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                  <text>Baseball
--,··-

The Daily S~tinel

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Astros hadn 't been alone m
It only took a day for the first place since April 14.
Chicago Cubs to get back into
first place.
,
Sammy Sosa hit a go-ahead
home run in the seventh
inning as the Chicago Cubs
Barry Bonds hit a grand
beat the Houston Astros 3- 1 slam into . the waters of
Tuesday night to reclaim th e McCovey Cove for his major
NL Central lead.
league-leadi ng 51st homer.
"This was huge for today,"
Bonds' 545th ca reer homer
Cubs manager Don Baylo r - his 1Oth career slam said. "Tomorrow, we'll be back gave him 51 homers faster
to the same thing again. It's than anyone else, two games
going . to be this way all the ahead of Sammy Sma, who hit
way, Chicago, Houston and St. 51 homers in the C ubs' first
Louis . Everyone will be 121 games in 1999.
watching everyone else's
San
Francisco,
which
scores."
remained one gari1e behind
Sosa connected against Ron NL West-leading Arizona, sent
Villone (5-5) for his 43rd 21 hitters to the plate in the
homer of the season.
fir st three innings, scori ng
"This was a little bit more eight runs and chasing Jesus
interesting since I struck out Sanchez (2-2).
.
the first three times · and then
Jason Schmidt (8-7) allowed
came back and hit a home three earned runs and eight
run," he said. "But I never give hits in five innings:
up, because I know that at any
moment, I can put my team
ahead."
Chicago, which moved a
half-game ahead of the Astros ,
Travis Lee drove in four
had lost three straight. Mon- rum , and Bobby Abreu added
day's loss in the series opener three
RB!s
as
vtsltmg
dropped the Cubs out of first Philadelphia reopened a twoplace for the first time since game lead over second-place
May 29.
Atlanta in the NL East.
At Houston, pinch-hitter
David Coggin (4-1) allowed
Robert Machado, batting for two runs and five hits in 6 1-3
David Weathers (4-4), added innings. Allen Levrault (5-8)
an RBI single in the eighth as gave up three runs in the first.
Chicago beat Houston for the
third time in nine meetings
this year.
Tom Gordon pitched a onehit ninth for his 24rh save,
In game attend~d by Presicompleting a . five- hitter. The
dent Bush, rookie Juan Uribe

Giants 13,
Marlins 7

Phillies 1Or
Brewers 4

Rockies 5, .
Braves 4

-

Amortconloag..,.

NotiOiiol League

Chicago Cubs (Lieber 15·5) at Houston

E11t

Philadelphia
Atlanta

Florida
New YorK
Montreal

Chicago
Houston

Sl. Louis
Milwaukee

Clnclnnotl
Pittsburgh

w L
66 52
64 ·54
59 59
54 65
50 69
C.nt1'811
w L
67 51
67 52
63 55
49 87

.Pel · GB

70

19
22

48

Arizona
San Francisco
LOS Angeles
San Diogo .
Colorado

45 73
Well
w L
68 51
67 52
65 54

58

60

50

66

s59

.542
.500
.454
.420

2
7
12',1.
15~

Pet
.568
.'Se3
.534
.422
.407
.381

GB

Pc:t
.571
.563
.546
.491
.424

GB

),

4
17

1
3
9h

17'1t

Monday's Games
Houston 9, Chicago Cubs 5
St. Loula 3, Clndnnatl 2
Arizona 3, Pittsburgh 0
Tueaday'a Gemea
Chicago Cubs 3, Houston 1
Philadelphia 10, Milwaukee 4
S1. Loult 7, Clnclnnetl 1
Colorado 5, Atlanta 4, 10 Innings
San Oiogo 6. N.Y. Mels 0
Arizona 4, Ptnsburgh 3, 10 innings
Montrea/4, Los Angeles 1
San Francisco 13; Florida 7

hit an RBI single in the 1Oth
off Steve Karsay (1-2), sending
the visiting Braves to their first
six-game losing streak since
September 1996.
Colorado, which rallied
from a 4"2 deficit, tied it in the
ninth when Jose Ortiz's single
off Karsay ( 1-2) scored pinchrucner Mike Hampton.
Jose Jimenez (6-1) pitched
the 10th.

(Astaclo 7·t3), 7:05p.m.
Phlla&lt;lelpllla (Daal 10-4) at Milwaukee
(Wright B·7), 8:05 p.m
Clnclnnotl (Aoltamo 5-111 at SL Loula
(W.WIIIIamal-8), 8:10p.m.
Atlanta (Burt&lt;en 9·8) at Colorado (Hampton 12·8), 9:05p.m.
N.Y. Mets (Leiter 7-9) at San otego
(Jarvis 9·9), 10:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh (O.Williams 1-4) at Arizona
(Schilling 17·5), 10:05 p.m.
Montreal Wavano 0-D) at Los Angeles
(carrara 2·1), 10:10 p.m.
Florida (Penny 7-6) at san Francisco
(Or1iz 13·6), 10:15 p.m.
Thuradav'• Games
Philadelphia (Flguaroa 4·2) at Milwaukee
(Quevedo t -t), 2:05p.m.
Florida {Burnett 8-8) at San Francisco
(Estes 8·7), 3:35p.m.
Montreal (Ohka 0·2) al Los Angeles
(Gagne 4·5). 4:10p.m.
N.Y. Mots (Appler 6·1 0) at San Diego
(Tollberg B-3), 5:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Baimel5·8) al Houstoo (Miller
12-6), 8:05p.m. ·
Cincinnati (Acevedo a.!) at St. Louis
(Hertn~~nson 111-9), 8:10p.m.
Atlanta (Millwood 2·5) at Colorado (Chacon 6·6), 9:05p.m.

w

70

New York
Boston

65

56

Toronto
Baliimore
Tampa Bay
Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City
Seattle
Qakland
Anaheim
Texas

L
49
52
63
69

50
42 78
Centro!
w L
66 52
64 55
58 59
46 69
46 71
West
w L
88 33
68 51
63 56
52 67

Pel

.588
.556
.471
.420

•

GB
4
14
20

.350

28~

Pet
.559
.538
.496
.410
.403

Gil

17'1.
18'1.

PC1

GB

.723
.571
.529
.437

18
23
34

2),

n

Tueaday'a Gamet
Seattle 6, Boston 3, 11 Innings
Toronlo 6, Qakland 3
Anaheim 7. Detroit 1
Cleveland 8, Mlnnuota 7, 11 lnnlngl
Baltimore 5, Kansas City 2
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 3
Chicago White SOx 7, Texas 4

Seattle (Garcia 13-4) at Boston (F.CISHI·
lo 7-6), 7:05p.m.
lllnnnalll (lloyo 12·10) ot CloYoland •
(Finley 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
Kansas Clly (K.Wilson 6-2) at Baltlmo&lt;a
(MeiO&lt;Idos B-13), 7:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (P.Wft!l()ll 5-7) at N.Y. Vankeos (Clemans 15-1 ). 7:05 p.m .
Texas (Holling 9-9) at Chicago WhHe
(Lowe 6-3). 8:05p.m.
Tltundlty'a - .
O&amp;kland (Lidlo 7·5) at TOfOilto (lyon 1-1 ),
12:35 p.m.
Kansas City (Byrd s-.4) al Baltimore (Pooson 5-a), 12:35 p.m.
Anaheim (Schoenewels 9-8) at Detroit
{Weaver ,()..11), 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Aupe 4-9) at N.Y. Yank ...
(Hitchcock 1·2), 1:05 p.m.
S&amp;anle (5eto 12·3) at Boston (Wakelleld
H), 7:05 p.m.
Mlnneoota (Johnaon 1-1) ot Clovetond
(Wooctard 1·2), 7:05 p.m.
Texas (Davis 6-3~ at Chicago While Sox
{Ga~and 4-4), 8:05 p.m.

o.;.backs 4,
Pirates 3

a

four-run ninth and dropped
Los Angeles three games
behind Arizona .
Chan Ho Park took a nohitter into the sixth and was
backed by a homer from his
favorite
catcher,
Chad
Kreuter, in the second against
Tony Armas Jr.
Graeme Lloyd (8-3) allowed
one hit over 1 1-3 innings.

' I I

Edgar
with runners in
scoring posttion in his previous three at-bats,
hit a three-run homer in the 11 th inning to lift
Seattle at Boston.
Seattle won in its last at-bat for the fou~th
time in five victories and clinched the season
series over Boston for the first time in 12 years.
Boston had taken a 3-2 lead in the eighth,
but Seattle tied it iri the ninth against closer
Derek Lowe.
Rod Beck (5- 4) took the loss.
. Jose Paniagua (4- 3) pitched a perfe~t 1Oth,
and Kazuhiro Sasaki worked the 11th fqr his
37th save.

Mark Buehrle won his fourth straight start,
and Royce C layton homered as Chicago beat
Texas.
Rookie Aaron Rowand hit a two-run double to key a three-run sixth, and Paul Konerko
added two R.Bls for Chicago, which had lost
four of six.
Buehrle (1 1-6) - who came in witll a
league-leading 2.90 ERA - allowed four runs
on eight hits in seven innings against the 'AL's
third-best offense. His ERA rose to 3.00.
Randy Velarde hit two home runs, and
Rafael Palmeiro added a solo shot for the
Rangers, who had won 14 of 25.

"

•

- ,'

ROCK SPRINGS - The
gr.md champion market hog
. was shown by Nicholas
Det\viller at the Meigs Coun.
.
.
ry Jumor Fatr Swme Show on

Spring; Fairgrounds.
C.Jasscs were divided by
weight only, with first place
results posted as follows:
21 0_211 lbs., Eric Needs;
212- 220 lbs., Jessica Pooler;
221-229 Chad Hubbard· 230-

champion by Stacie Watson.
Oerwille r and Aaron Fife
were awarded grand and
reserve champion showmanship honors.
Josep h John son of New
Vienna served '"judge fur the
show, which was held in the
show 'arena · at ·the Rock

232 lbs:; Mark Guess, 235-239
lbs.; Ntcholas Detwiller, 240241 lbs.; Stacie Watson, 242248 lbs., Matthew Wandling;
249c255 lbs., Mark Guess;
256-260
lbs.,
Nicholas
Detwiller; 261-268 lbs., Ricky
Colbum; 269-280 lbs., Myca
Michael.

Wedne~day.

and the reserve .

'

'

Padres &amp;r
MetsO

I

103; ARodriguez; Texas, 101; Thome,
Cleveland, 100; GAnderson, Anaheim,
92; JaGiambl. Oakland, 91 .
HITS -suzuki, Seattle, 178; BBoone,
Seattle, 154; Stewart, Toronto, 152; RAiomar, Cleveland, 151; Jetef, New YOf'k,
149; AROdriguez, Texaa1 146; GAnder·
son, Anaheim, 140.
DOUBLES -MJSweenOjl, Kaosoa City,
42; JaGiambl, Oakland, 35; Stewart,
Toronto, 34; Mientkfewlcz, Minnesota, 31:
EChavez, Oakland, 31; Koskie, Minnesota. 30; Durham, Chicago, 30; O'Neill. New
York, 30.
TRIPLES -CGuzman. Minnesota, 13;
Cedeno, Detroit, 9; RAlomar, Cleveland,
9; Suzuki, Seanle, 8: JEncamacion,
Detroit, 7; Easley, Detroit. 7; CBeltran,
Kansas City, 6; Stewart, Toronlo, 6;
Vizquel, Cleveland, 6.
HOME RUNS -Thome, Cleveland. 39;
MAamirez, Boston, 37; CDelgado, Toron·
to, 34; AAodriguez, Tt~xas , 33; Glaus,
Anaheim. 32: JaGiambl. Oakland, 29;
APalmeiro, Texas, 29.

KIDD.IE G.AMES
The Junior ·Fair Show ring is one, as he was one of the first to
- -where months .o!"hard-werk-pays~eat-his-bananac-Tara-Je\\iell-rook
off for young;ters showing live- her Mountain Dew chugging
stock, but it's also a place for the very seriously, as did many of the
younger set to kick back and other 40 boys and girls who parhave some fun.
ticipated in tile competition.
On Wednesday, kiddie games
Each day this week, kiddie
took the place of tile usual live- tractor . pullers like jett Tanner
stock shows, and boys and girls line up foi tile chance to qualify
lined up to try their skills at for the "Pull of Champions" on
chugging soda, eating bananas, Friday. Here, Tanner gets a few ·
and blowing bubbles. ·
~ words of advice fiom Brent
For Dylan Lavendar, 4, one of RAse, a member of the fair
the banana-eating competitors, board, before his chance at
the brea\t: fiom traditfmlal fair pulling Wednesday. (Brian J.
food appeared to be an agreeable Reed photos)

HOG - Nicholas Detwlller showed the grand champion
hog at the Junior Fair Swine Show on Wednesday. Also pictured is Fair Queen Billie Jo Welsh, Swine Princess Myca
Michael, Swine Prince Mark Guess and Little Mr. Meigs
County Jordan Koblentz.

Horse pull winners .

Junior horse show posts results
ROCK SPRINGS - Whitney Karr
'\'13S senior grand champion showman
~nd Betllany Riffle junior grand champion showman at Monday. morning's
Junior Fair Horse Show.
Jessica Janey was named senior reserve
champion showman, and Keshia Norman
junior reserve champion. Breanna Hems-

Sentinel
2 Sedlonl - . ,. ,....

Calendar
C!assjfieds
Comics
Editorial$
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

ley was novice grand champion show"
mart, and Hannah Williams novice reserve
champion showman.
.
Cassandra Smith took the production
grand champion rosette.
In the performance division , Whitney
Karr received senior performance grand
champion honors, Cassandra Smith

Hlp: 80s

Todlly"l

MaJor league ·hitting Ieeder.
NAnONAL LEAGUE
Cincinnati , 32; Rolen, Philadelphia, 32;
BATnNG -Aiou, Houston, .360; LWalk· BGIIes: Pittsburgh, 32.
er, Colorado', ·.347; LGonzalez, ·Arlzona, TRIPLES - Rollins, Philadelphia. 10;
.344; Berkman, Houston, .342, Floyd, · NP8rez, COlorado. 8; Vlna, St. Louis, 8;
Florida, .337; Vldro, Montreal, .334; Pierre, Colorado, 7; LCastillo, Florida , 7;
Gasay, Cincinnati, .333.
BGiles. Pittsburgh, 6; Kent. San Francis·
RUNS -LGonzalez, Arizona, 100; Hel· co, 6; LGonzalez, Arizona, 6.
ton, Colorado, 99; Floyd, Florida, 99; HOME RUNS - Bonds, San Francisco,
SSosa, Chicago,' 99; Bagwell, Houston. 51; LGonzalez. Arizona, 45; SSosa,
92; Berkman. Houston, 91; Abre:U, Chicago, 43; Hellon, Colorado. 36;
Philadelphia, 91 .
SGreen, Los Angeles, 32; Nevin, San
Rill -SSosa, Chicago. 114; LGonzalez. Diogo, 31 ; Bagwell, Houston. 31 .
Arizona, t11 ; Holton, Colorado, 107;
AMERICAN 'LEAGUE
Bonds, san Francisco, 102; Bertcme.n, BAmNG - AAiomar, Cleveland, .350;
Houston. 99; LWalker, COOrado. 97; Bag· JGonzalez, Cleveland, .345; Suzuki,
wen, Houston, 96.
Seanle, .340; JaGiambi, Oakland, .332;
HrTS -lGonzalez, Arizona, 156; Aurllia, BBoone. Seattle, .328; Mientkfewicz. Min·
San Francisco. 155; Berkman, Houston, nesota, .326; Stewan, Toronto, .321 .
149; BiggiO, Houston, 145; Pierre, COl· RUNS - Suzuki, Seattle, 98; AAodriguez ,
orado, 1.(3; Vlna, St. Louis, 143; VGuer· Te~~:as. 97; MJSweeney, Kansas City, 87;
rem, Montreal, 142.
Jeter, New Yortc, 86; BBoone. Seat11e. 86;
DOUBLES -Helton, Colorado, 38; Berk· RAiomar, Cleveland, 85; MRamlrez, .
man, Houston, 37; VGuerrero, Montreal, Boston, 82. ·
34; Abreu, Philadelphia, 34; Floyd, FIO&lt;I· RBI --JGonzalez, Cleveland. 106;
da, 3-l; Kent, Sar\ Francisco, 33; Casey, BBoona. Seattle, 104; MRamirez. Boston,

..

faifs grand
champion hog

.,

innings at San Diego for his
first major league victory. _
Chuck McElroy and David
Lundquist finished the Padres';
fourth shutout.
Wiki Gonzalez hit a tworun homer off Steve Tracpsel.
(6-11) in tile second inning
and former-Met Bubba Trammell hit a two.-run triple in a·
four-run third.
·

JarrodA!!!!!~ ~~c~l!'!n~ngs,

White Sox 7, Rangers 4

Martine~~w~!~l~

:11.

has

•

and
David Eckstein and Bengie Molina each hit
two-run singles as Anaheim beat Det.roit.
The Angels (63-56) have won 10 of 13, and
since the All-Star break are a major league-best
11-3 on the road.
Washburn (1 0- 6) gave up one run and four
hits. He allowed a combined nine runs and 14
hits in his previous two outin~ after winning
eight consecutive decisions.
The Tigers (48-69) have lost five straight and
11 of 13. They are a season-worst 21 games
under .500.

•

•

•

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Orioles 5, Royals l

Mariners 6, Red Sox 3, 11

www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY, AUIUIT 23, 2001
• IOUTHERI • MEIDl • EAITERI
MA

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

BY TONY M. l£AcH

Jose Cruz Jr.'s second homer of the night, a
game-winning three-run shot in the bottom of
Cal Ripken hit his first home run this season
the ninth, snapped Oakland's 11-game winat Camden Yards; a three-run shot as Baltimore
ning streak anti gave Toronto a 6-3 win over
~napped Kansas City's four-game winE:·iJ1E:.,_.1- - ,_ _______!~hk:i~:---- ~
strea£ - closer Jason Isringhausen (4-3)
Rip ken had hit all 10 of his home runs on
allowed Homer Bush to tie it with a double
the road before connecting off Chad Durbin
before Cruz hit his 21st homer off the right(7 -1 1) in the third inning.
field foul pole.
·
Ripken 's two nits gave him 3,155,lifting him
It was Isringhausen's eighth blown save in 31
past Royals' Hall of Farner George Brett into
opportunities.
sole possession of !3tll place on the career list.
Billy Koch (2-3) pitched the ninth inning
Ripken's 428th career homer backed Calvin
for the win.
Madura (2-3) , who allowed two hits and two
Oakland leads Boston by two games in the
runs in 6 2-3 innings.
race for the AL wild card.

.

50 cents • August 16, 1001 • Vol. 51, No. 1

three-run double offJeff Shaw
Junior Herndon (1-1) scat(3-3) as visiting Montreal
overcame
a
1-0
'deficit
with
a
tered
eight hits in 7 1-3
Matt Williams singled home
the winning run in the 1Oth as
Arizona won its fifth straight.
At Phoenix, Williams slashed
a grounder just inside third
base on the first pitch by Mike
Fetters. Damaso Marte (0-1)
had walked Tony Womack and

Blue Jays, Yankees, Mariners post wins

Tina Martinez hit a three-run homer m the
sixth and Andy Pettitte won his fifth straigllt
starr as New York beat visiting Tampa Bay.
Martinez, the team 'leader in homers and
RB!s, hammered a 1-0 pitch from Joe
Kennedy (3-8).
Derek Jeter added a solo home. run, and
Shane Spencer went 2-for-3 for the Yankees,
who snapped a three-game losing streak and
opened a four-game lead over Boston in the
AL East.

Hometown Newspaper

Melp County's

So•·

Wednesday'• Garnea
Qakland (ZIIo 8·7) at Toronto (Escobar 35). 7:05p.m.
Anaheim {Vald.. 6·6) at Datrolt (Sparke

Luis Gonzalez with one out.
Miguel Batista (8-7), usually
a starter, retired three of four ·
batters in the 1Oth.
Brian Giles tied the score in
the ninth with a leadoff homer,
against Byung-Hyun Kim .
Luis Gonzalez hit his 45th
homer in the first.

Thursday

8-7). 7:05 p.m.

Monday's Game
Tampa Bay 5, Minnesota 1

.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Yankees 5, Devil Rays 3

SPORTS: Tribe takes down Twins 8-2, Bl

WVednesday.Auaust15.1001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Cubs beat Astros, move
back into division lead

Page 86

AS

82-4
85
M
A3
81-2.5.8
A2

. L-:IOs
Details, A2

otteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 5·9-2; Pick 4:7-7-6-4
SUper LGIID: 1~26-2&amp;-344:s-46
Kid-. 641· Hl-7

W.VA.
Dlrlly 3: 5·9-2 Dally 4: 5-9-0-2
c 2001 Ohio valley Publishina co.

· senior performance reserve champion,
Keshia Nor.man junior performance
grand champion, and Alisha Compson
junior performance reserve champion .
Kay Tracy ofWa1hington Court House
was the event judge.
Results, by division, and by class, in

Please -

Results,' A3

Mules pulling against horses at Monday's horse pull at the
Meigs County Fair came in third in the light-weight division
to enthusiastic response from the crowd. Driving the mules
was their owner, Rodney Tuttle of Eagle Ridge. ·first lfl thE!.
division went to Douglas and McGuire of Glouster and Gallipolis. while second went to Jones and Douglas of VInton
and Glouster. In the heavyweight division, the winners, first
through third, were Jini Daniels of Gallipolis, McGuire and
Sons, Crown City, and Dave Seevers of New Carlisle. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Winners named in domestic arts judging
doll; Marilyn Spencer of Long l:lottom,
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
adult sweater; Corissa Deemer of SyraPOMEROY - When all 213 entries cuse, afghan; Debora Kenn edy of ·
in the open class domestic arts depart- P?meroy, wal~ hanging and counted cross
ment had been judged, eight items were stttch; and D1ana Johnson of Long Botdesignated as best of show and awarded tom, miscellaneous item.
·
0 th er bl ue n'bbon wmners
·
.111 t11e varrosettes an d prem1ums.
The top winners and the categories in ious classes were:
which they won were Sue Dewhurst of ... children's clothing - St;c Dewhurst,
Rutland, jacket or coat; Marilyn Deemer . dress; Merrilee . Bryant of Long I:Jottom,
of Syracuse, crocheted iten1 and dressed play outfit.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Adult clothing - Joanne Vaugllan of
Pomeroy, suit, blouse and dress; Patricia
Holter of Pomeroy, dress.
Fashion accessories, Marilyn Deemer
of Syracuse collar.
C h 'd ·
·
· f
roc ete ttems - CoriSSa Deemer 0
Syracuse, sweater set; Marilyn Deemer,
crocheted toy, doily 14 inch and under
and over 14 inch, crochet cushion, other
Please see Winners, A3

New at Holzer Medical Center ...
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Call Dave or Debbie at 992·2155
For More Information

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and radiation planning system.
For more information, call the

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·.·
I

•

�Thurachly, Aug. 16, 2001

·Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

INO.

thursday, August 1&amp;, 1001

FIVe records broken at Sale of Champions

Ohio weather
Friday, Aug. 17
AccuWeathe,..

PageA2

for
COLUMBUS (AP)- There was no
kryptonite to stop this Superman.
Laura Kline's grand champion steer
"Superman" broke the record for highest
sale price Wednesday at the Ohio State
Fair by bringing $75,000 from Kroger.
That broke the record for the third consecutive year.
" I'm thrilled;' said Kline of North Canton. " I knew they dedicated the sale to
(former Gov. James Rhodes and Ed Johnson, "The Voice of Ohio Agriculture")
and I knew they wanted to set records."
Kline said she would use the money (or
college and for next year's project.
The first four sales of the night also
broke records. The champion chickens
sold for $\ B,OOO, the reserve champion
chickens sold for $10,000, the champion

I .._n•tt.ld Is2o/IO" I •

•IColumbua 1Mo/118o I

Snow

Ice

lamb sold for $30,000 and the reserve
champion lamb sold for $12,500.
. Patrick Nolan of Wakeman, who sold
the champion chickens, broke the record
he had set in 1996.,
"It feels pretty coot;• Nolan said. Asked
if he expected to be back next year, he
smiled and said, "I hope so!'
With the bidding starting to slow for
the grand champion steer, Sale of Champions auctioneer Johnny Regula evoked
the memory of two of the sale's biggest
boosters to push it over the top.
Regula asked the state fair band to play
"that Sousa Song" - "Stars and, Stripes
Forever" - that Rhodes and Johnson
were fond of. Meanwhile, Kline and
Superman,stood in the ring, waiting.
After the band finished, Lt. Gov Mau-

Walking strong

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Weather forecast:
Tonight ...Showers
and
thunderstorms like!, mainly
unril midnight. Low in the
upper 60s. Southwest wind 5
to I 0 mph. Chance of rain 60
percent.
Friday... A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
morning, otherwise partly

RAVENNA (AP) - A fire it:J. a pit ,at Midwest Fireworks
resulted in a blast and thick smoke visible for miles earlier this
week and now has neighbors angry.
DuWayne Porter, environmental health director for the .
Portage Councy Health Department, said the burning Tuesday
evening apparently was legal and any health threat was minimal.
"It stinks so bad down here that we can't open our doors;" said
Doris Carver of Deerfield Township:
,
Joan Wallbrpwn, 69, who suffers from asthma, said the air "was
terrible, worse than if you lived in an industrial district. I just
couldn't breathe."

cloudy. High in the lower 80s.
West wind 5 to 10 mph.
C hance of rain 30 percent.
Friday night. .. Partly cloudy.
Low in the lower 60s.

· Extended forecast: ·
Saturday... Partly · cloudy.
High in th e lower 80s.
Sunday... Partly cloudy w ith
a chance of showers and thunderstor ms. Low in the lower
60s and high in the lower 80s.
Monday... Partly cloudy. Low
in the lower 60s and high in
the lower 80s.
Tuesday.'.. Pardy cloudy. Low
in the lower 60s and high in
the mid 80s.
Wednesday. ,.Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers. Low in the
lower 60s and high in the mid
80s.

Beer ad surprises offidals
COLUMBUS (AP) - Officials of an area park district say
they never gave permission for an image of one of their lakes to
be used oil a beer billbOard.
The message features a· can of Busch beer, a snow-topped
mountain range and a snapshot of the park's lake.
"Refreshing &amp; Natural As Sharon Woods Park;' the ad reads.
:- - John O'J'Je ara, arrector ot FranKlin County Metro Parks; said
:
\nheuser-Busch, which brews the beer, never contacted the park
• district about the billboard.
·

Man convicted of stalking
CANTON (AP) -A man who allegedly stalked women he
randomly selected has pleaded guilty.
Arthur R. Andrukat, 3 8, entered the plea to three felony and
two misdemeanor co11nts of menacing by stalking. Sentencing is
expected on Sept. 19.
"H didn' kn
f h fi
. . .. 'd J
-~ D
e
t ow any o t e ve VIctims, sw enn11er ave,
assistant Stark t?o~nty prosecutor. "The victims were chosen at
~ndom. 'I\vo vtcttms are real-estat~ agents. Three are psychologiSts chosen from the ~hone book.
.
,
Andrukat told mvesttgators he had been harbonng resentment
toward psychologists. None of the women knew who was harassing them until Andrukat wrote one psychologist and apologized.

Drive-by kills 1l·year-old
CLEVELAND (AP) - A 12-year-old ~oy was killed in a
drive-by shooting in a city neighborhood, police said.
The boy was shot outside a house shortly before 10 p.m.
Wednesday. He was taken to Rainbow Babies and Children's
Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
The boy was shot several times, said police Sgt. Mike Seaborn.
He declined to iden~ify the victim or say whether the boy lived
in the neighborhood where he was shot.
He said no one was able to provide a good description of the
car.

·France thanks Ohio veteran
MARIETIA (AP) - It's been more than a half-century, but
the French government hasn't forgotten abou.t the American soldiers who drove out the Nazis in World War II.
·
Marion F. Wilson, 76, of Newport, recently received a certificate and a letter of appreciation frorri the French government
thanking him for fighting in Normandy after the D-Day invasion
in 1944.The battle "changed the history of the 20th century," the
document said.
Wilson retired from the Army after 30 years of service in 1976.
"I was glad to see that the French governmem hadn't forgotten something I will never forget;' he said.

Rural lake losing water
WOODSFIELD (AP) - The state is pulling the plug o n a
popular recreation spot used by water sports enthusiasts in thi s
rural southeast Ohio community.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources plans to drain
Monroe Lake, which is used· for boating, fishing, swimming and
other types of water recreation about I 00 miles east of Columbus.
,
The lake is being drained so the department can repair con• · crete structural damage believed to have been ~aused by a flood
in 1998, Monroe County Commissioner Mark Forni said.
Spillways, dams and other concrete S!fucrures at the lake will be
repaired or replaced while the lake is drained.

Witness slayer gets life
CLEVELAND (AP) -A judge said he wo uld have preferred

harmful to juveniles.
Conviction on all charges could result in sentences totaling
more than 35 years in prison.

