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••

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..... Dl• .,....,. G:illltf-&amp;tlltind

.

Dow Jones ea

ITIU. AT WORK - Traders work on the floor of the New York
Stock Exchange. The Dow closed up 165.79 Friday, to give
W811 Street a solid one-week rebound from the losses that fol·
lowed the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon. The Dow rose 611.40, or 7 percent, for the week.
(AP)

.

attacks

...J

Videos
(tum,...Dl

"When done correcdy, the ·
positive impact on the
wildlife and our communities
can be phenomenal," said
Walker.
Tall Oalcs has traveled a lot
~ the past year from Canada for waterfowl, Northern
Saskatchewan for Northern
Pike, lake trout and moose,
Florida for wild boar and alii•· gator harvests and in Pike.
County, Ill., for hunting
whitetails.
"We have been working
-,diligendy with Pikeland Outfitters LLC in Pike County,
who specialize in whitetail
deer herd management
through selective harvest and

Jay
fiNHII ..... Dl
some investments are also
exposed to inflation risk.
There are many other types pf
risk as well, which apply 'to
different securities. The followiJ!g are some of the !JP!'S
of investment risk you should
keep in mind.
·
• Market risk - the possibility that an investment may
lose its value when traded in
the financial markets.
• Credit risk- the possibility that the issuer of an investJllent (a ·corporate bond, for
example) may not live up to
its financial obligations and
cause you to lose your invested capital or not receive
expected interest payments.
• Interest rate risk - the
risk that if interest rates rise,
the price (value) of an

Kneen
faumPapDl
problems for next year. Slugs
and snails are )aying eggs for
next year's infestation.
I Insects either overwinter as
adults in the soil or lay eggs
Oil' plant leaves and inside
plant stems.•Most plant mate-

Bymes
fnwnPapDl
Ag news
Sheep producer• - A
:ijnne( meeting is scheduled
'Or Oct. 22 at the Golden
:::orral in Gallipolis. Dr. Ed
Bonnette of Hubbar:d Feeds
wiU be here to share his
{nowledge on ewe nutrition
:luring gestation.
Please call Gail at the
Extension Office at 446-7007
:o make a reservation.
Congratulations · to Bud
Carter for being recognized
'Y the Gallia County PrideIn-Tobacco Association at the

investor's bond holdings and
certain stocks will decline. I
• Reinvestment risk - ' the
possibility that interest rates
will fall as a fixed
While the variety of risks is
substantial, you should not let .
risk management intimidate
you. People particiP,ate in the
financial markets because the
rewards have often enough
outweighed the risks.
By carefully assessing all the
risks an investment offers and
periodically reviewing the
holdings in your portfolio
with your financial advisor in
consideration wiili your risk
tolerance, you should be able
to find a level of risk that is
appropriate for meeting your
investment goals.
·
aay Caldwell is a certified
financial planner at Raymond
James Financial Services, 441
Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631, 446-2125 or 1-800487-2129, member NASD and
SIPC.)

and everywhere in between,
the thing that captures the
heart and souls of Tall Oalcs
Outdoors is sharing our
experiences with others;· said
Whitt.
"Through our videos we
strive to make each and every
hunt exciting to watch and to
also share our trade secrets as
we put them to the test!"

at

••
•
•
••

•

Mllp County's

Honaetawn Newsp1per

T.O.O. shares iri the belief
that we all have the responsibility as hunters and nonhunters, naturalists and outdoorsmen to practice conservation, safe and ethical hunting and to preserve this gf!'at
land.
"Spring Strutt and Russian
Madness" videos can be purchased by calling 1-888-255•

.Tear·gas
prom . ••
evacuation

6357 and at the Gallipolis
Gun and Archery Club for
$14.95 each.
The group is also co-sponsoring, along with Bladen
Archery, the "String it Up"
bow tournament on Nov. I 7
to benefit hunter education.
Registration begins at 9 a.m.
ai Bladen Archery.
A representative from the

"

Wright- Patterson
·officials to remore

grenades today
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

••

Ohio Department of Na~
Resources is anticipated to.
attend, and world and natiort
al bow champion Brian Smitb
will be a special guest on hanjl
to answer questions and jujl
mingle with the crowd.
'
· There will also be a boW
knowledge and safetY seminar
given with prizes and giveaways.

includes 300 anytime and 1.000 night &amp; week~nd min~tes per month

FREE activation ($2s value)

~ GE AllEGIANCE

&lt;

•

•••

tudents at Mid- in a synchronized show of
Valley Christian patriotic unity.
School
and
"Teachers in every comniunity in America have been
Rutland Ele- working with students to help
mentary School them understand . what hapwere among the 52 mil- pened on Sept. 11 and to
lion American school overeome their fears and con. . cerns;' Paige said. "They have
childre~ aske_d to par~ct- also worked to teach them
pate Fnday m a rtai:J.on- more about our· proud and
- wide,
"' sirnultanc;ou~ ·- ·~ national l!istory an4olh.e
recitation of the Pledge foundation of our free society."
0 fAllegiance.
The synchronized pledge
U.S. Secretary of Education began at 2 p.m., and was orgaRod Paige asked students in nized by Celebration USA, a
the country's 100,000 public non-profit organization dediand private schopls to stop cated to teaching children
their afternoon activities long about democracy and patrioenough to honor "Old Glory" tism.

BY BRIAN J. REED
POMEROY - Meigs County Commissioners appointed Pomeroy Mayor
John Blaetmar and Salisbury Township
Trustee Ed Durst to serve on Meigs' Issue
II Committee during the boar:d's regular
meeting friday.
Commissioner Jeffl'hornton and Engineer Eugene Triplett will also 1erve on
· the committee, which considers and

Nokia252C

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phone directory
stores up to 75
names and
numbers

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rate minutes minutes minutes
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$30 , 300 ' 1,000
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500 2,000 2,500

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call anyl\tlere wilhin lhe conlinenlal u.s.
l!lMree from your home stale ~ calling ;rea
visit \WI' local us. cellular. store for delais

"

Calendar
Classjfieds
Comjcs

Editorials
ord~r

at hume FREE tlell vcry

1•888•BUY•USCC
uscellular.com

.j:us.eenuiar

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

'

Lotteries

PIHM -

(llmmlt;t.e, AJ

.......... ~cb.AJ

activity.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
• • Known throughout the village as "the
. POMJ;ROY
Pomeroy's only pub- tennis court," the nearly abandoned
he basketball court has been gtven a b k tb 11
·
1ocated beside
~ourt,
dramatic facelift,. courtesy of one dedi- as e a
cated councilman.
Po,meroy First Baptist Church on Main
Victor Young Ill, Pomeroy council- Street, was anything but picturesque.
man .and owner of Young's Carpente,r Weeds and vines had overtaken the surService, has taken what many have rounding fen ce and cracks had all but
called an eyesore, and transformed it rendered the court's surface J.tnusable.
into ap. area of recreation teeming with
"The court's appearance was very
BY TONY M, LEACH

f-

AS OHIO

82-4 Pldt 3: 7·5-2; Pldt 4: 5·2-7-5
85 Sui* LaeD: 9-16-31&gt;34 46 48
A4 llkllr. 9-5-5-:H-7
A3 W.VA.
O.lly 3: 6-8-9 o.IIy 4: 6-9-4-7 .
81.3

A3

on an Appalachian Regional Commission conference held at Roscoe Village in
Coshocton, which he attended along
with Commissioner Mick Davenport,
Economic Development Director' Perry
Varnadoe, Department of job and family
Services Director Mike Swisher, and
Artisans Association ·Coordinator Justin
Diddle.
Thornton said the conference
. allowed '

third

Councilman,/m.ayor team up to dean up:court

' Law: :so.
Details, A3

Sentinel

&gt;

tied under military rules for
covering the operation.
Expanded ground operations are expected to play a .
•
•
more prominent role in the
effort to root out Osama bin
.
Laden and his terrorist netWASHINGTON (AP) - · ~rk as the air campaign
u.s:-led f&lt;lrces opened a sec- wmds down.
.
ond week of air
Meanwhile, the
strikes Sunday with
Taliban , sou~ht
an assault on the
agam to negottate
capital's communian e?d to !he
cations system and
bombmg, sa)'l_ng
more of the ruling
t~ey would . g~ve
Tali ban's military
hu~ to a
nanon
tf the ratds
assets.
stop and the UnitU.S. warplanes
ed States shows
have destroyed nearevidence he was
ly, all of the targets
originally assigned ·ENDURING involved in the
to them, including FREEDOM Sept. I I attacks on
America.
militant
trauung
President Bush
~amps and weapons
.
immediately
rejected the
storage areas, the captain of
the USS Enterprise aircraft offer.
"There's nothing to negoticarrier said Sunday.
" We're sort of in a 'cleanup ate;· Bush told reporters at the
mode right now," sai~ the White House. "They're. barcaptain who cannot be identi-

Afr strikes open
with assault on

ranks local State Capital Improvement
Program projects at a meeting next week.
Those members will appoint a fifth atlarge member before taking action on
local projects. After the local committee
prioritizes these road improvement ~nd
other projects, the projects will be sent on
to the district level, and then the state
level, where they will be further rated on
a point system.
At friday's meeting, Thornton reported

Hlp: 501

Todlly'•

...., ,

PlnM-Gai,AJ

of .attacks

Officials appoint Issue II committee. members
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY - ·The discovery of twO canisters
believed to contain tear gas
Saturday night resulted in a
brief evacuation of downtown Pomeroy.
· Sheriff Ralph Trussell said
Monday the softball-sized
canisters, along with a brickshaped object later identified
as a railroad flare, were discovered by a h!Jnter Saturday
evening in a remote area
near Chester, and brought
into the sheriff's office for

identification.Once contacted, Fire
Chief Chris Shank oroered
the evacuation of the centtal
business district, including
crowds at Court Street Grill
and Jimmy's Sports. Bar,
while officials worked on .
identifYing the obje~. said ·
Police Chief Mark Proffitt.
Deputies contacted the
Ohio fire Marshal's office ·
and explosives experts at
Wright-Patterson Air Force .
B:~.~e in Dayton, and those
experts used a description of
the objects and markings on
the ·canisters to identify
them.
"As it turned out, the public was at no immediate risk,
but we didn't know what we

·warplanes
open second.

Brian J. Reed and
Tony M. Leach photos
•

•

•

••

1,300 minutes
for $30 per moqth

· rial may be composted and .
used as organic matter next
spring. The microorganisms
and heat created by composting will kill most insect eggs
and larvae. Diseased leaves and
roots should be destroyed by
fire or trashed.
(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
· E:ttension agent for agriculture
and natural resources, Ohio State
University.)
annual banquet for his service
to the local and state tobacco
industry
During his career with
OSU Extension, Bud set high_
standards for tobacco leadership in Gallia County, a characteristic that has been very
valuable to local producers
during the last decade 'bf antitobacco movements.
In recent years, the PrideIn-To.bacco Association has
also recognized Ed Vollborn,
Noel Massie, Gary Moran
(Brown County) and David
White (Ohio Farm Bureau).
amnifer L. Bym" is Gallia
County~ Extension agent .for
agriculture and natura1'"iiisolirces,
Ohio Sta!t Ut~iversity.)

·•

•

tions of Wall Street analysts surveyed by out temporary offices in Manhattan.
At the same time, the company alsb
Thomson financial/First Call by 2 cents
reported that ad..,rtising linage, or vo~
per share.
The company's shares were up 77 cents ume, tumbled 46.8 percent on a per-Issue
to $44.98 in afternoon trading on the basis at The Wall Street Journal in September. Like other major publishers, Dow
New York Stock Exchange.
Revenues dropped 20.5 percent . to Jones was affected by advetruei'S' pulling
S397 .6 million from $500.3 Q1illion in the ads in the W&gt;ke of the Sept. 11 attac~.
year ago period. ·
Per-issue linage was .of£ 41.2 percent itt
Speaking on a conference call with ana- the third quarter and 36.3 percent in !hi
•
lysts, Dow Jones chairman and chief exec- year to date.
Dow Jones said that it now expecis
.utive Peter Kann said that despite the difficulties, several expansion. projects were linage at the Journal to decline 35 percetit
on schedule, includmg increasing color to 45 percent in the fourth quarter. Chi~f
printing capacity at The Wall Street Jour- financial officer Riclurd Zannino, aJs?
nal.
speaking on the conference call, described
"The third quarter wasn't easy, and the the current advertising climate ts
fourth quarter won't be either:· Kann said. "abysmal."
"But Dow Jones has a solid foundation:•
Dow Jones also lowered expectations
Dow Jones' headquarters were located for its fourth quarter earnings, saying the}i
across the street from the World 'lhde would likely be in the range of25 cents to
Center and were damaged during the 35 cents per share, excludini.special i~e~.
attacks. The company has temporarily Analysts . surveyed by Thomson Fm2Jt
relocated its headquarters to a technical cial/First Call. had been expecting 6':4:
facility in South Brunswick, NJ., and cents per share; in the same period a yeai
reporters from the Journal are working ago earnings were 83 cents a share. ·

'
nutrient rich feeding systems," said Walker.
"We are in the process of
offering the tools and ideas
they used to Gallia County
and it's surrounding areas.
There are long term revenue
possibilities for our area with
good education and management:' he added.
·
Food for thought: Accor:ding to Pike County numbers,
if 560 non-resident hunters
come in for a five day · hunt
and you include lodging, gas,
food, camping, and money to
lind owners, revenue generated totaled $902,178 - every
five days,
Its whitetailed deer archery
season lasts 13 weeks.
"Though hunting season
may take up from the gator
filled Swarl!PS ofFlorida to the
fertile field in Pike County

•

revenue$

tumble in
NEW YORK (AP) - Dow Jones &amp;
Co., publisher ofThe Wall Street Journal,
Barron's and Dow Jones Newswires,
reported a sharp drop in earnings before
one-time items Thursday, saying the Sept.
11 attacks worsened an already bad advertising climate. .
On a net basis, Dow Jones swung to a
profit of$16'.7 million in the thir:d quarter, compared to a loss in the same period
a year ago of S33.9 million, which was
caused by a write-down of its sWce in
Bridge Information Systems Inc., a nowbankrupt provider of financial data . and
news.
Excluding the write-down a year ago as
well as one-time effects in the most recent
quarter such as other investment charges,
costs for temporary relocation following
the Sept. 11 attacks and an accounting
gain, the company earned S17.4 million.
In the period a year ago, Dow Jones
earned a comparable $48.4 million, a
decline of 64 percent.
Per-share earnings fell to 20 cents compared with 55 cents, edging the expecta-

FLY YOUR FLAG TO SUPPQ~T AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Sunday, Oct. 14, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolt., Ohio • Point Pleasanl, WV

C 2001 Ohio Val!.y Publishi"' Co.

We connect with you~

depressing," Young said.
"Every titne I drove past the court I
would look to see if any kids were play- :
ing ori it," he said . ."[ never saw anybody. It was like the pla~e was deserted."
Disappointment turned t~ determi- ·
natio.h as Young contacted Mayor John
Blaettnar to see what could be done to

Pluu see Court. AJ

Gallio County Cardiovascular Health Coalition Health Fair

S1nall Steps, Big ~strides
Toward a . Healthier Ohio"
11

B.Cklly l!e&lt;kley Crossing Shopping Ctr.,(304)255-3990
for- •Ill o1f111 mil Oil of our IXChdlvo 1M11f1oriH11 lfNk:
B~ EaSI Pointe Sl!appiiiQ Ctr. 154 'E'rnily Dr.. 1304) 622·2331
Bltootiold The C~lular Group, M"'" Mall. (304) 324·2355
CloiWcrtlllo U.S. C~~lar. 750 \¥estern 1We.. l740)10z..4872
IIHvos&gt;illo Cell Page CommunH:ation~ 106 W"l Main Stree~ 13041754-3770
Clllllicatlto In-Touch l'fflelass &amp;Mo111, 34 E891 War,., (740)779-6999
~ Poak Co""""'ications. 206 Mor;antown St., (304) 329-3299
Etiol 220 Third Sl., 1304)636-9311
uwla~ 1 Glrf's EOclrooica. liB S. Jeffer1on Sl., (3041 845-7170
rr~d:~:nR~o:~~3t::~3~!~~~~ 1740 1441 _1066
M.......... Call Page ComOilnicationt Mallinsbu~a~ 800 Foxcroft Ava.. (3041263-8755
Jac,_ Ciassic ~·~ I"' E. Huroo, 17••1288 ~ 16
~ Cellular Associat,., Mal1insbu111 Moll,
Foxcroft ~ve., 1304) 263·9085
w
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Mlolord Mrnfonl Telephooe, 10717 S.R. 139, (740) B21J.2151
Moopnt1IWO Morgan1own Commons, 6518 Mall Road,(304j9B3-2355
Shennan Bectronics, 507 N. Main Sl.,(304) 538·2371
M.,..ntown #4 Suburoan Court Plaza, Chestmrt Ridge Rd .. (304159B·2450
Mt.llopo The Celk&lt;iar Group, C•oosroads MaR,j304l255·7737
Now llos1oo U.S. Celllar, New BoSion ShopPing Cent&lt;r, 4010 Rhode$ Ave..
Wamly ~ke County Pawn, 120 W. Emmitt Ave .. (1401941·7101
1740145&amp;-11722
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WII-Mart
Porta010lltlt Hilllop Cenle&lt;, 2736 Sc~to Tmil,j7401355.0058
Bec~ey. Buckhannon, Clarksbu111. Fainnonl. Graito~ Jackson.
PrtocltGtl ~ne Plaza, 1233 Slafford llr.,(304)4BJ-3855
LowiSbur~ Mo'IJantown, N.. Boston, Oak H&lt;ll, Princelon, Summersville
Su~ 1016 WaiSireet 13041872-6922
for rour
woltm -soalltllorii.. ,IIOM!ocdMI.
Wontty USCC Wa~Mart K~sk. !100 Westfmm~ A.....,, (7401947-0069
Outlido conllltllll • • - - .....
witlt five or more

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1

Tuesday, October 16 • 8:00 am - 12 Noon ,.
Holzer
Medical
Center Conference
·Rooms A-B-C
.
.
.
Hosleci by HMC Commvnity Health and Wei/ness ..
Svpported in part by grant funds from the Ohio Department of Health .
l

For more information, colllhe Gallio Co. Heollh Depaiiment al (740) 441-2950
or Holzer Medical Center al (740) 446-5679.

•

MEDICA( CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference'

www.holzer.org

�.. .
•

•

The Daily Sentinel

lllonclllv. Oct. 15, 2001

PageAl:

•

Amenca at War
•

LOCAL BRIEFS

llaat.,o 11hr 1S.HI1

Further

Jannle Allen

military

POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - jannie E. Allen, 60, Point
Pleasam, died on Saturday, Oct. 13, 2001, ·at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant.
She was born on Sep1. 6, 1941 , in Louisville, Ky., daughter of
Ehzabeth Jean Batrd of Louisville and the late Franklin Baird.
' She was a homemaker.
In addition to her mother, she is survived by ['!'0 daughters
and a son-in-law, Janet and Millard Herdman of New Haven
and Delores VanMeter of Point Pleasant; a son, Michael Allen
of Paoli, Ind.; two brothers, Ronnie Baird of Tennessee and
George Baird of Louisville; two sisters, Bonnie Baird and Cathy
Baird of Dallas, Texas; 13 grandchildren; and several greatgrandchildren;
.
Besides her father she was preceded in death by her son,
Charles Allen.
.
'
·
Graveside services will be Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. Letart
Evergreen Cemetery iri l.e'tart, with the Rev. Isaiah Crump
offici:lting.
Friends may .call at Fogelsong-Tucker ~uneral Home in
Mason on Wednesday fiom 9 to 10:30 a.m.

options ·
carry risks -:
.

WASHINGTON (AP) :_
P~ident Bush is trying to
breathe new life. into patients'
rights legislation and efforts to
overhaul Medicare, promising
that important domestic issues
will n'o t wither during the·
fight against te(rorism.
He forcefully dismissed a
new offer Sunday from
Afghanistan's rulingTaliban to
negotiate the handover of
Osama bin Laden.
uThis is non-negotiable,"
Bush said outside the White
House after returning fiom
Camp David. "There's nothing to negotiate. They're harboring .a terrorist. They need
to turn him over."'
- A week ago, when the Tal: iban made a similar offer,
Bush ignored reporters' questions about it, leaving spokes• . ·men to fie!~ them.

