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                  <text>Wednesday, Sept. 5, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 10·· The Dally Sentinel

News About ·senior Citizens
In Meig~ County

SPORTS:
Previews
of
Friday's
grid
action,
Bl
.

;

Meigs County's

Evening Dinners_

Scalloped Potatoes with Hungarian Style Pork &lt;-UIIIell
Ham. Turkey and
Mashed Potatoes
Sauerkraut
Casserole
White or Brown Bread
Cucumbers &amp; Onions
Watermelon
Cornbread
Cantaloupe

The Senior Nutrition Program meal is served at 12 :00 daily.

The Meigs County Senior cost with friends or meet new
Citizens Center evening meal friends.
· will be 'served on Tuesday and
Thun;day. Fall hours for serv ing
THURSDAY
are from 4:45 - 5:30 p.m: A
suggested donation for the meal
6
is $5 .00. Attend the evening
BBQ
Spare
Ribs
meal program for a good
nutritional meal at a reasonable Hot Baked Potato
Broccoli/Carrots
~----------I Golden Roll
TUESDAY
Hot Fudge Sundae Cake

SEPTEMBER 2001
Ala Carte items are listed in bold print.

Vegetable Meat Loaf
Scalloped Potatoes
Broccoli with Cheese
White or Brown Bread
Apricots

Open Face Roast Beef
&amp; Mashed Potato Sandwich

Glazed Carrots
Bread Pudding
Peaches
1

11

13

Sesame Pork wl Broccoli
on Rice
Crisp Salad
Golden Roll
Strawberry Tunnel Cream Cake

Spaghetti with meat Sauce
Seven Laye' Salad
Garlic Bread
Bananas and Vanilla Pudding
on Graham Cracker Crust
20

18

Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes •wl Gravy
Peas &amp; Carrots
Golden Roll
Peach Crisp

Meatloaf
Oven Roasted Potatoes
Green Beans
Golden Roll
Fluffy Orange Pie
27

25

BBQ Chicken Breast
Herbed Rested Potatoes
Broccoli Salad
Croissant
Rocky Road Pudding

·Ham with Pineapple
Scalloped Potatoes ·
Mixed Vegetables
Muffin
Fruit Whip

Chicken Rice Casserole
Roast Turkey
Spinach
IM.od, ..rl Potatoes &amp; Gn1v&gt;A
Confetti Corn
French Cut Green Beans
White or Brown Bread
Cranberry Sauce
Ftuit Cocktail
Pumpkin Custard

Country Fried Steak
Potatoes &amp;
Mixed Vegetables
White or Brown Bread
Peach Halves

Chicken Noodle Soup
Perfection Salad
White or Brown Bread
. Canta loupe

BBQ Beef on Bun
Potato Wedges
Buttered Peas
· Pinea pple Chunks
Brownie

'Activity Schedule

people paid from our area for
them to stop at the Center.
October4-7--lo Pigeon Forge,
TN and Dollywood Fall Festival
at a cost of $390.00 per person.
Highlights include Dollywood
Fall Festival, Dixie Stampede
Dinner Show, Louise Mandrell
Show, S moky Mountain
Jubilee, sightseei ng tour into the
Smokies to view the fall colors,
three continental breakfasts, and
two dinners.
Nove mber 30-December 2-to
Frankenmuth, Michigan to visit
the Christmas Wonderland at a
cost of $255.00 per person .
Highlights include Frankenmuth
City Tour, Bonner's Christmas
Store, two breakfasts, and a
dinner at Zehnder 's which is
famous for family styl e chicken
dinners.
The Swingin' Seniors have a
trip planned to the Guggisberg
Swiss Inn , Charm , Ohio f or
November 16- 18 . The dance

-------'---------------------t:rlcen,...::__~-------t,earn-v,·iU-peFform--f;"rilda;y-night Park Tours ha s s pace and Saturd~y m~rnin.g at the

"Let's Sew"

This section is designed
especially for you! There is sew
much for you to do.
A chenille pillow that you
stitch-sew-slash will be held at
the Center. Pam Schatz will be
the instructor for this class.
Your cost will be $15.00 which
will include the 20-inch pillow
kit. You must bring your sewing .
machine and lots of thread. It
.. will take 2 classes to complete
the pillow. The dates are
October II &amp; 15 from 6:00
p.m. • 8:00 p.m.
The class is limited to 8
people, so call Patty at 9922161 to register as soon as
\

Basic Skills
of Surging
Debbie Drake will be at the
Center on September 6 to teach
the basics of surging and ro talk
about the many uses of a surger.
The class is limited to 5 people
and you muskregis(er by calling
Patty at 992-2 161. There is no
fee for the class. but you must
bring your own machine. The
class is scheduled from 12:30
p.m.-2:30 p.m.

SU PPort Groups

Attention all
Sewers:

possible.
A quilt class will be held on
October3, 10, and 17 from 1:00
p.m.-3:00 p.m. The class will
cost $40.00 which will include
the flannel quilt kit. Pam Schatz
is the Instructor and there is a
limit of 5 people. Call Patty to
register at 992-,- 2161.
Pam will also teach you how
to make a rag quilt in
November. More information
will be posted in the next
newsletter.
Come into the Center to see
the samples on display for the
classes.
Call Patty Pickens at 9922161 for more information on
any of the above projects.

Painting
Classes
Available

A new
beg inner &amp;
intermediate painting class will
begin on Thursday; September
13 ·October 25 from noon-3:00
p.m. Note that these classes are
now held on Thursday. l;_he
cost is $7.00 per class.
Michelle Garretson is th e·
instructor. She will have
brushes to purchase, but .if you
have your own, please bring
them. Mithelle Garretson will
also teach a one- time fabric
painting class. You will .have to
bring your own sweatshirt (no
white or cream), the paints will
be provided. The cost is $12.00
and will be held on October I
Don' t forget the annual craft from 6:00 p.m.- 9:00 p.m. Call
show at the Center. The Winter Patty Pickens to register or for
Wonderland of Crafts will be more information at 992-2161.
A glass painting cla5s with
held on two days this ye!1r to
accommodate those who work. MiChelle will also be a one-time
The dates to mark on your class. The glass, brushes and
calendar are November 2 and paint will be included in the
November 3 from 10:00 a.m.- $15.00 fee . The date for this
one is October 22 from 6:00
3:00p.m.
Food will be served both p.m.-9:00 p.m. at the Center.
days. Come and shop from our The paint is penna-enamel and
local crafters to promote our is dishwasher safe. Call Patty at
· area hometown pride! For more 992-2161 to register.
information, call Patty Pickens
at 992-2161. We hope you will
join us.

The Caring and Sharing
Support Group meets the fourth
Thursday of each month at the
Meigs County Senior Center at
1:00 p.m. The meeting date is
September 27.
. The topic for the September
meeting will be an update on
Alzheimer's drugs. The Speaker
will be Craig Kimble, PhD.
MBA , from Holzer Medical
Center.
The Stroke Support Group
will meet September 12 at I :00 .
p.m. in the conference room at
Lia Tipton.
the Center.
Occupational Therapist, Holzer
Rehabilitation Center, . is the
coordinator. The October 10
meeting will be held at the
Rocksprings Rehab Center at
1:00 p.m.

Annual
Craft Show

hotel. Thrs tnp mcludes
shopping in . Berlin. Sug~r
Creek, a VISit to Lehman s
Hardware, a stop at a cheese
factory, and an Amish dinner at
a farm. The COS\ is $150.00 for
a double room . Room
reservations need to be made by
October 16.
'
For more information or to
make reservations, contact Alice
Wamsley at 992-2161.

Birthday Parties
The monthly birthday party
will be held on S~ptember 20.
Entertainment
for
the
September party will be Bill and
Hannah Spencer. This husband
and wife team will provide
music and storytelling at II :00
a.m. Come and dance · the
morning away !

Come and Dance
Come and dance the night
awa v with George Hall at the
Center. He will pllly music on
Saturday, September 8 from
6:30-9:30. Admi ssion is $8.00
~rperson.

Appeti zers and soft drinks
will be provided. For more
information call us at 992-2161.
The MCCoA is an altohol and
tobacco free environment.

Investment
Advice
ElizaQeth Schaad, Investment
R-epresentative with Edward
Jones, will be at the Center on
September II &amp; October 9 from
10:00 a.m. -1 1:00 a·.m. Ms .
Schaad will do private
co nsultation s concerning
investmen t questions.
Appointments are necessary ·
for thi s serv ice. Call Patty
Pickens at 992-2161 to make
your appointment now.
WE HONOR

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

992-3785

,

20
Soup Beans and Ham
i I Beets and Oni
Boiled Egg - Cornbread
Orange Sections

Johnny Marzetti
ColeSlaw
Garlic Bread
Grapes

·Are you interested in learning
about as,sisted living? If so, join
us at the Center on Septembe~
27 at 11:00 a.m. There will be a
speaker fro m Wyngate to
explain their facility. Wyngate is
located in Gallipolis past Holzer
Nancy Stevens, from Holzer Hospital.
Medical Center, is the facilitator
for the Diabetes Support Group.·
The September 20 meeting wi II
Belinda Wellington, Nutrition
feature , Gwen Fisher. She will
Program
Assistant at the Center,
provide tips on trave ling and
will
speak
on September II at
diabetes a t the Meigs
II :00 a.m. Her topic will be
Multipurpose Senior Center.
'"Food Safety for Seniors."

Convicted inmate
scheduled to die
Sept. 12
COLUMBUS (AP) Condemned inmate John Byrd Jr. on
Wednesday formally chose the electric chair as his means of execution, a

Golden Baked Chicken
Mashed Potatoes/Gravy
Buttered Lima·Beans
White or Brown Bread
Watermelon

~---------------~

I Your paid membership to the Meigs County Council on Aging, I
line. is a measure of support for the Multipurpose Senior Center 1
and the services provided to o lder adults residing in Meigs
l county. Each paid me mbership received verifies to regional, I
state and national funding agencies that the Multipurpose Senior 1
I Center is providing needed senior programs.

I

·

.

1·

The cost for each membership is $5.00. You may purchase your I
I membership at the Senior Center or by maiiing to: Meigs County
ISenior Center, 11 2 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722,1
Pomeroy, OH 45769. If possible, please include a stamped, self- I
laddressed envelope so that we can forward your membership
I card to you. Thank you for your support.
I

_______________ ..

IName

I

~
I
Membership II

IAddress
._
I Cit,y/State/Zip

Driver safety . Program
The 55 ALIVE Driver Safety number one problem area for
Program that was developed by drivers age 55 and over.
AARP will be held on Friday, • How does the aging process
October 26 from 8:00 a. m. · such as vision problems,
4:00 p.m. at the Meigs Senior hearing loss, and slower
Center. The De~ensive Driving reaction · times affect your
Refresher Course will help driving ability?
answer
thes e common • How can
best respond to
questions;- - - -adv.,.secdrivirrg-!:on•ditioll!r,streh- • Why do drivers age 55 and as rain , ice
night driving?
over have more accidents per
The fee for the class is
mile than drivers age 30 to 54? $10.00, check or money order
• How should you handle right- made payable to AARP. Some
of -way situat ions? This is the insuran ce companies offer
discounts to persons completing
the 55 ALIVE course, check
.11
with your insurance company.
To enroll or for more
information, ca ll Alice
Wamsley, Instructo r, at 992On September 18, 2001 from 2161.
II :00 a.m. · 2:00 p.m. the
Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc. will combine forces
with Hol zer Clinic to increase
Representatives from the
diabetes awareness in Meigs Athens Social Security Office
County. Dr. Scott Smith will will be at the Meigs Senior
speak on diabetes and Center to assist people with
" Knowing the Numbers Social Security problems and to
Associated with Good Control." provide information. The dates
Bayer Pharmaceuticals will are September 12 &amp; 26 from
have a representative available 10:00 a.m.- II :00 a.m.
to provide glucose monitors to
individuals diagnosed with
diabetes and who are active in
self -managernent.
Computer lab will be offered
Hol zer Clinic will also on September 4, II &amp; 25 and
pro~ ide free screenings for October 2, 16, 23 &amp; 30. Come in
diabetes. Lunc h will · be and l~am some basic computer
provided at no charge, but you skill s. The lab will be open
must register to attend You can from 9:30 a.m. • II :00 a.m.
Queen,
MIS
call the Holzer Clinic at 992- Tommy
0060 or the Meigs · Senior Coordinator, will be available to
answer your questions.
Center at 992-2161 to register.

Know v:our·
Numbers .!

Social Security

Computer Lab

BOWMAN'S
Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
Nebulizers
CPAP/BIPAP

• Hospital Beds
• Wheel Chairs
• Patient lifts
• lift Chairs

24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUPPLIES and BRACES
HOME OXYGEN and
RESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
SALES &amp; RENTALS
FREE DELIVERY

446·2206
TOLL ffiEI

1•100•445·2206

1480 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
486 lurllngton Road
Jackson, Ohio 45640

A legislative -committee
should approve stricter
nursing home guidelines
that include an incre~se in
required staffing levels,
Gov. Bob Taft said Wednesday in a letter to the committee's chairman.
The Joint Committee on
.....--.;., Agency
Rule
Review
is to vote
Monday
on the
guidelin es,
w hich
would
__ "' .• ::.....J replace
n iles that
below new federal
In a lett;er to Rep. J~mie
Callender, a R epublican
from Willowick, Taft supported an Ohio Depart- ·
ment of H ealth recommendation that would
require nursing home residents to each receive 2. 75
total hours of direct care
per day, with at least 2.20
hours provided by nurses
and nurse aides.
Representatives of the
. homes say the requirement
is too harsh and advocates
for the elderly say it's not
strict enough.
"Residents of today's
nursing facilities are more
medically impaired than
ever before, and these rules
have not been updated irt
over 25 years," Taft wrote.
"I know you share my
concern that Ohio's senior
citizens and those with disabilities living in nursing
PIIIH Ill

Calendar

• P.ower Wheel Chair
• Scooter
• Bedside Commodes
• Bath/Safety Items

•

on

the electric chair will accomplish
that.
Ohio has nor clecirocuted a condemn ed inmate si nce llJ63. Two
other inmates have be e~ executed
sin ce 1999, but both · chose lethal
injection.
Ohio Public D efender David
Boilikcr, whose office is representing
Byrd, said he visited the inm ate at the
Mansfield Correctional Institution

Tift. AJ

Cl~ssjfieds
Comjcs

Editorials
Q~jtuaries

Sports

.Weather

..

to

'
I

I

new .queen
BY TONY M. LEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RACINE - Live musical entertainment, a parade, an
auction, and the crowning of a new queen are just a few
of the activities one can enjoy during the 2001 Racine
Fall Festival on Saturday at Star Mill Park.The annual festival kicks off with a parade at 10 a.m.,
followed by a performance by Out Door Plumbing Co.
at 11 a.m. Monetary prizes of $50, $30 and $20 will be
given to the first, second and third place wilmers in the
parade competition.
The crowning of the 2001 Fall Festival Queen is 11 :45
a.m. on Star Mill Park Stage. Alexis Hill and Clayton
Findley will entertain those in attendance with individual
musical performances slated fur 11:50 a,m.
An auction is scheduled for noon and those participating will have an oppo~ty w bid on a number ofitems,
including a Lloyd Middleton First Doll, "Reagan,'l)ygqclen lawn ornarnents, a ch~d's comforter, microwave cookware Ets.arui:uoaster oven . ----~------~·ilil­
. Musical entertainment will continue at 12:15 p.m.
when the Swinging Se"!ors take to the stage, followed by

NATIONAL CENTER- Chip Carroll, farm assistant at Rural Action's National Center for the Preservation
of Medicinal Herbs, works with center volunteers at the Rutland-area farm, which will be the site of a workshop for beginners interested in growing medicinal herbs. The workshop is Sept 22. (Rural Action photo )

Workshop focuses on herbs
Goldenseal viewed
as (threatened)
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RUTLAND
Growing
he rbs with a potential for profit, such as Ginseng, Goldenseal
and Black Cohash , will be the
topi c of a workshop for beginners to be held later this month

at the Natior1al Ce nter for . the Action, a non -p rofit sustainable
oT Medicina l developm ent o rgani~ation .
H erbs.
It is designed to preserve a
Paul Neidhart, farm manager va lu able ecosystem and providfor the Rutland-area cen ter, ing a haven for wild herbs.
will be the inst ructor · for .th e
Because of the growing marcourse, se t for Sept. 22 from 9 kct for medici nal herbs, and the
a.m. to noon.
th reat rhat over-harves ti ng.
The nationa l ce nter
was these plants poses for them in
~sta~lished in 1998 by Frontier th e wild, the center focuses on
Natural Products Cooperative, · cu ltivation of the pl ants with
a major manuta cturer of medi- cooperati o n from _)oca l and
cin al herb products. T he opera- national organ izatio ns, includtion is now oversee n by Rural
Please see Herbs, AJ

Please see Festlv1l, AJ

New anti-death perlalty group formed
COLUMBUS (AP) - M any
central Ohio clergy have been
opposed to capital punishment
for years, arrd o n Wedn esday
they announced the formation
of a coaliti on dedi c-a ted .to
abolishing Ohio 's death penatc
ty.
,'
H owever, th ey acknowl edged it would be a stru ggle to

tiiJh: 801

12 Papt

on Wedn esday morning. Byrd already
had in fo rmed th e DR,C of his
choice, Bodiker said.
Dynl had little to say on Wednesday
about choosi ng th e electric chair,
Bodikersaid. ln 1994, Byrd chose the
electric chair 1vhen he came within
hours .of exe cution . H e was spared
wheh a federal co urt . stopped the
execution · and allowed him to proceed with· fed eral appeals .

Fall Festival

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

:a Section• -

·we Care For You Like Family• .

bcry bu t has denied stabbing Tewksbury.
On Wednesday morning, Byrd circled '"electrocution" and signed th e
fo rm the Department of Rehabilita tion is rt'guired to subntit to him one
week before his executio n. He had
the choice of le-th al inj ection , bu t he
has sJid he wants to make it tough
for the state to put him to death :tnd
he believes thar strapping him into

·

www.mydallysentmel.com

Gov. Taft
pushes
for stricter
guidelines

Sentinel

Food Safety

THE. .MEDICAL SH-OPPE

method he feels will make his executioners uncomfortable and serw as a
protest of Ohio's death penalry.
Byrd, 37, convicted of mu rder in
the stabbing of Cinci nnati convenience store clerk Monte Tewksbury
during a 1983 robbery, is scheduled
to 'be executed on Sert. 12 unl ess :r
court steps in or Gov. Bob Taft grants
his request for clemency. Byrd has
acknowledged taking part in the rob-

ToUy'l

Assisted Living

Diabetes
Support Group

~&amp;085'
'QiJ~_welen, Inc.
~ 212 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH

available for the following two
trips. There must be at least 12

Baked Steak
Scalloped Potatoes
Succotash
White or Brown Bread
Mixed Tropical Fruit

Ham Loaf
Wiener with Sauce on Bun
Baked Sweet Potatoes ·
Baked Beans
Seasoned Wax Beans
Potato Salad
White or Brown
Pineapple Tidbits
Oranges &amp;

It's Time for Trips

Wednesday, September 26--a
trip to Ripley, a hi storical Ohio
River town in Brown County.
Visit the John Rankin house, an
Underground Railroad Station,
view historical homes and sites,
and visit the Ulysses S . Grant
Thursday September 6, Junior and Rita will play at 5:30 p.m. home in Georgetown. Lunch is
Thun;day September 20, Gospel Sing " Joe McCloud" and "Frank included. The cost is $50.00. At
&amp; Ida Martin
thi s time only 20 people have
"Thursday September 25, Blood Pressure Checks 4:15 - 4:45p.m. signed up for this trip and there
needs to be 35 people to make
final reservations. beadline for
reservations is September 12.
Sunday, Ncrvember 18--a trip
The Mei gs Multipurpose The Knitting Ci rcle meets on to W,hee lin g for the Stotler
Senior Center is open Monday Wednesday from 10:00 a.m. Brothers co nce rt at Capital
through Friday from 8:00 a.m. until noon.
1\&lt;,usic Hall, a dinner cru ise on
until 4:30 p.m. Regularly
Older adults are invited to the qateway Clipper, and view
scheduled activities held attend the activities scheduled. the Oglebay Winter Festival of
throughout the week include Join us for lunch and select Lights. This trip is fu ll , but
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo, what you want from the a Ia standby reserva tions can be
cards and games.
carte menu or you can enjoy the taken.
Dance team practice is held regular meal. Ala cane items are
A three-day trip, October 2.1each Monday at I :,00 p.m. Cost individu a lly pric ed. The 23, is sched ul ed to Niagara
is $1.00 per session attended. . suggested donation for the noon Falls. This trip is full, but
meal is $1.50.
standby rese rvation s can be

Chicken Cacciatore
Buttered Noodles
Creamed Green Peas
White or Brown Bread
Pear Halves

·

•

eoses e

1
Sausage Gravy
Hash Brown Potatoes
Tomato .Juice
Biscuit
Fried Apple Slices

Hometown Newsp11per

Middleport • Pomeroy Ohio

. so cents • September 6, 2001 • Vol. 52. No. 15

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR NUTRITION PROGRAM MENU

Thursday

!

Low: 60s
Details, A2

Lotteries

AS

OHIO.
B2·4 Pldl3: ~2-2; Pick 4: 7-4-3· 7

85 •
LDIID: 7- 1~1&amp;23-28-47
A4 ~9-1 -7-8-H!

A3 W.VA.
B1.3 Daily!: 1-11-1 Daily4:7-9-1-7 .
A2
Cl 200 1 Ohio Valley Publ~hins Co.

convince law makers and even
their own congregation s that
the dea th pena lty is a bad idea.
. "No issu e ha s a bigger gap,
l ' m told, between th e pu lpit
and the p ew than capital punishment," sai d
the
Rev.
Richard IJurnett, rector of
Trinity Episcopal C h urch,
whcrc th e group h e ld a news

conference.
The Interfaith Coali tion to
Stop Execution includes leaders of congrega tions representing Protestants, Jews, Cath o li cs
and other rel ig ions. Many
n1embers have spent nights and
weekends protesting the ext· cutions o f inm ates since Wil -

Please see Group, AJ

QUEEN CANDIDATES -

Five Southern High school
students recently announced their candidacy for Sat•
urday's 2001 Racine Fall Festival Queen contest
. They are, from left, Amanda Ashworth, daughter of
Kitty Ramsey of Racine; Amber Duffy, daughter of
Krista and Bryan Duffy of Racine; Rachel Marshall,
daughter of Judy and Barry Marshall of Racine;
Stacey Mi lis, daughter of Redenith and Randy Mills of
Syracuse; and Lindsey Smith, daughter of Diana and
James Smith of Racine . (Tony M. Leach photo)

Benefits of innovation outweigh health costs
WASHINGTON (AI') - Americans
shoulq look bt.-yond the liost of expensive
medicines to consider the savings rhey produce, including fewer a11c.l shorter hospital
stays, health and econorn.ic scholars say.
There's little dispute over whether the
research and developmem of stronger medicin~s or safer surgeries is c.lriving the
decades-long cost increase fiJr prescription
dru gs, insurance premiUim ;u1d even visits to
·
the doctor.

B).lt in several ·essays and report', health
care economists, presidential advisers and
other experts take on the issue of expensive
medi cines and suggest many are paying for
themselves: People are staying healthier, living long~:r and avoiding lengthy and costly
hospit:rl stays.
" High- price new drugs may be the
cheapest weapon we haw in our struggle
against rising overall medical c&gt;:pcnsc-s," J.D.
Klemkc, a health care economist ba.&lt;ed in

Denver, Colo., says in one report being publishcd Thursday in the journal H ealth
· Affairs.
Kleinke, for inst;mce, points to the anticoagulants used to neat strokes. A lifetime of
care for a severe stroke victim averages .
$1 00,000, while therapeutic medicines cost
· just $1,095 a year, he says. He adds that
· although prescription drug costs are grabbing a bigger share of all health spending,
the share spent on hospital stays is declining.

•
Locally Operated ll y: Mary Ann Bowman, Lewi.! Bowman
Dan Bowman. Keith Blanke11•hip
'

Diabetes Support Group

.

The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group wiH meet
·Sunday, September 9 from 2:00 - 4:00 pm
in the Hospital's French 500 Room.
M E D I C A L C ENT ER
This month's topic: "Traveling Tips"
Discover the Holzer Difference
All are welcome!
·For·more information, tall
www.holzer.org

Free Delivery and Training • We Bill All Insurance
• Sales &amp; Rentals • Same Day Service • 24 Hour
Emergency Service
70 Pine St . .

740-446 -7283
1-800 -458 -6844

I

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(740) 446·'5 080

Oh
l

'

•

•'

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·Page A2

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, Sept. 1
AccuWeathere forecast tor daytime conditions, low/high temperatures
MICH.

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Mansfield !63"183" I •

IND.

W. VA.

EPA finds problems with Ohio agency·
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. ner said Wednesday. "It's just that they
Environmental Protectiun Ag~ncy's get worked out, and l hope that's
most exrenslve audit on a state coun- what's going to happen here."
According to the EPA report, the
terpart hal produced a long list of
problem areas for Ohio, from a lack of Ohio agency doesn't employ enough
public accountability to a sparse staff people to run its clean air progr~ms, has
rhat has fallen behind on issuing per- a high level of vacancies in its Diyision
of Air Pollution Control and doesn't
mits and assessing fines.
The federal agency has said while have a training. p[ogram in place to
these and other criticisms are serious, ensure consistency across the state.
they are nor insurmountable.
The state says it isn't understaffed
Other states have dealt with and are because fewer facilities than originally
dealing with similar problems, said Tom estimated need clean air permits, and ..
Skinner, who directs ti]e EPA's Region the EPA didn't count staff at local air
5 office in Chicago.
agencies that do contract work for the
"If you look at any one of the prob- Ohio agency. It admitted to having 14
lems that we found with Ohio, [ can 't vacancies at the division in question,
tell you thai those problems or issues but said the spots were being fi lled by a
haven't arisen with other states," Skin- "hiring process."

The EPA report said there had been
a decline in recent years of inspections,
enforcement case conclusions, complaint investigations and collected
penalty amounts in the Division of Air
Pollution Control. ·
The state called this a "contradiction" because overall, · it said, Ohio's
enforcement programs were rated very
strong.
.
"Ajr pollution penalt!es account for
nearly half of the $68 million in penal-·
ties assessed over the past 1p years, a
figure which helps form the basis of
U.S. EPA's positive endorsement of
Ohio's enforcement efforts," the state
agency said, in a news release.
The state said it's not behind on issuing air pollution permits.

0 2001 AccuWealher, Inc.

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&amp;!My Pt. Cloudy

M M
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Cklucty

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Showera T·storms

Rain

-. . . to:L
''W,•
..-.· M
....
,. •
Flurries

&lt;' • ' " '

Snow

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Ice

Warmer conditions will linger
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Partly cloudy skles were in ·
the forecast for the tri-county
area on Friday as a frontal sys,tern sweeps across the region.
It will be warm and muggy
with highs in the mid-80s.
And the National Weather
Service said Ohioans can
expect more of the same on
Saturday.
Sunset tonight will be at
7:55, and sunrise on Friday is
at 7:05a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .Partly
cloudy.
Lows in th e mid 60s. Light
southeast wind.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in th e upper 80s. 'south wind
arou nd 10 mph.
Friday night ... Partly, cloudy.

Lows in the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Saturday · night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
in the mid 60s.
Sunday... Mostly
clo udy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstor-ms . Highs in the
lower 80s.
Monday.. .Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s an d
hi ghs in the lower 80s.
Tuesday... Parrly
cloudy.
Lows near 60 and highs near
80.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.

Union doesn't extend invitation
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mayoral candidate Ti.m McCorma. ck was left out of a labor organization's mayo ral candidates
meeting when he refused to sign a document he believes is
harmful to parochial schools.
Nine of Cleveland's 10 mayoral candidates could have had
the opportunity Wednesday night to speak on their visions for
a Jabor-frie@ly City Hall. Seven made their pitcb.eUlLt.he
half-full Sheetmetal Workers Hall.
. McCormack, a Cuyahoga County commissioner, was not
invited because he was the only one of the mayoral candidates ,
all Democrats, wbo refused to sign the Cleveland AFL-ClO Federation of Labor's eight-point agenda, known as •:the
workers bill of rights.",
"The price of admission was signing on to the workers bill
of rights," said John Ryan, executive secretary of the labor
group.