Firewoltcs blast jolts neighbors

Rain win end Friday morning
The National Weather Service says rain will end as high
pressure builds in behind a
frontal zone tonight. Lows will
drop into the low and mid 60s
as skies clear.
Pleasant weather is expected
Friday.
Sunset tonight will be at
8:27. Sunrise Friday will be at
6:45 -a.m.
·

reen O'Connor, helping out on the floor,
stood, removed· her white cowboy ,hat,
donned a Meijer baseball cap and .said
':Johnny, Meijer is breaking the record at
$71,500," drawing cheers and applause
from the crowd.
But the guys in the white Kroger shirts
weren't done.
. After huddling together, one of the
floor men threw up his hand and
. announced that Kroger was bidding
$75,000, which brought a collective gasp
from the crowd - which then burst into
applause.
"We had to think long and hard," said
Marnette Perry, president of the Columbus marketing area for Kroger. "We hel d
the record so far, so we· decided to push a
little farther."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Resulb

Hemsley;
Ground
driving/lunge line, senior:
Cassandra Smith;Western ridfwm Pllp A1
ing, junior: Keshia Norman;
Western riding, novice: Han.d~cending order from tirst, nah Williams; Trail, senior:Jeswere:
· Janey, · Cassandra Smith;
nca
· Senior 5howmanship: Whit- Trail, junior, ·pony: Bethany
· ney Karr, Jessica Janey and Riffle; Trail, junior, horse,
Cassandra Smith; Junior Alisha
Compson; Trail,
showmanship: Bethany Riffle, · novice: John Brauer, Breanna
Keshia Norman, R.J. Leach, Hemsley.
Summer
Folmer, Alisha
Gymkhana Division, barCompson,
Kyle
Boggs, rels, senior: Stephanie Story,
· Samantha Dequaisie; Novice
,•howmans h'1p: Breanna H em- Joey Riffle; barrels, junior,
sley, Hannah Williams, Aman- pony: Miranda McKelvey;
da Foreman, . and Amanda barrels, junior, horse: Sonny
'Baker.
Folmer, Mallory. Hill, Adrian
Peformance Division,West- Boli!', RJ. Leach; pole bendern Pleasure, senior: Whitney ing, senior: Stephanie Story,
Karr, Cassandra Smith, Jessica Joey Riffle; pole bending,
Janey; Western Pleasure, junior, pony: Miranda McKjunior, pony: Bethany Riffle; elvey; pole bending, junior,
Western Pleasure, junior, horse: Adrian Bolin, Sonny
horse: Keshia Norman, Alisha Folmer; cones and barrels,
Compson, R.J. Leach, Saman- senior: Stephanie Story, Joey·
tha DeQuasie; Western Plea- · Riffle; Cones and barrels,
sure,
novice,
Hannah junior, pony: Miranda McKWilliams, Breanna Hemsley; elvey; Cones and barrels,
Western
Horsemanship, junior, horse: Ashley Robie,
senior: Whitney Karr, Cassan- Adrian Bolin, MaUory Hill;
dra Smith, Jessica Janey; West- speed and control, senior:
ern Horsemanship, junior, Stephanie Story, Joey Riffle;
horse: Kes.hia Norman, Alisha . Speed and control, junior,
Compson, R.J. Leach.
pony: Miranda McKelvey;
Western
horsemanship, Speed and control, junior,
novice: Amanda Foreman, horse: Sonny Folmer, Adrian
Hannah Williams, Breana Bolin.

City to appeal mling

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL STOCKS
A£1'-«~

An:h Coal- 20~
Akzo-43
ArnTec:hSSC - 43i•
Aahlend Inc. - 41 ~
AT&amp;T- 19~
Bani&lt; One - 38
BLI- 11~
Bob EIIBN - 191;
BorgWamer- 53),
Champion - 3~
Charming Shops - 6
City Holding - 11 ~
Col-19~

DuPont-41 \

Federal Mc1gul - 1 .
US8-2A% •
Gannett- 64\
General Electric - 41 \

GKNLY-1Qi,
Harley Davidson - SO),
Kmar!-1:&amp;.
Kroger- 26
lands End - 37~
lid. - 16~
NSC-20~

Dak Hill F'lllBnCial .:_ 16l.

OVB-25
BBT - 38

Peoples- 23~

Winners
from PageA1
and under and over 14 inch,
crochet cushion, other crocheted
item;
Merrilee
Bryat:J.t,
shawl;
Dor·is
Grueser of Racine, small er
doily; Maxine Dyer o( Bidwell, pot holder.
Knitted items - Barbara
Mora of Pomeroy, baby
sweater· set, miscellaneous
crocheted item, ·afghan
stitch with embroidery;
Rebecca Baer of Pomeroy,
shell or variation; Corissa
D ee mer, afgh an; Marilyn
Deemer, mile a minute ;
Mary Lance of Racine,
afghan.
Quilts ·- Barbara Mora,
floss embroidery; Debora
Kennedy of Pomeroy, white
or one color, patchwork,
wall hanging; unspecified ,
Julie Kimes 'of Middleport.
Rugs - Brenda Stuart of
Syracuse, latch hook; other
rug, Maxine Dyer of Bidwell .
Needlecraft Debora
Kennedy, counted cross
stitch and patchwork cushion; Mary Ann Shoults of
Racine, colored embroidery
and crewel cushion; Diane

LOCAL BRIEFS

Premier- 8l.
Rocl&lt;wel -

16~

ei.

Rockv Boots -

RD Shell- 56~

Sears- 45Y.

Sl1oney's -~
wat·Mart - 52"

Wendy's-27\
WOI1hington -

14~

Dally stocl&lt; repolts are
lho 4 p.m. closing
&lt;t&lt;Jil!es of tho provious
day's transactions, provided by Smith Pannors
al Advesl Inc.

Driver ticketed
RACINE Harry T.
Walls, 67 ,Athens, was cited for
failure to yield from a stop
sign by the GaUia-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol
following a two-vehicle accident Wednesday at the intersection of state routes 124 and
338.

Troopers said Walls was
stopped on 338 at the intersection with 124 at 10:10
a.m. when he entered the
intersection and was srruck by
a pickup truck driven by
Rachel R. Rose, 26, Third
Street, Racine, who was
northbound on 124.
Both vehicles were slighdy
damaged.

Deaths

Maxwell of Rutland, counted cross stitch; Doris
Grue~er of Racine. colored
embroidery; Melissa Coleman, painted . piece and
painted pillow case; Maxine
Dyer, embroidered pillow
BIDWELL- Ruthie Mildred Davis, 80, Summersville, S.C.,
case; Merrilee Bryant, cross
formerly
of Bidwell, died Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2001 in Sumstitch cushion; Merrile e
Bryant,
stuffed
animal mersville.
Born May 15, 1921 in Slab Fork, Raleigh County, WVa.,
under 12 inches and over
daughter
of the late Elbert Elester and Rosetta Hannah
12 inches, pot holder.
Dolls - Barbara . Mora , Williams Loveday, she was a member of Church of God of
.
cloth doll; Marilyn Deemer, Prophecy in Gallipolis.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Clyde Davis,
homemade ornaments, tree
skirt; Mary Ann Shoults, on June 10, 1993; a daughter, Linda Droze; a son, Johnny Davis;
three brothers, Garland, Ernest and Marvin Loveday; and ·a sisholiday wall hanging; Carter, Elsie.
rie Motris, holiday door
Surviving are six children, Delmar (Deanna) Davis of
decoration.
Langsville, Clyde (Faye) Davis ofTravelers Rest, S.C., Kenneth
Other crafts Debora
(Erma) Davis of Miami, WVa., and Elbert (Trena) Davis, CarKennedy, new craft; Merolyn (Harry) Scott and Betty Jo Davis, all of Summersville; 17
rilee Bryant, handmade
grandchildren :ind several great-grandchildren; and a sister, Jet- .
jewelry; Marilyn Deemer, tie Ellen Rawlins of Sylvania.
plastic canvas in two classes.
Services will be 11 a.m. Saturday in McCoy-Moore Funeral
· Serger sewin g - Marilyn Home, Vinton, with the Rev. PJ. Chapm~n officiating. Burial
Deemer, crochet angel; will be in Vinton Memoriall?ark. Friends may call at the funerM elissa Coleman, stuffed al home from 6-9 p.m. Friday.
angels, other miscellaneous'.
' .
Sweat shirts M elissa
Coleman, applique; Diana
Johnson , othe r use.
RACINE -Julius "Dutch"Waldnig, Racine, died WednesCeramic - Melissa Cole- day, Aug: IS, 2001 at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columman , non-fired painted; ·bus.
Lula Sue To ban of Pomeroy,
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
fired dry brush; Marilyn Home in Pomeroy.
Deemer, multipieces.
.W oodworking and wood
art -Diana Johnson ;

Ruthie Mildred Davis

Julius Waldnig

CINCINNATI (AP) - City officials said Wednesdity . rhey
Regis Shivers, left, of West Lafayette, joins Don Stevenson, of
would appeal an arbitrator's ruling that the police division must
Auburn, Wash. as he makes his way down State Route 36 in
PRODUCTION WINNER - Cassandra ·Smith won production
reinstate an officer who was fired in 1997 after he ackriowleqged
Cos hocton County. On April 26, Stevenson, 65, began a 3500.
grand champion and senior performance reserve champion
:
mile trek from Seattle, to New 'York City In order to raise aware- planting a bag of marijuana on a suspect.
honors at Monday's Junior Fair horse Show. Stephanie Story
Sgt.
John
Sess
took
his
firing
to
arbitration
and
got
his
job
,
q
ack,
ness and money for Multiple Sclerosis. (AP Photo)
and Joey Riffle, Horse Princess and Prince, are also pictured.
along with back pay and benefits for the four years he .Wa$ off
(Charlene Hoeflich photo)
'
'
work. The arbitrator, Harry Berns of Cleveland, said there was no
to sentence Timothy Moulder to death for killing a robbery ~c­ convincing evidence that Sess sh()uld have been disciplined. 1
However,.Sess will not return to work pending the outcome of
tim.
the
appeal, a poijce spokesman said Wednesday.
· · ' :
Instead, Judge Ronald Suster sentenced him on Wednesday to
During a polygraph test for a potential job transfer to; the
life in prison wi thout a possibility of parole. Suster of Cuyahoga
he
Co unty Common Pleas Courr could not give Moulder the death Regional Narcotics Unit, Sess told the unit commander
penalty because a lone juror refused to recommend a death sen- planted marijuana on a suspect in 1984. H e also said h e smoked
marijuana with two other officers in the late 1970s or early 19BOs
tence.
during a fi,shing trip.
.
;
1 ." The killing of Robert C urler was the worst form of the
'
.
.
.
~ · ~..1
I
•
• • 'I
•.
.
'
::, I
.,..
.,.,~f'f'...W
., . ..
- '
offense of aggravated murder, and any sentence short of the 'm ax- I
imum would · demean the ·seriousness of this heinous crime;'
Suster said.
Before..sentencing~him,Suste-r--asked Moulder if he-wanted~to-- CLE\'ELAND_(AP.). - Mayor~Michael lt.WIIlite:-ha,s-order.ed- 1-~· ··SHOWMANSHIP-WINNERS-- Wlnnlng~showmanshlp horiOI'll--~
speak.
an investigation into whether a Municipal Football League coach
· at Monday's Junior Fair Horse Show were, from left, Whitney
whipped young players with a belt.
Kerr, senior grand champion, Jessica Janey, senior reserve
The team is suspended from city services and use of city fields
champion; Bethany Riffle, junior grand champion; Keshla Norbegin~
. during the investigation, says a Wednesday letter from Recreation
· man, junior reserve champion. (Charlene Hoeflich photos) .
PORTSMOUTH (AP) - The U.S. Grant Bridge is being Commissioner Michael Coi.:. The city has asked C leveland
removed piece-by-piece as crews make way for a new span across schools to enact a similar ban.
the Ohio River. .
'
The city sent the letters to Clay Thompson, head coach of the
Crews began to dismantle the bridge last week, removit:J.g a Glenville A's, and to players and their parents. Authorities are not
section from the middle span of the deck.
saying whether the head coach or an assistant are accused.
Kathleen Fuller, public information officer for the Ohio
The league 'is an independent nonprofit organization but
D
fT
h
epartment o ransportation, said t e deck removal is progress- receives city grants.
ing on sch dul
The con~ract~rs hope to have all the sections removed within
two weeks so they can complete the demolition by the end of
the month.
CINCINNATI (AP) -A pilot was forced to make an emerBEST OF CROCHET - Marilyn Deemer of Syracuse displays a
·
gency landing on Interstate . 275 just outside of Cincinnati
crocheted christening · dress with shoes and cap which she
PERFORMANCE WINNERS - Winners In the performance made and entered Into the domestic arts judging. It won the
Wednesday. No one was injured.
'1' 'division of Monday's horse show were, from left, Whitney Karr, best of show tn the crochet category. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
The pilot, Alex Rybarczyk, 20, was flying the Cessna ISO to
.
·
·
senior grand champion; Sandi Smith, senior reserve champ!- ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - A suburban Cincinnati man has been Lunken Airport iit Cincinnati from Portsmouth.
on;
Keshla
Norman,
junior
grand
champion;
and
Alisha
Compaccused of raping a 7-year-old girl who went to him for piano
Rybarczyk was instrument-rated and training for his next level
son, junior .reserve. champion. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
lessons.
Qf certification. He landed on the expressway a few miles away
A Hamilton County grand jury released indictments Wednes- from the airport.
day against C harles Bingman, 69, of Blue Ash.
John Pruden, operations manager at the Franklin Colle ge of
He has been charged with one count of rape, five counrs, of Aviation, which owns the plane, said the cause of the problem .
gross sexual imposition and one count of disseminating ma~ter was unknown. He speculated that it was either a loss of power or
.
.
the plane ran out of fueL

Showman champ

tli:it

~

Demolition

Whipping a~on pro~ :

on bridge

Airplane lands on 1·175

Piano teacher accused rape

Court rules death
sentence appropriate
in munl@tQse ·· .
.

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Ohio Supreme Court has
upheld the death sentence of a
man found guilty of killing
two people in Fran:ldin county.
.
The ruling was issued
Wednesday in a case involving
Kareem Jackson, 27, who was
convicted of the 1997 shooting deaths of Antorio Hunter,
19, and Terrance Walker, 23,
during a drug-related robbery..
Jackson was sentenced to
death in February 1998 for
the killings. He also was sentenced to 5 1 years for robbery
and kidnapping.
His attorney, Keith Yeazel,
had argued that Jackso n
should not be sentenced to
death because a key witness
did not testify and two others
got reduced jail time for testifying.
The Supreme Court's opin ~
ion, written by Justice Francis

jackson was setJtenced
to death in February
1998 for the killings.
He also was sentenced
to 51 years for robbery
and kidnapping.
•

Sweeney, said, "The murders
were cold- blooded, execution-style killings .... We also
find . the death penalty
imposed in this case is both
appropriate and proportionate
when compared with similar
cases."
The robbery netted $40, a
cellphone and $60 worth of
marijuana.
Two accomplices, Michael
Patterso n, 25, and Derrick
Boone, 27, are serving· 15
years each in prison. Malaika
Will iamson, 28, is serving 10
years for. driving the getaway
car.

GYMKHANA WINNERS- Winners In the competitive Gymkhana
division of the Junior Fair Horse Show were Stephanie Story,
• senior grand champion; Joey Riffle, senior reserve champion;
Sonny Folmer, junior grand champion; and Ashley Roble, junior
reserve champion. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

'

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today. ·

992-2156

Enjoy The l38th
Meigs County Fai~!
Thursday, August 16 ·Sponsor of the Day .
Ridenour TV and Appliance/Gas Service
SENIOR cmzEN DAY
(All Senior.Citizens admiHed free untill:OO p.m.)
4:00 p.m. Harness Racmg
4:00p.m. Kiddie Tractor l'ull· Show Arena
4:00p.m. Clover Bud Show &amp; Tell · Hillstage
5:00p.m. Pic Eating Contest· Hillstage
6.00 p.m. Tractor and Truck Pulls· Tractor Pull Are
11:00 p.m. Gates Close
·, .
Friday, Augual17 ·Sponsor of the Day·
"RUTLAND BOTTLE GAS"
Various limes: Comedy Safari Show
7:00a.m. Gates Open
8:00 ·11:00 a.m. 4-H Horse Fun Show. 4-H Horse Show Ring
9:00a.m. Pel Show· Show Arena
·
10:00 a.m. Kiddie Tractor Pull of Champions
ll:OOa.m. Roll Call for 4-H
ll:OOa.m. junior Fair Dog Obedience Show ·Show Arena
12:00 NOQ!l Bicycle Drawing
1:00 p.m. l;lamess Racing· Race Track
2:00p.m. Market Rabbit and Poultry Sale; Show Arena
3:00p.m. Dairy Market Feeder Sale· Show Arena
3:30p.m. I;lairy Sweepstakes ·Show Arena
4:00p.m. Market Steer Sale· Show Arena
5:00 p.m. Markel Lamb Sales . Show Arena
6:00p.m. Commercial Feeder Calf Sale •
6:00 p.m. Tractor and Truck Pull · Pull Track
6:3(Jy.m. Market Hog Sale • Show Arena
11 :Wp.m. Gates Clooe ·

•
'

GRAND CHAMPION HOG
SHOWMAN
Nicholas
Detwiller was grand champion
showman at the Jun ior Fair
Swine Show on Wednesday.
Swine
Princess
Myca
Michael, Swine Prince Mark
Guess, Little Mr. Meigs County Jordan Koblentz and Fair
Queen Bille Jo Welsh are also
pictured with Detwllier.

•

The Daily Sentinel
(UIPI 21WIO)

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Correction Polley
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to be accurate. II you know of an
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\PRIIIG VI, IIIY (IIJIMII

Ohio Volley PUblltlllllfl Co.
Publlohed OYOry afternoon. Mooday
lhrough Friday, 111 Cou~ St.,
Pomeroy. Ohio. . Socond..lasa
postage paid at PCJt!18r&lt;&gt;y.
Momboo. The Associated Pre~~ and
lhe Ohio Newspaper Association.
Sen!! addrHI oomoc·
Ilona to The Dally SOntinel, 111 Coun.
St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.

ROSETTE WINNER- This child's velvet hooded cape made by Sue
Dewhurst won her a best of shoW In children's coats in the domestic a~judglng at the Meigs County fair. (Char1ene Hoeflich photo)

•

IIAnNEEI SAT· IUN 1:111 3:tl
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' .

�••

0 p1n1on

The Daily~tinel

PageA4
Thuf5d.y.Auaust11.2001

BY CHARLENE ltOEFUCII

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

SENTINEL NEWS STAfF

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Char1H W. Govey
Publleher

R. Sh-n L-la
Managing Edllor
Diane Key Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
Gener!ll Man~~g•r

n_,

Uttm to tlr• fiiiJkw,. lll'lknw.
sllot~ld N ku llul• 300 ,.,uniJ. All ,.u,
tMbjHt to .tilblf tuUI Mltd H 111..., .U lltCIIUU ~~ tued l~l~plrDnllnllllf'tlwr:
No U111ipnl l«lkn will h p.wlUIIId. Utttn rllould 1M lrt rood tart•, addrndllf

tiN

IUIIIIJ,

not pni(Jitii.IJ&amp;J.

Dt Of'iltiOIU IX1fflll4 Ill rh1 coiM•t~ H/4w " ' 1111 co"""''" of tilt Oltlo V.llty

h&amp;lillli•r Co. 'I ftlltorlid &amp;oard, •rtlnt otllti'Willl "Qift/.

NATIONAL VIEW

Benefit
'

(Regularizing' immigrants
can pay dividends to US.
• North County Times, Escondido, Calif., on immigratio"
plans: A high-level task force led by Secretary of State Colin
Powell and Attorney ·General John Ashcroft has delivered to
President Bush a report that takes another look at U.S. immigration policy - including the possibility of granting work
permits, and possibly legal residency, to the estimated 3 million
Mexican citizens already in the United States without docu- .
ments ....
... (R)egularizing the status of the estimated 3 million Mex. ican workers already here would be a good thing. It would
· ensure more humane worl&lt;ing and living conditions for people
who already are doing some of the most onerous tasks our
society needs done. And there is no question that US. businesses and private citizens need the workers . ...
So long as the nation can absorb the flow of workers -. and
: the nation already has absorbed the estimated 3 million Mexi: cans who are working here- immigration benefits the nation
: as well as the immigrants.
Clearly, many concerns need to be addressed. Singling out
Mexican workers for special status is unfair to the thousands of
their co-worKers from Central America, Haiti and elsewhere,
· who should be entitled to guest-worker status as well. And reg• ularizing the status of workers already here will not solve the
problem employers have of filling the mos~ back-breaking, tiring and dangerous jobs. Typically, as workers become 'legal, they
leave the fields and take safer, less physically demanding jobs.
And that's as it should be. That's why, if the undocumented
. workers already-here-are given-an opportunity to-become legal; U.S. residents, an expanded guest-worker program will proba. bly be. necessary to fill the jobs the new resid~nts will vacate.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Aug. 16, the 228th day of 2001. There are
137 days left in the year. ·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 16, 1977, Elvis Presley died at Graceland Mansion
. in Memphis, Tenn., at age 42.
On this date:
In 1777, American forces won the Revolutionary War Bat.
tle of Bennington;Vt.
In 1812, Detroit fell to British and Indian forces in the War
of 1812. ·
In 1829, the original Siamese twins, Chang and Eng Bunker,
arrived in Boston to be exhibited to the Western world.
In 1858, a telegraphed message from Britain's Queen Victo, ria to President Buchanan was transmitted over the recently
' laid transatlantic cable.
In 1861, President lincoln prohibited the states of the
Union from trading with the seceding states of the Confederacy.
In 1948, baseball legend Babe Ruth died in New York at age
53.
In 1954, Sports Illustrated was first published by Time Inc.
In 1956, Adlai E. Stevenson was nominated for president at .
the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.
In 1960, Britain granted independence to the crown colony
of Cyprus.
In 1987, 156 people were killed when Northwest Airlines
Flight 255 crashed while trying to take off from Detroit. ·
Ten years ago: Pope John Paul II began the first-ever papal
visit to Hungary. In Mos~ow, Alexander Yakovlev, a top adviser to Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev, resigned from tl\e
Communist Party, warning that hard-liners were plotting "a
party and state coup." .
Five years ago:Ajubilant Bob Dole set out from the Republican convention, promoting his tax-cut plan as a boon to
working families.
One year ago: Delegates to the Democratic Nation al Convention in Los Angeles formally nominated AI Gore for president. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., was diagnosed with a sec- .
ond bout of melanoma (the cancer was 'later surgically
removed, with no sign that it had spread).
· Today's Birthdays: Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres is
78. Actor Fess Parker is 76. Actress Ann Blyth is 73. Actor
Robert Culp is 71. Sportscaster frank Gifford is 71. Actress
Julie Newmar is 68. Actor John Standing is 67 . Actress Anita
Gillette is 65. Actress Carole Shelley is 62. Countty singer Billy
Joe Shaver is 62. Movie director Bruce Beresford is 61. Actor .
Bob Balaban'is 56. Ballerina Suzanne Farrell is 56. Actress Lesley Ann Warren is 55. Rock singer-musician Joey Spampinato
(NRBQ) is 51. Actor Reginald Veijohnson is 49. TV personality Kathie Lee. Gifford is 48. Rhythm-and-blues singer J.T.
Taylor is 48 . Movie director James Cameron is 4 7. Ro ck musi ~ ,
cian Tim Farriss (INXS) is 44. Singer Madonna is 43. Actress
Angela Bassett is 43. Actress Laura Innes is 42. Actor Tiniothy
Hutton is 41. Actor Donovan Leitch is 33. Country singer
·
Emily Robison (The Dixie Chicks) is 29.

Page AS
16. 1001

Baum claims top horticulture prize

The Daily Sentinel
.--

Fair

The Daily Sentinel

.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Is Bush s.(values initiative' a serious proposition?
•

If President Bush wants to be taken
seriously with his new initiatives on "values" and "character;• he needs to start taking on the purveyors of sex and violence
in the entertainment industry.
To his credit, Bush has set a personal
· example of dignity in the White House
.
and has sought increased funding for
"character education" in schools.
.
• However, he has left ii to others· notably Sens. Joe Lieherman, D-Conn.,
Sam Brownback, R-Kan., John Mcdain,
COLUMNIST
R-Ariz., and Hillary Rodham Clinton,
D-N.Y. - to put heat on Hollywoo~, broadcast television has increased by 70
television networks and the recording percent over the past two years.
industry.
Another conservative group, the JndeBush aides say that, beginning next pendent Women's Forum, reportecl last
week and continuing into the fall, the month ,that· although . college women
president will speak out regularly on val- overwhelmingly claim they want to
ues and character as part of his large.r marry, a significant minority is caught up
effort to remind vot~rs .~at he is a "com- in a pattern of"hooking up"_ engaging
passtonate conservative.
in no-commitment, ope-time sexual
Nevertheless, 'if the effort is, not to be encounters.
perceived as just a cosmetic or smaU-iniMeantime, Surgeon General David
nanves makeove~, such as AI G~re tt1ed _m Satcher report.ed ,in June. that. 45 million
the-2000 campat~-and mte-nme-White- !unericans (on~-i)1 six)-are--tnf&amp;ted with
House. adVIser D1ck Moms su~ted to genital herpes, 22 percent of women
Bill Chnton, Bush needs to begm ·making reported they had been raped, and
an If!~ pact on a worserung cultural eli- 100,000 children are sexually abused each
mate.
· year.
·
A study .in the Journal of the American
Moreover, if he wants to restore his
iinage as a moderate,. he should broaden Medical Association revealed that 18 perthe administration's sex education policy cent of high school girls in Massachusetts
to inch,tde "safe sex" advice as well as reported having been physically or sexualabstinence - or at least allow local com- ly abused by a boyfriend.
According to recent Corigressional witmunities to choose a mix of progiams.
On the cultural front, Bush has been nesses, children spend an average of 6.5
utterly silent, even as recent studies and hours a day involved with various media
congressional testimony demonstrate that (three of those. hours are spent watching
the entertainment industry is escalating its teil'vision) and may see as many as 15,000
pollution of popUlar culture and also to sexual references per year on the tube,
· · effiorts to h e1p parents momtor
· tQ only 170 of which J1romote responsible
restsnng
what their children, are exposed.
behavior.
The conservative Parents' Television
The relationship between violent and
Council reported last week that instances sexually explicit media and behavior has
of violence, sexual explicitness and pro- been documented again and again, but it
fanity during the so-called family hour on is still being disputed by industry exec!l-

Morton

Kondracke

rives, most recently by Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of
America.
Valenti wrote David Walsh, president of
the National Institute on Media and the
Family, that the scientific community is
split on whether media affect children and
said the evidence was "inconsistent and
weak."
Valenti also claimed at a Senate hearing
before Lieberman and Brownback that 70
percent to 80 percent of parents find that '
existing movie ratings are helpful to them
and that it's impossible for the industry to
do better.
For this,Valenti got blasted -justifiably.
Michael Rich of Harvard Medical School
. said 'that "among thousands of studies, aU
but 18 have shown a positive association
between viewing violence and subsequent
violent behavior."
Brownback' and Lieberman are trying
to get the entertainment tndustry'-"OI'l' a
voluntary basis, preferably - to establish
clear standards for ratings, create independent bodies-to-rate-material, and-make the--- rating process open to public scrutiny.
. In addition, along with McCain and
Clinton, they want to give the Federal
Trade Commission the power to regulate
the marketing of adult material to children.
Bush should join this effort and, in addition, take smaller steps, such as encouraging television manufacturers to inform
parents how to use existing devices, such
as V-chips, to control their children's
intake of Hollywood fare.
By ducking a battle with the entertainment industry, Bush is exposing children
to the very cultural influences he's trying
to combat With "character
education" and
·
"abstinence" programs.· Hollywood is
winning, :l.nd if the president doesn't
know it, he should.

(Morton Kondracke is executive editor
Roll Call, the ~ewspaper rf Capitol Hill.)

of

RYAN'S VIEW

from every risk, from every eventuality,
no matter how remote. We get rid of
jungle gyms when one child breaks his
back in a freak fall. We forbid our children to walk to schooll?ecause one child
is snatched off a street I ,000 miles away.
Now we're proposing a law to fine
parents $100 for leaving a young child in
a car for even a minute because one
father negligently killed his baby by leavit;~g him in a hot car for two hours.
Please. Leaving a .child strapped in a
locked, ventilated car for a minute, or
five, while a mother runs in to pick up
the dry cleaning does not harm a child.
Mothers do it aU the time. But with this
law, they'll have to check their common
sense at the car door.
We require helmets for any children's
activity that involves wheels or sticks. It's
only a ri •atter of time before a child
strapped into a car seat suffers a head
injury, and we. require kids to wear helmets in cars, too.
The blind embrace of any and aU safety measures seems already .to be eroding
our kids' common sense. The New York
Times ran a front-page story last Sunday
about how the rate of head injuries
among bicyclists has increased 51 percent
despite widespread use of helmets. One
explanation: The riders' sense 9f security
is blunting their sense of caution.

TOUGH JOI - For KaY, Tracy .of Waahlngton court House,
right, judging 4-H and FFA equestrian events was .s difficult job.
The day-long .show combined skill of lider and mount, In a number of competitive events, lncludln&amp; showmanship snd.perfor·
mance. (Brian J. Reed photo)
· '

. AND THE WINNER IS - Every day at the fair when the clock
. strikes noon, at least four new bicycles are prssented to chll·
.dren-attending-the-fair. A total of 29-bieycles- wlll- be-glven- away this week. Each child is given at a ticket at the gate to
put In the bucket for the noon drawings, which take place on
. the hill stage. Ons of Tuesday's winners was Eugene Patter" son of Rutland, pictured here on the bicycle he selected.
Open claaa poultry
Donating bicycles for the giveaway are Harmon Heating and
Winners In tha open clasa pouHry
judging ware annoonced today. Tak•
Cooling, Fast for U, WaiMart, Bend Area Care, Big Bend Farm
ing first place In the pen of one pullet
Antiques, DanTax, Shade River Coonhunter's Association, Fry
and one cockerel In the Engllah dlvl·
Plua, Jim Cane Concessions, Ridenour Gas Service, Jack's
slon was Lester Manuel of Racine.
In the judging of another standard
Septic Service, Rutland Bottle Gas, Christy Concession and
breed
of poultry, the winner In the·pul·
·. Games, McDonald's,.Bates Amusement and the Meigs Counlet and cockerel wu Manuel, ftm,
·;ty Fair Board. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
and Kirk Kenneth of LangiiVIIIe, aeo-

Fair Judging
· results

.

.

The Times' story told ·of a boy who
broke his neck while riding over a jump
on a mountain trail. He felt safe taking
the risk because he was wearing a helmet. "I wouldn't do something like that
without a helmet," he told the Times. He
was paralyzed from the neck down.
I'm not criticizing helmet laws; they
have saved many lives and ought to be
enforced. My point is our kids don't get
much practice in assessing risk and using
common sense to keep themselves safe.
The truth is the world isn't as dangerous
as the news anchors say, and our chil~n
aren't as defenseless as we imagine. But
we live as though life were a Mad Max
movie in which we aU will•perish if we
don't plaster wamings on every curb and
pass laws against every risk.
We have put ourselves on the road to
extinction. Here's how our end will
come: We will be flatten~d like pancakes
after following each &lt;;&gt;ther off the one
cliff on Earth where there isn't a large
warning sign, "Careful! Walking off edge
of cliff tan cause serious bodily harm or
death'' - thus inspiring Tim Burton's
sequel, "Planet of the Crepes."

aoa11 · Ryan is a columnist for the San .
Francisco Chronicle. Send comments to her in
care of this newspaper or send her e-mail at
joa11ryansfgate. com.)

