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                  <text>· . Pomeroy, Mlddl1port, Ohio

t'8ge B6 • T. . Udy S1nUnel

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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,

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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."

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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

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Please see Collect. AJ

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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
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America at
I forces enters fi t

-

lUll clav. Oct. 16, 2001

PageAl

The oany Sentinel

KABUL, Mgiunistan (AP)
- Heavy air cannons pounded Owm bin Laden's allies in
their headquarte~ city as U.S.
pilots brought a special-forces
gunship ,into action against
Mghanistan's Taliban. Intense
bombing in major cities Tuesday !l&lt;'~t residents running for
shelter.
Fint use of the low-flying,
'lumbering turboprop AC- IJO
followed the fiercest daylight
raids of the offensive and
marked a stepping-up of
attacks on Taliban bases and
leadenhip.
It also signaled U.S. confidence that more than a week
of attacks by ship-launched
cruise missiles and high-flying
jets liad greatly eased the
threat from Taliban air defense.
U.S. Secretary ofState Colin
Powell, in neighboring Pakistan to shore· up support for
the U.S.-led campaign, said

Mghanistan's Islamic regime
was "under enormous pressure" but refused to say
whether he thought it near
collapse.
Tuesday's fresh waves of air
strikes targeted the Taliban at
multipl~ fronts military
hases and airports outside the
capital of !Ubul. Taliban lead- .
en' southern base city of!Undahar and the key northern
city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
The attacks at Kandahar left
the Taliban unsure even what
hit them. Tali ban l~aders
believed it was helicopter gun-·
ships that had entered the war
for the first . time, Tali ban
Information Ministry official
·Abdul Himat said.
Himat claimed 13 civilians
died in the assault at lUndahar. The claim was impossible
to verify independently.
In Washington, a defense
official
confirmed
the

overnight attack was led by an safe, U.S. forces have made
AC-130, marlting the first particular targets out of airacknowledged use of special- ports in Taliban territory
forces aircraft in the now I 0- throughout the campaign.
day-old offensive. The official Attacks put the Jalalabad airspoke on condition of port in eastern Mghanistan
anonymity.
out of commisSion almost
Previous raids had targeted from the start.
anti-aircraft artillery &lt;ites and
Other strikes have pounded
other military installations Taliban jets at !Ubul and the
with the aim of making the sprawling airport complex at
slties safe for aircraft like the !Undahar, which holds at least
AC-130. The Taliban are 300 housing units . of bin
believed to still hold an Laden's followen.
unknown number of shoulThe only other major airder-fired Stinger missiles capa- fields in Taliban territory, at
ble of bringing. down aircraft, Shindand in southwestern
however.
Mghanistan and in Herat, have
H igh-fi•epower ,AC-130s also taken repeated strikes.
The United States launched
typically are used to support
ground forces . trained for the air campaign Oct. 7 to
small-unit operations. There root out bin Laden - the top
was no word whether the suspect in the Sept. 11 terror
gunship's deployment meant attacks on the United States
special forces had entered the -and to punish Mghanistan's
battle on 'the ground. ·
· rulen, the Taliban Islamic millAiming to make the skies tia, who harbor him.
•

has anthrax

·Child of ABC

~

NEW YORK (AP)- Investigators took to media mailrooms across New York after
learning that an ABC News
producer's infant son was diagnosed with anthrax. Hours earlier, the scare moved into the
halls of Congress when a letter
sent to Senate Majority Leader
Tom Daschle tested positive for
anthrax bacteria.
The diagnosis of the 7month-old child marked the
second anthrax case at a major
news organization in New
York in three days, following
one iit NBC in which a female
employee was infected by a letter carrying anthrax.
ABc News President David
Westin said Monday · the boy
developed the skin form of
anthrax after spending time at
the newsroom last month. The
child is talting antibiotics and is
expected to recover.

1

POSITIVE - New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, ·center,
speaks to the media at the ABC headquarters In New York to
announce that a seven-month-old child of an ABC employee
tested positive for the skin form of anthrax. (AP)

•

"The progn,osis is excellent;'
Westin said.
There was no immediate
word on whether anyone in
Daschle's office tested positive,

•

but aides who may have 'been
exposed to the letter were tested With nasal swabs and ~eing
·treated with the antibiotic
Cipro as a precaution, said Dr.

John Eisold, attending physician in the Capitol.
"They are innocent people
caught up in a matter for
which they have nothing to
do," said Daschle, who wasn't
exposed to the letter. "I am
very, very disappointed and
angered."
The letter to the South
Dakota Democrat prompted a
halt to all mail deliveries in the .
Capitol. Many already were
nervous about worlting in a·
building that could be a highprofile target for terrorists.
President Bush told reporters
"there may be some possible
link" between the anthrax incidents and Osama bin Laden,
who administration-officials say
was behind the Sept. 11 terror·
ist attacks.
"I wouldn't put it past him,
but we don't have any hard evidence;' Bush said.

WASHINGTON (AP) Attorney General John
Ashcroft met with a key
European ally as evidence
mounted that U.S. authorities have disrupted terrorist
plots overseas since the Sept.
1I attacks.
Authorities have arrested
225 people in about 40
overseas countries following
U.S. and foreign intelligence
reports suggesting that they
were involved in plotting "or
assisting terrorism, government official! told The Associated Press.
The officials, who spoke
on condition of anonymity,
said four bombing attacks
had been thwarted since
Sept. I 1 against U.S. sites in
France, Turkey, Yemen and
Belgium.

.I

"Our
efforts are
focused on
preventing
terrorists
from conducting
their operations," said
Francis X.
Taylor, the
State Department's
top
counterterrorism official.
"We'v~ had some success
and hope to have many more
in the future." He declined
to discuss details of foiled
attacks.
In Washington, Ashcroft
and FBI Director Robert
Mueller met with Mariano
Rajoy, interior minister of
Spain.
Spanish authorities have

Tulld.,, 0

cl••• 11. 2001

Reopening of historic
Tavern gives ~orale
boost to Manhattan
NEW YORK (AP) The city is taking further
steps to recover ·from the
estimated 100,000 job losses.
stemming from the terrorist
attacks on the World Trade
Center.
.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani
announced two developments Monday in the job
recovery effort: the openings of four job centers
around the city and a career
fair on Wednesday that is
expected to draw nearly 200
employers.
"This job expo ·signals yet
another significant milestone in the city's efforts to
emerge from this difficult
time in a much stronger
position than before," he
said.
At the wreckage of the
World Trade Center on
Monday, police tried to
determine whether newly
discovered remains were
those of a fallen officer. The
remains would be the fitst
to be recovered of any of