-

ACLU to defend diarist
C LEVELAND {AP) - The American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio is coming to the defense of a Columbus man
imprisoned for ,writing about sexual fantasies involving children in his private diary.
ACLU attorney Benson Wolman said Brian Dalton's con-

viction will be attacked on groun ds his writing is protected by
the First Amendment.
No one should be in jail for "things he scribbled in his notebook," Wolman told The Plain Dealer for a story Thursday.
Wolman said he wi ll head a team that includes O hio State
University law Professor David Goldberger and ·several Cleveland-based ACLU attorneys.

Hispanics want more from Bush
TOLEDO · (AP) - Tired of toiling in the fields picking
cucumbers and tomatoes, Alamar Perez and her husband
opened a store selling Mexican pastries and tamales to the
growing Hispa nic community.
"A lot of new people are coming in," Perez said. "On .weekends, there are lines ·ou t the door for the sweet bread.~'
Hispanics, mostly Mexicans who have come to this gritty
Lake Erie city loo king for work in fields and factories, are
ecstatic that President Bush and Mexican President Vicente
Fox planned to visit Thursday.
Their excitement, though, is tempered when they talk about
the prospects of am.nesty for illegal immigrants and the effects
of free trade on this industrial city.

Legionnaires' source unknown
DAYTON (AP) -Investigators have been unable to find a
definite source of the Legionnaires' disease that killed a
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base employee in June.
Mark Murray, 53, of Harrison Township, a. butcher at the
W right-Patterson Air Force Base commissary, died June 6 after
being hospitalized with Legionnaires' disease in mid- May. T he
disease is a fo rm of pneumonia that is sp read by inhaling of
mist from contaminated water.
A report issued Wednesday by the health districts in Montgomery and Green counties said Mur ray's exposure could have
come from anywhere.
Since the case was isolated, with no subsequent outbreak, it
was not considered a public health risk.

FAIRFAX (AP) - The federal government will help pay
for part of the SS million in
damages sustained by local
governments in Hamilton,
Buder, Cler mont and Warren
counties during July floodin g.
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency will
partly reimbur.se local governments for damages involving
roads, bridges, schools, utilities
and other infrastructure and
overtime pay for employees

Rutland Freewill ,Baptist Church
Sunday, September 9
Sun. School ........................... 10:00 am
Dinner .....................................12:00
Preachlng ...............................1:00
and Singing

experts

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
mysterious underground discovery is so fresh it hasn't yet
been named. Archaeologists
just call it "the circle."
What little that is known is
this: It's completely underground, circ ular and some 90
feet across:
Using powerful se nsors and
scientific instruments that
capture geophysical energy,
governmen t archaeologists
made the discovery by chance
this summer near C hillicothe
in Ross County, The P)ain
Dealer reported Wednesday.
National Park Service officials recently -confirmed the
find and plan to formally
announce the discovery at a
scientific conference next
month . They are discussing
exacrly how to excavate "the
ci rcle."
Researchers said the underground object is in a region of
southern Ohio that long has
been combed for ancient artifacts.
•

Guest Speaker· Bro. Carl Ward
Guest Singer· Bro. Jim Eden
Sunday Eve. Service 7:00
Guest Singers·
The Boelk Family
Pastor Paul Taylor
Invites public

Sheriff says layoffs nec~ssary

LO-CAL STOCKS
AEP-46'1.
· Arch Coal - 18'1.
Akzo-43'1.
AmTechSBC - 42).
Ashland Inc. - 42~·
AT&amp;T -19'1,
Bank One- :Joll,
BLI- 10'1.
Bob Evans - 21-t.
BorgWamer - 51 1,

Champion - 3'1. ·
Charming Shops- 7
Ci(Y. Holding- 11 ),
Col-20
DuPont- 41'1.

,

Federal Mogul - 1 ·

Gannett- '64 )i
General Electric- 41 1.

GKNLY- 4),
Harley Davidson - 47
Kmart- 10
Kroger- 26'!.
Lands End - 38).
Lid. -

NSC- 1!».
Oak Hill Financial- 16
OVB~25

BBT-36 ~

Peoples -

14,.

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
da~·s transactions, Pro--

vided by S,milh Part·
ners at .Advest Inc.

20 ·

Festival

held at 1 p.m. for the younger
festival-goers. The tractor pull is
being sponsored by Jimmy
from Page AI
O'Brien Farms.
"The Fall Festival is always a
Elvis impersonator Dwight· success and we invit~ everyotie
Icenhower at 1 p.m., Northwest to come btt! and enjoy themTerritory at 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., selves during one of th~ most
Out Door Plumbing Co. at 3 beal)tiful times of the year;' said
p.m., and Surefire at 4 p.m. and Catherine Hart, Fall Festival
6p.m.
board member.
Throughout the day, Marvin
"However, in case of
White of Tuppers Plains will inclement weather, the festival
·showcase his talent for making will be held at Southern High
brooms and all finished products School;' added Hart. .
will be available for purchase.
For booth information, conVarious craft and food ven- tact Krista at 949-221 0; enterdors will also be present during minmem information: Larry
the event and a kiddie tractor Wolfe at 949-2836; or general
pull with cash prizes. for first, information, Dale Hart at 949second and third pl0ce will be 2656.

DAYTON (AP) - Democratic challenger Rhine McLin:
said Mayor Mike Turner hasn't done much to stop the exodu~
of businesses from the city.
•
Mclin, a state senator from Dayton, took aim at one of the
mayor's main themes as the post-Labor Day ·political season·
begins.
McLin pointed to the city's 7.6 percent unemployment rate:
anti said jobs have been lost as businesses left the dty underthe:
two-term R epublican's watch. She listed several Wednesday at:
a news conference outside the now-dosed Franciscan Medical
Center.
'
McLin said the Dayton Daily News printing plant and parts
of Rey·· olds and Reynolds have relocated from the city while
layoffs have occurred at Standard
and Delphi.

Checking Accounts

Get $20·()()
. . ··········-

Come into FARMERS BANK today and open up any one of our
great checking accounts and you will be qualified to draw from
the "Barrel 0' Money!"
Select an envelope with a dollar amount of
$20.00 and this amount will be deposited
into your new FARMERS BANK Checking
account!
Ask about our HiFi, Golden Life, SuperNow
or Lifestyle checking accounts and you 'll
be sure to find one that's right for you!
This offer is good through Oct. 15, 2001 and
will be provided at opening of new checking ac&lt;:ou.nt.

(F':tl) Farmers Bank

Pomeroy

To PERF0 RM - Northwest Territory, along with a number of
other musical entertainers, will perform Saturday at Racine
Fall Festival In Star Mill Park. The' bluegrass group is sched_ uled to hit the stage aL2..a_n_ct5_p.m. (Submitted photo.)

Goodman's appointment to
Johnson's seat is expected
early next 'month. As a senafrom Page AI
tor, Goodman will represent
the north east side of Columfacilities receive respectful, bus and the area's suburbs.
high-quality care. These
Goodman is a lawyer with
updated rules will ensure that· Taft, Stettinius and Hollister
level ' of care is delivered," he in Columbus.
wrote.
FIREARMS THEFT
GOODMAN-SENATE:
R epublican Rep. John
A screening committee of Willamowski of Lima on .
Senate R epublica ns recom- Wednesday introduced a bill
mended on Wednesday the that would increase the penalappointment of state Rep. ty for the theft of a firearm .
David Goodman of Bexley to
The bill would increase the
replace Sen. Bruc_e Johnson of maximum possible sentence
Columbus, who is leaving the to five years in prison from
Senate this month to become the current 18 months. It also
director of the Ohio Depart- would require a judge to senment of Development.
tence offenders to prison
Goodman, also a R epubli- time, unl ess the judge found
can, has represented parts of extraordinary circumstances
Columbus' east side since in the offender's · favo r,
May 1998. In the H ouse, he Willamowski said.
sponsored a faw· that prohibits.
SCHOOt ASSAULTS:
the switching of customers'
Assaulting a teacher's aide
utilities without their permis-! or educational assistant in an
·sion and another law that Ohio school would be punprohibits public access to ishable by up to a year in jail
records kept -on children by under a bill introduced by
community recreation cen- Rep. Diana Fessler, a Republican from New Carlisle.
ters.
/

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

FDIC

Correction Polley

FLASH DANCE

error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Double Reclining Sofa

News Departments
The inaln number is 992-2156.
Department extentions are:
General manager
Ext. 12
News

Ext. 13

Of

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Other services
: Advenlalng

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Ext 4

Clalllfled Ada

.Quality Furniture Plus

42123 State Route 7 • TUppers Plains, OH 45783

(740) 667·7388 •1-800-:200·4005
..

To meet

Plan meeting

ing United Plant Savers.
Farmers and government
agencies are exploring herbs
as sustainable alternatives to
commodity farming and liquidation loggi ng, and the
goal of the national center is
two-fold: To support and
encourage the · efforts as an
alternative to .t raditional
farming and logging, and to
help secure the future of
these
at-risk
medicinal
herbs.
Plants including American
Ginseng, Black Cohash,
Goldenseal, Bloodroot and
.
E ch macea
are d escn'b e d by
the national center- as "critical to cultivate," because they

have been over-harvested to
the point that their existence
is threatened, according to
Neidhart. Herbs valued for
their roots where the
entire plant is harvested are especially vulnerable, and
are a priority at the center.
"This workshop will be an
exciting and edu cational
event for those who are
interested in learning 'handson' how to g~ow and propagate these valuable and
threatened herbs," Neidhart
said.
The workshop costs SlO
per person. Registration may
be made and questions
directed to Rural Action
Forestry, at 767~2090 .

---; ; ; ;:;,.;;;;.;;..:;;::::.._=:.....-======---====

·Gallipolis

(740) 992~2136 (740) 446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667~3161

LOCAL BRIEFS
EM_5 runs
with an .annual chicken barbecue.

POMEROY -- Units of
the Meigs Emergency SerPOMEROY - Robert J. Lewis, 81, of Pomeroy, died on vice amwered three calls for
Wednesday, September 5, 2001 at St. Mary's Ho!pit.itl in Hunt- aSSistance on Wednesday.
ington, West Virginia.
Crews responded as follows:
He was born on July 8, 1920 in Greenup, Kentucky, son of
CENTRAL DIS~
the late James Lewis and Marguerite Bauer Lewis. He was a ..
PATCH
1938 graduate of Pomeroy High School. He was a bombardier
8:41 · a.m ., Ohio 681,
in the U.S. Army Air Corps as a second lieutenant. during Edward Wigal , Camden·
World War IL
Clark Memorial Hospital;
p.m.,
College
He was employed by · the. forme.r Elberfeld's .P~partment _ _12:56
Store m Pomeroy for 10 years, and 'was a letter carrier in Avenue, Michad l:lri.cker,
: Pomeroy for 27 years.
Holzer Medical C~nter.
TUPPERS PLAINS
He · was a member of the Drew Web~ter Post, American
8;14
p.m., Ohio 248,
Legion in 'Pomeroy, a charter member -of _th'e Izaak Walton
League, and a member of the National Rifle Association .. He Josep-hine Hill, CCMH .
was an avid hunter and fisherman , and supporter of the Meigs
Marauder Band.
.
He was a member of ~he Trinicy Church in Pomeroy.
RUTLAND Rutland
He wtll be sadly missed by his wife of 51 years, Addajou
McKenzie Lewis of Pomeroy; his daughter and son-in-law, Township Trustees will hold
Carol and Paul Durst of Huntington; h' son and daughter-in- the ir September meeting on
law, David and Katie Lewis of Pomeroy; his brother and sister- Monday at 5 p.m. at the fire
in-law,J~ck and Mary Margaret Lewis of Pomeroy; two grand- station.
sons, Robert and Eric Durst of Huntington'; a granddaughter,
N*im Lewis of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his grandTUPPERS PLAINS parents and his uncle, Oscar Bauer.
Tuppers
Plains Regional
Services w ill be held .on Saturday, September 8, 2001 at 2
p.m. at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Sewer District will hold a
Paul Voss officiating. Burial will follow at Lemrt Falls Cemetery. regular meeting on Sept. 11
at 7 p.m.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, September 7,
2001 from 6-8 p.m.

from Page AI

.

_.........- ........- ... ...... ---·· .....,..... ·····---·· ....·-·· .......

Robert J. Lewis

Herbs

.Taft

New FARMERS BANK

Obituaries

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Fees increase

Candidates clash over jobs

KICK OFF
THE
FOOTBALL
SEASON
WITH THIS
LANE®
SPECIAL!

'

9

Aockwell-16'1.
Rocky Boots - 6
AD Shell - 56'1,
Sears-43
Shoney's-'1.
Wai-Mart- 49'1.
Wendy's - 281.
Worthington -

13~.

Our main concem in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an

'

Premier -

USB -.. 24 ~.

TIFFIN (AP) -The Seneca County Sheriff's Office plans
to lay otT about 15 employees because of a budget shortage. :
SheriffTom Steyer said Wednesday that a dispatcher and jail
workers could soon be laid otT in the northwest Ohio councy.
County Administrator Bob Anderson said the sheriff h~s
been allocated another $50,000, but that will not be enough
to avoid layoffs.
A newly formed warrants and transport division will be;
closed. The division operated with current jail employees; but
will be unable to fun ction because of the cuts.
-

V-.AJV Vfe're Your Bank for Cifo1~

•
'

working on the cleanup, officials said Wednesday.
Residents are · also waiting to hear whethe r homes in the
floodplain of Little Duck C reek will be bought an? razed .The
U.S. Army Corps of'Engineers is still studying whether flood
control in the area is · possible or the homes should be
removed.
Two people died and 78 homes were damaged in Fairfax
near the creek during July flooding.

partial paymenf

hemecoming 2001

Buried
'circle'
baffles

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

lhunday, September 6, 1001

Ohio weathe(

·Q .
, · · [§r:- ~~~'-"'

Thursday, Sept. 6, 2001

Ext. 5

· To send e-mail
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through Friday, 111 Coun St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated :~ress and
the Ohio Newspaper ASSOCiation.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court.
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Mail subscription
. Inside Meigs County

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

from Page AI
ford Berry was put to death
in 1999, the state's first execution since 1963. ·
Next week, the state will
execute condemned inmate
John Byrd, convicted of
killing convenience store
clerk Monte Tewksbury,
unless a couri stops the execution or Gov. Bob Taft
grants clemency.
Byrd has maintained that
although he took part in the
robbery of Tewksbury's
Cincinnati store, an accomplice stabbed Tewksbury to
death . On Tuesday, Byrd's
attorneys asked the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati to allow a lower
court to re-examine Byrd's
case.
"We have vowed never to
be silent again and today we
end that silence," said the
Rev. James Gebhart, a
retired United · Methodist
minister. " If we exec ute
Byrd , we bloody our hands.
The- core of our spiritual
tradition is that we don 't
kill ."
The raking of any life for
any reason is unacceptable
to those who hold reli gious
Howard
beliefs, Rabbi
Apothaker said.
"Justice needs to be pur-

Plan show

Adivities set
POMEROY -Area teens
are invited to attend "Friday's Fun, Food and Fellowship" at God's NET in
Pomeroy from 6 to 10:30
p.m. Computer games,
board games, pool tables and
other activities are planned,
and free refres hments.

Offer course
POMEROY
Small
Business Development Center of Southeast Ohio and
the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce will sponsor a
"Basis of a Successful Start"
workshop on Sept. 27 from
3 to 6 p.m. at the Meigs
County District Public
Library in Pomeroy.
The . workshop is designed
to answer questions and
make starting a business eas~
ier. Topics will include
assessing goals and strengths,
- registering a business name,
sources for financing, and
SBDC and other resources.
·Those wl)o wish to attend
should register by calling
593- 1797 or 992-5005.
RSVP is required by calling
Sept. 20.
The workshop is free.

Plan dance
POMEROY - Saturday
from 6:30 to 9 p.m., George
Hall will be at the Meigs
Senior Center for an .
evening of dancing. The $8
admission fee will include
appetizers and soft drinks .

McARTHUR -Vinton ·
County Pilots and Boosters
will have their annual air
show, fly-in and safety seminar on Sept. 16 at 11 a.m.
The show will feature the
"Appalachian Air Forc e
Acrobatic Flying Team,"
commanded
by
Norm
Crabtree, and will begin

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

IPRIUG VA IIfYCIIWIJ\
446•4524

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fll
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1

'

FRI8131101 • THURS 8/t/01
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
$3.75 ADMISSION
(CERTAIN P!ATUAII MAY BE EXCLUOEgl

Ztta~ ~'laoeet

?taowe "1~·1:4'1-.,.

NIKE • ..REEBOK· ASICS ·
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

JEEPERS CREEPERS (R)
7:20 &amp; i:20
JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE
BACK (R)
7:00&amp; 9:00
MATINEES SATl SUH 1:00 A 3:00

RAT RACE (PG13)
7:00.9:30
MATINEES SAT· BUN I '00 &amp; UO

AMERICAN PIE 2 (Cl)
7:151lt:30
MATINEES SAT· SUN 1:115 &amp; 3:30

THE OTHERS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT· 8UH t'101 3:20

527.30

n. Shoe

$53 82
$105.56

Rates outside Meigs County
$29.25
$56.68
52 Weeks
$109.72

. 13 Weeks
26 Weeks

Group

sued with justice," Apothaker said. "We believe there is
no crime for which the taking of a human life by society is justified .... That judgment needs to be left only
to the divine."
Rep. James Trakas, an
Independence Republican
and death penalty oppo-,
nent, said it's unlikely that
lawmakers would consider
legislation to abolish capital
punishment before next
year's elections. He said that
currently, there is little support for the idea in the
House.
The coalition wants a
moratorium placed on the
death penalty immediately
while the Legislature could
study the idea. ,
Taft, who has allowed the
executions of Berry and Jay
D. Scott to proceed, is still
considering Byrd's clemency request. He lacks blanket
authority to stop executions, but instead considers
each clemency request on a
case-by-case
basis,
spokesman Joe Andrews
said. The Ohio Parole Board
has recommended against
clemency for Byrd .
" The law provides that
the Parole Board do a report
and issue it · to him. He uses
that repo.rt and .other information to make a decision,"
Andrews said.

POMEROY
Meigs
County H ealth Department
has announced a fee
increase for certified copies
of vital records, including
birth and death certificates.
Effective Oct. 1, the documents will cost $10. The
co pies are usually required
for all business transactions
and are now set at S9 .
THe in c rea~e was approved
by the Board of Health in
August, to offset costs associated with Amended House
Bill 94. Upon amendment
of H.B. 94 , which changed
the Ohio Revised Code
about fees for certified
copies of birth records and
certifications of birth and
death records, the Health
Department is required to
submit more money to the
State Children's Trust Fund.
· The department files,
m·atlitains and !S5ues vital
records for those who were
born or who die within
Meigs County from 1909 to
present. Genealogical assistance is available during
normal business hours. Plain
copies are available for 10
cents per copy.
Edwina Bell , registrar, and
Courtney Sim, administrative assistant and deputy
registrar, execute the duties
of the Office ofVital Statistics Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m . to noon , and 1
to 4 p.m.

More than 200 general
· aircraft will be on display
for rh_e public, and antique
cars and trucks will also be
on show. Radio -controlled
aircraft, with both static and
flying demonstrations will
be on display, along with
demonstrations of hand
gliders, powered parachutes
and· ultra-light aircraft.
The show will Jrave a sky- •
diving team that will jump
twice.
The main attraction will
be stunt and acrobati c fl ying
of some of the best pilots in
the country, who will fly
both modern and vintage
aircraft .
·
A pilot safety seminar
sponsored by the Federal
Aviation Authority will be
held, and Martha Lunken·,
accide nt preventio n program manager and pilot will
conduct the seminary.
The Vinton County Airport, site of the show, is
located five miles north of
McArthu r,' just otT Ohio 93.

219 N. Second

.

.

992·5627

Place

RUSH HOUR 2 (PG13)
7:30 &amp; 9:30 '
MA-TINEES SAT · SUN 1:30 6 :30

THE PRINCESS DIARIES (G)
7:00 l 8:20 DAILY

Middleport

MATNEES BAT· SUN 1:00 • ! :20

THE MUSKETEER ,.,. 7:05.
llclallill.).i.!illlilmln,

ROCK STAR

em. II

7:40,10:00

jllilctM'I!~Iiiii~JniiMilli

ALL AGES, ALL TIM ES $4 .0 0

•

. ··- ·

�•

·Page A2

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, Sept. 1
AccuWeathere forecast tor daytime conditions, low/high temperatures
MICH.

~.

/

----'----·

j

"'- '&gt;J

.•••••. - -..

-

I Cle..land lesC/8eo I ~

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lr.Y::-o-un-g-o7to_w_n'l~
60:::o/8:::7"
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Mansfield !63"183" I •

IND.

W. VA.

EPA finds problems with Ohio agency·
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. ner said Wednesday. "It's just that they
Environmental Protectiun Ag~ncy's get worked out, and l hope that's
most exrenslve audit on a state coun- what's going to happen here."
According to the EPA report, the
terpart hal produced a long list of
problem areas for Ohio, from a lack of Ohio agency doesn't employ enough
public accountability to a sparse staff people to run its clean air progr~ms, has
rhat has fallen behind on issuing per- a high level of vacancies in its Diyision
of Air Pollution Control and doesn't
mits and assessing fines.
The federal agency has said while have a training. p[ogram in place to
these and other criticisms are serious, ensure consistency across the state.
they are nor insurmountable.
The state says it isn't understaffed
Other states have dealt with and are because fewer facilities than originally
dealing with similar problems, said Tom estimated need clean air permits, and ..
Skinner, who directs ti]e EPA's Region the EPA didn't count staff at local air
5 office in Chicago.
agencies that do contract work for the
"If you look at any one of the prob- Ohio agency. It admitted to having 14
lems that we found with Ohio, [ can 't vacancies at the division in question,
tell you thai those problems or issues but said the spots were being fi lled by a
haven't arisen with other states," Skin- "hiring process."

The EPA report said there had been
a decline in recent years of inspections,
enforcement case conclusions, complaint investigations and collected
penalty amounts in the Division of Air
Pollution Control. ·
The state called this a "contradiction" because overall, · it said, Ohio's
enforcement programs were rated very
strong.
.
"Ajr pollution penalt!es account for
nearly half of the $68 million in penal-·
ties assessed over the past 1p years, a
figure which helps form the basis of
U.S. EPA's positive endorsement of
Ohio's enforcement efforts," the state
agency said, in a news release.
The state said it's not behind on issuing air pollution permits.

0 2001 AccuWealher, Inc.

...'
'~·&lt;.

~
.

&amp;!My Pt. Cloudy

M M
.
r

,

Cklucty

-··

~~
' ..•• ,,

Showera T·storms

Rain

-. . . to:L
''W,•
..-.· M
....
,. •
Flurries

&lt;' • ' " '

Snow

~

' '

Ice

Warmer conditions will linger
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Partly cloudy skles were in ·
the forecast for the tri-county
area on Friday as a frontal sys,tern sweeps across the region.
It will be warm and muggy
with highs in the mid-80s.
And the National Weather
Service said Ohioans can
expect more of the same on
Saturday.
Sunset tonight will be at
7:55, and sunrise on Friday is
at 7:05a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight .. .Partly
cloudy.
Lows in th e mid 60s. Light
southeast wind.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Highs
in th e upper 80s. 'south wind
arou nd 10 mph.
Friday night ... Partly, cloudy.

Lows in the mid 60s.
Extended forecast:
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Saturday · night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows
in the mid 60s.
Sunday... Mostly
clo udy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstor-ms . Highs in the
lower 80s.
Monday.. .Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s an d
hi ghs in the lower 80s.
Tuesday... Parrly
cloudy.
Lows near 60 and highs near
80.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 60s and
highs in the mid 80s.

Union doesn't extend invitation
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mayoral candidate Ti.m McCorma. ck was left out of a labor organization's mayo ral candidates
meeting when he refused to sign a document he believes is
harmful to parochial schools.
Nine of Cleveland's 10 mayoral candidates could have had
the opportunity Wednesday night to speak on their visions for
a Jabor-frie@ly City Hall. Seven made their pitcb.eUlLt.he
half-full Sheetmetal Workers Hall.
. McCormack, a Cuyahoga County commissioner, was not
invited because he was the only one of the mayoral candidates ,
all Democrats, wbo refused to sign the Cleveland AFL-ClO Federation of Labor's eight-point agenda, known as •:the
workers bill of rights.",
"The price of admission was signing on to the workers bill
of rights," said John Ryan, executive secretary of the labor
group.

-

ACLU to defend diarist
C LEVELAND {AP) - The American Civil Liberties
Union of Ohio is coming to the defense of a Columbus man
imprisoned for ,writing about sexual fantasies involving children in his private diary.
ACLU attorney Benson Wolman said Brian Dalton's con-

viction will be attacked on groun ds his writing is protected by
the First Amendment.
No one should be in jail for "things he scribbled in his notebook," Wolman told The Plain Dealer for a story Thursday.
Wolman said he wi ll head a team that includes O hio State
University law Professor David Goldberger and ·several Cleveland-based ACLU attorneys.

Hispanics want more from Bush
TOLEDO · (AP) - Tired of toiling in the fields picking
cucumbers and tomatoes, Alamar Perez and her husband
opened a store selling Mexican pastries and tamales to the
growing Hispa nic community.
"A lot of new people are coming in," Perez said. "On .weekends, there are lines ·ou t the door for the sweet bread.~'
Hispanics, mostly Mexicans who have come to this gritty
Lake Erie city loo king for work in fields and factories, are
ecstatic that President Bush and Mexican President Vicente
Fox planned to visit Thursday.
Their excitement, though, is tempered when they talk about
the prospects of am.nesty for illegal immigrants and the effects
of free trade on this industrial city.

Legionnaires' source unknown
DAYTON (AP) -Investigators have been unable to find a
definite source of the Legionnaires' disease that killed a
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base employee in June.
Mark Murray, 53, of Harrison Township, a. butcher at the
W right-Patterson Air Force Base commissary, died June 6 after
being hospitalized with Legionnaires' disease in mid- May. T he
disease is a fo rm of pneumonia that is sp read by inhaling of
mist from contaminated water.
A report issued Wednesday by the health districts in Montgomery and Green counties said Mur ray's exposure could have
come from anywhere.
Since the case was isolated, with no subsequent outbreak, it
was not considered a public health risk.

FAIRFAX (AP) - The federal government will help pay
for part of the SS million in
damages sustained by local
governments in Hamilton,
Buder, Cler mont and Warren
counties during July floodin g.
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency will
partly reimbur.se local governments for damages involving
roads, bridges, schools, utilities
and other infrastructure and
overtime pay for employees

Rutland Freewill ,Baptist Church
Sunday, September 9
Sun. School ........................... 10:00 am
Dinner .....................................12:00
Preachlng ...............................1:00
and Singing

experts

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
mysterious underground discovery is so fresh it hasn't yet
been named. Archaeologists
just call it "the circle."
What little that is known is
this: It's completely underground, circ ular and some 90
feet across:
Using powerful se nsors and
scientific instruments that
capture geophysical energy,
governmen t archaeologists
made the discovery by chance
this summer near C hillicothe
in Ross County, The P)ain
Dealer reported Wednesday.
National Park Service officials recently -confirmed the
find and plan to formally
announce the discovery at a
scientific conference next
month . They are discussing
exacrly how to excavate "the
ci rcle."
Researchers said the underground object is in a region of
southern Ohio that long has
been combed for ancient artifacts.
•

Guest Speaker· Bro. Carl Ward
Guest Singer· Bro. Jim Eden
Sunday Eve. Service 7:00
Guest Singers·
The Boelk Family
Pastor Paul Taylor
Invites public

Sheriff says layoffs nec~ssary

LO-CAL STOCKS
AEP-46'1.
· Arch Coal - 18'1.
Akzo-43'1.
AmTechSBC - 42).
Ashland Inc. - 42~·
AT&amp;T -19'1,
Bank One- :Joll,
BLI- 10'1.
Bob Evans - 21-t.
BorgWamer - 51 1,

Champion - 3'1. ·
Charming Shops- 7
Ci(Y. Holding- 11 ),
Col-20
DuPont- 41'1.

