

Dow Jonas

Industrials
"""".....-41---+.::!0i-"""!f---- 9,000

10,401.31

Polcllange-p&lt;e-.ioos . r

-1 .06
High
10,504.13

Low
10,374.95

Record high: 11 .722.98 =--1----"-'--'"'-...__ _ 1.000
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
Jan,, 14, 2000
MAY
- - -'' 1,500

August 6, 2001

Standard a
Poor's500

---1,400
---1,300

1,200.48
Pol cllange- p!8WJus

-1.14
..
1,214.35

---1,100

Low
1,197.35

Record high: 1,527.46
March 24, 2000

'
JUNE

MAY

JULY .

AUGUST

Naadaq

The figures from the wideranging nationwide survey :ire
itself considered to be estimates
of data yet to be released from
the 2000 census. It is not considered a 'substitute for 2000
census results.
Yet for many demographers,
it provided the. broadest
socioeconomic look at America since the 1990 census.
Among the highlights:
o Homes are bigger. The survey found the median number
of rooms for a house in 2000
was 5.8. It was 5.2 in the 1990
census.
o Housing costs are up. The
median monthly cost for a
homeowner in 2000 was
$1,307. Adjusting for inflation,
it was $1,023 in the 1990
count. Also, the median value
, of an owner-occupied' home
was $120,162 in 2000.Though
not directly ·compatable, the
inflation-adjusted value of a
home in 1990 was S1()4,216.

will

---4,000

August 6, 2001

WASHINGTON (AP) Here is part of what Americans
have to show for the economic prosperity of the 1990s: bigger homes, steeper mortgage
payments .and a longer commute to work.
Also, more Americans are
better educated, and more have
access to cars than in 1990, the
most recent Census Bureau
survey shows.
The big picture from the
Census 2000 Supplementary
Survey: Many Americans' standard of living improved over
the past decade, 10 ·years
marked by a soaring stock market, a booming technology
industry · and sprawling suburbs.
"This is a commentary of the
go-go 1990s, a generation of
hope and '?Ptimism:' said lJrliversity of Michigan demographer William Frey, "People's
only be curtailed
appetites
out of.economic necessity."

---3,500

---3,000

The survey found .that the
average one-way trip to work
lasted 24 minutes. Though not
directly comparable, the 1990
census placed it at 22 minutes.
"Apparently, we are willing
to endure delays and long
commuting times to take on a
mortgage, and spend several
years in school to own large
houses that our parents wouldn't have owned," said Robert
Lang, a demographer with the
nonprofit Fannie Mae Foundation.
About 1 in 4 Americans age
25 and older had at least a
bachelor's degree, up from 't in
5 a decade earlier. And the
median household income in
2000 was $41,343, the survey
estimated.
The bureau considers its
income and pqverty data fiom
a separate report, the Current
Population Survey, to be more
thorough and better source of
comparison to past years.
o

Our Biggest Lane~ Event Ever

2,034.26
Pot cllange -

Take 1Oo/o Off the Low Sale Price.

pnl'llouo

-1.55

High

Low

2.053.60

2,032.51

Record high: 5,048.62
March 10, 2000

HIGHLIGHTS
Smith likely to
. start for

Bengals

GEORGETOWN,
Ky.
(AP) - Akili Smith, who lost
his starting job as the Cincinnati Bengals' quarterback last
season, may start in Friday
night's preseason game at .
Detroit.
Bengals coach Dick LeBeau
said Monday that he won't
make his decision official
until Tuesday; but he has
already suggested to Smith
that he might start against the
Lions.
Smith is competing with
, BARRELLING IN -St. Louis quarterback Joe Germaine (9) runs two yards for a touchdown against the Miami Dolphins
Jon Kima and Scott Mitchell
In the second quarter of the H~ll of Fame Game Monday In Canton. (AP)
·
for the starting job this season. Kitna was signed as a free
agent during the off season,
while Mitchell took over as
the starter last year after Smith
was benched.
' CANTON (AP) - Unproven play- Ram~, but didn't throw a pass.
and-and-goal.
Running back Brandon
ers get a chance to prove themselves in
"It sure feels good to get that first
The Rams need Germaine and the
Bennett missed practice
exhibition games.
rest of the backups to show they are touchdown, but I've got a long way to
Monday afternoon and was
Joe Germaine and Marc Bulger took ready. Last year, Warner broke his pinky go," Bulger said. "Last year in New
examined for a torn flexor
advantage of that chance Monday finger and the team went 2-3 without Orleans, I never even saw the field. So
tendon in his right pinky finnight.
him.
I'm already ahead of a things here.
ger. Bennett is expected to
Germaine completed 11 of 13• passes
St. -Louis also -won despite last· year's , That's not to say that J. don't have a.
return to camp workouts
for 156 yards and ran for a score, and MVP .in the NFL, Marshall Faulk, not long, long way to go." ·
Tuesday.
The Dolphins' best shot at tying the
Bulger hit Jeff Robin- playing a down. · ·
Linebacker Takeo Spikes
son with a 3-yard scor"Well, we have_!l't_peaked yet," Martz gam~ en!led when Josh Heup_el, who
suffered -a twisted-right ankleIng pass early in the said jokingly. "We're better at this stage led Oklahoma to the national champiin ·saturday's 16-13 overtime
fourth quarter as St. this year. The first quarter we flopped, onship last season, threw a pass through
loss to Chicago. He was held
Louis beat Miami 17- but as the game wore on we made the the end zone with 1:53 remaining.
out of practice Monday and is
10.
plays."
Another long pass by Heupel into the
expected to be out again
"Overall, I'm very
With almost all of the front-line play- end zone fell incomplete on the final
Tuesday.
pleased with our quar- ers for both teams watching from the play.
Spikes is expected . to play
terbacks," Rams coac};i sidelines, Bulger, in his second year after
Martz said he was particularly
against Detroit.
Mike Martz said. 'Joe not getting in last season with New encouraged by his retooled defense that
Feldler
put together some Orleans, hit two key passes :is the Rams has several new faces and several new
good drives. Marc did drove 57 yards in six plays.
coaches.
too, so imagine what he might do when
On third-and- 1 at .the Miami 49, he
"We're ·learning the discipline of
he learns the offense."
tossed a IS-yard pass to Trung defense," Martz said. "It's going to take
Martz didn't even mention Kurt Canidate, who sprained a ligament in some time, but we're willing to work at
· Warner, the NFL's MVP two years ago. his knee on the play. Bulger later found
Pleese see Rams, BJ
l-Ie played the opening series (or the Robinson on a play-action pass on secALOHA, Ore. (AP) David Duval and his father
Bob teamed for a 12-underpar 60 in the opening round
of the Fred Meyer Challenge,
tying Billy Andrade. and Brad
Faxon for the lead in the twoday charity tournament.
Andrade and Faxon pulverized the back nine of the
7,037-yard course at The
CLEVELAND (AP) -:::- The Cleveland
"We have to go there and take care of busiReserve Vineyards and Golf
ness," said Indians manager Charlie Manuel,
Indians need to make another comeback.
Club, shooting a 9-under 28
This one, though, doesn't have to be histor- whose team trails by one game in the standafter the turn. They finished
ical or miraculous.
ings. "We're looking forward to playing
with 10 birdies and an eagle.
One night after rallying from 12 runs down them."
Peter Jacobsen and tradiThe Indians are 5-2 against the Twins tl)is
to win, the Indians couldn't get the big hit
tional first-day partner Arnold
when they needed one Monday night in an year, losing by scores of 11-10 and 10-9.
Palmer were next-to-last in
Cleveland hit five home runs in each of the
8-6 loss to .the Seattle Mariners.
the 12-team field, eight shots
Paul Abbott (12-2) won his lOth straight losses.
back entering Tuesday's final
decision, lthiro Suzuki had three hits and the
"We know they'll be jacked up for us," said
round. Jack Nicklaus and his
Mariners didn't let any leads slip away in win- Indians first baseman Jim. Thome. "Especially
son Gary were last, another
ning three of four from the Indians.
up there. They'll be ready."
Hopefully as ready as the Mariners were for
After going 2-5 in a homestand against AL
three shots behind.
West leaders Seattle and Oakland, the Indians the Indians.
will open a three-game series in Minnesota
Seattle showed why its baseball's best team
against the AL Central-leading Twins on during its four-game stay at Jacobs Field, and
Thesday night.
should have left with a sweep except that its GOTCHA- Cleveland's runner Trayls Fryman Is tagged out by .
Seattle Maril)ers shorts~op Bret Boone in the second Inning :
It will be the fir5t o( 12 games remaining
·
Please
see
Tribe,
BJ
Monday. (AP)
between the clubs this season.
RACINE - The Southern Athletic Boosters will
hold their monthly meeting
Wednesday in the high school
cafeteria at 6 p.m .
All sports parents, booster
members, community memEDMONTON,
Alberta
crowned
when she slumped to the ian said. "I still remember '97.
Jones said it was inevitable ·
bers, and interested parties
world. cham- track as th e scoreboard Finally, my dream came true:' her streak of 42 consecutive
(AP) .- When she defeated
should attend the August .S
pion Mon- showed Jones had won by
Pintusevi~h-Biock hefd a wins .in I 00-meter finals
Marion Jones in the 100meeting.
meter semifinals at the World
day, earning two-hundredths of a second. slim lead throughout the first would finally end.
"I didn't expect to win
her title by
This time, she slumped to half of · the race. Jones
Championships, Zhanna Pinthe track in joy after running appeared to catch up with every race the rest of my
finally
tusevich ~Biock raised her
defeating
the
10.82 seconds to edge Jones about 20 meters left, but the career;' she said. "I'm disapright index finger in triumph.
Catch all the news on your
- the two-time defending Ukrainian edged ahead again pointed and I won't sleep for
seemingly
When she repeated the feat
favorite sports teams - prep,
champion - by three-hun- just before the finish line.
a couple of days. I'm going to
unbeatable
less than two hours later,
college, and pro - in The
dredths
of
a
second.
Ekaterini
go over this race 5,000 times
''I'm
disappointed,
to
say
Jones.
becoming
the
first
woman
Daily Sentinel.
. Thanou of Greece won the the least. I've won so many ·in my mind."
.lonH
Pintusesince 1997 to defeat Jones in a
bronze medal.
vich-Block
races, and I think I got
jones, kno~ked out of the
100 final, Pintusevich-Biock
"I'm so, so happy. I still can't spoiled," Jones ·said. "I ran a 200 at tht 1999 world cham~
thrust both arms toward the thought she had won th_e
Send your local sports news
believe
it, I'll need some time 10.85 today, so I don't think
1997 world title in Athens,
sky in celebration.
to The Daily Sentinel by fax
The Ukrainian sprinter was and had begun a victory lap to believe I won," the Ukrain- the world is falling apart."
at 992-2157.

Gennaine, Bulger lead Rams

Duval family
leads Freel ·

MAY

Meyer event

chief competitor, Advanced
Micro Devices, falling $1.63
to $17.62 and Micron Technology declining $1.44 to
$47 .01. The wavering sentiments on the semiconductor
industry illustrate the uneasiness that is pervasive on Wall
Street.
"It shows how much tentativeness and un certainty there
is out there," Ackerman said.
"Investors are in no hurry to
buy."
Other tech losers included
Dow industrial IBM, down
$1.67 at $106:51, and Cisco
Systems, which slipped 51

cents to $19.54 and is scheduled to release its fiscal
fourth-quarter earnings on
Tuesday.
Blue chip losses were widespread. The biggest dediners
included retailers, expected
to issue poor July sales results
on Thursday.
Radio Shack, which said
Monday that July sales
slipped 6 percent over last
year and was downgraded by
Merrill Lynch, tumbled $2.45
to $26.46.
. Best Buy, another electronics retailer, also suffered,
falling $2.68 to $64.?5 .

Choose from Every Style;

j

Every Recliner
Every Sleeper
..
.

Top employee
ATHENS - Bev.erle Boivin has been
'selected as the O 'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Employee of the Month for August 2001.
Boivin serves as a
·
·
maintenance. helper in
O'Bieness' building
services department
and is a resident of
Shade.
Boivin's supervisor
and co-workers say she
is a knowledgeable,
reliable and helpful
employee who takes
great pride . in her
work.
Boivin's hard work and ialents are most evident in the flowers she cultivates on the hospital grounds.
· Her supervisor, Bob Wachenschwanz, said
Boivin is the employee he turns to whenever
he has a horticultural question.'
.
Boivin has also received praise for her willingness co take on new tasks, ability to work
well with her co-workers and knack for locating parts and tools.
'
: Boivin is responsible for mait:~taining the
'flower beds surrounding the hospital, trimming

shrubs, insialling ceiling tiles, changing light
bulbs, maintain equipment; and performing a
wide range of other maintenance tasks.
"Every day !learn something new, and when
I'm done for the day, I can see what I've
accomplished," said Boivin.
Boivin began her career .at O'Bleness in
April 1997 as a housekeeping aide,

'

Every Reclining Group
Every Lane Leather Group,

Livestock report
GALLIPOLIS - . United Producers Inc.
market report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday.

Every Designer Fabric,

Jones' reign as 1OOM queen ends at Worlds

Feeder Cattle-Lower
275-415# St. $95-$108 Hf. $90-$100, 425525# St. $92-$104 Hf. $85-$91 550-625# St.
$88-$95 Hf. $82-$89 650-725# St. $84-$90
Hf. $75-$82; 750-850~ St. $75-$83 Hf. $68$76.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed $48-$52.50; Medium/Lean $42-$46;
Thin/Light $34-$38; Bulls $52-$62.
Back T\' The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $500-$900; Bred Cows
$450-$750;Baby Calves $50-$125; GoatS $11$114.
.
Upcoming specials:
Call the office at 446-9696.

..