Keith Greene
DART- Keith Alan Greene, 16, Dart, died Thursday, Oct.
I I, 2001 at the University of Louisville Medical Center in
louisville, Ky., from injuries sustained in an automobile accident involving other men1bers of his family in Illinois.
He was born April 8, I 985 in Marietta, a son of Brian Keith
Greene ofWaterford. and Shawnee Faith Greene Pugh of Dart.
He was a student at Marietta High School and was employed
.
at the Hotel..Lafayette.
Besides his parencs, he is survived by his brother, Jason
Michael Greene of Dart; his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Felty of Syracuse, and Charles Salser of Pomeroy; his greatgrandfather, Oris A. Hubbard of Syracuse; and several auncs,
uncles and cousins.
·
·
•
He was preceded in death by his stepfeather, Charld Edward
"Butchie" Pugh and his half-brother, Cody E . Pugh, both of
whom were ltilled , in the same auto accident; grandparents,
Donald· Owen Greene and Nola E. Greene; and his greatgrandmother, Leona Mae Hubbard.
Services were held on Monday; Oct. 16, 2001 at McCiureShafer-Lankford Funeral Home in Marietta, with the Rev.
Brian Harkness officiating.

the 23 city police officers
lost in the disaster.
Giuliani said 4,688 people
we~ still listed as mis!ing in
the tragedy; 453 bodies had
been recovered, with 398 of
them identified.
Another step toward
recovery was symbolized
Monday by the reopening
of historic Fraunces Tavern
in lower Manhattan. The
tavern, which had been
closed for two years during
a S2 million renovation, is
the site of George Washington's 1783 farewell to the
officers he commanded to
victory in the Revolutionary War.
"This place was the originallandmark of patriotism:·
managing owner Michael
Rakusin
said Monday.
"Over 200' years ago, you
had the sons of liberty
standing next to British soldiers here. The State
Department and the War
Department were all' housed
here."

•

Charles Johnson
COLUMBUS- Charles A. "Luke" Johnson, 50, died Saturday, Oct. 13, 2001 at Mount . Carmel Medical Center in
Columbus.
·
He was a 1970 graduate of and·a former football coach with
Columbus Westside Boys Club.
He is survived by his brother, Roger Johnson of Columbus;
an aunt and uncle; a niece, and several aunts, uncles and
cousms.
Services will be 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Miller Funeral
Home in Grove City, where family and friends will be received
beginning at 4:30 p.m. Committal service will be held at 11
a.m. Thunday.
·

Trailor
I

r,umfta&amp;eA1

which would be used as a·
third police cruiser for the
deparlment. Proffitt said the
vehicle's w'hite color will save
'
.
the village -around $1,000 in
painting costs and that the
automobile is in "pristine
condition."
· Council approved th~
requ&lt;7t and .informed Proffitt
to purchase the vehicle
immediately. .
Cojlncil also approved an
ordinance forbidding commercial tractors used to pull
trailers· from traveling on various. streecs throughout ·the
village.
Streets affected by the
ordinance include Anne
Street,, Kerr Street, Chester
Road, Lincoln Hill, Lincoln
Heights, Osborne Street,
Condor Street, Laurel Street,
Rock Street, Lib~rty Lane,
West Locust Street, Spring
Avenue, Union Avenue and
Pleasant Ridge.
· Any exceptions to this
. ordinance must be granted by
the police department and is
considered to be of temporary nature only. Vehicles violating the ordinance are subject to fines up to SI00 per
vehicle, per incident.
'
In other matten, Councilman Victor Young informed

CLEANING UP -

Sparks fly from a welder's torch as he
cuts through twisted steel on the. remall)s Qf, 6 Wod!l 1Trade.
Center as the r!lcovery and cleanup effort continues at the .
site where the World Trade Center towers once stood i[l New
York. (AP)
.
.
.

•

enter
for their

rsary

Attacks
from PapAl
"We're working to mal&lt;;e
clear to the Afghan people
that we support them and we
want to help free their nation
from the grip of the Taliban
and their foreign ter.rorist

allies." he said.

DUNDEE

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42123 State Route 7 • Tuppers Plains, OH 45783
I

Ext. 12
Ext. t3

or

•

council memben that a dedication ·ceremony for the
rece~· lv fini:1hed Waterworks
. Park on .t:ast Main Street is
being scheduled for Saturday
at I p.m.
Businesses which donated
money for the project will be
honored during the ceremony and refreshments will be
available to all those attending, said Young.
the
After
discussing
upcoming election, council
agreed to "unanimously support" the 1-milllevy on Nov.
6's general ballot, which, if
passed, would fund yearround maintenance services
for Beech Grove Cemetery.
"The village has received
numerous " complaints about
the c~metery's upkeep and
this !-mill levy would provide enough money for constant tending;• said Mayor
John Blaettnar.
"I strongly 'encourage village residents to vote for this
levy," he added. "If this levy
passes, then the village will
have enough funds to adequately maintain the cemetery's grounds."
Council also:
• accepted a maintenance
agreement on software for the
mayor's court totaling $1,560
per year;
• accepted a maintenance
agreement on software for
income taxes totaling S600
per year.

On the Web
www.mydallysentlnel.com

RACINE - Wendell N.
Clark, 34, 35210 flatwoods
Road, Pomeroy, was rited for
assured clear distance by the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol following a
two-vehicle accident Monday
on Ohio 124 at the intecsection with Ohio 338.
"I:roopers said Clark was
northboimd on 124 at 4:20
p.m. when he was unable to
stop his car in time and str11ck
the rear of a pickup truck driven by Zachary R. Pickett,
16, 22579 Riverfront Drive,
Racine.
Pickett, also northbound,
had stopped to make a left
· turn into a private drive at the
time of the crash, troopers
said.
Damage to Clark's car was
severe,· and no damage was
listed 'to Pickett's vehicle.
Perry C. Shuey. 70, litiz,
Pa., wa.s cited for failure to
yield by the patrnl followin'g a
two-vehicle accident Saturday
on Ohio 248.
Troopers said Shuey was
eastbound at 8:20 p.m. when
he attempted a left turn onto
Olive Township Road 265
(Number Nine) and collided
with a westbound car driven
by Heather N. Savoy, 26,
47910 Ohio 248, Long Bottom.
Both cars were slightly
damaged.

..

The leaflets falling to
Afghans with humanitarian
food packets are in the local
languages of Pashtu and Dari,
said Air Force Gen. Richard
Myers, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.
One leaflet shows a Western
soldier in camouflage and helmet shalting hands with a man "
in traditional Afghan dress in
front of a mountain scene.

The Daily S~ntinel

Double
Reclining Sofa

Obituaries

Da ive:s ticketed

•

Ove bro

been working with U.S. law
enforcement as they trac~
the steps of suspected
hijacker Mohamed Atta,
who is believed to have met
with
Islamic extremists
months before the hijackings.
A U.S. official, speaking on
the condition of anonymity,
said there isn't any evidence
thus far that suggests foreign
involvement in the anthrax
cases that have arisen across
the United States in the last
week. Indirect connections,
however, have surfaced.
The wife of an editor at
the tabloid newspaper that
employed a man who died of
anthrax helped two of the
hijackers fin&lt;! apartments last
summer, the FBI said Monday.