RESERVE CHAMPION SHOWMAN - Aaron Afe received ·
reserve champion hog showman honors at the Junior Fair Swine
Show held at the Meigs County Fair. Pictured with Fife is Fair
Queen Billie Jo Welsh, Swine Prince Mark Gi.Jess, Swine Prlnce~s
Myca Michael and Utile Mr. Meigs County Jordan Koblentz.

RESERVE CHAMPION - Stacie Watson won reserve champion market hog honors during Wednesday's Jun ior Fair
Swine Show. Pictured with Watson is Fair Queen Billie Jo
Welsh, Swine Princ.e Mark Guess, Little Mr. Meigs County
Jordan Koblentz and Swine Prin~ess Myca Mi_chael.

E·MAIL YOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS
- - - - -1- - -1news@mydailytribune.com ,

ond. Kenneth alao took ftm In the
pen 01 one han and one COCk In both
standard and old Englah g11118, and

LOCAL EVENTS
. SUNDAY
, TUPPERS PLAINS Descendants of Jacob
Bauer Elberfeld and
Katie Mees Elberfeld ,
annual reunion at Elberfled Farm near Tuppers
Plains, Sunday. Covered
dish dinner will begin at

noon.

Seeing the decline of common sense in our society
Bv JoAN .RYAN
If evolution breeds out characteristics a
species no longer uses, then humans will
someday be a collection of nitwits. We
are becoming so dependent on warning
labels and safety laws and we have
become so determined to eliminate aU
risk that surdy we are eroding our capacity for common sense.
The coffee I bought this morning, for
example, came with this helpful warning
on the paper cup:"Caution HOT beverage;' just in case I was thinking of splash,
ing some onto my face:
We have plenty of evidence that common sense is dying out. Every year now,
people are hurt trying to pet buffalo and
bears in national parks, apparently assuming there would be a sign or something if
these large wild animals were dangerous.
And every year, someone is seriously
injured from hanging out of a San Francisco cable car and slamming into
oncoming trafli~ - such a remarkable
diminishment nf common sense that the
accident serves as a cosmic reminder
about that survl''!al-of-the-fittest theory.
.If our capacity for common sense is
weakening with each overzealous law
and warning, imagin~ how handicapped
. our children will be. In today's America,
we raise our children as if they were
Faberge eggs. They must be protected

POMEROY Devon
Baum of Pomeroy was the top
blue ribbon winner in the
, horticulture judging at the
Meigs County Fair.
Baum received 16 blue ribbons for his entries, with
Harry Brown of Racine winning 13, and Henry Bahr of
; Long Botton\., eight. Judging
· the 378 entries in the open
· class show of farm crops, fruits
and vegetables was Rory
Lewandowski, Athens County
extension agent.
Blue ribbons in grains went
to Devon · Bauin of Pomeroy
·in both white and yellow
·sweet corn, Roy Holter of
Pomeroy in Indian corn,
Patricia Holter of Pomeroy in
peck wheat, and Stephen King
of Pomeroy in oats.
· In potatoes Henry Bahr of
Long Bottom took three firsts,
with Darlene Hayes of
Pomeroy taking a first. Bahr
also took two firsts in sweet
potatoes with Harry Brown of
Racine taking a blue ribbon in
yams.
In vegetables, the blue ribbon winners were Devon
Baum in green cabbage, long
pole beans, lima beans, red
· tomatoes, and sweet peppers;

and Darlene ' Hayes of
Pomeroy in zucchini.
In melons, the blue ribbon
winners w.:re Henry Bahr and
Devon Baum; and in apples
taking two first were Evelyn
Hollon of Racine for red delicious and another variety.
Taking blue ribbons in the
other fr'!it categories were
Harry
Brown, Concord
grapes; Roy Holter, Niagara
grapes, Maxine Dyer, Keifer
pears; Harry Brown, Bartlett
pears, blackberries . and blue
berries; Darlene Hayes, sugar
pears; Ro}' Holter, yellow
peaches;
Taking the blue ribbon for
the best display of garden produce was Darlene Hayes.
In'' the classes for largest
NOT AN EASY TASK- Rory i.ewsandowskl, Athens County specimen Tara Rote of Racine
. extension agent, judged the 378 crop entries In the Meigs had the largest potato; Evelyn
County Fair horticulture show this week. The top blue ribbon Hollon, the largest apple,
winner was Devon Baum of Pomeroy.
Devon Baum, the largest
tomato, the longest cucumber,
Henry Bahr in red cabbage; beets, and carrots; Deborah the largest turnip, the largest
Briar Dill of Long Bottom in Mohler of Pomeroy in cherry ear of corn, the largest canyellow tomatoes, summer tomatoes, and hot peppers.
taloupe, the largest cabbage;
squash, crooked neck squash,
Joshua Mohler of Pomeroy, Stephen King, the largest beet;
· and ornamental gourds.
in green pod pole beans, and Deborah Mohler, the largest
Maxine Dyer of Bidwell in okra; Jessi Meadows of Mid- cucumber; Henry Bahr, the
pear red tomatoes; Harry dleport in cucumbers; Opal largest onion; Nancy Circle,
Brown in pear yellow toma- Dyer of Bidwell in pickles; the largest squash.
toes, hi-color tomatoes, green Patricia Bissell of Rutlan~ in
Deborah Mohler won the
pod bush beans, white onions, field pumpkins; Darren Hayes blue ribbon for freak vegetayellow onions, red onions, of Pomeroy in pie pwn.pkin; : bles.
.
.

LONG BOTTOM Homecoming Sunday at
the Hazel Cor:rrmunity
Church near Long
· Botom, dinner at noon,
·afternoon services, 1 :30
·with special singing by
Proclaim. John Elswick
to preach.
. POMEROY- Squire
. Parsons to appear in
concert at First Southern
Baptist Church, 10:30
· a.m. Sunday.
POMEROY- Forest
· Run United Methodist
. Church to host unified
worship service with
Asbury, Minersville
churches, .10:30 a.m.
Sunday, with Rev. Jack
. Lethenstrom. Carry-in
·' picnic to follow at noon.

·MONDAY
. MIDDLEPORT- Special
meeting of Middleport Vii·

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
·MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

lage Council, Monday,
6:30p.m. for the purpose
of discussing insurance.
Community Calendar Is
published as a free ser·
vice 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.

a firtdt In b8nllm. ·

Alban ~r of Pomeroy took fim
In bantam duclca With a han and COCk.
•
Flm In fair dlllllaY
Grange boolha In the Meiga County Fair senior fair building ware
judged With Star Grange 01 LangiiVIIIe
taking ftm. Second went to HemloCk
Grange 01 Pomeroy, Racine Gr.nge
of Racine, third, and the Yokulh
Grange of Melgl County, Mldltep0!1,

fourth.

. Hay ehoW
Winners In lhrae ctuses of hay
judging ware announced today.
In the 75 percent or mora &amp;Halla, '
placing first was Ben Holter, With .Roy
Honer, second, and Dawn Kopec,
third. In aA gruaea the wfnnera W81'11
Herbert Ervin, first, T.C. Ervin, oac·
ond, and Roy Heller third.
In the 49 percent or las clue,
Ross Heller took flrt1t, Roy Holter,
second, and Ben Holter, third.

Serving..You Since I946
with QuaUty Prescription
·Service at
Comped_tive Prices
We Honor most Third
Party Prescription Plans
OPEN Monday thru Friday
8:00. am • 9:00 pm
Saturday 8 am • 5 pm .
Sunday 10 am· 4 pm
SW ISHER • LOHSE
PHARMACY
Kenneth Mc:CullouQh, R. Ph. ·
Char1es Rlllle, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112EastMalnStrael
Pomeroy, Ohio
·Open WeekniQhls '11119 •

HOUIIS

Mon. fri 8am ·liMn
Sat. 8am- 5pm
Sun. lOam· o4pm

DOTICE TO CODTRHCTORS!
Meigs County has been awarded funding for the
repair of owner occupied homes. ·
These Home Repairs will consist of the repair
only one or two Items that are of immediate need
to maintain the unit.
The Meigs Grants Office, on behalf of the
homeowner, will be requesting bids on each
project. Any contractor who would like to receive
notifications to bid on this work, should pick up a
contractor's application at the Meigs Grants
Offlc~, 117 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy Ohio .
Contractor's eire required to provide references
of previous home repair, proof of liQbility
Insurance and proof of workman's comp.," if
applicable.
For further information call, Jean Trussell,
Grants Administrator, at 7 40.- 992-7908.

Friendly Service
.'

�•

•

Thursday, Aug. 18,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

•

Cmel words aimed at kids cut deep and heal slow

.. .

DEAR ABBY: It was easy for me
· to rewrite "Words of Love&gt;" by
Danny Comstock, in order to
. describe wha~ many .young people
hear when they're growing up. I
speak from experience. Please print
it so other unhappy kids out there
will know they're not a)one. Please
do not identify me, Abby. Just sign
me ... SURVIVOR IN CALI. FORNIA
DEAR SURVIVOR: Verbal
abuse is toxic and cumulative. The
scars left by ugly words can take far
longer to heal than those from physical abuse. The victims may become
. successful adults, but underneath, the
wounds remain. Read on:
WORDS OF LOVE?
You're neurotic! You're immature!
You're skinny! You're ugly!
You're nothing but a slob!

You embarrass me, but I'm willing
to put up with you Because no one else will tolerate
you}
You need me to take care of you

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
Do your schoolwork! Clean your
room!
Clean the house! Take. care of the
baby!
Can't yo,u do anything right?
You don 't have any skills!
You will never get a job!
You're lazy! You're selfish! You're
spoiled!
No wonder you don't have any
friends!

You wouldn't last twO seconds on
your own!
. The only reason I berate and critICize yoy
Is because I'm trying to build your
character
And make you a better person!
Ifl didn't, I wouldn't lbve you!
DEAR ABBY: I will be starting
high school in September. I am nervous about going to a new environmem. Middle school wasn't bad
bec;tuse I knew most of the kids
from elementary school. High school
is different. Students from all over
the ciry will be attending.

baby shower. My husband and i
think it is greedy to have another
shower when we already have everything we ne~d. Abby, what is the
proper etiquette, if any? - SON
SET IN OREGON
DEAR SON SET: A baby show- .
er is a celebration of a new life to
LAS
DEAR FRESHMAN: This is an come. Participating in a baby shower
opportuniry to meet new people and for your second child isn't greedy.
a chance to expand your circle of However, if accepting gifts you don't
friends. If you see someone who is really need makes you feel guilty.
shy or hanging back, realize that the have your friend announce a charity
person is probably experiencing 'the shower and make it clear that the
gifts you receive will be donated to a
same feeling you are, so reach out.
Get together with your old friends women's shelter, a church or some
on the weekends. You'll have a lot to similar organization. Alternatively,
you could donate the items you
share and talk about.
DEAR ABBY: I am pregnant saved from your first son to a fa!JliiY
with my second son. My first is 4~ or young mother who needs them.
Dear Abby is writttn by Pauline.
and I have saved everything of his. A
friend of the family wants to host a . Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.

Some of my best friends will be
going to different high schools. I'm
not very outgoing, and I'm having a
hard time figuring who to hang out
with. Abby, I need your advice on
how to adjust to my first days in high
school.- FRESHMAN IN DAL-

Gang·enforcet' convided
•

..

WASHINGTON (AP) -When the ruthless leaders of a
street gang called the "K Street Crew" needed someone to
vanish, police say they called on Samuel "Chin" Carson.
He was so good at fiis job as a hit man, investigators say,
neighborhoods often cowered under shrouds of silence and
fear when the police showed up looking for witnesses.
Some of those they persuaded to testify were killed days
before trial.
This week, Carson was convicted of nine murder charges
- the most ever against a single defendant in the District
of Columbia.
Prosecutors say Carson's conviction for killings that
occurred.betwe~n 1989 to 1996 is a significant blow to his
gang, WhiCh pohce believe is the dry's 'most deadly creW.

p II E
0 :

urope down on Bush.

&gt;pASHINGTON (AP) -A major(ry of Europeans don't
approve of P~esident Bush's handling of foreign affairs,
thmk he makes decisions based entirely on U.S. interests
and feel he knows less about Europe than his predecessors,
accordmg to a new poll.
.

•.
..

..::·'•-

. .. · GRAND CHAMPION - Chelsea Young showed the grand
champion market lamb at Monday's. Junior Fair Sheep Show
· at the Meigs County Fair, Pictured with Young is Fair Queen
Billie Jo.Welsh, Wool Princess Alyssa Baker and Jason Blhl,
event judge. (Tony M. leach photos)

.1
~· -

Paula Jones sues tycoon

·New

Come On Over To Bob's Market•••
FOR THE BEST IN

on job.

•

Sweet

GREEN

CORN

BEANS

•

!

••
••

'

•

NYC cuts·education jobs

NEW YORK (AP) -The ciry is drastically overhauling
its Board of Education by slashing more than 1,500 jobs
•
• from its administrative staff.
:
About 1,225 positions will be cut from the central office
• over three years, including 600 jobs this year. Another 300
administrative jobs are to be eliminated at community
• school district headquarters. The cuts amount to reductions
of more than 40 percent. •
:. · The proposal is designed to repla'e the top-down man: agement structure of the city's school system with a local~ ized management structure that would focus on district and
~ school-level leadership, Schools Chancellor Harold Levy
; said in a statement Wednesday;
;
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani approved of.the job cuts, but
said the proposal did not do enough to address serious
• p'roblems at the Board of Education.

•

••

$2195

nla Freestone "CANNING PEACHES"

RESERVE CHAMPION - Meghan Haynes' wether was cho: . sen as reserve champion market lamb at Monday's Junior
•• Fair Sheep Show. Also pictured is Billie Jo Welsh, Meigs
County fair queen, and Alyssa Baker, wool princess.
•

..
..•

.: E-MAIL YOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS
..
..
news@mydailytribune.com
•.

'

Mandy Reutlir has been hired
as a family services case•
worker at the Athens County
Children's Services. She will
· work to protect ch lldren from
physical and emotional h'arm,
and to preserve families. She
is completing her bachelor's
degree in psychology from
Ohio University, and lives in,
Pomeroy with her husband
and child ..

Only

Bushel

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J Pf'f tf 'yr/
J-t t.I-J- .- -·

Pears.
New Crab APPles
labor Oa!ll 200

f

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FBI checks diluted drugs

1/4 mila North Pomeroy Maaon Brldgt ·

Mason, WV Phone
•

i

(304) 773·5323

t.

k.J\NSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Calls from cancer patients
po4red into an FBI hot line as news spread that a pharmacist had been accused of diluting chemotherapy drugs.

solar system travel in tight, erratic orbits around their stars.

Cards irk Ameritech users
MILWAUKEE (AP)- Some Ameritech customers complain that pay- phone cards the company sent as part of a
multimillion dollar settlement of a lawsuit are worthless to
them, saying they are receiving no benefit from 'the deal.
Barbara Kuwayama, 56, of Brookfield, received the two
phone cards, one for 13 minutes and one for 12 minutes .
She said she won't use them because she hasn't found a
·nearby Ameritech pay phone.
.
'"I think Wisconsin got a very bum deal out of this,"
Kuwayama said. "If it's a problem that originated in the
home then have the credit reflect on the home phone."
The telephone company sent the cards to settle the lawsuit, which stemmed from customers alleging they were
wrongly charged for a service covering repairs because
Ameritech didn't tell them the service, called "Linebacker,"
was optional. Each lawsuit. sought· refunds.

Balloonist enters s. 'America
ST. LOUIS (AP) - A day after breaking the endutance
record for a solo balloonist, millionaire adventurer Steve
.Fossett reached South America - and its towering Andes '
mountains - on his bid to circle the globe.
·
Air traffic controllers in Chile sent Fossett a note of welcome and said they would toast his arrival with a bottle of
Chilean red Wine.
As of 11 p.m. Wednesday, Fossett was traveling 33 mph.
about 50 miles north of Antofagasta, Chile.
"The distance to go is daunting, but we are on our way,"
Fossett told his St. Louis-based mission control team.

Church-Collins engagement

Lentes receives award

'

.
.
.
Dmngp~g

Cult leader denied contad

Official backs oH statement

•

It is unclear to what extent the new
The original rule: in one instance,
version will roll back protections offered would have required a health plan had 30
under the Clinton plan ·
days to review a patient complaint, such
The goal is to give states more control as a denial of care. Under the new rule,
over the 'details of patient protections. states could set their own time frames.
States, for example, could coordinate
·
.
HHS officials declined
patients
with th e
. to specify other
stat e ru1es c:tor pnvate
rules for those in Medicaid, said the offi- 'hanges they plan until Thursday, when
cia!, speaking on condition of anonymiry. · t~ey Will make pubhc, _the n~w regulaStates will have to give patients every tlon. The dep~rtment will solicit public
protection included in the regulation, but comments on Its plan until October and
they could differ on the details.
,
plans to make the rule final by early next
HHS spokesman Bill Pierce said that year.
the protections will be meaningless if
The change was welcomed by the
they are too cumbersome to carry out. National Governors Association, which
"It's going to be easier for states to argued that states should have the power
implement and carry out the rules in an to put in place the protections without
efficient manner,'' he said. "We're in the the fede~al government spelling out
business .of dealing with reality." ·
every detail.

still _ po·~r

MIAMI (AP) - A cult leader linked to a series of random ~illings cannot have any contact with followers after
his release from prison unless he gets approval from a probation officer first, a judge ruled.
REEDSVILLE -Theresa Church, Kendall Church and
;.
Yahweh Ben Yahweh, convicted of federal racketeering
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Collins announ'e the engagement and
,; for his connection to the killings, sought an injunction
d . against the U.S. Parole Commission's decision to · bar him
upcoming marriage of their children, Amber Nkole Church
·and Keith Zachary Collins.
. from communicating with followers .
.The bride-elect is a 2001 graduate of Eastern High
"
He is due to be released to a halfway house Friday after
School and is employed. at Mountain State Blue Cross and
••· 11 years jn prison. His attorneys say the strict conditions of
-Blue Shield. She foFmerly-worked at Reed's Country :Stcire.- -11- •- lrinet-ea·se are U!lc"O"rrstituti-olral: ·
- ~
Her fiance is a 2000 graduate of Eastern High School. He
., .
Yahweh wants to retake his leadership position with the
is studying electric engineering at Washington State Comgroup, which attracted about 1,000 people to a gathering
muniry College and working parttime ·at the Vienna K-.
last year in Montreal.
,
·
.
Mart.
..
,,
An open church wedding will be Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at
:
Reedsville Church ofthe Nazarene. A reception will follow
the wedding.
·
DECATUR, Ga. (AP) - A county district attorney is
backing off his statement that the investigation into the
slaying of a sheriff-elect was "dead in the water."
.
"Dead in the water is too strong," District Attorney Tom
Morgan said Wednesday, a day after he said the eight-month
'
'
RUTLAND Cathy was "Women as Lead;ers."
investigation has failed to yield anything new for several
Lentes will , be honored at
Lentes of Rutland has been
months.
named a winner in the Indi- Indiana's NOW Conference. ·
"I did not mean to imply that police were twiddling their
Lentes
said
the
poem
was
ana National Organization for
thumbs," he said.
Women Writers' Contest.
· inspired by an entry at
DeKalb County Sheriff-elect Derwin Brown was
Pauline Atkins, a member of the Rutland Garden Club, was
She was presented with a Bossard Library in Gallipolis.
ambushed and shot 11 times in his driveway on Dec. 15,
named the outstanding garden club member In Region 11 at
Literary Achievement Award While helping one of her
days before he was to take office. A task force that includthe recent annual meeting of the Oho Association of Garden
in Poetry for her poem, children research biographies
ed federal and state agents was formed days after the
Clubs held at the Raddison Hotel in Columbus. She was pre·
~'Eleanor Roosevelt: a life of about the late First Lady, an
killing.
sented a pin, certificate and a book on floral design. Atkins
disco." She was one qf five abbreviation of the title,
has been a garden club member for more than 50 years. Oth·
writer&lt; honored by NOW in "Eleanor Roo.sevelt: a Life of
ers attending the state convention were Sharon Jewell and
both prose and poetry.
Discovery" inspired th&lt;!
Gladys Cumings.
The theme for the contest poem.
NEW YORK (AP)- Resurrecting a claim that was dis• missed last year on procedural grounds, lawyers for Paula
: Jones sued a real estate rycoon they say never paid the $1
.: million he promised her to drop a lawsuit against President
: Clinton.
:
The lawsuit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court seeks
; to force · Abe Hirschfeld to fork over the money. A
: spokesman for the 81-year-old New York real estate mogul
•• did not return a call seeking comment.
:
The lawsuit claims Hitschfeld's public promise of$1 mil~ ' lion "was still on the table" even as Jones settled with ClinFresh
Fresh
' ton in November 1998.
Homegrown
Thomas F. Cohen, a lawyer who filed the lawsuit,
; declined to .comment. Lawyer Gregory Kitterman in Little
: Rock, Ark., who has represented Jones in the past, did not
~ return a ,telephone message.

.Outstanding

· . · : BEST SHEEP . SHOWMAN .- Chelsea Young was named
grand champion, showman at the Meigs County Junior Fair
Sheep Show on Monday. She Is pictured with Fair Queen Bll·
lie Jo Welsh and Wool Princess Alyssa Baker.

WASHINGTON (AP) - It will be at
least six more months before people in
Medicaid HMOs see patient protections
promised years ago, as the Bush administration retools the rules to give states
more power to write the details.
The rules' l·ssued 1·n the final days of the
Clinton administration, twice have been
put on hold since Presidept Bush took
office.They are meant to assure that peopie enrolled in Medicaid, the health program for the poor, get a variery of patient
protections when they are forced to join
managed care plans.
Now the Department of Health and
Human Services is putting the rules on
hold again and starting the regulatory
process over with a new version, said an
HHS official.

,.

Amber Church and ·Kelth Collin.

Thursday, Aupst u;, 1001

Patients still waiting for·Bush to fulfill promise

WASHINGTON (AP) - The economic boom of the
1990s failed to pull working single mothers and their chi!~; dren out of poverty, a report by an advocacy group says.
;::
These families earned more money at work in 1999 than
:: , they did in 1995, but their economic gains were offset by
r: · the loss of government benefits, said the study by the lib1: era! Center for Budget and Policy Priorities.
; .. After accounting for changes in government benefits, the
~ . poverty rate among these families remained the same in
!. ,1995 and 1999 - with about 19 percent living below the
~ poverty line.
:
By contrast, the poverty rate had fallen substantially
t•
.
;: between 1993, when it was 24.5 percent, and 1995. In
;: 1999, a family of three was considered poor if its income
L';' · was below $13,290 .
No. 2 SHOWMAN - Meghan Hayne~ was chosen reserve
champion showman 11t Monday's sheep show. Pictured with is
Fair Queen Billie Jo Welsh and Wool Princess Alyssa Baker.

PageA7

WhffiUcom~m~m~~~litig,thed~~pro~ofL------------------------------~------~-----­

Europeans may not be such a bad thing, said one conservauve analyst.
·
"In the long run, it's an asset domestically because it
shows the president is willing to stand up for American
interests,'' said Marshall Wittman of the Hudson Institute.
"It probabJy ·shows that Europeans suffer from Texaphobia."
. Euro~~a?s may ~ssume a leader from Texas is not sophisticat ed m mternat10nal matters, he said.

..•
......• Report: single moms
...

·"

Nation • World

The Daily Sentinel

,.. · · Workers to-drain crater

Miss Piggy performs a dive at the annual Royal Brisbane Show
In Brisbane, Australia. The diving pig Is the star attraction and
seats a.re taken up an hour before the show starts. (AP Photo)

Investigators, meanwhile, sifted through pharmacist
Robert R . Courtney's records page by page to figure out
whi'h patients may have been given weakened prescriptions of the cancer drugs Taxol and Ge'mzar.
"This is a nightmare, a real nightmare," said Chris Whitley, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in Kansas
City. "We're searching for needles in a pharmaceutical
haystack."
.
After surrendering Wednesday to rhe FBI, Courtney, 48,
was ordered held without bone\ by a federal magistrate on
a felony charge of misbranding and adulterati~n of a drug.

Scientists deted more planets
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Astronomers have found the
first solar system outside our own where multiple planets
travel round the same star in circular orbits.
"It's heartwarming to find a planetary system that finally
reminds us of our solar system," said astronomy professor
Geoffrey Marcy, a member ofthe University of California
at Berkeley team that made the discovery. .
The astronomers announced the discovery of the second
planet orbiting the star 47 ·Ursae Majoris on Wednesday.
Most of the roughly 70 planets found so far outside our

SANTA JULIANA, Philippines (AP) -A dozen tribesmen with picks and shovels climb_ed _the Mount Pinatubo
volcano Thursday on a dangerous mission to drain a crater
lake that threatens their villages with massive floods.
Tugging a leashed pig to sacrifice to the mountain god,
the Aeta tribesmen planned to carve a notch in the volcano's crater, to slowly release water from the rising lake.
Accompanied by a dozen porters and two engineers, the
diggers are expected to chop 16 feet off the lowest point of
Pinatubo's summit.
The water level in the lake has been rising rapidly during
the May-October rainy season, and is now within 16 feet
of the crater's rim. Without the notching procedure, the
weight of the Water could shatter the upper walls of the
4,740-foot volcano, endangering the lives of 40,000 villagers nearby, geologists said.
But the crumbly crater, composed of loosely packed volcanic' rock and ash, also could give w~y under the digging,
they said.

Candidate to visit Vieques
SAN JUAN, P~erto Rico (AP)- New York gubernatorial candidate H. Carl McCall arrived Wednesday in Puerto Rico with plans to visit Vieques t() support those who
want the U.S, Navy to stop its bombing there. ·
The issue of Navy training on Vieques, an island of 9,100
residents, has become an increasingly hot political topic in
New York, home to more than 1 million Puerto Ricans.
''I'm going to Vieques because many of my friends came
here and were imprisoned because they believe, as do many
people on this island, that it is absolutelyinconceivable that
the U.S. government and military are firing bombs near
American citizens in Puerto Rico," McCall in a San Juan
news ·c onference.
~~

Greenhouse g~ses have
effect on public health ·
WASHINGTON (AP) As nations debate the future
effect on the climate of burning fossil fuels, a study finds
· no question that air pollution
from exhaust · pipes and
smoke stacks already is killing
people worldwide.
"It is our best ~stimate that
more 'people are being killed
by air pollution from traffic
. than from traffic crashes," said
D ellra Lee Davis, first author
of the study appearing Friday
in the journal Science.
Davis, a professor at
Carnegie Mellon Universiry's
Heinz School for Public Policy and Management in Pittsburgh, said ozone, particulates, · carbon dioxide and
other pollutants from the
combustion of fossil fuels
may affect the clima1e In

coming decades. But she said
her team found that they
already are public health hazards.

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Thursday, Aug. 18,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Inside:

The Daily Sentinel

Diamond Roundup, Page B2
NFL camp news, Page BB

Page Bl
Thursday, August Hi, 2001

Tri

Duri
2001

~

MERCURY
VILLAGER

LINCOLN
AMERICAN

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2 Tone Paint,

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Auto, AC,
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. ,MASON W.Va. Jean
Powell of Pomeroy, recorded
her first hole-in-one in the
recent Mary Roush · Invitational Golf Tournament held
at the Riverside Golf Course.
Jean aced the number 12
hole, it was witnessed by
Norma Jean Easter of
Ravenswood
and
Betty
Gildow of Elizabeth WestVirgtma.

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POMEROY - The Meigs
Marauders will host coach
Dave Barr and the Roarie
County
Raiders
Friday
evening in a football scrimmage. The scrimmage will get
underway at 6:00 PM at Bob
Roberts Field in Pomeroy.

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' PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil
(AP) Brazil ended an .
unprecedented three-game
winless streak in World Cup
qualifYing, beating Paraguay
?·0 on goals by Marcelinho
Paulista and Rivaldo.
: Brazil, soccer's only fourtime world champi&lt;;&gt;n, hadn 't
won a qualifier since last Nov.
15 against Colombia, losing
1-0 at Ecuador, tying Peru 11 at Sao Paulo and losing 1-0
1t Uruguay, a skid that cost
two coaches .their jobs.
Argentina became the. first
South American nation to
qualifY for the World Cup,
beating Ecuador 2-0 on goals
~Y Juan Sebastian Veron and
tJernari Crespo. . .
• Argentina ( 11-1-2) has
qualified for 14 World Cups,
including 12 in a row since
missing the 1954 tournament.
A~gentina joins co-hosts
Japan and South Korea and
the five African qualifiers Cameroon, Nigeria, Senegal,
South Africa and Tunisia- in
the 32-nation field for' next
fear's tournament.

still owns Twins

CLEVELAND (AP) Now that they've mastered
the big comeback, the Cleveland Indians would like to
build a lead nobody in the AL
Central can make up.
Kenny Lofton hit a threerun homer, Jim Thome his
AL-leading 40th and Cleveland made several big defensive plays'Wednesday night as
the Indians beat Minnesota 82 to open a 3 112-game lead
over the Minnesota Twins.
· "At least we're not having ·
to look at the scoreboard all
the time to see if the Twins
· are losing;' Indians shortstop
OmarVizquel said. "It's nice."
Not for the second-place
Twins, who dropped their
sixth straight and haven't
played well in weeks.
"It's like we hit a wall and
are stuck to it;' said Joe Mays
(12-11) . "It's like they put tar
on it and we can't break away.
We can't go over it. We can't
get around it, and we can't dig ·
under it."
Cleveland is 9-3 against the
Twins this season with seven
games remaining, and can
sweep the series with a win
Thursday.
"I think our guys like to
play them;' Indians ·manager
Charlie Man1,1el said. "Every-·
one looks at them like they're
young and the surprise team.
They've. got a lot of energy
and hustle. But our guys look
· at them as our competition,'
and we like to play them."
Minnesota has lost 23 o£30,
and is just 9-24 since the AllStar break.
·
The bad news got worse for
....t1u;...,.l Wins, . who learned
Wednesday that right fielder
Chad Allen tore his anterior
cruda!!;_ lig~ment a night ear-

PieaseHe ntbe, as

V·S,AC,
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1-800-272-5179 or 448-9800

. JACKSON - Jackson
defeated Meigs and Vinton
County in a golf match held
qn Wednesday at Franklin Val.
. ley Golf Course.
. Jackson had a 298, Meigs ·
finished in second with a 344
and Vinton County added a
405.
Jeff Evans of Jackson fired a
par 71 for match medalist
honors. Other Jacbon scores
were Ji~y Ande~s~~X. with a
72, Brandon Limdermilt
added a 76, Ross .Anderson a
79, Ryan Whiteside an 83 an&lt;\
Matt !son an 84. ·
For Meigs, Jeremy Banks
· led the way wi.th a 73, Josh
Napper added an 81 ,Josh Ray
a 93 and Ben Bookman a 97.
For Vinton ·County Sean
McManus had an 82, Ryan
Kent a 90, Mike Andrews a
113, Jake Hunter a. 120, Josh
Jones a 124 and Corey Robson a 126.