1

hold on, prevent
Tribe from coming back ~

'

••

'TuEsDAY'S

LATROBE, Pa. (AP)
Mike Mularkey's debut as an
offensive coordinator played
out more smoothly than he
expected against the Atlanta
Falcons on Friday night, ·
despite a lack of production by
the starting squad.
" I felt very comfortable with
it," Mularkey said. "I was nervous because I wasn't nervous.
I mean, I was waiting for it to
hit me, but I'd kind of already :
played the game in my head." ·
M ularkey said the offense
has adapted well to his new ·
scheme and there were no big ·
surprises 'in the preseason
game.
.
· "I don't fe!j,) like we were :
rushed," he said. "There were a ·
couple plays at the end that,
because of me, personnel-wise, .
we were rushed in trying to get the snap off. But other than
that, we were up at the line ·
with no less than 15 seconds to
go, which was important to
me."
Despite a smooth transition
t? the new offense, Mularkey's
plays generally did not work
throughout the first 2 1/2
quarters.
With Kardell Stewart at
quarterback for two series in
the first quarter, the Steelen
gained a combined 8 yards.
Stewart led the team to 8
more yards on a second-quarter series before Kent Graham
entered .the game and managed only 34 yards in the next
five series.
. "N:othing they did in the
first half surprised us;' Mularkey said of the Falcons. "It was
guys not making the throws,
not making the catches or protection breakdowns. The
things we did should've been
more effective than they
were."
Tommy Maddox and Tee
Martin showed that the Mularkey offense could work. ·
The backup quarterbacks
led the Steelers to 211 yards
and all 17 points in the final
four series.

Every Luxurious Leather!

•••••

•••••

'" '

l)t

.

~

•f

�- Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Tuesday, Aug. 7, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

TUeadliy, Aug. 7, 2001

·r~ . I._F'..-..!IJIUi-sALE~I~.,.t

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Mutt ••• 190&amp; Fairmont LOoking To Buy A New
14x70, 2 Bri2Bth, Exotlllnt Horne? Don,· Ha'll Land?
condition. C1ll H1rold Wt Dolll Hurry Only 10 Loll
(740)385-7
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I I 1112 ·Lot I
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..;~;,~:,;
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monthly.
Call Nikki mun'o Rd., ·no moblll
(740)385-4387
• -11 (740)742 2803
'~" •
•
Llnd·homo PICkogoe• 111 Lot tor oalo,locatod on 1184,
11111 Proquallty by phono. ono milo oouth of Still
(740)448·3&amp;83
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Limited Or No Credll? Gov- 7444 , Evonlngo (740)367•
emment Bank Finance Only 7187
At Oakwood In SlrbOurovilla, WI/ 304-736·3409.
Two 1 ac. bldg. loll, country
IIHing, ten min. from Pt.
I 2x50 trallar, 2 bedroom, I Pleaunt, ofl Rl2 ownor will
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Jncludect (740)256·1304
304·566·0888 01 304-456·
x
br.
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Delivery
1593
14 70 3
and Set Up Heal Pump In·
clud·".
~ $l 2,000 on 81 Fleet ::=======~
Wood
Homes. 11oll Free
886-565·0167
H~
16 Wide Only 519500 Per
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H mea F10 m $199/MO 4,_
Qakwood Mo- 0
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30 Years at B•.S%
bile
lbath
M
2
10 12 Down,
mini bam $6,000 OBO. ~~ :~ ~~:gs, 800·319(304)8823893
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2 . Bedroom 1 Balli • Nk:e
..::.---'-~---WI hbohood R f
1982 t4x70 Fa1rmont Town- a~l oe~lt Aeq~~~~~,:
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S740
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hO
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•. no pets,
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.
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(740)446 7944
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Abandoned Doublewlde- 3 bedroom home Mlnerallllle
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no pels, 740-992·8777 after

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Qrooloul living. t 1nd 2 Appll1noto: Reconditioned
bedroom ~parimonto al VII· W11h111, Dryoro, Rangoa,
I~ M111or 1nct Rlvtllldl Rllrigr11011, Up To 90 Cayo
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utllhlll, dopoolt &amp; reloron· C1llaher 5pm.
ceo roqulred,lvallable 911
:..(7_40..,:)_74_12-'·30_33,;__ _ _ _ Gold Maytag washer &amp; dry- ·
or, $200; Almond Whlripool
1 Bedroom All$rimenl, Ro· washer, $85; Dryers also, -1~gorator, Range, AIC In· (740)448·9066 after 6pm.
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Relarenco. HUD Approved.
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CES Washers, dryers, relrlgerators, ranges Skaggs
1 bedroom aparimont, Appliances. 76 VIne Street,
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or ,;;.81...:8::-'-Q':"I-'-28;.;.·::---:::-:-7•.
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Mollohan CarpeI• 202 Clark
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economical gaa heal, quiet Free estimates. 90 days
~ocatlon, $279 month lease same as caeh, easy !mane&amp;
deposit
required lng, Visa&amp; Mastercard ac(740)448-2957
cepted. Drive-a-little save
alot. (740)446-7444
or
lbr. Aparimenl all ui/111/.S 1-877-830-9162
Included, $300 month 1 per· .:.;:.:..:..=:..:.:.:::____
aon. (304)675-36154
Main Street Furniture
2 Apll In Gallipolis and I
515 (304)675-1422
Main Stroot, Point
•~•m_ • nt In P"rter. Rater·
Pleasant
~~·· ~Ill&gt;'
.-Y
~rC: required. (740 )388· New &amp; Used Furniture
~-=--:------New 2 Piece UYingroom
2 bedroom apartment, In· Suites, $399 . Buy, Sell,
quire 0 116 W. Main St, Trade.
Pomer~. orr .II Chn'""• 0
-~ ·
...,
(740)992-2274.
::..;=.:.:.=.:..::...____
ANnQw;
'
2 br. Garage AJl$rtmenl, In ' " - - - - - - - - " ·
Mason $300 + Security De- ·
11 (304)67"1911
:.pas:.:.....:·c;.;,.;:.:;.:~..:..:.:..;__ _ Buy or sell. Riverine Anti2br. Apartment for rent In ques, 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740·
Point Plee 1 R 1
&amp;
Depo~~ ' A:~~=~ 992-2526. Russ Moore, .
owner.
(740)448-2200

11
L---FO·R·---pl

r

BEAUTIFUL
APART~
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
CES AT JACKSON EBTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $297to $383. Walk 10
Shop a. mov5es. call 740·
446-2568. Equal Housing
Opporiunlty

5pm.

,

Beech St., Mlddlepori, 2
3 Bedroom House In Syra· bedroom lumlshod apan·
cuse, 0 hlo, $450/ Mo nth ment, utilities paid, no pets,
HUO Approver:l (304)875· dapoall &amp; releroncos,
5332 week··o""'
(7'")992-Q185.
"'lUll ' 0 7
"""

I

2 Michelin XCH4 PI75R14
tires, bought new, about
5,000 miles on them, $35.
each, (304)875-8795
.2 OHTSU HI·Sioel 200
175170Rt3 Tires, $15 Per ;
lire. (304)875·6795
,

201b.. Propane tanks,
bought new Navel used,
overtlll
House for Sale or Rent, 'Christy's Family Uvlng, barbequeprotection
grill slze,device,
1-full
S
Dri
Brick,
33l
'"
••·
Ll
R
$30
1092 unae1 ve,
"""·-w rna d, Aut·· 2 empty $20, each,
AIC.
Bsumon/,
completely
land, Ohio,home
740-742-7403.
remodeled.
$5261
month, Apartment,
and trailer (304)675-6795
$525 depoall. Relerencoe ronlalo. Commercial store- Amadea· Adult's &amp; chlldrens
required. No Pets. Call fronts available for lease. JUI&lt;ebox, cash register. poktablee, 69 Peron Street, .
~(7~4.:;0 )~44.::8:--4.:..1:..:1 .:.6 :---:--· :~.:.ac:.:.a.:.nc.:1.:.81:.;::now::;::·_ _ __ ar
Kanauge. (740)448-7473
Newer 2 bedroom, large Nice 2 BA apartment on SA
yard . Near Rio Grande. 143, Harrisonville whh kllch- Cobra 129 LTD Classic CB
$400 month, depolit, rotor- en appl'·-s. No smoking, radio,
peaked,
$80..
-~
(""')675 6795
encas. (740)448·2801
no pets, $375 ,...~r
•
.. mo, plus ~
utlllllos, deposit &amp; releren· Crallaman 10" Table Saw
, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ces required, available wllh 40" labia. (740)256•
MOBD...E ~ immediately (740)742-3033 6359
::.:~~-::--::::-:--Now Taking Applications- •Francis 4ft. CB Antenna,
35 West 2 Bedroom Town- with coax vise gri p mirror
14x70, 2 Bedrooms, total house Apartments, Includes mount br~cket, amlfm anelectric, $300 • month &amp; Water
Sewage, Trash , tenna with coax $20
$150 deposit. No pete. $350/Mo • 740-448-ooos.
(304)875-8795
•
.
(740)742·2714
T
- , - - - - - - - - ara Townhouse Apa~- Generator, 16 HP v twin
2 bedroom mobile home :::::;''"· Very2 ~~!:_locus, 2 O.H.V. 8500E, $298, $1,000
$2501 month plus deposit'
roomo, '~•. A, I (740)379-9257
Releronce
required 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted,
,(7._:40::,)c:44::6::-4U5:=::_1____, _· Adub P~ &amp; Baby Pool. Pa- Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
tlo, Start $365/Mo. No Pets, Repairs. Problems? Need
2 Bedroom, In Kerr area lease Plus Security Deposit Tuned? Call The Plano or,
$300/mo.'You pay utilities &amp; Required, Days· 740-446· 7_40-:.::._448:..:.:.·...:4=
5 2=5'-----deposit. (740)386-91112
3481 , Evenings. 740-367· .
0502, 740-446-0101
Independent Herbellle Dis2 BR, all electric, air, wfw --'----'-.:...;""---- tributor, Call For Product Or
,.
0ppo
carpet, very, very nice,
rtunlty (740)441-:1982
(740)448-2003
end Twin RlverTowers now ac·
JET
,(7:_:40:::c:)448=:_·_:_1409=---cepting
AERATION MOTORS
applications for 1 BA
2br Trailer, heat with LP HUD aubsid1zed apt. for Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Gas, has rural water. 1acre elderly and disabled. EOH Stock Call Ron Evans, 1·
yard No pets Gallipolis
(304)675-6879.
800-537-9528
Ferry area. (304)675-1206
Ji'tJitNrsHm
:
lleaulllul River VIew Ideal
RooMs ,
Lark Raacal Quantum 4·
For I Or 2 POODle. Rel&amp;non· .,~•-llliiiiiiiiiiio_,.., whHI Scooter, and Woll
cos, Deposit, No Pets, Fos·
Tanning Bod. Call Kim
tar Trailer Pari&lt;, 740-441 - Rooms available at Dorsi ,;(304::.,:,)"-77:..;3-6000:.::=---0181.
Adult Group Home lor Raol· MOBILE HOME OWNERS
dents, private and shared
3
"·"room
In
• ~
• rooms available (740)992·

r:

FORRiiNr

I

L,--·A·CREA-·G·E-_..1 -

r

-kinD

1 Houelng Aat at 1tll. • Thl• n

r Mo~~ I Lwr_.;l:~l&amp;=~~=...,ll ...t_APAimi!ENrs_FO_R
RBNrii i i t__,l

1111 out a claaa applicaUonl cellent condition, $65 Thll nrapaper will not
Equal Opporiunlty Employer (740)867·88S8
knowingly eowpt
Encouraging Wortq&gt;ace Dl·
actvtrtlattNnta ror rut
Onando·beach area, 7 day
varsity (EOEEWD).
B night hotel stay Paid
Hlltl whiCh II In
Desk Clerk end House· $600. sell $199. (814)523· vlcHaUon of 1heltw. Our
rudlraere hereby
keeper needed, Please ap· ~8640C..::'--------Informed that all
New To You Thrift ShonnA Employer offers excellent P,,
' 7 at Budget Inn ' Jackson RC A Mini Camcorder with
dwelling• edvertllltd In
ee1
Pike
Gallipolis
No
Phone
9 West Stimson, Athena bene Its and work environ'
carrying case, 2 baUerles.
thla newapaper are
74()..592-1842
ment. Qnly qual/lied appll· Calls Please.
VCR adapter, charger, &amp;
avalllbll on an equal
Quality clothing and house- cants need apply. An Equal
tapes, excellent condition, '
opportunity biNI.
hold Items. $1.00 bag sale Opporiunlty Employer. Sind Need older lady looking tor $325, (740)667-8888
every Thursday Monday Resume to: Human Rala- home, to live In with elder Sw
thru Saturday 9•00-6:00.
lions Deparimenl, 90 Jack· lady Wages neg more Into
lvel rocker, desk, micro- r1U
HOME'i
son Pike, Gallipolla, OH call (30.t) 773•5840 or wave, 3 calculators, cash
S
45631·1562,
(304)773_5284
register, coffee pots, metal "-•-iiFORiiiiOiiiALEiiiii_,..,
f1le cabinets, boxes of Ilea •
GIVFAWAY
Cootspot R8$taurant, At Needed experlence full-time market items. varlous new 541 Fourth Ave Gallipolis
L
50,
4 a-•rooms,
2,1/2 boths,
1 Coolville,
4PM MidOhlo,nowhir·
1h
k cook. PM shill, 11 '30am· llems,call(740)992-7527
~
ng,
·· hi n g A
I, coo
s,
8:00pm
_
40
hours
per
week
11110
W.~
'large
llv1ng
room,
famllu
1 ta n1 EOE Employer, (740)245·
7 wee k old kill ens, II tter 4PM ·m ld n1g • · sss
-room; largekltchenandDR,'
trained, ·friendly, prefer Ma"nager positions, 4pm- 6660 University ol Rio •
To Do
. finished basement, two car
same
home
Phone Midnight dishwasher, appll- Grande accepted appllcadetached garlige with 2
(740)446-3897
cations available at the lions at dining hall
All Make Mowers, Lawn bedroom apartment Close
Needed Experienced Crew Tractors, Tillers Repaired. to schools New condition.
Beagles Full Blooded Sev . Coolspot.
"'~
DeI"··
oral to choose from. Cus Iomer Servlce SB· lor Setting and F1nishlng Free ..,,""'·up,
•vvry AvaII· (740)446•2300
$10
hr
Process
refund
s
I
I
H
I
s
d
able
21
Years
Experieoc:e
40)
(7 245·9644
·
act ana ous ng en C
· For sale by owner 2 story
':-__:.._--:-----:--- claims, PVFI. ••P or will Pricing 1nlormal1on and ••- all Mike. f740)446-7804
house In the center ollown.
Four kittens to give away, 2 train. (800)61S-9621
· perience to
Southern
BA Construction
6 rooms, full basement, and
male, 2 female, 2 1/2
Homes PO Box 629 Ja-k
months old, (740)992·2077 $1,000 VISA. No Crodll son OH 45640
• ' . Rooting, cement, ~ding,
allached garage. MUST
chock No Deposit, 100%
'
painting, decks, garages.
SEEI $52,000 Will consider
To a good hOme: A tamale Approvod. 1-888-878-6787 Now hiring STNA's Com- Etc. Free Estimates &amp; Ret- ranting $550 month. COn•
cat, black and white long
pelltlve wage &amp; benefit erences. can 675-nag
tact at 675-8055
hair, 8 years old, has been AAA Opponunltyll Work package (740)446-4148
spayed and de-clawed trom Home. $500-$1500/pt
D&amp;S.roollng, siding, sxterior 4 BR, 2 Bath, Llv1ng and
Needs love and attention $2500·$6000/ft Mall Order.
&amp; Interior painting, gutter, omnlng Room, Kitchen ,
Please call( 740 )24 s, 9003 1·800·962·4542 www.op- Pari-lime Dental Assistant drywall, and most home re· Brsaktast Nool&lt;, taundry
poriun1ty4all net
needed Experience prater· pairs. Free Estimates. Room, 4 Walk·ln CloseiA,
Used couch &amp; chair
rod. Send resume to: CLA ;,.(304__:)_87_5_·6_829__;_____ Garden Tub, 94 Double
:..17 40~)·9-49.·2·1·22----., ~~~~TARY AIDE· Scenic 530 , 010 Gallipolis Dally David's General Contracting W1de, 3 Car Detached Ga1 s Nursing Center Is Tribune, 825, 3rd Avenue, Plumbing electrical paint- rage, Garage all on 1 acre
70
YARD SALE
seel&lt;lng a pan-lime stock Gallipolis, OH 45631
lng, some' rooting, a'•- Call Home recently remodeled.
person/ dietary aide and a
~
Asking
$100,000
~:::;~::;~==~ pan-lime prep cook. For AN's and LPN's needed 101' (740)256-9373 (304)833· (74p)388-1512
morelnlormallon, call Justin 100 bed skilled nursing Ia· .:.62:.;6.:5_ _ _ _' - - New bank repo· 14x70, 3
111
vARD "'·at (740)448-7150 or stop bu ell"" Ful~tlme or Pari time
3 Bsdroom on Route 2, bedroom, 2 bath- Pay S499
• ·
;:JAU.o
.. ,.
·
Georges Portable Sawrmll, (304)675-5332
&amp; move·ln Oakwood· Gall i~
and 1111 out an application. ' position
sign on bonus
....
GAUJPOLlS
great bOnehts ~n&lt;lexcelleni dmollnl'jluohatcaullly304our ~75·119o57th.• - - - - - - - - - olis. (740)448-3093
"--lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_,.r Expenenced
Cashier Need·
1a1ory comp 11 ance as ___:..:.;...:::...:.:...:~..:.:.;;_:.;.:.;.~ For Sa Ia; Now 1200 Square New Double Wide. $195
ed (•"•)895 _3603 ___ regu
3 Faml'•
Yard
Sate.
8/8/01
c:.:..o.:~.:..::=:...::=.
well
to well&lt; H·L·M· pBin
. IIng, InI8 rior, Ex• F00I Horne Iess lhan 1 Year Per Month! 3 Bedroom; 2
1
'
_
with as ~unl~
~.- .. lion''
and 8/9101 . Children and Experienced mechanic for
an 8'1cep a1 1earn. tor1or Insured (740)245· old. Located 5 m1nutes 1rom Bath Free Delivery &amp; SetAdult Clothing, Car seats, mobile service. Must have Interested
candidates 9228, (740)339-1268. 17 Point Pleasant on Redmund up 1-888·928-3426
Little Tuke
-• &amp; clean driving record should spplu' to·· R-k
Ridge, 3 bedrooms, 2 IuII
' Toys and more. t...,..,.s
"" · years expe"•• ence
2 .,lies out Bulavitle P1ka Evening
walk
only springs Rehabilitation Canbaths, laundry room On 1 Private Propelly And New
(lrom Jackson P1ke) Rain (740)386 8547
lor, 36759 Rocksprings Wood Eatlrtg Hllleldea, acre ot ground with detach- Ooublewlde, One Payment.
Cancels.
::----"-.:..:..·:..:..:.:..,..____ Road, Pomeroy, Ohio Ditches, Etc. Mowing, eel 2 car garage Large (304)736_72g5
: - - - : - - - - - - - Experienced Metal Me· 45769. Equal opponunlly Clean-up. Removal 01 Un- gazebo In Iron! yard. Asking
~orch Sale. 2 miles East of chanica needed for upcom- employer
encouraging wanted Items. Odd Jobs. Price $65,000
MUST ~::0-~~----.
Poner on 554. Thursday _lng nuclear outages. Other workplace diversity.
Call Steve (740)446-7604 SALEI (304)3141
BI.ISINI!Iti
and Friday. 9-4. Baby Items Cfllfts required, pipe prep
Will
h •
==..!;:_::2:.:...:..:::.___
AND BlllLDJNGS
and Nics Clothes
t-hnl~ans &amp; ·--"el b lid
power was ..ouses, House lor sa•· bu owner
'
- Background
~
_,checku &amp;- Saleeperaon needed. lurnl· trailers, anything . Call 3br. 1 bath, IS9~.ooo' In Point ~
ers.
Vard Sale. Wednesday and Drug Screening required lure store, Immediate open- (740)441-4238 01 (740)446- Pleasant (304)B 75_5485
Building In Aar:lne, 30x80,
Thursday.
Centenary. To arrange an Interview ing, fuU·tlme position. Apply. 0151 ask lor Ron. If no
block &amp; brick, was church,
Clothes, Books, Glassware, contact Beckie 804•458 . Lifestyle Furn1ture, 856 answer, leave massage.
Nice older home, 2 BA, ltv- central air &amp; heat, out of
Tools, Old Stoff.
1565 EOE
Third Avenue, Gallipolis,
lng room, dining room, llood plain, great location,
::=c:...:::::..:,;______ OCaiH 9. ·30·5·00 No Phone
kitchen, panuy, utility room, St.Ate 124 &amp; Tyree Blvd,
Full-time Babysitter wanted,
A
full size attic, gas furnace, $12,000 (740)949-2217
11
call after 6pm, (740)367· .:.;;..:.:.;_______ j210
B~
central air, Racine, $35,000,
0314
Someone to care lor elderiy I
OftoKruNfJY
(740)949·2070
Channing church building
~:-:---::--:----- woman In Point Pleasant
In grut Pl PIH..nl ,..,..
Rk:k Pearson Auction Com- GAOWINQ BUSINESS Uttle housekeeping and
Ranch Style Home with lion 545 ,000 Maka a offer
pany, full lime auctioneer,
NEEDS HELP!
meal prep. Non smoker.
INOncEI
Country Silting. 2.1 Acres.
complete auction service. Work lrom home. Mall· or- Please send Ret. to EB08 OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· 2)'r old, 30r., 2 bath, 2 Car 304-675-1 816
Llcansed M66,0hlo &amp; West
der/E-Commerce
200 Main Street, Pt. Pleas- lNG CO. recommends that Garage, Deck, Central
VIrginia, 304-773-5785 Or $500+1 week PT. $1000- ant wv 25550 •
you do buslneas wbh people HeaVAir, HIW, Serber CorLoTs &amp;
304·773-5447.
$40001 week FT
'
you know, and NOT to send pel, Ceramic Tile, Centrally
www.futurenow4u.com
Someone to care for my money through the mall until located between HuntingWANfFD
(888)672-3871
mother In my homa In you have Investigated the ton, Teays Valley, Point
Cheshire, 8:30·12:30, $5.50 offering.
Pleasant,and tn Apple 2_7 acros, Welch Town Hill,
,
Help wanlod caring tor the hour, (740)367-o302.
- - - - - - - -- Grove, WI/. $134,000 Will '" 700, (937)878 _2780
elderly, Oars! Group Home, _...:,.:_.;.__;._____
)
"'
II
URGENTLY
NEEDED- Allenllonl Be your own COnsider Offers (304 576·
Absolute Top Collar. U.S. oow pa"ng
m
n
mum
wage,
Bossi
$500-$8,000/Month
3228
Sltver, Gold Coins, Proof- new a."'lfts 7am-3pm, 7am- plasma donors, earn $45 to PT/FT No Expenence Nee- =::..._______ 4 acres In Jackson County
'ets, Diamonds, Gold Spm, 3pm-11 pm, 11pm- $60 lor 2 or 3 hou,. weekly. essary 888_300-4915
Three BR. 2 bath, garden olf SR 35 East on BloomRings , US . Currency,· 7am, call 740·992·5023.
Call Sera-Tee, 740·592· www seriouslncomenow co tub, cia, cedar sided, fenced field Township Driveway
MT.S. Coin Shop, t 51 Sec6651 ,
1n play yard &amp; hot tub, with building site. Utilities
$59,900, (740)992_2045
close by unrestricted,
ond Avenue, GallipOlis, 74Q. Loans available good, bad, - - - - - - - - - m
no credit. bankruptcy weiStart Your Business To$19,000
negotiable .
448-2842.
'
come No application lees ~llage ol Rutland has an day . Prime Shopping ConMOBilE HOME'i I(,7~402:)88.:.2:.·:::99::8::9____
- Neod Dependable baby Ill- fast approval call loll lroe -nlng lor clerl&lt;llreaaurer tar Space Available AI Af·
FOR SALE
-Comp Sites For Rent On
tar? Unk or Sail Pay M-F. 1-668-807.()92()
~
rdabl A
S ri
(304)67s. 74116 , t5yro. exp. ------'------- position. Applicant must live 1o
• ate. P ng VaHey
Kanawha Rlvsr, ,8 miles
Looking tor a AdvMisl"if within tho VIllage. Apply at Plaza, Calt740-448-Q101.
·BIZZUN·
' lrom Point Pleasant, electric
I ' 11 '111' \II ' I
I'ROFE'illiONAL
Hot summer deals
only.
(304 )875-1722.
sates Representative Pari· the village offk:e balore Aunme. Experieooa a Plus gusll41h
S
·FREE·
(304)675·4144After 5pm
' I I{\ II I '
Call (740)441 ·11616
Wonlld- Nurolnft
ERVICEJ&gt;
Heat pump or central air
•
lth th p -aso or oelect Green Township f miles
'o
Rootaurant
now
Aall
...
nta
w
e u.....~.,
1rom Holzer. -ull
a.. 1ul BulldMcCiur.
TURNED DOWN ON
In sIoc k rnoda Ia
hiring all 3 locations lull or We are now hiring State
Tasted Nurolng Aaalttenta. SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
·WHERE·
lng Sileo. Somo Fleotricllons
'
peri·llmt, pk:k up appllca· We have both Full-limo and No Fee Unleaa We Wlnl Coles Mobile Homes. 15286 (740)«8·9968
Dental Aoelatant needed lion at loCation &amp; bring back Pari·llmo posltlone avollabll
1-688·562·3345
US 50 Eut, Athena,
Experlor1c:o pralorred. Sind batwton
11:30im
&amp; lor all ohllto. 11 you 111 olnOh .45701
ltoumo to: CLA5211 clo IO:OOom, Monday tnru Sot· Olrtly lnttrooted In wori&lt;lng
·PHONE·
Qalllpollo Dally Tribune, 1125 urday.
In the long term helllh oaro
(740)592· t972
Third Avonuo, Qalllpollt, OIIIOI Employoo Ntt&lt;ft&lt;f· ftold, piiUt aPPly In poroon
.
HoMEs
~-.,-....,.....,.--.,..OH 41!831
~I oompany It
II Holzar Stnlor C1ro ConFOR SALE
"'
an lnctiYidUII Who It Hlf· Ill, 380 Colonlll on-, lidFl,..l Daye, Nationwide In•• • 0 ppoMunltyl11 work matlvaltcf. Mull hlvt good Will, Ohio, batwetn
•• lht 31oll with 2 n10 3 bedroom vonlory
~
(:104) 73&amp;-340t Fleduotlonl
1
~rom Home. 1100-11 500/pl llttp!fortt llcllll, aompuler ltoure of lam and 4:30pm, nomn Flltllol propariy, ::::::.;,::.:.,.;::.;...---,.
12500·18000/11. Moll Oilier. llitlllt a plu1. )I lnttrotlld, MOndiV· ~rldiY or oall good lnoome, 110.000 . Lot Modol Clt1rano1 all
t-100-H2-41142
lind fllljlfll 10: FIHume, (740)4~1o1001 and uk lor (740)445·1~73
2001 mull go oavt Thou·
www.Oj)j)Onunlty4111.nll
P.O. loo 711, Clllllpolle, lull or MIMII.
aande. "utwood Homte ot
Act Newt
OH 41111
Wlnlt&lt;f: 1omoon1 10 root e room•. 1·112 bltn, CIA., P~loNIIIe. Toll ~ 111 Ill·
11
Now Aootollna AJIDIIOiilonl em111 poroh, 1nd 1n11111 tltctrlo hill, ttnood, ::
::5:.;:0~11::1....,.--:-:....,.-lnllrniiiOIIII.,IInHI
txpanctlng. I21/11SIIt. M tor Hontt HooMh .AICIH lnd dreln: Fllpelt brlokl In lire- IOrtlrltd In polllh, 112 1011 Now 14 Wldt, 3 ltdroorn.
III·IIH113,
DNA'I. Apply 11 151 Thl~ pleot. Call (740)441·3201 Chllhlre. (740)441 •1033 Pnlvl t USQ ~rot D1llvary
~.m~g~bUoltMyou.nlf
Ave. Clalllppllt.
aftll epm
(140):117·0114.
&amp;Ill Up. 1·111·121-21111
Big Z Tranapori. Will Pull Cardiology Ullrsaound Tech
Ultrasound Tech
Single and
Sectional
Homes Local or Factory DI- Insurance COding Clerk
Medical Lsb Tech
rect. Call for Rates
Hardware Tech
(740)2'88-4144 or (740)710·
ANI LPN- Lawrence County
6800

t

The. Dally Sentinel • Page B 3 ·

lWos_&amp;.....,..,IStringer remembered as
fu n-I0¥1ng,
• generous

.....

