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Page ~10 ~

The Daily Sentinel

Fi.Y YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORT YOUR COUNTRY!

Monday. September 14, ·1001 ~

AROUND THE DIAMOND

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Homers rule - Bonds
and Sosa boost totals

New York

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Montreal

Home runs ruled the NL chases and races.
Darry Bonds connected twice, boosting . his total to 66.
Sammy Sosa became the first major leaguer With a trw of three1 •
horner games in a season.
.
. _
Brian Jordan hit a tying shot in the mnth mnmg and a wmning one in the II th, lifting NL East-leadmg Atlanta. Philadelphia also got two late drives and stayed close to the Braves.
"-It was a home run or nothing," Jordan said after the Braves
beat the New York Mets 5-4 Sunday. "I wanted to do somethmg
.
to wake this team up."
Jordan's two-out, two- run homer started a three-~un rally m _
the ninth. His homer in the II th stopped the Mets five-game
winning streak and helped Atlanta maintain its half-game lead
over the Phillies.
On Sunday morning, Jordan and a few other Braves were
given a tour by police of the site of the World Trade Center collapse.Jordan wore a Port Authority cap for the first two mnmgs.
"It was an emotional day for me," he said. "I was glad I got
the chance to go down there and meet the cops and firemen.
That's reality. Baseball's not reality in the same way. And I was
really impressed by what these people are doing."
Bonds moved closer to Mark McGwire's record of70 homers
in 1998, leading San Francisco over San Diego 11-2.
Bonds' 66 homers tied Sosa's 1998 total for the second-most
in a season. The Giants have 12 games for Bonds to aim at
McGwire.
Sosa boosted his total to 58 home runs, connecting three
times in the first six innings at Enron Field. But the Chicago
-Cubs lost when Moises Alou hit a two- run homer in the seventh inning that gave the NL Central-leading Houston a victory.
Sosa hii a two-run homer in the first mning, a 454-foot shot
in the fourth ana another solo drive in the sixth.
At Philadelphia, Travis Lee hit his second homer of the game,
a two-out drive in the ninth inning that tied it. Jolmny Estrada
homered in the I Oth as the Phillies beat Florida.
Pirates 2, Cardinals 1
St. Louis' nine-game winning streak came to an end as Rob
Mackowiak's home run in the seventh inning lifted Pittsburgh
at PNC Park.
Diamondbacks 6, Dodgers 1
Curt Schilling earned )1is major league-leading 21st victory,
striking out 13 as Arizona beat Los Angeles,
Schilling (21-6) improved to 13- 1 in 17 starts following an
Arizona Joss. ·
Rockies 5, Expos J
Jose Ortiz and Larry Walker hit consecutive home runs in the
lninth inning and Colorado rallied at Montreal.
Ortiz hit a two-run homer off Scott Stewart with no outs for
a 4-3 _lead. Walker connected on the next pitch for his 34th
home run.

80
80

Atlanta

Philadelphia

Houston
St. Louis
Chicago
Milwaukee

L
69

10

74
69 80
64 86
Central
w L
89 60
85 65
81
68
64 86
~1
89
56 94
16

Florida

.

Clrw::lnnatl
Pirtsburgh

Pet.

84
Arizona
san Francisca 82
Los Angeles
80
74
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AHanta 5, N.Y. Mats 4, 11 Innings

Cotorado 5, Montreal 3
Pittsburgh 2, St. Louis 1
Philadelphia 5, Florida 4, 10 innings
Milwaukee 6 , Cincinnati 3

e

Houston 7, Chicago Cubs
Arizona 6, Los Angeles 1
San Francisco 11. San Diego 2
Monday'l Garnes
AlJanta (Burkett 11·11) at Florida (Penny
8·9). 7:05p.m.
Chk:ago Cubs (Wood 11-6) al Pittsburgh
(McKnight 3-4), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Morris 20-7) at Houston (Miicki
6-1 ). 8:05 p.m.
San Diego (Jarvis 12-10) at Colorado
(Thomson 2-5). 9:05 p.m .
San Francisco {L. Hemandez 12-14) at
Los Angeles (Baldwin 2-4), 10:10 p.m.

9~

-

y - wild card spot

Amertconlooguo

Sunday'• -

E..t

w

66

Colorado

NaHONII LNQlHI

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Basion

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Baltimore
Tampa Bay

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60

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.490
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Minnesota
Chicago
Detroit
Kansas City

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13
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36

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x·Seattle

Sunday'oGimoa

w

w

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y-oa~and
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Anaheim
70
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;~C-&lt;:l/nched division

...

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Del""' 12, Boston 6
Tampa Bay 1. Toronto 0
Cleveland •, llnnHOII 2
Chicago While Sox 10, Kansas City 2
Texas 5, Anaheim 2
Oakland 7, Seallle 4
N.Y. Yankees 5, Bahimore 4. 10 innings

Melp County's

Mondly'oGimoa
Baltimore (Maduro ~) at Booton (Cone
8-6). 7:05p.m.
Toronto (Holl-y 4-3) ot Clevolond •
(Colon 13-111.7:05 p.m.
seawe (Moyer 18·5) a! Texas (Davis 1G8). 8:05p.m.
Detroit (Spar1&lt;s 11 ·9) at Kanoas City
(Suppan 9-12), 8:05p.m.

I

t~

32
36

1.::~
-~

~~1. .. .

'

The A's handed AL West champion
Seattle its season-hi gh fourth straight lo'i'S
and first sweep of the year.
.;Oakland is playing awfully · well,"
Mariners manager Lou Piniella said."Now
we'U both have to wait and see who our
opponents are."
Oakland won its 12th so'aight home
·game, an ongoing record for the team
since moving from Kansas City in I %8.
The A's became the sixth team in major
league history to make the postseason ali:er
falling 10 games under .500. and the first
since Toronto rebounded from a 12-24
start in 1989.
Yankees 5, Orioles 4, 10 innings
Bernie Williams drew a two-out, basesloaded walk in the lOth inning as New
York inched closer to another AL East title
with a comeback victory at Baltimore.
The Yankees snapped a three-game skid
and reduced to two their magic number to
win a fourth straight division crown.
Cal Ripken had a homer and three
RBis for Baltimore, which blew a 4-0 lead
and failed to complete a three-game
sweep.
Rookie Nick Johnson homered, had
three RB!s and scored the winning nm
after getting a leadoff single off John Parrish (1-2).
Rangers 5, Angels 2
Alex Rodriguez hit his 48th home run,
breaking Ernie Banks' major league record
for most in a season by a shortstop and lift-

ing host Texas.
.
Rodriguez connected on the first p1tch
by Ramon Ortiz (12-1 0) in the third
inning, just clearing the wall in right-center. Rodriguez ·tied Cleveland's Jim Thorn~ .
for the AL lead with his 403-foot shot. - ;
Tigers 12, Red Sox 6
,
Eric Munson drove in four runs and~
Chris Wakeland homered to le~d Detroit"
Tigers at Boston.
•'
JeffWeaver (12-15) allowed three runs:
- two earned - , and five hits in six ·
innings to win for just the second time in;
nine starts. The Red Sox have lost 1(&gt; of20'
games. · ·
·
•
Devil Rays 1, Blue JI!YS 0
Rookie Joe Kennedy (6-8) pitched
four-hit ball for seven innings and Steve
Cox homered off Kelvim Escobar (6-7) as_
Tampa Bay won at Toronto.
·
Cox homered in his second straight
game for the Devil Rays, who won their
first series since Aug. 21-23, when they
took two of three from Baltimore.
White Sox 10, Royals 2
Magglio Ordonez hit a grand. slam to_
reach 30 home runs for the third straight
season, and Mark Buehrle (14-8) pitched
eight strong innings to give Chicago the
·
sweep at home. ·
Royce Clayton hit a three-run double
and drove in four runs for the White Sox
(78-72), who have won four in a row to·
get a season-high six games over .500.
·

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WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush is laying out a rough
sketch of his war plans for congressio nal leaders and moving to solidify international suppo~t for a long,
open-ended hunt for terrorists.
Bush has sent a letter to Congress,
broadly outlining how forces
already have been deployed in the

'

'

.

.

As1an and Pac1fic
regions.
H@
planned to meet
with House and
Senate
leaders
Tuesday to discuss
particulars about
how th e nation
should respond.
'' It is not now
pcssible to predict the scope and
duration of these deployments, and
the actions necessary to .counter the

States," Bush wrote m the letter reports sa~d.
Monday.
- - -s-autii Arabia cut all ties with
Bush also was meeting with Japan Afghanistan's Tali ban government
Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi on Tuesday, say in g the Central Asian
as hi s country's role in th e looming country was defaming lslan1 by harconflict becomes more clear.
boring and supporting terrorists.
Japan will send warships to the
The move leaves Pakistan as the
Indian Ocean as early as this week only nation -in the world to mainto carry out intelligence and sur- tain ties with the Tali ban, a·nd leaves
veillance missions, 'two Japanese Afghani stan's hard-line Islamic
newspapers reported. The squadron regime ever more isolated in its
may accompany the USS Kitty showdown with the United States
Hawk, an aircraft carrier that left its over Osama bin Laden , identifi ed by

:Festival
dedicates
iparade to victims
BY TONY

.

M~ddle East and terrorist threat to _th~ United base nea r Tokyo .o n Friday, the U .S. officials as the No. 1 suspect in

hOW

'mt.:[·l'(ary wt'11 be USed

P.s complete improbable run to ·playoffs; Yankees win ·:
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

~flush

14

AMERICAN LEAGUE

The Oakland Athletics poured o ut of
the dugout and piled on closer Jason
lsringhausen ali:er completing their comeback from an abysmal April to a postseason
berth.
Moments later, they kneeled in prayer
with their thoughts on the terrorist attacks
that devastated the country and killed a
close friend of Oakland second baseman
Frank Menechino
"He said we should enjoy the moment
- because it nlight never come again,"
Jason Giambi said.
It didn't look like it would come at all
after Oakland went 8-18 in April. But the
A's have gone 57- 18 since June 27 and
clinched their second straight playoff spot
with a 7-4 win at home over Seattle on
Sunday.
"We got off to that slow start, and we
were having a tough time," Giambi said.
"We suddenly flipped a switch and before
you knew it we were I 0 games up on the
wild card. It's unbelievable."
Mark Mulder earned his 20th victory
and Jermaine Dye, a key midseason acquisition · hit a three-run homer off Freddy
'
Garcia (17-6) as the Athletics joined Seattle as the only teams in the majors to earn
playoff berths.
Although Oakland's postgame celebration was more subdued than last year, in
light of the terrorist attacks, champagne
was flowing in the A's clubhouse.

Hometown Newspaper

Sept. II attacks on the United
States.
Din Laden's Al-Qaida organization , meanwhi le, issued a new statement early Tuesday warning Washington against attacks against him or
Afghanistan .
" Wherever there are Americans
and Jews, they will be targeted," said
a statem ent faxed to news organizations in Pakistan 's ca pital, Islam-

Please see Congress, AJ

Middle ort
Counci reviews
census figures
BY BRIAN J. REED

reason now to rely on the
results of a census it conMIDDLEPORT - Mid- ducted, with help from
dleport's population has · Rejoicing Life Church. That
dropped by 500 in the past census was conducted so the
I 0 years according to th e village could com est the fed2000 U.S. Census, but that era! figures, if necessary.
was expected, Mayor Sandy
In other business, Iannarellannarelli said Monday.
li noted Meigs Local · School
lannarelli discussed the District has agreed to ·transofficial census results and dis- fer 0\Vnership of its three
played a population map Middleport sc hool buildings
received from the census to the village, once they are
burea u with members of vacated. The village's prelimMiddleport Village Council. inary plans include use of the
The official cens us shows elementary school building
a popul3tion of 2,525 in as a village hall and possible
Middleport. Jan narelh said jail, the middle school buildUI -~~~_ and Me_igs_Coun ty ing as a community c-_e-_-n_:_:t::
er;_ __
experienced drops in and educa tio nal- facility.
populatiOn.
the central building as a star-

M. LEACH

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - In conjunction with this weekend's Sternwheel Riverfest 2001, a fire truck
parade on Thursday is
being dedicated to both
the victims and rescue
workers involved in the
recent terrorist attacks on
New York City and Washington.
The parade, which officially kicks off the annual
river festival, will honor
firefighters, police officers
and EMS crews who have
stayed on the scene to
remove debris and recover
possible survivors following the worst tragedy _in
the nation's history.
Howard Mullen, parade
chairman, said the parade
will be limited to fire
trucks only and will start
around 6 p.m. near the
tennis courts on East
Main Street. The parade
will travel down Main
Street
to
B u ttern lit
Avenue, cross over to Second Street and Sycamore
Street, and conclude back
on Main Street.
"In addition to honoring - the brave men and
women involved with the
rescue efforts at the World
Trade Center and Pentagon, we want to show all
emergency personnel that
the public is uniting
behind
them,"
said
Mullen.
"Everyone is being
urged to i1ttend Thursday's

Pleue ... Feltlval, AJ

The village will have no

Please see CoundL AJ

Markers recall
Morgan's. Raiden'

trek through Meigs
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Arnold Priddy of Pomeroy, seen here In his Santa
Claus suit. has long been an Important part of the
Meigs County Bikers Association, and the group's
annual toy run. The bikers held the 16th annual
Toy Run on Saturday to raise funds for their Christ.mas toy program for needy children. Priddy, as

always, led the ·pack." Saturday's picture-perfect
weather made for ideal riding conditions, and
more than 300 bikers from Meigs, Gallla, and
Athens counties, and from as far away as North
Carolina, were expected to join in the fun. (Brian
J: Reed photo)

PO MEROY - A small
group of people braved the
rai n Monday afternoon to
attend dedi ca tion ce remoni es for two m arkers
highlighting the hi stor ical
significance of Confedera te
General Joh n Hunt Morgan's
raid throughout Ohio.
Members of the M eigs
County Historical Society
and the Ohio Historical
Society, along with Meigs
County comm issioners, co n-

gregated in both Bashan and
on the steps of the courthou se to view historical
markers informing the public about the only significant
Civil War activity that took
place in Ohio.
In July 1863, Confederate
raiders
under
Morgan
crossed into Ohio from Indiana to condu ct a series of
raids. throughout Union
occupied territory. The raid
ultimately resulted : in the
Battle of Buffington Island

Please see Raiders: AS

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Calendar
ClassHieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

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Eastern board approves contracts

Lotteries

FROM STAFF REPORTS

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TUPPERS PLAINS -The Eastern
Local Board of Education approved sup plemental contracts, substitute staff and
other personnel action durin g its regular
meeting last week.
The ~oard hired Jackie Wolfe as a
business. office education teacher, pen~
ing certification, and approved Kyle
Wickline, Lisa Averion, Robert Beegle,

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Sharon C unnin gham, J ames D. Essick,
Dorothy Faulkner, Todd L. Grace, Erin
Hemmelgarn, Dale Hoover, Tamara Linton, Laura Nadeau, Wanda Ray, Herbert
Redman , Pegb'Y Ridgway, C harles Stanba.c k III, Hope Tilley, Joel Witkowski,
James M . Yerian and John W. Davis as
substitute teachers.
Supplemental contracts were awarded
to H eather Wolfe, yearbook advisor;

Ja cki e Wolfe, senior class advisor; and
Linda Faulk, sophomore class advisor.
C indy Linton was approved as intervention instructor and Joann Calaway as
her aide for the month of September.
Connie Soulsby was approved as a substitute edu cational aide, and Peggy
Moore as a substitute cook.
Scott C hristman was approved as out-

Please see Contracts, AJ

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11

'Saturclay,tSeplember 29, 2001 • 8 am· 12 Noon
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Speakers: Debbie Beegle, RN; Graham Stanley, CRNA;
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�The Daily Sentinel

New York trys to
help victims' families
NEW YO~K (AP) - A
city still grasping for hope of
finding anyone alive in the
rubble of the World 1rade
Center slowly turned its attention to helping rescue another
group: die victims' families.
On Monday, authorities
took steps to make it easier for
families whose loved ones are
missing in the ruins to collect
death benefits without having
to produce a hody.
~elat ives also will be able to
claim insurance · benefits,
workers' compensation and get
access io victims' bank
accou nts withou t needing a
death certificate.
"We need to pay rent and
for baby formula and lots of
credit card bills," said Cindy
Gomes, 33, of New York, who
lost her banker husband in th e
attack.
With her daughter, McKenzie, in a stroller beside her,
Gomes said:"Our life was normal before, but now it's all on
me. I work part time, but I
-Can't work that much with a
6-month-old baby."
With 6,453 people missing,
Mayor ~udolph Giuliani said
the number of confirmed dead
had risen by 15 people to 276

-· 206 of them identified.
Only five survivors have been
found, none since the day after
the Sept. 11 attack.
Owr the past two weeks,
Giuliani has tried to let families down gently, refusing to
dash all hopes that anyone survived in the rubble, but
acknowledging the chances ·
are small and getting smaller.
"Miracles have happened,"
he said Monday, but added: " It
would be unfair for any broad
hope."
On Tuesday, voters went to
the polls for a mayoral primary that will help decide who
replaces Giuliani, who is
barred from seeking a third
term.The primary was delayed
after the Sept. I I attacks.
"If I had a chance, I would
have voted for Giuliani again,"
said Elizabeth Dreier, an elementary school principal.
"He's shown leadership, poise
and conviction through the
.. "
CTISlS.
~es idents

and businesses in
lower Manhattan, meanwhile,
are still trying to resume daily
routines, despite the rumbling
trucks and streets clogged with
emtrgency personnel.

PageAl

•

Tuesday, September 25, 2001

Man charged with helping hijackers .get IDs
WASHINGTON (AP) -The FBI i•
seeking nearly 400 people for questioning
in the terrorist att.1cks probe while federal
prosecutors build a cri minal case involving
identification cards for five of the nowdead hijackers. One man has been charged.
As the investigation proceeded on several fronts Monday, a Florida bank president
said. he had been told that one of the men
suspected in the Sept. 11 hijackings of four
airliners tried to get a !.!an from the· U.S.
Agriculture Department to buy ' a crop
dusting plane.
'
Anorney General John Ashcroft told
CongreSs the FBI had gathered information raising fears that crop dusters could be

u&lt;ed in a biological or chemical attack. At
the FBI's request, the planes were grounded Sunday and Monday. The grounding
.wa.&lt; lifted early Tuesday.
In the criminal case, the government said
Herbert Villalobos accompanied Abdul
Aziz AI Omari and Ahmed Saleh AI
Ghamdi to a lawyer's office in Virginia on
Aug. 2 to help the two suspected hijackers
obtain state identity cards.
When shown photos of the hijackers by
the FBI, Villalobos recognized three other
suspects "believed to have commandeered
American Airlines Right 77" from Washington Dulles International A,irport that
crashed into the Pentagon, according to

court document5. Villalobos said Hani
Hanjour, Salem AI Hazmi and Majed
Moqed were at the Arlington, Va., office of
the state Department of Motor Vehicles on
Aug. 2, just as AI Omori and AI Ghamdi
were.
"Virginia DMV records ... show that all
five men did in fact conduct various transactions relating to Virginia identification
cards at the Allington DMY,'' said a sevenpage affidavit by an FBI agent.
The affidavit did not say \vhether the five
used the IDs to become ticketed passengers
aboard the doomed flights, which also
crashed in New York City and a field in
Pennsylvania.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Mohamed
Atta wa&lt; a busy man prior to th e Sept. 11
terror attacks, checking out flight schools in
Oklahoma and Aorida, meeting Islamic
extremists in Spain, inquiring about crop
dusters in Florida, conferring with an Iraqi
intelligence agent, skipping a traffic court
date.
Atta was so busy, in fact, that the trail he
left behind has made him a key figure in
efforts by investigators to link the multiple
· attacks and trace their source.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said public
reports of Atta's activities before the attacks
suggest that he may well be "the pied piper
of the hijackers" who nearly simultaneously crashed four jetliners in New York, Wash-

DAYTON (AP) - Patriotic artists agreed help raise money
images are a staple of the tattoo by applying small patriotic tatartist's trade, but since the Sept. toos in exchange for a $25
II terrorist attacks there 's been donation to the fund. The .four
an unusually high demand for of them applied 47 tattoos durstars and stripes, Uncle Sams ing a marathon session spanand bald eagles.
ning Friday and Saturday and
Glenn
Scott,
who
operates
sold
vquchers for 53 more.
1
Jeff Stafford redeemed his MADE IN AMERICA - Shawn
two tattoo parlors in the Dayton area, decided to use the voucher Monday.
Oliver, 28, of Madeira Beach,
"It was just a way to donate Ra., shows off his tattoos in
current interest to raise money
The
to the relief effort and to show St. Petersburg, Fla .
for terrorist attack relief.
"Made
in
the
USA"
tattoo
Is
"I was listening to a radio some patriotism at the same
n.
·.
The
"Eye
for
an
Eye"
tatshow, and they were talking time," Stafford said. "Having
toe. 1s about 4-5 years old, but
about how frustrated people this tattoo is like having a
~- - ~ were," Scottsaid. "fleotJliwaill::Jrece!PtshOiM!Igpe&lt;oplri~vas~~~_::~~~~~
ed to go out and hurt innocent willing to help.
people or do something else
Tatooist Harry Howard said who are just patriotic; they
stupid, and the radio host was the ferver created by the terror- want patriotic images no matter
trying to get them to do some- ism has brought in customers
what," Howard said. "Now,
thing positive like giving ~lood who otherwise might shun
we're doing flags for the average
or joining the Army."
body decoration.
Scott and three other tattoo
''Before, we had the people Joe off the street.

Nola Will

• FREE Fertilizer

S-preading
• FREE Buggy Rental

Congress

CALL NOW FOR DETAI

Chester landmar
State RoutaJ• Cha;;:;;st~at::!....:,O
=h=io:.___·_

The gro unding of cropdus.ting planes by the federal
government in. the wake of
terrorist attacks had Ohio
crop-dusters putting jobs on
hold and taking extra security
precautions.
Bill Oberli, of the Woosterbased Aerial Farming Services
Inc., said he plans to keep his
plane locked in a hangar at
night.
"There is some legitimate
concern here.'' Obe rl i said.
The government grounded
tho\lsands of crop- du sters
across the country for a second straight day Monday
~m id fears the planes could be

used in an airborne chemical
or biological attack. The ban
was lifted at 12:05 a.m. local
time Tuesday.
The move came after it was
learned that one of the suspected hijackers in th e attack
on . the World Trade Center,
Mohamad Atta, had shown
interest in crop-dusters and
that anpther perso n now in
federal custody had downloaded information about the
planes, U. S. Attorney General
Jo hn Ashcroft said.
Oberli said he ha s not
trained anyone to fly c'rop
dusters recently, nor have any
suspicious people inqu ired
about the use of his plane.
H e said the grounding had

$ide facilities and . grounds
:~:oordi nator.

The board approved oneyear contracts for bus dri~ers
· T homas Pullins and Larry
Cowdery, and approved
Amanda Milhoan and Cass
Cleland as student" teachers.
Brandy Ben tz , Charles
Hensley, December Dawn
Hensley, Codie Rae Turner
and ~aven Ethridge were
approved as open enrollment
students. Open enrollment
for a prospective Eastern
High School student was
denied.
The board also:
• Approved bus routes as
proposed by Arch ~ose ,

Siren .

499

Festival
from PageA1
parade in support of our
nation's he roes," he said.
"Their bravery has touched
us deeply and we want to pay
tribute to their unyielding
commitment and resolve in
keeping the American spirit

Ill~ .

• Approved appropriations
changes and financial reports;
• Approved current medical, dental and prescription ·
drug coverage through Dec.
31;
• Accepted donations of
trainers tables from Ohio
University, and a scorer's table
from Wesam Construction
Co. ; Baum Lumber, and D.V:
Weber Construction.
• Set the board's next meeting for Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. at
the high school media center.
Present were John Rice,
Greg Bail!'y, ~ick Sanders,
· Shelia Taylor, Roger Wilford,
Superintendent Deryl Well
and Treasurer Lisa ~itchie.
alive."
Mullen added that "a good
number" of fire trucks from
M eigs, Gallia, · Mason and
possibly Athens, Vinton and
Washington counties, will be
taking part in th e parade and'
that no pre-registration is
required for fire departments
that want .to participate in
the event.

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPS 213-860)
Ohio Volley Publlthlng CO.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. ,
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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Rt. 7 • Tuppers Plains, OH 45783
&lt;!~&gt; 667-7388 •1-800-200-4005

•

LOCAL BRIEFS
auto f~re, Jol)n Bu,h , Jr..
owner, no injuries.
RACINE
POMEROY - Units of
3:24
p.m.,
Crccnwood
the Meigs Emergency SerVice
answered six calls for assis- Cemetery, Brian l3owl!llg,
tan ce on Monday Units HMC.
responded as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:31 a.m., South Fourth
Street, Victoria Davis, Holzer
Medical Center;
POME~OY -The Meigs
11 :23 a.m., Ohio 124,Tracy County Artisans Association is
~iggenbach, treated;
accepting new members, and
I :34 p.m., Ohio 124, motor welcoming arti sans
and
vehicle
accident,
David crafters into its new building
Dubbs, HMC.
on West Main Street.
POMEROY
Those who are interested in
I :39 p.m., Ohio 124, motor joining and in selling products
vehicle accident, Evelyn in the store should contact Liz
SmaUwood, HMC;
Rou sh at 992- 1100 or Angie
9:54 p.m., West Main Street, Edwards at 992-9513.

EMS logs calls

Accepting
applications

Raiders'
from Page A1 .
near Portland m Meigs
County, where Union forces
routed Morgan 's raiders, and
thus, ended his raid through
the region.
Margaret Parker, president
of the Meigs County Historical Society, said the markers
were funded through an Ohio
Travel and Tourism grant in
the amount of $10,000,
matched locally by moneys
totaling around $11 ,000.
" We feel that these markers
are an excellent way to honor
Meigs countians who lived
during the time of Morgan's
Raid, as well as remembering
what events actually took
place," said Parker.
"We also feel that they will
contribute to tourism within
the county because of the
large number of people,
namely historians, who follow

the raid's route,"' she added.
Followin g the pledge of
allegiance and a st irring rendition of "God 13less America," J.D. Britton, director of
the Ohio Historical Society
Local Hi story Office, di scussed the importance of the
markers and what plans are
being made for future markers.
"These n1arkers are a reflection of the historical significance of Morga n's Raid and
the various local areos assoc i- ·
ated wi th it;' said Britton.
"They are a visual representation of both chonge and
continuity within Meigs
.County and will be here
indefinitely to educate future
gene rations," he added.
Britton said there are currently nine markers located
within the county and that
three more are sc heduled to
be . erected sometime next
year.

_...:---1--1-----"'trom
=-=-::....::.:

terrorist ~ttacks that kill~d
thousands in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania,
though the unit has not yet
been called to active duty.
"A year ago, I could have
done this and gone into uniform and gone anywhere my
country asked me," Taylor said.
"But how can I with any credibility preach Sunday after Sunday about Jesus, who tells me to
love my enemies, and yet be
part of a combat support unit?"
Taylor served in the military
from 1981 through 1985, and
joined the reserves before he
became a pastor. He has
requested a transfer to a the
chaplain's office.

put him in a financial pinch .
"It's causi.ng some hardship," he said. "Thi~ tim e of
year, we . can get extre mely
busy with wheat feeding. It's
our living."
Butch Fisher, of Fisher's Ag
Service in Mt. Gilead, said the
grounding had forced him to
postpone two or three jobs.
He estimates he is about four
days behind in his crop-dusting work.
Fisher said he is normally
up in the air four to five hours
a day this tim e of year.
Like Oberli, Fisher said he
has not trained anyone to fl y
nor seen any suspicious people inquiring about crop dust-

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3-

Contracts

Crop-dusting ban .puts ·pinch on pilots
Bv .JAMd- FfANNAH

The village's paving project
is finished, and an application
for additional funds through
the Issue II program has been
submitted.
Jay Shutt of Floyd Browne
Associates, the village's engineering and consulting firm,
said last night the firm will
gather preliminary costs associated with the replacement
of water lines on North and
South Second Avenue and
South Third Avenue, in connection with an additional
paving project.
Shutt also reported that the
village's sewer improvement
project is on schedule, and
should be completed before
Tl)anksgiving.
Boat do~ks on the levee and
picnic tables in the parks will
be removed for the season this
· week, lannarelli said.
Myron Duffield, president
of the Board of Public Affairs,
said the board will consider
reducing water sampling to a
quarterly basis rather than
monthly, because the levels of
volatile organic compounds
from Well .Four have been
consistently below delectable
levels.
Council agreed to ·monthly
testi11g two years ago, when
levels of trichloethylene and
other VOC's raised conc·ern
among officials and residents.
Council also approved pay.
ment of bills in the amount of
$18,718.11, with Councilman
Bob Pooler voting in opposition.
Also present were council
members Stephen Houchins,
~oger Manley, Kathy Scott
and Bob ~obinson.

CANTON - Nola Knight Will, Canton, formerly of Canal
Winchester, died Monday, Sept. 24, 2001 .
· She was born in Chester on Sept. 23, 1908, to Ida and Ernest
Knight. She was a retired teacher, having taught in Meigs
County and Canal Winchester. She attended Faith United
M ehtodist Church. ·
·: Surviving are her daughter and son-in-law,Vicki Jo and John
Nicholson of Canton, with whom she made her home; a
brother, Earl Knight of Middleport; a brother and sister-in-law,
Howard and Eleanor Knight of Chester; two sisters-in-law,
:Mary Kilpatr ick and Betty Loucks; a grandson and two great
ket by some of the cheapest
:grandchildren; an d many nieces and nephews.
prices in years . . The Dow's
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in Dwayne ~ - Spence
advance was its fifth-biggest
funeral Home, 650 WWaterloo St., Canal Winchester; with the
from PageA1
daily point gain in history.
Rev. Nena Bauman officiating. Burial . will be in Chester
Even airline stocks were up,
t::emetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and abad, in the name of Al- · re sponding to a financial
1&gt;-8 p.m. Wednesday.
Qaida's chief military com- support package passed by
Memorial contributions may be made to Faith United mander, Naseer Ahmed Congress over the weekend.
Methodist Church.
. Mujahed.
The Dow closed up
In other developments 368.05, or 4.5 percent, at
Monday:
8,603 .86, recovering more
transportation coordinator;
- Bin Laden, tried to rally
than a quarter of the
• Approved advertising for Pakistani Muslims to combat
1,369.70 ,it lost last :week in
bids for a new 72-passenger
attack on Afghanistan,
its biggest-ever weekly point

Pentagon begins call-ups

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

age facility.
"We have a lot of work to
do in the next two years,"
Jannarelli said.The project is being overseen by a citizens' committee
working under the Middleport Planning Commission. A
foundation is expected to be
established in coming months
to . oversee the use of the
buildings and to raise funds
for their conversion.
The village cannot afford
to hire an assistant clerk/treasurer, lannarelli said. Council
has discussed ·hiring a parttime assistant to train for the
clerk/treasurer position .
Clerk Bryan Swann has
announced· his plans to resign
sometime in. the next two
months to assume a position
with the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center, and
had planned to redllce his
time to half-time, to help offset the cost of training his
replacement.
lannarelli said the Ohio
Municipal League advised her
Swann can remain in his position with the village until he
takes up his new post, but he
cannot legally reduc e his
salary so a replacement can be
hired.
Applications submitted for
the assistant clerk position
have been reviewed and will
be retained until Swann's
replacement is needed.
lannarelli is reviewing
applications for the building
inspector position, she said.

- Harley Hendricks, 75, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Sept. 22, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Nov. 7, 1925 in Pomeroy, son of the late
Harley F. Hendricks and Eva Edna Rus che! Hendricks ·
Dessauer. He was a retired employee of Columbia Gas Co. He
was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II.
Surviving are his wile, Irene W Erwin Hendricks; a daughter
and son-in-law, Sandra and Paul Manske of St. Louis, Mo.; a sister-in-law, Dorothy Hendricks of Delaware; a:&gt;d three grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by his brothers, Carl and
Albert Hendricks.
.
A memorial service will be held at a later date to be
announced. There will be· no calling hours. ·
Arrangements are by ·Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

ington and PennsylvaAtta, Marwan AI-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah
nia, killing thousands of studied together in Hambu rg, Germany,
people.
during the 1990s, and German authorities
" It mak!'S sense that . say they believe th e three were part of a cell
investigators are explor- formed there early this year to attack targets
ing Ana's role so thor- in the United States. Two other alleged
oughly.'' said Grassley. members of the cell are being sought by
"Atta's background may German authorities on warrants charging
yield critical insight into· each with more than 5,000 counts of murthe terrorists' organiza- d er.
lions and. mind set."
U.S. authorities have said Al-Shehhi,
Atta, 33, believed by authorities to have believed to be a cousin or nephew of Atta,
been at the controls of the plane that piloted the plane that hit the trnde center's
slanm1ed into the World Trade Center's south tower. Jarroh was believed to have
north tower, has been connected publicly been on the hijacked United Airlines flight
with suspected hijackers on two of the that embed in a field in southwestern
Pennsylvania.
other three flights involved in the attacks.

Reserves prepare to serve as
Navy reserve.
The primary is not until
March, but the filing deadline
for candidates is Nov. 12, and
Gorell can not be certain he
will be back in time, the statement said.
Rob Taylor, who was
installed last year as pastor of
the St . Thomas Lutheran
Church in Streetsboro, Ohio, is
a munition systems specialist
with the 910th airlift wing, an
air force reserve unit of C-130
transport planes based outside
Youngstown.
Taylor and members of his
wing have been told to prepare
for deployment as part of the
U.S. retaliation for the Sept. 11

Eunice Gilmore

ftom PageAl

Harley Hendricks

5

A
California assembly candidate
has put his campaign on hold
and an Ohio pastor grapples
with the choice between God
and country.
~eservist5 around the country are preparing for deployment as part of the U.S. retaliation for the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks that killed thousands in
New York, Washington and
Pennsylvania.
Jeff Gorell, ~epublican candidate for the California
Assembly from Santa Barbara
issued a statement Monday saying he is suspending his campaign because he has been
failed to active duty in the

Deaths
LANCASTE~ - Eunice Gilmore, 83, lancaster, formerly
of Meigs County, died on Monday, Sept. 24, 2001, at Rockmill
Rehabilitation Center.
She was a retired beautician and a Church of God member.
Surviving are her sisters-in-law, Mary Ann Lane of Middleport and Patricia Gilmore of Lancaster; an aunt, three nieces,
two nephews, and several great-nieces and great-nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents, George and Bernice Gilmore, and her brother, Alfred Gilmore.
Graveside service will be Thursday at 11:30 a.m. at
Riverview Cemetery in Middleport with Pastor Todd Martin
officiating.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 4
to 8 p.m. at Frank E. Smith Funera\ Home in Lancaster.

Atta emerging as potential link among hijacker teams

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Coundl

POME~OY

Big demand for patriotic tattoos

J CLEVELAND (AP) -

--'

Monday, September 24, 2001

Subscription rates

By e~~nier or motor route
one-•
S2
One month
$8.70
One yoar
$104
Dolly
50 cents
Subacribers not desiring 10 pay lhe
carrier may remit in advance direct to
The Dally Senllnel. Credll will be given.
carrier each wook. No subocrlptlon by
mall permitted In areas where home
carrier service Is available.

