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Page B 8 • The Daily Sentinel

Homecoming ··

Pomeroy, Middleport,

o·h•o

Thursday, Sept. 27, 2001

EXPO flower show winners announced
junior horticulture division Toban, Shelia Curtis, Peggy
were Deanna Sayre and Crane and Alice ·Thompson
Breeanna Manuel; and in the and Michaela Hupp, two, in
senior divmon, were ·Pat - dahhas; and Joyce 'Manuel',
Holter, three, Evelyn Hollon, Peggy Crane and Lula Toban
and Janet Theiss in roses; in patio pots; and Peggy
Peggy Crane in chrysanthe- Crane in foliage plants;
mums; Pauline Atkins and Donita Sayre, annuals: Joyce
Donica Sayre in marigolds.
Manuel, celosia, African viaOther winners were Lula lets and succulents.

Bayless is among a growing
number of chef, who focus on ·
using the freshest of ingredients, in his case organic. Like
Bayless, Ch1cago chefs Paul
Kahan of Blackbird restaurant
_jnd John 13ubala of Thyme
restaurant have their own,
albeit snuller, g~rdens and shop

Bus see n
WASHINGTON (AP) ists.
President Bush JS courting
For the
Islamic support for a war on
first time,
terrorism " a Pakistani ddethe
FDI
Do you have a loved one .
ganon trtes to resolve the
said Thursdeployed in Operation Enduring
standoff between the United
clay
that
Freedom? Ohio Valley Publishing
some
of
States and Afghanistari 's TalCo. wants to salute these heroes by :
the
19
iban rulers over top suspect
publishing an occasional list featurhijackers
Osarna bin Laden.
mg their names, a brief bio, and a
that made
Bush planned to meet with
photograph. Drop off these materiBush
suicide
King Abdullah II ofJordan on
als at the offices of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Friday to discuss how the attacks on the World Trade
Reg1ster or The Daily Sentinel.
nations can hunt down terror- Center and the Pentagon have

saluting

local servicemen

EXPO WINNERS - In the flower show at the Meigs County
Town and Country EXPO the winners were Joyce Manuel, horticulture sweepstakes, seated; and Shelia Curtis, right, best of
show, and Gladys Cumings, reserve best of show. Larry
Bunger woh the creativity award.

been linked to bin Laden.
That revelation came with
the public release of pho. tographs of the suspected
hijackers, even though author-.
ities said they were not sure
they had the suspected terrorists' real names.
"What we are currently
doing is determining whether,
when these individuals came
to the United States, these
were their real names or they

changed their names for use
with false identification in the
United States," FBI Director
Robert Mueller said. He
urged anyone who recognized
the men to contact the FBI.
Investigators, meanwhile,
have !ound haunting documents that provide the most
jarring insight yet into the
mindset of the men who
boarded the four doomed
planes on Sept. 11.

AEPto

garage

A Message at Faith) Hope and Charit_y
· tram St. Joseph's Hospital.

:Tranifer to CIC
completed last
week

-·- -·- -·-•
•

•

A

partnership in which to be proud.
In August of 1991i.lhe SiS~enof Saintj&lt;&gt;eph llealth Syslan, Inc. and
HC\en~~ intoa 50 - 50 joinl ""JUre .,..ne•hipofSt.jo!eph's
Hospilal. Mthetime,theslltfo ..re ..~n&amp;apartnerlhatrould
lielpSI.Joseph'sgiOw inlolhefuture•n:~-inglhech~~nges ri
U1el1ealtl&lt;areindo;t~. &lt;fflrlhep:otfi~&gt;)""',Slj&lt;&gt;eph'sHospital

hlllll"""'andp"'!"nli,offenn&amp;tC.oommunicyawidelarrayol
state-of-the-art heallhcareser&gt;ices.
"I thank tht Sistm of Saint ]ostph o[Wiruling
on b#half of agrattful Dioc.tu for thtir
mol!)' lJJOndtrful.Jfors ofdtdicotion
to htolth oort in tht Poriusburgorra.
Tilt Duuu.t is &amp;rtat!J indtbttclto thtm
for tirtltu!J co rryuf&amp; out tht command ofChriJI

7bt Cbalilable Fund bas conmbuled over

13 millimlo more 1/xm /j(} age~/des ibrriughoul
/be eler~tn-roun/y aroJ u...,..._
"Nrw rralities prtsent nt!ll opportunities,
and onl~ Stott ond regulatory
approvals orr recti~td and the
solt compltttJ, tht SUtm of SaintJostph
Htalth ~stem. Inc. will conh·nut
sming tht h!OIIh and wtllntss nudJ
of~A!Jt Vi'Jinio through a foundation
that initiai!J focu.sts on childrtn. "
Sisttr Mo~rtlf O'Bnu
Pl&gt;flllitlll, $1$1m_of&amp;r11l)oaph HtoiiA ~.,.,,/~t.

A

to heal and to urvt all ptoplt. "
Tht Mort Ru. &amp;r"e~rJ W.

•

St~'"1U

8iJhojl ~J l'l'litrll"&amp; - G~orlr1lon

oontlnuotfily impro~

to the community.

put option lo sell (heir remaining 511% 01111eohip in Slj&lt;&gt;eph's
H&lt;&gt;pilal. The S""" reru:hirl thei1 d&lt;dsioo carefully and pra)"rful~.
OO!llidenng theu expenenre \lith HC\ and ..tghing a variety ri
f:JCto~. The;e fodoo inchlie:

An

Stiltr K~t!.lro~ Durirn·
Vr rt Prtutk~l, Stllrrs o{Sor11l}osrpll Htlll~ ~lltm, /11c.

il will oontinue to t1: run.
"~ t.rprriencr shows that HCA il
dedicated and commilttd lo prol!iding
mtptiona! hralthccrr stroiw to tht Mid-Ohio Val/g .
Th9 understand thot till!} communi!J
i5 amiquf and muJt De odminisfmJ locoi!Jr
with tht objutiiJl offulfi~ling
the nttds of tht ~ople it m'WI. ~

The Sisters' mission of charit!;j will
remain an integral part of the Hospital.
Now lhe Sis~~ will Jale their mi~ioo ina"""' dlredion. As part
of the pu~h"" ag:i..nent HCA, agnflto:
• Fol.,. the Catholic Ethical and Rcligioos Directi..,..
• Continue the rommillrtnl of the Hospilal to p101ide chancy
care &amp;MI.,. 1o the unde,.,(
• Kl!ep the P'"iilon ri ~ce President ri M;;.ton &amp; Ethics.
• Pnlli&lt;l! asear oo the itooJd ofTru&lt;tres 1o be apjlOtnled
by the Bishop.
• MainL1in the Pasloral Care Departroolt.

This ~Ilion exph'3 in 2002. The Si.~te~ ha\t doci&amp;!t to exercise the

· and sourct ofpridt and comfon to us. "

To ourpatienu, ph)'idans and St j&lt;&gt;leph's employee, this chilli!'
....l!iU.be ~am"" and tr.msparenl_f-o a 1151/lt ri the man"'l"""'' - - rontrJCt of \he pasl fi"'l"'"; the Hospital is already fllOrallng the way

IICA"s vision for St. Joseph's IIOS[lital is to

services available

"Th1 f.rptrtist, foithfulntss a11d strtnglh of thf
SJH Boord oJTrustm, Senior Managemenl. empl~rrs
and oolunteerJ hovt brtn i:J trrmtndouJ irupiration

lql pri&lt;lricy In the furure fur St. joseph~ Hospit&gt;l.

Dau1d G"fD· MD

part ri the joint \'Cillure ail""'ffi'nt, an opt~n was includ«&lt;
~ving the Sllifo of Saimp.ph Heallh SysJrot, Inc the :tbilicy ll&gt; ~II
(or a 'put" as il is callo:l) their remaining 511% "'""'hip II! HC\.

Jo;eph in anew diM:tion.

remain a

decision based on our
hopes for the communit:,~.

1-o

of the Boanl of Truslf&lt;l, senior m:magement lf~n l!ld
hospilalonpiO)"'·
• The opponunicy 1r1 ~ke lhe mi~ion of Ihe Siste• ri Srunt

educalion, and reifntion ri st.1l1 fori~ facilities. This will

and expand the

"':"mple of Ibis

bas

"""' . /be

mn""'"""'' of owr

143 mU/Ion for •ww loclmo/ogy and copiliil
improwmetl~

fk•&gt;-

a/ /be Haspilal over /be

pa.~

millioneJ&lt;jlansion
project '!!' fll'ned and Sl J&lt;&gt;eph's ocurrently
i;~St)W,ther&lt;'W$21

replacing its cardiac catheterization lab with

a new advanced digital system.
"Th' Mid-Ohio Va/19 btntfits
~having thl t:rptrtiu ofHCA
stroing our communi!J.

Outr thr Jxlst frtlf'.JfD,.;,
th9 hat!t proutn thtmstl~~ts
to bt a good portntr ~ mpondin&amp;

. "S/. ]01&lt;1&gt;h ·, H&lt;»!&gt;ilol, our medical !Ioff,
fmpl~m,

volunttm and tht

tnlin oommuni_!y lllill continut to benfjil

from the uniqut marriagt ofthll!Qiuu,
mijj•'on and prutoml carr
th1 Sistm ho~ JosttuJ at tht HoJpitol,
coupl1d with HCA 't slrt"&amp;'hs
cf acms to capitol and lttlortgi~
to a nd100rl of hospitals throughollt
thr .Stolt and tht country. "
Sltplrtlll M~r~g. CEO

to thr nttds ofour patitn,IJ

flrJt a~d Jorirrwst." &gt;

w"- ask for :,~our continued faith

R&lt;JNrl Lir~cicornr

during this time ofchange.
The SiSleo Oi. Saint J&lt;&gt;;eph beli.., il is a time of change and

,.

SJ

ofthr S}H fl1111r/ ofTrulltfJ

Our emplo!Jees are
our greatest asset.

a time of qJVOrtuni~·. Til')· beli~

thai

Ch~ir111an

Joseph·., llospital is in a

One of the first questions

unique position to continue to

a.~ked

when an

grow and prosper. ofkrin&amp; lhe

announcement like thi5 is made is "How will this

a.;der array of state-ofthe-art heallhc:are =ires. AI lhe

same time, Ule Siste11 belieYe it is the

impact lheemployee of lhe Hospita11" There is no
plan fora,loss of joil&lt;. With avision lhat focu.,
on growth, addilion of sta[ is more likely. HC\

right time to lake their mission in a new direction while maintaining

has f?Cused significant resources on recruitment,

&lt;qJJmuni~

a-...ry 11sible P""''"" ar Sl. Joseph's Hospital and in 1he rommuni~.
One.eKan:~e of this oaremarl&lt;:tble flw l"'" of service to the jlOC!lie
of the Mid-Ohio Valley throu~t tl• miniSiry of 1he Sis~• ri Saint
]as&lt;ph Chantab• Fund, set up •ith funds recei...J in 1996 when the
Sister.i fim entered in:othe joint venture with H~.

,.

St.Joseph~ Hospital
A Time of change.
A Time of Opportunit:,~.

An op~rtunit:,~
to continue the mission.
Wilh the mi~~n. &gt;ision and values of lhe Slsleo of saint jo!eph
firmly In place, OOI.Ill&lt;d
\lith the resoun:es ol
one of lhe leading
h'dltlKare oompanl« In
the nalioo, St jo!epb's
Hospital is uniquely
JXllitiooed to,.,.,. Ihe present and fulure health and ..,II..,. na'ds
of the Mid-OhioValley.
"Thr "li~ion and oolurs ofthe Hospital
nsidr itt thr htarts oft.ar:h ofour fntpl~,
worli'i at St. Jostph 's Hospital.

1h9 carry on tht work of tht Sislm
, through thfir companionate rare. "
Sislrt )110~ Kf!1t"b11M
Viet PrtJiftnt ofMWicfl &amp; fiAia

BY BRIAN J. REm

BY BRIAN J. REm

,,J'9MllRQY: - The for-

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

mer Oltio Department · of '

POMEROY - Meigs County Treasurer Howard
Frank met with Meigs- County CommissionersThursday to discms the financial condition of the
county's general fund.
Based on the ·county's spending to date, Frank projects a year-end deficit of$53,147 in the general fund,
which finances all county courthouse office opera-

Trans~---1

Pleue see AEP; AJ

s

tions.

ST
ternwheel
Riverfest 2001
got under way
Thursday afternoon as sternwheelers began docking
at the Pomeroy levee,
concession and artist vendors opened for business
and a fire truck parade,
wltich was dedicated to
rescue workers in both
New York and Washing~
ton, D.C., made its way
up Main Street.
The three-day festival
kicked off with .a flag-raising ceremony by Drew

Today's

Hlp: SOs

Sentinel

L-: 40s
Details, A3

,p~

2 Sec:tlons - 12 Pales

calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS

Lotteries
OHIO

82-4 Pick 3: 1-4·9; Pick 4: 3·2-4-6

85 lludwye 5: 17-18-24-32-37
A4 W.VA
A3 Dllily 3: 5-4-7 Dail)' 4: 6-3·5·3
81,3,6 Cash :zs: 2-4-10-14-16-24
A3

.
C 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Webster Post 39, American Legion, and a concert
by Dee and Dallas.
Festivitie~
continue
today with ·perfonnances
by the Meigs High
School Band and Flag
Corps, Midnight . Cloggers. and various live
bands throughout the
evening.
Saturday's
sc hedule
includes a parade, ltistorical \valking tours, the
crowning of' the 2001
Riverfest Queen, chili
cookoff, line-throwing
contest, and the ducky

-·.•

derby. A full line-up of
entertainment will be
available throughout the
day from 11 a.m. till mid-

night and a firework~ display at &lt;) p.m. will close
the festival. (Tony M.
Leach photos)

Please see Budget. AJ

Donations still being collected for NYC workers
BY TONY. M. LEACH

STAFF
POMEROY - ."Supplies and money
are being collected ,by the Pomeroy Volunteer Emergency Squad and Peoples
Bank for delivery to rescue workers moving the rubble that used to be th!! World
Trade Center.
Todd Smith, Pomeroy squad cltief, said
Thursday a large amount of clothing,
canned food and blankets has been col. SENTINEL ·NEWS

lected from people concerned about the
thousands of rescue workers still on the
scene of the worst.terrorist attack in U.S.
history.
"There's a lot of really good people out
there, which is clearly evident by the
large amount of donations we've
received," Smith said as h e piled bag after
bag of donated supplies into a collection
·
.
bm.
. "It makes one proud to be part of such

a great country whose people unite so
strongly in times of crisis."
With so many organizations collecting
donations for both victims and rescue
workers, Smith said a surplus of clothing
and canned food dbes exist; however,
. there are certain items still needed at
Ground Zero.
"We're currently in desperate need of
Ple•se see Donations, AJ

Gallla Fall Business Expo
Look for the Holzer Medical Center Community Health
and Wellness Department at the Expo

Saturclay, September 29 • 1 0 am • 5 pm -·
Sunday, September 30 • 1 pm • 5 pm
Gallla County Fairgrounds
health information will

I
,_,\

According to Frank's records, the county has operated "in the red" six of eight months this year, spending less than taken in only in April and May, when real
es!:ate tax settlements begin.
Frank suggested conunissioners prohibit all officeholders and department heads from using blanket purchase orders to purchase supplies and make other
cxpendirures, to avoid overdrafts in line items at the
end of d1e year. ·
Frank said that, in the past, officeholders have been
issued blanket purchase orders and useCJ the face value
of the purchase orders v.oith more than one vendor,
creating an overdraft in some line items, and conunissioners should hold those officeholders per.;onally
responsible for any overdrafis that result between now
and year's end.
The county relies on a carryover balance at the end
of the year to cover the first two or three payrolls and
other first-of-the-year expenses.That carryover will be
especially important to the commissioners this year
and next year, because of the projected loss of revenue
.from the removal of mining equipment at Southern
Oltio Coal Co.

•

FREE Blood Pressure screenings, Body Fat Analysis screenings and

-

Please see Bush. A3

Frank suggests
•
savrng
measures

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

portation .
garage near
Pomeroy
will soon
be occu- .
pied
by
American
Electric
Power, and
local of!icials expect
the move to benefit the local
economy.
AEP will consolidate local
-field operations into the
1950s-era garage, . w~ich
ODOT vacated last year in
favor . of a new and larger
facility just down Oltio 7
near Five Pain~.
That
consolidation,
according to Economic
Development Director Perry
Varnadoe, will include field
operations in Pomeroy. and
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
ODOT Di.rector Gordon
. Proctor and Deputy Director
George Collins presented the

Terrorists left behind rem
in Arabic giving them stepby-step instructions for their
suicide mission and preparing
them spiritually for death, a
law enforcement official said
Friday.
Published ·accounts characterized the document as a
mission guide that urged the
hijackers to do such things as
smile at their taxicab driver,

Treasurer,
officials
discuss
budget

-·

ODOT

------

• Acongregation becoming smaller and incre:lliing in age.
• A••mg foundation lor """"' «tablishirl by \he hard 110rk

HOME GROWN- Rick Bayless, acclaimed chef, poses in the
2,000-squar!l-'foot garden at his North Side Chicago home.
Bayless, proprietor of Frontera · Grill qJ:ld Topolobampo restau. rants, uses lnuch of the produce grown in his garden in the
restaurants and some at home on weekends, but he also says
gardening is like therapy: .. It brings me really back down to
earth." (AP PhOto)

AMERICA AT WAR

occupy

restaurant," says Bayless, who

films part of his PBS television
program "Mexico One Plate at
a Time" in his back yard and
home and part in Mexico.
"It bring; me really back
down to earth," he says. " I usually get up early and go out
there, and the first thing I'll do
is p1ck all the squash blossoms."