Call .. CICHUI&amp;y. OH

Word Ads

.•

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

11,000 BACK 2 Ton Air 1998 Dodge Intrepid ES,
eonditloner, 2 Ton Coil, 1 Candy appJe red , leather
Line Set, Installed. $2,295, completely loaded, alloY
$1 ,000 Bacl&lt;, $1295 Net wlleels, new Goodyear
Price. Free E1tlmates. Call tires, sporty lull size car,
For Quotes On Other Siz88 111,000 highway miles
If You Don' Call Ua, runo great 25mpg. S5oo0
We Both Losel Mobile 080. (740)441-otas
Homes Our Speciality I- -:::::-::-----740..w;-6308 1-800·291 · t997 Toyota Camry, 52,000
0098
mtles, auto, power sun roof,
PDL, power mirrors, 2.21~or
10 New wlnOows for com- engine, keyless entry, car
pl818 nome. double pe1ned aU!nn at toy wheats 2
w/grid (304)n3-5709
tires, ' AWFM c~ss!::,
clean $12 500 8 ff
NEW AND USED STEEL (740)446-oeSo 001f ~~.;
Steel Beamo, Pipe Rebar 2pm
~"' Concreto, Angle, Chan· __;__ _ _ _ _ __,__
nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating 1990 Cougar LS. all Power
~or Dratna, Drivewaya &amp; 52 OOOml good condition
'-'otkways. New 55 Gallon S4:ooo (304)675-5019 an.;
Drums With Lid &amp; Ring, 6pm or leave message
17.00 Each. L&amp;L Scrap Mot111 Open Monday, Tuesday, 1990 While Cadillac Deville,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Sam- 139,000 miles, good condl·
4:30pm. Cloaod Thullday, lion, $4500. Call (740)44 tSaturday
&amp;
Sunday. 0433
(740)448-7300
-'--'-'------':-:__;,._-:----:---::--- 1998 Lumina, loaded, excelPrinlll Stan&lt;l $25, Bottled lent condition , $7,500,
gas lank, 20 lb $10, Pipe (740)949-2203
threader S1U, Chain, 3181n.,
12 ft. long 110, (740)992· 1998 Mercury Tracer, like
2369
new, auto, •-cylinder, 4
doot; 2 lrallero, 5 bedrooms,
RESIDENTIAL HOME
gas heat, (740)441·1033
OWNEAS
2000 Hyundle Elantra, tully
Tappen HI Efficiency 90% loaded, air, 1111, cruise, PW,
Gas Furnaces. 011 Fuma- PL, power moon roof,
paa, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp; AM/FM cassette, keyless
Air Conditioning Systems entry (740)448-e982
Frea 8 Year Warranty Bsn- 69 camaro, now paint, new
nons Healing &amp; Cooling, 1- floors, 263 engine. 4 speed,
It 0 0 • 8 7 2 • 5 9 B 7 $4200,
(740)448-7458
wwworvb.cotnibennen
(740)44 I· tS46
••
G c
6
Wa I-mart
o art.
HP. 74 Chevy Nova, 350 enUke New $ 600 f740)44tl· gina, automatic lransmls·
9966
slon, 4 door, 1 owner,
Water
wells
drilled. 48,000 m1les, S2t95 080.
(740)866·7311
(740)379-2706

------~--------------~---------·

95 Chevy Silverado 4, 4 E•tended cab 63000 miles
Excellent ' ' Condition
$15900 (304)675-7256 ·

jj~~·;.;;.;;..:;
, ::,;:;;.;.;;.;.;;;.._,

WARREN, Ohio (AP) - With large. pots of white calla
lilies Oanking his open black coffin, Korey Strmger was
remembe red as a fun-loving, generous man who "never for1983 Honda Shadow, Good got anyone."
Conditton. $1200 (304)882About I ,300 people packed the First A ssembly of God
3273
- - - - .- - - - - church Monday for the two-hour funeral of the Minnesota
I 994 Kodak 400 4&lt;4, new
brakes, new hub on the Vtkings ' lmeman who dted of heatstroke last week ,
Iron!, runs good. $2,000
The crowd was so large that a spi llover group of abou_t 300
OBO. Coli (740)388-1808 or
cell pllons (740)441 -2775
more had to watch the service on closed- ctrcuit TV in an
adjoining
gym, while hundre ds more gath e red outside.
116 YZ 80, $1300. (740)448182_ _ _ _ _ __
.:.11:.::
That's how mu ch folks in Stnnger's ho m etown m north97 Kawasaki 4 wlleel dr. 4
wheeler $3000. 060 304· east Ohio loved htm. The 6-foor-4, 335-pound offensive
578·9991
'-:-';_:;.:;..:.=----::--- tackle was later buri ed there m his purple No. 77Vikings Jer99 Gas EC 250, $3200 . sey.
(740)448·1682
"He'd be shocked by all the people here today." Vikings
New 2000 Yamaha Royal teammate Cris Carter sa1d after the servtce, which was closed
Star Oreaser, loaded, mlleage 1,025: candy applel8dl to reporters . "He thought he was just a normal person ."
chrome, $13,800. Call
Carter joined Stringer's w1fe, Kelc1 , at the funeral along
(740)441-5218 or evening
(740)448-o10t
with dozens ofVikings, mcluding Daunte Culpepper, Randy
BoATS &amp; MO'JORS Moss and coach Dennis Green; plus former Ohio State
FOR SAlE
teammates Eddk George of the Tennessee Titans and Orlan1991 Bayllnor Capri Ski do Pace of the St. Louis Rams.
"It was a rejoicing that h e 's moved on," Pace said.
Boat, skla &amp; all acce880rl88,
excel~! condition, S6.700.
"
We're
sad
about
that,
but
hopefully he's gone to a better
(740)949-2203
place."
Avro PARI'S &amp;
A
Alfie Burch, a teammate of Stringer's at Warren G . Harding
CCI'li!iOIIJES 1
High School, said the 27-year-old offenstve tackle considered
33x1250 Outlaw Wheels himself an " ordinary guy" despite bemg a Pro Bowl player
nd ti
A ..... ad ... lVI.
(740)3~;:92~~... 11 · ....,., who made millions.
..:::...,..-------"He never forgot his bometown and h e never forgot the
84 Chevy 8ft. Tluck bed
$300 , 24ft. Tandom Axle kids," Burch saJd.
trailer with electric brakes
"You could see him down at the mall. He'd stop and he'd
Waterilne Special· 314 200 88 Honda CRX 51, 5 speed, $1000 (304)773-5709
PSI $21 .95 Per 100: 1' 200 black with gray Interior,
PSI $37.00 Per tOO; All 38mpg,
(740)256-6692 , Budgot PriGOd Tronoml• talk to everybody. He stayed in touch with all of his old
Brasa Comprssalon FIUings $1000.
otono All TYPe•. Acceaa To coach es. He was a great person. He JUSt n ever forgot anyone."
In Stock
97 Mustang GT black v.6 Over 10,000 Transmissions,
Stnnger died early Wednesday, 15 hours after a grueling
AOH EVANS ENT~RPAIB- 28,500 miles, $t S,500 • ~sl~r IC~~7t:0·245·
ES Jackson, 011/o, HIOO- (304) 875,7944
• e·
·
workout in stifling humidity and temperatures -in the 90s .
537·9528
CAMI'f:RS &amp;
NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue, vtsttmg the C leveland
Wilson tOOO magnetic 99 Pontiac Grsnd Am, Red,
MOTOR HO/'.IE8 1
mount CB antenna with 4 door, automatic, loaded, -. Browns in Berea, said he does not believe the league will
30,000 miles, $9500 080
)6
$40
7
79
COlli ,
(304 5-8 S (740)245-9753
1994 Jayco 30 ft. PuH be- change its training camp schedule to reduce the risk of heatBUDJHNG
hind OUeen Size bed.. Built stroke.
Lively s Auto Sales- 1987 In Air Microwave and Ster·
He said, however, that the league needs to examine poten·--Sul'l'lmJiiiiititiiiiiiiio_pl.
Chevy 1900:
S·IO 1992
pk:k·up,
S7·500
(304)576-2328
•
speed,
Eagle5 eo.
___
__
_ _ __
tial health issues facing increasingly large players .
Premier, auto, 11200; t991
Block, brick, sewer pipes, Ford Taurus, auto, S1200: 1995 Classic Dutchmen
windows, lintels, etc Claude 1990 Ford Probe auto camper, 26 ft. with expanWiniiiS, Rio Grande, OH $800· 1990 Dodge Monaco' do, $10,000.(740)992-7739
I 0 points, all with Germaine
Call740- 245·5121
auto,' $1000; 1988 ChevY 2000 Rockwood told out
at quarterback. He completAstro Van, 5 speed, $800, camper, w/AC, Like new.
~
I 992 Mercury Topaz, 5 (304)675-3004
ed both attempts for 2 5
"
·
·
speed,
$800,
1885
Chevy
:.__:__:.__.:..:_.
_
_
_
_
leading to J effWilkins'
yards
'
Celebrity, auto, $400, 1985 Open all aluminum trailer for
3 year old temals Yorkshire Dodge 800, converilble, sale, Aluma LTD, 18 ft.
34-yard fteld goal, then hit
Terrier lor Sale $300. $900; 1980 Ford Pinto. 4 long, GVWR 7,000 lbs,
it."
all five of his p asses in a 59(740)256-e95o or (740)441· speed, $800: 1988 Olds electric brakes, tandem
0755
Clara, auto, $1000, 1885 axles, 1500 miles, I year
Miami gained 25 yards on yard drive that h e capped b y
- - - - - - - - Chevy Cavalier, auto, $350; old, $3100 (740)949-2217
AKC Reglsterod Dachsllund 1985 Pontiac Perlslenne
its first play of the exhibition keeping up the m1ddle for a
puppies 1st shots &amp; SW, $600, 1888 Nlssan
season, a pass from J ay 2-yard touchdown.
wormed' · 7 weeks old 1 PICk up, auto, $1200, 1980 jftp;;:::;;;;;;;;:::::::::;;
Germaine p assed for twice
male. $:ioo, t tamale, $250 Ford Mustang. auto, $600: r~o
HoME
Fiedler to Rob Konrad . On
AKC, Red tamale, 2 yearo, 1988 Bu~k Electra, auto,
IMPilO\'EMENJ'S
the n ext play, however, as many yards as anyone else
CKC, Red male, 2112 years, $900, 1889 Chevy Cavalier,
$100 each or Will consider auto, $800, 1968 Chevy G·
Ftedler's pass was ttpped by in the game.
trading, (740)992-3265
20 Van, $1400: 1990 Chevy
WA~~PERM00
ENTFING
hnebacker Don Davis and
"The job of No. 2 is to b e
Alumina, auto, $1 000; 1990
,•~
CKC regtaterod Shih-Tzu Plymouth Sundance, auto, Unconditional lltotlme guar· intercepted
by
Dexter ready at any time," h e said.
puppies, 3 males, asking $1200; 1983 Ford Fairmont, antee. Local relerenceslur- M Cl
"That is what I must prepare
$300, ready Augual 12, auto, 1400: t990 Chevy nlshed. Established 1975.
c eon.
(740)992-1050.
Corsica, 5 speed, $1000, Call 24 Hro. (740) 446The Dolphins avoided a ny · to do."
ell
Call
Monday
through
Friday
0870,
1·8()(1.287·0576.
gll
'
tches on thel·r second posCanidate caught four p assPure b1~A
~ otw er pupe, 8 lrom 9am-5pm. Saturday Rogera Watarprootlng.
es ~for 77 yards and also
weeke old. Tallo docked, 9am to 3pm. CIOoed Sun· - - - - - - - -= - session, going 70 yards in 11
shots, wormed, ready to go. days. (740)386-9303
1
Mother &amp; taUter on prom· iiir.;;..~~;;;;;;;.._., c&amp;c General Home Malnta- p ays, capped by Lamar rushed for 26 yards.
lsos. $150 (740)441.()592
FORTR~nonce- Painting, vinyl std· Smith 's 2-yard run. Fiedler
The Dolphms' Ohndo
Rat
terrier
puppies ~
~
~'!.~:':?·..=:·~ was 3-for-3 on the drive for Mare kicked a 45-yard fi e ld
wormed ,
llrst
shots
repelr and more. For kee 43 yards - each pass good goal on th e last play of the
(740)245-5597
1974 Ford F·IOO Ranger e832sllme3te call Chat, 740-992· "or a first down.
XLT, 380 V-8, Automatic,
"
half to tie it at 10.
Rotwoller Puppies. I mate, Factory Air. Straight· No
"I
I d .h
B ackup quarterback Ray
was p ease WI! our
8 females, $150 each. Rust. S2500. (304) 576_3344 Interior &amp; Exterior remodel·
Mothar and Fathll 011 pramlng, chain link fence, hOme first offen se;' Miami coach Lucas strained his back and
1881 (740)388-9685
1983 Cto, 112 ton Chevy repairs, custom wood work
F'Runs &amp;
Full·slze bod, runs good &amp; decks. Mr Fix 111 Dave Wann st e dt sai d . "I didn't play in the second half
VEGEIABU:S
11500. (740)448-7473
(304)675-3733
think Jay was a little n-ervous for Miam1. The Dolphins
~
1988 International Dump Livingston's Basement Wa- on the opening drive. We also lost defensive end Jason
10' Bed. 1900 Sones, tor Proollng, all baoement
h ball
11
d J
Sweet Com, Baughman Truck
we an
ay Taylor with a shoulder
Farm, Wholesale Only In 4E6 Diesel, excellent sl\&amp;pe. repairs done, tree esll· qn t e
1948 malls, lllellme guarantee. made some plays."
injury and running back
k&gt;ts of 50 dozen or more. $1Q,400. FIRM.,
Dodge, Utility bed 112 ton, 14yrs on Job experience.
The Rams scored the nex t Johnson wtth a knee injury.
(740)256·8535
Body good shape. $1500. (304)895·3887.
FIRM, Commercial air comI l lt \l 'i 1'1'11 1'
.\ 11 \ 1· .... 14 )( h
pressor, 4 cylinder. ga•.
ELF.cnuCAIJ 1
jpjjp;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;; Jack Hammer. $2200.
ilFHuGERA110N
FARM
FIRM. (304)895·3859
~
Realdantlal or commercial
~995 Ford
F·l50
XLT,
4&lt;4, wiring, new service or reloaded,
extra
sllarp,
41 ,000
pairs Master Ucensed eleomiles. (740)256·1243
Ford 4000 Tractor with 6 ft
trlclan. Ridenour E.lectrlcal,
Front End Loader, A1 Con- t995 Ford Plck·up XLT King Wl/000306, 304-675-1788.
dillon, Gaa,52 HP. 6 b Box Cab, Color: Midnight Blue.
Blada, B n Flnlsll Mower, 5 cap top matches truck ~"'- r-"iiKjir~ISfl
ft. Brush Hog, Double Plow, 35t-EFI engine. oil cooler,
8 ft. Disk, $7500. (304)675· transmission cooler, new
5866
tires, eleclrk: sliding sun
roof, CO player. Extra, ald.ra
Massey Ferguson tractor, chrome. Chrome brush
290, excellent tires, wet guard. Many Extras Asking
Hnea, roll bar, clean &amp; well $9,500, Balow Blue·book.
kept, 3100 hoUrs, asking, ean be seen at 716 Third
110 Help Wanted
$9800, (740)949-2313
Avenue, Gallipolis, or call
(740)448-9426
.