Mal
subsalntlon
lntlde Molg• eol;r\ty__ _
13 Weeks

much as ·413.51 in the
hour Monday.
The investigation of the
hijackings that led to the
destru ction of -the World
Trade Center and heavy
damage to the Pentagon
continued to "inch forward. ·
Federal authorities charged
the first person with aiding
the hijackers, according to
court documents released
Mpnday. The number of people arrested or detained in
the wide-ranging investigation grew to 352.
Herbert Villalobos was
charged in federal court in
northern Virginia with aiding one of the suspected
hijackers to · fraudulently
obtain a Virginia identification card a month before the
Sept. 11 attacks.
A second man who aided
with the IDs was cooperating
and was not charged, prosecutors said. The court records
disclosed as ·many as five of
the hijackers got Virginia
cards in the month before
the attacks.
Attorney General John
Ash.c roft said the Justice
Department was seeking 392
people for questioning about
the attacks.
"We think they have information that could be helpful
to the investigation," the
attorn ey general told lawmakers.

MARKER DEDICATION - Members of the Meigs County and
Ohio historical societies, along with Meigs County commissioners, gathered near the Meigs County Courthouse Monday
for the dedication of a historical marker highlighting Morgan's
Raid throughout Ohio &lt;Jnd the local areas associated with it.
Earlier in the day, a similar marker was dedicated in Bashan.
(Tony M. Leach photo)
·

Coalition asks Supreme
Court to stand by decision
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Ohio Supreme Court should
not reconsider ·its Sept. 6 decision to order the state to spend
more ori schools, the coalition of
schools thai sued Ohio over
education spending said Monday.
The Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School Funding
asked the court to deny the
state's request to reconsider the

Further · compromise, in the
form of the court re-examining
its niling at the state's request, is
unthinkable, the coalition said.
"~ath er than acc~pting the
'way out; the sL1te has come
back asking to do less, reducing
still further the state's current and
future contributions to Ohio's
school children," Nicholas Pittner, the coal.ition's lead attorney,
said in a court tlling.

ruling.

It said the ruling was a compromise that backed away from
two previous court decisions
declaring the state's system for
paying for education unconstitutional

to~f\\"1 ArtisansA.r". ~

Howacceptlnq ~£.
artisans &amp; crofters
-~
for our new bulldlnq at
112 West Moln Street, Pomeroy
·

\PRIIIG vAlllY (llll/I,A

4 • 6•• 52 ...
'f

Of

'f

, ,t

\Ill I• u'f

'

I I

[AI.

!p

I

7

I of

(Old S.rvlca &amp; Supply Bid)

all this week.
For mcirelnrormotlon on ]olnlnQ or MIIIIIQ your

product, col~

Liz Roush 992-11 00

$27.30

26 Weeks

$53.82

52 Weeks

$t05.56

Ratn outalde Melga County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

to be hiding ..
-A CBS- NewYorkTimes
poll found that Bush's handling of the terrorist crisis
was supported by 90 percent
of those surveyed, and 92
percent expressed backing
for U.S. military action in
response. At the same time,
78 percent said they believed
another terrorist attack was
likely in the Uniteq States.
The survey questioned 1,216
intlividuals between Sept.
20-23 and had an error margin of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
-The Federal Aviation
Administration lifted a twoday ban on flights by crop
dusters, ·which -authorities
feared might be useCl in a
chemical or biological attack.
A Florida bank president said
he had been told that one of
the hijackers , Mohamed Atta,
tried to get a loan from the
U.S. Agri culture Department
to buy a crop · duster. USDA
is a tenant of the bank, which
checked its files about Atta at
the request of the FBI.
At home there were signs
Americans were beginning
to move forward after the
attacks on Sept. II, in which
terrorists
hijacked
and
crashed four airliners, resulting in the apparent deaths of
more than 6,000 people.
After a grim week on Wall
Street, stocks roared bac k
Monday as bargain hunters
were lured back to the mar-

$29.25
$56.68
$t09.72

SIAR -~-

7:40,10:00
7:45,9:45

ALL AGES, All TIMES $4.00

•

�The Daily Sentinel

New York trys to
help victims' families
NEW YO~K (AP) - A
city still grasping for hope of
finding anyone alive in the
rubble of the World 1rade
Center slowly turned its attention to helping rescue another
group: die victims' families.
On Monday, authorities
took steps to make it easier for
families whose loved ones are
missing in the ruins to collect
death benefits without having
to produce a hody.
~elat ives also will be able to
claim insurance · benefits,
workers' compensation and get
access io victims' bank
accou nts withou t needing a
death certificate.
"We need to pay rent and
for baby formula and lots of
credit card bills," said Cindy
Gomes, 33, of New York, who
lost her banker husband in th e
attack.
With her daughter, McKenzie, in a stroller beside her,
Gomes said:"Our life was normal before, but now it's all on
me. I work part time, but I
-Can't work that much with a
6-month-old baby."
With 6,453 people missing,
Mayor ~udolph Giuliani said
the number of confirmed dead
had risen by 15 people to 276

-· 206 of them identified.
Only five survivors have been
found, none since the day after
the Sept. 11 attack.
Owr the past two weeks,
Giuliani has tried to let families down gently, refusing to
dash all hopes that anyone survived in the rubble, but
acknowledging the chances ·
are small and getting smaller.
"Miracles have happened,"
he said Monday, but added: " It
would be unfair for any broad
hope."
On Tuesday, voters went to
the polls for a mayoral primary that will help decide who
replaces Giuliani, who is
barred from seeking a third
term.The primary was delayed
after the Sept. I I attacks.
"If I had a chance, I would
have voted for Giuliani again,"
said Elizabeth Dreier, an elementary school principal.
"He's shown leadership, poise
and conviction through the
.. "
CTISlS.
~es idents

and businesses in
lower Manhattan, meanwhile,
are still trying to resume daily
routines, despite the rumbling
trucks and streets clogged with
emtrgency personnel.

PageAl

•

Tuesday, September 25, 2001

Man charged with helping hijackers .get IDs
WASHINGTON (AP) -The FBI i•
seeking nearly 400 people for questioning
in the terrorist att.1cks probe while federal
prosecutors build a cri minal case involving
identification cards for five of the nowdead hijackers. One man has been charged.
As the investigation proceeded on several fronts Monday, a Florida bank president
said. he had been told that one of the men
suspected in the Sept. 11 hijackings of four
airliners tried to get a !.!an from the· U.S.
Agriculture Department to buy ' a crop
dusting plane.
'
Anorney General John Ashcroft told
CongreSs the FBI had gathered information raising fears that crop dusters could be

u&lt;ed in a biological or chemical attack. At
the FBI's request, the planes were grounded Sunday and Monday. The grounding
.wa.&lt; lifted early Tuesday.
In the criminal case, the government said
Herbert Villalobos accompanied Abdul
Aziz AI Omari and Ahmed Saleh AI
Ghamdi to a lawyer's office in Virginia on
Aug. 2 to help the two suspected hijackers
obtain state identity cards.
When shown photos of the hijackers by
the FBI, Villalobos recognized three other
suspects "believed to have commandeered
American Airlines Right 77" from Washington Dulles International A,irport that
crashed into the Pentagon, according to

court document5. Villalobos said Hani
Hanjour, Salem AI Hazmi and Majed
Moqed were at the Arlington, Va., office of
the state Department of Motor Vehicles on
Aug. 2, just as AI Omori and AI Ghamdi
were.
"Virginia DMV records ... show that all
five men did in fact conduct various transactions relating to Virginia identification
cards at the Allington DMY,'' said a sevenpage affidavit by an FBI agent.
The affidavit did not say \vhether the five
used the IDs to become ticketed passengers
aboard the doomed flights, which also
crashed in New York City and a field in
Pennsylvania.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Mohamed
Atta wa&lt; a busy man prior to th e Sept. 11
terror attacks, checking out flight schools in
Oklahoma and Aorida, meeting Islamic
extremists in Spain, inquiring about crop
dusters in Florida, conferring with an Iraqi
intelligence agent, skipping a traffic court
date.
Atta was so busy, in fact, that the trail he
left behind has made him a key figure in
efforts by investigators to link the multiple
· attacks and trace their source.
Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, said public
reports of Atta's activities before the attacks
suggest that he may well be "the pied piper
of the hijackers" who nearly simultaneously crashed four jetliners in New York, Wash-

DAYTON (AP) - Patriotic artists agreed help raise money
images are a staple of the tattoo by applying small patriotic tatartist's trade, but since the Sept. toos in exchange for a $25
II terrorist attacks there 's been donation to the fund. The .four
an unusually high demand for of them applied 47 tattoos durstars and stripes, Uncle Sams ing a marathon session spanand bald eagles.
ning Friday and Saturday and
Glenn
Scott,
who
operates
sold
vquchers for 53 more.
1
Jeff Stafford redeemed his MADE IN AMERICA - Shawn
two tattoo parlors in the Dayton area, decided to use the voucher Monday.
Oliver, 28, of Madeira Beach,
"It was just a way to donate Ra., shows off his tattoos in
current interest to raise money
The
to the relief effort and to show St. Petersburg, Fla .
for terrorist attack relief.
"Made
in
the
USA"
tattoo
Is
"I was listening to a radio some patriotism at the same
n.
·.
The
"Eye
for
an
Eye"
tatshow, and they were talking time," Stafford said. "Having
toe. 1s about 4-5 years old, but
about how frustrated people this tattoo is like having a
~- - ~ were," Scottsaid. "fleotJliwaill::Jrece!PtshOiM!Igpe&lt;oplri~vas~~~_::~~~~~
ed to go out and hurt innocent willing to help.
people or do something else
Tatooist Harry Howard said who are just patriotic; they
stupid, and the radio host was the ferver created by the terror- want patriotic images no matter
trying to get them to do some- ism has brought in customers
what," Howard said. "Now,
thing positive like giving ~lood who otherwise might shun
we're doing flags for the average
or joining the Army."
body decoration.
Scott and three other tattoo
''Before, we had the people Joe off the street.

Nola Will

• FREE Fertilizer

S-preading
• FREE Buggy Rental

Congress

CALL NOW FOR DETAI

Chester landmar
State RoutaJ• Cha;;:;;st~at::!....:,O
=h=io:.___·_

The gro unding of cropdus.ting planes by the federal
government in. the wake of
terrorist attacks had Ohio
crop-dusters putting jobs on
hold and taking extra security
precautions.
Bill Oberli, of the Woosterbased Aerial Farming Services
Inc., said he plans to keep his
plane locked in a hangar at
night.
"There is some legitimate
concern here.'' Obe rl i said.
The government grounded
tho\lsands of crop- du sters
across the country for a second straight day Monday
~m id fears the planes could be

used in an airborne chemical
or biological attack. The ban
was lifted at 12:05 a.m. local
time Tuesday.
The move came after it was
learned that one of the suspected hijackers in th e attack
on . the World Trade Center,
Mohamad Atta, had shown
interest in crop-dusters and
that anpther perso n now in
federal custody had downloaded information about the
planes, U. S. Attorney General
Jo hn Ashcroft said.
Oberli said he ha s not
trained anyone to fly c'rop
dusters recently, nor have any
suspicious people inqu ired
about the use of his plane.
H e said the grounding had

$ide facilities and . grounds
:~:oordi nator.

The board approved oneyear contracts for bus dri~ers
· T homas Pullins and Larry
Cowdery, and approved
Amanda Milhoan and Cass
Cleland as student" teachers.
Brandy Ben tz , Charles
Hensley, December Dawn
Hensley, Codie Rae Turner
and ~aven Ethridge were
approved as open enrollment
students. Open enrollment
for a prospective Eastern
High School student was
denied.
The board also:
• Approved bus routes as
proposed by Arch ~ose ,

Siren .

499

Festival
from PageA1
parade in support of our
nation's he roes," he said.
"Their bravery has touched
us deeply and we want to pay
tribute to their unyielding
commitment and resolve in
keeping the American spirit

Ill~ .

• Approved appropriations
changes and financial reports;
• Approved current medical, dental and prescription ·
drug coverage through Dec.
31;
• Accepted donations of
trainers tables from Ohio
University, and a scorer's table
from Wesam Construction
Co. ; Baum Lumber, and D.V:
Weber Construction.
• Set the board's next meeting for Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. at
the high school media center.
Present were John Rice,
Greg Bail!'y, ~ick Sanders,
· Shelia Taylor, Roger Wilford,
Superintendent Deryl Well
and Treasurer Lisa ~itchie.
alive."
Mullen added that "a good
number" of fire trucks from
M eigs, Gallia, · Mason and
possibly Athens, Vinton and
Washington counties, will be
taking part in th e parade and'
that no pre-registration is
required for fire departments
that want .to participate in
the event.

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPS 213-860)
Ohio Volley Publlthlng CO.

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St. ,
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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•

LOCAL BRIEFS
auto f~re, Jol)n Bu,h , Jr..
owner, no injuries.
RACINE
POMEROY - Units of
3:24
p.m.,
Crccnwood
the Meigs Emergency SerVice
answered six calls for assis- Cemetery, Brian l3owl!llg,
tan ce on Monday Units HMC.
responded as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:31 a.m., South Fourth
Street, Victoria Davis, Holzer
Medical Center;
POME~OY -The Meigs
11 :23 a.m., Ohio 124,Tracy County Artisans Association is
~iggenbach, treated;
accepting new members, and
I :34 p.m., Ohio 124, motor welcoming arti sans
and
vehicle
accident,
David crafters into its new building
Dubbs, HMC.
on West Main Street.
POMEROY
Those who are interested in
I :39 p.m., Ohio 124, motor joining and in selling products
vehicle accident, Evelyn in the store should contact Liz
SmaUwood, HMC;
Rou sh at 992- 1100 or Angie
9:54 p.m., West Main Street, Edwards at 992-9513.

EMS logs calls

Accepting
applications

Raiders'
from Page A1 .
near Portland m Meigs
County, where Union forces
routed Morgan 's raiders, and
thus, ended his raid through
the region.
Margaret Parker, president
of the Meigs County Historical Society, said the markers
were funded through an Ohio
Travel and Tourism grant in
the amount of $10,000,
matched locally by moneys
totaling around $11 ,000.
" We feel that these markers
are an excellent way to honor
Meigs countians who lived
during the time of Morgan's
Raid, as well as remembering
what events actually took
place," said Parker.
"We also feel that they will
contribute to tourism within
the county because of the
large number of people,
namely historians, who follow

the raid's route,"' she added.
Followin g the pledge of
allegiance and a st irring rendition of "God 13less America," J.D. Britton, director of
the Ohio Historical Society
Local Hi story Office, di scussed the importance of the
markers and what plans are
being made for future markers.
"These n1arkers are a reflection of the historical significance of Morga n's Raid and
the various local areos assoc i- ·
ated wi th it;' said Britton.
"They are a visual representation of both chonge and
continuity within Meigs
.County and will be here
indefinitely to educate future
gene rations," he added.
Britton said there are currently nine markers located
within the county and that
three more are sc heduled to
be . erected sometime next
year.

_...:---1--1-----"'trom
=-=-::....::.:

terrorist ~ttacks that kill~d
thousands in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania,
though the unit has not yet
been called to active duty.
"A year ago, I could have
done this and gone into uniform and gone anywhere my
country asked me," Taylor said.
"But how can I with any credibility preach Sunday after Sunday about Jesus, who tells me to
love my enemies, and yet be
part of a combat support unit?"
Taylor served in the military
from 1981 through 1985, and
joined the reserves before he
became a pastor. He has
requested a transfer to a the
chaplain's office.

put him in a financial pinch .
"It's causi.ng some hardship," he said. "Thi~ tim e of
year, we . can get extre mely
busy with wheat feeding. It's
our living."
Butch Fisher, of Fisher's Ag
Service in Mt. Gilead, said the
grounding had forced him to
postpone two or three jobs.
He estimates he is about four
days behind in his crop-dusting work.
Fisher said he is normally
up in the air four to five hours
a day this tim e of year.
Like Oberli, Fisher said he
has not trained anyone to fl y
nor seen any suspicious people inquiring about crop dust-

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3-

Contracts

Crop-dusting ban .puts ·pinch on pilots
Bv .JAMd- FfANNAH

The village's paving project
is finished, and an application
for additional funds through
the Issue II program has been
submitted.
Jay Shutt of Floyd Browne
Associates, the village's engineering and consulting firm,
said last night the firm will
gather preliminary costs associated with the replacement
of water lines on North and
South Second Avenue and
South Third Avenue, in connection with an additional
paving project.
Shutt also reported that the
village's sewer improvement
project is on schedule, and
should be completed before
Tl)anksgiving.
Boat do~ks on the levee and
picnic tables in the parks will
be removed for the season this
· week, lannarelli said.
Myron Duffield, president
of the Board of Public Affairs,
said the board will consider
reducing water sampling to a
quarterly basis rather than
monthly, because the levels of
volatile organic compounds
from Well .Four have been
consistently below delectable
levels.
Council agreed to ·monthly
testi11g two years ago, when
levels of trichloethylene and
other VOC's raised conc·ern
among officials and residents.
Council also approved pay.
ment of bills in the amount of
$18,718.11, with Councilman
Bob Pooler voting in opposition.
Also present were council
members Stephen Houchins,
~oger Manley, Kathy Scott
and Bob ~obinson.

CANTON - Nola Knight Will, Canton, formerly of Canal
Winchester, died Monday, Sept. 24, 2001 .
· She was born in Chester on Sept. 23, 1908, to Ida and Ernest
Knight. She was a retired teacher, having taught in Meigs
County and Canal Winchester. She attended Faith United
M ehtodist Church. ·
·: Surviving are her daughter and son-in-law,Vicki Jo and John
Nicholson of Canton, with whom she made her home; a
brother, Earl Knight of Middleport; a brother and sister-in-law,
Howard and Eleanor Knight of Chester; two sisters-in-law,
:Mary Kilpatr ick and Betty Loucks; a grandson and two great
ket by some of the cheapest
:grandchildren; an d many nieces and nephews.
prices in years . . The Dow's
Services will be II a.m. Thursday in Dwayne ~ - Spence
advance was its fifth-biggest
funeral Home, 650 WWaterloo St., Canal Winchester; with the
from PageA1
daily point gain in history.
Rev. Nena Bauman officiating. Burial . will be in Chester
Even airline stocks were up,
t::emetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and abad, in the name of Al- · re sponding to a financial
1&gt;-8 p.m. Wednesday.
Qaida's chief military com- support package passed by
Memorial contributions may be made to Faith United mander, Naseer Ahmed Congress over the weekend.
Methodist Church.
. Mujahed.
The Dow closed up
In other developments 368.05, or 4.5 percent, at
Monday:
8,603 .86, recovering more
transportation coordinator;
- Bin Laden, tried to rally
than a quarter of the
• Approved advertising for Pakistani Muslims to combat
1,369.70 ,it lost last :week in
bids for a new 72-passenger
attack on Afghanistan,
its biggest-ever weekly point

Pentagon begins call-ups

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

age facility.
"We have a lot of work to
do in the next two years,"
Jannarelli said.The project is being overseen by a citizens' committee
working under the Middleport Planning Commission. A
foundation is expected to be
established in coming months
to . oversee the use of the
buildings and to raise funds
for their conversion.
The village cannot afford
to hire an assistant clerk/treasurer, lannarelli said. Council
has discussed ·hiring a parttime assistant to train for the
clerk/treasurer position .
Clerk Bryan Swann has
announced· his plans to resign
sometime in. the next two
months to assume a position
with the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center, and
had planned to redllce his
time to half-time, to help offset the cost of training his
replacement.
lannarelli said the Ohio
Municipal League advised her
Swann can remain in his position with the village until he
takes up his new post, but he
cannot legally reduc e his
salary so a replacement can be
hired.
Applications submitted for
the assistant clerk position
have been reviewed and will
be retained until Swann's
replacement is needed.
lannarelli is reviewing
applications for the building
inspector position, she said.

- Harley Hendricks, 75, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Sept. 22, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Nov. 7, 1925 in Pomeroy, son of the late
Harley F. Hendricks and Eva Edna Rus che! Hendricks ·
Dessauer. He was a retired employee of Columbia Gas Co. He
was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II.
Surviving are his wile, Irene W Erwin Hendricks; a daughter
and son-in-law, Sandra and Paul Manske of St. Louis, Mo.; a sister-in-law, Dorothy Hendricks of Delaware; a:&gt;d three grandchildren.
He was also preceded in death by his brothers, Carl and
Albert Hendricks.
.
A memorial service will be held at a later date to be
announced. There will be· no calling hours. ·
Arrangements are by ·Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy.

ington and PennsylvaAtta, Marwan AI-Shehhi and Ziad Jarrah
nia, killing thousands of studied together in Hambu rg, Germany,
people.
during the 1990s, and German authorities
" It mak!'S sense that . say they believe th e three were part of a cell
investigators are explor- formed there early this year to attack targets
ing Ana's role so thor- in the United States. Two other alleged
oughly.'' said Grassley. members of the cell are being sought by
"Atta's background may German authorities on warrants charging
yield critical insight into· each with more than 5,000 counts of murthe terrorists' organiza- d er.
lions and. mind set."
U.S. authorities have said Al-Shehhi,
Atta, 33, believed by authorities to have believed to be a cousin or nephew of Atta,
been at the controls of the plane that piloted the plane that hit the trnde center's
slanm1ed into the World Trade Center's south tower. Jarroh was believed to have
north tower, has been connected publicly been on the hijacked United Airlines flight
with suspected hijackers on two of the that embed in a field in southwestern
Pennsylvania.
other three flights involved in the attacks.

Reserves prepare to serve as
Navy reserve.
The primary is not until
March, but the filing deadline
for candidates is Nov. 12, and
Gorell can not be certain he
will be back in time, the statement said.
Rob Taylor, who was
installed last year as pastor of
the St . Thomas Lutheran
Church in Streetsboro, Ohio, is
a munition systems specialist
with the 910th airlift wing, an
air force reserve unit of C-130
transport planes based outside
Youngstown.
Taylor and members of his
wing have been told to prepare
for deployment as part of the
U.S. retaliation for the Sept. 11

Eunice Gilmore

ftom PageAl

Harley Hendricks

5

A
California assembly candidate
has put his campaign on hold
and an Ohio pastor grapples
with the choice between God
and country.
~eservist5 around the country are preparing for deployment as part of the U.S. retaliation for the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks that killed thousands in
New York, Washington and
Pennsylvania.
Jeff Gorell, ~epublican candidate for the California
Assembly from Santa Barbara
issued a statement Monday saying he is suspending his campaign because he has been
failed to active duty in the

Deaths
LANCASTE~ - Eunice Gilmore, 83, lancaster, formerly
of Meigs County, died on Monday, Sept. 24, 2001, at Rockmill
Rehabilitation Center.
She was a retired beautician and a Church of God member.
Surviving are her sisters-in-law, Mary Ann Lane of Middleport and Patricia Gilmore of Lancaster; an aunt, three nieces,
two nephews, and several great-nieces and great-nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents, George and Bernice Gilmore, and her brother, Alfred Gilmore.
Graveside service will be Thursday at 11:30 a.m. at
Riverview Cemetery in Middleport with Pastor Todd Martin
officiating.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday from 4
to 8 p.m. at Frank E. Smith Funera\ Home in Lancaster.

Atta emerging as potential link among hijacker teams

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

Coundl

POME~OY

Big demand for patriotic tattoos

J CLEVELAND (AP) -

--'

Monday, September 24, 2001

Subscription rates

By e~~nier or motor route
one-•
S2
One month
$8.70
One yoar
$104
Dolly
50 cents
Subacribers not desiring 10 pay lhe
carrier may remit in advance direct to
The Dally Senllnel. Credll will be given.
carrier each wook. No subocrlptlon by
mall permitted In areas where home
carrier service Is available.

Mal
subsalntlon
lntlde Molg• eol;r\ty__ _
13 Weeks

much as ·413.51 in the
hour Monday.
The investigation of the
hijackings that led to the
destru ction of -the World
Trade Center and heavy
damage to the Pentagon
continued to "inch forward. ·
Federal authorities charged
the first person with aiding
the hijackers, according to
court documents released
Mpnday. The number of people arrested or detained in
the wide-ranging investigation grew to 352.
Herbert Villalobos was
charged in federal court in
northern Virginia with aiding one of the suspected
hijackers to · fraudulently
obtain a Virginia identification card a month before the
Sept. 11 attacks.
A second man who aided
with the IDs was cooperating
and was not charged, prosecutors said. The court records
disclosed as ·many as five of
the hijackers got Virginia
cards in the month before
the attacks.
Attorney General John
Ash.c roft said the Justice
Department was seeking 392
people for questioning about
the attacks.
"We think they have information that could be helpful
to the investigation," the
attorn ey general told lawmakers.

MARKER DEDICATION - Members of the Meigs County and
Ohio historical societies, along with Meigs County commissioners, gathered near the Meigs County Courthouse Monday
for the dedication of a historical marker highlighting Morgan's
Raid throughout Ohio &lt;Jnd the local areas associated with it.
Earlier in the day, a similar marker was dedicated in Bashan.
(Tony M. Leach photo)
·

Coalition asks Supreme
Court to stand by decision
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Ohio Supreme Court should
not reconsider ·its Sept. 6 decision to order the state to spend
more ori schools, the coalition of
schools thai sued Ohio over
education spending said Monday.
The Coalition for Equity and
Adequacy of School Funding
asked the court to deny the
state's request to reconsider the

Further · compromise, in the
form of the court re-examining
its niling at the state's request, is
unthinkable, the coalition said.
"~ath er than acc~pting the
'way out; the sL1te has come
back asking to do less, reducing
still further the state's current and
future contributions to Ohio's
school children," Nicholas Pittner, the coal.ition's lead attorney,
said in a court tlling.

ruling.

It said the ruling was a compromise that backed away from
two previous court decisions
declaring the state's system for
paying for education unconstitutional

to~f\\"1 ArtisansA.r". ~

Howacceptlnq ~£.
artisans &amp; crofters
-~
for our new bulldlnq at
112 West Moln Street, Pomeroy
·

\PRIIIG vAlllY (llll/I,A

4 • 6•• 52 ...
'f

Of

'f

, ,t

\Ill I• u'f

'

I I

[AI.

!p

I

7

I of

(Old S.rvlca &amp; Supply Bid)

all this week.
For mcirelnrormotlon on ]olnlnQ or MIIIIIQ your

product, col~

Liz Roush 992-11 00

$27.30

26 Weeks

$53.82

52 Weeks

$t05.56

Ratn outalde Melga County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

to be hiding ..
-A CBS- NewYorkTimes
poll found that Bush's handling of the terrorist crisis
was supported by 90 percent
of those surveyed, and 92
percent expressed backing
for U.S. military action in
response. At the same time,
78 percent said they believed
another terrorist attack was
likely in the Uniteq States.
The survey questioned 1,216
intlividuals between Sept.
20-23 and had an error margin of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
-The Federal Aviation
Administration lifted a twoday ban on flights by crop
dusters, ·which -authorities
feared might be useCl in a
chemical or biological attack.
A Florida bank president said
he had been told that one of
the hijackers , Mohamed Atta,
tried to get a loan from the
U.S. Agri culture Department
to buy a crop · duster. USDA
is a tenant of the bank, which
checked its files about Atta at
the request of the FBI.
At home there were signs
Americans were beginning
to move forward after the
attacks on Sept. II, in which
terrorists
hijacked
and
crashed four airliners, resulting in the apparent deaths of
more than 6,000 people.
After a grim week on Wall
Street, stocks roared bac k
Monday as bargain hunters
were lured back to the mar-

$29.25
$56.68
$t09.72

SIAR -~-

7:40,10:00
7:45,9:45

ALL AGES, All TIMES $4.00

•

�• •

Op1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

Page \A4

•

Tuesday. September 15,1001

It shouldn )t take a broken hip for wife to hear words of love

The Daily Sentinel
.•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing-Co.
Charl11 W. Govey
Publlaher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. S1ptember 25. 2001

A. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

'

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

OUR VIEW

ENEMY

DEAR ABBY: I have b..-..-n married 62 years to the same man. I am
· 84. He is 87. When he is good, he's
very good. When he is bad, he is
BAD. However, he's always . been
there when I needed him. I recent.
ly fractured my hip, and I don't
know what I would have done
without him.
Abby, for 62 years this husband of
mine could never say, "I love you."
So, now I'm lying in the hospital,
and I hear this forlorn voi.ce, ''I'm
lost without you. I love you." I
answered, "Pardon me, sir? Who's
calling?" (I had to break a hip for
him to say, " I love you"!)
So, to you guys out there please don't wait until your wife
breaks her hip. Say "I ,love you" now,
and mean it. - BETTER LATE
THAN NEVER

Abigail
Van
Buren

LOCAL EVENTS

Response to fund-raising effort
tells us what America~ about
A source of inspiration and encouragement about the American spirit following events of the past two weeks has been the
work of firefighters and rescuers at World Trade Center's
Ground Zero and at the Pentagon.
Despite predictions that few if any sur-Vivors of the terrorist
attack will be now be located, these men and Women have battled on against tons of rubble, exhaustion and grief to continue looking for any sign of life in the buildings' remains.
Their commitment to the task has touched many Americans,
many of them asking what they can do to help. They got their
chance over the weekend, and responded grandly.
Throughout the region, .firefighters and EMS staffers were
out on the streets, corners, and anyplace where people will
travel asking for donations to support the New York firefighters. Preliminary reports are that thousands of dollars were collected on their behalf, with more than $31,500 netted in Gallia County alone.
Local firefighters. and emergency personnel sacrificed their
time, some for 12 hours or more, to hold up a firefighters' boot
in which money was collected. Although there were signs
informing motorists what firefighters were doing, it was if they
knew already. When the boot was held up, people young and
old stopped, dug into their wallets and gave.
In the last few weeks, we've re-learned what the American
spirit is all about. When a crisis arises, folks respond. They did .
so magnificently this past weekend. To those volunteers who
worked the donations, and especially all who contributed to
f--.- -the-cause;-we-offeruursalute-of-admiratiotranch~pec .
Those ·\vho seek to destroy our nation and our people have
no idea just how proud this country can be. Citizens both here
and around the U.S. demonstrated that pride and concern for
others' welfare, and will continue to do so.

sent home
dents.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

He

"stood beside ~~e
tiptop shap;;:
through the deaths. of my parents
and only sister. His choice of comfort words may have left a little to be
desired, but without complaint he
made sure I ate regular meals and
gave me the space I needed to
grieve.
He has provided me with every
creature comfort (and tl)en some),
supported me in all the wacko hobbies I've plunged into, eaten the
"strange food" I like, taken me
places he never would have gone,
and provided for my future should I
have to face life without him. He's a
terrific lover, fun to be with, and
makes me laugh out loud at least
once· a day.
My husband has taught me
patience and helped me to grow up,
even though I was 36 when we

trade him for all the Romeos iri the ·
world.
This is not to say we haven't had
our differences - we've had some
wowzers. My man can't say "I love
you" with a straight face, and he
once presented me with a weed
eater for my birthday.
However, he shows me that he '
ADVICE
loves me every day.When I get up in
the morning, he's already made cofDEAR BETTER LATE: I'm fee for me. I never have to ask him
pleased you finally got to hear the to take out the trash - it's already
words you longed to hear. For other been done. He empties the dishwives whose · husbands are mute washer because he knows it's not my
when it comes to the subject of favorite chore. He makes the bed,
love, read on:
fixes his own breakfast and feeds the
DEAR ABBY: This is for all dog. (It's supposed to be my dog, but
those women who complain ·their she has eyes only for him, and loves
husbands aren't romantic enough or him as much as I do.)
don't talk to them. I am married to
My husband digs my garden, fills
one of those guys - and I wouldn't my composter and keeps my car in

with

m·a rried. He has yet to declare his
undying love for me, and we never
talk about " feelings ," but he doesn 't
have to, Abby - he does the deeds.
Every Valentine's Day he clears his
calendar to be with me. Now, that's
worth a volume of fancy words!
This month we will celebrate our
2~th wedding anniversary. I only
hope he knows how much I love
him. Here's one woman who knows
that true romance is all in how you·
define it. SANDY
IN
PHOENIX
DEAR SANDY: Take no
chances In letting your husband
know how you feel. If words won't
suffice, clip this column and leave it
on his pillow. From your description
he is 99.44 percent perfect.
Dear Abby is written by Pa~liilre
Phillips anil dauglrrer Jeairrre Phillips.

.Tetanus can be deadly without immunization ·

stu·

Divisions begin to show in Bush anti-terror strategy

Sternwhee( ~ver ~est
._.,._ ~((~&amp;~the ~ver

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

Today is Tuesday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 2001. There are 97
days left in the year~
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Sept. 25, 1789, the first Congress adopted 12 amendments
to the Constitution and sent them to the states for ratification.
(Ten of the amendments became the Bill of Rights.)
On this date:
In 1690, one of the earliest American newspapers, Publick
O ccurrences, published its first- and last- edition in, Boston.
In 1775, American Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen was
captured by the British as he led an attack on Montreal.
In 1890, President Benjamin Harrison signed a measure
establishing Sequoia National Park.
In 1890, Wilford Woodruff,.president of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, issued a Manifesto formally
renouncing the practice of polygamy.
In 1897,American author William Faulkner was born in New
Albany, Miss.
In 1973, the three-man crew of the U.S. space laboratory Skylab Two splashed·down safely in the Pacific Ocean after spending 59 days in orbit.
In 197.8, 144 people were killed when a Pacific Southwest
Airlines Boeing 727 and a private plane collided over San
Diego. ·
In 1979, the musical "Evita" opened on Broadway.
In 1981, Sandra Day O'Connor was sworn in as the first
female justice on the Supreme Court.
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council unanimously
ordered a worldwide arms embargo against Yugoslavia and all its
warring factions. Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie died in Lyon,
France, at age 77. A national commission faulted the government for a lack of leadership in the fight against AIDS.
Five years ago: Stone-throwing protests by thousands ofPalestinians angered by Israel's decision to open an · archaeological
runnel near Jerusalem's AI Aqsa Mosque compound led to batdes with Israeli. troops in which seven people died.
One year ago: In Yugoslavia, opposition presidential candidate
Vojislav Kosrunica claimed victory in weekend elections over ·
incumbent Slobodan Milosevic. In Sydney, Australia, Cathy
·Freeman became the first Aborigine to win an individual
Olympic gold medal, capturing the · women's 400 meters.
Michael Johnson of the United States became.the first man to
successfully defend a 400-meter tide.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Phil Rizzuto is 83.
ABC News correspondent Barbara Walters is 70. Country
singer ian Tyson is 68. Rhythm-and-blues singer Joe Russell is
62. Actor Robert Walden is 58. Actor-producer Michael Douglas is 57. Model Cheryl Tiegs is 54. Actress Mimi Kennedy is
52. Actor-director Anson Williams is 52. Actor Mark Hamill is
50. Actor C hristop her Reeve is 49. Actor Colin Friels is 49.
Actor Michael Madseri is 43. Actress Heather Locklear is 40.
Basketball player Scottie Pippen is 36. Actor Will Smith is 33.
Actress Catherine Zeta-Jones is 32. Actress Bridgette Wilson is
28. Singer Diana Ortiz (Dream) is 16.
p

September 27th, 28th, and 29th
.Saturday, September 29th

Thursday, September 27th
6:00 p.m.