Hometown Newspaper

•

FOOD

Chicago chef~ grow
some in redients
backyar fresh

cou

•

Meip County's

·

JUNIOR
AWARDSBreeanna
Manuel,
right, won
junior best
·of show and
the horticu~
ture award,
while Deanna Sayre
was the
reserve
best of
show and
creativity
award winner.

The Hoskins Family, a Southern gospel quartet which has had
10 national releases. will be the featured singers at Hobson
Christian Fellowship Church Sunday at 1:30 p.m. The singers
have had recordings which have hit the Singing News Magazine charts. They also placed in the top three in the National
Quartet Convention's talent search with an original song. The
church is located one mile !9-Uth of Middleport on Ohio 7_. A
noon at the old Legion Hall . in
potluck dinner will be held
_Middleport.

zote Mexicans so adore.

•

'

'POMEROY -Winners in "Meigs County Fair" class
the ¥eigs County Town and along with the horticulture
Country EXPO flower show sweepstakes award; while
last weekend at th e Rock Deanna Sayre took reserve
'springs Fairgrounds have best of show with her entry
been announced.'
in the "Favorite Design"
Taking best of show with class, along with the junior
her entry in "Pomeroy, The creativity award.
Blue ribbon winners in the
County Seat" was Sheila
Curtis with Gladys Cumings adult arttsttc ~rrangement
were
. reserve bes t o f show 1·n · classes
ta kmg
p
C Sheha CurtiS
. and
h
0
the "Middleport Honey Bear G~gf C ra~e, ';_ ~acd;
Festival" class. Larry Bunger
a Ays . uTmhmgs, myE " ·
f. h
· ·
son, 1ICC ompson, VC1yn
was wmner o t e creatiVIty H II
n ·11 C
d ·
d dJ
M
I 1h
o on, 1
rane, an m
awat • an oyce anue • e the junior division Breeanna
sweepstakes award.
Manuel two and Deanna
In the junior division , Sayre. '
'
Breeanna Manuel won best
Taking blue ribbons in the
of show for her entry in the

CH ICAGO (AP) -When regularly at farmers' markets.
chef Rick Bayless gets a cravCity space is precious, so
1 ing for sweet corn, fresh fruit Bayless doesn't waste an inch in
or a juicy tomato with sweet his garden. Grapes, ~r exambasil 'Prinkled on top, he can pie, are trained to' grow up
walk into his back yard or from a flower bed onto his
climb on top of his garage to garage roof. Two app le trees
gather the . luscious harvest of grow against a garage wall.
his own· garden.
Bayless and his wife, Deann ,
Thete, in· Chicago's Buck- use nmch of th eir produce in
town neighb·orlmod;-;~bwrtlve- their restaurants and scm e--ar- miles tram his Frontera Grill home on weekends. Like their
and Topolobampo restaurants, business, their garden has
this popular chef of authentic grown fast. It now requires a
Mexican food cultivates 2,000 full -time gardener, Sarah
square feet of vegetables, fruit Steedman, but Bayless still
and flowers.
enjoys his time there each
1
He also grows herbs galore, morning. ·
from basil and rosemary to the
" It's like therapy for me. It's
sassy cilantro and aromatic epa- such ·a different pace than the

FLY YOUR FLAG FULL STAFF TO SUPPORt YOU

be provided. For more information, call
446·5679

MEDICAL CENiER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org
I

0

�war

The Daily Sentinel

National Guard used for airport security
COlUMBUS (AP)
. Gm•. Dob Taft was waiting for
details' from the White Ho use
before deciding \vhether to
call up the O hio Natio nal
Guard to supervise security
checkpoints at O hio airports.
H e expected to make an
announcement on Friday.
Br ian Hic ks, Taft 's chief of
staff, sa id on Thu rsday that a
to tal of 50 to 60 guard members would li kely be deployed
in two- and three-member
teams at the Akron-Canto n,
C leveland, Columbus, D ayton , Toledo and Youngstown
ai rports.
" In all probability, we will
res pond favo rably to it, but we
want to see exactly what has
been as ked of us before making that dec ision ," Taft said.
Taft made the announcem ent during a tour of Rickenbacker Air N ational Guard
Base Thursday morning.
Ea rlier m the day, President
Bush had urged governors to

PROTECTING - Four Army National Gaurd soldiers walk
through the General Mitche ll Airport before being teamed up
with Milwaukee County Sheriff Deputies to patrol the faci lity in
Milwaukee . Gov. Scott McCallum on Thursday, called up mem·
bers of the Wisconsin National Guard Thursday to help protect
airports in Milwaukee, Madison and Green Bay. (AP)
call up guard m embers for airpo rt security in the wake of
the Sept. 11 terro rist atta cks.
The guard m embers will
provide · a transition berween
current civilian security procedures and Bush 's plan to put
th e federal government in
charge of airport security and

screening, incl udin g the purchase and mainte nance of all
equ ipment.
Under that plan, the government would sup ervise passenger and baggage sec urity
and perfo rm background
checks on security personnel.
' Unifo rmed federal workers

would manage all operations;
federal arid nonfederal workers woul d share tlie' security
work.
M any
ai rport secur ity
wo rkers would remain in the
employ of private co mpanies,
but with increased oversight
by the federal government.
The
Federal
Aviation
Adm inistrat io n w ill train
guard m embers in ai'rport
secun ty before they begin,
said Capt. N eal O 'Brien, a
spokesman for Adjutant G eneral Jo hn Smith, the head of
the Ohio N atio nal Guard.
Smith said ihe Guard members would come from Ohio 's
four military po lice companies. Eac h company, in Brook
Park in suburban Cleveland,
in Middletown in southwest
Ohio,
To ledo
and
Yo un gstown , has about 150
m embers.
,~
Taft said the call- up was key
to making Ohioans feel safe
about Oying again.

JDoes bin Laden has weapons of mass desbuction?
WASHINGTON (AP) Osa ma bin Laden has said
ac quiring weapons of mass
d estruction poison gas ,
killer diseases, radiation bombs
and nuclear devices - is "a
religious duty" and that all
Americans are targets.
He has tried to get such
weapons, say U.S. intelligence
offi cials, who won't. discuss
w hether the world's most
wanted accused terrorist has
succeeded.
"Does (bin Laden) have a
nucl ear bomb? I'd say no," said
Sen . Richard Shelby, R -AJa.,
lvice chairman of the Senate
Intellige nce Committee, who

•

is privy to secret briefings
from the C IA and other U.S.
intelligence· agen cies. "We
have to be aware of the possibility that he could launch a
chemical attack or biological
attack at any time. We need to
prepare for it."
Sinc'e the Sept. 11 attacks on
the World Trade Center and
Pentagon , lawmakers and terrorism experts say they are
undergoing a fundamental
shift in thinking about doomsday weapons
N ow, it's clear that whoever
conducted the attacks - and
the exiled Saudi bin Laden
remains the chief suspect -

would not hesitate to use one
·of these nightmare devices if
given the opportunity.
But don't panic, say the officials and experts.
"Bad guys are capable of
developing these agents, but
they are not very capable of
delivering th em," said Rep.
Jane H arman , D-Calif. , a
member of the House Pennanent Select Committee on
Intelligence. "What is new is
the wanton destru ction of
September 11 makes d ear
there would be no hesitation
against using them ."
Shelby said bin Laden has
engineers and chemists among

his ranks.
· CIA Director George Tenet
said both bin Laden and the
Palestinian group Hamas are
tryin g to obtain chemical
weapons.
"Although terrorists we've
pre-empted still appear to be
relying
on . conventional
weapons, we know that a
number of these groups are
seeking chemical, biological,
or
nuclear
radiological
agents," Tenet told ,t he · Senate
Intelligence Committee last
year. "We are aware of several
instances in which terrorists
have contemplated !-'sing these
materials."

Fri day, Sept. 28, 2001

Page Al

Pomeroy, Midd leport, Ohio

Frtd•y. September 21.1001

L OCAL BRIEFS

will

Powell says Jackson
probably .solve nothing
WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of State Colin Powell sai!I Jesse Jackson would
probably solve nothing by visiting Afghanistan's ruling Taliban militia becatUe the United States has nothing to negotiate.
"He is free to travel," Powell
said Thursday. "I don't know
what purpose would be served
right now, since the position of
the United State$ and the
international community is
quite clear."
Jackson is considering
whether to lead a delegation
to Taliban officials to try to
persuade them to hand over
Osama bin Laden; the prime
suspect in the Sept. 11 terrorism attacks on the United
States. The Talihan, believed to
be harboring bin Laden and
his ai-Qaida terrorist network,
have refused to meet the Bush
administration's demands.
The civil rights activist,
minister and former presidential candidate said Thursday he
does not know when he will
decide on his plans.
Jackson said he does not
want to go, but feels obligated,
if he can, to try to free two
American
humanitarian
workers, jailed by the Taliban
along with six other foreign
relief workers on charges of
preaching Christianity.
Jackson said he received a

telegram Wednesday from a
Tali ban spokesman inviting ·
him to come to neighboring
Pakistan to resolve the situation "in a way that preserves
the dignity and integrity of all
sides.,.
The Taliban ambassador to
Pakistan reportedly said the
request was not initiated by
the ruling militia. T he Mghan
Islamic Press, a private news
agency close to the Taliban,
quoted Abdul Salam Zaeef as
saying that Tali ban leader M ullah Mohammed Omar "has
accepted his offer to mediate.':
Jackson said some PakistaniAmericans acted as . gobetweens.
"It doesn't matter who ini tiated this, but that both of us
are interested in talking;· he
said.
Jackson discussed the matter
with Powell in two pho ne calls
and spoke with Condoleezza
Rice, President Bush's natio nal security adviser.
Several Bush administration
officials, speaking on condi tion
of anonymity, said , the White
House would urge Jackson
not to make the trip. They
worry it WO\J!d be viewed as a
U.S. attempt to negotiate w ith ·
the Taliban and could fra cture
the growing but fragile inter- ·
national coalition against terronsm.

EMS logs calls

Mary Neutzling

POMEROY - Units ofthe
Meigs Emergency Service
MIDDLEPORT - - Mary Neutzli ng, 83, of Mid,l:cpv•V at;;, ttd:l -si., calb for J!l)isGlnl'"t
died on Wednesday, Sept. 26, 200 I, at Holzer Medical Cent~r on Thursday. Units responded
in Gallipolis.
as follows:
She w as born on Nov. '!.7 , 1917, in Middleport, d1ughter of
CENTRAL DISPATCH
the late Samuel and Ann Jon es Fick . She was employed as a
9:15 a.m ., Ohio 7. Nathan
·telephone operato r and a beautician at Kay's Beauty Salon .
Murphy, St. Joseph's Hospita l;
She is survived by nephews, James W. Warner and friend,
1:15 p.m ., Dexter Road,
Janet Elkins, of Middleport, and Jay I~ and Sherry Warn er of Ft. Tracy Owensby. Holzer MedMyers, Fla. ; great-ni eces Ni cole Wanrer and Tara Warn er ical Center;
Cahill, both of C olumbus; great-nephews, Jake and Z ane Warn3:21 p.m., Skinne~ Road,
er, Ft. Myers, Fla. ; great-grea t niece, Alia Warner, Columbus; Brian Arms, dead on arrival ;
cousins Greg and Donna Rager and their childre n: Thomas,
6:23 p. m , South Third
Katie and Daniel, all of My;tle Beach, S.C. ; and a special fr iend, Street, motor vehicle acc ident,
.
Ida Martin, Middleport.
Joseph Rupe, trea ted.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her h usPOMEROY
band, Morris P. Neutzling, in 1993, and a sister, Jan e Ann Warn10:08 a.m., HMC Clinic,
er.
Lester Wolfe, H MC.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. on Sur!day, September 30,
TUPPERS PLAINS
2001, at Fisher- Acree Funeral H ome in Middleport with the
9:53 p.m ., Riebel R oad,June
R ev. Mark Mo rrow officiating. Buri al will follow at Riverview Ridenour,
Cam den-C lark
Cemetery.
Memorial H ospital.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Saturday, Se pt. 29,
2001, froJn 6 to 8 p.m ., and an ho ur prior to service.

Donations

fro m the Eagles C lub. We're
expecting more to arr ive fro m
other Peoples llank bra nch es
Pa~Al
in Washingto n, Athens and
Mason co un ties."
socks, gloves and mo ney," he
Smith said any excess clo th_J•i.~.
ing and cann ed food will be
An acco unt has bee n ere- • distributed amo ng the local
atl'd at Peoples Da nk fo r· th ose Salvatio n Army and o th er
w ho w rsh to donate money.
]' f
. ·
O nce the money has been re re organrzano ns. .
.
.
.
b
I
.
.
Supphes
are
strl!
b
erng
co ll ecte d , tt W I11 e e ectrom·
cally sent to the N ew York accepted at the . Po m eroy
City's firefi ghters to do with Branch of the M ergs County
as th ey Sfe fi t.
Lrbrary and the Mergs CoLrn" A total of $2,200 has ty Emergency M edr ca l . Seralready been donated to the vice office, loca ted behind
account, including $1,000 Veterans Memorial Hospital.

from

u.s:

people suspected of being
involved in the planning of
those attacks.
The arrests have resulted
from a global manhunt led by
the FBI and aided by CIA
intelligence tliat has produced
dozens of raids and searches in
the last two weeks.
Information about the overseas attacks first emerged this
summer, well before the Sept.
11 hijackings, when authorities captured an alleged associate of Osama bin Laden and
he began cooperating, officials
said.
The alleged bin Laden associate, Djamel Begal, provided
overseas authorities with
information about possible
targets and the names of others who might be involved,
officials said.

A senior . government official, spe~king on condition of
anonymity, said U.S. intelligence urged its European
counterparts to begin rounding up suspects before Sept.
11.
Spanish Interior Minister
Mariano Rajoy said authorities had been watching several
of the collaborators for several
months but lacked sufficient
evidence to move in on them.
After the attacks on the
World Trade Center and Pen-

tagon, European police moved
rapidly to capture as many of
the alleged planners as possible.
They include about rwo
dozen people arrested or
detained in Spain, France,
Britain, . the Netherlands and
Belgium. Several other suspected collaborators remain at
large, the officials said.
Since the first wave of
arrests, authorities have begun ·
to make links between collaborators in different countries.

PEACE TALKS - Rev, Jesse Jackson addresses students
at Jefferson Hl&amp;h School In Alexandria, Va. Jackson seld
Thursday he was c,onslderlng whether to accept an Invitation from the rullna militia In Afghanistan to take a •peace
deleaatlon' to nel&amp;hborlng Pakistan. (AP)

RELIEF DONATIONS - Todd Smith, Pomeroy squad leader,
stands beside a portion of donated relief items that will be
delivered to rescue workers at New York's former World Trade
Center site. Clothing, blankets and food h~ve been collected
with socks, gloves and' money still desperately needed. (Tony
Jv'1. Leach photo)

MORE LOCAL ~NEWS
MORE LOCAL FOLKS

Bush

Offidals assure public
on poli9 for shooting
down hiJacked airliners
by a general responsible for
U.S. air defense. Rumsfeld and
others stressed this would be a
last resort.
"Very, very senior people are
able to address a matter in real
time and ask the right questions and make the right judgments," Rumsfeld told a Pentago n news conference. He
said he has been consulted a
number of times since the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks about
" concerns, questions about
what various aircraft might be
doing in various locations of
the world." He provided no
detailed examples.
Hijacked airliners crashed
into the twin towers of New
York's World Trade Center, the
Pentagon and the southwestern Pennsylvania countryside,
killing thousands. Fighter j ets
were launched shortly .before
the second World Trade Center attack and shortly befo re
the Pentagon attack, but in
both cases the fighters did not
reach the scene in time to act.

With
Picture

·.

Wiijl Much
Appreciation

From YoUJ l''-~ ,
Congregatl1ftii

u.s:

Reader Services
Correction Polley

With Picture

Our main concern In all storie s is
be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

to

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.

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POMEROY Winter
storage in the buildings or
inside the fence on the fairgrounds can be rented now.
Items to be stored will be
accepted at the fairgrounds this
Saturday and on Oct. 20 anytime between 10 a.m. and 4
p.m.
In addition to the rental fee,
there will be a $20 charge for
early arrival, late arrival, early
renewal, late removal or anytime access is wanted to the
fairgrounds other than on the
designated dates.

Divorces,
dissolutions
filed
POMEROY Divorce
ac ti ons have ~ ee n fil ed in
Meigs C ounty C ommon Pleas .
Court by R ebecca M. C olvin,
Pom eroy, against Terry L.
Colvin, D ecatur, Ind.; Sh'erry
Wise, Middl eport, against
Danny J. Wise, Pomeroy; and

(USPS 213·960)
Ohio Valley PubUshlng Co.
Published every aftern oon, Monday
th rou gh Friday, 111 Cou rt St.,

Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Second-class

postage paid al Pomeroy.
Menlber: Tho Associated Press and
the Ohid Newspaper Association.

Po1tmaa1er: Send address correc·
tl ons to Th e Dail~ Sentinel , 11 t Court.