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Ask For Mike Hindle

MeigsgoH
second In bimatch

A. Boone
out with
broken
wrist
ST. LOUIS (AP)- Cincinnati Reds third baseman
Aaron Boone will be sidelined
2-4 weeks with a fractured
right wri st sustained when he .
was hit by a pitch Tuesday.
Boone was hit .by a Matt
Morris pitch with the bases
loaded in the
ninth inning,
driving
in
the only run
in a 7-1 loss
to the St.
Louis Cardinals. He was
batting .297
with .
14
..__B_o_.o.:..n_a..~,;....J homers and
57
RBls,
third best on the team, but was
in a 4-for-25 slump.
Boone will fly to Cincinnati
on Thursday to be examined
by Dr. Timothy Krem chek ,
the Reds' medical dire ctor. He
was placed on the 15-day disabled list, and the Reds are
expected to fill the roster spot
by purchasing the contract of
right-hander Jose Rijo.
Rijo, who hasn't pitched in
the major leagues siflce 1995,
likely will be used in relief.
This is the second stint on
the disabled list this year for
Boone, son of Reds manager
Bob Boone. He was out about
a month with a broken bone
in his right ·hand after being
hi£...9y. a Jlitc~. 9~ Houston's
waae"'Mifier'b'n"May t 4.
Boone was limited to 84
games last year by a torn ante- .
rior cruciate ligament · in his
left knee.

BIG HITTER-=-clevelantl's~Jimlhorrnn;logs 7a two:rmr home run-=-t\is- 40th onhe year .off
. Twins pitcher Joe Mays
. in the third inning Wednesday. (AP)
\

Partriots: Team is bigger than Terry Glenn
SMITHFIELD, R.I. (AP) -Terry
Glenn won't play for the New England Patriots again this ·season. His
teammates are just relieved the issue is
finally resolved.
·
"It's just a cancer to us right no'Y,"
defensive back Lawyer Milloy said.
"As a whole, that situation probably
needed to die as soon as possible."
Glenn left training camp Aug. 3,
when the NFL suspended him for
four games for violating terms of its
substance-abuse program. Coach Bill
Belichick, who made the decision to
suspend him for the season, said
Glenn had "ample opportunity" to
return but didn't.

"It's just a caucer to us rigl1t
now. As a whole, that sitllation probaiJly needed to die as
soon as possible."
. Patrlot'a Lawyer Milloy

MiUoy called Glenn "a friend," but
said other receivers showed they are
capable in last Friday's 14-0 exhibi tion victory over the New · York
Giants.
"You have a lot · of talent and a lot
of depth in the receiving corps," he
said.
Linebacker Willie McGin est said
the team will miss Glenn's onfield

ability, but must look ahead.
"Our job is to get ready and play,"
he said. "We can't let other things distract us."
When asked if Glenn let teammates
·down, McGinest replied: " N ext question."
Players supported Bclichick's decision to put the 27-year- old Glenn on
the reserve-left camp list, which
means he cannot be activated, traded
or released during the season.
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello sa id
Glenn would still have to serve the
four-game suspensio n when he
returned.
Belichick said he let the issue linger

Reds still
can't• find
a w1nner

long enough.
"This is about being in trammg
camp and playing football," Bdichi ck
said. ''I'm going to spend my time .
and my energy with th e players that
are here."
Belichick said the suspension was
unrelated to the one by the NFL or
Glenn 's off-season arrest for domestic
assault. He said owner Robert Kraft
was "supportive·."
Glenn signed a six-year, $50 million contract extension last year that
included an $11.5 million signing
bonus. The team said it won't pay
Glenn his salary an~ will withhold

Please see Glenn, BS

·Roush strong in.
Bobcat scrimmage.·
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ST. LOUIS (AP) -The St.
Louis Cardinals' seven-game
winnirig streak has put them
back in the race for the NL
Central.
The Cardinals beat the
Cincinnati Reds 8c4 Wednesday night to close within four
games of the central-leading
Chicago Cubs.
"It's fun to really believe
you're in contention," St.
Louis manager Tony La Russa
said. "We keep putting some
wins together and our .
chances . of playing some
exciting, meaningful Septem- NICE JOB, KID -Cincinnati Reds outfielder Adam Dunn Is
ber baseball get better and congratulated by teammates after hitting a home run In the
second Inning Wednesday against St. Louis. (AP)
better."
Jim Edmonds homered and
drove in four runs for the keep it simple and try to take diving catch of Dmitri
Cardinals,
who
have care of our business and .let Young's sinking liner to end .
outscored their opponents those two teams worry about the eighth , is doing his best to
44-23 during the run. They us," Edmonds said. "We're not ignore a bum should er. He 's
trail second-place Houston by going to worry about them ' 9-for-19 the last five games
. right now."
·
2 1/2 games.
PleaMseeReds,BS
"We're just going to try to
Edmonds, who also made a

'·

ATHENS
- Fonner
M eig; High standout Justin
R o ush was . the leading
rusher in an Ohio l:Jni\oersity intersquad
scnmmagc:
Wednesday mornmg.
Roush,
a walk-on
red,hirt
Roush
freshman,
carried the
ball five times for 46 yards.
The 5-8, 207 pounder also
caught a pass for eight yards.
The majority of the
scrimmage
featured
younger players competing
for a spot on the depth
chart, but the starters faced
the second team for a pair
of series.
The 90-minute scnmmage wrapped up Ohio's

'

· first week of preseason practice, as the Bobcat5 get set to
start the 2001 season on
August 30th at Akron . The
Bobcats' fi rSt home game
will be on September 22
against national power Iowa
State.
Last year, the Bobcats finished first in the MAC in
rushing offense at 32J YPG.
Fonner Wahama White
Falcon David Tennant, a
sophomore transfer from
Marshall also carried twice
for one yard.
Ohio enters its first season under Brian Knorr
after last year under Jim
Grobe, who took the head
coachin g position at Wake
Forest.
Ohio finished 7~4 overall
and 5-3 in the MAC last
season.
.
They will play Marshall
in the Battle for the BeU on
November 17 in Huntington.

�Cubs beat Astros again,
lead by 1 1/2 games
Dod

gers 1]
Emos 1

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Stop panicking C ubs fans:
r
Chicago's NL Centtal lead is
back up to 1 1/ 2 games.
Shawn-Cfre-;n hit three
Jon Lieber pitched a three- home runs and had•a careerhitter and Joe Girardi drove in high seven RDis as Los Angethree runs as the Cubs won 5- les stopped a season-high five1 at Ho).lston on Wednesday game losing streak and
night. After losing the series . remained three games off the
opener and dropping out of pace in the NL West.
first place for the first time
Green hit a three-run
'since May 29, the Cubs homer to left in the second at
rebounded to win the final Dodger Stadium and a twotwo games of the series.
run · shot in the fourth , both
"This is how we've played off Carl Pavano (0-1) . He
all year;' Cubs manager Don ·added a two-run homer in th e
Baylor said. "We've pitched seventh against Masato Yoshii. .
well, and we've gotten our hits 'Giovanni Carrara (3-1 )
when we can, and they count allowed on run and four hits
.
in six innings to win for th e
most of the time."
Lieber (16-S),coming off an first time since Aug. 23, 1996,
eight-hiqer against San Fran- with Cincinnati.
cisco, improved to 13-2 in his
last 16 starts.
"We just got dominated,"
I leS r
Bagwell said. "He pitched a
great game. He kept his slides
Scott Rolen homered and
down and away. He can do singled as visiting Philadelphia
that. They beat us two out of won its fifth sttaight and kept
three, but we didn't beat our- a two-game lead over secondplace Atlanta in the NL East
. selves. They beat us."
In other games, it was Ari- He is 16-for-30 (.533) during
zona 5, Pittsburgh 2; San Fran- an eight-game hitting streak
cisco 2, Florida I; Los Angeles with five homers, five doubles,
13, Montreal 1; Philadelphia one triple and eight RDis.
8, Milwaukee 6; Atlanta 7,
Omar Daal (11-4) won for
Colorado 2; San Diego 2, · the first time since July 13
New York 1; and St. Louis 8, despite allowing five runs Cincinnati 4.
four earned - and eight hits
At Houston, Pedro Astacio in 5 1_3 innings. Jose Mesa
(7-14), who had been 6-0 in pitched a perfect ninth for his
his pre~ious eight starts against 31 st save.
the Cubs, allowed three runs
Jamey wright (8-8) allowed
·ana nine hits in seven innings. seven runs and 11 hits in 5 13 innings as Milwaukee lost
for the 24th time in its last 3J
games.

Ph•11•

8

Brewers 6

D-backs 5,
Pirates l

Curt Schilling won his
career-high 18th game, the
most in the majors, as Arizona
won its sixth straight, comChipper Jones hit a grand
pleting a three-game sweep
slam, John Bufkett (10-8)
that kept it one game ahead of
allowed two runs and five hits
second-place San Francisco in
in seven innings as visiting
the NL West.
Atlanta .stopped its first six~---Schilling-(J.8=5)_matched.bis_
game losmg streak since Sepseason high with 13 strikeouts
tember 1996.
and walked one in eight
Brian Jordan added a twoinnings at Phoenix. He
run homer and Andruw Jones
allowl'd two runs on six hits.
hit a solo shot for the Braves.
Matt Williams hit a two-run
Mike Hampton (12-9)
homer, and Mark Grace sinallowed six runs, five hits and
gled in two runs as Arizona
six walks in four-plus innings.
won its sixth straight.

Braves 7,
Rockies l

Giants l,

Marlins 1

At San Francisco, John VanderWal's RDI double off Vic
Darensbourg (1-1) with two
outs in. the ninth gave the
Giants their fourth straight
win and 16th in 19 games.
Robb Nen (3-2} got the final
out in the top half after Preston Wilson's RDI double off
Russ Ortiz.
Barry Bonds 'was 0-for-4,
one night after hitting a grand
slam for his .. major leagueleading 51st homer.

Padres l,
Mets1
Trevor Hoflinan pitched a
perfect ninth to become the
14th player with 300 saves,
completing a tw?-hitter at Sa1;1
Diego.
Kevin Jarvis · (10-9) allowed
one run and two hits in eight
innings.
Rickey Henderson scored a
run to raise his career total to
2,228, 18 short of Ty Cobb's
career mark.
AI Leiter (7 - 10) allowed
two runs and eight hits in
seYen innings, dropping to 2-8
on the road.

I

Thursday. Aiapst 16~ 100~
.

Philadelphia
Atlanla
Florida
New York

Montreal

Chicago
Houston
St. Louis
Milwaukee

Cincinnati
Pittsbu rgh

Arizona
San Francisco
Los Angeles
San Diego
Colorado

e..,
w L
67 &lt;
65 54
59 60
54 66
50 70
central
w L
68 51
67 53
64 55
49 68
48 71
45 74
West
w L
69 51
68 52
66 54
59 60
50 69

San Diego 2, N.Y.Mots 1
Artzona 5. Pittsburgh2
GB

Pet.

.563
2
.548
8
.496
.450 1 3~
.41 7 1 7~
Pet GB
.571
.556 1'1.
4
.538 "
.419 18
.403
20
.378
23
Pet GB
.575
.567
t
.550
3
.496
9'1.
1 8~

.420

Tuesday's Games
Chicago Cubs 3, Houston 1
Philadelphia 10, Milwaukee 4
St. Louis 7, Clnclnnatl1
Colorado 5. Atlanta 4, ,0 Innings
San Diego 6, N.Y. Mots 0
Arizona 4 , Pittsb urgh 3 , 10 Innings .
Montreal 4, Los Angeles 1
San Fr~ nci sco 13, Florida 7
Wednesday's Games
Chicago Cubs 5, Houston 1

Philadelphia 8. Milwaukee 6

St. Loula 8, Cincinnati 4

Chicago

Amertcan Leegue

Atlanta 7. COlorado 2

National League

•

,.

Los Angeles 13, MOntreal 1

Eaof ,
w L

NewYOI1c
Boston

San Francisco 2, Florida 1

Thursdly'l Gllmes
Philadelphia (Figueroa 4·2) al Milwaukee
(Quevedo 1·1), 2:05p.m.

Toronto
Baltimore

Tompa Bay
Florida (Bumen 8 ~8) at San Francisco
(Estes 8·7), 3:35 p.m.
Montreal (Ohka 0·2) at Los Angeles Clovolond
(Gagne 4·5), 4:10p.m.
. Minnesota
N.Y. Mots (Appior 6-10) at San Diego Chicago
(Tollberg 6·3), 5:05 p.m.
Detroit
Pittsburgh (Baimel5-8) at Houslon (Miller Kansas City
12·6), 8:05p.m.

Cincinnati (Acevedo 3-3) at St. Louis
(Hermanson 10-9), 8:10p.m.
Atlanta (Millwood 2·5) at Colorado (Chacon 6·6), 9:05p.m.

Friday's Gamt1
(RIIo 0.0), 7:05 p.m.
PiHsburgh (McKn~ht 1·21 at Houston
(Mllckl 3.0), 8:05 p. .
Philadelphia (Person 1o-6) at St Louis
(KIIel3-7), 8:10p.m.
Florida (Dempster , 4·9) at CcJ!orado
(Bohanon 5-8), 9:05p.m.
·
Montreal '(Thunnan 6-6) at San Diego
(Lawrence 3·1), 10:05 p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Tapani 8·9) al Arizona
(Lopez 1·3). t0:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mots (Rusch 6~7) al Los Angelos
(Adams 8·5), t0:10 p.m.
Atlanta (Marquis 2-4) at San Francisco
(Heman&lt;lez 11 · 11), 10:35 p.m.
Milwaukee CSuzukl 3-8) at ·Cincinnati

Seattle

Oakland

Anaheim
Texas

71 49
65 53
57 63
51 89
42 79
Control

w

..

.

.• '

5 Kansas City (Byr&lt;1 5-4) at Ba~lmo ro( o~n
&lt;'
14 son 5-8), 12:35 p.m.
Anaheim (SCI!oenewels 9~8) at Dotri&gt;it
20
(Weaver 10.11),1:05 p.m.
:.
29~
Tempo Bay (Rupo 5-9) at N.Y. Yanirj&gt;es
•'
G.B (Hitchcock 1·2), 1:05 p. m~
S&amp;aitle (Sole 12·3) at Boston (Cone il-h
7:05p.m.
! •
3~
Mlnneoota (Johnoon I· I) at Cleveltnd
7~
(Woodard 1·2), 7:05 p.m.
•·
t7'f.
Texas (Davis 6·8) at Chicago White SOx
19'1.
(Garland 4-4), 8:05p.m.
:

Pel
.563

64

56

68

_

Gil

L

52

••'

Pel.

.592
.551
.475
.425 .
.347

52

59
49 89
72
48
W.at
w L
87 33
68 52
63 57

.••••'

11\ursd8y'1 Gamet
•:
Qaklar~ {:.X::. 7·~) at Tori.KdV (Lyon 1L 1).
'12:35 p.m.
;~~
--

·~-..

67
59

White Sox 6, Tens 5

.533
.500
.4t5
.400

Pel

GB

.433

19
24
35

.725
.567
.525 .

Tuesdlly's Game•

Sealtle 6, Boston 3, 11 Innings
Toronto 6, Oakland 3
Anaheim 7, Delrolt 1

Cleveland 8, Mlnneaote 7, 111nnlnga
Baltimore 5, Kan~ City 2
N.Y. Yankees 5, Tampa Bay 3
Chicago White Sox 7, Texas 4
Wedneldey'a Galmea

Sealtle 6, Boston 2
Toronto 5 , Qakland 2
Detrolt5, Anaheim·I

Frlday'e Games
•
TexBs (Oliver 9-7) at Toronto (Loaiza S..9),

7:05p.m.
'
Anohelm (Ortiz 11)-7) at Clevol~nd
(Nagy 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
Balllmore (Towers 1·7) at Boston (Wake·
tield 8·7). 7:05 p.m.
'
Seanle (AbboH 12·2) al N.Y. Yankj'Os
(Musslna 11·10), 7:05 P~m.
·.
Kansas Cily (George 1·3) al Oetron(Lima
3-4), 7:05 p.m.
·
·
Tampa Bay (Sturtze 7·9} at Minnes9ta
(A- t-1). 8:05p.m.
.
Oakland (Hiljus 1.()) at Chioago Wh&lt;te
sox (Wnght2~0), 8:05p.m.
·

..,

Cleveland 8, Mlnneaota 2
Baltimore 5, Kansas City 4
N.Y. Yankees 10, Tampa Bay 3

.

1. Jeff Qofdorl, 3, :107
~ Harvic:k , 3,368
ftldtltl.ldci, 3,013
Blfftt, 3.20C5 •
J. Dlle Jarrett 2,942
Jason KeMer, 3,165
... ..,.,. Millin, 2,782 Jftf Gttln, 3.084
a. Tonv Stewan, 2,788 Elton ~r. 2.656
.. o. Eln'ltlll'dl: .Jr, 2.719

a.

Gomez before Clemens
retired Brent Abernathy on a
grounder to shortstop to
leave the bases full.
"He certainly has been
leading this staff all year. He
hasn't had a bad start yet,"
Yankees manager Joe Torre
said.

3.

4.
1.
. 8.

RedSoxl

\

·.•

' ,,

Crow's
Family
Restaurant
Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken
-

(4-5)

~llo:wed three hits in 7 2-3 DEAD TO RIGHTS - Angels catcher Ben Molina tags aut

Orioles 5
Royals 4 ·

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drlv•Thru Window

992-5432

·White Sox 6,
Ran2ers 5 i

See us for Your Stihl"
· Powf1r 'Tools &amp;
Accessories . "

Tigers 5,

Ridenour
Supply

Annis 1

St. Rt. 248
Chester 985-3308

BUSCH GR\ND

What: NAPAOnllne.com
250

Martin have wOI'l twice here.

Speedway, Cicero . 111. {l ·mlle
track), 175 laps/ miles
When: 5 p.m., Saturday
Defendlnl champion: Joe
Ruttma n
Qualltylna: record: Joe
Ruttma n, Dodge,117 .612
mph, Aug. 26. 2000
Race ,.c:ord: Joe Aultman,

WINSTON CUP
WATKINS QLEN, N.Y. -Jeff
Gordon's detractors are
runnlnl out of excuses.
Once upon a time,
Gordon's army of
antagonists exulted when
the yourlg driver split with
Ray Evemham, supposedly
the architect of his succesi.
lhat happened nearly two
~ears ago.
That'a how long, I'C)ughly, It
took Gordon to fully

WMre: Michig3n
International Speedway,
Brooklyn , Mich. (2·mlle
trackt. 1.25 laps/250 miles

-

••••••••••••

PHOFILF ·

Stacy Compton

rc:
3
CT
CD
....

Your
turn
....., "'- IIIII' .....

Dear NASCAR Thla Week ,
I can 'I stand Jimmy Spencer. He
did nothing but complliilabout Dale
Ean•hardt ever)' time be raced . He
did not slop hi• complaininK even
al'ler IWnh.Wt wu killed. Speacer
picked someone iHBe to compiJlin .
aboUt . He even ll&amp;ed lbreateninJ
IOIICI afler 110rrx t'IICCs . Hu lhis person 10mc kind of pct1011allty problem'! He nen mcntloos hi• name in
the third pe.r10n.
If Spcocer ever wint 1 NASCAR
nu:e. l will give up wllchlna . I c111'1
believe lhis penon lw uy fans .
laaeNaratknolc
Stbrlna. Fle.
Spe11c~r

i!J fur fro,. the oflly
lril qWfl nume I"
iltl! third pl!rso'l. Tlte procr/ce Is
quire fruhionllbi• for som e rtason.
Also, Spencer luu WOII fwO WinJfon
Cup tUU:t in Iris cam!r.
dri~~er to m~'ltiun

or

Dear NASCAR This Week ,
I notice th111t Wintton Cup and
Busch Orand National racing lrt!
usina three car manufa clurers:
Chevrolet, Dodac and Ford. I would
like lo know if Chevy uses Chevy
motors. ~ord uus Ford motots and
Dodae uses Dod1e moton. Wh11t
cubic inches·c1n they use?
RGdney A. Wyeu

. --

.,...

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c·

Ail.
...,

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CD

CD&lt; -t

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Bryan, 'hxao

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Fimofal/,tlrerrarrrwoGenemt

How do ,you elaYitl you,..., M a toad
Mowt:r make.!: Chnorolet allli fb11tl·
-.
NASCAR Thla Week.
recer? •1 think I'm a smooth rOad fllcer. 1
de. No Dodge lw.t fl l compnrd '"
-•
CR\niMAN TRUCK .
th,; Rusc h Gnmd NuliuRuJ .sui,,
think In the past I've bet!ln Smoother than
othe~-drivers who tosa them--GM.~fim(u,.d D~dEJ~~:u:au 00--J~I~'HI- r:ea_ss_ume_bis..mastety_of~ __::;L:;;E~B~AN~O~N~.:••:n:n::;
.-:.~sc~o~tt=~,_,__. Stacy Co'T!pton-ls-one--of-raan~ NASCAR- so~-of-the
.
us' th,lr ow" ~ngmn, alt,.ough t,.ey
NASCAR's Winston Cup
''
ricers who bt&amp;an hla stock-ear career.ln
aroun~. Every time ~ou crank up a rece
"ave almost notlrlng ill comMon with
Series. On the heels of his
Rigs won for the fourth
the tOUJh prOVint &amp;rOuf'td of Vir&amp;lnla short car, Its a rush for me. It doeen t metter If
currettt prodJJclion -car t ngi"''
-.
victory In ~unday's Global
time this season In the
tracks. He 'll 1110 ont of many drlwrs who It's 8 road course or an 0\11!11 track or just
NASCAR englnt:J for Cup, Bu.,clr
Croaslnaat the Glen, a
Fedenlted Auto Parts 200 at
Mpn racln&amp; In pkafta.
cranking lt up to drl\le In throuJh the pita.
and CmftsnWn Truck s~rlu cuY all
stron&amp; pattern Is developing Nashville Superspeedway.
Compton, hl&amp;hly eucceasfulln the
It's Still 8 rush.
Ht at J51J ct~bic lm:lru
- w
In th"e points race.
Riggs led all but 19 of the
Crilftaman Truck Series, has been driving
'Tho fast way arO\!lld It (lost turn at
..., 1
Tne rest of the drivers are 150 laps, earning $44,635.
for the Melling team fdr the past two
watkins Glen) Is not to lift, but I don't
e a a a a a a • a a •
&amp;ettlng a recurring vision,
The victor~ moved Rigas up
seasons. The hl&amp;hllghts Wf!re front-row
know If you cart make It around that way
that being the faux taillights one spot, fr~ third to
Qulllfylng performances earlier this year
or not. The sooner yo'u can aet on the gas,
on Gordon's No. 24
second, In the points
at Oeytona and Talladega . He finished
the faster you can run. You're putting it on
~·
Chevrolet getting smaller
standings.
10th Jn the Daytona 500 and later came
the edge. If the track was five feet wider,
up with ait 11th 8t Bristol, Tenn.
you'd Still be runnlnl off. You're using all
•UMI Publications' new book
(')
MDII I towm Grtt, Va,
the track you can use."
"Bristol Motor Speedway: 40
2001 WINSTON CUP SCHEDUlE
...:34
What dD rou think ibout Hmll t.ame
Years of Thunder* Is on sate
Ail.
l'1nlo: Stert (April 21 ..1996, at
brlnll"l In ........,..,., O,..tlllltl fof 1M now.
Mertlnavtlle, Va.), P9IO(Apnl 22, 2001, at h•rs Point and w.tldpe Glen,...,
BI'CMild~'l, MICh.
TM boak Includes pMtos
Teliadqa, Ato.). win 1none)
Brtllol. Tenn.
Aut· 25 BriStol Motor Sl)lett«&lt;y
·vou can't blame 'em, but personally, I
of drivers like Fireball
~~.S.C .
0...... lutllttct: 53 ttces, 0 victories, don't think It's right to pull somebody out
Roberts, Joe Weatherly and
'Sept. e
RIChmOnd International RlcewB'J
Rk.hmond, \Ia
0 top-five finishes, 110P. 10,1 pole, over
of a car and put somebOdy In the car for a
the speedway's first winner,
NIWHMII)IM1! ~ ~
louOon. N.H.
$2.3 million In earnlogs
·
road race. tf they.want to bring an extra ,
Jack Smith, as well as all the
Slpt• .23 DcNef Downs lntllmatlonel SpeedW8)Dalter, Del.
Cor: No. 92 Kodlitk Oo&lt;tge Intrepid,
car In, that's fine . I don't think Ws rlgh~ to
contemporary stars like Jeff
owned by Marl&lt; Melling
pull a driver out and put a ro~ racer In for
Gordon, Dale Earnhardt and
chlet. Chad Knaus
a race or two races and then.Put the
Rusty Wallace.
FIUO OF THE WEEK
ototuo: Single
regular Orlver back In:
11 al so includes rare
pli'otos of the speedway's
...... Slid
RIGky Rudd
property during it&amp; 1960
A bump from Sakt late In the reoe relepted Rudd to a
construction, photos of the
fourttt-~ece flni•h 11 Rudd 1qulrted out of the iroo've In •
1992
concrete resurfacing
tuqt one. ,•1 &amp;uess Boris !Said), lOin&amp; ,down Into tum
process and more. Benny
1. Who was the nrst NASCAR driver to win
one Q'\
ot tho~ feet r•etart•. Just went In the~ and 1
Phillips, an Sward-winning
over $500,000 In 8 season?
drcMt ell ovorthe top of liM!,' Rud4 Mid, 'I'm not sure
motorsports writer, wrote the
•
IIDT:
Jeff
Gordon
has
2. Who owned the car driven by Dale Earnhardf; to the
w~re ~ thou&amp;llt ~ woo l&lt;&gt;hia, b&lt;lt ho"a 111&lt;:1\Y he didn't
story of BristoL
·
shifted into breakaway
Winston Cup championship in 1980?
.wlpe ·the WhO~ fltld out.'
.
mode with two straight
The limited-edition book is
· 3. Who won the Daytona 500 at age 50?
on sale at the BMS Ti cket
victories.
lllo
•Sold would like tQ be I!)Of'l then juot 1 roo&lt;Haclni,
Office and Souvenir Store for
•
NOT:
FOr
pole
winner
opecielllt, en&lt;l ht problbl)' te~ ho hid t~ moke hlo
aluoqe1 liqqoe
$24.95. It Is also available
Dale Jarrett, the race was
move. v... It .,.·. an outlandl8h one, and he ended up
punjJa~ so pol:J ·z:: 48noJOQJeA ~go "l
through
UMI oy calllna toll
a
disaster.
He's
fading
· 101~ the
111 plntd bl'·flylnal&gt;l' three cor•
. 9H3M9NW
free, 1-800-741·9287 , or by
fast in points.
• the end of the front iUallllt:
vh~ ltlng www.umlpub.com.

0

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"We have had some decenl runs
in several racttthis year. The same
Is lrue for last year. Some lhinRI
happened that no one had control
over. Other .thirags hh'e happcned
that we btt~ tilin into considera·
lion and teamed from."

receive it lhis .yeat. I ccnain l~ don't
want to stand m the way ofh15 fam·
ily receivinH tllis IIWilrd." .
.
Earn hardI, w"..o was k111 ed. m .a
• b. 18 . 1s elo
D.aylona , 00 eras," on ,e
·
gtble hccau5e the award il open to
any oJrivtr who makes ~~;n 11ttempt to
qualify fQI' any race.

X
UNDERRATED: Bobby Labonle

one' of on I, two drivers 10 fimsh
in the top five in both road races
during the: 2000 Winston Cup sea·
san. lt WIIJ ooe of many factors in
his championship year.
Labonte also f11red well earlier
1
"
n
this season at Sonoma, C11if., fin·
ELLIOTI OPTS OUT: - Bill
Elliou. 15 times voted NASCAR '! "TESTINGTHECUPWATERS: ishing scvenlh.
"The nlain thin&amp; is to ketp the car
Most Popular (?ri v~ r by fan s, hag Fronk Kimmel. Who has W&lt;ln 23
dNidc:d to remove his naJDe from tbe ARCA rate~. will gi~ Wjn5ton Cup on the tr1 ck," Labonte nld. "We
200 1ballot so that lhc l1te Dale Earn· 11 try by entocrinHthn.!e rac~:s thi ~ fall. know we have 11 t1r capable of not
hardl, who never won it while he was
With sponsorship fro~ Advance just finishinJ wrll, but pM."'ibly win·
alive, can win it po sth11mo~ly.
All to Parts nnd lhe Natmnal Pork ning, so not only do you h!Woc to be
"This is a much different year , Council. Kimmel hopes to run the av.ure of where everyone· is on the
than othua," Ellioti said . "Dale lllces at LowciiMqtorSpeedway on track. )'OU 1lso have to be smar1
Earnhardt. never won thl$ award. and Oct 7, Martinsville, Va., on Oct. 14 enough not to ovmlrin~ the cur and
I think it would be a tremendous and All11nla Motor· Speedway on cause any unnecesury trouble for
yourself."
llonor for the Earnhardt family to Nov. \8 .
\W.!l

CPU

x~M
•'1111--Rol&gt;br
Gordon clef net wtn the

Q.._. Croeelnf at tiMI

110 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
·Phone 992-1135

a~-- ~- to no · - ·
....
- of~ pit ,._
__
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..-•
._
- ~
~- oq n~

MoGM.
.

