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SPORTS: Akron bounce Bobcats 31-28 '
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81

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3x112" X 15"150.00 Sq. ft.
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Add beauty &amp; safety to your home
Round, White Aluminum columns

Meigs County's

169900

Hometown Newspaper

Sale Starts today and ends Sunday, September 9, 2001
" Not responsible lor typographical errors.

rl '

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. 70169

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Polyethylene Pipe

6'x8' Treated
4" Dog Ear

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4"x1 0' Flexible. solid,
slotted or perforated.

Fence Panel

$2699
II 1!1.1\ll\.~ .

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Board
approves
teacher
contracts

Corrugated Heavy Duty

Build A Fence!

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6' Two Hole Corner Post 70194 .............. 6.89

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Hl\TI\GTO\ ~EHIE ~

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1·1/2''110'......$2.19
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Buzzard,
Catherine
Grosvenor-Hart,
Susie
Cammarata, Jan Edlridge,
Amy
Northup, Larry
Wilcoxen; classified substitutes: Bob Curry, custodian; Kim Lee, cook;
Aim ee
Pyles,
secretary I aide;
Brian
Smeck, custodian; Julia
Stover, custodian .
Approved by the board
for 2001 - 02 supplemental
positions
were
Tom
Smith,
assistant
high
school football coach;
Ryan Lemely,, high school
student council advisot;
Kyle Wickline, eight grade
boys basketball coach;
new s1,1pplemental positions: Ryan Lemley, cross
country coach; Tanya
Hunter, seventh grade
girls volleyball coach; volunteer football coaches:
Mick Ash, Scott C leland,
Jamie Smith, Kyle Wick"

lliil

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tor your
water heaters
and
replacement .
. parts.

easier than you think with our free deck
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Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sl)orts
Weather

.

-

STYLE 563
Self-Storing
168 14, 1681s.
168 16, t681 7

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Thomas

.:loit center.
Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160 Gallipolis, Ohio

7 40-446.-2002
Mon.-Sat: 8-7 • ·sunday ll-5

M.

lEACH

FROM STAFF REPORTS

SENTINEL. NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - l'bns are
under way for the annual chili
cook-off to be held in conjunction with the Sternwheel
Riverfest Festival on Sept. 27-

SYRACUSE Athletes
throughout Meigs Co unty
recendy participated in the
Area ·s Special Olympic Track
· and Field meet at Alexander
High School. ·
More than .300 athletes
from southeast Ohio attempted to qualifY for th e State
Special Olympic Track a!ld,
Field m eet to be held at Ohio
State University, Columbus.
Athletes participating, their
events and placement in their
division are as follows:
Travis. Barber, 50-meter dash, first
place, shot put, first place; Matthew
Beha, shot put, second place, 100meter dash, first place; Nicole Blumenauer, softball throw, second
place; 'Bill Brewer, 100-meter walk,
firs! place, softball throw, third place;
Gene Bucl&lt;ley, standing long jump,
third place. sollballlhrow, third place;
·Jacob · Cade, 50·meter das.h, third
pillce, si1ot put, third place; Mamie
Cade, standing long jump, sixth
place, shot put, fourth place; Margaret Cade, 100·meler dash, third

.Please see Aru 8, A:S

29.

The contest, set Sept. 29,

.

.

WHEELCHAIR RACE - Jennifer Gray competes in the 30meter motorized wheelchair slalom and wins third place for her
efforts. More than 300 athletes from southeast Ohio were In
attendance at the regional track and field meet for an oppor·
tunlty to qualify for the State .Special Olympic Track and Field
meet to be held at Ohio State University, Columbus. (Submitted photo)

Htp:80s

1 Sections - 11 Pltps

I

..... ....

BY TONY

Details,

A2

Lotteries

AS
OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 1-1·5; Pick 4: 0+9-9

BS

IIIICMje 5: 16-20-21·29-31

A4
A3 W.VA

Bl .3.6 Deily 3:3-1-6 Daly 4: 4-7·7-7
A2

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

will limit teams to a maxithum offour members and all
team members and those
involved in the preparation
an d handling of the chili must
have pruof of a curreilt tubercu losis 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 prepa red
foods are ail owed under
health department rules.
Each team must cook a
minimum of three quarts of
chili, one of which wiU be

judged. More would be
apprec iated for sale of samples
to benefit next year's competitian.
· Coleman-_type stoves, barbecue grills and campfires
with a bottom may be used
for cooking. There are ,a few
electrical hook- ups and
adva nced requests for 'electric
must be made for arrangements to be fu rn ished ..
All iitgredients, except perish able products and ingredients to preserve secret recipes,
must be displayed.
Prizes will be awarded in
two classes, corporate and
in.d ividual, and will be
announced at a later date.
Decorations and signs are
·enco.uraged for the event.
En try fees are $1 0 in
advance and $15 after Sept.
10.
For information or applicattons, contact Belva Workman
at '!92-3'756 during the day, .
or 742-3 111 after ~p.m .

CENSUS

Low: ·sos

Sentinel

I
.

September.
The · association's
65
. members will be permitted
to display items in the building at no cost, and others
will be permitted to display
their items ~ei th er for sale or
BY BRIAN J. REED
to prornote the ir own shops.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - Members Plan is to rent a building on
Main
Street
in
of Meigs Coun ty's Artisans West
Association and others Pomeroy.
Association · members will
who wish to dispby h andhave free rent in the buildmade items for retail sale will . soon have a store of ing. Those who are not
members can rent space in
their ow n.
Meigs County commis- the building for·a price to be ·
·
sione rs, using econo mic determined.
The shop is another step
devdopment funds throu gh
Temporary A«istance to in promoting the potential of
Needy Families, plan to rent the county's craft industry,
a storefront on Pomeroy\ · which follows the 1999 pubof a crafters'
Main Street for those lication
broch
ure,
using
a grant from
crafters, said Commissioner
JeffThornton, who unveiled the Appalachian R egional
the project at today's regular Commission's craft initiative . .
Justin Diddle, the coordicommissioners' n1eeti ng.
The location has not been nator of the cou nty's ARC
disclosed, but the facility is crafrers initiative, will conexpected to be open by !arc . Please see ProJect, AJ

Today's

,,

I

Shop will qfford
crqfters retail
opportunity

RAC INE - Southern
Local sc hool board has
approved a one-year contract with Mary Jo Buck·ley as a fifth-- and sixthgrade LD teacher for the .
2001-02 schoo l year.
Buckley, who was formerly employed at Fairland Elementary, will be
placed at 10 years on the
salary schedule.
A
contract
with
Mi ch ael Barnett as a seventh~ and eighth-grade
LD teacher for the 200102 school year also was
approved by the board.
The contrac.t is pending
Barnett's completion of
coursework at the University of Rio Grande and
certification by the Ohio
D epartment of Education.
Wendy Wilfong was
. granted a special contract ·
fot the 2001-02 school
year as a personal aid 'to an
el~mentary SBH student
that lives within the· dis- ·
trier. The student is i11 a
foster home so the
exp ense will be charged
to the home school district.
The board approved the
follo,ving people _as Sl,lbstitute•· teadief\ 'fo r the'
2001 ~02
sc hool year:

orr·

"?Colon

1cials
unveil new
craft project

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Garage
Packages

. Prestique• II Raised Proft1e TM

www.mydailys~ntinel . com

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

50 cents • August 11, 2001 • Vol. 52, No. 1l

Poverty-rates.decline 'in southern states
.
.
dent' living in poverty in -1'!98, according
to a Census Bureau report released Friday.
But Mississippi's poverty rate · declined
about seven points from 1989 to 17.6 percent in 1998, wh ile Louisiana's dropped
four points to 18.2 percent in the same

WASHINGTON (AP) -States in the
Deep South have had some of the steepest
declines in poverty yet but still have the
high.,;t rates in the country, census data
show.
For example, Mississippi and Louisiana
had tw~ of the larg~-st percenrages'of .resi- peri od.

1~\ ,

States witli ·the largest i_n_s:reases: New
York, up three points to 15.4 percent, and
Californ ia, up two points to 14.9 percent.
. The figures come from an annual bureau
report that revises · earlier estimates of
puverty - in this ca.,e, estimates for 1998

Please see Census, AJ

What is a Hospitalist?
Valley Lurn.ber
&amp; Supply Co.

Thomas

:loit center.

'

555 Park St., Middleport ,, Ohio

Rt. 2 B)' Pass Point Pleasant, WV

'740-992-66l 1· •1-800-733.:.3334

304-675-5200

Mon.-Fri. 7-5 •

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7-3

Mon.-Sat. 8-7 •

Hospitalists are physicians who are skilled at diagnosing and
providing effective and timely treatment of illness to patient~
durin,g their Hospital stay. Their primary responsibility is to
oversee the doily care of the hospitalized patient.
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For mor~ information, call

(7401 446·5568
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Discover the Holzer D!fference

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_Th_e_o..,....ai_Iy_Se_n_tin_ei_ _ _ _...;;;B;;;;;;;_y

the Ilend ·-

PageA2 ·

Friday, Aug. 31, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Deaths

Frld.y. Aupst 11.1001

Wit, intelligence com~ in every k-ind of color

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS logs calls

Elmer Pickens

Doris R. Baloy

on Sept. 10.
Access for local traffic to
Royal Oak Resort is through
Wipple Road and Pine Grove
at the southern end of C.R.
26, according to the Ohio
Department of Transportation's District 10 office in
Marietta.