NEWS
AND
NOTES
Classes to
be offered

RYAN'S VIEW

It had to take a tragedy to bring this nation together
BY JoAN

Rv~

As our unspeakable tragedy reverberated through the world, reaching stock ma~­
kets in Japan and airports in London, It
was transforming the United States into a
small ,town.
It feels as though we took hold of the
country by its shorelines and borders and
pulled it dose around us.
Everyone knows somebody who
knows somebody who was affected by the
terrorist attacks, the way a death in a village touches every door. Thesday's vast
numbers of faceless victims became
today's 22-year-old daughter who had
been plarming to start a new job in San
Francisco ..next week. It became a 38-yearold Little League coach heading back to
California after bridging the f3mily's yellow Labrador retriever to their new home
in Arlington, Va.
It became Daphne Bowers ofBrooklyn,
who showed up at a New York hospital
with a framed picture of her 28-year-old
daughter,Veronique.'IWo friends supported Bowers as the mother tofd workers her
daughter had been wearing a white jacket and black shirt and had called her from
inside the World Trade Center to say the
building wa1 on fire.
"The last thing she said was, 'I love you ,
Mommy, good-bye,"' Bowers told a
reporter, weeping.

The television is like the old campfire·, today because it has been pulled apart for
as ABC anchor Peter jennings said Tues- so long. Clinton's impeachment plunged
day. We huddle around it in times of dis- the country into sharply divided camps.
tress, listening to the stories of what hap- The disputed presidential election deeppened, sharing. the latest developments, ened the divides. We've been battling each
figuring out what is to be done. The tele- other over our walkout of the racism convision gathers us to a common place as ference in South Africa and over the tax
surely as a campfire or a town.square does. cut and federal spending.
But we're connected today in ways that
But today there aren't thousands of
go beyond television. When somebody anonymous victims·, but a village of peaasks, "How are you?" they mean it. They pie we know The couple from Maine
want to know because they're going hea,ding to a son's wedding in Santa Barthrough the same waves of anger and sad- bara. The father from New Hampshire
ness and disbelief There's an undercurren! who wanted to visit ·his son before classes
of goodwill and appreciation .in our con- began at UCLA. ("He did love me more
versations today, born, perhaps, of realizing 1 than anything;' the son said of his father.
that·in an instant our lives can change, that "I know that.") The 31-ycar-old ho ckey
we can lose everything as abruptly and scout who was returning from a visit with
randomly as a bolt of lighming.
his twin brother, an assistant hockey coach
That's why the address-book pages and at Boston University. .
files and calendars fluttering through the
Some say it's a sh:)IT!e it takes something
Manhattan streets feel as though they are so horrible to make us come together. But
pieces of our own lives. That's why when isn't that always the way? Families fight
we hear about the woman searching for over snubs and slights. Communities
her husband's name on a World Trade divide over political disputes. But when
Center list of the dead, 'and we hear the tragedy strikes, everyone shows up at th e
pain in her voice when she says, "I can't door with a blueberry pie, ....d .. ~ weathstand thinking he died without me there er the pain together.
holding his hand," we fight back tears. The
woman is a stranger, but she 's not. We
aoa11 Ryan is a ro/rmmist for tire Sa11 Fran·
know her. She is you or your lister or your dsco Chronicle. Setrd commeuts to lrer in care of
best friend.
•
this newspaper or send her e-mail at joanryansPerhaps the country feels so connected Jgate.com.)

POMEROY- New class:es begin next week at Meigs
.County Senior Citizens Cen.. ter.
:.· A new yoga class will begin
.Tuesday and continue on
. ,Tuesdays
through Dec. 4.
. ~ Classes will be taught by Joy
_'Bentley. for beginners 6 to 7
lp.m. and others, 7 to 8 p.m.
lrrhere is a $2 charge for each

t, class.

,

.

On Wednesday garden quilt
classes will begin and will
continue on Oct. 10 and 17
from 1 to 3 p.m. The total
' cost of the program is $40
, with everything·being provid. ed for the class. As with most
'classes at the center, advance
registration is requested.
. A chenille pillow classes
will be Oct. 11' and 15 from· 6
, .to 8 p.m. Cost of the class is
· $15 which includes all of the
· needed material. Instructor
will be Pam Schatz.
A basic computer skills class
will he offered Oct. 2, 16, 2:}
and 30 from 9:30 a.m. to 11
· a.m. with Tammy Queen as ·
the instructor.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
'

6:30p.m.
7:00. 10:00 p.m.

WEEK

Friday, Septemti

~ oCTOBER 7·13

1: 00 p.m.

p

c 'lelhfll)l Band &amp;
"'

,1 r- ·:'"'t

.

.. . .~d
J-~~i5i~~~:.~~~~:~:';
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5:30-6:45p.m• . ,
7:00.8:00 n.m.... i'"

Salute your favorite Fireman
or Fire Department with an
Fire Prevention_Week

9:30am·12:30pm
lO:OO.a.m.

Optnlq Ceremony by
Pomeroy American Legion
Ftre Truck Parade
Dee "' DaJJu •
Sponsored by lhe Ohio Lollery ·

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at

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8:30 • 9:30 .,.-·,.~·&lt;~"+l~
10:00 ·U:OOp.m. ·

Live Remote· WYVK Radio
· Parade
IOf~'a.m.
Swinging_ Senion ·
(a · parade) .
Cloggmg·
~
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
·'P· Myron Duffield "King of the
· Calliope" (Calliope playing 15
to 20 minutes mi the hour)
.
· , Spopsored by the Ohio Lottery
I ~:M a..~4;0QP, ' . ~.Chili Cookoff.; Sponsored by
l?- " ,,,,
· VFW of' MasOn, WV.
rti:OO'a.iJii:t·l :OO'p.m.I..Irie'Throw'ing Conlest (sian·

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·:'-,

CCW;~N1r~flryf~!~1~',l.oi~e~ ,·

·:::h~~~~

1

1

,,q. ' . Tho)lsand f.\y~s•il.,upstairs of

Clark's '·lewel):y Store
, . . \Valking Toilr of !!,~eroy••
11;00 p.,rn.
2:00 - 3:00p.m.
Phil r;;ne,~l~ · Sponsored
. . .. .

'9·~1~r:.;;:; · ·
~
I
3:00p.m.'

-, · . ~y:,!Qe'Ohio"tohery

4:00p.m.
4:00p.m.

"""'·'"'" your support and
appreciation to
our brave firefighters.

Merchants Association

3:00 ·6:00p.m.
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9:00 · 132:00 mid
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1x2ad with or .,.
without pholo.
4

Crowning of the Riverfest
Queen · Sponsored by the
University of Rio Grande
Chili Cookoff Judging
"Ducky Derby" · Pomeroy
Big Bend Cloggen- Sponsored
by the Ohio Lottery
Captain's Dinner - Eagles Club
"ELVIS" Impersonator Dwight
Icenhower • Sponsored by the
Ohio Lottery
Blitzkreig Unplugged·
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
FIREWORKS · Ripenhoff
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Dislributing . .

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a~:;:~i!l5:00
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--------···········

iAttach this coupon to your photo and mail or
'k,;,,,., in with your payment to.:

The Daily Sentinel .
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
Name of Firelighter·_ _ _ _ _ _ ___;__
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Op1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

Page \A4

•

Tuesday. September 15,1001

It shouldn )t take a broken hip for wife to hear words of love

The Daily Sentinel
.•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing-Co.
Charl11 W. Govey
Publlaher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. S1ptember 25. 2001

A. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

'

Diane Kay Hill

Controller

OUR VIEW

ENEMY

DEAR ABBY: I have b..-..-n married 62 years to the same man. I am
· 84. He is 87. When he is good, he's
very good. When he is bad, he is
BAD. However, he's always . been
there when I needed him. I recent.
ly fractured my hip, and I don't
know what I would have done
without him.
Abby, for 62 years this husband of
mine could never say, "I love you."
So, now I'm lying in the hospital,
and I hear this forlorn voi.ce, ''I'm
lost without you. I love you." I
answered, "Pardon me, sir? Who's
calling?" (I had to break a hip for
him to say, " I love you"!)
So, to you guys out there please don't wait until your wife
breaks her hip. Say "I ,love you" now,
and mean it. - BETTER LATE
THAN NEVER

Abigail
Van
Buren

LOCAL EVENTS

Response to fund-raising effort
tells us what America~ about
A source of inspiration and encouragement about the American spirit following events of the past two weeks has been the
work of firefighters and rescuers at World Trade Center's
Ground Zero and at the Pentagon.
Despite predictions that few if any sur-Vivors of the terrorist
attack will be now be located, these men and Women have battled on against tons of rubble, exhaustion and grief to continue looking for any sign of life in the buildings' remains.
Their commitment to the task has touched many Americans,
many of them asking what they can do to help. They got their
chance over the weekend, and responded grandly.
Throughout the region, .firefighters and EMS staffers were
out on the streets, corners, and anyplace where people will
travel asking for donations to support the New York firefighters. Preliminary reports are that thousands of dollars were collected on their behalf, with more than $31,500 netted in Gallia County alone.
Local firefighters. and emergency personnel sacrificed their
time, some for 12 hours or more, to hold up a firefighters' boot
in which money was collected. Although there were signs
informing motorists what firefighters were doing, it was if they
knew already. When the boot was held up, people young and
old stopped, dug into their wallets and gave.
In the last few weeks, we've re-learned what the American
spirit is all about. When a crisis arises, folks respond. They did .
so magnificently this past weekend. To those volunteers who
worked the donations, and especially all who contributed to
f--.- -the-cause;-we-offeruursalute-of-admiratiotranch~pec .
Those ·\vho seek to destroy our nation and our people have
no idea just how proud this country can be. Citizens both here
and around the U.S. demonstrated that pride and concern for
others' welfare, and will continue to do so.

sent home
dents.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

He

"stood beside ~~e
tiptop shap;;:
through the deaths. of my parents
and only sister. His choice of comfort words may have left a little to be
desired, but without complaint he
made sure I ate regular meals and
gave me the space I needed to
grieve.
He has provided me with every
creature comfort (and tl)en some),
supported me in all the wacko hobbies I've plunged into, eaten the
"strange food" I like, taken me
places he never would have gone,
and provided for my future should I
have to face life without him. He's a
terrific lover, fun to be with, and
makes me laugh out loud at least
once· a day.
My husband has taught me
patience and helped me to grow up,
even though I was 36 when we

trade him for all the Romeos iri the ·
world.
This is not to say we haven't had
our differences - we've had some
wowzers. My man can't say "I love
you" with a straight face, and he
once presented me with a weed
eater for my birthday.
However, he shows me that he '
ADVICE
loves me every day.When I get up in
the morning, he's already made cofDEAR BETTER LATE: I'm fee for me. I never have to ask him
pleased you finally got to hear the to take out the trash - it's already
words you longed to hear. For other been done. He empties the dishwives whose · husbands are mute washer because he knows it's not my
when it comes to the subject of favorite chore. He makes the bed,
love, read on:
fixes his own breakfast and feeds the
DEAR ABBY: This is for all dog. (It's supposed to be my dog, but
those women who complain ·their she has eyes only for him, and loves
husbands aren't romantic enough or him as much as I do.)
don't talk to them. I am married to
My husband digs my garden, fills
one of those guys - and I wouldn't my composter and keeps my car in

with

m·a rried. He has yet to declare his
undying love for me, and we never
talk about " feelings ," but he doesn 't
have to, Abby - he does the deeds.
Every Valentine's Day he clears his
calendar to be with me. Now, that's
worth a volume of fancy words!
This month we will celebrate our
2~th wedding anniversary. I only
hope he knows how much I love
him. Here's one woman who knows
that true romance is all in how you·
define it. SANDY
IN
PHOENIX
DEAR SANDY: Take no
chances In letting your husband
know how you feel. If words won't
suffice, clip this column and leave it
on his pillow. From your description
he is 99.44 percent perfect.
Dear Abby is written by Pa~liilre
Phillips anil dauglrrer Jeairrre Phillips.

.Tetanus can be deadly without immunization ·

stu·

Divisions begin to show in Bush anti-terror strategy

Sternwhee( ~ver ~est
._.,._ ~((~&amp;~the ~ver

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

Today is Tuesday, Sept. 25, the 268th day of 2001. There are 97
days left in the year~
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Sept. 25, 1789, the first Congress adopted 12 amendments
to the Constitution and sent them to the states for ratification.
(Ten of the amendments became the Bill of Rights.)
On this date:
In 1690, one of the earliest American newspapers, Publick
O ccurrences, published its first- and last- edition in, Boston.
In 1775, American Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen was
captured by the British as he led an attack on Montreal.
In 1890, President Benjamin Harrison signed a measure
establishing Sequoia National Park.
In 1890, Wilford Woodruff,.president of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, issued a Manifesto formally
renouncing the practice of polygamy.
In 1897,American author William Faulkner was born in New
Albany, Miss.
In 1973, the three-man crew of the U.S. space laboratory Skylab Two splashed·down safely in the Pacific Ocean after spending 59 days in orbit.
In 197.8, 144 people were killed when a Pacific Southwest
Airlines Boeing 727 and a private plane collided over San
Diego. ·
In 1979, the musical "Evita" opened on Broadway.
In 1981, Sandra Day O'Connor was sworn in as the first
female justice on the Supreme Court.
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council unanimously
ordered a worldwide arms embargo against Yugoslavia and all its
warring factions. Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie died in Lyon,
France, at age 77. A national commission faulted the government for a lack of leadership in the fight against AIDS.
Five years ago: Stone-throwing protests by thousands ofPalestinians angered by Israel's decision to open an · archaeological
runnel near Jerusalem's AI Aqsa Mosque compound led to batdes with Israeli. troops in which seven people died.
One year ago: In Yugoslavia, opposition presidential candidate
Vojislav Kosrunica claimed victory in weekend elections over ·
incumbent Slobodan Milosevic. In Sydney, Australia, Cathy
·Freeman became the first Aborigine to win an individual
Olympic gold medal, capturing the · women's 400 meters.
Michael Johnson of the United States became.the first man to
successfully defend a 400-meter tide.
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Phil Rizzuto is 83.
ABC News correspondent Barbara Walters is 70. Country
singer ian Tyson is 68. Rhythm-and-blues singer Joe Russell is
62. Actor Robert Walden is 58. Actor-producer Michael Douglas is 57. Model Cheryl Tiegs is 54. Actress Mimi Kennedy is
52. Actor-director Anson Williams is 52. Actor Mark Hamill is
50. Actor C hristop her Reeve is 49. Actor Colin Friels is 49.
Actor Michael Madseri is 43. Actress Heather Locklear is 40.
Basketball player Scottie Pippen is 36. Actor Will Smith is 33.
Actress Catherine Zeta-Jones is 32. Actress Bridgette Wilson is
28. Singer Diana Ortiz (Dream) is 16.
p

September 27th, 28th, and 29th
.Saturday, September 29th

Thursday, September 27th
6:00 p.m.

NEWS
AND
NOTES
Classes to
be offered

RYAN'S VIEW

It had to take a tragedy to bring this nation together
BY JoAN

Rv~

As our unspeakable tragedy reverberated through the world, reaching stock ma~­
kets in Japan and airports in London, It
was transforming the United States into a
small ,town.
It feels as though we took hold of the
country by its shorelines and borders and
pulled it dose around us.
Everyone knows somebody who
knows somebody who was affected by the
terrorist attacks, the way a death in a village touches every door. Thesday's vast
numbers of faceless victims became
today's 22-year-old daughter who had
been plarming to start a new job in San
Francisco ..next week. It became a 38-yearold Little League coach heading back to
California after bridging the f3mily's yellow Labrador retriever to their new home
in Arlington, Va.
It became Daphne Bowers ofBrooklyn,
who showed up at a New York hospital
with a framed picture of her 28-year-old
daughter,Veronique.'IWo friends supported Bowers as the mother tofd workers her
daughter had been wearing a white jacket and black shirt and had called her from
inside the World Trade Center to say the
building wa1 on fire.
"The last thing she said was, 'I love you ,
Mommy, good-bye,"' Bowers told a
reporter, weeping.

The television is like the old campfire·, today because it has been pulled apart for
as ABC anchor Peter jennings said Tues- so long. Clinton's impeachment plunged
day. We huddle around it in times of dis- the country into sharply divided camps.
tress, listening to the stories of what hap- The disputed presidential election deeppened, sharing. the latest developments, ened the divides. We've been battling each
figuring out what is to be done. The tele- other over our walkout of the racism convision gathers us to a common place as ference in South Africa and over the tax
surely as a campfire or a town.square does. cut and federal spending.
But we're connected today in ways that
But today there aren't thousands of
go beyond television. When somebody anonymous victims·, but a village of peaasks, "How are you?" they mean it. They pie we know The couple from Maine
want to know because they're going hea,ding to a son's wedding in Santa Barthrough the same waves of anger and sad- bara. The father from New Hampshire
ness and disbelief There's an undercurren! who wanted to visit ·his son before classes
of goodwill and appreciation .in our con- began at UCLA. ("He did love me more
versations today, born, perhaps, of realizing 1 than anything;' the son said of his father.
that·in an instant our lives can change, that "I know that.") The 31-ycar-old ho ckey
we can lose everything as abruptly and scout who was returning from a visit with
randomly as a bolt of lighming.
his twin brother, an assistant hockey coach
That's why the address-book pages and at Boston University. .
files and calendars fluttering through the
Some say it's a sh:)IT!e it takes something
Manhattan streets feel as though they are so horrible to make us come together. But
pieces of our own lives. That's why when isn't that always the way? Families fight
we hear about the woman searching for over snubs and slights. Communities
her husband's name on a World Trade divide over political disputes. But when
Center list of the dead, 'and we hear the tragedy strikes, everyone shows up at th e
pain in her voice when she says, "I can't door with a blueberry pie, ....d .. ~ weathstand thinking he died without me there er the pain together.
holding his hand," we fight back tears. The
woman is a stranger, but she 's not. We
aoa11 Ryan is a ro/rmmist for tire Sa11 Fran·
know her. She is you or your lister or your dsco Chronicle. Setrd commeuts to lrer in care of
best friend.
•
this newspaper or send her e-mail at joanryansPerhaps the country feels so connected Jgate.com.)

POMEROY- New class:es begin next week at Meigs
.County Senior Citizens Cen.. ter.
:.· A new yoga class will begin
.Tuesday and continue on
. ,Tuesdays
through Dec. 4.
. ~ Classes will be taught by Joy
_'Bentley. for beginners 6 to 7
lp.m. and others, 7 to 8 p.m.
lrrhere is a $2 charge for each

t, class.

,

.

On Wednesday garden quilt
classes will begin and will
continue on Oct. 10 and 17
from 1 to 3 p.m. The total
' cost of the program is $40
, with everything·being provid. ed for the class. As with most
'classes at the center, advance
registration is requested.
. A chenille pillow classes
will be Oct. 11' and 15 from· 6
, .to 8 p.m. Cost of the class is
· $15 which includes all of the
· needed material. Instructor
will be Pam Schatz.
A basic computer skills class
will he offered Oct. 2, 16, 2:}
and 30 from 9:30 a.m. to 11
· a.m. with Tammy Queen as ·
the instructor.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
'

6:30p.m.
7:00. 10:00 p.m.

WEEK

Friday, Septemti

~ oCTOBER 7·13

1: 00 p.m.

p

c 'lelhfll)l Band &amp;
"'

,1 r- ·:'"'t

.

.. . .~d
J-~~i5i~~~:.~~~~:~:';
.

5:30-6:45p.m• . ,
7:00.8:00 n.m.... i'"

Salute your favorite Fireman
or Fire Department with an
Fire Prevention_Week

9:30am·12:30pm
lO:OO.a.m.

Optnlq Ceremony by
Pomeroy American Legion
Ftre Truck Parade
Dee "' DaJJu •
Sponsored by lhe Ohio Lollery ·

.'1' '""

' jf

·~..

) :. , ' \ I.

ll:OO~iiJ;\.J 'm

.. . uo
b~~'··!ep
·•.1 ,
at

t'. Sponsored
·'• .
,.c 1" .~,• :,
f
1)~1! ~Q!I~~~· •1,qo o a

. ... , 2:00n · 4:00p:m.

8:30 • 9:30 .,.-·,.~·&lt;~"+l~
10:00 ·U:OOp.m. ·

Live Remote· WYVK Radio
· Parade
IOf~'a.m.
Swinging_ Senion ·
(a · parade) .
Cloggmg·
~
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
·'P· Myron Duffield "King of the
· Calliope" (Calliope playing 15
to 20 minutes mi the hour)
.
· , Spopsored by the Ohio Lottery
I ~:M a..~4;0QP, ' . ~.Chili Cookoff.; Sponsored by
l?- " ,,,,
· VFW of' MasOn, WV.
rti:OO'a.iJii:t·l :OO'p.m.I..Irie'Throw'ing Conlest (sian·

· • • ''It~.:··:.,
·:'-,

CCW;~N1r~flryf~!~1~',l.oi~e~ ,·

·:::h~~~~

1

1

,,q. ' . Tho)lsand f.\y~s•il.,upstairs of

Clark's '·lewel):y Store
, . . \Valking Toilr of !!,~eroy••
11;00 p.,rn.
2:00 - 3:00p.m.
Phil r;;ne,~l~ · Sponsored
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"""'·'"'" your support and
appreciation to
our brave firefighters.

Merchants Association

3:00 ·6:00p.m.
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6:30 · 8:30p.m.

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without pholo.
4

Crowning of the Riverfest
Queen · Sponsored by the
University of Rio Grande
Chili Cookoff Judging
"Ducky Derby" · Pomeroy
Big Bend Cloggen- Sponsored
by the Ohio Lottery
Captain's Dinner - Eagles Club
"ELVIS" Impersonator Dwight
Icenhower • Sponsored by the
Ohio Lottery
Blitzkreig Unplugged·
Sponsored by the Ohio Lottery
FIREWORKS · Ripenhoff
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Dislributing . .

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'k,;,,,., in with your payment to.:

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
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•••
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All Efltertainment is
Sponsored by the
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Fireworks are
sponsored by
Ripenhoff Distributing
and Budweiser

�••
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

. Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEWS AND
NOTES

Program says thanks to senio.r volunteers
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Reco nition of volunteers for com munity service highlighted
the recent 28th anmversary
observance of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
at the Senior Cirizens Center.
Theme of the event was
"Volunteers Are ' Shining
Stars," with stars and other
decorations carrying out a
red, white and blue color
scheme.
Special recognition was
given to Josephine Smith,
92, who has volunteered in
the program, established in
1973, for the past 25 years.
She was presented a corsage, a check for $25, and a
commendation from the
Ohio Senate.
Others recognized were
Nettie Boyer, Goldie Graham and Kethel Hatfield, 20
years; Frances Alkire, Mary
Bise and Sylvia Wolfe for 15
years; and Mildred Arnold,

Ethd Bentz. Jane Brown,
Geraldine C leland , Gold1e
frederic.Llleleo Hiii~Vioas
Lee, Edith Sisson. H.rry
Stobart, and Mary Belle
Warner, I 0 years.
John Costanzo, superintendent of the AthensMeigs Educational Service
Cemer, spoke on the con tribution s which ' se nior
volunteers make. to ' the
schools through the STAR
and other programs .
Rep. John Carey congratulated the volunteers for
their years of service and
conlmented on the important role they play ln the
community.
Others speaking briefly
were Chrisri Lynch , field
representative for Rep. Ted
Strickland ; Rhonda Dailey,
R . N., Veterans Memorial
Hospital administrator; and
Anita · Moore, volunteer
coordinator for Holzer
Hospice.
Susan Oliver, executive
director, Meigs County

MCINE - The Oscar
Reed/ Charles
Hysell
reunion was held recently at
Star Mill Park.
·
A moment of silent prayer
was held before the minutes
and treasurerUs report oflast
yearUs meeting was read.
Officers and meeting place
and time will remain the
same for next year.
Gifts were presented to:
Flossie Hysell, oldest; Mikey
Sayre, youngest; and Bobbie
Jo McClure, traveled the farthest.
Attending were: Guy
Hysell, Roger, Jane, Bill and
Cody HyseU, BiD, Ann and
Billy Carswell, Mary and
Ryan Caruthers, Jessica,
Kathy and kasey Roush, and
Aaron Bowersock, all of
Pomeroy; Rachel Bliss,
Cleveland; Mark, Bob, Kay,
Kyle and Berry Johnson ,
Mike, Joy and Josh Hysell,
Dave Haggy, Terry Spencer,

.
t.:...-&amp;.

HONORED FOR SERVICE- Josephine Smith, seated center,
was honored for 25 years of volunteering in the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program of the Meigs County Council on Aging. Others honored at Friday's celebration were, f~ont left, Sylvia
Wolfe, 15 years, and right, Goldie Graham, 20 years; and
Goldie Frederick, Geraldine Cleland, Mildred Arnold, all 10
years; Frances Alkire, 15 years; and Vinis Lee and Edith Sis. son, each 10 years. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
observance with vocalist
Willie Church providing
entertainment. Numerous
door prizes \vere awarded.

••

PEOPLE
Jimmy Carter:

•

ATlANTA (AP) ~ ·
Former President Jimmy
Carter has canceled a trip :
to Bangladesh to monitqr
elections because of th;e :
Sept: 11 terrorist attacks. ·.
The National Demo ~ .
ratic lnstirute for lnterna.- ,
tiona! Affairs and tile c
Atlanta-based
Cart r ·:
Center· had planned ~ ,
send an internation;tl ,
observer delegation to t]'je :
country's . Oct. 1 parli4- ;
mentary elections.
l :
But the Carter Center
said Monday that the trjp ;
was called off due to tKe •
attacks.

SOCIE.T Y NEWS AND NOTES

..J

New arrival
MIDDLEPORT - Gary
and Tonya Stobart Coleman
of Middleport announce the
birth of a daughter, Kassandra Luann, born July 31 at
O'Bleness Memorial Hosp ital in Athens .
The infant weighed seven
pounds, 13 ounces. Mr. and
Mrs. Coleman also have a
son, Shaun Alan.
· Maternal grandparents ar~
Lucretia Stobart of Middleport and the late Arthur
Allen Stobart. Maternal
--great-grandparents are Beulah Stobart of Winter
Haven, Fla., formerly of
Antiquity. Paternal grandparents are Loren and Mary
Coleman of Pomeroy.

UMWmeets
ed Methodist Women met
recently at the church. Pastor Jane Beattie gave the
opening prayer during the
business meeting. Secretary
Martha Poole and Osie Mae
Follrod, treasurer, gave their
reports
which
were
approved.
The group reported 55
sick calls.
Thelma Henderson, Sarah
Caldwell, and Nellie Parker
reported on their attendance
at the UMW annual meeting in Belpre.
Officers for the Alfred
..JUMW are to remain the
same. Program books for
next year were distributed. A
ballot was taken on the time
to hold the meeting if the
regular meeting cannot be
held.

Kits for f:estival of Sharing David Barringer, RAre You land, Matt Calaway, ·Marie
have been collected.
Washed in the Blood of .the Sargent, Karen Spencer,
Nina Robinson gave the Lamb;S and ' Philip Boyles, Lutchie
Riggs,
Helen
prayer calen9ar in the RWhen Jesus Was on the Swartz, Lloyd and Ruth
absence of Mary Jo Bar- · Cross.S
·
Brooks, Guy and Evelyn
ringer, who had chosen
Janice Kuhn invited her Spencer, Mildred Caldwell,
Susan Hunt of Oklahoma former schoolmate·s to sing Betty Chevalier, Millard and
City, Okla., who is in laity. Rpeep and WideS with her. Terry Swartz, Wayne, Patti
The society signed a birthAttending were: Wilma and William Leib, Marlene
day card for her.
Henderson, Nina Robinson, Donovan, Debbie, Tyler,
Henderson gave the mis- Sarah Caldwell, Thelma Katlyn ·and Alison Barber,
sions report from RRe- Henderson, Victor Bahr, Kathy and Kyle Easman,
sponseS on RA Mission Russell Archer, Dave and Gary and Brenda Johnson,
Dream Comes True,S about Mary Jo Barringer, Richard, John Taylor, Joe and Pat
Rose Mae LudlqwUs trip to Florence and Tim Spencer, Mayh ew, Danielle Spencer,
Alaska with a missions team Pete and Osie Follrod , Derrick Bolin, Starling and
in summer, 2000.
Kathy, Stacie and Alan War- . Sandra Massa r, Nellie ParkHenderson led the pro- son, Marilyn . Robinson, e r, Janet Connolly, and Will
gram, RJubl1ee ?'000 - Yes Lloyd and Doris Dillinger, Poole, all local ; Geneva
to Life No to Death,S Kirt and Tiffany Spencer, . Farnsworth, Salem; Dale and
with those mentioned read- Melvin Tracy, Shelley Eng- Janice Kuhn, Littl; Hocking and discussing the topic.
C a] d we 11 as h os tess an d 1':"~~'"":':=-:=-:r:::-:;;:-:""':'"--:,-::--0;-(:;:-:::;;-;;;:::-;;;::;:
served Jello, sandwiches and
party mix.
Pastor Beattie will be the

ing; Jeff and Nora Wallace,
Brian Lackey and C.R.
Pratt, all of Athens; Joe and
M ary Lou Boyles, .Parkersburg, W.Va.; Gerald and
Norma Swartz, Marietta;
Eleanor Boyles, and Bob and
Janet Robinson, Belpre;
Clarence and Edna Warner,
Athens ; Teshlyn Taylor,
Washington, D.C.
Other churches represented were: Athens Church of
Christ, Marietta United
Methodist Church, Keno
Church of Christ, Long
Bottom ·united Methodist
Church, Little Hocking
Church, Hemlock Grove
Church, and Faith Full
Gospel Church.

•

••

Debbie Allensworth. Laura ·
Autherson, Charlotte and
Paul Hysell, aU of Middle- port; Billie, Destiny and
Mikey Sayre of Syracuse:;
Flossie Hysell, Rutland; Ron :
and Ruth Schleppi of '
Columbus; Francis Haggy ·
and Shirley Wolfe, Racine.; ,
David Haggy, Jr., Athens; :
Cindy and Greg Loft, Bel1 :
pre; Joe and Carol McClure;. :
Lean, W.Va.; Bobbie J6 ,
McClure, Catlettsburg, Ky:; :
and Tom and Tommy Varian, :
: ,
West Columbia, W.Va.

Plan reunion

Coun cil on Aging. Diana
Coates, RSVP director; and
Patty
Pickens,
activity
director, participated in the

Inside:

Fall Quarter
beginning classes
starting Thursday,
Setpember 27, at
6:00 p.m. at Carelton
School, Syracuse.
For ·more
Information, call

992-6839

~M

•

••
•'

,•
f
f'

at
next meeting, to
held Oct. 9.

I

t

Alfred
personals ,

~
~

~all is the right time .to

ALFRED -Alfred United Methodist Church held
its homecoming on Sept. 16,
with regular services in the
morning, dinner, and an
afternoon program .
Pastor Jane Beattie gave
table grace, and opening and
closing afternoon prayers.
Special program singers
were: Sounds of Praise, a .
male quartet, whose songs
included
RHoly,
Holy,
Holy,S and RHow Great
Thou Art;S Alfred Choir,
RWill There Be Any Stars in
My Crown;S Alfred MenUs
Chorus, RFarther Along;S

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Wedding announced

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lakes in Anniston/Gadsden
to your package and get
unlimited golf for that day
at that site. Hotels, carts
and tax not included.

Bengals toast of Queen City, Page BJ
Bonds closes in on Mac, Page BJ .
Mariners winning again, Page BJ

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Page Bl
Tuesday, September 15, 1001

'fuEsoAv's

HIGHLIGHTS
Air McNair still
a question mark
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- Steve McNair threw on
Monday for the first time
since being knocked out of
Tennessee's season opener,
and coach Jeff Fisher said he
thinks the quarterback should
mrow in practice this week.
MeNair wasn't in uniform
Sunday for the Titans' 13-6
loss to Jacksoqville. Fisher said
McNair tossed 25-to-30 passes to a trainer Monday and
that his range of motion has
returned, with his strength
improving:
Surgery is a possibiliry if
McNair doesn't heal, but that
would put him out . a minimum of three weeks 'a nd possibly up to 14.
"If he weren't getting any
better, that's a consideration,
but he's improving," Fisher
said.

Rocket out wilh

bum knee

MEIGS COUNTY
KARATE CLUB

The Daily Sentinel

tribe loses late one to Jays
• CLEVELAND (AP) - Roy Halladay and
Sctltt Eyre set the pitching tone for the
Toronto Blue Jays. Raul Mondesi delivered
the winning blow.
Halladay was perfect into the sixth inning
and Eyre earned his first career save as Toranto edged the Cleveland Indians 3-2 in 11
innings Monday in the first meeting of the
year between the teams.
"This was a beautiful game to watch," Blue
Jays manager Buck Martinez said after Mondesi's tiebreaking two-run homer in the 11th
inning. "It was well played with some great
pitching and a couple dramatic homers."
Under baseball's new unbalanced schedule
and with one ·week of the season postponed
by terrorist attacks, the former division rivals

didn't play until Toronto's 1 50th game and
the 151 st for Cleveland.
The Indians' magic number for clinching
the AL Central remained at six. Cleveland
· leads Minnesota by 6 1/ 2 games with 1'1 to
play- including three at home tbis weekend
against the Twins.
Carlos Delgado doubled offDanys Baez (52) with one out in the 11th and Mondesi fol lowed with his 27th harrier.
"I hung a curveball and it was a mistake,"
· Baez said.
Bob File (4-3) pitched one inning for the
win, leaving after allowing a leadoff homer to
Jalbert Cab~era in the 11 th. Eyre then got

Please see nibe, B3

CLOSE SHAVE - Cleveland outfielder Jaun Gonzalez is
brushed back by Toronto pitch':/ Roy Halladay Monday. (AP)

NFL, NADA
continue
Orleans
negotiations

Packers drub Redskins
G. B. offense
dominates
D. C. ·difense

NEW ORLEANS (AP) NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue initiated new negotiations
Monday with organizers of an
auto convention that has complicated plans to change the date
of the Super Bowl.
·
Tagliabue and National Automobile Dealers Association
president Phillip Brady met in
· the Washington, D.C., area
where
NADA
is
based- and
agreed
to
assign negotiators who
will.
begin
meeting Thesday.
' The
will cover complicated issues
ranging from financial compensation to resolving a variery of
scheduling confficts for the auto
convention's nearly 30.000 participants and 600 vendors.
"We would certainly have to
be indemnified by the league"
for the cost of changing convention dates, said David Hyatt,
spokesman for NADA. "There
are also some major logistical
problems. It's not just dollars and
cents.''
NADA 's convention currently is set for Feb. 2-5, the weekend after the original Super
Bowl date of Jan. 27. But with
NFL games pushed back a·week
in the wake of Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, the NFL now is leaning
toward holding the Super Bowl
in New Orleans on Feb. 3.
Mayor Marc Moria! has said
the ciry cannot handle both
events simultaneously, and
N ADA had earlier told Tagliabue that it was too late to move
its convention. But Tagliabue
said Sunday that New Orleans
remains the top choice as Super
.Bowl host, even on Feb. 3.
Moria! said the ciry would
prefer to keep the Super Bowl,
which pumps an estimated $400
million into the area economy.
Universiry of New Orleans
economist Tim Ryan says.
"We will continue to work to
ensure the Super Bowl will be
played in New Orleans;' Moria!
said in a written statement. "We
are encouraged by ongoing discus..-;ions."