A....-.ory t.tterr

E·Mtlllmoa@lrognet,not

._" • -........... to
.-..,n•fllolltt.te tellvtllon.

vtftW, ptrforman~;:aupgradti.COm

~. . . . . uplodtd In the
drhwr'l ~tent,
end It ooH GGrtlon •lbot

It -~ ... hla

•

fruatmiiOn 81 M cllmb141
outoltheemokJneo8ron
pit roecl .. Wllklnl O..n
lntemlltionlll.

Place Your Business's Ad here

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
·oave Harris or Debbie Call

992-2155

(740) 992-2635

m

Dodge, 85.290 mph , Aug.
27, 2000

X

and smaller In the distance.
Gordon won for the fourth
time In five ~ears at Watkins
Glen International in a
bruising, entertaining battle
that saw no small amount of
attrition. At the end, those
trallln&amp; him were drlve'rs;
Jeff Burton and Jeremy
MBytteld, wM were havlna
the time their lives on the
2.45-ml le ,1 mostl~ rlght.turn
track.

Failina ro make the field at the
Orlckyard 400 was a devastatina
setback for the t lumpinJ team of
Larry McClure, wtto bas been workinJ all year to rnlorc hi! No. 4
Chevrolet lo it&amp; onetime promi·
ncnce.
. "We have 111 oflhe key elemtnts
in place for our leem," McClure
insisted. "I think they lift not as
fine-tuned as they ·should be right

,....

·~

Notabla: This is not the
cRAmMAN TRUCK
same track where the
Whit: Sears Craftsman 175 Winston Cup and Busch
Series raced last month .
Where: Chicago Motor

FROM lAST WEEK

now. I am lrylni. ro calm Mryone

..i

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. '

NDt1ble: Only Bodine and

He's on a ramp•••
Hanlinc In •• be~ iHI 011n
(3) Dolo Jarrett
Won hlo lhlnl polo
(4) . KIYin Harvlok 7th -n'l bed on road oourM
(I) ,...,. &amp;tawon o... of thoot illl~uck tiM•.
(I) D. Eamhordl Jr. Htld 111o1 -monto,

•r Monte Dutton
NASCAR ThJs Week

' '

.

19, 1995

·
McClure determined to make his team competitive again

.Middleport, Ohio

. . _ _ floll ..... _ _

NATION\L

When: 1 p.m., $at ur0ay
Defendlnc champion: Todd
Bodine
Quallf)lna record:
Buckshot Jones. Chevrolet,
184.7B6 mph. Aug. 19, 2000
Race ,.cord; Mark Martin,
Ford. 169.571 mPh. Aug.

Winston Cup Series

down and set them refocused. They
are tf)'inll to so for poles and will!.
Riaht now, lam interested in detent
llarling positions and finishes. We
can move fnrwArd one !lep at a lime
from there.

··--·- ---

Notabl•: Jeff Gordon won
the race earlier th is summer
at Michigan, his second
victory at ~he track.

••••••••••
AROUND THE GARAGE

Ingels Furniture

--

2000

13. 1999

-tace

. ,.

Is congratulated by 'Mark Grace after the Dlamondt&gt;acks
defeated the Pirates Wednesday for SChilling's 18th win. (AP)

400

'hotl ~1 . 2.38!$
Rick)' Hendrick. 2.330

••Ill'•• - -.. - ·- ....

I M.~~
11 ...., ....

CAREER HIGH- Diamondbacks pitcher Curt Schilling, left,

What:

·where: Michigan .
International Speedw8)'.
Brookl~n 1 Mich . (2-mlle ~
track), 200 taps/ 400 miles
When: Green flag drops at
.2 p.m.. Sunday
O.tendln&amp; .champion:
Rusty Wallace
Qulllfylnt rtco«&lt;: Dale
Earnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,
191.149 mph, Aug. 18,

. Rice record: Dale Jarrett,
Ford,17 3.997 mph, June

but laded to 12th
(7) ltolll,. Morlln Not • fan ol road - 8. (I) Bobby Lobonto Aoolld Ml&gt;pluo flnloll
8. (8) RUIIJ Wollllca H)Jheat llnlohlnc Feril, opln
10.(10) Jofl IMrton · M- Gl'f"Gn oom It

tall today to take advantage of this incredible offer.

\

WINSTON CUP

1.

JU5t purct• I Dl5h301 ur ~ DISH Nlllwirt dgital 1.11e1111e lY SJS(flm Willi USIIPof $199 Of 11101e and receiwJ one
I~ ~ ot'Amll~ 'l ToplOO prngramm1110 pac+.age 101 only S9 &amp;II'1CI'IIh.lllarm I ..... of~· ·· p11' ..U.
OY!IrOUI IC9Uiar ll!ice \'oo'# also getlr~ bio$k P111fes110nai iOS181~kJ.l
All klgeO
M!I IIIItt't 1 $:M2 .......

"

--..:.:.:==="--Pepsi

1. (1) Jell Gordon
2. (2) Ricky Rudd

1.
...
•• •
•

COMING UP ON THE CIRCUIT

• NASCAR This week w)iter Monte DUtton ranks ·the
top 10 drl\lers heading Into this we!kend's race. Last
. week's ranklngs are In parentheses. ·

mnmgs and Alex Gonzalez Detroit's Bobby Higginson trying to score In the fourth innihg
went 3-for-4 With a ~o-run Wednesday In Detroit. (AP)
'
homer as Oakland lost 1ts second sttaight following an 1tgame wmnmg streak.
'
'
Barry Zito (8-8) · allowed
five runs - three.earned
Cal Ripken hit his second
Magglio ~rdonez ·hit • a
and seven h1ts m 6 .1-3 pivotal homer in two games, a tiebreaking homer in the sevmnmgs . Oakland remam~d tiebreaking sho: in .the sixth enth off Pat Mahomes (5- p).
two games ahead of Boston m ·offKris Wilson (6~3) that sent and Jose C~nseco and R;ay
the wlld card race.
host Baltimore to its sixth Durham added solo shots (or
host Chicago.
win in eight games.
Jose
Mercedes . (7-13)
!Gp Wells (7-9) pitched ope
allowed four 'runs and four inning of perfect relieffor ¢ e
. Clay Bellinger hit a. threehits in six innings to beat the win, and Keith Foulke
run home.r and a solo ~hot.
Roger Cedeno went 5-for'
Royals for the second time in worked the ninth for his 30th
Derek Jete~ added a pa!T of ' 5, Bobby Higginson went 4·
'
eight days. Willis Roberts save.
doubles ano a home run ·as for-4 and Deivi Cruz hit a
the Yankees scored twice in go-ahead two-run single off worked the ninth . for his
the first, once m the second AI Levine in the four-run fourth save.
and twice in the third against eighth.
Paul Wtlson (5-8) to giVe
Visiting Anaheim had won
Clemens a c~mfortable lead.. 10 of 13, while the Tigers had
Clemens d1d not allow a h1t lost 11 of 13. ·
until the fifth - the one
Matt Perisho (2-2) got the
frame when he encountered final out in the eighth. Mike
some trouble. Tampa Bay . Holtz (0-1) was the loser.
scored twice on a basesloaded single by Chris

11

.a,..

TOP TEN

Edgar Martinez hit a threerun homer for the second
straight night and Freddy
Garcia (14-4) allowed three
hits in eight innings. .
.
Martinez's 19th homer and
Bret Boone's 27th in a fourrun .third inning gave visiting
Seattle a 5-1 lead over Frank
Castillo (7-7) . .
Boston lost for . the sixth
time "in seven games, while
Seattle won its .fourth
strai.ght.

Yankees 10,
Devil Rays 3

Joe Ruttman, 2,460
scott RICP. 2,4:28
Jack Sorque, 2.417

.... · 2.'!""2.644 Terry
Tod - Cook, 2,259
· 2,300
1. Kevin Hli'vlcll, 2.703 T
Mike
McLall&amp;hlln.
li 8I:II:IDr ~•.~.­ Jtliilr'IM Jc:il'lnlon, 2,620 Dlnnll Setzfw, 2,153
•• Rusty vtallace, 2.686 ~ Utue, 2,549.
Rick Crawford, 2.069
14- .- -.2.ta3 Klnrt: - · 2,&amp;)7 Cor; Qlbba, 1.178

Mariners 6,

Escobar

- -

...,._

2001 POINTS STANDINGS

Indians, Yankees expand division leads; Mariners,winner:s

Kelvim

·

All '""" ENtem
• Buoch Sortoo, N\1'.\0nlne.com 280
1 p.m. • Saturday • TNT
• Cfllftamln Ttuok, lura Cf1111eman 171
5 p.m. • Saturday • ESPN
• Wlnaton Cup, Pep•l .-oo
1 ;30 p.m. • Sunday • TNT

AMERICAN LEAGUE
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Cleveland Indians and
New Yor). Yankees are starting
to qpen up comfortable leads
· in their division ra~es.
Kenny Lofton hit a threerun homer Wednesday night
as Cleveland handed Minnesota its siXth sttaight loss
with an 8-2 win and opened
up a season-high 3 1/2-game
lead over the Twins in the AL
Central.
Roger Clemens became
the sixth pitcher since 1900
to open a season 16-1, allowing only four hits in seven
innings to lead the Yankees to
a 10-3 win over Tampa Bay.
He is also the first pitcher
to open the season by winning 16 of 17 decisions since
Dave McNally did it for Bal'timore in 1969. \
"I don't know the history
behind it, and I don't think it
' ,matters unless we get to
where we want to be-· staying in first place and reaching
. our goals;' Clemens said. "It
-mxkesall
to pay off."
Clemens struck out eight as
· the Yankees increased their
AL East lead over B.oston to
five games - matching their
largest of the season.
In other AL games, it was
Seattle 6, Boston 2;Toronto 5,
Oakland 2; Detroit 5, Anaheim 1; Baltimore 5, Kansas
City 4; and C~icago White
Sox 6, Texas 5.

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

The Daily Sentinel
encourages your
support of these area
businesses who make
this page possible.

'

•

AROUND THE DIAMOND

NATIONAL LEAGUE

BY

Page B~

seball

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

-~

•

'r

(

rl.

'

.,

~

••

�Page a ·4 • The Dally Sentinel

-

P_omeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Aug. 18, 2001

.Thuraday, Aug. 16,2001

W:ribune - Sentinel -

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

f -~ lr=:l
==~~~! . REII~=~SHOME ~985
16

IH\'"I'IH(I \I HI'

REDS STADIUM

16

We

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

Glenn

Report says
ball.
park
d
I
~ur:!!~Fu~ ~~~c::.:: ~=·
costs
·
un
er
contro
Mea:

Cove

c.: :
.l!IU;cSAu!F
iaotwoodl

f1om Page Bl

:auorant-1 WI Sal New
oMoytog Appllanooo. French
:City
Maytog, 740-446-7795. caa, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp; (304)882-3506 L.aovo

Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason ,
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

For Salt: RecondHJoned Air Conditioning Systems sage.
.wosherl. drytnl and rsfrlg- Free 8 Year Warranty Ban- =:-=--::-----::----::-·orators. Thornpoo&lt;IS Appl~ netts Hooting &amp; Cooling , t · 1989 Chevy cavalier 5 ap.

C

p

C

IN INNATI (AP) rOJCCt managers or a n ew
0 0 - 8 7 2 · 5 9 6 7 tow mtles, noedo body"""' riverfront baseball stadium s•y costs are so wel_l in hand
·once. 3407 Jackson Ave- 8www.orvb.oom/bel:!nod
$700.00 304-875-1186
~
(304)875-73B8.
Wolor
welts
drilled. 1990 Couger LS. all Power that new estimates put the total about $6.5 million
. Gold Maytag washer &amp; dry- (740)866.7311
52,000ml., good condition. below w hat they predicted this spring.
•or, St40; Almond washer,
S4,ooo (304)675-50 19 oftsr
Gre at American Ball Park is supposed to be ready for
:S70; White Whll1poot washIII.JnJliNG
epm. or leave massage.
or, $70; Dryers, $60,
5uPnJEs
1 1990 Grand Prix, B4K, the opening day of the Reds ' 2003 season. Theldnew cost
(740)446-9066 alter 6pm
__
1
·
·
S2195: 1992 COrsica, one estimate is $282 .3 million, project managers to Hami .:Mollohan carpet, 202 Clark
3-SttEl BUILDINGs
owner. 1D3K, $2495: 1991 ton County commissioners on Wednesday.
··Chspal Rood. Porter. Ohio. Up to 60% oft or Bast Ollerl Cavalier, 98K, $2195. 1990
·
d
b
•300
' Fro estl'l'ataa. oo days 40x40, so.1oo, 70K120 Eocort LX, 77K, $950.
Less than ;1 year ago, the proJecte cost was a out"
;same ao cash, easy linancCon Dellvarl
COOK MOTORS (740)448· nu' llion
•lng, VIsa&amp; Mastercar&lt;l ac·
f!oy (800)-499-2760
0103
.
.
'
.
•cepted. Drlvo·a-lltllo save
. "Ma ny of the contracts for work at the ballpark have
:aiOt. (749)448-7444 or Block, brick sower pipes 1991 Dodge Stealth RIT,
•
d
h
··
d
h
. 1-877-830-9162.
windows ttnie1s ole Cia~ Twtn Turbo, 300 HP, 5 c ome m way un er w at we estlmate , s~ t at accounts
MOin Stree1FumRure
Winters, ' Rio Grande, OH opaed, tooded. Awesome for the drop," said Arnie Rosenberg of Parsons BrinckerColl740-245-5121
car. 114,000 miloo. Runs h £[ h fi
h. d b
(304)675-1422
Great. NADA Book $9150, o , t e 1rm 1re
y the county as construction man515 Ma~7.~~· Point
snoo 080. (740)44Hl135 ager.
._
1994 Flroblnt, V-8, auto, atr,
Hamilton County voters approved a sales tax surcharge
New &amp; Used Furniture
n .ooo miles, driven dally, . 1996
b .,d
d.
ti
h NFL'
• New 2 P - Uvlngroom t female Yorkshire Terrier, R·UUa, looko, runs greal, m
to U1 new sta 1ums or t e
s mcmnatl
; sultas, $399. Buy, sen , 8 · $400, paren10 on $4,500, (740)742·2357
Bengals along with Reds.
• Trade.
premises. 1740l2 5ti-B478
1996 Dodge Intrepid ES,
The county's agreement with the Reds caps taxpayer ·
$280
'II.
· h h R e d s paymg
·
ti
t
: New And Used Fumlture 5 Cocker Spaniol puppies 7 Condy ap~o rod, leather,
• Store Below Holiday Inn, weeks old, CKC reglstar8d. completely lOaded, alloy cost at
m1 10n, Wit t e
or any cos s
· Kanauga. We Sell Grave shots &amp; wormed 18118 wheels, new Goodyear over rhat amount.
• ~~~762 And vases. docked, (740)742-2525
\';~~ooo"'1g~~~;'":.~c:r· Construction has lagged behind schedule in two key
.
8 weeks old real cute fox run&amp; .great 25mpg. $5
a structural steel and concrete for the terrace
SPORI1NG
terrier puppies. 1st sllota. 080. (740)441-()135
I
R
b
. ·
d
b
$50 each. Monroo Yoder,
·'But
osen erg satd the work is expecte to e
GooiXi
_ 1147 Bume11a Road, Patri· ~~oo"'"tro,1 outo, ~C:· bac on schedule by mid-September.

;nue.

j

In one week With us

•

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

'ar;ribune

·. To Place

2

.tfQl"r/cfafe.r

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ. WRITE Ali AD.

l'EllsoN.uB

ply To: 553 2nd Avenue,

Qalllpollo, Ohio
Aportment 403

45tl31,

---.,-----

Why wal1? S1art meeting
Ohio alngleo tonight, call toll
lree
1-800-788-2623 ext
1821

r

~

ANNouNa:i\tiNrs

II"'

COra Mill Rood, A-Frame,
Friday &amp; Salulday, August
17th &amp; 18th: 8:30-5. Pallo
door, chlldron'o clOthing.
Frida 8117 &amp; Sat ld 8118
. Y .
u ay
9.00om-4.0Qpm, 1703 Fairfield Church Road (out 141lolloww ~) L.ola ol clllld,... clothing- toya.
Garage Sala- 991 Mill
CA18k Rood, A•~ust
17th.
-·
B':.;t c.::,e•;o:::•:lll,
~ wn.:!.., ..~
• ng
a
• .
Huge RurMIIlge Sale-Debbla . Drive Chapal, Activity

Clentleman Sooklng White
Female Over 50 \'ears For
Wolko And Frlendohlp. Re-

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

ceptlonal

opportunity

W....,

111)

93 Aeetwood t4x70 on
ranled lOt In Apple Grove.
AIIIUI_,._IIIng . very Nice Condition and
In thlo nowo-le
Area. $14,000. (304)578·
oubjoc1tolho9955 or (304)617·7705

--on

Fllr HcM*nt Acl ol1"'

n.r

eervlce. employee pertonn·
"ANJDJ
once, etc. Respond to Box
To Do
EB14 100 Main Streal,
Point Pleasant, wv 25550 All Make Mowero, lawn
Tractora, Tlllors Repaired.
Mason County Action Frae "'""
~-'lvl A 11
G
........-up, ~ ry va ~
wt'r'l:f l~kt~1
~-~~.Y~)~:·
until August 22, '"' a &gt;'An
lldxlr. Muat ba clean, neat
BA COnotructlon
and poUte. Must ba abll to R II
ent ldl
lilt and travel In-county pa~U:: :,:'ko, g!rS:~.

=!

:aoo.

I

8800

Encouraging Workplace Dl· a good driving record. Thlo
voralty.
Is 8 hra. per day, Mon· Fri.
Apjlly at 101 Second St.
Community Action Is seek· Bam--lpm. no phono calls.
lng temporary Intake Clerk MC,6.G, INc., Is an EOE,
Aide to work with Emergen- AlA, MIF.
cy Programs. OrganizatiOnal skills, computer oxporlenca,
and ability 10 deal wfth McClure's Restaurant now
parsons ol various soclo- hl~ng all 3 locations, lull or

economic

Now To You Thrift ~
9WootStimoon,740-582·11142
Cluollty clothing and nouoohold iloma. $1.00 bag oole

backgrounds. par1·1lme, pick up &amp;pp~lca-

811&amp;,17, 9am-3pm, 8 SOUth Valid Drlvars , __ high
ThlldSIIMt.Muon,clothes achool graduate or oqulva·
all 11111, Little Tike toys, lent. Resume with three (3)
babyCIOthal.
references toM"'. EdWards,
Gallla Meigs C.A.A., 8010 N

every Thursday. Monday Furniture tale, 9-4pm. Fri· Slate Route 7 Cheshire

11on a11ocatlon &amp; bring back
batween
9.30om
&amp;
10·QOam , Monday lhru Sat·
urday.
,._ 0 ld'8
R.10 G nd
Ml,;

ana

or

ra

camp Sites For Rent On
Abandoned Doublewldo- Kanawha Rlvsr, 8 miles
lree set-up &amp; dolvery. Hur- lrom Point Ploosant, electric
ry- t onty. (740)446;3093
only.
(304)875·1722,
c•··-·all 1.0 &amp; 12 (304)675-4144 After Spm.
-~ ~ on
wide mobile homes Kanau- GrHn Townahlp. 2 miles
go Mobile Homoo Golllpollo trom HolZer. Beautllul BuildOhiO. (740)441-o:lro
lng Sllet. Some Rootrlctiono
(740)446·9986
Final Daya, Nationwide InINVENTORY
v::o~ Reduction I
REDUCTIONS

.-,color, rollglon,-

1111111111- o r orleln, or ony lnlll\tlon to

moo..nyiiUCft
"'""'"'"'•llmllotlan or
dlocrtmlnotlon."
Thlo -.Piporwlll not

~~~:= Reule 141) Thursday, Fri- Equal Opportunity Employer Class D drivers license and sreooes. Call 875-7739

tcnowlngly -~~~
~~~,:-'