For..&gt; .

I

r

I

MOJOIIC\'CI.EN

j

i

r

I

from PageB1

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i

J.J.

io
I
L,--·F'..QuJPMoo'·----,1

r

from Page B3

Bret Boone homered as .
the Marinets sc.ored. at least:
once in each of the first five:
innings to win for the nmth •
time in 1 1 games.
Norm Charlton struck out .
the stde m the e tghth but put;
two on with one out in the ;
ninth.
•
•
He
then
struck
out•
Roberto
Alomar
before ~being r eplaced by J ose Paniagua, Sunday's loser, who got
Gonzalez to fly to c enter for .
his third save.
•
" We battled back · again,":
md Manu e l. " We had Con-:
zalez up there tn the ninth ·
with a chance, but w~
couldn 't come a ll the way :
back."
Jim Thome hit h 1s AL-:
lea dmg 37th homer and:
M arty Cordova hom ere d for:
the Indtans, who couldn't :
quite
duplicate
their
improbable rally when they ;
trailed 12-0 after three :
innmgs and 14-2 in the sev-:

during its four-game stay
at Jacobs Field, and should
have left wtth a sweep except
that its bullpen imploded in
Sunday's 15-14 loss.
"They play free and easy,"
lndtans starter Charles Nagy
(4-5) said of the M an ners
afte r they roughed him up .
"They don 't have a care in
the world. That's what happens when you're 50 games
over .500."
·
As the Manners ate then
postgame meal s, th ey looked
up to see yet another TV
replay of Kenny Lofton shding across home plate to cap
Cleveland's comeback the
night before .
"What, they won agam ?"
shouted J ay Buhner.
Nope, no improbable rallies this time.
Abbott made sure of i t,
remaining unbeaten since
M ay 22 - a span of 14 starts
- by allowing SIX runs and
seven hits in seven innings.
The right-hander, who got
a huge strikeout of Juan
. Gonzalez in the seve nth
with the tying runs on, ts

ans.

enth.

:

Sloppy fieldin g by the;
Indians, who made four ·
errors in the first three :
mnings, h elp ed the Mariners :.
take a 5-2 lead,
·

.

r

I ,

Tribe

now 5 - 0 in seve n c are er
appearances against th e lndi- .

Jones
from PageB1
pionships by a back i njury,
will be the favonte when that
event begms Wednesday. Pintusevich-Block, the 1997
world champion m the 200,
sajd Monday she's not sure if
she will compete in that race
tn Edmonton.
Avoiding a similarly shocking upset was women's pole
vaulter Stacy Dragila, who
won gold only because she
had one fewer miss than Svetlana Feofanova of Russta.
Both women cleared 15 feet,
7 inches, and missed three
times at the world- re cord
Height of 15-9 3/4; Dragila has dominated the
event since it became a part of
maJor track and field championships in the late 1990s .
" We're both No. 1 today,"
Drag1la sa1d after sprinting
down the runway to embrace
Feofanova after the Russian's

final

IDJ§S . "This

is awesome."

Other winners Monday
were Avard Moncur of the
Bahamas, who won the men's
400 meters in 44.64: Osleidys
Menendez of Cuba m the
women's javehn; and Jonathan
Edwards m the triple jump.
A day after winnmg h1s

third straight world tttle m the ~
men's 100, Maunce Greene
withdrew from the rest of the
meet because of a strained left
thigh that hobbled hun at th e ·
end of h is w m ning run S unday night.
'
Greene, who announced·
Sunday night he wo uld not
be able to defend his title in
the 200, said M o nday he also :
was withdrawing from the :
400- meter relay because "I .
don't want to damage the ·

team.''
Greene, who anchored the
U.S. relay team to v tctory a t
the 2000 Sydney O!ymp tcs,
will return to Los Angeles for
rehabilitation of the leg.
U.S. champ to n
R egma :
Jacob s withdrew from the ·
women's 800 b ecau se of a
nght foot injury and returned
home to Oakland, Ca!t f, and
1997~-wo rld c h a mpion Ato
Boldon pulle d Ol) t of th e·
men's 200. H e complamed o(
back pain followmg th e 100
final on Sunday.
John Godin a fatled m h ts
b id for an unprece dente d
sweep of the world utles tn :
the shot put and d1scus. Two .
days after gettmg gold in the
shot put, Godma managed
just 21st place in discus qualifymg Monday and fatled to ·
advance to the finals.

r

Ads

i

~

I

1997 Ram, 2WD, 84,000
· miles, excellent condition .
(740)441·1651 Seat offer
12 roooters, large breed, I
year old. Four month old
~Old English Cochln mix 85 Ford ~anger, 5 speed, 4
"Bantam,
$3 00
each cylinder, good condllion
(740)992-4265
yalve job, new Ignition sys:.......:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ tam, new allemator &amp; bat·
Syr. Palomloo Golding haH tory, new ,.,ndsllleld. $925.
Linger or Syr. Bslglan Geld- (740)256-6484
lng St 200. Each. 7yr Saddian mare $1500. 578-3216 94 Dodge Ram t500. 2
or 578-3219
wheel d11ve. Asking $4100
~•
.,_
"
~- Will Negotiate. (740)2581 '"""'' • w~ 9224
Bu ,~.erng
, old baby pigs, (740)949· =::......----:-:---2017
95 GMC Sonoma pickup
Ext. Cob, auto, Air, 48,000
HAY &amp;
miles. silver, excellent con·
~
GRAIN
dtllon. (304)675-2915 .

nr--':'!'-::---,

r

AUTOMOTIVE
SALESPEOPLE NEEDED

The
Daily
Sentinel

l:tilll'..;.-:=:-..;...;......, -----,----

1982 Chevy Pick-up, 74,000
actual miles, 250, 6-cytlnder, auto, $1200; 1990 Hy· 1987 Chevy Blazer. 4x4,
undla, 112.000 mlloe, auto, automatic, 350 automatic,
lull elza· loaded . 81,000
$6()0, (740)379-9257
miles. one owner. (740)2561243
1984 CJ 7 7 Jeep. 4 cylln· .::
dar, 4 speed, $3500. :.:::.......____
(740)379·9257
1989 Bronco II, 89,000
mllea, 4WO, excellent con1987 Chryaler LeBaron, dillon. (740)387·7973 leave
IJ(10d
condition, $1200 message pteue.
OBo (740)99:l·I 050
1997 GMC, 4x4 truck. Ex·
1991 Dodge Stealth AlT. cellon! Condition. 114•000 ·
Twin Turbo. 300 HP, 5 (304)682 ' 3391
speed, toadod. Awooome 87 Dodge Ram Charger,
car 114,000 miles. Run• =4•=4-:..:$:::3000=-~(7_:::40:!.)446=,:.;1562.::..
Groat. NADA Book $9150,
snoo oao. (740)441.0135 94 GMC Sierra trur:ll, 4&gt;&lt;4.
Voriec V·8, cd changer,
1994 Plymouth Acclaim, klcl&lt;OI speakers, $8500,
$1500 .
1992 Camara. (740)992·5025.
$271JJ), (740)742·2357

-DEBT CONSOUDATION'"'
a1mple low monthly payment
High Interest
Save
whlle becoming debt tree
ml1~10(1nlnl8for renters, homeownert 8nd

DUE TO OUR CONTINUED
GROWTH, TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS IS LOOKING FOR
ADDITIONAL SALES PEOPLE.
Previous experience helpful
but not necessary.
We' will train the right penon.
We seek·aggrenlve, self·startlng
profenlonal salespeople with the
desire to eun well above average
income. We offer benefit
package, including 40lk, medical
and retirement benefits, a five
work week and no Sundays.

:::~;;:~1

Mailing Our Sales Brocnuresl
Free Supplies, Postage!
Stari lmmedlalelyl
Genu1ne Opportumtyl
For Free InformatiOn,
Call Toll Free
t -888-615-1835

a

S6-S7/HR
Easy Indoor
work flexible
hours full/part
time hum II
":I'
Positions fiHing
lckl I
QU y,

No Phone Calls Pleas•

see Pat Hill

or Brian Ross

1-888-974-JOBS
COG

l!letwHn ,D a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.

management, lLC

IOE

CASH LOANS!
' Bad Cred•t OK
·Mosl Qualify

·Fast S&amp;NICe

OUT OF DEBT FREEl Slot&gt; I
calla, reduc8 payment&amp; up
lower Interest
lllce,nae,d. bonded Cell
4862)

Programo~:;::::::lr:~~~~~~~~~~;~

and Free
IEnh1an&lt;emont
I

credit
s:~~:::n~ In w1th
credit cards,
a«
medical bil!a and
loans. Call t-800-897·2200 Ext
A501(c)(3)Not·For·Profit OtiJBnlzo!H&gt;n I

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio
•

---------------------------·

PHILLIP
ALD~R

....
4

KENSINGTON
W1NDOWS HEAT

R....-llng

• New O.ragea

• Eloctricol • Plumbing
• Rooftng • Gunoro
• VInyl Siding • Pointing

992-6215
Pomeroy. ~

I

y

Free Est imates

740-992-1101
or992-2753
Public Notices In

Your Right to Know,
Delivered Right to Your Door.

NOT I
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATION
va
ANGELAL.
CAPEHART
aka ANGELIA L.
CAPEHART el al.
LEGAL NOTICE
Angola L. Capehart
aka Angelle L.
Capehart, whose last
place of realdence Is
ki\Own •• 846 E..t
lo!aln Stroot, Pomeroy,
OH 45788, but whoso
pro .. nt place of
realdonco 11 unknown
and John Doe,
Unknown Spouse, If
any, of Angola L.
Capehart aka Angello
L. Capehart, whoaa
laet place of residence
· 11 known 11 848 Eell
Main Slrtol, Pomeroy,
OH 45788, bul WhOIO
pruent place of
reeldonco 11 unknown,
will take notiOI that an
June 14, 2001,
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATION flied Ill
Complaint In CaM No.
01 CV1 01 In the Coun
of Common Plea• ol
Melge County, Llrry E.
Spencer,
Mal g 1
County Clark al
Courto, P.O. Bo• 151,
100 Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45781,
111klng loraclaeure

Ne•wspiBJ"!rs.

OleloN•w..,rA.UPC'-IHM
I

Doe,

Spouse,

Capehart

have

740-992-5232

or ·

Interest In the real
estate described

TREE SERVICE

below;

EXHIBIT"A"
The following real
eetato elluatod In tho
county ol Molgo, In tho
elate ol Ohio and In
tho
Vlllogo of ·
an d

bounded
and
doacrlbod as lollowo:
A place of ground lilly .
IHI wide out ol the ,

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column Inch Sundays

aouthwe1t corner of ·

Lot No. 12 In tho Plat
al• Dllloburg, now Lot
No. 280 In Pomeroy,
Ohio, which 11
bounded
and
deecrlbod •• lallowo:
beginning on the waet
elde al eold Lot No.
(280) two hundred ond
ninety atoou1h aide ol
the Ilona aldowolk an
the north oldo ol Front
StrHt; thence north
with the weal aida al
Mid lot No. 210 to the
lace al the rocka or
blull; thenoe alii (50)
lilly 1111 with the
racu and parollel with

Top • Trl• • Ra•onl
BucllatSarvlca

Advertise your
message
Till DEDI
CIIITIICTII8
Complete Home
Repair
Remodeling
New Additions
Garages

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_ _;...._ _ __
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WV0282120
Franl StrMt; thence
MORTGAGE
filE EI1IUIU
south to tho oouth
ASSOCIATION
.... 112-1121
aida ol the atone
By: Shapiro 6 Felty,
.
Ll.P.
aklawolk IItty lao! Nit
of the ploca of
U•M.Michaal8, .
beginning; thence
Anornay II Llw
we at with aald
Attorney far Plalntlll·
aldowalk to the ploca
Pllltlaner
al beginning.
aoo Wall SL Clair r-L:-0-11
-:-:w=-er=-g~ht~N=-o-w"'
The Delandonta
Ave.,
AkMH
2nd Floor
S 8 OW
nomad above are
Clevalond, OH44113 Wllolhlfyou'rolrylngto
required to an•w•r an
(2111) 1121·1530 loontlgh~ oupplomont
or belano the 28 doy of
(7) :11, (8) 7, 14, 21, 28,
JOUrdlolfa~mulmum
001, 2 ,2001, ·
nlrtrltlon, 01 )UIIIook y&lt;ro~r
FEDERAL (I) 4
gru!MI wltfl the boot
NATIONAL
............ ptG&lt;tucto,

NFL CAMP- NEWS

HlttM/11e In _ _ ....