St .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

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carrier or motor route

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carrier may remit In advance direct to.
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mall permitted In areas where home
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carrier
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On the Web
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Mail subscription

Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
$27.30
26 Weeks
S53.82
52 Weeks
$1 05.56
Rates outside Meigs County
$29.25
$56 .68

13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

$109.72

Judgments

issued
POMEROY - Judgments
have been issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
to LaSalle National Bank
aga inst John Mam!a; and o thers, and Bankers Trust C o:,
N.A., against Dal)ny Salyers.
A default judgment has been
issued to Scott Orthopedic
Center
aga inst
Brian
Burkhamer.

case dismissed
POMEROY - A criminal
case styled State of Ohio
against Scott E. McKinley has
been dismissed in the Meig;
Co.unty
Common
Pleas
Court.

High pressure building over
the region will bring warmer
and dry weather for the weekend.
·
Highs will be in the 6tls on
Saturday and around 70 on
Sunday.
.
Overni ght lows will continue to be in the mid- 40s under
clesar skies. ~
.
No rain is in the forecast
until next Tuesc!?.y.
Sunset today will be at 7:26
p.m . and sunrise on Saturday

CARPET SALE!

LO C AL STOCKS
USB -2 1',

AEP - 43'••

ArchCoal - 14',

Bank On:G - 30';.

Prem1er -

.Gannen - 58},
•
.General Electric- 35't.

Akzo - 38:.
AmTechSBC - 46 ),
Ashland Inc. - 37\
AT&amp;T- 18\

GKNLV - 3',

Harley

38'o

·

Davidson

Kma• t -71.

BLI - 8 ~ '
Bob Evans- 1 6 ~

Kroger - 243.•
Lands End - 29',
Ltd. - 9 1'2

BolgWamer - 38'o
Champion - 2,,
Charming Shops - 4 l.
City Holding - 9\

NSC- 15',

Oak
15),

Col - 1 3 ~

Hill

Financ•al

OVB - 24 'l
BBT - 36'•

DuPon1- 36'.1.

Federal Mogul -~~

Peoples -

Budget
from PageA1
"2003 will be one of the
county's hardest years financially," Frank said. " I don't know
how you're going to make up
that budget ... you . may have to
do some things you do n't want
to do."
in other business, comnu ssioners met
wi!h John
Francescon of OIH Inc., w hich
supplies county and local governments with products and services through Board of Mental
R etardation and Developmental
Disabilities workshops and
industries.
Steve Beha of the Carleton
School and Meigs Industries
also attended the meeting, during \vhich commissioners were
urged to encourJge other office
holders to obtain products and
services through OIH when
·
possible.

Probation
revoked

18~.

a·.

Rock well - 14 ,
Rocky Boots - 4 '.

AD Shell - 48 ,
Sears - 34 \
Shoney's _l;

Wai·Man - 49 ,
26 .
Worth•ngton - 11
Wendy's -

Daily stock reports are
Jhe 4 p.m. c!os1ng
quotes of the prev•ous
day's transactions, provided by Sm11h Par1ners at Advest Inc. of

Gallipolis.

Commissioners also appmwd
a resolution in support of the
Meigs C ounty d river's licerise
testi ng site. The comm is'\ ione~
have received notice that the
Ohio I3ureau of M otor Vehicles
is considering closing the &lt;ite.
The board asked Meigi villages and townships to pJ.ss similar resolutions.
The cornnLis."iioner.; alm:

• Accepted bid&lt; (or bituminous materials for O ctober from
Asphalt Materials, Inc. . MoriettJ.
and Middleport Terminal , In c. ,
Gallipolis;
,
• . Approved appropri ations
adjustments for th e county
auditor;
• Approved payment of bills in
the amount of$330,738.65;
• R enewed county employee
health
insurance
policies
through McNell y, Patrick &amp;
Associates and Am hem, at a r:t te
of$306.63 and $790.30, for single and family plans, respectively. .

era! fund. Varnadoe estimated
those proceeds at about $25,000
a year.
··~
POMEROY
Levi
"N ot only svill this help the .
McGrath has been sentenced
county in operating local govto one year in prison on a deed to the building to. the ernment, but the property will
charge of yandalism after vio- Community
Improveme nt also go on the tax roUs, and the
lating his community control Corp. of Meigs County at a 'county and other local gcwernprobaiionary terms. The charge reception last Week following ments will benefit from AEP's
of vandalism is a fifth -degree the U.S. 33 groundbreaking.
payment of real. estate taxes, as
felony.
The ere. a non-profit orga- well,"Varnadoe said:
Community control terms nization dedicated to econonuc
"This arra ngemen t brings
on four charges of theft remain · development, \Viii lease the money back into the county,
in place.
building to the powef company. saves jobs, creates j obs and adds
The five-year lease is renewable, to the tax rolls."
Varnadoe said.
AEP is expected to spe nd
"AEP will relocate and $100,000 in improving the
POMEROY Marriage expand their field operations in property, he sard.
licenses have been issued in Meigs County, and that will
Varnadoe said Collins and
Meig; County Probate Court retain current jobs and create a County Commiss ioner Jim
to Robert Joseph Lawrence, few new jobs as wen;·varnadoe Sheets were primarily involved
1B, and Jessica Dawn Dalton, said.
in comple!ing the transfer to the
17, both of Reedsville; and
The CIC has committed to · CIC.
Jerry Franklin Roush, 60, turn over all proceeds from the
AEP will begin occupymg
Pomeroy, and Sharon Lee Barr, building into the county's gen- the garage N ov. 1.
56, Langsville.

AEP

from PageA1

Issued licenses

Trustees meet
LETART FALLS- Letart
Township Trustees will meet
Oct. I at 5 p.m. at the office
building.

To speak

LOCAL EVENTS
FRIDAY
POMEROY- Fun, Food and Fellowship at God's NET in Pomeroy.
Nutritional meals, non-violent
video games, computer programs,
board games, tor teens. 6 to 10:30
p.m. Friday and Saturday.

MIDDLEPORT Greg
Sears will speak at Ash Street ~MEROY- Free community
Church, Sunday, '6 p.m. Public . drn~r at Pome~ Church of
. . . d
r
Chnst, Friday 5.30 to 7 p.m.
IS lllVlte .

OES meets
RACINE - Racine Chapter 134, Order of Eastern Star,
will meet O ct. 1 at 730 p.m.,
with election of officers,
reports and planning for the
1OOrh anniversary celebration.

Sunny and warmer Sunday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The D.aily Sentinel

FromYour Congregation

Onlf8,00

render bin Laden, and Pakistan,
the only country with diplomatic ties to Afghanistan, has
repeatedly tried to persuade
them to cooperate.
Ameer
ul - Azeem ,
a
spokes man
fo r
Paki stan's
biggest reli gious party, Jamiat
Ullema lslarni, said the religious
· leaders who have cordial
relations with the Taliban would
try
to
persuade .
Afghanistan's go~e rnment to
hold indirect or direct tal ks
with the United States.

-

Putor JohD Smith
With Much Appreciation

at 7:26a .m.
Forecast
Today: Partly cloudy. High
65, low 44.
Saturday: . Partly cloudy.
High 65, low 42.
Sunday : Pa&lt;tly cloudy. High
68, low 43.
Monday: Partly cloudy.
High 73, low 45:
.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. High
73,low 48.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy.
High 75, low 49.

.... '1J"ParYd

r0 Sale '8" Per Yd

• ~ Mohawk
Vinyl Floormg
Laminate Wood
1 11
! In Stock 5 Per Yard
In stocl: '1"Per R

SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN -American Legion
cook-out for members and guesls,
Saturday, 4 p.m.

Church) family praise service Sunday, at the new property on State
Roule 7. Special presentations to
the Royal Rangers and Missionettes will be made. The CORE
drama team will perform. Service
begins at 6 p.m. with a wiener
roast·to follow. Public welcome.
MIDDLEPORT- Homecoming,
Hobson Christian Fellowship
Church, Sunday, 1:30 p.m. The
Hoskins Family to sing. Potluck
dinner at noon al the old Legion
hall in Middleport.

PORTlAND - Lebanon Town·
ship Trustees, Saturday, 7 a.m..
lownshlp building.
SUNDAY
POMEROY- Eagle Ridge Com·
munity Church, homecoming,
su.1day. Moming service, 10 a.m.,
carry-in dinner at noon, afternoon
service, 1 p.m., with special
singing by Carrnei·Sutton Blue·
grass.
POMEROY- Bethel Worship
center (forme~y South Bethel

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446-4524

OiOflruH

1~WfSf

1~11~JM~&lt;,ltli'IK~

7

FRI9/28/01 • THURS 1014/0t
TUES IS "BARGAIN NIGHT"
,
$3.7H•DMISSION
lCERTjt.IN fEATURES MAY BE EliClUD!D)

ZOOLANDER (PG13)
7:30 &amp; 9:30
ATINEE

AT

U

'

DON'T SAY A WORO. (R)
7:00 &amp; 9:30
MATINEES &amp;AT &amp; SUN 1:00 I 3:30
TWO CAN .PLAY THAT GAME (R)
7:15 &amp; 9 :15
MATINE
T
N1 :15&amp;3:15
HARDBALL (PG13)
7:00 &amp; 9:30
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:30
SUMMER CATCH (PG13)

7:00" 9:16
MATINEES SAT I SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:15

JEEPERS CREEPERS IR)
7:20 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT I SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20
THE OTHERS (PG13)
7:10 &amp; 9:20
MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN 1:10 I 3:20
ALL AGES , ALL TIMES $4.00

•

••

"crave death" and "make sure
no one is foll owing you ."
: In Pakistan, a del egation of
t.op Islarnic leaders was to travel to Afghanis~111 on Friday or
Saturday for talks with the Taliban, according to one of the
partie.s involved.
The Taliban so far have
;.fused the
demand to sur-

+

ENJOY . DELICIOUS
PIZZA ALL DAY

Parent-teacher
meetings set

Fair Board
storage
available

from PageA1

WASHINGTON (AP) To p Pentagon officials don't
worry about a military pilot
-pavin g to . shoot down a
hijacked airliner as much as
the pilot being too reluctant to
fr re when necessary, the chairman of the Joint C hiefs of Staff
. said.
"Don't get th e impress ion
that anyo ne w ho's fl ying
around o ut there has a loose
trigger fin ger. That's not the
~ase," Gen. Henry H . Shelton
said.
Shelton and other top mili c
tary brass sought to rea~s ure air
travelers T hursday about the
mili tary's rules for dealing with
h ij a'c ked
civilian
planes.
Defense Secretary Donald H.
P.. urm feld said he could not
revea l details of the procedures, bm s.ll&lt;i the president
wou ld be &lt;;o11 sulted before
mili tary ac tion was taken, if
time allowed.
If tim e was too short, the
fi nal dec isi·on on firing at a
civilian ai rl in er co uld be made.

RUTLAN D
Meigs
County residents w ill be workin g with differen t communities
fo r the organizatio n of a
haunted house to help provide
money fo r a relief fund for victims and rescue workers in
N ew York.
The. haunted house will be
located at the Civic Center in
Rutland and anyone interested
in helping or do nating Items
should
contact
Kenny
Reynolds at 992-7476 or the
village office at 772-2121.-

POMEROY Parentteacher conferences will be
held in Meigs Local School
District, O ct. 3 and Oct. 10,
after school . for three hours.
Parents will receive notification.

FBI said to have thwarted at two attacks since Sept 11
WASHINGTON (AP) T h e government's global
manhunt has thwarted two
terrorist attacks since Sept. 11
and gathered evidence suggesting collaborators were in
various stages of planning on
several other plots to harm
interests here and abroad,
officials said Thursday.
Evidence seized in raids in
the United States and in
Europe included plans or
materials for an attack on the
U.S. Embassy in Paris and an
attack with explosives on a
military site in Brussels, Belgium, the officials said.
The officials, who work in ·
..law enforcement and intelligence, spoke only on condition of anonymity. They said
about two dozen arreSts have
bee n made across Europe of

Benefit
scheduled .

by Kenneth G. Ro,c, Lo ng
Bottom, against Ruth C. R ose,
Warren, Mich.
An action for dissolution of
n'lllrrioig~ ha, been filed · b'y
Gregory . Paul Garretson,
R ac ine, and M ichelle Cean
Garretson, Pomeroy.
Dissoluti ons have bee n
granted to Ken Everett VanMatre and Jan na Lynn VanMatre,
and to Corm i Go Garvin and
Larry R . Garvin .
Divorces have bee n gramed
to Gregory E. Weddle from
Susan , D. Weddle; an d to
Richard A. Peyton Jr., fro m Jessica V Peyto n.

The Da ily S e ntinel • Page A 3

•

'

�.•
0 IJinlon

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo. . . 740-9~2·2156;. Fax: 992·2151

\.l-'E.~;fii-'1 N\Y

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager

Friday, Septem\,er 18, 2001

1'HE IN~lDEL .PIQ ~S
fROZEN M.Y .~l,sA CARD? .
~tt.L CRUSH HEH!!

The Daily Sentinel
•

· P,age A4

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A~IC)...'r-o

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

E.xvv.t:."6.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

I~Nt!n lo tlu Nilor lll't tt·tlr:omt. Thty should '" ltu thalf JOO •ords. Allltntn
art st~bjecllo nlilittg ond must bt sigHtJ ond indwlladduu 1111d rtltphDift lllltft/Hf',
No unsigntd lt!Urr will bt publirhtd. l~tftf! should bt ill good taste, acUnning
lssats, ttot ptrron11/itits.

Tltt opiniom npr~tutd in tht column hdvtt&gt; tUt thr cmutnsus of lht Ohio 1-iltl«'J
Publishing Co.'s tdirorlal board, 1mltn tJ/hr~·ist n11ltd.

NATIONAL VIEW

It costs

.....

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Sept. 28, the 271st day of2001. There are 94
days· left in th e year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 28, 1939, during World War II Germany and the
Soviet Union agreed on a plan to partition Poland .
On this date:
In 1066, William the Conqueror invaded England to claim
the English throne.
In 1542, Portuguese navigator Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo
arrived at present-day San Diego.
In 1781, American forces in the R evolutionary War, backed
by a French fleet, began their siege ofYorktown Heights, Va.
In 1787, Congress voted to send the just-completed Constitution of the United States to state legislatures for their
approval.
In 1850, flogging was abolished as a form of punishment in
the U.S. Navy.
In 1924, two U.S. Army planes landed in Seattle,Wash., having completed the first round-the-world flight in 175 days.
In 1961, "Dr. Kildare;' starring Richard Chamberlain and .
Raymond Massey, and "Hazel," starring S,hirley Booth, premiered on NBC TV.
In ·1974, First Lady Betty Ford underwent a mastectomy at
Bethesda Naval Medical Center in Maryland, following discovery of a cancerous lump in her l;Jreast.
In 1976, Muhammad Ali kept his world heavyweight boxing
champi~nship with a close 15-round decision over Ken Norton at New York's Yankee Stadium.
In 1989, deposed Philippine President Ferdinand 'E. Marcos
died in exile in Hawaii at age 72.
Ten years ago: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev praised
President Bush's pledge to drastically reduce the U.S. nuclear
arsenal, and promised to "reciprocate." U.N. weapons inspectors
ended a five-day standoff with Iraq over documents relating to
Iraq's nuclear weapons program. Jazz great Miles Davis died in
Santa Monica, Calif., at age 65.
Five years ago: With the United States absiaining, the U.N.
Security Council passed a resolution indirectly calling on Israel
to close an archaeological tunnel in Jerusalem that had touched
off fightin g between Israelis and Palestinians. Landmark legislation t&lt;K:rack down on illegal immigrants in the United States
won House passage as part of a giant federal spending bill.
One yea r ago: Capping a 12-year battle, the government
approved use of the abortion pill RU- 486. Ariel Sharon,leader
of Israel's hard-line opposition, sparked new Israeli-Palestinian
clashes by tour ing the Temple Mount. Former Canadian Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau died in Montreal at age 80. In
Sydney, Australia, Venus Williams earned her second Olympic
gold medal, teaming with sister Serena in the final of women's
doubles to beat Miriam Oremans and Kristi e Boogert of the
Netherlands, 6-1, 6- 1.
Today's Birthdays: Actor William Windom is 78.Actor Arnold
Stang is 76. Actress Brigitte Bardot .is 67. Blues singer !)-oko
Taylor is 66. Singer Ben E. King is 63. Actor Joel Higgins IS 58.
Singer Helen Shapiro is 55. Actor Jeffrey Jones is 54. Movie
wr itcrcdirector-actor John Sayles is 51. Actress Sylvia Kristel is
49. Actress-comedian Janeane Ga rofalo is 37.