,

Federal Mogul - 1 ·

Gannett- '64 )i
General Electric- 41 1.

GKNLY- 4),
Harley Davidson - 47
Kmart- 10
Kroger- 26'!.
Lands End - 38).
Lid. -

NSC- 1!».
Oak Hill Financial- 16
OVB~25

BBT-36 ~

Peoples -

14,.

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
da~·s transactions, Pro--

vided by S,milh Part·
ners at .Advest Inc.

20 ·

Festival

held at 1 p.m. for the younger
festival-goers. The tractor pull is
being sponsored by Jimmy
from Page AI
O'Brien Farms.
"The Fall Festival is always a
Elvis impersonator Dwight· success and we invit~ everyotie
Icenhower at 1 p.m., Northwest to come btt! and enjoy themTerritory at 2 p.m. and 5 p.m., selves during one of th~ most
Out Door Plumbing Co. at 3 beal)tiful times of the year;' said
p.m., and Surefire at 4 p.m. and Catherine Hart, Fall Festival
6p.m.
board member.
Throughout the day, Marvin
"However, in case of
White of Tuppers Plains will inclement weather, the festival
·showcase his talent for making will be held at Southern High
brooms and all finished products School;' added Hart. .
will be available for purchase.
For booth information, conVarious craft and food ven- tact Krista at 949-221 0; enterdors will also be present during minmem information: Larry
the event and a kiddie tractor Wolfe at 949-2836; or general
pull with cash prizes. for first, information, Dale Hart at 949second and third pl0ce will be 2656.

DAYTON (AP) - Democratic challenger Rhine McLin:
said Mayor Mike Turner hasn't done much to stop the exodu~
of businesses from the city.
•
Mclin, a state senator from Dayton, took aim at one of the
mayor's main themes as the post-Labor Day ·political season·
begins.
McLin pointed to the city's 7.6 percent unemployment rate:
anti said jobs have been lost as businesses left the dty underthe:
two-term R epublican's watch. She listed several Wednesday at:
a news conference outside the now-dosed Franciscan Medical
Center.
'
McLin said the Dayton Daily News printing plant and parts
of Rey·· olds and Reynolds have relocated from the city while
layoffs have occurred at Standard
and Delphi.

Checking Accounts

Get $20·()()
. . ··········-

Come into FARMERS BANK today and open up any one of our
great checking accounts and you will be qualified to draw from
the "Barrel 0' Money!"
Select an envelope with a dollar amount of
$20.00 and this amount will be deposited
into your new FARMERS BANK Checking
account!
Ask about our HiFi, Golden Life, SuperNow
or Lifestyle checking accounts and you 'll
be sure to find one that's right for you!
This offer is good through Oct. 15, 2001 and
will be provided at opening of new checking ac&lt;:ou.nt.

(F':tl) Farmers Bank

Pomeroy

To PERF0 RM - Northwest Territory, along with a number of
other musical entertainers, will perform Saturday at Racine
Fall Festival In Star Mill Park. The' bluegrass group is sched_ uled to hit the stage aL2..a_n_ct5_p.m. (Submitted photo.)

Goodman's appointment to
Johnson's seat is expected
early next 'month. As a senafrom Page AI
tor, Goodman will represent
the north east side of Columfacilities receive respectful, bus and the area's suburbs.
high-quality care. These
Goodman is a lawyer with
updated rules will ensure that· Taft, Stettinius and Hollister
level ' of care is delivered," he in Columbus.
wrote.
FIREARMS THEFT
GOODMAN-SENATE:
R epublican Rep. John
A screening committee of Willamowski of Lima on .
Senate R epublica ns recom- Wednesday introduced a bill
mended on Wednesday the that would increase the penalappointment of state Rep. ty for the theft of a firearm .
David Goodman of Bexley to
The bill would increase the
replace Sen. Bruc_e Johnson of maximum possible sentence
Columbus, who is leaving the to five years in prison from
Senate this month to become the current 18 months. It also
director of the Ohio Depart- would require a judge to senment of Development.
tence offenders to prison
Goodman, also a R epubli- time, unl ess the judge found
can, has represented parts of extraordinary circumstances
Columbus' east side since in the offender's · favo r,
May 1998. In the H ouse, he Willamowski said.
sponsored a faw· that prohibits.
SCHOOt ASSAULTS:
the switching of customers'
Assaulting a teacher's aide
utilities without their permis-! or educational assistant in an
·sion and another law that Ohio school would be punprohibits public access to ishable by up to a year in jail
records kept -on children by under a bill introduced by
community recreation cen- Rep. Diana Fessler, a Republican from New Carlisle.
ters.
/

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

FDIC

Correction Polley

FLASH DANCE

error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Double Reclining Sofa

News Departments
The inaln number is 992-2156.
Department extentions are:
General manager
Ext. 12
News

Ext. 13

Of

Ext 14

Other services
: Advenlalng

Ext 3

' Circulation

Ext 4

Clalllfled Ada

.Quality Furniture Plus

42123 State Route 7 • TUppers Plains, OH 45783

(740) 667·7388 •1-800-:200·4005
..

To meet

Plan meeting

ing United Plant Savers.
Farmers and government
agencies are exploring herbs
as sustainable alternatives to
commodity farming and liquidation loggi ng, and the
goal of the national center is
two-fold: To support and
encourage the · efforts as an
alternative to .t raditional
farming and logging, and to
help secure the future of
these
at-risk
medicinal
herbs.
Plants including American
Ginseng, Black Cohash,
Goldenseal, Bloodroot and
.
E ch macea
are d escn'b e d by
the national center- as "critical to cultivate," because they

have been over-harvested to
the point that their existence
is threatened, according to
Neidhart. Herbs valued for
their roots where the
entire plant is harvested are especially vulnerable, and
are a priority at the center.
"This workshop will be an
exciting and edu cational
event for those who are
interested in learning 'handson' how to g~ow and propagate these valuable and
threatened herbs," Neidhart
said.
The workshop costs SlO
per person. Registration may
be made and questions
directed to Rural Action
Forestry, at 767~2090 .

---; ; ; ;:;,.;;;;.;;..:;;::::.._=:.....-======---====

·Gallipolis

(740) 992~2136 (740) 446-2265
Tuppers Plains (740) 667~3161

LOCAL BRIEFS
EM_5 runs
with an .annual chicken barbecue.

POMEROY -- Units of
the Meigs Emergency SerPOMEROY - Robert J. Lewis, 81, of Pomeroy, died on vice amwered three calls for
Wednesday, September 5, 2001 at St. Mary's Ho!pit.itl in Hunt- aSSistance on Wednesday.
ington, West Virginia.
Crews responded as follows:
He was born on July 8, 1920 in Greenup, Kentucky, son of
CENTRAL DIS~
the late James Lewis and Marguerite Bauer Lewis. He was a ..
PATCH
1938 graduate of Pomeroy High School. He was a bombardier
8:41 · a.m ., Ohio 681,
in the U.S. Army Air Corps as a second lieutenant. during Edward Wigal , Camden·
World War IL
Clark Memorial Hospital;
p.m.,
College
He was employed by · the. forme.r Elberfeld's .P~partment _ _12:56
Store m Pomeroy for 10 years, and 'was a letter carrier in Avenue, Michad l:lri.cker,
: Pomeroy for 27 years.
Holzer Medical C~nter.
TUPPERS PLAINS
He · was a member of the Drew Web~ter Post, American
8;14
p.m., Ohio 248,
Legion in 'Pomeroy, a charter member -of _th'e Izaak Walton
League, and a member of the National Rifle Association .. He Josep-hine Hill, CCMH .
was an avid hunter and fisherman , and supporter of the Meigs
Marauder Band.
.
He was a member of ~he Trinicy Church in Pomeroy.
RUTLAND Rutland
He wtll be sadly missed by his wife of 51 years, Addajou
McKenzie Lewis of Pomeroy; his daughter and son-in-law, Township Trustees will hold
Carol and Paul Durst of Huntington; h' son and daughter-in- the ir September meeting on
law, David and Katie Lewis of Pomeroy; his brother and sister- Monday at 5 p.m. at the fire
in-law,J~ck and Mary Margaret Lewis of Pomeroy; two grand- station.
sons, Robert and Eric Durst of Huntington'; a granddaughter,
N*im Lewis of Pomeroy; and several nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his grandTUPPERS PLAINS parents and his uncle, Oscar Bauer.
Tuppers
Plains Regional
Services w ill be held .on Saturday, September 8, 2001 at 2
p.m. at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Sewer District will hold a
Paul Voss officiating. Burial will follow at Lemrt Falls Cemetery. regular meeting on Sept. 11
at 7 p.m.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday, September 7,
2001 from 6-8 p.m.

from Page AI

.

_.........- ........- ... ...... ---·· .....,..... ·····---·· ....·-·· .......

Robert J. Lewis

Herbs

.Taft

New FARMERS BANK

Obituaries

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

Fees increase

Candidates clash over jobs

KICK OFF
THE
FOOTBALL
SEASON
WITH THIS
LANE®
SPECIAL!

'

9

Aockwell-16'1.
Rocky Boots - 6
AD Shell - 56'1,
Sears-43
Shoney's-'1.
Wai-Mart- 49'1.
Wendy's - 281.
Worthington -

13~.

Our main concem in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an

'

Premier -

USB -.. 24 ~.

TIFFIN (AP) -The Seneca County Sheriff's Office plans
to lay otT about 15 employees because of a budget shortage. :
SheriffTom Steyer said Wednesday that a dispatcher and jail
workers could soon be laid otT in the northwest Ohio councy.
County Administrator Bob Anderson said the sheriff h~s
been allocated another $50,000, but that will not be enough
to avoid layoffs.
A newly formed warrants and transport division will be;
closed. The division operated with current jail employees; but
will be unable to fun ction because of the cuts.
-

V-.AJV Vfe're Your Bank for Cifo1~

•
'

working on the cleanup, officials said Wednesday.
Residents are · also waiting to hear whethe r homes in the
floodplain of Little Duck C reek will be bought an? razed .The
U.S. Army Corps of'Engineers is still studying whether flood
control in the area is · possible or the homes should be
removed.
Two people died and 78 homes were damaged in Fairfax
near the creek during July flooding.

partial paymenf

hemecoming 2001

Buried
'circle'
baffles

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

lhunday, September 6, 1001

Ohio weathe(

·Q .
, · · [§r:- ~~~'-"'

Thursday, Sept. 6, 2001

Ext. 5

· To send e-mail
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On the ,Web
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through Friday, 111 Coun St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated :~ress and
the Ohio Newspaper ASSOCiation.
Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court.
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Mail subscription
. Inside Meigs County

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

from Page AI
ford Berry was put to death
in 1999, the state's first execution since 1963. ·
Next week, the state will
execute condemned inmate
John Byrd, convicted of
killing convenience store
clerk Monte Tewksbury,
unless a couri stops the execution or Gov. Bob Taft
grants clemency.
Byrd has maintained that
although he took part in the
robbery of Tewksbury's
Cincinnati store, an accomplice stabbed Tewksbury to
death . On Tuesday, Byrd's
attorneys asked the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati to allow a lower
court to re-examine Byrd's
case.
"We have vowed never to
be silent again and today we
end that silence," said the
Rev. James Gebhart, a
retired United · Methodist
minister. " If we exec ute
Byrd , we bloody our hands.
The- core of our spiritual
tradition is that we don 't
kill ."
The raking of any life for
any reason is unacceptable
to those who hold reli gious
Howard
beliefs, Rabbi
Apothaker said.
"Justice needs to be pur-

Plan show

Adivities set
POMEROY -Area teens
are invited to attend "Friday's Fun, Food and Fellowship" at God's NET in
Pomeroy from 6 to 10:30
p.m. Computer games,
board games, pool tables and
other activities are planned,
and free refres hments.

Offer course
POMEROY
Small
Business Development Center of Southeast Ohio and
the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce will sponsor a
"Basis of a Successful Start"
workshop on Sept. 27 from
3 to 6 p.m. at the Meigs
County District Public
Library in Pomeroy.
The . workshop is designed
to answer questions and
make starting a business eas~
ier. Topics will include
assessing goals and strengths,
- registering a business name,
sources for financing, and
SBDC and other resources.
·Those wl)o wish to attend
should register by calling
593- 1797 or 992-5005.
RSVP is required by calling
Sept. 20.
The workshop is free.

Plan dance
POMEROY - Saturday
from 6:30 to 9 p.m., George
Hall will be at the Meigs
Senior Center for an .
evening of dancing. The $8
admission fee will include
appetizers and soft drinks .

McARTHUR -Vinton ·
County Pilots and Boosters
will have their annual air
show, fly-in and safety seminar on Sept. 16 at 11 a.m.
The show will feature the
"Appalachian Air Forc e
Acrobatic Flying Team,"
commanded
by
Norm
Crabtree, and will begin

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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992-2156

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FRI8131101 • THURS 8/t/01
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
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(CERTAIN P!ATUAII MAY BE EXCLUOEgl

Ztta~ ~'laoeet

?taowe "1~·1:4'1-.,.

NIKE • ..REEBOK· ASICS ·
EASTLAND· DEXTER· KEDS
HUSH PUPPIES· DOCKERS

JEEPERS CREEPERS (R)
7:20 &amp; i:20
JAY AND SILENT BOB STRIKE
BACK (R)
7:00&amp; 9:00
MATINEES SATl SUH 1:00 A 3:00

RAT RACE (PG13)
7:00.9:30
MATINEES SAT· BUN I '00 &amp; UO

AMERICAN PIE 2 (Cl)
7:151lt:30
MATINEES SAT· SUN 1:115 &amp; 3:30

THE OTHERS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT· 8UH t'101 3:20

527.30

n. Shoe

$53 82
$105.56

Rates outside Meigs County
$29.25
$56.68
52 Weeks
$109.72

. 13 Weeks
26 Weeks

Group

sued with justice," Apothaker said. "We believe there is
no crime for which the taking of a human life by society is justified .... That judgment needs to be left only
to the divine."
Rep. James Trakas, an
Independence Republican
and death penalty oppo-,
nent, said it's unlikely that
lawmakers would consider
legislation to abolish capital
punishment before next
year's elections. He said that
currently, there is little support for the idea in the
House.
The coalition wants a
moratorium placed on the
death penalty immediately
while the Legislature could
study the idea. ,
Taft, who has allowed the
executions of Berry and Jay
D. Scott to proceed, is still
considering Byrd's clemency request. He lacks blanket
authority to stop executions, but instead considers
each clemency request on a
case-by-case
basis,
spokesman Joe Andrews
said. The Ohio Parole Board
has recommended against
clemency for Byrd .
" The law provides that
the Parole Board do a report
and issue it · to him. He uses
that repo.rt and .other information to make a decision,"
Andrews said.

POMEROY
Meigs
County H ealth Department
has announced a fee
increase for certified copies
of vital records, including
birth and death certificates.
Effective Oct. 1, the documents will cost $10. The
co pies are usually required
for all business transactions
and are now set at S9 .
THe in c rea~e was approved
by the Board of Health in
August, to offset costs associated with Amended House
Bill 94. Upon amendment
of H.B. 94 , which changed
the Ohio Revised Code
about fees for certified
copies of birth records and
certifications of birth and
death records, the Health
Department is required to
submit more money to the
State Children's Trust Fund.
· The department files,
m·atlitains and !S5ues vital
records for those who were
born or who die within
Meigs County from 1909 to
present. Genealogical assistance is available during
normal business hours. Plain
copies are available for 10
cents per copy.
Edwina Bell , registrar, and
Courtney Sim, administrative assistant and deputy
registrar, execute the duties
of the Office ofVital Statistics Monday through Friday
from 8 a.m . to noon , and 1
to 4 p.m.

More than 200 general
· aircraft will be on display
for rh_e public, and antique
cars and trucks will also be
on show. Radio -controlled
aircraft, with both static and
flying demonstrations will
be on display, along with
demonstrations of hand
gliders, powered parachutes
and· ultra-light aircraft.
The show will Jrave a sky- •
diving team that will jump
twice.
The main attraction will
be stunt and acrobati c fl ying
of some of the best pilots in
the country, who will fly
both modern and vintage
aircraft .
·
A pilot safety seminar
sponsored by the Federal
Aviation Authority will be
held, and Martha Lunken·,
accide nt preventio n program manager and pilot will
conduct the seminary.
The Vinton County Airport, site of the show, is
located five miles north of
McArthu r,' just otT Ohio 93.

219 N. Second

.

.

992·5627

Place

RUSH HOUR 2 (PG13)
7:30 &amp; 9:30 '
MA-TINEES SAT · SUN 1:30 6 :30

THE PRINCESS DIARIES (G)
7:00 l 8:20 DAILY

Middleport

MATNEES BAT· SUN 1:00 • ! :20

THE MUSKETEER ,.,. 7:05.
llclallill.).i.!illlilmln,

ROCK STAR

em. II

7:40,10:00

jllilctM'I!~Iiiii~JniiMilli

ALL AGES, ALL TIM ES $4 .0 0

•

. ··- ·

�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

_Th_e_·D_ai_Iy_s_e_n_ti_n_ei_ _ _ _ _

'111unday, September I, 2001

1l'HWN''

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor .

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager
IAn•" to 1M ftlllor an wna-c.

""1 Jlwifld ' ' ,..,~Nut JOIJ wot*. Alll#ftm

an rd}«r to tdltbtr M4 ,....,, H lfpH w

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•

NATIONAL VIEW

Fair move
CBS made a good dedsion in
not sensationalizing Levy case
• Enterprise-Journal, McComb, Miss., on CBS' right to
skip the Levy case: CBS News and its anchorman, Dan Rather,
have been unfairly cr iticized for holding back on cove rage of
Chandra Levy, ~he missing Was hington, D.C., intern who
apparently was seeing a married congressman.
R eporters have questioned the wisdom of holding back on a
story of this type, while conservative critics of the network
newscast have wondered whether CBS didn't report on Levy's
disappearance until July because the congressma n involved is a
Democrat.
More likely, the network's decision - a good one - was
based on the fact that it chose not to sensationalize the case of
a missing woman, o ne of many reported each year in th e country, simply because the man she dated is a congressman , but not
a ~ uspect in her disappearance.
" It seems to me that the harsh light of criticism should be
directed at the end of the spectrum thats most guilty of tabloid
excess," CBS N ews President Andrew Heyward said last week.
Newspapers, m agazines and TV stations often get criticized
for the racy or sensational events that do get covered. The com- ·
plaints are sometimes valid. But it is unfair to knock CBS in
this case, when the network used reasonable judgment in
decidin g what not to report.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Sept. 6, the 249th day of 2001. There are
116 days left in the year.
To day's Highlight in History: · · ·
One hundred years ago, on Sept. 6, 190l, President Willi am
McKinley was shot and mortally wounded by anarchist Leon
Czolgost at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, N.Y.
M cKinley, a Republican, died eight days later; he was succeeded by Vice President Theodore Roosevelt.
On this da,te:
In 1837, the Oberlin Collegiate Institute of Ohio went coeducation a!.
'
In 1909, American explorer Robert Peary sent word that he
had reached the North Pole five months earlier.
In 1939, South Africa declared war on Germany.
.
In 1941, Jews over the age · ~f 6 in German-occupied areas
were ordered to wear yellow Stars of David.
In 1948,the coronation of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands
was held.
,
In 1952, Canadian television broadcasting began in Montreal.
In 1966, South African Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd
was stabbed to death by a deranged page during a parliamentary session in Cape Town.
In 1970, Palestinian guerrillas seized control of three jetliners which were later blown up on the ground in Jordan after
the passengers and crews were evacuated.
In 1975, Czechoslovak tennis star Martina Navratilova, in
New York for the U.S. Open, requested political asylum.
In 1997, Britain bade farewell to Princess Diana with a
funeral service at Westminster Abbey.
Ten years ago: In the Soviet Union, the State Council, a new
executive body composed of President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
and republic leaders, recognized the independence of the
Baltic states.
Five years ago: The death toll from Hurricane Fran rose to
17 in Virginia, West Virginia and the Carolinas.
One year ago: The Millennium Summit, the largest gathering , of world leaders in history, convened at the United
Nations. Thousands of pro-Indonesian militiamen and supporters stormed a U.N. office in West Tilt)or, killing three foreign staffers, including· an Ameri can. M iChael Swango, a former doctor suspected in a string of poisoning deaths, pleaded
guilty to killing three patients in a Long Island, N.Y., hospital,
and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian joAnne Worley is 64. Country
si nger David Allen Coe is 62. Country singer Mel McDaniel
is 59. Actress Swoosie Kurtz is 57. Co median-actress Jane
Curtin is 54. Rhythm-and-blues musician Claydes Smith
(Kool &amp; The Gang) is 53. Country musician Jo e Smyth
(Sawyer Brown) is 44. Actor-comedian Jeff Foxworthy is 43 .
Actor-comedian Michael Winslow is 41. Ro ck h1usician Perry
Bamonte (The C ure) is 41. Actor Steven Eckholdt is 40. Pop
musi cian Pal Waaktaar (a-ha) is 40. Rock mu sicia~ Kevin
Mill er (Fuel) is 39. Co untry singer Mark C hesnutt is 38.
~ctress Rosie Pere~ is 37. Singer CeCe Peniston is 32.
R hythm-and-blues singer Darryl Anthony (Az Yet) is 32.
R.ock singer Dolores O'Rio rdan (The Cranberries) is 30.
Actor J ustin Whalin is 27. Rock singer Nina Persson (The
Cardigans) is 27. Rapper Foxy Brown is 22.
, .
Tho ught for Today: "We live in a fa ntasy world, a world of
illusion. The great task in life is to find reality."- Iris Murdoch, Irish auth or.

•

DEAR ABBY: Over the years, I
have seen letters about dogs and
cats needing emergency veterinary
care. Preventable accidents are the
No. 1 cause. of death and disability
for our canine and feline companions. Most of the time, pet owners
say they were unaware that the
plant their pet ate was poisonous, or
they didn't recognize the early
symptoms of their pet's illness.
Being informed and l'i'epared is the
key to having healthy, happy, furry
·
family members.
The American Animal Hospital
Association estimates that one out
of four pets could be, saved if just
ONE basic pet first-aid technique
. was applied prior to getting veterinary care.
I would like to offer your legion