POMEROY Units of
the
Meigs
Emergency
Service
DEAR ABBY: I am a recent
workers are well-educated sons and what can I say to encourage them to
My question is about the "do's and
MASON, WVa.- Elmer L. Pickens, 74, of Mason, formerCOlUMBUS Doris R. Baloy, 79, Columbus, died answered I 0 calls for assis_. bigh school graduate. I have received
daughters of the business -owners, accept with joy the fact that they'll don'ts" of thong bikinis. We have
ly of letart Falls, Ohio, died on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2001, in Wednesday, August 29, 2001, at Riverside Hospital. ·
tance on Thursday. Units
Huntington, WVa.
·
several national commendations and
and doing this work by choice, not probably have oftly one child? lovely beaches here. Bikinis are comShe was preceded in death by her hu sba nd , Charles S. Baloy; responded as follows :
graduated at the top of my class.
because they are unqualified for CONCERNED IN PENNSYL- mon, but I have yet to see another
He was born on Jan. 8, 1927, in Alliance, son of the late two brothers, William Edwin Kochert, Wayne Frederick
CENTRAL DISPATCH
So ,./hy is it that because I work
woman wear a thong bikini . I enjoy
other employment. looking down VANIA
Samuel Lewis and Mabel Clara Donahue Pickens. He was a Kochert.
8:17 a.m., Ohio 7, motor
with my parents in an "ethnic"
one's nose at someone whf? appears
plant operator for Drav.; Sand &amp; Gravel Co, and was a veteran
DEAR CONCERNED: In the wearing them, but I'm wondering if
She is survived by a daukhter, Cynthia Sue (Edd) Willhau ck vehicle accident, James Davis,
restaurant, patrons assume 1 have no
"difler~nt" is shortsighted and just interest of family harmony and their it's a breach of etiquette to wear one
of the U.S. Signal Corps du.ring·World War II.
of Charlotte, N.C.; two sons, Stephen Frederick (Chris) Baloy refused treatment, Beth and
command of the English language
plain wrong.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Nancy and Charles of Pomeroy, D r. Bruce (Trish) Baloy of Columbus; a si•ter,
feelings, avoid the subject. No input around . families or children. Thong
Connie Gregory. treated;
and am slow-witted?
DEAR ABBY: My son and from you can lessen your son and bikinis on older, ·out-of-shape men
Anderson of Mason; four sons and three daughters-in-law:· Dorothy ~ikalau s ; seve n grandchildren; and one great-grandPOMEROY -.
A golf
ADVICE
8:26
a.m., Overbrook scramble to benefit the athletPlease print this letter in the hope
daughter-in-law -she's 41 - have daughter-in-law's pain and disap- (eew!) are common.Abby, if it's good
Robert and Donna Pickens ofWarsaw, Ind., Roger and Norma child.
Nursing Cente r,James'Weeks, ic. boosters at Eastern High
that people will realize that behind
Pickens of Pt . Pleasan t; Steven and Jena Pickens ofWarsaw and
an adorable 3-year-old, and they pointment at being unable to have for . the gander, what about the
The family will receiv~ friends on Friday from 6-8 p.m . at · Pleasant Valley Hospital;
my face white, black, yellow, times. A generation ag&lt;i&gt;, workers in really· want another child. In the last another child. You are pushing for a goose? TOO SEXY FOR
School will be held at Pine
James Pickens of Pomeroy, Ohio;' a sister and brother-in-law, the Schoedingcr Worthington Chapel, 6699 N . High Street
11:57
a.m.,lemaster
Road,
newethnic
restaurants
were
often
brown, etc. - there is a mind and a
three years, she has had three miscar- conclusion they wiU have to reach YOURKJDS?
Hills Golf Course in Pomeroy
Clara and Junior Smith of Columbus, Ohio; four brothers and (half- mile south of I-270) where memorial services will be
Minni e Dixon, O' Illeness on Sept. 22, with tee-off at 8
DEAR
TOO
SEXY:
Let's
leave
heart that is hurt when people don't comers to this country and just riages.
Sue
Pickens
and
Wesley
a_
n
d
lou
ise
sisters-in-law:
Emmett
and
by themselves in their own time.
held at the .conclusion of visitation, Friday 8 p.m .
Memorial Hospital;
We will be visiting them in SepPickens, all of Toledo, Ohio, Shelby and Ruby Pickens of
a.m. The scramble will follow
bother to appreciate the diversiry of learnin g the English language. Today,
DEAR ABBY: I am a pretry 29- the geese out of it and concentrate
Interment will take place at a later time at Mansfield, Ohio
4:54 p.m., Gold Ridge. a blind draw format.
·
the human race. - STAMP OUT 'however, restaurant workers are tember, and I don't want to be a year-old woman living in ~ conserv- on people. When in doubt, cover up.
Racine, Ohio and Eber and Mary Pickens of Syracuse, Ohio; Cemetery.
assisted
by
Pome
roy,
Darlene
·
eight grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren.
The cost is S40 per player.
STEREOTYPING, NEW YORK more likely to be second -or third meddling mother-in-law, but I . ative area in Canada. I have always Getting arrested for indecent expoMemorial contributions can be made to the Central Ohio Curry, treated;
-generation
citizens.
sure'&lt;.vould
be
a
real
"bummer."
dear
was
preceded
in
death
by
his
wife,
Besides
his
parents,
he
CITY
believe they need to relax and enjoy been comfortable · with my statBreathing Association, 1520 Old Henderson Road, Columbus,
8:28 p.m., Holzer M edical
I'm priniing your letter to remind the little one they have_ and stop uesque body. My ~ boyfriend loves
Mary Louise Chaney Pickens; a son, William louis Pickens; a Ohio
DEAR S.O.S.:Tht! pattons prob43220;
or
e-mail
at Center Clinic, Rita Iluckley,
Dear Abby is written by Pallline
brother, Donald Pickens; and a granddaughter, Mickey Pickens. Condolencesbaloy@schoedinger.com
i!bly do not intend to be hurtful or readers who are guilry of stereoryp- "hoping for more." I especially that I dress flatteringly - or even
Holzer Medical Center;
Phillips and daughter Jeanne Phillips.
ROCKSPRINGS- SalisServices will be at letart Falls Cemetery Chapel at I :30 p.m.
disrespectfuL They are behind the ing "foreigners" that many of the worry because of her age. How and downright provocatively!
I
0:01
p.m.,
Hudson,
Tabitha
Sunday, with the Rev. James Keesee officiating.
bury Township Trustees will
Ohler, HMC
meet
on Tuesday at 6 p.m. at
Friends may call at Fogelsong- Tucker Funeral Home in
jump, fourth place.
RUTLAND
the town ~ h1p building on
Mason on Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m.
Joey Ray, t 00-meter dash, first
2:27
p.m.,
Crosspoints
place,
shot
put,
second
plaoe;
Jugh
Rocksprings Road .
The body will lie in state an ho.ur prior to the service at the
Roush, 100-meter dash, second Apartments, assisted by Cencemetery.
·
place, shot put, first place; Alban
Page AI
FRIDAY
REEDSVILLE - Homecoming
Salser, tOO·me1er dash , third place, tral Dispatch, Viola Youn g,
dash, first place; Christo- PVH;
at Eden United Brethren
POMEROY - Fun. Food and
place, shot put, sixth place; Deidra so-meter
pher
Shouldis,
100-m.eter walk,
Fellowship at God's NET in
Church, Sunday at 10 a .m.
8:54p.m., Ohio 124, motor
Carleton, softball throw, lifth place, · fourth place, softball
POMEROY
Meigs
contracts with:
BY
VALREA THOMPSON
about
40
percent
of
an
aver"
might
receive
from
Sotial
wages
might
be.
throw, fifth
Pomeroy, 6 to 10:30 p.m.
Peter and Betsy Martindale and
vehicle
accident, Gale Drum- County commissioners will
ESC
for
to-meter
assisted
walk,
lirst
place;
SOC IAL SECURITY MANAGER,
•
Athens-Meigs
place;
Charles
Sloane,
50-meter
age wage earner's salary.
Securiry when it's time to
• • •
family will conduct the service
Laura Clark, so-meter dash, firsl
ATHENS
services at a cost of · place, softball throw. second place: dash. second place, shot put, sec- mond, Ohio State Universiry meet on Sept. 7 instead of
Social Security provides retire? Well, now there's a · More and more people are
and music. Carry-in dinner,
SATURDAY
ond place; Maurice Smith, 100·
To voice your comments
Sept. 6.
Mary Jane Cuny, t 00-meler walk, meter dash, fourth place, shot put, HospitaL
Page AI
RACINE - The 34th reunion of 12:30 in the fellowship hall, and
$117,872.30;
survivors protection worth convenient way to estimate electing early retirement
.J
on
proposed
changes
in
first
place,
shot
put,
first
place;
SYRACUSE
special music by Delivered, 2
lhe Samuel Alan Eblin family
first place; Tracy Smith, too-meter
• Valuation Engineers In c.
·$ 374,000 to an average fami- the monthly benefit amount . these days. But remember ....
•
Bradley Donaldson, softball throw, dash, first place, "Inning lopg jump,
Social Securiry's regulations,
-l,;iii be held Saturday at 4 p.m.
p.m.
9:39a.m., Ohio 338, Harley
line..
to perform an inventory for lhird place, standing long jump, lifth place; Ruth Snyder, 50-meter
ly
composed
of
a you 'II receive from Social the age for full retirement
at Star Mill Park in Racine.
log onto Social Security's
The resignation of Lori the Southern local School fourth place; Christopher Edwards, dash, first place, softball throw, Barton,Jackson General Hoswidow(er)and two children.
Those attending are to take
CHESHIRE- The BrJdy FamiSecuriry.
benefits from Social Securiry
website, www.ssa.gov, and
·
ramp roll, second place, strike with fourth place; Crystal South, softball pital.
POMEROY A free
Hill as seventh- and eighth- District at a cost of $5,6 70;
their own table service and
Social _Security also proly of Parkersburg, W.Va., and
hand, secqnd place; Jennifer Gray, throw. liffh place, t OO·meter dash,
to
www.ssa.gov
the
is
rising.
The
increase
is
g~ad­
Just
go
scroll
down
to
"Comment
on
TUPPERS
PLAINS
favorite foods. Meat will be fur- New Horizon of Barboursville,
Ohio
Hunter
Edu
cation
class
grade cheerleading advisor
• OqSite Corp. to do ran- 10-meter assisted walk, second third place; Steve Titus, 100-meter
vides disability protection next time you're on line to
Proposed
Rules."
nished.
11:18
a.m.,
Ohio
681,
W.Va., will sing at Poplar Ridge
will be held Sept. 24-26 from
was accepted by the bc;md. dom drug testing of bus dri- place, 30-meter motorized wheel· walk, third place, softball throw. fifth
worth more than $220,000 estimate your own retire- ual, and when it's fully
You will also be able to
chair slalom, third place.
Freewill Baptist Church on Ohio
Christina
Otten,
Camdenplace;
Derrick
Trimmer,
tQO."meter
6 to 9 p.m. and Sept. 29 from
Hill thinks she does not have vers for the 2001-02 school
f~r an average income earner ment benefits. You can make phased in, in 2027, you'D .
Jessica Gray, softball throw. slx!h dash, second place, running long Clark Memorial Hospital.
REEDSVILLE- Annual Abra554 on Sunday at 2 p.m. Pastor
view comments others have
9 a.m. to noon at the
the time to perform the season as required by law.
with a spouse and two chil- the estimate as ofien as you have to work until 6 7 to
place, 3D-meter motorized wheel· jump, third place, shot put, second
ham and Mary Will Bahr
John Elswick invites the public.
made.
chair
race,
first
place;
Tim
Harris,
soPomeroy Gun Club on
place, high jump, second place, 400·
Bids were approved by the
duties associated with the
dren.
reunion, Saturday, first shelter
like, using different income receive full retirement beneHave you ever wanted to
meter dash, second place, softball · meter run, third place, 50-meter
Pomeroy
Pike. Class size is
at Forked Run Stale Park.
MONDAY
position due to her recently board as received in the throw, first place; Katie Kibble,
levels depending on how fits. There is no change in the
dash
,
first
place,
pentathlon,
second
how
to
tell
the
government
Friends and family welcome.
CARPENTER -Columbia
limited and pre-registration is
changing teaching positions. TreasurerUs office for the standing long jump, first place; Kyle place.
Wondering how much you much you think 'your future age 62 early retirement.
Meal at noon. Bring covered
do its job? Now you can.
Township Trustees. Monday,
POMEROY
County
Kinnan,
standing
long
jump,
second
required. Information and
Bill White, tOO-meter dash, sec• The board agreed to hire 2001-02 school year: United
dishes and items for silent auc- 7:30 p.m. , firehouse.
place, softball throw, first place; ond place, shot put, second place; Road 26, Flatwoods Road, pre- registration are available
Social Securiry developed
:fina Rees as the cheerlead- Valley Bell Dairy, milk; U .S. Roger Lance, 50-meter dash, lourth Dirk Young, softball throw, third
tion.
Saturday, September 1, 2001
this Internet service to give
!ng
advisor position vacated Food Service, food and sup- place; softball throw, second place; place , tOO-meter walk, second used as a limited access road . by calling the Meigs Soil and
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town·
at
7:00p.m.
people
who
would
ordinarLuke Lowery, t 00-meter dash, sec- place.
for Ohio 124, will perma- Water Conservation District
HARRISONVILLE - Har:
ship Trustees, Monday, 7:30
h HilL She will begin pend- plies; G&amp;M Fuel Co., Inc., ond
Sunday, September 2, 20.01
place, shot put, tlrst place, high
·ily not have easy access to a
risonvllle Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, will p.m. Gall clerk at 378-6149 to
nently close effective 7 a.m. at 992-4282.
.ing her completion of the fuel and oil; HeinerUs Bak- jump, first place, 400-meter run, secWinning relay teams in
at 3:00p.m.
hold a stated meeting on Satur- be placed on agenda.
notice of proposed ruleproudly prcsenls
_:sports medicine require- ery,
bread;
Nationwide ond place, running long jump, sec- their division are: first placeAt the Metgs Junior High School
day at 7 p.m. at the Masonic
making, a more convenient
ond place, pentathlon, llrst place;
(formerly Middleport
:ment
.Insurance, fleet insurance; Randall Mahon, 100-meter dash, luke Lowery, Derrkk TrimHall. Refreshments. Work in
LETART FALLS - Letart Townway to submit comments
RODGERS II&lt; HAMMERSTEIN'S
High School)
E.A. degree.
ship Trustees, 5 p.m. Monday,
-i: In bu~iness matters, the Malone Warehouse Tire, tires third place, softball throw, second mer, Tracy Smith, Bradley
about proposed changes to
Middleport, OH
place; Lisa · Montgomery, softball Donaldson; second place-B ill
office building.
(&gt;Oard approved a contract and tubes.
Social Security's regulathrow,, eiJ&lt;th place, 50-meter dash ,
l ATH ENS- The Guthrie-Story
wiih
Dodson . Brothers
Attending the meeting was third place; Kenny Napper, 50-meter White, Maurice Smith, Alban
$8.00 General Admission
tions.
reunion will be held at the 4-H
SYRACUSE- Sutton Township
Exterminating
Co
.
for
Bob
Collins, board presi- dash , second place, softball throw, Salser, John Cleland; third
building in Athens on Sept. 1.
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m.,
Once
the
propos~d
MUSIC BY RICHARD ROGERS
_inonthly pest control ser- dent; Ron Cammarata, vice- third place; Bill Neutzling, 50-meter place-Gene Buckley, Joseph
The potluck dinner will be held
Syracuse Village Hall.
For ticket Information, call
changes to a regulation are
BOOK &amp; LYRICS eY OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN , II
dash dash. third place, shol put,
at 1 p.m.
vices
during
the
.
2001-02
president;
Dennie
Hill,
treasixth place; Mary Rankin, softball Ray, Travis Barber, Jacob
(740) 992·5915
published in the . Federal
'oued on the pity Gn:en Grow lhtl.il•~s. by Lynn Rili&amp;l
TUESDAY
school year. The annual cost surer; board- members Dou- throw, seventh place, standing long Stacy.
Register, Social Security
Of
RUTLAND- Rutland Freewill
ALFRED - Orange'Township
Original dances by Agnes deMille
y.rill be $540 for Southern ' glas Little, David Kucsma
Baptist Church, Bend Area
.will open up a forum for 60.
(740) 992·4114
Trustees, regular meeting,
NEW YORK (AP) -The about," said Hu gh Johnson ,
.
lllementary
and $360 for and Richard Hill; James
Gospel Sing, 7 p.m., with Sher- Tues ., 7:30p.m., home of Clerk
Tickets available at the door
days. The agency will keep
. h 18 9
stock market hasn'tjust been chief investment officer at
1998 , along Wit
ry Kinsey, Hearts In Harmony,
&amp;
Southern High SchooL
Lawrence, Southern Local
. percent ~ 11 .
·
L b
D
F.
lb
Osie Mae Follrod.
Doors open
the public informed about
·
of
children
oun
r
than-_,;
e-_'a_ m~ stnc!_ 1ast_ a .o r __ay___,!stA~n~. ~ .
Two for Jesus, Joe McCloud
--11~--11 -~~r:hc:--t&gt;oard - also- approved- superintendent,
hounnnly
y lge
g
1t s been plungmg, so
Investors wornes Thurs"
a nd Together 4 Christ. .
Community Calendar Is pub·
18 .Th ose nattona
how many
]1overty estth
h 1
• 1 1
comment
period.
the
public
. d . th
muc so t at ast years eve s day centered on a governllshed as a free service to
Page
mates were not reVISe m e
dd 1 d • ·
b d
· ·
SUNDAY
non-profit groups wishing to
su en y on t seem so a . ment report showmg conIa
MASON, W.Va. -The Annual
test report.
Wh
h N d
·
announce meetings and speFinancial advis~~s tell
• Accepted bids for bitumi- _ derived from survey data.
.ffi
en t e
as aq com- sumers who se purchases
Th
d
h
ld
Johnson Reunion is Scheduled
h
cial events. The calendar Is
epoverryt
res
o
1
ers
·
·
d
1
d
·
'
·
people they will need about .
nous materials from Asphalt The revised reports are consid- b
h
h ld
d
d.
postte Ill ex acce erate tts account for two-thirds of the
for Sunday at the Mason City
not designed to promote
0
70
percent
of
pre-retireY.
ouse
.'
epen
mg
decline
shortly after labor nation's economy, c urbed
Materials, Inc., Marietta, and ered more accurate estimates
Park In Mason. A pot luck dinaaln or fund-ralaera of any
ment
income
to
Jive
comPage
AI
ner will take place at 1 p.m. and type. llama are printed only
MidcUeport Terminal, Inc., of siate· poverry data because mamly on the stze of the fam- Day and lost 10 percent in their spending -in July, as well
fortably when they retire.
those attending are asked to
In .1998, the poverry hne for September, no one imagined
aa apace permit• and cannot
Gallipolis, for the month Of they take into account not ily.~mil
f~
•1 660
as a revenue warning from
bring an Item for the auction.
Social Securiry replaces
be guarent81d to be
a
: duct a meeting about the September.
a the market would still ·be
a ,a Y o .our was " 6,
only
the
survey
data
but
other
Sun Microsystems.
apeoltlo number of
year.
· shop and the opportunities
• Set next week's regular factors such as taX returns and
tanking a year later. And the . A year ago, investors were
The most recent national
for crafters and artisans, on meeting for Sept. 7, rather Social · 5ecuriry income that
selling frenzy, which had just beginning to hear priestimates, from 1999, showed
Sept. 4 at 6:30 p.m. at Meigs than·Sep· t. 6,
•·
·_take..,more time to stud"'1'
been confined to technology, marily technology comp a.\o
11.8 percent of all Americans
,Counry
District
Public
• Authorized Gene Lyons of
The statistics also are somehas spread to the overall nies warn of skimpier earn in poverry, and a poverty rate
. Library in Pomeroy.
the Meigs Emergency Ser- what deceiving, said Jane
market
and shows no sign of ings, signaling the end of the
. In other business, the comfor children of 16.9 percent.
vices to advertise the sale of Boykin, president of the nongo - go bull market. Since
:missioners appointed the folBoth were the lowest figures fading.
On Thursday, the Dow
an ambul~nce;
profit Mississippi Forum on
then, however, profit warnjowing to serve on the Local
since 1979.
Jones industrial average fell
.. Appointed Paula ]. Wood Children and Families. Though
ings
have increased, moving
J
.
Emergency Planning ComIncreases in states such as
as acting director of the Meigs aided by the good economy of
171.32
to
9,919.58Thursday,
across
the market's secto rs,
BANGOR, Maine (AP) mlsston:
Sheriff
Ralph
California and New York dur- closing below 10,000 for the
Counry
Recycling
and
Litter
the
1990s,
many
families
there
Will consider an oller to 11111111111111 hiiiiL
Stephen King's insurance
Trussell, Engineer Gene
Control program
moved from being in poverry ing the 1990s were likely due first time in more than four and there appears to be no
company settled a lawsuit
Triplett, Commissioner Mick
end in sight.
• ·Approved an appropria- to simply just being poor, to an influx of new immigrant months. The Nasdaq was
with the horror writer by
Davenport, Norma Torres,
families, said William O'Hare down 51.49 at 1,791.68.
donating $750,000 to the
.Rhonda
Dailey, Harold tions adjustment for the sher- Boykin said.
"I see nothing that tells me
" It's good news. A good of the children's advocacy
hospital that cared for him
:Kneen, Mike Duhl, Ilobby iff's department in the
group,
the
Annie
E.
Casey
we
are at the end," said Gary
· after a· car hit him two years
:Ord, David Harris, Patsy amount of $5,000 and the economy has helped" states in Foundation.
Kaltbaum, market technician ·
·warner, Susan Oliver, Tom probate and juvenile court in the South, said Deborah Weinago.
Among
other
uses,
the
for
Investors' Edge Partners.
. • stein, family income division
Reed, Ilob Robinson, Donald the.amount of $6,000.
King sued OneBeacon
Analysts say there's no· rea • Appropriated $6,500 into · director of the Children's revised results are used to help
Poole, Mike Swisher, Gene
Insurance for $10 million . in ,
evaluate
welfare
programs,
and
ion to believe the market
Lyons, . Keith Wood, Don the sheriff's budget for litter Defense Fund.
February, claiming it failed to
distribute
Title
I
education
won't go even lower - not
"It can just make you worAnderson, Robert Byer, controL
provide full coverage for
with persisting rounds of
• Recessed until Friday at ried that with an economic grants for poor children.
Doug Hunter, Scott Hill, Bill
injuries he suffered in .the
.10 a.m.
'
The bureau will produce corporate
downturn whether ~ore chillayoffs, profit
·
:Spaun, Joe Bolin , and Todd ·
accident.
more
updated
estimates
of
warnings
and
weak economdren
can
slide
backward
Present at t,)1e .meeting were
Smith.
He was insured personally
instead of making the progress poverry next month, for 2000, ic reports.
Thornton and Jim Sheets.
The board also:
and by his business policy,
we want,,. she said.
based on an annual survey.That
"If you ~re looking for
both through Commercial
Nationally, 12·.7 percent of report is the sour,ce of the offi- something td worry about,
Union, which OneBeacon
Americans lived in poverty in cial national poverry rate.
there is plenty to worry
Example:
bought, But his lawsuit
claimed an umbrella policy
sho uld entitle him to addi(USPS 2-13-980)
Ohio Volley Pubtlohlng Co.
tional payments.
SPRitiG VAll IV CIIHMA
. 4524
Published every afternoon, Monday
111111 Tl
,f ' l
446
The settleme nt was executr1 '
'"' "I
through Frtday, Ill Court St.,
Downing Chi/as~ Mullen and Mijsser
Correction Polley
· Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
FRI8131/0I • THURS 8/6101
ed on Jply 27, the Portland
Our main concern in aU slories is po81age paid at Pomeroy.
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
Press Herald reported Thurs$3.75 ADMISSION
to be accurate. II you know or an Member: The Associated Press and
(CERTAIN 'EATUREI MAY IE liCCL.UDED)
error
in a story, call the newsroo~ the Ohio Newspaper Association.
day.
Poatmalter: Send address corracat (74D) 992·2t56.
tions ·lo The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court.
JEEPERS CREEPERS (R)
King was injured in June
This speciall25th Anni"Yenary Edition
St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
7:20 '9:20
1999 when a van driven by
News Departments
will be published on Thursday, September 13, 200i.
•
· Subscription rates
- Christopher Holter.
The main number is 992-2156.
Ilryan Smith of Fryeburg
JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE
By cat'f'ler or motor.route
All
ads
must
be
pre-paid
IJld
received
before
5100,
Friday,
September
7th,
2001.
Depanment extentions are:
BACK (R)
struck him as • he , walked
Oneweek
$2
7:00 '9:00
I Pit.~,... send or bring in the completed coupon below, along with your payment
One monlh
$8.70
General
m•nager
Ex!.
12
along the shoulder of Route
MATINEES SAT • SUN 1:oo &amp; 3:00
Ont y..r
.
S104
Dally
50
cents
5 near his vacation home in
Ext. t3
News
.
RAT RACE (PGI3)
Subscribers not desiring 10 pay the
Lovell.
7:00' 8:30
mav remit In advance direct to
Ext 14 o8rrler
or
MATINEES: SAT· BUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30
The
Oally
Sentinel.
C&lt;edll
will
be
given
The 53-year-old suffered a
carrier each week. No subscription by
AMERICAN PIE 2 (G)
Other services
mall permitted In areas where home
broken leg ~n'd hip, a punc7:15 '8:30
·Ex!. 3 carrier seMce Ia available.
Advertising
tured lung, broken ribs and
MATINEES SAT ·SUN 1:15 &amp; 3:30
THE OTHERS (PG13)
other injuries. He has underMail subsaiptJon
For More Information, Call Dave or Debbie at 992-2155.
Ex!. 4
Circulation
12~~~
16~~
I
.
7;tO &amp; 8:20
lnolde
·Mtlu•
COunty
gone five surgeries since the
MATINEES AT· UN 1:10 &amp; 3:20
t3
Weeks
$27.30
Claaolfled Ado
Ex!. 5 26 Weeks
Buy One Get Second One Freel
$53.82
accident.
RUSH HOUR2 (PG131
-----------~--------············-------·····----. 52 Weeks
$105.56
7:30.8:30 •
Friday,
August
31Sunday,
September
1
Rio Granth I 25th AnninvenRry &amp;Jition
Tony Payne, vice president
To send e-mail
MAnNEES SAT· SUN 1:30 &amp; 3:30
RotH oulolde Melgo COunty
news 0 mydailysentinel.com
of marketing for OneBeacon,
•
THE PRINCESS DIARIES (G)
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We Are Located On State Route 7
On the Web
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At
Chester,
Ohio
•
985-3902
regional hospital was a com· Nc&gt;ct To
Complete
ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00
Graduating Class:_______________________:_
promiSe.

Abigail
Van

Buren

Plan scramble

Trustees meet

LOCAL EVENTS

Areas

Social Security Facts

from

Change meeting

Contrad
from

Class offered

•••

Road to close

The Rlvea bend
Community Theatre

Stock market recovery
doubtful anytime soon given
rampant supply of ba.d news

()~!

daysare- l~l~f-~~=~~=~;;;~:=~~~

Census

1

- - - -•

•••

froin

Al

Project
from

"·

PEOPLE

t

.t'

Stephen Kin1

502 6th 811'881
Racine. Ohio 949-2264

Be A Part of the special
Commemorative Edition
saluting the
University ofRio Grande's
125th Anniversary
by placing your name and
graduation year in this special edition. .

The Daily Sentinel

8

7

111ANK YOU

Reader Services

~

tor purchasing my hog at the
2001 Meigs County Junior Fair.

The Daily Sentinel

l:

THArfKVOU

111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

SPECIAL
14» Er
Pizza·

Damon's Restaurant of Athens
for buying my hog at the 2001
Meigs County Junior Fair.
- Christopher-Holter

I

•

•

.

•

'

.

•

'

"

�.

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

J I

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

lAB

Dian.• Kay Hill
Controller

/..ltkn to tlr.• u/iio, 11n Wl!lcOift•. The1 tltot1UI be lnt tlt4• 100 wDI'IU, All kilns
.,.. sd)«r to tdiiUtg fUid lfUlst '" slrnfti a11d incl11tl• addn11 ud t1l•pluM• IIIUIIHr:
N• alfsipftl ktkn will k pll.blUitd.. lAten sltould &amp;. in rood tal,, lllldnnillr
iu•es, IHJI IH"Jfllllllitin.
·
Tile opiltioru UJUUS~ ill 1111 tDbttlllt be/dw 1Ut lift COiflllfiUI oj till 0/110 ..lh.J
hbliiiWrg Co. 'I nllloriGI bo4rd, "'"Ius
n()tft/.

ot,,,.;.,

NATIONAL VIEW

\

That would not be rational behavior, of course, but then the
unilateralist arrogance of the Bush administration is hardly
rational either.
·
Bush seems to operate on the notion that the United States
can play the game any way it \vants, without regard for the sensibilities of any other nation, while the rest of the world follows

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Aug. 31, the 243rd day of2001.There are 122
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 31, 1887,Thomas A. Edison received a patent for his
"kinetoscope," a d~vice which produced moving pictures.
On this date:
In 1886, an earthquake rocked Charleston, S.C .. killing up to
110 people.
.
In 1888, Mary Ann Nicholls was found murdered in London '1 East End in what is generally regarded as the first slaying
committed by Jack the Ripper.
In 1935, President Rqosevelt signed an act prohibitin·g the
export of U.S. arms to belligerents.
In 1941, the radio program "The Great Gildersleeve"
debuted on NBC
•
In 1954, Hurricane Carol hit the northeastern United States,
resulting in nearly 70 deaths.
\11. In 1969, boxer Rocky Marciano died in a light airplane crash
in Iowa, a day before his 46th birthday.
In 1980, Poland's Solidarity labor movement was born with
an agreement signed in Gdansk that ended a 17-day-old strike.
In 1985, Richard Ramirez, later convicted of California's
"Night Stalker" killings, was captured by residents of an East
Los Angeles neighborhood.
In 1986, 82 people were killed when an Acromexico jetliner and a small private plane collided over Ce rritos, Calif
In 1988, 14 people were killed when a Ddta Boeing 727
crashed during takeoff from Dallas-Fort Worth Airport.
Ten years ago: Uzbekistan and Kirghizia declared .their independence, raising to 10 the number of republics seeking to
secede from the Soviet Union . In Washington D.C, hundreds
of thousands of union members marched in a "Solidarity Day" ·
· protest.
.
Five years ago: Seven people drowned . when their vehicle
rolled into John D. Long Lake in Union, S.C.; they had gone
to see a monument to the sons of Susan Smith ' who had
.
drowned the two boys in October 19'J4.
One year ago: President Clinton vetoed a bill that would
have gradually repealed inher.i tan ce taxes; saying it would have
benefited the wealthiest Americans while threatening the
nation's financial well-being.
.
.
· Today's Birthdays: Broadcast journalist Daniel Schorr is 85. '
Comedian Buddy Hackett is 77. Actor James Coburn is 73.
Actor Noble Willingham is 70. llaseball Hall-of-Famer- Frank
Robinson .~s 66. Actor Warren Berlinger is M. Rock musician
Jerry Allison (Buddy Holly and the Crickets) is 62. Actor Jack .
Thompson is 61. Violinist ltzhak Perlman is 56. Singer Van
Morrison is 56. Actor Richard Cere is 52. Rock sin ger Glenn
Tilbrook (Squeeze) is 44. Rock musician Gina Schock (The
Go-Go's) is 44. Singer Tony DeFranco (The DeFranco Family)
is 42, Singer Chris Whitley is 41. Rhythm-and-blues musician
.Larry Waddell (M int Condition) is 3B. Actor Jaime P. Gomez is
36. Rock musician Jeff Russo (Tonic) is 32. Singer-composer
·
Debbie Gibson is 31.