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DEAR ABBY: I am a 'female
supervisor of a staff ot 31J. My friend
''Diane," who ~ also the office-mane
ager, is my problem. She consta ntl y
entertains personal calls and is very
loud. She's a smart lady, but her
work isn't up to par. (She knows her
job, but does it "at her convenience.") Diane is also very bitter
because she hasn 't received a promotion. She bad been . told many
times by the head of the department
and by me to curtail her personal
call s and to be more careful with her
work.
R ecently I was forced to take a
lengthy medical leave. Diane was
wonderful, calling and coming to
visit. But I have recently returned to
work, and my boss bas asked me to
talk to her again about the antics l
mentioned. I'm afraid if I do so, I'll

which are. after-homs relationships.
Explain to your co-worker/friend
ib;l.t while you don 't wanr to jeopardize the friendship, counseling your
staff is part of your job. Tell Diane
that you are calling her unacceptable practices to her attention so
that she can meet company sta ndards necessary for her to be sucADVICE
cessful. If you are tactful, she should
· be oble to distinguish between your
damage our friends hip. Please tell work relationship and your personal
me how to diplomatically approach one.
her. BETWEEN A ROCK
DEAR ABBY: With the end of
AND A
HARD
PLACE, summer comes the time of year I
BRONX, N.Y.
dread' the most - the holiday seaDEAR BETWEEN: As a super- son.
visor, your first responsibility must
It isn't the holidays that get me
be to handle the problems with the down, it's the . prospect of visiting
staff you supervise. While you are on my husband's family with our new
dury, that responsibility must take baby girl. T hey are all lifelong smokpriority over personal friendships, ers who th ink nothing of holding a

Abigail
Van
Buren

baby and a lighted" cigarene at the

only 6 mouth,· ow;:md 'exposingsame time .
her to all that smoke scares-me.
My sister-in-law's kid&gt; have allerI should add that I get along well
gies and asthma, but she smokes with my in-laws excep t for this one
around them anyway. Parties at my issue. Please tell me how to handle
in-laws' are literally a cloud of this. SMOKELESS BUT
smoke. When my husband's family OUTNUMBERED IN PENNare guests in our smoke-free home, SYLVANlA
they smoke outside. These folks
DEAR SMOKELESS: Schedthink that as long as the baby-is-.away ule a session with you r baby's pedifrom the smoke, it won't affect her. atrician and take your husband. He
They .don't realize the smell lingers needs to be told by a rrofessional
o n them - whether they 're smok- that a smoke-tree environment for
.
. ing in or outside.
your infant is "doctor's orders."
With
the
colder
weather Once he understands the imporapproaching, all our visits will be tance of a smoke-free environment
indoors. Our daughter's pediatrician for the baby's health, the two of you
says no o ne is to smoke around her. can restrict the fami ly visits at his
My husband refuses to say anything parents' house and do it with a clear
to his parents about the smoke and · consctence.
insists we take our baby to their
Dear Abby is writte11 by Pai1Ii11e
house. What can l do' Our daughter Phillips a11d daughter Jeamw Phillips.
tS

NEWS AND NOTES

Rizer wedding
POMEROY - Melissa Lee Canan
and James Edward Ri~er, both of
Pomeroy. were married on June 2, 2001,
at the Carpenter Inn and Conference
Center.
The double ring ceremony was performed by th e Rev. Brian Harkness,
pastor of Racine Method.ist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Michael
and Vicki Canan of Pomeroy, and the
groom's parents are Kenneth Rizer of
Portland and Deborah Rizer of Shade.
The outdoor garden ceremony was
performed under a white capri tent,
with vows being exchanged in front of
grape arbor built by the brideUs father.
Given in marriage by her father, the
bride wore a formal gown designed off

SAINTS AND SINNERS

Here~

Friday. September lB. 1001

VVOman sduty as supervisor conflicts with role as friend

-

Price of intelligence comes
high} but must be paid
• Los Angeles Times, on ret/,iuking tile CIA: ... The U.S. bas
astounding abil ities in what the government calls nationaltechnical means of verification. But satellite wizardry is not
enough.Terrorist networks need to be penetrated and disrupted. One small part of a remedy is a review of guidelines, curbs
and restrictions imposed on 'tbe· CIA after a Senate committee,
acting in the shadow of the Watergate scandal, in 1975 detailed
the agency's abuses over several decades. A Clinton-era regulation forbidding the employment of certain foreigners to penetrate terrorist groups should be amended. In 1995, the administration barred agents from signing up suspected human-rights ·
violators and required reduiters to disclose ·agents' identities to
Washington headquarters. The National Commission on Terrorism ... has strongly criticized this policy for its effect on
morale and hindraii te of intelligence-gathering ....
CIA Director George J. Tenet ha·s said that the organization
will "run to ground a vicious foe ." But this is the man who has
boasted th at America's counter-terrorism program is "robust"
and able to keep O sa·ma bin .4-aden and his followers "off-balance." ... The C IA lacks informants in radical Islamic groups,
and Tenet enthusiasti cally embraced restra'ints on recruiting
agents abroad. The C IA bas been caught flat-footed numerous
times. including the bombing of U.S. embassies in Africa and
the ·Indian government's resumption of nuclear testing ....
A cautious bureaucratic approac h i ~ not what U.S. intelligence needs. The Cl A must. fo cus on and reward informed
analysis and familiarity with local cultures and languages. U.S:
miscomprehension of its hellbent enemies has cost us dearly.

D_a_ily_se_nt_in~el_ _ ___,:B=-y .the

_Th_e

Page AS

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a prayer to help sustain our nation

The churches of Britain are empty.
This is not something new. Most of the
people of England stopped going to
church during World War II, and they
have not gone back.
When the dean of St. Paul's Cathedral
in London was in this country some
years ago, I asked him about this. He
ventured the opinion that the last two
world wars had done a good deal to
bring on the church crisis in England.
He said that the English people felt that
the horror of those wars has fallen on
them undeserved.
England had lived a good life, so to
speak, as a nation. As f.1r as most of its
citizens were concerned, they had done
nothing to warrant the catastrophe that
befell them twice in a single generation.
It syemed unfair.
A:nd SQ. many of the English lost, if not
the ir' faith in God, at least their interest
in the church. They have never regai ned
it.
If casualties continue to run high in
our nation 's war on terror istn , will the
people who flocked to services of
remembrance following the destruction
at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept, 11 give up their faith and
blame God for not intervening · in our
plight' Will America become like England?
Whenever good people suffer, it rai ses
doubts in their minds about God. It isn't
only the great physical sufferings which
affiict so many that make us doubt how
almighty and loving God is. When disap-

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST
pointment, failure and lon eliness come
into our lives, we are apt to lose faith in
God.
Can we say that such adversities are
part of God's plan for our world? The
answer is no - if his plan for us is that
we should be happy and comfo rtable all
th e tim e and li w long and prosperous
lives.
tlt!t suppose we are here to build our
characters. That puts a different face on
troubl e and m isfortune. Perhaps God is
interested in what we become, in what
we. mak e of ourselves.

If th is is God's plan for us, then adversity may be a part of it. Thin k of all the
things that make a ·m an a man and a
wmnan 3 woma n , thin gs such as

all possible worlds. You may decide that
it isn't. But then ask yourself another
question: Is this the best of all possible
worlds for the growth of the human
soul?
·
Maude Petre, th e English writer, said
in her autobiography that the qu estion
of suffering is one on which she finds
the greatest difference between the present generation and her own.
"In our upbringing," she says, "suffering was something sacred. We were
brought up to be ~oldiers of Christ and
soldiers rec kon not of scars. Our life was
to be one of achieve ment but achievement th rough effort - ·and the highest'
effort implies suffe ring.
"! have no doubt that we felt pain and
avoided it as much as people do now, but
all the same we regarded it as a lawful
and honorable factor in life."
She closes her re marks Vy"ith a memorable line.
"As I went on in ye ars," she writes, ''l
ca me to see that few peopl e were worth
mtich until they had suffered."
The late Dea n C hester Emerson, an
Episcopal clergyman , said this prayer
eac h night whe n he went to bed: "0
God, do with me whatever you want,
only no matter what befalls me, let me
feel you r arm across 111)! shoulder."
That would be a good prayer to sus-

Mr. and Mrs. James Edward Rizer

tlllltl

the shoulder and accented with crystal
beading at the neckline, waist and bottom of the hem. She carried pale pink
roses, freesia and ivy.
Kelly Canan of Pomeroy served as
maid of honor for her sister and.bridesmaids were Regina Manuel of Pomeroy,
Amber Slaven of Athens, Amanda
Adkins of Ravenswood, W.Va., and Amy
Codner of Marysville. Flower girl was
Hannah Cremeans, daughter of Darrin
and Beth Cremeans of Pomeroy. They
were ·in butterscotch yeUow dresses.
Richard Lyons of Racine was best
man, and ushers were Paul Chapman of
Pomeroy; Kenneth Rizer Jr. of Shade, a
brother of the groom, Todd Rizer of
Portland, also a brother, and Josh Codner of Maryville.
For her daughterUs wedding, Mrs.
Canan wore an off-white gown with

floral accent, while Mrs. Rizer was in a
floor- length sage green gown with
beading.
A reception for the couple was held at
the center, where the bride's table was
accen ted with grapevine beading
around the table and three pale yellow
pillar candles. Registering guests and
presiding at th e table were Kelsey
Hazlip of Carroll, Monique and Devin,
Mavery of Sunbury, and Layne Hazlip
of Carroll.
The couple took a wedding trip to
Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla.
They now reside in Pomeroy. The new
Mrs. Rizer is a 1997 Southern High
School graduate and is employed at the
Ohio University Inn, Athens. Rizer is
with the Ohio Carpenters Union .
Numerous out- of-county guests attended the wedding.

'''

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courage, faith, sacrifice and love. Can
you imagine what wou ld happen to tain us as o ur country fa ces ~n unc ertain
those thin gs if we li ved in a world with and dangerous future.
no grief, disappo intm em, pain or-lonelin ess?
(George R. P/age11 Z is a column ist for
Ask yourself whether this is the best of Neiiispaper E11terprise Associatio11.)

WEST 'S VIEW

Face up to it,Jolks
BY DIANA WEST

For some odd reason, one of the
countless factoids scrolling across the
bottom of the television screen last
week entered my . memory bank and
stayed. As the story of what happened
on Sept. 11 pieced itself together from
a mass of ptesidential statements, blackbox updates and dragnet bulletins,
along came an of!beat bit of news about
Osama bin Laden's brother having
endowed a scholarship at Harvard.
Certainly, this info-scrap bears no
weight on what President Bush inspirationally.called "this crusade, this war on
terrorism." (His spokesman bas since
expressed regret for riling Arab and
Muslim quarters with the word "crusade." More on that later,) But the symbolism of Brother bin Laden and Harvard turns out to have a hefr of its own.
Remember when Yale couldn't bring
itself to spend a $20 milliol) gift from
the Bass family to set up a humanities
program in Western civilization? Not
long before Lee Bass took his money
back from Yale, Sheik Bakr M()hammed
bin Laden was banding over ari. undisclosed sum to Harvard to fund Islamic
legal studies at Harvard Law School and
Islamic art and architecture sti.ldies at
the Harvard School of Design . Without
belaboring the point, it seems reasonable to say that in multicultural acadeQ1e, where the, creed is "diversity" or
bust, Islamic studies will trump Western
civ every time - and maybe even after
Sept. 11 .
But what does the predictabl e political correctness of the Ivy League have

it's a crusade against terror

to do with the surprise attack of militant Isl am against the Un ited States?
Simply thi s: There may be an enlightening glimmer to be found in th e co mparison between H arva rd's · swift
embrace of bin-Laden-funded Islamic
studies and the Western civilization
obstacle course encountered at Yale.
Maybe the fashion able pursuit of diversity to the point of cultural abnegation
explains something about the ease with
which the terrorists were able to launch
their attacks on Am eri ca from America.
Ass uredly, it's. a testament to th e
seemingly boundless tolerance of the
American people that so many men of
militant Islam were able to live, train,
and travel to their deadly missio n without seeming to have furrowed a single
bmw in suspicion . ln the end, of course,

this is nothing to be proud o f. Take the
case of the security checker who, with
a cheery " have a ni ce flight," sent five
Arabic men in khaki pants and tennis
shirts through .the gate at Logan Airport
onto United Airlines Flight 175.
Understandably, as the New York Post
reports, she is now and forever a haunted woman, particularly by one hija cker
she recalls as havin g acted "odd" - neither speaking nor makin g eye contact.
Why, she must wonder, did she not
pause to check him out? Was she fi ghting an intern al battle against the targeted prejudice of "profiling"' Ameri cans
must now begin to ask th emselves
where ihe onus of prejudice ends and
the liberatin g effects of prudence
begin .
For now, thou gh, there is still a weird

reluctan ce to ac cept crucial facts about
our adversaries, beginning with thei r
ethni c and religious identities. While
we ali have a responsibility to ens ur~
the safety of guiltless citize ns of Islamic
faith and Arab ancestry, it's begi nning t~
fe el as though Americans have entered
into a state of perpetual denial. We are
now living under an unendurable threat
of murder and mayhem from lslamics,
however extreme, of Arab ai1cestry. Btit
there is no official attempt to come tb
grips with this.
At the highest levels, Washington tells
us our war is with generi c " terrori srn"

and generic "terrorists," or, alternately,
with one particular terrorist named
Osama . bin Laden . At the local level , a
New York tip shee t for helping children
through th e trauma of the attack warns
parents to "Be careful not to stereotype ·
or deme an th e people qr co untries
thought to be homes of the· terrorists.
Children can easily generalize negative
statements and develoP. prejudice;'
That's foolish political correctness,
one of wh'ose worst asp ects is its distortion of the truth for political ends. This
notion came to mind on hearing White
House spokesman Ari Fleischer hedge
·on the president's apt choi ce of the
word "crusade" to describe the struggle
ahead . 1t may seem like a small thin g tO
cling to, but the fact is, th is fight is a
crusade - or it should be. Ahd winning it will depend as much on faci ng
th e truth as facing the enemy.
(Diana Wfst is a columnist and editorial
writer for Th e Was ltit~gton Tim es. Sl!e can be
comacted at diallawwattglobal .llet.)

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Plains

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�Pastor: Rl!'v. [)a,.id Ru~ll

1\utk!J.\ Sd.• II 10 J.ITI·
\1\'llllll!J .,.un.hlrtli .am h~:nlnJ!
\\nlnt..U...) 1 p m.

Cburdl o( bit (..,.rist Apo5tulic:
VllllZ.andt and \\ llRI Rd.
Pastoc JlllllC'!&gt; Mdler
Sunday S;,:"ho11l • !0.:,\0 11. 111.
E\ening - 7:l() p m.

Churth of jtm§ Chri&lt;~t
Apt),ll,llll

-l~ - ~ l~p

Pastor. PJ . Chapman
Sunday Sehuol - 10 a.m.

Nru. Lima Rnall
Sunda~. IU am. anJ 1:.~1 p m
\\'nltll:\\.la) . 7.\0 l't·lll

Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy
Plb1or: Rev Cra11 Cmumnn
Worship 10 : 2~ n m.
Sundl) S.:t'lo-.nl 9 I~ ll.nl.

1,,

Lilxrt, ASM"mbl~ ui'God
P.O. 8~" -'6 7, Duddiug Lanc:
Mason, W.Va.
P.N1\f Ncd Tl'nn:mt
Sunday Str. k~·!&gt; · Ill 00 a.m. :md 7 p.m

Mim ~tl.' r Anthon~

Gract" Episroptd Chun-h
326 E. Muin St .. Pomauy

Morri'i

Rev James 8cmack1, Rc,·. Katharin Foster

Sunday Sdmul 9:.'0 a.nt
\\\ll·sh1p- IO:.J,Q o.m.. 6 p.m.
Wt'tlncsda) Sm il"c~ 7 p.m.
Pomero~

Baptist
Littlt Cruk BMptlst Church

RJ .. Rulland
l'u~hw John Swan...on
Sunday So:hovl - IU :QO am .
Mormnf. Set" lc' C II :lXI a.m.
Ewning So:n l\' 1.' • 6·00 p m
Wednc!&gt;da~ St:n it:e · i :.\ll J' Ill .
Pnl·~· Holl o~

Hoj)(' Bapti§l Chun:h (Soolht'rn)
570 Gr.ml S1 .. Middh:rx'rt
Sunday school · 9:30 a.m
Worsh1p · II a.m. and 0 p.m
WeJnt:sda~ s~·n ke · 7 p m

Ridgr Chun·h of Christ
Pm:mr:Terry Stewart
Sundu} St·hool -9JO a.m.
Won.hip - 10 :.~(1 a.m .. 6:.\0 p.m.
Wl·dnesday Services- 6:JO p. m.

F.ast Matn St.

Sunday Sdkool - 9:J(l a.m .
W11rslup. IOJO a.m.

J.' irsl Southnn Haplist
41872 Pumcrn) Pike
Pu~t11t : E. Lamar O'Bry:tnt
Sundu}' School - Y:JO am.
WorshJI't - !0:~.5 a.m.• 7:00p.m.
WcJne."'-..tty Scr.' tl'I'S - 7:00p.m.

Tuppers Plai n Church of C hrist
lnstntme ntal
Worship Service • 9 a.m.
Communion · 10 a.m.
SundU)' St:hool - 10: 15 a.m.
Youth - 5:.10 pm.S undny
Bib!... Study Wednesduy 7 pm

Racine Firsl B11p1is1
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sundl.·1y Schoo l - 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:40 IUD .. 7.00 p.m.
WedncWay Sa\'ices ·7:00 p.m

Sunday Sc h oo l -9 : 4~

n. m.

hening · 6:30 p.m
Wednesduy Scrvio.:cs • tdOp.m.