The president rarely !~lakes
comments upon .his return to
the White House fiom weekend at Camp David. But on
Sunday, Bush. was" eager to
talk. He gestured vigorously as
he repeated: "When I said no
negotiations, I meant no
negotiations."
Earlier Sunday, Bush chose a
gathering of medical professionals as the venue for
renewing_ his emphasis on
health care proposals. ;
"Let me be clear about this:
We will win the war on terrorism, and we will ~o continue to tight important battles at home," Bush told about
700 people at an anesthesiologists' conference in New
Orleans.
His remarks were videotaped Sept. 24 - two weeks
after the attacks on• New York

Powell goes
to war zone
WASHINGTON (AP) Secretary of Sute Colin Powell headed to Asia Sunday on a
diplomatic mission intended
to ~eep tensions between Pakistan and India fiom further
-complicating the U.S. anti-terror campaigri in neighboring
Afghanistan. ·
Pakistan has been s.upporting
Islamic militants who seek an
end to Indian rule in the predominantly Muslim region of
Kashmir. A terrorist attack last
week in the Indian sector of
Kashmir )&lt;illed cabout 40 people.
Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage said last
week that Powell would try to
see if there were a way "to
lower the tempe~ture" before
the two countries.
Pakistan's president, Pervez
Musharraf, h.. cooperated
with U.S. efforts to track down
Osama bin Laden and go after
his Taliban government hosts
in Afghanistan. Musharraf has
allowed Amel'rcan military aircraft to land in Pakistan and
has granted the United States
use of at least two air bases
deipite widespread protests in
Pakistan.
Mindful of that cooperation,
President Bush last month lift-

.

Colin Powell
'
ed sanctions · against 'Pllkistan
and India that were imposed
after the two nations tested
nuclear weapons in 1998. The
sanctions barred economic
and military· assistance to the
two countries.
The United Statennd·Pakistan also recently sign~d an
agreement to reschedule $379
million in bilateral debt.
On Friday, the Overseas Private 'Investment Corporation
announced a variety of economic initiatives for Pakistan,
including extension of a $300
million special lin~ of credit.
OPIC is a self-sustaining
feder..J agency that backs U.S.
business expansion programs
in developing countries.

,

and Washington,' and two
weeks befqre the United
States begm military strikes
against Afghanistan.
. As his address played on two
large screens in New Orleans,
Bush was at C;unp David in
Maryland, where he attended
chapel and jogged Sunday
morning.
Bush has encouraged Americans to "go abou~ their business,'' and his remarks Sunday
signaled that he expects · the
government to do the same.
Medicare overhaul and a
patients' bill of rights have virtually disappeared tiom view
after the terrorist attacks.
. Separate patientS' rights bills
passed the House and Senate
this summer, and lawmakers
are trying to find a compromise.

NO NEGOTIATIONS- Preslf;lent Bush tells reporters there will
be no negotletlons with the Tallban as he arrives et the White
House In Washington from Camp David. Bush dismissed a new
offer from Afghanistan's ruling Tallban to neeotlete the handover of Osama bln laden. (AP)

U.S. ~aces fierce Afghan winters
WASHINGTON (AP)The fierce Afghan winter
and the fabled Mghan warriors who seem to thrive in
its extremes are very much
on the Pentagon's mind.
If U.S. forces go to battle
on the ground, Americans
could ' experience _the worst
wintet fighting they ever
have faced- "Vietnam With
snow'" is how one military
analyst describes it.
In January, the temperature
in Kabul, the capital, drops
below freezing and the snow
usually is at least 11 inches
deep, , a combination that
pfudu~e's' .-. skin-soaki ng
cold. A fighter for the ruling
Taliban regime wears pretty
much what he did in July: a
light ,~~ck~t: baggy' pants, a
little caUYaS over his feet. ·
" Afghans "are very tough
fighters in winter,'' said
Afghanistan analyst Alex
Alelliev. "You see some peopie barefoot. You don't 'see
that an,ywhere else." ·
For now, . the U.S.-Jed
strikes on Osama bin Laden's
ai-Qaida terrorist organization atid his Taliban allies
have come from the air.
But ifbombing raids fail to
roust the fighters, the likelihood of ground force
involvement increases and
weather b-ecomes an lmportant factor.
'
Unless Taliban autliorities
surrender ' bin Laden, "We
must expect to go through
.

.

.........

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.
.
the wmter and mto ne~~
. sum"_ler .a~ the very least,
Admiral S1~ _M,ch;el_Boyc~,
the top Bnttsh warn~r, satd
last week.
'
The Fort Drum, N.Y.b:ISed 1Oth Mountain Di~iston, a legendary alpme umt,
is positioned across the barder in Uzbekistan .. Smaller
special operation teams have
reconnoitered
inside
Afghanistan.
Mobilizing the division
was an encouraging' sign that
the alliance had studied the
failures of the 1979-88 Soviet invasion, Alelliev said.
"The Soviets moved in
December
197:9
from
Uzbekistan, where it is fairly
balmy in the Winter,'' he said.
"The soldiers lacked winter
apparel." That demoralized

WASHINGTON (AP) -.
-As U.S. planes run out of ..
the best bombing targets in .
Afghanistan, the military :
response to terrori!m is .
moving into a much more
delicate phase: trying to
roust the al-Qaida terrorists
fiom their hideouts and
· topple the Taliban .regime ..
sheltering them.
All of the options have ·
risks.
-Sending in small teams
of special forces soldiers to
hunt .down terrorist and
Taliban leaders might not .
be enough to eliminate all _
of them fiom Afghanistan.
-Dispatching a larger
force of ground troops raises the possibility of American casualties and erosion
of · support "fiom Muslim ·
allies.
-Helping anti-Taliban
rebels
means
getting
involved with a fractious ·
group of warlords, some of
whom are accused of cor- . ruption and atiOcities of
their own.
Those risks should not
prevent America fiom pur- ·
suing its goals in the antiterrorism campaign, said
Richard Perle, who was a
senior Defense Department ·
official in the Rea!!"n
administration.
"There's always the risk
that you will fail, that after
this is all over the Taliban · ·
will not only be in power '
but may even lay claim to
being
stronger
than
before," said Perle, now at ..
the American Enterprise · :
Institute, a conservative- · leaning think tank.
.
"There's even the poS.i- ·.
l?ility that in the ensuing :
chaos that so~one will rise to power who is ~ bad, : _
maybe in a different way. :
But if-you allow yourself to
be deterred from things
that need to be done in the :
short term because you're
worried about the long
can be para- · :
term,
lyzed:'
·
Pentagon officials indi- ·
cate they're aWat"e of the ·
risks and realities of the situation. Although he has :
been mum about what
form the next phase of military action will take,
Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld has said the
miSSIOn
Will
military
include more than bombmg.
"It's unlikely that the
airstrikes will rock the Taliban back on their heels,'' ·
Rumsfeld said last week. ·
2

'Miua ..r.tu•-tn--..._...'wi

·
the invaders and helped rally
the resistance.
But it was the Hindu
Kush, the jagged range running through northeastern
Mghanistan like a hunched
spine, that especially humbled the Soviets. Kabul, controlled by the Taliban, is in
the Kush.
In winter, mud renders the
Kush's roads impassable and
puts the aggressor at a disadvantage.
Until now, the northern
alliance putative U.S.
allies based in the northern
Kush - was able to repel
Taliban thrusts northward·
because of the mud. The
same obstacle threatens to
srymie any allied plan to
advance south to Kabul.

you

•

Eugene Newland

also have to worry · about
copycats ."
The anthrax scare began
Oct. 4 when it was confirmed that a Florida. tabloid
editor had contracted _the
inhaled form of the bacteria . .
He later died; the first such
death in the United States
since 1976..
Seven other employees of
,..merfcan Media Inc. have
tested posilive for exposure
and are being treated with
antibiotics.
None
have
developed the disease. A secbod round of blood tests fO[
more than 300 of the coni~
pany's employees is expected
this we'lk In Waihington, Attorney
General John Ashcroft said it
was prem a tur~ "to deci4e
whether there is a direct
link" \O Osama bin Laden's
terrorist network, but "we ,
should consider this potential that it is linked."

Wilbur Sinnett
COOLVILLE -Wilbur Sinnett, 76, of Coolville, died Sunday, Oct. 14, 2()()1, at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital in
Parkersburg afl;er an extended illness. ·.
Born- on Dec. 8, 1924, in ~azie, Ky., he was the son of the
_late June an_d Mabel Lamp Sinnett. He was a longtime employee ofBe.,(ey Matthews-Charlie Moore Ford in Athens and was
later employed with Athens Pepsi Bo~ng Co. until his retirement . .
l;le is survived by his wife, Doris Barnhart Sinnett; one ron,
Bob Sinnett of C•lolville, a daughter and son-in-law, Karen ai\d
Steve Kempton o( Coolville; two brothers and sisters~ in-law,
Clarence and Alice Sinnett and Wendall and Shirley Sinnett of
Torch; three sisters and brothers-in-Jaw, Mary and Otis Patter. ' son ofVienna, W.Va.; Adadine and Seldon Baker of Pomeroy,
and Ruthanne and Glen Barkley of Waverly. W.Va.; a si!ter,
Leota Richards of Parkersburg, W.Va.; two grandchildren and a
great-granddaughter.
Besides his parents he was preceded in death by a brother,
Donald Sinnett; an infant sister and an infant brother.
· Graveside serVices __will be Thesday at 11 a.m. at Weatherby
_Cemetery in Coolville with the Rev. Phil Ridenour officiating. Friends may call at White Funeral home in Coolville on
Monday, 6 to 8 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Appalachian
Community Visiting Nurse Association.

.

Attacks
boring a terrorist. They need to
tum him over!'
On the eighth .day of the
raids, U.S. jets destroyed Kabul's
Chinese-built inrernational
telephone exchange, severing
one of the last means of communication with the outside
world. Residents also said the
capital's historic ·MOgul-style
Balahisar Fort, built in the early
20th century. was in ruinS.The
report could not be .confirmed
because security kept outsiders

"Pump}(in Patch"

from the area.
Other targets included the
cities of Mazar-e-Sharif, Kan-dahar, Jalalabad and Herat,
according to the Taliban lnformation Ministry. Explosions
were·heard in the evening well
north of Kabul, the capital, in
the direction of the fiont lines
. between opposition and ~al-·
iban fighters.
And-the U.S. Air Force was
trying to gather more intelligence to check out the Taliban
claim that an American missile
had killed nearly 200 civilians
- · Thursday 'in the village of
Karam, Pentagon officials said
Sunday. .

Pictures will run:
Wednesday,. ,

The Daily Sentinel

October31
DeadUne for Entry:

Reader Services

Wednesday,

October24

Correction Polley

ONLY

Our main concem In all stories Ia
to be accurate. If you know ol an
error In a story, call fhe newsroom
at (7~0) 992 2156.

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~ - ........ Atia;'h Tt~s-~~ ToY~;chdcr; Pictu~c: ;nd .. . ; ..
Mall or Bflng Wuh \'our Payment To:
The DaUy Senllnd • 111 Court Street

MeiSs

Court

In The Sentinel

PerA4
I one subjeCt Per Pampklnl

POMEROY -Ohio University Public Television and
the Scripps School ofJournalism will hoot a toWn hall
meeting in the
High
School cafeteria at 7 p.m.
Tuesday.
"WOUB-TV and Scripps
will bring together newt ptO:fessionals, civic and business
leaders, and the viewing public in an important discussion
about how local news coverage can be mon: relevant and
engage broader audiences,''
said Olivea Oldham, public
information coordinator.
She said that among the
panelists participating will be
Charlene Hoeflich, The Daily
Sentinel; Brenda Barnhart,
WJOS-TV; Carrie Klein,
WSAZ-TV; John Blaettnar,
Pomeroy
Mayor; Tracy
O'Deii,Meigs County Health
Department; Sandy Erb,

MASON, W.Va. - Eugene H. Newland, 85, of Mason, died
on Saturday. Oct. 13, 2001, at St. Angela's N'!rsirtg Care in
Columbus, Ohio.
He was born on Jan. 17, 1916, in Bashan, son of the late
Simon Peter and Ao Dixie Tucker Newland. He was a veteran
of the U.S. !limy during World War II and was a retired
employee of Foote Mineral Corp.
Surviving are three daughters and two sons-in-law: Renilda
Ann Hamilton of Charleston, S.C., Patry N. andJames D. CarfiCMI ..... Al
roll of Marietta, Ga., and Harvietta E ahd Ronald L. Gribble of
improlle the court's deterioColumbus; four grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his wife, rating appearance.
After a short· meeting,
Della Ann Ord Newland; and two brothers, Kenneth and
Blaettnar consented to havHoward Newland. ·
Services will be Teusday at 1 p.m. at Fogelsong-Tucker ing the weeds eradicated and
Funeral Home in M.Son, with the Rev. Wilmer Bud Rich- new paint purchased while
Young agreed to supply the
mond officiating.
.
Burial will follow at l{irldand Memorial Gardens in Point labor, free of charge, for the
Pl~asant. Military graveside rites will be conducted by the court's renovation.
Young, along with several
Smith Capehart Post 180, New Haven, and Stewart-Johnson
members of his work crew,
Post 9926 VFW of Mason.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from 6 to
9 p.m.

·Show Off Your

l(

opening my mail," said Steve
Blum , 54, of Boca _Raton,
Fla. He said he."will discard
letters from someone he
does not recognize. "You

2

-- ...
...
•

:Number of peopl~ exposed jumps to a dozen

employee who is_ tak~ng
antibiotics after dlS'playmg
possible symptoms of the
disease.
'
"I thi-nk twice about

..

--,.-~·
•
Q

ANTHRAX

ADDRESSING THE . MEDIA - New York . Mayor Rudolph GIU·
llanl, second left, addresses the media In New York. A police
officer and two lab technicians InVolved In detecting the case
of anthrax 1n an NBC employee are being treated with antlbl·
otlcs for exposure to the bacteria, Giuliani said. Standing in
rear, from left, are Commissioners Richard Sheirer, Office of
Emergency Management; Thomas Von Essen, Are Depart·
ment; and Bernard Kerik, Pollee Department. (AP Photo/New
York Times, Dlth Pran)

e

. . .2

•

NEW YORK (AP) 'Americans . returning to
work
faced
anxious
: moments opening envelopes
: after the number of people
across the nation exposed to
anthrax sent through the
mail jumped over the weekend.
Three new cases a
police ·officer and two lab
technicians :nyolved 'in an
investigation at NBC's New
York headquarters - tested
po sitive for the bacteria,
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
said Sunday. Nevada officials
said four people who may
have come into contact with
a contaminated letter at a
Microsoft office tested negative, ·while results weren't
known for two others.
T he new New York cases
brought to 12 the number of..
people around the nation
who either have anthrax or
bee n ex posed to it. That
does not include ~n NBC

._,

The Dlllly Sentinel • Paae .u

Pomeroy, lllddlapart, Ohio

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vidod by Smith Part·

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"""'at-Inc.

More rain on the way
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

but seasonably .cool weather.
Sunset today will be at 6:52
p.m. and sunrise on Tuesday at
7:43 a.m.
Forecast
. Today: Partly cloudy. High
63, low 46.
11 esda . p tl 1 d H' gh
56
ar y c ou y. . I
W,~
p rtl
. e es Y· a Y cloudy.
Htgh 54, low 32.
Thursday: Partly cloudy.
Htgh 63,low 42.
Friday: Partly do~dy. High
66,low 48.
Saturday: Partly cloudy.
High 66, low 46.

Another spurt of rainy
weather is forecast for the
region for tonight and Tuesday, before conditions become
REEDSVILLE - · A .-." dry and cool for the rest of the
'""' week.
· .
festival will be· held Saturday
A fast-movmg low pressure
at
Reedsville
United system is responsible for the
Methodist Church. Games · soggy forecast, the National
will- begin at · 2 p.m. and a Weather Servict said.
soup supper will be held at .4
Temperatures tonight again
p.m.
will fall into the low 40s.
Highs on Thesday will be 5060.
On Wednesday, high prespainted the fence, backwill build into the region
sure
boards, and boundary lines, .
as weU as sealing the cracks fiom the we&gt;t. providing dry
on the court's surface. New
nets were put on the basketball rims and lights, which
hadn't worked in years, came
· fiNI ..... Al
to life with new· bulbs and a
little electrical work.
"It looks like a completely ARC, Ohio Governor's
different place,'' Young, said. Office of Appalachia, and ·
"We even had children local officials from across the
wanting to play basketball state\ Appalachian region to
on the court before we share ideas on economic
development, transportation
could finish."
and other issues important to
the region.
A number of grant procaution until we knew exactgrams and other funding
ly what we had:'
opportunities for local proOnce
identified,
the
ject1- were also ·discussed,
grenades . · and flare were
Thornton said, and the counlocked in a secure location on
ty will likely pursue another
county property, and officials
round of ARC funding in
fiom the Ohio Fire Manhal's order to publish .a catalog for
office .and Wright-Patterson local crafiers.
are expected to -remove the
The conuni.sioners also:
items later today, Shank said.
• Apptoll'lid appropriations
adjustments for the Board of
Electioni, in the wount Qf..

Festival planned .

r

J.j

da .

''

$600; Department of Job and
Family Services, in the
amount of $75,000; Crippled
Children's · Fund, in the
amount of$1,715; and Recycling and Litter Prevention, in
the amount of $7 ,500;
• Established new funds for
the Community Housing
Improvement Program, in the
amounts of $357,000, and
$143,000;
~ Approved contracts for
$9,000 and $880, for a new
security system and wireless
-alarm system for the DJFS,
and security consultation by
Eric Chambers;
• Approved payment of bills
in
the
amount
of
$392,133.54, $9,360.90 of
which were county general
fund bills.
Present ~ere Thornton,
Commissioner Jim Sheets and
Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Re ents now pushing
for eng-term lan · .America at War coverage
with creative unding ·- begins on Page A2
COLUMBUS (AP) -Bud- studying the pla!i. "It ttkes a
woes and a sluggish econo-- long time to tum research dol-.
my have forced the agency that Jars into economic benefits:'
The regents had sought a
· CM:rsees the state's public universities to shift the focus of its one-time $300 million infusion
ambitious, multimillion dollar from the currerlt two-year budresearch and technology plan to get to fund the plan, but Taft,
spark Ohio's economy.
whose first priority_was paying
After failing ro receive a one- for primary and secondary edutime infusion of money from cation, cut that to $40 million
the state for its Ohio Plan this over t'Wo years. Lawmakers
year, the Ohio .Board of eliminated all ~oney after
Regents tiow is pushing for a higher education officials comlong-term imestment with dif- plained,
ferent funding options.
.
"When you get $40 million,
Key lawmaken and otlicials don't~ it. We simply said we
fiom Gov. Bob rut's adtninisua- . can get that same dl'ect and give
tion generally support the· idea the~ nothi~s;" said . Senate
of having the state's universities Prestde~t Richard Ftl)lln, ..a
conduct research to cn:ate Republican from Evendale. I
products that their business think, the concept is good, but
there s not gomg to
huge
partners then could sell._
But, they say, how to do it and sums of money available.
where to find the money is up
State ~nues are expected
for debate. ·
to be about $600 million below
_" I'm going to ~ject the con- estimates this year and agencies
cept that the way to jump-start an: bemg forced to cut bu~ts.
Jhe economy is to do a quick Meanwhile, the -:veakerung
investment in research and ec~nomy has the business se~r
development," said Bruce John- laying ~If worlt:en and cutting
.
produCI•on.
son, di rector ofthe D epartment
Th ·
. h admi find
of Development and chairman .
e regent., w 0
t. of a bi artisan committee mg money for the plan will be
p
even more of o challenge during the current economic conditions, now are suggesting a
$900 milliop, six-year investment possibl)' generated from
several different !Qurces.
get

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"Loc:al News."
Community memben are
encouraged to attend Tuesday's Meigs High School
event and be part of the audience to learn more abo11t
economic development and
the county smoking ban in
any public building:
·
The Pomeroy smoking ban
ps into effect. on Nov. I.

FedniMI!gul.~lo

US8-Ie\

12

50 oonts
Sublctibera not desiring to pay lha

On the Web

TobacGo Free Ohio; and Dottie Thmer, Realtor.
Moderated by WOUB
News DirtttorTim Sharp, the
meeting will be videotaped tO
air ar 9 p.m. Oct. 23 on
WOUB-TV immediately following the new PBS series

58.70
S11l4

Dolly

13Weel&lt;l
26 Weel&lt;s

were dealing with at first,''
Shank said Monday. "Once
we identified the objects, our
concern went .down significantly; but we took. every pre-

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-~e_D_aily_Se_ntin_·e_I--.......:~=..., the

o~••••s.

