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The Daily Sentinel

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Base

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NATIONAL LEAGUE

Sosa hits homers No. 50, 51

Mond•y, Aupst 27. lOOJ
•••
•

AROUND THE DIAMOND
'

NI110NIIletgue

Arizona 4, Philadelphi a 3, 10 innings
Colorado 3, Milwaukee 2
Chicago Cubs 6. St. l ouis 1
San Diego 10, Florida. O
N.Y. Mets 6, San Francisco 5

Eosl

BY THE ASSOCIATEDPRESS

Amerte~~n

•

•

•

•

Te1141 5, l!oolon 4

League

No games scheduled

• .I

•

Hometown Newspaper

Melp County's

•

•
~o cE&gt;nts ·August 18, 1001 • Vol. 51, No.9

....

Martinez return a success even though Boston loses

urn.

DEERE FOR Ai.L SEASONS

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

www.mydailysentinel.com

SEWER PROJECT

Winners

claim

Council hears\
residents'
complaints

Powerball

•••

AMERICAN LEAGUE

.A

•
\

-y'oQomeo

EaM

•

••

sis Russ Ortiz (I 4-6), Lei ter
w L PeL GB
'lllndoy's Gomeo
•
w L PeL Gl
Atlanta
71 58 .550
New Vorl&lt;
16 55 .580
Ano ther day, another two squared around to bunt ~efore
-lon
(Cone •z)ot C-nd (lurfjo
Philadelphia 69 60 .535
71 56 .550
2
Boston
H), 7:05 p.m.
,..
home ru ns for Sammy Sosa.
pulling his hands back and
Florida
61 68 .473
Monday's Games
10
Toronto
64 67 .488
12
Ookllnd (Muldaf15-7) a! Bellimore (POft.
New YorK
61
69 .469
10'17
Los Angeles (Adams 9-6) at Atlanta Baltimore
54 78 .415
21 '&amp;
son 5-9). 7:05p.m.
Sosa hit his 50th and 5 I st slashing a si ngle to center field.
Montreal
55
75 .423
1 6~
(Made!ux 17-7), 1:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay
47
64 .359
Toronto (Loaiza 11-101 at N.Y. van•
29
ho me runs Sunday, j oining
Braves 9, Dodgers 2
Cenlnol
San Francisco {Jensen 1-2) at N.Y. Mets
Central
(Muaslna 12· 11), 7:05p.m.
w L Pet GB (Appier 7-10), 1:10 p.m.
w L Pet Gl Chicago White Sox (Biddie 5-8) at Detroit
Babe Ruth and Mark MeGSlumpin g Andruw J o nes
Houston
75
55 _577
San Diego (Tollberg 6·4) at Florida (Bur- Cleveland
13 57 .582
(Lima 4-5), 7:05 p.m.
wire as the only players with hi t a pair of two- run ho mers
Chicago
72 58 .554
nett 9·9). 7:05p.m.
Minnesota
3
69
62 .527
Saame (Pineiro~~ at Tampa Bey (P.Wii·
St. Louis
10
]';
Arizona (Lopez 3-3) at Philadelphia (Per- Chicago
60 .539
5
68 64 .504
son 5-8), 7:15p.m.
;
fo ur 50-hom er seasons.
and Atlanta won for o nly th e
Milwaukee
57
12 .442
1 7 '~
son 11-6), 7:05 p.m.
Detroit
19'1.
53 75 .411
Texas (Oliver 10-6) at Minnesota (Reed
" I'm no t going to lie to you. third tim e in II gam es at
Clnc:lnm~tl
53 n
.408
Pittsburg. (Seimel 5- tO) at M ilwau~ee Kansas City
22
51 80 .389 . 22';
3·3). 8:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh
48 81
.372
26 ~
(Coppinger 0·0), 8:05 p.m.
We1t
Anaheim (OO!z 11-7) a! Kansas CI!Y
I am very happy to be in that Turner Field.
West
w L Pet QB (George 1-4), 8:05p.m.
,
category w ith Mr. Mark
w L PC1 GB
Tuesday'a Games
Seatlle
Jones had batte d j ust .194
94 37 .718
· Arizona
75
Philadelphia (Duckworth 2-0) at N.Y. Oakland
54 .581
19
56 .572
75
McGwire and Babe," Sosa satd. in the las t eight weeks before
San Francisco ' 72 56 . ~
Anaheim
3~
Mat s (Rusch 6-9), 7:10 p. m .
25
59 52 .527
LosAngefes
While closing in on Darry going 3-fo r-5.
71
59 .546
Montreal (Vazquez 13-11 ) at Atlanta (Mill- Texas
36
58 73 .443
San Diego
64
65 .496
11
wood
4-5). 7:35p.m.
Bonds for the maj or leagu e
Mark D eR osa and M arcus
Colorado
56 73 .434
19
Cincinnati (Dovls 6-2) at Houston
Saturday's a.mes
ho mer title, Sosa is keeping the G il es also ho mered as the
(Miller 13--7), 8:05p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 7, AMheim 5
Saturday's Games
Florida (Dempster 14-11 ) at Chicago Seattle 3. Cleveland 2, 11 Innings
Cubs close in the Nl Central Braves o pened a two-game
Chicago Cubs 6. St. Louis 4
Cubs (Tapani 9-10), 8:05p.m .
Qakland 6, Detroit 1
Arizona 4, Philadelphia 3
Pittsburgh (Beimel 5- 1O) at Milwaukee Tampa Bay 8, Chicago White Sox 4
race.
lead over Philadelphia in the
Los Angeles 8, Atlanta 7
(C oppinge ~ 0·0), 8:05 p.m.
Toronto~ . Baltimore o
Sosa's latest homers led N L Eas t. J o hn Burkett won
Pittsburgh ·&amp;. Houston 2
San Diego (Lawrenc e 3-3) at Sr. louis Texas 8, Boston 7, 18 innings
Milwaukee 5, Colorado 4
(Kilo 13·8), 8:10 p.m.
Minnesota 7. Kansas City 1
C hicago over the St. Louis · his 'fourth straight decision.
Cincinnati 4, Montreal 2
San Francisco (LHemandez 11-12) at
Cardinals 6- 1 at Wrigley Field.
Shawn Green hit his 42nd
San Diego 7, Florida 1
Arizona (Johnson 17-6), 10:05 p.m.
Sunday'• Games
N.Y. Mets 3, San Francisco 2. 11 innings
Colorado (Chacon 6-8) at los Angeles Chicago While Sox 3, Tampa Bay 2
The Cubs· trail Houston by home run , inCluding 22 sin ce
(Brown 8·4), 10:10 p.m.
Toronto 5, Baltimore t
the All-Star break, for Los
three games.
Sunday's Games
Oakland 7, Detroit 6
Atlanta 9, Los Angeles 2
Minnesota 7, Kansas City 2
Sosa ·has 16 ho me runs m Angeles.
Houston 3, Pittsburgh 1
Cla...,lond 4, Suttle 3
August, including a pa1r of
Braves
third · baseman
Clnclnnau 17, Montreat 4
Anaheim 7, N.Y. Yankees 6, 10 innings
three-homer games.
C hipp er Jones and manager
"Sammy's having a phe- Bobby C ox were ejected for
n~ menal year," McGwire said. arguing in th e sixth.
" He's doing everything and
. D-backs 4, Phillies 3,
more.'.'
10 innings
Sosa hit No. 50 in the first
R eggie Sanders homered
and added N o. 51 in the fifih. in. the lOth inning and Luis
Both · shots came against Gonzalez hit his 48th home
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Young; the No. 9 hitter, hit a solo homer, The Twins, who had lost 10 of 14 geing
Dustin Hermanson and result- run as Arizona beat PhiladelThe Boston Red Sox couldn't have had his eighth, in the fourth.
into the series, completed a three-game
ed in curtain calls.
phia.
a more encouraging loss.
Angels 7, Yankees 6, 10 innings
sweep and sent Kansas City to itli sixth
Backed by Sosa's four RB!s,
Sanders hit his career highPedro Martinez returned to the mound
Garret Anderson hit a nm-scoring dou- straight loss - all at home.
rookie Juan Cruz earned, his tying 28th homer, and third
for the first time in two months Sunday hie in the 1Oth inning to give Anaheim a
Brad Radke (1 1-8), who had lost his four
first major league victory.
of the s.eries for the NL West
night, but Boston lost S-4 to the Texas come-from-behind victory over visiting previous decisions, pitched three-hit ball
Sosa has reached at least 50 leaders.
Rangers.
·
New York.
for seven innings to beat Blake Stein (5-7),
homers in four straight years.
Astro.s 3, Pirates 1
Martinez, on a 60-75 pitch count as·he
Anderson's game-winning drive do~n who gave up five runs on six hits and four
McGwire did it from 1996-99
Ron Villone, starting . 111
recovers from a sore right shoulder, left the right-field line off Mike Stanton· (8-4) walks in 4 2-3 innings. The Twins remained
and Ruth did it in 1920-21 place of Pedro Astacio, struck
after four innings with the score tied at 3. came atier Stanton hit Darin Erstad with a 4 I 12 games back in the AL Central.
and 1927-28.
out eight in 5 1-3 innings as
"I feel good. My arm reacted good," pitch to start the inning. ·
White Sox 3, Devil Rays 2
Mets 6, Giants 5
the NL Central leaders won
Martinez said after throwing 71 pitches in
Anderson went 3-for- 5, with two douJose Canseco and Magglio Ordonez hit
Al Leiter kept Barry Bonds at Pittsburgh.
four innings."[ got my work done and I bles and two RB!s.
solo homers for visiting Chicago.
With Astacio out because
was back on the mound. The rest is overDavid Eckstein's two-out, run-scoring
in the park and keyed New
Canseco, who had three RB!s in Chicarated."
single off Mariano Rivera in the ninth tied go's 8-4 loss Saturday, broke a 2-all tie in
York's go-ahead rally in the of shoulder stiffness, Villone
~venth ·with a rare hit of his won in his first start since
In his first start since June 26, the three- it at 6 and denied Orlando Hernandez his the siXth against Bobby Seay (0-1) with his
own to lead the Mets over San June 20 with Colorado.
time Cy Young Award winner allowed first win of2001.
12th homer this season, the 458th of his
Francisco.'
Padres 10, Marlins 0
three runs - two earned - and siX hits.
Athletics 7, Tigers 6
career.
, Bonds came within about
Kevin Jarvis pitched seven
He threw mostly fastballs and changeups
Miguel Tejada drove i!'kthree runs, and
Jon Garland (6-4) allowed two runs and
·o ne foot of his major league- strong innings and San Diego
for 5 I strikes.
Terrence Long hit a tiebreaking single in six hits in 6 1-3 il'inings, and Keith Foulke
)eading 56th homer but had to won at florida .
Tim Wakefield (8-10) relieved Martinez the seventh as Oakland overcame a S-0 got three outs for his 35th save.
,settle for a triple and another . ·Rickey Henderson scored
to start the fifth. Mike Lamb hit-a tiebreak- deficit against visiting Detroit.
·
Blue Jays 5, Orioles 1
homerless day at Shea Stadi- his 2,229th run in the Padres'
ing two-run single for the Rangers in the
Matt Perisho (2-3) walked Olmedo
Rookie Brandon Lyon (3-2) pitched six
He hasn't gone deep in his eighth, leaving him 16 shy of
sixth.
Saenz and hit Jason Giambi with a piich in innings of three-hit ball as visiting Toronto
. iast 30 games at the Mets' 1Y Cobb's career record.
· Bill Haselman singled, Michael Young the seventh and Jermaine Dye singled completed a three-game sweep, outscoring .
Rockies 3, Brewers 2
was hit by a pitch and Boston catcher home the tying run.
' home stadium.
·
the Orioles I 9-1.
.Larry Walker hit a threeDoug Mirabelli was charged with a passed
Jeff Tam (2-3) pitched one scoreless
Leiter (9-10) allowed three
Melvin Mora's sixth-inning homer,
runs and five hits in eight run homer that Jed Colorado
ball before Lamb singled to left.
inning for his first victory since July 2, and ended Toronto's. 26~inning scoreless streak;
The Rangers built a 3-0 lead against Jason lsringhausen pitched the ninth for his one short of the team recottl.
innings as the Mets won their over Milwaukee at Miller
third strai~ game in this J&gt;a~k~~ _Maninez~wllo struck-out..fuur-and-walked-j!6tils;~ve.-:
en1on Wells,=
re~call
'+."e"id~fro'-m
-;;
11;-:
ri-,
pl;-e-A~four- game series.
Walker's 33rd home run
one.
Thins 7, Royals 2
Syracuse earlier in the day, had three .hitli.
After Rey Ordonez singled helped
Mike
Hampton
Ricky Ledee had an RBI single in the
Visiting Minnesota parlayed four walks Jose Mercedes (7-15) allowed five runs and
and went to second on a improve to 13-10.
second. The Rangers got an unearned run and five stolen bases into a five-run fifth. six hitli in six innings.
throwing error by Mets neme~
after two Boston errors in the third and

...

Tuesday

.SPOilS: Lady Eagles soar again, Bl

'-1e A10

jackpot
8y DYLAN

T.

LoVAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Three of the four winners of the $294.8 million
PowerbaU jackpot claimed
their
shares Monday,
including an elderly Maine
couple who hid their winning ticket in . a box of
cereal, a married mother of
three from Mini:u!sota and
a 46-year- old ex-convict ·
from Kentucky.
" It's a poor man's
dream," David Edwards
said at the Louisville Slugger Museum in Louisville,
Ky.
The. jackpot is the thirdbiggest lottery prize in
U.S. history. The four winning tickers in Saturday
night's drawing of the
multi state lottery·were sold
in Kentucky, Minnesota,
New Hampshire and
Delaware.
Except for the holder of
the Delaware ticket, all the
winners were identified
Monday and all chose the
lump-sum payment of
$41.4 million, before taxes.
With each winning ticket
worth $73.7 miUion, winners also have th~ option
of taking $2.9 million per
year for 25 years .
Up first in the parade of
. jacKpot
wimiers
was
EdwardS, who ·said he was
recent! laid off from his
fiber optics job, needs back
surgery and had no idea
what he was going to do
once his unemployment
benefits ran out.
"A lot of people work
hard and a lot of people are
out of work. And you
dream you want a better
life, and playing this lottery
has done that for me," said
Edwards, · whose fiancee,

PIHH seel•ckpot. AJ

. said last night.
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Lift station improvements
MIDDLEPORT - With and installations have been·
progress comes problems.
completed
on
General
Progress on Middleport's Hartinger Park way, Mill
major sewer improvement Street, and Laurel Street, and
project, and problems expe- excavation work on the lift
rienced lly residents as the 'station installation · at Ash
resuit of street repairs were Street has been completed in
cliscussed by Middleport Vil- anticipation of installation·.
lage Council during Mon- Paving at the site of the
day evening's regular meet- Rutland Street work should
be cQmpleted soon.
mg.
Two · contracting firms are . Hayes also · discussed the
working on separate public results of a recent inspection
works projects in Middlec of the 125,000-gallon water
port: B&amp;L Construction of tank on Middleport Hill.
Ashland, Ky., on the village's The Ohio Environmental
million- dollar
sewer Protection Agency suggested
improvement project, and the inspection after an EPA
Black Top Contracting of worker noticed a bulge in
Nelsonville on a street the side of the tank.
According to Hayes. the
paving project.
inspection
revealed that,
The sewer project, funded
through local revenue, pub- aside from few needed
including
seal
lic grants and loans , is mov- repairs,
replacement,
painting
and
ing along swiftly, according
to Becky Hayes of the ,vil- roof repairs, th e tank is in
lage's engineering firm , good condition. Suggested
repairs would cost approxiFloyd Browne Associates.
mately
$20,000, while the
"The project is right on
schedule ... maybe a little replacem ent of the tank
ahead of schedule," Hayes
Plene see ProJect. A:S
~

.
M

,.. ·-· ·"··---J--·---~-

IDDLEPORT - "Sharpen your
pencils, get your books out, and
"
.let's get started!"
Students and teachers at Mid- Valley
Christian School in Middleport were a step
ahead of their publiG school COUnlerparts,
starting classes on Monday.
Patty Asbeck, pictured here with firs~­
grader Morgan Hurlow, was busy giving
her students first-day instructions yesterday
morning, but it was clear that the first dive
into schoolwork was not far away. (Brian J.
Reed photos)

•
LTI33 lawn Jrador
• 13-hp engine
•
• 38-inch mowing deck
• S·speed shift·on·lhe-go transmission

W55 lawn Tractor
•15-hp engine
• 42·inch convertible mowing deck
• Automatic transmission
BY TONY

M.

WCH

. , TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Sheriff's Department has received fo11r
used personal comp11ters and two lap-top
computers through American Electric
Power's Charitable Donation Program.
Accorcling to Tom Graham, regional
security manager for AEP, the computer
donation program is an extension of the
company's corporate goal to support and

play an active, positive role in communities where AEP employees live and work.
"These donations are particularly
designed to help both qualifYing ;schools
and non-profit community orgaruzations
expand .their use of computer technology," said Graham . .
"Educators and students may use the
donated PC's in making technology an
int~gral part of the educational learning
process while non-profit organizations

may use the computers to update or
expand their computing capabilities so as
to better serve their communities," he
added.
Meigs County Sheriff Ralph E ,Trussell
said the donation wiU be used to update
the department's computer system,
specifically with record keeping and vehicle maintenance files, and that the equip-

. Pluse see cOmputerS, AJ

JS60 Walk-Behind Mower
• 6.0-hp engine
• Durable die-cast aluminum deck
• Seven cutting heights

Sentinel

J1 05C Line Jrlmmer/Brushcutter
•1.05-hp 119.8 eel M·Series engine
•15-inch·cutting-swath
• Only 8.5 Ibs
• 2·year consumer warranty

www.JohnDeere.com

~
'

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1 S1dlan - 10 Pllpl

SST! I lawn Jratllir

ealeDdar
Classifieds
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Editorials
Obituaries

• IB·hp, V·Twin engine • Two-pedal automatic transmission
• 48·inch mower deck • Zero·turn radius with power steering

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NOTHING

RUNS

LIKE

A

Weather
·'

A6·8
A9
A4
A3
ASJ-8,10
A3

L-:101
Details; A2

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick 3: 8-5--5; Pick 4: 1-4-H
...... . ,. 5: 4-~ 11-23-28

W.VA.
Deily 3: ().3.-8 Deily 4: 7-4-9-7
C 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

.

State argues that execution should proceed
COLUMBUS (AP) -Convicted killer
John W. Byrd Jr. should be e:Kecuted Sept.
12 because he hasn't raised credible evidence of his innocence, the state has told
the Ohio Supreme Court. .
The state filed court documents opposing Byrd's request for a hearing on the
evidence of his claim before ·the high
court.
Meanwhile, a mental coi)lpetency hearing was held in federal court on Monday

for a death row inmate who once said he
wanted to waive his appeals and be executed but later reversed himself.
The hearing will establish a permanent
record of whether Kevin Scudder is competent to waive appeals in his case.
Byrd claims an accomplice was responsible for the I 983 stabbing death of a
Cincinnati man during a convenience
story robbery. In January, Byrd's attorneys
produced two documents in which that

accomplice. John l3rewer. takes credit for
the slaying.
The state said Byrd has yet to show thai
a trial court made a mistake in convicting
him and sentenci.;g him to death.
"No one would ever want to see a truly
innocent man face the death penalty, but
Byrd has no~ offered any credible evidence supporting his claim on that issue,"
Hamil~on County Prosecutor . Michael
Allen said.