The Dally Sentinel• Page A 3

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Dry and cool through Saturday
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Wednesday night ... Mostly
Rain will move out of the clear. Lows in .the lower 30s.
region tonight and usher in
Extended forecast:
several days of cool and dry
Thursday... Mostly sunny.
fall weather, the National Highs 61 to 66.
Weather Service said.
Thursday
night ... Mostly
It will be unseasonably cool, clear. LoWs in the lower 40s.
with highs Wednesday in the
Friday... Mostly clear. Highs
50s.
in the upper 60s.
Sunset tonight will be ar
Saturday... Partly
cloudy
6:51 , and sunrise on Wednes- with a ·chance of showers.
day is at 7:44 a.m.
lows in the upper 40s and ·
Weather forecast:
highs ·in the mid 60s.
Tonight ... Mostly· cloudy
Sunday... Partly cloudy. Lows
with a chance of sprinkles in the lower 40s · and highs in
•
through midnight. Lows near . the lower 60s.
40. West wind 10 t&lt;i 20 mph.
. Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Wednesday.. .Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s and highs
Highs in the lower 50s. West in the mid 60s.
wind around 10 mph.

Federal Mogul-~

AEP-44

Arch Coal- t9~

.

Akzo-42
AmTeci&gt;SBC- 43,,
.
.
Inc.- 40~
Thursday has been declared "Overbrook Center Day" by Mid· . Ashland
AT&amp;T- t9),
dleport Mayor Sandy lannarelll. The facility will celebrate Its Bank One ...: 30),
13th anniversary with 4 p.m. ceremonies on Thursday, Includ- aLI-n.
ing a balloon launch, a flag ceremony conducted by Boy Scout Bob Evans - 18~t
BorgWamer ~ 44).
Troop 245, refreshments and tours of the center. Overbrook Champion- 2~
opened in October 1988, and remains one of t~e community's Charming Shops- 5~
largest employers. lannarelli was joined by Charla Brown and Cily Holding - 9'•
Col-15).
Don "Dodger" Vaughan, both of Overbrook Center. (Brian J. DG-13,,

Reed phllto)

DuPont~40~

and garages, by not leaving
pet food out at night, and by
animal proofing trash containers. He said that wild anifrom ,.AI
mals account for about 93
Sealing openings in build- percent of rabies cases reportings to keep out unwanted ed in the U.S., but that all
colonies of bats, vaccinating m.ammals, including humans,
domestic animals, and not are susceptible in differing
permitting dogs . and cats to degrees.
"Virtually all cases of rabies
roam free are important precautions
in
preventing in domestic animals are
domestic animal and human , caused by exposure to wild
animals, usualJy raccoons,
rabies, according to Little.
He also suggested eliminat- skunks, or bats. Cats, dogs,
ing "denning sites and food" cattle anrl horses are the most
for raccoons and other wild frequently inf~qed species,"
carnivores by closing sheds little said.

Rabies

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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usa -16'·

Gannett -65
General Electric - :Jm,
GKNLY-4
Harley Davidson -

48'·
Kmart -7~.

Peoples- t6\
Premier- 8~
Rockwell-15\t
Rocky Boote - 5
AD Shell - 52'•

Sears-39\

Shoney's - ~.

Wai-Mart- 53~

16~.
OVB-24~

Wendy's - 26),
Worthington - t 3~
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing
quotes of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Part-

BBT-JV,

ners ft Advest Inc:.

Kroger- 25
Lands End- 3t
Ltd. -11~

NSC- t8),
Oak Hill Financial -

year," said Gergely.
To be a blood donor, individuals must be at least 17
years old, weigh 1OS pounds
from PapAl
. or more, be in good general
and emergency patient needs. health, and not have donated
The local Red Cross has a blood within the past 56 days.
daily collection goal of 1,050 Donon can give blood when
donations to meet the needs taking most medications,
of patients at over 110 hospi- including insulin and high
blood pressure prescriptions, if
tals in p"'rs of six states.
Red Cross is also launching .their medical condition is staDonor
Rapid ble.
a 11ew
The bloodmobi.le will be at
Response Team, 'a program to
the
center from 1-6 p.m. and
help assist in the col)ection of
bake
sale will be held from 10
meeting future patient blood
a.m. until ·6 p.m., with proneeds.
"We must focus on schedul- ceeds going toward the New
York Disaster Fund.
'
ing blood drives and recruiting potential donors to meet
future blood needs wherever
they occur ... tomorrow, next
week , next month, or next

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earner HIVICe Is &amp;IJallabla.

MASON. W.Va.- Robert "Bobby" Paul Schneider Jr., 42, of
Mason, died Sunday, October 14, 2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital
in Point Pleasant, West Virgini...
Born October 18, 1958 in Batesville, Indiana, he wa.s the
beloved son of Robert Paul Schneider Sr., and Judy Schneider of
Aorence, Indiana, and step-father, Gene Wolfe of New Casde,
Pennsylvania.
A 1976 graduate of Meigs High School, he was a boilermaker
and construction worker, and a member of the International
Brotherhood of Boilermaken. .
He is preceded in death by his mother, Charlotte (Carr) Coleman; two brothen, Steven Schneider and Kenneth Scott Wolfe;
and two grandfathers and one grandmother.
Along with his father, stepmother and stepfather, he is survived
hy a daughter,Tara l.VanZandt and a a son,Jatyd Bradley Schneider, both of Fort Worth, Texas; four sisten and three brothers-inlaw, Jeanie and Jeff Boggs of Cincinnati, Cindy and Rick Billr of
logan, Patti and Billy Louks of Aorence, Indiana, Julee Wolfe
Meadows of Mason; a brother and sister-in-law, David and Amy
Schneider of Milan, Indiana; paternal grandmother, Elsie Schneider of lawrenceburg, Indiana; nine nieces and nephews; and special aunts, uncles, cousins, and friends.
Graveside rites will be 10 a.m. on Wednesday, October I 7, 2001
at Lone Oak Cemhery in Point Pleasant. Pastor Mark Morcow
will officiate.
There will be no calling hours.
POMEROY -Pomeroy
Arrangements are under the direction of Wilcoxen Funetal
Center of the Meigs County
Adult Basic &amp; Literacy F:du- Home jn Point Pleasant.
cation program will hold an
open house on Wednesday
. people use tweezers to go
from 9 a.m . to 2:30p.m. and 6
down into the slot and try to
to 8 p.m. The public is invited
pull out bills.
to attend and learn more
Besides
fine
produce,
hom PapAl
about the ABLE program,
Teaford gives his customen a
where adults can study for ·the customers to put their money "little extra" - like tips on
GED test and improve basic in, but the jars kept disappear- how to make good food taste
skills.
ing. Now he uses a metal box, even better.
The center'is located at 111 bolted down , with a pad lock.
This week recipes for
W. Second St. Information is
"Works pretty well," he· Cushaw Pie were tacked right
available by calling 992-6930. said, although he has seen above the big squash.