The Dail
. .YSentinel

'

'

•

Husband~

•

111 Court lt.!'o~Mrow. Ollto
740 112 21M •fa: liiH117

DEAR ABBY: I have been married for 50 years. I am 70, my hmband is 73. We have eight grandchildren and are active in our church
and community. Everyone thinks
our marriage is a happy one. However, they are mistaken.
My husband has had seven affairs
that I know of in the last 40 years.
~h affair lasted from six months to
s~n years. His current affair is now
in its sixth year.
Abby, his mistress calls me and lets
me know every time they meet. She
teUs me to leave him so they can be
together. You can't imagine the pain
of hearing a young woman say:"Old
goat! We are in love. Leave him so he
can have a life with me." I am devastated, but I fear loneliness. I don't

...•.J

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
Cher1n w. Qnew
Publlelw"

R.lhliwn Lewis
'1.-.glng Editor

•

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'"

OUR VIEW

Giving

Community CIIMdar le pub1IsMd ...., . . IMIYice to nonprofit groupe wishing to
IIUIOU- ~IL9 R
..,...
cllll-118. The caiMdar 1e not
~lllgned to promote . . . . Of'
funckllllenl of 111\Y type. IIIIIM
IN printed only . ....,_ permila end cannot be gUINnl8ed

I

Contribute to refugee reliif, but
charity still begins at home
President Bush's call last week for public contributions to the
food and relief fund for Afghan refugees is another exantple of
American compassion.
'
,
It's. a noble goal to help those displaced .by the terror of the
Taliban regime, and politically smart if we are able to forge a
friendlier p0V1fer in the Middle East once the Taliban and
Osama bin Laden's followers are toppled.
But even before the Sept. t I terrorist attac!u that spurred this
new war, America was still a natio1,1 struggling to combat its
own hunger issues, especially in Appalachia.
Many things have been put on the back burner in the ,Past
month, but hunger and meeting quality of life standards are
problems that don't go away.
·
Wouldn't it be better if our available income for charity literall)' be directed to home - . our home? A sliding economy
and stricter public assistance guidelines have made the plight of
America's poor more pronounced.
·
Their situation is just as desperate as refugees'. Only the
political circumstances are different.
If anyone wants to. contribute to refugee relief, do so, by all
means. We need as many friends as we can get irt Afghanistan
and Pakistan, and one of !iJe best vehicles for expressing Arncr. ican goals fur peace is through our donations 10 ease that
region's suffering.
But remember our neighbors coping with · poverty and
deprivation within American borden. Make a conttibutipn' to
your local United Way, United Fund or charitable oraanization·
of choice.
•
. ·•
And don't fOrget that one of the 'biggest needs we have ttow
is for the families of9-ll's Strike at OUr national SCCUtity.Atnerica's response to their n~ed following the loss of so many loved
ones is another re~on why this nation, despite all of its prob- .
lems, is great.
The generosity and sacrifice shown by this nation - both
overseas and at home - gives w an edge and moral stance that
cannot be questioned. If you can give, please do so. But contribute to the organization you believe will do ·the greater good
for everyone.

TODAY IN HISTO:RY
.
.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

•11.(

nr:

would have cho.en the first option.
I'm sorry I didn't follow your advic~·
then.
DEAR LOST: I, too, am sorry
that you didn't follow my advice. It
would have saved you 17 years of
pain and humiliation.
I hope you 'II take my advice this
time. Some things are worse than
ADVICE
loneliness, and in my opinion, living
with a chronic cheater is one of
know where to turn. Please tell me them. Make an appointment with a
what to do.- LOST IN CffiCA- lawyer - and this time, follow
GO
through.
P.S. I wrote you in 1984 about the
DEAR ABBY: I recently lost my
same problem. You gave me two wife to cancer. I could not believe
choices: Leave him or tolerate his the ltindnen and consideration of so
behavior, because he wouldn't ·. many family members and friends.
change. You were right. He did not However, some people said and
change. You said personally you wrote things that were thoughtless

Abigail
Van

Buren

known cases.
All of these services are necessary for
the control of tuberculosis and will be
financed by the Meigs Counry Tuberculosis levy. Please support this levy and
help control and eliminate this terrible
disease.
Wtlma Parker
Long Bottom

Dear l!ditor:
' The Tuberculosis Office and Clinic
have served the citizens of Meigs County since 1952. This communicable disease, which can permanendy damage
your health if J.10t treated, appears to be
on the rise.
•
A .50 . mill levy to continue the free
services of this office will be placed on
the ballot in November. When entering
the public school sy.5tem, students and
Dear Editor:
staff are tested for thiS serious,-commuWith the threat of biological and
nicable disease.
chemical W.rfare, now is the time to disFood service workers and handlers ·are contiuue funding our public health care
tested in oponsored clinics throughout sy.5tems.. '···· ·
On Nov. 6, you will have the opporthe ~ounty:Health~are workers andpeo, pie. whQ work closely with the public • tunity to support the J'vberculosil office
are also offered these free services.
levy. The TB office is totally suppC!rted
It is very important to get medical by this levy. They do not get any federal
attention and proper treatment for this or state funds and do not get any funds
chronic, infectious disease as early as from the Health Department. If this levy
possible. Hospitalization and clinic ser- dpes rtot p~ss, the TB office will have to
vices ate not only eSsential for the recov- 'close its doors.
·
ery of patients with tuberculosis, but
As a former employee of the TB
helps prevent the spread of disease from office, I saw first hand the valuable ser-

Support TB levy

vice the TB office provides for the cou~
ty. The screening program is a valuable,
tool in the fight against the spread of
· Tuberculosis.
""
There has recently been an upswing i);u
the incidence of TB exposure. Th~
expansive screening program providetl~
by the TB office can find those peopr.!"
who have been expo.sed and providf
medication, tree of charge, to prevellr&gt;l
them from developing the disease.
uM
I kno\v that many people · are ang?;: 1
about 'the recent decision to make Mei&amp;t
County a non-smoking county and have
stated that they will not vote to supportany health .ca~ agencies.
..,.
, The:ra office and the H~a1th D.tpariJ.
ment work directly with the CD~
(Center for Disease Control) to s~op the
spread . of infectious ' diseases. These
health care agencies are our, #l defense
to protect ourselves if biological warfare·
· does occur.
·
Vote "yes" to support .the. tuberculosis
levy.
Kathleen M. Whitjt
Rutlanl\,

Chester

·· Courthouse

w.l'1 :

.

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

Apples.' popularity takes o.ffinfall months
BY BECKY BAER

Apple• are popular all
year round, but especially
prevalent in the fall. They
are a nutrient-dense food
because they provide some
Vitamin A and C, thiamin,
iron, calcium and fiber. A
medium raw apple has only
75 calories.
When buying fresh apples,
choose ones that are firm.
Avoid those with bruises or
decay. Make sure apples are
ripe for optimum flavor, texture and storing capability.
Apples usually will be less
expensive when bought in
larger quantities. Be sure
they can be stored properly
until they are eaten. Apples
should be refrigerated
between 32 and 35 degrees
Fahrenheit in a perforated
plastic bag. Throw ou 1
' "oles at the first sign of
·pot! age.
·
Apples vary greatly in
moisture content, size, color
and taste . Usually one
pound will equal about
three medium apples. That
amount will also provide
about 1- 1/2 cups applesauce. Two pounds or six to
eight apples will make a 9inch pie. one bushel or 48
pounds will equal 16-20
quarts of canned or .frozen
applesauce. A quart is ~~out
2 3/4 pounds of applesauce.
Choose the variety .of
apples that will fit your
need. Fuji,' Gala, Jonathan,
Mcintosh, Winesap, and
Red and Golden Delicious
are great for eating. Golden
De)icious, Winesap, Mcln-

..

"'Homecoming

'
;ij

J

'

&lt;4'"ji

.....,

Palron. Enlertalnment. Relreshmenls . .All members urged lo
attend.

offered at

• y~,

(Nat Hent'!!f is a 11atianally renown4J,
authority an the First Atnendment and ti¢1
Bill of Right.!.) '
,,

Exercise helps to ·treat varicose . veins

Smith at 985-3521 or Pat
Hplter, 992-7261. There is no
fee.
.J
Those who take part are to
take a rolling pin, zip lock
plastic bag, a quart bowl or
pan, and a sharp knife for cut'eHESTER -A variety of ting, along with 1- t /2 cups of
eBucational programs and hoi- all purpose flour, and two
iday events will be carried out eggs .
at the Chester Court House
On Saturday, Nov. 10, Betty
Dean will give a demonstraover the next few weeks.
Saturday's special program tion on flower arranging feawill feature an interview at I turing Madonnas. The workp.m. with Charles E. Blakeslee, shop will be held in preparalongtime Meigs Counry tion for the Meigs County
Extension agent, on his role in Christmas flower show.
expanding services through
The annual Christmas in
that agency, as well as his con- Chester program at the. Courtributions to a variety of com- !house will be held Dec. I and
munity organizations.
2, and Dec. 8 and 9, 1 to 5
On Oct. 27 at 1 p.m., Betty p.m. There will be special disMilhoan will do a program on play.5, demonstrations, games
identi!)'ing old horse and . and music.
buggy roads in the county. The
Cost of the programs are
first session will be on Chester coming from a $5,000 educaTownship. Additional town- tiona! grant, which the
ships will be explored if Chester-Shade
Historical
enough interest in the topic is Association received la5t fall
shown.
from the state. Various activi.On Nov. 3 and 17 from I to ties have been carried out in
rp.ni. each day, workshops the schools with some of the
will be given by Cleo Smith money.
The old courthouse is open
on the art of making perfect
noodles for holiday dinners.
every Monday and Saturday
Only 10 people can take from II a.m. to 4 p.m. or by
part in the hands-on work- appointment for use by the
shop, which will be held at the public in genealogy study, for
C.hester Fire Department. To interviewing and viewing
pte-register for the class, call exhibit in the museum.

··Ariel Sharon spoke the facts in his view.of co,glict ;~
Nat
Hentoff

DEAR KEN: Please accept my
sympathy for your loss. Many people
feel awkward and do noi know the
proper words to offer when someone has suffered the loss of a spouse
or relative. It is for tho.e people I am
printing your letter. I hope they will
save it for future reference. Sooner or
later, we're all going to encounter
someone in that situation, and it's
best to be prepared.
Dear Abby is written by Paulint
Pl1illips a11d da.•gh.ter Jeatme Pltillips.

Programs

tVII

Laden- tells Albert Hunt in the Oct.'4.~
Will Street Journal that an actual peao~~
between Palestinians and Israelis would.-.
not deflect the terrorists. "They see," shli.
says," America as a barrier to establishinl!!'.
an Islamic state. Even if the Israeli-Pales.. ,
tinian ·issue were resolved, that wouldn\.;
"
.. ...
change.
.
~
.::!
· Ariel Sharon, under insistent pressl!r;f!"
from Colin Powell, permitted · Shimol)i
Peres to ]neet with Arafat; a ceasefire
agreed on; and thereafter, as Sharon say~,;,
the attacks on ls~aeli citizens, launches:!
each time by Palestinians, did not stoPf.
u~
10r even one day."
,, ~
11
So, Sharon now tells the Bush admiJJ;;,.
istration - which will not even inclu&lt;!~ ••
Hamas, Hezbollah, or Islamic Jihad, in ils
list of terrorists - "Do not try to
1
appease the Arabs at our expense. Frorii. _
now on, we }Ifill count only on our.::;
selves. There is no such thing as gooir
terrorism and bid terrorism, TerrorisiD."
blindly kills innocent people, and -!instructed my security forces to take all
the necessary measures to confront the
Palestinian terrorists." He has apologized
for a metaphor linking the president to .
Neville Chamberlain. Now that the w~r
~
on terrorism ha.&lt; begun, who is 04f.1
more reliable ally: Sharon or Arafat?
1
. In Elei Sinai, Gaza Strip, during th~d
ceasefire 12-year-oJd. Haniel Gross and,
friends, rehearsing for a celebration o'f
their settlement's"founding, suddenly saw,
two men in combat fatigues, firing wilct'-'-:
ly " ... at us. They ·were taking aim. Yon''
don 'kn
'll11 '
t ow 1'f you can go to sIeep wu.iout anything happening to you."
You can be .murdered in this jihad1
while you're awake. Haniel Gross did ndt'
attack first. She had nothing with whiclf!:
to attack or defend herself.
·':1

N.J.

NEWS . AND NOTES

.

Today is Monday, Oct. 15, the 288th day of 2001. There are
77 days left in the year.
.·
.
Today's Highlight in History:
New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani,
addressing the United Nations Gene~ ·
Fifty years ago, on Qct. 15, 1951, .the situation comedy "I
Assembly recently, warned: "The era of
Love Lucy" premiered on CBS teleVision.
On this date:
p1.0ral relativism on terrorism must end."
In 1860, 11-year-old Grace .Bedell of Westfield, N.Y., wrote
That message has yet to reach the White
a letter to presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln, suggesting
House and the State Department.
he could improve his appearance by growing a beard.
In trying to forge a coalition against
In 1914, the Clayton Antitrust ,Act was passed.
·
the . widely . interconnected scourge of
In 1917, Mata Hari, a Dutch. dancer who had spied for the
terrorism, the Bus!i administration is
Germans, was executed by a frenilh firing squad outside Paris.
enlisting, or trying to neutralize, some
nations that encourage or allow indirect
In 1939, New York Municipal Airport, later renamed
COLUMNIST
LaGuardia Airport, was dedicated.
.
fundraising for this murderous network.
In 1945, the former premier ofVichy France, Pierre Laval, ·
Among the latter, Saudi Arabia comes to
was execute&amp;
mind. And when the United States tell us all would have been well, and our
In 1946, Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering poisoned
Security Council lifted sanctiar1~m presence in their world would have
himself houi;S before he was to have been executed.
.
Sudan - a sanctuary for Osamal bin yielded a sweeter harvest, had we cast
. In 1966, President Johnson signed a bill creating the Depart·
Laden from 1992 to 1996, and other ter- Israel adrift ... But nothing could be furment ofTransportation.
rorists .since - we remained silent and ther from the truth. A deeper antiIn 1969, peace demonstrators staged activities· across the
'
Americanism grips Arab and Muslim
comphctt. ·
·
country, including a candlelight .march a,round the White
. In order to facilitate the coalition, the , lands.
·
House, as part of a moratorium against the Vietnam War.
administration's most persistent pressure
"It has been America's fate to be
In 1976, in the first debate of its kind between vice-presi- ,
has been on Israel to engage once more caught in the crossfire of a war over
dential ~ominees, Democrat Walter F. Mondale and Republican
in negotiations with Yasser Arafat. I have Islam itself, a war between privilege and
Bob Dole faced ofT in Houston.
long been for an independent Palestin- wrath, betweert the secular powers in the
In 1990, Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev was named
ian state; but for President Bush to sum- saddle and a nativist-pio us opposition
the recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize.
.
mon this "vision" at this point in the war from below."
Ten years ago: Despite sexual harassment allegations by Anita
on terrorism without first noti!)'ing
For a long time, the terrorists' fierce,
Hill, the Senate narrowly confirmed the nomination of
Israel, is 10 reward Yasser Arafat. We have abiding goal is to hijack the Muslim reliClarence Thomas to the Supreme Court, 52-to-48,
increased ·pressure on Israel to trust a gion, )Yhich does not condone such
Five years ago: CSX Corp. announced plans to buy Conrail
negotiating partner . who has initiated atrocities as suicide bombing.
Inc. for $8.4 billion dollars to create the nation's third-largest
In the Oct. 5 NewY0rkTimes,columnew violence ·from his side every tinte
railroad.
there is a cease-fire, or has not effective- nist Thomas Friedman, hardly an uncritOne year ago: President Clinton left Washingto~ for emer-·
ly punished the terrorists. ·
.
ical analyst of Israeli acts, notes: "We
gency talks in Egypt with Israeli and Arab leaders. New York
The administration is operating under know the Sept. 11 attack was being
Times movie and drama critic Vincent Canby died at age 76 ..
an illusion that a root cause of terrorism planned a year ago -- exactly when 'PresToday's Birthqay.5: Economist John Kenneth Galbraith is 93.
. is hatred of the United States because it idem Clinton was proposing to Yasser
Historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. is 84. Actress Jan Miner
is the ultimate supporter oflsrael. There- Arafat," th~ deepest accommodations
("Madge the Manicurist") is !14. Former Chrysler chairman
fore, Israel must not only exercise any Israeli government had ever made.
Lee Iacocca. is 77. Actress Linda Lavin is 64. Actress-director
Yet, Friedman adds, "this terrorism was
restraint when it retaliates against the
Penny Marshall is 59. Rock musician Don Stevenson (Moby ·
murder of its citizens,' but it must do being planned because America was tryGrape) is 59. Musician Richard Carpenter is 55. Actor Victor
much more to accommodate Arafat's ing to builil Israeli-Palestinian co-exisBaneijee is 55. Tennis player· Roscoe Tanner is 50. Singer Tito
demands.
tence, not because it wasn't."
Jackson. is 48. Actor Jere Burns is 4 7. Actress Tanya Robern is
However, as .Fouad Ajami, director of And Julie Sirrs, a journalist who in
46. Britain's Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson, is 42. Chef
Middle Eastern Studies at Johns Hop- four trips to Afghanistan, has interEmeril Lagasse is 42. Rock musician Mark Reznicek (Thadies)
kin! University, points ou't in the Oct. 8 v1ewed pmoners of the Northern
is 39. Singer Eric Benet is 31.
·
U.S. News &amp; World Report: "The Arabs Alliance who had been fighting with bin

are you?" Instead, they should say,
"Good 10 see you."The bereaved do
not need to be reminded of their
loss, but do wekome smiles and
cheery greetings.
KEN
ALBRECHT, SEA ISLE CITY,

,,

.
....
--~--------------~------------------------------------------~--~--------------------,.
HENTOFF'S VIEW

or hurtful.
My wife entered hospice care
when it was apparent she would not
win her battle. One woman sent her·
a greeting card that included the
message. '1ust think. - when you
die you can be my guardian angell"
Believe it or not, that was topped at
the visitation prior to the funeral,
when a widow told me: "You think
it's bad to.day? Just wait. Every day
will be worse than the day before."
.Instead of rushing to "open mouth
and insert foot;' people should just
offer sincere condolences, shake
hands, and hug or kiss the bereaved.
Weeks after the funeral, wherever I
went -including church- people
would either try to avoid me or give
me a pained look and ask," And how

••

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Dllpartmenl, childhood
lmrnunizallon clinic, Tuesday, 1
10 7 p.m.. at the office. Take
to be printed • ~lllc num- child's shOI records; must be
ber of days.
accompanied by parentl1egal
guardian.
MONDAY
. POMEROY - Meigs County
WEDNESDAY
Garden Club Association meet·
POMEROY - Red Cross
ing Monday, 6:3Q p.m. al the Bloodmobile, Wednesday, 12:45
Pomemy Libraty.
10 6 p.m. Meigs County Senior
· LETART - Letart Township Cillzens Center.
Trustees, Monday 5 p.m. al the
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
office building.
Uteraty Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
POMEROY - Revival ser- Pomeroy Ubraty. Phyllis Hackett,
vices at Moun! Hermon United hosless. Leah Ord 10 be !he
tfl'ethren In Christ Church, reviewed.
through Sunday, 7:30 p.m. SpeTHURSDAY
c~ singing each evening, Public
POMEROY- "Rock·a-Thon;
invited.
Senior CHizlins Cenler, 8:30 a.m.
-RACINE- Special meeting of to 4:30 p.m. to raise money lor
Racine Chapler 134, 7:30 p.m., New York disaster lund. Also an
Monday at lodge hall.to cekibrate 'All American Mear 10 be served
lh~ 1ooth anniversaty ol the lmm 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. al $3 with
ct!I!Pter. Visitation by Worthy all proceeds to go to the disaster
G?end Matron, Worthy Grand lund.

ou·R READERS' VIEWS
.Serving community

Moncllly. OlfGber 15. 2101

numerous qffairs have cheated wife of a lifo ·

LOCAL EVENTS
.z•l

Bend :_

Page AS

;

'

held

~OMEROY -

Annual
homecoming of the Hemi!Jck
Grove Christion Church was
h~ld Oct. 7, with guests from
I J churches attending. ·
. There was a basket dinner at
the grange hall at 12:30 p.m.
following by a program at the
· cHurch at 2:30 p.m.
Corey Six started the prowith piano music folby songs from the conr,eg;ttion. Muriel Bradford
a reading and there was
special music by the Pottmeyel's from Reno. Paula Welker,
Kenny-Wiggins, and Pottmeyers sang several songs, and the
program concluded with

~;;:;_

by pastor Richard

Area churches represented
were Alfred, Orange, Chester,
. Dexter; Zion, Minersville,
Flatwoods, Vienna, W.Va.,
Reno, Hemlock Grove and
Waterford.

MORE LOCAL
NEWS.
MORE.LOCAL
FOLKS.
Subscribe t11day.
992-2156

'

Becky
Baer

cious are appropriate for
baking.
(Becky Baer is Meigs County's Extension agent for family
and consumer scierues /community development, Ohio State
University.)

ADVICE
tosh, Rome and Jonathan
make good applesauce. Fuji,
Gala, Jonathan, Granny
Smith, Mcintosh, Rome,
Winesap and Golden Deli-

America 4t
War coverage
on pageA2

TO OUR VALUE[)
CUSTOMERS...
Due to a printing
error, ''The Cold
Weather Sale" ad that
begins October 14 wiU
end
October
21,
instead of October 28.
We apologize for any
inconvenience
this
may cause. ThankQ.

QUALITY
FARM&amp;FLEET
Silver Bridge Plaza

'

�'

.•
I

Pille AI •lbe Deily Sentinel

••

Capital punishment . Is a HARD-TO-HEAL WOUND l.
case exposes court rift or skin problem causing you:~
e o\OVERTlSEMENT

serious

question,"

••••

.

pa1n and distress?