OUR READERS' VIEWS
cla~&lt;ified

second- hand smoke a Group A EMS system and the same volunteers who
Carcinogen a substance known to still work for free. We have to progress
Dear Editor:
cause cancer in humans. There is no safe with changing times.
I hope Meigs County residents will supI would like to offer the following doc- level of exposure for Group A toxins. The
port
a ban on smoking as Mason County
umented research information in response EPA report opened up the P?ssibility of
agamst the tobacco mdustry by has done. If smokers voluntarily abstained
t0 th e Sept . 2 , 20.01 , 0 ur R ead ers•v·1ew .. lawsutts
.
k
d
·d d th
• May 31, 2001, was designated as "The ' mntalyocen~ nonsmofi ers aln alproVI e
e from smoking in public areas, and respectw r ld N
...., b
D " b th w r ld ca st ror s1gru cant oc government ed the feelings of people who are affected
vvor
o- 10 acco ay y e vvor
. .
·
ki
·
bli
1
Th th
action agamst smo ng m pu c p aces by their smoking, there would not be a
' 0·on 1\YTHO)
H eal th 0 rgaruza
, ••
. e eme,
d
k
' ·
a1 h
need of a smoking ban in public places.
"Second - H an d mo ke Kills - Le t's Cl ear an
wor p1aces
(Resp1ratory
He t
.
.
·
·d b th WHO to Effects of Pass1ve Smoking: Lung Cancer Are you willing to do that?
the Air," was d es1gnate
y e
d th
· rd
hi
DC
By the way, in I nt, gentlemen left the
·
f h hazards ·f
an 0 er D1so ers. Was ngton, . .:
ra1se awareness o t e
o exposure U
·
tal Pro
·
A
d
.S.
Env1romnen
tecuon
gency,
.dity
of ladies in the dining room and
presence
to secon d- h an d smok e. (M orb 1
an
I
kl R
[MMWR] M
Office of Research and Deve opment, retired to their smoking in a separate
M ortality wr
wee Y eport
ay D
b 199? H dd · S "S
d
25, 2001/Vol. 5o/No. 29);
ecem er
-; . ea en, .. econ - room, and I don't believe they felt it
.. ...., b
hand Smokescreen. Tobacco F1rms Wor- deprived them of their rights.
11
• . M ay 4 • 2001 • th e "~ acco. ~es a ried for Years About Risks of Passi~
Tharik you.
MaJor Obstacle to Chtldrens Rtghts S ki " US N
A
3 1998·
Margaret Eschew
d
mong, · · ews,ug.,
'
R eport " press reIease by thWHO
e
state :
A rd"1
t0 th
EPA
·d
Pomeroy
In addition to the impact caused by h ' d ceo k ~g
. e h. al.th . ,ksteconhild"
f b
hildre
als
an smo e 1s a senous e
rts o c . lrect duse 0h· toh accfulo, cffc n f are do dren because the developing lungs of chilexpose to t e arm e ects o secon - d
ffc
d b
d
hand smoke. With adverse· health effects hrend are ak e:te Y exph o~ukre ftol secon ·
Is f
an smo e mcreases t e rts o ower resDear Editor:
. d .th .
associate_ wt event 1ow 1eve 0 expo- p1"ratory' tract infiectt"ons such as pneumoI. near1y laughed my tail· o If at a "1ew o f
sure, childre n. everyw h ere suffc_e r th e cond- nia and bronchitis. The EPA estimates that the statements made in the Aug. 29
sequences o f exposu:e. to second- han passive-6molting is responsible for between
d
"National View" column featuring an edismoke. Nearly 700 million, or almost half
.
150 000
300 000 1
' ~ an
. ' . , ower dresphilmldtory torial tided " Get Closer: Opening Up Ties
the world'~ children, breathe air pollute11
k I a!
all
tract uuecttons m tniants an c
ren with Cuba Key to Life after Castro"
b
d h d
chase undet;-l8 months of age annually; resulting which origt"nally appeared in the Tul;a
y sehcon - anh s~o. e. hn most
th ey ave no c otce m t e matter as t ey · in between 7 500 and 15 000 hospitalizah '
(
'
b . - Worl ·
are unable to protest or protect them- .
.
nons eac year EPA Internet We s1te:
"The only hope for C uba is a gradual
I
se ves, .
Se t 4 2001)
. .
.
.
.
• The paper summarizing the WHO
P ·, '
·
operung of relat1ons wtth the Urnte.d
Margie Skidmore, RN S
M
d
seven year srndy of Environmental Tobactates. ore tra e means more econonuc
fc h
ba " 1 tall "
ful
Director of Nursing h
co Smoke (ETS) conducted from 12 cenMeigs County Health Department ope or t e u ns. ns
a peace
ters in · seven European countries was
market e~onot~( and, presto! Cuba will .
undergoing scientific peer review prior to
Pomeroy be g1ven hope. Sold ~mencan! .
Alas, the sttuauon 1sn t nearly so stmple.
the publication and ifs findings - consisWhat
about
our
rights?
Wh h
d th
1 f h
tent with other major scientific reviews at ope_ o e peop es o ot er connshowed statistically increased risk of lung
Dear Editor:
tries south of the border possess who are
cancer among nonsmoking spouses of
th
d
under American imperialist domination? .
I am writing in response to e Rea ers
smokers -"Passive Smoking Does Cause 'Views letters, Sept. 2 , 200 1. 1 don't believe Under Fidel, the Cubans have experiLung Cancer, Do Not Let Them Fool any smokers' "rights" are being destroyed. enced bloody tryanny and gr-inding
You ," press rek;ise,WHO, March 9, 1998; 1 do b elieve non-smokers have not had poverty, but they have that under the
• Second-h:fud smoke is the third lead- any "rights," as we have had to inhale oth- Amencan puppet Bausta.
ing cause of preventable death in this en' smoke for years.
The main task of America in these
country, killing 53,0(}0 nonsmokers in the
Yes, there are non-smoking areas in countries is to kill hope, not restore it U.S. each year. For every eight smokers the restaurants, usually after you walk through kill the hope of getting out from under
tobacco industry kills, it takes another a smoking area, rest rooms and laundro- the heel ofAmerican corporate and finannonsmoker with them (Glantz, S.A. and mats are a necessity, and usually smoke cia! elites. The killing ofhope is called :'staParmley, W., "Passive Smoking and Heart 6Iled. I don't have to go to restaurants, bility" by the Imperialists.
D isease: Epidemiology, Physiology, and bingo, bowling, bars, etc., as that's enterBatista was a tryant. So is Fidel. But for
. Biochemistry:' circulation 1991; 83(1):1- tainment, but 1 do have a "right" to go to the Cuban people, there is a key differ12; and Taylor, A. Johnson, D. and Kazemi, these places and not have to breathe ence. Fidel is Cuba's bloody tyrant an&lt;l not
H., "Environmental Tobacco Smoke and smoke.
United Fruit's. That's the difference.
1 know there are many people in Meig;
Jeff Fields. .
Cardiovascular Disease:' circulation, 1992;
(86): 699-702;
· Coupty who suffer from heart problems,
,
.
.
Middleport
• According to the WHO tobacco Free asthma, emphysema, cancer and sinus
J?isappolf'!ted m coverage .
Initiative, in the U.S., second- hand smoke problems. These same people cannot go
Dear Editor:
causes 3,000 lung cancer deaths a year, into areas where there is smoke because
I would like to know why it is nearly
compared to less than 100 lung cancer we can't breathe if we do. We also have to impossible to get rhe sports ·editor in Gal- · · '
deaths per year from traditional forms of request "no smoking" rooms in motels.•A lipolis to publish anything concerning
outdoor air pollution. Secr nd- hand · smoker won't die from the "w.int" of a local auto racing.
smoke tauses and aggravates asthma and cigarette for an hour. Anyone can and will . Articles have been sul:!mitted but nothother breathing problems, particularly m die fiom the ''need" of oxygen in five mg appears m the paper. We have many
'" local fans tn the trt-county area and many .
children. It is also an important cause of minutes or less.
sudden infam death syndrome. NonsmokIn response to the other " rights" lost, if drivers. Several have won big feature races. ,
ers breathe m the same toXIc chenucals m we weren't forced to carry insurance, you Th name a few: Todd Srruth of ~Jlleroy.
tobacco smoke as the smokers do.
would have to pay what your insurance Bob Adams Jr. of Racme, Ben H1ckel o( .
The smoke contains thousands of toxic doesn't when an uninsured motorists hits New Haven, W.Va.; the Bond Brothers of
che"micals, including benzene, cyanide, you. · ! wouldn 't drive two feet without Coolville, and John Burdette o~Coo!ville ;
cadmium, lead, radioactive .polonium, msurance.
Mark Dickson of Gallipolis, Rox Johnson
benzo (a)pyrene,
ammoma, · carbo n
You are only ·endangering yourself if of Gallipolis, Bob Bailey ofReedsville and
monoxide, . and nicotine, which causes you don't use a seat belt and that's your many, many more.
They work long hours on their cars and
many diseases. The chemicals in second- right. I had seven children and I used child
hand smoke also have an effect on health safety seats. Ask any EMT if you will ever deserve some recognition.
disease because they poison the heart forget seeing a broken and mangled child
A stoty on a friend of mine now 79
muscle, interfere with the ability of blood or the parents' faces as they plead for you years old, Mr. Mack Clingan, was submitvessels to adjust themselves to control to save their child. I've seen this and gone ted but nothing. He was one of the best
· blood pressure and flow, increase the home and aied for the families who lost sprint car drivers ever to strap in, winning
features in the '50's, '60s and early '70s at
buildup of blockages of blood vessels a child.
(which lead to heart attacks), and make
Yes, I was one of the "great people" who Skyline Speedway, Ohio Valley, Hilltop - ·
blood sti ckier (Internet Website: Sept. 4, volunteered for 27 years in Meigs Coun- tracks all over' the Midwest and Pennsylva2001);
ty.Anytime anywhere, and in any weather. nia. He has terminal cancer and the write• In 1986, the R eport of the Surgeon I did it because I've enjoyed helping peo- up submitted told the story about a niglit
General, the 1986 National Research pie. But who paid for my car, maintained for Mack at Skyline.
Council report Environmental. Tobacco it, and kept it fueled? \Vho paid for the
This story was submitted over a week
Smoke: Measurin g E&gt;:posures and Assess- training and expenses involved to get that ago. We wanted to send him a copy but he '
ing H ealth Effects, and the 1992 U.S. training and in keeping certified before may no longer be with us.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) the EMS system was formed?
Can't we find a sports editor who isn't
report R espiratory H ealth Effects of PasWe traveled all over the state for training so lazy? A lot of these people take the Sensive Smoking: Lm1g Cancer and O ther at our own expense, to work for free and tine!.
Disorders established that ETS exposure it cost you nothing? (Usually not even· a
Hilton N. Wolfe Jr.
causes lung cancer.The EPA report (1992) thank you.) So please don't knock the
Racine

FOR
TIPS

Castro Cuba's problem

c

ADVICE
of pet-loving readers a pet preparedness guide titled "Knowing
Your Pet's Health." It's a 20-page
booklet that includes pet emergency preparedness advice, how to
assess your pet's health, a health
chart, a list of comrnon plant and
household pet poisons, a snout-totail assessment with worksheet, and
suggestions for finding the best pet

Page AS
Thursday. September 6,1001

DEAR ABBY: For the past year,
I have been seeing a 35-year-old
widow and mother of three small
children . About every five weeks
and every holiday, her 24-year-old
brother-in-law, "Mark," will call her
and spend the night with her and
the kids. If we have plans, they are
cal)celed to accommodate Mark.
Also, when Mark is visiting, I am
told that it would be "Inappropriate" for me· to be there or call her.
After a year of this, I finally told
my girlfriend I was uncomfortable
with this arrangement, and if Mark
wants to see her and the ·kids, that's
fine - but he should go home at
night. My girlfriend became irate.
The next day at a family gathering, she asked, almost begged, Mark
to stay the night with her and the

ADVICE

Take care
"with dry
clean items
(Becky Baer colunin)
Dry cleaning is a special
, cleaning process that uses a
solvent to remove soils and
stains from fabric.
It is c~~~~ "dry"cleaning,
because no water is in the
-~!)~,!!;~,_Titis solution does
not penetrate the fibers of
the fabric, although it usually dissolves greases and oils.
The dry cleaning process
begins with pretreating
spots. using special cleaning
methods. An oversized
front-loading
washing
macfiine provides the agitation to loosen the dirt. The
dry cleaning solvent is filtered frequently to keep the
' clothes clean. The garments
are then dried in that
machine, leaving no solvent
· odor on the clothing.
There are several things
the consumercan do to help
ensure the cleanest dry
cleaning. The following are
some guidelines:
• Dry cleanable garments
should be dry cleaned fie' quendy. Ground-in dirt can
become abrasive, wearing
·' out the fibers, if it is not
., · removed periodically.
• A garment should be dry
cleaned its soon as possible
· after a stain occun. Point out
'spots to the dry cleaning
" professional, especially hidden discolorations such as
-, pop, fruit juice or white
"wine. If stainS ate not taken
' care of immediately. they
; may become permanent.
, • Make sure deodorants,
··' perfumes, lotions and cos,, metics are dry be(ore dress, ing.These items may contain
·· products that cause dye
·
, changes.
• Beware that excessive
_. perspiration can affect some
·dyes, especially silks. Use
· proper protection, such as
perspiration shields.
, • Dty clean matching arti•. des together to keep colors
· ;. uniform. This advice also
pertains to bedspreads and
, drapes. If there is a change in
. color, it will be-consistent.
• Protect items from long
exposure to intense light.
Even artificial light can cause
changes in clothing color.
• Don't . press dirty or
stained clothing. .The heat
can cause permanent spots.

(Becky Baer is a Mrigs
.,·county Extension agent.)

/

I,

II.

Dcrn Abby is li'Tittc/1 l&gt;y f&gt;nlllinc
Pili/lips n11d clau,~htrr )&lt;'fllllll' Phillips

The Community Celend•r Is take a covered dish. Family and Edward Jones Investments, on
REEDSVILLE - Olive Townpublished as • free service to friends invited.
fluctuations of the stock market. ship Trustees, special meeting,
non-profit groups wishing to
Wednesday, 7 p.m. township
ennounce ._tlng~ end •pePOMEROY - Meigs County
WEDN
clll eventl. The calender 11 not Retired Te11chers, Saturday, I"'___E_s_D_AY-----.., building on Joppa Road. Discusdellgned to promote sales or noon, luncheon at the Chester .
fund raisers of any type. Items Courthouse. Parking on hill. Pro,,. printed only as space per- gram, Bicentennial Commission

POMEROY - Junior and Rita
White and Ralph Cooke will perform a variety of music at the
Meigs Senior Center on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. A "name that
tune" segment will t-e included in
the program. There is no admission charge and the public is
Invited.

SATURDAY

POMEROY
Eiurlingham
Modem Woodmen, dinner, 6:30
p.m. Saturday at the hall. Camp
to furnish, meat, dessert and
drinks. Those . attending are to

Are your investments
spread among
multiple firms with no
one really knowing
who you are?

SUNDAY ·•

ALFRED - Orange Christian
church 163rd annual homecoming Su.nday. Guest speaker David
Cougar with special singing by
Higher Calling. Dinner at 12:30;
service at t :30· p.m. Morning
services, Sunday school at 9:30
and preaching at 10:30 a.m.
Church located on County Road
TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers 53, Coolville.
Plains VFW Ladles' Auxiliary
Thursday with potluck dinner at
TUESDAY
6:30 p.m., meeting at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, regular meeting,
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town hall.
.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, luncheon, Tuesday. Overbrook Canter, Middleport, noon. Guest
speaker, Elizabeth Schaad of

sion on renewal of the cable tetevision franchise with Adelhia
Cable Co., and residents with
complaints or problems.

PRE-SEASON
SPECIAL!

THURSDAY

Becky
Baer

kids. She did tt three times 111 from
of me. The 1.-t time wa&lt; as MJrk
was leaving. She then turned to m.e
and told me to leave. She said that
Mark is family and welcome to 'tav
with her any time. (I thought I w,;,
family, too.)
What do you. think' If th ere i&lt; to
be a future in this rdationship, we
need your opinion. - THREE'S
A CROWD IN WISCONSIN
DEAR THREE'S A CROWD:
If the relationship with her brotherin - law was &lt;trictly platonic, she
wouldn 't insist that you be absent
and not call when he i&lt; visiting.
Wise ·up and move on . She has
made her choice- and you're not

LOCAL . EVENTS

mite end cannot be guaranteed representative on upcoming
to be printed • 1peclflc number events and activities in Southof dllys.
eastern Ohio. Reservati.ons, 992. 32t4, 949-2601, or 98$-3890.

s

us

Abigail
Van
Buren

1nsunnce.
Thank you, Abby, for your many
years of providing helpful and accurate information to conscientious
pet owners. - THOM SOMES,
PRESIDENT, PET TECH INC.
DEAR THOM: Because pet
first-aid classes are not available
everyJ.where, I'm sure your, boo'ktet
will save the lives of companion
animals that might not otherWise
survive. I commend you for providing such a readable and easy-tounderstand guide for pet owners.
Readers: To order a copy of
"Knowing Your Pet's H ealth," send
a chec~ or money order for $3 .50
to: Pet Preparedness Guide, cl o Pet
Tech Inc., 5800 Severin Drive, La
Mesa, Calif. 91942. The pet you
save could be your own.

TIME

OUT
Here's the facts

he end

Advice in pet health care guide is the eat's meow

.

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

~:.f_

PniiiiUAI

our

An~la Ward
Clief'll S6Mce Manager

AI
Raymond James office we make it a point to get to know
our clients and for them to get to know us. We have over 35 ·
years of combined experience in the investment busine~s. Let us ·
share our experience with you as we get to know you.

Grade

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John.Miller@RJFS.com

COLLEGE
NEWS

l-~- ·

-

· Helps It
Haverford camp
HAVERFORD, Pa. - The
hottest job at Haverford College in the summer isn't necessarily the highest-paying,
nor the least demanding, but
it is one of the most gratifYmg.
Kyle Smiddie of Pomeroy, a
lecond-year student outside
of Philadelphia, Pa., is working ·on campus with 12 other
Haverford students as a coun. selor at the college's summer
day camp for local children.
.As a counselor, he supervises six to 13 year-olds
throughout a busy schedule of
arts and ·crafts, computer
activities, sports, drama, nature
hikes, and day trips to local
points of interest.
"Serendipity:' as the camp is
called, began in the early
1960s with the goal of promoting a closer relationship
.between the college and the
neighboring
community.
Starting with a handful of
neighborhood, staff and faculty children, the seven-week
program now enrolls nearly
200 young campers.
Over the years, "Serendipity" has become synonumous
with summer at Haverford,
both for children in the community and for Haverford students.
·

Snyder's

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Maxwell House
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Totino's Combo
Pi%Za Rolls

Great Value

Blue Bonnet

WhiteBread

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PEOPLE
James DePreist
PORTL/&gt;ND, Ore. (AP) After two years on kidney
dialysis, James DePreist, the
charismatic conductor of the
Oregon Symphony, is on 24. hour call for a kidney trans·
plant.
DePreist informed the
orchestra of his medical situation last week, 'leaving management scrambling to come
up with plans to repJa_s:e him
while he's recovering.

Cook's

Spiral Ham

$

59
Lb.

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Bottom Round
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'

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Saturday

8,2001

Lb.
·.

�PageA4

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

_Th_e_·D_ai_Iy_s_e_n_ti_n_ei_ _ _ _ _

'111unday, September I, 2001

1l'HWN''

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor .

Charles W. Govey
Publisher

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager
IAn•" to 1M ftlllor an wna-c.

""1 Jlwifld ' ' ,..,~Nut JOIJ wot*. Alll#ftm

an rd}«r to tdltbtr M4 ,....,, H lfpH w

l~tt&amp;uN IJdllrn•IUid ttkplwM IIJUIIIMr.
Na ouuftolll ,.,_.., wiU k pob/IIW lAm 1Molll k Ill ,.., lUll, -..,1•1

lin••~. •01 pn-so~U1~J~Ns.
J'h opbtloJu "l"ftlt4 /11 tJu colaJu bdow tn t#k UIUIIWU

Qj tJII CJIIID Mlllty

hbUIIt.lll6 Co. 'I «&lt;ltorittl board, wdn~ ollt'"'l" nolld.

•

NATIONAL VIEW

Fair move
CBS made a good dedsion in
not sensationalizing Levy case
• Enterprise-Journal, McComb, Miss., on CBS' right to
skip the Levy case: CBS News and its anchorman, Dan Rather,
have been unfairly cr iticized for holding back on cove rage of
Chandra Levy, ~he missing Was hington, D.C., intern who
apparently was seeing a married congressman.
R eporters have questioned the wisdom of holding back on a
story of this type, while conservative critics of the network
newscast have wondered whether CBS didn't report on Levy's
disappearance until July because the congressma n involved is a
Democrat.
More likely, the network's decision - a good one - was
based on the fact that it chose not to sensationalize the case of
a missing woman, o ne of many reported each year in th e country, simply because the man she dated is a congressman , but not
a ~ uspect in her disappearance.
" It seems to me that the harsh light of criticism should be
directed at the end of the spectrum thats most guilty of tabloid
excess," CBS N ews President Andrew Heyward said last week.
Newspapers, m agazines and TV stations often get criticized
for the racy or sensational events that do get covered. The com- ·
plaints are sometimes valid. But it is unfair to knock CBS in
this case, when the network used reasonable judgment in
decidin g what not to report.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Thursday, Sept. 6, the 249th day of 2001. There are
116 days left in the year.
To day's Highlight in History: · · ·
One hundred years ago, on Sept. 6, 190l, President Willi am
McKinley was shot and mortally wounded by anarchist Leon
Czolgost at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, N.Y.
M cKinley, a Republican, died eight days later; he was succeeded by Vice President Theodore Roosevelt.
On this da,te:
In 1837, the Oberlin Collegiate Institute of Ohio went coeducation a!.
'
In 1909, American explorer Robert Peary sent word that he
had reached the North Pole five months earlier.
In 1939, South Africa declared war on Germany.
.
In 1941, Jews over the age · ~f 6 in German-occupied areas
were ordered to wear yellow Stars of David.
In 1948,the coronation of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands
was held.
,
In 1952, Canadian television broadcasting began in Montreal.
In 1966, South African Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd
was stabbed to death by a deranged page during a parliamentary session in Cape Town.
In 1970, Palestinian guerrillas seized control of three jetliners which were later blown up on the ground in Jordan after
the passengers and crews were evacuated.
In 1975, Czechoslovak tennis star Martina Navratilova, in
New York for the U.S. Open, requested political asylum.
In 1997, Britain bade farewell to Princess Diana with a
funeral service at Westminster Abbey.
Ten years ago: In the Soviet Union, the State Council, a new
executive body composed of President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
and republic leaders, recognized the independence of the
Baltic states.
Five years ago: The death toll from Hurricane Fran rose to
17 in Virginia, West Virginia and the Carolinas.
One year ago: The Millennium Summit, the largest gathering , of world leaders in history, convened at the United
Nations. Thousands of pro-Indonesian militiamen and supporters stormed a U.N. office in West Tilt)or, killing three foreign staffers, including· an Ameri can. M iChael Swango, a former doctor suspected in a string of poisoning deaths, pleaded
guilty to killing three patients in a Long Island, N.Y., hospital,
and was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Today's Birthdays: Comedian joAnne Worley is 64. Country
si nger David Allen Coe is 62. Country singer Mel McDaniel
is 59. Actress Swoosie Kurtz is 57. Co median-actress Jane
Curtin is 54. Rhythm-and-blues musician Claydes Smith
(Kool &amp; The Gang) is 53. Country musician Jo e Smyth
(Sawyer Brown) is 44. Actor-comedian Jeff Foxworthy is 43 .
Actor-comedian Michael Winslow is 41. Ro ck h1usician Perry
Bamonte (The C ure) is 41. Actor Steven Eckholdt is 40. Pop
musi cian Pal Waaktaar (a-ha) is 40. Rock mu sicia~ Kevin
Mill er (Fuel) is 39. Co untry singer Mark C hesnutt is 38.
~ctress Rosie Pere~ is 37. Singer CeCe Peniston is 32.
R hythm-and-blues singer Darryl Anthony (Az Yet) is 32.
R.ock singer Dolores O'Rio rdan (The Cranberries) is 30.
Actor J ustin Whalin is 27. Rock singer Nina Persson (The
Cardigans) is 27. Rapper Foxy Brown is 22.
, .
Tho ught for Today: "We live in a fa ntasy world, a world of
illusion. The great task in life is to find reality."- Iris Murdoch, Irish auth or.

•

DEAR ABBY: Over the years, I
have seen letters about dogs and
cats needing emergency veterinary
care. Preventable accidents are the
No. 1 cause. of death and disability
for our canine and feline companions. Most of the time, pet owners
say they were unaware that the
plant their pet ate was poisonous, or
they didn't recognize the early
symptoms of their pet's illness.
Being informed and l'i'epared is the
key to having healthy, happy, furry
·
family members.
The American Animal Hospital
Association estimates that one out
of four pets could be, saved if just
ONE basic pet first-aid technique
. was applied prior to getting veterinary care.
I would like to offer your legion

OUR READERS' VIEWS
cla~&lt;ified

second- hand smoke a Group A EMS system and the same volunteers who
Carcinogen a substance known to still work for free. We have to progress
Dear Editor:
cause cancer in humans. There is no safe with changing times.
I hope Meigs County residents will supI would like to offer the following doc- level of exposure for Group A toxins. The
port
a ban on smoking as Mason County
umented research information in response EPA report opened up the P?ssibility of
agamst the tobacco mdustry by has done. If smokers voluntarily abstained
t0 th e Sept . 2 , 20.01 , 0 ur R ead ers•v·1ew .. lawsutts
.
k
d
·d d th
• May 31, 2001, was designated as "The ' mntalyocen~ nonsmofi ers aln alproVI e
e from smoking in public areas, and respectw r ld N
...., b
D " b th w r ld ca st ror s1gru cant oc government ed the feelings of people who are affected
vvor
o- 10 acco ay y e vvor
. .
·
ki
·
bli
1
Th th
action agamst smo ng m pu c p aces by their smoking, there would not be a
' 0·on 1\YTHO)
H eal th 0 rgaruza
, ••
. e eme,
d
k
' ·
a1 h
need of a smoking ban in public places.
"Second - H an d mo ke Kills - Le t's Cl ear an
wor p1aces
(Resp1ratory
He t
.
.
·
·d b th WHO to Effects of Pass1ve Smoking: Lung Cancer Are you willing to do that?
the Air," was d es1gnate
y e
d th
· rd
hi
DC
By the way, in I nt, gentlemen left the
·
f h hazards ·f
an 0 er D1so ers. Was ngton, . .:
ra1se awareness o t e
o exposure U
·
tal Pro
·
A
d
.S.
Env1romnen
tecuon
gency,
.dity
of ladies in the dining room and
presence
to secon d- h an d smok e. (M orb 1
an
I
kl R
[MMWR] M
Office of Research and Deve opment, retired to their smoking in a separate
M ortality wr
wee Y eport
ay D
b 199? H dd · S "S
d
25, 2001/Vol. 5o/No. 29);
ecem er
-; . ea en, .. econ - room, and I don't believe they felt it
.. ...., b
hand Smokescreen. Tobacco F1rms Wor- deprived them of their rights.
11
• . M ay 4 • 2001 • th e "~ acco. ~es a ried for Years About Risks of Passi~
Tharik you.
MaJor Obstacle to Chtldrens Rtghts S ki " US N
A
3 1998·
Margaret Eschew
d
mong, · · ews,ug.,
'
R eport " press reIease by thWHO
e
state :
A rd"1
t0 th
EPA
·d
Pomeroy
In addition to the impact caused by h ' d ceo k ~g
. e h. al.th . ,ksteconhild"
f b
hildre
als
an smo e 1s a senous e
rts o c . lrect duse 0h· toh accfulo, cffc n f are do dren because the developing lungs of chilexpose to t e arm e ects o secon - d
ffc
d b
d
hand smoke. With adverse· health effects hrend are ak e:te Y exph o~ukre ftol secon ·
Is f
an smo e mcreases t e rts o ower resDear Editor:
. d .th .
associate_ wt event 1ow 1eve 0 expo- p1"ratory' tract infiectt"ons such as pneumoI. near1y laughed my tail· o If at a "1ew o f
sure, childre n. everyw h ere suffc_e r th e cond- nia and bronchitis. The EPA estimates that the statements made in the Aug. 29
sequences o f exposu:e. to second- han passive-6molting is responsible for between
d
"National View" column featuring an edismoke. Nearly 700 million, or almost half
.
150 000
300 000 1
' ~ an
. ' . , ower dresphilmldtory torial tided " Get Closer: Opening Up Ties
the world'~ children, breathe air pollute11
k I a!
all
tract uuecttons m tniants an c
ren with Cuba Key to Life after Castro"
b
d h d
chase undet;-l8 months of age annually; resulting which origt"nally appeared in the Tul;a
y sehcon - anh s~o. e. hn most
th ey ave no c otce m t e matter as t ey · in between 7 500 and 15 000 hospitalizah '
(
'
b . - Worl ·
are unable to protest or protect them- .
.
nons eac year EPA Internet We s1te:
"The only hope for C uba is a gradual
I
se ves, .
Se t 4 2001)
. .
.
.
.
• The paper summarizing the WHO
P ·, '
·
operung of relat1ons wtth the Urnte.d
Margie Skidmore, RN S
M
d
seven year srndy of Environmental Tobactates. ore tra e means more econonuc
fc h
ba " 1 tall "
ful
Director of Nursing h
co Smoke (ETS) conducted from 12 cenMeigs County Health Department ope or t e u ns. ns
a peace
ters in · seven European countries was
market e~onot~( and, presto! Cuba will .
undergoing scientific peer review prior to
Pomeroy be g1ven hope. Sold ~mencan! .
Alas, the sttuauon 1sn t nearly so stmple.
the publication and ifs findings - consisWhat
about
our
rights?
Wh h
d th
1 f h
tent with other major scientific reviews at ope_ o e peop es o ot er connshowed statistically increased risk of lung
Dear Editor:
tries south of the border possess who are
cancer among nonsmoking spouses of
th
d
under American imperialist domination? .
I am writing in response to e Rea ers
smokers -"Passive Smoking Does Cause 'Views letters, Sept. 2 , 200 1. 1 don't believe Under Fidel, the Cubans have experiLung Cancer, Do Not Let Them Fool any smokers' "rights" are being destroyed. enced bloody tryanny and gr-inding
You ," press rek;ise,WHO, March 9, 1998; 1 do b elieve non-smokers have not had poverty, but they have that under the
• Second-h:fud smoke is the third lead- any "rights," as we have had to inhale oth- Amencan puppet Bausta.
ing cause of preventable death in this en' smoke for years.
The main task of America in these
country, killing 53,0(}0 nonsmokers in the
Yes, there are non-smoking areas in countries is to kill hope, not restore it U.S. each year. For every eight smokers the restaurants, usually after you walk through kill the hope of getting out from under
tobacco industry kills, it takes another a smoking area, rest rooms and laundro- the heel ofAmerican corporate and finannonsmoker with them (Glantz, S.A. and mats are a necessity, and usually smoke cia! elites. The killing ofhope is called :'staParmley, W., "Passive Smoking and Heart 6Iled. I don't have to go to restaurants, bility" by the Imperialists.
D isease: Epidemiology, Physiology, and bingo, bowling, bars, etc., as that's enterBatista was a tryant. So is Fidel. But for
. Biochemistry:' circulation 1991; 83(1):1- tainment, but 1 do have a "right" to go to the Cuban people, there is a key differ12; and Taylor, A. Johnson, D. and Kazemi, these places and not have to breathe ence. Fidel is Cuba's bloody tyrant an&lt;l not
H., "Environmental Tobacco Smoke and smoke.
United Fruit's. That's the difference.
1 know there are many people in Meig;
Jeff Fields. .
Cardiovascular Disease:' circulation, 1992;
(86): 699-702;
· Coupty who suffer from heart problems,
,
.
.
Middleport
• According to the WHO tobacco Free asthma, emphysema, cancer and sinus
J?isappolf'!ted m coverage .
Initiative, in the U.S., second- hand smoke problems. These same people cannot go
Dear Editor:
causes 3,000 lung cancer deaths a year, into areas where there is smoke because
I would like to know why it is nearly
compared to less than 100 lung cancer we can't breathe if we do. We also have to impossible to get rhe sports ·editor in Gal- · · '
deaths per year from traditional forms of request "no smoking" rooms in motels.•A lipolis to publish anything concerning
outdoor air pollution. Secr nd- hand · smoker won't die from the "w.int" of a local auto racing.
smoke tauses and aggravates asthma and cigarette for an hour. Anyone can and will . Articles have been sul:!mitted but nothother breathing problems, particularly m die fiom the ''need" of oxygen in five mg appears m the paper. We have many
'" local fans tn the trt-county area and many .
children. It is also an important cause of minutes or less.
sudden infam death syndrome. NonsmokIn response to the other " rights" lost, if drivers. Several have won big feature races. ,
ers breathe m the same toXIc chenucals m we weren't forced to carry insurance, you Th name a few: Todd Srruth of ~Jlleroy.
tobacco smoke as the smokers do.
would have to pay what your insurance Bob Adams Jr. of Racme, Ben H1ckel o( .
The smoke contains thousands of toxic doesn't when an uninsured motorists hits New Haven, W.Va.; the Bond Brothers of
che"micals, including benzene, cyanide, you. · ! wouldn 't drive two feet without Coolville, and John Burdette o~Coo!ville ;
cadmium, lead, radioactive .polonium, msurance.
Mark Dickson of Gallipolis, Rox Johnson
benzo (a)pyrene,
ammoma, · carbo n
You are only ·endangering yourself if of Gallipolis, Bob Bailey ofReedsville and
monoxide, . and nicotine, which causes you don't use a seat belt and that's your many, many more.
They work long hours on their cars and
many diseases. The chemicals in second- right. I had seven children and I used child
hand smoke also have an effect on health safety seats. Ask any EMT if you will ever deserve some recognition.
disease because they poison the heart forget seeing a broken and mangled child
A stoty on a friend of mine now 79
muscle, interfere with the ability of blood or the parents' faces as they plead for you years old, Mr. Mack Clingan, was submitvessels to adjust themselves to control to save their child. I've seen this and gone ted but nothing. He was one of the best
· blood pressure and flow, increase the home and aied for the families who lost sprint car drivers ever to strap in, winning
features in the '50's, '60s and early '70s at
buildup of blockages of blood vessels a child.
(which lead to heart attacks), and make
Yes, I was one of the "great people" who Skyline Speedway, Ohio Valley, Hilltop - ·
blood sti ckier (Internet Website: Sept. 4, volunteered for 27 years in Meigs Coun- tracks all over' the Midwest and Pennsylva2001);
ty.Anytime anywhere, and in any weather. nia. He has terminal cancer and the write• In 1986, the R eport of the Surgeon I did it because I've enjoyed helping peo- up submitted told the story about a niglit
General, the 1986 National Research pie. But who paid for my car, maintained for Mack at Skyline.
Council report Environmental. Tobacco it, and kept it fueled? \Vho paid for the
This story was submitted over a week
Smoke: Measurin g E&gt;:posures and Assess- training and expenses involved to get that ago. We wanted to send him a copy but he '
ing H ealth Effects, and the 1992 U.S. training and in keeping certified before may no longer be with us.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) the EMS system was formed?
Can't we find a sports editor who isn't
report R espiratory H ealth Effects of PasWe traveled all over the state for training so lazy? A lot of these people take the Sensive Smoking: Lm1g Cancer and O ther at our own expense, to work for free and tine!.
Disorders established that ETS exposure it cost you nothing? (Usually not even· a
Hilton N. Wolfe Jr.
causes lung cancer.The EPA report (1992) thank you.) So please don't knock the
Racine