Summertime Woes?

JoHN DEERE

DEERE

Hlp: lOs

'fod.y's

Electricity service was out for more than 400 residents and
businesses in the Village .of Pomeroy. American Electric Power
blamed a faulty underground cable for the 12-hour outage,
which began at 10 p.m. on Sunday evening. Service was
restored just after 10 a.m. yesterday, but some stores and
offices - most notably offices In the County Courthouse declared a holiday &lt;Jnd remained closed for the day, although ..
it was business as usual in the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, where hearings continued as scheduled. Here, Peo- ·
pies Bank's Pomeroy office says it all. (Tony M. Leach photo)
.

If you have health concerns or questions, call the

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WAKEFIELD GARAGE

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..
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Discover the Holzer Difference
www .bolzer.org

�Bend

The Daily Sentinel

PageAl

; Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2001

Tuesday, Aupst 18, 1001

DEAR ABBY: Several years ago,
I was in a car accident and was prescribed the painkiller Vicodin .
: Because of some bad personal rela! tionships and terrible choices, I
· became addicted.
During the years I was addicted, I
1 becarpe involved with a pl tient in
· the medical office where I was
working as a secretary. He seemed
sincere and caring. I thought he was
"the one." My addiction grew to the
poif!t w~ere, at times, I was afraid I
wouldn't wake up in the morning. I
. fdt guil ty and ashamed. I wanted to
tell "Mr. Perfect," but I was afraid I'd
1
lose him.
To feed my addiction, I resorted
to forging a prescription. I was
caught and arrested. Mr. Prefect
' assured me he understood and
' would be supportive. That lasted
· two· days. When -he was teased by his

Abigail
Van
Buren

&lt;

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

.

Nikki and Nicholas Roe;
Kia
Mark, Brenda and
Wright; AJ and Lorrai ne
Wright; Mike Smith; and Ashley Burbridge.
Those send ing birthday
wishes and gifts but unable to
attend were Beverly, Todd and
Nathan Rothgeb; Tami, Jon,
Trevor and Jordan Buck; Vicki
Hoffman; Kim, David and
Olivia Duncan; Brenton Barnette; Manning Roe; Randy
Wright; and Mike, Cindy and
Jimmy Smith.
·

To perfonn

Projed
from PapAl

· THURSDAY

POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chafer, Beta
Sigma Phi, beginning day din·
ner, Thursday, 6:30 p.m.
home of · Clarice Krautter.
Social committee to host dinner.

PEOPLE

Pierce Brosnan

"'

IJ

•

'

And Deserve .Recognition!
Put Your Special Greeting
In Our "Grandparents
Are Special'~ Edition

Sunday, September 9,2001
'

0\.

ol

• A Ball and B Ball
• Little League
• Pony League
• Softball
~

$1

Tessa Paige Will
"All my pappaws

and mammaws
are the best!"

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

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II Throws: Right or Left
II Bats: Right. or Left
ITeam: __________________________~·--~
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ssoo

Pap&amp;
Grandma
-Judy
We~ You!
Kali Bug
B Bear

Cost $1 0.00 per picture

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Correction Polley
Our main conctm In all atofleals
1o be accurate. If you knOw of an

DEADLINE: Wednesday, September 5, 2001

The Daily Sentinel

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1.11 Court Stre~t • Pomeroy, Ohio
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POMEROY School
pictures will be taken at
Meigs High School on
Wednesday for grades nine
through 11. l nformation is
available at the school.
Senior retakes will be taken
T hurs;lay.

Barbecue set

error In a llloly, call !he MWStOOm
at (7-40) 992·2158.

News Departments

..

The main number IS 992·2156.
0epamnen1 exleflliQna are:

Genenll maneger

Ext. 12

Ext. 13
Ext. 14

or

Other services
Ext. 3
Clrculltllon

Ext. 4

CIMII!Ied Mil

Ext. 5

neweOmydallyHntinel.com

OntheWeb

-~nel.com

.

Plan cookoff

I

Weighing them in.

$S,OOO and S7,OOO fro~ genera! fund to fire eqmpment
and street funds; respectively.
.
• Amen d ed th e VI.11ages,
D
F W. k 1
r~g- ree or Pace
po1rcy
to mclude .two hours of pa1d
compensatron for employees
wh? · ~ust be tes~ed durmg
the1r time away from work,
for ~he village's random_drug
testmg pohcy. Councrlman
Stephen Houchms voted
against the measure.
.
Also present were Councrl
members Bob Pooler, Kathy
Scott and Bob Robmson .

Edwards, who lives outside
Ashland, Ky., has an I 1-yearold daughter from a previous ·
marnage.
from Page AI
Kentu cky corrections offi26-year-old ' Shawna Mad- cials said Edwards was convicted of robbery in 1981 and
dux, stood by his side.
He bought $8 worth of sentenced to I 0 years in
tickets - seven for Himself prison . . He was paroled and
and one for his fian cee - at returned to prison several
a convenience store just 90 times before serving out his
sentence in 1997. He also !las
minutes before the drawing.
"I said, 'Help me Lord. I a conviction for possession of
a firearm by a convicted
know it might not be right of
me to ask you this, but can felon .
you just let me win this?" ' he
said.

Jackpot

-=

TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
$3.75 ADMISSION
(CERTAit FU.TUNEI MAY II. EXCLUDlD)

Send
address111CO&lt;I'IIOIIonl ro Til&amp; Deily
s.nunet,
eoun .
St.. ~- Ohio 45789.

tbru Fri.

**

Subscription rates

0no-

Ono """""
anorDoilY

S2 .

. $8.70

S104

so .....

~ 1101 detlrtng tO pay the
cai!lo&lt; may l1ll!1ft In advance direct to
The o.tly - Credit will be giVen
carole&lt; - - No IIJbecrlpllon by
·- home
-moll paronlltod
HOViCe IIInavailable.·

Mal
sublatatlon
-llolgo~--$27.30
$53.82
$105.56

13-

26-

- l l o l g a County
13129.25

26W-

$56.68
$109.72

82WHIII

ments to be furnished.
All ingredients, except perishable products and ingredients to preserve secret
recipes, must be displayed.
Prizes wilt be awarded in
two classes, corporate and
individual, and will be
announced at a later date.
Decorations and signs are
encouraged for the event.
Entry fees are $10 in
advance and $15 after Sept.
10.
For information or applications, contact Belva Workman at 992-3756 during the
day, or 742-3111 after 5 p.m.

REEDSVILLE The
annual reunion of the Abraham and Mary Will Bahr
family will be Saturday at the
first shelter house at Forked ·
Run State Park. Friends and .
family are welcome. The
meal wilt be held at noon.
Those attending should
bring covered dishes and
items for the silent auction.

Plan
homecoming
REEDSVILLE- Horne-\
coming will be at Eden
United. Brethren Church in
Reedsville on Sunday at I 0
a.m, Peter and Betsy Martindale and family will conduct
the service and music. A
carry-in dinner will begin at
12:30 in the fellowship hall,
and special · music by Delivered will begin at 2 p.m.

Scramble set
POMEROY - · A golf
scramble to benefit East~rn
football will be held at Pine
Hills Golt Course on Sept.
22, with tee-off at 8 a.m.
Teams will be selected by ·
blind draw. The cost is $40
per player.

Supplies
available
POMEROY Those
needing helping with free
school supplies may contact
the Ladies for the Lord at
992-1640.

EMS logs calls
POMEROY - Units of
the f;Aeigs Emergency Service a!)swered seven calls for
assistance on Monday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPA'l'CH
12:55 a.m., County Road
i, rnotqr vehicle accident,
assisted
Rutland, Tirlllothy
8:55 a.m., Gilkey Ridge
Road, Linda Kinntson,
· OMH;
12:04 p.m., Collins Road,
assisted by Pomeroy, Annette
Marshall, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
I :06 p.m., Landaker Road,
assisted by Pomeroy, Virginia
Jordan, OMH;
6:46 p.m., Cole Street, Barbara Harris, PVH;
8:45 p.m., Ohio 681,
Calvin Hank, PVH.
POMEROY
9:53 a.m ., Fisher Street,
. William Stivers, OMH.

TI41Nk 1'1&gt; Llki.
TO l.IVE. IN TfiE.
FAST l.t.NE.."

Regardless of your driving
record, WE HAVE AUTO
INSURANCE FOR YOUJ
DON'T DRIVE wm«JUT
ADEQUATE COVERAGE/
Downing ChUdo lnou,.nce A 111 Eaal Second Strael, Pomeroy

17401 H2·1374

~
,.

FRI~~I·THURS~Gml

Pomeroy.
Ohio. Second-claoo
poo1aga paid or Pomeroy.
MoooobOI. The Alooclaied p,... and
lilt Olllo Now paper AMoctalion.

ly-01'--

POMEROY - P!ans are
under way for the annual
chili cook-off to be held in
conjunction with the Stern~
wheel Riverfest Festival on
Sept. 27-29.
The contest, set Sept. 29,
will limit teams to a maximum of four members and
all team members and those
involved in the preparation
and handling of the chili
must have proof of a current
tuberculosis test.
No ingredients may be
precooked or treated in any
way prior to the preparation
period with the exception of
canned or bottled ingredients. Also, meat may be precut or ground~ but not treated in any way.
No use of home canned or
other prepared foods are .
allowed under health department rules.
Each team must cook a
·minimum of three quarts of
chili, one of which will be
judged. More would be
appreciated for sale of samples to benefit next year's
competition.
Coleman-type stoves, barbecue grills and campfires
with a bottom may be used
for cooking. There are a few
electrical book-ups and
advanced requests for electric

Plan reunion

,__ _ _ _ CLY'Of. t S"lllt _ _ _ _...._

(USPS 213-1101
ONo Yllloy P-"'"0 Co.
PubiJhOd avery • - · Monday
through -Friday, 111 eoun St.,

82 WHIII

To Hnd e-mail

CHESTER
The
Chester Volunteer
fire
Department will have its
annual chicken and spare ribs
barbecue, with homemade
ice cream, on Monday,
beginning at II :30 a.m. The
parade will be at I :30 p.m.

Computen

The Daily Sentinel

. .
---~-,
r -----------------I
· Send or brini your phOto to: ·
1

I

village $8,264 per month. ·
Cantrell reported to council that state law wjll require
all village tax offices to main- NEW COMPUTERS - Meigs County Sheriff Ralph E. Trussell
poses witl1 several pieces of new computer equipment recent·
tain websites on the Internet
ly donated to the Sheriff's Department by American Electric
after Jan. I, so that taxpayers
Power's Charitable Donation Program. According to AEP offi.
can download forms and seek cials, the program is an extension of the company's corporate
information electronically.
goal to support and play an active rote in communities where
Cantrell said that a part- AEP employees live and work. (Tony M. Leach photo)
time village employee will be .
paid to develop a website for
. "Th ese computers wilt
the village, to include ~ site
undoubtedly increase our file
for the tax office. All other
capacity and improve the
village departments, includ- .
from Page A1
accuracy of the department's
ing the police department,
"
public works and recreation, ment will prove ben eficial record s.
AEP has donated more than
and organizations such as the when catalogi•lg information .
4 50 personal computers to
Riverbend Arts Council and
"We're extremely pleasep
schools,
learning centers and
Middleport
Community to receive the computer
Association, will have the equipment and we will begin comm.unity agencies across
opportunity to be included preparations for immediate seven :states since the pro~
gram's inception in 1997.
installment," said Trussell .
on the site.
The cost of constructing
the site in-house is approximately $250, compared to
several thousand dollars if the
work were to be done by a
professional firm.
The Pomeroy
lannarelli said that a candiOpen Bass Tour. date for assistant clerk/treanament was held
surer will be presented for
Sunday with 27
- t1a81ls-takir1g part.
counc.il's coi!illim.J:ill!l~~,_..:_
Sept.
I0
Here one
the
judges is weighing
Clerk/Treasurer
Bryan
in some of the
Swann has announced his
fish caught during
plans to resign, although he
the tournament.
has not officially submitted
The resu Its of the
his resignation or given a date
tournament will be
for same.
released later in
Council also:
the week. (Photo
• Approved payment ofbills
by Dave Harris)
in the amouni of $5,008.54
from the general fund and
$111,432 for the Board of
Publi~ Aff~irs, $100,000 of
which was a . standing purchase order for the sewer
project.
• Approved transfers of
funds in the amount of

..

Larger Ad Available
If Needed

..

:

• II I

POMEROY - Mary Philomena Whidock Kunzelman, 94,
of Lawrenceville, Ga., formerly of Pomeroy, died on Saturday,
Aug. 25, 2001, following a lengthy illness.
. She was born in Pomeroy on Dec. 11, 1906, daughter of the
]ate l:liram and Sophia Myer Whidock. She was a long-time
..employee of Ohio River Salt Co., and was retired from Farm. ers Bank and Savings Co. as a bookkeeper.
. Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, John and Patricia
: Kunzelman of Lawrenceville, and two grandchildren.
. , Besides her parents, she was preceded in ~eath by her sisters,
.Ann Grueser and Helena Brickles; and four brothers: Fred,
Hiram, Francis and Joseph Whidock.
Services will be Wednesday, Aug. 29, 2001, at 10 a.m. at
· .Sacred Heart Church with the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will follow at Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Friends may call at Ewing Funeral Home from 6 to 8 p.m.
' today. A vigil service will be conducted at 7:30p.m ..

Parent or guardian must
. accompany child and provide
shot records.

'

Pictures taken

'

Mary Kunzelman

would cost the village nearly
·$300,000.
. · Council member Rae
· Gwiazdowsky attended the
.meeting with two other resi'dents who have experienced
'problems with dust and gravel in and around their homes
,as the result of milling and
TUESDAY
POMEROY Harvest
sweeping of streets included
:
MIDDLEPORT- Ohio Val· Time Bluegrass Band, Meigs
ley Crusade for Christ, 7 p.m. Senior Center. Dinner from
·.in the village's paving proGracie Kathryn Hoffman
at Abundant Grace Church. 4:45 to 6 p.m. with music to
·"gram, specifically on North
Refreshments.
follow. Suggested donation is
··Third Avenue.
$5.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli said
WEDNESDAY
that announcements have
. MIDDLEPORT Toney
SATURDAY
been made in the newspaper
:o:"'d
Brothers to perform at 7 p.m. . RACINE The 34th
. .to advise residents of the
MIDDLEPORT - Gracie ·
Wednesday, Hobson Com· reunion of the Samuel Alan
· 'work schedule, and to aUow
munily Church.
I Kathryn Hoffman . celebrated
The Toney Brothers will Cathedral Quartet, Oak
Eblin family will be held Satur.'those ,residents to remove
· her third birthday July 10 with
perform at 7 p.m. Wednesday Ridge Boys, and several
day at 4 p.m. at Star Mill Park
.their&lt;Cars
from the streets and
POMEROY - Childhood in Racine. Those attending
1 a dinner held. in her honor.
LONDON
(AP)
at Hobson Christian Fellow- other well-known gospel
:to anticipate other problems
immunization clinic, Meigs are to take their own table
'· Gracie is the daughter of Despite rumors to the con- ship Church . The group has acts, and have appeared on
,associated with the work.
County Heahh Department, 9 service and favorite loods.
David and Kathie Hoffinan of trary, Pierce Brosnan's license been performing for more the popular "Celebration"
lannarelli asked that resito
1
t
a.m.
and
1
to
3
p.m.
Meat will be furnished.
Middleport . Those attending to kill will be renewed.
than four decades, and television program.
dents be patient and cooperc to help her celebrate were her
Eon Productions, which involves three generations of
•• ative while the paving work
:sisters Uan
and Marlee, and ma kes t he 007 fil1 ms , on F
. n. . the Toney family. Th:ey have
.
~ continues.
, ,br&lt;llher ;_.Cqje,; .; groqdparents .
.
.
performed with the Black• Meanwhile, a representative
.; Fred and Pauline Hoffinan, day demed reports that It was wood Brothers, The Statesand Nick and Ruth Wright; lookmg to replace Brosnan men The ~Jill~-bmily~-1---- , . _
--~.1---- -~-- -----.----'---1---11--.+
' .QL.tb.C--'i:!lltt~.cting_.fir will
m the role of J:iihesl!oni1:- .
; be asked to meet with resi: dents affected by dirt, dust,
· gravel and other detritus
from the proJect.
Council approved a contract with the Wiseman
Agency
and . McNeely,
Patrick &amp; · Associates for
employee health insurance
through Anthem/Blue Cross
&amp; Blue Shield. The new pol. icy will cost the village
· · $7,389.38 per month.
: The switch to Anthem,
which also carries insurance
for the county general fund
employees and employees of
the Department. of Job and
family Services and health
Name: Shelley Thomas
department, will save the viiBirthday: 1013/94
1x3 With Photo
1x2 With Photo
l
. t 1 $4 OOO
Throw: Right
\.:t:;:J
age ahpprox!mad~ Y t .' T a
Bats: Right
mont , accor mg o ax
II
. .
C IC
Team: Llttletown Rocketa
AdmmiStrator aro antre .
Benefits under the new
plan are nearly identical to
those under Aetna, with the
exception, of higher co-payments . for doctor visits and
prescription medications.
The Gallipolis and Jackson
firms
also carry the village's
Deadline for the Baseball
current Aetna plan.
&amp;
. Hall of Fame Is
Don Vaughan of MiddleFRIDAY~ SEPT. 21
port presented a proposal
' which would have cost the
'' 5:00p.m;

Hoffman
.. birthday

•

· COOLVILLE -Thomas L. Kelly Sr., 62, of Coolville, died
early Monday morning, Aug. 27, 2001, at Harn:ar Nursing
•
Center in Marietta.
Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home in
Coolville.

LOCAL EVENTS
The Community Calendar
Is published as a .free aer·
vice to non•proflt groups
wishing to announce meet·
lnga and special events.
The calendar Is not
designed to promote aalea
or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed only aa
space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a 11peclflc
number of days.
0

•

lhomas L Kelly Sr.

embarrassment. Prescription drugs substance ·abuse, but th.ey, too, honeuly with them is the crucial
can b as dangerous as street drugs. deserve - and can receive - pain strategy. For information on services
People must educate themselves relief without reactivation their available locally, consult the AmeriPain
Society
at
before taking anything. Those who addiction. There is scientific evi- can
www.ampainsoc.org
or
the
Amerihave
never
experienced
addiction
dence
that
patients
with
pain
prob1
sho'!ldn 't look down on people lems do better when the pain is rec- can Alliance of Cancer Pain Initiawho have one. Addiction can hap- ognized and treated effectively early tives at www.aacpi.org.
CONFIDENTIAL TO " THE
pen to anyone.- RECOVERING on in an illness. Although opioid
IN A SMALL TOWN, U.S.A.
pain relievers (morphine, codeine, MIDDLE-SCHOOL MISFIT":
ADVICE
DEAR RECOVERING: Pain is etc.) are considered the mainstay for Don't lose hope. The great entera huge public health problem.While serious pain problems, many non- tainer Bette Midler also felt she was
co-workers, who read about my the medical establishment is keenly habit-forming medications can be as a misfit when she was a child. Forarrest in the newspaper, he· broke up aware of the need f&lt;lr pain manage- effective or more effective than opi~ · tunately, she finally realized that
with me.
ment, there is also concern about oids for particular kinds of pain, being different wasn't the problem
To my surprise, the doctor I media reports of misuse of pain such as nerve, bone and soft tissue she thought it was. As she put it: " 1
worked for and his wife were com- medications such as Oxycontin.
pains. There are also a host of proven didn't belong as a kid and that
passionate and forgiving. They got
!learned from Tom Strouse, M.D., nonmedication techniques, includ- always bothered me. If only I'd
me into treatment. It saved my life. psychiatrist and director of pain ing physical therapies, chiropractic, known that one day my differences
Abby, please assure you r readers management at Cedars-Sinai Com- massage and acupuncture, hypnosis, would be an asset, then my early life
who may have drug problems that it prehensive Cancer Center in Los relaxation and other psychological would have lieen much easier." ·
may not be easy, but they can live Angeles: " People at greatest risk for treatments."
drug-free.They shouldn't keep their misusing prescription pain medica,
Dear Abby is written by Pauline
Finding pain management experts
drug addiction a secret .for fear of tions tend to have a prior history of and communicating openly and Phillips and daughter jeanne Phillips.

Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Deaths

Forgery arrest lis blessing·in disguise for drng addict

The Dally

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

....
~

7:05,9:30
7:30, 10:00

JAY AND SILENT BOB
STRIKE BACK '(RI
7:00 &amp; .lJ:OO
MAnNEES SAT- SUN 1:00 I 3:00

THE OTHERS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:20
RAT RACE (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 1:30
MATINEES SAT. SUN 1:00

....

--...

-

7am- 10am

&lt;doSausage Gravy
· and Biscuits
~Coffee

'(';'Ilea
'(';'~Milk

a 3:30

AMERICAN OUTLAWS (PG131
7:10 &amp; 9:10
MAnNEES SAT. SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

7:00, 9:15
PIE2
~
7:10, 9;25
RUSH HOUI2
1'&lt;11
7:25,9:50
RAT RACE
"~
IHE OTHERS
Mo!l&lt;ll 7:35, 9:55
,.._ 7:45,9:55
AIIKAI1 Oli11AIII

Thursday
August
30th

AME;RICAN PIE 2 (RI
7.:15 &amp; 8:30
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:15. 3:30

Ages 65 &amp;.. over eat free
Anyone else - donations will be
accepted for our residential
activities.

RUSH HOUR 2 (PG131
7:30 &amp; 1:30
MAtiNEES SAT· SUN 1:30 &amp; 3:30

THE PRINCESS DIARIES (GI
7:00 61:20
MATINEES SAT · SUN 1:00·1 3:20

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00
Io

'')

�'

..
0 p1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

0

.Inside: -

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

NFL Camp news, Page A 7
.Diamond Roundup, Page A 10

1Ueld1J. Aupst 21. 2001

Page AS

)8111Hr•clnc:ypc*.oom

The Daily Sentinel

1Uesday.Augustl8,l001

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

ThFsDAY'S

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher

HIGHLIGHTS

'

R. Shawn Lewis
Managln$1 Editor

Fomer Marshall
players cut

Diane Key Hill
Controlltlt'

Charlene .Hoeflich
General Manager

MEXICO CITY (AP) - Quincy Carter is.
· already getting philosophical about life in the
NFL.
"One thing about this game is that you can
UNDATED
(AP) have
a good game one day altd a bad game
Three former Marshall foot- _
the next. You just want to keep going out on
ball players have been cut by
the
field and getting better;' the Cowboys
NFL teams.
rookie quarterback said after leading a 21 -6
Wide receiver David Foye
victory Monday night over the Oakland
was released by the Miami
Raiders.
Dolphins, defensive lineman
Carter was 6-of- 11 passing, with 99 yards
Giradie Mercer was let go by
and
no interceptions, and had an impr~ive
the Green Bay Packers .and
16-yard touchdown run.
punter-kicker Jason Witzcak
He showed more poise this time compared
was released by the Tennessee
Titans.
' Also, former Bluefield High
and University of Virginia
linebacker Yubrenal Isabelle
was cut by the New England
Patriots.

ktt"'

Uturs to the ftiJJor arc w«kDIIfr. TlttJ tluHild H lu1lluut JOO won&amp;. AU
ro ft1111111 tUUI '"'"' IH 1i111td •ttd l~tclU. .,.,.,, a4 ltltplaoa •IUfUu.
No
ltlttn wJH "- pdlh~ Ulhn llwuld N i11 po4 Wit, flddnuilfJ

11ft sd}tcl

,,;,,.u

;,,,,, 1101 ptnotutfllUI.

Tlu oplllions upnutd In tht colu1111t btklw tJn tltt COIUtlfllll oflltt Oltlo \bll•J
Pwblilltbtf Co:'r tdilorlolllotud, fllllllt OllltrtfUt 11Dit4.

NATIONAL VIEW

lfs true
Don't listen to death penalty
opponents' claims about Byrd

...
LAMBRO'S VIEW

Economic adviser changes his -tune about economy
BY DONALD UMBRO

• The Cincinnati (Ohio) Post: Opponents of the
death penalty would have you believe that John Byrd
is a doe-eyed innocent who is about to be executed
for a crime he didn't commit.
Don't believe it.
If you do, you must ignore that the jury that heatd
the case and the 70 state and federal judges who ha&gt;je
reviewed it at 15 separate stages over the last 18 years
all came to the same conclusion: Byrd was the principal offender in the stabbing death of Monte Tewksbury during the • robbery .of a Colerain Township
convenience store in 1983.
You also must accept as credible a confession by
Byrd's friend and accomplice, John Brewer, that he,
not Byrd, was the killer, and ignore the fact that
Brewer swore at his own trial that he hadn't stabbed
Tewksbury and the fact that he cannot now be tried
on capital charges for that homicide.

TODAY IN HISTORY

WASHINGTON - President Bush's
chief economic adviser, Larry Lindsey,
says he is now more optimistic that the
economy will pick up steam over the
next four months and fully recover· in
2002.
For the notoriously bearish LindseY.
who remained pessimistic about the
economy throughout the historic
expansion of the 1990s, this is quite a
switch. About a month ago, the conservative former Fed governor was cautiously forecasting that the economy would
not turn around until year's end or early
next year at best.
But in an interview last Friday in his
West Wing office, Lindsey told me that
he is "a little more optimistic now"
about the econom\c outlook. He says
with certainty that the 0.7-percent second-quarter GDP growth rate will be
the lowest point in the year. The current
third-quarter rate will be "a little higher," and the fourth qua_rter will be higher still going into 2002 "when we ·will
begin to get back to a more normal
~Ymwth rate."

r-----~~~~~::-~~~~i~:~~·~:~~~
~~:~~l:~~~~~~~~=~~~-1---~:r~~a;~~~~ttw~lslOire~-tingth~
Toc\ay is Tuesday, Aug. 28, the 240th day' of 2001. There are

I

125 days left in the year.
•
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 28, 1963, 200,000 people participated in a peaceful
civil rights rally in Washington D.C., where the Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech in front
of the Lincoln Memorial.
On tlris date :

In 1609, Henry Hudson discovered Delaware Bay.
In 1749, German author Johann Wolfgang von Goethe was
born in Frankfurt.
In 1828, Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy was born near Tula.
In 1916, Italy's declaration of war ·against Germany took
effect during World War 1.
In 1947, legendary bullfighter Manolete was mortally
.
wounded by a bull during a fight in Linares, Spain; he died the
following day at age 30.
In 1955, Emmett Till, a black teen-ager from Chicago, was
abducted from his uncle's home in Money, Miss., by two white
· men after he had supposedly whistled at a white woman; he
was found murdered three days later.
In 1968, police and anti~war demonstrators clashed in the
streets of Chicago as the Democratic National Convention
nominated Hubert H. Humphrey for president.
In 1973, more than 520 people died as an earthquake shook
central Mexico.
In 1981 ,John W. Hinckley Jr. pleaded innocent to charges of
attempting to kill President Reagan (he was later acquitted by
reason of insanity).
.
In 1981, the national Centers for Disease Control, noting a
high incidence of Kaposi's sarcoma and pneumocystis in
homosexual men, announced a medical task force had been
furmed to find out why. It was later determined the increased
number of illnesses was caused by AIDS.
Ten years ago: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
ordered a shake-up of the KGB and sacked his cabinet in the
.· wake of the failed coup by hard-liners.
five years ago: Democrats nominated President Clinton for
a second term at their national convention in Chicago. The
troubled 15-year marriage of Britain's Prince Charles and
Princess Diana officially ended with the issuing of a divorce
decree. '
One year ago: A4thorities in Peru announced that four years
after military judges convicted American Lori Berenson of
planning a rebel attack, the military had overturned her life
sentence, clearing the way for a new civilian trial. Berenson,
who maintained her innocence, was convicted last June of" terrorist collaboration" and sentenced to 20 years in prison.
• Today's Birthdays: Actor- dancer Donald O'Connor is 76.
Country singer Billy Grammer is 76. Actor Ben Gazzara is 7 I.
Foriner Defense Secretary William S. Cohen is 61. Actor David
Soul is 58. Baseball manager Lou Piniella is 58. Actress Alice .
Playten is 54. Singer Wayne Osm 0 nd (The Osmonds) is 50.
Actor Daniel Stern is 44. Olympic gold medal figure skater
Scott Hamilton is 43 . Actress Emma .Samms is 41. Country
singer Shania Twain is 36. Actor Jason Priestley is 32. Olympic
gold medal swimmer Janet Evans is 30. Actor J. August
Richards ("Angel") is 28. Rock singer-musician Max Collins
(Eve 6) is 23. Actress Carty Pope is 21. Country singer LeAnn
Rimes is 19. Actor Michael Galeota is 17.
Thought for Today: "The essence of immorality is the tendency to make an exception of one's self." - Jane Addams,
American social worker and Nobel Peace laureate (18601935).
.

'

'

GDP will be around 3.2 percent. next
year, which is in line with private blue
chip forecasts .
A number offactors are feeding Lindsey's more bullish assessment of the
economv, which he believes is stabiliz"
ing, after "skirting a recession" in the
second quarter. The housing market,
fu e1ed by r,.IIing m
· teres t ra tes, remams
strong, as construction jumped in July to
its highest level since February 2000.
Inflation remains virtually nonexistent,
with the consumer price index falling
0 ·3 percent in July. Preliminary job data
also seems to show stability, despite the
rash oflayoff announcements.
Moreover, consumers are still buying,
albeit more frugally, with retail sales
fueled, Lindsey says, by the nearly $40
billion in tax rebates that are still being

mailed out this summer to 90 million
taxpayers.
Lindsey is a professional economist
who, following Bush's rules to tone
down the Washington rhetoric, studiously avoids political firefights with the
Democrats. But this time, the low-key
policymaker - given the green light by
the White House - struck back at
House Democratic Leader Dick
Gephardt and Senate Democratic Leader
Tom Daschle, who blame the Bush tax
cuts for the shrinking budget surplus. ·
"Playing · politics with th_e budget
numbers and the economy is not doing
anyone a service," he told me.
He denies Democratic charges that
the administration is using "budget gimmicks" to mask the deep decline in the
government's operating budget surplus
by making routine accounting adjustments in Social Security payroll income
in previous years. "It's dode all the time,"
he says.
"lt doesn't give us any extra money.
There ar; _ no ;mmicks here," he said.
Daschle and Jephardt have no credibility when they charge that the size of
Bush's tax cut is responsible for this
year's projected surplus, he says. The
truth is the Democrats' alternative tax
cut plan that the Senate rejected was
bigger than the Bush plan in the first five
years (though smaller over a 10-year
period).
"First they said that you can't have a
tax cut because it's too stimulative. Then
they said our tax cut is just as big as
yours. Now they're saying your tax cut is
causing this problem with the surplus. If
that isn't politics .... They were saying
exactly the opposite not too long ago,"
he said.
Besides, "if the Bush tax cuts caused
tlris problem with the surplus, wouldn't
their five-year tax cut have caused it
too?" he asks. Good point.
And then there is the Democrats' double standard. Daschle and Gephardt

focus their criticism only on the declin~
in the government's operating budger
surplus,
minus
the
Social
Security I Medicare surplus, which
remains the second highest ever at close
to $160 billion. .
But why focus only on the operatin~
general fund surplus to measure the lis~
cal health of the government, since all
federal revenues fall under a unified
budget? Who says so? None other than
Tom Daschle:
Lindsey pulls out a quote Daschle
made on Feb. 2, 1998, when some
reporters were questioning the claim
that the Clinton budget was now in a
surplus. Social Security was running a
surplus then, but not the general revenue
fund that was running a deficit.
Not to worry, Daschle said. "Under
the unified budget, there is a surplus:
There is no question. If you look at the
way we've defined surpluses and deficits
over the last 30 years, we now have ~
surplus," he said.
Of course, that's not what Daschle it
saying now. Lindsey thinks tlris is more
than hust a little _}lypocritical. "It's J?.Oli•
tics~"

e says.

.

,

What has caused the non-Social Security operating budget surplus to declin~
temporarily is falling corporate profitsj
which have plunged to 1995 levels;
Lindsey points out.
"That began a year ago and is causing
fewer corporate tax receipts. The problem is a slowing economy," he said.
_
The way to quickly restore the general fund surpluses is to "revive the econo~
my. "Tax cuts are the solution. They are
not part of the problem. It's necessary to
get the economy growing again, and
that's what the tax cuts are for. This ii
Economics I 01 ,"Lindsey says.
Apparently, Daschle and Gephardt
didn't take that course.
·

(Donald LAmbro is filling in for Morton
Kondracke.)

WASHINGTON TODAY

Joe Lieberman begins to·sound like he~ - a candidate
BY WILL I.EsTER
right thing to do. Al Gore gave !rim an profile leader of the party he was a great
WASHINGTON - Sen. Joe Lieber- opportunity, and he believes that ifAl Gore addition to the ticket. Senator Lieberrmu1
man is busy traveling the country raising decides to run, then he should noi!'
is a .. . thoughtful, serious leader of the
, money and addressing crowds of adoring
In the meantime, Lieberman is criss- party who &lt;bould be on everyone's short
Democrats these days - vety much like crossing the country, appearing before list!'
someone who has an eye on the 2004 Democratic_ groups, h~lping candidates
Lieberman remains one of the favorites
presidential race.
and raising money for his political action of the Democratic Leadership Council,
But the 59-year-old Connecticut law- committee, wlrich had almost $600,000 at the centrist policy organization that
heiRed guide the party back to the White
maker has promised he won't run if 2000 the end ofJune.
Democratic nominee AI Gore runs ~ a
He goes to New Hampslrire in Novem- Hous~ in 1992.
pledge that stands in fiont of any presiden- ber to help an old political friend raise
Veteran strategists in the party say
tial aspirations harbored by Lieberman, money and campaign for state and local Lieberman has offered a . more balanced
who was Gore's running mate.
candidates and also has trips planned in the and marketable message than most other
• Some Democrats fear that pledge may - coming months to California, Georgia, potential candidates. He's been a vocal
stifle one of their most promising presi- Florida, and New York. ·
opponent ofPresident Bush on the tax cut
dential possibilities. Lieberman made
"Senat~r Lieberman came out of the· and the environment, while supporting
many friends and impressed !tis fellow 2000 campaign with a deep sense of grat- the president's broad goals on edutation
Democrats with !tis campaign skills and itude for the dpportunity he had and his and gi:&gt;vernnient aid for religious charities;
personality during the campaign, they say. new role as a national party leader and he
He has a lrigh-profile post as chairman
is committed to helping those who help&lt;:d of the Senate's Governmental Affair•
"Lieberman clearly is interested in
ning;• said Howard Reiter, ~ political sct- !rim and do whatever he can to build up Committee, the Senate's leading investiga.:
entist at the University of Connectiqn. "If the Democratic Party," said spokesman tive panel. It has already looked into sucli
issues as the levels of arsenic in Water and
he isn't, he's giving the best imitation I've Dan Gerstein.
ever seen. But I think he's boxed himself in
Lieberman is adept at crafting positions protecting na.tional forests.
as far as Gore..It will be very awkward for at the center of the political spectrum
"Joe Lieberman has to keep doing what
Lieberman if Gore doc:s run:'
while remaining loyal to core !Yemocratic he's doing ... a~ting like a presidential candi~e. with the reservation that he's going
Some within the party say they wish values, many Democrats say.
It's a long way until the presidential elec- to give way ifAl Gore decides to run," said
Lieberman was free to run on !tis own, but
Lieberman aides. say he has no second tion, and impossible to predict what Gore Ed Marcus, a Connecticut attorney and a
thoughts about lris pl_edge to Gore.
will, do, said Simon Rosenberg. president Lieberman friend. "It's certainly not th¢:
'Joe Lieberman is very loyal and not and founder of the New Democrat Net- · best position to be in, but that's where he
your typical politician;• said Tom Nides, an work, a political action committee.
finds himself."
informal adviser to the Connecticut sena"A lot of people want Senator Lieber(W./1 wter~polilics and pollingforThe.
tor. "He's done what he believes is the man to run;• said Rosenberg. "He's a high- Associated Press.)

"'t

'

-·

-J

'

Quincy Carter sharp leading
Cowboys to..~ 21-6 victory _

Williams
advances at u.s.
Open
, NEW YORK (AP)- Serena Williams, the 199.9 champion, overcame a slow start to
beat Anca Barna 4-6, 6-1, 6-2
ln the first round of the U.S.
Open.
' She joined four other former women's champions Hingis, Lindsay Davenport, '
Monica Seles and Arantxa
Sanchez-Vicario - in the
. 1econd round.
• 1\vo-time
champions
Andre Agassi and Patrick
Rafter advanced on the men's
side, as did defending champ
Marat Salin.
·-N'o. 3 Davenport, playing
0n the 1Oth anniversary of her
U.S. Open debut, beat Andrea
Glass 6-2, 6-3. The No. !reeded Hingis opened play on
Arthu~ Ashe Stadium ~nd
routed two-time NCAA
champion Laura Granville 62, 6-0.
' No. 7 Seles beat Nicole
Pratt 6-1, 6-2. No. 20
Sanchez-Vicario had a much
tougher time, edging Petra
Mandula 6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (5).
American twins Mike and
Bob Bryan lost to former
champions. Mike was beate_n
by Agassi 6-4, 6-1, 6-0. Rafter,
playing in perhaps !tis . final
Grand Slam tournament,
swept Bob Bryan 7-6 (3), 6-3,

'7-5.

NFL offidals

walk-out likely
DALLAS (AP) - The first ·
round of negotiations to avert
the use of replacement officials for at least the last week
of NFL exhibitions ended
with the league . saying no
progress bad been made.
Replacement
officials
already are signed and could
begin working exhibition
~m~s as early as Thursday.

litansr Rolle
threatens to
leave camp
· NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
-All-Pro cornerback Samari
RoUe threatened to leave the
Tennessee Titans' training
camp in a contract dispute.
' Rolle, who has led the team
in interceptions the past two
seasons, reported to training
•amp last month without a
,
long-term contract.
, He practiced Monday, but
planned to talk with agent
Lamont Smith about his next
¥ep, which could be leaving
Nashville before Tuesday's
practice if significant progress
~n't made in nego~a~ons.