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
convicted murderer's fight to
avoid execution has exposed
an unusual amount of rancor
among judges in the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals.
Some have accused others
of holding secret meetings
and eng~ging in questionable
tactics to spare John Byrd Jr.,
who w:as convicted of k.illing
a clerk while robbing a
Cincinnati convenience store
in 1983.
"This case has stirred a disturbing degree of acrimony
within the court which
reflects the politicization of
the issues by some public officials with motives open to

t

:

• Preoo•re ooreo • Frlotlo• toon • DlaMIIo oilllll •loon • S•relool wollo4o

Politicians look
to fund rails

Page B1
Mand.y. Odob• 15, 2081
'

MONQW'S

Waterford slams Tomadoes

HIGHLIGHTS

BY ScenT WOI.FE
O'IP CORESPONDENT

RACINE - Dan Doebereiner ran
for three touchdowns and amassed .
234 all-purpose yards in leading the
Waterford Wildcats to a 36-0 shutout
win in a delayed Southern homecoming game Saturday night in Racine.
Waterford is now 6-2 in tying its
best-ever school mark, and is 2-1 in
the Tri-Valley Conference. Southern
drops to 4-4 an&lt;l 2-1.
Corning into the game everyone
knew Doebereiner was the man to
stop, already having surpassed the
1,000 yard mark for the season.

topAPspot
AUBURN, Ala. (AP) Flori!la was upset 23-20 at
Auburn on Saturday night
and dropped from No. 1 to
No. 7 in the rankings. Miami
regained the top spot in The
Associated Press Top 25 media
poll after a 49-27 victory over
Florida State.

Estes wins

Despite all the keys and double teams
Southern could throw ' at him, Doebereiner rushed 24 times for 154
yards. Todd McCutcheon complemented that effort with 11 carries for
45 yards and a touchdown.
Southern's offense was virtually
non-existent against the more physical
Wildcats of Coach Doug Baldwin.
Southern was limited to 39 yards
rushing and had 44 in the air for 93
total. Brice Hill led Southern with 25
yards on six carries. Much of that
yardage came on a 20-yard run. Justin
Allen led the Tornadoes with four
catches for 44 yards.

Two times Southern held Waterford on downs during the first two
possessions. The second time came
when Waterford had first and goal
from the nine. In four straight plays,
the SHS defense held in heroic fashion, aliowing SHS to take over from
the four. · Southern made some
progress but was forced to punt and
Waterford took over.
Southern again tried to mix up its
running game with different rushers Matt Ash, B.J. Marnhout, Hill, Brandon Pierce, Anthony Coffinan. and
Joe Cornell. Only Coffman and Hill
were able to muster runs of over five

yards.
In addition, Pierce, who has developed into a very good quarterback,
had virtually no time to throw and
had to rush many passes in his wo.rst
completion ratio of the year. Credit
much of Southern's inabilities to a
strong Waterford defense.
The game's first score came on a
26-yard run by Doebereiner. It came
on the sixth play from scrimmage.
Doebereiner's initial burst through the
line was all it took as he went on to

PI•- _ _SotiiiMrn. IS

lnvensys,a•sk

CAPITAL PUNISHMENT -

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, housed In the court building pictured In Cincinnati,
has not ruled whether John Byrd Jr. will get a full-l:ourt hearing.
Byrd, convicted of killing a clerk In Cincinnati In 1983, Is the
next Inmate on Ohio's execution schedule. (AP)
and Tennessee, three of the
states whose federal appeals
are sent to the Cincinnatibased court. Michigan does
not have a death sentence.
The. 6th Circuit has overturned numerous death sentences - usually because it
agrees with arguments that a
convicted murderer had bad
legal counsel- while leaving
the
murder
convictions

intact.
It defers to the U.S.
Supreme Court on the legality of capital punishment.
"The imposition of the
death penalty has been consistently upheld by the
Supreme Court," Judge Alan
E. Norris wrote in a September opinion. "Until the Court
holds to the contrary, we are
bound by its decisions."

was an individual'sellingViagra

Officials ·want
conbad back

without a prescription through
the Internet," Fairfield County
Sheriff Dave Phalen said.
CLEVELAND (AP)
Pfizer makes the drug drat · €1NCINNATI (AP) Funding for passt·ngen trains treats
male
impotence. ,So~e City offictals want to
may move up on legislators' Employees told investigators reiCJnd a $1%,000 contra~!
priority lists for transportation they bqught an undisclosed . a~ed to a church whose
dollan following the Sept. 11 quantity of the drug from mtrnster has led marches on
ierrorist attacks.
· Saunden online.
Ctty Hall and called for eco"Now's the time to invest in
Late Thursday night, under- ~omic boycotts of downtown
rail," said Rep. Dennis cover Pfizer workers and law liusmesses.
Kucinich, D-Ohio. "We all enforcement officers met
"People are going to say he
know tliat if we had high- Saunders at a .restaurant in is getting paid to clean up a
speed rail right now, it would Lancaster, where they bought mess he had a part in creating:'
be in great demand. People 480 more doses, authorities Mayor Charlie Luken said last
would be lining up. We've said. Saunders was not on duty week of the contract awarded
learned it's better to have a at the time. .
to the church of the Rev.
variety of choices available, and
A task force of Lancaster and Damon Lynch III. "If there's a
rail is one important option." Pickerington police, Hocking , way to back, out of the .c~n­
Kucinich and Rep. Steve and Fairfield county sheriff's tract legally. I &lt;I be all for 1t.
LaTourette, R-Ohio, support a officers, and the Ohio Phar~
Councilman Pat DeWine
bill to provide $71 billion in macy Board coordinated the said he will address th~ is1ue in
no-interest bonds and loans to
effort leading up to the sting. a committee meetmg th1~
•rates and intentate agencies to
week.
·develop rail systems.
The contract was awarded to
Of that, $36 billion woul&lt;l
New Prospect Baptist Church
be earmarked for building
in August as part of an effort to
high-speed intercity lines that
clean up the Over-the-Rhine
would take the place of airline · CLEVELAND (AP) - . A neighborhood, the
same
flights of I 00 to 500 miles.
small collection of items that neighborhood where a white
Last year, 670 million pas- belonged to Dr. Sam and Mar- police officer fatally shot an
sengen flew from U.S. air- ilyn Sheppard will be sold at an unarmed black man on April
port$, compared with the 22.5 auction, to the disappointment 7. The shooting caused the
million who rode from city to of the couple's only son.
city's worst rioting since the
city on Amtrak.
The collection is included assassination of Martin Luther
Citi~ like Cleve!'tnd have among thousands of family King Jr. in 1968.
few trams to places like Ch1ca- heirlooms to be offered for sale
Lynch, who helped lead
go1 New York and Pittsburgh. Oct. 20 from the estate of
protests of the shooting, said he
The trains t.hat do run drop bff Dorothy Sheppard, wife of
is not benefiting from the conpassengen to the e:u:JY morn- Sam's late brother Richard. ftact.
ing houn. Some routes arc; s.ig- She died in January.
nificantly slower than drMng
"Heavens," said Sam Reese
,would be.
Sheppard, who learned of the
From Cleveland, Amtrak auction Friday while in
trains going to Washington, Greensboro, N.C., for a protest
D.C., take 1~ ho~n. To New against the death penalty. "I
COLUMBUS (AP) - An
15
York, t~e fide.
often 21 feel that it's our respectful and Ohio Air National Gu~rd unit
hou~, wtth an etght-ho~ historical responsibility to keep has been sent overseas to proover to Philadelphia.
all of these things' together."
vide communications help to
. Sheppard said to him, the the Air Force.
1\venty · members 6f the
collection is priceless.
"I'm going to do everything 251st Combat Cornmunica1 can to try to negotiate them lions Group left fium SpringLANCASTER ·(AP) - A out of the auction:· Sheppard field Oct: 6.
It is the first Ohio National
20-year Columbus police offi- sa1·(!·
cer has been arrested on
Marilyn Sheppard WiiS blud- Guard unit known to have
charges of selling almost 500 geoned in her bed early on drawn an overseas assignment.
The unit's movement was
doses ofViagra without a pre- July 4, 1954, at the family's
scription to the drug m akers• suburban BayVillage home on classified so the date of their
undercover employees.
Lake Erie.
&lt;leparture wasn't released until
Officer Delois Saunders, 49,
Sam Sheppard was convicted last ·friday, said Maj. Ann
of Whitehall faces a single of the ~layin~ and served a Coghlin, public aff"airs officer
felony count of drug traffick- ·decade m pnson. The U.S. for the group.
ing, Fairfield County authori- Supreme Court lat~r overThe 20 members of the 44ties said. She was released Fri- turned the conv1ct16n, and; person unit were mobilized
day on $7,500 bond.
Sheppard was acquitted at a Sept. 25. The. unit is based at
"We were alerted by the secood trial in 19~6. He d1ed the . . Sp~mgfield-Bec~ley
manufacturer a couple of days in 1970.
. Mumc1pal Airport tn Sprtog' prior to the arrest th~t there
field ..

Old ·Dominion
race rained out
MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)
- Rain washed out the Old
Dominion 500 NASCAR
Winston Cup race. Martinsvill~ Speedway officials
rescheduled it for Monday at
11 a.m.
Also, NASCAR Winston
Cup teams will have to use
the same engine to qu~ify
and race next season, the
series'
governing
body
announced.

Doctors report.
"Wounds of many
origins can greatly
lrtneftt
from
accelerated natural
healing with the aid·of

Amerigel®
Ointment."

::roved

Physician
Recommended

Steelers pound
Chiefs, 20-17
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)
- Jerome Bettis rushed for
112 yards and set up two
scores as Pittsburgh held off a
late rally and beat Kansas City,
20-17.
Bettis has rushed for more '
than 100 yards in five of six
games against the ChiefS (14).
The Steelers (3-1) never
trailed against the ChiefS, who
fell to 0-3 at home for the
first time since 1980. Kris ·
Brown kicked two field goals,
including a 55-yarder, and
Chad Scott intercepted a pass
from Trent Green and ran it
back 61 yards for a touchdown . .
Priest Holmes had 150
yards and two touc~do~ns on
20 carries for Kansas City.

Vikings hold off
late Lions rally

Ohio Guard unit
deployed

''

"

Bengals' Dillon
key in win for
Battle of Ohio

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Bob
Estes came from Jive shots off
the lead with a final-round 9under 63 and took advantage
of a critical mistake by Tom
Lelurtan to win the lnvensys
Classic at Las Vegas.
It was the second win of the
year and the 17th consecutive
round in the 60s for Estes. He
finished at 30-under for the
five rounds, a shot ahead of
Lehman (66) and Rory. Sabbatini (64).Davis Love Ill finished fourth with a counerecord 61.
Lehman had a chance to tie
on the 16th, but hit a 4-iron
thin from 218 yards and it
landed some 20 yards short of
the green in the water.

Sheppard items
to be sold

•

The Daily Sentinel

Baseball Playoffs, Page B3
NFL &amp;ores, Standings, Page B3

Miami regains

wrote

Senior judge Nathaniel Jones,
who is at the center of..ihe·
dispute.
Byrd, 37, has acknowledged
that he took part in the robbery but claims he is innocent
of murder. An accomplice
confessed to the slaying in a
1989 affidavit, which prosecuton say is false.
Appeals court judges rarely
criticize each other in their
writings. Nor do they comment on the righteousness of
·the death penalty.
Written opinions usually
deal with interpretation . and
application of laws, appropriateness of lower court decisions and instructions, competency of defense lawyers;
timeliness of filings and judicial theory.
·
But the Byrd case has
exposed a deep rift in the
application of the death
penalty in Ohio, Kentucky

'

llondlly, Oct. 15, 2001

Pomeroy, lllddlepoft, Ohio

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"1

,,

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Daunte Culpepper rushed
seven times for 83 yards and
two touchdowns, and threw
for another score as Minnesota withstood 20 straight
Detroit 'points in the second
half to win 31-26. •
The Vikings (2-3), who surpassed 30 points for the first
time in I 0 regular-season
games, avoided falling into a
tie for last place in the NFC
' Central.
Culpepper was 20-for-28
for 244 yards and a touch- ·
down, and· an interception.
Cris Carter bad eight catches
for Ill yards, including a 4 7yard touchdown pass.
Charlie Batch, starting for
the first time sirrce Week 1,
WIIS 31-of-41 for 345 yards for
the Lions - 0-4 for the first
time since 1989.

••

CINCINNATI (AP) Nearly one full quarter without a first down by eithef
team..
Remarkable? Not in this
game. The Browns and Bengals couldn't do much of anything right in thdr latest
poke-in-the-eye reunion.
Penalties piled up, quarterbacks slammed into their own
running backs, fumbles squirted everywhere. The only constant was Corey Dillon.
The running back who does
his best against the Browns
had his best game of the season. Dillon ran for a seasonhigh 140 yards and a decisive
fourth-quarter touchdown
Sunday as Cincinnati beat
Clevelan&lt;l 24-14.
"I don't think we like each
· other," Dillon said. "If they'd
have won, I'm sure they
would have been popping
champagne corks."
The upstart Browns (3-2)
came to town with their first
three-game winning streak
since they returned to the
NFL in 1999. For most of the
afternoon, they played like an
expansion team.
Cleveland ruslied for only
40 yards and Tim Couch
couldn't do anything against a
defense missing its best player.
BIG GAME - Bengals running back Corey Dillon (2B) runs- past Browns defender Jamir Linebacker Takeo Spikes
Miller (95) for a gain In the third. quarter,
Sunday In Cincinnati. Dillon ran for 140 yards. (AP) missed the game because of
.

.

his father's death in Georgia.
"They shut us down," said
Couch, who threw for 194
yards and two touchdowns. "I
didn't get into a rhythm. I
don't think anyone got into a ·
rhythm. We were totaUy out of
sync.
In the first half, the Browns'
defense also did a nice job on
DiU on, who hadn't come close
to 100 . yards since the season
opener. Neil Rackers missed a
22-yard field goal attempt just
before ·halftime, leaving the
Browns ahead 7-3 and the
Bengals staring at a make-orb~ak mwnent.~ . •, •. .
After losing two in.a row on
the road, the Bengals were
getting booed at home.
"Coming off those losses on
the road, we dido 't want people to start thinking we're the
same old Bengals again:• Dillon said.
The crowd of64,217- the
largest ever for a sporting
event in Cincinnati
watched a Browns-Bengals
game get decided the same
old way. Dillon took over in
the second half, running for
72 yards and a 5-yard touchdown that put the Bengals in
control early in the fourth
quarter.
Cincinnati had a season-

..

Plun- Ohio, IS

Boyles takes 2nd
at Ohio Uniyersity
BY MARK WIWAMS
RIO GRANDE StD

••

ATHENS. - Rio Grande sophomore harrier Matt
Boyles continues to improve and impress as a competitor
in college cross country. The Tuppers Plain native finished second at the McDonald's Invitational at Ohio
University on Saturday. Boyles timed out at 26:22.58,just
5.5 seconds behind winner Justin Ross ofWright State).
Rio Grande finished fifth out of eight teams with 108
points.
.
. Sophomore Marc Littrell (Baltimore, OH) ran well for
the second consecutive race, finishing ninth (26:48.62).
Sophomore Derek Baker (Gallipolis, OH) was 31st
(28:21.74) with Scott Littrell (Baltimore, OH) right
behind him in 32nd place (28:24.02).
Senior Michael Hendershott (Baltimore, OH), who has
batded injury troubles all season, finished 36th (28:41.47).
Other Redmen results: Jim Robinson (Lakeview, OH)
was 43rd (29: 14.49), David Kerns (West Liberty, OH) finished 53rd (29:33.80)_ and Bryan Jones (East Palestine,
OH), 58th (30:04.+9).
The Redmen !entered Saturday's race, 28th in the
NAJA, after receiving 13 votes in the latest Top 25 poll.
There were 78 runners in the men's race.
Kenyon College won the meet with 40 points, •Ohio
was second with 64, foUowed by Baldwin-Wall~ce, 3rd,
(94) Akron, 4th, (?9) Wright State, 6th (108), Indiana
University (PA), 7th (149) and Milskingum College, 8th
(225).
.
On the women's side: Sophomore Amanda Wolfe (Lancaster, OH) was highest Redwomen to finish . She was
46th with a time of 20:14.45. Red-shirt freshman
Heather Mace (Logan, OH) was 58th (20:50.71), Sopho-

Plun -

Rio, B:S

I THINK I BLEW
IT -Indians
reliever Paul
Shuey, center,
hangs his
head In the
dugout between
Einar Dlaz, left,
and C.C.
Sabathla In the
ninth
Inning of the
.
Indians 6-2 lo-ss ·
to Seattle Sunday. (AP)

Mariners avoid elimination
CLEVELAND (AP) -The
Seattle Mariners stared down
elimination, packed their bags
and headed home to play at
least one more game.
Safeco Field will never have
looked so good, or been so
loud.
Nine outs away fium their
magical season ending irt an
early ' postseason exit, the
Mariners rallied for a 6- 2 win
over the Cle\reland Indians on
Sunday in their AL division
series to force a decisive Game

5.
Rookie lchiro Suzuki provided the key hit in Seattle's
three-run,
seventh-inning
rally, which underscored the
Mariners' resolve.
"There was no panic," Seat-.
tie second baseman Brei
Boone said. "The feeling was
we were going to find a way."
Suzuki's RBI single came in
the sewenth
when · the
Mariners, shut out for the .first
six innings by losing pitcher
Bartolo Colon, displayed their