Brees finally signs with Chargers

-.... dlolriiMIIor,
JlL Entorprtoo

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
.
ta Vikings offensive lineman. The 27SAN DIEGO (AP) --: San Drego year-old Stringer died last week of heat. Chargers coach M1~e R1ley made a . stroke following a training-camp practice
.
·
pomt of stress1ng the Importance of get- session.
ring Drew Brees signed and get into
Rehbein_cuached for 23 seasons in the
training ca~pNFL, beginning in 1979 with the Green
The rookie ~uarterback got the mes- Bay Packers. He worked eight seasons
sage Monday mght.
•
with the Vikings from 1985 to 1991 and
• Hardwood Floorlria
Brees, the record-setter from Purdue, eight seasons with the New York Giants
• CO!Iioleum
agreed to · a four-year between 1992 and 1999.
FREE
ESTIMATES
contract with
the
Rehbein, who joined the Patriots in
Pllone
fl04J
"'..__.. '""
Chargers.
.
February 2000, is survived by his wife,
Pl.
The deal IS worth - Pam, and daughters Betsy and Sarabeth,
roughly $10 mdhon an intern in the Patriots media relations
·and includes a signing department during training camp at
b~n~s of close to $2 Bryant College.
milhon, a source dose
The team canceled practice Monday . ·ROBERT BISSELL
to the negotiations, following the announcement of · CONSTRUOION
.._......-'liZ~--' speaking on the condi- Rehbein's death.
•New Homes
. COLTS
tion of anonymity, told
BrHs
The Ass~ciated Press.
. TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) - Heat •Garages
Brees, the fi~t p1ck m the second was also a problem: for two Indianapolis • Complete
MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
round of ~pnls draft, IS expected to Colts linemen that were helped from the
Remodeling
Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
compete wrth former CFL star Dave field near the end of practice Monday.
Stop &amp; Compare
Box 189
Rookie offensive lineman Ryan
Dickenson. for the No. 2 spot behmd
FREE ESTIMATES
Mrddlcport. Ohro 45760
D?.ug Aune.
.
.
Diem ~nd second-ye.ar defensive tackle
740-992-1671
- Local 843·5264
.
How many snaps has he mrssed, a Josh Williams were taken on golf carts
young iuarter~~ck that nught be the to the training room for treatment.
M~-dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
back~p. Tons, R1ley sa1d Monday
Neither the players nor team doctors ·,-..,;;,-_,--..., Burial and Final Ellpenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
. mornmg.
_
,
were available for comment following
8rees,_who rmssed the Chargers fi_rst the afternoon practice.
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
19 practices, lS expected to be at pracuce
"The heat got to them a little bit, but I
COHTRAOORS, INC. Mortgage: Major Medical
Tuesday afternoon.
.
think they'D be OK," coach Jim Mora .Recine, Ohlo48n1
• Nursing Home
At Purdue, Brees threw for a Blg Ten- said. "Everybody's a little jitter ish right
740.985·3948
record 11,792 yards ~uring his college now because of what happened."
. CONCRETF/BLOCK/BRICK
Pomeroy Eagles
career and led th~ Boilermakers to their
Mora was referring to the death .last • Footers, Walla, Steps •
Club Bingo
first Rose Bowl smce 1967.
week of Minnesota Vikings lineman
Repl•~=e~~~Walkl
On Thuredays
· General manager John Butler spoke Korey Stringer, who died of heatstroke
and Drives. Stencil .
All
Makes
Thactor
&amp;
At 6:30p.m.
with Brees soon after the deal was COJTI- last week.
Crete Fne EaUmales
Equipment Parts
• Main Street
pi;,ted.
.
.
Temperatures reached 88 degrees with
S....ln1 Ohio and W.V.
Pomeroy, 01 rio
I told him he gets to start the career a heat index of 95. ,
· ·
WV 1031712
Factory Authorized
he's always dreamed about," Butler said.
UONS
Paying
$80.00
Case-Ill Parts ·
per game
. "I said, 'Let's put aside business and get to
UNIVERSITY CENTER, · Mich.
Dealers
$300.00 Coverall
work.' It's _going to take a lot o~. extra (AP) -, Lions running back James Stew1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Starburst
work on hiS part to get caught up.
. art slightly strained his right hamstring. Hauling &amp;
Coo/v/1111, OH 45723
· Progressive top line
Runmng b.ack LaDam1an Tomhn~on lS Stewart, who rushed for a career-high
740117..0811
1,184 yards in 2000, was expected to
the Chargers only unsrgned draft piCk.
lie.. 1100-50
PATRIOTS
. , lighten his workload following Thesday's
SMITHFIELD, R.L (AP) - Now 1t s scheduled day of[ Detroit opens its exhi• Umeatoae
. the New England Patnots who are deal- bition season against the Cincinnati Ben- Haulloa
• Gravel Sud •
YOUR
Howardl.
gals on Friday.
. ing with a death during training camp.
'lbpsoll • Fill Dirt
CONCRETE
Quarterbacks coach Dick Rehbein
"Stewart has a little twinge in his ham• Mulch
Wrllesel
Bulldozer Services , - CONNECTION
died Monday of heart failure at Massa- string, and we backed him out of pracRoofing • Home
.chusetts General Hospital in Boston. A tice;' Lions coach Marty Mornhinweg
'
Quality Driveways,
Maintenanceteam spokesman said the 45-year-old said. "At this point, we don't believe it's
Patios, Sidewalks.
Rehbein, who had heart disease, checked very serious."
Gutters- Down
· himself into ·the Hospital over the week· JAGUARS .
25 years experience ·
· Spout
end complaining of discoplfort.
JACKSONVILLE, Aa. (AP) - JackFree Estimates · FrN EltlmiiH
Rehbein, who had an internal pace- sonville Jaguars safety Craig Miller
Advertise
949-1405
740-742-8015
maker, suffered an apparent heart attack retired, four days after being carried off
591-5011
early Monday morning, and exteruive the field on a stretcher foUowing a neck
1-877-353-7022
injury.
resuscitation efforts failed.
"Dick was the kindest and most decent
X-rays and the MRI exam on Miller's
of men, who cherished his family and his neck were negative, and Miller was
career as an NFL coach," head coach Bill expected back at practice this week:
Bellchick said. "He was respected and
However, Miller, a second-year safety
admired professionally by -players . and who played in four games with Jackcoaches alike and will be deeply missed." sonville last season, decided over the
Rehbein died · the same day a funeral weekend to retire.
was held for Korey Stringer, a Minneso-

P/8

DIPOYIAB
PAIIft

WICK'S

etJExc:i

(740) 992-3470

in this
space
on
for
cuiUng edge•••
•so per Readlh8 ,

'

.

ClaaaiDad Ada

A Q J 10

Internet

15 Church
54
. lnalrumonta 55
18 Moket
Impure
511
17 Egg drink 57
18 Bonk.acct.

•
•

A. Q H
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21 Iareau
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(2 Wdt.)

23 Oambadlo'a
lon24 The
I-lOP
25 Sly glance
27 L-a bonn
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31 Scald
repeatedly
32 UKhra.
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Hodgot
34 rr,pa ol
brlh
37 Pour
40 Row
41 - jiOIIOI

Opening lead: • 10

·.

BARNEY

1-888-521-o916

.ALLtEL
Cellular

_,

'

·'

Jean de Ia Bruyere,
a French writer and
tnoralist ,
wrote,
"There' are only two
ways of getting on in .
the world: ' by one's
own industry , or by
the stupidity of oth-

.

'

ers. ·

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blau, lor
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3 Jomak:on
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5 Beard ol
groin
8 Yarnloh

Ingredient

7 Putting In
juga

8 Actre11
Merkel
t Romon
1,051
10 Mexican
party Item

lgtnt

word
·
22 Book·
ketpar'a
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24 Shoelace
Up
26 Froot
28 Flohlng
need

30 Moot
acratcl&gt;worthy
34 Galley
with two·
banka ol

39 Uood the
pool
ollice
40 Braa•
lnotrumanta ·
42 Compu1er·
acreen
graph lee
44 Long and
alender
49 "Opel"
llnloh
500r1hodonllet'l
dog.
52 Fiber
clutter
53 g~~ ol

That applies at the ·
aero
35 Tenant
bridge table. If you
play well in this deal,
you won't need to .
rely on the stupidity
of the opponents .
How would you cry
to ·make six spades?
West leads the diamond 10.
North's three notrump shows a gameforcing spade raise: at
least four-card support
and, in principle, ·1315 support points ,
Here, North upgraded slightly because he couldn't bear
to hear partner pass a ·
..,..-t--t--t--t--1--t .-.,
three-spade limit
raise.
Since East didn't
CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lui a Campoa
,·
make a lead-directing
Celebrity
Cipher
~ogremo
oro
cmtld
lrom
quclatlono
by
fomouo
double of North's
people, paalond pment. Each ltftorln the clphor•'!~ tor another.
five-diamond BlackToday'a clue: H sq1111/s Y . ,
THE BORN LOSER
P'"
.
-:"'l , wood response, per•
'JFPINFCCN
PO
GFD
...-I'!N5e: '&lt;~ ~&lt;:.~Gl-\1 1-W'-10 w..o""'
'(OJ~ ~~(,[.\\ ~D,
11\~:':l (~ f"4\'( lt~GI-\T I-W--IC't a-\
haps West should
~((OJ~TOf \.'M.l.EfThave led a club. Yet
I&lt;E.I'EAT l'f\E.i:. ME...
JCVAGWH
OFTG
KWCNVJDO
t-1\~. 614\IJ£:)~ \E.!
rlr\~PE.D I
that.would have made
GFD
UCOG
ACOGTIRPJ,
declarer's life very
easy.
JCAGDAGPCVO
TAN
There are possible
CKPAPCATGDN
DYPIDO .'
losers in hearts and
clubs. However, if
WPJFTWN
DNDW
East has . either the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I lwd more fun·and Men more plaau
heart king or club
with less money than If I was Rockefeller." - Leroy 'Satchel'
ace, you can get
Paige
home if you time the
BIG NATE
WORD
r::o~-----.:-~7-="1 play correctly.
I'AMI
l: t&gt;IDN"T CALL YOU 0\/Ei"R
YOU WE~E
After
drawing
KE LLY 1 WAIT- 1 LISTEN
100 SCAREil
THE IIEEI&lt;.ENO IIECAUSE ... t
- - - - - - E~lltd by CLAY R. 'OLLAN
trumps,
unblock
f1E}.N, r till&gt; CALL YOU! ON TO TALK
TO ME 1 THIS IS THE
Reor'range letters of the
TO ME~
51\TURD!o.Y! l!UT... W~EN .WU
TRUTH, I ~WEAR IT!
dummy's remammg
four
scrambled words be·
TH"TS
50
I'N~WE~Et&gt;. r GOT ALL
diamond honor, cross low to form four simple words.
F"\.V&lt;TEREil l!B:...USE r
C. UTE!
'
'
THOI)&lt;OHT I'D ~OUtlt&gt;
to hand with a trump, .
. STUPID SO r PANIC.I&lt;.Eil
R!PALM
and
discard· two clubs
ANtl .. . J: HUI'I&lt;O UP!
on "the ace-queen of
i
diamonds. Back inio
i
dummy with a trump,
HED!C
•
. lead a club toward
3
14
L.::~~~~~::;J!~r.m~~~~~~!=l your king.
.....,..,__..,
Here, East wins
PEANUTS ·
with his ace and
switches · to a heart, h _,..L....,.o_R....-A
OH. SURE, MARCIE
I MEAN, HOW I REAP MINE
5
CAN \fOU IMAGINE OUR TEACHER
My boss is a perfectionist and'
but
you industriously
OH,SURE!
SURE,
THE
FIRST
ARE
WE
EVER
E.XPECTIN6 US TO READ FOUR
I don't think he has
a
workaholic.
rise with the ace and
MARCIE!
Oil.
601N6TO
WEEK
WE
WERE
WHOLE 600KS THIS SUMMER?
C N R
~~c~~~ but I do believe he is a···
throw dummy's secSURE!
FIND TIME?
I-lOME, SIR ••
1 0
1
ond heart on your
t--n~t~~r--,lr--,1""'-,1--1
tho chuckle quoted
club king -- contract
1 Complete
.
•
•
•
•
by filling in the missing words
'---1.-L...,J,.--1-.J...~ you develop lrom step No. 3 below.
made.
Suppose instead that
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARES
your club king loses
to West's ace. If he
stupidly returns a red
suit, you are home.
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
But if he' correctly
•
I
leads back a club, ruff
Insult • Bluff- Onion - Dainty- FINDS OUT
in the dummy and try
Married man to counselor: "I try to make my marriage
the heart finesse . ·
more exciting, but my wife alway• FINDS OUT!"

~

/I~ Honl'lb Slop A '/lvror!'

s&lt;rt ttc;ijN\- ar. trs·

0

I

..,v....-lli

11~?\-y

Eric Blackburn

O

8

" Fully lnoured

•All$ IIII•Fri•EIII ...... IKI._
•liM &amp;•111.11 • EIIIIIIIWBil

''

.........................9&amp;

lnltM2.15•1urlllln
•
ond

.llUESDAY

AUGUST 7 I:,._. ,;.,__.