OU announces scharships ·to local students

Special service

•

ATHENS- Ohio Univer- Duhl, Portland, Diii·Arnold- ship; Scott W. Needs, Scholarship, Kibble Foundasity has announced that tht." Cutler Scholarship, Kibble Pomeroy. Kibble Foundation tion Scholarship; Aaron J.
following local students have Foundation
Scholarship; Scholarship; Kyle P. Norris, Vaughan, Rutland, Kibble
been ~warded scholarships f&lt;lr Stephanie
A.
Evans, Racine, Kibble Foundation Foundation
Scholarship;
rb.~ 2QOI-P2 ~chool year:
.:.. Reedsville, Ben Manley Scholarship; Stefani L. Pick- Julie A. Wandling, Pomeroy,
Grant J. Abbott, Pomeroy, SchcllarShip:Kibble Founda-· ens, Pomeroy, Kibble Foun- Dill-Arnold-Cutler ScholarKibble Foundation Scholar- lion Scholarship; Justin M. dation Scholarship; Kevin A. ship, Kibble Foundation
ship; Lauren E. Anderson, Fields,
Pomeroy,
Dill- Porter, Racine, Dill-Arnold- Scholarship; Angela · M.
Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, Cutler Scholarship, Kibble White , Shade, Dill-ArnoldScholarship; Nicholas T. Kibble Foundation Scholar- Foundation Scholarship.
Coolville,
Dean's ship; William M. Francis,
Ryan M. Pratt, Pomeroy, Cutler Scholarship , Kibble
Avis,
Scholarship; Kelli L. Bailey, ':leedsville, Kibble Founda- Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholar- loundation
Scholarship;
Pomeroy, Dean's Scholar- t1o~ Scho~arsh1p; RobM A. ship, Kibble Foundation _Joshua D. Wil.l, Pomeroy,
• ship,
Dill-Arnold-Cutler Gnm, Middleport , Kibble Scholarship; John Heath D. Kibble Foundation . ScholarScholarship, Kibble Founda- , Foundation
Scholarship; Proffitt, Long Bottom, Dill- ship; William A.
Will,
tion Scholarship; Jason P. MarJone A. Halar, Pomeroy, Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, . Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold-Cutler
Barber, Reedsville, Kibble Kibble Foundation Scholar- Kibble Foundation Scholar- Scholarship, Kibb.le FoundaFoundation
Scholarship; sh1p; Cortney L. Haley, ship; Joshua J. Pullins , tion Scholarship; Brooke A. .
Michael L. Barr, Pomeroy, Pomeroy, Countess E~1z Portland , Kibble Foundation Williams,
Middleport,
Ahsha . D. Dean's Scholarship, Kibble Rev. James and Hilda Craig, missionaries to East Africa for the
Kibble Foundation Scholar- Evans Glouchowska, D!ll- Sc~olarsh1p ;
ship; Orion J. Barrett Arnold-Cutler Scholarship, RoJaS,
Tuppers _Piams, Foundation
Scholarship ; · Church of the Nazarene, will speak at Chester Church of the
Langsville, Kibble Founda: K1bble Foundation Scholar- Advantage Award; Alison N. William A. Young, Pomeroy, Nazarene on Sept. 17 at 7 p.m . Since their appointment as
tion Scholarship; Kristen D. ship.
. Rose, L?ng Bottom , Kibble Dill-Arnold-Cutler · Scholar- missionaries in February 1996, .the Craigs have been
Bond, 'Syracuse, Dill-ArnoldChad
. E.
Hans&lt;;m. Foundat1on
Scholarship; ship, James D. Euler Memo - assigned to Zambia. where they have served for four years·.
Cutler Scholarship; Jessica Pomeroy, .Kibble Foundat1on Just1n P. Roush , Pomeroy, · 1
h 0 1 h'
K'bbl
Their work includes the development of the Zambia's Pastors'
.lle, K'lb- Sch. olarship,· Maureen M, . Kibble Foundation Scholar- Foundat
na
~
ars
•P.
.
'·
e
Trammg
· ·
·
·
1nst.t
1 ut e, an arm of extens1on
education, m1ssion
K. Brannon' Reedsvl
1on Scholarsh 1
.
on
Scholarsh•'p·,
Hemes,
P.
omero~.
Deans
ship,
·
Leah
M.
.
Sanders,
.
P·
fi
d
z
.
s
h
.
h 1
1nance, an
ambia out District expansion. They are picKtbble Fo ndat on
ble Foundat 1
.nda
v.
Bratton,
Rutland
Scholarship,
D_
•11-Arno.
ldReesville
,
Dill-Arnold-Cutler
.
u
1
c
a·
arsh
1
d
d
tured
with
their
children, Canaan and Hannah.
cl
Kibble Foundation Scholar: Cu!ler Scholarship; Tra~1 M. Scholarship, Kibble Founda'
1ps were . a so a:-"ar ~
ship; Stacey E. Brewer, Mid· Hemes, . Pomeroy, K1b~l~ tion Scholarship; Daniel B. to these Oh1o Umvers1ty
dleport, Kibble Foundation Foundation . Sch~larsh!P· _Sa~re, Racine, K!bble Faun- freshmen: Whitney B. AshScholarship· Joshu
M Autumn B. Hill, Racine, K1b- dat1on Scholarship ; Jenmfer ley, Pomeroy; Derrick L.
Broderick '
P a
· ble Foundation Scholarship; A. Shrimplin, Pomeroy, Kib- Bolin, Rutland; Joseph A.
DeanUs Scholarshi~We~~~: Sarah E. Householder, Mid- ble Foundation Scholarship. Brown, Reedsville; Brandon
promise and financial need.
stan)
Diii-Arn ld-C
dleport, ~d1th A. Wray
Shannon K. Slavm, Syra- R. Browning, Reedsville;
11
0
She is a graduate of ·M eigs
•
.
.
u er Scholarship;
J .T. cuse,
Dill-Arnold-Cutler Kristen
L.
Chevalier,
Scholarship, K!bble Founda- Humphreys, Pomeroy, Kib· Scholarship, Kibble Founda- Chester; Jeff w. Circle,
PARKERSBURG, WVa. - H igh School, and will major in
110~r~~~~~arsh~.
B kl
ble Foundation Scholarship; lion Scholarship; Bonnie J. long Bottom; Joshua M. Samantha L1vender of Racine pre-pharmacy.
·
uc ey, Monty A. Hunger, Middle- Smith, Pomeroy, Dill-Arnold- Cl k p
J
w
.
She is the daughter of Rick
.J Pomeroy, K1~ble
.Foundauon port, Kibble Foundation Cutler Scholarship, Kibble
ar , omeroy; ames
. was named to the president's
and Diana Ash .
Scholarship, Michelle . D. Scholarship; Jody R. Hupp, Foundation
Scholarship; Crow, Pomeroy; Andrew E. list at Mountain State College
Cald~ell,
Reedsv•l!e, Racine, Dill-Arnold -Cutler Sabrina D. smith, Pomeroy, Davis, Pomeroy; Robert M. • in Parkersburg for havi11g
Deans Scholarship, Dill· Scholarship; Jessica R. Area Six Health Services, Day, Syracuse; Christopher achieved a perfect 4.0 grade
)
'
79, beset by the ills tl)at accompany old
A~l')old-Cutler Scholarship, Johnson, Middleport , Jewell Dean's Scholarship, Kibble A. Dodson . ·Pomeroy (and point average.
ADAChad
Hubbard,
son
age, Senatl)r Helms is bidding us farewe'll. .
Kibble Foundation scholar- Cutler Scholarship; Kristina Foundation
.Scholarship , Presidential
Scholars
She is a student in the med·
of Sharon
With him will depart a r,1zor-like analyti-sh1p! Rush Elliott Pre-Pro- M. Kennedy, Pomeroy, Kib- Mary Pallay Covell Scholar- award); Clay G. Enslen, ical assisting program.
Hall · · of
cal mind that could see through nonseJJse
fess1onal Scholarship; Cyn- ble Foundation Scholarship; ship; Jeremiah G. Smith, Racine; Jeremy L. Fisher,
Racine, has
as if it were a pane of glas,, and a tongue
th1a ~· Caldwell, Syracuse, Timothy J. King, Middleport, Langsville, Dill-Arnold-Cut· Syracuse; Curtis W. Hansenrolled in .
that simply would not be silenced. His
D!!an s Scholarship, Kibble Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholar- ler Scholarship, Gordon F. tine, Racine; Ryan N. Hill,
the College
devotion to his God, his cou ntry, and his
Foundation
Scholarsh!p; ship, Kibble Foundation · and Nadine Brunner Schol- Syracuse. Tony A. Hupp,
of Arts and
state are beyond challenge. He has served .
·Chad M. Cl~rk, Racme, K~b- Scholarship. ·
arship, Jay Hall Scholar- Racine (and James D. Euler
Cara
them well.
.
ble Foundation Sch~larsh!p;
Craig A. Knight, Racine, ship, Kibble Foundation Memorial Scholarship); JesRIO GRANDE Sciences at
CALL FOR U.S. SOLDIERS TO .
Carly A. Cr~w, Rac1ne, K1b- Dill-Arnold-Cutler Scholar- Scholarship; James K. Stan- sica A.. Janey, Pomeroy
Lynn Ash of .
Ohio
MONITOR A CEASE-FIRE
ble Foundation Scholarship; ship, Kibble Foundation ley, Pomeroy, Kibble Foun- (and James D. Euler MemoSyracuse has
Noith~rn
Adam
V._
Cummgs,
Sy.raScholarship;
Stephanie
N.
dation
Scholarship.
rial
Scholarship);
Joshua
L.
received
the
CbLUMNIST
Universiry.
In a recent column I predicted that a
cuse, Kibble Foundation Kopec , Middleport, Kibble
Jennifer
A. Starcher, Kehl, Ree.dsville; . Billy J.
Racine
He
will be a
Chad Hubbard
call would soon go up for U.S. soldiers to
Sc~olarsh1p: Heather E. Foundation
Scholarship; Pomeroy, Kibble Foundation Kennedy II, Middleport;
Home
freshman
What Jesse Helms has in abundance, monitor a cease-ftre between Israel and
Da1ley, Racme, James D, Jennifer M. · Lambert, Rut- Scholarship; Stephanie L. Andrea
c.
Krawsczyn,
National
majoring in general studies.
and all to himself, is a commitment to the Palestinians. Afterward I wondered .
Euler Memorial ~cholarship, land, Kibble · ~oundation Stewart, Middleport, Dill- Pomeroy; . Christopher s.
· Bank ScholA . graduate of SoutherrY
K1~ble Foundation Scholar- Scholarship; Michael G. Arnold-Cutler Scholarship;
principles that 'is c~mpletely public and whether perhaps I had gont• a bridge too .
c Aft
all
h d
11 d c
S hip,· Corey D. Darst, Lawson,
Rac1'ne,
D•'ll- Wes.l ey
s.
Thoene, Pickens, Pomeroy (and
h.1 t th High School, Hubbard wa~
utterly indifferent to criticism. Let's face 1t, 1ar. ter , no one a yet ca e 10r such F
d
•A
d) F 11
D
ars P a
e
active in basketball, baseball,•
.
d.
·
ld
1 b ·
Pomeroy,
Kibble
Foundation
Arnold-Cutler
Scholarshl·p,
Pomeroy,
K1'bble
.Foundat1'on
oun
ers
war
;
a
on
·
Un1'vers1
·ty
no matter how immune we may claim to a .th mg; my pre tenon cou east Y e dis- ·
Ro sh R ·
Jeff
A
· d
h
f
1
d
Sc.holarship; Matthew 0. Kibble Foundation Scholar- Scholarship,
President's
u • acJne;
rey
·
of
Rio cross-country, golf, all-academJ
be to denunciations by our political foes, m1sse
Dill, .Racine, Kibble Founda- ship; Charles W. Legar, Scholarship; Autumn D. Shank ' Pomeroy (and Vale •
cara Ash
Grande and ic, Who's Who Among Amerination. as t e vapors o a penervi imaginobody (and certainly no other U.S. sention Scholarship.
Pomeroy, Area Six Health Thomas, Syracuse, Kibble dictorian Award); Rachel A. Rio Gra
, nde Community Col- can high sch~ol Students and
ator) enjoys them, and most of us will do
So I am grateful that less than two
Brant D. Dixon, Pomeroy, Services; Steven J. McCul- Foundation
Scholarship; Taylor, Middleport; Robert J .
National Honor Society.
our best to sidestep them if we see them weeks later, New York Times columnist
Kibble Foundation Scholar- Iough, . Pomeroy, Kibble Adrianne L. Tilley, Cheshire, Taylor, Racine; Jason L. lege.
ONU is affiliated with the .
ship; Chad B. Dodson, Mid- Foundation
Scholarship; Kibble Foundation Scholar- Warner, Long Bottom; and
The "'holarship is awarded
coming. But what infuriates liberals Tom Friedman made a proph.et out or'
Methodist Church, and
United
1
me. Writing on the Times' Liberal Attack
dleport, Kibble . Foundation Jason N. Mora, Pomeroy, ship; Brandy B. Tobin, Mid- Mickey
L.
Williams, to an ' oming Meigs County
beyond endurance is the fact that
freshman who shows academic enrolls 3, 100 students .. · · .· .. -.Helms genuinely- does not care w"·hethe~-p;!ge_(llllilw:lly-}:J;l&gt;-~~~.f2al~e) . £riedb:__ _ J-_.Bc:b.clia.Jts. hip;_.MicbaeL_W,__J(]b.bliLEoundatio.o..Schalar- dlapJlil,__QjJJr_ar.no.Ld::C.utler Eomero.y~---~-----~---~
the New York Times, say, has condemned man announced he had just
,
a
him to whatever tile liberal equivalent of solution to Israel's gha~tly problem: Let a
perdition may be. To be held in such cease-fire be monitored by a force of ·
~
-~"~'•'~'•'
..p
..p..p.p ~:.
~ft
~~~~~~~~~~
'
se rene comempt by a man whom the state NATO troops.
of North Carolina has five times insisted
The fact that Friedman called for a
Vl~
upon sending to the U.S. Senate is an NATO force, rather than a purely Ameriaf!Tont for which Washington's liberal elite can force, is irrelevant. Friedman knows ·
simply has no effective response.
perfectly well that Israel would never con- .
~
His indifference is like a cold glass of sent to a force including French or Getwater in Washington's desert of arrogance. man soldiers. The proposal would swiftly·
p~
w~lol _ .. .lll~ .!t.~'*- ~.$...'..llW
~lll·'-lWI.ln•
•••'l.;l...J'Oi.llilho~."oo;.·.-~~...:-..
1 would be almost as happy if it were dis- metamorphose into a call for U.S. troops.
Thanks, Tom!
p1aye d bY,some lib eraJ serlator -- th augh
the exercise · is hard to imagine, because
(William R11sher is a Distinguished Fellow
the liberals are cheered on. by the very of the Claremont lnstilllte for the Study of
forces that hate and dread Jesse Helms. At Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.)
,.,.tW §tltCJif),..

.t

·

NOT~

PROBLEM.

COLLEGE NEWS

Named to list

CONSERVATIVE ADVOCATE

Farewell .to a southern gentleman
American politics is a bewildering collection o f pe&lt;somlities, many of them
crooked, some of them admi rable, and
almost all ·of them colorfuL Tlw connoisseur can fi nd here just about any human
type he is looking for, usually 111 the company of a large group of others of the
same general breed. But in Jesse Helms,
who has just announced that he will step
down at the end of his fifth term as a
Republican senator from North Carolina, in January 2003, friends and enemies alike
agree on one remark able cqnclusion:Jesse
He1ms is ·unique.
What you think about him depends on
what yo u think of the views he holds, and
the trait that characterizes him . He is, from
·
the liberal standpoint, almost ce rtainly the
most hat~d man in the S~nate. To censervatives, on the other hand, he is a hero of
almost mythical proportions. And, significantly, it isn't at all hard to find individual
~berals who, without unsaying one word
of their criticism of his views, will con-

has many admirable qualities.
--.,.-the·- rutle~-of~ccmducl:--t~le-intt,nati&lt;ma.l-comJmlmicy-has-d&lt;,vel""-1--icf;;·e~d.~e-ith~at he
is it about jesse Helms that elicoped over the past half century.
The United States is about to ftnd out just how irrational .
that outlook is, to its own peril and the world's.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

s

Clueless
• Star Trilmne, Mitllleapolis, on President Bush:
Sometimes it almost seems as though President Bush needs
someone to connect the policy dots for him, so. blind does he
·
appear to obvious linkages.
Recently in Bdjing, for example, the Bush administration
was talking with· China about tightening up o n exports of
nuclear tec hnology to such nations as Pakistan and Iran . In
Texas that same day, the president was kickin"" C hina in the
diplomatic teeth by asserting flatly that th e United Stares
would unilaterally withdraw from the' Ami-Ballistic Missile
treaty ''at a time convenient to America." ...
With the ABM in force, China doesn't need more than its
.
current two dozen ballistic missiles to pose a credible nuclear
deterrent. Without the ABM, both the United States and Russia are free to build missile defenses, and that undermines the
credibility of the modest Chinese deterrent. BeiJ.ing might be
forced in those circumstances to build a lot more missiles, or to
put niultiple warheads on the ones it now has. That, in turn,
will give the neighboring Indians a good fright, and they might
feel the need to ramp up their nuclear forces. Next in this game
of nuclear dominos would co me Pakistan, of course and the
world would get a lot mo~e dangerous very quickly.. :.
•

Friday, Aug. 31, 2001

\.
The Daily Sentinel • Pa~e A 5

s

.

Bushs foreign policy
skills greatly lacking

Frld8J, Aupst J1, 2001

CALIFORNIA SIRLS

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

PageA4

WISH THEY
- ALL COULD BE

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740..992·21545 41=ax: 992·2157

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

-

· th ese fierocious, yet complex, emotions?
1 have had the goqd for.Une to know
Senator Hehns almost from the beginning
of his Senate career. The first thing you
notice about him is that you are in the
presence of a spectacular example of an
almost vanished breed: a true-born,
Southern gentleman. No matter how
much he may disagree with someone, his
·inbred courtesy never fails him. He is
almost always soft-spoken; he is innately
fair; and his word is his bond. But, while
those characteristics are not common · in
today's Senate, neither do they make Sen. ator Helms unique.

Enrolls at ONU

Eams
scholarship

William
Rusher

~

r:
-------------------------------.
t• $$'tt'tt11:.
•
.•
I
.

II
l ..

:

WASHINGTON

MERRY-GO- -R~UN0

.

.

Jack

Anderson
&amp;

Douglas
Cohn
COLUMNIST
I

'must be. preserved to pay future Social
Security benefits. Bm the money cannot
just sit there under some great big government mattress. It is loaned to the government in the form of those special T-bills.
So, lockbox or no lockbox, the money still
goes into th e Treasury. Without a lockbox,
the money is simply treated as tax revenue
and spent under the Uniftcd Budget. With
a lockbox, the mont'Y is treated as debt:
money owed by the Treasury to the Social
Security Trust Fund, aka "lockbox."
Either way, the money is spent. Either
way, the governnient remains obligated to
pay future Social Security benefits. One
way, it is treated as tax revenue ; the other
way, as money borrowed from the Trust
Fund. Either way, the goVernment owes
the money to Social Security beneficiaries.
Look at this ~ituation making an analob'Y to ,, family.Your child earns money each
summer, btJt the child is obligated to turn
the money over to you because you will
be paying his or her college education. It
does not matter whether the child gave

you the money or loaned you the money
in exchange ·for a·promise to pay for that
future education. Either way, when rhe
time comes to pay for the education, that
money from your child will have been
long gone. If you managed your financial
affairs wisely, you will be able to pay for
the education. If not, you will have to borrow the money, or, in a worse-case see. nario, you will default
The family is not fully analogous
because, as the parent, yo'! have the ability
to diversifY your portfolio. The government does noc and should not. The government has no busines.~ playing the stock .
market, no business having a dramatic
impact on the price of ·a given stock, or
even on a: basket of stocks covered by such
instruments as index futures. Imagine what
would happen if the Social Security Trust·
Fund invested its money in Dow Jones·
index furures. That mon ey would flow:
into the 30 stocks that make up the Dow ·
Jones Industrial Average. There could
never be enough stock , and those stock.1
would soar. And then the day would come
when the Trust Fund needed cash, and it:
would be f&lt;;JrL'ed to sell off some of its~
investment;, causing nothing less than a:
1929-like Cr;J.Ih.
.
No, it is time for truth in taxes. The
Social Security tax should be ended. Social :
Security benefit&lt; - like defense and eclu- :
cation spending - should come out of
general tax revenues. The lockbox myth :
sh&lt;;&gt;Uld be exposed.
•

·aack Anderso11 and Douglas Calm are distribwed by Uflited Feature Sy11dicate, Inc.)

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.

American lockbox mythology
. WASHINGTON -There is no lockbox; there never was a lockbox; there never
will be a lockbox.
Does America place money into a lockbox to ensure that there are sufficient funds
to pay for future defense needs? Does
America have a lockbox to fund future
educational needs? These and other programs are paid out of general revenues,
which are collected year after year. Yet, we
continue to kid ourselves that America
needs a Social Security lockbox. Not only
is it not needed, but the whole concept is
nothing more than a chimera.
Employees and their employers, as well
as self-employed people, pay into the
Social Security Trust Fund. By law, that
fund must then invest all of the money in
special Treasury bills, which is to say that
the money is loaned to the federal government. Then, as funds are needed to pay
Social Security henefin;, enough of those
T-bills arc cashed in to do the job.
Now, let's say what is really happening:
The government collects. Social Security
taxes, places the money into a fund that it
lends to itself and pays back to the fund1 as
necessary. '
Or, le t's simplifY it further: The government collects Social Security taxes, places
the money in the Treasury and pays out
benefits as they arc due. · •
The idea of a 'pecial fund anJ special Tbills is ju,t silliness. It 's accounting
· mumbo-jumbo. And the idea of a lockbox
is even silli er. Social S.ecurity ·money flows
imo the Social Security Trust Fund, which
becomes a lockbox. It can't be touched. It

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•·

�Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport. Ohio
Sunday SctMIOI 10 am Mommg won;:hip II am En:nmg - 7 pm
Wq&lt;Jn'--.day 1 p.m.

O.J . White Rd off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Cliaprnan
Sunday Sehoul - 10 a.m,
Wonhip - II a.m.

O nu-rh or Jesus Cbrlsl APQfitolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
P.t~llw : JanK'' Mtllcr
SunJJ) Sdl\rol • 10 .10 a.m.

( ·athulir
Sacml lleart Clltholie Cbun:h
161 Mulhcrry A... e., P~J~ncru y, 992-51198
Pit~tot : Rt:\ . Walter E. Heint.
Sat . c,m. -l · -t5 - 5 : 1 .~p m : Mass-5:30p.m.
Sun Con -li:45 9:15 a:.m ..

E\emng • 7:lOp m

Rh't'r \ '11lley
AJXl~lohc Worship Center
~1.' S..lnl A"e., MH.Idlcpor1

('hurd! of ( 'hrist
Pomeroy Chun:h
.

Nev. Luna RoaJ
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 7:.'0 p.m.
7 .m p m.

uf Gud

"

Pastor : T~rr y

llanvil le Uoliness Chun-h
Stut~· Rmttl' .12.5. LanKH ik·
Pa~lor: Gal) J ad;~on
SunJ:~y ~c h onl 9· .10 am
SunUa} worshtp - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p. m.
WcdncM.Iay pmycr &gt;erv icc - 7 p.m.

Stewan

Sd101.d . 1),~() a.m.

ltl :~O

WcUnc~d ay

First Southern 811ptist
4IK72 Pome roy Pike