FOR
TIPS

Castro Cuba's problem

c

ADVICE
of pet-loving readers a pet preparedness guide titled "Knowing
Your Pet's Health." It's a 20-page
booklet that includes pet emergency preparedness advice, how to
assess your pet's health, a health
chart, a list of comrnon plant and
household pet poisons, a snout-totail assessment with worksheet, and
suggestions for finding the best pet

Page AS
Thursday. September 6,1001

DEAR ABBY: For the past year,
I have been seeing a 35-year-old
widow and mother of three small
children . About every five weeks
and every holiday, her 24-year-old
brother-in-law, "Mark," will call her
and spend the night with her and
the kids. If we have plans, they are
cal)celed to accommodate Mark.
Also, when Mark is visiting, I am
told that it would be "Inappropriate" for me· to be there or call her.
After a year of this, I finally told
my girlfriend I was uncomfortable
with this arrangement, and if Mark
wants to see her and the ·kids, that's
fine - but he should go home at
night. My girlfriend became irate.
The next day at a family gathering, she asked, almost begged, Mark
to stay the night with her and the

ADVICE

Take care
"with dry
clean items
(Becky Baer colunin)
Dry cleaning is a special
, cleaning process that uses a
solvent to remove soils and
stains from fabric.
It is c~~~~ "dry"cleaning,
because no water is in the
-~!)~,!!;~,_Titis solution does
not penetrate the fibers of
the fabric, although it usually dissolves greases and oils.
The dry cleaning process
begins with pretreating
spots. using special cleaning
methods. An oversized
front-loading
washing
macfiine provides the agitation to loosen the dirt. The
dry cleaning solvent is filtered frequently to keep the
' clothes clean. The garments
are then dried in that
machine, leaving no solvent
· odor on the clothing.
There are several things
the consumercan do to help
ensure the cleanest dry
cleaning. The following are
some guidelines:
• Dry cleanable garments
should be dry cleaned fie' quendy. Ground-in dirt can
become abrasive, wearing
·' out the fibers, if it is not
., · removed periodically.
• A garment should be dry
cleaned its soon as possible
· after a stain occun. Point out
'spots to the dry cleaning
" professional, especially hidden discolorations such as
-, pop, fruit juice or white
"wine. If stainS ate not taken
' care of immediately. they
; may become permanent.
, • Make sure deodorants,
··' perfumes, lotions and cos,, metics are dry be(ore dress, ing.These items may contain
·· products that cause dye
·
, changes.
• Beware that excessive
_. perspiration can affect some
·dyes, especially silks. Use
· proper protection, such as
perspiration shields.
, • Dty clean matching arti•. des together to keep colors
· ;. uniform. This advice also
pertains to bedspreads and
, drapes. If there is a change in
. color, it will be-consistent.
• Protect items from long
exposure to intense light.
Even artificial light can cause
changes in clothing color.
• Don't . press dirty or
stained clothing. .The heat
can cause permanent spots.

(Becky Baer is a Mrigs
.,·county Extension agent.)

/

I,

II.

Dcrn Abby is li'Tittc/1 l&gt;y f&gt;nlllinc
Pili/lips n11d clau,~htrr )&lt;'fllllll' Phillips

The Community Celend•r Is take a covered dish. Family and Edward Jones Investments, on
REEDSVILLE - Olive Townpublished as • free service to friends invited.
fluctuations of the stock market. ship Trustees, special meeting,
non-profit groups wishing to
Wednesday, 7 p.m. township
ennounce ._tlng~ end •pePOMEROY - Meigs County
WEDN
clll eventl. The calender 11 not Retired Te11chers, Saturday, I"'___E_s_D_AY-----.., building on Joppa Road. Discusdellgned to promote sales or noon, luncheon at the Chester .
fund raisers of any type. Items Courthouse. Parking on hill. Pro,,. printed only as space per- gram, Bicentennial Commission

POMEROY - Junior and Rita
White and Ralph Cooke will perform a variety of music at the
Meigs Senior Center on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. A "name that
tune" segment will t-e included in
the program. There is no admission charge and the public is
Invited.

SATURDAY

POMEROY
Eiurlingham
Modem Woodmen, dinner, 6:30
p.m. Saturday at the hall. Camp
to furnish, meat, dessert and
drinks. Those . attending are to

Are your investments
spread among
multiple firms with no
one really knowing
who you are?

SUNDAY ·•

ALFRED - Orange Christian
church 163rd annual homecoming Su.nday. Guest speaker David
Cougar with special singing by
Higher Calling. Dinner at 12:30;
service at t :30· p.m. Morning
services, Sunday school at 9:30
and preaching at 10:30 a.m.
Church located on County Road
TUPPERS PLAINS- Tuppers 53, Coolville.
Plains VFW Ladles' Auxiliary
Thursday with potluck dinner at
TUESDAY
6:30 p.m., meeting at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, regular meeting,
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town hall.
.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, luncheon, Tuesday. Overbrook Canter, Middleport, noon. Guest
speaker, Elizabeth Schaad of

sion on renewal of the cable tetevision franchise with Adelhia
Cable Co., and residents with
complaints or problems.

PRE-SEASON
SPECIAL!

THURSDAY

Becky
Baer

kids. She did tt three times 111 from
of me. The 1.-t time wa&lt; as MJrk
was leaving. She then turned to m.e
and told me to leave. She said that
Mark is family and welcome to 'tav
with her any time. (I thought I w,;,
family, too.)
What do you. think' If th ere i&lt; to
be a future in this rdationship, we
need your opinion. - THREE'S
A CROWD IN WISCONSIN
DEAR THREE'S A CROWD:
If the relationship with her brotherin - law was &lt;trictly platonic, she
wouldn 't insist that you be absent
and not call when he i&lt; visiting.
Wise ·up and move on . She has
made her choice- and you're not

LOCAL . EVENTS

mite end cannot be guaranteed representative on upcoming
to be printed • 1peclflc number events and activities in Southof dllys.
eastern Ohio. Reservati.ons, 992. 32t4, 949-2601, or 98$-3890.

s

us

Abigail
Van
Buren

1nsunnce.
Thank you, Abby, for your many
years of providing helpful and accurate information to conscientious
pet owners. - THOM SOMES,
PRESIDENT, PET TECH INC.
DEAR THOM: Because pet
first-aid classes are not available
everyJ.where, I'm sure your, boo'ktet
will save the lives of companion
animals that might not otherWise
survive. I commend you for providing such a readable and easy-tounderstand guide for pet owners.
Readers: To order a copy of
"Knowing Your Pet's H ealth," send
a chec~ or money order for $3 .50
to: Pet Preparedness Guide, cl o Pet
Tech Inc., 5800 Severin Drive, La
Mesa, Calif. 91942. The pet you
save could be your own.

TIME

OUT
Here's the facts

he end

Advice in pet health care guide is the eat's meow

.

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

~:.f_

PniiiiUAI

our

An~la Ward
Clief'll S6Mce Manager

AI
Raymond James office we make it a point to get to know
our clients and for them to get to know us. We have over 35 ·
years of combined experience in the investment busine~s. Let us ·
share our experience with you as we get to know you.

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311 Fourth St., Marietta, OH 45750

740-376-9186
. 800-726-8412

www.raymondjames.com/JohnCMiller
.
.

John.Miller@RJFS.com

COLLEGE
NEWS

l-~- ·

-

· Helps It
Haverford camp
HAVERFORD, Pa. - The
hottest job at Haverford College in the summer isn't necessarily the highest-paying,
nor the least demanding, but
it is one of the most gratifYmg.
Kyle Smiddie of Pomeroy, a
lecond-year student outside
of Philadelphia, Pa., is working ·on campus with 12 other
Haverford students as a coun. selor at the college's summer
day camp for local children.
.As a counselor, he supervises six to 13 year-olds
throughout a busy schedule of
arts and ·crafts, computer
activities, sports, drama, nature
hikes, and day trips to local
points of interest.
"Serendipity:' as the camp is
called, began in the early
1960s with the goal of promoting a closer relationship
.between the college and the
neighboring
community.
Starting with a handful of
neighborhood, staff and faculty children, the seven-week
program now enrolls nearly
200 young campers.
Over the years, "Serendipity" has become synonumous
with summer at Haverford,
both for children in the community and for Haverford students.
·

Snyder's

Hunger Blaster
Potato Chips

Maxwell House
CoffeeADC

99

2($

39 Oz.

Totino's Combo
Pi%Za Rolls

Great Value

Blue Bonnet

WhiteBread

Margarine Qtrs

PEOPLE
James DePreist
PORTL/&gt;ND, Ore. (AP) After two years on kidney
dialysis, James DePreist, the
charismatic conductor of the
Oregon Symphony, is on 24. hour call for a kidney trans·
plant.
DePreist informed the
orchestra of his medical situation last week, 'leaving management scrambling to come
up with plans to repJa_s:e him
while he's recovering.

Cook's

Spiral Ham

$

59
Lb.

· Family Pack

Bottom Round
Roast
'

$

99
Lb.

Family Pack

Beef Round
Tip Roast

$ . 99

Saturday

8,2001

Lb.
·.

�The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

TVC Golf results, Page B3

Page Bl
lbursday, September 6, 1001

---.....

ReserVes thump Reds

.....

-

... . . .

Towards the purchase af a FOlD F-SIIIIS far anyone wbo currently awns
.
a Chevy Silverado, CK/DMC Sierra, ar Toyota Tundra!
Ford is currently offering up to $1500 rebates *PLUS~ $1000 if you currently have ownership of an equal competitive mo~eh
*Does not have to be used as a trade ln.

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

I

T•m
1. Ironton
2 . Gallipolis
3. Portsmouth

~

LINCOLN
A lol E R I C A N L U )( U ' R

saaaa Iabate

4. Logan

'f

5. Eastern
6. Parkersburg
7. Waverly .
8 . Wellston
9. Ravenswood

*PLUS* $1DDD

Prev. Votes
,
3

50 (5)
43

2
5
6

39
35

6

19
18
12
11

9

10. Ripley

25

10

for IDJ.DDI DWDiig I fall SiZid
competitive SUV.

Jackson 6, SE Ross 3, Mariet-

*Daes aat aaad ta ba asad far trade.

To .1111 eligible for The OVP

~hera

receiving votes:

ta 1.
10, a 1ll8m must ellhar: a.) bll
from the Maeon-GalllaMelp.Jackaon - : b.) bll'
loc:al conferance member; or
c.) play at least one game
against loc:allllllma.

ord

ThuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS .
Prep Football
SEOAL
:&amp;lUn

s.EQ All

Gallia Academy
0-0 2·0
0-0 2'0
Logan
Marietta
0-0 · 2·0
Athens
0-0 1·1
Jackson
0-0 1-1
0-0 1·1
Point Pleasant
Warren
0·0 1·1
River Valley
o-o 0-2
Friday's Games
~· .~a.rloh at P.PI~~~a~t . ,
·, 'l'rorito'ifh(Gallla Academy

SPBCIAL FINANCE DBP~
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
"We Can Help 'II

rum

2-wheel$2495

Check and adjusl camber and toe. Additional parts·and

$19

95

FAST LUBE

• Chad( and fill necessary fiu~s • All in 29 minums or less
be extra.

FLOORMATS ·

Sta~ing

We feature all major brenda: Goodyear, Flrest01'1e, General,
Michelin, Brldgestone, Continental, UNIROYAL, BF Goodrich .
Mounting and balancing may ba extra .

Motorcraft"'

• Service includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil and Oew
Motorcraft oil fitter • Perform Multi-Point Vehicle 1inspection
• Diesel vehicles

1

We will meet or beat any (Ompetitor's
advertised pri'e on the some tire.

$4400

WIPER BLADES
Starting
at

$1995
·

SPLASH GUARDS

sso~o

I

I
I
I
I

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD
Starting
Of

$8150

Installed

BED RAILS

$242

PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

or
Falcons
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

TUPPER. S PLAINS
Coach Ed Croml ey and his
Wahama Whit e Falcon football eleven have had little time
to savor· their first victory of
the 2001 season as they prepare for a tough road test at
7:30 pm Friday against the
unbeaten Easteni Eagles.
Wahama owns a 14-5 edge
in the overall series with the
Eagles, but their challenge in
week three will be stopping
Scott C hristman's Eastern
squad which has emerged
victorious in each of the past
two years.
The Meigs Counry team
snapped a four-game WHS
winning streak during the
1999 campaign with a 22-0
blanking of the White Falcons
before posting a one-sided
50- 12 triumph in the Eagles'
stellar 2000 push into the
Ohio football playoffs.
Eastern has posted successive wins over South Gallia
and Fort Frye and js well on
its way towards another banner season under the guidance
'of Christman.The Eagles win ·
last week over the Cadets
avenged their only regular
season loss of a year ago during Eastern's 9-1 2000 season.
"We're 2-0 (or the first time
since I've been here, but We've
gotta go 3-0," said Christman.
"That's going to be the task
this ':Y~.~L· ,_try_~J!S,; L .:.-s£.!
them back down (after beat-

Meigs looks for first win against Raiders

TVC
Ohio Division

IY.C. · All

Nelsonville-Yor1&lt;
0-0
Wellston ·
0-0
Alexander
0-0
Belpre
0-0
Meigs
0-0
~inton County
. 0·0
Hocking Dlvlelon

''
4-wheel $ 4 9 9 5 :

ets set

River Valley at Meigs
for a day.
1HELD IT LIKE AN EGG -Reds pitcher Chris Reitsma reacts after giving up a three-run
1-- -.Jackscm at Vinton-County--~-- Please see-Reds;-B'J- - home run·to- Houston's Vinny Castilla in the second inning Wednesday. (APt
Hamilton TWP at Marietta
Zanesville at Logan
Athens at Alexander
Warren at Par1&lt;ersburg So.

rum

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff llagwell and Moises Alou
watched from the bench as
the Houston Astros emerged
from their off~nsive slump
and opened their biggest lead
of the season.
Imagine what they could
do if their top hitters get in
the swing, roo.
· Vinny C astilla drove in six
runs in a revamped lineup
Wednesday n ight, leading the
Asrros to a 10-3 victory over
the Cincinnati R.eds that put
them in control of the NL ..
Central.
The Astros opened a fivegame lead on the Cubs, who
blew a ninth- inning lead and
lost to Florida 7-6. The division's top two teams play
seven times in the last two
weeks to decide the title.
"Going into it, we 're right
where we want to be everybody's got to catch us,"
said Dave Mlicki (5- l), who
pitched seven innings and had
a hit in the mix-and-match
· . offense.
The Astros have made a
remarkable turnaround from
June 17, when they trailed by
eight games and had only a
break-even record. They
whittled away at the deficit,
then surged to their lead by
winning 15 of their last 19
games.
The spurt ha1 come with
misgivings . The Astros have
depended too mu ch on their
impeccable pitching to make
up for their undependable
hitting.
After the Astros managed
only 15 singles and three
extra-base hits while splitting
the first two gaines in Cincinnati, manager Larry Dierker
decided ro retool his~lineup

Eastern

1-1
1-1
0·2
0-2
0-2
0-2

IY.C. AD

Eastern
0-0 2·0
Southern
0·0 1-1
Trimble
0·0 1-1
Waterford
0·0 1-1
Federal Hocking 0-0 0-2
Miller
0-0 0-2
Friday's Games
Wahama at Eastern
River Valley at Meigs
Southern at South Gallia
Jackson at Vinton County
Waverly at Wellston ·
Miller at Berne Union
Trimble at SE Ross
Fairfield Union at N-York
Waterford at Frontier
Athens at Alexander · 1
Zane Trace at F. Hocking
Belpre at Fort Frye

Non-league
rum .
An

Ravenswood
2-o
Ripley
2-0
OakHill
1·1
Wahama
1-1
Hannan
0-2
South Gallla
0-2
Friday's.Games
Wahama at Eastern
Buffalo-Putnam at Hannan
· Southern at South Gallia
Rock Hill at Oak Hill
Riverside at Ripley '
Roane Co.at Ravenswood
Correction
In Friday's account of the
Eastern/Southern
volleyball
game, server Ashley Hager
scored nine points and had two
aces in helping to lead Eastern to
the win.
.It had earlier been reported
that Whitney Karr was. the leading scorer with nine points.

-

BY DAVE H .ARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

. " Ril'er Valley is an improved
team. Tirey are hnngry.fi~r
theirfirst win, and tlrey will
be ready to piiiJ'-"

POMEROY' - 'fwo teams looking for. their first win of the young
season will clash this Friday evening
when the Meigs Marauders host the
River Valley R.aiders Friday evening
Melga heacJ coach Mike Chancey
at Bob Roberts Field.
This is the ninth meeting between eastern in their opener. River Valley
the two n,eighbors; River Valley won .Coach Larry Carter is in his fourth
the first two between the two teams, season at the hdm of the Raiders, and
but the Marauders have run off wins the Raiders .are trying to break a 33in the last six, including last year's game losing streak.
In last week 's game the Golden
thrilling 12-6 win over the Raiders in
double overtime at River Valley.
Rockets jumped out on top 20-0 in
The R.aiders were defeated by the first period at C heshire. The
Wellston last week 58-0, after drop- R.aiders lost their first-ever 1.•000
ping a 48-7 decision to R.oss South- yard rusher Jared Taylor to gradua-

tion, he has taken hi s talents to More- a minute left in th e contest.
Of th e Bulldogs '28 points, really
head State this year.
Blake Marcum starts at tailback in only one came on a sustained drive.
place ofTayior. Luke DeGarmo is the One touchdown came after a long
Kaiders' fullback and Jo;li'Wamsley punt return put the ball at the
Marauder eight yard line, and anothalso sees time at fullback.
.
er
came on a kickoff return to open
The quarterback for the R.aiders is
1
· Joey Graham, a sophon}ore transfer the second balf and a interception
return for a score.
from Gallia Academy.
Four times the Bulldogs had the
Meib" is still trying to iron out
ball deep in Marauder territory, but
problems with it's offense. In two
to . the Marauder credit they held
games, the Marauders have only been three rim es.•
able to muster 10 first dowm. In last
Meigs is led on th e ground by Jereweek 's 29-8 loss at Athens, the my Roush with ~8 yards in 24 car. Marauders' only score came on a 16yard pass from freshman Eric C ul" Please see Melp, BJ
lumns to classmate Matt Holley with

'

?

Southem heads
to South Gallia

Bucke es
unite on
all fronts
'

COLUMBUS (AP)
With a new coach, a new. system and a new season on the
brink, Ohio State's players say
they also have a new attitude.
No more of the fin gerpointing, cliques, disciplinary
and academic problems and even teammate-vs.- teammate lawsuits - that have
marked the past two Buckeyes
squads, they say. The team that
opens its seas'on on · Saturday
against Akron is close-knit
and driven only by thoughts
of all-for-one-and-one-forall, not agents, the NFL draft
or individual glory, they say.
"The Ohio State Buckeyes
are a different team now,"
linebacker Matt Wilhelm said.
A cynic would point out
that kind of talk is common
from teams coming off a bad
finish that ~esulted in the fir-

BY SCOTT WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

NEW OLD BUCKS - Ohio State's Matt Wilhelm (35) stops Michigan's Anthony Thomas (32) last season. Wilhelm says this year's
Buckeyes are a different team, with a new coach, a new system
and a new season on the brink. (AP File)
ing of the head coach .
R egardless, th e Buckeyes
say th ey plan to back up their
preseason talk by truly supporting one another.
Ohio State's summer wCJrkouts have been a virtual love-

fest. N ew coach Jim Tressel ,
who replaced John Cooper
after th e Buckeyes were beat-.
en by Michigan . and in the ,
Outback Bowl, has tried to

Please see Buckeyes, BJ

'

RACINE -. This Friday night, the Sou\hern
tornadoes whirl into Mercerville for a bout with the
South Gailia Rebels.
Behind three Matt Ash
touchdowns and 21 first
quarter points, the Southern Tornadoes rolled to a
35- 6 non - league win over
the Hannan Wildca ts last
Friday night in area non league football · action.
Southern is 1- 1 overall .
South Gallia dropped a
53-8 decision to Waterford
last weekend in Waterford
and fell ro 0-2. That loss
came after a 66-22 drubbing against Eastern the
week before, meaning th e
R.ebels will get their third
straight dose of Tri-Valley
Conference opponents .
Southern's mainstay has
been Matt Ash . Overall in

last week's game, Ash
rushed 13 times ·for 113
yards and three scores. T he
senior running back also .
wa~ a defensive standout at
linebacker with twelve
ta.ckles in a great all around
performanc e. Southern's
tlrice Hill was 5- 52 rush ing with 2 catches for 76
yards and a tou chdown .
Southern's
Anthony
C offman , Brandon Pierce,
Joe Cornell, and Andrew
Philson each had two
sacks, and Joey Phillips had
one. Matt Ash , BJ Marnhout andTommy Sheppard
each had fumble recoveries. In receiving Brice Hill
was 3-82, Aaron Ohlinger
1-26, and Justin Allen 349. Allen and Ohlinger
have complemented Hill
and have become equally
tough weapons in the TorPlease see Southern, IJ

�The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

TVC Golf results, Page B3

Page Bl
lbursday, September 6, 1001

---.....

ReserVes thump Reds

.....

-

... . . .

Towards the purchase af a FOlD F-SIIIIS far anyone wbo currently awns
.
a Chevy Silverado, CK/DMC Sierra, ar Toyota Tundra!
Ford is currently offering up to $1500 rebates *PLUS~ $1000 if you currently have ownership of an equal competitive mo~eh
*Does not have to be used as a trade ln.

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

I

T•m
1. Ironton
2 . Gallipolis
3. Portsmouth

~

LINCOLN
A lol E R I C A N L U )( U ' R

saaaa Iabate

4. Logan

'f

5. Eastern
6. Parkersburg
7. Waverly .
8 . Wellston
9. Ravenswood

*PLUS* $1DDD

Prev. Votes
,
3

50 (5)
43

2
5
6

39
35

6

19
18
12
11

9

10. Ripley

25

10

for IDJ.DDI DWDiig I fall SiZid
competitive SUV.

Jackson 6, SE Ross 3, Mariet-

*Daes aat aaad ta ba asad far trade.

To .1111 eligible for The OVP

~hera

receiving votes:

ta 1.
10, a 1ll8m must ellhar: a.) bll
from the Maeon-GalllaMelp.Jackaon - : b.) bll'
loc:al conferance member; or
c.) play at least one game
against loc:allllllma.

ord

ThuRsDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS .
Prep Football
SEOAL
:&amp;lUn

s.EQ All

Gallia Academy
0-0 2·0
0-0 2'0
Logan
Marietta
0-0 · 2·0
Athens
0-0 1·1
Jackson
0-0 1-1
0-0 1·1
Point Pleasant
Warren
0·0 1·1
River Valley
o-o 0-2
Friday's Games
~· .~a.rloh at P.PI~~~a~t . ,
·, 'l'rorito'ifh(Gallla Academy

SPBCIAL FINANCE DBP~
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?
"We Can Help 'II

rum

2-wheel$2495

Check and adjusl camber and toe. Additional parts·and

$19

95

FAST LUBE

• Chad( and fill necessary fiu~s • All in 29 minums or less
be extra.

FLOORMATS ·

Sta~ing

We feature all major brenda: Goodyear, Flrest01'1e, General,
Michelin, Brldgestone, Continental, UNIROYAL, BF Goodrich .
Mounting and balancing may ba extra .

Motorcraft"'

• Service includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil and Oew
Motorcraft oil fitter • Perform Multi-Point Vehicle 1inspection
• Diesel vehicles

1

We will meet or beat any (Ompetitor's
advertised pri'e on the some tire.