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road

Pomeroy

740-992-5344

HOURS: Mon • Frll-5; tilt 1-1

Wednesday, Aug. 8, 200i

W 1

There's 3 strong chance in
the year ahead that you may
switch your emphasis fro m
your material intere!it5 to life's
more esthetic values. As a result, happy times arc in the

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

offing.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) -Don't try anything cute roday,
because What you think may
be a clever maneuver expressly devised to funhcr a
peNona1 aim will most likely
b&lt;tck.fire on you ~nd hurt your
image. Leo,· treat yourself ro' a

birthday gift. Send for your
Astro-Graph predictions for

the year ahead by mail"ing S2

and SASE to Astro-Graph,
c/o thiflatyspaper, P.O. Box .
17~~ny Hill Station,
New York, NY 10156. lle

;

1;

or

m·onth

.-

86

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

(740)815-3921
Wo can ,.,.onolrz. 1
progremforyoul

•

9AQ

I

Mon-Fri 8:30 • 5:00
Over 40 yrs experience
(740) 742-8888

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

lomolhlng tOI ·~
CtN your lndopendont

.117141

Deater: South
Vutnenable: Ea~l·West

Rutland, Ohio
Truck seats, car seats, headliners, truck tarps,
convertible &amp; vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats;
motorcycle seats, boar covers, carpets, etc.

claim lo have an

Pomeroy,

ROBOTMAN

A&amp;D Auto Upholstery· Plus, Inc.

Pomeruy, Ohio

.
!~~ala }~ o~f~~·h•t ;

•

•Knn

FREE IN KOllE ESTliiATES • "SEEING IS BEUEVINO• •~103m

33795 Hilllrul RJ.

Unknown
If any, of

...

••

IIenaU!

1~800-291-5600

.SeH-Storage

and alleging thot the
Defendant• Angela L.
Capohan aka Angelle
l . Capehart and John