Pa.~w r : E Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday Sc hoo l - Y:30 a.m.
Worship. · 10: 4 ~ a.m ., Hill p.m.
•Wednesday Servi~.:es- 7:00p.m.

a.m .. 7:00p. m.
Scr,•kc!o . 1 p.m.

_;Ycd n c~day

Sun day Sl· holll · IO: l5a.m.
Bihlc St udy Wednesd:ty 7 pm

or

J 'J~-~H

flrndhUI)' ~oad . Middlt:-po.)fl
Sunday School- I.J :30 a.m
Wuflihip- 10:30 a.m.

Rutl11nd Chu rch of Christ
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.
Wors hip · 10 ..~0 a.m.. 7 p.m.

Silver Run Baptist
Pus1or: Ste ven K . Litt le
Sundu y Sehoul- IIJa.m.
Worship - I hun .. 7:00p.m:
Wtdnc&gt;duy Se rvict:s- 7:00 p.m.

Bradrord Churrh of Christ
Comer of St. Rl. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Mini S1er! Doug Shumblin
Yout h Minis1cr: Bill Ambeq;er
Sunday S~.: hool- 9:30 n.rn.
Worship · 8:00a. m., 10 : ~0 a.m:. 7:00p.m.
' Wednesday Services -7:00p. m.

\11. Union Baptist
.Pa'i.tor : Joe N. Soyrc

Pa ~ t or.

Dunald Balis
Sunday St·hool - 9:30a.m.
~o rs h 1p • 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wcd n ~.~d ay Scr\·ice . 7: 00 p.m.

Btthlehtm Bilptist Chun:h
Greut Bend, Route 124. Raci ne. OH
Pastor · Dan iel Mecca
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Sunday Wnrship - I(J:3U a.m .
Wcd nc.~day Bible Study-6:00 p.m.

'llte Chu rc h or J esus
Chri.&lt;d of Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. lfiO, 44tt-6247 m 446-7486
Sunday Schoo ll0:20-l l a.m .
Relief Soc iety/Priesthood ll :05-12:00 noon
Su~ram cm Service 9- 10:1 5 a.m .
Homemaking meeti ng, lst .Thu rs.- 7 p.m.

Langsville Chrls lhm Church
Pastor: Robert Musser
Sunday Sehoul- 9:][) a. m
Worship ·. lO:Yt a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wcd1 wsd ay Sc rvke 7:.30 p.m

Old Hethel f' m! Will Buplist Church
2860 1S1._B_t. 7. M1ddlepon
Su ndny School - 10 a.m.
E\'cn ing - 7:00 p.m.
Thur!idu)' Services - 7:00

Rt~dsl' illc

St. John Lutheran C hurth
- r lne Grove- - - - -

Church orChrl!lt '
-pn~tor: Philip Sturm -'---~
Sunl1;1y Scho&amp; 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip Service ; IU:~O tun.
Bible S1udy. Wcdnc ~day, 6:10 p.m

Hillside B11p1iSt Cbun:b
St. Rt. 14~justo iTRt. 7

Pastor: Rev. Jam es R. A~Tee. Sr.
Sunday Uni fied Service
Worship · I 0:30a.m., 6 p.m.
Wc:dncMJuy Services -7 p.m.
Victory Baptisllndeptndt nt
.'12.5 N. 2nd S1. Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worshi p·- IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnesda_y Scrvkcs- 1 p.m.

Our Sawiour l.utheran Church
Walnul lmd Henry Sts .. Ravenswood, W.Va .
Pastor: Dav id Ru ~sd l
Sunday Schoo_]- 10:00 a.m.
. Worshi p- II a.m.

Church of Chris1
lntcrsectiun 7 and 124 W
Evangc li~t : Dennis Snigcnt
• SuniJily Bitllc Sludy • 9:]0 a. m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:JOp.m.
WedneSllay Ui blc Study - 7 p.m. '

St. l•aul Lutheran Chun:h
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy
Re v. Donald C. Fritz
Sunduy School -9:45a. m.
Wu r ~ hi p - 11 a.m.

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason

Sunday S~.:hool - 10 a.m .·
Wonthip • I I a.m .• 6 p. m.
Wedn c~ day Scr\'iccs - 7 p.m.

Graham United M ethodist
Worship -9:30a. m. (I fit &amp; 2nd Sun).

7:J[j p.m. 13rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesda y Sen•icc - 7:3 0 p.m.

Hartford Church or Christ In
Christian Union
Hanford. W.Va.
Pnstor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
W1..-dnesday Se n·i ~'Cs- 7:30 p.m.

· Forest Run Bapdst
Pastor : Arius Hun
• Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · I! a.m.
~

llnite&lt;l \lt'lho&lt;list

( ' hristian l 'nion

Mt . Moriah Bilptlst
Fourth &amp; Main St ., M1ddlepo rt
Pastor: Rev. Gilhcrt Craig, Jr.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 hehind Wi lkc:svilh:
l'll~ l (lr: Re\'. Ralph Sp ires
Sundu y School -9:30 a. m
Worshi p - 10:30 n.m .. 7 p.m.
Thursduy Sef\.' ke~ - 7 p.m.

Churrh of( ;ocJ
1':

Sunday School - 9:30 a_m.
' Worship · 10:4.5 a.m.-

1':

Meigs Cooperathe Parish
Nonhea ~ t Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Jane Bcaui ~:
Sunduy School · 9:30a. m.
w{)rship . l1run., 6:30 p.m

II

Mile Hill Rd .. Rucine
PaStor: Brice Un
Sunday School· 9A.5 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.

Antiquity Bapllsl
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a,m.
Sunday EYcning - 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Wednesday Se rvices '.'7 p.m.

Chester
Jane Beuuie
Worsh ip - IJ a.m.
SunOOy School - 10 a.m.
Thursd:ly Sel'\'kes - 7 p.m.

Rutland Churth or God
Pn.'itor: Ron Heath
'
Sunday
Worship- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnesllay Services - 7 p.m.

Rutland Free Wi!l Baptist
Salem Sl.
•
Pastor: Rev. Pau l Taylor '
Sunday School - 10 a . ~ .
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedne~y Services· 7 p.m.

Pa ~ t or:

Syracust First Chuf(' h of God
Apple and Second Sis.
' · Pastur: Rev. Da"id Ru~se ll
Sunday Schoo l ttnd Wur ~ h ip- Hl a.m.
Eve ning Sen·iees- 6JO p.m.
Weflnesd!ty Serv ices- (d O p.rn:

Stcond Baptist Cbun:h
Ra venswood, WV
Pu..wv: Dav id W. Mcciain

Joppa
P..utor: Bob Randolph
Worship . 9:30 u.m.
Su nday School · 10: ~0 a.m.

Long Bottom
Sundu y School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10: ~0 a.m.

Churi'h of God of Prophery

..

·announ~ments. $ponso:red

by these area merchants

_

Racine

1&gt;cx1er Church or Chrisl
Pastor: Nathan Robinson
Sunday St·hool9:30 u. m.
Norman Will, supcrimendcnt
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Su nday School- 10 a. m.
Wouhip · II A.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
Coolville Unlled Methodisl Parisb
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Ch urc h
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday Schopl- 10 a.m.
Won; hip • 9 a. m.
Tucsd11y Services- 7 p.m.
Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C
Sunday Schoo l - '9 a.m.
Worshi p · 10 a.m. ,
Wednc!iduy Services - 10 a.m.

137-C N. 2na Ave.
Middleport,
OH
.
Bill Quickel .

992-6677

lngel'.s ccu,let
16~

N 2nd Ave.

Middleport,· Ott.

992-:7028
•'

.'

9~2-6376

I

Florist
Meigs Couur.y's Oldesr Florist
352 East. Mai~
Pomeroy, Oh ·

6.Ji
W

"let ur tend yiJur

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

992·5130
Pomeroy

Nazarrnt·
Middleport Ch un:h of the Nazarene.
Pastor: Allen Midcap
Sunday Schoo l ~ 9:30 a.m.
Wor~hip - 10:30 a. m., 6:30 p:m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen_Midcap
Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Tere~ Waldeck
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · I0:45a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Ave.

Thursda y-7:00p.m.

Rejoicing Lite Church ·
500 N. 2nd Av e., Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
Pasto r: Emeritus Lawrence Forema n
Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

New Lite Victory Center
1
3173 GCOI]:CS C~ek Road. Gallipol is, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten
Su nday Services· 10 a. m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday- 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.
Full GO!ipel Church or the L lvlna S11vlor
Rt .338, Antiqui ty
Pastor: Jesse Morris

God's Temple or Praise
31665 McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Bt~lcolm
Services: Thurs. Nites 7:00 pm
New church No Suriday sef\/ ice eslitblished.
Salem Community Church
· Lieving Road, West Colum bia, W.Va.
Pastor: Clyde Ferrell
Sunday Sc hOOl 9:30 11 m
Sunday evening service 6 pm
Wednesday service 7 pm

l'l'll h •rost :II

SyriK' u.~e Mission
14 11 Bridgemun 51., Sy r!tcuse
Rev. Mike Thomp son,Pastor
Sunda~ School . 10 a.m.
Even ing· 6 p.m..
Wednesd ay Service - 7 p.m.

l're~h\ hTian
Syracu~e

Fint United Prt1byterian
Pastor: Rev. Kriiana Robin son
· Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship . II a.m.

llazel Community Cbun:h
OITR t. 124
Pastor: Edsel Han
Sunday School · 9:30 n.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.

Harrisonville Pmby.terhm Church
Worship - 9 a.m .
Sunday Sc hool - 9:45a.m .
Middleport Pmibyterlan
Sunday Sc hool · 9 a.m .

Dyesl' ill~

Community Church
Sunday Sehoul· 9:30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .

Worship · 10 a.m.

Sewcnth·Day Adnmtlst
Mulhcrry Hts. Ref., Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Lawinsky
Sa1urday Services:
Sab bath School - 2 p.m.
Wurship - 3 p.m.

MI. Htrriton United Bnthren
In Chtisl Chun:h

Texas Co mmunity off CR 82
Pa.~tor : Robe rt Sanders
Su nday Sc hool - 9:30a.m:
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WednesdaYServices - 7:30p.m.

Un iltd F11lth Chun:h
Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pass
P11s1or: Rev. Robert E. Smlth, Sr.
Sunc,tay School ·9: 30a.m.
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m..
Wedn~ sday Service· 7 p.m.
~ ull

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

h

Eden Uniled Brethren in Christ

Gospel Llahlbouse

...

2 In miles north of·Reedsville
on Slate Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday ·worship - 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Serv ices - 7:30p.m.
Wednel&gt;llay You th Service - 7:30 p.m.

Crow's Family Res,taulrant ;ftflbtr. lime .funeral Jfo111~el
"Fesiurlng Kentucky Fried 264 5ootlo S..... Ave. • "''••••"· Ott 4S760
740·99H141
Chicken"
lnct I. ,...... DheiN .
W. Main St.,. Pontere~,vl 590 lAd Malo StrMI• , _ , , Ott 45769

740·992-5444

992•5432

Jalus R. Acree, Jr.· Dlrtdor

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
POMEROY FLOWER
· PHARMACY
106 BUTI'ERNUT AVE.
We Fill Doctors'
POMEROY,OH 992-6454
Prescriptions
"Flowers for all occasions"
992·2955
Pomeroy
FUNERAL HOME

SNOUFFER FIRE &amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE

992·7075
. 882-8200
Lundy Brown
Regan Brown 172 North Second Ave.
Middleport, Oh
Director
174 Layne Stn•etl

•

•".1

~

(

~'

\.........,...
A weekly look at the
region's top football teams,
as voted by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. sports
staffers. (First-place votes
in parentheses)

Team
Prev. Votes
1. Ironton
2 46 (3)
2. Portsmouth
1 44 (1)
3. Gallipolis
6
36
4. Jackson
3 33 (1)
5: Logan
4
30
6. (tie) Eastern
8
21
Parkersburg
5
21
8. Fort Frye
9
15
9. Wellston
7
10
10. SE Ross
10
9
Others receiving voles:
Ravenswood 6, Ripley 4, Minford 1.

To be eligible lor .The OVP
10, a laem must allher: a.) be
!rom the Maaon-Gallla·
Metga.:.Jaclwon area; b.) be a
local conference member; or
c.) play at least one game
against local teama.

FRIDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS

m:eafotb '
1\eal Qfstate
216 E. Second Pomeroy

a lways &amp; 'f.orever

9ift Sfiop
51 BE. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH

992-1161

Prep Football
SEOAL

Please see Ohio. Bl

Friday's Games
Point Pleasant at Roane Co.
Coal Grove at Gallia Acad·
emy
Wellston at River Valley
Waverly at Jackson
Cambridge at Marietta
Nelsonville-York at Logan
Meigs at Athens
Parkersburg at Warren

Friday's Gaines
Wahama at Federal Hocking
Southern at Hannan
Wellston at River Valley
South Gallia at Waterford
Fort Frye at Eastern
Meigs at Athens
Vinton County at Rock Hill
Millersport at Miller
Trimble at Alexander
Nelsonville-York at Logan
Steubenville
Belpre at
Catholic

Non-league
Friday's Games
Wahama at Federal Hocking
Southern at Hannan
South Gallia at Waterford
Oak Hill at U niota
St. Albans at Ripley
Ravenswood at Poca

Herd players
suspended by
NCAA
CHAIUESTON , WVa. (AP)
- The NCAA has suspended
14 Marshall athletes for improperly receiving extra work benefits, the school said Thursday
night.
The announcement, which
involves 12 football players and
two men's basketball players, was
made two days before the
Thundering H erd opens the
football season at No. J.,fl orida.
According to the N CAA, two
football players must sit out one
game; 10 football players will
miss three games; and the basketball players must miss 30 percent of the upcoming season. ·
Sporn information director '
Ricky Hazel said some starting
players were among those suspended, although he wouldn't
release. any names. H e said quarterback Byron Leftwich · - a
3,000--yard passer ~t seasan wasn't among them.
Neither the scqool nor the
NCAA said what the extra ben~fits were or who gave them. A
'statement issued by the school
said tbe benefits were given
prior to February 2000.
· The penaltieS will be served
immediately while the university appeals.

field goal edges Bobcats

BOBCATS' .HARD TARGET- Akron's Brad Detwiler (23) dives for but m·isses Ohio quarterback Dontrell Jackson (17) during thE
tirst half Thursday in Akron. Ohio. Akron won 31,29. (AP)
·

Astros' rookie
closes up sWeep
'

-TVC

•

AKRON (AP) Zac
Derr kicked a 38-yard field
goal as time expired and
Akron spoiled Ohio coach
Brian Knorr's debut with a
3 1-29 vic tory Thursday
night.
The Bobcats (0- 1 , 0-1
Mid-American Conference) had ralli ed from a
28- 19 d eficit . to take a 2928 lead on Kevin Kerr's
32-yard field goal with
2:45 to play.
The Zips (1-0, 1-0) th en
went on a 12-play, 55-yard
drive, and Derr beat the
Bobcats with a last second
field goal for the second
straight season. His 18yarder with 24 seconds to
play last Sept. 23 gave
Akron a 23-20 victory.
Bob Hendry rushed for
I 03 yards on only eight
carrie s and two touchdowns for Akron, including
a 56-yarder that gave the
Zips a nine-point lead with
8:18 remaining in the third
quarter.
Ohio cu t it to · 28-26
minutes later when quarterback Dontrell Jackson
capped :in 11-play, 78-yard
drive with a 22-yard TD
run. Jackson faked out several tacklers and leap ed at
over two d efenders at the

Services: Saturday 2: 00p.m.

PasM Mike Ailltins
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p. m.
Wednesday Se~ices- 7 p.m.

"We accept Preneed Transfers'

106

Sliwusvllle Community Churt:h
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell
Sunday Services - 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7 :00p.m.~

SyrM:U!le Chun:h or the Nazarene

Dignity and Service Always

992·2121

PuMor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7 : ~0 p.m.
Wedne sday Ser\'ice · 7:30 p.m.

Pent«Mtal Assembly
St. Rt. 124, Rnclne
Faith Valley Tabem-.:le Church
P115tor: William Hoback
Bailt:y Run Road
SundaySchooi - IO a.m. ·
Pa stor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Evening -7 p.m.
_ _ Sunduy Evcnh'!_g 7 p . m~
. ----~.
Wednesday-Service~ - 7 p.m.
Th ursduy Se rvh:e - 7 p.m.

3304.5 Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pas1or: Ruy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Eveni ng 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday-7:30 p.m.

Reedswlll~

NEW HAVEN

Established 1913

Calv11ry Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.

Clifton Tabernacle Churth .
Clifton, W.Va.
Sum.luy SchlXll • I 0 a.m.
Worship - 7 p.m.
~\'cd nc.~ay Sl·rvice • 7 p.m

Mt. Olin Communlty Chun:h
Paslor: Lawronce Blish
Sundny School • 9:30a.m.
Even ing. 7 p.m.
Wcdneday Service . 7 p.m.

Ton:h Chun:h
Cu. Rd . 63
Sunday School : 9:30a.m.
Wors hi p- 10:30 a.m.

EWilfG FUNER.AL
HOME '

thflu2ht~ with ~:~1~1 eqM"

741)..992·2644

•

Brogan-Warner

Pastor: Rev. Franllin Dicken..;
Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Faith Gospel C hurch
Long Bottom
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship - 1 0 : 4~ a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.

140·667·3110

Service &amp;

Faith •'elloW!II hlp Crusade for Cbri.rt

Morse Chapel Churt:h
Sunday school · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.

Hoc:kin/ilport Chun: h
Grand s..ee1
Sunday School· 10 a. m.
Worship· I I a.m.
Wcdm:sduy Services. 8 p.m.

~

Worship-7:00p.m.
'?'ednesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

Middleport Community Churc h
575 Pea rl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderron
Sund ay School 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30 p.m.
WednesUay Service - 7:30p.m.

East Letart
rastor: Brinn 1-tarknc:ss
Su mlay Sl.'hooi - 10 a. m.
Worship - 9 :t.m.
_We.dncsday_,_7_p.m.__

Re v. Do nald C. Frit1.
Worship - 9:00a.m.
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.

Pastor: Brian May
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Com munity Chun:h
Pastor: Thero n Durh am
Sunday - 9:30a.m. aild,7 p.m.
Wednesd11y · 7 p.m.

Pastor: Dewaync Stutler
· Sundny School - II a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

·~

Letart , W.Va. Rt. I

Harri~nvllle

Morning Slar

l.uthrnm

or Christ
Pun.land-1-! &lt;td nc Rd.
Pa,tot : M11.:hacl Duhl
SundJy School • Y:JO a. m
Wor ~ hip · IU:J O 11.111 .
w. :dnesday Ser\'ices . 7:00p.m.

New Lime Rd., Rutla nd
P'ustor: Re\'. Margare1J. Robinso n
Ser\'kes: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday. 2:30p.m.

C11 rmel &amp; Bashun Rds.
Rad ne, Ohiu
PIIStor: DeWuyne Stutler
Sun day Sc.hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Bib le Study Wed. 7:00p.m

I ,atll'r-Da.\ Saints

Fairview Bible Church

The Beliuers' Fellowship Mlnl!itry

Csnnei-Sutton

Hickory Hill ~ Church of Chrisl
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 11.m.
W01ship - 10 a. m.. 6:30 p.m
WL"tlncsday Scr\' ice~ 7 p.m.

Sundll)' Sc hon i-Y:45 fU l1 .
E\'cning- tdO p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices- 6:.10p.m.

Beth11ny
Pustor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School- I 0 a.m.
Wo r ~ hi p • 9 a.n1 .
Wednesday Services. 10 a.m.

Laurel Cliff F~ Methodist Chun:h

Othl·r Churrht•s

.~ron

The OVP

-Worship - 10:30 n.m.
Service- 7 p.m.

Faith Full Gospel C hurch
Lon g Bottom
Pasmr: S1evc Reed
Su nday Sc hool - 9:30a.m.
Wursh ip · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.·
Friday- fellowship service 7 p.m.

Snowville
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.

•.

Wedne l&gt;d a~

Abund1nt Gra(.'(' RF. I.
92:\ S. Third St., Midd lcJXtrt
Pas tor T~: ,· csu Du"i s
Sund ay service, 10 a.m.
WOOncsdJty serv ice. 7 p.m

Salem Center
P&lt;tslor: Ron fierce
Sunday Sc hool - Y: 15 a.m.
Worship · 10:15 a.m.

Hysdl Run Holiness Church
Rev. Mark Michael
Sunday School - q:JO a. m.
Worship- I0:45a. m.. 7 p.m.
Th u r~IIY 8ihle Study and Youth - 1 p.m.

Coo lville Rood

Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.

Agape Lire Center
"'Fu ll-Gos pe l Church"
Pas tors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Seco nd A\·~. Mason
773-501 7
Service time: Sunday 111:30 a.m.
Wednesd ay 7 pm

Rutland
Suntlay Schi'lol - 9:30 &lt;~.m .
Wmship - '10:.\t l a.m.
Thursthty Services - 7 p.m.

P ~~1nr: Re\', Doug Cox
Sunduy Worship - 9:.'0 p.m.. 7:3 0 p. m
Wedrtcsday Service - 7:30 p.m.

Clnm·h Christ
l'a~l or : 1im Eatun

Sunday Sl;:hool- 9:30a. m.
W01ship · 10:40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wc d n ~sdu y S~ rvic~s- 7:00p.m.

Rock Springs

Service. 7JO p.m.

While's Chapel Wesleyan

William Justts
SundU)' Sc hool . JO:OO a.m.
Mnming Wnn&gt;htp - 11)·45 a.m.
Sunday Service · 6:30 1&gt;.m.

Harvl'!it Outreoth Ministries
47'43Y ~e i be l Kd .• Chesler
PasioN: Re\'. Mal)' and Harold Cook
Sunday Services: 10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wcdncsduy Services. 7 p.m.

Pastor: Kci1h Rader
Su nday School - 9: 15a.m.
Wurship - 10 a.m.
Youth Fe llowship, Sunday- 6 p.m

Wesleynn llihlt' Holines!i Chun ·h
75 Pcnrl ~ ~, M1(k\lepnrt.

Yuiuh- . ~:.'0 pm Su n day~

Racine Flrsl Baplisl
Pastor: Rirk Rule

PastOI': Rod Brower
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunda~ School - IQ:35 a.m.

1/2 mile nil Rt. 32~
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Monic'"
Suml:ty Sdmul - 9:.'0 a.m:
Wur~hip · lO:JO :tm., 7 : ~0 p.m.

Com mumnn - 10 tu ll.

Urudbu r~ ·

Pom~nl)'

Leadi ng Creek IM. Rutland
Pastor: Rc1. DC"v.cy Ki ng
Sunday St'hool- Y:JO a.m .
Sunday wor~ h ip- 7 p.m
WcJncsd &lt;t)' 11raycr mt;l'ting- 7 p.m.
Pine Gro-.c Bible Holines.."l Church

'l'uppcrs Plain Church of Chri!it
ltutnun,cnwt
Wnrsh ip Scrv ict' - I.J u.m

First 8ap1is1 Chu rth
Pa~or: Mark Morrnw
6th uml Palmer S1., Middlepon
Sunl.iay Sc hool - 9: 1.5 a.m.
Worship - 10: 15 a.m., 7:00p.m .
Wcdnestla~ Service- 7:00"p.m.

Rost or Shllron Uoliness Church

Page Bl
Friday, August 31, 2001

Freedtmr Gos~l Mission
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd. 31
Pu!itor. Rev. Roger Willford
Worship- 7 p.m.

Ash Street Church
Ash St.. ~idd l epon ­
Sundny Schoo l . 10:00 a.m .
S" nduy Service -6: 00p.m.
Wedne!iduy Service - 7:00 p.m.

P~arl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a. m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Meigs golf results, Page BJ
College football scores, Page BJ
Diamond Roundup, Page B6

Worship Service 10:30 a.m.

Sunday S~.:houl - 9:30a.m.

Hemlf.K'k GroYe Christian Ch urth
l'.tslor: Richard Nease
Sunday s~·hoo l . 10:30 u.m.
Worsh ip · 9:30 o.m
Rih le Study . 1 p.m.·

Minersville
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday Sehoul - 9 a. m.
Worship · 10 a:m.

\

Zion ( 'hun:h or Chr ist
Pon)cnJy. H~trri Silfll' ille Rd. ( ~1.1 4 .'J
l' a~1nr: Roger Wat.~on
Su ndtl)' Schuol 9:.'0 a.m .
Wnrshir .

(Middleport)
Pa,tor: Roh Brower
Sundlly Sdli.K11- 9:30a. m.
Wnr ~ h1 p • II :00 a.m.

C..:itiVil r}' Pil~.:rim ChajK'I
1-fUrrbm\\'ilk Koad
Pastor: Charles McKcttJ.i~·
Sunday Sdt('llll 9j 0 &lt;t.lH .
Worship - I I run .. 7:()(1 p.m:.
Wcdnesd.1)' Savkc ·7:00 p.m.