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)
-The Green Bay Packers
and Washington Redskins
both verified their season
openers were no flukes.
Brett Favre threw three
touchdown passes, Ryan
LongweU kicked three field
goals and Ahman Green
rushed 25 times for 116
yards as the Packers routed
the Redskins 37-0 Mon-·
day night.
And it was Green Bay's
first shutout since beating
the Raiders 28-0 on Dec.
28, 1993, and Washington's
first game without scoring
since Dec. 11, 1993,when

IRVING, Texas (AP)
Dallas Cowboys receiver
Raghib Ismail is expected to
be out 2-to-4 weeks,
although test results on his
injured right knee won't. be
available until Tuesday.
Ismail was injured Sunday
when his leg Was bent under
him while he caught a pass
and was tackled in the second
quarter of Dallas' 32-21 loss .
to San Diego.
Ismail tore a ligament in the
same knee 10 games into last
season and did not return. On
~ey~,L~~~~•n~=w~
~ne (.!fiVe 15efore tills mJury, e
York Jets.
proved that his speed was
It was Washington's first
back ·with an 80-yard touchroad shutout since 1971
down tha:t was the longest of
and for the first time in
his career.
franchise history· the Redskins have not scored a
touchdown in their first
two games.
"I know they're struggling on offense, but to be
able to keep them out of
the end zone was really
WASHINGTON (AP) something," Packers coach
Michael Jordan kept his
Mike Sherman said.
mouth shut and fax machine
The game capped the
off, and the sports world spent
NFL's
·first weekend of play
another day awaiting official
word of his return.
since it postponed all of
J9rdan already has completWeek 2 following the tered the paperwork to sell his
rorist attacks on Washingshare of the Washington Wizton, D.C. and New York ori
ards, but the comeback
FASTER THAN YOU- Packers' receiver Bill Schroeder breaks away from Redskins' cornerPluse ... Pilei!, B:J
announcement was delayed
back Champ Bailey for a touchdown in the third quarter Monday in Green Bay. (AP)
for at least one more day
because of a licensing issue
· with one. of his sponsors.
"Michael has not finalized
his decision;• said Estee Portnoy, vice president of marketing and' client services for
BY MARK WIWAMS
shott (Baltimore) returned after missing race.
SFX, Jordan's management
RIO GRANDE SID
the Wilmington Invitational. HenderOn the women's side, redshbirt freshagency.
CEDARVILLE- For the first time shott finished 25th (27:18 .92). Sopho- man Heather Mace was the top Rio
A statement from Jordan
this season the University of Rio more Derek Baker (Gallipolis) was 27th Grande finish er. . The Logan native was
outlining the reasons foe his
Grande Redmen Cross Country team with a time of 27:21.94. Sophomore
38.th with a time of20:13.55. Sophocomeback was being finalfailed to win the meet they participated Bryan Jones (East Palestine) was 51st
more Amanda Wolfe (Amanda) was 41st
ized, and he is expected to
in. Rio placed fifth (out of 12 teams) at (28:04.08) and junior Jim Robinson
(20:19.30), Sophomore Tiffany Fogle
make his first appearance in a
the Friendship Invitational on Saturday. (Lakeview) was 57th with a time of
(Macksburg) was 96th (22:25. 96) and
Wizards uniform at media day
The Redmen scored 113 points 28:10.83.
in Washington next Monday
while sporting six runners in the event.
Kenyon College won the meet _.;ith freshman Kristin Barnett {South Webthe day before training
Sophomore Matt Boyles. (Tuppers 44 point1; Heidelberg was second (50), ster) , competing in her first co llegiate
camp begins in Wilmington,
Plains) was the top Rio harrier to Wright State was third (95) and race, was 126th with a time 23:54. 19.
N.C.
Cedarville won the meet with 33
finish. He was fifth overall with a time · Cedarville finished fourth (109). Rio
But before he can end his
of 26:12.23. Sophomore Marc Littrell Grande had beaten Cedarville in the points.
three-year . retirement, shoot
(Baltimore) crossed the line, '14.th first meet of the year. .
There were 151 runners in the
his first free throw or run his
There were 119 runners in the men 's women's race.
(26:44 .87). Senior Mich~enderfirst wind sprints, Jordan and

Air Jordan
keeps them
waiting

Boyles fifth at Cedarville XC meet

legions of lawyers must fine. tune the fine print.
· Because owners can't play,
Jordan had to sell his share in
Lincoln Holdings, which
· !&gt;WilS a portion of the Wizards, the NHL's Washington
Capitals and the MCI Center. .
Jordan's stake, about 10 percent, goes· to Lincoln Holdings majoriry owner Ted
Leonsis.

•••••
Not seeing your team's
results in the' Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to fax their
game informadon to 9922157,

Meigs, ·Eastem volleyball teams post
BY

DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

NELSONVILLE - After
losing . for the first time this
season last week against Eastern, the Meigs Marauder vol~
leyball team rebounded with
a 15-2, 15-8 win over Nelsonville-York in TVC volleyball action Monday evening at
Nelsonville-York
· High
School.
Nikki Butcher had a good

game leading Meigs with 14
points and 18-of-18 serving,
Corrie Hoover added 11
points on 12-of- 13 serving,
four kills and one assist,
Mindy Chancey added four
·points on 6-of-7 serving, she
had seven assists and one kill,
Kayte Davis added one point
on 3-of-3 serving with one

two blocks, and Kayte Jeffers
was 2-of-2 serving with one
kill and eight assists. C hrissy
Miller added one kill.
Meigs has a team was 43of- 45 serving, with 17 kills.
Meigs is now 8-1 both
overall and in the TVC, they
will travel to Federal Hockin g
..'on Tuesday.
kill.
The Marauder junior varsiJaynee Davis was 2-of-2 ry also got back on the winserving and had nine kills and ning track with a 15-6, 15- 12

..

s

win. They, like the varsity ford. Eastern is now 10-0 in
hold an 8-l mark both overall the Hocking Division, while
and in the TV C.
posting a 10-2 overall mark.
Senior Janet Calaway led
the Eastern charge with 21
points on a 21-of-27 serving
Bv ScoTT WoLFE ·
night, five aces, four dinks,
OVP CORRESPONDENT
WATERFORD The and an 18-of-31 setting night .
Eastern Eagles
continued Calaway had nine sets for
their dominance ofTri-Valley kills. Kass Lodwick added 12
Conference competition by points on a 10-of-17 night
defeating Waterford in three
sets Monday night at WaterPle1se IH V·BIII, Bl

Eastem wins again

\

�••
Page A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

. Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

NEWS AND
NOTES

Program says thanks to senio.r volunteers
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY- Reco nition of volunteers for com munity service highlighted
the recent 28th anmversary
observance of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
at the Senior Cirizens Center.
Theme of the event was
"Volunteers Are ' Shining
Stars," with stars and other
decorations carrying out a
red, white and blue color
scheme.
Special recognition was
given to Josephine Smith,
92, who has volunteered in
the program, established in
1973, for the past 25 years.
She was presented a corsage, a check for $25, and a
commendation from the
Ohio Senate.
Others recognized were
Nettie Boyer, Goldie Graham and Kethel Hatfield, 20
years; Frances Alkire, Mary
Bise and Sylvia Wolfe for 15
years; and Mildred Arnold,

Ethd Bentz. Jane Brown,
Geraldine C leland , Gold1e
frederic.Llleleo Hiii~Vioas
Lee, Edith Sisson. H.rry
Stobart, and Mary Belle
Warner, I 0 years.
John Costanzo, superintendent of the AthensMeigs Educational Service
Cemer, spoke on the con tribution s which ' se nior
volunteers make. to ' the
schools through the STAR
and other programs .
Rep. John Carey congratulated the volunteers for
their years of service and
conlmented on the important role they play ln the
community.
Others speaking briefly
were Chrisri Lynch , field
representative for Rep. Ted
Strickland ; Rhonda Dailey,
R . N., Veterans Memorial
Hospital administrator; and
Anita · Moore, volunteer
coordinator for Holzer
Hospice.
Susan Oliver, executive
director, Meigs County

MCINE - The Oscar
Reed/ Charles
Hysell
reunion was held recently at
Star Mill Park.
·
A moment of silent prayer
was held before the minutes
and treasurerUs report oflast
yearUs meeting was read.
Officers and meeting place
and time will remain the
same for next year.
Gifts were presented to:
Flossie Hysell, oldest; Mikey
Sayre, youngest; and Bobbie
Jo McClure, traveled the farthest.
Attending were: Guy
Hysell, Roger, Jane, Bill and
Cody HyseU, BiD, Ann and
Billy Carswell, Mary and
Ryan Caruthers, Jessica,
Kathy and kasey Roush, and
Aaron Bowersock, all of
Pomeroy; Rachel Bliss,
Cleveland; Mark, Bob, Kay,
Kyle and Berry Johnson ,
Mike, Joy and Josh Hysell,
Dave Haggy, Terry Spencer,

.
t.:...-&amp;.

HONORED FOR SERVICE- Josephine Smith, seated center,
was honored for 25 years of volunteering in the Retired Senior
Volunteer Program of the Meigs County Council on Aging. Others honored at Friday's celebration were, f~ont left, Sylvia
Wolfe, 15 years, and right, Goldie Graham, 20 years; and
Goldie Frederick, Geraldine Cleland, Mildred Arnold, all 10
years; Frances Alkire, 15 years; and Vinis Lee and Edith Sis. son, each 10 years. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)
observance with vocalist
Willie Church providing
entertainment. Numerous
door prizes \vere awarded.

••

PEOPLE
Jimmy Carter:

•

ATlANTA (AP) ~ ·
Former President Jimmy
Carter has canceled a trip :
to Bangladesh to monitqr
elections because of th;e :
Sept: 11 terrorist attacks. ·.
The National Demo ~ .
ratic lnstirute for lnterna.- ,
tiona! Affairs and tile c
Atlanta-based
Cart r ·:
Center· had planned ~ ,
send an internation;tl ,
observer delegation to t]'je :
country's . Oct. 1 parli4- ;
mentary elections.
l :
But the Carter Center
said Monday that the trjp ;
was called off due to tKe •
attacks.

SOCIE.T Y NEWS AND NOTES

..J

New arrival
MIDDLEPORT - Gary
and Tonya Stobart Coleman
of Middleport announce the
birth of a daughter, Kassandra Luann, born July 31 at
O'Bleness Memorial Hosp ital in Athens .
The infant weighed seven
pounds, 13 ounces. Mr. and
Mrs. Coleman also have a
son, Shaun Alan.
· Maternal grandparents ar~
Lucretia Stobart of Middleport and the late Arthur
Allen Stobart. Maternal
--great-grandparents are Beulah Stobart of Winter
Haven, Fla., formerly of
Antiquity. Paternal grandparents are Loren and Mary
Coleman of Pomeroy.

UMWmeets
ed Methodist Women met
recently at the church. Pastor Jane Beattie gave the
opening prayer during the
business meeting. Secretary
Martha Poole and Osie Mae
Follrod, treasurer, gave their
reports
which
were
approved.
The group reported 55
sick calls.
Thelma Henderson, Sarah
Caldwell, and Nellie Parker
reported on their attendance
at the UMW annual meeting in Belpre.
Officers for the Alfred
..JUMW are to remain the
same. Program books for
next year were distributed. A
ballot was taken on the time
to hold the meeting if the
regular meeting cannot be
held.

Kits for f:estival of Sharing David Barringer, RAre You land, Matt Calaway, ·Marie
have been collected.
Washed in the Blood of .the Sargent, Karen Spencer,
Nina Robinson gave the Lamb;S and ' Philip Boyles, Lutchie
Riggs,
Helen
prayer calen9ar in the RWhen Jesus Was on the Swartz, Lloyd and Ruth
absence of Mary Jo Bar- · Cross.S
·
Brooks, Guy and Evelyn
ringer, who had chosen
Janice Kuhn invited her Spencer, Mildred Caldwell,
Susan Hunt of Oklahoma former schoolmate·s to sing Betty Chevalier, Millard and
City, Okla., who is in laity. Rpeep and WideS with her. Terry Swartz, Wayne, Patti
The society signed a birthAttending were: Wilma and William Leib, Marlene
day card for her.
Henderson, Nina Robinson, Donovan, Debbie, Tyler,
Henderson gave the mis- Sarah Caldwell, Thelma Katlyn ·and Alison Barber,
sions report from RRe- Henderson, Victor Bahr, Kathy and Kyle Easman,
sponseS on RA Mission Russell Archer, Dave and Gary and Brenda Johnson,
Dream Comes True,S about Mary Jo Barringer, Richard, John Taylor, Joe and Pat
Rose Mae LudlqwUs trip to Florence and Tim Spencer, Mayh ew, Danielle Spencer,
Alaska with a missions team Pete and Osie Follrod , Derrick Bolin, Starling and
in summer, 2000.
Kathy, Stacie and Alan War- . Sandra Massa r, Nellie ParkHenderson led the pro- son, Marilyn . Robinson, e r, Janet Connolly, and Will
gram, RJubl1ee ?'000 - Yes Lloyd and Doris Dillinger, Poole, all local ; Geneva
to Life No to Death,S Kirt and Tiffany Spencer, . Farnsworth, Salem; Dale and
with those mentioned read- Melvin Tracy, Shelley Eng- Janice Kuhn, Littl; Hocking and discussing the topic.
C a] d we 11 as h os tess an d 1':"~~'"":':=-:=-:r:::-:;;:-:""':'"--:,-::--0;-(:;:-:::;;-;;;:::-;;;::;:
served Jello, sandwiches and
party mix.
Pastor Beattie will be the

ing; Jeff and Nora Wallace,
Brian Lackey and C.R.
Pratt, all of Athens; Joe and
M ary Lou Boyles, .Parkersburg, W.Va.; Gerald and
Norma Swartz, Marietta;
Eleanor Boyles, and Bob and
Janet Robinson, Belpre;
Clarence and Edna Warner,
Athens ; Teshlyn Taylor,
Washington, D.C.
Other churches represented were: Athens Church of
Christ, Marietta United
Methodist Church, Keno
Church of Christ, Long
Bottom ·united Methodist
Church, Little Hocking
Church, Hemlock Grove
Church, and Faith Full
Gospel Church.

•

••

Debbie Allensworth. Laura ·
Autherson, Charlotte and
Paul Hysell, aU of Middle- port; Billie, Destiny and
Mikey Sayre of Syracuse:;
Flossie Hysell, Rutland; Ron :
and Ruth Schleppi of '
Columbus; Francis Haggy ·
and Shirley Wolfe, Racine.; ,
David Haggy, Jr., Athens; :
Cindy and Greg Loft, Bel1 :
pre; Joe and Carol McClure;. :
Lean, W.Va.; Bobbie J6 ,
McClure, Catlettsburg, Ky:; :
and Tom and Tommy Varian, :
: ,
West Columbia, W.Va.

Plan reunion

Coun cil on Aging. Diana
Coates, RSVP director; and
Patty
Pickens,
activity
director, participated in the

Inside:

Fall Quarter
beginning classes
starting Thursday,
Setpember 27, at
6:00 p.m. at Carelton
School, Syracuse.
For ·more
Information, call

992-6839

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next meeting, to
held Oct. 9.

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ALFRED -Alfred United Methodist Church held
its homecoming on Sept. 16,
with regular services in the
morning, dinner, and an
afternoon program .
Pastor Jane Beattie gave
table grace, and opening and
closing afternoon prayers.
Special program singers
were: Sounds of Praise, a .
male quartet, whose songs
included
RHoly,
Holy,
Holy,S and RHow Great
Thou Art;S Alfred Choir,
RWill There Be Any Stars in
My Crown;S Alfred MenUs
Chorus, RFarther Along;S

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Bengals toast of Queen City, Page BJ
Bonds closes in on Mac, Page BJ .
Mariners winning again, Page BJ

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Page Bl
Tuesday, September 15, 1001

'fuEsoAv's

HIGHLIGHTS
Air McNair still
a question mark
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)
- Steve McNair threw on
Monday for the first time
since being knocked out of
Tennessee's season opener,
and coach Jeff Fisher said he
thinks the quarterback should
mrow in practice this week.
MeNair wasn't in uniform
Sunday for the Titans' 13-6
loss to Jacksoqville. Fisher said
McNair tossed 25-to-30 passes to a trainer Monday and
that his range of motion has
returned, with his strength
improving:
Surgery is a possibiliry if
McNair doesn't heal, but that
would put him out . a minimum of three weeks 'a nd possibly up to 14.
"If he weren't getting any
better, that's a consideration,
but he's improving," Fisher
said.

Rocket out wilh

bum knee

MEIGS COUNTY
KARATE CLUB

The Daily Sentinel

tribe loses late one to Jays
• CLEVELAND (AP) - Roy Halladay and
Sctltt Eyre set the pitching tone for the
Toronto Blue Jays. Raul Mondesi delivered
the winning blow.
Halladay was perfect into the sixth inning
and Eyre earned his first career save as Toranto edged the Cleveland Indians 3-2 in 11
innings Monday in the first meeting of the
year between the teams.
"This was a beautiful game to watch," Blue
Jays manager Buck Martinez said after Mondesi's tiebreaking two-run homer in the 11th
inning. "It was well played with some great
pitching and a couple dramatic homers."
Under baseball's new unbalanced schedule
and with one ·week of the season postponed
by terrorist attacks, the former division rivals

didn't play until Toronto's 1 50th game and
the 151 st for Cleveland.
The Indians' magic number for clinching
the AL Central remained at six. Cleveland
· leads Minnesota by 6 1/ 2 games with 1'1 to
play- including three at home tbis weekend
against the Twins.
Carlos Delgado doubled offDanys Baez (52) with one out in the 11th and Mondesi fol lowed with his 27th harrier.
"I hung a curveball and it was a mistake,"
· Baez said.
Bob File (4-3) pitched one inning for the
win, leaving after allowing a leadoff homer to
Jalbert Cab~era in the 11 th. Eyre then got

Please see nibe, B3

CLOSE SHAVE - Cleveland outfielder Jaun Gonzalez is
brushed back by Toronto pitch':/ Roy Halladay Monday. (AP)

NFL, NADA
continue
Orleans
negotiations

Packers drub Redskins
G. B. offense
dominates
D. C. ·difense

NEW ORLEANS (AP) NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue initiated new negotiations
Monday with organizers of an
auto convention that has complicated plans to change the date
of the Super Bowl.
·
Tagliabue and National Automobile Dealers Association
president Phillip Brady met in
· the Washington, D.C., area
where
NADA
is
based- and
agreed
to
assign negotiators who
will.
begin
meeting Thesday.
' The
will cover complicated issues
ranging from financial compensation to resolving a variery of
scheduling confficts for the auto
convention's nearly 30.000 participants and 600 vendors.
"We would certainly have to
be indemnified by the league"
for the cost of changing convention dates, said David Hyatt,
spokesman for NADA. "There
are also some major logistical
problems. It's not just dollars and
cents.''
NADA 's convention currently is set for Feb. 2-5, the weekend after the original Super
Bowl date of Jan. 27. But with
NFL games pushed back a·week
in the wake of Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, the NFL now is leaning
toward holding the Super Bowl
in New Orleans on Feb. 3.
Mayor Marc Moria! has said
the ciry cannot handle both
events simultaneously, and
N ADA had earlier told Tagliabue that it was too late to move
its convention. But Tagliabue
said Sunday that New Orleans
remains the top choice as Super
.Bowl host, even on Feb. 3.
Moria! said the ciry would
prefer to keep the Super Bowl,
which pumps an estimated $400
million into the area economy.
Universiry of New Orleans
economist Tim Ryan says.
"We will continue to work to
ensure the Super Bowl will be
played in New Orleans;' Moria!
said in a written statement. "We
are encouraged by ongoing discus..-;ions."

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)
-The Green Bay Packers
and Washington Redskins
both verified their season
openers were no flukes.
Brett Favre threw three
touchdown passes, Ryan
LongweU kicked three field
goals and Ahman Green
rushed 25 times for 116
yards as the Packers routed
the Redskins 37-0 Mon-·
day night.
And it was Green Bay's
first shutout since beating
the Raiders 28-0 on Dec.
28, 1993, and Washington's
first game without scoring
since Dec. 11, 1993,when

IRVING, Texas (AP)
Dallas Cowboys receiver
Raghib Ismail is expected to
be out 2-to-4 weeks,
although test results on his
injured right knee won't. be
available until Tuesday.
Ismail was injured Sunday
when his leg Was bent under
him while he caught a pass
and was tackled in the second
quarter of Dallas' 32-21 loss .
to San Diego.
Ismail tore a ligament in the
same knee 10 games into last
season and did not return. On
~ey~,L~~~~•n~=w~
~ne (.!fiVe 15efore tills mJury, e
York Jets.
proved that his speed was
It was Washington's first
back ·with an 80-yard touchroad shutout since 1971
down tha:t was the longest of
and for the first time in
his career.
franchise history· the Redskins have not scored a
touchdown in their first
two games.
"I know they're struggling on offense, but to be
able to keep them out of
the end zone was really
WASHINGTON (AP) something," Packers coach
Michael Jordan kept his
Mike Sherman said.
mouth shut and fax machine
The game capped the
off, and the sports world spent
NFL's
·first weekend of play
another day awaiting official
word of his return.
since it postponed all of
J9rdan already has completWeek 2 following the tered the paperwork to sell his
rorist attacks on Washingshare of the Washington Wizton, D.C. and New York ori
ards, but the comeback
FASTER THAN YOU- Packers' receiver Bill Schroeder breaks away from Redskins' cornerPluse ... Pilei!, B:J
announcement was delayed
back Champ Bailey for a touchdown in the third quarter Monday in Green Bay. (AP)
for at least one more day
because of a licensing issue
· with one. of his sponsors.
"Michael has not finalized
his decision;• said Estee Portnoy, vice president of marketing and' client services for
BY MARK WIWAMS
shott (Baltimore) returned after missing race.
SFX, Jordan's management
RIO GRANDE SID
the Wilmington Invitational. HenderOn the women's side, redshbirt freshagency.
CEDARVILLE- For the first time shott finished 25th (27:18 .92). Sopho- man Heather Mace was the top Rio
A statement from Jordan
this season the University of Rio more Derek Baker (Gallipolis) was 27th Grande finish er. . The Logan native was
outlining the reasons foe his
Grande Redmen Cross Country team with a time of 27:21.94. Sophomore
38.th with a time of20:13.55. Sophocomeback was being finalfailed to win the meet they participated Bryan Jones (East Palestine) was 51st
more Amanda Wolfe (Amanda) was 41st
ized, and he is expected to
in. Rio placed fifth (out of 12 teams) at (28:04.08) and junior Jim Robinson
(20:19.30), Sophomore Tiffany Fogle
make his first appearance in a
the Friendship Invitational on Saturday. (Lakeview) was 57th with a time of
(Macksburg) was 96th (22:25. 96) and
Wizards uniform at media day
The Redmen scored 113 points 28:10.83.
in Washington next Monday
while sporting six runners in the event.
Kenyon College won the meet _.;ith freshman Kristin Barnett {South Webthe day before training
Sophomore Matt Boyles. (Tuppers 44 point1; Heidelberg was second (50), ster) , competing in her first co llegiate
camp begins in Wilmington,
Plains) was the top Rio harrier to Wright State was third (95) and race, was 126th with a time 23:54. 19.
N.C.
Cedarville won the meet with 33
finish. He was fifth overall with a time · Cedarville finished fourth (109). Rio
But before he can end his
of 26:12.23. Sophomore Marc Littrell Grande had beaten Cedarville in the points.
three-year . retirement, shoot
(Baltimore) crossed the line, '14.th first meet of the year. .
There were 151 runners in the
his first free throw or run his
There were 119 runners in the men 's women's race.
(26:44 .87). Senior Mich~enderfirst wind sprints, Jordan and

Air Jordan
keeps them
waiting

Boyles fifth at Cedarville XC meet

legions of lawyers must fine. tune the fine print.
· Because owners can't play,
Jordan had to sell his share in
Lincoln Holdings, which
· !&gt;WilS a portion of the Wizards, the NHL's Washington
Capitals and the MCI Center. .
Jordan's stake, about 10 percent, goes· to Lincoln Holdings majoriry owner Ted
Leonsis.

•••••
Not seeing your team's
results in the' Daily Sentinel?
Tell your coaches to fax their
game informadon to 9922157,

Meigs, ·Eastem volleyball teams post
BY

DAVE HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONDENT

NELSONVILLE - After
losing . for the first time this
season last week against Eastern, the Meigs Marauder vol~
leyball team rebounded with
a 15-2, 15-8 win over Nelsonville-York in TVC volleyball action Monday evening at
Nelsonville-York
· High
School.
Nikki Butcher had a good

game leading Meigs with 14
points and 18-of-18 serving,
Corrie Hoover added 11
points on 12-of- 13 serving,
four kills and one assist,
Mindy Chancey added four
·points on 6-of-7 serving, she
had seven assists and one kill,
Kayte Davis added one point
on 3-of-3 serving with one

two blocks, and Kayte Jeffers
was 2-of-2 serving with one
kill and eight assists. C hrissy
Miller added one kill.
Meigs has a team was 43of- 45 serving, with 17 kills.
Meigs is now 8-1 both
overall and in the TVC, they
will travel to Federal Hockin g
..'on Tuesday.
kill.
The Marauder junior varsiJaynee Davis was 2-of-2 ry also got back on the winserving and had nine kills and ning track with a 15-6, 15- 12

..

s

win. They, like the varsity ford. Eastern is now 10-0 in
hold an 8-l mark both overall the Hocking Division, while
and in the TV C.
posting a 10-2 overall mark.
Senior Janet Calaway led
the Eastern charge with 21
points on a 21-of-27 serving
Bv ScoTT WoLFE ·
night, five aces, four dinks,
OVP CORRESPONDENT
WATERFORD The and an 18-of-31 setting night .
Eastern Eagles
continued Calaway had nine sets for
their dominance ofTri-Valley kills. Kass Lodwick added 12
Conference competition by points on a 10-of-17 night
defeating Waterford in three
sets Monday night at WaterPle1se IH V·BIII, Bl

Eastem wins again

\

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

'\ .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

--------------------~--------~------~
'

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\.e
CLASSIFIED

Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2001

Co~&amp;nty,

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BY THE .ASSOCIATED PRESS
Barry Bonds and Ric key Henderson closed in on some
nl:ljor milestones.
Bonds hit his 67th homer Monday night , moving
within three of Mark McGwire 's major league record as
the San Francisco Giants defeated the Los Angeles
Dodgers 2- 1 Monday night and moved closer in the NL
W est race.
'That's what we play for - wins,'' Bonds said. "It'll be
fun if we win the next two."
The Giants moved within I 1/ 2 games of idle Arizona
in the NL West and two behind St. LoUis in the wild card
race. The Dodgers are 4 112 back in the division and five
behind in the wild card.
Bonds' homer came in the Giants' 151st game. M eGwire hit his 67th in St . Louis' 162nd game. T h e Cardinals
played 163 games that season because one game was suspended by rain.
H enderson got close to a pair of big marks of his own.
He went 4-for-5 with three runs scored in San Diego's
15-11 loss at Colorado.
Henderson is three runs short oftyingTy Cobb's m ajor
league record of 2,245, and seven hits shy of 3,000. H en derson also hit his SOOth career double.
In other NL games , it was Houston 9, St. Louis 3;
Florida !,Atlanta 0; and Pittsburgh 7 , Chicago 6 . .

CINCINNATI (AP)- Sipping .champagne in September?
Sure, it sounds strange. The Cincinnati Bengals have played
ohly two games, and they're getting toasts and pats on the back
as if they've d on e something special.
By local standards,.they have.
The NFL's worst team of the past 10 years is bask.ing in a 20 _start that has done wonders for its reputation. After a 21 - 10 .
vjctory Sunday ove r the Baltimore Ravens, about 20 players ·
~ent to a restaurant and got a complimentary bottle of Dom
Perignon.
"People were like , 'Oh, you just beat th e Supel' B owl
chari1ps!"' said ce nter Rich Braham, in his eighth season with
the Bengals. "The biggest thing now is you go our in public
and they know you more often. Everybody's your friend ."
. The 2-0 start is cause for celebration. It's only the third time
in 10 years that the Bengals have been unbeaten so deep into
the season.
·
"Th e last time l was 2-0? Barcelona," said newcomer Jon
Kitna: w ho was MVP of the World Bowl in 1997 . " All it is is a
good start. The weather's getting ready to cha nge, the days are
ready to get a lot shorter, th ere's .a lot of season left."
Before the leaves drop off the trees, the Ben gals have usually
dropped o ut of contention. T h ey haven't w on their first three
gam es smce 1990, w hen they won the AFC Central. They
haven't had a win ning season since.
· The Bengals went 6-31-in September from 1991-2000, setting up " one lost season after another and o n e debate after
another over why the counry built them a new stadium.
·
Only 49,632 fans- the smallest crowd in Paul Brown StaLjiUin's two years - showed up ·o n a sunny afternoon to see the
Ben gals take advantage of the Ravens' six turnovers. After the
.JBengals recovered a fumble on the final play, the players doused
coach Dick LeBeau with water and lobbed chin straps, sweat
bands and other keepsakes into the crowd .

r

Dla-

ICAN LEAGUE

~·:::.;..:..:,,::.;:.:;..____

Seattle winning again

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OVP CORRESPONDENT
RACINE - The Southern

Tribe
from PageB1

first hit with o ne ou t in the
sixth - a lined dou ble ofl" the
wall in left. D iaz held seco nd
as Cabrera followed with an
infield sin gle. Third ba seman
Felipe Lopez dived to his le ft
to stop Cabre ra's g rounder,
but couldn 't make a play.
Halladay halted the threat
by getting Kenny Lofto n to
ground into a double play.
A sacrifice fly by pinch - hitter Tony Fernand ez put
Toronto ah ead 1- 0m th e seventh off Indians star ter Bartolo Colon .
Lopez drew a one-o ur
walk, took third on ·a sin gle by
Darrin Fl etcher an d scored

three outs.
"You come in and h ave to
forget how great' a lineup
Cleveland has,'' Eyre said .
"Having a b ette r m ental
approach I S one thing I
learned in the minors. I never
paid attention to things like
that."
Roberto Alomar ti ed it at 1
with one out in the ninth ,
hitting his 20th homer on a
2-2 pitch from Billy Koch.
"I thought right there we
were going to win it," Indians
o
fl
when Fernandez lotted a y
manager Charlie M anuel said . .
to left- center.
Ii was Koch's sixth blown
C olon allowed six hits and
save in 40 chances.
stru ck out eight in R 1-3
Halladay retired the first 16
batters in his second straight innin gs. Toronto put t wo rundominant start. He allowed ners on b ase in the third ,
three hits and struck out six in fourth and seventh innings,
6 1-3 innings.
but each time Colon ended
The right- hande r, reca.~
lle d.,..--"'
thellireat with a str i!&lt;,·o ut.- ~~
from the minors in July,
It wasn't the first t ime Halextended his scoreless streak laday flirted with a n o- hitte r.
to 12 1- 3 mnings . He had a His first career win Sept. 27,
career-high 11 strikeouts in 1998, came when h e· held
his previous start, a 4-2 win Detroit hitle ss for 8 2- 3
·
J·nni· n"'
over B aIt1more
.
,.- unti!''yielding a pin ch
Einar Diaz got Cleveland's homer to 'B obby Htggmson.

r

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I

r~l

I

r

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$8/HR
Light

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Work

i

Mailing Our Sales Brochures!

Free Supplies, Postage!
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For Free lntormalion,
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and five aces with an 18-of24 passing gan1e; two blocks,
and four kills. Tiffeny Bissell
added five points on a 5-8 serving night and two aces, a 12-of22 setting night with four sets
for kills; and AI)'Ma Holter had
two points on a 3-of-6 night
and or.e ace. Amanda Yeager
had a point, and Katie R obertson a point.
Whitney Karr and Tammy
Bissell again anchored the Eastern front line, complimenting
the Lodwick effort. Karr was 7of-14 spiking with four kills and
four blocks. Bissell was 5-of-13
spiking with three kills, and two
blocks, while Holter was 4-of-6
with a kill and a block. Robertson had two kills.
Eastern Coach Pam Douthitt
was well pleased with another
road win as Eastern closes in on
yet another Tri-Valley Conference C hampionship.

Tornadoes took tlw e.&gt;rlv k'.td m
botl1 game. but t(·ll ha~ d 111 suffering 1:\YO !os.&lt;;es to the 1 nmblc
Tomcats M ond.1y m ~l n 111 TriV:illey Confe rence volk·yball
action in Chark&gt;s W I layman
gymnasium. Souther11 drnpped
6- 15 and 13- 1:; matches.
In the first b'31llC, Kane Sayre
put Southern up 2-ll, but Tnmlrb!e came right back to t:tke a 62 advantage and never looked
back en route to the 15-h wm
In the second b&lt;lllll'. Sou thl·rn
suffe red a similar fate . S:J )T&lt;' pm
Southern up 3-0 and l'ullins
and Williams added good S&lt;.·t-ves
for a 5- 0 Southern lead, b,·fo rc
Southern smmbk•d and allowed
Trimble to fight back fmm a 59 deficit.
Sayre led So uthern wtth five
po onts, an ace, and a kill. Emily
Hill had four points and a 9-of.JO night spiking; D ,•am Pullins
had four points on a 7-of-7
serving night and an ace with a
16-of- 16 serving night. Ti!funy
Williams had three poi nts o n ·a
5-of-5 night and a kill.
Puny Lee contributed a gooll
passing game · and settmg
to compliment Pulli ns. while
Rachel Chapman added 5-of-5
serving with two points. and Jeri
Hill contributed w ith sc·vc ral
successful passes.