Bethlthtm Baplist Chu n-h
Great Bend, Route 124. Radnc, OH
Pastor : Duniel Mece&lt;~
Sunday School· 9 : ~0 a.m.
Sunday Worship · IO:.f.O a.m
We dn~ sday B1hk Stud~ 6 00 p.m

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Old Bt:lht:-1 FrH \\111 Baptbi_Church
2860 1 St. Rl 7, ~llddleport
SwtJday School · 10 a.m.
Ev~ n ing - 7:00 p,m.
Thursday Sc=rvkc=s • 7:00

Hillside Ba pds1 Chun:b

Hickory Hills ChuKh of Christ
Ev~tngclist Mike Moort'
Sunday Sdu.)l)l · 9 a.111.
Worship· 10 a.m ., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Servit·es - 7 p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:~0 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30 p.m.

Reedsville Church of Chrbt

Rev. Jame s R. Acree, Sr.
Sun day Ll mfied Scr.r icc
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Se rvices -7 p.m.

Sunduy Schnul: 9:10a.m.
Worship Sm•icc: 111:.~0 a.m.

VIdor}' Baptist lndependenl
525 N. 2nd St Middleport
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worship - !Ottm .. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces. 7 p.m.

·Fallh Bapll!il Chun:h
Rui lroad St., Mason
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wor~hip - ! I a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedne N d:.~ y Servit.'Cs • 7 p.m

Ri hlc Study, W~dnesday, 6:.:\U p.m.
Drxlt-r Churth u£ Christ
Puslor: Nat han Robinson
SuuUuy sc hool 9:30a.m.
Norman Will , superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.

Chun-h

Pas10r : Arlus Hun

,

Fourth &amp; M11in St. . Middleport
Pa ~tor: Rev. Gilhl.'n Crai~ . Jr.
Sunday St· hoo] . Q:30 :un.
Won,hip · tOA5 11.111.

orChrist

lnl c r.~cl'tion

7 und 124 W
E\•angcliM: Dennis Sarge m
Sunday Bihle Study· 9 :30 a.mt
Worsh ip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p. m.
Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Rutland FrTe Will Bapli!l l
Salem St
Pas1or: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday S~.:hool- 10 a. m
Even in!! · 1 r.m.
Wednesday Service~· 1 p.m.
S«ond Bapti!l Chun:h

Ravenswood, WV
Pastor: Duvid W. McClain

Wednesday Service- 7:30p .m.
Faith Valley Thbern11de Chun:h
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Erilmeu Rawson
Sunday E\lening 7 p.m.
ThurWay Service- 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:45 a:in.
Worsh ip . II a.m.

( 'hristian l ' nion

Graham United Methodist
Worship - 9:30a.m. ( I st &amp; lnd Sun),
7:30 p.m. (3n.l &amp; 4th Sun)
Wed nesday Servke - 7:30p.m . ·

..lartford, W.Va.
Pas tor: li m Hughes
Sunday Sehoul- II a.m.
Worship -9:30 a.m .. 7:30 p.m.
Wednesduy Serv i~.:Cs • 7:30 p.m.

MI. Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine
Pustor: Brice Utt
Sunday 'Schuo\- 9:45a. m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wedncsda~ Scrvicell - 7 p.m.

Pa~tor :

Ron Heath
Snn,lhly Worship· 10 a. m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Chester

AJlple and S~wnd ~ I!&gt; .

Reedsvlll~

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. llliffir·c
INSURANC-E

Full line of
Insurance
Products+
Financial

. .ENCIES Inc. Services

Bill Quickel

992-6677

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

.992-7028

Service &amp;
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

1frmds Florist

EWING FUNERAL

County's Olde~ t "'lorist
Main
Pomeroy, Oh
•
.

A,

"l ot ur cttfld your llmughlr ~Jth ~JN!C ial ctn!~

740-992-2644

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

HOME

FUNERAL HOME

Dignlly and Service Always
Established 1913

992-2121
106

•

Ave.

Pomeroy

"We accept Preneed Transfers"

882·8200
Lundy Brown
Director

Regan Brown I
174 Layne fltn•Atl

Harrisonville Presbylerlan Chun:h
Worship - 9 a. m.
Sundny School · 9:45a. m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.

l n ill'd II rl'l h rl' n
Texa~

• .

Community offCR 82

P11stor: Robert Sanders
Su nday School· 9:30 a. m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesdu y Service!! • 7;30 p.m.

Eden Unlled Brelhren In Christ
2 !/2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Rnber1 Markley
Sunday School· II A.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7,:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youlh Sc=rvice- 7:30 p.m.

Craw's Family Restaurant ;Jtlibn:, l:cm ;Junnal-.omtl
"Featuring Kentucky Frlscl
Chicken"

264 s..,. Stcood An. • Mil~''"'· OH 45160
74G-992-51.41

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

s9o EAst Mall srr"'. , _ , ort 45769

992-7075
172 North

Seeond Ave.
Middleport, Oh

•

•l

Bledsoe out for
three games
BOSTON (AP) - Patriots
quarterback Drew Bledsoe
expects to miss at least three
games after being released
from a hospital following a hit
. that caused bleeding in his
c;hesl cavity.
·

NFL bans use of

ephedrine

lrwo l .lkllor· Olrodor

74D-992-5444
J-s R.

Jr.- Dirtdor

~eaforb

l\eal QEstate
216 E. Second Pomeroy

.:Always &amp; 'forever
Sift Sfiop
518 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, OH

992·1161

B. Green the early suprise of the MAC
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
th em on ESI'N."
The Bowling Green Falcons, flying
f1rst -year Bowling
high at 3"0, are the biggest early surGreen coach Urban
prise in the M id-American Confer- ·
Meye~ said.
ence.
A year ago, in Gary
Wh ether they continue to be will
Blackney's last season
be determined Saturday night.
as head coach, the
Despite the energy generated by
Falcons
shumed
victories over Missouri , Temple a,nd
through a 2-9 disasMAC foe Buffalo, the trip to fourter. One of the few
time defending MAC champi on MarPruett
bright spots was a
shall could put a damper on all the
20-13 loss to Marturnaround talk.
shall o n a late punt return.
ul'm new to this confere nce but I'm
Havin g already exceeded last year's
not new to watching Marshall play win total, there's an electricity runand hearing abo ut them and seeing nin g through the l:lG campus. M eyer,

however. isn 't plugged in just yet.
"Everybody around Uowling Green
is so excited," hl· said. ''I'm going to
make thi1 comment ro our players:
You ran be exci ted all vou want about
beating a Temple and· you should be
bt·catlse ·wins in Division I are hard ro
get. l:lut when you can go down th ere
and compt'te with M arshall , that 's
wh~;:n yo u've made some strides."
Marshall (1 -1), which is playing irs
MAC opener, has had a 2 1-day layoff
siqce its last game, adding an air of the
postseason .
" It 's sort of li ke a bowl game
because it's usually that amount of

NEW YORK (AP) -The
NFL has banned the stimulant
ephedrine after being told by
experts that th e substance
often found in strength-building food suppl ements can
cause seizures, strokes and even
death.
The ban will be part of the
league's ami-steroid policy,
which means tha t players will
be subje ct to year-round random testing for th.e substances.
But comnms10 ner Paul
Tagliabue said the tes ting
won 't begin until further consultation,s with the NFL Players Association, whi ch has
approved the ban but not the
tim ing.

netters

victorious
Bv Scon WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Dawson.leads
Texas Open

UC. Kent in Rock

and Roll
Shootout

CLEVELAND (AP)
Cincinnati and Kent State,
both N C AA tourn ament
teams last season , highlight the
field for this year's Rock 'N'
Roll Shootout D ec. 29 at
GundArena.
The Bearcats, who advanced
to the N CAA 's Sweet 16 in
March, will play Akron in the
first game of the doubleheader. ·
Cincinnati has appeared in all
eight Shootouts.
Kent State will play Cleveland State in the second game.
Cincinnati coach Bob Huggins has enjoyed bringing his
team to Cleveland in the past
and said -th1s- 1'C3r's event 6hould be ev~n better with
four Ohio sc hools participating.
"This is a well-managed
event in a first-class facility,
which creates a big-timr;
atmosphere for both our players and our fanst ' Huggins
said. " This year's matchups
should create a lot .of interest \
in Northeast Ohio."
The Bearcats are 5-2 in
seven previous trips to the
events.
Kent State will be playing in
its second Shootout The
Golden Flashes won 1)1e MidAmerican Conference t ournament last year at the Gund.
They'll be coached this year by
Stan Heath, who replaced
Gary Waters.
Waters is now at Rutgers.

l
' ,.

.

Please see MAC. BJ

Lady Eagle

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) Utah guard John Stockton, the
NBA's career leader in assists
and steals, signed a two-year
con tract ext ension with a
salary of $8 million for each of .
the next two seasons.
Stockton made-1\l·l n&gt;illion
last sea.,on. but agreed to .take
about $3 million less so that
the Jazz would not exceed the
estimated luxury tax threshold
of $54 'million.

SAN ANTONIO (AP) -·
Facing the prospect of returning to qualifYing school yet
again, Marco Dawson shot a 7under-par 64 to grab the firstround lead in th e Texas Open :

time in bt·tween (games)," said Marshall Coach Uob Pruett.
The Thundering Herd and Falcons
are at opposite ends of the spectrum,
Meyer said.
" R ighr now Marshall is a program
that knows how to win .. Bowling
Green is a program that's hopefuUy
starting to learn how to win a .little
bit," said th e former Notre Dame
assistant. "You look at a school like
Marshall , it's not by accident that
'those teams win. They are prepared,
they expect to win and they play to

PREP V-BALL

Stockton signs
for two more

Worsbip • 3 p.m.

Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7~30 p.m.

SNOUFFER FIRE &amp;
SAFETY SALES &amp;
SERVICE

HIGHLIGHTS

Sabbath School - 2 p. m.

l

f ull Gospel Lighthouse
Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a. m.

Fellowship

NEW HAVEN

Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School · iO a. m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday s~rv ice s- 7 p.m.

In Christ Chufch

992• 5432
110
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
FLOWER SHOP
PHARMACY
106 BU'ITERNur AVE.
We ~Ill Doctors'
Po~ov,OH 992-64S4
Prescriptions
'Flowers for all occasions"
99~·2955
Pomeroy

Brogan-Warner

Pentctoslal Assc:mbl~
St. Rt. 124. Racine

Pastor: Luwrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a. m.
Evening- 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service- 7 p.m.

3304~

Church of the Narorene
Pastor: Te resa Waldeck

White funeral Home
Since 1858
9 fifth Street
Coolville~ Ohio

l't·nll·t·o~t a I

ML Olive Community Chun:h

United Faith Church
Rl. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass ·
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith. Sr.
Sundli)' School· 9:30a. m.
Wul'llhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Middleport Churth of lhe Nazarene
Postor: Allen Mldctlp
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship · !0: 30a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.
Pastor: Allen Midcap

FRIDAY's

SAturday Serv ice~:

Wednesday 7:30p.m.

:\a t.a rt'lll'

S11lem Community Churth
Lic\'ing Road, West Columhia, W.Va .
PAstor: Clyde l'errell
Sunday School9:30 am
Sund lty evening serv ice 6 pm
Wednesday SCI'\' ice 7 pm

Seventh-Day Adnntlst
Mulberry Hts, Rd.. Pomeroy
Pllli!Or: Roy Lawinsk.y

Jo'alth Gospel Church
Long Bottom
Sunday School -9:3 0 a. m.
Worship - 10:45 a. m., 7:30 p.m.

Torth Church
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wofship ~ 10:30 a. m.

Pastor: Jane Bennie
Wonr.hi p • 9 a.m
Sunday School · \0 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Syrafuse Firwt Church or God

Morse Cl\apt:l Church
Sunday ~hool - 10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p. m.

Grand Street
Sunday Schoo l - !Oa.m.
Worshi p - l l ll.m .
Wednesday Se rvices- 8 p.m.

Mels" Coopt:ralive Par·b1h
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pa.slor: June Beauie
Sumlay Schoo l - 9JO1Un.
Worship- II ~.m .. 6:30p.m.

Rulland Churth or God

Dyesvlllt Communlly Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m.. 7 p.m.

Hocklnuporl Chun:h

Mt. Olivt Unitt.-d Methodlal
Off 124 behind Wilkesv ille
Pastor: Rev. Ra lph Spires
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 11.111 .
WOrshjp - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p. m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

( 'hu rdl or ( ;od

Sunday Schoo l · 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 10:30 a. m.. 7:30 p.m.

Belhel Chu rch
Town~h ip Rd .. 4l'iRC
Sund ay School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a. m.
Wc=dnesday S~rviccs- 10 n. m.

l nilt•d \ll'lhmlist

Hartford C hurth ofChrislln

Hazel Community Church •
• OITRt. 124
PaMor: Edsel HKrt

Coolville Uniled Methodi'it l aris h
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coollli llc Ch11rc h
Main &amp; Fi flh S1.
Sunday School - 10 a. m.
Worship - 9 a. m.
Tul!lday Services - 7 p.m.

Pasmr: Wayne Balcolm
Services: Thurs. Nites 7:00 pm
New church No Sunday se rvice
estab lished.

Syracu!it: Fil'!rlt United Pmlhyterlan
PaMor: Rt!v. Krisana Robinson
Sunday School - 10 a. m
Worship · I I a.m.

SyraCuse Mlssloa
1'41 1 Bridgeman St., Syracuse
Rev. Mike Thompson,Paslor
Sunday School - I 0 a.m.
E11cning • 6 p. m.
Wednesday S~rv ice- 7 p.m.

1

S1. Paul Lulhcran Church.
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second S1.. Pomeroy

Antiquity Baplist
Sunday Schoo l - 9:30 n. 111.
Worshi p · IU:45 a.m.
Sunday Evc=ning · 6:00p.m
Pas1or: Mark McComus

Middleport Communily Churth
575 P~ MI St., Middleport
Pus lor: Sam Anderson
Su.ndny School 10 a. m.
Ev~ ning ·7:30p.m.

W.Vu .

Pnstor: David Russe ll
Sunday School - 10:00 u.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Christian Union

Mt. Moriah Baplist

HarriS()nvllle Communily Church
Pastor: Theron Durham
Sunday-9:30a.m. an d i p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Sundny School - 10 a. m.
Worship- I I a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Our Saviour Lutherain Churth
Walnul and Ucnry Sts., Ruvcnswood,

•·ort!st Run Baptist
Su nday School- 10 a.m.
Worshi p · II a.m.

Racine
Pastor: Brian Harkness

God's Temple or Praise
31665 Mr.:Quirt: Rd . Pomeroy, Ohio

New Li me Rd., Rutland

Morning Star
Pastor: Oewayne Stutler
Suoduy Schoo l · II a.m.
Wm!i hip - 10 a.m.

Worship · 9:00 a.m.
SchCMll- 10:00 a.m.

Services: Saturday 2:00 p.m.

Pastor. Rev. Margaret l Robi nson
Sen.·ices: Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, 2~1 0 p. m.

Bible Sind)' Wed. 7:00 p.m.

Sund~y

Savior
Antiquity
Paslor: Jesse Morris
Rt.3~8.

The Bellenrs' Fellowship Ministry

Ca~nei·Sulton
Cannel &amp; Bushan Rds.
·
Racine. Ohio
Pastor: Dcwaync SlUiler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.

St. John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove

Full Gospel Cbun:h of the Llvln11

Faith FuU Gmopel Church
Long Bottom
Pas tor: Steve Reed
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 9:30 a.m. and 7 p. m
Wcdne~duy • 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowship service 7 p. m.

Bethany
Pustor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvit'es • 10 a.m.

I ,utht•ran

New Life Vldory Ce nter
3773 Georges Creek: Road, Ga llipo lis, OH
Pa stor: Bill Slaten
Sunday Services- tO a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

Abundtlnt Grace R.F.I.
923 S. ThinJ St., Middleport
Pastor Teresa Davis
Sunday service, I0 a.m .
Wednesday service. 7 p.m. ·

East Letarl

Pasmr: Philip Sturm

Pa_~tor:

713-50 17

Snowville
Sunday School - I0 a.111.
Worship- 9 a.m.

Pasto r: Brillrt Harkness
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.
Wo~hip · 9 a.m.
W~dn esd ay • 7 p.m.

Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7 p.m.

Serv1ce time: Su nday 10:30 H.m.
Wedn~sday 7 pm

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce
Su nday School-9:15a.m.
Worship· 10:\S a. m.

Rejoicing Life Cbun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport
Pastor: Mike Foreman
PaStor: Emeritus La.wrc=nCc Foreman
Worship- I0:00am
Weo.Jn~sday Services - 7 p.m.

Cllhon Tlbermu:le Chun:h
Clifton, W.Va.
Sunday Schoo! - 10 a.m.

"Full -Gospel Church"
Pastors John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason

Worshi p - 10:30 u. m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

or

Langsvlllr: Chrislian Church
Pa~tor: Rohc11 Musser

St. R1. l4JjustoffRt. 7

Wlo'Sieyan Bible Holiness ChurTh
75 Pearl St. , Middleport.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

The Chun:h Jesus
Chrisl of Latter-Day SainiS
St. Rt. 160.-446-624 7 nr 446-7486
Sunday School 10:20- I I a.m.
Relief Society/Priesthood I I :05· 12:00
noon
Sacra mCflt Service 9- 10: I5 a. m.
Homemakin}!: meeling, I st Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Community Chun:h
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewdl
Sunday Services- 10:00 a. m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Thursday -7:00p.m.

Agape Lire Center

Rock Spring~
Pastnr: Keith Ruder
Sunday s,:hoo!- 9: 13a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.
You th Fe llowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.