lt UO iUll . • 6JU p.m.
\~'rdnc,Juy Scr\ire~ · fdO p.m.

Pomf'ruy Firsl Baptist
f·_:bl Mam St.
Sunduy Srhonl - 9:.\0 a.m.
Worship - IO:JO a.m.

H~alh

The Daily Sentinel

No Sunday or Wednesday Night St::rttces

CommunitJ

Pastor: Bob Robmson
Sundny Slilool · I0 u. m.
Worship - 9 a.rn.

Inside:

Sunday ScbQoJ- 9:30a.m.

ra~l\lr:

• Fort~~t Run

J 1057

Wur~ h ip -

u. m.

Rev. Anw~ Tillis

Mum Sltt'.:t. Kulhmd
Sunday Wt,rsh ip-1 0:00 1Ul1.
Sunda) Scrvin:- 7 p.m.

Bea rwa lln"A' RidKt' Church of Christ

Kullund l&lt;'irst Uap tiSI Chu n:h
Sunday Schnol · 9: .' 0 a.m.
Wor~h ip - 10:4~

l'a~ lo r

Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
C.rleton lntudtnomhaationaJ Cburth
Kingsb ury Road
Pastor: Ruben Vane\!

Porthand J.' in t Chun·h or the Nazarene

Pastor: Keit h Rader
Sm1dcly School - 10 a.m.
Worl&gt;hip ~ 11 a.m.

IJulilll'SS

Pastor: Robert Barber
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Sun. Wool'lip - 10:10 a.m .. 6p.m.

Sunday School 9:.'0 a.m.
Wnrship 10:30 n.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdnc!&gt;day Scn•iccs -7 p.m.

a.m.

Rstwoods

Sun&lt;l:ty Sdu11.•l - 10·30 a.m.
~·~~~ltlr- J el'ft'l'Y Wal la..:._·
1 .~1 and ~n l Sunda)' .

Sund.ty

II

Stiver Rid,gc

l'a shlr: ~cv Samuel W. Bas1e

Enterprise
Paslor: Kt• ith Rader
Sund:ty School . 10 a. m.
Wnrsh tp . I} a.m .

Fo-. t ~r

Su1HJ.1y Schoo,&gt;l und
l-loly Eu~·hari~ t 11 :00 a.m.

v,:.,,r .. hlp · I.UO .t.m.

n p.m

Worshi p~

Soutb Hethf'l New Tntament

Rutland l: hurth or the Naunme

...

Wednc:sday Set'\ ices . 7:30p.m.

J:!f1 E. Matn .St.. Pomeroy
Rev. J am~, Hcmacki. Rev. Knthnrin

Kt' no Church or Christ

Scrvtl't' . 7 p.m.

•

Doh Rohin!&gt;On
Sunday Schon! - 9:4'5 am.
Pa~tor:

Grace Hpiscopal Church

Youth Mmi ,t.:r: Uilll-'ra/K"r
Sunday S1.'h01)1 - Y:.ltl Hll.
Wor:.htp- ~~ ~ 15. I(l:)llu.m.. I p.m.
W~!dnc,Jd) Servin·:-. - 7 p.m.

570 Grunt St .. MuJdlcp1•fl
Sunday ~c h ao.) l - 9JO a.m.
· I h 1.m . 1111d

Jane H..:unir

Ct'ntnal Cluster

'

Church or Chrisl
51h a11d \1ain

IIOIW Baptist Church (Soulhern )

We~ne sday

orChri...~t

212 WMlttnSt
Mmi slcr Anlhon~ ~ !orris
SunUa~ Srhtll.ll - lJ:.~O a.m
Wnr~hir- IO:JO ll.m .• 6 p.m.
Wcdne~d:t) Sen· ic~;~- 7 p.m.

Middh~PQrt

Lillie Cret'k Baptis1 Chun·h
Pnn· Hollow Rd .. Rulland
Pastor: Jnhn Sv.&lt;msun
~unduy s~hool. 10:00 d.m.
Morning S.:rvtcc li :DO a.m .
E\'t: nm ~ Scn'K'r ·6:00p.m.
Wctlnes.:luy Scr. ke - 7:.~0 p.m.

\\'n (~/llp

Jlli~ lor :

Chester Chu n:h uftbr Naurene
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grnte
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wt:dJJt•sday Servi~o-es • 1 p.m.

Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 tt.m
Tuesday Sorvices - 7:30 p.m.

Epi,ropal

l'omer()y Wl'51sidt· Lhurrh or Christ
1'\22() Chiltln.:n'o; Hnme Kd
Stmday Sdmttl • II a.m.
Worship . !Oa.m.. 6 p.m.
W~!dn~·sday Service~·· 7 p.m.

Uberty 1\sstmbly or God
P.O. B..•.\ 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.Va.
Pasti)r: N~i l Tl·nnanl
Sunday Services- IO:lKI a.m. and 7 p m.

Baptist

·n,ppers Plain~ Sl. P11ul

A~bui)"'S"uw~

Chu rch or Jesus Christ

\ssl'mhl~

Sel'\it.:-cs - 7 p.m.

Trtnity C hurc~
Second &amp; L}nn . Pumcruy
Pa~1or· Ke,-. Crni!! Cro~"-ma n
Wur.hip 10:25 am
SunJu) Sd1uol 9: l.'i a.m.

DJalc} Mass . H:30 a.m.

Ptlmt-my Churdt ofth• Nu.art.ne
Pru.tor: Jan La\ender
Sunday School - 9;30 a.m.
Won;:hip- 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m
Wednl.'sday Scr,•ice:oo • 7 p.m.

Reed.n -lllt
Worship - 9::\0 a.m,
SundaySchooi-IO:JOa.m.
. FirM Sunday of Month · 7:00p.m. service

( ·ongn·gatiunal

Mus~t-9 : 10a.m.

Sun

Kt"\ m KonL.Ic: PJ~Ior
SunOOy. 10 am anJ (rOO p m
Wedn.!.,..ld) . 7..m p 111 .. Youl,h.l·n 7:10pm

W~·dn.esdJ) .

WeJne~a)'

Friday. Aug 31. 2001

HOUSTON (AP) - R ookie Roy Oswalt's pitching feats
no longer surprise his l:ious.ton...teammates .
~
· Oswalt pitched hi s second co mplete gam e and three-hitter in 24 major league starts Thursday as the Astros beat the
C incinnati R eds 6c 1 and maintain ed their fo ur- game lead
over Chicago in th e NL Central.
·
"Now, if he doesn't have a good game, it would am aze
me," first baseman Jeff Bagwell sa id."We've talked about this
many times. He's just something special. It's not just what he
has in his shoulder and his arm.
" It 's what he has all over, his h-eart, his guts, his mind. He
has the whole package."
Oswalt . (12-2) matched the team re cord for rookie wi ns
set by Jim Deshaies, who went 12- 5 in 1981i.
" It 's not important, the vi ctory is w hat co unts;" Oswalt
~id
.
Oswalt allowed a solo hom er by Adam Dum; in the sec- ·
ond, a single by Dunn in the eighth and a singl"e by Dmitri
Young in th e ninth.
"We've seen this before from him," Craig Bi ggio said. " He
just goes out there and .gives you seven or eight solid
innif1gs. H e did a good job and ..we scratched o ut eno ugh
runs to get the win.''
Oswalt struck out nine, one short or his career high , and
walked none. He also pitched a three- hitter agai nst Montreal on Aug. 4.
·
"Ou~ of over I 00 pitches, he threw only 25 o r 26 balls.
That's a pretty good day's work,"Young said. 'That kid has a
tremendous future ."
Ast'ros manager Larry Dierker likes Oswalt's progress.
"He was the Texas League pitcher of th e year last year, and
if he'd started in our rotation fr01h th e start of th e seaso n, he
might be the National League pitcher of the year," Dierker
said.
FRUSTRATION- Reds th ird baseman Dmitri Young sits on
the field after trying to field a ball Thursday. Young later
Pleas• see Reds, B3
committed two erro rs as the Astros swept the Reds. (AP)

PREP VOLLEYBALL ROUNDUP

Meigs, ·Eastem post-Tri-Valley Conf. wins
BY DAVE HARms
OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS. - The
. M eigs , Marauder volleyball
team picked up it5 second win
in as many tries in the young
season by defeating Alexander
15-4, 15-5 in a.TVC volleyball
match Thursday evening at
Larry R . Morrison Gymnasi-

um.
The win gives the Marauders a 2-0 mark both overall and
in the TVC. Meigs will travel
to Wat&gt;rford on Thesday
evemng.
.
Mindy C hancey led the
Marauders with 15-of-16
serving, one ace, four assists and
13 points, Corrie. Hoover was
ilO-of- 11 serving had two kills
and eight point5, Nikki Butcher scored five points on nine of

nine se rvin g, Kayte Davis
scored two points and four of
four st·rving and five kills, Katie
Jeffers wa1 5- of-5 serving with
one poi nt, one kill and six
assists and Jaynee Davis had
one point on five of five serving with one kill and three
blocks. C hrissy Miller also had
.one kill.
As a team Meigs was 46-of48 serving, bad two aces, 14
kills, I 0 assisrs and three blockS.
Meigs also won the junior
varsity con test by scores of 157, 15-5.

but Eastern quickly eclipsed man had three kills, while
that advantage in handily Deana Pullins was 32-of-32
defeating the Torn adoes 15-J setti ng. Katie Say"' and Emily
and 15-8 Thursday night in Hill each had kills.
Tri- Valley Conference volley13ehind Karr's S5Tvi ng E. litball action at Eastern H i ~h ern opened up a I0- 1 lead ami
School.
never looked back in the first
Whitney Karr led Eastern ga me.
Karr scor.c· d eight
with eight point,,Kass Lad- straight po ints before Calaway
wick had seven,
eventually scored the ~ m eTariimy Bissell · added five win ning poinrs.
points, Janet Calaway added.
T he second game was much
three, Janet Ridenour added · closer, however. KaSs Lodwick
four, w hil e Tiff.1ny ' Spencer opened up the game to give
and T iffany Bissell each adcled Eastern a ':i-1 lead. The Eagles
one.
then stretch ed it out to 11 -7,
South ern was led by Eniily • before ra cing to the 15-8
Eastern top,s Southern Hill with three points, l&lt;;atie finale. '
Sayre added two, Amy Lee
Eastern won the rese rve
BY ScoTT Wou:E
added two, Tiff.1ny Williams contest 15-3 and 1Sc 12.
OVP CORRESPONDENT
two, Rachel Chaptpan two,
Southern hosts Alexander
TUPPERS PLAINS
and Jeri Hill ont•.
Tuesday. Esatern will play host
Southern took an early lead,
Southern's Rachd Chap- to Nelso nville-York Ju esday.

'
•.

X-country
teams to

open
seasons

FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

C HESHIRE- On Saturday, River Valley Hi gh School
will aga in be rhe start of the
cross country season for many
schools in the area.
This year's edition of the
R iver Valley Early Bird Cross
Co untry Invitational Meet
will feature all the teams in a
five county area surrounding
Gallia County.
Over 300
ru nners have
entered
in
the
meet's
four races,
according to
race director
and
River
Valley coac h
Ed Sayre.
Sayre
"This wi II
be our sixth
invitational, an d by far our
largest," said Say re. "It will
showcase so me of the best
runners in Southeast O hio."
The . team to beat in the
boys _race . w ill be the guys
from Warren Local, last year's
state qualifying teain in Division I , whi"c h has · many
returnin g veterans plus some
new faces m ovi ng up from
the j unior hi gh ranks.
Gallia ,Acad emy, M eigs and·
Wheelersburg will be favored
to battle for th e· oth er top
positions.
A past champion, Ch.ris
Eades of Jac kson, will headline the individual competition along with Luke Suffridge from Warren ·and Gallia
Academy's Daniel Roush.
On the women's side, the
g irls from Wh eelersburg will
be one oLthe. teams to watch
o ut for along with the teams
from Gallia Academy, Warren
and Meigs.
Sara Wi se man of Gallia
Academy will be back to
defend her title . . Several
regional qualifiers w ill also be
returning to the hills at
C heshire, including River Valley's own Emily Lawson, who

Please see 1-country, BJ

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Aug 31, 2001

Friday Aug 31 , 2001

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

L.,_...,;FOII
r
.;Fo.i~
iiiSALE
iiilii_.,.,l r ~~J!_~~ l l
~. ,__AN_mQUJ'
_ •'li-_.1

Sentinel - l\e i!)ter
CLASSIFIED
~rtbune

57 acre farm. 7 bedroom Mobile home tor rent and
and 3 bed oom houws mobile home lot tor font
horse bam 32x84 shop ga (7401446 1279
age ha)l I &amp;ld pas ure
woods stocked pond good

r

ht nt ng Sel houses ogeth
er o sepa a e Be wean

We Cover
Me igs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can'

~~·;;;,~~an·~~cep~oa~

Buy o set
ques 1124
SA 24 E
992 2526
owne•

Ir

APARThfmrs
m a RtNr

.

eou

2_2_1_8_ _ _ __ _ _

r

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

I

Monday thru Fnday
8 00 a m to 5 00 p m
HVW I.Q WRITE AN AQ.
S u cc essful Ads
Should Include These Items
To He p Get Response

Ir

-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

·-------pi
•
r
·-------pi
PERsoNAl.'!

~

YARD SALE-

GALLii'OLJS

Da y I n Co umn

1 00 p m

Mo nday F day f o nse t on
In Next Day s Pa pe
Su n da y In Co um n 1 00 p m
Fo Sundays Pap e

A D sp ay 12 Noon 2
Bu S ne ss Da ys P o To

Pu b ca o
Su nday D spa y 1 00 p m
Th u sday o Sun d ays

Sta t Your Ads W tl'l A Ke ywo d • nc ude Compe t e
Desc pt o n • Inc ud e A P ce Avo d Abb ev ~ on s
Inc ude Ph o ne Num be And Add ess When Needed
• Ad i Shou d Ru n 7 Day5

I. ri~l

6 faml1y yard sa a rain or
sh ne Saturday September
Why wa I? Stan moe11ng 1st (9am 5pm) &amp; Sunday
Ohfo slnges tornght call toll Septombe• 2nd 11 am
free 1 800 786 2623 ext 5pm) at State Route 160 2
1621
ml es north of Holzer Hasp
·~-· ~·---1 tal tams offered compute
n.r•u'4U\J~ 1 .,
taos clean twn maHres.s
set chandel er healthride
'
old lei chen droplear tab e &amp;
Advoca e For Ch d en
~~ha:s ~~~u:hl~a~ ~
Become a Foste Pa ent
Coli WV Youth Advoc.te s nk vanity top 3 wicker
chairs some ant quas &amp; col
Program
ectbles goodceanclo h
Phone 1 800 575 6008
ing al sizes books toys
or 304 345-&amp;197
and much mCH"e
:-:-:-:-----::--:::-:---New To You Th H Shoppe 64 Mil Creek 30th 31 st
9 Was St mson Alhens
, f Th d Friel &amp; S t
s
urs ay
ay
a
740 592 1842
Qua ty c olh ng and house urday UHie of everyth ng
ho d ems $ 00 bag sale 906 Fourth Avenue &amp; 9 Vin
every Thu sday Monday ton Avenue August 31
th u Sa urday 9 00 6 00
SEip embe
2 3 9am 1
Fum lure c othes apP an
ces b kes mowers porce
a n doll collect on doors
GIVEAWAY
windows many mora I ems

Ir

YARD SALE
PoMEROYIMIDDLE • ~

3 fa mily Aug 31 Sept 2
one ml e past SHS on St
Rl
124
baby ch ldren
clothes adult clothes toys
&amp; househo d Items etc

Free Yard Sale S1gnt
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

Home Heath Agency seek
F ti 1 p rt t e1 p
~J w~n~ AN~ co/:.'
pet veSalarywfhbenelfs
No home health
exper1
ence necessary App y at
750 F rst Avenue Gal po s
o phone 18664411393
{to free)
,.---------,

rain or sh ne
COLLECT BLE SALE# sun
sept 2 M
Se t 3 8a
on
P
m
A ..-m Austc HIs Sy acuse
.....,
II t s a TREASURE we
MAY have
Glass Fen
ton Potlery Toys Do Is
WANrnD
Nascar Too 5 Planter11 A
my Blankets Jewe ry etc
Lw--•TOiiiBiiUYii.-_.1
--.
Community yo•d oalo a
the co ner of Eagle A dge Absolute Top Do ar U S
Sve
GodCons Proof
Ad &amp; PneGoveAd Sat sets
Damonds
Gold
051 OnS
1sl of Sept too s antiques A ngs
u S Cur ency
guns clo hes &amp; m sc don M T S Con Shop 15 Sec
m ss It (740)992 1527
and Avenue Ga 1pol s 740
Commun ty yard/bake sale 446-2842
Pomeroy C ffs Apartments
come see what we have
925 4th Ave Back Yard Aug 31 Sept 1
F ee Pupp es 7 weekS old L nens Exe else Equip
M xed B eed Mother Is ment TV Ste eo Stand
Back and Tan (740)379 Lots mise Tuesday 8 5
9278
Wonted to buy used mob fe
No
- - -- - - - - August 31 september 1 3 -::::==~=.;:.:;__
homos Colt 1740)446 0175
To g ve away usod roofng 48BurnetoAoad Kanauga Ga age Sale
ran 01
fund raiSing
memb ane Pome oy area 81 y rd Sal S 1 b shine 8am ? Sal 9{1 one
1740)992-6810
~ 3 ~emloc: Ao",P/~
day ony
Tum at Meigs
SaleS Or
- - - - To good home 10 mQn old-mle out oH Eve green
MftmllryJ&gt;ar&lt;len_on Bl l go i;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-1--c olleCtiO nsabout 1/4 m to to n e sec 1110
puppy part Husky German
Sheppe d
housob oken Carport Sale F day &amp; Sat ton house on eft Lots ol
liELPWANrnD
Full
gent e ov ng Needs space u day 9am 4pm 204 K ne Ant quos
Dep ess on L.- - - - - - - - '
BenefitS
0 un has a shots &amp; 5 on Dnva Auto pool sweep Glass F e K ng com c
nuete ed cat 304 674 0073 lo above ground pool Nk:e books clothes &amp; Mise
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Paid
=~;.;..:;-,;.;.-.,..;.;..., adde Good teenage c ofh 1740)992 7599
Assemble cralfs wood
l..o6T AND
l ing Household &amp; more
King bed $too 572 H gh
tem'r~s:~! ~~vlded
Training

*J Q B S*
*JQBS*
*J Q B S*
50 NeW
p
"ti
NOW
Available
$7/hour +
weekly

r

bonus

__

.Job Poatlnga

c

SEPTA
1 F 11

c;w.:~~=D~!.Ity

eo

babvoltto• lor 2&amp;3
year 0 d Fu time In my Start Your Business To
homo [140)441 9887 alte• day Primo Shopping Cen
Bpm
to• Space Ava !able At AI
:-:--:---:-:---::----:-- lordab o Rate Sp ng va ley
Nood
Job
Beourlty Plaza Ca l 740-4&lt;18 01D1

Neleonvllll Ohio •5784
Appl cat on may be obtained
0001$5 000 +
Month
from and returned to SEP $1
Work From Home Free ln.
TA 800am to 400 pm
to 1..a88 447 7813
Monday through Friday
Complete job descnptions Needed 83 People to looe
a e &amp;\laitabte tor e\llew 30 ba by Octoller 15
The dead ne to appllcat on e..nd
1or th 1s po sf1 ng 8 Frid ay New Just Patented I lost
t be 4 2001
23 bs none Monthll-800
epem
57D 9628
Post on
www bs rn4ile com
Rooldont Supoi'VIoor
Now Hiring Establshed
housec ean ng business
Hourly Rare 10 58
Are you amb tious ha d
working
team or ented
Work Schedu 8
whose main objecttve 8 derotatee ta 11 Call (740)258 , 3f
Work
ohllt
to Must have license and
8 OOe m
to lransponat on
OOp m OOp m
8 ooa m

s

a

o:=n. Irio

Cardmal Glenn B el p r e and the Spartans b o th had 192 s but the
tte w a&lt; broken wtrh rh e fi fth scor e t1 e b reaker M e gs fim sh ed m

fim shed 16t h

m

FOUND

Found gray &amp; Wh e mae
cat 5 1'1 S New Haven 304
882 106

Huge Yard Sale Something
fo everyone baby turn ture
d shes toys August 3f
1&amp;3 9§m 7 38 LeG ande
:::Bt:::vd::.._--,-_ _ _ _ _
-:Ga age Sale n back yard
Approx 8 112 m les south of
r~ ~~! 8n~~ :~::s7'~~~~~
rens c othee August 30 31

St Porno oy Ga aije ~ e
Sep , 3 4
:M,.:o_
v -ng-'-cf-um
- tu_e_ n_IC_n_a_csc olhes
k tchen
lems
books &amp; types next to
" -D
M\i ana ds Sat 9 30 3
Sat Sept 1st 9 3pm 727
Broadway M ddlepon n a
ley behind garage

F eo lnlormaUon pkg 24 H
1 801 264 5625

Th1s m eet 1s fas t b ecommg a
preVIew fo r cross country m this
l ocal

five

Sayre

1

coun ty

We

are

area

tn a m aJOr

r~
r

n
I
I

J ose

Au g

2H Sep t

R!J O thre w

sconn g
e1ght h

w 1l d

a

p1tc h

th e

RtjO who appeared

m t h e f o urth maJOr l ea gu e
ga m e

of

p1tch ed
Au g

ht s

fo r

R ed s

17 after s1x

on

years on

th e stddm es and five e lbow
Dunn s

hom e r

w as

hJS

an

NL

r oo kt e

fo r

an y

month

Fn n k Robut so n h t t

1 1 ho m ers fo r tbe R e d s 111
A fte r

Dt nn s

h o m er

ca m e

H e was really co n p ct m ve
R1 c h ar d

H1 dal go had

!Jag veil

an

1 th e s xth an d

h 1t a sacnfice fly tn

the se v e nt h
Notes

Chns
to

Reds on

l ea d

11.. c lts m a

st art

Fr d ay
wlth

the

fo r

th e,

l eads NL

1 60

n 11 n gs

R eds

st art e r s

NL

w 1tl

mnmgs pitc h ed

f ewes t

2

732

3

T h e onl y ro o k es v 1th m ore

n

we rt~

11 o n th

Detrott s Ru d) Y o rk ( 18 m

Osw 1lt r et1 red t h e next five

Aug u st

batters

Ma r k McGw1re ( M av 1 987)

p t tch

h t Young

With

a

t h en remed 1 2 m a

De n nys

(1

Reyes

fo ur runs -

and

1 937)

O&gt;kl a 1d s

M nne sor a s

H all ( 1 3

row before D u nn s smgl e

J mn t e

n At g u st 1163)

5)

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went for the t
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e

1

bm
v as

stuffed JUSt b efore t h e goal
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13 l ead o n

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g•v

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a

28 19 l ead
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o n 26 attemp t s m clud n g 1 15

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from P ayn e o n 23 carnes

G rove

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33 9

early m the thtrd and st o ppmg

yards B r mker go t 1?4 ) ard s

V mton Count&gt;~ W ar ren W ell

an

on 19 attempts

ston

StOll

R ock

Hill

Wheeler sbu rg

Southern
and h ost

scho ol River Valley

Oh 10 t wo p o mt conve t

K err al so k~eked a

Brand o n P ayn e scor ed on a

The first race b egm s Wit h the
JUruor htgh g •rls rac e at 9 a m

l h ave no 1dea h ow these

h

seconds t o go tn th e second

m my

So

th at r •n

ho n ers

Aug JSt 1966

Bom e

b ack and sh u t them do\\ n

m

h om er s m

thre\1

Alexander Athen s C h esapeak e

m en and two first year runners
top seven on the b oys

m ee t

H e battkd Aft er g '

rook1 es

Augu st

p l eased t h e

R eyes

pttc h ed

r ec ord

U rad A us

&lt;ad

13th o f th e seaso n and 12th

the hunt for a t eam t rophy
B1rd

I w as r ea ll y

sc h edul ed

op era tion s

I

w 1y

Rl31 t rt p l e

co m eb ac k

the

ln

Jade 11

m us sac n ficc fly

t ng u p

run

tn

from Page 81

M e1gs

e n ce

Wanted Home n country
to espons b e pas to &amp; h s
fam y enta o land contrac t (740)985 3845

1

yard run at the 10

to

make 1t 2 1 13

46

m ark

b ut ltay

I

and the l as t race w ill b e th e high

Hu st o n s 2 yard run

sch ool boys race at 10 4 5 a m

pull ed th e Bobcats w 1thm 2 1

36 l at er

fiel d goal m t h e

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5 yar d
1! qt ar

t er
Kn o r r

too k

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at W ak e Forest

IrBoA~~s~~ Ir.:P':::liO--~H~OM-E-...,
Sl.l!\1( '1 S

VANS&amp;

4-WDs

Auros
FOR SALE

1

Golllpollo Coi'MI' COiiogo 3 Bed•oom on Route 2
(Caraeru Close To Home) 1304)87S.5332
Call Today! 740-«6-4387
r---~--..,
1-800 2144452
Az.OS 1274B

1 $1 Time Buyers Ca 1 Oak

Complete Beauty Saldn 101'
sal~
2 Tann ng beds
shampoo bowls dryers &amp;
many extras $5000 firm
colt (740)387-0812

Abandoned Doublew de
free set up &amp; de Ivery Hu
'Y 1 on y 1740)448 3093

one Kulckle Electric Whee
chol• Ike new (7.U)Q92
'2838

G:t

All I'IIIHtlte ldvet1111ng
In thll MWIP.Iper II
aubject to the Fedtr1l
Fair Houtlng Act of 1HI
which molln It lllogll to
" ldvlftiM ..any
llmllltlon or
dltcrfmlnetlon biNd on

...,.,.,.ce.
r.ce

color ,.Uglon 11x

temlllllltalua or Mllonal
origin or any lntentk»n to

Nkeanyeucn
pre-ce,lfmhotlon Of
dl.crlmlnltlon

wood
Gal pols today
Gov 1 backed p ogram buy
loco 1740)446-3093

Adu
0 Stan
Lease Plua
Required Days
3481 Even ngs
0802 740 446.()101

Pa ade Indian Outl t c oth
ng head d ess b east
plate e c couch &amp; cha r
(740)446 2222

3 bedroom home M nersv e
a ea nve view refe ences Tw n A \IBrTowers now ac
ryqu red depos equ ed
cepting
no pets 740 992 6777 af1er
appl cat ons fo 1 BA
5pm
HUD subs d zed apt fo
3 bedroom house 25 Evans e de y and d sab ed EOH
Heights Ia ge tam ly •oom
1304)675 8879
w th ca port $400 mon h
$3:;0 depos t (74D)256
6456 days 1740)256 , 530
evanlogs
fiOUSilHOLI)

riO

F nal Days Nationwide n
ventory
Reduction!
1304)736-3409
Land home packages a 1
areas Prequa ty by phone
1740)446-3583
Lim fed 0 No C•ed t? Gov
emmi!Jnt Bank F nance On y
At Oakwood In Bart&gt;ou s
ville WV 304 736 3409
New 14 W de 3 ,Bedroom
Only $19 850 F•ee De very
&amp; Sot Up 1 888-928 2426

New 18x80 3 bedroom 2