~~ IF MOJOKcr~ I n,ai==::H;;;OME;;;;;;;;;;;~

r

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from Page Bl

from

I

~~~~~.~~~h~~g~nga~=

V-Ball

Pack

of 28, 32 and 30 yan:ls.
Favre threw touchdown
passes of 12 yards to Antonio
Freeman in the first quarter,
PageB1
41 yards to Billy Schroeder in
the third quarter and 4 yards
Sept. II.
Mer the long layoff, neit\Jer to Bubba Franks in the fourth
the Packers , who beat Detroit quarter.
28-6 on opening weekend,
George, who has struggled
nor the Red&lt;k.ins, who lost to to adapt to Schottenheimer's
San Diego 30-3,knewifthose ball-control passing game, was
games were true gauges or sacked five tin1es, including
four straight third-down plays.
not.
But the Packers dominated
Mter going 6-of-10 for 37
from the start behind Favre yards in the first half, George
and Green, the NFI.:s leading was intercepted by Nate
rusher and the first Packers' Wayne at his own 16 on the
running back ever to top I 00 first series of the second half.
yards in the season's first two
Washington's defense held
games. Green also caught a and Longwell's 32-yarder
team-best six passes for 30 made it 13-0.
·
'\ yards'
Then, Schroeder, who hadAnd Redsk.ins quarterback n't caught a pass all night, ·
Jeff George, benched during caught a bullet from Favre in
the loss at San Diego. played stride as he sliced through the
worse, handing Marty coverage of Champ Bailey
Schottenheimer his first 0-2 and Sam Shade on a quick
~tart in his IS-year NFL slant for a 41-yard score and a ·
coaching career.
20-6 lead.
George finished 15-of- 24
Favre hit Franks in the end
for 102 yards. Favre was 20- zone on the first play of the
of-31 for 236 yards.
fourth quarter, and Longw&lt;:ll's
Redskins returner Mi¢ael 30-yarder capped. a 13-play ·
Bates, one of the league's top drive that took 7:19.
return men, conunitteda lS•-=-- -Washington- lost linebacker
yard personal foul on coverage La Var Arrington (knee), corditty and fumbled three times, nerback Donovan Greer
the last of which was returned (knee) and defensive end
27 yards for a touchdown by Marco Coleman (elbow) .The
Rendell Mealey with three Packers lost rook.ie tight end
minutes left.
David Martin (shoulder).
Longwell k.icked field goals

von· blalde Sun Alae me· &amp; Set Up. 1-8e6·926·2425 3 bedroom houoe, 7 acres, 1740)446-6030
Opportunlly. (740)441 - 1982
mortal Glrdena on Rl33.
I oulbulldlng, small blm. Now Taking Applications· JET
1 1/4 acres, 3 br. 2 fire pia· New 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2 Route 62, 5 miles from 35 West 2 Bedroom Town.
A.EAATION MOTORS
cos. (blkaolmh ont lncT ludoa an bllh, only SSOI!.~n, call Point Pleaoanl, Mason Co. houoe Apertmonls, lncluJoo Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
exira lc en, V room, _N...,Ik...,kl_,l7...,40..:.::)365..cc:.~
__7_._ _ ccc:a...,ll.:.:l304..:...:)6c:.7...,5...,·4358
..:.:;.:.__~ water sewage, Trash, Slock. Calt Ron Evans, 1.
~ I
bedroom, btlh) 2 car oa· Now 2002 Fleetwood only 3 bedroom newer home $350/Mo., 740-446.Q008. 800.537.9528.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The M ariners took their
raga, p~valt rural eettlng, sns down and $150.85 per
Th
'I
't fi
I d .
h
d
50.IC 50 ah~
II
304-•••
near
Porter
S42"'mo
De•
•
h
A
rt
e
1111
estone
wasn
rst
ea since t e secon
V\1 ca
~- month,
call
Cheryl,
,
w
•
.ara .own ousa pa • - - - - - - - - 2050 or 304·882·3885.
(740)385-4387
poaR &amp; reterence
menta, Very2 Floors,
Spacious,
2 MOBILE HOME OWNERS :
lmportant to Jamie Moyer. inning of their loss to Ana12 gauge sholgun &amp;BB gun
(740)446·2601
aflerrequired.
5pm. Bedrooms,
CA, 1
2
wae stolen at Robert
vu
•
1-800·21,..()45 '
For sale by owner: Nice bl· Now Double Wldo . $195 Cotta~ suitable lor single 1/2 Bath, Fully Carpeted, Huge Inventory, Dlscounl
What -mattere d t o hi m W as heim on T h urs d ay 36
expending. $25/S75hr. PfT down.
Transportation
and
R~t90-05· 1274B.
Wa
u~t~a. Th I8 I1 Sa nlfman· FfT'886·568-3713.
lodging avallablo. Operato,.
level homo on 1 acra near Per Monlhl 3 Bedroom, 2 01 co~ple $250.00 Lincoln Adutt Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Prices, On Vinyl Skirting,
h
h
S tJ
M ·
tal. Asking lhallta relumod www.mogabuckl4you.n01 are Olandlng byl Call todayl 117U ••-· ,. __ CHeater. Throe bedroom, Balh. Froo Delivery &amp; Set· Avo. call Homestead 304· llo, S1art $365/Mo. No Pols, Doors, Windows, Anchors,
t at t e
ea t e
,anners innings
when John
and no charges will bo ::..._..:.:..:...;..:...;;_:_--....,_ 1·1188·432-6937. .
miSIEJ.ANEXli.IS
two balhs, one-car garage, up. 1-888·928·3426
Lease
Plus
Socurtly
Oepoall
Water
Healers,
Plumbing
&amp;
ended
their
longest
losing
.
Olerud
broke
a
1-all
tic in the
675·5640 ask tor Nancy.
mode.
ARBY'S RESTAURANTS
family' room with tlroplaco,
Required, Days: 740·446· Elactr~al Parts, Fumaces &amp;
--------~ ARE CURRENTLY SEEK· Help wanted caring tor lho
s~n room. New central heal· 1st tllne buyers· Govern· Ooublewlde for rent, 2 bed· 3461; Evenings: 740·367· Hoot Pumps. Bennetts Mo·
streak of the season.
third with a two-run double.
Disney Beach Vacalions, 6 INO CANDIDATES FDA eldorty, Darsl Group Hom.e, 4 piece Badroom sullo, lng &amp; ale syslem. One ml· menl loans· buy loans &amp; room wllh garage $375 plua 0602, 740·446·0101.
bile Home Supply, 740·446·
Moye r won the !50th
"""'e haven't hit a lull all
nlghla, nice holel, wlllsacrt· ALL LEVELS OF STORE now paying minimum wage, Queen bed, nlghl etand, nulo off Roule 7, bulotlll prl· sale· (740)446·3093 Oek· dopoail, (740)992·7401 .
9416 www.orvb.com/bln·
W'
lk:e tor $199, (6t4)898· MANAGEMENT. Aggros· new shltle: 7am-3pm, 7am· cheat ot drawers, 62" drooo· vate. (740)965-3961
wood Suporcenler
Apertmon1 Available Now nett
game of his career as the AL year long, but last w eek we
2728
slve unllexpenolon IBiaklng 5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· or wllh mirror, $300.
Houses for Renl 2 bed·
0.11
:;:::::____ _ _ _ _
W
h
·
M ·
place within lho local trt· 7am, call740·992·5023.
740!1149·2653
For sale or lease.lg. ranch 2· 12x40 mobile homes, rooms &amp; 1 bath, located on
lWin River Towero
Moving Must Selll Brown
est C amp1on
armers did ,'' said Bret Boone, who
NewToYouThrlfiShoppe
t
olylo home, 4 br., 3 bl., wl $1800 each 1· 10x38 mo· thoGalllallawrencoCounty
. (304)675-6679.
t
h &amp; Ch 1 $25
d th 1i · R
rs 9 3
1p
1 nd
1
9WestStlmson, Athens stao araa romolon a Homoworkoro
NHdod 11111!
WANnD
at;~eened In pelio porch, 2 bile home, si,500or$4,500 line. Call between 8:30pm· lorappllca11on. HUOsubsl· '!:,~ ~uc chair:' 550:·
route
e exas ange
had three hits. "It happens in
740·592·1842
~n':'a ~a~~~~~~~;: $635 Weekly Processing
To Do
car garage $78,000.
tor all three. (740)441·0219 11 :00pm. (740)256-8803
dlzod apt.for eldorty and Welghl Machine s1oo.
on M o nday night to end their a
- game schedule. It just
162
lenl Salaries and Banetll
Commerk:al lois for sale or call afler 6:00pm.
Pllol Program, RonteiO _ _,::dl.::oa=b:::led:.::... .::EH.. ,o.::.....__ (304)882·3587
four- gam e sk.id.Moyer (19-5) happened to us after we
every Thu&lt;Sday. Monday Packages avallablel Expe~- 800·652-6726 Ext 2070 All Make Mowers, Lawn loaoe, In Pl. Pleasanl 304· 26x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· Needed, 304-738·7295.
Very Nk:e small 1 bedroom NEW A"D USED FUR·
allowed two runs and eight
enca
In food 581VIC8
'
' Trae t010. Till ors Rope Ired · 727·3318 call bolween ly $345.00 Per Monlh
Ium 1sh·"
lhru Saturday 9:00-6:00.
vanlageouo
bul nolis ad·
~apt Upper 0 upIex NANCES~ FOR SALE I we
. hi c li nc he d and t hen p)aye d a
111• 24Hrs.
Free pick-up, Delivery Avail· spm·12.
8.99% Fixed Interest Rate, Quiet Country SeHing 3br Mt. Vernon A.ve. No Pels. Install, Free Estimates, 11
hits 'in five innings to wm s
qulrod. Pleaoe tax your ro- Immediate . RN poslllon In able. 21 Yeara Experience.
1·886·928.3426
2ba. tor ronl or oalo on land No Smokers. $265. + Elec· you doni Coli us, We both
lOth straight decision. H e team (O akland) · that was red
sumo to 1-606-838·9817 or Physicians offlca. Perma· Call Mike. (740)446-7604 7 room &amp;bath, wllh alovo &amp; .:..:;:::,:.:::.:.;::.:.____ contrael. Available Oclobor lrlc. Reterencea. $200. Da· Looaol
.
hot."
, .
17401446 6308 1
E·mall
lo nenl
compell·
refrigerator, 522 Grant Sl., Ashland Fleetwood 2002 1st Call (304)675·2864
polit (3041675-2551
•
.()()98.
hasn't
lost
in
13
starts
sin~e
800 291
carloolandOzoomnol.nol or live
resume to Davld'e Glneral Contracllng Middleport, (740)992·9084. Ooublewldo $26,226 Toll
Mike · Cameron increased
Mall to Amy's, 201 Stewart
Gallipolis Oal· · Plumbing, electrk:al, pelnl·
Free 666-605·5619 10 min Ronl 1o own on land con- Very nice, 2·3 bedroom Nurses uniforms.
2x
13 against San Francisco.
Worthington, KY
, 625 Third Avedocka, roofs. Call A good clean 2 bedroom lrom Huntington
lrael, good clean 2 bedroom apanm_an_l, _In lown, _1_arge _and_3Jc,_3 .~~~~~~•tdd~~,;---1---1::_:-s,,;ttle:_i,mf•ro've·d--its--.uad-"S'eattl.;! lcad_ to _:l.d.~"''ltlL:iLJ
(304)633· hOuae In Pomeroy-on land Ashland Fleetwood Septom h(7o40ua)6e-9"--721n44 Pomeroy, kiiChen, t&amp;Rd, $~mo. IRradel· $100. Sail
$40.
rd
55 ?I
hi
h
two-. run sJ'ngle J·n the fifth
or amall lur·
·
l!.:!::c::::::~=::::..·--~ arences
epos
..
requ
.
)
.
reco
to
-,
mate
ng
t
e
7116
1740
992
aymaM 0 ezwv.com. ~For­ AREA REPS, Individuals Local ratallor looking for ex- .:.:;:.;..,_ _ _ _..,-__ conlracl, (7401696·7244.
ber special. 2002 14x70
(740)446·3844 ·
~
inning that chased Doug
merly" 24yr. Wood lnduslry with good schooVcommunlly perlenced loss provenllon Full service houao cleaning, Newly conslrUclod, single 3bd'2ba. $19,990 Free Del. Syrocu:"t, now houa':., 0~
Rare baseball cigarette card
1971 Oakland Athleti cs •Or
Forester, 11yr. wvu For- oontacls to place and super- aosoclalo for In s10ro looa $7.00 hour; very honest slory · 1600 sq. fool home. &amp; Setup. Toll Free 1-866· ~~:f.· ca~roog~;ag":, big
SPACE
plcturtng ' Kid Elberleld" a :
the most road wins by anAL Davis
(1 0-9).
Mark
estry Professor &amp; lyr Direc- vlso an exchange aludonl. prevonlion posllion. Pleaoe ' Rotoroncea available. Call Located 10 mlnules from ::.805:.;. ,·5:.;6:.;1;;.9______ deck, 2
a month plus
FOR RENT
McLemore hit a three- run
1 Pomeroy, Ohio nallvo who .
5650
tor of WV Division of Forest- Compensation and travel in- send resume to Loaa Pre· (740)446·2977
Holzer Hospital, 20 minutes "":"
played ball· lara 1B90's ear· .
team .
ry.
centive. 1-800-964·4878
vonllon Supe&lt;VIsor, 6027
.
from Plea.. nl VaMoy Hoopl· Aoaumablo loans· Many $650 depoall, (740) 385•
I 1900'
II t
ndl
double, and Dan Wilson
Kyle Moore Road Hunting. Georges Portable Sawmill, tal off SR 160 on 8 private types available. Call for de· H59.
Mobile Home lot lor rent In 1Y0 , , :.O,~~ce ~~fo c;::o cal~
In other games Monday, it
ATTENTION
ton, WI/ 25702. '
don'l haul your logo 10 the 1·l/2 aero lot. 3 bedroom, tails. 1740)446·3563.
Why ronl? government Mlddlaport, ' 12S per month (740)446·0196 $65 00
was Baltimore 5, Boston 1; added a run-scoring single in
WE NEED HELPI
GIVEAWAY
mllilustcall304-675·1957. 2·112 baths. big kllchon Deluxe homo aave $5445 backed lOIN from $490 (740)992·31114
.
Ka
c· 2 the seventh to make it 9-1.
$500·$1500 PT
Local retallo1r looking tor •1•· 0Uall1y hou118Cieanlng lm· vi/oak cablnolo, OR, LR new 2000 mOdal Skytl.;. :i down. 1740)446·3093
Waterline Special: 314 200
and Detroit 4,
nsas lty .
$2,000·$6,000 FT
pertencod oss proven! on
•
wlgas log tlroplace cenlral bed
h
•
~~..;.-~--.,
PSI t21.95
100; 1" 200
Free Training
Dog for giYeaway to good
aaaoclate tor In store loss maculate, natlculous, de· I I d
' f t
room, 2 bat . total alec- 011 M
H
ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; PSI $37.00 Per 100; All
1-8e6-807·RICH
home. Includes doghouse,
prevention position. Pleaae taHed cleaning. The abso- a rroh a~n 2~12 r:~· ar~o~ tr!c, vinyl &amp; shingle, low
OBII..E or.u
riO
floosEHow
Brass Compression Fittings
runner and pin. Call www.comeworkwtthme.com Mnd reaumo to· Loot Pro- lulo blat. Call tor a froe·oot•
edl t
ol g ~ · monlhly paymonls, dollv·
FOR RENT
GooDs
In Slock.
,
(740)446·n16
vantlon Supe,.;iaor 6027 male. (740)256-1131 or 1· m7118d a~
~~~onM k.0 erod &amp; teiUp Includes skirt·
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS. .
8
AVONI All Aroaol To Buy or K 1 Moo Road H 1 868·781·2~12
pra
• · a lng &amp; atepa, Coles Mobile
J k
1 1·600· •
Soli. Shirley Spears, 304· 1°
re7
untng·
offer. Call (740)446·4514 Homoa, us 50 Eul, Alh· 1995 14x52 single wldo tor
E5 ac son, 0 ho,
Free klltons to a good 675-1429.
ton, WI/ 25 02
Wanlod to care tor elderly In trom , 8-5pm, M·F, or ens, Oh, 740·592·1972
rani or aale. call (7~01949· Appllanceo: Reconditioned 537-9526
homo, (740)992·7285
.:_...._..cc:.,.......,..---- LPN'Ii RN'a needed lor Pe· their home. Call at (740)446·3248·oflor 5pm.
0044 between 6pm·6pm
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, - - - - - - - - ::::::::.!:.:::::!::::..:.::::...__ Be Your Own Bosal
dlatrlc home care caBes In (740)256·6503 If no answer.
r
Final Days, Nationwide In- _ _ _ __;_..:..,__ Aefrlgrators, Up To 90 Days
Free Pupp6es! Mother: From Hamel
the Southeast VInton Coun· Leave mesaage on voice
~~
ventory
Reduction! 2 bedroom mobile home, Guaranteed! We Sell New • RESIDENTIAL HOME
Golden Aetrlevet, Father: Eam $500-$8000/MO
ty, Pomero~ and Racine mall.
(304)738-3409
Hud accepted, close to Rut• Maytag Appliances, French
OWNERS
Black lab. Call (740)367· PTIFT
land, (7401742 .2014 .
Cily Maytag, _740-448·7795.
7708
No Experience Nece888 ry Areas. Please Call Primary Will haul away, clean out,
· -Limited Or No Credit? Gov- =:::..:_;.:..:..:::..::.:._.:.___
"rappan HI Effk::lency 90%
1\1\a.l
Care Nursing
at clean up, move almost anyemment Bank Finance Only 2 Br, 1 112 bath, 14 wide For Sale: Reconditioned Gao Furnaces, Oil Fuma·
Kitten Calk:o to giveaway. 1·886·270 ~
(600)51
8 2273 Service
Ask tor
·
thing. Olher odd lobo. Call
At Oakwood In Barbours- with large e•pando &amp; can- washers, drvArs
,,_ and refrl~- ces, 12 Seer Heat Purhp &amp;
1 304)675·63~3 call alter WWN. Nevertl T•O5Aga 1n.oom Ph Ills •
I \ll\ 1 '\1 t'l't II "'
41
'\ I I&lt; \ I t I ""
Y ·
(740)446·7604
All IWII ntllo ldverllolng ville, WV 304·736·3409.
lrol air, (740)992·2167 · orators. Thompeons App I· Air Condlllonlng Systems
.'\. I 1\I ..., ICI( 1,
S:30pm.
C.IUIII Pert Time Direct McClure's Restaurant now
In lhle MWeplper Ia
r._ n ...c:•
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- Free 8 Year Warranty Ben·
3 bedroom mobile home In nue, (304)675-7388.
Kittens- gray long hair, blue
C.re Stiff
hiring an 3 locations, lull or Will power wash houses,
eubfeet to tftl Flderll
.l'n.N...~
netta Heating &amp; Cooling, 1eyoa, Cheater, (740)965· A leading provider ol se&lt;V· part·time, ·pick up appHca· trailers, anything. Call Folr Houolng A01 o11111
FOR SALE
Middleport,
no
pels, :c:::::..:::.:..:c::::...:.=...._-- 8 0 0 · 8' 7 2 · 5 9 6 7
;;;;io;:=;:;:F.::;ARM;:;;:;;:;;;;I
.
1998 Honda TRX 300, 2
IMPRo\IEMI;MS
k:e Jo individuals wllh Men· tlon allocallon &amp;brtng back (740)441 ·4238 or (740)446· whk:h- It u~·l to ~
(740)992·5656.
Main Slroet Fumltu•e
www.o&lt;Vb.co1111bonnett
4466
"~· -1985
Herloy
Sportater,
1000
1987
Ford
4•4
XLT
L.artat.
wheel
drive,
Good
Cond
..
L,---iiiiiiiiiiiliiiorl
·
••1 R lard tl
nd o 1
0151 aak lor Ron. If no
.._
(304)675-1422
L--O:"""'~iiiil'n"iiii""'Oi.-,J custom, $4500. 1979 Mua· New paint clean, runs great. $2200, (740)1149-3081
... e a on a
eve· between
9:30am
&amp;
uag
Mvertlll "1ny
132 acres with pond, lots of 3 Br, 2 baths, 14x70 Ne'Nly
515 Main Street, Point
1
tang, 4 speed, V-6, good $3500.(3040675·8859
All lypes of masonry brick,
Unfinished Pine desk with
opmental Disabilities Is lO:ODam, Monda~ thru Sat· answer, eave me
e.
ptlt.rwtiGI, Hmtt.tlon or
standing timber, lovel~ 4 remodeled, (740)992-2167
Pleasant
2000 Kawasaki Bayou 300 block &amp; alone 20 Y'"· expolooking for casual part lime urday.
dlecrlmfnatlon bllld on b&amp;drQOm, 2·112 bath home ,
drawer, $85 , like new.
52 Case DC &amp; 5' Brush hog condition $1 400 1979
workers Starting wage Is
Beautiful River View Ideal
(7401446·0196
tor $1500, &amp; Small child's Chevy m~tor tiom8 excel· 87 Ford truck &amp; 85 Oldsmo- 4x4, $4,300. Call (740)44~. rience, tree estimate,
·
loda Sa
u
I'ICI, color, I'IJiglon, IIX
2 barns, garage and cellar
New &amp; Used Furniture
$6.50 per
1
1304)773-9550 .
Clo·Kart
5 horse, $100 lenl condition, $3,so0: 1991 ~~OCutlass, call (740)742· 8959. 1eave message.
App y
y lea Person. MUll have 2
B•\J\:Jiol.,.:m
~
I' flmlllllll81UI or nltkmll . h
mobil h
t I For 1 Or 2 People, Referen·
FOUND· Great Dane of1 of In person hour.
at Middleton Es· years experience In salea of
.
ouae,
e ome rena ces, Deposlt No f»ets, Fos· New 2 Piece Uvingroom WATER WELLS DRILLED.
(740)843·5217
Geo
Prism,
automatic,
.
2
Suki
~CatEma
GFX
Route 160 near Vinton, can
BASEMENT
OlromJNny
origin, onny lnlenllon 10 ~) 2":.J~:gl=:~ t~; 1er Tr~ller Pari&lt;, 740·44!· ~~~~~· $399. Buy, Sell, (740)1188-7311
12,000. 1967 Nova, 5·
VANS &amp;
16 F. 5 500 mlleo. Like
(740)388·8248 and ldenllty. totes. 6204 Carla Drive. lumber &amp; hardware. Send ,
WATERPROOFING
Gallipolis. OH. An Equal resume or pick up an appl· lo._--ii.iiiii.iiiiiiii;.,.l ....=~~:.:.":'on
mo•olnformallon.
0"-1'1181"1•
. ~-----., .:;::::::.__ _ _ _ __ White's Metal Detector
John Deere 6620 Titan II speed, $600. KX1 25 motor·
'WDs
N $3
(304)576 -68
Unoondltlonal lltolime guar·
...
ow. ·
·••
Opportunity
Employer. cation al Thomas Oo·ll Con·
INOntEf
dttc"mlnotlon."
Nice used f"mlture/ appllan· Speclrum XLT, shows tlnd
combine. Call (304)675· eros&amp; bike, $1 ,ooo. Baer
Lost 2 Farm dogs Irom FIMIOV
I 176 •·-c '-k R d
..
I
• ~·.........,..,
"
antee.
Local references fur·
4306
Ace engine Analyzer wllh ~
Do/ITS &amp; MOTORS
Burlingham. Mloolng since
·
G"a~'· 11 118 OH ~~31 oa ' OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
BtJSINE\'I
nr~.,.. ~ .. u
oes. (740)446·1004 or doplh. $600. (paid over
nlahod. Established 1975.
gas.
Great
tor
begl11ners,
1985
Chevy
S·10
Blazer,
.
S
Sepl 8th. Female: Black CNA'a, HHA's . Cortltled
po '
lNG CO. recommends ltlel Thla ,_..,.per will not
· AND U.JIWINGS
FOR RENT
(740)446·2680.
$800.) Like New (304)675Call 24 Hra. (7401 446·
$300. (740)386·9516 or 4x4,
asking
$1800
FOR AlE
Lab/Doberman mix wilh homomakefl needed 10 pro- SECURITY OFFICERS: you do buolneaa with people
knowtnglr occap1
~
Solid Oak Traslle Table w/ 5416
0870,
1·800·287.0576.
(740)386-6071
.
(740)992·21
67
white patch on c~est, 60 vide In home services lor Guardsmark is now accept· you know, and NOT to sand lldv.-tiHrnlntl fOf ml
Office building In .,.1ners. 1 and 2 bedroom apart· chairs, matching hutch/ bul·6
A_ogers Waterproofing.
For
sale
or
trade
anything
or
Window
Air
Conditioner.
lbs., 6 years old, medium elderty/disabled In Mason &amp; lng appMcatlons for employ- money tiYough the mall until
...... which 111n
ville,
sq. ft., elc, COY.. ments, furnished and unfur· fet. 6 years old, perfect con·
1992 Camara, V-6, auto, 1986 Ford Bronco II, 4x4, value. 36 loot houseboat
hair, blue collar. Very sweet Putnam county areaa. Call men! In Mason County. If you have Investigated the viOIIUOn ofthlllw. our ered 600
parking, ceiling tan, nlahed, security deposit re· dillonS1.800. (
) _ Works Groat. $50 OBO.
4 year old AOHA Incentive 25th Anniversary Edlllon, rod, 74,000 miles, CO play· wllh
V·bollom.
Call C&amp;C Gen8ral Home Mainte740 256 (740)992·7116
&amp; genlle. Anawers to 1·886·453-4992
you are at loaal 21 years of oftortng..
~
1275/mo., 614·876·1661 .
qu1rod
. • no pels, 740-992· 1275 ahor 5:30pm week·
Fund Mare wllh 120 days $2500, (740)742·2357.
or.
$3,000.
(740)379·2110
(740)669-3482
22 16
nance- Painting, vinyl sidSpankera.
Male:
age, have a ctear pollee reInformed that •H
da
anyll
Sat rda &amp;
riding. Will make all arounq
alter 5:30 pm.
&amp;
Roltwellar/Chow mix, black Dlreclor of Nulling needed cord and a high school Free Sotlwarol Amazing -~---In
LoTs &amp;
I
ys,
me
u Y
Ing, carpentry, doors. winprospect. (740)441·1015
1993 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Auro
PARI'S
100
with brown Rattle markings for
bed skilled nursing diploma or equivalent, we Web Site will show You
thlaMMPII*.,.
ACREAGE
1 Bedroom Apartment, Ae· iiSiiiundap.;;:;Y·- - - - - . . . . ,
dows.. baths, mobile home
Supreme. 4 door, Rod Exto· 1992 Ford Explorer, 4x4,
ACCE'I'iORIL'i
1
on lace, chest, paws. Chow facl~ty. Excellent opportuni· would like to talk with you. How To Download Over
ev•llabll on.,. -~~·•
frigerator, Range, AJC In·
JIAY&amp;
rior,
Black
Interior,
PW,
Pl,
Eddie
Bauer,
Blue/Tan,
1,~---iiiiiiiililiiiiiiiio_.l. repair and mora. For free
tall &amp;longue, 75 lbt, 2 112 ly for lho nghl candidate lo Starting pey Ia $6.60, gc&gt;ng 250.00 Shareware Pro·
Opporlunlly ..;;i,"
eluded, $289 Plus Deposit &amp;
ANI1Qmli
eattmare can Chet, 7-'0-992·
PO, AJC, $2500 080. 103,000 miles, aunrool,
brick, sewer pipes
GRAIN
yeara old. long hair, red col· wonc with excepUon.aJ man· to $7.30. Full time employ· grams Freel 1·900·329·
Indian Creek Equestrtan Es· Reterenca. HUD Approved. L____..;,___.J Block,
(740)446 9238
leather, loaded, mint condl· Are ~ou kxlklng for engines 6323.
wlndowe.
lintels,
etc.
ClaudE
lar. A little shy but friendly. agement team, nursing ltaff eea receive paid vacaUona 8670 Ext. 3933, $2.99 per
tates, 3·6 acre lots, west of (740)441-1519
·
lion, 16,700 negotiable, or tranamloolons? Clive me
Winters, Fllo Grande, atBuck a bale sale, square 1997 Cavalier 49,500 miles, (740)379·2268
Answers to Bruno. Please and 181facility with &amp;MceUen! paid life and health lnsur- min. Must be 18yra, Sarv·U Affordable new home, 3 Rio Grande, from $25,900. : -&amp;;::_bed-roo-'-m-.-n-e-ar_Hol_z_a_r, Buy Or sell. Riverine Anti~ Call 740·245·5 121 .
a call at (740)446-0519
1
2
bales St.OO other hay up lo 35·46 MPCI, c/d, air, auto,
call Clinger or Jeff (740}992· rog_:' 1"'Yt 1comj&gt;lancot
·
Opance,
and
an
opportunlly
to
(819)
645·8434.
bed
roomR
·
LRba~~ch'::',;
~:::;
(740)245-5747
economk:al
utilities,
$
to
quea,
1124
East
Main
on
1
1
1
279
$2.00, round bales 115.00 new lires, pey off $7,000, 1997 Ford F·150 XLT, mol· Budgl1 P~cod Tronomlo2504, Rowardl
PQ•:.~nh Y,_ 01f"pro
eas ona partlclpalo In a 401·K pro- 1 t 1~- M·l , _ H
ng 00 ~~ ,_ · 8 Perl -• - - - - - - - - · per monlh pluo ulllllles
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Rough Cui lumber, 2•4's
each 304·675·4669
gran, ' Ul:lne
us, pay com·
M
II
•·
ablo
to
o...
n eme '""""r...., ..._m ow garage, n!\ie ..,ve11o.1 C'O'I.I Lo-•ing •o Buy A New 5379
992
2526
R
aa
Mo
1
•6'
I
I
8
16
f
alllc blue, 75K, 4x4, flare· elona All Types Access To
(140)949 2221
8• cu
•gram~ ittu and
~ 80f1'll week·
w •• to ••8 ke Contr,,..
"' ot Anolhe r 1n t•·
~ Don1
''
·
· u
oro,. lebgths,
n board
·
•• .
mensura Ie wl Ih expeuvnce.
·any
,.., 70'a. CaII tor more do • Home?
Have Land? (740)446·2957
owner.
1.000+
teet
·
·
aida, 3" lift, 33' llres, wllh Ovar 10.0oo Transmloalone, Residential or commercial
I lnterealed
YARD SALE
. candldaleo ends: All applk:anta will bl Compuler Over The Inter· 1ollo. 1740)446·2801 .
We Oolll Hurry Only 10 Lois ~6...,47:::.;5c:.lh:.::A:.;v:.;en_u_o_,-1-b-ed-·
$250. (740)441·1015
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie 1997 Lincoln Towncar Slg· Leer topper, very clean. Transfer Cases, 740·245· wiring, new aervlce or repairs. Master Licensed ~ec·
1·900 ·329·8670 • Nk:e older home, 2 BR, IIV· Left, 304·736·7295.
~traw, Yem 'Round Delivery nature Sones, leather lntarl· (740)446·6323.
56n, Cell: 339-3765.
· should apply to: Rock· given a drug ocreen. Apply nell
room, washer/ dryer hook· New Buolneoo Opening Oc· iir;;.:;.;;:;;~:.;,:,::,:;:__
trlclan. Ridenour EleCtrical,
springs Rehabilitation Can· at the Main Gate of the Exl.393'4-, $2.99 per min., lng room, dining room, ,
up. (740)446•7903 .
tobar 1st. Sua's Selectables
p,....,
&amp; Volume Discount Availa· or, low miles, all options,
YARD SAL&amp;
Iter, 36759 Rocksprings Rd ., M&amp;G Polymers plant on -Must be: 18yra. SeN·U (619) kltchan, pantry, utility room, Nice 4 acre tract near
on the ~r In Middleport
t&lt;UR~A.LE
bla.
Heritage
Farm wiU trade for Suburban . . or 1998 Jeep Wrar'lgler, stand· ONYX Black Fiberglass Wl/000308, 304-675·1788.
Tahoe. (740)992·2457 eve· ard no AIC, alum. wheels, 1\.R.E. Cap tor 6·112' 1999
GAIJJPOLIS
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Sisto Roolo 2, Apple Clrovs, 645·6434.
tull elzo ottk:, gas lurnace, Gallipolis· ~asy lsrms, BEAUTIFUL
APART· Ohio: (740)992.()298
..,_ _ _ _ _ __
(304)675·5724.
53,000 miles, extended 7- General Motors PCk-up. ExL---iiillillliiiil._.l Equal Opportunlly Employer WI/ between 6:00 AM and Start Your Buslnoaa To· cenlral air, Racine, $35,000, 1740)446-3583
MENTS .AT BUDGET PAl·
1 1~ \\ '-I I'IIUI\IUI\
~nl::ngs!!::.
.
yr.100,000 mile warranly. cellent Condl11on. (740)256Encooraglng Wort&lt;placo 01· 2:00PM. Monday, Septem- day... Prima Shopping Can· (740)949-2070
Primo 2·112 acre lot for CES AT JACKSON ES.
MlscFLL.oo:ou; AKC Basaol Hound pup .
;;;;;::==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 2000 Camr; LE. Excollenl 304·675·6894
304-675· 6239 Leave message.
Inside &amp; out, 4 rooms lull, vei'Sily.
-U'IJr 24 · thrN~h
F""•y
Sen.
TATES, 52 Weatwooct Drive
~~
pies,
vet
checked,
6wk old "'"W
•rua • ,. ter Space Available At AI·
building on· loCated on quiet
.LYII!.M...... IIt'U~
$175 (304)576 2125
·
io
Auras
Condl11on. $17,000 080 or 2617 alter 4pm $10,000.
. 11 Help Wanted
aw._r, all ck:lllea $.50 &amp; Dollar Plus Ohio River Pia· lomblr 28.
tordable Rale. Spring Vallay
MOBILE ll&lt;lMD I road, secluded area, oul· trom $297 to $383. Walk lo
·
·
FOR SM.E
take over payments.
.
CAMPERS
&amp;
I
under,
1699
McCormick
hlrt'
PI
c
11
740
...
"101
S
-••
.
a
........
&amp;
nxwlas.
Call
740Rd., 10om·?, 26lh, 27th, za, now ng management. Special Education Pre- aza, a
· -u-u
·
FOR ALE
IMUe o1city limtls 1n 5 pring- ,..,...
Baby bed, dressing table, AKC Registered BoaiOI ·
' - - - - - - - · !:!7..:.40~).::24:::5..:.0:.:5:..19:_·_ _ _ : . P~ac~~':,~· ; ::
MaroR Hor.e
26th.
Apply tn person or laM ra· achoot Teacher, 3 days per
I --• field Township. Asking 446 .2568 · Equal Hovslng car seat, s~ng, high chair. Terrier Puppies. (740)258
Chevy Bolelre, 4 dr., 69 Omnl, 135,000 mllea, 53,000 OBO. (740)441·
sumalo (304)736-3092.
week. Must have current
~
,
$17,500. Call for mote inlo. :Oppo:!1:::.rtu:::;:nl:.!ly:..
. - - - - - Black leather boots size 7 or 1825
re•tore 10 original, 107.000 runs great, $700 060. 1856
1984 Coachman 22ft. travel
AUC110N AND
Expen·e~ Olooel and/or Ohio "-•rtmenl ot Educa·
StlMCE'i
. 12x65 2 bedroom, goo heal, (740)446·4514 Days: or Chrlaly'e Family Living, 7 1/2 and Size mod. Coal -------~
""-·
••·-··~~
-...~
falroond,Uon,
12,500;
14x51
(740)446-3248
Evenings.
33140
N
Ll
Rd
Rut
lhat
lch
(304)675
2601
Registered
Lab
Puppies
actual
mlloa,
$6200 OBO. (740)256-1 233
B&amp;O
Aulo
Selea
ualler
~oops 4-5. Has new
Auto Mechanic. Must have tlon Cartilication/Licenl8
2 bedroom, all electric, good
ew ma .,
.
rna .
.
yelfow and black. S20t
~~-.O"oiiiu.Aiili"iOii.L'UIA&lt;.iiiiiit'_.l loo'·
(740)742·89&lt;J!l.
92 Camero, V-6, standard, 1994 Chevy S10 Blazer
relrtdg., hot walor lank, 4
&amp;c~an driving record. and have or b1 ollglbla lo
TURNED DOWN ON
oondi'llon, $6,500. 1740)446·
land, Ohio, 740·742·7403.
h
·
4door $3600. 1983 Che\AI new tires, lie &amp; furnace,
,. "'
h
nd n1 Beautiful handmade solid eac , ma1es and female&amp; ·
88 rson Aucllon Co
Hops, asking $2500, 510 Bl•·er 4door 13800.·' stova &amp; oven. Readl to go
Rick
P
(740)388·8547
Obtain
eeny
education
ol
SOCIAL
SECURITY
1881?
4734
(740)367·701
5
:~==~===~
Apartment,
orne
a
tra r wood cradle, a must oee· (740I446-0G80 evenings.
1 ~9 Camero Rebuilt 355
·
.
.
m·.
hlndk:apped validation. No Faa Unleta We Wlnl (740) 441 1337
rentals. Commercial store·
40 1 74 2 2 35 7
17
pany, full time auctroneer, Experienced Timber Cut·, er. Send resume by september
1-888-682-3345
•
fronts available for lease. great for' a newborn or baby
M
a;',d transmla~on. l!ody In ::::~:..:::.:·::=.·:....._ _ _ 1992 Chevy 510 Blazer
camping. Asking 4,100.
compiOio aucllon aervlce. (740)682·7318 call aller 281h lo: Cartetoo School,
r10
HOUSilS
Vacancies now.
dolla, $100. (740)448-0198
~CAL
Good Condl11on. Have parts · - · · · B&amp;O Auto Sales
$2300. 1992 Toyota Pickup (304)773·542 4
Llcenaod 166,0hlo &amp; WeBI 6pm.
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Par
RENT
.J16rRUMI'Nl'S
1310 Carleton Stroel, Syra·
to llnloh. $2000 llrm. 1996 Pon11ac Grand Am 4X4 52600. 1992 Ford
V1rg1n1a, 304·773·5785 Or
CUM, Ohio 45179 or Fax to
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest L---FOiiRiioiiiioiioo-rJ Furnished efficiency, all utll·· Firewood lor sale, $150 "---iiiitiiiiliiiiliii'(740)245·9502
·
$2700. 1996 Mllaublahl Gal· Ranger Pk:kup 4X4 $2200. 1999 Coachmen Catalina,
37 toot, 2 slide outs, loaded,
304·n3-5447.
Full-lime denial asolslanl (740)992-6438
rio
HOME'i
I Rale With Air And Un· llies paid, ahara balh, 1125 =loa=d·:.;l:..740~)«:.:.:1..:·9:.:4:..78:___
lant $2700. 1995 Chevy 1990 Dodge Caravan
position. Muet be available
et~ceuenl
condition,
FOR S•• ~
derplnning 1·888·928-3426 1 ·3 Bedtooms Foreclosed month, 919 2nd /\venue. F
Flute, LeBlanc Vito, used~
1ffl9
Ford
T·Bird
351
modi·
Cavalier
$2400.
1993
Ford
$1200.
1996
Ford
Aerootar
WAN'IID
J'UA:.
urnlture,
appliances,
dryer,
4
times,
new
S516,
ee
(740)245·9480
fled,
runs,
body
needl
worl&lt;,
Probe
$1500.
19;3
Ponllac
Van
12000.
Monday lhru Saturday, SUBSTITUTE TEACHER
1966 Vendale 12x60 Mobile Homos From $199/Mo .. 4%(,7:.:40::::.:1446-:.;::,.::394:::5::..- - - - walerbod, music equlpmenl, $350, music eland/ 0881
I 8am-6pm.
. 10 BUY
Pleaae aubmlt ra- AIDE FOR CHILO CARE
Homo. 1886 Ford Ranger Down, 30 Years at 8.5% alereo's, elc. Low prtces, books. 17401367.7026
S300; new pelr ol mud &amp; Grand Am $1700. 1993
B&amp;D Auto Sel.es
69 Dodge camper Van, oelt
sumo lo 995 JackiOn Pike, CENTEFI. MuBI have an In- 3 Bedroom on Roulo 2, 2.3 Lilla. 5 opoed. APR. For Llotings, 800·319· Gracious living. 1 and 2 1740)446-7625
i:iir;;;.:~;:;;;~,;;;;..._
snow
tires,
150,
(7401992·
Chevy
Lumina
$1900.
1992
~~_;H~Ig~hw~a:y~1~60=N--,
contained, excellent oondl·
toreat and desire lo worl&lt; (304)875·5332
(304)675•7091 01 13041675. 3323 E&gt;t. 1709.
bedroom apartmenla at VII·
FRUITS &amp;
Absolute Top Dollar. U.S Clalllpols, OH 45631 .
4276.
Ponllac Grand Am $1200.
740 446 8685
tion, garage kept, low milewith young children. Reply
5292
logo Manor and Rlvefllde Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
v~-·DIJ!S
Silver, Gokl Qolns, Proof·
1985
Chevy
Ceiobrtly,
GL
1969
Toyota
CorollaS1200.
ago,
mull sell, leaving
:.:::.:.._______ 1 bedroom , AJC, 1 bath, Apartments in Mktdleport. Repairs. Problems? Need ~----~iiiiiLii''~iiiOiiiil;..
seta. Diamonds, Gold Full·tlma wor1&lt;, sales expert· to: Magic Years Day Care
2.8 v.e, Good Condlllon, al·
B&amp;D Auto Seleo
otato. Call (740)709-4444
ence
neceaaary.
Contact
Center
201
High
Street
·
House
for
1111
by
owner.
:)
1982
14x70
Fairmont
Hap.
kitchen
has
appliances,
From
$278·$348.
Call
740·
Tuned'?
Call
The
Plano
Dr.
·
Rings , U.S. Currency,·
7
oo Free Kitten, 6 weeks,
Highway 160 N.
MOIORC\'OL'i
Polnl Pleaaanl, WI/ 25550 bedroom. 1 112 balha, lg. pyhousa mobile homo 3 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis, 992·5064. Equal Housing 740-&lt;148-4525
Pumpkins for sale, roral
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· Rick al (740)448-6 00
Call
(740)256-6735
740-&lt;148-6885
FUNDRAIIINQ
llvlngroom,
dlnlngroom bed oom'e $10 000 68 II $350/mo. (740)446·4859
Opportunllloa.
wholesale, Raymond Row
ond Avenue, Galllpolis, 740·
·
URGENTLY
NEEDED· kitchen fenced back yard'
r
'
' ·
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 Forms (740)247-4292
&lt;146·2842.
11188 Grand Am, Silver, Au· Llko new 1999 Cadillac 1981 Honda 650 cb. Runt Buy, Sell or Trade
DIRECTOR
plooma dono,., oam $45 to eiOCIIor hoat pump, attach: (740)441·8959 leave mas· 2 bedroom home clooa 10 Nlca largo apo~ment; 3 lor 110. Open Sat. 6·5pm. &amp;
lo, CD Player. 12000. OevWio, priced below wtlOie· Great, 24,000 mllas. Bike In ·
08
Needed f~r
$60 tor 2 or 3 hOurs weekty. ld garage, sent no 0 ,; over 1 : ::ga!::..- - - - - - - town, basement. River view, bedrooms, large lllllngroom, evenings. Dewflurat Green·
(740)379·2110
aller oale. Aloo 1984 CheVy s-10 Good Condlllon. $600 OBO.
In the
6"11:'(/~~~~· PT~~ :~.:Ct!:'o.Ea: ·eo. Call Sera-Tee, 740·592· acre of land on Rl.l24 close 1993 Clayton 16, 60 mobile $4251 month: 3 bedroom In wuhor/ dryer hook·up, houao MI. Allo. (304)895· Buy, Sell or Trade
5
tru&lt;k and 1983 Ford lruck, (740)245-9502
Avg 101 yr IIIO-tiOK
8851.
lo New School, (740)992· homo 3 br., 2. ba. asking lown, H/2 batho. Good lo- $450 monlh, retarancoo &amp; 3740 ltavo meuage. or
:30pm.
all' In greal ohape. Call
· In th•
Won- Black Batty Beanie
&amp;.eo
oia ISIO
Ne-• 7 Laclleolo SeH Avon. 3911 aflor 3:00pm,- Muol '19,000 304-773· 5666 after cation. $5001 monlh. Rolor· dtpooll roq~irtd. (740)446· (304)995·3789
1991
Chevy
Cavalier
Runt
(740)44
Hl279 attar 8:00.
Buddy, reasonable price ,
caii17401446.3358
Soli.
5 pm,
oncoo and daposll required. 8030
good, but noe&lt;ts worl&lt;. CaH
call (740)11112·7242.
(740)448·3844.
(304)882·2539
I
l
Why wall? Start meeting
Ohio singles tonlghl, call toll
tree 1·800·766·2623 lid
1!121.