I

•••••

, Not seeing your team's
iesula in The Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to send
game reports to us by fax at
9?2-~15_7 or by e-mail at
sports@mydailysentinel . com~

to his 5-of-17, 27-yard game against New
Orleans on Aug. 19, and it gave the Cowboys
their first win of the preseason after three
losses.
The Cowboys snapped their nin e-game
preseason losing streak. Dallas had dropped 17
of 18 preseason games.
"We really needed a win," said coach Dave
Campo, who heaped more praise and pressure on his young quarterback .
"I think Quincy Carter made some things
happen out there, and whether he can keep

Please see Carter, AI

TAKE THIS - Raiders quarterback Bobby Hoying, center, hands
off the ball during a pre-season game against Dallas Monday. (AP)

Lady Eagles soaring again Kitna
Seniors key to
named
Eastern v-ball
suaess
starter
BY DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

GALLIPOLIS - One
could come back to worse
situations.
Fresh off leading the
Lady Eagles to a 23-2 softball record and a berth in
the stat~ tournament, Pam
Douthitt returns to coaching volleyball after a nineyear hiatus to find that the
Eastern volleyball program
is still strong.
·
Despite losing the last
year's Tri-Valley Conference player of the year and
the District 13 MVP (as
well as five other seniors)
to graduation, Douthitt
finds herself with nine
seniors and seven
year as the Lady Eagles ·
look to make the run for
the TVC tide.
"This is my first year
back so I'm a little bit
excited about it," said
Douthitt.
Having the extensive
depth is riot the complete
blessing it would seem to
be, after all, only six players
can man the court at any
given time.
"Once they get used to
the
rotation,"
said
Douthitt. "I think that

Pluse-hstem,A7

, HERE IT IS -Eastern's Janet Calaway sets a ball at the net in Monday's volleyball match
with Ohio valley Christian. Eastern topped the Defenders two games to one. (Dan Polcyn)

PREP GOLF

.Southern third
BY ScoTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

GLOUSTER - Southern placed third in the season opener belrind winning
Trimble and second place
-Morgan during high school
golf action in the Trimble
Invitational at Forest Hills
Golf Club.
Match Medalists were led
by Noah Barrett who shot a
day-high 65 ahead of Jordan
Huck of Morgan, Matt
Hamilton of Miller, and Jeremy Faires and Brad Gilders
·ofTrimble.

Trimble shot a matchwinning 315 on the day,
Morgan 326, Southern 337,
Miller 372, Trimble B 375
and Nelsonville-York 421.
Ty Hill led Southern with a ·
77, Jordan Hill shot a 79,
Curt Crouch an 86 and 90plus efforts fiom Adam Ball,
CFaig Randolph, and Curtis
Neigler.
Again at Forest Hills,
Trimble claimed the first
Hocking Division match in
the Tri-Valley Conference

Please -

Golf, AI

Falcons.top Meigs
BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

MASON,
W.Va
Wahama defeated Meigs in a
dual golf match Monday
afternoon played on the
front nine at the Riverside
Golf Course. Wahama. had a
168 while the Marauders
had a 176.
. Four players tied for match
medalist . honors, Jeremy
Banks, Josh Napper of Meigs
and Ian Smith and Ryan
Roush of Wahama all had

4 I 's.
Other Wahama scores were
Nathan Fowler . and Alan
Barnitz with 43's , Brya n
Cromley added a 48 and
Shawn Fowler added a 49.
The other Meigs scores
were Josh Napper and Ben
Bookman .with 47's .
Meigs will get back into
TVC play on Tuesday when
they play at The Elm . The
match will be hosted by
Alexander.

CINCINNATI (AP) Jon Kitna got the quarterback
job that no one keeps for
long.
The Cincinnati · Bengals
picked Kitna as their starter
Monday, culminating a threeway competition tnat produced little in three preseason
games. Coach Dick LeBeau
chose Kitna over Scott
Mitchell, who had nearly
identical statistics.
"In my opinion, you could
have flipped a coin," said Akili
Smith, knocked out of the
competition by a sore shoulder.
The better question is how
long Kitna keeps the job.
He becomes the foutth
_guarterback !Q..~rLU~QD.._ _:,._
in the last four years. In each
of those seasons, the Bengals
switched quarterbacks to try
to prop . up a struggling
offense.
Jeff Blake gave way to
Boomer Esiason in 1997. Neil
O'Donnell yielded to Blake
the next year. Blake tem-porarily lost his job to Smith
in 1999. Smith started the first
10 games last year before
being replaced by Mitchell.
· Most likely, all three of
them will play at some point
this season.
"We're not going to start a

Please see Kltna, AI

DOTICE TO COHTRHCTORS!
Meigs County has been awarded funding for the
repair of owner occupied homes.
.

.

These Home Repairs will consist of the repair of
only one or two items that are of immediate need
to maintain the unit.
The Meigs Grants Office, on behalf of the
homeowner,
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
Office, 117 East Memorial Drive, Pomeroy Ohio.

will

Contractor's are required to provide ref~rences
of previous home repair, proof of ·liability
i.n surance and proof of workman's comp., if
applicable.
For further information .call, · Jeon 'Trussell,
Grants Administrator, at 740-992-7908.

�Tuesday,

Aug. 28, 2001
26,

rueaday, December

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Lifestyle Furniture, 856
Third Avenue , Galhpolls, Wanted To Do I Will come
OH 9 30-5 00 No Phone lqo aYI?tur hope:naa~cagovee ~
_c_al_ls_ _ _-.,.--.,.- u n"~rf 1
r roh~
-=wo .,.. u compamona 1p
Secretary pos111on available 20 years e,.;penence Days
Established busmess office mghts and will stay up to 4
Send resume to ·Job Ae 24hr days E,.;cellent Reier
sume", PO BoK 359, Gal· ences
Call
Carolyn
.:''po_hs-'-O_H_4_56_3_1_ _ _ _ ~19_3...;7)_39_3-_
16_7_8_ _ _ _
Will power wash houses,
Overbrook Center Now ac- !tailors, anything
Can
cepllng applications for a (740)441-4238 or (740)446rull t1me 11-7 LPN Appl•ca· 015 1 ask for Aon 11 f'IO
11ons ma~ be piCked up at answer, leave message
333 Page Stree 1 M1ddl e- ---'-------':.....port Oh or contact Kr1 st1e Will PfOvlde day-care in my
Madden for more 1n!orma- home
Monday Friday
lion E 0 E
(740)949·2169

729

Ino

I

L,---TO-Oi8iiUYiio.-•',..

Colonial Drive, Bidwell
Ohio or call (74ll)446·5001
and ask for Eula or Mame

'

I

Brand new home great
place to raiSe alamUy or rehre, 2 acres, mil, all level,
mce pond, 3 bedroom at!ached garage near new Industnal park, mmutes to
Call
h0sp 1181 s84 000
174ll)448·2801

For safe by owl1er N1ce b1·
level home on 1 acre near
Chester Three bedroom,
two baths one car garage,
family room w•th llreplace,
sun room New central heat1ng &amp; ale system One m1nute off Route 7, but sttli pnvaJe 1740)98S-3961
Land Contract- Pomeroy, 3
bedroom. 100% remodeled
$2000 down $350 month,
1740)698·6783

I

rol.oAN

Newly construcled, single
stqry 1600 sq foot home
10 monutes from Holzer
Hospnal 20 m1nu1es from
Pleasanl Valley Hosprlal off
SR 160 on a private 1·112
acre 1o1 3 bedroom, 2·112
baths bog kilchen w/oak
cabinets, DR LA w/geSiog
fireplace, central a~r laundry
roomgarage
froot porch
&amp; 2·112
car
Qual tty
construCIIOn aU the way lmme-

transportation
hai'!Cing the lives qt-our se- PROBLEMS
"-=---~~S&amp;10
~onv~~-~-&amp; references prefer Racine nlora, PI•••• spply at 380

~-~-~:nt llo, are able- to beT~Ii~o-have-reUabte

&amp;

~OM&amp;'! l~.,e._..~-o.".~.RENr--·1r'"'--~-FOR.1UfiMI'Nili·RENr--_.1 r
6

Mo::

New ~4 W•de, 3 Bedroom

Middleport, 3 bedroom
Only $19,850 Free Delivery $375 per month plus depos·
&amp; Set Up 1.888-928-2426
11 rent Includes water sew
er &amp; trash. (740)992·0175
New 14lC70 3 brl2bth only - - - -- - - - $975 down and $198 78 per 2 bedroom home close to
month
Call
Cheryl town basement A1ver v1ew,
1740)38S-4367
$4251 monlh, 3 bedroom In
town 1-112 baths Good 1oNew 14
K70· 3and
Br/2bth
$975
down
S189only
76 cal'"" ' $5001 m-th
.... , Refer·
ences and depoSit reqUired
monthly
Call Nikkt (740}446 3644
;..17_4ll.clc;38.;.S:...436..:..:.;.7_ _ _ _ _c_:::__c:..:.::c..._ _ _ _
New 2002 Double Wide 3br 2 bedroom,
1 bath
II
A
1
F
house/apartment,
Mulberry
2ba A
ppt ances ree Ave accepllng HUO call
Delivery &amp; Setup Only John Harmon day or eveH$32ome900s ofonplyrocattoF"'lellatwle~oil nongs, (74ll)992·1610
"
Free1888565-0187
2 br cottaga \19')' Pr1va te,
..:.::.:.__.:.::.·,::.:::..:.:..:_.-.,.-New 2002 Fleetwood songle $30000 a mon + dep and
w1de0nly$149month,only _re-:-f:-304-.,.6_7_5-68_7:-6-::--al Fleelwood Homes of cProctoNIIIe Toll Free 1· 2 Br housa In Pomeroy,
$260 mo, $50 deposil,
888 _56S·Ol 87
musl have first moolh &amp; deNew bank oepo· 14x70 3 posol(74ll)98!&gt;4256
bedroom 2 balh Pay $499
&amp; move-tn Oakwood· Gallop- 3 bedf\)Om homa Minersvolle
area, nver VIew, references
119 (74lll448 3093
requrred, depoSit required,

SfoR11NG
Gooos

Now Taking Applications- Remtng1on 700 30·06, 4x

35 West 2 Bedroom Townhouse Apartments, Includes
Water
Sewage, Trash,
$350/Mo 740-446-0008

Weaver, $425, Remington
870 20 gauge Wing Master,
$425 Browning A-500 A
Belg1um 12 gauge two barrels $650 (740)367-7693

i

10

j-!

-

~

$~~oca~~~lt$400(74~)~~t~:

roRSALE
~~

7

=~~dagsys-( 40)256-

1530

__..,::._ _ _ _ _-:•
3 Bedroom Houoe In Syracuse, Ohio. $4501 Month
HUD Approved (304)87S·
S332 woekondo only
3br In New Haven large 101
Cenlral Air, Pets allowed,
Noce area Available Sept
1304l982·3587

ed-~redoo~
.
-':

s

1

i

'

I

r

r10

.

r

11

J'

i

r

lr.ll"""-~~--...., nessee, but he doesn't know how long he
10

will

HOME

&amp;M

Lou1s Bryant announced a comeb~ck bid
earher thts month, but th e team smd he

GIANTS

COLLEGE FOOTBALL POLLS

nence- Painting, 't'lnyl sld·
mg, carpentry doors w1n·

Georgia Tech unceremoniously knocked from Top 10
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

dows. baths mobile home
Georgta Tech won its openrepatr and more For lree
estimatecaiiChel 740·992· er,
but
not
tmpreSSively
63
_ _2_3 _ _ _ _ ___ enough to hold 1tsTop 10 spot
llvlngs tons Basement Wa· tnTheAssoctated Press poD.
lor Proofing, all basemen!
repairs done, free esllIn the only change from t te

WR.I N\..JU..I

REf'RJGERA.TION

son Top 2 5 on Monday desptte
a 13~7 wm over Syracuse the

A85 id 1181
1 day before
1985 Pro CraH 17 1/2 toot wmng,ennew or
servcommercta
1c 9 or re8 ass boat WI lh 1988 J o hn pars
1 Ma star Ltcensad e1ec0 rego h S tate, II th ln th e
3000
1
$
preseason. lS the new No. 10

S&amp;lrvawoluYmeearD~scouo~~to:~~~i (~;o~ffg6H1~;gme,

ber, when he was InJUred m a ga'!J~ St

Frustrattng IS not the word;' sa1d GarAll types of masonry brick,
block &amp; Slone 20 yrs expe- dener, who had 54 tackles m I 0 games
needed to pass a phystcal b efore bemg
nence,
free
estimate
last season. "I don't look good weanng a
allowed to play.
1304)773·9550
mmtsktrt and c heerlea dmg from the stdeEAST RUTHERFORD, NJ (AP) BASEMENT
line, and l don't thmk my behmd can take
WATERPROOFING
Gtants cornerback Jason Sehorn had hts
Unconditional hfehme guarantee Local references fur - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - nlshed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (74ll) 446
0870,
1·800-287·0576
•
Rogers Waterproofing

Ir

BoATS
OIURS
-FUR SALE
.

Bryant hasn't played smce last Septem-

p m. Sunday to

announce the1r final 53-man rosters
Tuggle has not reached a deciSion by
then, the club apparently wtll release h1m.

11

custom Buoll3 wheel motor· mates lifelime guaranlee preseason rankmgs the Yellow
cycle liberglassbody vw 14 yrs on JOb experoence J k
,: llr.
N' lOt N
0
Engone (304167 s. 2203
1304)895 3887
ac elSie trom O
o.
E" ·~-~ .. I 111 m the AP's first regular-sea-

i

but a unantmous one."

If

be able to play before his back starts

l.t.-oiiMPROiiii.iiili\'EMI!Nn;iiOiiiiii-.·p1 hurtmg agam

::le::.av:.:•:..:m:.:e:.:ss::a~ge~---- C&amp;C General Home Matnte1996 Yamaha Banshee 350
4 wheeler new ures well
ed Ask
$3000
Camaonll~o~)446
~~
4
1
.:.c::.1_ c_" - - ' - - - - 2001
Harley o av 1dson
Sponsler 683 Hugger lorward controls. 81 0 mtles
askong $8000 1740)742·
4506

roster at 66.
Teams have unt1l 4

the season opener Sept 9 agatnst Ten-

'' tn 11 1 s

~~~~~~g~r6i~~~':

1

h

S

da

]
pace

h

k N b

k

Caro ma on
atur y
mght to stay at No. 3; Nebras-

vote t IS wee '
e ras a
and Texas each lost a first-

ka

held the No. 4 spot w 1th a
21-7 win overTCU on Satur-

place
vote ,· and
Oregon
recetved 1ts first vote for No. 1

day.
Texas was fifth, foUowed by

After Georgta Tech, tt's No
12 Mtchtgan, No. 13 Kansas

Flonda- State, Oregon, ffen-

State, No. 14 LSU, No. IS

nessee, Vtrgtma Tech and OreSt3 t
gon
e
Flonda, wh1ch opens at
home agamst Marshall, had 21

Washmgton, No 16 Northwestern, No. 17 UCLA, No.

r.
LlfSt-p Iace

Slppl· S tate.
S outh C aro1Ina IS N o

Nort

potnts
wnters

votes an d
lrOm t h e 72

1 , 723

r.

18 Notre Dame, No
19
Clemson and No 20 MtSS1S21 '

sports
and broadcasters on followed

and No. 22 Wisc&lt;lnstn at No 7
Oregon
APTop 2S Polio
W-L
G-O
0-0
1·0
1·0
0·0
00
0-0
o-o
0-0
oo
1o

Plo Pva
1,723
1
1 710
2
1,610
3
1,472
4
1 467
s
1.4S2
6
1 367
7
1 347
a
1 164
9
t 024
11
945 10
0-0
926 13
12
0 o 914
0-0 780 14

f. Florida (21)
2 Moamo133)
3 Oklahoma 110)
4 NebraSI&lt;a(3)
s Texas (4)
6 Flonda Sf
7 Oregon (1)
8 Tennessee
9 Virginia Tech
10 n - - St
-'""""' Tech
11 Georgia
12
Michigan
13 Kansas sr

I
16
0·0 660 16
~~~~~-~t-~~~~~F~~~~~~~~====~~~~~~~~~~~:~~===~~:~:-~~!~~~=~=~~:~~~~~~~~~~f~~~~;;~==~-~~;~1
Flonda remamed a sohd No
Miian1i, at Penn State on Sat- Colorado
17
o o 641
17

1

I

FALCONS

.:.30:..4_·8.;.7..:5..:·6..:89.;.7~----,----::----c' i~~~~~~;:::

8

r

after recovermg from a broken nght col-

sore nght knee flushed to reduce swellm g
on Monday, and should be able to play 1n
thetr season opener at Denver on Sept

10
larbone
FLOWERY BRANCH , Ga (AP) "We're snll on track wah Jason," coach
· 1 he Browns' second-year w1de recetvJesste Tuggle ts pondenng whether to
jm1 Fasse l sa1d "We expect hm1 to begm
er had contact for the firstfilme thiS sumretire or play for a team oth er than the
runmng early next week , and we're hopemer durmg the afternoon practtce MonAtlanta Falcons, Wtth whom he has spent
32 fool Stern wheel Boat 7
ful that he wtll have enough practtce t1me
foot stern wheel V/W en day l nstead of runmng ummpeded pass hts enttre 14-year career.
g1ne custom Naugahyde tn routes through the secondary, Northcutt
to play the openmg game m Denver"
But hts career wtth the team ts over
tenor convertib le top lull
Sehorn had reconstru ct iVe surgery on
cover and 35 foot Tandem dtdn't have it so easy as Cleveland's defenOn Sunday, coach Dan Reeves told
!ratter E)(cel\enl cond1tton SIVe backs bumped and JOstled hm1 nearhiS nght knee m 1998 after he was
Tuggle, the N FL's leadmg acttve tackler,
$15,000 or trade lof motor
tnjured returnmg the opemng k1 ckoff m
ly every ttme h e touched the ball
hOme (7 40)245 5787
that the Falcons want htm to rettre so
a preseason game agamst the J e ts at Gtants
Northcutt broke his collarbone m June.
they won't be forced to release h1m .
S
tadmm He missed th e enttre 1998 seaWh1le viSltmg a friend's house m Dayton,
CAMPFJIS&amp;
"jess1e
understands
where
we're
conlMmoR HoME&gt;
son Hts 1999 season ended when he
he tned to keep a 6-year-old boy from
mg from," Reeves sa td Monday " He
broke hts left leg agamst the Jets
hming hiS h ead on a large rock m a creek.
1971 Travel Male Camper
wants to end his career as a Falcon, and
Dunng
th
e
attempt,
Northcutt
shpped
17ft Self Conra1ned sleeps
we're gomg to try to honor that as best
6 A/C, Great Shape and Jammed hts shoulder.
$1300 Neg (304)576 27S3
we can and try to work out the details "
Call alter Spm
SANTA CLARA, Cahf (AP) The
The 36-year-old mtddle hnebacker was
1997 Mallard 28ft camper,
San
FranciSco
49ers
released
one-ttme
not mterested m speculatmg on hts future
sell contamed with ale,
when
contacted at home He cleaned out startmg defenstve hneman Jumor Bryant
DAVIE
,
Fla.
(AP)
Daryl
Gardener's
$9000 1740)985·3413
99 model camper, Sprinter, lower back ts still a source of concern for h1s locker and had hts name plate on Monday after he fa tled yet another
36' long Pull out rooms air, th e (v\iamt Dolphms
phySical m an attempt to return from a
removed from hts cubtcle on Sunday
stereo queen mat1resses 2
R eeves, who r e fused to say what senous neck InJUry.
Garaener dtd not play Saturday agamst
bedrooms,
bath
tub,
1740)245·S53S
"It's not fun t6 do thiS," coach Steve
options
he gave Tuggle, mdtcated the
Green Bay becau se of back spasms. He
Open all aluminum trailer for m1ssed prac ttce Monday and probably hnebacker has a week to reach a deciSion. Manucc1 slid. "But tt was everybody's
sale Aluma LTD, 18 It
v1ew that he shouldn 't play a n y more
long, GVWR 7,000 lbs won't play in Mtamt's preseason finale The F alcons would prefer he dende
electric brakes, tandem Fnday mght agamst Mmnesota, e1ther
Tuesday the d eadhne for NFL teams football becau se of the status of hiS back
axles, 1500 m1les , I year
to
trun
thetr
rosters to 65 players. Atlanta and hts neck You take all of that mto
The 6-foot-6, 310-pound defenstve
old, $3100 l74ll)949·2217
tackle ts opttmtstlc about returnmg for released 10 players Monday, leavmg the cons1derat10n It was a dtf!icult dectsiOn,