$4400

WIPER BLADES
Starting
at

$1995
·

SPLASH GUARDS

sso~o

I

I
I
I
I

FORD FACTORY
BUG SHIELD
Starting
Of

$8150

Installed

BED RAILS

$242

PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

or
Falcons
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS

TUPPER. S PLAINS
Coach Ed Croml ey and his
Wahama Whit e Falcon football eleven have had little time
to savor· their first victory of
the 2001 season as they prepare for a tough road test at
7:30 pm Friday against the
unbeaten Easteni Eagles.
Wahama owns a 14-5 edge
in the overall series with the
Eagles, but their challenge in
week three will be stopping
Scott C hristman's Eastern
squad which has emerged
victorious in each of the past
two years.
The Meigs Counry team
snapped a four-game WHS
winning streak during the
1999 campaign with a 22-0
blanking of the White Falcons
before posting a one-sided
50- 12 triumph in the Eagles'
stellar 2000 push into the
Ohio football playoffs.
Eastern has posted successive wins over South Gallia
and Fort Frye and js well on
its way towards another banner season under the guidance
'of Christman.The Eagles win ·
last week over the Cadets
avenged their only regular
season loss of a year ago during Eastern's 9-1 2000 season.
"We're 2-0 (or the first time
since I've been here, but We've
gotta go 3-0," said Christman.
"That's going to be the task
this ':Y~.~L· ,_try_~J!S,; L .:.-s£.!
them back down (after beat-

Meigs looks for first win against Raiders

TVC
Ohio Division

IY.C. · All

Nelsonville-Yor1&lt;
0-0
Wellston ·
0-0
Alexander
0-0
Belpre
0-0
Meigs
0-0
~inton County
. 0·0
Hocking Dlvlelon

''
4-wheel $ 4 9 9 5 :

ets set

River Valley at Meigs
for a day.
1HELD IT LIKE AN EGG -Reds pitcher Chris Reitsma reacts after giving up a three-run
1-- -.Jackscm at Vinton-County--~-- Please see-Reds;-B'J- - home run·to- Houston's Vinny Castilla in the second inning Wednesday. (APt
Hamilton TWP at Marietta
Zanesville at Logan
Athens at Alexander
Warren at Par1&lt;ersburg So.

rum

WHEEL ALIGNMENT

CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff llagwell and Moises Alou
watched from the bench as
the Houston Astros emerged
from their off~nsive slump
and opened their biggest lead
of the season.
Imagine what they could
do if their top hitters get in
the swing, roo.
· Vinny C astilla drove in six
runs in a revamped lineup
Wednesday n ight, leading the
Asrros to a 10-3 victory over
the Cincinnati R.eds that put
them in control of the NL ..
Central.
The Astros opened a fivegame lead on the Cubs, who
blew a ninth- inning lead and
lost to Florida 7-6. The division's top two teams play
seven times in the last two
weeks to decide the title.
"Going into it, we 're right
where we want to be everybody's got to catch us,"
said Dave Mlicki (5- l), who
pitched seven innings and had
a hit in the mix-and-match
· . offense.
The Astros have made a
remarkable turnaround from
June 17, when they trailed by
eight games and had only a
break-even record. They
whittled away at the deficit,
then surged to their lead by
winning 15 of their last 19
games.
The spurt ha1 come with
misgivings . The Astros have
depended too mu ch on their
impeccable pitching to make
up for their undependable
hitting.
After the Astros managed
only 15 singles and three
extra-base hits while splitting
the first two gaines in Cincinnati, manager Larry Dierker
decided ro retool his~lineup

Eastern

1-1
1-1
0·2
0-2
0-2
0-2

IY.C. AD

Eastern
0-0 2·0
Southern
0·0 1-1
Trimble
0·0 1-1
Waterford
0·0 1-1
Federal Hocking 0-0 0-2
Miller
0-0 0-2
Friday's Games
Wahama at Eastern
River Valley at Meigs
Southern at South Gallia
Jackson at Vinton County
Waverly at Wellston ·
Miller at Berne Union
Trimble at SE Ross
Fairfield Union at N-York
Waterford at Frontier
Athens at Alexander · 1
Zane Trace at F. Hocking
Belpre at Fort Frye

Non-league
rum .
An

Ravenswood
2-o
Ripley
2-0
OakHill
1·1
Wahama
1-1
Hannan
0-2
South Gallla
0-2
Friday's.Games
Wahama at Eastern
Buffalo-Putnam at Hannan
· Southern at South Gallia
Rock Hill at Oak Hill
Riverside at Ripley '
Roane Co.at Ravenswood
Correction
In Friday's account of the
Eastern/Southern
volleyball
game, server Ashley Hager
scored nine points and had two
aces in helping to lead Eastern to
the win.
.It had earlier been reported
that Whitney Karr was. the leading scorer with nine points.

-

BY DAVE H .ARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

. " Ril'er Valley is an improved
team. Tirey are hnngry.fi~r
theirfirst win, and tlrey will
be ready to piiiJ'-"

POMEROY' - 'fwo teams looking for. their first win of the young
season will clash this Friday evening
when the Meigs Marauders host the
River Valley R.aiders Friday evening
Melga heacJ coach Mike Chancey
at Bob Roberts Field.
This is the ninth meeting between eastern in their opener. River Valley
the two n,eighbors; River Valley won .Coach Larry Carter is in his fourth
the first two between the two teams, season at the hdm of the Raiders, and
but the Marauders have run off wins the Raiders .are trying to break a 33in the last six, including last year's game losing streak.
In last week 's game the Golden
thrilling 12-6 win over the Raiders in
double overtime at River Valley.
Rockets jumped out on top 20-0 in
The R.aiders were defeated by the first period at C heshire. The
Wellston last week 58-0, after drop- R.aiders lost their first-ever 1.•000
ping a 48-7 decision to R.oss South- yard rusher Jared Taylor to gradua-

tion, he has taken hi s talents to More- a minute left in th e contest.
Of th e Bulldogs '28 points, really
head State this year.
Blake Marcum starts at tailback in only one came on a sustained drive.
place ofTayior. Luke DeGarmo is the One touchdown came after a long
Kaiders' fullback and Jo;li'Wamsley punt return put the ball at the
Marauder eight yard line, and anothalso sees time at fullback.
.
er
came on a kickoff return to open
The quarterback for the R.aiders is
1
· Joey Graham, a sophon}ore transfer the second balf and a interception
return for a score.
from Gallia Academy.
Four times the Bulldogs had the
Meib" is still trying to iron out
ball deep in Marauder territory, but
problems with it's offense. In two
to . the Marauder credit they held
games, the Marauders have only been three rim es.•
able to muster 10 first dowm. In last
Meigs is led on th e ground by Jereweek 's 29-8 loss at Athens, the my Roush with ~8 yards in 24 car. Marauders' only score came on a 16yard pass from freshman Eric C ul" Please see Melp, BJ
lumns to classmate Matt Holley with

'

?

Southem heads
to South Gallia

Bucke es
unite on
all fronts
'

COLUMBUS (AP)
With a new coach, a new. system and a new season on the
brink, Ohio State's players say
they also have a new attitude.
No more of the fin gerpointing, cliques, disciplinary
and academic problems and even teammate-vs.- teammate lawsuits - that have
marked the past two Buckeyes
squads, they say. The team that
opens its seas'on on · Saturday
against Akron is close-knit
and driven only by thoughts
of all-for-one-and-one-forall, not agents, the NFL draft
or individual glory, they say.
"The Ohio State Buckeyes
are a different team now,"
linebacker Matt Wilhelm said.
A cynic would point out
that kind of talk is common
from teams coming off a bad
finish that ~esulted in the fir-

BY SCOTT WOLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

NEW OLD BUCKS - Ohio State's Matt Wilhelm (35) stops Michigan's Anthony Thomas (32) last season. Wilhelm says this year's
Buckeyes are a different team, with a new coach, a new system
and a new season on the brink. (AP File)
ing of the head coach .
R egardless, th e Buckeyes
say th ey plan to back up their
preseason talk by truly supporting one another.
Ohio State's summer wCJrkouts have been a virtual love-

fest. N ew coach Jim Tressel ,
who replaced John Cooper
after th e Buckeyes were beat-.
en by Michigan . and in the ,
Outback Bowl, has tried to

Please see Buckeyes, BJ

'

RACINE -. This Friday night, the Sou\hern
tornadoes whirl into Mercerville for a bout with the
South Gailia Rebels.
Behind three Matt Ash
touchdowns and 21 first
quarter points, the Southern Tornadoes rolled to a
35- 6 non - league win over
the Hannan Wildca ts last
Friday night in area non league football · action.
Southern is 1- 1 overall .
South Gallia dropped a
53-8 decision to Waterford
last weekend in Waterford
and fell ro 0-2. That loss
came after a 66-22 drubbing against Eastern the
week before, meaning th e
R.ebels will get their third
straight dose of Tri-Valley
Conference opponents .
Southern's mainstay has
been Matt Ash . Overall in

last week's game, Ash
rushed 13 times ·for 113
yards and three scores. T he
senior running back also .
wa~ a defensive standout at
linebacker with twelve
ta.ckles in a great all around
performanc e. Southern's
tlrice Hill was 5- 52 rush ing with 2 catches for 76
yards and a tou chdown .
Southern's
Anthony
C offman , Brandon Pierce,
Joe Cornell, and Andrew
Philson each had two
sacks, and Joey Phillips had
one. Matt Ash , BJ Marnhout andTommy Sheppard
each had fumble recoveries. In receiving Brice Hill
was 3-82, Aaron Ohlinger
1-26, and Justin Allen 349. Allen and Ohlinger
have complemented Hill
and have become equally
tough weapons in the TorPlease see Southern, IJ

���..

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio·

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thun~day, Sept. 6, 2001
-··

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

....

-

• ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

)'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLiP

ALDER

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

Hill's Self
Storage

Cir:Ja

29670 "Bashan Roa
Racine, Ohio
4sn1

• Gravel Sand •
. Top!Oil • Ftll Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

740-949-2217

P/8
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Raelne, Ohio 457T1

740..985-3948
CONCRETE/BlOCI!/BliO&lt;
• Footen, Wolls, Sleps •
Flat Work,
Replatta~entl, •

Walk.l

·JONES'

~~~

• Top • Removal • Trim
· • Stump 'rinding
• Buelc&amp;t !ruck

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

Tree Service

CONSTRUCTION
Free..Umatea,

lnaurod
Specialize In aew
tonstruli:tlon,
remodelln~o

plumblaa,

electrical, home main•

tenance, and repair
porches, &amp; decks.

Owner •
Charles A. Dill
Phone 992-7445

(eU hone 591·9254

Specl811zlng In
roofing, plumbing, ·
drywall,
remodeling,
addltlona &amp; deck•
Free eatlmalea
10 yrs. experience
· In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm
74
7 9

Maintenance-

Local 843·5264

,.,......
•
H OMf: C R EEK
ENTEHPRISES

General

Contractma

Ezcan.tbq( •

ana

Doiler

Bacldloe
Septic Systema
UtWtlea
New Home•

740-992-5232
lAMM'S
CONSTRUOION

Roofing • Home

992-7943

....

.......

.... &amp;.IO.N•M

. . . . . . . .E?R 1111 . . . . . . . . .

IIIDIUII•

thence running weat

Jr., etal

Detendanla
Caee No. GO-CV-151
In puraUIOCI or 10

Order ol Sale In the
above entitled action, I
will offer tor sale at
urthouae,

'.

In

Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
above named County,
an 20th day of
Soptamber, 2001, at
10:00, the fallowing
doacrlbeil real estate,
altuatod In the County
of Melga and State of
Ohio, a·nd In the City
1 11
0 fp
omeroy 0 w :
Legal Deacrlptlan
Exhibit A
Situated In the
Townahlp at Salam,
county of Melge and
Stata ot Ohio:
'Parcel No.
1:
Situated · In the
Townahlp of Salem,
County of Melgo, and
Stela of Ohio :
Baglnnlg at the
northweat camar al a
47-acre lot deedad by
Smith Kenl'a helra to
Qaorga Maloy, In
Section 12, Townohlp
7.- Range 15, o.c.P.,
thance running aouth
on aald 11ctlon line,
16 chalna and 11 llnka
to a ataka: thence net
5 . halna and on lin~
...
toc a atake: vv
thence
north 18 chalna and 10
llnka to a atake;
then ca north 18
chalna and 1111nka to
Shuler'• linea; thence
wool 5 chalna and 59
llnka Ia tha placa of
beginning, con..lnlng
10acnaa,moraorlaaa.
Alao, tha following
parcel of land altuate
In
Section
12,
Townahlp 7, Ranga .15,
o.c.P., and beginning
at the northaaat
corner of a tract of
land dHded by A.L.
. Maloy and wife to
.. Mifflin Harklna; thence
eaet 9 chalna and 54
llnka to the
northweat corner of a
land owned by Dora
W. Spirea, thence
aouth 18 chalna end
1811nka; thence weat9
chalna and 34 llnka;
thence north 18
chalna and 19 llnka to
the
place
of
benlnnlng, containing
•
11acrea.
more or leaa.
Alaa, .the tutlowlng
tract; lltlglnnlng ,at the
aoulheaat carnar of a
2-acra lot daad by
Mifflin Harkins to
Harvey A. Maloy, dated
September 14, 1101,
recorded to Volume
88, Page 115, Melga
County OHd Recorda,
In
Section
18,
• Townahlp 7, Ranga15,
O.C.P.; thence lOUth
to E.C. Ralph'a land;
thence welt 12 chalna
and 60 llnka to a atone
corner; thence north
to the road; thence In
an eaeterly direction

,

with aald Golf'a line,
13 chalna and 16 llnka
to a poet; thence
aouth to the road
leading tram E.C.
Ralph'a
a st

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087
2121 1 mopd

949·1405
591 -5011

Your Right to Know,
011/o Nr..,.,.,,. Au;UoCUitlult

DBPOYIII
. Pllft

'f K J U

All Makes Tractor &amp;

Equipment Pam

EXP02001

Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

1000 St. Rt. ~South
coo1vme, OH .um

740-.0111

SOUUI

•

A 10

Dea ler: Soulh
\luln!lrllble: East-West

t

W,.~ l

Nort ll

rns

l A

PI U

~au

Pau

46

Allpau

mal1h~ re

Varieties
'

September 15th &amp;·16th
f()r lnf()nnatl()n {;()ntad

Uallas Weber

tics;

I I

• Near,ly 2000 years

• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.

• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

24'120'

For more info'rmiiJIDn, come to our cltun:lt sit•.
·

N-12 DOUBlE WAll
PLASTIC
FIRSTCOML
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REIULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

Sunday 9.:30- Sunday School;
10:30. Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

FAITH IIULL COSPIL CHURCH
ROUTI 11•, LONG BOTTOM, OHIO

KENSINGToN
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERnME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 89.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

,...

NOT ~\ICLlt.m..Y,OIIe:F...

SYSTEMS

in this

1-800-291-5600 • Pomerov, OH
"'E! II HOME EstiiiATEI• "SEIINO IIIEt!EVINO" •~IGI34n
•

$50 per
mont

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Addition• • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAl

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

•

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

and
aces. (And
lacking one
there is no

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

·~

:r. ~
r~,~~~~~J.b~~-----~

I

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
·

$2,500 (change .out old ayatam) ·
$1,700 (add AIC to gaa furnace)

L....;;;~;;;.,;,;,;;,;,;,;;.....l L--...!.~:!l:!:.z.!i!/..!2!:!l.!:!.~------J

SMITH'S
CO NSTR UCTION
•Now Hamel
• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagoa
• Addition•
• Decks
• Home Rapalrl

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or992-2753
TRI-COUDTY
TRftDSPORT
Umestonel
SeniOR DIIICGIIIIIS
llultlple laed
Discounts

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
Romodollng
• NewG1raun

• Eloctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Outloro
• .V!n~i Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio ond Porch Dlckl
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pom•oy. Oh10
V.ar

I

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complete Llna of Sullivan'• Grooming Suppllea
Sulfur Coaled Urea, bulk only, 1121.00 par ton
10% off oil Prllfert Horae end Uvoatock Equip.
10.10.10 All Purpoaa Fertilizer S.UQ/5011
II' 11,000 Bator l'wlne $19.50/Bolo
Baler 1'wl~21.50111alo
,

TREE SERVICE
Tap· Trim • Removal
Bucllet 1111~~:e

34

35

(poet.)

by

Luis Campos

·

Today's clue: 'M equals Y

z

LZTLZQ

OYIDFOKD

ews

ZG.

LZGRCZHKAIFGE

FG

BWFHW .

ZIKFHAY

( H

BZGKD.'

zI KWA I

..F D .

HSLOSDYI

LSTYIG

'K W Y

s· L

GSUSTM

0 S D Y I )

W S G YE E YI

. ~ ,(-~!G~~=-~~s::-~~w=o:::-10

0

letten

Rearrange

of

...."''

Declarer ruffs, then
attacks trumps. You
must duck until the
third round , when
dummy is playing its
final spade . Then a
fourth heart forces
out declarer 's last
spade . Your fourth
trump is th e setting
trick.

the

lour scrombled words be-

low ro form four simple words.

I1-....,.

N0 TNI E

-.,r--1

--.-.-1---..,2---.-.,
1.
1.
1. 1.
.

;::::::====~:::~~

I1-....,.,...l U N 0 F I
3....,.,--.ll:-~-,,-1

I·

:
.

R H A. N C"'
·;;

.,s.

I

.I I I
1
_

1

"'1

_

Ay SQEU

16

A college s tud ent ca lled home
and aske d , Would you prefer one
f
million dolla rs o r a call rom yow ·
penniles s son? Without hesitatior

I~~~~~. replied , I hope thiS IS-· ·

I () Complete

the ch"'kle · quoted

.
_ _
by filling in t he min1ng words
L..l.-L...I.-.L...I.__;,J you develoo from step No. 3 below

.:'I. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'11::1'
THE SE SQUARES ·

.:a.
V

UNS CRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWE R

1

I I

fmyf

III

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Exhale - Aglow - Naive - Subdue - BEIGE
"Which color shirt do you like best?" asked my
teenager. "The blue one is my first choice. and th~ white
is my second ," 1answered. "Good," he laughed, " I'll wear
the BEIGE."

.-

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE
ll
V

Shade Rlnr At Service, lac
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
I ; I'ax

•

• Flat

Continue with a third

heart.

.

74,.u-949•1521
....

diamond
if he is
of those,
hurry to

~:~;~~ istrt~n~~nt~~;k~

·~

All Home NHdS
Owner:
Charlie WoHe

~'lOT

••

Electrical, Plumbing

30

49 "Do - say"
50 Southeast
Asian
holiday
52 Cler9y·
man &amp;title
53 Put into
practice

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotatiOfls by famous
people, past and present Each lener in the cipher stands for another.

I

"'

&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,

atart

6 PurHpart
7 Winced
8 Sot'a word
9 Unlock

':::·==·==·=~-~

I

Free Estimates

28

material

string
European
capital
Calmly
Homeowner's
pride
Nol moving
&lt;2 wds.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER

cash partner's winner.) Also, s urely ~
. - - - - - - - - - - - - , South can play th e
E5PECIALLV: WHEN 'f'OViRE
d
·h
diamon suit w1t out ~
ALLOWED IN THE HOUSE .. los; . The right ap - .

DOCTOR, DO 'lOll FIND THAT
MAKIN6 HOUSE CALLS HAS
BECOME MORE DIFFICliLT?

~~~----------~

ov on a

26 T

-T-HA_;;TO:,;AIL;,;;;Y;;;,;.C.;,;..Irii_-Q_ S'l!i-'1o.--:-

the au c tion, South
_.,....~1 presumably has the

t:IIIIIPitUrllll

40 Relinquish
(rlghtsf
42 - ·red
44 Veil

ll--(--D~~~~~~;ci-l-;:}~~~1
see thrcc___i&gt;UZZLII ·0-~ -1-~'IU-~. t.t.~~~~-P-~.~(/~
~ :·~;G~A~M~I~,-~-tri c ks : the spade , ace
Ealtoa by CLAY~•· POLLAN

PEANUTS

Reelnt,Ohlo

records

book
abbr.
22 Rolates
24 Come

•one Is not bam a woman- one beqom_eso~~."- _ Si'!'~ne
· ' de Bilauvolr

from where is number
four co ming? Given

... 1:. .12:11

814~49·2202

19 Phone-

queen w i th your
where do you

and two hearts. Dut

18-I:.Tttel-frl.

'Org.
38 Small
sailing
vessel
39 Historical

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I owe noth.ing to,Women's li b."• Margaret Thatcher

11

fiii/WIIttar ......

36 Ciean-olr

you capture South's

·

·~,

"HilpiiJt You 10 Rtco"' Y011r lnwrtment"

7:40·992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

:' .BIG NATE .

Advertise
n t s space
for $100 per
month

FREE ESTIMATES

Fortune is full of
fresh variety:
Constant in nothing
but inconstancy.
The last three d eals
of the week co ntain a
constant spade situation, but feature an
inconstancy of possibilities.
First, you are sitting
West . What would
you lead against four
spades?
South might jump
straight to game, but
his chosen three-diamond rebid is called a
help-s uit ga me - try .
North, with good
help in diamonds and
a maximum, has an
automatic jump to
game .
With four trumps,
your initial thought
should be to try to tap
declarer -- to make
him ruff in hand. So,
the heart -s ix lead
stands out.
Partner wins with
the ace and returns
the seven, his original

fourth-hiJ~hest. After

space for

BISSELL

Pf'o:)1\'&lt; l'r&lt;\ M.O~Of" DI£-T
....
1
POP WL\0~( MNi&lt;

OUALITY
WINDOW

Advertise

....

composer

2 Sang
wllhout
moving the
Ups
3 Be against
4 Adriatic,
e.g.
s "Cycle"

29 Greek
laland
31 Sixth lanH
(abbr.)
32 Dell broad
33 Unclolmed
mall dept.
34 In abundance
37 Highly
·
eeuoned
dlah

AlDER
Ri chard 13arnfic ld,
who di e d in 1627,
wrote :
Noth1ng more certain than un ce rtain -

1-304-67!-712&lt;1
I-IGO-l50-!1117'7
Residential Commercial New Construdion
Soleli Senlce Installation
Specialblllll in Shell Melli 'Ductwvrk
"Tnne• Salea It Senlce For
Gallla, MilliOn, ll'ad Meip Counllm
Licensed and IMured •
WV 105176

Mdp Couaty Falrplndl

45 Timetable
obbr.
46 A Bobbuy
1Win
47 Wlldebtoest
48 Conceive
51 Economical
54 Boat, e .g.
55 Markel
again
56 A thing
unto ltsall
10 Cheerful
57 Reluclant
11 Bentson
·and
Bridges
DOWN
12 Male and
I "Peer G~nt"
female

27 Talent
uekera

BY PHIWP

LlcenAe •53009580

•

.. Q.
t A J 10 l

JJLVM'.

hardware and
software.

CL4SSIFIEDS!

A KQJID6

tiOBOTMAN
Soulh
••

·. and up. uaed

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

"4

• s3z

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUOION

Free aatlmatea
on repalres,
In-horne service
available .24 houna,
used ayatema 388

CLASSIFIEDSI

¥ A l0 I 7
t I I ;J 2
... Q

ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

6thAMrurl

992·9158

Dance the night away
at Meigs Senior Center.
6:30 • 9:30, Sept. 8th.
Music by George Hall
· $8,00 per person

Jiad

Opening lea.d: ?~

441 Beach St.
Middleport, OH

Delivered Right to Your Door.

...

'

relltlve

13 Madia
mogul
Murdoch
14 Small WIVe
15 M.r
16 Rolrlgerotor
17 Comic
Philip•
18 Limb
20 Hurricane
center
21 Tole of
adventure
23 Edlbleaeed
24 Scoundrels
25 Covered
with

.'

Wul
A A I I 5

3

JERRY ' S
USED
C OMPUT E RS

·Benefit Shoot for
road to the section
Una feel south of the
Chuck Rathburn
soutH at corner of
Sept. 9th, 2001 1:00 pm • ??
the ian
w owned
by H.W.
attrlll;
Rutland American Legion
thence north a II the
Everyone Welcome
aectlon Una I the
place of begin lng,
containing 20 acrea,
moreorl....
save and except the
------coat In and above
Public Notice
Public Notice
deacrlbed property, _..;__ _ _ __
prevloualy conveyed Sal d
Pram loa a aacertalnad, will toke
to Ohio
Power Appraleed at $38,000 notice that on the 16th
Company.
· and cannot be aold for day of May, 2001,
· Sublect to all legal leaathan two•thlrda of LaSalle Natlano~ Bank
••••menta and rlghta that amount.
Truatia under
of racord.
TERMS OF SALE: 11
Pooling and Sllvlclng
SAVE AND
1 O% of appralaed Agreement Dated
EXCEP'T!
· value down, remainder
8/1118Superior
Serlll 1899·2
The
following upantanderoldled.
Bank,
deocrlbed real aatata,
Laurance e . Landon c/o
FSB
flied
Ita
In Malga County, Ohio, &lt;100346158)
Complaint
In
the
In Salam townahlp; Attorney lor Plalntlfl
Pl111 Court
Beginning at the 175 s. Third Stroot, Common
of M.lga County, Ohio
Soulhaaat corner of Suite 1100
In Caee No. 01 -CV-41 82•
W.o. Qoll'a land In Columbua, Ohlo43211 on
the docket of the
Soctlon 11, Tawnahlp &lt;81&lt;1) 221-7272, lxt.
Court,
and tho obloct
7, Range 15, O.c.P.; ·210
and
damand
lor rallet
thence runnln~ weal (I) 1, 11, 23, 30, (I) I
of which pleading Ia to
with aald Golf 1 Una, · - - - - - - - torecloll tho li•n 01
13 chaine and " llnka
plalntllf'a mortgage
Public Notice
10 a poat·, thence
recorded upon the
Iouth to the road
leading · from E.C . COURT OF COMMON following daacrlbed
realeal818to wH:
Ralph'a paat W. K.
PLEAS
Property Addreaa:
Leonard'e;
thence MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Walnut Street,
Eutarly along eald . LaSsila National Bank 211
Middleport,' OH 45710
road to the aactlon
a Truatee under
being more
Una 5 feet South of tho Pooling and Servicing and
particularly
deocrlbad
Southwaat cornar of
Agraement o.t.d
In
plolntllf'l
mortgage
tho land now ownad 111 TIIIariaa11tt-2
recorded
In
Mortgage
by K. W. Cottrill;
c/o Superior lank,
eook 87, page 511, ot
t,hence North along
I'SB
lhla
, county
the Sacllon line to the
Plaintiff,
Recordlr'e Otllce.
placa of beginning,
va
All of the above
containing 20 acrea, Patrlcl8 Blankanahlp, n•med
dellnelanta are
more or laaa. Save
al
81
required to 1nawer
and except the coal In
Defendant•
within twenty-eight
and under the above caee No. 01-cv-o12 (26)
daya after laat
daacrlbad property, Judge: Fred w. Crow
publication,
which
prevloualy conveyed NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
ahell
be
publlahad
to Ohio
Power
FORECLOSURE OF once a week tor alx
Company.
MORTGAGE
canaecutlve w"ka, or
Subloct to all legal
Patricia
might ba denlad a
eaaemanta and rlghta Blankanahlp, whoae they
..
rlng
In thla caee.
h
of way of record.
Ia at known adf;lraaa Ia
Patricia
K. Block
Being. the lome real 298 Walnut Street,
Lerner,
S.mpaon
&amp;
eatate described In Middleport, OH &lt;15760,
Rothfuu
deed of record In and the unknown Attarneya tor Plaintiff
Volume 255, Page 627, he ira,
devlaaea,
P.O. Box 5460
Melga County Dead lagateea, axacutora, Clnclnnetl,
OH 45201·
Recorda.
·
edmlnlatratora,
5480
Being the aame real
and aaalgna
1
,513) 241·3100
apouaethe
aatate 11 daacrlbed aa and
unknown ,9) 6, 13, 20, 27, &lt;10) 4,
Parcel No. 2 of record guard lana of minor 11
In Volume 267, Page and/or Incompetent
758, Daad Recorda of heir a of Patricia
Malga County, Ohio.
Blenkenahlp, all at
Buy, Sell or Trade
Current
deed whoae realdencea ere
recorded on 08110n7 unknown and cal!not
In the
In Volume 267, Page by
reeaonable
759.
d Ill g an c e
be
Property commonly
known aa : 28775
Sanford Davia Road,
Langavllle, Ohio
45741 .
Parcel Number: 13·
00458.000.
.
Said' Premlua
Located at 29775
Sanford Davie Road,
Langsville, OH 45741.
•

Free Esllmlttl

Cellular

•
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance ;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pen sion &amp; 401K Rollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

• Garages

and

along .. td road to tho
piece of beginning,
containing 19 acres,

Sheriff's Sole of Real
Eatate
The State ol Ohio,
mora
or
leal,
Meigs County
·containing l.n all 46
Blink One, National
acres,more or leaa.
Aaooclatlon fka The
Parcel No. 2: The
Firat National Bank ol
following described .
Chicago, as Trustee,
real estate, In Meigs
by Residential
Funding Corporation, County, Ohio, In
Salem
Township;
Ita Attomey In Fact,
Beginning
at the
c/o Homecomings
southeast corner of
Financial Network
W.O. Goll'o land In
Plaintiff,
Section 18, Townahlp
VI
Buddy Wayne Eggers, 7, Range 15, O.C.P.;

Spout

avee.

1 Acro11

• NewHomea

•

Public Notices Jn Newsp .. pers.

NOTICES .

Gutters- Down

VI

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3-D

. . . . .111111

Rocky A. Hupp . Agent
Bo• 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760

It ILl

and Drives • Stendl
C rett Free Esdmor.u
Servin&amp; Ohio ODd W.V.
WV!I031]12

992-3470

Howardl.
Wrltesel

40 Telephone

1 Hollo_, 41 "Gram"
flguraa
atart
7 See
43 CIOH

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

COlli IE'S
CIILDCIRE
Jllllllllllt
24111.