beth on y $500 down ca
Nlkk I74D)385 4367

I

Tann ng canopy w/bench
$350 Kohle blue couch &amp;

1740)742 3033

=53:::7_:_9:::52==.8_ _ _-::-::Wh 1 h 1
2
fk
ee c a
wa ers
wa k ng cane potly chal
make best oHe 174D)448
3870

==-===='::----

loveseat $10D 1740)388
0436 afte• 5pm

;:_::.:...:::c;.....:.c_ _ _ __
WATE~ WELLS DRILLED

(740)888-7311
Waterline Specla 314 200
PS $21 95 Per 100 1 200
PS $37 oo p
, oo Aft
er
B ass Compress on F Hlngs
In Stock
RON EVANS ENTERPRISe
ES Jackson Ohio 1 800

Fo• Sale Aocond f oned
washers dryers and refng
erato s Thompsons App
Needed 304 736 7295
ance 3407 Jackson Ave
Th ee bedroom house n nue (304)675 7388

. "-='-"0==--::--:-Plot Prog am
Rente s

"'

MOBILE HOML'I
n..,... ....

Hotpo nl washer
$75 Work ng E ect lc Dryer
Wh rlpool dryar $75 GE Maytag $25 2 Bft metal
30" e ectno range 1ke new
$l 75 GE refrigerator: white b ead shelves $35 each
was 5175 now Sf 50 20 old lawn mower11 not wort&lt;
gas ranga $95 All appllan ng $20 1304)773 5698

i

I

FOR""" I

14x70 2BA traler $300a
monlh &amp; $150 depos t to al
7 742
eec r c no pets 1 4°)
2714
-----=-::-::
2 bed oom 14x65 CIA
tolal eleclric abso utely no
pels $350 mo plus deposit
Cal 174D)245 9491
or
(740)245 5 75 No.,calsal
te 9pm
., 2 bedroom on Rou e 35 no
pets depos t &amp; eferenoe
roqu red
1740)2 45 5690
I74D)441 9080
2 Bed oom T a le on Add!
son Pike $220 ~.p&gt;onfh
$1 00 d6poslf No Pets
1740)446 1637
1740)448
3437

o•

ces gua anfeed Skaggs
Appi ances 76 V ne Street
1740)446-7396

2 BA CIA quiet oottlng
tor
Appo ntmenf
Call
1740)962 2187
3 BA CIA all eoctrlc nice

~~
~urrLir..':J

Lea her couch &amp; ecllner Block brick sewe ptpes
char
good cond lion w ndows ntels etc C aude
P ced
Ef&amp;Sonable Winters R o Grande OH
1
,7....:40:::):::256:.:..:6c:67
:..;0; _ =:-=-:: Cal 740 245 5121
Mo ohan Carpet 202 Cart&lt; - - - - - , . - -- - : : Chape Road Poner Ohio Clopay brand garage door
F ee estimates 90 days c ose out sale Cash &amp; car
same as cash easy f nanc ry Hvera models choose
ng ~so&amp; Mas erca d ac from
(2) 8•7 NfODO
cepted Orvea tile save INSIWHLocks $150 for
alot (740)448 7444
o both Used (1) 9x7 wood
1 877 830 9t62
door primed for paint ng
.:...::..:..:::::..:.:;::::.____ perfect cond ton $350
Ref gerator F eeze $50 New doors (1) 16)C7 14050/
1304)675 8795
INSIWHIPL Glass/ No lock
"-~------ $850 If ) 18M7 ffOOOI NS/
~
White No ock $500 13)
8x7 11000 INSMfHI Sunray
Man St eet Fum tu e
glass/ Lock $350 each 11 )
1304)8751422
8x6 8
14300
NS/
51 5 ManSt•oet Point
Amond/l.HFI EJ&lt;t $300 If)
Peasant
8x7 14300 INSIWHIPL

2 BR a le ect lc sir carpat
Nsw &amp; Used Furniture
very very nlce no pels n New 2 Pleee Uvlngroom
Gafllpatlo (740)448 2D03 Suites $399 ii&lt;IY Sol
and (740)448 1409
T•ade

j

SroRI1NG

GooDs

'

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~~~": ~88~~J40l448

I.

,

cal
fo
appo n)meot Rsmlnglon 700 30.()8 4x
(740)992 2187
Woavor $425 Remington
870 20 gauge Wing Master
All oloctric $300/n1o + de 5425 Browning A 5DO Fl
pos t no po o 1740)387 Be glum t2 gauga two ba
0611
• 8 $65D 1740)387 7693

~

•

R~g1 ste ed li!&gt;• •r Pup

Ak t
plos DOB
malo 2

.(O~oc:~k~o:di·~~~~·

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1 01

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Lowe'ry Pe.gent E oct lc or
ge.n Fu size like new
1740)367 0688

2002 Waco alum num t sh
ng boa w cente canso e
50 ho se Me cui)' &amp;-t a e
59800 2002 Waco 7 a u
m num bass boat w 60
'-:'"-: : - - - - - - - ho se Mercury &amp; tra er
c:c
$1 0 30D 200 Hydra bass
B8
hevy 4X4 a r Ill t be glass bass boa w 150
cru se ~ wo k truck ho se Mercury &amp; Ira e
Asking 4 000 (740)446 51 5 600 other assortment
~
D 71:li4411""'_ _ _ _ _ _, 0 boats ca Tom 8 Manne
~40
Survtees 74Q-992 6520
MoroKCYCLI'S
~
•
Al!fO
6&lt;

I

[60

PAKTS

ACCFSSOIIIES

I

IMPRO VEMENTS

A ypes of mal;o n,ry-- l&gt;ri o l&lt;~--~
o ock Bo s one 20 y s e)(pe
enca
ee
est mate
(304 773 95o0
- -----,-- - - - -·
BASEMENT
WATEAPROOFING
Uncond ana e me gua
an ee Local rele ences fu
n shed Es abl shed 1975
Call 24 H" 1740) 446
0870
1 80D 287 0576
Aoge s Waterp ool ng

1994 Honda 250NX on/ oH
road e ec nc s art water
cooed
7 000
m Ius
$1400 (740)245 5934

1998 Honda Aecon 250 CC
good cond lion 4 whee e
has 2 wheel d ve S 800
1304)675 5888

Honda 450 ES Foreman
$4500 1740)742 2821

I

r

I

liir.;..--.----,
'

Four Caval e s t om S1 995
to $2 695 1988 Che okee
VEGETAIILI!li
$2 595 1993 G and AM
1990 L nco n Town Ca GT V6 au 0 S2 495 1994
Cann ng tomatoes we p ck good cond ffon AJC no1 S 10 $3 695 We take
$2700
OBO trades COOK MOTORS
$5 bushel you p ck $4 working
I74D)446 0103
bushe cal 1740)247 21 13 (304)675-7285
J m 0 Bran Farms a so 990 Z2 C8118 f
1
4
er good
he hot &amp; '
~·
cond ton
runs
good
TRUCKS
I· \ 1{\J '-II 1•1'1 II "''
(740)388- 509
FOR SALE
l\ II\ I '-IICU"
1992 25 h Ann versary Ca "---iiiiiiiiiiiito_,.r
maro G een LM 82 000
m les 1\/C (740)448 4237 I t ) 1969 GMC 1 f/2 Ton
Leave a message $5000 dump truck s eel bed sin
OBO
gle aMie 5 speed 305 V 6
-:-:-:--:--::-::::----::-- fa cond 1on fa 1 es Ask
994 12 ft Stock T a 1e&lt; 1993 L ncoIn Town Car lng $2 000 (1 ) 1973 Chevy
Good Condition (740)388 56 000 ml es leather oad 1 1f2 Ton dump t uck alu
981 5
ed excel en
cond t on m num bed s ngle axle 5
1740)446-3108
speed w spflnte• 366 V 8
1994 Massey Fe guson 0 e "--"'-'-'-=.:.__ _ _ _ good cond t on good t res
se ,la m Tr•ctor model 1993 Mazda MX.S L S V Ask ng S2 800 No COL ,.
283&lt; typo 521 0 557 hou s 6 loaded auto 83 000 m qui ed on either Call
$12 500 Cal Vnce Alee o Beck $5000 304.{;75 3893 1740)446-451 4 8 5pm o
Pam Wid&amp; at F rst Federa
1995 Mazda M ata 68 000 1740)448 3248 after 6pm
Sav ngs Bank of Ironton
m les Runs and looks l982 Chevy Pickup 250 6
[140)532 8845
Grea
$6100 o trade cyl auto $900 1984 CJ7
60 HP ntematlonal trac 01 1740)339-3089
Jeep 4 r:y 4 spd $3500
with front end loader Cal
1995 Monte Caro Z34 989 Ford I 50 XLT Larinet
[140)379 9381
94 000 m lea (740)992 3008 63 000 ml 85
Palom no
1996 L ncoln Towncar m nt Sl de In camper s eups/4
cond t on low m eage good shape Lowe bass
$15000 frm one owne boat&amp; taler 18HP eecl c
(740)992 3102
s ar1 molar lui y ~u ppecl
816 New Ho and fo age '-:-:c:.'::-'-'--''-:--::--:-;- Package Deal $8500 a 3 o
wagon 27 New Holland 1996 Pon ac Sun! re dark sel separate Ca (304) n3
ed au omattc AMIFM CO 5296
bows 1740)949 2072
playe new 1 es dual a r =~------­
bags we manta ned aM 989 Ford Range 4x4 ex
GEHL round ha~ bale wll clean $5000 080 Ca !ended cab 48 000 m es
take cat fe as trade 304 (740)446-9230
Good cond tlon needs 5
576 21381aave message
"--"'-''::-::=:..'::'--::-:-:::-: speed manua transm ss on
1998 FOI'd Con ou L,X 4 $1 500 1740)388 D436 affe
J D 6800 comb nt 13 ft cy lnde 76 000 mKes dartc. 5 OOpm
G H 1740)448 3648
g eon 4 doo NADA i:~-~~-~--,
$7 000 ask ng $5 700
VANS &amp;
Wanted to buy a Sdede v 1740)446 2824
4-WDs
ery rake 5 3pt bush hog
used metal to
ba n 1999 Monte Carlo LS e)(
(740)446 1052
eel ant cond tion oaded 1986 Ford B onco Edd e
39 000 m es $10 500 Baue Two one Med urn
WANIED
1740)446 3117
Mocha/Light Mocha 4x4
L---TOiOiBiiiUYiiio-_..1 ~:::..:_::..:=---- 302 VB EFI Aufoma lc
..,
96 500 m les AJC Cru se
20-241 Aluminum goose
11 Power Windows/Locks
stock tra ler Good L vely s Auto Sales 1988 4 Suspension L ft Alp ne
I
Ford Escort $6DO 1992 Stereo System $6 DOD
Ford Range P ckup 5 1740 )448 6833
speed $600 1986 Ford 1988 F 150 XLT Lanai 4x4
Crown Victoria 5650 1989 truck Excellent Cond 1on
Olds Cutlass Supreme 66 000 miles (740)44
Miniature Jack Donkey 6 $1000 1989 Ford Tau us 171 6 any1 me
(740 )962 2480 sw $600 1992 Eagfs P e - - . . . : . . . . - - - - months 0 ld
m10 e $800 1990 P ymouth 1990 Chevy As o Van Au
Nann" goats some w h Sundance
$850
1985 o N C I74D)992 6137
'
v
Dodge 800 Convartab e
kdl different p Ices ,oung $600 989 Chevy Be ena 1990 lauzu tuck 4x4 4
rooslers
Lakenvelde s S1200 1992 Dodge B 250 cy 5 sp new t1 es &amp; bat
Oomnlquu Dar1&lt; Cornsh Van $WOO ~ 989 Ods ery auminum whees
$3 00 each Two pol a$d u ~ Clo 1 11000 992 Dodge nice $1 200 1740)247 4292
Lavender gu neas
'ShSdow $600 198 '~- Pon 19111 Chevy Suburban 4WD
pol (740)256 1399
'
f ac G and Am $45D 1968 88 000 m les oaded very
IL\Y &amp;
0 ds C ••a $700 1988 good condft on (74D)448
GRAIN
Dodge Omnl $500 1988 3108
, _ _ _ _ _ __, Chevy G 20 Van $1 000 ;.;..:.:..,-::--:--:-:-7:--:--::
~
1992 Me cury Topaz $800
11100 bs ound bales
980 Ford Musang $500
oto ad Inside barn $16 1985 Chevy Cavaler $250
each (740)448 0103
990
Chevy
Cors co
- - - - - - , - - - : - - - - $1 DOO 1980 Fo d P nto
Buck a b8 e sa e square $500 1988 P ymouth Sun b ue oaded 118 000 m les
bales $1 00 oth e• hay up to dsnce $500 1989 Fo d EC $7500 We ima n alned
$2 DO round bales $1 5 00 Tsmpo $600 1969 Chevy (740)446 3467 evenings
:::
•ac
= h.::30
: .4.:.:.
67:.:=5_488
.:.c9':::--:::- Caval e $600 987 Chevy 1998 Toyota Tacoma 4•4
Hay &amp; B•ght W•e Tie S fD Pickup $900 1989 Exfa cab low m eo IVC
aw Yea Round DEtllvery Plymouth Hor zon $500 c use cassette and CD
&amp; Vo ume 0 scoun Ava Ia Ca I (740)388 9303 Man P aye s 6 I It Excellen
ble
Ho tage
Fa m day hrough F day 9am condft on
$15 DOO
5pm Satu day 9am 3pm (740)387 D328
1304)675-5724
C osed Sundays

Fllurrs&amp;

..

Tappan H EHic ency 90%
Gas Fumaces 0 I Furna
cos 12 Sea• Heat Pump &amp;
Air Cond tlon ng Sys ms
Free 8 Year Wa anty Ben
notts Heating &amp; Coo ng ,
8 0 0 8 7 2 5 9 6 7
www orvb comlbenneH

cuse Oh o $450 Month
HUD App oved 1304)675 App lances Rocond floned
5332 weekends only
Washe•s Drye s Ranges
Relrigrato s Up To 90 Days
Cozy ~ 2 bedroom Cottage Guaranteed We Se 1 New
$250 L ncoln Ave Ca Maytag Applances Freno~
Homes ead
Realty City Maytag 740 446 7795
1304)675 5540 ask lo Nan
cy
Couch and love seat cream
-'-- - - - - - - - background w/llora paHem
New 2 bedroom duplex $500 00 Farmhouse sty 8
Harrlsonv lie a ea a 1 alec lab 8 and chal 8 S150 00
H f t
tr o ene gy e c en no bo h n bral"ld new cond
smok
pets $375
304-675 3805 _ _~
monlhng no
p us
ut t per
es :::.:..:.:.:.::::::_

Centenary on Stale Route
141 G een Sohool Dis rict
elerences squired a eng
WI h depos 1 Month y rent
$50D 1740)448 2988 afto
5pm

r

RESIDENTIAL HOME
OWNERS

GooDs

3 Bedroom House in Syra

r

Friday &amp; s•tu doy 82 Syca 3 lam ly yord oolo 8131 811
Street K de wom•11• 1om1thlng tor IVI!YQMI Yard Sa • Woman 1 Club
Parr 1h Ave
Satu day
c oth ng &amp; m oc ltomo
383 Porte St Middleport
Bept lot 9 2

str eak from
1 2 19 )8

u p run t o the bes t of thetr abil

Earl y

t h e ga m e -

third -

t

0

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WANm&gt;
To Do

mo 1

~even

wilhng t o p ay the pnce and set

year s

run

o 1

IH \ I \ I&lt;.,

Call .,..Oday
I
xxxxxxxx

wo n

Ohio

rebuilding year With f o ur fresh

Lawson w 1th any race expen

2 bed oom
own basement
$4251 mon h 3 bedroom n
own 1 1 2 baths Good lo
cat on $5001 month Aefe
ences and depos t equ ed
1740)446 3644

ext. 1911

sa1d

stele The g trl s w ill have o nly

PROBLEMS
PAYING
BILLS OR LOANS Loans
Ava labia Ca I To I Free 1
877 745 1049 Good Bad or
No Cred t or Bank uptcy
Welcome Fast Aelable

Minimum Qualltlcatlana
Cu ent OPOTA peace on
cars ceri1JCatlon and current
aw enfo cement comm s
s on Two years expenenee
n aw enforcement andlo
corraclions Two years su
parv sory experience H gh
School D ploma or GED ru
qu ed

AAA Opportun ty I Access
to Compute 1 Mal 0 de•lln
tern et
$500 $1500/pt
LOST Masoo Area Ma e
$2S00-$6000 ft Mal Order
McC ure s Aestau an now
chocolate ab &amp;male bnnd e
1 800 962 4542
hiring a 3 ocations tul or
stnped lab bOth wtth cha
www opportun ty4al net
part me p ck u11 app ca Posit on COOk, Plll'tlme
co Ia s 1304)773 52D2
1on at location &amp; bnng back
Act Nowl
between
9 30em
&amp; Houriy Rate $7 82
&amp; september 1et
set 442 Sixth St M ddfe
nternalional Bus ness
10
OOam
Monday
fh
u
Sat
YARD SALE
expanding $251$75hr PIT
u day
;:;::;::~ Garage
Sale Septembe 1 port baby clothes &amp; mise
--.
2 78 G ape St eet 2 Jam y hand he d 40 channel CB FIT BBB 588 3713
www
megabucks4you
net
sale Sam untl 6pm Some &amp; ot more Items
YARD SALEfu n tu o lots ol c oth ng a setu day Septembe 1 00,
G~
s zes Mise: SOmeth ng for ner Grant &amp; Beech Middle
~
everyone
port 8 30-1 rid ng g8 den
t Ia kitchenware games
odds and ends

have

T l e

fir st tune s n ee a 11ne ~aml

Team s sendmg nmners t o th1s

year

a

1· 866·475·7223

Ce n t r a l

stratgh t h o m e games fo r th e

such a l ar ge m eet I h o p e they re

distnc ts l ast

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tt}' If t hey d o so w e Wtll b e n

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FOR SALE

l ead

t h e fi rs t o f two h e

youn g r u m ers will respon d to

from Page 81

fa tr game

folio\\ 1n g

s double Hous
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erro&lt; h v Yn

$15D

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allowed

X-country

fo u r

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o ver seco nd place C h JCagO&gt;

Cent M ssoun 24 L nco n Mo 10
Empo ICl St 35 Fort Hays St 21
G and Va ey St 56 M nn Crookslon 0
N Dakota St 48 AngelO St 9
N Iff nos 20 South Florida 17
N owa 34 wayne Mch 14
N M ch gan 27 St Cloud Sf 24
Nebraska Kearney 49 Wayne Neb 9
Neb aska Omaha 24 NW M ssoun St 21
South Oako a 44 W nona St 21
To edo 38 M nnesota 7
W II nos 17 W Kentucky 3
W Mch gan 48 ll nolsSt 7
Youngs own St 3B Lock Haven 7
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas 14 UNLV 10
M dwestem St 42 W Texas A&amp;M 14
SW Texas 52 Ar1&lt; Monticel o 7
Tu sa 51 lnd ana St 0
FAA WEST
Anzona 23 San 0 ego S I 0
N Anzona 30 CS Nor1hndge 1
Wa sh ng on St 36 daho 7

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ahead 111 the fir&lt;t

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C OLL EGE GRIDIRON
SC ORES

201b Propane tanks bough!
new never used overf 1
p otect on barbecue gn
s ze ~ lui $30 1 empty $20
1304)675 1618

h ts

three

Jul to L u go
ton made

th rd W i th a 19 4 W e llsto 1 h ad a 203 Vmr o n County a 204 and
N e lsonvtlle York had a 241

3 Bedroom house on ap
pro•lmatey oneac eof and
on Soy Scou Comp Road
tn Cheste•
Uflf ty oorn
partal basement gas hea
Thome Po• eo In A BoK P~nfl~):~ ;~22 a ga den
Delivered to your door! At ca
Occaalonsl Race ve fee -4 -b-'r -:-2-:-fu-:-l__b_a-::
1v--n-g-roo
-m-=&amp;
catalog E•pond ng Work lam yroom w If rep ace
lrom home Cel Becky
now windows doo s ca
f.B77-629-4900 ext 594
pet • ding oof 304 675MONEY
11972 leave message
• h•..
MOBILE HOMES
TO J.AJN"O

j

H o u st o t

-

fo 1r walk&lt; 1 1 :&gt; 1

Rl3 1

ARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Pr vate Party Ad s Under $1 00
20 Word s 7 Days • Each Ite m Priced
• No Commerc al Ad s
• No Tickets/Purebred Anima s
Or Ga age/Yard Sa es • Lim i t 3 Pe Pe son
Mall To Ohio Valley Pub lshlng 82 5 Th d
Ave nue Gal pol s OH 45631

lfw&gt;WANm&gt;

FLEA MARKET

r

6

H

a 4 8 Josh Nappe r a 4 9 and B en B ookm an a 54
If C
Ti day
1988 24 gooseneck ho•se
M e1gs w II tra vel to Th e Fa1rg r eens Go
ourse o n u es
1e te 3 compartments 22 wnh a mac h h o st ed bv W ellston
pull beh nd campe seeps
6 evenlngs 1740)245 5622 - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - - -- - - - --

POL.ICIES Oh o Va leV Publ ah no reHI"Vea thll ght to edit, reject, w cane.~ any 8d at any drne Erron mud .,. NpOrtrtd on the n It
T bune-SenUnel Reg eter w I be raapone ble for no mor11 then the COlli of the spece occuptd by the etTOf' and onty the fll'll nMrllon
any o .. or upenq that resu II from tM pub cal on or omlnlon of an HYertiiii1MinL Con.ctlon will be madll n thl rlret evalllble Mit on
1ft a waya conflclen al Cu rt nl ate c.,d epp IlL All rul " eta .tvert MftMnla . . tubJ.ct to tM Peden! Fa r Houtlng Act of 1M8
accap~ only he p wanted adt m"tlng EOE ... ndards. W• w II not knowtngly Rotp~an~ lldvtnfalngln ~auon ot Ute tlw

AucnONAND

Auct on 202- E Man St
Pomeroy dressers metal
wad obe ste eo caDnet
smslf and tabe bo• lull ol
e ect k: plumb ng day bed
ots new Items dots kni
vas plus more (740)992
0074
,.,.-----::---:--::-::--Rick Pearson Auct on Com
pany lui t me auct onee
camp ate auc ion service
L censed "88 Oh o &amp; Wes
v rgin a "304 773 5785 0
3Q4..7735447

$

AVE

0098

To Place
\!rrrbune
l\egi!)ter
Sentinel
Your Ad,
446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... (740)
Or Fax To (740) 446 3008
992·2157
In clud es
Up To
Ov er 15
Ads

y

Clr 1ed

from Page 81

Jason Warren of Alexander was match ntedahst w th a three
~:! 6 ~08 s~~6 ~ 9 : o ver p ar 40 Jer emy B anks l ed M e1gs w1 t b a 4 3 Jos h Ray ad de d

f bed oom noa Hoze Ale
econom ca gas hea qul81
AND B UIWINGS
ocat on $279 month lease
&amp;
depos t
equ rect
Bu ding n Rae na 30x80 1740)446 2957
blod&lt; &amp; b lck was church
cenl al ai &amp; hea ou o
flood pia n great oca1on
St Ale 124 &amp; Tyee Bvd
$72 000 I74D)949 2217

In one week With us

BIJSINI&lt;S'i

B D

M L'iCELLANflJUS

BACK
11 000
2
CoM """" 2 Ton
1
Lne Sel Instated S2295
St 000 Back $1295 Net
P ~• Fee Esumates Calf
F Quo
On 01
s
or
tes
he zes
I You Don't Call Us
We Both Lose!
Mobie

with P 0 c v wa house 1 Bed oom Apanment Ro
ou bu ld ngs
beaull ul 1 6
m on tor more nlo ca frge 8 or Range AJC n
duded $289 Plus OepoSII &amp;
~a;:;a&amp;~:=~::kenc 304 Aefeence HUO Approvect
740
776 1340
1 )44 1 15 9

G•l111 Cno~mty OH

Reds

Belpre still leads TVC

B elpr e shpped p ast Al ex&gt;nd er t o \\111 t h etr fo urth TVC golf
Ton AI matc h m as m an y tn es T hu rsday ew nm g on th e b lCk ntne of

- - - - - - - ~.!['~ :'u~s de~~~

Poppof~, ~~dv:
~~73 ".~aets
.,

PREP GOLF

~ MERaiANDtsE

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments furnished and un u

Henry He shberger

R venne Ant
East Ma n on
Pomeroy 740Russ Moore

The Datly Sentmel • Page 8 3

We're
not
JUSt
newspaper
we re
a
smooth-runnmg mach1ne,
gathenng
the
days
newsworthy events from
around the area and the
world, and diStilling them
mto
an
ms1ghtful
enterta1mng format that
readers look to every day
to stay mformed
Start or extend your
subscnpttontoday

The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

summER
JOBS
S6-S7/HR
Easy Indoor
work fle11lble
hours fulltpart
time hurry!
Positions filling
quickly!
1-888-974-JOBS
COG

ffiDDagement, UC

�•
Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Oh io

Friday, Aug. 31 , 2001

·

1

Friday, Aug. 31 , 2D01

..1

Po me roy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEY OOP

The Dally Sentinel • ~·~!-a

- ...

'

0

WICK"S
Hauling &amp;
· Excavating

~~

Haullnc • Limestone
• Gronl Sand 0
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

"

Hlll't Self
Sttrllt
2H70 Baahan Road

Racine, Ohio
45n1

740-949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
1o 10' x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

...........

,Racine, Ohio 45n 1

740-985-3948
CONCRETF/BLOCK/BRICK

...

and Drivu • Stencil

FrH Eltlmata

Serving Ohio ond W.Y.
WY11031712

Top Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

861-6329
FlU MARKET

-31.

MAPlEWOOD lAKE
leJIL 1 &amp;3
Cfelelllllll.,

~I

DEPOYSAD
PARTS

949-2734

Coolville, OH 45723

8115 1 mo

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

General
Contracting
Excavating ·
Dozer and

The Daily Sentiner

Backhoe

Septic Syeteme
UtWtlee

CALL 992-2155

· Free EstlmstH
949-1405
591·5011

1000 Sr. Rr. 7 South

740-992-5232

CL'ASSIFIEDS

Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout

IIIII.,_. &amp; 1:11111

INn. Cllllllltl,

FINO WHAT YOU NEED
IN

Rocky R Hupp.

........... c....

1111111 .. lhldl.

RURESHMENTS

New Home•

992-7943

.•

74N87:G888

Agent

Box 189
Middleport. Oh 1o 45760
Local 843-5264
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Fi nal Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement.
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

· Jeff Warner Ins.
.992-5479

4~ ~ t(j(j~/3

Q
61/t Annual
't)
~ EXPO 2001 1:.

Ualla§ Webe..7 4U·7 4.;1-:J();i() evenlnt§

740-992·1671

IJPLEWOOD lAIE
lUg, 31. Sellt.113
ClaiM IIIIIIIJ
SIIICIIIVIIIIIIII

1111 Clllllllltll
IIIIIIVIIIhlll,

N-12 DOUBLE WALL
PLASTIC
FIRST COME,
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REGULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

•

l -J04-67S-7824

l-800-250-9077

8115 1 mo

•'

3-0

FREE ESTIMATES

CONSTRUCTION

RESIDENTIAL · INDUSTRIAL
COMMERCIAL

Free oatlmatoe,
lnlured

SMAlL OR IUGI 1011111

SINCE 1964

Specialize In new

BACKHOE• DOZING •!NO IOAOII •
· IRUCKIIG • TIIINOIING

cons truction~

remodeling, plumbing,
electrical, home main·
tenance, and rtpalr
porches, &amp; drcks.

••• ., -

&amp;001

"Trane" Sales &amp; Serrice For
Gallia, Ma..~n, a'nd Mtigs Counti6

WV 005176

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

IT'S ON~ OF L.lfe's SIMPt..t
"""-..../ L.ITTLe PL~ASU~ts~-- ~
USIN6 Ttf~ MUT~ ii
lUTTON ON i
A TALIC

J"t-IOw.

BORN LOSER
NO'N \f\P.JSWi-\A.T l C.NJ..,
5\'\C( 0 \IU !

.QUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

1·800·291·5600 • Pomerov, OH
FR!E IN HOM! ESTIMATES • "SEEING tS BELIEVING" •tw10234n

1111 .... S2UII
'"*&amp;Mihl.II•.....,WIIIl
; ........ llllllltrllhell$18.15

Own,er
Charles R. Dill

BIG NATE .
G

.. .·
'

740-992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

RICint,Ohlo
~~~--------~~