1
•

1997 Honda utttity 4·wheel·
er. $3000 00 060 "ali '"'
" ~
675-3745 alter 5 pm or

1

c:;-·ccc·.;;;:~:-~:::c

MoroRCYU.ES

1988 Kawasaki Bayou 220,
runs &amp; looks great $1 100
080 (740)387.a239 Leave
message If nc answer

1

Clean 2br Ape•ment Ref- Big $croon TV Tako on
57 acre farm 7 bedroom
erencos, and deposit No omall monthly paymontl
and 3 bedroom houo81,
Pets (304)875 5162
Good Credit Required
hors ba 321164 h
_ __;_.:..__ _ _ _ _ Phonel-800·Tl 8_1857
• m,
s op, go·
For Lease One bedroom,
rage, hay field, paslure,
unfurnoshod, second floor Independent Hort&gt;allfo Dis·
woods, stocked pond, good
apenment at corner of Sec 1ribu1or Coli For Product Or
hunling Sell houses togeth·
ond and 'Pine /IJC $300 Opport~nltv (74ll)44f-1982
er or separale Betwaen
per month, waler InCluded
Security and key deposit
MerceNIIIe and Palriot
3489 Hannan Trace Road
R f
I ed N0 Chest Freezer $100 00
Henry Hershberger
New 2 bedroom duplex e arences requ r
Ftefrldg /freezer
sso 00
448
2
~~~r:ilr,;,...;.:~,;.::;;;;..._ _, Harrisonville area. ail alec: pets (74ll) -44 S
etec range w1 oven $50 oo
~
1riC energy effoclen1, no Tara Townhouse Apart- heavydulylg capecllyefec
ANDBlliLDINGS 1 smoking nc pets, $375 per menlo, Very Spacious 2 washer $5000, heavy duty
.,----~---,
--month
plus
Ulilltles Bedrooms 2 Aoors, CA 1 lg capacity elec dryer
-SIZZUN·
Building In Recine. 301C80, (740)742·3033
112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, $SO 00 caii304-67S·8795
Hot summer deals
block &amp; brick, was church Pilot Program Renters Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
-FREE·
central air &amp; heat, oul of Needed 304-73ti·729S
flo Start $385/Mo No Poll, Firewood for sale $180
Heat pump or central air flOOd plain, great location
•
Lease Plus Security Deposit toad ~740}441 -9476
with lhe purchase of &amp;elect StAle 124 &amp; Tyree Blvd .
MOIIIUl HOM&amp;'! Required, Days 740·446·
In slock models
$72,000 (740)949·2217
FOR RfNr
3481 Evenings 740-387· Fumilure, clothing, toys, pic·
AI roll tlllllldvtrllolng
·WHERE·
- - - - - - - - - ..,_ _otiiiiiiii;.;.;_ _. 0502, 740-446.()101
tables, freezer, rocker,
.:.="'-..:...cc.:...:c.:.....:.__ nlc
1118nal nman t caner,
t bik88
lnthltnewapaperlt
ColesMoblleHomes 1s 266 Office building in Minerse
tv' heaters lolI of Ml sc
subject lo lhe Feder11
US 50 East, Athens, ville, 600 sq It ale, cov 14x70 mobile home w/ 24 ft
Fair Houolng Act of ffl6tl on
expando, nice yilrd need Twon RoverTowers now ac- (304)S76-24ll0
45701
which m•ketlllliegll to
-PHONE
$~~:r~~1~-8~~~n6g6 tan, ret , $325 00 a mon w/a
cepting
Grubb's Plano- Tun!~ &amp;
ldvtrtl .. "•ny
(740)592 1972 •
small dep 304-675·3207
applications for 1 SA
prt~ferwu:e, llmltltlon or
•
HUD subsidized apl tor Repairs Problema? eed
dltcrlmlnatlon baHCI on
~· &amp;
2 SR. CIA, quiet setting elderly and disabled EOH Tuned? Call The Plano Or
r.ce,color,retlglon,ux
16 Wide Only $19500 Per
LUI.,
Call
for
Appointment,
(304)875-6679
740-446-4525
famUiof olotuo Of nolionol Month, 6 99% Frxed lnlerest ACREAGE
1740)992-2167
~
JET
origin, or 1ny intention 10 Rate With Air And Un
AERATION MOTORS
mike any eucH
derpinmng 1-868·928·3428 100 acrea ONLY $49,000 3 BR, CIA, all electnc. nice,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
call
lor
appointment,
Stock Call Ron Evans, 1 _
preftren~.llmltltlon or 1971 3br Trailer on 1/4 or 273 acree ONLY (740)992·2167
~=~=~=::~~t ·~537·9S28
dlecrlmlnttlon"
acre In New Haven Must $138,00 Recreation proper·
~
QVV"
Sell
Askmg
$22,500 ty In KY and WV Great tor All electric, S300/mo + desoild heayy , . . - - - - - - - - Thlt MWIPIJ* will not
(304)882-8250
the Outdoor Lover! Also 5 posit no pets (740)367·
Westinghouse Large oak table with six
knowlnglyacclpl
::.:=::..=..:.;.____ acrelo 6 acrelracls avaola· 0611
elec slova $7500 caii304-' CI18ira Large satellite dish
adv_.lllmtnta for real
1981 t4x56 Oakwood Mo- ble 1n Pike and Jackson Co
Ph
(740)245 5211
•tat• which ltln
bile Home, Good Conclltion accessible to 40 acre to 200 Beaut•ful AI~Jer VIBw Ideal 882 "2281
one
"
violation of the law Our
$5500 (304}882-3893
acre or Public hunting For For 1 Or 2 People, Referen·
•
(740)446-Q123
- - - ' - - ' - - - - - - more Info and FREE maps ces Deposit No Pets Fos- Appliances Reconditioned
readere lrt.Mreby
1982 14x70 Fairmont Town contaGt
tar Trailer Park 740-441· Washers, Dryers Ranges MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Informed thlt Ill
house, 2 bedroom, 1 large
Anthony Lind Co., ltd. 0181
'
Aefrigrators, Up To 90 Days
ctwelllnp H\lartiHCIIn
bath with heat pump &amp; ale,
1-IOC)o213-8385
- - - - - - - -- Guaranteed! We Sell New Huge Inventory, Discount
thlt newtpaper are
$7,500, 740· 591·4043 or
WNW a!cland com
Ntee clean, 3 tladroom, In Maytag Appl•ances, French Prices. On Vtnyl Skirting,
country (740)256-6574
City Maytag 740-446-n95 Coors, Windows, Anchora1
IYIIIabl• on an *lUll
740•992 .0938
opportunity b....
1st Time Buyers- Call Oak· Commerctal Lots wf small Two bedroom trailer In Tup- Couch and love seat cream Water Heat~rs. Plumbing &amp;
__ ,. ~
G 11 1
oc1 1 home for sale, 4 lots 262' pers Pla1ns, $275 plus utllit- bachground w/ floral pattem HEiectricap1Parts, FurnaCBI &amp;
wG~ bac ..~..1po 19 t bay long over an acre 1n heart ol 1es and deposit (740)6137- $500 00 Farmhouse style eat umpa Bennetts Mo~~~r.;--~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ovt 1\tru program uy PI Pleasant located al1410 3487
table and cha~rs $150 00 ~~~~~:c~=
r10
HOMEi
local (740)446-3093
LeWIS Sl
pnce neg c~-':"'"-----,1 bolh In brand new cond nett
FOH SALE
26x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· $62 ,000 call 304·727·3318
APAKI'MWITS
304-67S·3805
"---iitiiiiiiiiii--,1 ly $345 00 Per Month between 6 00 to 1f 00 pm
FOR RENT • =-For-'=s"a..:le.;..:.:R:-ec-o-nd-:i-,-tlo_n_ed_ Aabbll cagee, different
,
8 99% FtKed Interest Rate, I dl
C k Est t s 3 . wa-•ers, ""·era and relrig- sizes, (740)368-9123
1300 sq ft house at Letart, 1 888 928-3426
n an rae
ae •
~ttl
"''
remodeled 1 yr ago new
acre to 6 acre estates also 1 and 2 bedroom apart· erators Thompsons Appll·
RESIDENTIAL HOME
plumbong new elec new Abandoned Doublewtde· 27·50 acre or more !arm or mants, tumishad and unlur- ance 3407 Jackson AveOWNERS
furnance 24lC30 garage , tree set-up &amp; detNery Hur- ranch land (740)245·5747
mshed, security deposit re· nue ~304)675-7388
above ground pool 8x2S ry· 1 only (740)448 3093
land lor sale 80 acres on ~~~=d no pels, 740·99~ Hotpofnt washor, STS, Tappan HI Enlclency 90%
treated wood deck call eve- F 1 0
Mason Co "'timbered &amp; - - - - - - - - , - - Whirlpool dryer, $ 75 , GE Gas Furnaces, 011 Fumen_on-:g'-o.,-304_·_89_5_·35_2_6_'_
v~~~ory ays Natl~~~~~~~~j clear cut~ 304·697-5927
1 Bedroom Apartment Re 30~ electric range, like new, cas, 12 Sear Hea.t Pump &amp;
'
1304)736-3409
frlgerator Range, AJC In- $175 GE refngeraiOr wMe, Air Conditioning Syllems
3 Bedroom house on apLooking To Bu~ A New eluded. S289 Plua Oeposi1 &amp; was $175, now $150 20• Free 8 Yaar Warranty BenprolClmatety one acre of land For sale by owner, 3 bed· Home? oont Have Land? Reference HUO Approved gas range, S9S All appllan- nens Heating &amp; Coolmg 1on Boy Scout Camp Road room Schull mobtle home We Doll! Hurry Only 10 Lois (740)441-1 519
ces guaranteed. Skaggs 8 0 0 • 8 7 2 • 5 9 6 7
In Chesrer Utillly room, Very mce llnanc1ng av&amp;Jla- Left. 304-738·7295
::..;:.:..:.-:....:...;....:..__-.,.-.,.--: Appliances, 76 VIne Streel, W'lfiN orvb comlbennett
penial basement, geo heat ble (740)"" 3583
1 bedroom near Holzer /IJC (7'n) ..•~7398
Plenty room for a garden :--'-:-'--....:...:.:.:_c._ _,-: Oh1o River lot, gorgeous.
'
"tV . _ , . .
Aiding lawn mower, price
calll74ll)985-3922
Land·home packages- all 90' by 430' Syracuse 60', economical gas heat, quiet :-:,~-c::-,~-:---=c--:-:-:-:-- $450
ask for Junior
iocatiOO, $279 month lease m\,111-IGn arpet, 202 Clark
7&lt;10)256-1102
areas
Prequahly
by
phone
deep
flat
area
with
large
&amp;
de-It
required
Chapel
Road,
Parler,
OhiO
1
trees on nver, rest above
3 Bedroom on Route 2. (740)446 3583
..,......
F
.
1304)67S 5332
flood plain $30.000 call 1740)446 29S7
roe esllmates 90 ~ays Wator
wolio
drilled
Limited Or No Credit? Govsame as cash , easy !inane- (740)886-7311
4 br ,2 lull ba hvingroom &amp;
(937}390-0380
2 bedroom upsta~rs apart· ing V1sa&amp; Mastercard ac- ::-:-~:--:-~-:--:--:-::-:~
!am•lyroom w/ fireplace, emment Bank Fu1ance Only
ment $275/mo $150 de- cepted Drive-a·hllle save Waterhne Special. ~4 200
new w1ndows, doors , car At Oakwood In Barbours
pos1t, pay your own utilities alot (740)448-7444
or PSI $2, 95 Per 100 1• 200
pet siding roof 304·875· voile WV 304 ' 736·34 09
37-112 Smilher's Avenue 1-877-830·9182
PSI $37 00 Per 100, All
1912 1eave message
Must 1188 1995 Fairmont 1:1~11'""-~---- (740)446·9061
Brass ComprMon Fittings
14K70, 2 Br/2Bth El(celtent
H~
Main Street Fumtture
In Stock
Ranch Slyie Home- for sale cond•t•on
Call Harold
FOR RENT
Gracious living t and 2
(304)675--1422
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.
4 bdrm 3 baths, 2 car ga· (140)38 5•4367
bedroom apartments at VII·
515 Main Street Poinl
ES Jackson, Ohio 1·800·
rage, close to htgh school ' - - ' - - - - - - - Pleuant
537-9528
19 OakWOOd OR Gal\
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed lage Manor and AiverBide
Oh call between 6 00 . N1ce Fleetwood Mob•le Homes From $199/Mo, 4% Apartments in Middleport
New &amp; Used Fumlture
Wheelchair, 2 walkers,
11 oo pm , 1n good cond w Home 2 Bedroom 2 Bath on Down 30 Years at a 5% From 5278 ·$348 Call 740· New 2 P18Ce Uvlngroom walking cane, potty chair,
992
5064
central air &amp; heat $78000 1 Acre ground on At 62 APA For Ushngs 600·319"
Equal Housing Suites, $399 Buy Sell, make best offer (740}448oeduced 304·727 3318
oqeriook1ng rover beiWeen _33_2_3_E_x_l_17_09
_ _ _ _&gt;0ppo=.;.rt~u-nlc..ti•:.;s__c_ _ _ _ Trade
3870
Rancher Now 3 B~room. Leon &amp; Pomt Pleasant PosNice 2 bedroom apartment lri'lll'--::.,~------..., 111"_"":::-".,....,--,
1980 sF 2 baths,~1 acre Sible
Owner
finance Cozy 1-2 bedroom Cottage Wltn garage, Harrlaonvme, •
""""'"""
I"
$35,000 (304)343-4143 or $250. Lincoln Ave Call all electric no smoking &amp; no
Gooos
llutuliNG
flat lot Brickandvlnyl 2car .,1304;..:cl.c458-::._1:.:9:::S2:___ _ _ Homestead
Realty pets S375 per month plus "---ooiiiiiiiiii;,._pl
SuPPI.m
garage House Is in Pliny, (304)675-5540 ask !or Nan- utilities (740)742 3033
~ow--iiiiiiiiiliii--,.1
2 2 m1tes oul Plantation Your choiCe 3 Qr 4 Bed· cy
'
·
Auger Super Blackhawk 44 '
Road at Wind y Hill Develop room 16x80 $247 00 per ·•
2 mag Wllh ••••
- ' - - - - - - - - Nice Newly Ruuecorated
__.., $325 00• Block• brick, 18W8r pipet,
ment Close 10 Toyola month Also, 7 used homes House In country reference bedroom Apart with Kitch- Marlin 22 mag riffle with Wlndowl,llntala. etc Claude
Plant $156 900 (304)586- at cost Gall for pre appro &amp;
deposit
required en , appl iances, AC WID nice ~ scope
$175 00 Winters, Alo Grande, OH
3348 1304)S4S-6067
VII f-688-738-3332
(74())379 2209
Hookup 1304)87S 4302
174())245-5229
Caii740-245-5121

'

~-------·

-1 16ft Corn Elevator 1 8ft
Tall gate Corn Elevator Call
:Bob Henry I304)675·34S6

___

°

-~~-10 :- :

G:t

IF40

EQu.ARMIPMmT

2 bedroom apartment in
Centenary appliances furmshed, ut1llt1es paid except
,
A~~
1
electric.
clean·
$2851 ~---~.._""'_~_ _.
~150 HP 1n1ernahona 11 rae tor
month· call (740)256·1135
with lront end loader Call
aher Spm
:::::::...:!::::--'----- Buy or seH Ah1erine Anh·
(740}379-938 1
Apartment near Porter quea, 1124 East Main on
GEHL round hay baler wd l
124 E PRomulleroyMo,7 40-re
R
_
apartment in Gallipolis Ref~ S
take cattle as trade 304
0 '
Bt'encea required (140)388- 9 9 2 25 28
576-2138 leave message
1100
.:,B:,:E;.::•.,.u"'T"IF-:-U-:-L--'--.:-p:-•R-T::-·
'Wanled lo buy- a Sldedehv·
,.
,. ,.
' ery rake 5' 3pt bush hog
1
MENTS AT BUD 0 ET PRI· l.w-ii
1used metal I~Dr barn
CES AT JACKSON ES· ~,
1740)446 10S2
TATES, 52 Westwood Drive $1 1000 lACK 2 Ton A i r r .i:!~~;.,.;~~::---,
:
from $297 lo $383 W.ik
Conditioner, 2 Ton Coil, 1
Rw &amp;
shop &amp; movies Cali 74ll· Line Set, Installed, $.2,295
GRAIN
448·2568 Equal Housing 51 ,000 Back, 51295 Not
o~n n~·
F
E
~-·
,
~ u "'
~ric~ ;••Onot~99S ~ 1
11100 lbs round bales
Chnsty's Family Living or uo 08
r z..
Slored onsode barn S 16
33140 New Lima Rd ' Rut: If You Oont can Us
each 1740)446 0103
land, Ohio, 740-142-7403 We Both Lotti Mobile
Apertrnonl, home and lraoler Homes Our Speclalily 1Buck a bale sale, square
New Double Wide $195 no pels, 740·992-Bm after rentals Commercl81 store· 740-446-6308 1·800·291·
bales $1 oo olher hayup to
Per Month! 3 Bedroom 2 5pm
fronts available for lease 0
_ 098________
$2 00 round bales S15 00
Bath Free Delivery &amp; Set· 3 bedroom hOuse, 25 Evans Vacancies now
each 304· 675 4669
12.x3 ' pool with cover. $40,
up 1·888·928-3426
Hel Qll._,
~ 1arge 1am 11'i room Clean 1 br unfum apt 17'")992
2217
"'""'
•
Hay &amp; Brlghl Wire Tie
$35000 a mon uti! lnclud·

PAYINO sell- make offer Call
I740)446-4S14 from 8 Spm
BILLS OR LOANS. Loans
'
Available Coil Toll Free 1· M-F, or 1740)448 3248 after
an 745 1049 Good Bad or Spm
No Crodol or Bankruplcy
R II I Route 692 Meigs County
"'eiCOIM.
,.
Fast
e abe 20 acres.' 3 bedrooms. 1
:::~;;_;;;;;;;:;:-l'l2 balh attached gerage, 2
decks central air, red bam
&amp;
pond
11 s 50o 00
;.;,ojjjjjj;,._.l shown by ~ntm;.,l only:
174())698-9655
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!? llll!ll"~:""--:::---,
NoFeaUnlessWeWinl
MOBFORIIE"I_I_~
1-688·582·3345
i:IJlU!,

r

!!:::--~--~--, 2001 Ford F 250 diesel ex·
,.,.
FRUITS &amp;
tended cab long bed, 4•4.
VEG..,,.ABU'S
6 disc C/0 player will sell
1'--ioiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiooorl lor pay off low miles,
bo.
1740)742 •011 or 740·742·
....ackbernes for sat'"', $3 00 3135
c a quart, come to carpenter
follow Carpenter tnn signs, 88
Chevy 4,.;4, alr, lilt,
next farm (740)698-6770
crwse, good worX truck
1-:-------- Asking $4 000 (740)446·
Canntng tom atoes, we p1ck 0744
5 bushel, you PICk, $4 "'a9-'='Fo_r_d -:R-a-ng_e_r-,4x-4-ro-:-ll-:-ba-r
bushel call {740)247-2113, With hghts good ti res &amp;
~1m O'Brien Farms also wheels no ~ust looks good
tla~Je hOt &amp; green peppers
black, 'v-06, s' speed t1lt
cruise,
S3,000
t1rm
I \ B\1 'I 1'1'1 II·'
(740)992·S532
KIll t•SIOI K

r10

1t Slttmg on a bench wnh splmters m 1t"

DOLPHINS

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

• lox
• Thlti&lt;IOIWII~P"I

BEREA, Oh10 (AP) Denms Northcutt finally got back on the practice field

49'ERS

1995 W1ndstar LX dark
blue, loaded 118 000 moles
EC $7SOO Well maonlaoned
(740)446-3467 evemngs

P.-IIO Sa 11 exceltenr conctt 1998 Toyota Tacoma. 4x4,
10n, asking $500 (740}441- Extra cab low m11es AJC,
bn 54
cru1se. cassette and CO
o;"-'"-:--:--:----:-- players, 6~ lift Excellent
JEundy A.tto Sax good con- cond111on
$15 000
noon $400 1740)441 0643 l74ll1367.Q326

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Word s 7 Days • Each ltem Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Mali To· Oh oo Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Ave nue , Gallipolis, OH 45631

POUCIES Ohio Valley Publishing rHerVH the ftght to edit, ,.J-et. or cane.! •ny Ml lit •ny diM Erron must be r.ported on the flrat dlly of
Trtbune-Senllnei·Reglster wlU M retponslble for no mote thin the co11 of the 1~ occuplld by tM trror 1nd only the ftm lnMrtlon We
any kls1 or expense that resulta from the publication or omlsalon ol an advertlser~M~nl CorNCtlon wtll be milCH In the first IVIIIIble edition.
ere etwayl conlldlnUal • Current rtte c1rd 1ppllea • All real e1ttte sdvartlaementa are aub)Kt to the Fedef111 Felr Housing let of 1188
accepts only help wanted .aa meeting EDE etendtrdl wa wtll not knowingly 1ccept tny ldvertltlno In violation or the lew

Ir

3 A.KC Aeg Beagles 1 fe- Expenenced
babysitter
male 2 males Female has wanted In my home IMor 2 youdlaidre a,

r

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

~ELPWANJID

,.I

~!"'"_ _ _ _..;..._,.

Dally In Column 1 00 p m
Monday Friday for Insert on
In Next Days Paper
Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • In clude Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Pho ne Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

PJ._CR&amp;J
__N.US
__

Advocate For Children
&amp;Jcome a Foster Parent
Clll WV Youth Advocate
Program
Phone 1·800·575·6008
or 304-345·6897
--------Now To You Thr1lt Shoppe
9 West St1mson, Athens
740 S92 1842
Ouahty clothmg and household Items Sf 00 bag sale
every Thursday Monday
lhou Saturday 9 00·6 oo

Display Ads

I

199t Chevy Suburban 4WD
66 000 miles. loaded very
good condtllon (740)446
3108

oberman Pmshcer pupes no1 reglstefed Mother/
ather on p1emlses $150
ach (74()1446·9638 days
~ 40 ) 256 -6 390 evenings
~70
MV..lCAL

ta-ooiiiiiiiiiiiliiiitli-,..1

Word Ads

VANS &amp;

4-WDs

INsrRUMENI'S

Offie~ !fo«Jl'~

HOW IQ WRITE

FJO

ks 1740)992·910S

446-3008

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

i&gt;r.c&lt;'S.

F==c.:.:.=:.:...=--

A7

Northcutt returns to Browns pradice

fiberglass bass boat, w/ 150
horse Mercury &amp; tr811er
$15 600 other assortment
ol boats Call Tom at Manne
Sei"VtCes 740-992-6520

fo'OR":'JAl..E

~KC I female Sharpe I 13

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call Today•••

mlnum bass boat w/60
horse Mercury &amp; tra1ler
$10 300 2001 Hydra bass

2000 Toyota Tacoma SA5,
4lC4, loaded, 27 500 m11es
$16,200 304·S76·306S
75 Chevy 112 ton Ptckup
1304)67S 2203

;3243

The Dally Sentinel• Page

NFL CAMP NEWS

FOHSALE

~ ~~asak1

186 Ford 2SO heavy duly
76 000 m1tes, AJC w/tape
...--player no rust good tires w/
~ Dachshunds 2 female topper
~nd 1 male AKC registered Walk 1n camper shell for 3
~II after Spm, (740)446· 3/4 ton truck 304-675-2049

l\egister

Sentinel

I

7:&gt;J BoATS &amp; MOTORS

garage doors 1986 314 ton PICk up, new

WH Suntay glass/ lock $350

In one week With us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

'{[ribune

~uRSALF.

1)16x7 jJQOO Wtutef no quick sale $8 750 hrm
~k $S50 , 13)8x7 •10001 174())256-9161

CaUl&amp; c-ry, OH

To Place

TkUCKS

750 3 seat
new &amp; used cash 11 res new bat1ery good run 1
carry Steel- insulated mng
cond 1t1on
Call er Jet Ski Bought new 1n
98. 174())256-6608
~veral models to choose {740)245·5371
rom (2) used 8•7 1110001
2002 Waco alummum l1sh·
!/Hilocks $ISO each 1999 Dodge Dakota Spon ing boat w/center console
1)16x7
114050/WH/Pl Magnum V-6 auto, a1r, so horse Mercury &amp; trailer
lassl No lock $750, crwse, 28 000 miles For $9800, 2002 Waco 1T alu

pr sale

lillhl&amp;t Cwnly, OH

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

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

r:

BUIWING
Suw!m;

2000

IJ

F'o

AliiOS
FOR SALE

1967 cavalier Z·24 V·6 5
speed Custom paonl co,
runs and droves groa l
$1700 OBO 1740)388·0113

an
culling edge
Read lhe
Classified Ads

•••

1, With M1anu close behmd m
l
N
2 Th
t 1e votmg at
o
e
Gators and Hurncanes start

~

thetr seasons Saturday.

hom a had 10 urst- place votes,
Nebraska had 3, Texas 4 and

Alabama .
th
U A .., da ESPN
In
e
S
10 y/
h
h
fi
coac es po ' t e top ve are
the same as Jts preseason rank-

Oklahoma, the defendmg
nauonal champions, opened

Oregon I.
Flonda p1cked up one first-

mgs: Flonda, Mtamt, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Florida

•
wtth
19BB Ponllac 6000 1os ooo L - - - - - - - - - - - - miles, good shape $1025
Call 174ll)446 3607 ailor - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1Oam

a

41-27

VICtory

urday mght, had 33 first-place
kl
votes and 1 ,710 pomts 0 a-

over

State
Wtsconsm, the only other
Top 25 team m actton over the
weekend, beat VIrgmta 26-17
Top games Jnvolv1ng ranked
teams on Saturday mclude No

1992 Li ncoln Towncar all
powor oploons loalheronle
nor tmmaculate condlllon
(740)985·3595
1993 Li ncoln Town Car

17 UCLA at No. 25 Alabama

1996 Lincoln Towncar mont
condition low m1leage,
$15 000 firm, one owner
(740)992·31 02
· 1998 Ford Contour LX 4
cyhndllr 76,000 miles dark
I green,
4 door NAOA
$7 000 asking
$5 700
(740)446-2624
~ 1998 Grand Cherokee Laredo, 4 x4, excellent con,htlon,
loaded clean pric&amp;cl rea
sonable
Call (740)9922358 alter 4 30 weekdays
anytome weekends
1999 Dodge Slratus Rasp
berry color 4 dr exc cond
new ttres, 60 ooo miles
$12,500 304-576 2987

=~/(~~~~~~.()~~

Air,

"' 86 Bonnieville, SSOO OBO