Latlt•r-l&gt;a\ Saints

Stiversv ill~

Harvest Oulreach Mlnlstrir.s
47439 Reihc=l Rd., Chest~r
Pastors: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sundny Sc=rvices: 10 am. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wcdnesduy Services- 7 p.m.

Pumeruy
Pastor: Rod Browt:r
Worship - 9:30a. m.
Sunday Sl·hool-. !0:35a.m.

Crusade For Ch rist

Cal,·acy Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pas1or: Rev. Blackwood
~unday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worshir 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30 p.m.

Ash Street Church
Ash St., Middleport·
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Su nday Service - 6:00 p.m.
Wednes®y S.ervice - 7:00 p.m.

Pe-arl Chapel
Sunday School · &lt;.J a.m.
WoNhip • 10 a.m.

F~llowship

Stn•icc=: Friday, 7 p.m.

•

Laurel Cliff Free Methodjst Church

Brudfurd Ch~n:h of Cltri51
C11rnc r (lf St. R1. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .
Mini st~ r: Douc Shamblin
Youth Min ister: Bill Amberger
Sun day School-9:30a.m.
Wnn; hip - H:fK) a.m .. IO:.lO a.m .. 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Sen· ice~ · i:OO p m.

Sunday &amp;hoot - 9:30a.m.
· Worship - 7:00p.m.
WednesdB )! Bible= Study· 7:00p.m.

Pll!l tur: Rev. Franklin Dkkens

Community of Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd .
Pustor: Mk'huel Duhl
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a. m. ,
Wednesday Ser.rit•cs- 7:00p. m.

Minersville

Pastnr: Dona ld Balis
Sunday s~· hoo l - Y:~O a,m.
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p. m.
Wednesday Scr.rice · 7:00 run.

Lttan. W.Va. Rt. I
Pastor: Brian May

•·ailh

Othl·r Churdws

Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday Sc hool · 9 a. m.
Wnrship • 10 a.m .

Rl'V. Mark Mit·hael
.
Sunday Sc hno l ·9:30a.m.
Worsh ip · 10:45 a.m .• 7 l't -111TIJUrMiuy Bible S1udy uud Yout h · 7 p.m.

Church of Chrisl
Sunday School- 9:3Ua.m
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

Pas10r : Juc N. Suyre

Sunday School - 10:00 a.m .
Morning Worship· 10:45 a.m .
Suno.lay Service· 6:30p.m.

Pastor: Rob Browe r
Sunday School - 9:30 u.m.
Worship - I I :00 a.m.

Run Holiness Church

Fairview Blbl~ Church

Portland First Chun:h ot lbe Nazan!ne
Pas1or: William Justis

Pint Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mile nff Rt. 32~
Pastor: Rev. O'De ll Manley
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · !0:30a.m .. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvi~.:c: ·7:30 p.m.

ll ys~ ll

Coolville Rood
Pa)tor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
SundaY. School ·9:30a.m.
Wun.hip • 10:30 a.m.
Wt."llnesday Service- 7 p.m.

· Sunday Sehoul - 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

He•th (Middleport)

Pastor: Rev. Doua Cox
. Sunday Worship · 1}:30 p.m.. 1:30 p.m.
Wcdnesda)' Sen•ice · 7:30p.m .

Rull~~ond

MI. Union Baptist

Sunday School - 10 1.111.
Wo~hip- 9 a.m.

Friday, Sptember 18, 1001

While'§ Chapel Wr.sleyan

Rutland Church or the Naurene
Pastor: Rev. Samuel W Uasye

Ruti11nd

Bradbury Church of Christ
Pustor: Jim Eaton
395.58 Bradbury Rood. Middlepon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wnr~hip - 10 ~ 30 a.m. ,.

Slh-er Run B1p1ist .
Paslor: Sleven K. little
Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship - I I a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-. 7:00p.m.

DMn\·ille Holiness Chu~h
.~1057 Suue Route .n.~. Langs\'lle
Pa~tnr: Gary Jackson
Sunday sehoul · 9:30a.m.
Sunday W110hip , IU:JO a.rn . &amp; 7 p.m.
Wcdnc~Jay pra)cr sen,ice • 7 p.m.

Frtedom Gosptl Mi5sion
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31
PAstor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School- 9:30 u..m.
Worship- 7 p.m.

Wednesdlly Services - 7 p.m.

Foresl Run

Page 81

No Sunday or Wednesday Nighl Services

Cbesttr Churdl ot tbe Naartrw
Pastor: Rev. Herben Grute
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m.. 6 p m.

Pastor: Bob Robin~

Rose of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek. Rd .. Rullantl
Pa~tor: Re,·. Dewey King
Su nday school· 9:30 u.m.
Sunduy worshl~ ·? p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Zion Chun:h or Christ
P1l111eru}. H ani~nvillr: Rd. (Rt . 14 3)
Pustur: R~er Watson
Sundoy S~hoo l • 9:JO a.m.
Wnn;hip · IO:)Oa. lll,, 7:00p.m.
W\•dncsrJay Sl'r.,ices·. 7 p.m.

First Kapfist Church
Pa,tor- Mark ~· l oml\\
6th and Pnlme1· St . Middleport
Sund:~ y s~·hool · 9:15a.m.
Worship - \0:15 t~ . m .. 7:00p.m.
\\'ednc..Uay Scn•ire- 7:00 p. 111.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
W&lt;)rship • I I a.m.

C11lvar}' l'il~; rim Chapel
Hurrisonville Road
Pastor: Charles Mt· Kenzie
Sunday Schooi 9:.\0 a.m .
Worship - II Ll.lll .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servi'ce - 7:00p.m.

lh~llr~·ulln"'·

Ra~pti ~ l

,)l,.u..U:f.i\.1-..;- 9.3{, ....'b.

Ra~cr

Pa,tor: Re,·. Amos. Tillis
Muin Street, Rutlant.l
Sunday Wor!ihip-10:00 a.m.
Sunday Senice-7 p.m.

•

Prep golf notes, Pagl.' B3
Miami tops Pitt. Page B3
Diamond Rormdup, Page B6

Swlday School- 9 :30a.m.
\,Vnn.lup Scrvttt I0'30 a.m

Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service5-? p.m.

Flatwoods

Pastor: Keith

y

Keno Chu rt"h of Christ
Wo1r~hip -li: ma.m.
Suild&lt;~~ SchLI\11 · IU:lO a.m
Pa,ll •'r-ktlrr::) \\lalb~·e
l"l anJ )nJ Suud&lt;~)

Ruthtnd Fir-st Hnplist l'hurl'h
SunJa~ Sclli &gt;OI - 1.U O a.m.
\\ ,1rsh1 p - 10:-1 5 11.111

Pomeroy f'int

llolilll'SS

1\liddlepnrt Chun:h or Chrisl
5th w1d Muin
P:t~tor: AI Hanwn
)\ltl\h Minh1a: Bill Fr.t1i~r
Sund11y Seh01•l 9Jil a.m ·
Wor.htp- H : l~. IO:JO a.m, 7 p.m.
\h-Jn esda) Sen1~e~ - 7 p.m.

p.w. sen:K.

Ente rprise
Pastor: Keith Rade r
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunda)' Schoo l and
Holy Eucharist II :00 li.lll .

\\ eslsidr Church of Chrisl
J.\116 ChtlJft'n·~ Hnmc Rd
Sunday SchO&lt;ll · 11 a.m.
Wor,hip - !Oa.m . t&gt; pIll
.Wcdnc..Uay Sen n:e' - 7 p.m

1 -· i ~w

Central Ou_'ill'r
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor: Bob Rollin-.on
Sund!ly ~chool- lJ4~ a.m.
Wor~hip - II n.m,
WeUillisday Sen· icc~ · 7 : ~0 p.m.

E pisropal

Pomrro~ Chun-h of Christ
~I:!\\ . ~lain St.

Chun:b of the Nn~~rent
Pastor. Jan Uwc-nder

Tuppers Plains St. Ptn.d
P'.&amp;Stor. Jant Beantc
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Tuesday Servkel&gt; - 7:30p.m.

Trinil) Church

Hernlo..·k t;ro,t Christian Church
Pu...wr: Ri~h ttrJ N('a'lt.'
Sundt~ Scho:l\tl- 111 J011 m
\\ur-lnrr9 ~n IIIli
R1hlc Stud)
m.

huth

Fii"Zi ;:,wklay vl1Vi.:ih

The Daily Sentinel ·

Inside:

CarJdoa lnte-rdeftom in~~tiooal Churd
K.ing~&gt;hury Road
Pastor-: Robeo Va.ncC"

PQQ~roy

Wur..hip - 9:30a. m.
SWKiay Sl:honl • 10:30 a m.

- ·--.
( ·un~rq~ational

( 'hurrh of ( "hri~t

c•un::h o1 tht Nuamw
Pastor Mike Adkins
Stmday School • 9 :30a.m
WoNhip - JO:JO a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv~. 7 p.m.

Rft'lkville

Woo.hip - 11 a.m.
Wet.lncsdll)' Scf'\ii:C) - 7 p.m.

Sun Con -X .t~ 'J. I5a·m.
Sun Ma~~ - 9 ::\0 am
lJail~) \1;M - H "} :un

Soulll Bethel Ntw lHCaJatDI
S1hc:t Ridge
Pastor: Rohtrt Rarber
Sooday School· 9 a.m.
Sun. WOI'Ihip- 10:10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Ser'i~et • i p.m.

Synr~

Lona Bottom
Sunday School -- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

OJ. While Rd. off St. Rt. 160

m . \1ass- 5 : ~0 p m

Sunday School - 9" JO a.m.
WorVup • 10:45 a.m.• 7 p m.
WedoeMby Servit:es. - 7 p.nl .

Worship . 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:)() a.m.

Cbur&lt;lo otGod ol Proph«y

Sacrtd Ht-art C1tholk Chun:h
tbl Mul"crn A\e .. Pomeroy. 992-~898
Pastor· Re\. Walter E- Hetn7 .

Sut Con _.

Jopp1
Pascor: Bob R&amp;ndolph

Surv.l&amp;y SchoulllfKI. ~ship- 10 a.m.
Evcmng Sen JttV 6:3Q p.m.
Walntsday Servic~s · 6:30p.m,

7 ptn

( ·a tholi r

Rinr \ '11Ut•y
A("ll"toh~· Wuf':itur O.·m~r
!1:71 S. 1nJ A, e.. M1dl.l)cpon
r..~Hn 1\.unlte. PwO'r
Sunda). lOa 111. andti.OOp.lll
\\ednesday. 7:_~ p.m.• Yomh t-n 7: lOp m.

FridaY. Sept. 28. 2001

Pomerov. Middleport, Ohio

Paae A 6 • The Dally Sentinel

WE'RE IN A TIGHT SPOT- Reds starter pitcher Lance Davis pauses after walking two straight Phillies bat·
ters In the fourth Thursday in Philadelphia. The Phlllies didn't score , and Davis made it to the seventh
inning before being relieved. (AP)

5

5
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - J ohnny Estrada signaled
for a pickoff attempt, saw the runner on· third break
for home and couldn 't believe it.
·
"You're not afraid to throw to first with a catcher
on third ," Estrada said. "I saw him coming and said
'Oh • no." '
Corky Mill er stol e home on a planned suicide
squeeze, and Lance Davis pitched two-hit ball over
six innings, leading the Cincinnati R eds to a 2- 1 vic"
to ry over the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday night
The Phillies missed a chan ce to tie Atlanta for first
place in the NL East The Braves lost at Florida 7-1 ,
but stayed one game ahe'ad of Philadelphia .
"We can't keep hoping for teams to beat other
teams," Phill ies manager Larry Bowa said.
C incinnati took a 1-0 lead on :In R.BI sin gle by
.Wilton Guerrero in the fifth .Todd Walker and Miller
started the inning with singles off Omar Daal. After
Davis sacrificed, Walker scored on Guerrero's liner to
left.
-· Miller theu stole home when Daal threw t&lt;r first on

a pickoff attempt, giving the Reds a 2-0 lead . 1t was
Miller's first ca reer steaL
"As soon. as he picked up his leg, I wanted to go as
fast as I can and that's not f.1SI," Miller said.
Daal said th e same thing happened to him in a
game several years ago: H e was surprise d to see Estrada call for a pickoff.
"The sign comes from the d~ gou t," Estrada said.
"You don't an ticipate th e catcher breaking for th e
plate."
·
Davis (8-3) allowed sin gles to Estrada in th e th ird
and J immy R.ollins in the sixth. He left after th e first
rwo batters reached in th e seventh.
Scott Sulliv;m retired six of seven batters in the seventh and eighth, and Danny Graves pitched the ninth
for hi s 29th save in 35 chances.
Th e fifth -place ll..eds won two of three against the
Phillies for their second straight series vi ctory.
" We swung at a lot of bad pitches, a lot," Il owasaid
Please see Reds, BJ

RACINE- Again flying high above the
competition, the Eastern Eagles defeated
rival South ern in two se ts 15-4, ·15- 10
Thursday night to remain undefeated at 120 in th e Tri-Valley Conference Hocking
Division volleyball rankin gs. Overall, Eastern is 14-2, while Southern drops to 4-7 in
th e league and overalL
Eastern went up 9-0 in th e first game on
se rves by Janet Calaway, Kass Lodwick, and
Alyssa Holter. T he Eastern serving was
exception ally sharp in this game, as the Eagle
gals got a deceiving drop on the ball in placing every serve in play and de ceiving the
South ern defenders .
Southern finally got on the board when
En1ily Hill served to points to break the
shu t-out bid. Nikki Phillips notched a point
for a 10- 2 EHS tally, and Southern 's Brandi
Lane matched that effort. Bissell, Calaway,
and Hol ter mopp ed up with a 5-1 charge to
end the game at 15-4.
In the second ga me, Southern went up 20 on serves by Deana Pullins and Katie Sayre.
Holter then took over with seven straight for
a 7-2 Eagle lead. Eastern let! 9-2 and 12-2
around Southern time o uts, before Emily
Hill made. a g reat save and Kati e · Sayre
dropped in a din)&lt; to capture the serve for
Southern.
•
South ern ralli ed around three Rachel
C hapman serves before Calaway recorded
points 13 and 14 . Deana Pullins added five
more serves for Southern to tighten the
score at 14- 10, but on ce Southern lost the
serve Nikki Phillips added the game-wi nner
at 15-10.
Eastern was led by Alyssa Holter who wai
red ho t at 13-for- 14 with fou r aces and a
game-high 12 points, senior Janet Calaway
went 8-of-1 0 serving with six points and an
ace, Tammy Bissell was 8-of-8 serving with
an ace and six poinl,, Kass Lodwick added
four points and an ace with a perfec t 4- of-4,
and Phillips was 3-of- 3 with two points .
Eastern wa s 38-of~4 1 servin g overalL
Calaway had eight assists in an 18-of-28
setting ni ght, Tiffeny Bissell was 4-of-7, and
Phillips was 5-of-7 with three assists. Eastern
dominated at th e net both defensively and
offensively. Whitney Karr led the Eagle
assault with a perfect 10-of- 10 and five kills;
Tan)my Bissell was 5-of-6 with two kills ,
Katie Rob ertson had two kiUs, and Kass
Lodwi ck was 8-of- 10 with three kills.
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt sai~e
playecl.I.QIIy well the fim game :lnd':;ITiUght
long we missed just three se rves. We had a

.Please see Eastem. BJ

Tressel: Bellisari will start for Buckeyes
COLU1v\13US (AP) - The great
quarterback controversy at Ohio State
was over before it started.
Steve 'Bellisari, the starter for the last
two years·, is again scheduled to start Saturday when the Buckeyes play at Indiana in their Big Ten opener.
"My feeling was that unless he just
had a h orrendous Tuesday, Wednesday
·and Thursday, Steve Belli sari deserves to
be our quarterback;' coach Jim Tressel
said Thursday. "That doesn't mean he
wiU ·always be our quarterback but I
certainly didn't prolong the thougl1t:'
Bellisari completed only 5-cif-23
passes in a 13-6 loss at U C LA. He hit on

only one of his last 17
passes.
~rly in the week,
Tressel did not deny
that he was t.1king a
hard look at starting
Scott M cMull en, a
sophomore back- up.
"After the game oh
Saturday, we dido 't
Belllsarl
have a chance to evaluate everytlung," Tressel said. "After reviewing the ballgame,
we had less thought of changing but not
about how much better we had to get
at that position ."

Tressel also said tha1 his comments
After Thursday's practice, O hio State
quarterback coac h Joe Daniels said there about McMullen's chan ce of starting
we"' not intended to mislead reporters
never was a quarterback controversy.
•'Not here," Daniels said. " I guess in or to give Bellisari extra incentive.
" I already had a pretty good idea on
other places around Columbus there
Monday
and Tuesday, but I wanted to
was.'' ·
Daniels said he wasn 't even aware that watch llellisari and McMullen practice
there was any discussion of unseatin g this week," he said.
Tres~el sard that what Bellisari needs
Ilellisari as the starter.
Daniels said the only time he serious- to do to solidifY the position is to play
ly considered replacing Bcllisari was consistendy better.
"The key to the quarterback position
when he got tip limping after a play at
is having prolonged consistency;' Tressel
Saturday's game.
said.
"Whether you're a coach, a righ~
" I never said anything to Tress ·about
changin g qu . ~rterbacks after Steve tackle or a quarterback, the key is prolunged consi!itency.''
limped back to •he huddle," he said.