ACROSS

¢

. •:

·

I

CAN HELP
GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

METAL CULVI:RT
GEOTEXTILE
'REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE
NO JOB TOO LARGE OR SMALL

II
I
I

lc.t vc all emo tton n ut of the
tasks you need to .KC&lt;Jtnp!Js!J.
R L·g:ndlcs.~ of how dt~l.ts tcful
they may be or cve tt tf you' re
not in thL· mood, gl't cr:tck111

I

•

•'·

Friday, Sept. 7, 200 1
. ill the yc:~r ahl·;1d yo u 111 1ght
find }'Ollrsdf movin~ in m o re
promin en t social ri~clcs t h :~n

I

!
!'

thosc to wh1ch yo u rc i\ccus-

I

tom cd . A numbc r of th c~c
cu ut;~cts cou ld 'PfOVl.' to be

I .

val ua ble .

r

I

I

•
I
I

'

I

••

''
'

''·
....
...

..•......f.
.....
"
i

ncwsparcr. P.O. Box . l h7,
.Wicklifl'c , OH 4~092-0 1 67.

lndlanul

•

••'
••

.

VIRGO (Allg. 23-Sept. 22)
~- Frt.•c ti m e is too , prl.'ciou s
for you to ~ qu andcr today.
Yo u do n ' t have to spe nd it
wit h th ose who are n't you r
favori te peoplt-; find an cxc uk
and join up wi th t ho~l' you
like. Gl·t a jump on life by
lmdcr.~t;:md ing the influen ces
tha t'll go vern you 111 the year
ahc~d. Send for yo ur A5troGraph predictions by mailing
$2 to Astro-Grilph. t/o tim

I •

. !j · ~~i!J~~~~;u

~ e sure to :sta te ,yo ur Zodiac

s1gn.
LIURA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) •

- Hopes and cxpcc tiltJOm ;uc
achievabll' today, so fo ng as
you go after your aspi rations

in a prac~ic• l fa~hion . It's OK
ro be a bit of a dreamer, but
be a pn.gmiltic one.
SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov .
22) -- Yvlt re in 1. good cycle
whcr(' vour relationships arc

ro11ccrncd. but the one

thin ~ ·

that could usurp ·this i ~ if you
slwuld get too 1' 1"-or(cntcd.
Think in tcm1s of"wc."
SAGITTA11.1US (Nov . 2.1-·
Dec. :! I) -- A ~5oc i atcs usually
have no doubt as to w h~·n:
you st;wd on issm:s, bm today

w~u 'II IH"L'd to t:1ke cue not to

Pltt them down 111 the proress
of being candid. lie t;Jctful
about wh:n you say .
C AI' K ICORN (Dec . 22j:Hi. l IJ) -- There'! a possibility you L·ould recoup :.n old
ob li gati on roday if you ap.
preac h th e debtor in a way
where he or .du.• ~cts .the mcs- '
sage withuut. re~cntmcnt or
em ba rra ssme11t.
AQUARIUS ()'" · 20-fcb .
19) -- De careful nQt to side
with an o uuidcr today ove r
t:1mily. I t'~ tine to be to\ cr~ nt
of others' upini om, bltt not at

the expense of those who love
you .

PISCES (Feb. 20-Mmh 20)

-- This mig ht be :t good dny
to by dow n yo m tool~ L'arly
and get a j ump start on tht.!
Wl'ckend, but m akl' Htre your
rc ~ponsibilitic.~ arc taken CHL'
of fi~t.
A KJES (Marr lr 2 1- April I'!)
-- lf ymt'rc smart tmlay, you'll

"

on them .
TAURUS (Aprrl 211- May
20) ~ A dtsin!--:enuott ~ :~cqu.tin­
tancc who nm~idcr~ ynu ·.111
c :~ sy nurk could be 111 for :~
rude .1wa kenin~ lmby shmdd
shL· or hL· au c mpt tn urldc r-

minc )'&lt;JUr fncnJ~h ip~ \Vtrh
other; .
GEM INI (M;1y 21-Junc 20)
- E\'cn thoue;h

Will

m.w gl·t

:1

ch'a ncc tud.t~ t~ makl· ~ ~mL'­
st~.led al!rc~·m t·nt f:.vur111g
yo urs('](, to your frl't ltr y~Ht'l)
take p.1ins ro do t l11 11g ~ t.urly
that'll benefit both p.u w:,.

C AN CE R (lpnc 2 t -J ulv
22) - Althout.:h t: ondillllll ~ do
nut tJv or yoll bl'iu~ cxtr:.va ·
Kant with \'our rc~ourc c~ today. thL·y 'arL' on your si de
moneyw 1~c wh en 1l CO llJC\ to
dealm~ .md ncgott:lttum yo u

havC wtth ,t]w~.
LEO Uuly 23-Au~. 22) ••

Keep cvcllo't!mtg- above-hoard
and unselfi~h whl'll ~h·:thn~

wt th

other~

:md you'll

t:ll~ily

&lt;Khlcve yon :tims tod:~y . People wil l :~dmire ·your h:mdhng
of i:~H1c s a1 d want tc) l·ooprrarc with )'(lll .

�..

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio·

Page B 4 • The Dally Sentinel

Thun~day, Sept. 6, 2001
-··

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5

....

-

• ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

)'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLiP

ALDER

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

Hill's Self
Storage

Cir:Ja

29670 "Bashan Roa
Racine, Ohio
4sn1

• Gravel Sand •
. Top!Oil • Ftll Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

740-949-2217

P/8
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Raelne, Ohio 457T1

740..985-3948
CONCRETE/BlOCI!/BliO&lt;
• Footen, Wolls, Sleps •
Flat Work,
Replatta~entl, •

Walk.l

·JONES'

~~~

• Top • Removal • Trim
· • Stump 'rinding
• Buelc&amp;t !ruck

High &amp;Dry
Self-Storage

Tree Service

CONSTRUCTION
Free..Umatea,

lnaurod
Specialize In aew
tonstruli:tlon,
remodelln~o

plumblaa,

electrical, home main•

tenance, and repair
porches, &amp; decks.

Owner •
Charles A. Dill
Phone 992-7445

(eU hone 591·9254

Specl811zlng In
roofing, plumbing, ·
drywall,
remodeling,
addltlona &amp; deck•
Free eatlmalea
10 yrs. experience
· In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm
74
7 9

Maintenance-

Local 843·5264

,.,......
•
H OMf: C R EEK
ENTEHPRISES

General

Contractma

Ezcan.tbq( •

ana

Doiler

Bacldloe
Septic Systema
UtWtlea
New Home•

740-992-5232
lAMM'S
CONSTRUOION

Roofing • Home

992-7943

....

.......

.... &amp;.IO.N•M

. . . . . . . .E?R 1111 . . . . . . . . .

IIIDIUII•

thence running weat

Jr., etal

Detendanla
Caee No. GO-CV-151
In puraUIOCI or 10

Order ol Sale In the
above entitled action, I
will offer tor sale at
urthouae,

'.

In

Pomeroy, Ohio, In the
above named County,
an 20th day of
Soptamber, 2001, at
10:00, the fallowing
doacrlbeil real estate,
altuatod In the County
of Melga and State of
Ohio, a·nd In the City
1 11
0 fp
omeroy 0 w :
Legal Deacrlptlan
Exhibit A
Situated In the
Townahlp at Salam,
county of Melge and
Stata ot Ohio:
'Parcel No.
1:
Situated · In the
Townahlp of Salem,
County of Melgo, and
Stela of Ohio :
Baglnnlg at the
northweat camar al a
47-acre lot deedad by
Smith Kenl'a helra to
Qaorga Maloy, In
Section 12, Townohlp
7.- Range 15, o.c.P.,
thance running aouth
on aald 11ctlon line,
16 chalna and 11 llnka
to a ataka: thence net
5 . halna and on lin~
...
toc a atake: vv
thence
north 18 chalna and 10
llnka to a atake;
then ca north 18
chalna and 1111nka to
Shuler'• linea; thence
wool 5 chalna and 59
llnka Ia tha placa of
beginning, con..lnlng
10acnaa,moraorlaaa.
Alao, tha following
parcel of land altuate
In
Section
12,
Townahlp 7, Ranga .15,
o.c.P., and beginning
at the northaaat
corner of a tract of
land dHded by A.L.
. Maloy and wife to
.. Mifflin Harklna; thence
eaet 9 chalna and 54
llnka to the
northweat corner of a
land owned by Dora
W. Spirea, thence
aouth 18 chalna end
1811nka; thence weat9
chalna and 34 llnka;
thence north 18
chalna and 19 llnka to
the
place
of
benlnnlng, containing
•
11acrea.
more or leaa.
Alaa, .the tutlowlng
tract; lltlglnnlng ,at the
aoulheaat carnar of a
2-acra lot daad by
Mifflin Harkins to
Harvey A. Maloy, dated
September 14, 1101,
recorded to Volume
88, Page 115, Melga
County OHd Recorda,
In
Section
18,
• Townahlp 7, Ranga15,
O.C.P.; thence lOUth
to E.C. Ralph'a land;
thence welt 12 chalna
and 60 llnka to a atone
corner; thence north
to the road; thence In
an eaeterly direction

,

with aald Golf'a line,
13 chalna and 16 llnka
to a poet; thence
aouth to the road
leading tram E.C.
Ralph'a
a st

L&amp;L Tire Barn
44087
2121 1 mopd

949·1405
591 -5011

Your Right to Know,
011/o Nr..,.,.,,. Au;UoCUitlult

DBPOYIII
. Pllft

'f K J U

All Makes Tractor &amp;

Equipment Pam

EXP02001

Factory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

1000 St. Rt. ~South
coo1vme, OH .um

740-.0111

SOUUI

•

A 10

Dea ler: Soulh
\luln!lrllble: East-West

t

W,.~ l

Nort ll

rns

l A

PI U

~au

Pau

46

Allpau

mal1h~ re

Varieties
'

September 15th &amp;·16th
f()r lnf()nnatl()n {;()ntad

Uallas Weber

tics;

I I

• Near,ly 2000 years

• Works on Sundays.
• Always Available.

• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740-992·1671

24'120'

For more info'rmiiJIDn, come to our cltun:lt sit•.
·

N-12 DOUBlE WAll
PLASTIC
FIRSTCOML
FIRST SERVED
$200.00 PER JOINT
REIULARLY
$321.00 PER JOINT

Sunday 9.:30- Sunday School;
10:30. Preaching
Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

FAITH IIULL COSPIL CHURCH
ROUTI 11•, LONG BOTTOM, OHIO

KENSINGToN
WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS THE
SUMMERnME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 89.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

,...

NOT ~\ICLlt.m..Y,OIIe:F...

SYSTEMS

in this

1-800-291-5600 • Pomerov, OH
"'E! II HOME EstiiiATEI• "SEIINO IIIEt!EVINO" •~IGI34n
•

$50 per
mont

BUILDERS INC.
New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement
Windows • Room
Addition• • Rooftng
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAl

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

•

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

and
aces. (And
lacking one
there is no

WOLFE HOME
MAINTENANCE

·~

:r. ~
r~,~~~~~J.b~~-----~

I

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio
·

$2,500 (change .out old ayatam) ·
$1,700 (add AIC to gaa furnace)

L....;;;~;;;.,;,;,;;,;,;,;;.....l L--...!.~:!l:!:.z.!i!/..!2!:!l.!:!.~------J

SMITH'S
CO NSTR UCTION
•Now Hamel
• Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garagoa
• Addition•
• Decks
• Home Rapalrl

Free Estimates

740-992-1101
or992-2753
TRI-COUDTY
TRftDSPORT
Umestonel
SeniOR DIIICGIIIIIS
llultlple laed
Discounts

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Addition• &amp;
Romodollng
• NewG1raun

• Eloctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Outloro
• .V!n~i Siding &amp; Pointing
• Patio ond Porch Dlckl
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pom•oy. Oh10
V.ar

I

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complete Llna of Sullivan'• Grooming Suppllea
Sulfur Coaled Urea, bulk only, 1121.00 par ton
10% off oil Prllfert Horae end Uvoatock Equip.
10.10.10 All Purpoaa Fertilizer S.UQ/5011
II' 11,000 Bator l'wlne $19.50/Bolo
Baler 1'wl~21.50111alo
,

TREE SERVICE
Tap· Trim • Removal
Bucllet 1111~~:e

34

35

(poet.)

by

Luis Campos

·

Today's clue: 'M equals Y

z

LZTLZQ

OYIDFOKD

ews

ZG.

LZGRCZHKAIFGE

FG

BWFHW .

ZIKFHAY

( H

BZGKD.'

zI KWA I

..F D .

HSLOSDYI

LSTYIG

'K W Y

s· L

GSUSTM

0 S D Y I )

W S G YE E YI

. ~ ,(-~!G~~=-~~s::-~~w=o:::-10

0

letten

Rearrange

of

...."''

Declarer ruffs, then
attacks trumps. You
must duck until the
third round , when
dummy is playing its
final spade . Then a
fourth heart forces
out declarer 's last
spade . Your fourth
trump is th e setting
trick.

the

lour scrombled words be-

low ro form four simple words.

I1-....,.

N0 TNI E

-.,r--1

--.-.-1---..,2---.-.,
1.
1.
1. 1.
.

;::::::====~:::~~

I1-....,.,...l U N 0 F I
3....,.,--.ll:-~-,,-1

I·

:
.

R H A. N C"'
·;;

.,s.

I

.I I I
1
_

1

"'1

_

Ay SQEU

16

A college s tud ent ca lled home
and aske d , Would you prefer one
f
million dolla rs o r a call rom yow ·
penniles s son? Without hesitatior

I~~~~~. replied , I hope thiS IS-· ·

I () Complete

the ch"'kle · quoted

.
_ _
by filling in t he min1ng words
L..l.-L...I.-.L...I.__;,J you develoo from step No. 3 below

.:'I. PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'11::1'
THE SE SQUARES ·

.:a.
V

UNS CRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWE R

1

I I

fmyf

III

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Exhale - Aglow - Naive - Subdue - BEIGE
"Which color shirt do you like best?" asked my
teenager. "The blue one is my first choice. and th~ white
is my second ," 1answered. "Good," he laughed, " I'll wear
the BEIGE."

.-

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
WE
ll
V

Shade Rlnr At Service, lac
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
I ; I'ax

•

• Flat

Continue with a third

heart.

.

74,.u-949•1521
....

diamond
if he is
of those,
hurry to

~:~;~~ istrt~n~~nt~~;k~

·~

All Home NHdS
Owner:
Charlie WoHe

~'lOT

••

Electrical, Plumbing

30

49 "Do - say"
50 Southeast
Asian
holiday
52 Cler9y·
man &amp;title
53 Put into
practice

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotatiOfls by famous
people, past and present Each lener in the cipher stands for another.

I

"'

&amp; Insured
Paint, Flooring,

atart

6 PurHpart
7 Winced
8 Sot'a word
9 Unlock

':::·==·==·=~-~

I

Free Estimates

28

material

string
European
capital
Calmly
Homeowner's
pride
Nol moving
&lt;2 wds.)

CELEBRITY CIPHER

cash partner's winner.) Also, s urely ~
. - - - - - - - - - - - - , South can play th e
E5PECIALLV: WHEN 'f'OViRE
d
·h
diamon suit w1t out ~
ALLOWED IN THE HOUSE .. los; . The right ap - .

DOCTOR, DO 'lOll FIND THAT
MAKIN6 HOUSE CALLS HAS
BECOME MORE DIFFICliLT?

~~~----------~

ov on a

26 T

-T-HA_;;TO:,;AIL;,;;;Y;;;,;.C.;,;..Irii_-Q_ S'l!i-'1o.--:-

the au c tion, South
_.,....~1 presumably has the

t:IIIIIPitUrllll

40 Relinquish
(rlghtsf
42 - ·red
44 Veil

ll--(--D~~~~~~;ci-l-;:}~~~1
see thrcc___i&gt;UZZLII ·0-~ -1-~'IU-~. t.t.~~~~-P-~.~(/~
~ :·~;G~A~M~I~,-~-tri c ks : the spade , ace
Ealtoa by CLAY~•· POLLAN

PEANUTS

Reelnt,Ohlo

records

book
abbr.
22 Rolates
24 Come

•one Is not bam a woman- one beqom_eso~~."- _ Si'!'~ne
· ' de Bilauvolr

from where is number
four co ming? Given

... 1:. .12:11

814~49·2202

19 Phone-

queen w i th your
where do you

and two hearts. Dut

18-I:.Tttel-frl.

'Org.
38 Small
sailing
vessel
39 Historical

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I owe noth.ing to,Women's li b."• Margaret Thatcher

11

fiii/WIIttar ......

36 Ciean-olr

you capture South's

·

·~,

"HilpiiJt You 10 Rtco"' Y011r lnwrtment"

7:40·992-7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

:' .BIG NATE .

Advertise
n t s space
for $100 per
month

FREE ESTIMATES

Fortune is full of
fresh variety:
Constant in nothing
but inconstancy.
The last three d eals
of the week co ntain a
constant spade situation, but feature an
inconstancy of possibilities.
First, you are sitting
West . What would
you lead against four
spades?
South might jump
straight to game, but
his chosen three-diamond rebid is called a
help-s uit ga me - try .
North, with good
help in diamonds and
a maximum, has an
automatic jump to
game .
With four trumps,
your initial thought
should be to try to tap
declarer -- to make
him ruff in hand. So,
the heart -s ix lead
stands out.
Partner wins with
the ace and returns
the seven, his original

fourth-hiJ~hest. After

space for

BISSELL

Pf'o:)1\'&lt; l'r&lt;\ M.O~Of" DI£-T
....
1
POP WL\0~( MNi&lt;

OUALITY
WINDOW

Advertise

....

composer

2 Sang
wllhout
moving the
Ups
3 Be against
4 Adriatic,
e.g.
s "Cycle"

29 Greek
laland
31 Sixth lanH
(abbr.)
32 Dell broad
33 Unclolmed
mall dept.
34 In abundance
37 Highly
·
eeuoned
dlah

AlDER
Ri chard 13arnfic ld,
who di e d in 1627,
wrote :
Noth1ng more certain than un ce rtain -

1-304-67!-712&lt;1
I-IGO-l50-!1117'7
Residential Commercial New Construdion
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Specialblllll in Shell Melli 'Ductwvrk
"Tnne• Salea It Senlce For
Gallla, MilliOn, ll'ad Meip Counllm
Licensed and IMured •
WV 105176

Mdp Couaty Falrplndl

45 Timetable
obbr.
46 A Bobbuy
1Win
47 Wlldebtoest
48 Conceive
51 Economical
54 Boat, e .g.
55 Markel
again
56 A thing
unto ltsall
10 Cheerful
57 Reluclant
11 Bentson
·and
Bridges
DOWN
12 Male and
I "Peer G~nt"
female

27 Talent
uekera

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used ayatema 388

CLASSIFIEDSI

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ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

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Dance the night away
at Meigs Senior Center.
6:30 • 9:30, Sept. 8th.
Music by George Hall
· $8,00 per person

Jiad

Opening lea.d: ?~

441 Beach St.
Middleport, OH

Delivered Right to Your Door.

...

'

relltlve

13 Madia
mogul
Murdoch
14 Small WIVe
15 M.r
16 Rolrlgerotor
17 Comic
Philip•
18 Limb
20 Hurricane
center
21 Tole of
adventure
23 Edlbleaeed
24 Scoundrels
25 Covered
with

.'

Wul
A A I I 5

3

JERRY ' S
USED
C OMPUT E RS

·Benefit Shoot for
road to the section
Una feel south of the
Chuck Rathburn
soutH at corner of
Sept. 9th, 2001 1:00 pm • ??
the ian
w owned
by H.W.
attrlll;
Rutland American Legion
thence north a II the
Everyone Welcome
aectlon Una I the
place of begin lng,
containing 20 acrea,
moreorl....
save and except the
------coat In and above
Public Notice
Public Notice
deacrlbed property, _..;__ _ _ __
prevloualy conveyed Sal d
Pram loa a aacertalnad, will toke
to Ohio
Power Appraleed at $38,000 notice that on the 16th
Company.
· and cannot be aold for day of May, 2001,
· Sublect to all legal leaathan two•thlrda of LaSalle Natlano~ Bank
••••menta and rlghta that amount.
Truatia under
of racord.
TERMS OF SALE: 11
Pooling and Sllvlclng
SAVE AND
1 O% of appralaed Agreement Dated
EXCEP'T!
· value down, remainder
8/1118Superior
Serlll 1899·2
The
following upantanderoldled.
Bank,
deocrlbed real aatata,
Laurance e . Landon c/o
FSB
flied
Ita
In Malga County, Ohio, &lt;100346158)
Complaint
In
the
In Salam townahlp; Attorney lor Plalntlfl
Pl111 Court
Beginning at the 175 s. Third Stroot, Common
of M.lga County, Ohio
Soulhaaat corner of Suite 1100
In Caee No. 01 -CV-41 82•
W.o. Qoll'a land In Columbua, Ohlo43211 on
the docket of the
Soctlon 11, Tawnahlp &lt;81&lt;1) 221-7272, lxt.
Court,
and tho obloct
7, Range 15, O.c.P.; ·210
and
damand
lor rallet
thence runnln~ weal (I) 1, 11, 23, 30, (I) I
of which pleading Ia to
with aald Golf 1 Una, · - - - - - - - torecloll tho li•n 01
13 chaine and " llnka
plalntllf'a mortgage
Public Notice
10 a poat·, thence
recorded upon the
Iouth to the road
leading · from E.C . COURT OF COMMON following daacrlbed
realeal818to wH:
Ralph'a paat W. K.
PLEAS
Property Addreaa:
Leonard'e;
thence MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Walnut Street,
Eutarly along eald . LaSsila National Bank 211
Middleport,' OH 45710
road to the aactlon
a Truatee under
being more
Una 5 feet South of tho Pooling and Servicing and
particularly
deocrlbad
Southwaat cornar of
Agraement o.t.d
In
plolntllf'l
mortgage
tho land now ownad 111 TIIIariaa11tt-2
recorded
In
Mortgage
by K. W. Cottrill;
c/o Superior lank,
eook 87, page 511, ot
t,hence North along
I'SB
lhla
, county
the Sacllon line to the
Plaintiff,
Recordlr'e Otllce.
placa of beginning,
va
All of the above
containing 20 acrea, Patrlcl8 Blankanahlp, n•med
dellnelanta are
more or laaa. Save
al
81
required to 1nawer
and except the coal In
Defendant•
within twenty-eight
and under the above caee No. 01-cv-o12 (26)
daya after laat
daacrlbad property, Judge: Fred w. Crow
publication,
which
prevloualy conveyed NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
ahell
be
publlahad
to Ohio
Power
FORECLOSURE OF once a week tor alx
Company.
MORTGAGE
canaecutlve w"ka, or
Subloct to all legal
Patricia
might ba denlad a
eaaemanta and rlghta Blankanahlp, whoae they
..
rlng
In thla caee.
h
of way of record.
Ia at known adf;lraaa Ia
Patricia
K. Block
Being. the lome real 298 Walnut Street,
Lerner,
S.mpaon
&amp;
eatate described In Middleport, OH &lt;15760,
Rothfuu
deed of record In and the unknown Attarneya tor Plaintiff
Volume 255, Page 627, he ira,
devlaaea,
P.O. Box 5460
Melga County Dead lagateea, axacutora, Clnclnnetl,
OH 45201·
Recorda.
·
edmlnlatratora,
5480
Being the aame real
and aaalgna
1
,513) 241·3100
apouaethe
aatate 11 daacrlbed aa and
unknown ,9) 6, 13, 20, 27, &lt;10) 4,
Parcel No. 2 of record guard lana of minor 11
In Volume 267, Page and/or Incompetent
758, Daad Recorda of heir a of Patricia
Malga County, Ohio.
Blenkenahlp, all at
Buy, Sell or Trade
Current
deed whoae realdencea ere
recorded on 08110n7 unknown and cal!not
In the
In Volume 267, Page by
reeaonable
759.
d Ill g an c e
be
Property commonly
known aa : 28775
Sanford Davia Road,
Langavllle, Ohio
45741 .
Parcel Number: 13·
00458.000.
.
Said' Premlua
Located at 29775
Sanford Davie Road,
Langsville, OH 45741.
•

Free Esllmlttl

Cellular

•
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance ;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pen sion &amp; 401K Rollovers ;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

• Garages

and

along .. td road to tho
piece of beginning,
containing 19 acres,

Sheriff's Sole of Real
Eatate
The State ol Ohio,
mora
or
leal,
Meigs County
·containing l.n all 46
Blink One, National
acres,more or leaa.
Aaooclatlon fka The
Parcel No. 2: The
Firat National Bank ol
following described .
Chicago, as Trustee,
real estate, In Meigs
by Residential
Funding Corporation, County, Ohio, In
Salem
Township;
Ita Attomey In Fact,
Beginning
at the
c/o Homecomings
southeast corner of
Financial Network
W.O. Goll'o land In
Plaintiff,
Section 18, Townahlp
VI
Buddy Wayne Eggers, 7, Range 15, O.C.P.;

Spout

avee.

1 Acro11

• NewHomea

•

Public Notices Jn Newsp .. pers.

NOTICES .

Gutters- Down

VI

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

3-D

. . . . .111111

Rocky A. Hupp . Agent
Bo• 189
Middleport. Ohio 45760

It ILl

and Drives • Stendl
C rett Free Esdmor.u
Servin&amp; Ohio ODd W.V.
WV!I031]12

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atart
7 See
43 CIOH

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

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II
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lc.t vc all emo tton n ut of the
tasks you need to .KC&lt;Jtnp!Js!J.
R L·g:ndlcs.~ of how dt~l.ts tcful
they may be or cve tt tf you' re
not in thL· mood, gl't cr:tck111

I

•

•'·

Friday, Sept. 7, 200 1
. ill the yc:~r ahl·;1d yo u 111 1ght
find }'Ollrsdf movin~ in m o re
promin en t social ri~clcs t h :~n

I

!
!'

thosc to wh1ch yo u rc i\ccus-

I

tom cd . A numbc r of th c~c
cu ut;~cts cou ld 'PfOVl.' to be

I .

val ua ble .

r

I

I

•
I
I

'

I

••

''
'

''·
....
...

..•......f.
.....
"
i

ncwsparcr. P.O. Box . l h7,
.Wicklifl'c , OH 4~092-0 1 67.

lndlanul

•

••'
••

.

VIRGO (Allg. 23-Sept. 22)
~- Frt.•c ti m e is too , prl.'ciou s
for you to ~ qu andcr today.
Yo u do n ' t have to spe nd it
wit h th ose who are n't you r
favori te peoplt-; find an cxc uk
and join up wi th t ho~l' you
like. Gl·t a jump on life by
lmdcr.~t;:md ing the influen ces
tha t'll go vern you 111 the year
ahc~d. Send for yo ur A5troGraph predictions by mailing
$2 to Astro-Grilph. t/o tim

I •

. !j · ~~i!J~~~~;u

~ e sure to :sta te ,yo ur Zodiac

s1gn.
LIURA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) •

- Hopes and cxpcc tiltJOm ;uc
achievabll' today, so fo ng as
you go after your aspi rations

in a prac~ic• l fa~hion . It's OK
ro be a bit of a dreamer, but
be a pn.gmiltic one.
SCORPIO (Oc1. 24-Nov .
22) -- Yvlt re in 1. good cycle
whcr(' vour relationships arc

ro11ccrncd. but the one

thin ~ ·

that could usurp ·this i ~ if you
slwuld get too 1' 1"-or(cntcd.
Think in tcm1s of"wc."
SAGITTA11.1US (Nov . 2.1-·
Dec. :! I) -- A ~5oc i atcs usually
have no doubt as to w h~·n:
you st;wd on issm:s, bm today

w~u 'II IH"L'd to t:1ke cue not to

Pltt them down 111 the proress
of being candid. lie t;Jctful
about wh:n you say .
C AI' K ICORN (Dec . 22j:Hi. l IJ) -- There'! a possibility you L·ould recoup :.n old
ob li gati on roday if you ap.
preac h th e debtor in a way
where he or .du.• ~cts .the mcs- '
sage withuut. re~cntmcnt or
em ba rra ssme11t.
AQUARIUS ()'" · 20-fcb .
19) -- De careful nQt to side
with an o uuidcr today ove r
t:1mily. I t'~ tine to be to\ cr~ nt
of others' upini om, bltt not at

the expense of those who love
you .