uncanny ability to do the little:
things right.
.
"There was a little sigh of .
relief with each at-bat," Jay :
Buhner said. "We got a walk.
The error. A sac fly. A hit. Each
one was bigger and bigger and
then we just knew."
The win enabled Seattle,
which won 116 games during
the regular season, to avoid the
same fate as the 1906 Cubs the team whose wins record
the Mariners matched. Chica-

~~~--Trlbe.IS

�Monday, Oct. 15, 2001

Pomllov, llldJhport, ONo ·

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dlllly Sentinel 0 Pege B3

BASEBALL PLAYOFFS

D-Backs Into NLCS

CLASSIFIED

•

I
I

PHOENIX (AP) -Tony \\\•• ri: singled
home the winning run with two 9"11 in the bottom o( the ninth inning to litl: the Diamondbacb OYer the St. Louis Cardinals 2-1 in th~
deciding Gillie 5 o( ~ divilioo series.

We Cove
Meigs, •Gall Ia,
And Mason ·
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

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(740)258 8887
UIIIXIIiidllkwwi ...... lro*.,...., laCII ........ tur~
18118 Fonl C1ull Wogan XI.T · E-.od 1875.··
·ffltll, fully ....._ COl z.t (740) - .

Spitz (m)
Chow (f)

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T.m.r (f)
Mix Terrier (f)

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~

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l'll:tlsoN.u8

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von. 11.000 hlnllng. .vlnjt oldair, Cllllle, 1111• PW, PL. ~· ,:"".::'!'·=~
AMIFt.l C1111ftl, dull Ill """" l!ld
F ....
1&gt;1g1. Alii. _,. 7. 11111 Milo .... ~ ~
011
2134

Cbicaon did not win a World Series tide
D"
that year.

f~

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• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • rnctudt complete
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111o ume u 111o neld guy
. Gentleman -ng While for doing ~? Would you
· Female 0vor so Yeano For liko 10 oam whal you're
Walks And F - p. Ro- worth? Tho boner yoo par·
ply Too 553 2nd Avenue, form lhe ~ you will bo

Gallipolis, Ohio 45831 ,
Apartment403

--------

w~y wail? Sla• moellng
Ohio sl"'!i.. lonlgll, call lOll
free 1·800·758·2623 o&lt;l
1621.

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EOE M/FIDN
www.......... carn

IHOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. """""menda lhal
you do buslneso wllh poop1e
you know, and NOT 10"""'
money lhrough lhe mall until
you have lnvalligalod lhe

l

Kittens· Inside only. Utter tates. 8204 Carta Drive. Paralegal Naaded. Eatab-

lralned, preler same homo. Galllpollo, OH. An Equal lished Hunlinglon Firm.
(740)446-3897
. Opportunity
Employer. C(onl)act, Ko 1ley Services:
800 29~9470
FIINDV
SOlar Blankel Ills 27 II.
'
.
.
above ground pool. USOd Domno'a now taking appll· Pa•·t&gt;me D&gt;otary Aide
once. (740)367.()889
cations for management· needed for 100 bed skilled
nd sat drtv
Galrpoll nursing facility. Interested
L&lt;m AND
~ ~ 1 1ons 1 18 applicants should apply to:
.,
Apply in po"!,
on y. Rockepnnga Rthabililation
rOUND
·
Center, 36759 Rockapnngs
EMPLOYMENT
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
OPPORTUNmES
45769 AH e · W
~)"');."::9.~: Wei~~~~
COOK/ DIETARY AIDES Supo~sor. E~a~e,;:
porneranlan, spacial family HDLZI!R SENIOR CARE nily Employer Encouraging

I:nd

pet3Q4..895.3822

Wecu

Lost· 1 111 red cow, aoo lbl., for

CE~!

coo~ dlata~':

Wo~ceOiverslty.

Margin A RECESSION

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whlch.=•.::Hlll&amp;-582·3345

AJir'Ni ..... IMIIfrlrllltng
ln.,i,_ll
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1to
~ronoo, llmltallon e&lt;
dloot'•lllnltlon-on

COlOr. rellgloh, Mx
hlmllllllsllltut or Mtlon8l
origin. or any lnt.ntlan to
make ..... auch
1'101,

pra,.,..nce,llmlllllonot

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Dact~Mmtntlfot.-.1

v=:~h.!~oUr·
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'
lnlonnod'l'"t•ll
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lhleiiiHIPif*.,.
tv~ on en equ111
opportunttybaMI.

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u.............
FOR SALE
.D.Vl\'11!&amp;)

·

28x60 Ooublewide sitting on
rented lol. With 2x8 walls,
thermal pane windows.
Pr1ced to Sell, Point Pleas·
ant area. (304)675·3689
ask for Rosemary.
3 Bedroom on Route 2
(304)675-5332
'
For Rent or Sale Small
Houoo $2SO. Monlh .+ $200.
Oopoalt (304)727-3318
lrom 6pm-11pm:
For aale b~ owner: NICe bl·
level home on ' acr~ near
Chtolor. Throe bldrcom,
IWO bllhl. ono-oar garago.
lomlly room wllh llroplaoo.
1un room. New central htat·
lng &amp; e/o lyllom. Ont mi•
null oil Roull 7, bulllill prl·
VIII. (7&lt;10)1185·311111

Prlcl Aoauold. 3 loaroom,
a 112 Bllh, a Cor &lt;llragt , a
~ lroplaaaa , Pallo Oooro,
Muoh Mo\'al Cloat IO HOII•
11'1,
lillllpOIII,
OH
.,. •03 10
(,-)441
:::-"7~"7--:-::-:Plo II rondO
lied·
roomo,
1 1/aArea,
Bllh,2 L.A..
Kilohon, Lira• '•••I LOt
lmmodllll
Pooaotllon,
127,900. (7&lt;10)448·2501

"

Qlo.

. :,: ~7 · •
5

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~.

110 Ooyo lriiMor, FO&lt;P!oduct Or
- 1 We Stll Now Clpport\.&lt;jly. (740)441-1882
·----. .... , ... ·-...-

.....,....

~Up To

Col

lolayiOg Applilncol, F CltyMtyttQ, 740-44&amp;-1'7V6.

TS Transmission

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For Soloo Racandlllonod Ropalrod, How &amp; Albuln In
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erators.

8182. Froo E - .

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EMy

MOIILI! HOllE OWNERS

lntorlhoml &amp; Colomtn gu.
011 a tltCiirlc turnaceo lneluding· hi ettlclency pump......,.. we cony o

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home~ &amp; IICCIIE 181•
BI!NN
B HEAnNO a
COOUNG (740)448-8411
ar

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NEW AND USED FUR·
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lnotoll, Froo Eotimaln, 11
"*"
you doni Coli ut, wo bolh
~~.:.. C· ,;_....:..., ,
Rei ....... HUD ~. Sultot • - · Buu Sell Looool (7•A) ue 6308 1
Pomeroy, all brick" · - · " •
....-..~· •• (740)441-1518
· · -···
,.
·
- " ' • ..
home, 3 bedroom, 2 both, tales, ~ aero 1011, - o f
Trade.
800-28H10118.
)
dining, kllchen &amp; living Rio Grande, from $25,900. 1 bodroom upllalro apart- Nice,- tumiiUrel appl~n· Rod Melli Bun~ Bed. Twin

j

SOC~L SECURITY ISSI? - -

No Fee Unlo88 Wo Wlnf

4

(3041185-37811

~~.
a.-, ~..__Idol~ -

21&gt;r. Tralor on Crab c-. anoo. 3&lt;107 .-oon A...
No Poll, Rat.&lt;tncot ,._ nuo, (304)875-7388.
qulrod. Rent Nog. (304)8751208
Mollohan Corpot. 202 Clark
ChOpol Rood. Porlor, Ohio.
Allum.m&gt;mi
(740)448-7444 1-877-830-

r

-

Holdy Mulnl

for $10. Opon Sol Wpm. &amp;
3 . , _ Living - . , Sull. -·~~~~· DM!ulll or....
Good Candlllon 1125. Gun houle MI. Alto. (304)11115Col&gt;lntt $40. (74014*-47111 3740 loavo mHUgo. or
.

flnlnclng, 90 ~tame u
2•112 baths big kltcheri acre tlactl, some ~ng
wloak cabl,;,,, OR LA Public hunting. Available In 1 and 2 bedroom apart- cuh. VINI Muter Ctld.
wlgaa lOg flrOI&gt;Irlce. cOnlral Alhona. Gallla, Jackson, moniJ, turnlohod and untur· Drive- a•lltllt oave aJol
air laundry room, tronl Pike, S&lt;lolo and Hocl&lt;lng nllhod MCUlllt dlpooll ,.
Main- Fumlluro
poicl, &amp; 2·112 car garage. Counly, also Lewll Co., KY. qulrod: no pots, 740-1192·
(304"'75-l-422
lmmediale poaeulon. Ap- For mort lnfonnaUon and 2218
515 ~S1JMt. Polnl
praised at $125,800.' Make FREE 11111P1 conlacl:
.
Plouont
offer. Call (740)448-4514 Anthony Lind Co., Lid.
1 Bedroom Apartment. Relrom 8-5pm, IA-F, or
I-21W311
lrlgeralor, Range, NC 1,.
How 1 UOOd Fumlluro
(74ll)446-32&lt;48 afl"' 5pm.
www.atcllnd.corn
dudod, $218 Pkll Dopo11t &amp; How 2
UvlngroOm

Country

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Ranch Galllpoha..

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Scenic

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2.7 acres. ur'Nt\Wntln'aln, in

plel ~ ua_, mbod me House. 3 Bodrooma, 1 112
corn °'' r..,..u
• new Balho, 2 Car Garage, Cov·
lloonng &amp; carpal 2 br. 1 ba. erod Deck. 1 Aero Lol. Ask·
din. rm.&amp; heal pump ' fronl · ing S75 000. 31134 Ro&lt;! Hil
pol&lt;l1 wl owning exc. COfld. Road, . Danville· Molgo
304-576-4016
Counly. (740)742·6004.
~ , AyanorAmi,Holden.

I

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,......._-

ment In Galllpolle. S250 on.

glassed in back pon:h, largo W Dolll Hu Only 10 L
•
•
llront porch, lencoll in back 1
oiJ economical uiHitlel, $278 10
. rry
7
yard, (740)992·2571 .
Loft, 304- 38-729!i.
~78 por monlh pluo ulllllloa
•
Nice
4 acnt tract nee (740~2957

Ll:lAN

1981 Nash

-rly.

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&amp; heat, root &amp; carpel, Home? Don't Have Lind? 1&amp;2 bedroom near Holz.:

MONEY

__

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Newly constructoa single WIIChiOWn, $2700, pioooe
IIOrY 1600 aq tooi homo, call (5801583-3753, Lotvo
Locale&lt;! 10 mlnulol from name ana number '
.
Holzer Hoopllal, 20 mlnutoa
HUNTING Oli
::'olf~:;:,
::f~
RECREATION LAND
1.;12 aero lot 3 bedroom Ranging in 5 aero 10 100

room, fireplace, all new (740)245-5747

1-800-980·8948124 Hours

1111"------,I

r

For ..le lg. ranch llylo
home, 4 ·br.. 3 bo., w1
ocr- in palio pol&lt;ll, 2
c a r - $71,000.

~

(740)4418-tOCM

PROOF BIZ. MUST SELL range, micro, air condiUonor Looking To Buy AI New I!JOIIIh. CoK (7&lt;101o148-2458. (7&lt;10)448-218Q. .

P a r t - I I m e

phone (7&lt;10)368-8592 Vin both lull· lime and P••· housekoeporllaundry staft
. 10. Ohio.
·
'
. lime. E•ponenco proforrod, needed lor 100 bed &amp;kUiod
- ' - - - - - - - - ·but will train the right candi· ~nursing facUlty. Interested
Losl· blaok &amp; white Pygmy data. If you are inleresled, applk:anls should apply lo :
goal in lho Rocksprlngo pleasoapplyat380Colonial Rockepnngs Ro~abHitalion
Road area, $25 Raword, Dnve. BldwoH, OH or phone Conler, 36759 Rocklprlnl!'
(740)992·3333.
Euta or Manit al (7&lt;10)ol48- Road, Pomeroy, Oh&gt;o
5001
45769, Atto Mike Gilmore,
111
Supervisor. Equal Oppo•uYARD SALE
FAST GROWING BUll· nily Employer Encouraging
NEI8 NEEDS CASHIERS WorkplaCe lllvOIIIIy.
!.,~::~;;:::;~;~ &amp; COOKS, PART nilE,
~
FULL nME, ALL SHIFTS, McClure's Rallaurant now
YARDS..U.
SEND PESUIIE TO: THE hiring. all Jl&lt;&gt;coJIOna, full or
DAILY SENnNEL PO parl·timo, pick up appllca·
G AlJJPOUS
lOX 721-08 POMEROY tion allocation &amp; bring back
"~--iiOiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiio_.J DH
• bolwoon
&amp;
9.30am
417n •
lamily
gerago
Wed·
IO·OOom
Monday
lhru
Sal·
2
1810
Sal., II·?, tumilure, ciolhea, Help wanlod canng lor lhe uni.y. '
.
Homllnlorlorandmora,apDarat Group Home.
proximataly 2 112 miles out now paying minimum wage, Addi'HIIfS want~ lmmedl554 trom Cheshire on Oxyer new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7&amp;m· atetyl No tlq)enenc. neeRoad, rai~ or shine.
5pm, 3Pm-ttpm, 11 Pm· ....ry. WD11t; at home. call
~
7am, call 74(1·992-5023.
toll tree 1-886-215-5709
YAADS..U.
Homtworkera Needed WORI&lt;FROMHOMEI
PoMEaov/Mmou: -35 W kl P
I
NO EXPERIENCE
~
. •• Y rocou ng
.
~1. Easyl No Experl. NEEDED!
Huge yard SBie &amp; crafts, once Needod. Coli 1· COMPANY EXPLODING
34820 Stale Route 7, Pom- 600·652·8728 Exl. 2070, EARN $1Q00.$80(1()1M0 •
eroy, acroas from Skat.,.. ~4Hrs.
1 ~ 1510
way, 10112-10/18.
INTEANAnONAL
WWW.EXMoneyToday.com
AUCI10N AND
STUDENT EXCHANGE.
Coordinator needed to re-11«1
~
Fl..EAMA!ua;;r
cruh OOol lemlilos and au1'lwNING
pervlao studonls. Musl bo •
.
Rick Pearaon Auction Com· organized anthuslaslic and
pany, full time auctioneer, enjoy ~king with t~ns. Glllllpollt career COllege
complete auction service. Part- time cQmmlssloned (CareersCbseToHome)
Ucensed t68,0hio &amp; West position. (800)760-4821 .
Call Today! 740-448-436?,
.VIrginia, 304·773·5785 Or www.-pec:tfounct.tlon.org
R1~~~~~~B.
304-773-5«7.
Mact"llne -atofa needed
:
170
.
I
WANI'ED
for first &amp; second shifts,
MlSCFU..A.NEOl5
1
m BuY
-lng for Individual wllh al .
,
.
~...__ _ _ _.__
_.~ laosl 2 years o•porlor&lt;:o •n
'
macfllne Shop. company of·
.
.. Absoluie Top Dollar: U.S. fera e•cetltnl wage &amp; bene· Bedroom SUite, bed. drtll·
Silver, Gold Colna, Proot- fit package, torward resume er, chest 01 drawers, $125 ·
alter
sets. Diamonds. Qold to: Imperial Electric, 345 ~= 5 ·42 82
Alngs, U.s . Currency,· Sycamore Orlve, Middle· ·
·
M.T.S. COin Shop, 151 Sac· po•. Oh 45760, Att: Mark Oak 1. - ..~ 535 ~-d
..ondA
Galllpol' 740- Venoy
lrvwuuu ,
• 1\1111 •
-446- 2 ~~·
tl,
·
two or more 194&lt;.1 1, S30
.
·
(740)742-2897 or (7-40)992·
wanloa 10 Buy: Standing U~GENJ~-- NEt;,~ 5ED: 7258
Timbo (7&lt;10)379-2711
P """ ~Mo, oam .., lo
r.
.
$60 for 2 or 3 houre WHkly. I'ICI
WANI'FD
Call Sera-Toe, 740·592·
To Do
I \ll'ltl\\11 '\I
'\lll\lll ...
6651.
.
Jf'tl,io~""------, Mollndao Roolaurant 509 An Karo10no wicka lnolal·
HFJ..pWANJ'IiD
Main StrHt Point Pltau.nt ltd: tepalrlng torctd air ktr·
11 ICCfPIIng applloallonl for ossne htatera: lawn mow·
1111 I&gt;OIIIIonl. lxporiiiiCtd oro: omall onglnoj. Mike
Grill Coolr Naoded Ap~y (7&lt;10)448·7104
1
181PTinloFT
AbamJOII
~~~'Y.
F
wilhln
·
E
- 4 78 1 1
'
Davld'l General Contr1ct1ng
Wollt From HOmo
NEW EPHEDRA FP!E Plumbing, lleotrloll, palnl·
www.bPich123.oom
La• 4011111 ~ 2 monlholll ing , dtcl&lt;t, root1• Clll
llutranlood Roaulll.
(7&lt;10)a55·8373 (304)833·
Applletlionl bllft111COOPIIG
Or. Approvtdll
ea45
lor houJOCIIInlng Pf!Ul•
~rll Corltulllllon
Fire and wa1ar D1maga
,.,.,_,87-3148
TAI·COUNTY CONST~UO·
Cioonlng ano AIPtlro. Mull
- ·••hlllll!y.oom
TION.
.
Naw
Havl RtWIDII Tranaporllo -· illtOO" Conll ••a~n Conllruollon/AimOdlllng.
·• •· p
1
~·
I •~ ·
'Siding;, ·~ootl~ '0""""~
lion Coro
••~ -Clolnlng
unCIUllie•
•
- lnd lui llmt , 01\1 "HI ' II Air""l.or181''e"-Ill•'
clal
.,,_
1143 Coftll-~ Ratd ~ IVIIIIbfl· lor LP I ond ma111 574-41231174·3155
' • •• ono
ITNA'I
on Ill 111\1111.
' ..,.y, olaon oul,
lipollo, OH 4 1. (7&lt;10).....,•
lnllrotlatl
llhOUkl Any.
uli Will hlul
9118
K~lllt M - 11 (7&lt;10)8112· ctoan up or movl almoat
Netd 7I.ICIIIO 1o Stll Avon. 1472 or 110p Ill' our tron1 Ill· lnVIhlng. Cali (740)448can (740)448-3358
11o1 tor on oppllatllon. EOE 7104

r
r

16

::0·

~&amp;JD~~='n! ~~

=

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r .
Ill-·..,.._,

Free 112 . Lall puppies. wo(kers. SIJ•ing wage Is· Admlolstrator at (740)992· • p;,;;'"'eoa ~~;01
(7&lt;10)388·9088
$8.75 par hour. Apply today 6472. EOE
•
·
- - - - - - - - In paraon al Mkldlelon EaVending 1000% Prolil

r

.!t~

II I

132 IC1111 with pond, loll ol 2 Homl 7
llonding timber, ~ 4 miltl out Sltld Hill All . .
bodroom, 2·112·bllh home, '*"'-· 2 largo ~ All
2 baml, and cellar Eloclrlc. 1300 monlll 1300
houoo, mobile home renlll Dtpotll., AIIO Mollllt Home
:;;:,~ul~logoS.:"'~ CGmmertcalloll for Ult Ql opot. below - l l o on Lot 1150. and S110 dtpoiiL
~ jutt..l""3Q4.4175.t9!57 loue, In Pt. 304- CoRouiiA 2( 71!~)::!.$2501(
or. (304!17H522
m
· 727-3318 call between
_,
c:uu1
lipm-12.
(740125&amp;85113- o4pm for 2
up &amp;
moro Info.
repair around
homo
Now hOmO. 3 bod...,., 1
(740)882-21711
riO
lluiii'IE!ls
~-· IMng room, kllehen, [
LO'rsf&lt;
1 112 bolh, 14 wk1o
1• -2 II&lt;'1afi0
OfroRIUND'Y
~~.J"'"~~,!;: ~
Aoiiw;E
_..oo &amp; con•
• $74 900 ( 7 &lt;10~.._2801 .
lrolllr, (740)882-2117

Overbrook Center Ia cur- offerill$J·
COSTUMES, RuUand Da- red, but not Required. 5101 rentty seeking 8 beautlcMin
.
pa•ment Slore, Thurs .. Fn ., hour. Con (74ll)256-1265
ro work PB" llme In ltle laoli- A Eotabllahed Vending
Sat
7
Oct 5thlty's beauty salon. Condi· Rootal Eams. Big S$. must
No~: ~- (~) 742 .7243 , Cooual Poll nmo Dlroct dales should posseaa a •II· seill 1-888·571-0225 E•t
ragdo!Ohefbalsage.oom
•
ear. St.ff
ld managing cosmotologist 2005 (Florida Only AIN
aF~..;;..;,;;:;;;.;.;;;;,., A loading provider ot aerv- licenaa oa well as Nobility In· I017)
ice 10 Individuals with Men· surance. ~lary Is based Start Your Business ToGIVEAWAY
tal Ratardatlon and Daval- on commission. 1-ostod day Pnme Shopping Con" - - - - - - - " " opmental Disabilities Ia candidates should con1act fer 'Sp..;. Available AI AI·
.
looking lor cosual port Ume lhe Oi""'"'r of Markeling ol toM·~- :Ro•• .• ......_ "lllloy

r

It

~

Iro

Full- houle cleaning,
$7.00 ~our. .,..ry hOntll.
Role- IVIIIabll. Coli
(740)«6-2i77

We reward a Job well
done. Wt offer parHime
and luii-Umo ~tiona. Eam
moro baled on your ablllly
10 bo IIUOCOIIful. Wa have
paid .....
. liono, paid lraln· H i t -.
ing, paid holldayo, IWO dat1
OIIII08E, INC.
oil """'Y wool&lt; plus bonoColi Toll· F.., IO&lt;
paid.

~~

II'.

OUTDOOR CAREERS
•Hirtno flel4 Crew
FO,.men
•Weekly PlY &amp;Bonuses
•Tough Job- Great
COmpany
Mull OI1IOY phyllcol ouldoOr
worit, poueu 11rong ~
e,.hip Sl&lt;illt, have a good
dnving record, and bo lloxi·
bla in OH, WV an&lt;l mid-

•··-~--~ ftls. Call IOday fOf an Inter·
"""""""""""""' •~ ~law. 1-888-237·5342 oxt
"-------.,12221
114 Acroo Fill nmbor For AVONI All Antaai To Buy or
Salt. MBF + or • 610 BBF, sen. Sliney Spaars, 30465% Oak 72% 18 IO 22 875-1428.
.
inc~. DBH. Malon Co. WV

(304)458-~6S6

Htl.PWANml

a.

==..,.,...

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m .
Monday- Friday ror Insertion
In Next Dar's Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

6

·r,-.....,.,og. .

ru...:.

•

I&amp;Wida. OnlySI 9S.OOPor
Monlh, 8.99% Fl•od lnloreol
Aale With Air And Un·
da . 1 l -eee-9211-3426
rponn ng

•~•
I9S3 SChu~ m:O~~·
~
1
a

(7 }441·1498
1991 Norris Mobile Homo
14JC70, 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, very good condhlon,
S17,000. Call lor appolnl·
monl, (7&lt;10)4&lt;48-0786
1993 Clayton 16&gt;&lt;80 mollllo
home. 3 br., ,2. ba. asking
$19,000 3P4·773·5885 arter
5pm.
18t

St- Ulllliel Paid. Slovt

.
ano RofrigtriiO&lt; No Ptllr.
Wonlod lo buy. 5- 20+ Pard· $475 plut ClopotH. ally Wooded. Galli&amp; County. COl Roqulred. (740)446~:5 after 6pm. (74ll)448· 3945
3 rooms t u - UNIIH
Prime 2·1/2 acre lot for paid, $280 plus ·d~poalt.
~~~In~~=~ a:~ (740)«&amp;-1a..o
·
~ 0 I I II IIJ I' '
field ~o~n;/,lp r ~~ BEAUnFUL
APART·
$17 500 Call for 'more Info MENTS AT IUDOET PRI(740)44S-.4514 Dayo· 0 ; CEI AT JACKSON El(740)oi48-32&lt;48EvOnlnQ..
TATE8,52W-Drlve
lrom $297 to $3113. Wllk 10
ahop &amp; · Coli 7&lt;10448-2111. Equal Houoing
Oppo&lt;tunily.

rid

·'
·

Wulwlrl Doyw Extra Largo
Copoclly. Excailonl Condi·
lion $300. Dishwasher,

llotilm

....., n...-

I

run. nr.nJ

Foreclosed
Homes From $19911Ao., 4%
Down, 30 v..ra al 8.5%
~~~'· 800-319·
·
'
1fi Court Street 2 Bed-

=:;

1 -3 Bedrooms

rooms, 1 t/2 bath~. Kitchen
with stove and rafrlgeralor.
Off Street Parking, Close to

time buyers- Govern· Schools and Downtown
ment loans- buy loant .&amp; Area. S5851 month plus desale· (140)446-3093 Oak·
WOOd SUpercenler
posit and Relerence. No
Pels. (74llj446-4926
2 bodroom mobile home lor 2 bedroom home 01010 10
sale, (7f'0)992-5071 please IOWn, basement. RivervieW,
callaf1er4pm.
$4251 month; 3 bedroom In
28•60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· &lt;own. 1·112 balho. Good loly $345.00 Per Month cation. $5001 month. Refer8.99% Fb&lt;ed lnleroat Rata, oncesanddlposil roqulrod.
1-8811-928·3426
(74ll)44e-3644.