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CHILLICOTHE -American Electric Power forestry
and line department personnel will conduct aerial surveys
of its high-voltage power lines
in southern Ohio during the
next two weeks.
Using helicopters,AEP performs these patrols on a
recurring basis to t:xamine the
lines and ensure the reliability
of the company's tcmsmission
network. The low level Oights
are routine !n nature and
should not be a cause of f'On cern for the public.
The patrols Will begin this
week, between 8 a,m. and 6
p.m ., and will conlinue
through the end of the
month.

A 'OIVOT COUL'O
FLY 185 Y'OS'

EE=.!~
•

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"

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�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

Tu••d!f· Ck'~Mar 1~ 2111

The Daily Sentinel
Marshall staying in the MAC, Page A 7
Old Dominion 500 R.esult.s, Page A 7

The Daily Sentinel

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tiN...,.,..

HIGHLIGHTS

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor
.

Dl- Kay Hill
Controller

Yankees outlast
theKs,S-3

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Any .means·

.I

Cutting qff Bin Laden~ financial
pipeline necessary step
• Clarksburg Exponent-Telegram: President Bush
took what we feel was an important step in the fight against
worldwide terrorism recently.
What he did was to sign an executive order to freeze the
assets of27 individuals and organizations. The president said
the list contained terrorist organizations, individuals, terrorist leaders, a .corporation that serves as a front for terrorism
and several nonprofit organizations.
.
No terrorist network can effectively do its job to train and
recruit new members if it has no money supply. This is why
a concentrated effort must ·be made to choke off funds to
Osama bin Laden and related groups.
Of course, this does not mean that Washington has given
up on military action. It is still preparing to strike at the
heart of where many outlaw terrorists live -- in Afghanistan.
It is also stepping up efforts to build up an anti-terrorist
coalition.
Thwarting terrorist networks by cutting off their money is
a good tactic, but just part of an overall strategy to defeat
them.
We must take any measures necessary to reduce the likelihood of many moie days like Sept. 11.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 16, the 289th day of2001. There are
76 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
One hundred years ago, on Oct. 16, 1901, BookerT Washington dined at the White House as the guest of President
Theodore Roosevelt, whose invitation to the black educator
sparked controversy.
On tlris date:
. In 1793, during the French Revolution, Queen Marie
Antoinette was beheaded.
In 1859, abolitionist John Brown led a group of about 20
men in a raid on Harper's Ferry.
·
·
In 1916, Margaret Sanger opened the first birth control clinic, in New York City.
In 1946, 10 Nazi war ,criminals condemned during the
Nuremberg trials weie hanged.
In 1962, the Cuban missile crisis began as President Kennedy
was informed that reconnaissance photographs had revealed
the presence of missile bases in Cuba.
In 1964, China detonated its first atomic bomb.
In 1970, Anwar Sadat was elected president of Egypt, succeeding the late Gamal Abdel Nasser.
In 1978, the College of Cardinals of the Roman Catholic
Church chose Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Polimd to be the new
pope; he took the name John Paul II.
In 1981, Israeli war hero Moshe Dayan· died in Tel Aviv at age
66. •
In 1995, a vast throng of black men gathered in Washington,
D.C., for the "Million Man March" led by Nation of Islam
leader Louis Farrakhan .
Ten years ago: A deadly shooting rampage took place in
Killeen, Texas, as George Henriard crashed his pickup truck
into a Luby's Cafeteria and opened .fire, killing 23 people
before taking his own life.
Five years ago: Republican Bob Dole challenged President
Clinton's ethics and honesty in their final debate. Socci" fans
trying to squeeze into Mateo Flores National Stadium in
Guatemala City stampeded, killing 84 people.
One year ago: President Clinton launched a fresh effort to try
to cool Middle East tensions at an emergency summit in Egypt
that included Israeli and Palestinian leaders, as well as the leaders of Egypt a,nd Jordan and U.N. Secretary-General Kofi
Annan. Missouri Governor Mel Carnahan and his son were
killed in a plane crash south of St. Louis while en route to a
rally for C~rnahan's U.S. Senate campaign. The New York Mets
beat the St. Louis Cardinals 7-to-O to win the National League
championslrip series four games to one.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Angela Lansbury is 76. Former
·presidential adviser Charles W. Colson is 70.ActorTony Anthony is 64. Actor Barry Corbin is 61. Rock musician C.E Turner
(Bachman-Turner Overdrive) is 58. Actress Suzanne Somers is
55. Rock singer-musician Bob Weir (The Grateful Dead, Ratdog) is 54. Producer-director David Zucker is 54. Record
company executive Jim Ed Norman is 53. Actor Daniel Gerroll is 50. Actor- director. Tim Robbins is 43. Actor Randy
Vasquez ('JAG") is 40. Rock musician Flea (Red Hot Chili
Peppers) is 39. Jazz musician Roy H argrove is 32. Actress Terri
].Vaughn ("The Steve' Harvey Show") is 32. Singer Wendy Wilson (Wilson Phillips) is 32. R apper B-Rock (B-Rock and the
Bizz) is 30. Actress Kellie Martin is 26. Actor Jeremy Jackson
("Baywatch") is 21.
Thought forToday:"Everybody's private motto: It's b~tter to
be popular than right." - Mark Twain (1835c1910).

•

Cowboys top Redskins
IRVING, Texas (AP) The way the Dallas Cowboys
celebrated, you would've
thought they won much
more than the "Gutter

•

Bowl."
When Tim Seder's 26-yard
field goal went through the
uprights to give Dallas a 9-7
victory over Waslringtori os
time expired Monday night,
Oash bulbs sparkled thr:oughout Texas Stadiwn:
Pl~yers rushed the field

NEW YORK (AP)
~ Derek Jeter and the New York
Yankees beat Oakland 5-3 in
the deciding Game 5 of the
playoffi to advance to the AL
championship series.
The !~eye-time defending
World Series champions
became ·the first team ever to
win a best-of-five series after
losing the first two games at

NATIONAL VIEW

I

Mariners send Tribe
packing.iii Game Five•

from the sidelines. Ru~ning
back Troy Hambrick tore off
his helmet and spun it as if
he w:u celebrating a touchdown in the end zone.
All that for beating a team
they'd beate,n . the severi previous meetings? All that. for
beating a team that hadn't
come within 14 points of
victory all season?
Well, yeah especially
when you consider the alterPIIMI 1M

c.•avi. A7

hom~.

KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Pentagon the best agency to combat bioterror waifare
Whether or not Al Qaeda terrorists
planted anthrax in Florida, the incident
ensures, as it should, that Congress will
fund a major upgrade in the nation's
defenses against biochemical attack.
The White House budget office had
been quibbling over Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson's
request for $8QO million for the task.
Now that Florida is home to anthrax
cases, it seems almost certain that· more
funding will be approved.
Sen. Bill Frist. R-Tenn., told me in an
interview that he's confident the administration will support the $1.4 billion he
and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
have proposed primarily to build up
state and local health and emergency
agencies.
With the · addition of overdue
improvements to food-safety inspections, the total is likely to come to $2
billion, according to aides to Sen. Tom
Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Appropriations subcommi~tee that oversees
HHS.
the money is likely to be approved by
the Senate Appropriations Committee
within a week and be attached to the
Defense Department's appropriation.
However, it does not contain what
one outside expert _considers a vital
bureaucratic change: making the
Defense 'Department the lead agency
responsible for combating bioterrorism.
Sue Bailey, · assistant secretary of
defense for health in the Clinton administration, told me that the lead agencies
now are the FBI and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, but she
explained that neither ha! the assets
needed to respond to a serious attack.
"The military has the transport capacity and the communications," she said.
"It has the hospitals - base hospitals
and mobile ones - and it has control of
the vaccines we'd need. It also has the
troops, if it comes to that, for quarantines
and crowd control."

the hospital from chemicals and biological agents," she noted. "Hardly any of
our hospiqls do."
Subways, stadiums and major public
buildings, Bailey- said, should be
equipped with detectors that will signal
the presence of biological and chemical
agents, as well as set off computerized
alarms for local and federal authorities.
"People have to know who's in charge
. ahead of time. And the first responders
COWMNIST
- firemen, police, emergency workers
and hospital pers.onnel - ought to be
vaccinated
as soon as possible in order to
The military is prohibited by law from
of
other people,'' she said.
take
care
performing civilian police functions, but
Bailey also suggested that subways and
.Bailey's idea deserves attention.After aU,
building;, including the Capitol,
major
the attacks of Sept. 11 were acts of war
on American soil, and they undoubtedly have filters installed in their air conditioning systems to remove biological
won't be the last.
An anthrax or nerve-gas attack could agents.
She was not alone in her criticism of
kill tens or hundred.&lt; of thousands of
people- millions, in the case of highly Thompson for saying on television and
before Congress that the U.S. govern·contagious smallpox and plague.
Bailey, who oversaw anthrax vaccina- ment "could respond to any (bioterrortion of all U.S. military personnel in the ism) contingency and control it."
:'Unfortunately, that's simply not the
1990s and took the shots herself, said the
case,''
Bailey said. "Our public health sysrecent · mini-outbreak of inhalation
anthrax in South Florida Was ··an appar- tem has no anthrax vaccine itlventO'ry
ent deliberate release -an act of terror- and would be' overwhelmed by a largescale biochemical attack if it happened
ism.
Bailey did not blame the AI Qaeda ter- today."
Although a biochemical attack might
rorist network of Osan1a bin Laden, but
be
the deadliest, Frist said poisoning the
it's a fact that one of the perpetrators of
the Sept. .11 attacks, Mohammed Atta, nation's food supply with bacteria might
attended flight school in nearby Delray be the easiest evil act for terrorists to pull
Beach and inquired about crop-duster off. American agents currently inspect
aircraft, a potential vehicle for spreading only 1 percent of imported food, he
explained.
anthrax.
However, one reminder of how
"Even if it turns aut not to have been
done by the lslamic terrorists," she said unprepared local areas are was furnished
about the Florida cases, "it's a harbinger last week at a hearing by Sen. Robert
Byrd, D-WVa., who said that his wife
that ought to spur us to action."
Besides ma)&lt;ing the Pentagon the lead recently had to wait aU day to be seen at
agency to combat bioterrorism, Bailey Fairfax Hospital's emergency room for
ticked off a list of othe'r thing; that need pneumonia. Imagine the situation if the
to be done, some of which haven't been Washington area had been hit with
anthrax.
widely discussed in Congress.
(Morton Kondracke is executive etlitor of
"Every hospital in Israel has a decontRoll
Call, the 11ewspap_er of Capitol Hill.)
amination room to protect the rest of

Morton

Kondracke

RYAN'S VIEW

Student pleads for understanding, in his own words
BY JoAN RYAN
The assignment to the Crittenden Middle School's eighth- graders was to rewrite
"1, Too,'' the 1954 poem by AfricanAmerican poet Lang;ton Hughes. They
were to alter the words to reflect their
own lives.
Ali Rafi knew the poem was assigned
every autumn at tl1e Mountain View Middle School. It was only a coincidence that
th~ assignment arrived the exact day his
place in the world had been thrown into
turmoil.
He took the WqJCk home and turned in
a poem that, just two days earlier. he
couldn't have imagined writing.
Rafi is a quiet cut-up, the kind of kid
who, behind the scenes, would write the
smart and funny lyrics for the school
revue.
He has dreamed of becooning a standup comedian. Smhetimes he pictures
himself as a rap singer. He makes ~ttle differentiation between himself and his
diverse group of mends, many of whom
live on the military base at Moffett Field.
· But the horror of Sept. 11 suddenly set
trim apart, particularly from the sons and
. daughters of those likely to be deployed to
the Middle East to fight a war against radical Muslim murderers.
"You probably helped the terrorists
crash those planes ·into the twin towers!" a
boy joked Ioudly to Rafi on the school

quad before class.
Then another boy: "Hey, look, it's Ali,
the terrorist."
One of Rafi 's friends told the boys to
shut up, but Rafi said nothing. He has
never hidden the fact he is Muslim. He
doesn't eat meat at school, and his mother
and sisters show up at school events wi,th
their heads covered in traditional Muslim
scarves. But, until that day, his religion had
never been the source of ridicule.
"It took me completely by surprise, but
I kind of shrugged it off,'' Rafi said.
At lunch, and then in gym class, the joking escalated. "I felt embarrassed," he said,
"because suddenly I was different, and I
don't feel different."
Rafi resembles his mother, Yvonne, a
California blonde who grew up in
Carmel and Santa Barbara as the daughter
of a career Air Force serviceman. She converted- to Islam afi:er marrying an Iranian
classmate at UC Santa Barbara. At home,
she and her husband denounced the
attacks. "It was horrific. Unfathomable,"
she said. She taped an American flag to the
antenna of her car and hung a flag in a
front wind(JW of their hom.e.
Even when she shared with Ali and her
five other children the insults directed at
her since the attacks, her son said nothing
about the taunts he was weathering at
school.
"1 guess it's part of being th e cool mid-