��Friday, Sept. 28, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 4 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, Sept. 28, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 5
Sill DOl:

NEA Crossword Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

P/B

WICK'S

Hauling &amp;
Excavating

-~

H1uling • Limestone
• Gravel Sand •
Topsoil • Fill Dirt
• Mulch
Bulldozer Services

(740) 992-3470

CONTIIACTORS, INC.
J;;;:;:i&gt;-M Bashan Roadl
Racine, Ohio

45771

740-949-22t7
SlzM5' X 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

Roclne, Ohio 45771

~ ~tttfiA9

• Top • R&amp;moval • Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Buck&amp;t Truck

High &amp; Dry
Self-Storage

Tree Service

Free eatlmatea,
Insured
Specialize In new
constr.-'ctlon,
~modeling, plumbing,

electrical, home maJnlenance, and repair
porches, &amp; decks.
Owner
Charles R. Dill

Ph0nt992·7445
Cell hone 591·9254

Male. Shut

In
Home visit

Haircuts
Available

MaintenanceGutters· Down
Spout
Free Estlm1tt1

liiiii/WIIl
Min.

lllt.J
TIUIUrl Pll5ls

ll49-1405
591·5011

661-1329
HOME CR E EK
ENTERPRISES
-

.33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

992-7943

Deal~rs

1000 St. Rt. 7 South
Coolville, OH 45723

740187-G381

'If llhcUII.III

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

by appolntmenl
(740) 698-0757
SPECIAL 10% Discount
on Collector Items

Mack's Pocket
lveo &amp;: Collectlbl
217f:, 2nd, Pomeroy

740-992-1"71

992-5908

WINTER STORAGE

JERRY'S
USED
COMPUTERS
441 BlltiCh St.

Middleport, OH

992-9158
Free eotlmatea

&amp;

accept~d

in

Meigs County.
Dump Truck Delivery.
Meigs and Mason
County

Bob Ball
1:740·992-6142
or
1 ' 877 -604-7350

Sheriff's Sale
The Slate of Ohio,
Melga County, ss.
Pursuant to the
command of and
Order of Sale Issued
from the Court of
Common Pleas of said
County and to me
directed, In the action
ot National City Bank

v. James Patterson, et
al., defendants.
I, Ralph Trussell,
Sheriff, shall .olfer lor
sale at public auction,
at the door of the

BISSELL

Newa'pu;~er·s,

BUILDERS INC.

Nr..,.&lt;rptl~r"' U IX',.liott

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

or certified chock, 10% Covington, Meaaenger
deposit on sale date
Newman I Thomas
and balance paid
Co., L.P.A.
within 30 days olaale.
Jerry M. Bryan,
Ralph Trussell, Sheriff
Attorney
beginning, containing
Henderson,
(9) 28, (10) 5, 12
661100 of an acre.
Reserving to the State
of Ohio, however, all
oil, gas, coal and other'
minerals with the right
to entrY\ for the
purposes
of
prospecting
for,
developing, producing
or operating lor the
same, and the right of

Courthouse, In the occupancy Insofar as

AT. 7 PIZZA &amp; RACINE
PIZZA EXPRESS

''

• Replacement
Windows • Room
Additions • Rooflng

COMMERCII! and REIIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES
SUNDAY CALLS)

.

••

Vulnerable Both

LUCIUS &amp;.YMe., T~ Je. IS G.O. BOO~ A.NO
""V EQY 6 . PEC.KIDG€ - Wt. c;.t..U.. Ht:R

OF

WINDOWS HEAT
MIRROR TECHNOLOGY .
KEEPS THE
SUMMERTIME HEAT
OUT AND WINTER
TIME HEAT IN
BLOCKS OUT 911.5%
OF DAMAGING
ULTRAVIOLET RAYS
FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

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

GOTTA GO,LUKE'f !!

WH'f YOU ROMANTIC
DEVIL, YOU ! !

WtiAT'$

T~f

/

-

TtiAT

NO ONf

GOT .net:
TOl&gt;AY.

... .
•

'.J.o

·. ' - ~

.

• •••

.

THE BORN LOSER .
'

1-\[ LLO, c:EN:.. 1

~&lt;::x.JGI, Dt&gt;..Y t&gt;..T ,

oc Cf"fl(£ -r

/'

'

I

ARTllR, I./ILL YOU EXCUSE
U5? I NEED TO !&gt;PEAK
TO NATE .
HOK,a.'(. 8UT
FIRST, MUST .

Roofing • Gutters • Siding
Decks • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring ,
Pressure

SAY SOI'\E •
THINC:.
ALSO .

.NAT!:, I DO NOT LIKE
FOR YOU 10 QUIT CHESS
TEAM BECAUSE r "'1'1
NUMBER ONE PLAYER .
YOI.I 8E NU11BER ONE
,O,&amp;AIN. "'Nl&gt; I 0/ILL liE
NUMBER TWO .

992·9200 949-4900

FLEA
MARKET

-...;~

St. Rt.l:W
Between Racine

-Gets·•

Spa- A'nllable

Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

Pb. 949•Z'7J4

1:t

ea.~teowltb

............t
Stand open.

luUHOik

"Q,udity WOrk"
Cars, Tractors,
Lawn Furniture,
Boat. Trailers,
Utility Tralleri,
Car Haulers, •
Anything Metal

Maplewood Lake

Custom Computers

New Business Opening
Oct. 1

SUE'S SELECTABLES

Free Estimates

on the 'T' in Middleport, Ohio

740-992-1101
or992-2753

74b-992·0298
New Adult, Youth League

TRI-COUDTY
TRRDSPORT

Mason .Bowling Lanes
Forming Sun. Sept. 30 7:00 p.m.
Family Fun &amp; Atmosphere
Mason , WV 304· 773,5300

Complete Line or Sulllvon"o Grooming Supplleo
• Sulfur Coated Urt1, bulk only, $128.00 per ton
•10% oil all Prlelert Horaa and Livestock Equip.
•1().1().10 All Purpou Fertilizer $4.501501
• 9,000 Baler 1\vlne $19.50/Sale
•18,000 Baler 1\vlne $21.50/Bale

llladi Rlvu Ag Service, Inc
35537 St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 4576Q
Phone: 740·985-3831 • Fax 740-985-3851

Umellonel

TREE SERVICE

muutple LHd

Top • TriiD • R81DDV81

Stolon Dlscounb
Discount&amp;

•

U!f.lAT A MISERABLE DAV ...
EIGI-IT D·MINUSES WITI-l
MORE TO COME ..

MAAM?

· fl'EE . ·

I LIKE' PERMISSION TO 60
TO THE PENCIL Sf.IARPENER, TI-lE
DRINKIN6 FOONTAIN AND TilE MOON

£$1\1·~ £$ .

~t
Sherman White
7411-992·7832

Come oarty with
BC and The Longhairs
Sal., Sept. 29th

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

Pan
Plu

PHIWP AlDER

WE CAN. HELP
ll
\I
.

·•

35 Give the

givers

cold

8 JFK

liehlclea

9 wash
1o Qatar
ruler
11 "Rhtlngold'"
19 Medicationapproving
agcy.
21 Faultllndero
24 Tul
25 Mythical
giant
26 Ralreohlng
ver1e writer 27 Congers
4 Prlnceu ·
28 Leave
out
Grace' a
29 Habit
realm
wearer1
5 Lathe
33 --care
6 Kitchen
center
Item

materl1l

34 Sib
35 "Gal'" of
song
37 One-million
(rorej

ohoulcler
36 Liked • lot
39 Put up
with
40 Computer
datum
41 Light-bulb
Inventor
43 Popular okl
reoorl
.... - molar
45 Placed
47 Wyo.
neighbor
46 Gerdln
green
49 Lo- - (not
fottenlngl
51 NYC'I
Madleon,
a.g.
53 Chum

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campoa
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands for another.

Todsy's clue: J equals U

'C N

LXSGAL

vy

XFHXGGXKA.