(740)992-5S32
92 Ford Mustang 50 LX
1301&lt; sunroof
5sp,4 1o
gears
hatchbac'k pw
$3 500 1304)576·2666
94 Buick Skylark aulo wf air
$2900
95 Tracker t owner ,s harp
$2900 304·697·S927
Four Cavaliers !rom $1 995
t to $2 695, 1988 Cherokee
1. $2,595, 1993 Orand AM
II GT VB a uto S2 49S 1994
- 8·10, $3,695 We take
trades COOK MOTORS
(740)446-o103

i

TRUCKS

~UK SAU"

--

~ (1) 1969 GMC 1-1/2 Ton
dump truck, sleei bed sing1e axle 5 speed 305 v 6
..: falr
condltkm. fair tires Ask·
mg $2,000 ~1) 1973 Chevy
I 1-1!2 Ton dump truck alu·
mlnum bed single pie, 5
366 v 6
1
w splintergood t1res
·
~ speed
good conditiOn
1 Asking 52 800 No CDL re
' qui red on either Call
17401446_4s 14 6 •5pm or
(7•9)446 3248 alter 6pm

0-0
0o
0·0
00
1·0
G-O
o-o
0-0

594
568
541
367
257
186
170
13 f

18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

Other~ receiving votes Purdue 129,
Georgia 100, Sou them Cal 72 East Car
olina 61 Pittsburgh 59, Louisville 54, Fresno Sl 35, MIChigan Sl 29 TelCaB A&amp;M 22,
Arkansas 21 llllnots 21, Wash•ngton St
14, BYU 13, UNLV 12, Southern MISS 11
Marshall 10, Penn St 9, Slanford 9,
Aubum 8 Kansas 5 COlorado 2. Iowa St
2, Mlsslssippo 2, W Mochogan 2 Wetl Yfr·
glnte 2, Arizona St 1. Indiana 1 Toledo 1

sparks St"Ing In• WNBA f"InaIs

56 000 m1les leather/ load
ed excellent
conditiOn
17401448 3108
1993 Mazda MX 6 L S V
;a , loaded, autQ ' 83 000 ml
Black, $5000 304 675 3893
1994 Thunderb~rd LX V8
4 6 L aulo 63 K while wllh
ground
ellecls
tmtOO
wmdows dual SlChaust
power everythmg
runs
great e)tcellenr condH•on
low
mileage
$7 600
, oe.:..:.0.::.:..._,_17_4c.;Ol..:36-:7,-·7-'3'-2-'8-:-

u

16 Notre Dame
19 Clemson
20 Mlsslssoppo St
21 South carolina
22 Wlsoonson
23. Ohio St.
24 Colorado St
2s Alabama

I

LOS ANGELES (AP) -

L1sa Leshe had a career-htgh 35

pomts, 16 rebounds and blocked seven shots to lead the Los
Angeles Sparks into the WNBA finals for the first nme Wi th a
93-62 VICtory over the Sacramento Monarchs

FIND
WHAT YOU
NEED IN
The
Daily
Sentinel
CLASSIFIEDS

CALL
.
992-2155

My Personal story
famed S5000 OOJmo
m leBa than 6 moa
-P111d vact10ns (Hawatl2001)
.•HQme with Children•
1·80().221· 7740
www aucessandhfe com

poor onus fat ! Co nS ider your
BEFOR E you r opportumtiesl V1sl
the Gov t start your bustneas
I Grents. Loans Hud Tracers $8001wk
Incorporation Free
IAc:&lt;Ount. Free Credit Card Processin111/
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Mathng Our Sales Brochures!
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The Sparks won the Western Conference title 2-1 and w1U
play the Charlotte Hornets tn the best-of-three champtonshtp
finals that begm Thursday m Charlotte
NEW YORK (AP) -

Alhson Feaster m ade

two late

3-

pmnters, Dawn Staley led h e r team back from a dreadful start
and the Charlotte Stmg advanced to the WNDA Fmals by

GREAT SECOND INCOMEI
FROM HOME
NOT SELLING! NOT MLM
1 BOO-S32 6791 EXT 3299R

defeattng the New York Ltberty 48-44
In the lowest scormg playoff game m league hiStory, the Stmg
won desptte shootmg 19 percent m the first half.
They became the first team tn stx tnes to defeat th e Liberty
on the1r home court m an ehmmatton game and demed New

'-----------&lt;

York tts fourth tnp to the finals m five years
calls reduce payments up
lower Interest
llicene.ed, bonded Call

1 ..... . ..

11Sat1s!act•o
Postage supplies
sen Addressed!!
StaomJ)&lt;&gt;d. Envelope! GICO Dept
Box 1438, Antioch Tn 3701
Starllmmed•atelyt
Gu•~ranole&amp;di

CASHLOANSJ
• Bad Credit OK
•Most Qualify
•Fast SaNice
"Confidential
· easy Payments

Eastem
from Page AS
they'll be alnght"

Continued success also seems
like a posstbility for t he 200 1
season.

Last mght, Eastern opened up
With Wins over Oh10 Valley
Chnsttan and Sou th Gallt a

_

Returmng are semors Janet

They beat OVC 2-1 and th e

Calaway,
Janet
R1denour,
Tiffany Hensley, Whitney Karr,
Tanuny B1sseU, and Kayla

Lady Rebels 2-0 In both
matches, the Lady Eagles won
the dectding matches convmc-

Gtbbs

Sophomore

Kass

WICk also returns.
Rounding out the

Lod-

mgly, burymg the Defenders
15-1 m the rubber match and

varsity

putllng away South Galha 1 S-0
Both WinS were lug hh ghted by

roster are Ntk.ki Phillips, Ashley
Hager,Ttffany Spencer,Amanda
Yeager, Ka11e Robertson, Alyssa
Halter, and Tiffany BtSSell
Douthitt c ttes semor leadershtp

as

one

of her

club's

strong servmg from Calaway,
Lodw1ck, B1ssell and others
Douthitt sees the tn - matc h
ag:unst non - league opponents
as a good

way

to start the sea-

strengths for 2001
" This group of grrls wants to

son.
"We get to play some non-

be successful," she satd, "and

league teams b efore we start

these semors will step forward
and take charge:·
•

gomg;' she satd
The Lady Eagles (2-0)

will

the team on staymg focussed

open TVC play today when
they travel to Alexander They.

and g•vmg all-out efforts every

will play

Douthitt has also addressed

ttme they take the floor

host to Metgs County
nval Southern on Thursday.

�Page A 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2001

Tuesday, Aug. 28, 2001

Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 9

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

.

•

PHILLIP

c. f.

YOUNG'S

tARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addltlona &amp;.
I' Remodeling
~

NowGor• Electrlcol • Plumbing
; Roofing • Qutttro

VInyl Siding a Pelntlng
~ Petlo 1nd Porch Decka

i

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

WOLFE HOME
MAl NTENANCE

• New Homes

• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
·Garages
·Additions
• Decks
• Home Repairs

Free Estimates
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs

Free Estimates

740-949-1521

740-992-1101
or992-2753

Owner:
Charlie Wolfe

.and

John

• Replacement

Windows • Room
Additions • Roofing
COMMERCIAl and IEIIOENTIAI
FREE ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Howardl.
Writesel
Roofing • Home
Maintenance·
Gutters· Down
Spout

Olrir1 f\'~W..;ptlfHI",./Io.W&lt;'t• fi ml

BASKET BINGO

Lot No. 12 In the Plat
of Dillsburg, now Lot
No. 290 In Pomeroy,
Ohio, which Is
b o.u n dad . and

from Page AS

Owner
Charles R. Dill
Phone 992-7445
(ell hone 591-9254

7 40-992-7599

an d

Carter

Specialize in new
'onstruction,
~modeling, plumbing,
electrical, homt main1enanee, and repair
porches. &amp; dedu.

· DEPOYSAG
PARTS

b o u n de d
and
described as follows:
A piece of ground fifty
feet wide out of the

side of said Lot No.
(290) two hundred and
ninety at south aida of
tha stone sidewalk on
thenotlhsldeo!Front
Street; thence north
with tho west side of
said Lot No. 290 to the
face of the rocks or
bluff; thence east (50)
filly feet with the
rocks and parallel with
Front Street; thence
south to tho south
side of the atone
sidewalk fifty feet east
of the place ol
beginning; thence
wast with said
sidewalk to the place
of beginning,
The Defendants
named above are
required to answer on

CONS1RUC110N

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

24' X20' SECTIONS
N-12 DOUBlE WAll
PLASTIC
FIRST COME,
· FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$327.00 PER JOINT

(Fabulous baskets from Dre:sder1ll

Thursday August 30 6:00
Pomeroy Elementary School
Sponsored by Employees of
Holzer Meigs Clinic
Information 992-6142.
Nor affiliated or sponsored
b~ !he Longaberge.r Company®

~:;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~lj

11

-------Public Notice

Public Notice

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized
Case- IH Parts
Dealers

74D-817-8313

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
~Excavating

~
Hauling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

BLACKBURN'S

Ownar

~~Aheatl

In Scrvit:e"

Complete Line of Sullivan's Grooming Supplies
Sulfur Coated Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
10% off au Prlefprt Horse and Livestock Equip.

dten S&lt;;rambled left, dodging tacklers on his
touchdown run.
Dimitrius Underwood _ended Oakland's
next drive by sacking Hoying at the 32. ·
Carter then drove the Cowboys 80 yards

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

740•949-2217

/~~ &amp;. f:()l)~
Q
6lh Annual
~~

~

~

EXP02001

1

Golf

eral's Andrew Whited shot a 36, Waterford's Matt Heiner and Miller's Matt
Hamilton a pair of 38's and Eastern's Jon
Owens a 4 I. Southern's Jordan Hill
from Page AS
shot a three-over par 37 good enough
shooting a winning 148 ahead of for thi rd indiv1dual honors.
Waterford who shot 150. M1ller placed
Southern's Ty Hill shot a . 42, Curt
third with 162, Southern fo urth with Cro uch a 48, Adam Ball a 39, Craig
166, Eastern 174, an d Federal Hock ing R ando lph a 4&lt;), and Cu rtis Nei gler a uO.
d1d not qualify.
,
Easte rn sco ring behind Owen was
Noah Barrett was again ma tc h - Ryan Wa chter with a 44, Adam Chev;Jmedali st Wi th ;i 34 over nine hob. Fed- lier with a 43, and Steve Shepherd a 46.

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

CONTRACTORS, INC.
Recine, Ohio 45771

•

740·985·3948
CONCR£Tf/BLOCK/BRICK

• Footers, Walls, Steps •

Flat Work,
Replacements, • Wolks
and Drives • Stencil ·
Crete Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W.V.
wv M0317ll

• $ 3

Nortll

..

TtUS SAY f

.

. The Saitek Pro
Dridge 310 has some
good features . It is
easy to usc in .a confined space, being a
hand-held device that
is 8" x 4.5" ·x 1.5'' . .
To pass time on
buses, trains 'and
planes, it is ideal.
Yet its Introduction
to · Bridge is poorly 1..
'
written;
the suit sym- ·
bois arc small; you
must remember the
auction · as it progresses, seeing only
four calls at a time;
the machine's bidding
and play are bad; and
when you discard,
say, a six, even if it's
the only one in your
hand, you must still
press the appropriate
suit button (but not
when following suit) .
Also, the Saitek assertion that bridge is
"played and enjoyed
by some 50 million
people" is a major
· overbid.
However, ' you can
claim to quicken play;
see all four hands afterwards (though only
two at a time); and
practice your counting and card-play
techniques.

II

T~~ SMA~T P~OP~~

. PU~~tp OUT Of Tt4~ ft\A,~tT

jUST IN Tll-'t.
StMICtSPeA~E

viOULP SAY, IT
""AS "" Ttl~ T1 MI 1'1 ti

Of Tt4e Stt,ewP"!

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
f~or more injormatioiJ, come to our church sUe.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;
10:30 ·Preaching
Sunday E•e. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG BOftOM, OHIO

56

23

56

.'· 'FBRX

Rocky R. Hupp. Agent
Box 189
Middleport, Ohio 45760

J-304-675;7824 .

1-800-250-9077

Residential Commercial New Construction
Sales Senice lnstallalioll
Specialir:iDK in Sheet Melal Ductwork

WHO 'S

T+liS

WELL, SHE. SHE'~
JU5T ... HOW CAN I
PESCRI!IE HER&gt;

MRS .

'I'Ot.iR£ ALWAY~

Gallia, Ma.•nn, a'nd Meigs Counll""
Licensed and ln.&lt;ured
WV 005176

IN&lt;&gt; AI&gt;OUT'

I KNOW!.. . SEE THAT
LAI&gt;Y OVER THERE
WALKING TMT BIG

•

XATM

I

cl~~-ree

no - trump
died quickly. West
·Jed its spade. And
when in with the
heart ace, West
shifted to the club
jack. So the defenders
took one spade, one
heart and four clubs
for two down.
The machine is
$133.95
postpaid
from Baron Barclay
Bridge Supplies. Call
(800) 27 4~2221 to order.

.

I 0 LOOK RIDICULOUS
WIT~ CAT I-I AIR ..

Pomeroy

740-992-5344

HOURS: Man· Frl

Sat9-t

V271

Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

217 E•al Second Street
Pomt~or.

Ohio

· 992-5908

To get a current
weather report,
check the

Sentinel

Wcdnc~d.ay, Au~ .

29. 2001

There'§ an uc.:elknt chance
you wi ll be- developing
stronger bonds in m:lny of
yuur rdationships in the ycu

Ill Dogs, Pll Clm,

ahcarl. People like what they
a.nd they'll want' to spend

Beaas. cam lreld.

~cc

san DIIAks acenee

more time with you.
VIRGO (llco~ . 23-S&lt;p&lt; . 22)

8/15 1 mo

--II isn't likely you'll cxp•ri-

~Snodgrass' Upholstery
"Htlplttl Yc&gt;t1 to Rtcmr Your ln,Wmtnt"

FlEA MARKET
MAPlEWOOD lAIII
Aug. 31. Sept. 1 &amp; 3
Closed Sundllll

suaces available
IISD CBDIPSihiS
PIBDIV Dl lhlde.

REFRESHMENTS
Hat Bags, Pop com,

SLII.l
TUPPBrs Plain

661-6329

leans. cem Brelll.

Soh Drln•s &amp; c.Hee
614~49-2202

Raelne, Ohio

949-2734mo
8/151

Advertise

in this•
space
for
sso per
month
/1

T 1-COUUTY
TRHUSPORT
limestone!
Seniors Discounts
illuttlple Load
Dlscounls

49 Summar '

24 More
profound

mo.

25 Make
50 Entreat I
proclouo
52 Nelahbor
27 Hot aprtng .
of J!i.
32 Suaan
53 "- had Itt"
54 Newaman

Hayward

movill

Koppel

ZT DJ L

XTDUA

FTL I

HLXB
I

HL
KADX

XATM

R B LN . '

H L

RATZZTM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'The bast of times lor me will come
when l'lle reacllad llle promlee&amp;tland of-the· World Serfet.' Barry Banda
·
4\.,..- ,(~

_

- 1)~'{1- {ffi-Q..~-WIIID

II II

I I II

~.....,,...r...,.U_N_,I~:--Drl--ll~,'

I I _ _ _.. .

In the high-tech business
world, collaboration is the process
L-...L..__r._-'-...J..--'..
whereb~ two people create some:~ing which each thinks is--- -0 0 S Wy 0
~-,.~--T~,..5_,1-,I..-6-,I.---1 0 Compe
Ite th e ch uckle quoled
L-L....I.-.L...J-...l.......J
bv lilling ;n the missing l"'"d'
you develop from Slop No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
LETTERS TO

I

I

8

SCitAM·LETS ANSWERS
Dreamy- Omega _- Comma- f igure- ~RRIAGE
The Irate husband pointed to a mule and sa1d 10 hiS ~~le ,
"Relative of yDurs?" "Yes ," replied 1he angry w1fe, by
MARRIAGE!"

'Your
'Birthday

REFRESIMEtiTS

·A~verti~e rour ~u~inen on t~i~ ~a1.e · 1r one
mont~ for a~, low a~ ~~~ ~~one~~~~~~~~
.,

.

follower ,

I

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087 Wlpple Road .

48 HST'I

lmprlaon

KJBLN' ,

·vM

RYSSTJHLN

I

OF DOGI-lAIR IN OUR .POOL!

22 Hairpiece
2J

did North find two
N E. W.C R H
no-trump? That is ab- 1--. _,..:.:....:;:_.;.:.,.:.:......,,........,.,.-1
1
surd. Nprth should _
12
settle for two hearts, a ' 1--L-.I--1-.L......J-..J
contract in which deE NC I E
darer will lose .o ne
-....--.--..--.---1
13
heart, one or two diamonds, and two 1--L-.L....I.-...L.....J

COMPLAIN·

iELL HIM WE DON'T WANT A LOT

Eillv. arua 35 Joined
Ore. time 39 Dsgrlde
twlMedicinal 43 Conntler-IIIHICO:OO
root
1111, 1945 '
19 In pairs . 45 Competent
20 Concurred 47 --do-welt

0

ooc;.•

PEANUTS
• New Tires

10
11
13
18

KJTXUATG

WBTXJM

f-.

• UsacJTirea
• Re-CapTirei

a lolllfy
prize

not to
PUZZUI \::}~ I."'QU ~).
~ I.:J (/" ;:J · GlMI
try for a penalty in
l~lttd ~y CLAY I. POLLAN
one spade doublec!,, .
because that concract
r::;r~~1mb~:;"~cr~s ~h.~
is makable. Y ct where low 10 form four slmplo words.

G.OOFREY

"Trane11 Sales &amp; Senice For

chow

UJDQZTG

DJT

..

CIIIHII Cq
IIICIII 1111111Me
.... CIIQIItiiS
IIIDIV llillllde,

24hrs.

9 One (Scot.)

Today's clue: S equals F

111.31. llllt1 &amp; 3

ldavsJWelk

"Cyan"

8 What COWl 34 Offerld 11 .

Blackened
DOWN

by Luis Campos

MIPLEWIDILIIE

now Ills lull Ume
openings, all shiftS.

57

COiebrtty Cipher c'YJ)tograms ""' crealed from quolallons by laiOOUO people, put and present Each letter in the cipher a~nda lor another. :

FLEAMARIET

CONNIE'S
CHilD CARE

Stow

cargo
Encouraged

CELEBRITY CIPHER

Here is deal number
864,468 of the 10 billion preprogrommed

ELITE MECHANICAL CON'fRACTORS

v-

Luplno
21 Medlterranean

llnlah '
26 Snubnosed
1 Orlhodoga
dontlat'a
28 Horae COlor
deQ.
29 Adult
2 Aalronauta'
mailla
"Ill right"
30 Wy1n 3 ChsrHan
31 Wild
Heaton'a
33 Mike
org.
lntelllglbill 4 Statlall(2 wd1.)
clan'a
36 Swtndill
concsm
37 Ginger5 ParodiMI
=drink) I Llal
· 1 Consplcu31
IQIIln
OUI

INT
Pn•

Good, bad

~""-~~~u

Fleming
Undertllke
aamethlng

46

d..~~

·ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Kitna

~

.

If )I Hard.ThStopA Thmr~

ting Jason Tucker at the Raiders 4 for a 287:00AM • 8;00 PM
yard gain.
· 1-------'
Troy Hambrick, who led Dallas mshers
witl1 43 yards on 9 carries, scored on the
next play.
Cowboys backup quarterback Anthony
Wright also scored on a run, charging off · •New Homes
left tackle for 4 yards in the third quarter to
·Garages
end a drive that fearured a 40"yard pass to
• Complete
Reggie Swinton.
Remodeling
Wright was 4-of-6 pa.~'ing for 75 yards.
Stop &amp; Compare
Backup .Marques Tuiasosopo again looked
'
sharp, going 13-of-19 for 132 yards.
FREE ESTIMATES : 750 East State Street Phone (740)593-667
.
Athens, Oh10
.
With 34 seconds left in the first half, Hoy740-992·1671
'
ing fired a 24-yard pass to Marcus Knight in
the end zone. Knight bounced up celebrating, but officials ruled he lost the ball.

during training camp.
None of the three played well enough
to W\n the job outright, leaving LeBeau
from Page AS
with a tough choice. Kitna was 26-of-51
for 251 yards; Mitchell was 22- of-44 for
' pat lineup," coach Dick leBea u said. 250 yards. Smith made .one start, got
"As in the past, if we think we can help battered and was knocked out of the
our football team in a situation I'm running with a sore shoulder.
" I don't think there's a great deal of
looking at in the game, I will not hesitate. to substitute."
difference in the three," LeBeau said.
LeBeau said his decision to divide the
Impatience with thhe qduarhterback has
been a common t rea t rough the
·
U
h h
·
B · 1 • 10
.h
. .
time equa y among t e t re e durmg
engda sA" years W1t ·ou t a wmmnhg .. traini ng camp probably made it difficult
[.
f h
.recor . cter gomg 4- 12 1ast year wtt
the worst passing game in franchise hiso;,~ny 0h t ~m tole;e1\ ·
,
tory, they looked .. for their latest fix in
.
oa~ ac now e ge . t Is.: 1t wasnt
f;ee agency.
necessanly the greatest s1tuat1on:. b~t 1t
.
the best way to make It fa1r, Kttna
The Be ngal s ma d e a run ar El VIS was
. "
r
. Grbac, dropped out ofthe bidding and sa1d. As a q uarterba~k, you want to take
.settled on the inconsistent, Kitna. He contra 1. W ten you re m competition,
started 12 games for Seattle last seaso n espe,cially a three-way competi~.ion , you
and threw 19 interceptions, the third- dont want to step on any toes.
highest total in the NFL
K1tna had a d1fferent feehng when he
The newcomer had an adva ntage over took the field for practice Monday after
Smith and Mitchel l. He was more f.1 mil- LeBeau chose him as the starter.
·"It's a relief in the sense that we've got
iar with th e offensive system installed by
coordinator Bob Dratkowski , who some direction now - more for the
worked with Kitna in Seattle.
tean1 than for myself," Kitna said.
Plus, the Ben gals had so ured on
Mitchell took it hard, saying he needSmith, their first-round draft pick in ed time to get over the hurt and the dis1999. Mitchell was brought back as the appointment of being the backup again.
No. 3 quarterback, although LeBeau
" I feel I need a day of mourning," he
decided to give all three an equal chance said.

,. born
Hill dweller
tidally
17 lncomct
51 Lagol
(llrWf.)
writ
11 Actreu
55 Fenced

Openinc lead: • s

HERE'S GEORGI

· Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

We"

oNT

x 10'

P/B

KI
AQt 4

,....
.... •• ·'....
·~..
.
"'"
....
••r
•u•
Souih

BARNEY

Cellular

lc----'----&lt;:JotftJcsowm~nelpcl&lt;;ciclec-rlfe•tmrrreo!mtourfffiffures;lilli&lt;ing-2syaros'!or&gt;ain.::m--'l~lo1o"x ao·
this team."
Hours
Hodge jnd then, under heavy pressure, hit- First-team quarterback R.ich Gannon did
not play, and top receivers Jerry Rice and
Tim Brown left after the first quarter.
Despite threatening skies and a light min
that stopped just at game time, a crowd of
88,309 turned out at Azteca stadium for
what L' becoming a near yearly preseason
ritual.
Bobby Hoying, who was 16-of-21 for
136 yards, completed seven straight passes in
the first quarter on a 71-yard drive that
stalled at the Cowboys 9 with a penalty and
_ .a field goaL
·
. ; On the Raiders' next possession, safety
· , George Teague picked off a Hoying's pas.' at
.the 35 and returned it eight yards.
Four plays later, Carter faked a handoff.

•
•

Dealer: South

Meip Ciluaty Fairgrounds

September 15th &amp; 16th

KQ17tl

Vulnerable: Bul.h

1G-1G-10 All Purpose Fortillzer $4.SO/SO#
9,000 Baler Twine S19.501Bale
16,000 Baler Twine $21.50/Bale

2nd~~~; (7~0) 992-3470

Jlill's Self
Storage

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

WHY DRIVE ANYWUEitE ELSE?
Shade River AG Sen-ire

•

lee
'
15 EMIIMI

••

n

Rick

Top • Trim • Removal
Bucket Se1rv1c:e

Fully Insured
Right Away Clearing

14 Glides cin

• Q' J

SOUP TO NUTZ TM

TREE SERVICE

Eric Blackburn

....

Soutll
6A JLOI2.
• QJ

BIR~I&gt;A'l PRESE

• Bucket Truck

A~

J I ' 2.
.. J LO l 2