dle-schooler not to snitch," she said.
In Rafi's language arts class, the students
broke into groups of four. Each group
chose a poem from among the four to
share aloud with the class, Rafi's group
chose his. So he sat on the stool in front of
the room and read:
"1, too, am an individual./ They embarrass me the way they tease./ When they
say I'm ·a t_errorist, I shrug it off,/ But I
'count them as friends./ And so, the
ridicule continues/ And I must shrug
another day off./Tomorrow/ When they
joke,/ I will joke back./ Then they won't
say to me/ "You probably helped them," I
Then./ Besides,/ They'll stop after I show
them/ who I an1/ And lower their heads./
I, too, have dignity"
When Rafi finished, the class fell silent
then erupted in applause. The principal
· asked him to read the poem over the PA
system- during the "words of wisdom"
portion of morning announcements.
The taunts stopped without Rafi's ever
. raising his voice ~r his fists.
He knew he couldn't · conrrol the
attacks, only his response to them. The fact
that an eighth-grader understood tlris so
-clearly is enough to feed my faith and
hope through another anxious week.

a""" Rya11 is a columnist for-the San Hun-

cisco Chronicle. Smd comttoents to her in care of
this newspaper or ~end her e-mail at joanryansjgate.com.)

New York, trying to
befome only the third team
to win the World Series four
straight times, opens the AL
championship Wednesday at
Seattle.

51..,
avoids DUI
-r cha
. rge
HUNTINGTON, WVa.
(AP) - Manhall basketball
star Tamar Slay pleaded guilty
Monday iri
Cabell
County Circuit Court to
the misdemeanor
offense
of
reckless driving,
his
attorney said.
Slay
Slay was
originally
charged with driving Iinder
the influence of alcohol '\nd
: driving without a license.
· The DUI charge was later
dismissed as part of a plea
agreement, attorney Gene
Gardner said.
Slay was arrested April 29
after he stopped his car in the
middle of a Huntington street
and nearly caused an ac£ident.
Police said Slay had a blood. _alcohol content of0.124 percent. The legal limit in West
Virginia is 0.1 0.
Slay's sentence includes a
: jail term of five days - with
· aU but one day suspended, 32
hours of community ;ervice
. and six months of unsupervised probation, Gardner said.
' .Slay must also address students
· from at least one local high
· school about the offense.
"I made a serious mistake in
' judgment in April,'' Slay said
in a prepared statement. "I
· offer no excuses for my conduct.
"I was .wrong and deeply
regret setting such a poor
. example,'' he said. "I have
learned from tlris experience
and hope to share my·
thoughts with young children
and high school students
throughout Cabell County so
that they will not make the
same mistake I made."
The 6~foot-9, 205-pound
guard finished fifth in the
Mid-American Conference
scoring lasi season with a 17.3
scoring average.

Miller stripped
of bronze medal
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) . Inger Miller, a former world
. champion at 200 meters, test. .ed positive for caffeine during
the 1999 world indoor championships and will be stripped
of her bronze medal.
The failed drug test for
high levels of caffeine had not
been disclosed previously by
USA Track &amp; Field, the sport's
domestic governing body.
USATF said it upheld a
February ruling of its appeals
board.

With
Picture

Appreciation

WE'LL GET 'EM NEXT TIME, KID - Indians pitcher Chuck Finley, right, Is comforted by
pitching coach Dick Pole In the dugout after he was taken out during the fifth Inning. (AP)
SEATTLE (AP) -Two giant ALCS logos
were being spray painted along the base lines
inside Safeco · Field as red-white-and-blue
bunting was straightened on the upper deck.
Moments earlier, the Seattle Mariners finished off the Cleveland Indians in five pressure-packed games in the AL division series,
and already plans were under way for the
next round.
Things change very quickly. !his time of
October.
Just' ask the Mariners.
Less than 48 hours since being nine outs
from an early postseason exit, the Marinen
moved one step closer to the World Series on
Monday with a 3-1 victory over the Indians
in a decisive Game 5.
Jamie Moyer tamed Cleveland's bats for six
inning;, lchiro Suzuki got three mare hits
and Mark McLemore drove in two runs as
the Mariners advanced to the ALCS for the
third time in franchise history.
After the Mariners won 116 games during
' the regular season, there were questions about
how they might do when faced with an elimination game. ·
Apparently, pretty well.

"This year had gone so well we never really had our back to the wall, in a desperate situation,'' said Moyer, who confounded the
Indians with his slow, breaking pitches for the
second time in the series. uNow we've had
that, the last two games. And I think it was
good for us. I ·think we were fortunate to
experience it and show we can handle it."
Shut out at home. Blown out on the road.
Down to their final nine outs. Twice in danger of having their record•setting regular season end in failure. ·
The Mariners· endured it aU before ending
the Indians' year,
"We were down 1-0, and we had to win
Game 2," reliever Jeff Nelson said. "We had to
win Game 4, and we had to win today. It
sl)ows what kind of players we have and what
kind of team we are. We tied history, but .it
wouldn't have looked very good if we got
knocked out in the first round."
There was no wild celebration after third
baseman David Bell threw out Juan Gonzalez
at first far the final out. The Mariners know
they still have a lot of work ahead.

Craven wins OD 500
MARTINSVILLE,Va. (AP) -Three laps from the end of
the Old Dominion 500, Ricky Craven hit"the curb, looked
in his rearview mirror and saw the realization of his dream
intact. Emotion made it hard to concentrate.
Two laps from the end, he lowered his visor, essentially
cutting off all communication with his team. Fact is, he
couldn't .talk anyway.
And one lap from the' end, even with Dale Jarrett pulling
door-to-door with Craven on the outside, and even with
173 examples of failure in his career, Craven lqlew his
odyssey was over.Victory had finally come.
Craven withstood everything Jarrett had to offer in the
finallap&gt;Monday. seeing him pull almost even on the backstretch, refusing to yield his inside line and then slamming
the door on his way to the triumph ,
He beat Jarrett by .141 seconds, his first victory in 17 4
career Winston Cup starts.
In a race postponed a day because of rain, Craven pulled
away from Jarrett on a restart with 17 laps to go, but saw Jarrett close in, pulling up close to his bumper with about two
laps to go on the .526-mile oval.
Hamilton caught Kevin Harvick with 28 laps left and
bumped him in the second turn to take the lead.

'

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With l'fdllre

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Have your fertilizer custom applied this faD ·
and you don't have to pay for it until
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Get a head start on next years planting season
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••••••
Attention winter sports
, coaches: Please send your
2001-2002 schedules to the
daily Sentinel by fax at 9922157 or by e-mail at sports@
myc4ilysentinel.com.