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE

In one week .With us
TO Place

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

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

Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2001

974JOBS

l

monthly payment.
High l':lterest
while beooming dobt
homeowners
people wtlh credtt
:::~:::in~in credit cards, II i
medical bills and
loans. Call1·800-897-2200

Ext. 340.

A501 (c)(3)Not-For·Profit Organtzatlon.

�Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

'\ .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

--------------------~--------~------~
'

m:rtbune - Sentinel - 1\.e
CLASSIFIED

Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2001

Co~&amp;nty,

Bengals are the
Bonds
hits
No.
67
toast of the town

OH

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD .NOW ONLINE

m:rtbune

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

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POLICIES: Oh6o Valley PubUahiRQ retoatWa the right to edft, refect, or c.noat any Mlet My time. ErTora mult be~ on the first d ay
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~
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100 WORKERS NEEDED Pleaoe visR www.aecond·lo- 4501 • Ext 593
.6.slemble crarta, wood none.com to complete a ~~irlr41r.;,;;;;~.;.---.,
ltomo. Malertal provided. convenlenl applk:ation.
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1

2

BY THE .ASSOCIATED PRESS
Barry Bonds and Ric key Henderson closed in on some
nl:ljor milestones.
Bonds hit his 67th homer Monday night , moving
within three of Mark McGwire 's major league record as
the San Francisco Giants defeated the Los Angeles
Dodgers 2- 1 Monday night and moved closer in the NL
W est race.
'That's what we play for - wins,'' Bonds said. "It'll be
fun if we win the next two."
The Giants moved within I 1/ 2 games of idle Arizona
in the NL West and two behind St. LoUis in the wild card
race. The Dodgers are 4 112 back in the division and five
behind in the wild card.
Bonds' homer came in the Giants' 151st game. M eGwire hit his 67th in St . Louis' 162nd game. T h e Cardinals
played 163 games that season because one game was suspended by rain.
H enderson got close to a pair of big marks of his own.
He went 4-for-5 with three runs scored in San Diego's
15-11 loss at Colorado.
Henderson is three runs short oftyingTy Cobb's m ajor
league record of 2,245, and seven hits shy of 3,000. H en derson also hit his SOOth career double.
In other NL games , it was Houston 9, St. Louis 3;
Florida !,Atlanta 0; and Pittsburgh 7 , Chicago 6 . .

CINCINNATI (AP)- Sipping .champagne in September?
Sure, it sounds strange. The Cincinnati Bengals have played
ohly two games, and they're getting toasts and pats on the back
as if they've d on e something special.
By local standards,.they have.
The NFL's worst team of the past 10 years is bask.ing in a 20 _start that has done wonders for its reputation. After a 21 - 10 .
vjctory Sunday ove r the Baltimore Ravens, about 20 players ·
~ent to a restaurant and got a complimentary bottle of Dom
Perignon.
"People were like , 'Oh, you just beat th e Supel' B owl
chari1ps!"' said ce nter Rich Braham, in his eighth season with
the Bengals. "The biggest thing now is you go our in public
and they know you more often. Everybody's your friend ."
. The 2-0 start is cause for celebration. It's only the third time
in 10 years that the Bengals have been unbeaten so deep into
the season.
·
"Th e last time l was 2-0? Barcelona," said newcomer Jon
Kitna: w ho was MVP of the World Bowl in 1997 . " All it is is a
good start. The weather's getting ready to cha nge, the days are
ready to get a lot shorter, th ere's .a lot of season left."
Before the leaves drop off the trees, the Ben gals have usually
dropped o ut of contention. T h ey haven't w on their first three
gam es smce 1990, w hen they won the AFC Central. They
haven't had a win ning season since.
· The Bengals went 6-31-in September from 1991-2000, setting up " one lost season after another and o n e debate after
another over why the counry built them a new stadium.
·
Only 49,632 fans- the smallest crowd in Paul Brown StaLjiUin's two years - showed up ·o n a sunny afternoon to see the
Ben gals take advantage of the Ravens' six turnovers. After the
.JBengals recovered a fumble on the final play, the players doused
coach Dick LeBeau with water and lobbed chin straps, sweat
bands and other keepsakes into the crowd .

r

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ICAN LEAGUE

~·:::.;..:..:,,::.;:.:;..____

Seattle winning again

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OVP CORRESPONDENT
RACINE - The Southern

Tribe
from PageB1

first hit with o ne ou t in the
sixth - a lined dou ble ofl" the
wall in left. D iaz held seco nd
as Cabrera followed with an
infield sin gle. Third ba seman
Felipe Lopez dived to his le ft
to stop Cabre ra's g rounder,
but couldn 't make a play.
Halladay halted the threat
by getting Kenny Lofto n to
ground into a double play.
A sacrifice fly by pinch - hitter Tony Fernand ez put
Toronto ah ead 1- 0m th e seventh off Indians star ter Bartolo Colon .
Lopez drew a one-o ur
walk, took third on ·a sin gle by
Darrin Fl etcher an d scored

three outs.
"You come in and h ave to
forget how great' a lineup
Cleveland has,'' Eyre said .
"Having a b ette r m ental
approach I S one thing I
learned in the minors. I never
paid attention to things like
that."
Roberto Alomar ti ed it at 1
with one out in the ninth ,
hitting his 20th homer on a
2-2 pitch from Billy Koch.
"I thought right there we
were going to win it," Indians
o
fl
when Fernandez lotted a y
manager Charlie M anuel said . .
to left- center.
Ii was Koch's sixth blown
C olon allowed six hits and
save in 40 chances.
stru ck out eight in R 1-3
Halladay retired the first 16
batters in his second straight innin gs. Toronto put t wo rundominant start. He allowed ners on b ase in the third ,
three hits and struck out six in fourth and seventh innings,
6 1-3 innings.
but each time Colon ended
The right- hande r, reca.~
lle d.,..--"'
thellireat with a str i!&lt;,·o ut.- ~~
from the minors in July,
It wasn't the first t ime Halextended his scoreless streak laday flirted with a n o- hitte r.
to 12 1- 3 mnings . He had a His first career win Sept. 27,
career-high 11 strikeouts in 1998, came when h e· held
his previous start, a 4-2 win Detroit hitle ss for 8 2- 3
·
J·nni· n"'
over B aIt1more
.
,.- unti!''yielding a pin ch
Einar Diaz got Cleveland's homer to 'B obby Htggmson.

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$8/HR
Light

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CLASSIFIEDSI

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1Hmble
BY $CCm WOllE

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Southem falls to

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and five aces with an 18-of24 passing gan1e; two blocks,
and four kills. Tiffeny Bissell
added five points on a 5-8 serving night and two aces, a 12-of22 setting night with four sets
for kills; and AI)'Ma Holter had
two points on a 3-of-6 night
and or.e ace. Amanda Yeager
had a point, and Katie R obertson a point.
Whitney Karr and Tammy
Bissell again anchored the Eastern front line, complimenting
the Lodwick effort. Karr was 7of-14 spiking with four kills and
four blocks. Bissell was 5-of-13
spiking with three kills, and two
blocks, while Holter was 4-of-6
with a kill and a block. Robertson had two kills.
Eastern Coach Pam Douthitt
was well pleased with another
road win as Eastern closes in on
yet another Tri-Valley Conference C hampionship.

Tornadoes took tlw e.&gt;rlv k'.td m
botl1 game. but t(·ll ha~ d 111 suffering 1:\YO !os.&lt;;es to the 1 nmblc
Tomcats M ond.1y m ~l n 111 TriV:illey Confe rence volk·yball
action in Chark&gt;s W I layman
gymnasium. Souther11 drnpped
6- 15 and 13- 1:; matches.
In the first b'31llC, Kane Sayre
put Southern up 2-ll, but Tnmlrb!e came right back to t:tke a 62 advantage and never looked
back en route to the 15-h wm
In the second b&lt;lllll'. Sou thl·rn
suffe red a similar fate . S:J )T&lt;' pm
Southern up 3-0 and l'ullins
and Williams added good S&lt;.·t-ves
for a 5- 0 Southern lead, b,·fo rc
Southern smmbk•d and allowed
Trimble to fight back fmm a 59 deficit.
Sayre led So uthern wtth five
po onts, an ace, and a kill. Emily
Hill had four points and a 9-of.JO night spiking; D ,•am Pullins
had four points on a 7-of-7
serving night and an ace with a
16-of- 16 serving night. Ti!funy
Williams had three poi nts o n ·a
5-of-5 night and a kill.
Puny Lee contributed a gooll
passing game · and settmg
to compliment Pulli ns. while
Rachel Chapman added 5-of-5
serving with two points. and Jeri
Hill contributed w ith sc·vc ral
successful passes.

~~ IF MOJOKcr~ I n,ai==::H;;;OME;;;;;;;;;;;~

r

••.-.ru . .