~~~~~~~1~~~-

• Stump Grinding

Shade River Ag Service, Inc
or belora the 28 day of Attorney lor PlaintiffOct. 2 ,2001 .
·
Petitioner
35537 St. R1 7 N ·• Po111c roy. Ohio 45769
FEDERAL
800 Weal St. Clair
I • Fux 74tl-9R5-385
. NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATION
Cleveland, OH 44113 &amp;.;....;....;...._ _ __, ~--------------,
By: Shapiro &amp; Felty,
~- --- -.
(216)621-1530
L.L.P. (7) 31, (8) 7, 14; 21, 28, :
Lloa M. Michaels, (9) 4
AHorney at Law

.r-------,

•
t

11h, \~

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

••

a sin ..... ?

• Top • Removal • Trim

~"':'
.KL I I 7 ' $
• "u 1'
.. K f

.....

40 RegicNI

41 Actrou
Chsriue

1 Temper
7 R-1
42 hppel1
12 l.egMd8ly 44 Goof
11*0, El- 4$ Allem
13 towa
46 Author

•••1

taLI&lt;in' chlot

Tree Service

ACROSS

~J ~

WhattaYa

JONES'

949·1405
591·5011

Is known ~~~ 848 East described as follows:
Main Street, Pomeroy, beginning on the west

OH 45769, but whose
present place of
residence Is unknown,
will take notice that on
June 14, 2001,
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATION flied Its
Complaint in Case No.
01CV106 In the Court
of Common Pleao of
Meigs County, Larry E.
Spencer,
Mal g s
County Clerk of
Courts, P.O: Box 151,
100 Second Street,
Pomeroy, DH 45769,
seeking lorecloaura
and alleging that the
Defendants Angela L.
Capehart aka Angello
L. Capehart and John
Doe,
Unknown
Spouse, II any, of

KENSINGTON

Free Est/mares

Doe, southwest corner of

Unknown Spouse, II
any, of Angela L.
Capehart aka Angelle
L. Capehart, whose
last place of residence

Siding • New Garages

Delivered Right to Your Door.
·

3-D
Free estlmatea,
Insured

New HOmes • Vinyl

Angela L. Capehart
aka
Angello L.
Capehart have or .
claim to have an
Interest In the real
estate described
below;
EXHIBIT "A"
The following real
estate situated In the
county of Melgs.lr the
state of Ohio and In
the
Village of

known 11 846 East Pomeroy,

Main Street, Pomeroy,
OH 45769, but whoae
preoent place of
realdanca Ia unknown

BUILDERS INC.

Public Notices· in Newspapers.
Your Righi to Know,

ICES
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
ASSOCIATION
vs
ANGELA L.
CAPEHART
aka ANGELIA L.
; CAPEHARTetal.
· LEGAL NOTICE
' Angela L. Capehart
Angelle L.
a:ka
Capehart, whose last
place of rtlldence Is

BISSELL

ALDER

cncc any rroublc- keeping evel)'thing in proper perspective
tod.av. This is became you 'll

kno\~ how

10

maim:.in good

control ovl;'r your thinking.
Vitgo, treat youndf to a
barthday gift. Send for your
A s tro~aph prediction~ for the
year :.head by mailing S2 :.nd
SASE ' to Astrograph. c/o thi~
newspaper P.O. Box 167,

Wickliff&lt;, OH 44092-0 I o7.
Be sure to State your Zodiac
~ign .

LillRA (Sept. 2J-Oct. 23) -

things they may nOt tell others
th&lt;Lt co\lld be significant in

your afT.1in at this time.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-

Dcc . 21)

~- As

they unfold

to~

day, ~ve events a lot of con- .
sidcration and you co uld reap
a golden harvest down the

line. equal co none.

CAI'RICORN (Doc. 22Jan. 19) -· If ym1 're required
to make a decision today between that which feeds your
ego and that whil'h (;ltte·m
yqur w;~llct, don't hesitate to
choose the latter. Remuneration heals wounded pride .

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
_:_ Regardless of what others
may think or advi$e today ,
you'll be indiued to pc your
own penon. After they sec
the succ;e~s of your thinking,
thL·y'U follow suit.
IIRIES (March 21-llpril 19)
-- After Yl'Stcrday·.~ wur note~,
you're going t.o bl' bent on

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No''·
22) -- Be friendly ;md open to
everyone you cucouLHl'r to·
tl;ty .an'+J'copll· will tell you

, GEMINI (May 21-JuJJ&lt; 20)
will serve to nimulate your
strengths, rathe r than push
yott overboard. Set your ~ights
high and go ;~ftcr th e big tish.

CANCER
22)

-~

0'"" 21-July

Once yo u 'devote con siderable thought to somedu ng, don't clo:.k you~t'lf in
i";~ tion.; li zation tod:~y . Your
clciJr th inking \.von't Icc you
down and th\!rc' s nothing to
b(' g;~ined by more pondering.
LEO Quly 2.l-llug. 22) -It's important thu you sufficiendy voice your :~pprec i a­
tion today for the assistance
someone might have rendered
you . In thiS C:1$C word~ will
become m ore imlmrtant than

deeds.
~

~

Challenging developments

you could encou nter tod;~y

have a definite influem·c over
your pocketbook tod ay.
However. you're not apt to
mind rhi~ one bit, because
they might b~ putting the
money iu, not taking it out.

in thl' family being in a good
mood today to open up a discussi'on on resolving a critical,
domestic imlc. Thc timing is
cxccUL·nt.

TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20) ~- Dccause you will not
cease reflection and l·ontemplation before getting into the
maimtrcatn of live action today, you'll be abll' to accomplish most anything you wish .
~·

AQU/\RIUS Qan. 20-Fcb.
19) -- Comp•nions could

-Take advamage of everyone

preservation of your objective~ today. Your brain wiU be
tuned in at all times to pro ~
te.c t, provide and preserve .

.....

�se

The Daily Sentinel
•

Barry Bonds hits No. 56

Ealt·

Atlanta

Sammy Sosa, who did it in the

Philadelphia

Fk&gt;rida
New York
Montreal

It was Bonds' first home run
at Shea Stadium since May
28, 1995.
· "I didn't know about a
drought until someone came
up and t.old me," he said.