D&amp;S.roollng, siding. exterior
&amp; Interior pointing, gutter,
drywall. and moot home repairs. Froo · Eotlmatao.
(304)875-8829

~~~.~~

- ' · • • - - - 1n
thlo ntiVIPIPif...
··-oftlnoqtJOI

Georges Portable Sawmill.

don't haul your loga to the

mill just call ~75-f957.

~·r'k.~· ~~~~: '7::g;-2~:

--hlroby

vlotltton a1111o lew. Our

·

r"

2.7 ooras, VIllage of Syra·
cuao, partially wooded. vii·
llge water/sewer, Roy
Jonas
Rd., . $18,000
(814)262-3998

oppclltUnlty bun.

I

I

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenta, lumlshod and unfur·
nlshed, security depool! requlrod. no pete, 740-9922218.

--------

1 Bedroom Apartment. Rofrigerotor, Range, AIC lneluded, $299 Plus Dopoolt &amp;
Reference. HUD Approved.
(740)441-1519
1 bedroom near Hob:tt', AIC

ooonomlcal gas neat, quiet
location, $279 montli ,....
&amp;
deposit
required.
(740)446-2957
2 bod room apartment in

( · )

In the following counties: Centenary; appliances

For eale hoUill trailer 14•70
wtth · 10x28 add- on
S7500.call 304-875-1186 '"'
more Info.
lond·homa packa_gea- all
areoa. Prequallty by phone.
(740)448-3583
u ltod ·o N c edit? G
m
r o r
ovemmant Bank Flnonco Only

Adamo: 3 acres, $11,200;
Athens: 7 acres. $8.800;
Hooking: 5 acres, $20,000;
Jackoon: 3 acree. $10,900;
Mslga: 9 acres, $8,000;
Pike: 5 acres, $14,500;
Rosa: 7 acreo, $21,700;
Scloio: 27 acres, $21 ,600;
VInton" 5 acres, $10,900.
For more Info and FREE
mapa. COnlact:

At Oakwood In Barbour&amp;-

Anlhony Lind Co., Ltd.

fur~

nlshod, utllllles paid except
stectric, clean· rofsrencas&amp;
deposit required. $291i/mo.
can (740)256-1135
=-'----'--'-'-----

2 or 3 bedroom apartment
In Middleport, no pots.
(740)992·5658
A
.
p
panment near
oner,
apartment In Gallipolis. References required. (740)388·

ville, wv 304-736·3409.
1-800-213-8365
_n_oo_______
Mull sea 1995 Fairmont
www.alcland.oom
BEAUTIFUl
APAAT14x70, 2 Br/2Bth, Excellent mobile home lot for rent. MENT8 AT BUDCIET PIIIBy Owner 111 English Ct condition. Call Harold (740)446-1279
Cll AT JACKSON II·
Housekooplng and/or sit PI Plooaont 3br 1 bath. (740)385-4367
TATES, 52 Wootwood Olivo

8228 (740)339·1288 17
yoor&amp; experience.
·

e wlth

Elderly

In

Home

·

lloP.!l!8

FOKSAu!

·

·

r'

'

I

. from $297 to $383. Walk to

day, B/17, Hlde-a·bed, mat· Ohio, 45620 by 8124101. now hinng all ol-lfts. Vaca· $6 OOilr (304)895-3723 . FoBrmol Dining Room, Full
•~llu
l.ms &amp;
shop &amp; movleo. Call 740tre... box springs, computer GMCAAJs EOE
. tlon and holidays paid. In·
. .
~emNll, Fr= ea:'ki
-~ ·~
A
. 446-2668. Eq.ual Housing
r-~----"''l"'"'k;-dlnsfte aat:· Gravlty ~o==,;,.~="'"..,....=~·uran¢JL&amp;.VaUable._Apply_ln
-Maglc-Yeara.Day-Caro-l'roY! ' central
ow wair,owa,_v
!))' Hot OU!!l!!l!Lc!otals
~---GU!A-·
· ·G·E-·-. -_-, -_epportunlty.
Drivers with COl license, person.
achool. State llconoed, lot aiding,
(304)675.fREE·
,
_._______
GIVEAWAY
E~ exercise machine, ex· must have haz~mat, air
your child Experience Fan· 8187. It no an11wer, leave Heat pump or central air
a .. bike, 26" man'o 18 brakes &amp; tanker endorse- Nood
Job
Soourlty, tasllc Day Care with Tender maaeege. Sarlous Inquires with the pun:haae of eelect looking To Buy A Now Christy's Family living,
,
opeed bike (like now). lodles ment, good sal&amp;f'l, great $1,0001$5,000.+
Month. loving Core. (304)87S·5&amp;47 only.
In stock models
·
Homo? Don1 Have land? 33140 New lima Rd., Rut24" 10 opeed bike (like benolits send resume c/o Work From Home, Free In·
-WHEREWe Dolll Hurry Only 10 lola land. Ohio, 740-742-7403.
8 year old male SlamOII now), ate. Romo Cremeans The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box to. 1·868·447-7813
Naod n-ndoble baby lit· By owner, nnr now Malgs Colos Mobile Homoa, 15288 len, 304-736-7295.
Apartment, home and trailer
cat, had .._
lhole, (740)367· realdonce 3 mlleo out 729·09, Pomeroy, Oh NOW HIRING
....,..
Elementary 5c hool. Nice 4 US 50 Easl, Athena,
rantato· Commsn:lal Oloretar?
Unk
or
Soli
Pay.
M·F.
7123 al1or ..,....
•·-:'f.rove
Rd.,
Ru"and,
bad
h
1
t/2
Oh
••701
Iron•·
..._
"
45769
RIVER BOAT PilOTS
(304)675-7486, 15yra. exp.
room ranc on -~
~ available for leaoe .
Froo, IWO Spaniol miK pupa, witCh "' signa.
.
aero with otarage shod.
-PHONEVoooncles now.
male blacklwhlto, lomalo
"ARD""Full-time positiOn available, Company has Immediate Palntlng, lnteriO&lt; and elC18~- Now roof, lroo gas. Aaklng (740)592-1972
~ean 2br. An••-t. Rof·
browniWNt
•·
"""""
must ba dapandabla &amp; re- _.,tngs In the Charleston, or, omall tear downs &amp; haul $53,000. (740)7-12'7013
"'
.,.....,,_,
•• 740-e98-3004.
Pr.I'LF.As.\Nr
sponolblo &amp; willing to work area lor ox~rtenced river away. Free . aatlmatoa.
HOUI&amp;'i
srenoea, and deposit. No
LOin'
woekondo, room for growth, boat ~IOie w1th operatora II· (740)256-8141
Channing church bUilding 16 Wldl. Only ~185.00 Par ~
FOR RENr
Pale. (304)875-5162
., AND
v ~Sa F
Sa
applications are being takon cense tor unlnspectad voow/ajlllrtmenttn groat Pt. · Month 1 ~.99% Flxod lnteroot ,
. FO&lt; lea••· Ono bedroom
~OIJIID
•••w le ri. &amp; 1.47 Bur· M·F 1-4pm (740)1143-!249 ools. F,6.X rooumo to: Weed Eating Hlllaldoo, l'toaaant location $47,500. Rata wtth Air And Un...
•
..___oitiiiiiiiitto--' della Add. 8-?,toota, nome
'
'
· (304)345·6388 or coli Dltchaa, Elc. Mowing, Make a ofler. 304-875-1618 dorplnntng 1•886•929_3426 1 ·3 Bedrooms Foreclosed un1urnlohed, aocond floor
loot, young cat on Bailey Int., lola ol mlec.
Hair Stylist needed. Be your (304)345-8383
Clean-up, 'Removal Of UnHom.. From $199/Mo., 4'!' apartment, at oomat of Sac!~
R
own boss, rent or cammlswanted name. Odd Jobo. FO&lt; oale by owner: Nice bl· 1882 14•70 Fairmont Town- Down, 30 Years at 8.5% ond and Pine. A/C, $300
un d., yellow, tan &amp; Var&lt;t Sale Pleaoont Ridge ston. (740)446·4247
Now hlnng dnvera or man- Call stovo (740)44&amp;--7804 lovol home on 1 aero noar nouoa, 2 bedroom, 1 large ,6.PR. For Uatlngo, B00-319. per month; water Included.
white.
Please call Road, Gallipolis Forry, Fri.
agers, Domino's Plua, 811
·Cheater. Three bedroom, bath with hMt pump &amp; ale, 3323 Ext. 1709.
· . Security and kay dapoolt.
1740)99Z-8206
and Sat. 9 till ?
Help wanted caring tor tho W. Main, Pomeroy, Oh. WIU power wash houoao, two batha, one'C8r garage, $7,500, 74Q-S91·40.43 or
References required. No
elderty, DotSt Group Homo, 45789.
trailers, anything. Call !amity . room with llraplooo, 740-992-Q938.
2 bedroom houaa on Slate pets. (740)448•4425
Loot- all gray mala cat, Yard Sato Stale Rl. 2 now paying minimum wage,
(740)441-4238 or (740)448- oun room. New central haat·
Route 7 South o1 Middle- '-":....:.-'-";_;_'--"-'--Breezy Hts. oraa, very Auguol IS, 18, 17,and 18. new shlfta: 7am·3pm, 7om· Over lhl road dnver need- 0151 aok tor Ron. If no lng &amp; a1o system. One ml· 1898 Dulch, 18Jc70, 2 bad- port, $300 8 month &amp; ullllt· Furnlahod Apartmo~l. 3
lr1endly, rowald, pleaoo call 9·?, Houaehold llama, cloth- 5pm 3pm-1tpm 11pm- ed, Home on the weekend&amp;, answer, leave mooaage.
nuteofl Route 7, but IIIII prt- room, lived In 8 months, GIA .188, 1740)992-o542.
rooms and bath, $285.00
(740)992-5896
lng, 10)'11, knick knackt, lots 7am: caii740·992·So23.
no foroed dlopotch, lllnlor·
vale. (740)985-3981
· &amp; heating. oldlng, shlnglu, -:-:'-"-'=:.:.;::..::=---,-- monlh. All Ulllltiel Paid. 919
of Mloc.
aoted call (740)992·5364 or
books $24 eoo $21 000 3 badroornhomo Mlnorovtle Second
Ave.
phone
lOST- Saturday, 8111101
HIRING- RN, LPN, STNII
(740)591-1182
For oalo or rant· 4 bedroom 080. (740)as&amp;-1533 altar area, river ~ow. rofenoncas (740)446-31145
""" Plymale Road at yald
AllCI'ION AND
Wo are now hiring tho lotlJuiNJi'ss
house, Bidwell· 2 bedroom 7pm
required, dapoon required,
IIIIo In Golllpollo Farry, boyo
l.i'u!A MARKEr
lowing po~tions: RNilPN;
~--·
trailer,
SOUthwestern
·
no pets, 740·992-8777 after Gracloua living. 1 and 2
33
Gamo Boy, tool green In ~ ·
- Full-time 7pm to 7am Part- Overbrook Center, 3
vnvRI\Jruar , IChoolo, (740)379-2640
101 Time _Buyoro· Call Qakbedroom apartments at VII·
block
caoa •
Rowa~
' to Page
.. Middleport,
Is cur- •
wood G Ill
1ege ...
-'"·
•w Rick p
Auction Com tImo, 7am to 7pm, 7pm
rsntty St-king
applications
INOTlCEI
,
a polls todayl 5pm.
-nor a nd Rl v•·(740)446·11845
pony, ::lr":'mo auctlonll~ 7am, and ,3pm to 11 :30pm. for tho position of RN Man- OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH· ~o"
o:,: Gov't backed ~ram- buy 3 Bedroom Houoa In Syra- Aportmonts In Middleport.
Motorola Pager, In Pomeroy complete auction oorvlco. ~or S~~· we "~1:,:""" ager. Tha successful candl- lNG CO. rocommondo 1hst Addison call 1740)448-2195 local (740)446- 3
cuse, Ohio, $4801 Month ~~sfsr~~qual ~u~:g
or
Middleport.
Call LJcenood 1168,0hlo &amp; West me """' ono ava
on dale must hove 2 or more you do bllalneoo wit~ people
28&gt;&lt;80 3 Or 4 Bed100m, Qn. HUD Approved (304)875 ·
(740)985-4227
Vlrglnle 304·773·5785 Or all shifts. 11 you are 8 caring, yearo ot long term care ox- you know and NOT to oond Houao for sal a 4 br.2 ba. lg. ly $345.00 Per Month 5332 Wllkondo only
" · Opportunllles.
304-n:i-6447.
dodlcaled Individual who Is perionoe and 11111s1 have a monayth~gh the mall unttl kit. &amp; dining area, utll. room . 8.99% Flxod lntoreat Rote, For rent or·sale, 2 bedroom -No"'w-li-ak-lng--Ap-p-llc_a_tiO_n_eRowanl: 2 lOot loba, both
commiUed 19 enhancing tho wort&lt;lng knOWledge of state- you have lnvaatlgatod the ba..ment &amp; garage,&amp; out 1-1186-928·3428
houee. In Meroervlla. Call 35 WoSl. 2 Bedroom Townmalo. I black, I ytllow, loot
WAN'II!D
quaHty olllle for the elderly. and federal regulations •• ollorlng.
building, CIA, prload In the
(740)448-72641or detallo. houaa Aparlmanta, lncludas
seen 818 near Albany. '
ro Bvv
. Pleaoe apply 11 Holrar
Sa- well es quality aoouranco
.70's 304-875-4331
New 14K7D, 3 brl2bth only
Water
Sewage, .Trash,
(740)698·4031 or (740)707·
nlor Care Center, 380 ColO- atandards. If you are Inter· Proven $1 ·000 True WoaKh
$975 down and $198.76 per Ngoodlaa 3 bedlghboroorhoodmho_me 1n $35n'Mo., 740.44.8 ~·.
4426
nlal Or., Bidwell. between
S
'••• •••
Houoe For Sols on Mt Ver""""
00
55261
Absoluto Top Dollar: u.s. the nours 01 e·3Dam and eOiod, please slop by our yotem. 1~7906.
monlh.
Call
Cheryl.
Stlvl Gold COl p 1 ·4.00 . M •• · h Fnd
front office and pick up an
.
non Ave, 3br. 2 bath, Newly (740)385·4387
monlh; 2 badrodln homo · SmaM tbr. Apartment, Furr,
ns, roo. , pm on\,Hiy t ru
ay, application No phone calls Start Your Bulineea To· Remodeled lnelde and out.
cloae to town, basement. nlthed, kitchen, LR, Bath.
ll
oeto, Dlamonda, Gold ·or call (740)448-5001 and pia
e0E
day... Primo Shopping Can- Price Negotiable. (304)875- Now 14x70, 3Br/2bth, only River vlow, $4251 month; 3 All uUIIUes paid,-~ elocYARD 8.u.E
. Ringo, U.S. Currency,- ask for Eull or Martie.
""· · · ·
1er Spaoo · Available AI AI· 8048 or (304)675-3212
$975 down and $189.78 bedroom In town, 1-112 1rtc. Rafsrancos, Dopoelt re~::::;::;:::~· M.T.S. Coin Shop, 1!1 Sac- Homeworkers Needed $e35 Roglolered Nuraa. Home toldablo Role. Spring Volley
monthly. .
Call .Nikki balhl. Gopd locallon. 55001 qulred.
S225.
month
ond Avenue, Galllpollo, 740Health Agency accepting Plaza, Cal1740-446-ll101. New brick home with 3,000 (740)385-4367
month. Ralarencoa and de· (304)675-1365
448-21142.
Weekly Prooasstng Mall . applications for per diem
Sq.ft. on 2.4 acres. 5 ml)
11
1ed
YARD SAu?,.
Eaoyl
No
Experience RN's. Two yoara nural~ ax.-arur~
nutea from Holzer'o, 3 bad- Now 2002 Double Wide :ibr.
roqu r . 1740 446- Tara Townhouse Aport.. ,~- 1
Needed. Call 1-800-8521e
1ed
""-~
All Applloncea FrH
·
manta, veru ""•clous, 2
1 room, 3 baths, lnground 2ba.
G~
8726 Ext. 2070, 24Hra
per nco requ r · ome
""" CA, 1
~~",-====- Hsalth ••pertance halplul.
. .,.,..• ........,
pool, otorags building. Ds 11 very &amp; sa1up. Only Nlca 3 bedrooms, 2 miles Bedrooma, ·•2 Floors,
n'llr------.... ::KVC A Beh I I U-·lth- Flexible hours. For more In(740)446-0149
$32,900. Only al Fleetwood lrom Holzer's, n&lt;&gt; petl rat· 1/2 Bath, Fully C.rpo~ted,
1262 Lincoln Plko, In North-111G
av ora ~
fonnatlon oonllct Tla Woo- Plano luning I ropalr, doHomaa of PtoctorvHis. TOll erenooo required. $4150' plus Aduh Pool &amp; 8aby Pool, Po·
~~~~~a:.91h,.
HwWANJDJ . =~tt:'/'O&lt;\r,."~~;,'P-!'0 tHen, Phtealants Valley .Homo \':~~blolo:mceo~:~f: =Y~~·::·:~ ~ Frae1-888-5tl5-0187
d(7•40~~!o~!•r Included. tlol,Star1PI$365/MoSacurlty·~,· ··
.. .,....
In our Mason' - OBit • 7400
ervlceo 1 BOGa1 (740)7-12-2951
'
' 10 minutes lrom Holzer N'!"' 2002 F'·-·-·•
I
I
,.......~
,. Doyo·. 7••-..
......-"~ s ng a
R-ul-•,
•.
(304)87"'
3 fomlllos, Saturday, Auguot 11,000 VISA, No Credit Ice.
or Holpltal, 20 mlnutao from Wide Only,$149 month, on~ Pilot Program Ranttro a48't· ''Evenings· 7~
46
76
·18th, 9:00tun-??, 1591 Jay chock No Depaoli, 100% Fomlly SeiVfce Sptcfallll 7 .00 . AAIEOE
'TURNED DOWN ON
Pleuant Valley Hoopltsl, off at Fleetwood Homes . o1 Needed, 304-738-7295.
. 0502 · 740-446-ll;01
Drtve. Clean Clothes, toyo, Appfoved. 1-888-878-8787 (Caoe Management) Appllo Salosparaon naadod: luml- SOCIAL 8ECUR11Y 1811? SR 180 on a private H/2 ProoloiYIIIe. Toll Free 1·
•
·
baby homo.
canlll muot have a BachelOr lure otore, Immediate openNo 'foe Unlela WI Wlnl acre 101. 3 bedroom, 2-112 588-5tl5-0187
AM Opportunllyli Work degree In Social Work. Pay- lng, ful-tlmo position. Apply:
1-888-582-3348
baths, big kltchsn wloak
tu'. ~..~ Twin RlverTowero ,_ 00•
3 family yald sale. 488 From Homo. $150().$1500/pt chology or CounoHng and llfootyla furnlluro, 858
cabinets, DR, LR wtgaolog New bonk repo- 14x7D, 3 1 ·
·~"""''
ceptlng
Goorgeo CAIOk, 101 nou.. $2500-$8000111. Mall Order. ba ooclal work llcansabls. Third Avenue. Gallipolis,
ftraptaca, central air. leundry bedroom, 2 bath· Pay $499
appllcatlonalor 1 BR.
on rlghtaffor crooalng tracb 1-800-962-45-12
Pay atartut $10.57 hourly OH 9,30_5,00 . No Phone
room, llont porch &amp; 2-112 &amp;move-In Ookwood- Galtp.
HUD subsidized apt. tor
lmm Route 7, Friday 17th, www.opportunlty-lall.not
family SI!Yfce •nm'ara
calla.
.
r10
IIOMFS
. car garage. Qualhy con· olio. (740)448-3093
2 Bedroom, In l&lt;frr araa. elderly and dllabled. EOH.
Satulday 18th, 9am-5pm,
Appllcanle must havoal-lgh
.
FOil SALt: ·
otructlon- all tho way. lmme- New Double Wldo. 5195 $300/mo. You pay utilities &amp;
(304)67s-8879.
low prlooo.
AM Opportunltylt Work acnool diploma or GED. Socrellrlal Bookkeepor po· dloto poeaeoolon. Naod to Per Monlhl 3 Bedroom, 2 dopoolt. (740)388-9162
::-----='"-.:.;.;,.;_;_:.;_:___;__
from Homo. $150o-l1600/pt You 1111101 have a depend
slllo~. excellent company 3 bedroom hcuoo tor oaltln oall- moke ollar. Call Bath. FrH Dollvery &amp; Sot- 2
·
Two 2 bedroom apartment
$25Q0.$800011t. Moll Or&lt;ter. able vahlcle, valkl drlvora
banoflll, Monday· Friday at Middleport, call Tom Ander· (740)448-4514 trom 8-Spm,
BR, CIA, quiet oottlng. tor rant ·,n Syracuae $330
928
3426
Vald Sala. Wedntoday. 1-800-1162-4642
license and lnourance., Pay local homo haanh agency. aon after Spm, (740)892- M-F, or (740)446-3246 altar up. t-888- '
can for Appointment, per month plua $200 dapoaThureday, Friday. August
Act-l
&amp;18118al$8.00to$7.00.
send resume to: Modi- 3348
Spm.
TOP DOlLAR
(740)992•2187
It, 740-378-8111 .
t5,t8.17. 313 u- Route lnttmotlonal Bullnou
KVC
provldao
in-homo
oarv·
Homo
Health
Private
C.ro.
On
Mobile
Hame
2ilf.
Troller
'"'
rent
Will
•
00
7. At Siver 8rldgo llghl tum t!CJ)IIIdlng. $251$ 1ihr. Prr lou to children and tamltlea. Attn: Diana HMoes, RN SU· 3 Bod room on Routo 2, Nice older homo, 2 BR, llv,_no
copt Sac1lon 8. Call after
.-.,..,.........,
7
towardo river. Go llralghlto Fit 888-1588KVC oilers e&gt;&lt;OIIIont train- pervlsor. P.O. Bo• 867, Gal- (304)675-5332
lng room. dining room,
WI hovs
Bpm In Clalllpolls Farry
' RooMs
3713 .
lell property on left ballde www.ITIOQII&gt;uci&lt;Myou.not
lng and benallta. Sand re- llpolll, OH 45831
kitchen, pantry, utility room,
CuOiomora
Area. (304)875-4075
..__ _oiiiiiiiiiiio--'
tho Aftarlllons lhop. Friday, _ _..:;.._ _:..___ aurnoo to Human Rooource
3 bedroom, 357 Rouoh lull olzs attic, geo lumaoe,
waiting.
Ill INm8 wll ba hal1 priOII Mlarlng Opf&gt;ortunltyl Wort&lt; Dopt., PO Bo• 510, Ripley
lana, 1-112 bath, oontralolr, oontrala~. Recine, $35,000,
Tha Homo Show
3 BR, C/,6., 111 electric, nloe, Rooms available at Dorol
ltomo. ollerod: toolo, wort&lt; from homo, PTIFT free WV 26271 "' ploaoo call URGENTLY
NEEDED- aloctrlc hoot, fenced yald, (740)949-2070
St. Albans
call for . appolntmenl Adult Group Homo tor Root·
lhop homo, mlac. hardWare, booldel. 1-800-259-2998
372·5145 or lax reoumao ta plaoma donora oom $45 ·to acreanod pon:h, 1/2-acra, Pomeroy, 101 Plaooanl
1-1100 1415878
(740)992 2m
, donie, private and ahared
oolor, canning lira. -."""'-'Y~Jarlch. net 372-1683. You may e-mail $80 for 2 or 3 h.ura weekly. now •oldlng, Call Trioh
'
100rl!1 available (740)992·
pre11ure canner, dlthtl, --'-'--'-~.;.._;;.c....:.;.,. uo
al Call Sera-Tee 740,592• (740)-441-1033 or Shirley =~~~~~ 27~;,!
Beautiful River Vlow Ideal 5023
glaoowaro, plaotlc waro.
AniNTION
kvccorporatoOcltynet.nel 8861
'
•(740)367-QS14.
$24 ,500 OBO. 1740)698•
For 1 Or 2 People, Releren\ I l l&lt;! I I \\ l ll' l
poll/ pono, kltchon utenllll,
WI NIID HILPI
EOE
.
3 bed
CIA I II ball- 8783
BuiiNmi
011, Doposlt, No Pele, Foo- "1liF~.;;;.;;;,;;;,;;;o;
$500-$150DPT
.
~o!Qalllpollo
.
room,
• u
ANDBUIWINGS
tor Trailer Park, 740-441·
microwave, coflH maket,
10,....,goodloca$2,0011-Se,OOOFT
Maintenance Man netdod FooidllarvtooAIIIIUint mtn1
,81
u--~H~I~
0181
.
""""""-'U'
reading maMII1
Froo Training
., the New Hoven Amtrlcen Wyngete of Gallipolis hao • ton,
Daytime (740)448·
,........., ~
:-:---::------GooiXi
al, aduh clothing. hand - 1-888-8117-RICH
legion. (304)882-3802
· pert-tlmo poaltlon available 8753, Evening (740)448·
FOil 8.u.E
Building In Ractno, 30x80, Mobile home !of rent and .__ _oiiiiiiil--'
-carpet ruga, oavoral box
for alood eervlco aulolant. 0389
block &amp; brick, waa church moblla homo 101 lor ront. K - - w--•- 195. v-.
lale, aduk clothing, -ng www.oomtWOII&lt;WIIhmo.com
Maintenance
Peroon
need-··-·
- ·gas ~·
llorne, flower stakH, eolacl- ,6.VONI All A,..ll To Buy or ed IO&lt; 1 42 un~ apartment Experience cooking and 541 Founn Ave., GaHipollo. Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. central air &amp; hsat, 01.(1 ot' (740)448-1279
mora
dryer,-$96;
Sell.
Shirley
Spoors,
304complex.
Apply
at
Valley
positive
adllude
are
a
must.
4
Bedrooms,
2
112
baths,
Only
$19,850.
Fraa
~livery
flood
ploln,
greal
location,
Now
18x80
real~
nice
Cl,6.
195;
Whirlpool
elsa1rtc
· -n
. - llama. 875-1428.
shopping
carl,g
booSter
Vlow Aponmonlalocated on We offer a competitive oal· lerge living room, !amity &amp;Sat Up. 1-888-92&amp;,2428 St.Rtt 124 &amp; TyrH Blvd., $425/mo s3oo dopooli
range, $150. GE rolrlgorator
hand work plocoo, and .
. S1ata Route 325· Rio ary and banoflts are avail&amp;· room, large kiiChon and DR, .
$72,000 (740)949-2217
tor &amp; ttUh Included,' nlca $150; omall chll1 fraezar,
Did• oH odd and ende. Dental Aulotant noodad. Clrande, DH. Gonorol main- bls. lntereatod appflconts llnlshod baoomtnt, two cor 3 bedroom, 14x70, with
neighborhood, no pole. like now, $1&lt;15; otr oondlto CLA 531, tanonoo requlrW. vallay ahoukl a':fY~~Ipoi~'"EE~t detached goraga with 2 hos1 pump, hardwood Olllce building In Minora- (740)256-t6B4
tloner, 23,000 BTU, S2150;
Tormo: cuh, no · All 5end 1·
oalea nnat. No ratundt. Ev- o/o Galllpollo Dolly Tribune, VIew Apartmenle, 909 West Wyngete
Skeggo Appllancoo, 78 Vlno
· -bedroom aPIIIntont. CIOoe llooro, ,_ cabinet, muat ba vile, 800 oq. ft., al,c. covoryono -..e. Como and 625 Thlld Avonuo, GoiDpo- College Street, Thurman, No phone ..u•. Deadline to oc1X&gt;Oto. Now oordlllon. moved. 13,000 u - ,, erod perking, calling tan, Trailer In Muon. No Poll. StrHI,
GaiUpoMo, OH
bring at~ .
lie, Ohio 45831 .
Ohio 45656. (740)245-9170 8117.
(740)448-2300
(740)448-8305
' $350/mo., 814-87&amp;,1861.
(304)773-5751
(740)448-73118

'
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thru Satulday 9:00-8:00.

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whloh11111k11HIIIegolto
"ony
~,tlmllo1lon or

Building. (1.7 miles out road, Pomerov. Ohio 45769. area. MuSt have a valid Etc. Free Estlmatel &amp; Ref·

P-ram
day. Saturday. 10om·4pm.
Phone 1
Void SaiH- Wolf Run Rood
57 5-80011
or 304-345-8897 .
4 mllooiOUih ot RIO Grande
:::---::--::--~--::-::::--:~ · ofl Route . 325. Friday and
Big Z Tran•""". Will Pull Satur&lt;tay, Au~uot 17_16 _
.,.....
Single and Sectional Bam-Sum. (740 37~
Homes.Clooalll o,.rFactoryR [)1. r~
YARD SAwrect.
a
r
etta.
(740)288-4144"' (740)710.
l"oMmmoviMlooul

• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales. • limit 3 Per Person
Mall To : Ohio Volley Publishing , 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

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• No Commercial Ads

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Manager Needed for local Qalllpollo C.rMr Collogo
area ReOiaurant. Will work (carae,. Cloae To Home)
under direct supeNislon of Cai1Todayl740-446-4367,
owner. Prior Reslaurant ox·
1-B00-214.()462,
penance required. Wil mon·
Rop IIIO-OS,1274B.

to ltor food quality, customer

wort&lt;wltnpmgroeslvorehab
dept., challenge and profaoolonal growth. Great benolila, start rates, facility hoo
hlltof'l ol good regulatory
com~ lance and stable man·
agemant leam. Interested
candldatos shoukl oontact:
Allison Bamod, MPT Facility
Rehab Coordinator, Rook·
oprlngs Re"~tblllllllon Centor, 36759 Rookapnnga

h-ee !Irk

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced

POLICIES: Ohio Ve111V PubMihklt ,....,.,.. Che 111M lO ectll,. rwfiOt, or 0111011 any ed It eny tnt. lmn '"..,.. bll twported on the flrtt drt
1Hbul•lan41J,.., a·, wllbe• 1 nalblelornoMONthllnhco.toflhellpiOitoocupledbytbiiiiTQI'IndonryNtntlnllftion. W.
anr loR or~ ihlt ......tt. from the pelb&amp;k1tlon or omlukJn of "'~ Coi•eclkm will be I'Ndeln tM ftret w8lllil* tldftlon . •loa
.,. elwtyl oonfldtntJM. • Cwrtnl rete Mnf IPPIIM. • AI N111 11U118 ICtV'Irdlllitllitl _.lullfeot to the Fedefal F* Houalng Act of 1111. • nla
- o o l y ....,......., . . _"0 1!01! ...- .
not-ngly-ony
ki-Dflho-

-w- w...,_, 1r =

Certified OccupatiOnal Ther·
apy Aaalslent tor 100 bed
oklllod nunolng taclllty, port
tlmo hour! to fuii·Umo, dopot1dent upor ca..toad. Ex-

I

..__ _ _ _ _ __,
Advocate For Children

AdS

DisDiay

Dally In-Column I ·1 :00 p.m.
All Display: 12 Noon 2
Monday -Friday for Insertion
Bu!IIPI!SS Days. Prior TO
In Nex t Day 's Paper
'Publication
Sunday In-CDiumn : 1:00 p.m. Sunday Display: 1:00
For Sundays Paper
Thursday for Sundays

• Start Your Ads With A. Keyword • Include comp lete
Descr iption • Include A Price • A"Vold Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Get

rI =

Word Ads

·

~

(7!?.~ To99=2~:n2~-~~s~-~~(3~0~4)~67=5-1333 .

Ofllee 11u~~

\ \ \ til \! I \I I \ h

l\egister

·Sentinel

ca~f~::;... (7!?.~ro~!~;~~~2

j

'2- 10122 Ruger slelnlass
: atoelllmltod edition rifles w/
ooopes new In box. 1· 20
. gauge H&amp;R youth single
, shol, 1- 12 geuge N.E. aln·: gle shol alug gun 304-675· 1564
' Squirrel Hunter Special-

~s,

ot, OH 45658, 1 mile off Pa- 7

•

----+-----------------...:..---

•

Tribe

trtot Rood.
_:.)__
446. - -- - AKC Chocolate lab puppies 1997 Sa1um, 4 door, auto,
2 females groat pole s20Ci' air, power sun roof, excelaach. (740)446-0718 ·
lent condition. $5,000.
(740)446-4782
AKC Mtnl Dachshun~ . 2 1999 cadillac Sadali
maloa, $200, 8 weeks old. Deville, mint condition. 38K.
2 1498
(740) 56hunler green , $23,500- .
:...
&lt;

innings behind Finley, and
catdier Einar Diaz threw out
two runners trying to steal.
Shortstop OmarVizquel and
second baseman Roberto Alo-

from Page B1

New reasonable ahotgun; 1 AKC miniature Schnauzers (740)245·9n1

. pump, also 243 Remington pupplaa1 sait/popper, vat 2000 COugar V-8 5-opeed
lier and could need one year
Riffle, for moo:e Info, checkeo. S3DD, (740)696· 19,000 miles, !'740)245: to recover.
(740)448·1127
1085.
5062 daytime, 740)339·
"
d
"We're in a hole, Mays sai .
AKC Reg. Pomeranian, 4 1610 evenings.
•·-.;.....,
..Mo
~,,e, t bl ac k. ReadY Tho 68 Camara Drag Car, "We're notpitchingweii.We're
"""""~

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~.o~------"'· ~~~3~~~50. 675·3783
Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·
quos, 1124 East Main on
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992:2526. Russ Moore,
owner.

r Mrscn'ANEOl5 I

or $13,000. (740)25tl-8606

not playing well and we're not
- - - - - - - - playing defense. We have to get
AKC Shel!le puppies, sa- 84 Monte Carlo $!000.· • 86 back to the way we were playbles, t~a &amp; bl·blacks, vet $500,, 88-Ford Taurus
checked.
S250·S350, $300., an run Good. ing in the first hal£ ! know we
(740)B96-tll6s
&lt;740)388-()318
can do it, but we have to get

Doberman Plnshcar pup-

~ MERciiANDisE •

$1,000 BACK 2 Ton Air
. Conditioner, 2 Ton Coil, 1
uno Sat,Back.
Installed,
$2, 295
$1,000
$1295
Net·
Price. Free Estimates. can

.

For Quotas On Other Sizes. wormed, makes great gilts. Victoria Ford all Power.

11 You Don't Call us,
we Both losel Mobile
Homes
1740
448 Our
8308 Speciality
1·800·291·

009B ·

\ - ------. 1 Quickie electnc wheel·
chair like now for sale,
(740)992·2838
;.__,-'--------'. 112 Inch aookat wrench se1,
American, 37 pieces, $55;
Ught aluminum extension
ladder to 16 feat, $30.
(740)448·9791
'-2 --'---M-Ic_he_l_ln--x-c"'H-4
195175RU · 'llres; about
::;::, ~~~~~0 ~:o;"·n~:
$10. Each, (304)878-8795
2 ten spaod blkeo, dish nat·
Ia
work, Nok cell phone,
Erlckoon cell phone,
(740)992-7933.
, 201b . Propane Tanka,
bought n.w never U.ed

(740)256-1997
(304)875-4014
HaleOuln male Greal Dane. 94 Nlooen Maxi 1 dod
11ve years, paper, (740)699 - Top Condition 1oa7500.'
2716
· (304)675-8 132
longhair Chihuahua, fe· 95
Chevy
Cavalier,
mala, two year, IIIW!l white, wrecked, s1200 OBO; 79 4
$150, (740)698-2718
wheal drive Bronco, $1500
080; 68 Uncoln Town Cor,
Los1- female Pomeranian, SIOOO
080 . 92 Hvundla
red-cream color, 5 lba., 581 $400 080 1740 )258 -5478 '
area, (740)698-7121 sub- .:..,:;;.,:,=·"-:-==:-=:..
otarillal rawaldl
88 Oldomoblle Cutlooo
Clar1l 63,000 miles $5500.
Rot Terrier Puppies, sso Coli after Spm. on week·
aach, (740)843-0013
· dayo (304)875-8733
1
~~~!;.:~'fso ":,~~· 98 Muatang, black, v-s.

°'

Mather and Father on ~ram:
toes 17401388 9885
·
•
Two fomala Great- Danos,
ono black, one Blue Merle,
both two years, papers.
(740)B98-2718
iar'-"""::":""""
____,

to left, hitting it to all fields, and
pulling the i~ide pitch,"
Manuel said. "He's heating up,
and that's great. Our offense
· eds
"
ne
Kenny.
The ~ndians need Finley just
as badly. Finley (5-5) was -.t.:o.ft . his
"~'II

barbacuo grill otzo, 1-Full Armstrong Flute 1
yre.
(304)675-8795
(304
"'50.:..50=B:...TU'--'-'F'-n-gld-.-,.-11-0 . )B82-322t
von, A.C. new In box 304- $Bundy Alto Sax. like new,
700. Call (740)441-()810
675-158-4
- - - - - - - al1ar6pm.
' 8000 BTU, 11 6 ·volt, room For
Sale
Clarinet.
air oondl!lonor, $45; spotting
ooope, 20&amp;30x50 w~h Inpod (304)875·5559
$35. (740)448·9791
&amp;
112
$30., 2·empty ' 20 · each, old. Pd. S800 !liking $350.

r . ,___

~awn~

mar turned a gorgeous double
play in the tint to snuff out a
b
ases-1oad ed threat.
With one out,Torii Hu,nter

Reds

bin grounder up the middle
that Vizquel ran down, and in

fromPageBl

one motion scooped the ball
with his glove to Alomar, who
stepped on second and threw

9-for-19 the last . five
games with two homers,
including ~ three-run shot
off Chris Reitsma (5-13) in
the first .
Edmonds added an RBI
single in the fifth for his
third four-RBI game of the
season and "first since June
24. He got the day offThesday because the Cardinals
were facing a left- handed
starter.
"I had one at-bat and two
pitches worth of good days
for my shoulder, until I
swung at the first changeup," Edmonds said. "If I
could just stay' withiq
myself, and really nor tty all
over the plate at the place, it
seems to. be OK."

~:._
to =t.

The- pair turned another
double play in the third before
Vizquel nuile a diving backhanded stop m· the hole and
threw out John Barnes.
"Those guys are human vacuums o.ut there;• Finley said.
"Theyre
• fu n to watc h"
•
Finley got out of trouble in
h
fifth h
) ft fi ld
t e
W en e
e er
Marty Cordova made a diving
catch near the line WI·th two
on, and Finley got out of the

Additional
re sea rc h
1s
unavailable. The closest anybody else during that time
frame was Albert.Belle, who
had eight straight hits for .
home runs in 1995 when h e
played for the Cl eve land
Indians.
Since the start of the 1998
season, McGwire h as 189
homers and 167 singles.
Ken Griffey Jr. , Adam
Dunn . and Brady Clark
homered for the R ed s, who
have lost four in a row. It's
their ninth slump of at least
four straight setbac ks this
season .
Griffey tied Carl Vastr:zemski for 23rd o n th e
career list at 452 h o m e rs
with his opposite- field sh ot
leading off rhe second. Griffey has 14 homers this year.
· Cardinals •tarter :Woody
Williams (10- 8) co uld n 't
believe the ball left the park.

second start since returning inning by striking out David
fio his
d ·
the 0 rnz.
·
m
secon snnt on
disabled list with neck and
"I knew th:it was my last batshoulder spasJ;IlS. The left-han;
ter," Finley said of his 9-pitch
PW. Pl. rune excellenl, der allowed two runs and seven battle with Ortiz. "He just kept
35,000 miles, $9,400 Or
.
foulin g them ou1r and 1JUSt
r.1t
·· 1e
beOI offer. (740)446-.1127
hits in five innings, but got his
Che Monte cano gOO&lt;rfirst-win- since- May- 12 -thanks-like-'0~-that's enough22
: '"' - - -1
MarlcMc•GWiresingl.ed-•'Cl-"i~llli~r-lraida oett~er &lt;i~y---T
vy
•
.
· - d
candltlon, runs good, mag to some stellar defense.
Notes: Thome be a career
start the fifth against .K.eus- at the plate than on th e
rima wlllte letter tlreo,
.
. th fi
I eli
high ·th his 40th h
H ·
$1,000; 561n1ematl0n truck,
Ftnley. ts
e nt n ans·
WI
omer. e
rna for his first nori- home mound. He allowed three
good condlllon, $1,500; 89 starter other than rookie
also hit 40 in 1997 . ... Lofton
run in 72 at-bars. Since he runs and s1x hits in . five
PonllacGrandPrtx,le.lrcon·
,
·I d · L:_ ~-a) b ..,_
singled off' Houston's Roy mmngs, but singl ed and
diUon. runs, $500; 95 Pon- Sabathia or Bartolo Colon to tnp e m '"" nn at- at •ues11
Oswalt on July 18, MeG- scored in the second and
~~~d~~~~d~r':'·g~!~. "~l win sinceJuly,25- a span of day night, giving
a two~
power, auto, V-8, $6,500; 20 startS.
oome cycle. The Indians haven t
wire's last 11 hits were had an RBI double and
...---(740)88B-7 121
"If we can just pit~h decent- had anyone hit for the cycle
homers.
scored in the fourth to raise
TR
lyWe'll win some games. We all since Andre Thornton · (1978).
"I hope we can convince his average to .200 with
lJCKS
•
,
'd .....,
"'-"-h p u1 M . li
him he's still a good hitter,"
three doubles and five RBis.
mR&amp;u..l!
know that,' Finley saJ • . we ... •wu1&gt; coac
a
o tor
need to g·e t Bartolo and C. C. was ejected after tossing a hitLa Russa said. ''I'm just glad
Reitsma
lasted
four
f th d
·
1984 Chevy S·tO, lair oon- some help out there. That's why ting tee out o
e ugout m
he got some good at- bats."
innings, giving up eig ht runs
dillon, naw tlras, needs th
the "ourth Molitor was apparThe Elia1 Sports Bureau - seven earned - and I0
transmission,
$500.
ey got me h ere...
"·
·
.
(740)25tl-1582
Cleveland made three great ently upset with plate umpue
said the streak was unprecehits. He has lost seven of
"- "-·
Mike
Fi h ' trik
dented
in
the
last
25
years.
eight decisions .
1985 For&lt;t F-280, auto, defensive plays in the m&gt;t uve
c ters s
e zone.
130,!lfl0 miles, good shape,

I

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MI.SICAL
y....__.___
·
~-,.;;"""'iiii'iiiilawiiil""'""iiii'~O..,.I
Ovarflll Protection
DevJce,' ..,

=;:..c_=.:..:.:,:.;.;:..;___

,

plea, 1101 reglalerod, Molhlr/ 87 Cutlesa Cruiser otatlon gomg.
Father on premtseo, $150 wagon. ' 250 · &lt;304l875•
Lofton, who had twO singles
each. (740)448-9638 days, 3309
(740)266-8390ovonlngs
-P-Iyrnou--tn_SU_nd_anc_a_to-r and a double, is batting .412
88
Full·bloodod Rat Terrier oele, (740)742-1347
with 15 runs and seven RB!s in
pu pp1 as, ho~
•• to 11nd bl ac k 94For&lt;tTempoGl, allpow· his)ast 13 games •
&amp; tan, hao had shots &amp; or, 75,000 miles. 87 Crown
"Kenny is hito
, ·ng line drives

..