~

Eut

• Utili
.. I 7 I l

OUALITY
·WINDOW
SYSTEMS
• Pomerov, OH

~~~
High&amp; Dry .

.,

6 I
¥ K ItS

OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIAEc:T
PRICING

• P•Uo tnd Porch Decka

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill

WKI

KEEPS THE
SUMMER11ME H!AT
OUT AND WINTER
11ME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 119.5~

• Room AddHIOnl I

ort
• ..,.,.. L
A. Q LO T IS a

t KJ

MIRROR TECHNOLOGY

ACROSS 43 Former
Rutolon
1 Unlvarolty
ruler
trNaurer 45 Fancyvoae
7 -cera
48 Buolnooo
(cemlvol
obbr.
allracllan) 47 Bind
13 Boxing
48 Happen (tol
otretagy
51 Ate
14Connactad
redUced
to lhl

sure to statr your Zodia~; silfl .

Stir111

-- People, in KE!neraL won't

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

28170 lluhln Rold
RICine, Ohio

remodeling,
drywall, room
additions, and
plumbing.

48771

740-949-2217
Slzq 5' X 10'
to 10'x30'

Terry Lamm

992-0739

Hlll't .Stlf

Houn
1

7:00AM • 8:00PM

I·

be in too &amp;ivinl a mood to·
day, ond even le11 ao 1hould
they think you've odopred a
what'a·ln·lt·rur-mt attltudt,
Take co" nul to oct too 101r.
aorvlntc.
LIDM (Sept. 23-0et. ll) •
• In a tontt1ted altuetiun. tu·
dny, ahould you br confronted
by •n Individual whn l111

.

~

-- If you' ve been involved in
something for quite awhile
that still- h:an't produced are-

mor~ authority or rank than

. you do, toelfully back ofT.

turn, today may be the day to

Chances are you'll come in
second .

cut your losses and stop po~1r­
ing more into a bottomless

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

pit.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)

22) --Today, in your haste to
get th ing~ do ne , there's 3
strong chance you could bet: ome very careless. Pace
yourself wisely, concentrating
at all times on what you're
doing.

-- Attitude is everything today. If you become too head5trong or unyielding in dealing with othen, nobody will
respond co you in a kind, loving manner .

TAURUS (April 20-May

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -- Thi• is not a par-

20) -- A strong personality
c.an end up dominating your
thinking without ;J.ny trouble
today if you have too little .
faith in your own ideas. It

ticul:uly good day for your
pocketbook. It may be all too
~asy to purchase extravagant
items you don't need, having

little regard for your budget.
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22,
Jan. 19) -· You're a pretty
good negotiator today, but
you might lack the imtin&lt;t "
to how much il enough. 1r
you pu1h tOO (ar, aU that Wll
lifet~ upon could be laat.
AQUARIUS Uon, lO·Pob.
19) •• lt'a alwoyalntportont to
bo able to 110 tha bla picture,
but cht doullr aro llMrrlncarrt
11 well. Todoy, bt cnor.tl not
to rocua 10 hord on tht rorlll
chat you rorget to look u tho
tree a.
~ISCES (Peb. lO· Marth 20)

could hurt both you and your
ego.

.

GEMINI (Moy 21-:June 20)

.... You could be forced to

trim some

noneu~:11tial

ex-

pensu today due to overopendinl In the port, which
may Include oeveralltema you
depond upon ta aaathe your
•JIO· Make the 11crlflci.
CANCBI\. (June li·MY
22) •• lt'a not llktly an efFectlvo rt~olutlon wiU bt round
today conctmlna a crltlul ••·
reor lltuallorr, becau11 ~v•ry·
ano, lncludlna you, ntay bt at
odda with ono onothar.
\I

�,

.

Baseball

!he Daily Sentinel

Hatteberg experiences the
rarest of baseball extremes
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

a grand slam in the same
Scott Hatteberg's second at- game?'' Range rs manager
bat couldn't have gone any Jerry Narron said. " It's probaworse. H is next trip to th e bly never happened befo re."
plate couldn 'r have been betM anny Ramirez hit his
ter.
35th homer ·for Boston to
Hatteberg experienced th e give him 101 RB! s. N o mar
rarest of baseball extrem es Garciaparra went 3-for- 4 and
, Mo nday night, hitting a grand added a solo homer for the
slam one at-bat after lining Red Sox.
into a triple play in Boston's
Casey.Fossum (1-0) wo rked
I 0-7 win over th e Texas two scoreless innings for his
Rangers.
first major league w in . D e rek
" That's from the outho use Lowe pitched the ninth for
to the pentj10use right there," his 23rd save.
Hatteberg said. " I was trying
Alex Rodriguez hit his
to get the ball in the air, try- 32nd homer for the R angers.
ing to stay out at the doubl e
play. It was a great feeling
going around the bases."
The Red Sox moved within 2 112 games of AL EastEmergency starter Lou Pote
leading New York with their limited New York to four hits
first four-game sweep .ofTexas in five innings, helping Anasince July 10- 13, 1975. heim split the · four-gam e
Boston also improved its wild series at Yankee Stadium.
l:ard lead to two games over
Pote (2-0} , making j ust his
Cleveland.
second major league start,
"A good comeback win," pitched just twice in Ana: Red Sox manager Jimy heim's previous 17 games . He
· Williams said. "We hit the ball took the start in place of Scott
hard. Certainly, Hatteberg's Schoeneweis, who was sidehit was big."
lined by a stomach ailment.
. In other AL games, it was
The Angels nic.ked loser
Seattle 8, Cleveland 6; Ana- Steding Hitchcock (1~1) for a
heim 3, New York 1; Oakland run in the second and two in
. 6, Detroit 3; Chicago 5, the fifth .
Tampa Bay 2; and Baltimore
9, Kansas Ciry 6.
.The Rangers turned their
ICS ,
third triple play in club histo.
ry in the fourth inning when
Johnny "1:&gt;amon hit a
Hatteberg lined to shortstop tiebreaking three-run homer
with the runners on fir.;t and in the ninth inning off Danny
second moving on the pitch. Patterson (4-3) to give OakAlex Rodriguez flipped to · land its first four-game sweep
second
baseman
Randy in Detroit in 46 years.
The A's hadn't swept a fourVelarde, who forced the lead
runner and tagged the sec- game series in Detroit since

Angels 3,
Yankees 1

Athlet" 6
Ti2ers 3

on;he Red Sox rallied from a July 1955, their first season in
Kansas Ciry. Oakland has won
7-5 deficit in the sixth. Carl five straight and 21 of 28

~-~e~~:/~~~~~e~no~~ ~:~~~

Rob Bell.
. Troy O'Leary singled off
reliever Juan Moreno (2-2)
and Brian Daubach walked to
load the bases. After Chris
Stynes ~ single made it a one"
tun game, Hatteberg hit a 2-1
pitch into the Red Sox
bullpen.
"How many times you see a
guy hit into a triple play and

overall. The Tigers have lost
six straight games .
Luis Vizcaino (1 -0) got one
out for ' his first career win,
and
Jason
Isringhausen
pitched the ninth for his 21 st
save in 28 chan·ces.

Page B&amp;
Tuesday, Aucust 7, 1001

-llooguo

.

6·7). 7:05 p.m.
LDs Angelos (Adams H) a1 Pi!WOOfllh
(- night H ), 7:0S.p.m.
Son Francloco (Schmidt 7-8) ot Ctnclo&gt;notl (Davia 5-1), 7!05 p.m.
San Diego (Jonos 7·13) at Phllodolphla
(Duckworth o-o), 7:05p.m.

Eul

w·

Allanla
Philadelphia
FlOrida
NewYor1&lt;
Molllteal

63

l
48

Houston

St. Louis
Milwaukee

Cincinnati
Pltlsb!Jrgh .

l os Angeles
Arizona

.568

.540

3
.504
7
.055 12 112
.420 18 112

62

49

.559

58
47

54

62

48

64

43 87
Wool

w

63

62
san Franclaco 62

San Diego
Colorado

GB

60 51
58 55"
51 81
47 85
Cen...,
L
63 47

w

Chicago

Pet.

54
46

Pet

Milwaukee (Haynes 7-1 3) at N.Y. Mats
(Choo 4-5), 7:10 p.m.
Houston (MIIckl 2..0) at AUanta (Maddux

14-6), 7:35 p.m.
Colorado (Neagle 6-6) a1 Chicago C'*'
(Tapanl 8.fl), 8 OS p.m.

GB

.573
1 112
.509
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.431 15 112
17
.411
.391
20

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49

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Wedneodoy'aGomu

-

Pet
GB
.562
49 ' .559
112
50 .554
1
57 .486 8 112
85 . 414 18 112

Sundey'• Games

Colorado (Thomson ().4) a1 Chicago
Cubs (Sere 7-5). 2:20 p.m.
Houston {Astaclo 6-13) at Atlanta
(Giavlne 11 ·5), 7:05 p.m.
Arizona ~John son 1,.·5) al FIO"rida
(Sanchez 2.()), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Smith 3-1) at Montreal (Anna s
Jr. 8· 11 ). 7:05 p.m.
San Diego {Hemdon D-O) a1 Philadelphia
(Goggin 2·1), 7:05p.m.
Los Angeles (Prokopec 6-6) al Pi!WOOrgh
(J.Andenoon 6· 11), 7:D5 p.m.
.
son Frandoco (R,_ 11·7) ot Clnclnnotl (Doooono H), 7:05 p.m.

Florida 5, St. Louis 3
Atlanta 12, Milwaukee 8
Hooston 4, Montreal 1
MilwaukM (Levrault 5-6) at N.Y. Mets
Pittsburgh 5, Colorado 4
(TrachSel5·10), 7:10p.m.
San Francisco 8, Philadelphia 4
Thuraday'• G•me•
Arizona 2, N.Y. Mets 1
Milwaukee a1 N.Y. Mats, 12:1D p.m.
Clnclnnati10,.San Diego 8
Arizona at Florida, 1:05 p.m.
Los Angeles 4, Chicago Cubs 3, 10 San Diego at Phlladelpl11a, 1:05 p.m.
Innings
·
. Colorado al Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m.
Tuolday'oGomoo
St. Louis at Montreal, 7:05p.m.
St. Louis (KIIe tt -7) at Montreal (Vazquez Los Angeles at Plnsburgh! 7:05 p.m
1().10). 7:05p.m.
San Froncloco ot Clnclnnotl, 7:05 p.m.
Arizona (Lopez 0.2) a1 Florida (~lament Houst~ at Atlanta, 7:35 p.m .

-

·-·~
w

New YOlO
Boo1on
Toron10
Bo111ononoTampa Bay

67

64
53
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.s

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59
67
37 75
Central
l
63 48

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Minnesota
Cle¥oland
Chicago

82

Detroit
Kansas City
Seattle
Oakland
Anahekn
Texas

L

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44 68
Weat ·
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62
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54

63

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.473
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Pet

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.568
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.723
.554
.516
.438

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19
23

32

Sundly'aGo.,..
Boston 8, Texas 3
Toronto 5, Baltimore 4
Clakland 4, Oelrol1 1
Anaheim 4, N.Y. Yankees 3
Kansas City 10, Minnesota 5
Tampa Bay 8, Chicago WMe Sox 4
Cleveland 15, Soo111114, 111nnlf111a
llondoy'a Gomeo
Qakland 6, Oatrol1 3
Anaheim 3, N.Y. Yankees 1
Chicago While Sox 5, Tampa Bay 2
Boston 10, Te)(8S 1.
Seanle 8, Cleveland e
Baltiff10f11 9, Kansas Cl1y 6
Tuelday'aGameo

N.Y. Yonkeeo (Mu65ina 11·9) at Tampa
Bay (sturtze 6·9), 7:15 p.m.
-..ct (Sobothlo10-4) atllln.....,.
I i i ( - 1-11), 8:05p.m.
Baltlmort (Maduro ().3) al Kan su Ci1)'
(Suppon 5-9), 8:05 p.m.
Oa1rol1 (Pettyjohn 0-4) at Texas (Myello
1· 1), 8:35p.m.
·
Toron10 (Halladay 1·1) al Saa111e (Pineiro
2.()), 1O:OS p.m.
Boo1on (Sabertlagen H I al Oakland
(Mulder 13-6), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago Wl'i1e Sox (K.Wells 6·7) at Ana·
holm (RIIPil 4-9 or Schoenewels 8-8),
T0:05 p.m.
Wednoodoy'aGo.,..
C i t - (Colon IN) ol lllnneooto ·
( l - 3-4), 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees (Peni11e 12·6) at Tampa
Bay (Biaobrodt ().1). 7:15p.m.
Ballimore (Men:edes 5-13) a1 Kansas
Ci1y (Ourb&lt;n 7·9), 8:05 p.m.
Oe1ron (Cornejo D-O) at Texas (Davis 5·
8 ), 8:35p.m.
Tor&lt;Wno (Cerpenter 7-9) a1 Seot1te (Moyer
12·5). 10:05 p.m.
Boston (Wakefield 7.fl)·a1 Oakland (Hudson 13-6), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago White Sox (BueMe 9-6) at Ana·
helm (Washburn 9·5), 10:05 p.m.
Thurlday's Gemee
C..vNnd 11 Minnesota, 1:05 p.m.
Boston at Oakland, 3:35 p.m.
N.Y. Yankees at Tampa Bay, 7:15p.m.
Detroit at Texas, 8:05_p.m.
Baltimore at Kansas City, 8:05 p.m.
Toronto at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.
Chicago While Sox at Anaheim, 1O:OS
p.m.

final trip to Kansas City in
sryle, capping a five-run fifth
inning with a two-run double .
that led Baltimore to the win.
· Ripken, who is retiring at
the end of the season, earned
a standing· ovation just for
showing up and then drew
applause for helping beat the
hometown team .
Jason Johnson (10-6) gave
up four runs - two earned
- in 5 2-3 innings for the
win.

said.
"At the Hall of Fame ilin: rter, one of the great players
saiq, 'It's becoming too easy
to get into the Hall of

Fame,"' said Morgan, vice
chairman of the hall's board
of directors. "This came from
the players, and it should be
more difficult to get into the
Hall of Fame.
"We also felt there should
be an appeals process for players dropped off. This gives
them a second look. They
have new hope."
• AQ players with at least 10
yem' eJqierience are eligible
again, regardless of how many
votes they received in voting bY
baseball writers. Among the
players with renewed eligibility
are Jelf Reardon, AI Oliver, Bill
Madlock, Ted Simmons, Lou

B1 -

WetfnesCiay

•

•

Scha
BY ToNY

M.

WCH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

PO MEROY - Effective immediately,
patients will b e charged by the Meigs
Emergency Ser¥ice for emergency squad
runs, said Gene Lyons, administrator of
the county service.
Lyons said Tuesday that people in need
of an ambulance will now be charged a
fee because of fin ancial strains that have
put the emergen cy service in a precarious situation .
Under the new plan, pati e nts will be
charged $350 per run if advanced equip-

www.mydailysent!r~el.com

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 cents • August 8, 2001 ·Vol. 51, No. 245

$250 to $350 to be
billed for squad ~ns

Hometown Newspaper

ment - namely hea rt or stroke mo nito rs
- or m edicines is re quired , and patients
with m inor injuries, colds or flu-like
sympto m s, will be billed $250 per run.
" Fees charged for the ambulance service will be directly billed to one's insuran ce o r M edicare/ Medicaid," said Lyo ns.
" The money we receive from the insurance companies should help . cover our
costs."
Lyons said th e decision to bill patie nts
was finali zed once Meigs C ounty Prosecutpr Pat Story researched the Ohio
Revised C ode and discovered that the
EMS can legally charge patients, if doing
so would assist with attaining finan cial
stabiliry.
"Now that the counry's only emergency ~om is defunct, more residents

are relying on us to transport them to
hospitals located miles away," said Lyons.
" The increased workload and lo nger ·
·drives has created staffi ng problems and
it's beginning to drain us fi nancially," she
said. "At the rate we were going, we
wouldn 't have had enough money to
continue operating." .
Statistics provided by Lyons show more
than 2,500 ru ns have already been logge d
to date, compared to 3,800 calls all oflast
year. While $18,41 9 was spent on gasoline and di esel fuel las t year, $14,344 has
already been ·consum ed through Jun e of
this year.
The emergency service is funded by
three properry· tax levies that ge ne rate
$551 ,000 annually. However, that total

Please see EMS, A3

FINANCIAL EMERGENCY - Paramedics Clay Crow, left, Tony
Shope, middle, and Danny Davi.s, right, work on an ambulance
Tuesday morning inside the garage of the Meigs Emergency
Service in Pomeroy. Financial troubles have forced the county
emergency service to begin charging patients who are in need
of an ambulance. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Eundin
for bri ge
approved

·Four close
down over
summer

White Sox 5,
Devil Rays l
Dan Wright tool( a no-hitter into the seventh inning of
his second career start, lifting
Chicago over visiting Tampa
Bay.
Wright (2-0) was effectively wild, walking seven batters
and allowing no runs before
being replaced when Chris
Gomez's double with one out
in the seventh broke up the
no-hit bid. Keith Foulke
pitched the ninth for his 27th
save.
Jose Canseco and Paul
Konerko each hit two- run
homers offJeffWallace (0::_3).

Melp County's

CHARTER
SCHOOLS

WEIRD NIGHT :.._ Texas Ra~gers catcher 'Ivan Rodriguez, in background, throws a ball back to .
the field as Boston Red Sox Scott Hatteberg, center, is congratulated by teammates Troy :
O'Leary, far-left, and Brian Daubach, far-right, after hitting a grand slam in the sixth Inning Mon- .
day. Hatteburg also hit Into a triple play-Monday. (AP)
~
·

Orioles 9,
Royals 6
Cal Ripken kicked off his

Whitaker, Larry Bowa, Dwight
Evans and Bobby Grich . .
Mazeroski's name was not
mentioned Monday by Morgan
or hall officials, but some Hall of .
Famers
including Ted
Williams - were unhappy the
fielding whiz was elected in
March by the 15-memberVeterans Committee headed by Joe L.
Brown.
Mazeroski, a career .260 hitter,
never received a high pen:entage
of votes during his 15 year.; on
the writer.;' ballot and clid not
begin receiving substantial Veterans Committee consideration
until Brown became clrairinan.
Under the changes, the Veterans Committee that Brown
headed was disbanded and
replaced by a 90-man group,
two-thirds of them Hall of
Farner.;. However, the new committee can elect player.; only
once every two yem, beginning
in 2003, and executives, umpires
and managers only once every
four year.;, beginning in 2004.
Previ~usly, Hall of Famers
could be chosen from both
groups every year.
Because there won't be any
Veterans Committee voting
next year, there is a possibility
there won't be an induction
ceremony in 2002. The writers wiU consider candidates
such as Ozzie Smith, Andre
Dawson and Alan Trammell',
but none are seen as a lock for
election.
The changes do not alfect th_at
annual balloting by more than
500 member.; of . the Baseball
Writer.; of America Association.
The ineligible player.;, such as
Pete Rose and Shoeless Joe Jackson, currently banned from .consideration, also aren't alfected.

SPORTS: Bonds pounds Reds,

.

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Hall of Famers get much
·bigger say.in hall voting
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.
(AP) - Bill Mazeroski 111lght be
lucky he made it to the Baseball
Hall of Fame this year.
. Under revamped guidelines
that give Hall of Farner.; a much
bigger say in who joins them in
.Coopmtown, he wouldn't have
made it next year- and, perhaps. maybe not at all.
The
sweeping
changes
announced Monday eliminate
the closed-door Veterans Committee meetings held since 1953
and give renewed hope to 1,700
players previowly dropped from
consideration for receiving a low
·percentage of writer.; votes.
: The election process was
dunged not jwt becawe some
. J:iall df Farner.; complained that
: I~s-worthy canclidates were
being inducted, but because
players deserving of consideration were being dropped too
~n. Hall of Farner Joe Morgan

'·

COLUMBUS (AP) Low enrollment, academic
problems and financial
troubles forced at least four
ch am~r schools to close this
summer, officials said.
JADES Academy in Toledo and Northwest Ohio
. Building Trades Academy
in Northwood closed voluntarily because of low
enrollment, said Tom
Baker, superintendent. of
the Lucas Count)' Educational Service Center,
which
sponsored
the
schools.
The center declined to
renew the contract with a
third school, Proficiency
Achievement Study Skills
in Toledo, because the
school wasn't meeting its
goal of raising students'
academic
performance,
Baker said Tuesday.
The Cleveland Alternative Learning Academy
relinquished its charter
Thursday in a letter to the
Department of Education,
which sponsored. it, said
department spokeswoman
Dottie Howe.
Charter schools, called
community schools in
Ohio,
are · publicly
financed, privately run
schools that operate free
from some state regula- ·
tions. The schools are eligi- ·
ble for per-student basic .
aid but no start- up money.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED ,

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - An additional $448,400
has bee n approve d by th e state for plans
for the n ew Pomeroy- Mason Bridge.
State R ep. Jo hn C arey, R-Wellston,
announced Tu es day that $555,000 in state
fundi,ng was approved for projects in
Lawrence, Meigs and Gallia counties.·
$100,000 will be used to develop an
-4~¥!$1!~.~;~l ;~it~ .in...l.a.w~~e. ~ounty. ,and .
sidewalk improvements in
G allipolis.
.
- Carey said the -bridge funding will l5e
used to revise intersection designs at the
new bridge site, replace water and sewer·
EXTRA PRECAUTIONS - Meigs Middle School footballers spent a· lot of time at the drinking fountain Tueslines, revi se drain;~g e plans , and in crease
day - at the direction of their coaches. Lots of water breaks and rest periods In extreme heat Is one reason
the width of the bridge.
the team has never had a heat-related emergency. (!;Irian J. Reed photo)
· Nancy Pedi go of the Ohio Department
of Transportation said this morning that .
AT RISKthe intersection plans now on the drawFootball
players like
. ing board are esse ntially th e same as those ·
these
unve il ed a year ago durin g public meetMeigs Mid·
ings in Pomeroy.
die School
The intersec tion i~ considered a "Jathletes are
hook" intersection, and will allow for
· especially
relat~d illnesses and death.
non - stop bridge traffi c and a shorter red
prone to
Each year, CDC says,
light for through traffic to Middleport.
heat-related
about 300. people die as the
· Plans also include a 56- foot -wide roadillness,
result of heat exposure . ' '
way on th e bridge de ck, with , two wide
because
of
Thousands of others suffer
lanes and a more narrow middle lan e to
heavier uni·
temporary effects of the
be used for maintenance only.
forms and
hear; including h~at cramps,
The plans also in cl ude a .se ven- foot
protective
heat
exhaustion
and
heat
sidewalk
on the upstream side.
BY BRIAN J. REEO
gear, and
.stroke
the
most
severe
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
C onstru ction of th e new bridge is
since pracIf form of heat illness.
MIDDLEPORT
expec ted to begi n in late summe r 2002,
tice season
Heat cramps, the result of
you're siiting in an uncomfalls during
and has been es tim ated to cost abour $25
heat,
dehydration
and
poor
some of the
fortably hot house because
million .
hottest
you're afraid of high electric conditioning, are u sually
The cable-s tayed bridge design is new
summer
bills, you're not alone, and alleviated with rest, drinking
to Ohio, althou gh a number of them are.
days. (Brian
the Cent.e rs for Disease water and a cool environnow being constructed by ODOT irt
J.
Reed
Control says that fear could ment.
other areas. A similar bridge is now open
photo)
result in an increase in heatin Huntington, W.Va .

Fear of high bills could
increase ~eat illnesses

CDC suggests
tipsfor avoiding
. heat exhaustion

-ToUy's

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'

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-~ .

Sentinel v
2 Sedlo••

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
9.ports
Weather

- 12 Pllps

H!p: Ill

Lotteries

OHIO
82-4 Pick 5: 5-S..S; Pick 4: 0.3+7
BS ~~uc~re,. 5: 1-11-20-22·37

A4
A3 W.VA.
81.3.6 Deily 5: 4-9-3 Dilly 4: &amp;3-3-3
A2 C 2001 Ohia Valley Publishing Co,.

S15,000.
Campbell is to enter his plea Au g. 22 at
an arraignment before U.S. Magistrate
Ma.r k · R . Able. The agr~ement wa~., fil ed
Thursday.
Campbell and Paul E.'Riegel, both of
Jackson, were charged in Novembe r 19'1'1
with 442 counts of illegally takin g
wildlife.
They were accused of spreading co rn

treated with a r-esticide that kiUed Canada geese, mourning doves," songbirds,
crows and a ra ccoon. More than 500 animals were poisoned in a 200- acre field
near Jackson, about 65 miles south of
C olumbus.
·
.
Health officials, fea ring that other
wildlife wo uld .be co ntaminated and
taken by hunters, declared a health emergcn cy and buri ed the carcasses.

It's Mason County Fair Time!

nights, Stay at historic Grand
Hotel , play Magnolia Grove,
and LakewoocL ... starting at
$213 per person

E-mail: reservations@rtjgolf.com

COLUMBUS (AP) - A southern
Ohio farmer has admitted he killed birds
. by spreading poisoned corn on a field, the
government said Tuesday.
Harlan "Slim" Campbell, 68, agreed to
plead guilty to 'one feder~l misdemeanor
count o f illegally killing migratory. birds,
said Mike Marous, an assistant U.S. attorney. He could be sentenced to up to six
·months in prison and fined as mu ch a~

AS

Bay anlJ Beyon3.. .3 days, 2

Summer Spedil does not loclude holtls.
Price's 1re per P'm on. N sed on doublt occup1nty
1nd pre·lelKttd hob!b. SumiMf Spedlllnclu6t5
unlimit~ replty 1t w ill! site. C.11t ftt ch1rged for
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mty 1pply. C1rts and tax 1re not lnduclt'd In prlc1.
Vli.id M1y 15 ~Septe mbe r 1 ~. 2001.

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L-:101
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•
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.

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.·

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