Houston
Chk:ago
S!. Louis
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
Pinsburgh

Phl"lll"es 3

L

71
70
61
61

59
60
69

55

75

72
70
58
53
48

Pet.
.546

GB

.539

I
10
IOh
16

.469
.466
.423

70

Central
w L
75 55

w
. Arizona

75
San Francisco 73
72
Los Angeles
65
San Diego
56
COlorado

1

Gary Sheffield hit a threerun homer in the eighth
inning to rally visiting Los
Angeles over Atlanta and deny
Greg Maddux his '18th victory.
Maddux allowed one run
and five hits in seven innings,
leaving with a 2-1 lead. But
Mike Remlinger (3-3) put
two runners on in the eighth,
and Jose Cabrera gave up
Sheffield's 31st homer.
Maddux was attempting to
become the second 18-game
winner in the majors, following Arizona's Curt Schilling.
Terry Adams (1 0-6) gave up
two runs and eight hits in
seven innings.
,

w

GB

58
60
72

Pol
.577
.554
.539
446

.&gt;108

22

82

.369

27

Pet
577
.557
.550

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n

west

Dodgers
4
·

Braves 2

•
TUesda~August18,1001

L
55
58
59
65
73

-y·· -

3
5
17

.500

2h
3\
10

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18 ~/l

Philadelphla (Cock-'ll 2·0) at N.Y.
Mets (Rusch 6-9). 7:10pm.
Montreal (Vazquez 13-1 t) at Atlanta (Mill·
w&lt;Xld 41-5), 7:35 p.m.
Clnclnn•ll CDevls 6-2) Itt Houston

(Miller 13-7), 1:05 p.m.
Florida (Dempster 14-11) at Chicago
Cubs (Tapani !HO), 8:05p.m.
Pittsburgh {McKnight 2-3) at Milwaukee
(Suzuki 3-4), 8:05p.m.
San Diego (lawrence 3-3) at St. Louis
(Kile 13.S), 8:10p.m.
San Francisco (LHemandez 11-12) at
Arizona (Johnson 17-6). 10:05 p.m.
Colorado (Chacon 6·8) at Los Angeles
(Brown 8-4), 10:10 p m.

Wednesday's Games
Montreal (Armas Jr. ~11) at Atlanta
(Giavlne 11-7), 7:05p.m.
Philadelphia (Oaal 12-4) at N.Y. Mats

E811

w
New YorM;

76
71

Boston

Toronto
Battimore
Tampa Bay

64

Cleveland
Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City
Seattle
Oakland
Anaheim
Te)(as

L

Pet.

55

.580
.550
.488
.415
.359

58
67

54 76
47 84
c.ntral
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69 62
65 64
53 76
51 80
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(Chen 6·6), 7:10p.m.
~lorida

(Clement 8-8) al Chicago Cubs

(Bare 8·8), 8:05p.m.
Cincinnati (De11ens 9-10) at Houston

Sunday'a Games
Atlanta 9, los Angeles 2
Houslon 3, Pittsburgh 1 ·
Cincinnati 17, Montreal4
Arizona 4, Philadelphia 3, 10 innings
Colorado 3, Milwaukee 2
Chicago Cubs 6, St. Louis 1
San Diego 10. Flonda o
N.Y. Mets 6, San Francisco 5
Monday'• Games
Los Angetes 4, Atlanta 2
San Francisco 6 ~ N.Y. Mets 5
San Diego 8, Fiolida 3
Philadelphia 3, Arizona 1

(Mussina 12-11 ), 7:05p.m.

American League

Milwaukee 12, PiHsburgh 5

National League

' a rare Cubs' 132nd game in 1999.
Barry Bonds got
pitch to hit, and he didn't miss
it. It seems like he never does.
Bonds hit his major leagueleading 56th home run Mondav, becoming the fastest player to reach the mark, as the
San Francisco Giants beat the
New York Mets 6-5.
"It was a fastball, probably
the only one I got," Bonds
said. "I knew I had it."
Bonds has always had a
good eye, but pitchers fear
him now more than ever. He's
already walked 133 times this
season, and he must continue
to make the most of his
swings if he hopes to break
Mark McGwire's 1998 record
of70 homers.
With the Giants in the thick
of the NL playoff race, Bonds
doesn't. figure to see many
good pitches down the
stretch.
" As long as you win the
game, it doesn't matter,"
Bonds said.
The American League had
the day off.
Bonds also doubled and sin-

a1

(C.Her..,ndez Cl-1), 8:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (J.Anderson iHSJ at Mllwau·
kee (Levrault 5-B), 8:05p.m.
San Diego (Jones 8-15) at St. louis
(Smith 3-2), 8:10p.m.
san Francisco {Rueter 12· 9) at Arizona
(Will I· t ), 10:05 p.m.
Colorado (Jennings 1-Q) at Los Angeles
:13aldwin 2-1), 10:10 p.m.

Meigs County's
50 cents • August29. ~pot

Texas (Bell 4·3) at Minnesota (Milton 12·

5), 8:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Aapp 5· 10) al Kansas Cil)'

Chicago White Sox 3, Tampa Bay 2
Toronto 5, Baltimore 1
Oakland 7. Detroit 6
Minnesota 7, Kansas City 2
Cleveland 4, Seattle 3 ·
Anaheim 7, N.Y. Yankees 6, tO innings
Texas 5, Boston 4
Monday's Games
No ga'mes scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Boston {Cone 8-2) at Cleveland (Burba
H), 7:05 p.m.
Qakland (Mulder 15·7) at Baltimore (Ponsoo S-9), 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Loaiza 9-10) at N.Y. Yankees

Padres 8,
Marlins 3

Petitions yield 500
signatures to date
BY BRIAN J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - 'Peti.t ions opposing
a proposed ban on smoking have
yielded as many as 500 signatures so
far, and a contingent of smokers'

Parkersburg football
coach steps down ·

PITTSBURGH (AP) -Jerome Bettis probably will play less
than a · quarter in the Pittsburgh Steelers' final exhibition game
Thursday·against Buffalo, maybe only a series.
To Bettis, there's no reason to play any longer.
"I feel great," Bettis said. "I haven't felt this good in the presea·son in a long time. I'm ready to do."
That is a significant change from the previous two preseasons,
when Bettis barely played- not by choice, but because he couldn't. He had knee injuries almost as soon as camp opened both
years, and thus saw almost no action until the games counted.
The layoffi apparendy made the six-time 1,000-yard rusher
more ·conscious about his off-season conditioning. So, a.fier signing a $30 million, six-year contract extension, Bettis spent more
time working out - and keeping his weight down - than ever
before.
"Some of the coaches were kidding me and saying I even
looked quick out there," Bettis said of gaining 38 yards on six carries Saturday against Detroit.

.•,-, .. BY TONY M. lEAcH

ious to begin her first year of
teaching inside such a magnificent facility, and she · looks
fotward to working with the
students in her classroom.
"It's a little hectic righi now
and the students are understandably excited," Evans said.
"However, once we get into
the rhythm of things, I'm sure
we'll progress at a rapid pace."
While monitoring the flow
of buses through the school;s
parking lot, Southern Local
Superintendent
James
Lawrence said the students
appeared comfortable with
the transition and no real
problems had presented thelllselves.
"Overall, the transition into
PluH

Teiday's
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per person• Hotels not included.
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Dor.• not ti1clude Capitol Hill, 0.\'nll'!w
Valley tW Lakeu•o,,J. GrmuJ Natimud nr~t

Hampton Cove, Silver Lakes, Oxmoor
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starting at $178 per person

·

' Heart ofAlabama ... 3 days, 2 nights,
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Sontbern Swing .. .3 days,
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Summer Specl!!l doe! not include hotel.i.
Poices "'re per person, ba~d on double occupancy
and pre-selected hotel,, Summ~r Spec:ial incl~es
unl1mited replay at same site. Cart fe e charged for
all rounds. ~bject to availabilicy. Som~ lt~trictions
may appl~ C;rts and tax a1t not included in plice.
Valid May 1~-Septembtr 1~. lOOI.

E:mail . reservations@rtjgolf.com
For a complete state vacation guide tall t.800.ALA8AMA or visit www.tourallbama.org

Lotteries

1 Section - 10 Plllft

Calendar
Classjfieds
ComiCs
EdjtoriijiS

see School, A3
HIJh; 70s
L-: 50s
Details, A2

Sentinel
A2

" We want the people who are
affc;cted by this measure to be aware
of what's about to happen;· Turner
said Tuesday. "Smokers have stood
back and let a lot of things happen. If
we had united and spoken up earlier,
we might have been .able 10 stop
so m e of the things that have happened already.
" We plan on confronting rbe board
with a large gro up of concerned cit-

izens. l have talked to a lot of angry
people. It seems that everyone is up
in arms about this proposal."
The proposed legislation provides
for criminal penalties of S100 to
SSOO for smoking in "enclosed public places," including elevators,
restrooms, lobbies, hallways, retail
stores and restaurants , bars, waiting
rooms at health facilities, and any
Please

see Ban, A3

OHIO

~Splo!JOil!rtsg__ _ __.Ao,~.y.-.utl
p , Dally 3: 3-5·5 Daily 4: 2-5-Q-6
e&gt; 2001 Ohio valley Publishing eo.

Rally in the Valley
this weekend
BY KRIS DoTSON
OVP NEWS STAFF

FIRST DAY EXCITEMENT - Rebecca Evans, fourth grade
teacher at Southern Elementary, prepares her students for the
first,day of class. Evans, who is a first year teacher, said she
is just as excited as th7 students to be i.n such a nice.facility.

GALLIPOLIS -Whether
it's by boat, air or land, there
are plenty of ways to enjoy
this weekend's Rally in the
Valley.
The
thre e-day
event
begins with opening ceremonies at 8- a.m. Friday at
the Gallipolis boat docks'
public access area.
The Delta Queen will be
arriving at the same lime and
will visit the Gallipolis area
until noon. Unfortunately,
no boat tours will be

allowed, but there will plenty
of other activities to enjoy
throughout the weekend.
The weekend celebration
will include performances by
barbershop quartets, Model
As to · view, a band organ
rally, and strolling re-enactors
such as Henry Cushing and
Mark Twain - all in the
Gallipolis City Park.
There also will be plenty
of food to enjoy and Potpourri by the River, which
features crafters and craft!.
Pluse IH

Rally, AJ

Mason experiencing growth spurt
BY MICHELE CARTER ·
OVP NEWS STAFF

· A6-8 Pick 3: 5·7-9; Pick 4: 8-()..1-4
A9 lllld!aye 5: 1-23-2&amp;34-35
A4
J.;0!!&lt;b'llitYJUai!!rl!:ie~s_ _ _____r:Al;!3 W.VA.
.
!W!'e~a!!!twh!Sectr_____~A~2

Bay aniJ ReyuniJ...3 days, 2
nights; Stay at hi stor; r Grand
Hotel, play Magnolia Grove,
and Lakewood .... starting at
$213 per person

.,

opposition to th e measure was
voiced at that time.
The second hearing promises to be
a different matter, according to one
opponent.
Dottie Turner, who owns a realty
firm in Middleport. and Brenda Jeffers, an employee; are circulating the
petitions in area convenience stores,
bars and rest~urants , in an attempt to
drum opposition to th e measure.

South:ern., Meigs students back in .school
RACINE - A large number of yellow school buses traversed area roadways Tuesday
morning as students in the
Southern Local and M eigs
Local school districts headed
back to cl~.
For ·many Southern students, the excitement of the
first day of school was multiplied tenfold by the grand
. opening of Southern Elementary a massive . 80,000
square foot, two~story structure that houses more than 20
·classrooms, a gymnasium,
library, and several science laboratories, for classes K-8.
Rebecca Evans, fourthgrade teacher, said she is anx-

PREP FOOTBALL

Bettis looking strong

rights advocates is expected at a public hearing on the ban next week .
The Meigs County B'oard of
Health wiU conduct its second and
final public hearing Sept. 6 on a measure that would criminalize smoking
in virtually all public places, including restaurants and bars.
The first bearin.g was July 31 , and
according to the health department's
tobacco prevention coordinator, no

FROM STAFF REPORTS
lishment number REST.
POMEROY Ground 410," and labeled, "Sell by
beef sold at Kroger stores in Aug. 19, 01." In addition to
Ohio and elsewhere bas Ohio, the products were sold
been recalled.
in Georgia, Indiana, KenGreen Bay Dressed Beef, tucky, Michigan, Tennessee
Inc., Green Bay, Wis., ~!so and Virginia.
Products sold to wholesale
doing business as American
Food Group, iS voluntarily establishments and institurecalling
approximately tions were also recalled.
530,000 pounds of fresh
"Because of the potential
ground beef products which hazard of foodborne illness, I
may be contaminated with urge c.onsumers who have
purchased these products
E. col.
According to the U.S. not to eat them, and to
Department Agriculture's return them to the place of
Food Safety and Inspection purchase," said a USDA
Service, the products being administrator. "USDA .. is
recalled were produced on informing the public so
Aug. 2 and distributed to consumers who may ~ave
retail establishments, whole- purchased and stored the
sale establishments, and product in their refrigerators
institutions nationwide. ·
or freezers can know to
The 'i'roducts include check."
~!c.l:~-2: E:!!JI!~~::Ll~jb..;;.,_;; t,1 .-l~-t:hn'e and five - peund- tubes--According-----r,-{jSDA
of "Kroger Ground Beef," reports, the problem was disBACK TO SCHOOL - Students file out of their school buses and into the newly constructed Southern Elementary In Racine
" Kroger Ground Chuck," covered through follow-up
Tuesday morning during the first day of the 200'1.02 school year. Tuesday was also the first day back for Meigs Local students.
"Kroger
Ground sampling as a result of a retail
and
(Tony M. Leach photos) .
Round," marked with estab- recall on Aug. 13.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

J I.

www.mydailysenlinel.com

Kroger recalls
ground

Brewers 12,
Pirates 5

int'/m)u) ,~(lrr At~qu,,t

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Oakland (Hudson 14-7) at Battimore

added a solo shot as the visiting Padres roughed up A.J.
Burnett, who pitched a nohitter against them May 12 in
San Diego.
Burnett (9- 1 0) allowed
seven runs on eight hits and
five walks in five innings, losing for the fifth time in six
decisions.

PARKERSBURG, WVa. (AP) - Marshall Burdette, the
football coach at Parkersburg High School who was named
West Virginia High School ·Coach of the Year in 2000, has
resigned.
.
~-Burdette announced his resignation to his players Monday,
but gave no reason, WTAP-TV reported.
Burdette was unavailable for comment Monday night, as was
Wood County Schools Superintendent Daniel Curry. Parkersburg High Principal Bill Niday referred questions to Curry and
the Wood County prosecutor's office; but would not say why
the prosecutor's office would be involved.
Wood County prosecutor Virginia Conley also could not be ·
reached for comment.
Burdette bad guided Parkersburg High School's football
team to a 14-0 season and the Class AAA state championship
in 1999.
"Marshall Burdette's a fine human being and a fine coach
and I'm just as shocked as everybody else is," said Mike Hayden, executive secretary of the Secondary School Activities
Commission.
Burdette 'had been at Parkersburg since 1972 when he began
a5 assistant coach. He became head coach in 1991, inheriting a
program that hadn't reached the state playoffs since 1985.

• Vol. 52, No. 10

Hometown Newspaper

(Towers 8-7). 7:05 p.m.
•
Boston (Fouum 1~) et Cleveland
(S.bathla 13-4), 7:05 p.m.
Toronlo (Halladay 2·1) al N.Y. Yank(HIIchcock 3·2), 7:05p.m.
.·
Chicago White Sox (Glover 3 -1) at Oetrolt
(Redman 2·5), 7:05 p.m.
Seattle (Moyer 15-5) at Tampa Bay
(Srurtze 8·10), 7:15p.m.

(Suppan 7-11), 8:05p.m.

Sundey'a Games

Wednesday

•

,

Crncago WMe Sox (Biddle 5-8) a1 Oet&lt;Uit
(Lima 4·5), 7:05 p.m.
Seaure (Pineiro 3~) at Tampa Bay (P.Wio
son 5-8), 7;15 p.m .
Teas (O.Ivet 10-8) at Minnesota (Reed
3·3), 8:05p.m.
Anaheim (Ortiz 11·7) at Kansas City
(George 1-4), 8:05 p.m.
Weclnesdey'a Gamee
..

gled, and J.T. Snow hit a
tiebreaking, two- run homer
'
in the ninth inning off Rick
White (3-5) as the Giants
Robert Person allowed one
averted a four-game sweep at run in eight innings, and MarShea Stadium.
.
. lon Anderson's single drove in
San Francisco moved with- die
go-ahead
run
for
Richie Sexson homered
in 2 1/2 games of first-place Philadelphia.
twice and drove in five runs to
Person (12-6) gave up five help Rocky Coppinger win
Arizona in the NL West and a
half-game ahead of idle hits, tied a career high with 11 forthe ,first time in nearly two
Chicago in the wild card race. strikeouts and won for the years as Milwaukee beat PittsBonds and . the Giants face eighth time in nine decisions burgh at Miller Park.
Coppinger, who missed all
Randy Johnson in the opener as the host Phillies closed
of a key three-game series within one game of first- place oflast season recovering from
elbow su(gery, allowed three
Tuesday night at Bank One Atlanta in the NL East.
Ballpark.
Jose Mesa finished for his runs and five bits in five
' "J.T. won the game for. us," 34th save in 36 chances. innings for his first victory
Bonds said. "Every game is Before the game, Mesa since Oct. 1, 1999, against
important for us right now."
received a two-game suspen- Cincinnati.
The Pi~ates (48-82) fell 34
Felix Rodriguez (8-1) .got sion for hitting St. Louis' Jim
the win despite giving up a Edmonds with a pitch on games below .500 for the first .
tying homer to Tsuyoshi Aug. 19. Mesa will miss the time since the end of the
Shinjo in the eighth.
next two games . against the 1986 season.
Robb Nen took over after a Mets.
54-minute rain delay and got
Diamondbacks starter Albie
CAN HE KEEP THIS UP?' - San Francisco's Barry Bonds watches his 56th home run of the
ihree outs for his 37th save.
Lopez (3-4) allowed four._:h_:.:it_s:.:__
seasor.1-in-the fifth inning off-New-York- Mets-pitcher-Kevln-Appier Monday;--On-deck-batter Jeff - ar\Chnree runs m s1x innings.
Kent is at rear left.(AP)
off Mets starter Kevin Appier Lopez had won three straight.
to lead off the fifth inning,
Bonds followed with a high
drive to right-center field for
his 550th career home run.
Bonds connected in the
Damian Jackson hit a three- .
Giants' !31st game. The previrun homer, and Phil Nevin
ous quickest to 56 homers was

D·baCkS 1

SPORI 5: Astros beat Reds 6-4, As

AROUND THE DIAMOND

NATIONAL LEAGUE
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Page AlO

MASON, W.Va.- Things are on the
move in this Bend Area town.
Mayor Raymond Curidiff said .. the
addition of five new businesses and other
work through'out town is helping Mason
grow.
Cundiff said constructiol] of the five
businesses, which will be housed in a strip

mall in front ofWal-Mart, is proceeding.
After talking with the contractor, the
businesses plan to open in October, to
offer goods for area citizens' Christmas
shopping. The mayor said the names of
the five new establishments have not
been released yet, but they are under cqntract with the developer.
A gas station is in t~e works for a corner of the Wal-Mart parking lot. Also, a

new Chinese Restaurant is under construction just outside of Mason limits, but
through a mutual agreement between
property owners and the council, the
restaurant will be annexed into the town.
In an effort to make the town's water
system better, crews were working Monday to replace a four-inch water main and
a valve to isolate the water supply for
Please see Mason, A3

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FOR RESERVA7IONS &amp; TEE 7IIIES

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learn .more about the programs and services
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www .holzer.org

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