from Page Bl

from

I

~~~~~.~~~h~~g~nga~=

V-Ball

Pack

of 28, 32 and 30 yan:ls.
Favre threw touchdown
passes of 12 yards to Antonio
Freeman in the first quarter,
PageB1
41 yards to Billy Schroeder in
the third quarter and 4 yards
Sept. II.
Mer the long layoff, neit\Jer to Bubba Franks in the fourth
the Packers , who beat Detroit quarter.
28-6 on opening weekend,
George, who has struggled
nor the Red&lt;k.ins, who lost to to adapt to Schottenheimer's
San Diego 30-3,knewifthose ball-control passing game, was
games were true gauges or sacked five tin1es, including
four straight third-down plays.
not.
But the Packers dominated
Mter going 6-of-10 for 37
from the start behind Favre yards in the first half, George
and Green, the NFI.:s leading was intercepted by Nate
rusher and the first Packers' Wayne at his own 16 on the
running back ever to top I 00 first series of the second half.
yards in the season's first two
Washington's defense held
games. Green also caught a and Longwell's 32-yarder
team-best six passes for 30 made it 13-0.
·
'\ yards'
Then, Schroeder, who hadAnd Redsk.ins quarterback n't caught a pass all night, ·
Jeff George, benched during caught a bullet from Favre in
the loss at San Diego. played stride as he sliced through the
worse, handing Marty coverage of Champ Bailey
Schottenheimer his first 0-2 and Sam Shade on a quick
~tart in his IS-year NFL slant for a 41-yard score and a ·
coaching career.
20-6 lead.
George finished 15-of- 24
Favre hit Franks in the end
for 102 yards. Favre was 20- zone on the first play of the
of-31 for 236 yards.
fourth quarter, and Longw&lt;:ll's
Redskins returner Mi¢ael 30-yarder capped. a 13-play ·
Bates, one of the league's top drive that took 7:19.
return men, conunitteda lS•-=-- -Washington- lost linebacker
yard personal foul on coverage La Var Arrington (knee), corditty and fumbled three times, nerback Donovan Greer
the last of which was returned (knee) and defensive end
27 yards for a touchdown by Marco Coleman (elbow) .The
Rendell Mealey with three Packers lost rook.ie tight end
minutes left.
David Martin (shoulder).
Longwell k.icked field goals

von· blalde Sun Alae me· &amp; Set Up. 1-8e6·926·2425 3 bedroom houoe, 7 acres, 1740)446-6030
Opportunlly. (740)441 - 1982
mortal Glrdena on Rl33.
I oulbulldlng, small blm. Now Taking Applications· JET
1 1/4 acres, 3 br. 2 fire pia· New 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2 Route 62, 5 miles from 35 West 2 Bedroom Town.
A.EAATION MOTORS
cos. (blkaolmh ont lncT ludoa an bllh, only SSOI!.~n, call Point Pleaoanl, Mason Co. houoe Apertmonls, lncluJoo Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
exira lc en, V room, _N...,Ik...,kl_,l7...,40..:.::)365..cc:.~
__7_._ _ ccc:a...,ll.:.:l304..:...:)6c:.7...,5...,·4358
..:.:;.:.__~ water sewage, Trash, Slock. Calt Ron Evans, 1.
~ I
bedroom, btlh) 2 car oa· Now 2002 Fleetwood only 3 bedroom newer home $350/Mo., 740-446.Q008. 800.537.9528.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The M ariners took their
raga, p~valt rural eettlng, sns down and $150.85 per
Th
'I
't fi
I d .
h
d
50.IC 50 ah~
II
304-•••
near
Porter
S42"'mo
De•
•
h
A
rt
e
1111
estone
wasn
rst
ea since t e secon
V\1 ca
~- month,
call
Cheryl,
,
w
•
.ara .own ousa pa • - - - - - - - - 2050 or 304·882·3885.
(740)385-4387
poaR &amp; reterence
menta, Very2 Floors,
Spacious,
2 MOBILE HOME OWNERS :
lmportant to Jamie Moyer. inning of their loss to Ana12 gauge sholgun &amp;BB gun
(740)446·2601
aflerrequired.
5pm. Bedrooms,
CA, 1
2
wae stolen at Robert
vu
•
1-800·21,..()45 '
For sale by owner: Nice bl· Now Double Wldo . $195 Cotta~ suitable lor single 1/2 Bath, Fully Carpeted, Huge Inventory, Dlscounl
What -mattere d t o hi m W as heim on T h urs d ay 36
expending. $25/S75hr. PfT down.
Transportation
and
R~t90-05· 1274B.
Wa
u~t~a. Th I8 I1 Sa nlfman· FfT'886·568-3713.
lodging avallablo. Operato,.
level homo on 1 acra near Per Monlhl 3 Bedroom, 2 01 co~ple $250.00 Lincoln Adutt Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Prices, On Vinyl Skirting,
h
h
S tJ
M ·
tal. Asking lhallta relumod www.mogabuckl4you.n01 are Olandlng byl Call todayl 117U ••-· ,. __ CHeater. Throe bedroom, Balh. Froo Delivery &amp; Set· Avo. call Homestead 304· llo, S1art $365/Mo. No Pols, Doors, Windows, Anchors,
t at t e
ea t e
,anners innings
when John
and no charges will bo ::..._..:.:..:...;..:...;;_:_--....,_ 1·1188·432-6937. .
miSIEJ.ANEXli.IS
two balhs, one-car garage, up. 1-888·928·3426
Lease
Plus
Socurtly
Oepoall
Water
Healers,
Plumbing
&amp;
ended
their
longest
losing
.
Olerud
broke
a
1-all
tic in the
675·5640 ask tor Nancy.
mode.
ARBY'S RESTAURANTS
family' room with tlroplaco,
Required, Days: 740·446· Elactr~al Parts, Fumaces &amp;
--------~ ARE CURRENTLY SEEK· Help wanted caring tor lho
s~n room. New central heal· 1st tllne buyers· Govern· Ooublewlde for rent, 2 bed· 3461; Evenings: 740·367· Hoot Pumps. Bennetts Mo·
streak of the season.
third with a two-run double.
Disney Beach Vacalions, 6 INO CANDIDATES FDA eldorty, Darsl Group Hom.e, 4 piece Badroom sullo, lng &amp; ale syslem. One ml· menl loans· buy loans &amp; room wllh garage $375 plua 0602, 740·446·0101.
bile Home Supply, 740·446·
Moye r won the !50th
"""'e haven't hit a lull all
nlghla, nice holel, wlllsacrt· ALL LEVELS OF STORE now paying minimum wage, Queen bed, nlghl etand, nulo off Roule 7, bulotlll prl· sale· (740)446·3093 Oek· dopoail, (740)992·7401 .
9416 www.orvb.com/bln·
W'
lk:e tor $199, (6t4)898· MANAGEMENT. Aggros· new shltle: 7am-3pm, 7am· cheat ot drawers, 62" drooo· vate. (740)965-3961
wood Suporcenler
Apertmon1 Available Now nett
game of his career as the AL year long, but last w eek we
2728
slve unllexpenolon IBiaklng 5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· or wllh mirror, $300.
Houses for Renl 2 bed·
0.11
:;:::::____ _ _ _ _
W
h
·
M ·
place within lho local trt· 7am, call740·992·5023.
740!1149·2653
For sale or lease.lg. ranch 2· 12x40 mobile homes, rooms &amp; 1 bath, located on
lWin River Towero
Moving Must Selll Brown
est C amp1on
armers did ,'' said Bret Boone, who
NewToYouThrlfiShoppe
t
olylo home, 4 br., 3 bl., wl $1800 each 1· 10x38 mo· thoGalllallawrencoCounty
. (304)675-6679.
t
h &amp; Ch 1 $25
d th 1i · R
rs 9 3
1p
1 nd
1
9WestStlmson, Athens stao araa romolon a Homoworkoro
NHdod 11111!
WANnD
at;~eened In pelio porch, 2 bile home, si,500or$4,500 line. Call between 8:30pm· lorappllca11on. HUOsubsl· '!:,~ ~uc chair:' 550:·
route
e exas ange
had three hits. "It happens in
740·592·1842
~n':'a ~a~~~~~~~;: $635 Weekly Processing
To Do
car garage $78,000.
tor all three. (740)441·0219 11 :00pm. (740)256-8803
dlzod apt.for eldorty and Welghl Machine s1oo.
on M o nday night to end their a
- game schedule. It just
162
lenl Salaries and Banetll
Commerk:al lois for sale or call afler 6:00pm.
Pllol Program, RonteiO _ _,::dl.::oa=b:::led:.::... .::EH.. ,o.::.....__ (304)882·3587
four- gam e sk.id.Moyer (19-5) happened to us after we
every Thu&lt;Sday. Monday Packages avallablel Expe~- 800·652-6726 Ext 2070 All Make Mowers, Lawn loaoe, In Pl. Pleasanl 304· 26x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· Needed, 304-738·7295.
Very Nk:e small 1 bedroom NEW A"D USED FUR·
allowed two runs and eight
enca
In food 581VIC8
'
' Trae t010. Till ors Rope Ired · 727·3318 call bolween ly $345.00 Per Monlh
Ium 1sh·"
lhru Saturday 9:00-6:00.
vanlageouo
bul nolis ad·
~apt Upper 0 upIex NANCES~ FOR SALE I we
. hi c li nc he d and t hen p)aye d a
111• 24Hrs.
Free pick-up, Delivery Avail· spm·12.
8.99% Fixed Interest Rate, Quiet Country SeHing 3br Mt. Vernon A.ve. No Pels. Install, Free Estimates, 11
hits 'in five innings to wm s
qulrod. Pleaoe tax your ro- Immediate . RN poslllon In able. 21 Yeara Experience.
1·886·928.3426
2ba. tor ronl or oalo on land No Smokers. $265. + Elec· you doni Coli us, We both
lOth straight decision. H e team (O akland) · that was red
sumo to 1-606-838·9817 or Physicians offlca. Perma· Call Mike. (740)446-7604 7 room &amp;bath, wllh alovo &amp; .:..:;:::,:.:::.:.;::.:.____ contrael. Available Oclobor lrlc. Reterencea. $200. Da· Looaol
.
hot."
, .
17401446 6308 1
E·mall
lo nenl
compell·
refrigerator, 522 Grant Sl., Ashland Fleetwood 2002 1st Call (304)675·2864
polit (3041675-2551
•
.()()98.
hasn't
lost
in
13
starts
sin~e
800 291
carloolandOzoomnol.nol or live
resume to Davld'e Glneral Contracllng Middleport, (740)992·9084. Ooublewldo $26,226 Toll
Mike · Cameron increased
Mall to Amy's, 201 Stewart
Gallipolis Oal· · Plumbing, electrk:al, pelnl·
Free 666-605·5619 10 min Ronl 1o own on land con- Very nice, 2·3 bedroom Nurses uniforms.
2x
13 against San Francisco.
Worthington, KY
, 625 Third Avedocka, roofs. Call A good clean 2 bedroom lrom Huntington
lrael, good clean 2 bedroom apanm_an_l, _In lown, _1_arge _and_3Jc,_3 .~~~~~~•tdd~~,;---1---1::_:-s,,;ttle:_i,mf•ro've·d--its--.uad-"S'eattl.;! lcad_ to _:l.d.~"''ltlL:iLJ
(304)633· hOuae In Pomeroy-on land Ashland Fleetwood Septom h(7o40ua)6e-9"--721n44 Pomeroy, kiiChen, t&amp;Rd, $~mo. IRradel· $100. Sail
$40.
rd
55 ?I
hi
h
two-. run sJ'ngle J·n the fifth
or amall lur·
·
l!.:!::c::::::~=::::..·--~ arences
epos
..
requ
.
)
.
reco
to
-,
mate
ng
t
e
7116
1740
992
aymaM 0 ezwv.com. ~For­ AREA REPS, Individuals Local ratallor looking for ex- .:.:;:.;..,_ _ _ _..,-__ conlracl, (7401696·7244.
ber special. 2002 14x70
(740)446·3844 ·
~
inning that chased Doug
merly" 24yr. Wood lnduslry with good schooVcommunlly perlenced loss provenllon Full service houao cleaning, Newly conslrUclod, single 3bd'2ba. $19,990 Free Del. Syrocu:"t, now houa':., 0~
Rare baseball cigarette card
1971 Oakland Athleti cs •Or
Forester, 11yr. wvu For- oontacls to place and super- aosoclalo for In s10ro looa $7.00 hour; very honest slory · 1600 sq. fool home. &amp; Setup. Toll Free 1-866· ~~:f.· ca~roog~;ag":, big
SPACE
plcturtng ' Kid Elberleld" a :
the most road wins by anAL Davis
(1 0-9).
Mark
estry Professor &amp; lyr Direc- vlso an exchange aludonl. prevonlion posllion. Pleaoe ' Rotoroncea available. Call Located 10 mlnules from ::.805:.;. ,·5:.;6:.;1;;.9______ deck, 2
a month plus
FOR RENT
McLemore hit a three- run
1 Pomeroy, Ohio nallvo who .
5650
tor of WV Division of Forest- Compensation and travel in- send resume to Loaa Pre· (740)446·2977
Holzer Hospital, 20 minutes "":"
played ball· lara 1B90's ear· .
team .
ry.
centive. 1-800-964·4878
vonllon Supe&lt;VIsor, 6027
.
from Plea.. nl VaMoy Hoopl· Aoaumablo loans· Many $650 depoall, (740) 385•
I 1900'
II t
ndl
double, and Dan Wilson
Kyle Moore Road Hunting. Georges Portable Sawmill, tal off SR 160 on 8 private types available. Call for de· H59.
Mobile Home lot lor rent In 1Y0 , , :.O,~~ce ~~fo c;::o cal~
In other games Monday, it
ATTENTION
ton, WI/ 25702. '
don'l haul your logo 10 the 1·l/2 aero lot. 3 bedroom, tails. 1740)446·3563.
Why ronl? government Mlddlaport, ' 12S per month (740)446·0196 $65 00
was Baltimore 5, Boston 1; added a run-scoring single in
WE NEED HELPI
GIVEAWAY
mllilustcall304-675·1957. 2·112 baths. big kllchon Deluxe homo aave $5445 backed lOIN from $490 (740)992·31114
.
Ka
c· 2 the seventh to make it 9-1.
$500·$1500 PT
Local retallo1r looking tor •1•· 0Uall1y hou118Cieanlng lm· vi/oak cablnolo, OR, LR new 2000 mOdal Skytl.;. :i down. 1740)446·3093
Waterline Special: 314 200
and Detroit 4,
nsas lty .
$2,000·$6,000 FT
pertencod oss proven! on
•
wlgas log tlroplace cenlral bed
h
•
~~..;.-~--.,
PSI t21.95
100; 1" 200
Free Training
Dog for giYeaway to good
aaaoclate tor In store loss maculate, natlculous, de· I I d
' f t
room, 2 bat . total alec- 011 M
H
ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; PSI $37.00 Per 100; All
1-8e6-807·RICH
home. Includes doghouse,
prevention position. Pleaae taHed cleaning. The abso- a rroh a~n 2~12 r:~· ar~o~ tr!c, vinyl &amp; shingle, low
OBII..E or.u
riO
floosEHow
Brass Compression Fittings
runner and pin. Call www.comeworkwtthme.com Mnd reaumo to· Loot Pro- lulo blat. Call tor a froe·oot•
edl t
ol g ~ · monlhly paymonls, dollv·
FOR RENT
GooDs
In Slock.
,
(740)446·n16
vantlon Supe,.;iaor 6027 male. (740)256-1131 or 1· m7118d a~
~~~onM k.0 erod &amp; teiUp Includes skirt·
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS. .
8
AVONI All Aroaol To Buy or K 1 Moo Road H 1 868·781·2~12
pra
• · a lng &amp; atepa, Coles Mobile
J k
1 1·600· •
Soli. Shirley Spears, 304· 1°
re7
untng·
offer. Call (740)446·4514 Homoa, us 50 Eul, Alh· 1995 14x52 single wldo tor
E5 ac son, 0 ho,
Free klltons to a good 675-1429.
ton, WI/ 25 02
Wanlod to care tor elderly In trom , 8-5pm, M·F, or ens, Oh, 740·592·1972
rani or aale. call (7~01949· Appllanceo: Reconditioned 537-9526
homo, (740)992·7285
.:_...._..cc:.,.......,..---- LPN'Ii RN'a needed lor Pe· their home. Call at (740)446·3248·oflor 5pm.
0044 between 6pm·6pm
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, - - - - - - - - ::::::::.!:.:::::!::::..:.::::...__ Be Your Own Bosal
dlatrlc home care caBes In (740)256·6503 If no answer.
r
Final Days, Nationwide In- _ _ _ __;_..:..,__ Aefrlgrators, Up To 90 Days
Free Pupp6es! Mother: From Hamel
the Southeast VInton Coun· Leave mesaage on voice
~~
ventory
Reduction! 2 bedroom mobile home, Guaranteed! We Sell New • RESIDENTIAL HOME
Golden Aetrlevet, Father: Eam $500-$8000/MO
ty, Pomero~ and Racine mall.
(304)738-3409
Hud accepted, close to Rut• Maytag Appliances, French
OWNERS
Black lab. Call (740)367· PTIFT
land, (7401742 .2014 .
Cily Maytag, _740-448·7795.
7708
No Experience Nece888 ry Areas. Please Call Primary Will haul away, clean out,
· -Limited Or No Credit? Gov- =:::..:_;.:..:..:::..::.:._.:.___
"rappan HI Effk::lency 90%
1\1\a.l
Care Nursing
at clean up, move almost anyemment Bank Finance Only 2 Br, 1 112 bath, 14 wide For Sale: Reconditioned Gao Furnaces, Oil Fuma·
Kitten Calk:o to giveaway. 1·886·270 ~
(600)51
8 2273 Service
Ask tor
·
thing. Olher odd lobo. Call
At Oakwood In Barbours- with large e•pando &amp; can- washers, drvArs
,,_ and refrl~- ces, 12 Seer Heat Purhp &amp;
1 304)675·63~3 call alter WWN. Nevertl T•O5Aga 1n.oom Ph Ills •
I \ll\ 1 '\1 t'l't II "'
41
'\ I I&lt; \ I t I ""
Y ·
(740)446·7604
All IWII ntllo ldverllolng ville, WV 304·736·3409.
lrol air, (740)992·2167 · orators. Thompeons App I· Air Condlllonlng Systems
.'\. I 1\I ..., ICI( 1,
S:30pm.
C.IUIII Pert Time Direct McClure's Restaurant now
In lhle MWeplper Ia
r._ n ...c:•
ance. 3407 Jackson Ave- Free 8 Year Warranty Ben·
3 bedroom mobile home In nue, (304)675-7388.
Kittens- gray long hair, blue
C.re Stiff
hiring an 3 locations, lull or Will power wash houses,
eubfeet to tftl Flderll
.l'n.N...~
netta Heating &amp; Cooling, 1eyoa, Cheater, (740)965· A leading provider ol se&lt;V· part·time, ·pick up appHca· trailers, anything. Call Folr Houolng A01 o11111
FOR SALE
Middleport,
no
pels, :c:::::..:::.:..:c::::...:.=...._-- 8 0 0 · 8' 7 2 · 5 9 6 7
;;;;io;:=;:;:F.::;ARM;:;;:;;:;;;;I
.
1998 Honda TRX 300, 2
IMPRo\IEMI;MS
k:e Jo individuals wllh Men· tlon allocallon &amp;brtng back (740)441 ·4238 or (740)446· whk:h- It u~·l to ~
(740)992·5656.
Main Slroet Fumltu•e
www.o&lt;Vb.co1111bonnett
4466
"~· -1985
Herloy
Sportater,
1000
1987
Ford
4•4
XLT
L.artat.
wheel
drive,
Good
Cond
..
L,---iiiiiiiiiiiliiiorl
·
••1 R lard tl
nd o 1
0151 aak lor Ron. If no
.._
(304)675-1422
L--O:"""'~iiiil'n"iiii""'Oi.-,J custom, $4500. 1979 Mua· New paint clean, runs great. $2200, (740)1149-3081
... e a on a
eve· between
9:30am
&amp;
uag
Mvertlll "1ny
132 acres with pond, lots of 3 Br, 2 baths, 14x70 Ne'Nly
515 Main Street, Point
1
tang, 4 speed, V-6, good $3500.(3040675·8859
All lypes of masonry brick,
Unfinished Pine desk with
opmental Disabilities Is lO:ODam, Monda~ thru Sat· answer, eave me
e.
ptlt.rwtiGI, Hmtt.tlon or
standing timber, lovel~ 4 remodeled, (740)992-2167
Pleasant
2000 Kawasaki Bayou 300 block &amp; alone 20 Y'"· expolooking for casual part lime urday.
dlecrlmfnatlon bllld on b&amp;drQOm, 2·112 bath home ,
drawer, $85 , like new.
52 Case DC &amp; 5' Brush hog condition $1 400 1979
workers Starting wage Is
Beautiful River View Ideal
(7401446·0196
tor $1500, &amp; Small child's Chevy m~tor tiom8 excel· 87 Ford truck &amp; 85 Oldsmo- 4x4, $4,300. Call (740)44~. rience, tree estimate,
·
loda Sa
u
I'ICI, color, I'IJiglon, IIX
2 barns, garage and cellar
New &amp; Used Furniture
$6.50 per
1
1304)773-9550 .
Clo·Kart
5 horse, $100 lenl condition, $3,so0: 1991 ~~OCutlass, call (740)742· 8959. 1eave message.
App y
y lea Person. MUll have 2
B•\J\:Jiol.,.:m
~
I' flmlllllll81UI or nltkmll . h
mobil h
t I For 1 Or 2 People, Referen·
FOUND· Great Dane of1 of In person hour.
at Middleton Es· years experience In salea of
.
ouae,
e ome rena ces, Deposlt No f»ets, Fos· New 2 Piece Uvingroom WATER WELLS DRILLED.
(740)843·5217
Geo
Prism,
automatic,
.
2
Suki
~CatEma
GFX
Route 160 near Vinton, can
BASEMENT
OlromJNny
origin, onny lnlenllon 10 ~) 2":.J~:gl=:~ t~; 1er Tr~ller Pari&lt;, 740·44!· ~~~~~· $399. Buy, Sell, (740)1188-7311
12,000. 1967 Nova, 5·
VANS &amp;
16 F. 5 500 mlleo. Like
(740)388·8248 and ldenllty. totes. 6204 Carla Drive. lumber &amp; hardware. Send ,
WATERPROOFING
Gallipolis. OH. An Equal resume or pick up an appl· lo._--ii.iiiii.iiiiiiii;.,.l ....=~~:.:.":'on
mo•olnformallon.
0"-1'1181"1•
. ~-----., .:;::::::.__ _ _ _ __ White's Metal Detector
John Deere 6620 Titan II speed, $600. KX1 25 motor·
'WDs
N $3
(304)576 -68
Unoondltlonal lltolime guar·
...
ow. ·
·••
Opportunity
Employer. cation al Thomas Oo·ll Con·
INOntEf
dttc"mlnotlon."
Nice used f"mlture/ appllan· Speclrum XLT, shows tlnd
combine. Call (304)675· eros&amp; bike, $1 ,ooo. Baer
Lost 2 Farm dogs Irom FIMIOV
I 176 •·-c '-k R d
..
I
• ~·.........,..,
"
antee.
Local references fur·
4306
Ace engine Analyzer wllh ~
Do/ITS &amp; MOTORS
Burlingham. Mloolng since
·
G"a~'· 11 118 OH ~~31 oa ' OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
BtJSINE\'I
nr~.,.. ~ .. u
oes. (740)446·1004 or doplh. $600. (paid over
nlahod. Established 1975.
gas.
Great
tor
begl11ners,
1985
Chevy
S·10
Blazer,
.
S
Sepl 8th. Female: Black CNA'a, HHA's . Cortltled
po '
lNG CO. recommends ltlel Thla ,_..,.per will not
· AND U.JIWINGS
FOR RENT
(740)446·2680.
$800.) Like New (304)675Call 24 Hra. (7401 446·
$300. (740)386·9516 or 4x4,
asking
$1800
FOR AlE
Lab/Doberman mix wilh homomakefl needed 10 pro- SECURITY OFFICERS: you do buolneaa with people
knowtnglr occap1
~
Solid Oak Traslle Table w/ 5416
0870,
1·800·287.0576.
(740)386-6071
.
(740)992·21
67
white patch on c~est, 60 vide In home services lor Guardsmark is now accept· you know, and NOT to sand lldv.-tiHrnlntl fOf ml
Office building In .,.1ners. 1 and 2 bedroom apart· chairs, matching hutch/ bul·6
A_ogers Waterproofing.
For
sale
or
trade
anything
or
Window
Air
Conditioner.
lbs., 6 years old, medium elderty/disabled In Mason &amp; lng appMcatlons for employ- money tiYough the mall until
...... which 111n
ville,
sq. ft., elc, COY.. ments, furnished and unfur· fet. 6 years old, perfect con·
1992 Camara, V-6, auto, 1986 Ford Bronco II, 4x4, value. 36 loot houseboat
hair, blue collar. Very sweet Putnam county areaa. Call men! In Mason County. If you have Investigated the viOIIUOn ofthlllw. our ered 600
parking, ceiling tan, nlahed, security deposit re· dillonS1.800. (
) _ Works Groat. $50 OBO.
4 year old AOHA Incentive 25th Anniversary Edlllon, rod, 74,000 miles, CO play· wllh
V·bollom.
Call C&amp;C Gen8ral Home Mainte740 256 (740)992·7116
&amp; genlle. Anawers to 1·886·453-4992
you are at loaal 21 years of oftortng..
~
1275/mo., 614·876·1661 .
qu1rod
. • no pels, 740-992· 1275 ahor 5:30pm week·
Fund Mare wllh 120 days $2500, (740)742·2357.
or.
$3,000.
(740)379·2110
(740)669-3482
22 16
nance- Painting, vinyl sidSpankera.
Male:
age, have a ctear pollee reInformed that •H
da
anyll
Sat rda &amp;
riding. Will make all arounq
alter 5:30 pm.
&amp;
Roltwellar/Chow mix, black Dlreclor of Nulling needed cord and a high school Free Sotlwarol Amazing -~---In
LoTs &amp;
I
ys,
me
u Y
Ing, carpentry, doors. winprospect. (740)441·1015
1993 Oldsmobile Cutlass
Auro
PARI'S
100
with brown Rattle markings for
bed skilled nursing diploma or equivalent, we Web Site will show You
thlaMMPII*.,.
ACREAGE
1 Bedroom Apartment, Ae· iiSiiiundap.;;:;Y·- - - - - . . . . ,
dows.. baths, mobile home
Supreme. 4 door, Rod Exto· 1992 Ford Explorer, 4x4,
ACCE'I'iORIL'i
1
on lace, chest, paws. Chow facl~ty. Excellent opportuni· would like to talk with you. How To Download Over
ev•llabll on.,. -~~·•
frigerator, Range, AJC In·
JIAY&amp;
rior,
Black
Interior,
PW,
Pl,
Eddie
Bauer,
Blue/Tan,
1,~---iiiiiiiililiiiiiiiio_.l. repair and mora. For free
tall &amp;longue, 75 lbt, 2 112 ly for lho nghl candidate lo Starting pey Ia $6.60, gc&gt;ng 250.00 Shareware Pro·
Opporlunlly ..;;i,"
eluded, $289 Plus Deposit &amp;
ANI1Qmli
eattmare can Chet, 7-'0-992·
PO, AJC, $2500 080. 103,000 miles, aunrool,
brick, sewer pipes
GRAIN
yeara old. long hair, red col· wonc with excepUon.aJ man· to $7.30. Full time employ· grams Freel 1·900·329·
Indian Creek Equestrtan Es· Reterenca. HUD Approved. L____..;,___.J Block,
(740)446 9238
leather, loaded, mint condl· Are ~ou kxlklng for engines 6323.
wlndowe.
lintels,
etc.
ClaudE
lar. A little shy but friendly. agement team, nursing ltaff eea receive paid vacaUona 8670 Ext. 3933, $2.99 per
tates, 3·6 acre lots, west of (740)441-1519
·
lion, 16,700 negotiable, or tranamloolons? Clive me
Winters, Fllo Grande, atBuck a bale sale, square 1997 Cavalier 49,500 miles, (740)379·2268
Answers to Bruno. Please and 181facility with &amp;MceUen! paid life and health lnsur- min. Must be 18yra, Sarv·U Affordable new home, 3 Rio Grande, from $25,900. : -&amp;;::_bed-roo-'-m-.-n-e-ar_Hol_z_a_r, Buy Or sell. Riverine Anti~ Call 740·245·5 121 .
a call at (740)446-0519
1
2
bales St.OO other hay up lo 35·46 MPCI, c/d, air, auto,
call Clinger or Jeff (740}992· rog_:' 1"'Yt 1comj&gt;lancot
·
Opance,
and
an
opportunlly
to
(819)
645·8434.
bed
roomR
·
LRba~~ch'::',;
~:::;
(740)245-5747
economk:al
utilities,
$
to
quea,
1124
East
Main
on
1
1
1
279
$2.00, round bales 115.00 new lires, pey off $7,000, 1997 Ford F·150 XLT, mol· Budgl1 P~cod Tronomlo2504, Rowardl
PQ•:.~nh Y,_ 01f"pro
eas ona partlclpalo In a 401·K pro- 1 t 1~- M·l , _ H
ng 00 ~~ ,_ · 8 Perl -• - - - - - - - - · per monlh pluo ulllllles
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· Rough Cui lumber, 2•4's
each 304·675·4669
gran, ' Ul:lne
us, pay com·
M
II
•·
ablo
to
o...
n eme '""""r...., ..._m ow garage, n!\ie ..,ve11o.1 C'O'I.I Lo-•ing •o Buy A New 5379
992
2526
R
aa
Mo
1
•6'
I
I
8
16
f
alllc blue, 75K, 4x4, flare· elona All Types Access To
(140)949 2221
8• cu
•gram~ ittu and
~ 80f1'll week·
w •• to ••8 ke Contr,,..
"' ot Anolhe r 1n t•·
~ Don1
''
·
· u
oro,. lebgths,
n board
·
•• .
mensura Ie wl Ih expeuvnce.
·any
,.., 70'a. CaII tor more do • Home?
Have Land? (740)446·2957
owner.
1.000+
teet
·
·
aida, 3" lift, 33' llres, wllh Ovar 10.0oo Transmloalone, Residential or commercial
I lnterealed
YARD SALE
. candldaleo ends: All applk:anta will bl Compuler Over The Inter· 1ollo. 1740)446·2801 .
We Oolll Hurry Only 10 Lois ~6...,47:::.;5c:.lh:.::A:.;v:.;en_u_o_,-1-b-ed-·
$250. (740)441·1015
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie 1997 Lincoln Towncar Slg· Leer topper, very clean. Transfer Cases, 740·245· wiring, new aervlce or repairs. Master Licensed ~ec·
1·900 ·329·8670 • Nk:e older home, 2 BR, IIV· Left, 304·736·7295.
~traw, Yem 'Round Delivery nature Sones, leather lntarl· (740)446·6323.
56n, Cell: 339-3765.
· should apply to: Rock· given a drug ocreen. Apply nell
room, washer/ dryer hook· New Buolneoo Opening Oc· iir;;.:;.;;:;;~:.;,:,::,:;:__
trlclan. Ridenour EleCtrical,
springs Rehabilitation Can· at the Main Gate of the Exl.393'4-, $2.99 per min., lng room, dining room, ,
up. (740)446•7903 .
tobar 1st. Sua's Selectables
p,....,
&amp; Volume Discount Availa· or, low miles, all options,
YARD SAL&amp;
Iter, 36759 Rocksprings Rd ., M&amp;G Polymers plant on -Must be: 18yra. SeN·U (619) kltchan, pantry, utility room, Nice 4 acre tract near
on the ~r In Middleport
t&lt;UR~A.LE
bla.
Heritage
Farm wiU trade for Suburban . . or 1998 Jeep Wrar'lgler, stand· ONYX Black Fiberglass Wl/000308, 304-675·1788.
Tahoe. (740)992·2457 eve· ard no AIC, alum. wheels, 1\.R.E. Cap tor 6·112' 1999
GAIJJPOLIS
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Sisto Roolo 2, Apple Clrovs, 645·6434.
tull elzo ottk:, gas lurnace, Gallipolis· ~asy lsrms, BEAUTIFUL
APART· Ohio: (740)992.()298
..,_ _ _ _ _ __
(304)675·5724.
53,000 miles, extended 7- General Motors PCk-up. ExL---iiillillliiiil._.l Equal Opportunlly Employer WI/ between 6:00 AM and Start Your Buslnoaa To· cenlral air, Racine, $35,000, 1740)446-3583
MENTS .AT BUDGET PAl·
1 1~ \\ '-I I'IIUI\IUI\
~nl::ngs!!::.
.
yr.100,000 mile warranly. cellent Condl11on. (740)256Encooraglng Wort&lt;placo 01· 2:00PM. Monday, Septem- day... Prima Shopping Can· (740)949-2070
Primo 2·112 acre lot for CES AT JACKSON ES.
MlscFLL.oo:ou; AKC Basaol Hound pup .
;;;;;::==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 2000 Camr; LE. Excollenl 304·675·6894
304-675· 6239 Leave message.
Inside &amp; out, 4 rooms lull, vei'Sily.
-U'IJr 24 · thrN~h
F""•y
Sen.
TATES, 52 Weatwooct Drive
~~
pies,
vet
checked,
6wk old "'"W
•rua • ,. ter Space Available At AI·
building on· loCated on quiet
.LYII!.M...... IIt'U~
$175 (304)576 2125
·
io
Auras
Condl11on. $17,000 080 or 2617 alter 4pm $10,000.
. 11 Help Wanted
aw._r, all ck:lllea $.50 &amp; Dollar Plus Ohio River Pia· lomblr 28.
tordable Rale. Spring Vallay
MOBILE ll&lt;lMD I road, secluded area, oul· trom $297 to $383. Walk lo
·
·
FOR SM.E
take over payments.
.
CAMPERS
&amp;
I
under,
1699
McCormick
hlrt'
PI
c
11
740
...
"101
S
-••
.
a
........
&amp;
nxwlas.
Call
740Rd., 10om·?, 26lh, 27th, za, now ng management. Special Education Pre- aza, a
· -u-u
·
FOR ALE
IMUe o1city limtls 1n 5 pring- ,..,...
Baby bed, dressing table, AKC Registered BoaiOI ·
' - - - - - - - · !:!7..:.40~).::24:::5..:.0:.:5:..19:_·_ _ _ : . P~ac~~':,~· ; ::
MaroR Hor.e
26th.
Apply tn person or laM ra· achoot Teacher, 3 days per
I --• field Township. Asking 446 .2568 · Equal Hovslng car seat, s~ng, high chair. Terrier Puppies. (740)258
Chevy Bolelre, 4 dr., 69 Omnl, 135,000 mllea, 53,000 OBO. (740)441·
sumalo (304)736-3092.
week. Must have current
~
,
$17,500. Call for mote inlo. :Oppo:!1:::.rtu:::;:nl:.!ly:..
. - - - - - Black leather boots size 7 or 1825
re•tore 10 original, 107.000 runs great, $700 060. 1856
1984 Coachman 22ft. travel
AUC110N AND
Expen·e~ Olooel and/or Ohio "-•rtmenl ot Educa·
StlMCE'i
. 12x65 2 bedroom, goo heal, (740)446·4514 Days: or Chrlaly'e Family Living, 7 1/2 and Size mod. Coal -------~
""-·
••·-··~~
-...~
falroond,Uon,
12,500;
14x51
(740)446-3248
Evenings.
33140
N
Ll
Rd
Rut
lhat
lch
(304)675
2601
Registered
Lab
Puppies
actual
mlloa,
$6200 OBO. (740)256-1 233
B&amp;O
Aulo
Selea
ualler
~oops 4-5. Has new
Auto Mechanic. Must have tlon Cartilication/Licenl8
2 bedroom, all electric, good
ew ma .,
.
rna .
.
yelfow and black. S20t
~~-.O"oiiiu.Aiili"iOii.L'UIA&lt;.iiiiiit'_.l loo'·
(740)742·89&lt;J!l.
92 Camero, V-6, standard, 1994 Chevy S10 Blazer
relrtdg., hot walor lank, 4
&amp;c~an driving record. and have or b1 ollglbla lo
TURNED DOWN ON
oondi'llon, $6,500. 1740)446·
land, Ohio, 740·742·7403.
h
·
4door $3600. 1983 Che\AI new tires, lie &amp; furnace,
,. "'
h
nd n1 Beautiful handmade solid eac , ma1es and female&amp; ·
88 rson Aucllon Co
Hops, asking $2500, 510 Bl•·er 4door 13800.·' stova &amp; oven. Readl to go
Rick
P
(740)388·8547
Obtain
eeny
education
ol
SOCIAL
SECURITY
1881?
4734
(740)367·701
5
:~==~===~
Apartment,
orne
a
tra r wood cradle, a must oee· (740I446-0G80 evenings.
1 ~9 Camero Rebuilt 355
·
.
.
m·.
hlndk:apped validation. No Faa Unleta We Wlnl (740) 441 1337
rentals. Commercial store·
40 1 74 2 2 35 7
17
pany, full time auctroneer, Experienced Timber Cut·, er. Send resume by september
1-888-682-3345
•
fronts available for lease. great for' a newborn or baby
M
a;',d transmla~on. l!ody In ::::~:..:::.:·::=.·:....._ _ _ 1992 Chevy 510 Blazer
camping. Asking 4,100.
compiOio aucllon aervlce. (740)682·7318 call aller 281h lo: Cartetoo School,
r10
HOUSilS
Vacancies now.
dolla, $100. (740)448-0198
~CAL
Good Condl11on. Have parts · - · · · B&amp;O Auto Sales
$2300. 1992 Toyota Pickup (304)773·542 4
Llcenaod 166,0hlo &amp; WeBI 6pm.
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Par
RENT
.J16rRUMI'Nl'S
1310 Carleton Stroel, Syra·
to llnloh. $2000 llrm. 1996 Pon11ac Grand Am 4X4 52600. 1992 Ford
V1rg1n1a, 304·773·5785 Or
CUM, Ohio 45179 or Fax to
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest L---FOiiRiioiiiioiioo-rJ Furnished efficiency, all utll·· Firewood lor sale, $150 "---iiiitiiiiliiiiliii'(740)245·9502
·
$2700. 1996 Mllaublahl Gal· Ranger Pk:kup 4X4 $2200. 1999 Coachmen Catalina,
37 toot, 2 slide outs, loaded,
304·n3-5447.
Full-lime denial asolslanl (740)992-6438
rio
HOME'i
I Rale With Air And Un· llies paid, ahara balh, 1125 =loa=d·:.;l:..740~)«:.:.:1..:·9:.:4:..78:___
lant $2700. 1995 Chevy 1990 Dodge Caravan
position. Muet be available
et~ceuenl
condition,
FOR S•• ~
derplnning 1·888·928-3426 1 ·3 Bedtooms Foreclosed month, 919 2nd /\venue. F
Flute, LeBlanc Vito, used~
1ffl9
Ford
T·Bird
351
modi·
Cavalier
$2400.
1993
Ford
$1200.
1996
Ford
Aerootar
WAN'IID
J'UA:.
urnlture,
appliances,
dryer,
4
times,
new
S516,
ee
(740)245·9480
fled,
runs,
body
needl
worl&lt;,
Probe
$1500.
19;3
Ponllac
Van
12000.
Monday lhru Saturday, SUBSTITUTE TEACHER
1966 Vendale 12x60 Mobile Homos From $199/Mo .. 4%(,7:.:40::::.:1446-:.;::,.::394:::5::..- - - - walerbod, music equlpmenl, $350, music eland/ 0881
I 8am-6pm.
. 10 BUY
Pleaae aubmlt ra- AIDE FOR CHILO CARE
Homo. 1886 Ford Ranger Down, 30 Years at 8.5% alereo's, elc. Low prtces, books. 17401367.7026
S300; new pelr ol mud &amp; Grand Am $1700. 1993
B&amp;D Auto Sel.es
69 Dodge camper Van, oelt
sumo lo 995 JackiOn Pike, CENTEFI. MuBI have an In- 3 Bedroom on Roulo 2, 2.3 Lilla. 5 opoed. APR. For Llotings, 800·319· Gracious living. 1 and 2 1740)446-7625
i:iir;;;.:~;:;;;~,;;;;..._
snow
tires,
150,
(7401992·
Chevy
Lumina
$1900.
1992
~~_;H~Ig~hw~a:y~1~60=N--,
contained, excellent oondl·
toreat and desire lo worl&lt; (304)875·5332
(304)675•7091 01 13041675. 3323 E&gt;t. 1709.
bedroom apartmenla at VII·
FRUITS &amp;
Absolute Top Dollar. U.S Clalllpols, OH 45631 .
4276.
Ponllac Grand Am $1200.
740 446 8685
tion, garage kept, low milewith young children. Reply
5292
logo Manor and Rlvefllde Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
v~-·DIJ!S
Silver, Gokl Qolns, Proof·
1985
Chevy
Ceiobrtly,
GL
1969
Toyota
CorollaS1200.
ago,
mull sell, leaving
:.:::.:.._______ 1 bedroom , AJC, 1 bath, Apartments in Mktdleport. Repairs. Problems? Need ~----~iiiiiLii''~iiiOiiiil;..
seta. Diamonds, Gold Full·tlma wor1&lt;, sales expert· to: Magic Years Day Care
2.8 v.e, Good Condlllon, al·
B&amp;D Auto Seleo
otato. Call (740)709-4444
ence
neceaaary.
Contact
Center
201
High
Street
·
House
for
1111
by
owner.
:)
1982
14x70
Fairmont
Hap.
kitchen
has
appliances,
From
$278·$348.
Call
740·
Tuned'?
Call
The
Plano
Dr.
·
Rings , U.S. Currency,·
7
oo Free Kitten, 6 weeks,
Highway 160 N.
MOIORC\'OL'i
Polnl Pleaaanl, WI/ 25550 bedroom. 1 112 balha, lg. pyhousa mobile homo 3 2nd Avenue, Gallipolis, 992·5064. Equal Housing 740-&lt;148-4525
Pumpkins for sale, roral
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec· Rick al (740)448-6 00
Call
(740)256-6735
740-&lt;148-6885
FUNDRAIIINQ
llvlngroom,
dlnlngroom bed oom'e $10 000 68 II $350/mo. (740)446·4859
Opportunllloa.
wholesale, Raymond Row
ond Avenue, Galllpolis, 740·
·
URGENTLY
NEEDED· kitchen fenced back yard'
r
'
' ·
Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 Forms (740)247-4292
&lt;146·2842.
11188 Grand Am, Silver, Au· Llko new 1999 Cadillac 1981 Honda 650 cb. Runt Buy, Sell or Trade
DIRECTOR
plooma dono,., oam $45 to eiOCIIor hoat pump, attach: (740)441·8959 leave mas· 2 bedroom home clooa 10 Nlca largo apo~ment; 3 lor 110. Open Sat. 6·5pm. &amp;
lo, CD Player. 12000. OevWio, priced below wtlOie· Great, 24,000 mllas. Bike In ·
08
Needed f~r
$60 tor 2 or 3 hOurs weekty. ld garage, sent no 0 ,; over 1 : ::ga!::..- - - - - - - town, basement. River view, bedrooms, large lllllngroom, evenings. Dewflurat Green·
(740)379·2110
aller oale. Aloo 1984 CheVy s-10 Good Condlllon. $600 OBO.
In the
6"11:'(/~~~~· PT~~ :~.:Ct!:'o.Ea: ·eo. Call Sera-Tee, 740·592· acre of land on Rl.l24 close 1993 Clayton 16, 60 mobile $4251 month: 3 bedroom In wuhor/ dryer hook·up, houao MI. Allo. (304)895· Buy, Sell or Trade
5
tru&lt;k and 1983 Ford lruck, (740)245-9502
Avg 101 yr IIIO-tiOK
8851.
lo New School, (740)992· homo 3 br., 2. ba. asking lown, H/2 batho. Good lo- $450 monlh, retarancoo &amp; 3740 ltavo meuage. or
:30pm.
all' In greal ohape. Call
· In th•
Won- Black Batty Beanie
&amp;.eo
oia ISIO
Ne-• 7 Laclleolo SeH Avon. 3911 aflor 3:00pm,- Muol '19,000 304-773· 5666 after cation. $5001 monlh. Rolor· dtpooll roq~irtd. (740)446· (304)995·3789
1991
Chevy
Cavalier
Runt
(740)44
Hl279 attar 8:00.
Buddy, reasonable price ,
caii17401446.3358
Soli.
5 pm,
oncoo and daposll required. 8030
good, but noe&lt;ts worl&lt;. CaH
call (740)11112·7242.
(740)448·3844.
(304)882·2539
I
l
Why wall? Start meeting
Ohio singles tonlghl, call toll
tree 1·800·766·2623 lid
1!121.

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 3

NATIONAL LEAGUE

In one week .With us
TO Place

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

'

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

Tuesday, Sept. 25, 2001

974JOBS

l

monthly payment.
High l':lterest
while beooming dobt
homeowners
people wtlh credtt
:::~:::in~in credit cards, II i
medical bills and
loans. Call1·800-897-2200

Ext. 340.

A501 (c)(3)Not-For·Profit Organtzatlon.

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

\

Tues~y, Sept. 25,

2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Oh io

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 5

OOP
NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

P/B

Hill's Self
Storage
Racine, Ohio
45771

xtt•

lo10'Xalr

JONES'

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

Min.

Spout

T I I 1111'11111

881-8329

wv fiOJ17ll

. 11-~~
High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

33795 Hila,.d Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Backhoe
Septic Syatem.a
UtWtlee

General
Contractlnl
Eacavatinl! Dozer

ana

New Home•

740-992-5232 992-7943
3-0

•

Advertise

CONSTRUCT10N
Insured

Specialize In new

Owner
Charles R. Dill

space
for $50
per

PhoM 992-7445 ·
CtU hone 591-9254

month

constnu:~tlon,

remodeling, plumbing,
electrical, home malntea•nce. and rtpai~
porches, &amp; deckJ.

._1811 ....

•1.1111&amp;·111··1'¢ . . . .
.............. u...........

llnUMUI·--

in this

Free eat11111111,

Pomeroy

740·992·5344
Sal8·1

21211 rro od

WINTER STORAGE

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN
C!fANGE OF
----~.~:~=~:~oF KAYLEEMERICOTO
KAYLEE MORGAN
HOWARD
APPLICATION FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
OF MINOR (R.C.
2717.01)

The sppllcanl 1tateo

CONSTRUCTION

All Makes Trador &amp;

Equipment Parts
Fadory Authorized

.

, .,.....
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740.992·1671

Free estimates

Good Deelsl

DREHEL'S
(740) 742-2925
Your Replacement Parte Source

Advertise
In this space
' for $25 per
month

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
addition• A decka
Free e1tlmatea
10 yrs. experience
In the bualnna
Reference•
available. Owner:
TerryLamm
740.992 739

on rapalrea,
In-home service
available 24 houre,
used systems 386
and up, uaed

hardware and
software.

24'120'

N-1210UBlE WAll
PlASTIC
FIRSTCOML
FIRST SERVEI

$200.00 PER JOINT

REGUlARlY
$321.00 PER JOINT
l740J 446-8237 OR
[3041 675-7516

that I,. applicant II
the parent of a bone
fide reoldent of Meigs
county, Ohio for 111
lent ona year
Immediately prior to
the
filing
of
application.
A
certified copy Dl the
mlnor'a ·
b Ir I h
certHicalell sttached.
Tho applicant elet11

lhst lhe name and
addra1s of the mot,.r
of the minor Ia: Trocy
Lynn Me rico, 311 Mainf
Slreal, Rutland, Ohio
45775 end .lhe nama
and addre11 &lt;&gt;f the
father or alleged fslhar
ol the minor Ia: Jam..
Dsvld Howsrd, 311
Main Straet, Rutland,
OH 45775.

B ISSELL

~~!:!'!~c:;:::~

''
ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Additions • Roonna
COMMERCIAL and IEliD£HllAL
F-R!:E ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

~t· 8!

Residential ·commercial New Coll•tructlon
Sales Sonia: installaliun
Spedalizina in Sheet Metal Du&lt;twork
"Trane" Sales &amp; S."ice Fur
·
Galli•, M ....,., a'nd Meias Counties
Licensed and lll!ured
WV 005176

Custom Computel'll
Service, Repail'll, and

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column lnch .Sundays

1:r

10:30 ·Preaching

MITH IIULL GOIPIL CHURCH
ROUTII24, LONG BOnGM; OlltO

IwoMEN I

' KENSINGTON
WINDDWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS liiE

•
.
'

741)..667-o&amp;OO

Free Es tim ates

·'
I

...

,·•

.'·

...

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

f ...

-·

TRI-COUDTY
TRHDSPORT

orone.
'

~

.- !

Umell-1

5esMn DIKDUnls
mulllple Lood

.1.•

~ ~

•' r ~ • ...._.

•. ' ..... :•
li. ~\.. if :.

_,

.,.

..,...

'

..

DfKDUnls

!

~

....

I
I

. Roofing • Gut1ers • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint• Flooring
· Pressure

Bucket Service ·

order

61 Clean-air

11

Huge

org.

lhl'()llg

P1yche

ra:low

......

z.az.a·o

2 Ao!M
nanny

1loter
34 Vljjor'1

24 Snug

4Huo
5Wheel

llger.

36 Eighteen-

6

wheeler

~lieu

ltrnporary 52 FourSinister
po-, e.g.
30 Large llurd 53 Oloon ol
31 Sign Dllho
-lie
Mura
54 C1pp'1

bird

a Hunt

IIINIUta

38 Urge

41 Chalot

29

7 Fining

37DIIt.nce

44 Totum
HIY0....-/

25 Clarinet kin
toatura
26 Novelist
49 Plumbing
llril
e&lt;oblem
21 Uvy con- so oym org.

3 Eat

35e:=p.ce

•a.-n ·

43

for- -"
20 ·Mil. ofllcer
cold
22 Volentine 45 Poleozolc
llgura
ll1d
23 CuoiOmllry
MftOzolc
practlcu
46 lmpullhle

' DOWN
1 Typeol

ordert

· holy

Illegally

37 M1ocuUne

- --- - ~·
....-,..-...,;::

Abner

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Lula Campos

Colobrity Cipher cryptograms are craaled !10111 quotations by fatnQ\ja

people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: Y equals J 1

zwo

'B W T A .E C Q

ZTO

Z Q WI. '

PMSG

OM

FTAOMS

UTJSGC

uws

'S. M

T 0 '

W

BWTAECG

FZM
T .O
GBYMKTSP
.1\ T B G, • :
if
opponents
thethetickets
and have
bid
game, partner with a
F T A A T WU
B G .W D Z G C -;-----,:;:-:-~-~-~~--.:.__~-------- fit~ wm-15e thiiiki:_
n.::.
g-.- -"P'"'REVIOUS- SOLUTION: 'He was a great leader
about a sacrifice, exbest shortslop I ever saw.'.,..- Bob Feller, on Lou
AI(TUI\ THE STAR OF
~
OH TVES.
AR. Ull.!
pecting you to have at
TliE TEAM! AATU"-.
WOlD
WE 111JSTN'T WHO 110/ES TO TOWN, ·
most
one
defensive
GAM
I
FORGET
BEAT.S ME ONE TIME, !
trick. However, if
I\ BoUT
AND T~S M'l' SPOT
i
AS OUR lliUMIO ONE
ARTU~!
you hold two solid
O Rearrange letter• of ·t~e
Pl.~vl.-.!
four 11&lt;romblod word• bo·
winners, it could easlow 10 form four olmplo words.
ily be a phantom sacrifice.
RAHORB
In this deal, North
might have doubled
fou'r hearts and collected 200 points. But
DUELE
he preferred to go for
2
3
the vulnerable game
WHEN WE LEFT. IT WAS NICE
bonus.
1 GUESS "'OU CAN NEVER
AND CLEAR .. NOW,LOOK WlolAT
West led the heart
COUNT ON TlolE WEATiolER ..
WE'RE RUNNIN6 INTO ...
king. South could see
F N I Kj4
Two old timers sat on a bench
10 top tricks : six
~=·~~-:;:;:~·~·~~·:._,watching the people go by. One
spades, one heart, one
,.
replied to the other, "The future
diamond and two
5 UE 5
. isn't what it - - - - to - -.'
5
clubs. Could anything
6
lhe chuckle quolod
1 Complele
_
•
_
•
_
•
by filling In the missing words
go wrong? Yes, if East
you develop from J!ep No. 3 below.
had· no hearts. What
was the solution? To
·,
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN li
IZ 13 ,.
THESE SQUARES
I
1
.
play low from the
dummy at trick one.
@) UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO 1
GET ANSWER
•
South repeated the
.procedure at trick
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
two, ruffed the third
Lotion- Drone- Tumor- Handle -:HELMET
heart ·in hand, drew
Iwouldn'(_iay our neighbors boy was babied. But, he
the only kid I ever saw play badminton weartrumps, an d too k ~ .is however,
HEL•'ET
those I 0 winners.
· ong a
"' ·

I

I

I

j

rIr

~. .~

I

O

r ,. I

f9

lA

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complett Une of Sulllvan'o Grooming Supplloo
Bullur Cootod Um, bulk only, $128.00 por ton
10% oil all Prlol_. Hor11 ond LlvHtock Equip.
10.10.10 All Purpooo Fertlllw SU0/50t

Tap • Trim • Remaval

14 =

II

750 Easl Slate Street

TREE SERVICE

33

eo Vale

Ijj

740-112·7832

35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831 •

32

Fountain

I I I 1I .