WlthMuch

985·3700 Toll Free: 866·2·59·3321
Derek Fauber Jim Buckley

GET YOUR MOTOR RUNNING- Ricky Craven leads second
place finisher !1ale Ja[rett (88) into turn one during the Old
Dominion 500 race·Monday. (AP)

Branch Manager

Tim Rooney
Certified Crop
Advisor

Agrilianc~

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�Tue1d1y, Oct.11S, 2001

-·-

t!I:ribune- Sentinel -

Tund1y, Oct. 111, 2001

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CLASSIFIED

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We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

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Win : C...,..:::~ll!fl*-" too

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In one week With us

t

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

,

!

All oo·= I
Dolo--·

en..-.

Joll-.

11 . (20) Kin

Scho-. -

--

500.

~

12. (1) Todd Bodine, Fonl, 600.
13. (18) III;IIJby · Clwwolst. 500.
14. (36) Jlnmy Sponcor, Forti, 500.
15. (8) Rully - · Ford. 500.
te. (43) Sloe)' Compoon. Dodge, 500.

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.. _

Alice . .llllkl

, 3 hours, 28 mlnuloo, 20

....... ol ~ 0.141 !'lop' 13 fo&lt; II lapo.

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Lo.l~: l01fft0ftGI4-.

L a p - : T. -

17. ~~-. -500.

10-66; M. -

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::: ~=-~~c=.:;.
(31) Ktmy W~Ract. ChNollt, 498.

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I

Dovo - .

a..-.-·

Joe-

1

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John-

493.
Dodgo. 482.
34. (31) Tony labonlo, C1wwo1st. 483,
hllndllng.
i
......... va.
35. (40) K"" lluocl1, Fonl. 479.
LIP~ Ill mil ow.~
35. (221M111 · Ford. 458. _,ond,
I. (8) Fildey c,...,., Fonl, 600 lopo, 37. (42) ...... ~. Dodgo. 458.
15.•75 """
38. (21) Robby ·
442.
39. (181 Rlcf&lt;y Rudd, Fonl, 397, '"'fjlne
2. (41
500.
3. (Ill- Dodgo. 500.
ldn.
4. (32) ~ Lal&gt;onlt, · 500.
40. (31)- · Fonl, 269.
5. (24) Joll lluolon, fooj, 500.
41 . (BIT""Y ·123, '"'fjlne
""'""r
500.
fdn.
7. (1S} Marte Martin. FOld. 500.
42. (21) Btl Ellloll, Docfuo, 115, - I . (12) - · Fonl, 600.
ing.
\.
a. (3)
c - . 500.
.f3.
(15)
RDNn,Pi'lllll(. Ford. 63, cruh.
10. (26) Slalflng Mariln, Dodge, 500.
32. (215)

33. (27)

1-1: R. c._

57-82; J. Clonlon 63-

80; M. 81-104: J. 106125: E. Sodlsr 126-159; J. Goolon ISO.
ISO; R. era-. 181·199; J. Gonion 200207; M. MM11n 208-m, K. 11uoc11 240277; M. Morlln 278; W. Buniln 279-323; 0.

21 . (30) KoWt ~. - · 489.
22. (35) Kevin HaMck, et.o.rolel, 4119.
23. (1)
et.o.rolel. 499.
24. (14)
Clwwolst. 489.
-25. (41) Caaey A,_, Dodge, 496.
26. (29) Hut - · Fonl, 496.
27. (2) Dele Earrllatdt Jr, Clwwolst. 496.
28. (23) Hermlo - · et.o.rolel, 496.
29. (10) Deve Bloney, Dodge, 496.
30. (33) - - Dodge, &lt;194.
31 . (181 RlctlBfcl&lt;lo. ~. &lt;194.

Jerry-·

Jarr011324-3114;C.-;!155;8. Ion 356-447; J . _ , K. Har"""' 453-472; R.
473-500.
IIOidu. .: J . Gonbl, 4,366; R.
- · 4,032; 8. Morfin, 3,923; 0. Jarrsll.
3,805; T. -~~. 3,113; R. Wal-.
3,789; D. Earrhlrdl Jr., 3,740; K. Hatvlck,
3,739; B. ~. 3,697; J. Burton, 3.510.

era-

Manhall staying _in ·MAC
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Addressers wanted lmmedl·
atotyl No experloiiCO neeGonlleman SHWng White OIIOJY. W011&lt; at home. Call
Female O..r 50 Vaars For toll '"" 1-886-295-5709
Walka And Friendship. Aeply To: 553 2nd Avonue, AppllcaUono being ~
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 , for housecleaning peraonApartment 403
Fire and Waler Damage
: : - : : - - - : - : - - - - Cleaning and Repairs. Must
Why wail? Start meellng Have RellaiSie Tranapor11·
Ohio singles tonight, cell toll tloo and Be Punctual. Spafree 1-8()()..788-2623 elCt cial Care Cleaning Service.
1621 .
1743 Cenlenary Road. GellipoUs, OH 45631. (7-40)446ANNoi.INc&amp;o.mNr 9585

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Are you tired of being paid
the same as tha naxt guy
1or dol ng more1·wou ld Y?U
like to earn what you re
worth? The beUer you per·
form the more you will be
paid. We reward a job well
done. We oHer pan-tlme
and fult·tlme positions. E~m
mora based on yoor ability
to be successfUl. We have
paid vacations, paid train·
lng, paid 'hoNdays. two days
ell every week plus benefits. CaU today lor an interview. 1-888-237-5342 ext.
2221

114 AcrN F..l nm~ For
-

Sate. MBF +or· 610 BBF,

65% Oak 72% 16 to 22
Inch. OBH. Maoon Co. WV
(304)458-1656

::-::-=,.,-,----COSTUMES, Rutland Depanment Store, Thurs., Fri.,
Sat., noon-7pm, Oct. 5th·
Nov. 4th, (740)742-7243,

ragdoiOhe~lsage.com

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GIVEAWAY

·------·
•
Beagle, Collie, Shepherd
Mix. 3 male 2 f_emale. Eight AVON! All Areul To Buy or
wks old . Wormed. (304)675- Sell. Shirley Spears, 3042925
675·1429.
::---:-:::--:--:----,-Do . ,
kl
ppli
Free 112 Lab puppies. cat:;:s ~~ m~n~~~en;
(740)38S·9088
and sate drivel'l, Gali¥Jolis
Kittens- lnsfcle onh•, Utter and Pomeroy local ions only.
trained. prater sam'~ home. Apply In peraon.
..:.;...:_..;.._ _ _ _ _
(740)446·3697 .
ifllroo~~----.
EMPLOYMENT .
1.arr AND
OPPOATUNmES
FOOND
c 00KI~ETARYAIDES
--H LZEA S!NtOR CARE
CENTER .
LOst· 1 81 red cow, BOO Ills., We cufrenUy have openings
phone (740)388-8592, Vln- for cookal dietary aides,
to, Ohio.
both rull· time and part:-:-:-:--::-:-:-::-- time. Experle('ICI preferred,
Lost· black &amp; white Pygmy but will train the right candi·
goat in the Rocksprings date. If you are Interested,
Road area, $25 Reword, pl~ase apply at 380 Colonial
(740)992·3333.
Dnve. Bidwell, OH or phone
Eula or Martie at (740)446-YARD SALE
5001