•

992·5!108

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE
Free Estimates
&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,
Electrical, Plumbing
All Home Needs
Annual Chicken Barbeque
Saturday, Sept. 1
Township Fire House Reedsvlllo, OH
Serving 11 am • 3 pm
Racine Fire Dept.
CHICKEN BBQ AND

HOMEMADE ICE CREAM
Sunday, Sept. 2nd
Serving Begins at 11 :00 am

BINGO
Sunday, Sept. 2
Starts at 1 p.m.
Upstairs at the
Gallipolis Elks Lodge
uct1on Laborers
Needed
Local Work
7943, 591-7002, 591-4641
O'DELL LUMBER
634 E. Main , Pomeroy
992·5500"
Open Sunday 10-4
Open
8-4

1"\UlJI::~un

Freewill
Baptist Church

Annual Labor Day Sing at
Kyger Creek Shelterhouse
Monday, Sept. 3
4 pm
Groups to Sing are:
God's Ambassadors
Gloryland Believers
Johnson Family
Addison Quartet
Addison Choir
New City Singers
Door

''"'"" HOLIDAY!

•
&amp; Monday
Only
.12 Noon lill4:00 pm
Only at
1

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
842 Second Ave., Gallipolis

COME IN AND SEE OUR
NEW ITEMS
WE'LL PAY YOUR SALES
TAX ON ALL PURCHASES

740·949-1521
Owner:
Charlie Wolle

740-992-1101
or992-2753

TRI - COUDTY
TRHDSPORT
limestone! ·
Seniors Discounts
multiple load
Discounts

lcHfvRO,~T/

75 0 East State Street

Phone (740)593-66 71
Athens, Ohio
·

Shade River AG, Service
" Ahead In Service"
• Complete Line of Sullivan's Grooming SUpplies
1Sulfur Coated Urea, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
110% off all Prlofert Horn and Livestock Equip.
110.10-to All Purpoae Fertilizer $4.50/5011
19,000 Baler Twine $19.5018ole
116,000 Boler Twtne $21 .50/Bale

Shad• River -' luvlca, Inc

Psln\n.A : Furnaces
Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$2,500 (change out old system)
$1 ;700 (add A/C to gas furnace)
Dlagno•stlc Fee • Flat Rate Drlr•lnn

19 .........
of - ..

Dealer: Soulb
Vulner~ble: BoO!
Wu\
Pass

...

Non• £.:11

AIIPIU

OpentnciUd: • to or • 10

l I-lEAR T~AT NONE OF THE·
·NURSES WILL 60 OUT TO
DINNER WITH 'f'OU ...

DO 'f'OU nUNK MA'&lt;6E
'I'OU KNOW WH'!'?

-

Tj.jEI( HATE EATING
IN A KENNEL

TREE SERVICE

IFRIDAY

''

'I
.

Free Estimates
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 '
Porn.,.oy. OhiO
22 Year

I

.

42 Moving
truck
43 - - even
" keel
44 "- the
Wooda"
46 Wire
meaouros
47 Soften
'
48 lrlah-Goellc :
50 "- you
polhlve?"

52 Baoeball
53

P"'
M ,r"

Small

organl•m•

by.Luls Campo•
are created lrorn quotations by famous

peopte, peat and present. Each letter In the dpher stands for another.
Today's clue: C equals D

G'OGVVGD

'O .T 0 D G K K
OGXKC

z·r

N

J F LV

B GDI

SKTVOI

LV TV

TOLGDZ

OTV

IYLI'DI

•

T

L p

BGZL
F y

ZTN

Z V G J.

IDZAFYI

TV

OVDFZ

•

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Women In Cape Verde (Africa) are ,
very strong, and we have a flghllng spirit." - ('Barefool diva')
Ceaarla Evora ·
·

-

I' .j 1 1

Is

I

@)

low di amond , you
discard a club immediately. And, finally, a
club shift is into dum- ·
my's ace-queen.

e

'I I

will t urn out to be f.1r-sightcd

and ent erprising may e n ter
vo ur life in the year :1head.
Their influen ces cou ld hl'i p
YC?'u op'-'ll up severa l new
route!i to success.
VIRGO ( A &lt;~g . 23-Sept. 22)
-- "Concerns for the net:'ds of
loved ones is what will motivate ynu today to be more en tccpri si ng than us ual. Dec.:lllsc
·it's w h:~ t ym1 WJnt to do,

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

yo u'll feel good abo ut what
you do . Try111~ to patch up a
broken romaau:c? T he Astra-

'

NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

you un&lt;lcrua 'hi what to do to
make the rclatiotlShip wor~.
Mail S2.75 to Matchmake r,
c/o t hi~ newspaper, 1'.0. Umc
167, Wic klitTe. OH 44092-

0! 67.
·1

LI BR A

(Sept. 23-0ct.

23) •
~ A variety of imcrcsts and activltic~ may be c~ll~tl for toda.y
in o rd er to gr&gt;~t1ry your.restless
urges. Fortun ~ tcl y, no matter
how much yoLt do, yo u'll do

it well.
SCORI'I.O

(Oct.

24-Nov.