PISCES (Feb. 20-Mmh 20)

-- This mig ht be :t good dny
to by dow n yo m tool~ L'arly
and get a j ump start on tht.!
Wl'ckend, but m akl' Htre your
rc ~ponsibilitic.~ arc taken CHL'
of fi~t.
A KJES (Marr lr 2 1- April I'!)
-- lf ymt'rc smart tmlay, you'll

"

on them .
TAURUS (Aprrl 211- May
20) ~ A dtsin!--:enuott ~ :~cqu.tin­
tancc who nm~idcr~ ynu ·.111
c :~ sy nurk could be 111 for :~
rude .1wa kenin~ lmby shmdd
shL· or hL· au c mpt tn urldc r-

minc )'&lt;JUr fncnJ~h ip~ \Vtrh
other; .
GEM INI (M;1y 21-Junc 20)
- E\'cn thoue;h

Will

m.w gl·t

:1

ch'a ncc tud.t~ t~ makl· ~ ~mL'­
st~.led al!rc~·m t·nt f:.vur111g
yo urs('](, to your frl't ltr y~Ht'l)
take p.1ins ro do t l11 11g ~ t.urly
that'll benefit both p.u w:,.

C AN CE R (lpnc 2 t -J ulv
22) - Althout.:h t: ondillllll ~ do
nut tJv or yoll bl'iu~ cxtr:.va ·
Kant with \'our rc~ourc c~ today. thL·y 'arL' on your si de
moneyw 1~c wh en 1l CO llJC\ to
dealm~ .md ncgott:lttum yo u

havC wtth ,t]w~.
LEO Uuly 23-Au~. 22) ••

Keep cvcllo't!mtg- above-hoard
and unselfi~h whl'll ~h·:thn~

wt th

other~

:md you'll

t:ll~ily

&lt;Khlcve yon :tims tod:~y . People wil l :~dmire ·your h:mdhng
of i:~H1c s a1 d want tc) l·ooprrarc with )'(lll .

�Page B 6 • The Daily Sentinel

SPORIS: WVU fears O~·io option, Bl

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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

Meigs County's

Friday

Hometown Newspaper

'

50 cents • September 7, 2001 • Vol. 52, No. 16

OnIV

Family

All Times Eatern
• C.r artsman Truck , Kroe;8r 200
a p.m . · Thursday • ESPN2

Restaurant
I

•

Busch Sarles, Autollte Fram 260
8 p .m. · Friqay • TN T
·!I Wln•ton Cup, Chevy Monte Carlo 400

Featuring
Kentucky
Fried Chicken

7:30 p.m. · Satu rday · TNT

•

228 Main St.

··

2001 POINTS STilNDINGS

WINITON C...

Pomeroy, Ohio
Drlve-Thru Window

992-5432

•· ····--

UOCH

1 . Jeff Go•dc.J. 3 . 706
2. Rrcky Rudd , 3.366
3. S\erlms Mi!•lrn 3,230

Hcv..-. Ha•viCk, 3,8&lt;19

Jue Rullman. 2.T45

J11wo Keller, 3,533

Scolt lliii!S , 2 ,7 3:2

WINSTON CUP
What: Ct'1evro1et MCinte
Ca r~ o

400

Where: Richmond [Va .)
Intern ational Raceway (. 75mi le track ). 400 laps/300
miles
· Where : Green flag drops at
8 p.m .. Saturdav
DefendlnC cl'lamplon : Jeff
GO! don
Qualifying record: Jeff
Gordon. Chevrolet. 126.499
mph, May 15 , 1999

9 . ~o~ev•n Harv• ck, 3,055
10. Jollnrt,o Benson, 2,964

Jac~ SP1agu'h. :J .125
3.452
Trav1s Kvapil . 2 ,641
Elton Sawyer, 3,1::: 7
R1cky Hend,.Ck, 2.615
Mllo.e McLaughlin, 3,084Ted M lls gra~e. 2.593

Oldd Lltue, 2,931 '
Kenn~ ~ Hace.

.

•

TOP TEN

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

~way

...
good enough
to catch Gordon
3. (5) Ton.- Stewart
Miraculously avoided crash
to ftnlah fourth
4. (6) Sterlln&amp; Marlin Now third In points
5. (3) Kevin Harvlck

Sllp-slldlnc

Seventh Isn't

Eighth Isn't bad for

a rookie

at Darlington
6. ( 4) Dale Jarrett
Yet another hard-luck race
7. (7) Bobby Labonte Fine third-place finish
8 . (8) D. Earnhardt Jr. Left a few others In his wake
9. (-t Ward Burton· Gave' Oodgeltl ~econd . vlctory
10. (9~ Rusty Wallace Has never won at Darlington

FROM LAST WEEK

but the Buscn Grand
National race at Darlington
DARLINGTON. S.C. - After
Raceway will tie
the 52nd Southern 500 had
remembered more for a
been comple ted, driver Ward series of unfortunate, wack)!
Burton and owner Bill Davis
and macabre Incidents that ·
almost defy belief.
arrived In the press bolt
waxing poetic about the
For instance, on the 20th
glories of grand old
lap, Winston Cup regular
Da rlington Hacewa~ .
Steve Par~ was knocked out
If love and re spect for
or the race m a crash that
Darl ington had anyth tng
occurred under caution.
substantial to do with wh o
And after the race was
wins th e -Southern 500. " ---co" •';:;e:;r,7.roSokie Scott Wimmer
Button wou iCI win It every
created another scene whe n
year.
he ·cras hed into the Ford of
Burton does not win it
Greg Biffle. which was not
every year - Sunday's
even the car he apparently
was aiming at. Wi mmer.
victory in NASCAR's oldest
angry at Jeff Green for a
superspeedway event was
hi s f1 rst - but he has won
late-race incie!e nt , drove too
two of the la st four races
hard onto the apron in a
contested here. His first
damaged car, which
Darlington victory was the
ca reened violently Into
Mall.com 400, hele! on
Biffle's car and destroyed it.
March 19, 2000 .
" Mr. Darby (Busch Series
director John) and Mr.
Tr iplett (NASCAR operations
BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
'director Kevin) were not ver y
DARLINGTON , S.C.- Jeff
happy wi th me.~ Wimmer
Burton held o ff Elton Sawyer
sa1d . "Nei ther were Mr.
in a battl e ot Ford drivers
Biffle and Mr. Roush (owner
that ended the Sou th
Ja ck) ."
carolina 200 on Saturday,
WINSTON CUP

•

FEUD OFTHE WEEK

••••••••••••
Dc~r

By his own admission ,
the transition from racing
winged sprint cars on dirt
to heavy stock ca rs on ·
asphalt has been difficult
for Dave Blaney, but
Blaney has made steady
progress in his NASCAR
career.
Although he comp~ted in
' a single Win ston Cup race
seve n years earlier. Bla ney
was 36 years old when he
became a regular on
NASCAR's premier circu it.
As a racer in general,
howe-Jer. Blaney Is hardly
inell perienced . When he
won the USAC Sii"Jer
Crown championship in
1984 , he was, at the time,
the series' youngest
champion. In a,..single
season, 1997, Blaney won
the prestigious Knmcvllle
(Iowa) Nationals, Eldora
(Ohio) aM Gale! Cup
sprint-car races . He was
the World of Outlaws
champion in 1995.

It '.1' ptl illlat-sli t:N id:•u
lim!' lm.•· 11m n·r urril'('l/.

Hometown: Born i n
plonehlp 111·1-. ·
Sharon, Pa ., grew up in
Hartford, Ohio
in NASCAR after 15 years
Crew chief: Doug
. in spri nt cars, I'm finally
Rar 'olph
·
gettln&amp; comfortab le in
Car: No. 93 Amoco
knowing what stock cars
Dodge Intrepid. owned by
need to go faster every
week.~
Bill and Gait Davis
CBJHr t tttlstlct: 64
When you were youn1er,
·starts, 0 wins, 0 top.5
did you ever think you
fi ni shes, 6 top-10
would race atock cart
finishes , 0 poles, almost
full time? • for me - having
$3 million In ea rniniS
grown up in open-wheel
Flrata: Sta rt (Oct. 25,
cou ntry in Ohio- the
1992 , at Rockingham.
pOssibility always seemed
N.C.), pole (none), win
more likely that, as I had
(none )
more success In the USAC
Oeacrlbe the procr•••
and WOrld of Outlaws
·of th•~ team . · we're j ust
sprint-ca r r8nks. racing jn
beginning to shOw signs
the Indianapolis 500 would
as a tea m that we can run be a more ttkely caree r
at th e front every week
destination than ending up
with the new Dodge
where I am: racing al
Intrepi d. After starting late Daytona, Ch3rlotte,

Talladega aM Indianapolis
In stock cars. Before Bill
Davis gave me the chance
to make th e mDit'e to
NASCAR in 1998, most of
the rac ing I h ad done was
on di rt , altho ugh I had
driven a half-dozen ARCA
series races and some
USAC Silver Crown Series
eve nts th roughout the

• HOT: Jeff Gordon has
finished eighth or bener
In the last seven races .

Fan Tips

1980s.'
Do .-ou feel at home now
In the 1tock c•,.?
" Because the tim.e I've
spen t In NASCAR has been
r~lattve l y short co mpared
to a lot of the euys we race
around e~~ery week, I seem
to still be learning abOut
these cars al a pretty
con siste nt pace.·

• NOT: Dale Jarrett
continues to bleed
points .

an ~o uoa ~tJe~ "£
·t; L.S6't u1Jii)Jea 'lj:Jna -~

l&lt;~IOJ I\94 ::&gt;

SHiMSNY

l:

.... Q

8.
'C ~
0. a: .!.'l

::::&gt;a;o

~.::!:.9-

."'
••

a:

=
ca
CJ

• fWd Lorenzen ~- oniJ
the biC IICII durin&amp; htl
spectecular career.
.._nMarchaa.
1964, and May 9, 1984,
Lorenzen wvn ..,.,., race
he entered. Hit atraak

began with vlctorlt• In
AtiM'Itl and Bristol,
TtAII., then another
NAICAA: race at North

WHkooboro, N.C.
Lorennn then switched
to the old USAC drcult to
outduel PllrHIM Jones In
a road race If:

lndlanepoUa Raceway
Park . The final victory In
his str.tk wa• the Rebel
300 at Darllntton, S.C.

•

AROUND THE GARAGE

· :-: CREWOfliiWIB

Expect rules to change for Talladega restrlctor·plate race
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

fihJcttl'l."'-' spnilcr and a 2'-J/32 (inch)
n:~trie tor plute ," said Ray Evcmhnm. who own s the Dc.'ll..ige~ dri\·en
DAR LINGTON. S.C.- ·nx•pre- by B1 1l Ellion and Ca"':y Atwood .
vail ing \ ' io.:\\ , ha~l on NASCAR", '111cn we 11\liVcJto a 718-irKh plate
acrodymm1k 1NinJ: Ia!&gt;! \leek at and rMl rnofspoiler.Ormuyllcitwus
Talladt'g;J, 1\ thai Wiu•lnu Cup em• the rlll~r wHy 111\JUnd . Ar1ywuy. '-'"l"
will go mln tht: llCXl mce 111 Tallatlc- tried 1111r..e l'Oinbi nutlon!&gt; mkllnoked
!/-11 lml.;iug a lut like Bu~it Gmnd lll how the y 11fti."\."led th1.: cur ~IIlli-.:
Nmionult'tlr:..
'
NASCAR &lt; •ffidai~ U!&gt;t.-d 20-lup
und 1.'\-htp 14')\itm~. allnwin10 the
dri \·o..-r..tn tlb)&gt;l'l'\' ~' the v ariou~ ucn._
Jynamlt:·plalc conlhilto1t inn' 11t n11.:eIike sillllllitlllS. NattlrJIIy. tho..•nllidu l
lir'll: j, thai rw del·i ~inn~ huvc h.-en

malk
"We ~tark... l in tlx· mnminp u. ith a

'

''I kind of liked this,' " Marlin "&lt;lid. BoUine.1ltc: Nu. 29 !Cam fXtllidP&lt;JI " We 've run good here in the pa.~t. cd with OJvc Marcisas drivcr.
We ju:o.t would like to gel it to when:
"We r.:ou iUn 't haw !eumo..-d the
we c;m get out from umlcr every - lhinJ;S we did in a ~ inglc-car lc~ t or
body
in the wind tunnel or Uyno-tyjA!
"Nnw we mu.~ l be prcc 1~ with lo.!.•K" ~aid Win_
-.ton Cup Series
()'.lr•p;L,~ iug. . It's nuta~ ca.\y In p;l'~ :t' din."ttor G:JI'\• f'iclsoo . "We nt.'Ctled ll
it Wit.\, I I hit ~ mad; illnnlt.' dillicult to p;~~.:k nt·cars.ttl help us CIOiain all that
lhL' ~· hut }'II'J h;,ve thlll r.:nmml."
we did.
tmck .... Spt."e(bii'CI\'Ul thc I'AJmph
Dri\'Cr., par11npu1ing in the li!• l
''llle itk:lr wu~ to make the cum:nt
mngc in Chc puch."
were: RustyWuii:K.'I!. Kevin lqxlgc . tiCru· puck~,ge more etlicient and to
Arter \!U\' h .-.c~'inn. N,\ SCAR Bill Ellit.'!lt .J,•hruw Bcn)o!lll . Mic had tkJ "''· w~· changl-d the plate ,jzc.
otlida l ~. tcnm nK"mhcn. m1d di-ivcn. Wuluip, Tt)llYStc.:V&lt;ut , I:: Ilion S.K.IIcr. rcnr spnilcr an~lc and removed the
gmhcn.:J fnr 1111 infurmai wlli I'Ill n._,w W:111.l8u11CJ11 .Jcny N;K.b lu .Jimmy ~i 1· Ucncctor on the roof. At one
o..'O~eh ICit tb: lk: r~ll'plalc comhiuauon~· SpciK'Cr. Rkky
RLKid. JOt." pui nt. we even had the!- team~ usc' a .
worked . Fm \1111\e , liko: Sterling Nr.:lllL"t;ld . Ken S...·hr:klcr. StcrlinJ! o;.'tJmbin:~tion that wa~ •imilur to the
M
• ar Im. lh c cnmh'
_u;:tllflfl t' h1H\J!(!l, Murlin. John Andrctli . Btk.'hh:ll acn•·p&lt;tdagl" the NASCAR l)u..ch
vmrkcJ \\-ell.
J on..-~. Btlbby Hamilton and Todd &amp;•ric~ L'UIT\:1\[f y UM.'i•."

• No Dod&amp;• had won at •
Oarllnaton Raceway In
more than 30 yeara

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Classjfjeds
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'IOday's

2 Sedlons - 12 Pllps

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ate future.
Bob and Lucille Rhod es,
alo?g . with Kuscma, pose
with the Golden Tornado
plaque that will hang at the
schooL The plaque displays
the r names of Southern
alumni and others who have
donated $100 toward the
purchase of the new. playground equipment.
Anyone is interested in
becoming a Golden· Tornado, can contact Sam Hawley
at 992-7483 or Wendy Hill
at 949-2206.

BY TONY M. I.EAcit
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - Solutions
on how to stop motoris~
from speeding throu gh the
Pomeroy Parking Lot were
examined during Thursday's
Village Co uncil meeting. '
Councilman Bryan Shank,
speaki ng on behalf of the
safety co mmittee, repo rted
to council its' solutions on
how to stop vehicles from
accelerating through the
parking lot to bypass stop
light' on Main Street.
,
The topic was brought up
at council's last meeting and
the safety committee . was
assigned to investigate the

Tony Wlch Photos

Ridenour
Supply

Raceway.

Call The Daily Sentinel for details
Dave Harris or Debbie Call

tudents at Southern
Elementary
took a break from
classes Wednesday
- - .. afternoon to frqlic
on the school's colorful new
playgrou~d equipment, purchased with donations from
Meigs County residents and
businesses.
Principal
Michaela
Kuscma said the addition of
another playground is being
discussed and more pie ces of
equipment are .expec ted to
be purchased in the immedi-

See us for Your Stlhl"
Power Tools &amp;
Accessories

Chester

office in Marietta;

K.okosing's bid was $1.5
million below ODOT's official · estimate for the constru ction, coming in at S13.9
million. Seven other firms,
including the second-lowest
bidder, Elmo Greer &amp; Sons,
London , Ohio, also' bid on
the project.
.
The · third phase is the
"middle" phase of the project, connecting the first and
second segments, from
Morning Star Road ·to Port-

Please -

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parking lot
speeding solution

TIME To FROLIC

MIIHJ:.
-.........

St. At 248

•
Collins, deputy director of
the Ohio Department of
Transportation's District 10

(;i-1-ta-Ekle$

'&lt;

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until Tommr l-'dwln
and 1'111 "'Cat Crew "
helped W•rd Burton win
the Southern 500.
AI Burton uld ·
afterw•rd, • driv•r
Clnnot come from 37th
poattlon on the at•tlnc
&amp;rid without help from
l'lla crew, and Btldwln
tnd r;omptny were
•uperlatlve.
1
. The v~tory WBI
Burton'&amp; third of hll
Wlnaton Cup care., •nd
IICOnd at D•rllnaton

"'tt

CD

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(615) 832-1171 .

••••••••••

POMEROY - Kokosing
Construction Co., Coh.pllbus; ha; been aw~rded the
bid for the third and final
phase of the Ravenswood
Connector highway project.
Bids on the five-mile co nstr uc tion
project
were
opened in Columbus on
Wednesday, said George

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CD,i

• rom Gillispie has put
together a book that will be
meani ngful to fans of the
late Dale Earnhardt. titled "I
Remember Dale Earnhardt:
Personal Memories and
Testi monials to Stock CarRacing 's Mo st Beloved Dr iver,
As Told by the Peo ple Who
Knew Him Best." The
hardcove~ book se lls fo r
$18.95 and Is published by
Cumberlan d House
Publi shing of Nashville, Tenn.
Typical of the re mi niscences 1S a quote from
driver Bobby Hamilton : • J've
been mad at Earnhardt so
many tim es because of the
things he 's Clone to me and
other competitors . But the
one thing ! always loved
about him was that he was
the only true racer that I've
ever known . He was there to
race. It didn't maKe all)'
difference what the
circumstances were."
The book is now in stores,
or il may be ordered by
ca llmg Cumber land House at

1 . Before Dale Earnhardt in 1990. who
was the last driver to win the Winston Cup (th en
Grand National) title in a black car?
2 . What make of cer did Ned Jarrett drive to .the
championship In 1961?
3 . WhO won the first race i n a Matador?

way.~

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&lt;

ln,Li~;;~,,d 1;;',j"c"j,;· ll iirdl---'l ~0~·~:::_

•••••••••••

••••••••••••
Who's Hot ...
Who's Not

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Sr. every time: she
, pid:ed op 11 book or puper. Put the ·
bou k or paper down because it's
going 10 he there. And it \ th.:rt for 11
goOO reu ~on : He was NA.SCA'k'li
grrate&gt;t driver ever, and this i5 the
w~v we fan s tlDnor nnd motrrn his
lc11~lng uS ~o soon. The lo.&gt;s of 111!
these NASCAR dri vr:r. is rwi nftil

Stacy Compton vs. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Com pton was high ly critica l of Junior following a
Southern 500 crash. "There 's 42 cars out the're yo u can
race with and one you can't ." Compton said. "That's the
th ird time the (No.) 8 car hit me today. He finally
accomplished what he was trying to do and took me
out. It's the best car I've had all year.· Responded
Earnhardt : "I felt like Stacy got up underneath in the
corner.... I don 't feel like 1 was at fault there ."
N4SCAR Thla Week 's Monte Dutton &amp;lVII hll
opinion: · Junior Earnhardt (that's what he said recently
he prefers to be ca lled I is an aggressive young Clrlver.
Hi s fans probably wou ldn't want him to be any other

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~ ' llnJI'

D~lc E~rnha rd t

and they wi ll he

Award of third
phase completes
bidding process

·I

I have ncve1 re spondctlto Dny-

PUBUC . MEETlNG - About 200 people filled the Meigs · High
School cafeteria last night to express their opinions about the Meigs
County Board of Health's proposed ban on public smoking. The
board will vote on the proposal next week. (Brian J. Reed photo)

Kokosin has
lowbid or·
stage ~ project

...

. Lhing heforr until now. 'and I wo11ld
like to respond :o (the pr"rson) ""'ho
, !&lt;tHted .•he ,..·as ~ick of hearing 11blM

Children: Emma 1101.
- . .......,._,...,._,.,_~Ryan-~ 7-), Erin-(3}.-------~...;•~~ He w._a. Weltd fill OUtiMn P-ild ~ ~

see Opinions, A3

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Dcur NASCAR This Week.

.1011n Clork/NASOOI ms Wee~~

Please

3

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Ase: 38
Wife : Usa

cion.
Only three members of the board were
present last night: Jim Clifford, JoAnn
Crisp and Ann Haning.
In addition to providing a forum for
those on both sides of th e issue, last night's
meeting also served as a final public hearing on the measure. The board of health
conducted a first hearing on the proposal
in July, and aq:ording to the department's
tobacco prevention coordinator, Tracey

t:

NASCAR Th i ~ Week ,

1 rc:ttl a re~dcr\ itle:t ~billl l having
the driv.:n; lllllkt ull ri_~lltturn &gt; und g.ll
the nppo~ile d1n:ction for one rJL)!. So
l !hOUIJhl I ll'lltlkl ~hure nl )' i:.lc~ .
EV('I\ thuugh o~ le Jurn:u i~ n ' l my
fa1·orite drive r, lrh ink th~ l'Ummcrciab atx111t him tllclnj! the u ..s truck
un: ~mus ifig . So why not make h1m? I
think it wnuld he fun fl'lf NASCAR ro
h11ve wmr kind of uhibirion rtlte or
~J mtthing wtltre the driver~ drhe
ttleir ~ pu nsor 's trud\: Jurrc lt can
dri1-c the UI'S trudc ldf Gordon can
drl\e n Pcp• i truck . Bubby L:nbunte
crm d ri\~ un \nttr!illlle Bane ric~ uuck ,
etc. 't think il would be good for t~
•punwrs und lots or fun for the dn\'•
crs ~nd fnl'!s. The onl r rhing I'm not
~un: ubout is Wan! Burttm. Wuui!J he
have to drive u CAT".'
r\mundu Cruh
Chf!l lrr, lll.

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Thi s Week

Torres.
The Meigs County Board of Health
will, on Sept. 12, determine the fate of a
proposal which would criminalize smoking in all enclosed public spaces and outside within 20 feet of an entrance to a
public building. The ban would outlaw
smoking in restaurants, bars, retail stores,
and other privately-owned businesses, as
well as public buildings. It also establishes
fines of up to $500 for those who violate
the ban, and charges local deputies and
police officers with enforcing the restric-

r

Your
Turn
Lllltn Front O.r Reader,

Winston Cup Sertes

• .,

• NASCAR This -Week writer Mo.nte Dull on ra~ks the
top 10 drillers heading into this weekend's race . Las t
week's rank1ng IS In parentheses .

.

Dave .Blaney

RICk CrEJWtor\J. ,; ,:;s 1

Coy G1bbs } l76

2.B1B

UP ON THE CIRCUIT

International Raceway (.75 Marlin's record .
mlle track) , 250 laps/ 187 .5
CRAnSMAN TRUCk
miles
1997
Notable: Tony Stewart won
When : 8 p:m., Friday
Wh•t: Kroger 200
at R1chmond earlier this year.
Defendln&amp; champion: Jeff'
Where·: Richmond (Va.)
i n the Pontiac Excitement
Burton
' Internationa l Raceway (.75·
400, and this track was also
Qualltylnl recotd: Matt
mite track ), 200 laps/ 150
tt'le site of the first of
Kenseth, C'hevrolet , 125. 780 miles
·
Stewa rt 's 12 career victories . .mPh. May 4. 2001
When: B p.m ., Thursday
... Rusty Wallace Is the active
Race r•cord : Kenny
Quallfylj,l record: Ron
leader In victo rie s with six.
wallace, Fore!. 104.928 mph, Hornaday, Chevrolet.
Sept. 8, 1995
121. '!26 mph, Sept . 4, 1997
BUSCH GRAND NATIONAL
Notable: Kenny Wa!lace
R•c• record: Bob
has won fo ur times at this
What: Autolite Fram 250
Keselowskl, Dodge, 104 .167
track, one less than Mprrk
Wher~ : Rictlmond (Va.t
mph , Sept. 4. 1997

Greg BrHte. 3,471

8. Botloy Lat:Jome, ~- 11 r
7. D. [arnna rd\ Jr . 3.079 TOrl'f Rames. 3,0 59
leu)' Cook, :2.584
I . Husty wallace . 3,060 J1mmle Johnson. 3,!J27 Denms Setze1, 2, 446

POMEROY -Those on the side of a
proposed smoking ban, who feel that second-hand smoke is a danger, and opponents who maintain that the proposed
legislation is a violation of their rights,
presented their positions on the proposed
ban at a public meeting at Meigs High
School on Thursday evening.
About 200 people attended the meeting, which was conducted by Meigs
County Health Commissioner Norma

Race record: Da le Jarrett.
Ford, 109.047 mph, Sept 6 ,

Jl"lf Gr~~&amp;o ,

" · Dale Janett. 3.2 15
5. Tony Stewart, 3.2 10

•

~OM lNG

www.mydailysentinel.com

Public airs ban concems
BY BRIAN J. REm
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Crow's

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

Weather

L-:IOS

Lotteries

A5
OHIO ·
82·4 Pick): o-1-o; Pick 4: 3-9-4-o
85 Bnme,.e 5: 13-15-1&amp;27·35
M
A3 W.VA.

81.3.6 Deily 3: 9-1-Q Dlllily 4: 3-6-1·7
A2 e 200t Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

problem and ide ntify possible sol utions.
Shank presented a drawing
of the parking lot to council
memb ers and suggested that
the upp er and lower
entrances be changed to
exits only and that several
parking spaces be realigned
to accommodate the onedimensional Oow of traffic.
"The new configu ration
would eliminate motorists
from speedin g through the
entrances and . hopefully
make th e . area safer for
pedestrians," said Shank.
After deliberating on the
cmruruttee's fi ndings, council

Please sti Coundl. AJ

·court orders end ,to decade-old lawsuit
COLUMBUS (AP) - The state
worked to estimate the exact cost of the
Ohio Supreme Court's decision to end a
decade-old c..,o urt fight over school funding.
· •'
The court's 4-3 decision on Th,ursday,
whi ch did not specify a complete dollar
amount, said additional spending would
meet the constitutional test created in the
court's two previous school-fund)ng

opmmns.
The coalition of schools th at brought
the laws~it in 199 1 estimated the court
wants lawmakers to spend $1.2 billion
over the next two years.
Senate Republicans, frustrated with the
court's ruling, estimated it could cost
O hi o almost twi ce as much and said the
state doesn't have the money.
ChiefJusti ce T homas Moyer on Thurs-

day night said justices believed ihe cost
would be $300 million to $400 million
annually.
The co ur t ordered the state to recalculate how it determines the amount each
school district receives to pay for the
basic education of .a stud ent. The court
also ordered the state to speed up funding
meant to close the gap between poor and

Please see Lawsuit. A3

Support Group
The Holzer Medical Center Diabetes Sypport Group will meet
Sunday, Septem~r 9 from 2:00 ~ 4:00 pm
MEDICAL CENTER
in the Hospital's French 500 Room.
This month's topic: ''Traveling Tips"
Discover the Holzer Difference
All are welcome!
www.holzer.org
For more information, call

:a:

(740) 440·5080

- -·-

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