Glenn his salary and w ill
__withhold the remain ing $8.5
million of the stgning bon us.
The Patriots sent a letter
to Glenn and h is agent,
James Gould, on the day he
left camp warning that he
risked suspension if he did
not return in five days.
Gould said h e was trying
•to arrange a meeting when
he · was to ld Tuesday that
Glenn had been susp ended.
He said Glenn wanted • to
return .
Gould said G lenn left
camp b ecause he hadn't been
paid since June 15, when the
Patriots withheld a S1. million payment on the bonus .
" They owe him money
and that's why he's not
there;' he said. "He was at
training
camp
witho ut
receiving one penny, yet they
felt they h ad the right to
compel him 10 ·be there."
· Gould said he will pursue
the matter in c ourt.
Quarterback Drew Bledsoe
wouldn't
talk
to
reporters, only releasing a
statement.
"It is too bad it" has come

ti

.

to this," he s~id. "As a team,
we are going to look ahead
and go fo..Ward wirh the
guys we h ave. W e're. just
goin g to try to win some
.
games.
Fellow wide receiver Troy
·:Brown sa1d he lefta n •~»•ge
at Gle nn's h om e, b ut never
heard bac k .
•• I am j ust concerned for
him perso nally," h e said. " I
hope h e's d o ing well ... that's
the m ain thing."
In
M ay, G lenn
was
charged with assault and battery at his Walpo le, Mass .
home . The alleged victim,
the mothe r of h is 5 -year-old
son, has since recanted the
charges, but prosecutors are
still pursuing the case .
The
NFL
suspended
Glenn for violatin g terms of
.its substance- abuse program,
which Glenn eflte red in January 2000. Glenn said he
tested positive for m arijuana.
Glenn said his most recent
violation was missin g a drug
test, even though he ale rted
the program's administraro·rs
he would be out o f town .
Glenn said he later took the
test and tested negative.
He started aU 16 gam es last
season and had 79 catches
for a team- best 96;3 yards
and six touchdowns .

c.c.

h_im

j

I

Big Screen TV. Taka on
VEGI!TAIIW
amall monthly payments . ~
. Good Credit Required. Blackbantes (740)446-4824
Phone 1-800·718-1657

Accessories. a quan,
to
.=.:-:.::-,,----.,.----- Jll
r' ~&amp; Ir'o
=~~--~~-b~~~~~~i~=;~~=~~~==;~==~~=;;;;=~:;:;===~~===~;~·~~;;;;===:
$30.
Clarion follOw Corpentor Inn algno. 1986
Dokole, 4K4. i
VANS&amp;
I
rD---FOK
· &amp;Su.t:u. I
110 Help Wanted
RDX855Dz Fold
Flip nslC11arm . (740)698-8770
owner, 88,000 miles.
4-Willl
"''·" "
Marolt HoMmi
• Table·plus

080,

come

~rpenter

Down

Ono

· Foce CD Player-40 wads X

· Now-Sail $125. oeo bnng oontalnors, (740)247·
(304)675-5770
2961
o:.:==-"-'----Cider Mill with Elactric Mo- Canning tomatoes, $4 a
tor. (304)675-1615 ·
bushel, also ball peppers,
- Cobra 29lTD Claoelc CB · RowoFann, (740)247-4292.
Radio, $65. Wilson 1000 Canning tomatoeo, we ~ck,
• Magnatlc Mount CB Anton- $5 buonel, you pick, $4
no, $35. (304)875-ff795
busnal, call (740)247-2113.
Computers for
sale, Jim 0 Brion Farms, 8180
complete, . $250 and up, have hot &amp; green peppers.
alao
porto avaltabls.
(740)448-9584

==------,---

rio

F.

1.~--llliiioitlii--'

·

1991 Chevrolet 314 ton pick·
up, V-8, auto, air, 76,000
miles. $4500. (740)446·
0425 offer

EQt=r

Extendahoe 4x4, full cab
with heat. 3,000 hour&amp; vo&lt;y
good condition. (740)379·
2655
Ferguson 30 with extra motor and 8. Ford bush hog
'
,
now 5' sorapper blade,
$2600. Call (740)446-43QS

.._lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiorl
'

1999 Wlndllar SE, V-8, roar 2002 Yll!co aluminum ftsh- Opon 111 aluminum trailer'"'
heal &amp; air, 4 door, loadod, 1ng bollt ..,_,., ....-, oole, ,6.1uma LTD, 18 ft.
40,000 miles, oxctltont con~- "~·ry &amp; 1ral'- long CIVWI'I 7 000 lbl
dillon, $17,000 . 080 .•50...:::::.-2002-W~IICO tr .-~u-··
' brakao,. tandom.,
-~
......,
(740)367~
mtnuni ba.. boat w/80 elactrto
axlea, 1800
mlel, 1 yoor
1998 Ford F-150 XlT,
horoo Man:ury l lrltlltr; otd,$3100.(740)84N217
46,000 miles, excellent con$10,300; 2001 Hydra dltion, auto, V-8, A/C, power
flbargtaae boll~ w/159
doors, power windows, ~«&lt;
~~~;
$t0,6QO 1740)985 . 4418
1
of bolita, Col Tam 01 Morine . imiiiiiiiiii~~....--,
2000 Cna"'' s-to lS, 5Saovtou, 740-llt2-o280. •
HoME
speed, 22 ,000 mlleo. 1988 Hondo 250, 4-Trax. 4 ·
~$10,000. (740)258-1709
wheeler, $I500, 1740 )742_
•
••••~2357
2000 Toyota Taooma SR5
---·
King Cab. Caasede &amp; CD --------::---:WATERPIIOOI'INCI
Player, loaded. 27,500 1996 Yamaha Worrier 350, Are You Looking For En- Unoondltlonal lfoUmo guarmiles 117 000 (304)576- $2,000 080 lola of extru. glnto Or Transmlootono? antoe. local raler11- tur•
(740)448-2804
Give
A can At 740-446- nlshod. Ella.bllshod 1975.
3085 ·Evenlnga. ·
0519.
CoN 24 Hra. (740) 4481999
93 Ford F-150 High Milos.
Sportller I200custom iiiii;;;..~--~~.., 0570,
t-600·287-tl578.
2788
asking $1200. .Sal ol Tan (740)3711.
CAMPDIS B!,
Roger1 Waterproofing.
Husky llnera Mats lor 96· 2000 model Spot1ator 883,
MoroR HclMiili
2000 Blazer (304)675-8430 2000 miles, $7200; 1885
_C&amp;_C_Clonera--1Hoo_m_!O_Mal_n_ta94 Dodge Ram 1500, 2 low rider. o&gt;&lt;OIIItnl oondl· 1898 Slide ·In 8 112 n. truck
Palntl
~-· ldwheel drive Aaklng $4IOO uon, $6800; 740-992-0280. camper a1o tumaoo queon ng, "" •1
·
, ·
·•· bad' roor' ~· - · r~ lng, co!plntry, doors, wnWill Negotiate. (740)&lt;56· 95 Elootra Gilda Claoolc ""''
•
"• . ~ - · balhl, mobile home
9224
H rle D ldoon $13000 cable Tv and bathroom. -lr and more For trsa
oolt for 17600. call 304· iiinatacall Chli 74o-lle2
17~)~ 58 ~ • • · 676-3353
VANS &amp;
. 11323.
'
· •

MoroRcYa.a;s

I.

r

j ·

John Doera 4400 tractor, 90

4-WDs

I

.:.0::;

·riG ·

j
_Opportunity. 1740)441 -1982

WAN'II!D
10 Buv

I.

MOBILE HOME OWNERS wanted to buy used mobile
homos. call (740)446-0175
Huge Inventory, Discount "'(304)B75-5985
Prtcos, On VInyl Skirting, .:....::._::_______
· Doore, Windows. Anchora. wanted to buy· Good ehspa
Walar Hsatera, Plumbing &amp; ·300 Honda 4-whloler eeat,
Eloctrlce
. 1Porta, Furnaces &amp; (740)448-7800
Heat Pumpe. Bannolta Mo.
: bile Homo Supply, 740·448• "418
•
www.orvb ·com/ben • n011
.
LMNrocK
JETMO~ns .
Registered elack Angua
AE n•~iON
n~•
'""'
Bull and Heller. Bull Is 26
Rspelred, Now &amp; Rebuilt In months. $1200. HoWer lo 22
.
Slock. c.u Ron Evans. 1· months
11.000.
ca11 2000 Silverado Pll.l. air,
800,537-9526.
r-304)675-2808
4x4, ate. Only 10,000 miles.
.
- - lli &amp;
great oondlllon. plaoM call
4314
Waterline Speclel: 314 200
Y
1
1 740f448·
PSI $21.95 Per too: t' 200
GRAIN
79 Jeep CJ5. $2500.
·. PSI $37.00 Par 100; All
(304)675-8540 Robert Noal
. Braaa Compraoolon Fldlnga Hay &amp; Brighl Wire Tie ff1 Che~ 4x4 pickup, 'Z' IIH
In Stock
Straw, Voar 'Round Delivery
-·
liON IYANI IN.TERPRII- &amp; Volume Dlooount Avalll· kit, Aluminum whaeta, 305,
EB Jackeon, OhiO, 1·800- ble.
Heritage
Form. automatic, very nice, $6500
637·95.28
1..304)675-5724.
(740)25tl-8808

r

I

!:...:=:.:...;=----

"

Uvl'r.ton'o Bosemont Wa·
,. rooting, all beaement
rejllllro dono, frH astl· ·
mottt. lffoUme guarantee.
14yra on job experience.
(304)895-31187.

r·

o~?tl:noN

...,.............,.

In M•mory

not just a newspaper; we're a
machine, gathering
the day's newsworthy events from
around the area .and the world, and
dl'stllllng them Into an Insightful,
· fo rmat th a t read ers I00k t0
enterta1n1ng
d
Ia 1 1 ed
every ay tO S Yn Oml ·
Start or extend your subscription
today.
•

Th8 0 8 II Y SentlneI

JOBS

$fi-$l/HR
Easy IndoOr
work ftexlble
hOil'S fulUlUIrt
I"'
tlme hUfTY
·1
PosiUODS filling
qUickly!
1-•••-974-JOBS
- CD6
m-ement,
UC
_...,.

Farmere Bank l Savlngo Co., Pomeroy,
Ohio, lo onklng on experleneed consumer
1oan o111cer f or one o f 1II M.elgt County
oHicoo. Qualified cendldltet will have
experience In peraonal or rtal eatato (1 -4
family) landing. The Farmero Bonk ollera 1
competitive tolary and fringe benellto
package. Send cover le11er and delalled
rtaumt to Farmera Bank, A11n: Human
Rtaourcea Director, P.O. Box 828, Pomerou,
'
Ohio 45788. Farmers Bank Ia en Equal
Houalng Ltndtr, Member FDIC, end Equal
0........,. Hy E 1
..,.....un
mp oyer.
•
-••--•• --•-Position: August 27, 2001- June 30,

2002 .. Master Teacher (5-7 positions)
Child

Development Center, Ohi o
M' .
lntmum requiremenls:
B h 1 •
D
·
ac e or s
egree
tn
Child
D
I
/E I
.
eve opment ar y
Childhood
Education or related field, knowledge
of pro;ect work and the Reggio Emilt· a
•
philosophy
are
· impor1 ant. ,
Responsibililies
include
effectively

untverstty.
. .

In Loving Memory

·

•

LOA.N OFFICER

hiEIIIr -CIIIMIII• I*"IIIID

·

mER

I

Rooldontlel or oonvnsn:lal
wiring. now or ,._
palrl. -LJcenlld aloetrlclan. Rldeoour Electrical,
WV000306, 304-875-1788.

I

cau anytime after earn .

(740)245-5634
1985 Chivy S-10 4x4, 2.8
V6, solid truck, no rust. New
Urea. $2300 (740)379-9276
no Sunday calls.
1998 CheV'J Aatro. 4 captain
cholra, 1 bench seat, runs
good.
asking
$975.
(740)245-575tl
1987 Ford Ran~ar, suP.,
Cab XlT. 4~ 4 · -8 engine,
5-speed, air, cruise, tilt. also
wllh lopper and bad liner.
Clean
$2 000
V
ery
·
' ·
(740)367-7250

IMPRoVEMFNTS

Ma

Inch ffnlohlng mower, John ~
Deer loado; Pleaae call 1984 Blue-bird Bus, Detroit
4
(740)448-43
engine. very good condition.

. tributor, can For Product 01

'

HOME

"''""""

"

I

ARlit
, Dog Kannel Chain Link
·. Fence 10K10x6 $175. Dog·
.
house
Plywood $40. Case 580 Super E Sackhoo

(304)675-8132
For Sale Copper Wire for
cran Work. (304)875-4534
.
For Sale- Nice Santi Vane,
ready lor the rood or otorage
each
12 '000
.
'
(740)448-7600
Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
Rapalro. Problema? Naod
Tunod? Cill Tho Plano Dr.
740-446-4525
Independent Herballfe Ole-

0

$3500. (740)258-8012

· 4-Buill In Enhancer $350. Canning tomatoes for sale,

Craftaman 10" Table Saw
with 40" labia. (740)258·
6359

Dadge

of

LINDA LOU
STEWART
Who Pass.ed Away
Aug. 16, 1973
bl
d
.ou esse our
lives for just a few
v

years .
We shared laughrer,
Iove an d rears.
It btoke my heart
when vou had to
leave . 1•miss you so,
even yeti grieve.
Jesus came and
took my Lou.
Please wail for me,
I'm coming too.
Love Always
Mom

managing
an
early
childhood
classroom, teaching infants/toddl e rs or
preschool
children,
planning
d
1
eve opmentally appropriate .activiti es,
partt.cl· at ·
·
h
d
p tng
m
researc
an
supervising students. Salary: $25,000
(
pro-rated). Send letter of application,
resume, names and addresses, phone
number of 3 current references to :

M~. Cathy Waller, Administrator
Child De_velopment Center
Horse Bam L ane
The Ridges, Ohio University
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Application deadline August 16, 20Q 1
or until positions are filled.
Ohio University Is an AHirrnative
Actlon!E a1 0p
1
qu
portun ty Employer.

"

�P~meroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Thursda~Aug. 16,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

:::::--,

•

CARPENTE
SERVICE
• Room Additions l
Flemodollng
•Now~

- • E - l l Plumbing
• Roofing I Guttera
• VInyl Sldl"'ll
I
• Pilla and Porch -ks
Free Estimates

.......

"""'~~

·New Home•
• Siding
• Floollng
• RemOdeling
• Garages
• Additions
• Deck1
• Home Repalra

V. C. YOUNG Ill · Free Estimates
992-6215

740-992-1101
or992-2753

---......-..:.....---.
WOLFE HOME

...--~--.

.BISSELL

MAINTENANCE
Free Estimates
&amp; Insu red
Pain~ Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs

740-949-1521
Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

New Romeo • VID7I
Sklln: • New Garaceo
• Replacement

Wlaclows • Room
Additions • Roofing

acre~.more

740-992-7599

l'ttOH 992-7445
can one 591·9254

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

~'R~

High&amp; Dry
.SeU-Storage

V

•:

I

Chester, Ohio
Furriiture stripping
&amp;: refinishing

nEE 11n111111
J40.1182-oo!t
Tllfrll
181-192-tl21

Seutb

louwolgh~oupplemont

,YOUrdlottorrillllnium
nu~filcln, or Juotlook your
grootoot wlth·tho blot

35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

J::'!/:\:::1::!~
.. o..-.thlngloriYifYOIII.
Coli your lncloplndlnt

"':~~~!=or,
(740)HHt2l

We can Plflonallloo
L-O:"':.:ogro:t:m::,l:;:or:.ly:::ou::,l_.l

II

YOU &lt;.AN'T FlftiP Tt4E

, Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

L.eT'S JV$T

· Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

~tMOTel

~0 wiT~

F~ee !NIL~,

fREE ESTIMATES

Phone (304) 614-6100

Tt4eN.

.

'me.~~ Not lr.\~mT lll..X.£. TO~
~(Z:(IJCK:(

EA.T ~ffi\fo¥:,...

P"'

'(OJ W..VETO WI\\I

t-1\\fo.llJre) &amp;fOR£
1r-.~ TilE. w~~ '

.

-oq

N'W.::.T 2.0

(:IJ

FTrt.P....T EXA..Nfo.IS WIW \&lt;-l( tiE.~~
':££.. f\\ t-1\ IN 'ffiE:. WI'I&amp;
\
!

...

llkHoni'JbSr&lt;lf'A'Ilun~

........,. .

TO

1\N cVE.NIN&amp; 01"
SLOPPY JOES AND

' '1'1\HTZE.E"?

un11

Gallia, M...,..,.~d ap •
..
Licenstdandlmliftd ·
WV005176

fLe&gt;OUit

L-=i!!!.l~!Uo~...l

TREE SERVICE
Tep • Trim • Removal
8UC!II8IIOI'VIC8

740-992-1671

P/B
CONTRAaORS, INC.
, Racine, Ohio 45n1

740-985·3948
CONCRETf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Footen, Wolis, Steps •
Flot Work,
ReplaCemeats, • Walks
and Drives • Steadl .
CRte FRO Estimates
Ser11lng Ohio and W,v.
wv NOJ171l

i

flf,

&amp;

DIPOYIAG
PARft.
All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case·IH Parts
· Dealen
1000 Sf. Rt. 7 So~lh
,._..,.

7411117-11311

~

• Gravel Sand •
Thpsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

992-3470

VOUR
CONCRETE
CONNECTION

Cinelli

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo
On Thursday•
At6:30 p.m.
• Main Slreet
Pomeroy, OJ 1io
Paying $80.00
per game
$300.00 Coveroll
'\ Starburst
· Progressive top line

Lie. #D0-50

Howardl.

1-sn-353·7022

949·1405
591-5011

....

by L!lll Campol
.
ColebrlfV Cipher ci'/Pfogram, ara ciNttdlrom quotallono by lamouo
poople, poalond preoent. Each lttter' ln tile cipher atando lor anotller.
Today's c/IJIJ: Z equa/8 W

\

'LX'T

C

KGTR

Jl

SNNP . WCD

H CD

UXNUAX
SNXT

C R

ANNFBDS

L B T

ZBAPXM,

J BAA I

Z~CR

RXAA ·

B D

ND

LBW

LXCMR.'
N D

AXWWND

KCHF

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I was a soldier, but I know of no ·
- •n•mr In w•-r ·more lnafdioua or vh;loul than AIDS. • Secretary of State Colin Powell
•
WOID- GAMI

dictionary.
.
The book contains
onIY two fiu II Iayouts,
used to highlight the

.
Ult•• ~r CU.Y l. POUAN
OReorronge letters of 1he
---~..
four ocrombled words bt·
low to form lour simple words.
·

built around bidding
question. Look only
at that South hand.
What would you do

•
.
.
.
.
.
,.--~~--=--:~-,

aftc~

the given start to
the auction?

.

r-,..K--.U_L~E....,.F~

13

L=::====-=~

,..

I I I

I If,:

If West's jump to
RH EN0
four hearts is too rich
I~
People don't see th is sight evfi
bl00d
d _ .
_
eryday ; the tour guide gushed .
or your
• rea
L--L-.1....-L-.L.....J.,
Under his: breath · he rnuttered,
the book!
.--------.
·d
G
U
R
N
0
0
but
the
tour
gu1
es - - - - - -.
Despite . his mini-

po1nt-count,

I
I I I I .j
IS

_

~

O Complete
by filling

the chuckle quoted

in the missing words
from Slop No. 3 below,

stay behind to

pick up the CLOTHES. :

'Your
'BirthdaY

•
Friday, Aug. 17,200 1
More opportunitic~ than
usual might co me yollr way in
[he year ahead through working in close conj un ction with
others. Don 't allow indiffcrcnce to let these gol de n gifts
slip awil y.
LEO Uuly 23- Aug. 22) -·
It's imperat i\'t' today that you .
kl-ep in mind that giving :md
n-cciving is :.l two -way strecl.
lle generous to those who dest." rvc it , but avoid rcw:.rd ing a
do-j1o thing. Get a jump on
. life by ·undcr5t;mding the influ ence~ that'll govem yo u in
the yeoar ahead . Se nd for your
A~ t ro wGuph prediction s "by
1ouailing S2 to Astro·- Graph ,
c/ o this newspaper, P.O. Box
1758 . Mumy Hill S"tion,
Now York, NY 10156. Be
sun.- to state your Zodiac sign .
VII\.GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
.. Not doing today what you
c.an put olf untU tomorrow is
a sure firb way to r.ur you on
a track of prob ems . Neglect.;d talk&amp; wiJI be twice as

JONES'

Tree Service

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

i.
.,

Hill'• .Sell
Sttrtlt

lllahln ROid
. 211870Raclnt,
Ohio

..

45771

740-949-221'1

IIIIIIJII ......

IUBEIIIEITI

plurnbing.

iiiiii.Cint.,.

Terry lamm

Ads

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Someone has to

llllca•••a.

611 1 mo

'

South has a great · L......J.-..L.._J_...L.-L......I yov develop
hand . North must
have at most one
heart, and if he has a
LETTERS TO
heart, he probably
holds the . club ace.
South should raise to •
SCRAM-LOS ANSWERS
six diamonds, which
Harbor- Class- Quilt- Legacy· CLOTHES
makes easily.
I think women live longer than· men for one reason. ·

Roofing - Home
Gutters- D&lt;MIIJI'
Spout
Free Est/mat.,

-time
9 Ocaen
liner
10 Circle of
light
11 Bouball'e
Slaughter
12 Withered
18 Marille'a
guy

35 Makn
•-tera
38 0011 to
39 "HI - -It
hla deek"
40 Article of
!1Ith
42 Egyptian
croae

Yet I concurred
w 'ith a )at of the recommendations. In
particular, they urge
that if the dealer
opens, second hand
makes a simple overcall, and the responder passes, a
new-suit bid by the
overc:.Il~r's .partner,is _
forcing for one round .
Finally, though, I

muJn

. . . . . ...,... bll. . . . . .
•IIIIIIPIII II
llriiiiiCii SIUI

IIICIIIIIIII.II

llllllltla a hlllt

'I'OU COULD AT LEAST
KEEP DOING IT UNTIL VOVR
ARMS FALL OFF...

• .....llllllftlllllillllllr I2UI

II

...........

, . . . . . . , - - - - - - -......,.--,

lnlured

Wr!tesel

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

FlUURIEJ 740-742-8015 or
IIPLEWIDIIIIE
-31.11M.1U

TllE'r'?

OF COURSE. 't'OU CAN'T EXPECT
ME TO DO IT FOREVER ..

and

Coo/v/11.. OH 45723

Excavating

DOGS LIKE TO BE
SCRATCHED BEHIND
THEIR EARS, .m lW'T '

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R. Hupp . Ag ent
Bo x 1 B9
Middleport. Ohio 45760
Local 843·5264
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp; .
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home 1

'------L-W

PEANUTS

• Garages

Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

42 Help
rob a
23 One billion
bank
(prof.)
43 Not any, '
24 Clumay
44 Gangh • fellow
. (Mongol ,
25 "Step
conqu-)
--1"
45 - and
25 Team
hawa
28 Operotee
(oqulvo29 "--tha
catea)
Mood lor
47 IOWI
, Love·
college
30 Dorothy'•
town
dog
. 48 Anti-drug
31 Right, on a
olllcar
map
49 Gymnaot ,
37 Pull off
Korbut
38 Nahoor
50 Prophet ;
aheap
52 A Stooge:
4t Conaumsd 54 Dr.'e arg.

~~~s a!:~1at~~;~~~~
.l:_,..~.I--'
NUI_A_Ls_y....I.2_E...LI--'I .
a

r-----._..._,
• Complete
Remodeling

Ieeder

21 Rise

22 Veil

1---,.:;;:;;.:;,;,..;~~=--~ ~~ =~~~li==T====J;~:=.;~~~;;::==Tl· w.ish they-woulclloo~MAHAM-fift'il-a--ST.,.-A- _ ··~--e -~Q.IIl
:S
· up "infinitely" in the
PUULII ~\.!:Q 1-'"U ~a.
~ [;, (/• P

-

M'"' ·c

Pan

7-17.

1-304-675-7824
1-810-2511-!1077
R..idential Connerdal New Co111tructioe
Solts Senlce l111tallatlon '
Specbolb.l"'lln Shoe! Metal Ductwork
"Trane" Sales" Senlce For

, Hardwood floorlnt
, Gonaoleum

· , New Homes

•

..

POORL'C

II
••

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

(8) 9, 18, 23

aoulhwaet corner of

FEEL.IN 1

r-""'2.,.,1n

·ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRU. OION
wvv 7 0 5 11

Parcel No. 2: The
following deecrlbed
real Illata, In Melge
County, Ohio, · In
Salam
Townehlp;
Beginning at the
eauthaaet corner of
W.D. Goff'a land In
Section 11, Townehlp
7, Range 1.. O.C.P.;
'thanca running weat
with aald GoH'a line,
13 chalna lnd 11 links
lo • poet; thence
Iouth io the road
leading from E.C.
pa• t
Ralph'•
Laonerd'e;
thence
lllltrly along laid
road to the eactlon
line 5 lwt aouth of the

I'M

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

lb•de IUnr lg llnlce, lac

"""'
••

The contents of a
book on bidding are
bound to fail to win
universal approval.
This is true of "iS
Ways to Comp e te in
the Bidding" by Barbara Seagram and
Marc Smith (Master
Point' Press, 2000). It
is a workmanlike project, but of course I
disagreed with some
of the authors' advice.
For example, they advise overcalling one
spade
with acequeen-jack- I 0-fifth of
spades, . only those
seven
high-card
poirrts, and 5-3-3-2
distribution . I think if
you inust bid, you
should make a weak
jump overcall of two
spades. This takes up
mo~e
space, and
means that when you
make a simple overcall, partner knows
you have something
like 10-17 points, not

TOP • Trim • Removal
auc!llot So1rvlc:e

Whtlhtryou'retrylngto

· Pua

Ea1l

Numbers

1-80()..291-5600 • PomerQv, OH

TREE SERVICE

Lose W.elght Now
Ask Me How

r"':""-"!":'!'":"":"":"::":""..,

Wut

Opening lead: 9 4

SNUFFY CAN'T PLAY CAR'D&amp;
TONIGHT, LUKE.'(
,_._....