22) -- Time h nm ncccurn ily
your al1y today' ~o you wou't .
waste any time hcmmi n!J: and

~~~~:RMBLE FORI ·1

I' I' .I'

I

I

I I

I

.·j'

·I

J I I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Wigwam · Knave • Uncle · Bolero - CARE to KNOW
An authority is a person who can tell you more about
something than you really .CARE to KNOW.

'

Saturday ..Sept . l. 2001
Sc\' Cral new pc r~ons who

YOUNG'S .

RemOdeling
• NewGaregtJ
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing '
• Roofing &amp; Guttert '
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio and Porch Decke

'

porch

Celebrity Cipher cryptogrlrna

~:eent.h~f h~ia:~~sn~

AUGUST 31 I.

GRAVEL
SAND
Lll\tESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

\[

'I

tllaater
41 Greek's

CELEBRITY CIPHER

f..

WE CAN HELP.
ll

I

40 Ancient

33

I

graph M atchmaker can help

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions a

DOWN
20 GIUI
1 "-'t I thug!
display
2 Rral-rate
20 Show or
can
3 Cry ora
handa
23 Zu Z.. lomb
21 De-creued
28 - Clolre,
4 Shlp'o dlory 22 Shade or ·
Wis.
5 Compe11
difference
23 Leavea
27 - ·Locka,
pl
24 In- Ra
&amp; Chlckln 30 Public
7 Moke happy
(bored)
opeaktr
8 Poland'•
25 Purns
32 Fatlowod
Walen
27 Butter
clonly
9 Princely
subotltute
34 City In
Italian
28 - moot
Oregon '
lomlly
29 Puta 2 and
2 together
35 Group ot 11 Cow
31 Doa~ood
nlnt
l - '·l
36 Rdo.
12 Settle by
thing lor
37 Author
conciliation
the plano!?
Umberto - 13 MooNot
outwardly
39 Coagul·tung
40 Long
18 Ropper,
36 CIA'I
forerunner
IO~'!'_IY
Dr. -

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

.

35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-985-3831 • Fax 740-985·385 1

Top • Tl'lm • R8QIOV81
Buclket Setrvlc:e

I ' 2

(rood)

I' I'

LARRY .SCH EY

~

•

11 snare
17Strlnge

I I" I

.PEANUTS

•

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
• New Home•
·Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagea
• Additions
• Decks
• Homo Repairs
Free Estimates

KI

1-·- - , , . - . . , . . , . . . . . , . . . - , - - (
•

To get a current
weather report,
check the

Sentinel

M.f'

AJill~

you can still make the ~=
· =·==·==·=~·---J
contract by squeezing '"I
NI T EL I
East in th e minors) .
Win with dummy's
15
ace, draw trumps , ":~·:::;·:::·~~-~
, cash th e hearts (dis-,r
~~
carding the diamond
D I L B N o1
fiv e), and lead the
1 1
17 ;:;
After a long discuss ion ab9ut
diamond three toward
. . . . ..,1
my future with my parents, my dad
your eight. East wins
said, Remember, son, goals are
with the jack but is -F,;S,.:E;.·...rS:..,:.:R_E;-::L:"-r--11 dreams with • ·- • • • • • •.
ensnared. If he leads
a 19
Complete the chuckle quoted
.
.
.
.
.
by filling In ti-le missing words
the diamond kin g,
you develoo fmm steo No. 3 below.
you mff, cross to the
club · ace, an d d iscar d , m.
t;;ll' PRINT
LETTERSNUMBERED . . 13
. 1•
. .Is . .
. . .
you r remaining club ~ ;;::;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;=::=:::!:=;::::;:=!=;:~=:;:~

•

Iii

Pomero~..._Ohlo

814~9 •2202

•

•

11

:i

~

21 T E11t Second Sl...lt

donkey

15 Extom

0

~Snodgrass' Upholstery
"HlfpiJtl Y011 ro Rtto"' Yo"' ln&gt;tltltllllt"

14 Wild

I 7 I

• KJ 1 I
A KJ5ll

from hand and
the dununy.
r:~~:~:~r d.ll'il "0 .i\" ,( _ J) "C ~a. e WORD
Now for the appar0~ l'"U ~). '!:1 Ptf./" ~ GAM I
entiy mo re tes ting
.
E411ed by CLAT R. POLLAN_,;__ _ __
diamond-! 0 start. An
Reor~ango lottera of tho
four SCIOmblod words be·
endplay is also avail- low !O form four simple words.
able. Again, do not be ·.
tempted by a trick- h·c-"T-::-M_Ir.-D-.-A_D.,_E:....,..-1
one . finesse (though
12

and

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes ' Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Additions • Rooftag
COMMEJCIAL and IEIIDINTIAL
FREE ESTIMATE's

...,.

•

~~:-::~~~&amp;;~~ill'l~

l'hone-9-92·1445C.U hone 591·9254

BISSELL

.

f.asl
• 7

As you sure ly
know, Oscar Wilde
said, " I can resist everything except temptation." T his wou ld
not be a good deal for
him, wit h tem pting
fi nesses abo undi ng.
How wou ld you try
to make six spades after West leads either
the cl ub 10 o r diamond 10?
Sout h's weak-two
openi ng promised a
decent six-card suJt
and (5) 6-9 (I 0) highcard points. N orth bid
w hat he tho u ght
(ho ped!) his partne r
co uld make. (Y es,
m~yb e he should have
chosen six no-trump .)
If yo u kn ow you r
endplays, you will see
that after a club lead,
fin ess in g dum my' s
qu een is wrong. You
sho uld win wi t h
dummy 's ace, draw
tmmps, ntn the hearts
for a club discard, and
ruff the , lub queen in
hand. Now you lead a
diamond to dummy's
nin e (or qu ee n, if
Wes t imerts th e 10).
After Eas t wins with
the diamond jack, he
is trapp ed. If he returns a diamond, it is
away from th e king
into dummy's acequ een. H owever, if
he shifts to a club ,
.you discard a di a-

D~G I4.u. ~

Residential Commercial NewCon.•trud ion
Sales S&lt;nice lmtallation'
Specializilfltln Sheet Metal DuctWork
Licensed and ln.&lt;ured

greot

No deal

lt&gt;t 11ntd7bStopA 'lJont~

IEFRESIIENTS

·~

..

...,.

KENSINGTON
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

htDIP,I'I• 0111.
...... 011111'1111.
Sill Drlals &amp; Clllel

l0 4

Mile.
49 Honl8n
51 SUmler
54 CllariC!er
.as ear.: lllandl
511 AIUkln
city
57 Simple .

10 Toe type
12 Annoy ·

... ,.

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.
For more informaJion, come to our church site.
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;
10:30 · Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00
FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTE 124, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

24'120'

1015~2

t

.. Jl)lll

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

MCip Couaty Falrp'ountll
September 15th &amp; 16th
f'{)r lnf{)nuatl{)n £ ()ntad

•

46 Mother or

."GWTW ..

• Soccer

... Q

Wut

45 Okla. time

Lelgh'l

co-slar

ll ll• •

AKQitJ
¥ A Q J
• A QJ l

...

Cellular ··

~ ---

• New Homes
·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

1

N•rth

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

FLEA MARKO

verti~e .our u~ineu

~~

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Howardl.
Write!ltl

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

SIIIC81-IIDII
IIU CIIIIIIR81

33795Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
J

ll.llllllb.

Hln.
SI.IL7
Ta11n Pilla

Replacements, • WalkS'
C~te

I

JIIIII/WIU

• Foolers, W•lls, Steps•
Flat Work,

. ~'R~

I

COfiiiFS
CllliCUE

CONTRACTORS, INC.

JONES'

Tree Service
I

P/B

l

j
------------------,
ACROSS 42 Null ond ..NEA C r o11wo r d Puzzle

PHJI.LiP
ALDER

'

.

ha wing. You 'll get right tO.
work on involvements where
th ere is something in 1it fo r
you.
SAGITT ARIUS (Nov. 23-

Uec. 2 1) -- Th ere isn't anythi ng you ca n' t accompli !ih
today if you focus your attention and abilit ies o n yo ur objective. Once you have a cle-ar
ta rget, you 'll move full speed

ahead.

·

C APRI COR N (Dec. 22Jan. 19) .. C hance could play
an important role in ways
yo u'd least expect todJy in
you r affairs, but it'll be gOod . .

You may end up being fortuna te fina nciall y.
AQ UARI. US Qan. 20-Feb.
19) -- Th ere'~ nothing wishyw a~hy :~bout you today, 51j if a
~itu ation warrants it, you' ll be

ready and will ing to baCk up
your words with ac tion .
PI SCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
-- The zest an d relish wirh
which you pursue your objec- ·
tivcs today could bri r\g you
more enjoyment in the purgoals than the acdo.
ARI ES (March 21, 1\pril 19)
-- Not · o~ly c.lo you hnc. the

~uit uf your
tuil~ reward~

~ift o f gab today, but your
presentation wi\J be both logi;
·cal and imaginative. With this
go m g for you. you ' ll be a
p re tt y compelling person
w hen you want to be.
TAU!tU S (April · 20-May
20} -- It's so like yon to ~pend
more [ime on an endeavor for
another person t h;~n you do
for yo unelf. Today, however.
you'll benefit more fro m the
latter than the former.
GEMI N I (Moy 21-June 20)
--You 'll th rive on competitive uwolvenicnts today, fueling your juices to succeed, esped;~l\y if some type of tc;un
cOOrt 1~ called for. Ynu'll be
the engine- that will power the

un ion .
CANCER Uunc

21-july

22) ... If you're so inclined,
today is an excellent day to
look for a second sour~:~: of
incom e. Wha t you discover
out there could turn o.~lt to be
pre-tty lucrative .
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) ..
W hether you foc n~ your 7
lorts ;~ n d enc"~es on sociill l or
. commercial afliirs ' today, the
results should turn out to your

er

liki ng. It's the woy you do
things that in spires o then .

'

�Page 86

·The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 31, 1001

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Atlanta and Philadelphia
lose to bottom teams in .East
C';' "'f: I( ASSOtiAT[D PRC:.JS •

·be~causc

of·' naggmg abd-&gt;mlnal strain, Tsuyoshi Shinjo
went 3-for-4 and scored two
runs.
Steve Trachsel (8- 11 ) worked
seven inni nb"· givi ng up four

Only the Chicago C"bs
took advantage of playing a
losing team in the N L East.
The Atlanta Braves and
Philadelphia Phillies f.1iled to
do the same Thursday night hits and striking out nine . H e
and remained a game apart
did not walk a batter, improvatop the Eastern Division.
ing to h-1 with a 2.76 EllA in
Bill Mueller homered in the
his last nine, starts.
bottom of the ninth to lifi the
Philadelphia 's David Coggin
Cubs over slumping Florida .54, dropping the Marlins (62- (4-4), one of three rookies in
71) into fourth place in the the Phillics' rotation, gave up
fi ve runs and sev~:n hits in three
division.
Fred McGriff hit a three-run innings.
Montreal's Tomo Ohka ( 1 -:~)
shot as Chicago tied it 4-4 iri
the seventh. The Cubs over- allowed two· Atlanta runs and
six hits in 5 2-3 innings. Scott
came a four-run deficit their largest comeback of the Stri ckland got three outs for
year - and remained four his third save.
Giants 13, D-backs 5
games behind Houston in the
Rich Aurilia, John Vander
NL Central. The Astros beat
Cincinnati 6-1 on Thursday.
Wal and pitcher Jason Schmidt
Philadelphia lost 6-2 to the homered as S.1n Francisco
New York Mets (63-71), and avoid a three-game sweep at
Atlanta stayed a game ahead of Arizona.
the Phillies despite dropping a
Schmidt
(I 0- 7), . who
4-2 decision to last-place improved to 4-1 in six starts
Montreal (57-76).
since being acquired from
Atlanta has Jest II of 15 Pittsburgh, also had a broken-home games and is 33-36 at bat, RBI single and a sacrifice
Turner Field this season .. The bunt. He scored twice.
Braves are 4-6 on their 13Dodgers 5, Rockies 4
game homestand and lost two
Chad Kreuter's fifth-inning
of three to Montreal.
homer, Los Angeles' third
The Phillies also lost two of
home run of the game, salthree to the Mets.
vaged a win over Colorado.
Mueller's home run in
Chan Ho Park (13-9) strugC hi cago was certainly interesting Jnd important to the Cubs, gled, but earned the victory.
who maintained their half- · Adrian Deltre and Gary
game lead over San Francisco Sheffield also hmnered for the
Dodgers, who cut off th e tying
in the wild card race.
Cubs
reliever
Kyle run at the pbte in the ninth
Farnsworth (4-3) struck out inning. Sheffield reached 1,000
two and gave up a hit in one career RBis with his solo shot.
Cardinals 13, Padres 3
mmng.
Matt
Morris became th e
Ricky Bones (3-4) allowed
run and a hit in one-third of an major leagues' third 18-game
linning for Florida, which lost winner, and St. Louis scored in
for the 14th time in 17 games. double figur~s for the second
With N e.w York's All-Star straight game, beating San
catcher Mike Piazza sitting out Diego.

AROUND THE DIAMO .ND
Nallonal League
East

Atlanta
Philadelphia
Ne¥:..·,-....,.~.
Floricfa
Montreal

w

l

72

6t
62

71

-

l

78
55
74
59
72
6t
59
73
53
~
49
83
West

1

~

g',

.466

.429

10
15

Pet

GB

.•HV

71
62
76
57
Central

w

Ho\Jston
Chicago
St. Louis
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

GB

Pet.
54t
.534

.586
.556
.541
.447
.398

4
6
1B '2
25

.371

28'2

w

l
Pet
GB
Arizona
77 56 .579
3).
San Francisco 74
60 .552
4i.
Los Angeles
73
61
.545
San Diego
66 67 .496
11
Colorado
74
.439
IS'IJ
58
Thursday's Games
St. Louis 13, San 01ego 3
Chicago Cubs 5, Florida 4
Houston 6, Cincinnati 1
N.Y. Mets 6, Phlladelpt:lia 2
Montreal 4, Atlanta 2
San Francisco 13, Arizona 5
Los Angeles 5, Colorado 4
Friday 's Games
Montreal (Thurman 6· 10) at PhUadelphia
(Figueroa 4·4). 7:05 p. m .

Pittsburgh {Ritchfe 10..11) at ClncJnnatl
American League
N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 11· 1) al Boston
(Reitsma 6-13), 7o05 p.m.
Ent
(f'CastiiiO 8·7), 7:05p.m.
Florida {Penny 7·71 at N.Y. Mets ~Leiter g..
w l Pet GB Oakland (Udle 8-!1) at Tampa Bay (Relcar
10), 7: 10p.m.
New York
78
56 .582
t - 11J, 7:15p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Cruz 1-1) at Atlanta (Bur- Boston
71
61
.538
6 _ Anaheim (Valdes . 8-:,8) at Minnesota_
ken 11-8}. 7:35p.m.
- 13 ' (ABOt&lt;e 11·8), 8'05 p.m.
Toronto
6~
69 .485
Houston (MIIckl 4· 1) 81 Milwaukee Baltimore
79 .406
23:0,
54
Te•as (HeiNng 9·9) at Kansas Cily (K.Wil·
(Wright 9·8).J.:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay
48 86 .358
30
son 6-4), 8:05p.m.
Arizona (SChilling 18-6) at San Diego
Centr•l
Cleveland (Woodard 3-2) ol Chlcogo
(Jodie 0-0), 8 :05 p .m. 1 1st game
w l Pel GB White Sox (Wright 2·2), 8o05 p.m.
Arilona (B.Anderson 3-9) at San Diego Cleveland
76
57 .571
S.turday's Gamel
(J arvis 11-9) , 11 p.m ., 2nd game
· Minnesota
70
64 .522
6~
N.Y. Yankees (O.Hernandez 0·6) at
St. Louis (W.Wflliams 10·9) at Los Ange- Chicago
67
a·~
65 .508
Boslon (Martinez 7-2), 1:15 p.m.
les (Gagne 4-6), 10: 10 p m.
Detroit
54 78 .409
21 ~
Detroit (Wea11er 10-13) at Toronto (Lyon
Colorado (Thomson 1-5) at San Francis- Kansas City
22'o 3·2), 4o05 p .m .
54 80 .403
co (Ortiz 14-7), 10:35 p.m.
West
Seattle (Abbon 13-3) at Baltimore (MerSaturday's Ga.mes
w l Pel GB cedes 7-15), 4 :05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Ta11arez 8·9). at Atlanta 'Seattle
96 38 .716
Oakland (Hiljus 8.-6) at Tampa Bay (Bier(Maddux 17·7), 1:15 p.m .
Oakland
78
56 .582
18
brodl1·3), 4o15 p.m.
Colorado (Hampton 13· 1{}) at san Fran- Anahekn
69
65 .515
27
Anaheim {Schoenewels 10-9) at Mincisco (Jensen 1·2), 4:05p.m.
Texas
74 .448
60
36
nesola (Lohse 4-6), 7o05 p.m.
Houston (Reynolds 11 - 10) at Milwaukee
Thursday's G•mes
Cleveland (Dreae 0-0) at Chicago
(Quevedo 3-2), 7:05p.m .
Seattle 4 , Tampa Bay o
While Sox (Dorland 8-4), 7:05 p.m.
Montreat (Pavano 0·2) at Philadelphia N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 4, 11 innings
Texas (Davis 8-8) at Kansas City (Byrd 6(Person 12-6), 7:05p.m .
Cleveland 3, Boston 1
5), 8:05p.m.
Pittlburgh (D.WIIIIama 1-6) at Clneln- Oakland 15, Baltimore 0
noll (Acevedo 4-5), 7o05 p.m.
. Detroit 3, Chicago White Sox 1
Florida (Bumell9-10) at N.Y. Mets (Appl· Texas 5, Minnesota 1
er 7·10), 7:10p.m .
Kansas City 2, Anaheim 1
Anzona (Lopez 3-4) at San Diego (Toll·
Friday'• Games
beig 7-4), 1M5 p.m.
Detroit (Sparks 9-8) at Toronto (Escobar
Sl. Louis (Hermanson 12-10) at Los 6·5J, 7o05 p.m.
Angeles (Adams 10-6). 10o10 p.m.
Seallle (Sele 13·4) at Baltimore (Maduro
2-4), 7o05 p.m.

TEMPO

SPORIS

lakin women's
prison update

Prep football
action highlights

•

•

•

tmts

star."

Alomar's 16th homer of the season put
Cleveland up 3-1 in _the second, ·and his
fielding in the fourth n1ade sure it stayed
that way.
Alomar threw out Shea Hillenbrand,
who was trying to stretch a double into a
tripl e, from short right. The next batter,
Scott Hatteberg, singled.

Bartolo Colon (1 1-10) won for the
first time since July 27. He allowed eight
hits and a run in six innings against the
slumping Red Sox. Bob Wickman
pitched a rocky ninth for his 26th save.
Boston, swept for the first time by
Cleveland since 1996, went 1-for-23
with runners in scoring position in the
series ~

Yankees 5, Blue Jays 4
Bernie Williams hit a sacrifice fly in the
11th inning off Scott Eyre (0- 1) as New
York matching its biggest division lead. ·
T he host Yankees trailed 3-0 after five
innings, then went ahead with a threerun seventh when Enrique Wilson
pinch-hitter
Chuck
homered, ·
Knoblauch had an RBI single and shortstop Felipe Lopez's throwing error
allowed Knoblauch to score.
Mariners 4, Devil Rays 0
Freddy Gar:cia (15-5) allowed eight hits
in 6 2- 3 innings, and Bret Boone drove
in three runs as Seattle pitched its leagueleading ninth shutout.
Tigers 3, White Sox 1
Shane Halter homered and scored
twice . as Detroit stopped a four-game
losing streak overall and a 10-game losing

streak against visiting Chicago.
Rookie Nate Cornejo (3-1) won his
third straight start, allowing one run and
six hits in seven innings.
Athletics 15, Orioles 0
Eric Chavez hit two homers, including
a grand slam, and drove in a career-high
eight runs as Oakland completed a threegame sweep at Baltimore.
Cal Ripken had two hits for the Orioles , who have lost six straight by a com~
bined 44-4 score.
Royals 2, Angels 1
Gregg Zaun singled home the winning
run with two outs ii1 the ninth inning as
Kansas City earned its first three-game
home sweep of Anaheim since 1989.
Jason Grimsley (1-5) pitched two
innings of one-hit relief for his first win
since June 14 last year.
Rangers 5, Twins 1
Rookie Aaron Myette allowed three
hits in seven innings •as Texas wori at
Minnesota.
Myette (3-2), a rookie who replaced
the injured Kenny Rogers in Texas' rotation July 28, struck out a career high
eight batters in his best start.

•

tntint

RALLYINTHE

NICE-

Festival
goers
view a
miniature ·
carousel
at Rally
_in the
Valley in
Gallipolis
City Park.
(Millissia
Russell)

- - ALLIPOLIS
Rally in the Val~
ley is an oldfashioned festival with Gal'polis ity Park being filled
· vintage band organs,
reModel &amp;, a quilt
enactors and other events.
"On Sunday afternoon
we will go way back in time
and have an old-fashioned
Songfest with sack races and
a picnic in the park," said
organizer
Marilyn
Pavlovsky, executive director
Gallia County Convention
:ind Visitors Bureau.
: "The state tells us that the
oiggest tourism grabber is
events. We need more events
and Statewide attention. AlJ
of this will '. bring economic ·
d-evelopment
improvet:nents. The downtOW1) fire
proved that Gallia County
~r[&lt;s very well together.
· " We can achieve our
go:ils and take care of our
econonii~ needs thro,~~ .
~veryone s efforts. Thuttsm fs
.i . ~~ in:::tl,~~ County; '
tlie 'eftorts of each individual
off."
are

Worken
strike at

Scenic Hills
FROM STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS - Workers
at Scenic Hills Nursing
Home struck early Friday
morning following a 52-4
vote.
The workers say they have
been trying to negotiate a
fair contract With management that includes better
health care benefits, but the
adm inistration refuses ro
bargain iri good faith.
u Management won 't even
listen to us in terms of the
health care coverage because
it was brought to them by
the union," said Carol
Young, administrative organizer for the Service ·
Emplpyees
International
Union/ District 1199.
The main issue the work-

show,

1.25

5

-,., 1t]61Na. 19

Gallipolis • Pomer·oy • Pt. Pleasant • September l, 1001

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Alomar is having an. MVP season - if people would notice
The Cleveland Indians want the rest of
the AL to take notice : R.oberto Alomar is
playing as well as anyone in the America n League.
Alomar hit a two-run homer, scored
twice and threw out a runner at third.
helping the Indians complete a threegame sweep with a 3-1 win over the
Boston Red Sox on Thursday night.
AJomar is batting .340 - second to
lchiro Suzuki - and is playing his usual
Gold Glove second base, but is rarely
mentioned as anAL MVP c~ndidate .
"I don 't know why," acting Indians
manager Grady Little said. "He does
things day in and day out that help us
win games. Whether it's on offense or
defense or with something he says to
somebody in the clubhouse, he's a super-

.

~-

AIVJERICAN LEAGUE
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Baum Lumber
keeping pace

ers are concerned about is
affordable heal th care b\'nefits. Workers have proposed a
health care plan to management that would not only
allow all workers to afford
coverage for themselves and
their families, but would sav,e
the facility about $4,000 a
month, Young said in a press
release.
The benefits also . were
made available to all nursing
homes in. the chain, which
Young said co uld save tens
of thousands of dollars in
health care costs that could
be put to higher wages tO
recruit more workers and
put back into the facility in
terms of patient care.

Please -

Strike, AI

Officials update Vinton·
residents on sewer plans
8\" KEVIN

ffoover.
'Fuller and Hoover aired

KEU.Y

TIMES:SENT1NEL STAFF

site of a sewage treatment
plant for Vinton would cause
additional costs and a higher
rate for customers, village
residents learned Thursday
during a public information
meeting on the . $2 million
project.
The plant will be offVan
Buren Street (Ohio 325
South) behind property
owned by C harles Fuller and
across the road from a residence owned by Tom

._IG BOAT - The Delta
Queen ·paid a visit to Rally
In the Valley Friday. (Dick
Thomas photo)'

location and
odor,
answered by representatives
from age ncies involved in
bringing the project to
fruitio n.
Hoover and his son John
asked if the plant could be
pbced further down the
field from its present site,
chosen in part because the
former CSX railroad line
can se rve as an emergency
en trance to the facility if a

Please SH VInton, M
•

Brand New 2001 Pontiac
Grand Ain SE Coupe

Brand New 2001 Buick
Century Custom Sedan

Brand New 2001
S·S1arie1 Extended Cab

1'1CKUD

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Silverado Ext. Cab 4 Dr. 4x4

Brand New 2001 Chevy
ZR2 Blazer 4x4 LS

~3,550* ~7 ,750* ~8,950* 822,950~ .
• Air Conditioning
• Power Locks, AMIFM Cass.
Delay Wipers, Tilt

Powei Seat, Windows, Locks
Tin Steering, Cruise Control
Heated Outside Mirrors

• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Power Windows, Locks, Mirrors
Keyless Entry, Locking Diff.
·

• V·8 Power, Automatic ·
• Air Conditioning, Tilt &amp; Cruise
.
Pkg., AMIFM

824,8
• Automatic, Sunroof
• Power Sea~ Windows, Locks ·
CD System, Till &amp; Cruise

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Tahoe LT 4 Door 4x4

838,950*
• Sunroof, Onatar System
• Leather, Heated Seats
Third Seal, Totally

'

Meigs elections bOard rejects 14 candidates
Cite .improperly
completed petitions

ship and village offices in Meigs
County have been disqualified.
Elections board directo r Rita
Smith said the board met last week
to certify petitions, and disqualified
the .1 4 candidates for a variety of
BY BRIAN J. RIID
TIME~ENTINEL STAFF
reasons, all relating to the way in
POMEROY - The petitions of which petitions were signed or oth14 candidates who filed for town- erwise submitted by candidates.

·6enttnel
m;·--

Hlp: IDI
Low: 50s

~·

2000 Chevy
Cavalier Sedan

2000 Chevy ,
Lumina Sedan

2000 Buick Century
Custom Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

89.,950* q1,950* q2,950* q5,150*

• Automatic ·
• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Stereo With Cass.

• V-6 Power, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks .
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

• Power Driver's Seat
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

.

• Power Seat, Windows &amp; Locks
• CD System, Alum. Wheels
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

2000 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan

2001 Chevy Blazer
LT 4 Door4x4

~8,850*

q9,950"

• Power Seat, CD System
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Tlh Steering, Cruise Control

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;Locka
• eo System, Alum. Wheels
Tilt Wheel, Cruise Control

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics ·
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks

Details, A3

WI"LLHTHIII

'

~-*,m~,~'-!-;:".
"'"·"''~"'-

'0.".':'·.1;,,-'"

'f..--·

Buick

;~

it's a ll

goo'Ct

~Oldsmobile

,___ 1 t,;~ •

eoooe~·

West Virginia 's #1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, And Custom Van Dealer.

M. lEACH

years ago.
Village Administrator John Anderson
POMEROY - After months of spo- said Friday now that the new line is in
radic construction and questions concern- place village residents should experience
ing its progress, Pomeroy's new water line improved water reliability and increased
project is finished.
.water pressure.
The 12-inch line runs along Main Street
"The old line was very corroded and
from Plum Street to Butternut Avenue and was not performing to capacity like it was
replaces the former 8-inch cast-iron line intended," Anderson said. ''Water pressure
estimated to have been installed about 85 had dramatically decreased, and it was
TONY

02-7

insert
I
Friday. Spotts, 111

o 2001

Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

on
111..-l

Monday- Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm
·CL9SED LABOR DAY

Olive; Steven Shuler, Syracuse BPA;
Lawrence
Johnston,
trustee,
Lebanon; Paul Life, trustee, O live;
Richard B. Hill, Southern Local
School Board ; Craig Hanning,
trustee, Scipio; C harlotte Wamsley,
Racine Village Counci l; Will i1m
Ayres, trustee, Olive; Gordon W u1e-

TIMES-SENTIN EL STAFF

·Taxes. Tags, Til~ Fees~xlra . Rebate included in sale price o1 new vehicle listed where applicable. "On approved cre~l. On seleoled models. Nol responsible for typographical errors.
Prices Good August 3tsl Through Seplember 3rd.
CHIVROLIT

rejected because they were, in one
way or another, completed incorrectly," Smith said.
c Candidates disqualified and the
office they sought were: Dick Fetty,
Rutland mayor; Cecil Stacy, trustee,
Salem; Lee Layne, Racine Board of
Public Affairs; Robert Bucher,

BY

cs
A4
A6
BI ·B
Dl

"All of the petitions rejected were · ttustee, Scipio; Joe Lantz, trustee,. brenner, Syracuse BPA;

~nd

Grover

Salser, Jr., tru'stee, Suttor•.
The petition of Aloysius Grueser
Jr., a candidate for Rutland village
clerk, also was rejected, Smith said,
because the unexpired term for the
clerk's position cannot, by law, be

Please see Rejldl, AI

Pom-eroy waterline finally completed

,

'

.

'

starting to becorne an inconvenience for
many residents.
"It was not economically feasible to
continue using the old water mail\ because
the probability of breaks in the line was
increasing every day.
"Repairs would have cost the village a
good sum of money. The installation of the

Please see Complete, AI

Men

FREE Prostate Screening
sponsored by Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wei/ness and Holzer Clinic

Saturday, septe•ber a, .2001
8a30 am • 12 Noon
Second Floor Urology Clinic
Holzer Clinic • 90 Jackaon Pike, Gallipolis
To schedule your free screening, or lor inlor'malion on parlicipalion.requirements, call Susan Morgan al

.

(740) 446·531,

Regislrolion is limiled 10 the lirsl 100

men.

deadline is 9/6/01 ol4 PM.

MEDICAL CENTER

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www .holzer.org

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