:t

3 bedroom mobile home for 2 Bedroom House, AJC, R~
aale,
total
electric, tn,:r~tO: lncluded(30
(740)992·5658.
~ ge c:re~ee5 OO
•
18 er : .
1
M
A
bl
233 2nd Ave. Converuent to
ssuma • 1oan&amp;· anv Downtown 2 Bedrooms 1
types a\lallable. C~ll lor de· 112 Bath, Kitchen wtth steM.
lOlls. (7&lt;10)446·3583.
and Relrigorator· · $4901
Big 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2 month plus depo8it and Ref·
bath, save $5,155, delivered erences. No Pets. (740)448&amp; se1 up on your lot lnclud- 4926.
ing skirting &amp; fiberglass 3 bedroom ·house In the
steps, Cole.s Mobile Homes, country Galllpolil CUy
u.s. so Eall, Alhens, Oh. Schools s 3so1mo plus do740-592-1972
·
·
·
posit. (140}256·1702 after
Final Days, Nationwide In- 5pm.
v011tory
Roductionl 5 Room House wiih Sat~
(304)7~9
G
plul Ooublt
arage.
Umlled Or No Credil? Gov· (740)ol48-1519
onvnonl Bank Flnanco only Pllol Program, Ron1ore
81 Oakwood In BtrbOu,.. Neoaoa 304-736-7295
yllle, wv :~CM·736-3409 .
·
·
Why rent? government
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
Joana !rom 1490
Only $19,850. Froo Oollviry
&amp; Sat Up. 1·118-1128·2421
N 1••70 3 bod
aw - •
room. 2
bllh, onl~ Ui5 down &amp;
1188.12 por monlh, call
Harold 740·315·4317.
. 3 bedroom moblil homo In
NIW DOUbfl WIOI. 1115 ' Middior:on, no Pfll,
Ptr MOI11hl 3 BtdtOOm a (7~)1 a-1111.
Bllh Frtt OtiiVoiY &amp; Stf·
up i-881·U5-3o42e
3 btOroom, canlral air,
'
' Wllhlrllfl)'lr, 1300 par
" monlh PIUI dlpolll, Ull
' (7&lt;10)882-1111. LOll &amp;val'•·
~
B&amp;lu1 StQ Or fra.O..
bit 1110,
fl
··''
tht IIW 3 bedroom , MIOdlopo•,
1378 per monlh plull ~
II, rtnllnoludoo wllor, Hw!r &amp; lralh, (740)182.0171

. ,.

·

CMIIy'o Fomlly Living.
331 &lt;10 Now uma RO RUI·
land, Ohio, 7-t0-742:7403.
'"-rlment. home an&lt;llrallor
rentals. Commttelal storefronll IIVIIIable lor loloo.
Vacancloo now.
Garage lportmenl In city. 2
bodroomo. slovt, relrigors·
tor &amp; window air condttiontr,
wuher &amp; dryer hook up.
No pets. Deposit &amp; referen.
eel (740)448•21 43
Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apa•menta of VII·
lage Manor and AMnlde
Apa•monls in Middlepo•.
From 5278 -$348. Call 7&lt;10992·5084. Equal Housing
Opportunitlee.
lo

he elderly

Low Income r I
rr'
pnmary Ulillllos included n
ran~ call Janlca (740)992·
7022 The Maples.
Middleport Beech street 2
bedroom 'rurnished a~rtment no pets deposit &amp; ref·
era~•. ullllties paid,
(740)992...(1185.
Modem 1 bedroom apartmanl, (7&lt;10)4&lt;48-0390
Now Taking Applk:atlons35 West 2 Bedroom Townhouse Apanments, Includes
Water Sewage, Truh,
$3501Mo., 74Q..t48.000S.
~
~ h
A
.ara .own _ouse partments, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooma, 2 Flocn, CA, 1
112 llelh, Fully Carpeted,
Aduh Pool &amp; Baby Pool Pati Start $385/Mo No p II
~~.. Pluo Socuniy 0 ~
Required, Dayo: 7&lt;10-4453481' Evonlngo· 7&lt;10-387·
0!02 · 7&lt;10-448-0iot
•
·
Twin River Tower~ now ac·
copllng appl~llona for
18R. HUO IUblklllod lpl.
lor oldany lnd diNblatl
!OH
'
(304)875.0.71.

(304)675-5373

RE81DEN11AL AND
COIIIII!IICIAL

==

N..tl Repair- Glvaawau. AMANA- HI Efftdency 92 +
-,
fu
e.. ...... HI Effi..

Ierma, 3 Rooml and a.th. 48 Olive (740)446-8881

easy

(74ll)ol48-3583

I •

Mollu.E HOMES
FOR Su ~

~oom,

r

or on Top Full sP.t:e bottom.
Like now. $100. OBO.

j

OU

SrolmNG
Goooll

rT\8Cea.

"""''J'V'

~ and Air
· 1 year porta
land labor warronly Included.
COMFOIIT AIR HEATlNQ
AND COOLING
~~tie~\

..

:S.~m~u:~=r ~tu:,

$175 and $200, Dllh Net· lltefllle 8yatMI
worl&lt; -Ho Dlol1 and A•
colwr. 136. (7&lt;10)448-1127 BETTER THAN FREEIII
~':'·:1 miMiary, SIOQ. Gil 011111 Network ..
;
rd~Jdod,..,. No oqulpmenl 10 own or
::'boorne(74ll~~~ _buy.iloBt llbiTVOiniO v_!twdlft.'e'l
Col ea ... or Iaiii. ,_,.
•
"'
•
_,., FREE - r d proIOUiorlal lnotollatlon. AmorlAl&gt;mQlJI;:s
cu Tap 100 Ollr moot popu•
lar programming. Haulo
1!111 In-Home Sarvlco Plan.
Buy or Hll. Alvtr1nt Ana· Package• ltart at only-. ~
~ 1124 Eu1 Main on S 3 5. 9 91 m on I h. · ·
12• E. Pomeroy, 740- NBC ,CBS ,ABC &amp; FOX
992·2526. RuN Moore, avlllable In moalareaa.
owner.
$49.99 Acllvatlon Foo for 2
Suo's - e o on ll1o "'" Rtcolvera, add $49.00 por
in Mkldltpool.
gl.... aflor 2n&lt;l.lncl'"*
ware, Aladdin mantels, and first month free of all rnonthmora, (7.tO}Q92.0298
ly programming servlcel
that you chooae. 12 Month
MIMFI IANIOC)tB
commitment Bnd proof ol a·

I

j

'

Dol•.

r

MERaiA.NolsE

I maJor

credit c:ard or debit

card raquiNd
·
·
20 Ton Jack Uka New
$45. 6 Ton J.d.. $8. 4 Ml: Or ask aboul our "Charter
chelln P23570RI 5 Uroo, ~- Bount; end I Uke 9"
$40. Call(740)4.41-o625
1 ~tlon~~· d'n~
$9.00/month for tht lirlt
Combulllonoor Coal Slovt. roar
ultd vary little. (740)245·
.
9212
Clll PRO DIGITAL IOdayll
Your Local Aulhorlzod DISH
Cookware- We stopped Ntlwortc Retalel' 740-689giving dinner partial 'We 9211 888-31 0.2
4 5

.,

www.dilhretllltera.com/prodigital

j

·------pi
""'""

•
Mobil Homo 101 lor ront In
MldciiiiiOII. 1115 par monlh
1710)1102-31114

·

4 tomelo Goldon Rotrlovtr
pupa, 8 -k• old, lull
bloodod (7&lt;10)085·3852,
·180.
:-A::KC~.~-~~110
-.-=eom--:A-ugu-ll ·

=

r4r

The family of
Troy m. Durhom · ~hc:'. h~~~:l =~"::,CV071
would like to .

!':!':en~::~=~;

thank onyone
whO helped In
ony woy, In our

"

TELEPHONE OPEUTORS

NEEDED NOWA.D..,
.~ WILL TRAIN"\!:'. ~a,

t

·~•

241h. AI':: 10 Go I
3 '18-.:-:=:aa:;:::-=-.-:::--.---:
!:17~&lt;10=::):.:
Bllok and Tin RatTtnlar. I
manlht oi&lt;U100. (7~-

Pogltllllll LID PUIIPIII.
INTIII'III.. Oni llaok ~.!1 one wllilo
, OhiO, 1-eDO- 1(~:;),')~
-h.
'
""""

Southern
.

ftNtPip81

;

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.,_ _.~--~-...

~~~--~mP.itlian

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Dllltllm fi/IIIIIJ ·

w..o:a=~ ·w~rr..

:;~,.l!o:r~~~~:~

~~~:,UJ:r.~

Rio

fromPipB1

Vtry nlot, 1·3 bedroom
Coollar lpanlal Pupplll.
apanmonl!. In lawn, latQt
Pull lloodtcl. ,lrtnll on
kiiOhtn, '"· $800/mo. Atf· ~~~~~~~~ Pttm1111. 1110. (7&lt;10)448orart011 &amp; dtpooil roqulroo.
181(
(7&lt;10~3644
roll ltJNr

•
bitt~ AI Martin grounded into a force at the
plare.
.
David Bdl followed with a fly ball down
the left-field ijne that M•""" Cordova nn
downinfouJ. retritory,butitwudeepenough
to ICOre Javier without a play to tie it at 1.
~uel had le(t-hander Ricardo Rincon
ready to fac~ Suzuki, who led th~ majon in
hits and batted .445 with runners in scoring
position. But he stuck with Colon .and Suzu- ·
ki aingled - his 250th hit in the regular .and
postseason - through the hole in right to
score Cameron and give Seattle a 2-1 lead.
Mark McLemore followed with anQC!ter
RBI. lingle, chasing Colon, who had set a
divisio,n ieri~ record with 14 .consecutive
scorele11 innings.
The Indians cloaed within 3-2 in the bottom of the inning. but the Mariners got
another run in the eighth on Cameron's RBI
double.
-..
With Suzuki on again · in the ninth, Martinez bit a 458-l'oot homer OtT Paul Shuey.

Tllonk You

.:,'•=-.,-....,..,.....,....,..~

r "'"·-

Camero~walkedtoloadthebues,andpinch-

time of need.

L.--·Sum.miiiiiiiiiiia-.,1
·
Block, briok. H'MH" pipes,
windowl, lintels, file. Claude
Wlnlera, Rio ·arando, OH
catl740-246-5121

i

B ut h e ·--•L-d
hn 01erud to OIM'n the
WiUU Jo
seventh, and Stan 1-•er ~ his bot at an
outside pitch for a J-"
ainpe to 'left.
'l'he In~ tried to pick Olerud of£ second, but Colon's wild tluuw allowed the
Marinen to finally geta runn~ to third. Mike

Ohio

OPERATOR
WANTED

1111"-~----,
BIJIUII!&gt;iG

.!CALL NOW

.

11

between Brice Hill and a Am, Doebe~einer bad a 23- ford's fourth score. That play
touchdown, made a gutsy out yard t:etu~n that come to was set up by a 15 yard run by
Automatic Specialist
of
bounds tackle that saved a within four y.ards of the origi• McCutcheon. The PAT run
!luCie
bJioo $t
• .oo
boleo111or
- ·nay- up 10
20 Years experience
$2.00, rcuna bJioo $15.00
touchdown. Hill bad run the nalline of scrimmage. On the was no good, the score 26-0 at
each ~76-.48811
74Q-992·4~78
ball from his own fuur yard fint play from scrimmage the 3 :20 mark of the third
Hay &amp; BriOhl Wlrt Tlo
win the foot race to the end . line to the 24 yazd line before quarterb"k• Ben Cunning- period.
.
Smaw. Yoar'AoundOoioMy
ham
launched
a
•.
25-yard
Doebereiner
capped
a
37zone. A}eir.. Heiss added the being stopped by Arnold. Per&amp; VOlume ~111 A ble. Harltagt Farm.
extra
point kick for a 7-0 haps an SHS scoie could have · touchdown aerial to Frank yard drive with a 21-yard
(304)675-5724.
score with three seconds in made a dilfereni;e in confi- Amtlld in the end . zone. A scamper followed by a Heiss
the lint quarter.
.
dence, but as it stood SHS Heiss kick made it 14-0 with kick with 10:35 left in the
Auros ,j
fourth quarter. Later, a Heiss
The play of the game and turned ,over the ball on three 33 seconds left in the balf.
liORSw!
NOTIC&amp; OF
lor live (I) yeara.
At
the
half,
Doebereiner
field
goal made it 36-0 to
possible Southern momentum downs. ·
ELECTION ON TAX
Tha Polla lor Hid
kilier came when Frank
Southern was stopped, but carried 14 times for' 106 yards . round out the scoring at the
1976 Conlene. Whlll with LEVY IN EXCESS OF oleclloil will opan 81
and a touchdown. Southern's 4:34 mark.
Rod lnlorlor, T·topl, . THE TEN MILL
f:30 o'clock A.M: end
Arnold, · the
malic, $7500. (740)3118~~~~~o~n~th~e~~~
by Matt spu'ttering offense was led by
UMITATION
r•meln open until
Several Tornado youngsren
0406
. R~.~.
7:30. o'clock P.M. of ·
Hill
with
·six
caries
for
24
including
frosh Wes Burrows,
1986 Ford, F·150, 300, 6 Sectlana UDt.t1{GI, Hid day.
y.ards.
Derek Teafoid, Philltp Pierce,
5705.18, 5705.25
cyl., 4 opetd. 4•4. runs
By order of the 8urd
good, $900 (7&lt;101247-21161 .
.Sbuthern went three · and .and Jake Nease were among
NOTICE .II hltlbY of Elacllona, of melga
out on its first possession of . those that '!'W action at the
1on11189CondBroncoltlonlllow
,
4101M,IExloacal·
given
the I
In County, Ohio.
1
· ·
go. puttuence of e
the second half and was forced ·end of the game in trying to
bldderll, lnetruc11on1 oeoember 17, 1~
- NOTICE OF
:.;.333~~=~ Aanlutlon of the . D81ad S.p1amber 7,
io punt. Matt Ash punted 35 spark the Tornado offense.
ELECTION ON TAX
and conditione lor Pllllloollft, e1
a Good Work Car. $!555. ,VIllage Counoll of... 2001.
LEVY It EXCESS OF . tubmlttlng bl4a may ·,q end .W, 11 Lot D. yards to the Waterford 40
Aaron Ohlinger had an
(740)367-081111
Vlllegt of Rutlend,
THE TEN MILL
be obt1lned ,, Ill, ond beln1 mort
Aullend,
Ohio, John N.lhlt
interception
for Southern. B.
whet:e
Doebe~einer
received
LllriTATION
C•rltiOI) School, pMtlou._rtY ClteOrlbtd
1990 Chevy Cornaro. auto- peeltd on the 101h Chalrmeln
maliC, T·Topo, CD player
1310 Cetlo1on ltrwt, ai loll-: hgi;::Z and ran the punt back 60 yards J. Marnhout had · a sack.
Aedlaod Coda,
wllh IATX ,mp, ,_ paris, day of July, 2001,
-.3101.11(01,
P.O
.' 801
307, 81epolntlnttw
for a touchdown. The Heiss Arnold and Heiss had sacks
be Rite D. Smith
- u.... $2,300. (7&lt;10)441 · there will
5705.11,5705.21
Syrecuae,
OhiO IIIII of Unooln RCIH,
0615
aubmllte4 to ' vo,. Dl-r
41771. Nlone: (7401 81the betwean ki'k was wide left and WHS for Waterford. Arnold and . ·
of the people of Hill
NOTICE
le
.
hereby
982-6611.
Daedllna
Loll
21
end
a?. •• .led 20-0 at the 10:13 mat:k.
Heiss also bad fumble recciver1993 S.lck Conlury, 1191&lt;, aubdlvlalon et 1 (101 I, 15, 22, 28,
given . that
In lor . oubmlttlnl the ehown on Hid 1111p; · .1\vo pia~ after a Southern ies.
$2,495: 1992 Corsica, GENERAL ELECTION 2001
1031&lt;, one owner, $2,495;
· pureuance of • r • quI ra d
bId thenot with the .Hid
Southern goes to TrimbJ,
1993 Covaller, 981&lt;, $2,195: to bll ~tid In the ollc
Raaolullon of the .lnlormellon ond bid 11111 of Llnooln R6111 fumble and 15-yard unsports1993 Grand Am, 1031&lt;, \flllega ol Rullend, r-~:::--:::
Vlllege Council of.,. opening 11 Mondty, ourvlng to thl right In manlike
penalty,
Todd Friday and rounds Ol\t the seo
$2,595. COOK MOTORS, Ohio, et the ragultr
VIllage
of
Racine,
October
22,
2001,
et·
•
Wet,.rly
dlrtoUon
(7&lt;10)448.01 03
'
plao.. of voting
With • radiUI .of 150 , McCutchean rambled' five son the following Satuido
Ohio, pe11td on the 12 noon.
theNin·
;
on
the
lth
flh
dey
of
Auguat,
Jwl,
a dlellnoe ofiO.I 'yards. to paydirt and Water- ag:linst Eastern.
1993 Mercury Caprl. ll4,000
mlloo. 5 opd. Ale. $1300. day of . November,
2001, thor• will be Steven E; Behe
IMt to a point In the
2001, the queallon of
(7&lt;101446-4711
tubmlllld lo • vote E~ecU11vt DlraCior
Wnfllrly ellletlor 11111
lavylng • tu, In
of the people ol allld
of 11ld Lincoln
composure a little bit," co.IC h
1995 Hyundal Elanlrio, PS, exctU of.,. ,.n mill ·
tubdlvltlon •• • (II) 23. 24, 2001
Helghlo; thtnoe with
PB,. PW, Air, brand new llmlltllon, lor the
Butch Davis said. "For the
GENERAL ELECTION (1 9J 1~. 15.2001
eetd line, 8outlt 7
trarlii'NIIIon under warran·
benefit
of
Autlend'
lint
time all season, we kind
1y. Now timing boll &amp; IIIIMn
to be hold In tht 4t c
dlgrHa oa• Weet, 200
head . $4,200 (740)258· Vlllego lor the
Vlllege of Reclnl,
fMI; thanoe Narth M
of got caught up in some of
purpoaa of currant
6800
Ohio, 81 tht raguler
Public NOtice
dlgrHI Dl' lut, 50.4:
the emotion where in the
expan..,_
ploceo of vot1n1
tllenoa with the Una
1998 Ford COntour, Dark
S.ld
tu
baing:
high 400 yards ag:linst a past, we played with a lot of
1hareln, on the lth
11e""'ii\Hid Lote ae
Groen, Looks Good. 77,000 • renaw11 of e tu of
~ of November, Sltlrlll't Sill of Rill end J :i7.' North 7 defense that hadn't given up poise and wajked away from
mlloo, $5000. Call (7&lt;10)4482 milia 11 • me 11ot
2824
1, the qutallon oI
~..!..-of Ohio · degrata 03' Elat, 250 yards in any of its first the pushing and shoving. We
excetd.lng 2 (IWOI
levylnl • tax, 1n
,.,. .....
, 202.1 1111 to a point of
1999 Plymoulh Bretzo. 4 mltla lor eeoh one
'
kind of got distracted a little .
·
ax-•
ol1ho
tan
mill
Mllge
County
bel Inning, reurvlng, . four games.
Door. flulo, A/C, All Power, dollar of veluellon,
limitation,
lor
the
aenk
One,
Netlonel
.
.,_,.,,
the
1
and
001
AINFM Col8etto. Mlcltllln, which 1mount1 10 .
bit today." · ·
"Dillon
was
a
big
hand
in
The Dally
benefit of Racine Aaaoolatlon, Tflll,.. ell other m1111ra11 In
10,500, clean; $65\)0.
The Bengals also were sloptwenty centa ($0.201
Vlllege lor the By
lluldenllel and undlrljlng the what they did:'. cornerback
(7&lt;10)379·2741
Sentinel
lor nch one hundr8d
purpoa• of ourrent . Funding Corpor811on, above dlieo rtbed · Daylon McCutcheon said. py and distracted, but Dillon
1'999 Ponllac Orand Am. dollart Of VIIUIIIon
ex,.n-.
Ha Attorney-In l'aol •• fii'OPlrly together with "We knew we'd have to gang: and their defense got them a
992·2155
loadod, V-8, CD player, aiu·
s.ild tax bllng:
Ae11gnee of Home the rlgM to ·mine the
mlnum miiH.
. wheell,
cackle him and wrap him up, win and their best start since
21,000
$8,250 white,
080. .. __7:-~:':'-:"-:"-· ~;:::::;::;~=::;~ a raplecement of • S.nMFIIIIriOI.IICorp. eeme . without
tax
ol2
mlllo
811
rate
C/0
Homecoming•
enaumb·
r
anoe
to
the
but he did what he's known 1990, the last time they had' a
(740)245-9753
Help Wanlld
Card of Thank• not exceeding 2.0 Flnancllll Network
property, end alibloel for."
winning record.
1999 Wlndstar SE Van. Rod
milia lor ..each one Plalntlll
to an aaaement lor
with Tan Interior, Stall 7,
'
He's known for having
"It was very important for
doller of veluallon, VI
.
MWIIge lllllr ditch or ·
Four Ooorli wfth auto optn•
which
amount•
to
Mtrll-,
II
el
leeching
ditch
ea
Ml
huge
games
against
Cleveus
to get stabilized and get
or, K~ Enby, Air, Pow·
ar Windows, Lockl. Statl,
11
land: In 1999, he ran for'168 . things back to the way they
Rear Air, Rear Back Up ·
and
192 yazds against the tint- were going," coach Dick
Sa.-, CD Player, Good
dollar• ol vatuellon
In purauanet of an be • r I n t
. d ete
TirH, Elllra Cloan. Ellcal·
lor nv. (II yeara.
Order of lela In the Novamblr 21, 1141 year Browns. Last season, he LeBeau said.
lent Condition. 57,800
'
The Poll a lor uld ebova entlllld aotlon, I end recordld In aald
Notes: Browns WR Kevin
mlloo. Call (7&lt;10)446·8176
eleotlon will open at Will offer lor eelt et Rtoordlr'l 011101, bad 137.in a· game.
.
9am-4pm.
1:30 o'alook A.M. end publlo euCIIon, it lhl Dlaamber a, 1143 In . The Browns' shortcomings· Johnson bad eight catches for
2000 DodO• ourengo SLT,
remain open · until Courthouee
In Died look 111, lie.. didn't stop with the defense. 153 yards, his fourth career
2 whool driVe; 18,000 mllol&gt;
7:30 o'olook P.M. ol Pomeroy, Ohio, In tht 111.
,
They set up one field goal ' 1 00-yard game. ... The
liD~ fiiYm•ID:i
l•ather Interior. ' overhead
uld dey.
ebove named County, PPN: 11-111770
air, co + cat...,., remo1t
o/o Dally llnUnal
on 8th day ol laid
' Premleea with a . penalty Percy Browns converted only 2 of
onby, 115,100 080.
P.O. Box 721-11 .
Dloember,
2001,
••
Located
at
1
..
4
of
tho
Board
By
Ordar
EDsworth hit Jon Kitna in the 11 third downs. .. . Bengals
(7&lt;10)2111-11 58
Drlva,
Pomeroy, OH 41781"
of Ellotlon1, ol Malge 10:00 a.m., the Lincoln
head after be released a CB 'Rodney Heath tore his
81 IIUZU Trooper LS, V-8,
following dllorlbtd ltofnlroy, OH 41711
County, Ohio.
PW, PS Evoljlhlng workl.
rul
eltllt,
1Huetlclln
laid
Prtntlell
fOurth-down paa - and s~t left hamstring while making a
'
'
nntrnilllon lruuble. 1.810
--~~~':":'::-::~~~---~Dated
llep,.niber'7,
the
County
of Mtlga Apprelud
et
tackle and is out for the sea080. (7&lt;10)378-2708
110 Hflp Wanted
2001
and ...,. o1 Ohio, and 111,100.00 and unnol up anoth.e r when Couch col·
lid~d with James jackson on a son. Rookie WR Chad JohnMUll ooll 1887 Dodge In·
In the City of Pornlroy
be IDid lor 1118
lropld VI, - r lockl &amp; ;;;;;;;;;!f!~~~~~;;;i;!Mi John N. lhll
to wH:
•·
two•lhlrda
of tlllll
thet handof£, causing a fumble.
son broke his collar bone and
mlrnn. grey velour ....11:.
The Browns had three fum- will be sidelined for six •
80,000 mU., MotH, 81011·
Chalrmeln
01' IALI: .
lint oondiUon (740)811·
Rite D. Smith
or paroel of lind, 1 O'Mt of llpprelnd bles, nine penalties and weeks. ... The Bengals have •
4112
Dl-r
" eltueted, lying end velue IIOWft, remelncllr numerous missed tackles.
won their last five home
being In the City of upon,.ncllroflloed,
• "I thought we ·lost our game! .
1a, 22, 21,
~~y
4to
end being known and
. · Oeunty, Ohlo
1885 Ford P/U XLT, 4x4,
ster,
OH)
was
98th
:,02 onglno, 8 lool bod,
auAILABLI
-..-·
deelgnetld
on
•
mep
Llurenoe
a. Undon
.INI.ITI ....
47,000 mlloo, $14,200.
of ' Llnooln Htlghte 11003441111
·
(22:59.78).
(7&lt;101446-7881
..v I HI-S
Public Notice
made by • • • and .Attorney lor Pllllntlll ·
MA
· Thet:e were 119 runners in
·
nw
ra
Cerpar
Civil 171 1. Third 8trut,
2000 Aangor XLT. Exlen&lt;l·
the women's race:
;id Cab. 17,000 miloo. 5
AVAILABLI.
PUBLIC 'IOTICE
lt~gleterad lnglnHra, SuiiiiOD
•
Huntington, Will Columbua,OhloWtl
lpd. NC, CO Playar. Roll·
Ohio won the women's
DYer, Comtl with Used Cab
LEGAL NOTICE
: VIrglnle,
de1eCI ~~~4) 211·1171, l!xt.
more
Tiffany
Fogle
(Mackstt bedlk:fa, Irani ' bumper.
meet with 69 points. Akron
Ootober 17, 1842, •
-'
$2700. (7&lt;10)448-4768
REQUES T FOR oopy of which mep 1114123311HI'AX
burg,
OH)
was
97th was runner- up (89) ·and BaldBI0 S
'-' N·
4 ~ waa lllld IOI IIOOrd In lanclonOweHmen.oorn
18 Nl,..n, 4 cylin&lt;lor,
p•s•oo ger s chool the ·0111oe of the (10111, 21, H, (11) S, (22:57 .69) and freshm•n win-Wallace rounded out the
.widard; II ·COIIgo Ram.·
Full·llzl: 81 SIO, 4 cyllndlr,
bu• wllh whltlche1r ReoordiF · of lrltlge 12
Kristin Barnett (South Web- top three with 97 points.
lllndlrd, (740)255·5228,
. .- - - - - - - - - - - - . - - • lift. Information lor County,
Ohl .o,
(7401211·1417.