c

vy

y

DJA

CSRVKT
V'W

CPEVXY,

SIIXSO

vu

SKPALXO

VK

A LX

OVTLA

I

l
I

z

I
1~.·

I

~~~
,, re'ady to defe nd yo ur work
product.
CAPRI C OR~ (Der . 22Jan ~ 19) -- Optinti~m i!l an itttribut e with powt•rflll inspirational effens. whil e wi shful
thinking is usually scl f-d ilutmg , rc.·sulting in di~:.ppoi ntml.!n t. Don't be tempted by
the latter.
AQUARIUS U•n. 20-Feb.
_l~J) . - - _Guard ~gaimt strong
mchnauom tod.:&amp;y urgin K you

u po n wmco nc 's emoti ons in

order to attain his or her help
today. I t'~ not necessary, ~nd
it will only c~u~e resentment if
their feelings are abused. Trying to r :m:h up .:&amp; broken rom~nce . The Anro-Guph
M:nchnukcr can help yOu und~rstand what to do to make

GRAVEL
SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL
DIRT

the relationship work . Mad
.12.75 to Mmhmoktr, c/o this

METAL CULVERT
GEOTEXTILE
REBAR &amp; REWIRE

newspaper, P.O . Box 167 ;

to nuke unreasonable dcmands on your mate or co• hort. Everyone's tolmn&lt;c and

oppo&lt;ite gen&lt;ltr, if you •ppear
to be too s~l f-centtrcd today,

space

for
124 per month

them.
CANCER (June 21 -)uly
22) ~ - Ue lavish in the praise

'

of those who Jcst.•rvc it today,
ev e n with SOllll'O il e of whom
you 're not overly fond . How
you tre:~t ptople will rt:flect
upon how thcy'U trc;u you in
return.

PISCES (f•b. 20-March 20)
•• ile particularly coroful nut

WieklitTe, OH 44()92,0167.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov .

22) -· No matter how appealing and attra ctive you noimally arc to members of the

NO JOB TCiO LARGE OR SMALL

"\on of respect for you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- Even if yo ~ 1r goals or o bjcctivcs are d early defined today , unless they co me easily to
yoU, yo\1 might i1ot put the
cffon forward needed to fulfill

to overspend in hopes that
SOill t!how you'll be able to
p11y for j[ later. That day may
.,. never come: only the bills .
•

·'

'"

.
20) -- How you treat people
will be carefully s..:rutinizcd by
othcn today. lffricmls witness

any iU behavior there could be

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ••

Your 'ensc of value might
leave a lot to be dc8ircd today,
and this anomaly could become quite evident •hould

patienc;:.:: has its li111its, and you
might pu~h that special someone over the line.,
ARIES (Marth 21 -April 19)

you go •hopping. Take core of

you're not apt to receive high
mark~.

-- Unforum;uely. it might be
far t-:uicr for you to nuke
promise! today than to fulfill

what you purchase and how
much.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 2.1-

them . Sadly, however, that

~-

Dec . 2.1 ) ·- S om ~o nc might
· try to take crt&gt;dit today for
your accomplhhmcnt in n ca-

failure may end up costing
somcone's fotith in you . Su.nd
by your word .

reer &lt;ituation. Don't let that
~l·t ilway wit h i t; be

TAURUS (April 20-May

VIRGO (Aug. 2J ,Sept. 22)
In one-on-one rclationdtips

todrty tactfulntu and decorum
will have their place, but
m:~ke stir~ not to for~el the
subst:mce of the relationship.
It's the latter that counu.

penon

•

7 Shade

P K X
H S C X
SGPKT,'
opener shows a stopper in a suit at the
, T.,OXKK
up 0 w
three l levef, or bids
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All are but pa~s of one stupendous
three no-trump with
whole, I Whose body Nature Is, and God the soul."Alexander Pooe
ace- king-queen-sixth,
or signs off in his own
WOlD
suit with a minimum.
GAM I
In other words , he
makes rebids similar
O Reorronge
letter• of the
four
a&lt;:romblod
wordo bo·
to those he .produces
low to form four olmple words.
if the responder uses
the two-no-trump inR 0 NUJ I
quiry.
2
Against six hearts,
I
1 I I
West leads the spade
T 0 GA L
two. How should
South continue?
3
West's card has all
1
the aura of a singleton. And since one
:, L AI T w ::
doesn't lead a single"Have you ever realized," a
I
ton with · only one
friend remarked , "that your inL.--L....J........J_.J......J
trump, it is dangerous
.........,.,....,....,.....,,....,~:-:--.come
is something you can 't live
"'
to play a heart immeH l A J D without or - - •. - •?"
diately. Instead, South
~ ~-Ms!"""TI-'"'6!"'""1'1-f G Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling · in the missing Wo~ds
cashes his club ace
you develop from step No. 3- below.
and two top dia.$ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
monds before ruffing
THESE SQUARES
, .
the diamond six in
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
the dummy . Then
TO GET ANSWER
declarer discards his .
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
second spade on the
IMndow. Havoc· Bilge- Pollen - ONE BONE
club king. Finally, he
1
d .
If you are over 60 you better stay out of dance clubs.
P1ays ah 0 ~umhp anf. · At that age it isn 't dancing , it's committing suicide ONE
c aJms s
Y t e~ea BONE at a time .
~
·
ter.

prob:~hilit y.
.
LIBRA {Sl·pt . 23 -0ct. 23) •
- T ake e m: tw t to impo~e

Advertise
In this

Pan

!•

pla y .1 mtjor role.- in your fidd ·
of cntk.w or in thl" V(•ar .1hcad.
whik luck \'ltill pl;y a minor
wlc. Uccam e you 'r" up to
th.a t. advancement is a Hron g

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

'

Remodeling
• New O•rlgtl
• Eloctrlcol &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Guttoro
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing(
• Potlo ond Porch Dtcko
Free Eslimates

l"'lu
f'IU

....

DELIVERY AVAPLABLE
Fully lnaured

Pau
Pan

W

t

"'" ""' ' "" "''' wm

Community of Christ
· Portland,Aacine Road
10 am
Auction- Yard Sale- Games
Gospel Mu~ic- Refreshments.

4NT
6 .,

t•

I I I I

PEANUTS

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$49 Service gas, fuel oil; and
haat pumps for winter

BUCkel Service

Sat., Sept. 29

PIM

t:n~

1 Liniment
5 Korlovy
Very, e.g.
I Aoked
orclenlly
-12 B,..d
opro.-1
need
13 Rogulotlon 46 Twig
14 Dllal49 Oresoed
15 ChiU
50 Kind of
Ingredient
ohHI
t 6 Blyth or
52 II cQmtl In
Lander•
1 blr
17 "Wo l'f.
54 Pierre's
harder ' folk
girl
18 Knllllng or 55 Festive
crocheting,
night
e.g.
56 Eorthen l•r
20 Type of tube 57 Actraaa
22 Bank
Cheryl
oflerlngo
51 Llon"o
23 No, to 1
quartera
illllt
59 Holiday
24 Wotmlng
oong
drink
27 lncHn
DOWN
(2 wdo.j
1 Actor
30 lt"o - Newhart
(NASA OK)
2 Writer
31 Curved
Wough
letter
32 llloutv-PKI&lt; 3 Nonoenoe

Y

"Htlplng Yo~ ro Rtcovtr Your lnvurmm"'

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

l Y

N'IIIMII

W e have b ee n
studyin g w ea k tw obids. On W ednesday ,
w e learn ed that if the
res ponder is thinking
about ga m e in th e
opener's suit, he responds two no- trump ,
which asks for further
definition . Y et what
does it mean if the responder names a new
suit?
The Young Turks ,
whose weak twos
promise only 13
cards, usually treat it
as nonfor~ing. However, the saner. bidders
like you and me preter to play thn a new
suit is forcing fur one
·round. It indicates
that, at the least', the
responder is seriously
thinking about game .
And normally. the re sponder will have at
least six cards in his
suit .
How does the
opener react? He ·
should raise with any
three-card or doubleton top - honor sup- ·
port (or, for experts
only, show a singleton
at the four-level with
a particularly suitable
hand for partner' s
suit).
Otherwise

BARNEY

KENSINGTON ·

us,.......

• New Homea
•Siding
• Roofing
• Remodeling
• Garogeo
•AddHiona
• Oecko
• Horne Repolre

'1\'tlt

BY

FAITH FULL GOSPEL CHURCH
ROUTI 124, LONG BOnOM, OHIO

Free Estimates &amp; Insured

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?

Sou th

New suit

740-667-0600

1/2 PRICE

K Q 1Gtl11

Dealer· North

ALLEY OOP ® by Jack and Carole Bender

'We'll fi~ it or elsel".

Buy any Large
Pizza
Get Second

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BIG NATE

Raelne, Ohio

A

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.,

814~49·2202

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a. tati.\J2

OH
IELIEVIHO" •

~nodgrass' Upholstery

.. J ' 1 4

•

-5600 • 740.992-4119

~

I

• Q• 4 1

Sunday 9:3().. Sunday School;
I 0:30 • Preaching
Sunday Eve, 7:00 &amp; Wednesday Eve. 7:00

OUALITY
WINDOW
SYSTEMS

[740) 992-3194
. 992-6635

and Racine Road;
thence along North
aida of said road North
38 degrees West- 130'
to the place of

the same Is essential
to such prospecting,
developing, operating
or producing . Also
reserving to tho State
of Ohio the use of
streams
ll"owlng
through said lands or
abulllng upon the
same and so much of
banks thereof as may
be necessary for such
No. 16, Town No. 2, enjoyment and the
Range No. 12, Lot No. protection of such
6, Sutton Township, streams from erosion,
contamination
or
Melgo County, Ohio:
Beginning on the depooll of oedlment.
Dud:
Eeot aide of ·the Rolerence
Pomeroy and Racine Volume 273, Page 717
Rood 58 loot from a of the Melgo County
point which bears Daed Records.
Reference:
North 38 degrees West Prior
at the lnteroectlon of Volume 43, Page 271,
"Pomeroy end Racine Melga County official
Road with the Weal Recorda.
line o.l Section 18, oald Audltor'o Parcel No:
point being 91_6 feet 19·00253.000 and 19,
from the Southwest 00254.000
Tho
above
corner of Lot No. 8 In
Section 18; thence described property lo
North 52 degrees 56' further known ae
Eaot. 220 fall; thence property locoted at 3rd
South 35 dagreeo 41' Stroot In the City of
Eul 132 feet; thence Racine. 9hlo.
Approlaed
at
South 53 dogreeo 43'
Wool 218 loot to tha $25,000.00 Minimum
North elde of Pomeroy bid: $16,686.87
Tormo of oale: caah

•

(10'K10'-&amp;10'K28')

Your RIRhtto Kn•ow.
Delivered Right to Your

City of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio, on
Thursday, the 8th
day of November, A.D.,
2001 beginning at 11
o'clock A.M. of said
day, the following
described lands and
tenamenta to wit:
Situate In the Village
of Racine In Section

N-12 DOUBlE WAll
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FIRST COME.
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$200.00 PER JOINT
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For more information, come to our churrh site.

97 Beech st.
middleport, OH

RKine, OH 45771
Kenneth 1\1 rlty

Ololo

--

• Nearly 2000 years experience.
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24'120'

~

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MAW's PLA't'IN I
"OUR, SONG" !!

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

I~

Public Notices In

NOTICES

Parts Source

in this
Turley's space
Mattress for $50
Sales
per
month
(740) 949-2657
47869 Sllle Route

Advertise
in this space
for $100 per
month

hardware and
software.
LlcenM •530085ao

Advertise

Q

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In this space
for $25 per
month

Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodeling,
additions &amp; decks
Free estimates
10 yrs. experience
In the business
References
available. Owner:
Terry Lamm
74().992·0739

and up, used

. (740) 742-2925

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., J

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available 24 houra,
uHd ayatema 386

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.992-5479

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1111UM1111•

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrival:
Sept. 29 &amp; Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 a.m.· 4:00p.m.
Release:
April 27,2002
A fee of $20.00 will be charged for early
arrival, late arrival, early renewal, !ale
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
(740) 992-6954

Dental, Rel irement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
M on gage; M ajor M ed ical

All Makes Tri.ctor &amp;

IU.III
·1111111- •r

M edic are Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Fi nal Expenses; Cancer &amp;

PARft

ana

•

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·

.AlltEL

, Local 843·5264

. DIPOYSAD

.

General
Contractlni
ExcavatlnJ[ •
Dozer
Backhoe
Septic Systems
Utllitlaa
NewHomea

R. Hupp. Agent
B ox 189
Middlepc.rt. Ohio 45760
Rocky

Roofing ~ Hom

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• Footers, Walls, Steps •
Flat Work,
Replatements, • Walks
and Drives • Stencil
Crete Free Estimates
Serving Ohio and W.V.
wv 1103!711

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

HowardL.
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CONCRE1E/BLOCK/8RICK

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38 Spiro~
homed ,.
entelopes
40' Actreso
Palmer
42 Tramp
43 Give almo
44 Suspect's

ACROSS

',

'

�Page B&amp;

The Daily Sentinel

Friday. September 11. 1001

N.'ATIONAL LEAGUE

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Braves can't br.eak away
•

N•Uonal LNgu.
Eul
w l Pet
82 71
S36

(l-., 18-6), 3 20 p.m.

GB

American League

Mon.,.al (Yosllll 4-5) a1 Cincinnati
(Acevedo 5-41), 7:05p.m .

East

12· 15),705pm
Mlnnosola (Umon 14-7) al Clo..tand
(Sabalhla 15-5). 7:05 p .m .
Baltimore (.lo&gt;lnsoo 1j).lt)-OI NY Vank.ees (Mus-sina 15-11), 705 p m
v~Tarooto (ESOObat &amp;-7) al Ta"l)a Bay
(Rekar 2·13), 7 IS p m

w l Pel GB
Atlanta
on rhe right wri t p1· Bmn
Phiadelphoa (Pe&lt;soo IS.fi) a! Flonda x-New Yen
61
90
596
81
n
~
1
Thesa Atl;u:::a Br:rn..,; jmt Jordon's h;wr kadmg. on th~­
(~ 15-11), 105 ~"'
Boslur1 ·
76 75
14
50'
79' 74
516
3
NY Mets (Trachsel 10-121 at Atla',..a Tomoto
74
78
487 161/2
aren't abl~ to. pull away.
Flonda
71
82
464
11
(GiaVIOO 14-7). 7 35 p m
&lt;&lt;'t'llnd. Juan. Accvado (1- ~)
4!)1 29 1/2
Balbmont
61
91
Montreal
64 89
418
18
Greg M addux qu1ckly tdl allowed three h1ts 111 thret'
PittSburgh (RIIchte 11 - 13) at St 'Louis Tampa Bar
55
97
362 35 1/2
Chicago While Sox (Garland 6.6) al
Central
(Hermanson 13-13), 810pm
Centl'll
Kansas C1ty (Durbin 7-16), 8.05 p_m
behind · in the first thtt'l' ~t-oreiC"SS llllllrl~ .
w l Pel Ge Milwaukee (J Wnght 10.121 at Cotoraoo
w l Pel GB Texas {Myette 3...() at Anaheim (Valdes g.
flouslo&lt;\
91
62
595
(Eiarton 4-9). 9 05 p m
innings. and the Braves lost to
Clovwiand
17
65 .572
1l),100Spm
Mets 12, Expos 6
St louts
87
66
569
4
Los Angeles (Adams 12-8) al Arizooa Cl!icago
80 73
523 7 1/2
Oakland (Mulder 20-7) at 8eaHie (Garci&lt;l
the Florida Marlins 7- I
Ch&gt;cago
82
71
.536
9
(Schdlong 21-6), 10 OS p m
Pmch-hntcr Mrkc l'iazza.
Minnesota
80 73
17-6), 10 OS p m
523 7 112
Milwaukee
65
425
sa
26
San D.eoo (Mtdalebrook 1-0) at San Detroit
Thu~&gt;day night as the NL who d1d11 't li(Jft bt.'C3 LISC of .1
62
91
4!)5 25 1/2
S.turday'a G.mes
Cinclnn1U
63 90 .412
28
Franosco (Estes 8-8). 10 35 p m
Kansas City
60 93 .392 27 1/2
Mlnneso1a (Lohse 4-7) 11 Cle..tand
East tighte11l'd sonw morl'.
P1nsburgh
58
95
379
33
Saturday 's Games
brui&lt;,·d right thumb, lined ,\
Wesl
(Flnloy 8-6), 1:05 p .m.
West
N.Y Mels (leiter 11 ·10} at Atlanta (BurWith 10 days left in the ·thn·,·-run doubl,· in the ninth
w
l . Pel
GB Baltimore {Madura 4-6) at N.Y. Yankees
w l Pel GB kett 11-12). 1 15 p m
;~-Seattle
109
44
.712
(Hi1chcock 5·5), 4.05 p .m.
Anzana
regular season, the Braves arc as tht.' Mcts won tOr the
86 67
562
Houston (Miicki 11 -9) at Ch.cago Cubs y-Oakland
95
14
58 .621
Toronto (Halladay 4-2) ·at Tampa Bay
San Francisco 84 69 . 549
2
(Wood 11-6). 1.15 p.m .
one game ahead of second- eighth time in nine games.
Anaheim
as
.
74
79
.484
(Bie&lt;brOdl
3·6). 4 .15 p.m.
Los Angeles
81
72
529
5
Montreal (Thurman S.11) at Cincinnati Texas
73 83 .458
39
Boston (Cone 8-6) al Oetroil (Sparks 12Sa1. Otego
76
place Philadelphia and .three
77
497
10
(Oeuons~13),
1:15
p.m
.
Trading 6-2. the Mets
9), 5:05p.m
Colorado
68 85
444
18
Milwaukee (D'Amico 2-3) al Colorado x~inched diVision
in front of the charging M ets, scored twice in the sixth and
Chicago White Sox (BueMe 14-8) at
(Thomson 2·5) , 3 05 p m.
y-dinched wild card spot
Kansas c;,y (Suppan 9·13), 8:05p.m .
Thursday's Games
who play a three-game series once in the seventh, when
San Diego (JaNis 12-10) at San FrancisTe,.s (Helling 12·9) at Anaheim (Ortiz
Colorado 13, San Diego 9
co· (Or1tz 15·9), 4 ·os p m.
Thursday's Games
at Turner Field this weekend. first boscman Todd Zeilc Jlld
12· 10), 10·05 p.m.
NY Mets 12. Montreal 6
Pittsburgh (0 Williams 3-6) at Sl Louis Chicago White Sox 9, MiMesota 3
Oakland (Hiljus 4.0) al Seattle (Moyer 18Flonda 7, Atlanta 1
"The Mets, the Phillies (Smith 6·2), 4:10pm.
Dakland 6, Anaheim 2
Valentine - were
ejected .
5). 10:15 p.m .
Cincinnati 2, P:hiladelphla 1
Los Angeles (Baldwin 2-5) at Arizona Ta~ Bay 5. Toronto 1
it's the same thing. We have to R elaford hit a two-run
Houston 6, Chicago Cubs 5
(6atista 1G-B), .&amp;:12 p m
Baltimore 4, Boston 2
13,
Milwaukee
11
,
Anzona
win," Braves ca tcher Jav y homer in the eighth off Scott
Philadelphia (Ouckwonh 2- 1) at Florida Kansas City 8, Detroit 7
Friday's Games
(Penny 9·9). 7 05 p.m
Friday's Games
Lopez said. "We cou ld have Stri ckland (2-6).
Houston (Oswalt 14-2) at Chicago CubS
Boston {Nomo 12-9) at Detroit (Weaver
put more d istance on those
'
New York had 19 hits,
teams, but we didn't do it. including a tl'am- record 10
We'll have to do it when we doubles. Rick White (4-5)
American flag as he rounded
get ·back home."
pitched the seventh .
the bases following his 59th
Philadelphia, which could
The game drew 6,988, and homer, but he wasn't enough
have moved back into a ti e M ontreal finished its home
to carry the fading C ubs.
for first place, lost 2-1 at schedule with a team-recordIn the firs t game at Wri gley
BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS
home to Cincin nati . Th e low attendance of 619,451.
going to get the ball," Howe saying, "On his way to CoopField since the Sept. 1 I terM ets rallied ·from a four- run an average o£7,648.
The
Oakla nd Athl etics said. "He's earned that right."
rorist
attacks,
Shane
e~&gt;town , Cal, thanks for the
.deficit to wit·! 12-6 at Monalready have clinc~ed a playoff
D-backs 13, Brewers I 1 R:eynolds (13- 10) improved
The Athletics extended the memories."
treal.
slot. Now, Cory Lidle has majors' longest home winning
Randy Johnson (20-6) to 5-0 against the Cubs this
White Sox 9,1\vins 3
"We're playing for some- stru ck out 16 in 6 2-3 innings
locked up a spot in their post- streak since Cleveland took 18
season an d Vinny Castilla hit
Carlos Lee hit a two-run
Jhing now and I've never and became a 20-game winseason rotation.
in a row in ) 994, according to homer and Chicago won its
a three-nin homer off Kevin
been ·in a season where we've ner for the second time.
Lidle pitched the first com- the Elias Sports Bureau.
Tapani !9-14).
final home game of the season.
had something to play for,"
plete game of his career and
Johnson , who allowed five
Jason Giambi a high
H ousto n in creased its lead
The White Sox tied Minsaid Desi Relaford, who hit a runs, seven hits and two
the Athletics beat the Anaheim school tea nm1atc of Lidle's in the NL Central to four
go-ahead home run in · the walks, tied the rmjoi league
Angels 6-2 Thursday for their homered, doubled and singled n esota for second place in th e
games over idle St. Lou is.
eighth and an RBI double mark he already shared with
AL CentraL The defending
15th strai ght home victory.
Chicago has lost five of six
as Oakland won its seventh
during a five-run ninth.
Lidle, a throw- in from Tampa straight overall. Anaheim lost its champion White Sox trailed
Nolan Ryan with his 23rd and dropped five games
At Miami, Maddux (17-10) double-d igit .s trikeout ga me
the Twins by 15 112 games in
Bay when the A's got Johnny sixth in a row.
behind the Ca rdinals in the
pitched for the first tim e of the seaso n. He has· 366
May.
Damon in a three-team trade
wild card race.
O r io,les 4, Red Sox 2
since hyperextending his strikeouts, 17 shy o f R ya n's
Devil Rays 5, Blue Jays 1
in
the offseason, won his fourth
Rockies 13, Padre's 9
Cal
Ripken scored a run ii1
elbow Saturday in New York record.
Jared Sandberg hit_ a threestraight decision and improved his final game at Fenway Park,
Phil Nevin homered rwice
and gave up Cliff Floyd 's RBI
Visiting Milwaukee rallied and drove in a career-high
run double in the eighth and
to 1 I -2 since July 4.
and Balnmore beat Boston . '
double and Kevin Millar's from a 10-1 deficit. Jeromy
Manager Art Howe originalseven runs. ~ut Colorado
The retiring O rioles ~tar was Tampa Bay beat Toronto.
run-scoring single in the first, Burnitz hit his fifth homer of
overcame an 8-0 defi ci t with
ly was mcli ned to go with a h onored in a 15-mi nu te
Carlos Delgado hit his 39th
Derrek Lee's sacrifice fly in the se ries, a two- run shot off
a nine- run th ird that includusing pregame ceremony. H e went home run and reached 100
three-man rotation the second and Mike Lowell's Byung- Hyun Kim in th e
ed Todd Helton 's 4hth
Ma rk Mu lder, Tim Hudson 0-for-2, and also walked and RB!s for the fou rth straight
homer in the third.
ni nth.
homer, a three - run shot.
and Barry Zi to - when the was hi t by a pitch.
season.
Maddux has lost three
R ube n Quevedo (4-5)
Todd Belitz (1- l) pitched
wild
card
A'
s
begin
the
best-ofRoyals 8, Tigers 7
As he ca m e. to the plate for
straight decisions for the first gave up seve n runs, seven hits
two scoreless innings at
5
opening
round.
..
·
the last time in the eighth,
-fime since .J uly 22 to Aug. 2 and six walks rn 2 1-3
Carlos Febles hit a leadoff
Coors Field. Junior Herndon
But after watching Lidle .(12- Ripken received a standing home run, and Ca rlos Beltran
last year.
.
mmngs.
(2-6) ',Vas th e loser.
6) pitch a five- hitter,Howe said ovation and tipped his helmet. and Raul lba11eZ also connectMatt
Florida
starter
· Astros 6, Cubs 5
· he'd changed his mind.
Clement left after being hit
Public address announcer Ed ed in the first inriing as Kansas
Sammy Sosa carried a small
"If we go four gaines, he's Brickley introduced him by C iry beat visiting Detroit.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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

=

AMERICAN LEAGUE

lidle clinches playoff rotation spot

Brand New 2002 Chevy
· Cavalier Sport Coupe

Brand New 2002 Pontiac Grand
Am GT Sedan Coupe Or Sedan

Brand New 2002
Chevy 5-Series Pickup

~2,450* ~8,950* ~3,550*

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo W/CD System
• Sporty Equipped!

2001 Oldsmobile
·Alero GL Sedan

• V-6 Ram Air Power
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Keyless Entry, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Stereo
• Styled Wheels

2001 Pontiac Grand Am
SE Sedan

2001 Chevy
Malibu LS Sedan

~3,250* ~3,850* ~3,150*

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Seat, Windows &amp; Locks
CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Seal, Windows &amp; Locks

Brand New 2002 Chevy Silverado
Ext. Cab LS 4Door 4x4

Brand New 2002 Chevy
Tracker 4Door 4x4

Brand New 2002 Buick
R•ndezvous CX AWD

125,950*

~5,550*

• V-8 Power, Tilt &amp;Cruise
Power Windows, Locks;
Keyless Entry, CD System

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo With CD
• Luggage Rack, Styled

• 7 Passenger
Onstar
• Leather, Fully Power
• Buick Luxury Loaded!

2001 Buick Century
Custom Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

2001 Pontiac Gra.nd Prix
_....SE Sedan -

q4,350*

~5,450*

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;
• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Cruise, Til~ CD System

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;
• CD System, Aluminum
• Cruise Control, Tilt Steering

829,95

115,950*

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

• Taxes, Tags, Title Feas extra. Rebale included in sale prico of now vehicle listed where applicab!e. "On ; pproved credit On selocled mod~s. Not responsible lor typographical errors.
Pricos Good Seplember 26th Through Seplember 30th .

...

CHIYIOLIT

wru.a•

nt•••·

!.at
Buick ~
it's a (i gooo

G2:&gt; Olds mobile..
OOMG~·

West Virginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, And Custom Van

Deal~r.

~allipolts

J)ailp m:ribune,
l)otnt l)leasant 1\egister
and The Daily Sentinel
Fall -""l'~

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24559">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24558">
              <text>September 28, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2234">
      <name>fick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1331">
      <name>neutzling</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