Complete Uno of Sullivan'&amp; Grooming SuppiiH
SuHur Coated Ursa, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
10% olf Ill Prtelert- lnd UVMiock Equip.
1~10.10AII PurpoM Fartlllzor $4.SC!/50t
8,000 -Tirlne *18.!MIIIIIIe
11,000 laltr Tirlne $21.5Miale

z

AQI O

.."'. •• ,. ••

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

BARNEY

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG S"!rvice
"Ahead ~ Service"

'

De.lt r: SouUt

C8IITIIIDnNG

WV0282120

14 llelr'-"nt 55 Charm
15 Olltl41ena 58 come forth
11 Sew-and- 57 Puland
-?
futuro
17 Hat holdera 58 Auto-reclng
11 Front..,.
org.
man Canon
20 Emulate
DOWN
Chrtatle
Brinkley
1 Chirp
21 Awry
2 T1marlok
23 Lueter
· un tree
27 Rallgloua
3 Type of rug
4 Pull
recluu
32 Archltec5 Compa11
tural order
pt.
33 Margar1t
8 Cl111roorn
Mead'1
allpiH
WorkpiiCI 7 Not 10 bad
34 Ba 1 tour
8 One day -

Vulne rab le. North·South

nMDEIM

.
,

''

.

FAEE .. HOllE ESTIIATES • "SEEING 18 IEUEVINQ• •t.'¥1021477

Complete Home
Repair
RemOdeling
New Additions
Garages

• " J.:

. ..

ROBOTMAN

PRICING

JIM'S

740•885·4181

•Q na•J

• A. n

Maxlcln
apeclalty

rlptNr

.

•• 7

740-992-5232
WOODSHED

7 Bla
ehTndlge
13 Fruit

Scull II

FACTORY DIRECT

o·ELIVERY AVAILABLE

car

• • 5!
¥AK JI5

'.. . 7'

48 Alr-tralflc
org.
47 Yearo ISp.)
51 "La-~
(opere)
53 Hot

1 Overtook 1

KJ IDS I S

10 ••

RAYS

Pommy, Ohio

Appralaed
at
$18,000.00
Torma ofaale: Caah
Sheriff, Melge County
AmyL. Brown·
Thompaon
Ll!rner,Sampaon&amp;
Rothlues
120E.FourthStreet,
8th Floor
ClnclnnaU,Ohlo45202
OH Su(p51Ct3) ~ ·3 1 00
·

•

BLOCKS OUT ".5%
Of' DAIIAOIHO

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp;· REWIRE

ACROSS

• Q fl

w...

TIME HEAT IN

Mount Olive
d~~·~:d~~C;o;urt~o;,fPleaeC~o~m;m;on~~~ii~~~~~rt~y~a;d~d~re;e~s~:~~~tM~~~~~1~.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~+
an
to me
directed from sold
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sele at
public auction at the
Courthouu
on
September 13,2001 at
10:00 a.m. of uld day,
the
. following
deacrlbed raaleatate:
Situate In the
Township of Olive,
County of Melga, Siele
of Olilo,. bounded and
deacrlbad aafollowa:
Being In · Town 3,
Range 11, and Section

•

OUT AND WINTER

U~TRAVIOLET

ALDER

¥11~~
MIIOI
• K QJ 4

IIIRROR TI!CHHOLOOY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

NO JOB TOO i.ARGE OR SMALL

PHILLIP

.
·-....
. .

WIHOOWS HEAT

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

~,,j

KENSINGTON

33795 HiiAruJ 1/J.

Advertise your
message

or Ieee.

the land now owned
by H.W. Collrlll;
thence north elong the
aactlon line to the
place of beginning,
containing 20 acral,
- o r Ilea.
Siva and except the

ll

Owner
Charles A. Dill

FREE ESTIMATES

..

to the roldi thence In
·an neterly direction
along aald road to the
place of beginning,
containing 18 acrea,
more
or
Ieee,
containing In all 48

~CAN HELP

teaance, and rtpair
po"'hes, &amp; decks.

COMMIICIAL ood lEliDENTIAL

coal In and above
described property,
previously conveyed
to
Ohio
Power
Company.
Subject to all legal
easements and rights .
of record.
·
SAVE AND
EXCEPT:
The
following
described real eatate,
In Meigs County, Ohio,
In Salem township;
Beginning at the
Sou thea at corner of
W.O. Goff's land In
Section 18, Townahlp
7, Range 15, O.C.P.; .
thence running weal
$8.00 column inch weekdays
with eald Golf'• line,
13 chaine and Hllnka
$10.00 column inch Sundays
to a poet; thence
South to the road ,
laadlng from· E.c.
Ralph'a paat W. K. _.;..__ _-,-_ __
Leonard'a;
thence
Public Notice
Eaaterly along aald _...:P:...u::b::l::;lc:...N:..:o:.l::.lc::•:__
road to the aectlon
·
line 5 feat South of the value down, remainder 24, and being a part of
Southwilat corner of upon tender of deed.
Lot No. 122, Olive
the land now owned
Laurence B. Landon Townehlp.
by K.W. Cottrill; (110034858) ·
Being on the north
thence North along Attorney for Plaintiff
elda of ' the Recine
the Section line to the 175 S. Third Street, Road, beginning at the
place of beginning, Suite 900
eoutheaat corner of
containing 20 acr.. , Columbue, Ohio 43215 what wet formerly
more or le ... Save (814) 228·7272, Ext. known •• the Bennett
and except the coal In 210
Barton lot, now owned
and under the above (8) 9, 16, 23, 30, (9) 8
by C. E. Petty; thence
doiacrlbed property,
·70 degreaa aaat on
prevloualy conveyed
Public Notice
aald . road 5 rode;
to · Ohio
Power _ ___;_...;__ _ _ _ thence north 20
Company.
SHERIFF'S SALE
dagraaa waat to the
Subject to all legal
Real Eatate
aouth line of whit was
eaaementa and rlghta
Cue Number ·
formerlyknownaathe
of way of record.
OOCV148
T.S. Sheldon land;
Being the aame real
Th e
C h a • e thance weaterly along
ettale · d .. crlbed In Manhattan Bank, •• the Sheldon aouth
deed of record tn truataa of IMC Home line, to eald C.E. Petty
Volume 255, Page 827, Equity Loan Truat, lot: thence aouth 20
Mel go County Dead 1898·5 under the degreaa eaet along the
Recorde.
Pooling and Servicing C.E. Petty line to the
Being the aame real Agreement dated as of place of beginning,
ettate aa daacrlbed as September 1, 1998
containing about 84
Parcel No. 2 of record PlalntiH
rode, more or lisa.
In Volume 287, Page Va.
Prior lnetrumant
718, Deed Recorda ot 1!11-th.Bartoe, et al reterericee: Volume 1o
Melga County, Ohio.
Defendants
Page 31

IInke. to 1 llake; recorded on 08/10n7
n!)rth 18 chaine
50 In Current
·thence
northand 18
Volume 287,
- ·ctiiilna ana-18-llii1CSI015'9.
.:Shuler's llnet; thence Property commonly
weal 5 chaine and 50 known u: 29775
IInke to the place of Sanford Davia Road,
beginning, containing Langtvllle, Ohio
10 acrea, more or less. 45741.
Also, the following Parcel Number: 13·
·p.rcal of land eltuate 00458.000.
In
Section
12,
Said
Premlaea
Townehlp 7, Renge15, Located 11 29775
O.C.P., and beginning Sanford Davia Road,
at tha northeast Lengavllle, OH 45741 . .
Premlau
corner of a tract of Said
land deeded by A.L. Apprelaed at $38,000
Maloy and wife to and cannot be sold lor
MIHIIn Harklna; thence leas than two-thirds of
1111 II chaltia and 54 that amount.
. TERMS OF SALE:
llnkatothe
northwell torner of a 10% of appralaad
·land owned by . Dora
. .W. Spirea, thence
· eouth 18 chaine end
· 19 IInke; thence wut 9
chaine and 34 links;
thence north 18
chalna and 1911nka to
tho
place
of
beginning, containing
17 acres, more or lese.
Alao, the following
- ~ract; Beginning at the
; aoutheaat corner of a
• 2·acre lot deed by
• Mifflin Harklna to
Harvey A. Maloy, deled
.... '.
(•
September 14, 1901,
recordad to Volume
88, Page 195, Melga
'
County Deed Recorda,
In
Section
18,
Townehlp 7, Range 15,
O.C.P.; thence south
to E.C. Ralph'a land;
thence_, 12 chaine
t,." .
and 110 llnill to a IIane
corner: thence north

Speciallz:e in new
constructJon,

roinodellng,l&gt;lumblng,
electrical, homt main ~

NOTICES
Sherlff'a Sale of Real
Eatate ·
The State of Ohio,
Melga County
Bank One, National
Alloclatlon lka The
First National Bank of
Chicago, as Truslea,
by Residential
. Funding Corporation,
· lteAttorneylnFact,
; c/o Homecomings
• Financial Network
: Plaintiff,
• vs
· Buddy Wayne Eggers,
"r., etal
llelandanta
: Cen No. OQ-CV-151
. In purauance ol an
· Order ol Sale In the
: above entitled action, I
·will ollar lor aale at
: public euctlon, at the
· Courlhouee,
In
.PIIIINiroy, Ohio, In the
)bove named County,
· on 20th day of
: Slplembar, 2001, at
• 10:00, the following
' deecrlbad real eetate,
: altuated In the County
·of Melge and State of
: Ohio, and In the City
· ..of Pomeroy to wit:
.• Legal Deacrlptlon
Exhibit A
Situated In the
Townehlp of Salam,
County of Melga and
State of Ohio:
Parcel No. 1:
Situated In the
Townehlp of Salem,
County of Melgt, and
'State of Ohio:
Beglnnlg at the
northweat corner of a
47-,a cre lot deeded by
S1111th Kent'l helrt to
George Maloy, In
Section 12, Townehlp
7, Range 15, O.C.P.,
thence running eouth
on aald eactlon line,
18 chaine and 19 links
•to a stake: thence east
I ohllne end 110 IInke
to a etlke: thence

Free e1tlmate1,
lneured

CONSTRUCT10N

IIUDO&amp;

.~ ri

----,

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

3-0

BUILDIRI INC.

. - - - - -- - - -

The Dally Sentinel • Pafje B 7

992-0739

Slzta 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
HOUI'I

' 7:00AM • 8:00 PM

I

difiicult to handlol•tor.
UllRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •
; Some"one you deem as an
important contact may be
more uf a talker than a deliverer. You ' d be wise not to

rely simply on the word of
another about whom you

know little ~
SCORPIO (0" . 24 - No v.
22) -- Trying to shift rhe
bbme o nto another or tryin g
to 'over up a· mistake you've
made \llill do no thin g but
harm your reputation . ' Fc-ss
up to your error and d on 't
make fooli sh c:xl·us es.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec . 2 1) -- Any pl an co ustru cccd upon a faulty premise
will have ill- fated res ults, so
today, before you m ove forward on a project, double
'c heck your information
and / or your blueprint,

CAPRICOitN (Dec. Z21'9) -- Don' t purchase
anything today that you can't
pay for out of your wallet.
Money on which you ' re
. ' ounting may not be in the
mail as promised, leaving you
in the red.
AQUARIUS. O•n. 20- Fcb.
19) - · Rovelorions of sdf-centcredness c;&gt;n the p3n ·of someone with whom you 're get ..
ting more" closely involved
should not be iy:nored today.
It's a sign of more to come.
PISCES (Feb. 20- M•rch 20)

Jan.

-- M~ke certain any assistance
your genero us heart l"Xteuds
today is to the right peo ple,

and for. the right reasons. Be
compassionate, but don't be :1
patsy.
.
'
ARIES (March 21-Aplil 19)
-- Although you pride yo ur-

self in being a person not
·given to emoti onal j udgmcms,
today you could find younelf
far too sensitive when de ali ng
w it h friends for you r o w n

good.
T AU RU S (April 20-Mav
~ - From yoLir perspc(tive
today you mi ghl thmk the

20)

world 'is dumpin g on you
wh1le gi ving somconc else

che brcJks. Gt:t

your~el f out

.,u
of

thilt negative m ood ; life is .
what you make it to be.

GEMINI (Mo y 21 -June 20) ,
.... One of the rypcs of per5ons ,
you per!lonally find unattractive" are know-it-alb. Be care"- 1
fu l yourself today rh:n you .
don 't give orhen reuons t.o •

classify you as one.
,
CANCER Qu no 21-July •
22) ~- Financial mistake• miilde
today could put you or the ~
penon for whom you're ·
working in the red. Thu~. un- '
leu you're an expert, be careful about taking on managing
an eKpensive cnterprhr .

'

�•

Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

'Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Aug. 16, 2001 ·

National Football League
Chicago

TRAINING CAMP NEWS
veterans~hearing. the.Turk's footsteps; Goose

EAGLES

BY TONY

TAKE A REST - Baltimore Ravens tackle Tony
Siragusa participates In a drill at the Ravens
training camp at Western Maryland College In
Westminster, Md. In this Aug. 7, 2001, flle
photo. Siragusa Is expected to undergo arthroscopic knee surgery Wednesday and will be
sidelined from a week to 10 days.(AP file)

RAMS
1

ST. LOUIS (AP) _ St. Louis Rams backup
..defensive el\d Cedtic ]ol\es is expected to miss
the entire season because of a fractured left hip
socket.
·
Jones, a six-year veteran, was kneed in the
hip .late in practice Tuesday.
A statement issued by coach Mike Martz said
Jones' injury does not require surgery.
.

.

MORE LOCAL SPORTS. YOUR
LOCAL TEAMS.
Subscribe today.
992-2156

Armour may get·chance to make roster
GEORGETOWN, Ky. (AP) - JoJuan
Armour's chances of winning·a spot as a backup free safety with the Cincinnati Bengals may
have just improved with the injury to Darryl

Williams.

Name: Shelley Thomae

ol

State's Liquor Board allows liquor at Heinz
PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Steelers tans will be
able to drink a few beers
while watching a ·game at
tfeinz Field, the Pennsylvania
Liquor Control Board ruled
Wednesday.
·
The board voted to grant a
public venue liquor license to
Philadelphia-based Aramark,
which plans to sell beer, wine
and liquor at the new stadium.
The vote came after a pub-

Blrthday:1~

lie hearing last week, where
residents living near the stadiurn voiced concern about the
way liquor will be sold at
Heinz Field.
Residents in the Allegheny
West n,elghborhood of Pittsburgh had said they have sufc
fered from "loud, drunken and
aggressive" fans at football
games at Three Rivers Stadiurn.
If Aramark follows the pro-

cedures it outlined for •· the ·
board at the · public hearing,-.
there will not be a problem at
the new stadium, said board
Chairman John E .Jones Ill.
"We listened to the concerns of the citizens who live
near the park and arc satisfied
that the concessionaire will
take the necessary steps to
. insure· that it operates in a
legal and responsible manner,"
Jones said.

Throw: Right
Bata: Right ·

~
.

\t;;;l

·- ·

Rocketa

Deadline for the Baseball
Hall of Fame Is
FRIDAY, SEPT. 24

5:00p.m.
Cost $10.00 per picture

t@.

Fill out the form below and drop It off along with photQ or mall
with payment to the Dally Sentinel "Baseball"
P.O. Box 729., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r-------------------------------------,

SCHOOLS

Taft issues

order allowing
use of vans
COLUMBUS (AP) -Gov. Bob Taft on Thursday
issued an emergency order that will allow school districts to usc small passenger vans for extracurricular
activities this fall.
'
A change \n state law last month
prevented schools from using the
vane for such activities, including
.. ~ , sports, without a new set of rules
governing the use of tlie vans.
-'
~ . ::lriMi~'
Taft's order will allow sc.hools to
.
use the vans this fall while a legislative body works out permanent
rules.
"El&lt;traturricular activities are an
important part of students' growth
and quality of life," Taft said in a
statement. "The emergency rule is intended to be an
interim measure to allow after-schdol activities to get
started as the school year approaches."
Taft gave the rule-making committee three months
t&lt;il consider the Ohio Department of Education's
proposals to expand the use of vans.
Under the old law, vans were allowed for only three
reasons - transporting children with disabilities,
hauling preschoolers or picking up children in places

-~
~

WASHINGTON (AP)
- All of President Bush's
164 unconfirmed nomil).ees for executive and
j,Udicial positions must
return to "Go" when the
Senate .reconvenes in September because of a politi'al tiff over two of them.
· Rather
than let
the Senate tell
Bush to
submit
new
candidates to
head the

'

Please -

Schools, Al

'

..

ment's · Western Hemisphere affairs bureau,
Republicans
forced
Democrats to send back all
nominations
awaiting
approval.
The move was strictly
procedural and senators in
both parties expect Bush ·
to renominate all of his
candidates. However, it
foreshadows more· confirmation battles when Con,
. gress reconvenes after
Labor Day.
Republicans made it
clear they will try to portray Democrats as obstructionists if they don't allow
~otes by the full Senate .on ·
some
, Qf
. Bush's more controversial choices.
• "To isolate · it down to
~ne or two this early in the
session, we believe, is a
(.roblem," said . Senate
Minority Leader Trent
Lott. "We realize it is a
ministerial process now.

TASTING THE TREATS- A part of the annual Ladies Day program always includes tasting the treats.
Thursday, It was cherry tarts made by Becky Baer, using the same recipe she used for creating a per- .
feet pastry. Morgan Russell of Langsville and Alex Berry of Akron especially enjoyed the tasting part
of the program.

Baking a pie

and more

Fair~

LAdies Day offer
tips on home arts
Bv

CHARLENE HoEFUeH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - "Can you bake a cherry pie,
.
Billy Boy, Billy Boy?"
Well, if your answer is "no," then you should
have been at the Ladies Day at the Fair program
Thursday when Meigs County Extension Agent
Becky Baer, demonstrated how it's done.
She gave tips on making the perfect pastry and COOKIE BAR WINNERS - With an original recipe
for raspberry cream bars, Tahnee Andrew. left,
the just-right way to prepare a delicious cherry
took the championship In cookie bars at the
· filling.
·
.
"ladles Day at the Fair' contest. Second place
went to Emily Bing, arid third to Susanne Johnson.
PleeH- Ladles. Al

Hlp: 80s
Low: 101
Details, A2

Sentinel
2 SectlonJ - II Ptlps

.Lower gas cost
drives ..down
consumer•
energy pnces
•

ToUy's

Calendar
Classifieds
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Editorials
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Weather

www.mydailysentinel.com

. .... 'I

Profl\lct Safery Commis-

BENGALS CAMP

Armour, a two-time Mid-American Conference defensive player of the year, said his role
against the Eagles allowed him to use his linebacker and strong safety skills.
"That tells me that they want me here,"
Armour said ,of the coaches.
Bengals defensive coordinator Mark Duffner
said he is pleased with how Armour, a Toledo
native, has responded in the secondary. Armour
also can play on special teams, which could
further help his chances of winning a job.
"He's plenty tough enough, there's no question about that," Duffner said."! think he's pro. "
gressmg.

lEAcH

Bush's
picks spur
clashes

sumer

------~

• A Ball and B Ball
·• Little League
• Pony League
• Sbftball

M.

ble persons.
DJFS.
DJFS will determine eligibility and
In other matters, Commissioners Jin1
POMEROY - Establishing a new line approve or deny requ'em for burial paySheets and Mick Davenport discussed the
item in the county budget to help pay the ments based on the policy established by the
.possibility of distributing a petition to colcost of burial services for indigent families commtsstoners.
lect signatures allowing people in the 992
topped Thursday's agenda of the Meigs
The policy stipulates that a ceiling of calling area to call the 882 calling area in
Counry commissioners' regular meeting.
$500 for children under 11 and $750 for
Under the most recent budget bill passed adults will be provided if the applicant is New Haven, W.Va., without charge.
Residents who now live in the New
by the legislatu~. the state no longer pays eligible to receive the funding.
Haven
area are not charged for making calls
for indigent burials, and beginning July I,
Monies over the established ceiling prices
to Pomeroy, and the commissioners have
:!001, Meigs County Department of Jobs Will be the responsibility of the applicant.
and Family Services (DJFS), on behalf of
Applications that are approved will be received several requests about the issue, said
the commissioners, will start accepting submitted to the county auditor for pay- Davenport. ·
Once petitions have been completed,
awards for burial applications from funeral ment from the county general fund and
directors for deceased Meigs County eligi- denials will be issued to the applicant by
Please see Burial, Al

BRONCOS

GOOD TIMING - JoJuan Armour stretches durIng practice in Georgetown, Ky. Armour's
chances of making the lineup have improved
as a result of Darryl Williams' recent ankle
Injury. (AP file)

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

BANTHERS

Williams is out for six weeks with an ankle
injury, opening a door for Armour, who played
lineba~ker at Miami of Ohio before being
converted as a defensive back by the Bengals.
"He has practiced very well;' said Jim Lippincott, the Bengals' director of pro/ coU~ge
personnel. "He has done everything we've
asked him to do.
"Just because Darryl got hurt, doesn't give
him a lock. There's still a lot of things he has to
learn about playing safety, but he's on his way,"
Lippincott said.
The 5-foot-11, 220-pound Armour worked
on Tuesday as the backup to strong safety Cory
Hall. It is the first time he is being assigned to
work in the secondary for a full -5eason.
He opened the Bengals' training camp last
year at strong safety, then was switched back to
linebacker early in the regular season after an
ankle sprain slowed him up.
Several injuries limited him to playing in
four games. The Bengals sent him this year to
play for Barcelona of NFL Europe. He had 21
tackles in seven games for Barcelol\a as a strong
safety,
·
"It was a difficult process," Armour said of
switching positions. "My rookie year, I wasn't
focused. I didn't appreciate the opportunity I
had to be in this league."
The Bengals used Armour in the 2000 season fin'!le against the Philadelphia Eagles to
·watch quarterback Donovan McNabb and
make sure he didn't scramble often for extra
yards. McNabb rushed for 20 yards on three
attempts.

Hometown Newspaper

County OKs burial·cost fund

RAVENS

.REDSKINS

Meigs County"s
so cents • August 17, 2001 • Vol. 52, No. 2

FALCONS

BILLS

Friday

•

to miss several days

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
strides in the last two days," coach Mike ShanaAt one point, McKinley broke free of the
LAKE FOREST, IU. (AP) - The feeling in han said. "Hopefully he can keep it going. He serum, raced around the huddle and took a
Chicago's locker room is that Mike Wells might knows the target date."
shot at offensive tackle Melvin .Tuten before
not be the last Bears veteran to get cut.
That date is Aug. 25.
being restrained.
"It's sort of like everyone is walking around
Davis, who has missed 24 games because of
"The players who were involved in it, there
on egg shells," said Wells, who was released by injuries in the last two seasons, missed Denver's was pushing and shoving and · hitting in the
first preseason game Saturday because of lin- belly and back. But there weren't blows going
the Bears on Wednesday.
Wells, a seven-year veteran defensive tackle, gering tightness in his right hamstring and a to the head and things like that," head coach
was due $2.2 million this season, but the Bears sore right knee - the same one that required George Seifert said. "So I guess it was consigned free agent defensive tackles Ted Wash- surgery in 1999.
trolled rage or controlled violence or whatevThough Davis will not play Monday night at er."
ington and Keith Traylor in the offseason.
Washington received a three-year, $7.5 mil- . Green Bay, the former MVP has plenty of time
lion de:il and Traylor a three-year, $6.3 million to prepare for the regular-season opener on
contract.
Sept. I 0. Denver plays home preseason games
FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. (AP)- Back"Looking at our defensive side of the ball , I Aug. 25 and 31.
up
quarterback Eric Zeier, diagnosed with
thought we were top-heavy at Mike's position
gout in his left foot, likely will be held out of
in terms of the money that was spent there, in
the Atlanta Falcons' preseason game in Washparticular when we had signed both Ted WashWESTMINSTER, Md. (AP) - Baltimore ington on Friday.
ington and Keith Traylor," Bears general mane
Zeier, who was expected to play most ofthe
ager Jerry Angelo said. "That put an 'X' on Ravens defensive tackle Tony Siragusa· is
expected
to
be
sidelined
for
7
-to-1
0
days
after
second
half against the Redskins, practiced and
Mike's chest in my inind."
is wearing a soft walking cast when he's not on
'Knowing that management was looking to undergoing arthroscopic knee surgery.
"We're
not
overly
concerned,"
head
coach
the field.
save salary cap money, Wells offered to take a
Brian Billick said. "It's almost as much prevenZeier was listed with an injured toe after
pay cut, but the Bears declined.
tive
as
anything
else.
This
should
not
jeopardize
·
Atlanta
won at New York Saturday night. He
"Then they wanted to trade me, but they
completed 2 of 3 passes for 25 yards in the
said nobody had draft picks to give up," Wells the opener at all."
The
Ravens
hope
Siragusa
can
play
in
the
fourth quarter of the 20-10 victory. Trainer
said.
New
York
Giants
preseason
finale
against
the
Ron Medlin said the gout developed after he
The 6-foot-3, 325-poundWeUs started aU 16
games in each of his three seasons in Chicago. ·on Aug. 31, and expect him to be in uniform hurt his toe in the game.
Last seasol\, his 64 tackles led the defensive line for the regular season opener against the
Chicago Bears on Sept. 9.
for the second straight year.
Angelo, who took over as general manager in
UNIVERSITY CENTER, Mich. (AP) June, said he's not through changing the team.
Detroit Lions tackle Ray Roberts likely will
"There could be more moves," he said.
PITTSFORD, N .Y. (AP) - Buffalo Bills retire, despite pressure from his teammates to
."Were talking. That's a continual process were · quarterback Rob Johnson will miss at least two play for one final season.
days of practice after spraining ligaments on the
' going through."
Roberts - who has spent nine seasons in
'
index finger of his throwing hand.
the NFL - has pondered retirement since the
Further examination of Johnson's swollen beginning of training camp because of a pair of
.
finger
found no other serious damage.
ailing knees.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Washington
"He could play today if he had to,"Williams
Redskins signed former NFL Europe tight end
"Ray, has so.me age on him and h!s knees are
said.
"But we need to rest him right n·ow."
Steve Brominsh
~reaky, Lwns coach Marty Mornhmweg .s~td .
Coach Gregg Williams said Johnson will be He came up to me last week about .rettrmg
Brominski, 25, was signed by the New York
re-evaluated
Thursday, when it will be deter- and I talked htm out o~ tt becau~e..' wanted to
Jets off their practice squad last November and
was sent by them to NFL Europe, where he mined whether he will play in Saturday's pre- make sure he was certam about tt.
played for the Amsterdam Admirals. The Jets season game against the Philadelphia Eagles.
Johnson was hurt near the end ofTuesday's
waived him in April.
The 6-foot-4, 264-pound Brominski, who practice when he banged his finger.on the helBETHLEHEM, Pa. (AP) - Defensive linewas signed as a free agent and released by the met of running back Sammy Morris.
man Corey Simon returned to the Eagles'
Detroit Lions last August, played at Syracuse
practice field for the first time since sustaining
and was selected for the 2000 Hula Bowl.
rl'l
a concussion last Thursday.
The Redskins also released rookie tight end · SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) - A · melee
Simon's participation was limited by the
John Sigmund.
involving more than a dozen linemen erupted coaches and he pulled himself out of practice
during an individual pass- rushing drill at the for precautionary reasons after discussions with
the training staff. Simon wasn't certain whether
Carolina Panthers' training camp.
The fracas started when offensive tackle Jon he would play in Saturday's preseason game in
GREELEY, Colo. (AP) .-Terrell Davis was
Blackman
and defensive tackle Alvin McKinley Buffalo, but promised that he would see action
back practicing with the first team and has set
became entangled. Other players jumped into before the regular season opener against St.
the date for his return to Denver's lineup.
the
fray, with players from the offensive unit Louis next month.
"You could see that there's been big-time
squaring-off-against defensive-players.
---

UONS

THIS SATURDAY: Be sure to grab the Sports EXTRA!

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Child's Name=-- - - - - - - - - - - ' - Birthday: _ __.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

WASHINGTON (AP) - A sharp drop in the
cost of gasoline and other energy products helped
drive down consumer pr ices in July by the largest
amount in 15 years.
There also was good news on two other frorits
Thursday: Housing construction posted its best
performance in 17 months and the number of
workers filing jobless benefits declined, suggesting
better days ahead for the slumping economy.
"This is all great economic news," said Mark
Zandi, chief economist for Economy.com. "After all
,the gloom, which was getting thi cker and thicker,
there is a little break in the clouds and sunlight is
poking through."
On Wall Street, last-minute bargain hunters
boosted stocks, which had sagged earlier in the day
as investors focused on profit: and revenue .warn-

ings. The Dow Jones industrial average gained
46.57 points to close at 10,392.52 .
While Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan and his colleagu es have plenty of room
to cut ii1terest rates further, given the tame inflation, economists are predicting th at policy-makers
will ·opt for a quarter-point reduction rather than a
more aggressive half- point \~hen they meet Tuesday

Firestone knew safety cap cut tire failures
McALLEN, Texas (AP) - Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. knew years ago that
tires with an inexpensive nylon layer would
be as much as five rimes less .bkely to fail
than those without the caps, according to
court documents.
Internal company correspondence
included in evidence introduced this week
in a $1 billion case against the tire manufacturer may show the company knew of
ways to reduce the sort of tread separation

plaintiffi in the ca.'e say led to a Ford
Explorer rollover that injured four people.
In a n1emo dated Nov. 7, 1998, David
Laube,
executive
director
of
BridS!'stone/ Firestone sales engit)cering,
said the company compared tires with and
without protective shoul,der strips. It found
the "rate for rires with· shoulder strips is
three to five times lower."
Four months later, Bruce Halverson, the
head of the company's quality assurance,

wrote that a light truck tire known as the
Dueler AT with 90-cent nylon cap strips
sh.owed "tire and tread belt edge separations
were reduced by more than 50 percent."
Last summer, Firestone recalled 6.5 million tires, many of which were standard on
Ford Explorers. The' recalled tires have been ·
linked to at least . 203 deaths and 700
it~uries. In May, Ford Motor Co. said it
would replace 13 million more Firestone
tires.

What •IS a Hospital1st?

Throws: Right or Left
Bats: Right or Left
Team: ________________________________

Hospitalists are physicians who are skilled at diagnosing and
providing effective and timely ~eotment of illness to patients
during their Hospital stay. Their primary responsibility is to
oversee the daily care of the hospitalized patient.

Phone: ___________.;___:_:__ __

For more informotion, coli

L---~-------------------------•-------~
Make checks pa able to: The Dail Sentinel

(7

•

446-5508

Discover the Holzer Difference
Www .bolzer.org

,•

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