DATA
ENTRY

::=:.~~j check~toutonh ~ !Jtf0

stalnlela steel! 100% wa·
terteul Was $ 1,700. Now
$395 .1 Hurrvl 1-aoo. 434 _
=48:.:2:;-61'---.,..,...-Dining room iablo dark
M&gt;Od wl8 ohalra exc. cond.
Browning Micro-Midas bow
85"' lal; on, 26 • draw 25 10
4 ~ = ~• n Y el&lt;lnra•
67 .,.. 1 781 a er
P.
5.30 pm. ·
Goi&lt;UI Weight-Bench. dumbbella, Olympic Bar and
weighls, $100. (740)ol484245 slllr' 6pm
.
Gl\lbb'o Plano- Tuning &amp;
~=·Copi~ThoomoPia? NoodD
no 1·
7&lt;10 448 4528

ii

died the Mariners with eue for six ·imlinp. ·

.

S.IIZIIki went 3-for-5 and Edgar Martinez
hit a two-run homer in .the ninth for the
'R FIIO 4&lt;4, E Mariners, who weR blown out 17-2 and
a!'--::.,_i"""_~...
~- Clb. L1tll~=)e33 M04
,
~
1 ., (740)111•
.
played possibly their worst pme of the season
~ VIICETAII.III
· ;;
Pnl\*11111 "' OOIMIIIolal in Game 3 on Satwday.
~
Rtonardo Frun · · Mlnllf:Yrus
-.:-~e~ec&gt; · Freddy Garcia' (l-1) pitched 61-3 innings
Fann. A'PLU AND
~
~1 ~· · for the win.
.
.
MUCH ::"•· 24 mlloo 11188 ~~~~~~~~~ w - . .
Jamie Moyer, who beat the Indians in Game •
1 .. an c..... 310 4114.
Nofllcl
2
and 'M:Dt 2-0 against them in the regular
""
11111·
I I h ",f I 1'1 I II
13,800. (7
season, will start Game 5 for the Mariners on
.\ I I ' I ' I II I
~~--__, =~· ~- H = ""·· '",,..
Monday at Safeco Field against Cbu'k Finley.
w1111 "I'm elated about getting to pi~h in a fifth
uaoo (7&lt;10)84WIII
game;• said .Finley. who W2ited 15 yean to
. make his first postseason start in Game 2 and
52 C.. DC wt1115 ft dllig
gave up a pair of ~run homers in the lint.
11'1&gt;0 hog. ...,
Before Game 4, which was delayed two
well. $1910 for Of
$1010 for - · 1300 for
hours, 20 minutes by rain. a relaxed Piniell,a
bruoh hoa -'-'Y·
(7&lt;10)845217
was ~onfident his lel!JD would go home to
play another day.
·
For six innings it looked like the Mariners
would fly solo, but the Indians ate headed to
8- hall Doll. E'POiod
the
airport, too.
10 lull blood buck. for Jtnu.
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
Juan Gonzalez's second-inning · homer
- Botr
$275Buclt.
- · Rtgio$400.
2:00PM
DAY
BEFORE
PUBliCATION!
looked
like it might stand up as Colon hanI ..

For Sundays Piper

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

I-I00-21HI571.

:::.... .,._.,_vanto'
..-_,_- . ,.. Nc~~-_ --·

r- . . . . "' r•
HOW IQ. WRITE Ati AD.

Tribe'

= ·· ·

-e212 -

""""'"---- :;:;:·

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

driM in liw N111 as the New York Yanbes beat
the .Athletia 9-2 to exapc Oakl•nd wiCh their
!eQll1d vic:tory in two day! ,and furce a ~
Game 5 bade jn cbar bollpark
'
Ahc the A) !he AL division series' 6nt
Mw another Sllellar pircbing pnfocmance two g;uncs in New York, the Yankees seemed
from Curt Schilling.Arimna il btxlecl to the NL dnonvd Agr, ~ md the er.etgetic A's
chainpiomhip .mes.
made lbeYanbes looldil:e tdics of a p 'ng m ,
Arizona will face ~ Adanta in the mere shadows of thoir once-hgbly sel-.
NLCS. Game 1 is 1besday in Phoenix.
But with two JUI!y wins at tile Coliseum the
Y•nk •• 9, Ook!end Z
three-time World Series 'lumps ~ a trip
OAK_LAND, Calif. (AP} - Bernie williams home tbr a·deciding ~ Monday night.

1·888•174•JOBS

.
'

•

�...,..._,.._ .....

-~

Mondly, Oct 11, 2001

rc Ohio

The Dlllly Sefttinel • Page BS

•
•

NBA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS . 31 ....,.;,.,.

C.ll Ue For All Your Lawn

101111 MSSJI!
COIISJIUCliOII

And

Nlldll

I

l'IHII\
E\ II HI'HI'-1 '-

11(1\11

•

____

,

COitsiHlCI!ON

.... ......

tnt ICI
Spociolllt II lOW

Oenenl

·.=~
Da.:*!:s·

non•lll., plumbl.,
iloctrlcol, mala·
lr'ect. ud repair
purdoa,Adoo:kl.

. lfelp Coaaty Fll...,_..u

Arrim:

Sept.lll a Oct. 20, 2001
10:00 LID. • -4:00 p.m.
Relaae:
April '1.7, 2002
.
A ree of $20.00 will be cllllrltd for early
arrlvel, late errlval, early reaewal, lite
removll, or uytlme accea II waated to
l\alraroulldl oCher tbu lilted dates.
B•IJdln&amp; II(NICe Is ftnt come ftnt oene.
liii!We Stonp: $4.00/lf
Opm Space: $100/lf
Jllllde Fente: $1.0Mt
740 992-6954

R,.,.,.,.,.

Jl ~~RY S
USIO
COMPU TLilS
y

-

•

Mlclclleport, OH

992-9158
FrMH11-

I.,.:.~

u- ....

Owner
Charlea R:OIII

BYillltlble 24 hourw,

,....992-7445

Ll-·--

Cel

21271 npd

WINTER STORAGE

591·9254

Top Q ' Bd41ttt II

~·
TUrley's

u-•Y-381
and up,
hardwareand

Vouchers IWC8Piad In
Meigs COunty.
Dump True!&lt; Delivery.
Melgo end Mason

M~ttress

County
Bob Ball
1-740-992·6142
or

Sales
..,..
.......... ,...
-OII-I

-~(740)
949-1657

•Re,-:n••t

w-.•Room
Addltl- •Rooflna

(OIIMII(W. . . II!IDIIIIW.

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

PAIIf8

• Graft! S.nd •
'JJIJIIIIII • 1111 Dirt
•Muldt
Bulldour Senlcea

IMI l )

Advertise

.......,
INT

All Makea Tractor &amp;
· Equipment Pam
Factory Authorized
Caoe-IHPirll

Shut In
Homevlslf

P/B

WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSEP

Haircuts
Available

C~Ois,IIIC.
.......... Ohio 48771

lite" avt••
Custom Computen

Scnicc, Repein. and

Upgrades

740-tiiWMI
COIKIE'If/ILO«&lt;IIKI

1:t

. •F-,Wala, ..... •
.
IIIII Warlr,
Ropt.a....~~,. w.a.
tnld_ DriJn • Sllodl ·

'Wo'll fix It or &amp;lui'

In this
space
for $50

74MI7-o800

CntePrM.:.t1111111
s.ntaa Oldo ud w.v.

24'120'
1·12 DIIBLE Will
une

Cellular
Warner Ins
992-5479

·fiRSTCIML
FIIST SERVEI $200.00 PER JOIIT
REIIWLY
$321.00 PEl JOIIT

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
-month

mona·

Local843-5284
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, R~tirement,
PensiQn &amp;: 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
~
• Nursing Home

ill

740-742·3411

NOnCE II hereby
given lh1t In
PUIIUince of I
Reeolutlon of the
Vllllge. of Pomeroy,
P-roy,
Ohio,
p1111d Qn the 11th
day of June, 2001,
thera wUI be
eubmlttld to 1 vote of
the poople ol eeld
eubdlvlelon 11 1
GENERAL ELECTION
to bl held In thl
Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio, 11 the regullr
place a of voting
thlrlln, on the 8th
day ol Nov1mber,
2001, the queetlon ol
levying a tex, In
ex- olthe ten mill
limitation, for the
ben•fll of Pom1roy
- Vlll1g1 for the
purpo11
of
malntelnlng and
opoirtllng oem-lll.
Slid toox being: an
addlllonal tax ol '1
mill at 1 r111 not
IXCHdlng llrl Clntl
($0.t0) mille far 1ach
one dOIIIr of
valuellon, which
amounll to ten centa
($0.10) fetr aach one
hundred dollere of
v11uellon for live (I)
ye.ro.
Thl Poll• for uld
ellotlon will ~n 11
, 1 k A.• end
. • :30 ococ

WE!fl CRI\l.Y.

Box 189
Mlrld/I'JHHI OhiO 457GO

·FREE .ESTIMATESI

NOTICE OF .
I!LI!CnON ON TAX
LEVV IN EXCESS OF
ntETEN MILL
LIIIITAnON
Revi-Codl,
Section• 3101.11 (G),
5701.18, 5705.25

MR. Ro5A, /o.NO ALL

OF TtiE SUllO~ tiE

Rocky R Hupp. Agent

Bryan Reeve•

[740) 992-3194
992-6635

Public Notlcea In N~::~~~:::
Your Rltiht to Know, Delh•el'ed Right to

.

.

remain .open until 2001, the qU.ellon ol
7:50 o'alook P.M. 01 levying 1 tax, In
Hlddly.
IXOIII of the lin millllmltallon, lor the
lly order ol the Boord benefit of Rullend
of EIIOIIolll, of Mllg1 Townohlp lor the
County, Ohio.
p u r p o1 1
of
_malnl1lnlng end
Dltld September 7, · opal'lllno.CI1MIIrlll.
2001.
llald laX llelng:
I repi1Cirilen1 of 1
John N.lhll
llx ol I mill II 1 rile
Chelrmaln
not"eicCNIIf~g t (one)
mille for eech one
Rite D. Smith
dollar of veluetlon,
Dlnoctor
which amo\11111 to lin
centa ($0.10) for paoh
(1 D) 11 11, 22, 28, 200t on• hundred dollar•
4to
of velueuon. for live
·(I) YIIIN.
Public Noltoe
Thl Poll• for elld
_.;....;;;;.;..,;;.;..;.;_;;;;.;;__
NOTICE OP
:~;g·~=~.:~' A~rl~~
ELECTION ON TAX
remlln open until
LEVV IN EXCESS OF 7:30 o'clock P.M. ol
ntl! TEN MILL
· ulddly.
UMITATION
By ardlr of the ll011rd
Alv!Hd Code,
ofEIIctlo111, oUIIIfll
s.ct1on1 3501.11(G), County, Ohio.
1701.11,1701.21
Dated llepllmblr 7,
NOTICE II hereby 2001.
given
that In
pur1uano1 ol 1 John N. lhll
Reeotutlon of the Chalnnaln
lloerd ol Townthlp
Rill D. Smith
TrUIIIII Of lhl
Townehlp of Rutland, Dlroctor
Rutlend,
Ohio,
pauld on th• 8th 1101 · 1, 11, 22, u,
dey Cll Au gull, 2001,
there
will
be
IUbmitlldtOIVollof
the people ol oald
oubdlvlllon at 1
GENERAL ELECTION
to be held In tho
Townllhlp of Rullend,
Ohio, II the reguler
plecee of voting
therein, on the 811\
day of November,

.

I

Romoclollng
•Nowaoro,...
• Eltotrle~~l. &amp; Plumbing
0

~~:j•d:~~~QuttPa"intlngl

. Publlc.NOtlcf

-...;..;:.;.;..;,;,;..;;~­

Ellollon Llgal Nolfce
The Ohio Boll end
W111r Coneervltlon
Commlulon will
oeuu en elloflon of
euparvltor ol the
Mllg1 loll lnd Wllllr
ConMrvlllon Dletrlot
to be held In
aaoordanae with
Chepllr 1111 ol lh1
Ohio ReviHd Coda 11
Melgl Hlgh School
on Ootober 11, 2001
117:11 p.m.
NomlnMI Ire: 8111
1111r and Aaron

SMITH'S
CONSTRUCTION
•New Home•
• Siding
• Roolfng
• Remodeling
• Gerogee
• Addition•
•Dock•
• Home R1palr1
· Free Es l ltn;l l cs
·

740·992-1101
or 992 -2753

..~:mlnlllon• wlllbt
eooepted from the
floor 11 the time of ...- - - - - - - .
eleollon.
On• TRI
IUperYIIOr II to be
·
elected. You m1v
TRHOSPORT
vote 11 the ennuel
Umeat.et
melting or on oil
Sinian IIIICOUIIb
1b11nt11 ballot
multiple LHd
which mey . b'e
IIIICIIUall
IICUIId . from lhl
aonui'Ytlllon dl1trlot
oftiOI.
·

lAMIA'S
CONSTRUOION
Specializing In
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
remodollng, ·
addition• A dlckl
FrMelllmetee
10 yre. experience
In lhe buelnn•
Rlfertncta
evallabll. Owner:
Terry IAmm
74 82 73

HowarcfL.
Wrltesel
Rooftng • Home

MaintenanceGutters· Down·
Spout
FI'H E•tlmllel

949-1405
591-5011

counTY

(10) a, 11, 2001
fit0

Buy, 'St!l or Trade

~~.~~====~c=~~-H='·i~RE~·o;~~r:
SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

CLASSIFIEDS!

~~
High &amp; Dry
Self~Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Poineroy, OhiO

740-992-5232

~Snodgrass' Upholstery
"HripU., y.,.. ro Rtrotlfl Yo111 lnHtllllmr•·

spots, , -est.w,blis~~!, _JC~~~~~ ~ ~QU ~...._-.'b r;.q•
dummy s hea~t. s~!t "'"-..-.•. _ .._,.... ,. , ,~~ ~Y CLAT l •• r~."