Sherrnon While

....... m.... ltrvlce, lac

Sll Timid

41

I

Bt4~·2202
Raelnt, Ohio
~~~------~~~

8,000 Baler Twine 111.50/Bole
18,000 Baler Twine $21.50/8111

1

29

PttlllJP
Yesterday, I mentio ned that a weaktwo opening of two
diamonds, two hearts
o r two spades shows a
decent six- card suit
and 5-9 points nonvulnerable and 6-10
vulnerable. There are
other traditional re quirements. .
You are not supposed to have four
cards in a side major.
When you open with
a weak two-bid , you
promise length in that
suit and ,no other. It is
hard to find a fit in
anothef'&lt;suit, and uncovering a .4 -4 fit is
virtually impossible.
You shouldn't have
a void. If you do, you
are looking at either
6-4-3-0 or 6-5- 2-0
distribution. The first
hand is playable in
three suits, not just
the one you annoupce. The second
is a two-suiter and
should be bid as such.
It is dangerous to
hold two aces. A
weak two-bid is a
two-edged sword. If
partner is strong, you
hope he will know
what to do because
you have closely defined your hand . Yet

10

I

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

New vttJiity 1;1ig:hc b~.• in fused. in your ~oc ial aff.1i rs in

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT·.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• NowQorogeo

211 E111 S1cond Str"t

Pomero..,, ONo

992-5908
M·F 10wn-4tpm

•'

NIDf.~~ I

27

=of tf:c:

9 HHchhiker"1 3t Lobl1er

1
~ f-

• EIICtrlctl &amp; Plumbing
&amp; Gutt•ra

•

PT~ (()tNolo,U(\\ lC"'Tl().l G"'-P"''

~~=====~~::t':~~Jo! Jl.:e:=!;o::zL2-~

• Room AddHiono &amp;
Romodollng

··

0

.

~ilDOK.

R""'" fOfll' '"~llllllllt"

'"\:; I, '

.•

\

BORN LOSER

Ll K£. c.H lC.Ke.N !

•

I

.'

(I

we

t----.., "ffil5lSC.lTY .""'1
ffilC.KEN '?"IT~

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
•New Homes
• Siding
• RO&lt;&gt;ftng
• Remodeling
• Gsrsg•
•Additions
• Deoks
• Homa Repelra

0

(l.fALt..Y?! ~0¥1 lOON
1&gt;o
ttAve
TO l&gt;fCII&gt;e?

;
'

"We'll fix it or elsel'

·.

Weak
bid
BY
ALDER

Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

IPQC::::!Ac:_;+·~---=--~
"""""'""
L-.....;~~:...!!!ti..!!!~!:!!!:::.._.............l

'

24

For mon infoi1JIIJlion, comelo our church
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;

Upgrades

~.

l&amp;ul
Allpau

23 "Gtottl"

. BARNEY

BJt••

Advertise your
message .

.

'•

. 1-800-250.!1077

SUMMERnME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME H~T IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Nena
••

c.

::;'hbot

57
upon
Lamb, by
17MineexH
181nlron1
20 Movie pert 5I 51,...
21 Winter mo.
Damone

OpeninG: leild ¥ K

•
•

'

"Hilplnf Yolrto

16

SuuUt

"'""

••

sa Keep on

15 Furniture

I

740-992•7599

..

t 6

l!

Snodgrass' Upholstery

..... ... .

!Miura
52 Trunk
13 LubrlcetH . 55 Umb

Vulnl!111bk: 8oth

FREE IN HJ)IIE !1'1111AlEI • "11!1116 II IEUI!VING~ • WV102S177

.

~bile

t QJU7

.. l t l t ) t J

'

s..u.

1-3114-675-7124

.....

Ueat~-

1·800·291-5600. 740·992-4119 .
Pomerov, OH
·

(10'1110' 610'1120')
The
•
request• a
nsme ol
rom ·
Merlco
Morgen
lor':=:::::===:!
tha following raaaona: i
•
..---------------,
Ksyl" would like for
~
·
har laal name lo ba
tha Sima a• her BUILDERS INC.
brot,.ro.
(II 27, 2001
New Homes • Vinyl
Sidlq • New Garoges

QJt

~: ROBOTMAN

SYSTEMS.

~~t·:
·~~
~~~ ~

... ,

GNentpen

41 TJvonv
42 Sun, In

·~.
44=:-o
e.g.
....,
11 "Who-- 47 p to ..,.?· 51 ......,lc
12 Bullllo

6 AKJ U I J

OUALITY
WINDOW

Ucenae •53008580

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Public Notice

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

.
•

39 lmpallle
Cranoton or

40

the lolela

£HI.
• • i 4
lf ii:QJ1ttt 49 -

• Nearly 2000 year• experience.
• Work• on Sundays.
• Always Available.

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Public Notice

Cellular

-~·

• ••

Wnl
•

·ROBERT BISSEll'
· CONSTRUCTION

992-9158

NOTICES
PROBA7E COURT OF

LAMM'S

. DBPOYIU
PARIS
Case-IH Parts
Dealen
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH ~'123

.. Q " l

__., A H 1
t A 31

''* 0\.loWf'l' un:

'

JERRY ' S
USED
COMPUTER S
441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m.
Release:
April27, 2002 ·
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime access Is wanted to
fairgrounds other than stated dates.
Building space is first come first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

Public Notice

949·1405
591·5011

Rocky A Hupp Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh1o 45760
Local843-5264
Mr.dicare Supplemenl; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Mongage; Maj or Medical
• ~ursin g Home

•Garages

DreBarn
44017 Wlpple R011d

FI'H Estlm11H

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

· •New Homes

and

HOURS:

Writesel

,....,....
lllt7

Crete Free Eslimot..
SerYin1 Ohio oad W.V.

Houri
7:00AM • a:OO PM

992-3470

- -111111111
I ,111111111.

Howordl.
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

Ill .

• Foolen, Wollo, Stepo•
Flit Work,
Replocemeall, • WolkJ
ond Dri¥Oo • Slell&lt;il

740-949-2217

aa.

740-985-3948
CONCRETF/ILO&lt;K/IIICK

CONTIACTORS, INC.

29670 Bashan Roa

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

• Recine, Ohio 45771

CDIIIfS
CllliCUE

ACROSS
1 Cl'llo
4 llome&lt;&gt;l

•

th L' yc .u :1hcad throtlgh many
ne w cont:u: t~ and fn cnds. (f
you 're unauach ed , one could
even bl' of J romantic ni'iwrc.
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0&lt;t. 23) •
- on~ of yo ur b c~ t att ributes
today is yo ur ability co handle
fricnds or suda l si[Uatio ns
·w it h a co rn p:•ssio n that others
fi nd cspl· ci;t\\y ap pelli ng .
Don' t be s urpri .~ ed at yo ur
popularity . Lib r.~. trcl t yo ur.. sdf to J birthday gift. Send for
your Astro-Gnph ·predi.:tJons
tOr the year ahe:1d by mailing
s~ and SASE to Astro-GrJph .
do this newsp.1per. P.O. Box
167 , Wickliffe, OH 440920 \67. He sure to state yo ur .
Zodiac sign.
S CO l~PIO (O c t. 24-N ov.
22) -- Conditjons concl!rning
so m e kind o f problem you
have despaired over m.ight do
c h:mgc cod.1y .1nd usher in
fre sh w1nd s of hope . This
could hav e so met hing to do
with alovcd o nc.
SAGITThRIUS (Nov. 23•· De.: . 21) -- You could beespecially lucky today, so it
might be a good time to focus
all you r efforts o n :m entcrpri!u~ chat h~s recently caug ht
' your f:mcy .

·~)'Your ·

/to!

II

-

'~'Birthday·
CAPRIC ORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- He alert fo r deve lopments that could cotJtributc
to your material well-being,
bccau~c co nditions in tha t departme nt loo k part icld :ul y
' promisi ng to day.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J- Fcb .
l ? ) -- Nbke discu~si n ~ isml.'&lt;;
o r info rm :l tion t llJt cou ld
have an ctT~r c on you person ally a prio rity tod.1y. S tl lll t! thin~;: good could come our ot ·
netwo rking with othen .
PISCES (Feb . 20-Mareh ~o)
- - Gr;K io usly au :cpt any in vi.. tacion that comes yo ur way
mday to participate in someo m: clst.!·~ ~ndcavor. It may be
a gift horse you won't want to
look 1n the mouth .
ARIES (Man;h 21 - April 19)
-- Persnm you' ve been invo lved wit h h.tcly arc qu itL.'
appreciative o f ~he way
yo u've trl.':Ued che:m. Conseque ntly, today one of the m
1my inv 1te you to join in o n
somethin g very special.
TAURUS (April 211- MJy
20) -- Euabh5h l!OillC mc:tn i ngful obj ~.·ctives for }'o urself
tod3 y, beca use you 're in an
exccptinnal achievement cy. de. D on't Wa5tc a m o ment;

strike while the iron is ho t.
GEMINI (M ly 2 1-Jun&lt; 20)

-- Advan.;ing yOur sdf- mtc r~m -- be they social. fiu :1.ncia!.
or o th ~..·rwisc .:.. shou1d not hL·
:~. ny troi.t blc for you todJ.y .
Cham:t=s atl' thi n~:;s wi!l ~;o
smont hcr than usual.
C ANC ER Oun' ~ ! -J u l y
22) -- Instead of tripp ing you
up , you'll tend to benefit from
ch:1ngcs o r shiftin g co nd ilions
today. W ha t occun w il l he for

~·our bt."s t j,ft ,•rc5ts, so ~njoy
thL' free ride.
LEO Uul y 23 - Au~. 221 -H a\'t.' thJt talk. toda y you'w
bccn WJ nting to h:1.V1.' wlth
slllll l'.on ~· who is impurr:mt t L&gt;
you. bc c Jm~ :in ythin g yn n
n~cd to wo rk o ut will be met
wit h lpprov-J.l.
VIRGO (Aug. 23•Sept. 22)
-- Ahhough t here may not b"·
;m y fret' ride~ ht:in~ h.mdeJ
out today. any work you' re
pr!.'pa.red co ·do will potl'ntJJ.IJ y
pay off mnrc.- ha ndsomely th:m
usual.

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 • The Dally Sentinel

\

Tues~y, Sept. 25,

2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Oh io

The Dally Sentinel• Page B 5

OOP
NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP

ALDER

P/B

Hill's Self
Storage
Racine, Ohio
45771

xtt•

lo10'Xalr

JONES'

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

Min.

Spout

T I I 1111'11111

881-8329

wv fiOJ17ll

. 11-~~
High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

33795 Hila,.d Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Backhoe
Septic Syatem.a
UtWtlee

General
Contractlnl
Eacavatinl! Dozer

ana

New Home•

740-992-5232 992-7943
3-0

•

Advertise

CONSTRUCT10N
Insured

Specialize In new

Owner
Charles R. Dill

space
for $50
per

PhoM 992-7445 ·
CtU hone 591-9254

month

constnu:~tlon,

remodeling, plumbing,
electrical, home malntea•nce. and rtpai~
porches, &amp; deckJ.

._1811 ....

•1.1111&amp;·111··1'¢ . . . .
.............. u...........

llnUMUI·--

in this

Free eat11111111,

Pomeroy

740·992·5344
Sal8·1

21211 rro od

WINTER STORAGE

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN
C!fANGE OF
----~.~:~=~:~oF KAYLEEMERICOTO
KAYLEE MORGAN
HOWARD
APPLICATION FOR
CHANGE OF NAME
OF MINOR (R.C.
2717.01)

The sppllcanl 1tateo

CONSTRUCTION

All Makes Trador &amp;

Equipment Parts
Fadory Authorized

.

, .,.....
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

740.992·1671

Free estimates

Good Deelsl

DREHEL'S
(740) 742-2925
Your Replacement Parte Source

Advertise
In this space
' for $25 per
month

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
addition• A decka
Free e1tlmatea
10 yrs. experience
In the bualnna
Reference•
available. Owner:
TerryLamm
740.992 739

on rapalrea,
In-home service
available 24 houre,
used systems 386
and up, uaed

hardware and
software.

24'120'

N-1210UBlE WAll
PlASTIC
FIRSTCOML
FIRST SERVEI

$200.00 PER JOINT

REGUlARlY
$321.00 PER JOINT
l740J 446-8237 OR
[3041 675-7516

that I,. applicant II
the parent of a bone
fide reoldent of Meigs
county, Ohio for 111
lent ona year
Immediately prior to
the
filing
of
application.
A
certified copy Dl the
mlnor'a ·
b Ir I h
certHicalell sttached.
Tho applicant elet11

lhst lhe name and
addra1s of the mot,.r
of the minor Ia: Trocy
Lynn Me rico, 311 Mainf
Slreal, Rutland, Ohio
45775 end .lhe nama
and addre11 &lt;&gt;f the
father or alleged fslhar
ol the minor Ia: Jam..
Dsvld Howsrd, 311
Main Straet, Rutland,
OH 45775.

B ISSELL

~~!:!'!~c:;:::~

''
ELITE MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Additions • Roonna
COMMERCIAL and IEliD£HllAL
F-R!:E ESTIMATES
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

~t· 8!

Residential ·commercial New Coll•tructlon
Sales Sonia: installaliun
Spedalizina in Sheet Metal Du&lt;twork
"Trane" Sales &amp; S."ice Fur
·
Galli•, M ....,., a'nd Meias Counties
Licensed and lll!ured
WV 005176

Custom Computel'll
Service, Repail'll, and

$8.00 column inch weekdays
$10.00 column lnch .Sundays

1:r

10:30 ·Preaching

MITH IIULL GOIPIL CHURCH
ROUTII24, LONG BOnGM; OlltO

IwoMEN I

' KENSINGTON
WINDDWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY
KEEPS liiE

•
.
'

741)..667-o&amp;OO

Free Es tim ates

·'
I

...

,·•

.'·

...

740-992-1101
or 992-2753

f ...

-·

TRI-COUDTY
TRHDSPORT

orone.
'

~

.- !

Umell-1

5esMn DIKDUnls
mulllple Lood

.1.•

~ ~

•' r ~ • ...._.

•. ' ..... :•
li. ~\.. if :.

_,

.,.

..,...

'

..

DfKDUnls

!

~

....

I
I

. Roofing • Gut1ers • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint• Flooring
· Pressure

Bucket Service ·

order

61 Clean-air

11

Huge

org.

lhl'()llg

P1yche

ra:low

......

z.az.a·o

2 Ao!M
nanny

1loter
34 Vljjor'1

24 Snug

4Huo
5Wheel

llger.

36 Eighteen-

6

wheeler

~lieu

ltrnporary 52 FourSinister
po-, e.g.
30 Large llurd 53 Oloon ol
31 Sign Dllho
-lie
Mura
54 C1pp'1

bird

a Hunt

IIINIUta

38 Urge

41 Chalot

29

7 Fining

37DIIt.nce

44 Totum
HIY0....-/

25 Clarinet kin
toatura
26 Novelist
49 Plumbing
llril
e&lt;oblem
21 Uvy con- so oym org.

3 Eat

35e:=p.ce

•a.-n ·

43

for- -"
20 ·Mil. ofllcer
cold
22 Volentine 45 Poleozolc
llgura
ll1d
23 CuoiOmllry
MftOzolc
practlcu
46 lmpullhle

' DOWN
1 Typeol

ordert

· holy

Illegally

37 M1ocuUne

- --- - ~·
....-,..-...,;::

Abner

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Lula Campos

Colobrity Cipher cryptograms are craaled !10111 quotations by fatnQ\ja

people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: Y equals J 1

zwo

'B W T A .E C Q

ZTO

Z Q WI. '

PMSG

OM

FTAOMS

UTJSGC

uws

'S. M

T 0 '

W

BWTAECG

FZM
T .O
GBYMKTSP
.1\ T B G, • :
if
opponents
thethetickets
and have
bid
game, partner with a
F T A A T WU
B G .W D Z G C -;-----,:;:-:-~-~-~~--.:.__~-------- fit~ wm-15e thiiiki:_
n.::.
g-.- -"P'"'REVIOUS- SOLUTION: 'He was a great leader
about a sacrifice, exbest shortslop I ever saw.'.,..- Bob Feller, on Lou
AI(TUI\ THE STAR OF
~
OH TVES.
AR. Ull.!
pecting you to have at
TliE TEAM! AATU"-.
WOlD
WE 111JSTN'T WHO 110/ES TO TOWN, ·
most
one
defensive
GAM
I
FORGET
BEAT.S ME ONE TIME, !
trick. However, if
I\ BoUT
AND T~S M'l' SPOT
i
AS OUR lliUMIO ONE
ARTU~!
you hold two solid
O Rearrange letter• of ·t~e
Pl.~vl.-.!
four 11&lt;romblod word• bo·
winners, it could easlow 10 form four olmplo words.
ily be a phantom sacrifice.
RAHORB
In this deal, North
might have doubled
fou'r hearts and collected 200 points. But
DUELE
he preferred to go for
2
3
the vulnerable game
WHEN WE LEFT. IT WAS NICE
bonus.
1 GUESS "'OU CAN NEVER
AND CLEAR .. NOW,LOOK WlolAT
West led the heart
COUNT ON TlolE WEATiolER ..
WE'RE RUNNIN6 INTO ...
king. South could see
F N I Kj4
Two old timers sat on a bench
10 top tricks : six
~=·~~-:;:;:~·~·~~·:._,watching the people go by. One
spades, one heart, one
,.
replied to the other, "The future
diamond and two
5 UE 5
. isn't what it - - - - to - -.'
5
clubs. Could anything
6
lhe chuckle quolod
1 Complele
_
•
_
•
_
•
by filling In the missing words
go wrong? Yes, if East
you develop from J!ep No. 3 below.
had· no hearts. What
was the solution? To
·,
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN li
IZ 13 ,.
THESE SQUARES
I
1
.
play low from the
dummy at trick one.
@) UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO 1
GET ANSWER
•
South repeated the
.procedure at trick
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS .
two, ruffed the third
Lotion- Drone- Tumor- Handle -:HELMET
heart ·in hand, drew
Iwouldn'(_iay our neighbors boy was babied. But, he
the only kid I ever saw play badminton weartrumps, an d too k ~ .is however,
HEL•'ET
those I 0 winners.
· ong a
"' ·

I

I

I

j

rIr

~. .~

I

O

r ,. I

f9

lA

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
Complett Une of Sulllvan'o Grooming Supplloo
Bullur Cootod Um, bulk only, $128.00 por ton
10% oil all Prlol_. Hor11 ond LlvHtock Equip.
10.10.10 All Purpooo Fertlllw SU0/50t

Tap • Trim • Remaval

14 =

II

750 Easl Slate Street

TREE SERVICE

33

eo Vale

Ijj

740-112·7832

35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831 •

32

Fountain

I I I 1I .

Sherrnon While

....... m.... ltrvlce, lac

Sll Timid

41

I

Bt4~·2202
Raelnt, Ohio
~~~------~~~

8,000 Baler Twine 111.50/Bole
18,000 Baler Twine $21.50/8111

1

29

PttlllJP
Yesterday, I mentio ned that a weaktwo opening of two
diamonds, two hearts
o r two spades shows a
decent six- card suit
and 5-9 points nonvulnerable and 6-10
vulnerable. There are
other traditional re quirements. .
You are not supposed to have four
cards in a side major.
When you open with
a weak two-bid , you
promise length in that
suit and ,no other. It is
hard to find a fit in
anothef'&lt;suit, and uncovering a .4 -4 fit is
virtually impossible.
You shouldn't have
a void. If you do, you
are looking at either
6-4-3-0 or 6-5- 2-0
distribution. The first
hand is playable in
three suits, not just
the one you annoupce. The second
is a two-suiter and
should be bid as such.
It is dangerous to
hold two aces. A
weak two-bid is a
two-edged sword. If
partner is strong, you
hope he will know
what to do because
you have closely defined your hand . Yet

10

I

(740) 949-1521
(740) 517-6827

New vttJiity 1;1ig:hc b~.• in fused. in your ~oc ial aff.1i rs in

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT
PLASTIC CULVERT
METAL CULVERT·.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• NowQorogeo

211 E111 S1cond Str"t

Pomero..,, ONo

992-5908
M·F 10wn-4tpm

•'

NIDf.~~ I

27

=of tf:c:

9 HHchhiker"1 3t Lobl1er

1
~ f-

• EIICtrlctl &amp; Plumbing
&amp; Gutt•ra

•

PT~ (()tNolo,U(\\ lC"'Tl().l G"'-P"''

~~=====~~::t':~~Jo! Jl.:e:=!;o::zL2-~

• Room AddHiono &amp;
Romodollng

··

0

.

~ilDOK.

R""'" fOfll' '"~llllllllt"

'"\:; I, '

.•

\

BORN LOSER

Ll K£. c.H lC.Ke.N !

•

I

.'

(I

we

t----.., "ffil5lSC.lTY .""'1
ffilC.KEN '?"IT~

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
•New Homes
• Siding
• RO&lt;&gt;ftng
• Remodeling
• Gsrsg•
•Additions
• Deoks
• Homa Repelra

0

(l.fALt..Y?! ~0¥1 lOON
1&gt;o
ttAve
TO l&gt;fCII&gt;e?

;
'

"We'll fix it or elsel'

·.

Weak
bid
BY
ALDER

Sunday Eve. 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

IPQC::::!Ac:_;+·~---=--~
"""""'""
L-.....;~~:...!!!ti..!!!~!:!!!:::.._.............l

'

24

For mon infoi1JIIJlion, comelo our church
Sunday 9:30- Sunday School;

Upgrades

~.

l&amp;ul
Allpau

23 "Gtottl"

. BARNEY

BJt••

Advertise your
message .

.

'•

. 1-800-250.!1077

SUMMERnME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
nME H~T IN
BLOCKS OUT 99.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Nena
••

c.

::;'hbot

57
upon
Lamb, by
17MineexH
181nlron1
20 Movie pert 5I 51,...
21 Winter mo.
Damone

OpeninG: leild ¥ K

•
•

'

"Hilplnf Yolrto

16

SuuUt

"'""

••

sa Keep on

15 Furniture

I

740-992•7599

..

t 6

l!

Snodgrass' Upholstery

..... ... .

!Miura
52 Trunk
13 LubrlcetH . 55 Umb

Vulnl!111bk: 8oth

FREE IN HJ)IIE !1'1111AlEI • "11!1116 II IEUI!VING~ • WV102S177

.

~bile

t QJU7

.. l t l t ) t J

'

s..u.

1-3114-675-7124

.....

Ueat~-

1·800·291-5600. 740·992-4119 .
Pomerov, OH
·

(10'1110' 610'1120')
The
•
request• a
nsme ol
rom ·
Merlco
Morgen
lor':=:::::===:!
tha following raaaona: i
•
..---------------,
Ksyl" would like for
~
·
har laal name lo ba
tha Sima a• her BUILDERS INC.
brot,.ro.
(II 27, 2001
New Homes • Vinyl
Sidlq • New Garoges

QJt

~: ROBOTMAN

SYSTEMS.

~~t·:
·~~
~~~ ~

... ,

GNentpen

41 TJvonv
42 Sun, In

·~.
44=:-o
e.g.
....,
11 "Who-- 47 p to ..,.?· 51 ......,lc
12 Bullllo

6 AKJ U I J

OUALITY
WINDOW

Ucenae •53008580

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Public Notice

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

.
•

39 lmpallle
Cranoton or

40

the lolela

£HI.
• • i 4
lf ii:QJ1ttt 49 -

• Nearly 2000 year• experience.
• Work• on Sundays.
• Always Available.

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

Public Notice

Cellular

-~·

• ••

Wnl
•

·ROBERT BISSEll'
· CONSTRUCTION

992-9158

NOTICES
PROBA7E COURT OF

LAMM'S

. DBPOYIU
PARIS
Case-IH Parts
Dealen
1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH ~'123

.. Q " l

__., A H 1
t A 31

''* 0\.loWf'l' un:

'

JERRY ' S
USED
COMPUTER S
441 Beech St.
Middleport, OH

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m.
Release:
April27, 2002 ·
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, late
removal, or anytime access Is wanted to
fairgrounds other than stated dates.
Building space is first come first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf

Public Notice

949·1405
591·5011

Rocky A Hupp Agent
Box 189
Middleport. Oh1o 45760
Local843-5264
Mr.dicare Supplemenl; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Roll overs;
Mongage; Maj or Medical
• ~ursin g Home

•Garages

DreBarn
44017 Wlpple R011d

FI'H Estlm11H

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

· •New Homes

and

HOURS:

Writesel

,....,....
lllt7

Crete Free Eslimot..
SerYin1 Ohio oad W.V.

Houri
7:00AM • a:OO PM

992-3470

- -111111111
I ,111111111.

Howordl.
Roofing • Home
MaintenanceGutters· Down

Ill .

• Foolen, Wollo, Stepo•
Flit Work,
Replocemeall, • WolkJ
ond Dri¥Oo • Slell&lt;il

740-949-2217

aa.

740-985-3948
CONCRETF/ILO&lt;K/IIICK

CONTIACTORS, INC.

29670 Bashan Roa

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

• Recine, Ohio 45771

CDIIIfS
CllliCUE

ACROSS
1 Cl'llo
4 llome&lt;&gt;l

•

th L' yc .u :1hcad throtlgh many
ne w cont:u: t~ and fn cnds. (f
you 're unauach ed , one could
even bl' of J romantic ni'iwrc.
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0&lt;t. 23) •
- on~ of yo ur b c~ t att ributes
today is yo ur ability co handle
fricnds or suda l si[Uatio ns
·w it h a co rn p:•ssio n that others
fi nd cspl· ci;t\\y ap pelli ng .
Don' t be s urpri .~ ed at yo ur
popularity . Lib r.~. trcl t yo ur.. sdf to J birthday gift. Send for
your Astro-Gnph ·predi.:tJons
tOr the year ahe:1d by mailing
s~ and SASE to Astro-GrJph .
do this newsp.1per. P.O. Box
167 , Wickliffe, OH 440920 \67. He sure to state yo ur .
Zodiac sign.
S CO l~PIO (O c t. 24-N ov.
22) -- Conditjons concl!rning
so m e kind o f problem you
have despaired over m.ight do
c h:mgc cod.1y .1nd usher in
fre sh w1nd s of hope . This
could hav e so met hing to do
with alovcd o nc.
SAGITThRIUS (Nov. 23•· De.: . 21) -- You could beespecially lucky today, so it
might be a good time to focus
all you r efforts o n :m entcrpri!u~ chat h~s recently caug ht
' your f:mcy .

·~)'Your ·

/to!

II

-

'~'Birthday·
CAPRIC ORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) -- He alert fo r deve lopments that could cotJtributc
to your material well-being,
bccau~c co nditions in tha t departme nt loo k part icld :ul y
' promisi ng to day.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21J- Fcb .
l ? ) -- Nbke discu~si n ~ isml.'&lt;;
o r info rm :l tion t llJt cou ld
have an ctT~r c on you person ally a prio rity tod.1y. S tl lll t! thin~;: good could come our ot ·
netwo rking with othen .
PISCES (Feb . 20-Mareh ~o)
- - Gr;K io usly au :cpt any in vi.. tacion that comes yo ur way
mday to participate in someo m: clst.!·~ ~ndcavor. It may be
a gift horse you won't want to
look 1n the mouth .
ARIES (Man;h 21 - April 19)
-- Persnm you' ve been invo lved wit h h.tcly arc qu itL.'
appreciative o f ~he way
yo u've trl.':Ued che:m. Conseque ntly, today one of the m
1my inv 1te you to join in o n
somethin g very special.
TAURUS (April 211- MJy
20) -- Euabh5h l!OillC mc:tn i ngful obj ~.·ctives for }'o urself
tod3 y, beca use you 're in an
exccptinnal achievement cy. de. D on't Wa5tc a m o ment;

strike while the iron is ho t.
GEMINI (M ly 2 1-Jun&lt; 20)

-- Advan.;ing yOur sdf- mtc r~m -- be they social. fiu :1.ncia!.
or o th ~..·rwisc .:.. shou1d not hL·
:~. ny troi.t blc for you todJ.y .
Cham:t=s atl' thi n~:;s wi!l ~;o
smont hcr than usual.
C ANC ER Oun' ~ ! -J u l y
22) -- Instead of tripp ing you
up , you'll tend to benefit from
ch:1ngcs o r shiftin g co nd ilions
today. W ha t occun w il l he for

~·our bt."s t j,ft ,•rc5ts, so ~njoy
thL' free ride.
LEO Uul y 23 - Au~. 221 -H a\'t.' thJt talk. toda y you'w
bccn WJ nting to h:1.V1.' wlth
slllll l'.on ~· who is impurr:mt t L&gt;
you. bc c Jm~ :in ythin g yn n
n~cd to wo rk o ut will be met
wit h lpprov-J.l.
VIRGO (Aug. 23•Sept. 22)
-- Ahhough t here may not b"·
;m y fret' ride~ ht:in~ h.mdeJ
out today. any work you' re
pr!.'pa.red co ·do will potl'ntJJ.IJ y
pay off mnrc.- ha ndsomely th:m
usual.

�FLY YOUR FLAG .FULL STAFF TO SU

Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Melp County's

RT YOUR COUNIRY!

Hotnetown Newspaper

Bush targets airport secu
~

BY CHRISTOPHER NEWTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LINCOLN
A.WEAICAN

WASHINGTON - · President
Bush· plans. fO push for sweeping
changes in airport security, including armed officers on almost every
flight, as the Justice Department
warns that terrorists may be plotting more destruction .
With that in mind, the House
voted to divert money from Bush's
missile defense program to counterterrorism efforts.

LUX"B· RY

Do you have a loved one
deployed in Operation Enduring
Justice? Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
wants to salute these heroes by
publishing an occasional list featurIng their names, a brief bio, and a
photograph. Drop off these materials at the offices of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
·
Reg1ster or The Daily Sentinel.

Evenas the U.S. military continued to mobilize for a strike at terrorists and a U.S. envoy briefed
NATO officials in Brussels, Belgium, the Bush administration sent
last-chance
overtures
toward
Afghanistan's Taliban militia.
.
Secretary · of State Colin Powell
said in an Associated Press interview that the Taliban rulers could
avert a war with America by turning over Saudi exile Osama bin
Laden, the No. 1 suspect in the

Sept. 11 terror attacks, and ripping
up the al-Qaida terrorism network .
Bush suggested that Afghanis rise
up against the Taliban. He said th e
best way to fi ght terrorism "is to
ask for the cooperation of citizens
within Afghanistan who may be
tired of having the Taliban in place
or tired of having Osama bin
Laden.."
In Kabul. thousands of demonstrators responded by attacking the
abandoned U .S. Embassy com-

MEIGS SCHOOL
APR
interest

60
Months
on most 200 I motllels'

ermits
inders
progress

For

for)r?J- \
\

'

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

I

\' .'

~~·~l1J~t~o~c~alj1J~~~~~~~!~

,13,995 14,995

projects and explain how the
delay in getting building permits from the Department of
Industrial Co\npliance is
affecting progress.
. Engram said site work at the
elementary school has been
completed, but that actual .
construction of the building
cannot move forward untifthe
permit is issued.
·"We really don't ~&gt;now what
to do. Anything we ·do could
put things at risk and we don't .
want to jump the gun," he
said.
Engram explained that bids
are only good for 60 days and
that time is about to expire. He
said that letters have gone out
to the contractors asking them
to extend the bids and he's
hopeful of having those letters
back this week.
Meanwhile, he said, Wesam
Construction is moving ahead
with site work for the middle
school located near M eigs
Hi gh School.

Bankruptcy?
Credit Problems?

"We Can Help "II
Call Us

Fi~t

Or We 8oth Lose!

Ask For Mike Hindle
1-800-272-5179 or 446-9800

(•

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Ple•se -

$1915 FASTWBE
ltoltn••n

• Service includes up to 5 quarts of Motorcraf1oil and new
Motorcraft oil filter • Perform Multi -Point Vehicle inspection
• Check and fill necessary nUids • All in 29 minutes or less
• Diesel vehicles
be extra.

FORD RPCIIGR CO.
R.OORf'ATS

Sto~~ing

$4400

Starting
at

SP' •SH GUARDS

sso40

Hl&amp;fi:.IOI

.

3 Sections - 13 hps
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

BED RAILS

L-:401
Details, A3

242

5

Lotteries
OHIO

82-4 Pick 3: 448; Pick 4: 1.().9'0

85

'

WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. poverty rate dipped
last year to its lowest level in
over a quarter-century, driven
down by a healthy economy
that helped a broad range of
workers.
Overall, many analysts said
the Census Bureau report
released Tuesday offered a
positive picture of the Ameriat least
can economy before the financial unrest
· from the terrorist attacks.
The year 2000 could prove
10 be the high-water mark of
the econom ic expansion that

Sentinel·
I

I

goingStemwheel Riverfest
centers around the parking
lot in downtown Pomeroy.
Festivities will kick-off on
Thursday with an opening
ceremony by Pomeroy
American Legion at 6 p.m.,
followed by a fire truck
parade at 6:30. p.m. and a
performance by Dee and
Dallas near the riverfront
at 7 p.m . .

National poverty rate
lowest in over 25 years

Procress, AJ

Todlly's

t'l

~

POMEROY Sternwheelers of all shapes and
sizes, live music, contests,
food , parades, a historical
walking tour. and an explosive
fireworks display are just a few
of the activities to be enjoyed
at Sternwheel Riverfest 2001,
"Rally by the River," Thurs. day through Saturday.
The event, formerly known
as the Big Bend Sternwhee!er
Festival, was re-formed under
the supervision of a new
committee last year and is
dedicated to continuing with
the traditions that have made
it so popular over the years.
"We're anticipati ng yet
another successful festival and

•
ily has been slated and we
encourage eyeryone to attend ·
and join in on the fun," he
added.
F~tivities will · kick-off on
-+--I- exp~ct~m\Y.ds_to_sUt:pass-:r-hui'S&lt;jay-with an op.«~nirlg---t
those of last year," said John ceremony by Pomeroy AmerMusser, chair~an of the ican Legion at 6 p.m., folSternwheel Riverfest com- lowed by a fire truck parade at
mittee.
6:30 p.m. and a perfiormance
"A full schedule of exciting
PIHie IH Feltlv•l. AJ
events geared toward the fam -

met with
the
Board
of ·Ecfuca~on

SPECIAL FINANCE
DEPARTMENT ·

lfyOiire

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

: POMEROY -While work
o n renovation of M eigs High ·
School. is two weeks ahead of
s~hedule, work on the new
ejementary is at a standstill, and
r.rogress at the middle.school is
being hindered by the lack of
building permits.
: Jeff Engram, project manager for Quandel Group Inc. ,

'

PIMA- Attacb, AJ

Bv ToNY M. lEAcH

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

Toyot84X4

pound in the Afghan capital, burning cars and tearing down the U.S.
seaLThe compound was abandoned
in 1988.
Elsewhere in Afghanistan, heavy
new fighting was reported in
northern Afghanistan as an opposition alliance pressed on with its bid
to seize t erritory from fighters of
the Taliban.
·
In neighboring Pakistan, mean-

Riverfest kicks
off lburSday

lack of

Choice•••
Ford
Lincoln

reform

llndwje 5: 4-741 ().12

A4
A3 W.VA
BL3.6 ~ 3: 6-8-6 Deily 4: 7·7-2·9
A3 Q 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

began in the early I 990s, said
Tim Smeeding, professor of
economics and public policy
at Syracuse University:
"The economy continued
to do good things in 2000;'
Smeeding said. Speaking of
the poverty rate, he added,
"Unfortunately, I'm afraid
that what goes down will
come back up, particularly
after" the terror attacks.
Several advocacy groups
said the report highlighted
troubling trends that existed
even before th~ suicide
hijackin gs of Sept.

CI

Racine looks for ways to ·cut trash costs
cil.
RACINE - Officials here are stressing
Earlier this year, council increased the
recycling as ~ means of saving the village refuse collection rate with the intent of
money.
building a ba)ance to be used for payment
"Recycle as much as you can and make · on a new compactor truck.
use of the curbside recycling program," said
At that time, the village. paid a set weekM ayor Scott Hill. "What you recycle will .ly fee for a. dump con tamer. However,. a
not have to. be taken to,the landfill, thus new company h as taken over and th e VIIsaVIng the v1llage money, he added.
lage IS now bemg charged a weekly rental
T he state of Racine's refuse fund is an fee on the contain er, as well as paying a fee
ongoing concern of Racine Village Coun- for each ton of refuse dumped at the landFROM STAFF REPORTS

Gallla Fall

fill.
In other business, council discussed a letter from Solicitor Doug Little, which
informed members that the operation of
golf carts on village streets is illegal. ·
The letter stipulated that there could be
. a question of liability if the village were to
ignore ot condone this illegal operation.
In the letter Little suggested that if any
'
Pluse IH R•clne, A:S

lxpo

Look for the Holzer Medical Center Communily Health
and Wellriess Department at the Expo

140-446-9800 •1-800-212-5119

.....
,
..
• •
•

Saturclay, lepte~nbet 29 • 1 0 •• • S pill
Sunday, SepteMber 30 • 1 p• • S ptn
Gallla County FaiJgrouncls
FREE Blood Pressure screenings, Body Fat Analysis screenings and
health information will be provided. For more information, coli

PREMIER
' .I
EX PERl ENCE

. ••

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www .bolzer.org

446·5679

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...

· · ·· --~

•

..

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