Air Conditioning : R.trlgeratlon
$411 Service gea, fuel oil, a·nd
heat
for winter

,r,~00 ,.111~, le~ra ol the
' •
fQur · ,tc:rombJeol.• ~rdo beranz startttl wjth an· low ·lo \form . four 'll"~lo words.
'
unorthP&lt;jox . sp"«;;&lt;!
l{
A S.l E t ,,.
eight! J:he , 4ec!ar~r, 1
1
2
won woth dummy s
:" .,
'
king and play~ a flia.l' .
.'
. · N u T 0 F 'JJ ''·',
mond to his )Iiiii'
'·.•.
,,
.,
I
· ter winning ..:Jiitf'tli~~\
ace, West retume&lt;l
:\', I.'"'
J• ••
..~ ~
...
....·hii ,. .
other spade. And .1 I '
0
when - in with the'
A piN 1
heart ace, Rose~k;;;nz ·
4 ' s
switched to a club. L.:.·...J..-L.-.1.........1• .;..J.- ,
"The car needs a new muffler,"
Before South could
the husband told his newwite. 'S he
collect nine tricks, the
M I N0 K 0
'replied, 'I'll try and···-- • • ·."
defenders had borne .
G Complete ono chuckle .quooed
five: two spades, one _ .
. .
. .
by lilling In tho milling words
and gets b:C?Il):~.

R~elno, Ohio

,· ,

Howde~. R~e~k~·~· .

.

THAT'S WHV I RUSH HOME
AS FAST AS I CAN BECAUSE
I KNOW HE MISSES ME

W~ERE ARE

THE COOKIES?

heart, one diamdnd
and one club.
To make the contract after a spade
start, declarer must
win with dummy's
king and lead a low
club toward the
queen -- a play .qnlr.
likely to be foun&lt;l 1f
South has seen an opponent's hand.

Tucsd•y. Oct. 1&amp;. 2001
Because what you lcarhed

from experience wiil be piJt to
the test in the , year ahead,
you"ll not be tripped up by
obstacles that ovcnoc1k you in
the past. Your sut:~;csses will
be nwnerous.
LIIJRA (Sept. 23-0co. 23) •
- Wh~n faced witb adversity
today, do what you your in. ncr feding5 tell you is right
and not what othen arc attempting to force on you. Be
your own counsel. Trying to
pat\.h up a broken romAnce?
The Astro-Graph Matchmaker can help you under~

stand what to do to make' the
relationship work. Mail S2 .75
to Matcbnuker, c/o thlt

new•paper, P.O. nox 167,
Wicltlifl'e, OH 44092-01 b7.
SCORI'IO (Oct. 14-Nov,
22) •• IJeing a Scorpio, ""'IY
do your hunchrl lrt you

down . Howover, today you
cou ld Mit •·fal10 r..dln1. 10 lot
your logic
your Intuition.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-

"'P'"'d•

814-849·2202

OAMi

. }T 1

1 ·: I;

·.*f- .
·' . f . I' -1'

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

(10'li10' 610'11201

• Room AddHIOnu I

. . · .. ' . ·' ,. "··'

P-REVIOUS SOLIJTf9N: rl'm not a worliaholic. ·l've got II lot Ill

or .'fl'u&amp;

~

97 BeediSt
middleport, OH
SERVICE

\WO

~~~h~ t~~r~~~;;~; ;· . ·.~.~~· r.:_:viQfta;:~~ ~:: :s~· wou

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

New Hornet, Room Adcllflona,
Garagea, Pole Bullcllnga, Roob,
Siding, Dec:ke, KHchene, Drywal
· 6More .

4!1pau

l..9.~.r,th:b.i~;,\i;~$likt ·"'''. ~,';.~ ;.~,." ~ ll ~ w

•

W"'&gt; JLIST' TALI&lt;,UoiGo

Sunset Home
Construction

PIW

m-·•

month -

-1~

SNT

Ea.l

Today is the 50th
•nniversary of the
contraceptive pill .
The head of the
group at Syntex S.A.
in Mexico &lt;;:ity that
developed the Pill was
Dr. George Rosenkranz. He is 85 years
YOU AIN'T
old, l:!ut you would
never ·know it to
meet him.' lle is very
active, both professionally and athletically. Also, Rosenkranz still plays toplevel bridge~ For example, his team fin.ished second in the
prestigious Vanderbilt
Knockout Teams last
~--------...--..----. . Mareh.
Rosenkranz is accomplished io ;dl aspects of'the game, but
is especially reno'!VJled
for his opening-leal!
expertise. For exam. '·
pie, look at the West
hand. What would
you select against
three no-trump? You
· CELEBRITY CipHER'
know that North, the
..
by Lull Campol
dummy, ··h as so Ine . 9t~
~b•UY'Cipher cryptograms are created tram q'¥JIIItioos by tamous
. .,, pO!ip!o ,'putw, preoan~.Eactlltltorlnthtciphersoandofotanol/lor.
• Today's clue: L squals, K
,... ·'
"'I 14 points witll eXactly
YOO 1\t\1/t:: c.N.LEl'&gt; r.. t.l~-~ five hearts (shown via .
• p 0 W" ~
L K D p K '· 1o1
p D1x w
a
transfer
bid);
and
;.
fU.I&amp;.It I Pt.E:ME
that South lias a balTG
F GV 0
A D W 0 C •,~
P ·p I X W
CIR&gt;Jl.'l- YOIJii:.
15'
17
"
t.·
•
l
.
'
d
~nee
pOints.
.
.
DIW..T&lt;Y-Y N{l'&gt;
presupt;thly with onl~&lt; !" I&gt;P: :o ·H G~ • 1U ,o H G W .0 X X J C
~~toll_
two hea~ &amp;ecause ·h~ · t\.· .. tf , • "' l ;t
..,,•.~ :·
~rred
th'
·,.,:
•
,_,,,.
vD.DLMO
,;
sovwu.
··.. : ·- , ('j;~
..• xx•
Pr ele
ret;. . no .. . ·····
,. , 1 ~~
·
··
trump tofo~r· l!e~. ! '·'l:r. o &amp;.,:. 8:0 ,J ~ · M K w t sAG .o 1 'w, o H.G ·
If WeH :l,c;ads a ,., .1·.' "' • . ·, 11
, .. ,
- .-, . '"

WV11131 U

PUBLIC
NOTICES

lllnll Of
....
1111 Exc1..-1y·
• 5I Exerclao
11 IYJIII
10 ruP.PY- 3l 'lflvh
20 Colon do 57 Paychlc'o
12 Sljlo of
~-:
lndlan1
gill (lbbr.)
print
31
far
21 Brucaol 51 Rolls of
18 -PIIInao,
kuftOiu · . · billa
IL
'
channol
22 M.va . _ 51 Daa olf
20 Web link 31 .......
24 Elfie! To·
lddr.
lnlta. '
en.
DOWN
·22 Mlclaummer 41 Toes the
27 Doocooeu..
.
. 23 Be alcll
line
• _....
1 Widing bird 24 In~··
·• 42 Out ol •
30 Gu!WIIt
2 II urw61e to
poutnor
clinger
Cllplon ~ 3 "WNI -Ia 25 F1nt hOrae 43 In
31 lbiMOI'o
,_?"
26 IlL .
concluolon
101
4 CNngo
Ha~h 44 Sro.' group
32 llel'sldn
colorllegoln · 27 View from 41 llldilay
34 Coli of
5 ..... ftnd
tho donn • 47 De1101111
8 bJ11I&gt;
28 s-..
35 W.n.r'o
7 Clrcuh
, 29 Pollulloo
......,,
IOid ·
I Toad
. 3t Bear Or lie 41 Alii..,
31 Plccldllly
footure
33 Tl,.. ,
50 Arrow
11111111
8 W...l
· preuure
launcher
37 -up (-1
Georgo
mua.
51 Literary
Into
wouldn't
35 Bout
colloctlon
.._..)
tell (2 --)
endlr
52 Ally.'l deg.
JD'lfiQV
17 - y..,

OpenJn&amp; JHct t?

per

,;·'.j

Wnt Nwtll
I.

1¥

"So - · ·
Ill"
Holy unit

so Aim

-

!'...
P-

·c..

41
...... """
14 - - 15
Pt. of lifT 53
18 54

De•ler: Soulh
VulnerabM: Neither

992·3470

7:00 AM • 1:00 PM

35537 SL Rt 7 N• Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769

A I•. I

Ntw H - • Vlayl
Sldlq • Now G......

DIHYIU

lhd1 llwa It laliJI, lao

'

8UILDIRS INC.

WeJdlaa &amp;: BruJDa

.........

13

..."

'

BISSELL

PrKa

Cuslom Fabrication

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"

.

.. Q'n:

3oD

wn.
-w-·

11 ludol n'• 46 TV' I
1111n11

' A At '7 I
'I' K J J
t K Q aJ

....,•.

•

41 ..apovo'o

........
Olive42
01111'1
•. .....104
..,.,_.

•Heal"'-

•017171

40 ~Thla
-ldl"

1 l'lnlalll
calli

Dec . 21) .... U.nrurtunately,

you might have placed your
trust in tonn!gne who hu

I c 'I .&gt;
g
1
I1,6,.....,--,...1-,1"''-,1,......,1--i

yqu develop' fro~tt st•p No. 3 belo;w.

SCRAM-I.ETS ANSWERS
Psyche • Topaz • Hoist· Aghast· GOSSIP
1 have

observed over the years thati.yhen three people
.are talking you have a conversation. When one leaves
you have-GOSSIP.

now proven to be 'unreliable.
··cut him or her loose today or
you'll only have yourself to

blame if havoc resul"'.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- ·

Jan . l9j -· When atiempling
to iron out the kinks in something you''re ~rying to do to~
d.ty, you could destroy what
.already exists. h might be
wiser to .make a fresh start

AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Fcb.

19) ~- Unfortun:~tely, your
defenses could be down today
.and cause you to respond jn
w~y1 unbecOming to ycu . l(
thu should 'happen, inuncdiately make amends.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
-~ Penon1 with whon1 you'U

be involvotltuday migho lack
your vision and

po1hiv~

pe!r-

~pective , 10

dontt rast your
pearlt b~:~fore awintL jun 110

om and prove yo)Jnwl( riHht.
ARIES (Match 21·April19)

·• Thorc'o a chanct a oroubled
rtlatlon•hip could be termiIHUtd today. Dut lc Wi• dubi ..

ous ac best, and letting ao of lt
now leayea you free to opcr..
Ut d you whh.
TAURUS (April 20-May

20) •• You can hide, but you

can't escape your rcsponsibiliw
tics. If you attempt to sweep
them under

rhe

rug today,

rliey)ll plague you 'for th e rest
of the week. Get them oVer -

with and be free.

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
•• Someone who is ·a troublemaker could try to pick :~ ftght
with you today. Imtc aJ. of
getting imo it with h1.111 or
~cr,

walk away from th1s per-

son once and for all .

CANCER Uun&lt; 21-Ju ly
22) -- Owing to a few donu~s­
ric tcn~iom. rhe welcome- mat
might not be re:1d')' for invit·ing over friends. G~t out or

the house and find a fu11'placc
to shirt time with yollr p11l1.
LEO Ouly 23-A~~~- 22) ••
Don't di~cun any fre•h ideas

you

s•t

wltb co-workrn.

One amollM thc{u ·niJJtht at ..
te111pc ~o Uta! your innova ..
• tiont and but you to the
punch. Launch thean today.
VIRGO (Au1. 23-Sepr. 22)

•• If you arc inv_olvcd In a key
endeavor thAt now req~1ires
greater .funding. lntlead nf
s;cttinK uptct, semt~h (or .nC!w
way• to handle it. What yoU
conceive today wm work .

�· . Pomeroy, Mlddl1port, Ohio

t'8ge B6 • T. . Udy S1nUnel

FLY YOUR FLAC TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

Melp County's

.Front ines not
.'.t·· . ·.,.'

I lid• I g
The Shop-V~Sp1d11tv
Serln 18 Gallon 6.25 HP
w.tiDry VIIC with
DetiiChllble Blower ·

Increased
Perfonnance

OPERATION

HOIIIetawn Newspaper

n

WASHINGTON (AP) - Low-flying
Taliban lfOOP concenAC-130 gunships are hitting Taliban
trations, said a senior
-~
~,troops in i tough new assault on
defense official speaking
on
condition
of
Afghanistan's leadership, officials said.
,4.
anonymity.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
•
·r~: .,.
The strikes will focus
..
I
warned that the front lines, facing rebel
ete;; more on the ruling
furces, soon will not be "a very safe place
•
militia's ttoops once the
to be" for the Taliban.
Pentagon gets better
American warplanes carried out the
from rebel
information
heaviest daytime bombardment yet of
'
. forces, Rumsfeld said
Afghanistan on Monday, and the attacks
Monday
at
a
news
conference.
continued into the night. Monday's plan
Speaking of the Talibart front line,
was to strike 18 to 20 targets, including

WIl l..

Rumsfeld said: "I suspect that in the period "head, that's not going to be a very safe
place to be."
To that end," senior defense official said
the Air Force sent into combat on Monday the AC-130 turboprop gunship.
The use of the AC-130 marked a new
step of the air campaign, aimed directly at
the Taliban leadership. Previous raids had
targeted air defense and other military
fucilities with the aim of making the skies
safe for)ow-altitude, slow moving aircraft
like the AC-130, a high-fire power aircraft

that is typically used to support ground
forces trained for small-unit operations. It
was the first use of special-forces aircraft·in
the conflict.
·
"We felt it was the appropriate weapon
to be used," the senior defense official said,
speaking on condition of anonymity. He
declined to discuss specific targets or
results.
On Sunday, the U.S. military began
dropping leaOets on Mghan citizens, altmg
with food, Rumsfeld said.

PIMM- Altec"t, AJ

'

LOCX• •
HOSE SYSTEM

Council
considers
food
trailer

.

5 undergo.

rabies
treatment

BY TONY M. LEAcH

'

SENTINEL NEWS STAff

POMEROY The
possibility of a permanent
food ttailer being permit~
ted on the Pomeroy Park- .
ing Lot was discussed during Monday's Village
Council meeting.
Angela Hall met with
· council to discuss the pos. sibility of placing a mobile
food booth/ trailer on lot
in an effort to sell both
'American and Chinese
food during lunchtime·
hours, and possibly dinner
tim!' h,ours, if Slli:~essful.
Hall said she has complied . with all health
department regulations and
the trailer itself has met all
laws required for opera-

FOUR YEAR

•

WARRANTY

I

tion.

Council advised Hall of
the necessities required for
such a juncture, namely
electric and water, and
informed her th at the
parking lot's water sources
are, in fact, turned off for
six months of the year;
which could prove detrimental to the proposed
business.
After meeting in execu-

\.
Afte.; Mall·ln Rebate*

1159682

tive session, council decid-

ed that the matter needs to
be discussed at greater
length with the village's ·
legal representation and
advised Hall to return during next month's meeting
for a final answer.
Pomeroy Police Chief
Mark Proffit requested
$6,500 for the purchase of
a 1997 Crown Victoria,

The ORIGINAL Wet/Dry Vac

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" .

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'D'•IIor, AJ ,

Bv CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS ST~FF

SJ9 s59

ROADS~E· STAND- Organically grown fruits and vegetables are featured at Virgil Teaf.ord's.

the raspberries
. come. on and closes it in the fall when tlie squash are gone.

.

'

If it's in season, it'll

be at Teaford's stand
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SYRACUSE - "Whatever's in season, is what you'll
find here," Virgil Teaford said
as he arranged squash on the
small display table at his road·
side stand.
Teaford has been selling
fruits and vegetables and even
some Oowers at his Virgil's
Berry Patch stand along Ohio
124 between Syracuse and
Racine for nearly a decade.
· 'Tve always been into gardening," he said. "It really
started with growing strawberries when I was 8 or 9 and
I've never !topped."

"''oday's

Hlp: 50s

Sentinel

Details, A3

1 s.ctlon .,. 10 ......

Classjfieds

6-8

Low:40S

Lotteries

.OHIO
Jo(,yO!!mwic.;~Sc___ _ _ __;z9 Pick 3: 9-9-4; Pick 4: 0-9-9-1

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1159648

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6.0 Peak HP
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020011.owe's• Home c.m.n,'Jnc.
for the l.oww's ...
you aoll UOO 44 LOWES.

..st

Prices IYIIIY vary H thent ant
market variations.

22 Gallon
6.25 Peak HP
Wet/DryVac
#159650

15 Gall,on
6.25 Peak HP
Wet/DryVac
1159653

14 Gallon
5.5 Peak HP
PumpVac
#159683

If it Doesn't sar Shor.•Vac,
Kt!ep Sh-.,plng.•

6 Gallon
2.25 Peak HP
Wet/DryVac
#04440

WuseaoawthLCeiiJr_____......t3

•
•

.'

Teaford· says he opens the
stand in the spring when the
raspberries get ripe and closes
it in the fall when all the crops
are gone. He prides himself on
having the best raspberries
.
.
around. I
"People, come from 50 mil es
away just for my raspberries,"
he said.
The kinds of produce at
Teaford's stand changes as the
growing season progresses.
Now there are plenty of
turnips, squash, cucumbers
and all kinds of peppers, but
about everything else has
come and gone.
Providing good things for

people to eat is important to
Teaford who says everything
he sells is organically grown.
"I use only organic sprays
and fertilizer on my crops," he
said.
Since he maintains an unattended stand, he uses the
honor system of payment. He
says that works pretty well,
although there are always a
few who don't pay. But he's
not about to let a few dishonest people discourage him
from doing something he
enjoys and which benefits
others.
At first he had two jars for

Please see Tuforcl, AJ

environmen-

nervous system tissue."
If a possible

exposure
should occur,
he . advised
seeking medical attention

tal health for
department.
immediately
~
and also conthe
Meigs
County Health De~~1ent, tacting the health departreported that a calf's head mcnt to insure that the sus.
had been collected and pected animal is quarantined
shipped to the Ohio Depart- or tested.
ment of Health laboratories
Little said that in order to
after a local veterinarian red uce chances of exposure
expressed concern over the people and especially chilcause of its death .
dren should avoid contact
The health department with wild animals, particuwas notified Friday that the Iarly if they appear sick or are
calf tested positive for rabies. injured.
The particular strain of
"Never handle any wild
rabies has not yet been iden- animal found dead," he cautified, Little said, noting that tioned.
the specimen has been sent
He said that wild animals
to th~ Centers of Disease should not be kept as pets,
Control in Atlanta, Ga., for and that they should not be
analysis.
moved for nuisance control
As for transmission, the ·or sport hunting without
environmental health direc- permission from the. Ohio
tor noted that "the rabies Department of Natural
virus may be transmitted Resources because of the
when an animal or human is possibility of spreading disexposed to infe ctious sal iva ease.
or cen tral nervous system tis-

Please see Rabies. AJ

c 2001 Ohio valley Publlshin&amp; co.

Bloodmobile plans Wednes9ay stop in Pomeroy
BY TONY M. lEAcH

occur," she added.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Gergely s~id Red Cross works to ensure
that the supply of blood matches current
demand from hospital!.
Although blood banks around the
country often face a shortage of blood,
since the Sept. II terrorist attacks, a large
donor response has ensured that enough is
being collected to suppty both planned

Gergely, ' spokesperson with the Red
Cross. ·
POMEROY - , Even though blood
"Because we've had such an overbanks across the country are reaching sur-,. whelming response as of late, we may
plus levels, the American Red Cross limit the number of people on a given
Bloodmobile will be at the Meigs Senior day, hoping to sustain this outpouring of
Center on Wednesday to collect blood support over coming weeks and months,"
donations in case of an emergency.
she said.
"We encourage local residents to con"We need your continued participation
tinue with donations because blood so we are prepared to respond to emerdonors are needed every day," said Cheryl gencies whenever and wherever they

www.shopvac.com

Please see Collect. AJ

to•••

Shop-Voce is 1 NgiiWod tradomerk of
Shop-Voc Cotporltlon.

Holzer Ho111e Care

Truell'ICIM lnd LockOniM IN trodernlrkS of

Shop-Voc Cotporltlon.
• - " " " lxpl... 12/31/01

'•

•

Ill~ 5: ~7·17

-'"Oab!l'it~~.ulllawrillie:z.s ____.....J.3 •••
...VA.
~splllo.a.rtus_ _ _ _.....J.st.LJ Dally s: 4+2 Dally 4: 4-8-11-B

10 Gallon
3.5 Peak HP
Wet/DryVac
#64455

50()6.14-17985

'0 I

POMEROY - The first
case of rabies in more than a
decade has been detected in
a domestic animal from a
Meigs Cou'nty farm. As a
result of possible exposure to
the virus, five people are
undergoing
a possible exposure
post-exposure rabies
should occur, he
prophylaxis
treatment.
advised st'tleing
medical attention
Keith Littie,
R.S., immediately and also
director of contacting the health

lf

ro!ldside lltBT\d ~Ohlo-1:24 blltween·Syracuse and' Racine. He opens 1t lfi the spring wfieri

sue, either by bite expos!lre
which requires a penetration
of 'skin by a rabid animal's
teeth, or by non-bite exposure which is contamination
of an ·open wound•. mucous
membrane
(eye,
nose,
mouth) or theoretically,
· scratches, by infectious saliva
or
central

\

QSP .Serles

574

.

.

.''

'

•'

· for receiving theit Medicare
recertification, deficiency free .
Consider Holzer Home Care when you
choose your home core provider.
Call (740) 446·5301 .

•

MEDICAL CENTER .

Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holz~r.org

\~

'i

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