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YARD SALE-

FAST GROWING BUllNESS NEEDS ~·&amp;HIERS
&amp; COOKS, PART TtME,
FULL nME, ALL SHIFTS,
SEND RESUME TO: THE
DAILY SENnNEL, PO
lOX 721-01, POMEROY,

GAILII'OUi

L,~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-~·

2 lam1ly garage sale, WedSal., B·?, fumilure, dothas,
Home Interior and more, approximately 2 112 miles out OH ~7H.
~:~~~~~~~~e~" Oxyar Help wanted eating Jot the
old~· 0 I G
Ho
-------....1 .
ara roup me,
Moving Sale. October 16th· now payl~ minimum wage,
OCt~ber 20th. 91.m-7, 55 5p,_ shllla3p. 7~f-3pm· f•mGarfreld Ave. (Rt 7 South)
m,
m- pm, '
pm·
Prices are Reasonable
7am, Clll 740·992·5023.
YARD SAlEHomow
. orkera
Needed
4
35 Weekly Processing
.._oil'oMERoioiiiiiiiiiiii~ii/Mmvu;iiiiiiiiiPI1 Mail. 'easy! No Experi'
ence
Ne~~ Call 1•
~Huge yard sale &amp; crafts, 800f652·8726 Ext. 2070,
34820 State Route 7, Porn· 24Hra.
.
eroy across from Skate-a··
way' 101 12. 10118
McClure's Restaurant now
·
·
hiring all 3 tocadonl full or
·
'
y rd &amp; Bak s
t Lori pan-time,
pick up· applica·

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~nom

co:m a ~tya B tldg tion allocation &amp; bring bacl&lt;
un
u • between
9·30am
&amp;
10118 19 20 9
ing,
' ' ' ;00-?
10:00am, Monday thru Sat·
yARD SAJ.E.
urday. .

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Pt Pu:As.ANT
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Yard &amp; Crah sale, 9:00.?,

Oct:. 17-19, Clifton, wv,

chlklreno, adu~ clolhes, bed
spreads. curtams, stereo,
baby bed, walker, high
c~alr, toys, lawn mowers,
m1sc

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A .
., ~RKETAND

.I'LI'A IUA.

~'!inc::.:-:,~~r~~
81

509
n
asant
1
•,accepting ~lcatlons tor
~rHr=- xplf ..nced
. hln
· Apply
wit •
NEW EPHEDRA FREE
lose 40tbs in 2 months!ll
Guaranteed Fk!sulta.
or. ApprOIJed!i
Free Consultation
1-888·397·3845
www.axheallhy.com

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•

Rick Pearson Auctlon Com·
pany, lull time auctioneer,
complete auction sarvlce.
Ucensed t66,0hlo &amp; West
VIrginia, 304•773•5785 Or
'VtA-773-S447 .

Foremen

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AM JNI ...... ....,ltlnQ
In thll IIIlA I I to

............... ,_

Fllr Houolng Act ol1111

-·ony

Mollu..E HOMES
FOR SAlE

Ir:~~lr ~ 1rs=1r~
Twin RlverTowars now aocepting &amp;Wicallons for
tBR. HUO euboldlzed apt.
fo&lt; elderly end disabled.
EOH.
•
(304)675-6679.

New 14 Wide. :i Bedroom. 2 Br trailer, small clean up &amp;
around
home
Only $18,850. FrM Oelivlly rep!tlr
(740)992-2979 ·
&amp;
t-888-1128-2428

sao up.

New 14x70, 3 bedroom. 2 2 Br, 1 1/2 bath, 14 wide
bath, only $995 down &amp; with ' - oxpondO &amp; can$189.62 per month, call tral air, (7..0)992-218?...

20 Ton Jack. Like Now, Ha!&lt;1y Mums .$3.00 IICh 4
$ol5. 6 Ton Jacl&lt;. $9. 4 Ml· lor $10. Open sao. 8-5pm. &amp;
chelin P23570R15 tires, evenlnge. Oewhursl Otoon$40. Cal (7401441-0625
house MI. Allo. (304)6953740 teaw mesaage . .or
Beby bod, droulng labia, (304)8~788
antique bedroom sulte 304- - - - - - - , - - -

675-2801

Haroi&lt;t 740·365-4367.

lndtpendtnl:

Htrballtt

[){a.

2br. Trailer on Crab Creek. 1 bedroom upstairs apart.
trl&gt;utor, Call For Produci Or
1991 Norris Mobile Home, No Pets, References re- ment In Gatllpolla. $250 COrnbuatiOneer CO.i Stove, OpJxwtunlty. {7-40)«t-t882
1o4x70, 2 bedrooms, 2 qulred. Rent Neg. (304)675- month. Call (740)448-2468. ulo&lt;l VOfY lillie. (7401245- ,-'-''--'-':,..:....,.:.:-:--:,::;_
balltt, vary good cond~lon. 1206
9212 ·
Watlfilne Special: 314 200
$17,000. Cel for appoint· 5 Room House v.ilh Belli 2 BR, All Electric, large LR
PSII2Uii P.- 100· 1' 200
10
morrt, (740)44&amp;&lt;l768
plus
oouiM Garage. In Gallipolis. Vary, Very Cookware~ We stopped PSi 137.00 Per 1'00; All
(7401446-1519
Nice. No Pels, (7401446- giving dlnner pa~lool We Braas eo.npr-. Fittings
p_tlfa:w-.llmlt 'k'ftcw
1993 Clayton t6x80 mobile
2003 (740)4411-1409
have Gorgeous Now 171)C. 1n S10Ck
dllc1mlnlldon...
home. 3 br., 2. ba. asking 1 · 3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
sets! Heavy·G~, aurglcaf RON EVANS ENTER~
$18.000 304-n3-5885 after Homes From $199/Mo., -4% 2 br. In Point Pleasant $275. stalnlesa lteell 00% wa· ES Jacklon Ohio 1-800~
Thll
will
not
5pm.
.
...,.,
•
...
,..,,..
.
Down.
Years
at
%
a
mon.
no
pets,
please
bldl
teriBSSI
Waa S1,700. Now
_
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1
30
85
&amp;KIUI"4~
304-675-4900 for more Into, $395.! Hurry! 1·800·434· 537 9528
·
lcnowfngty1997 Fleetwood Sun Plonte APR. For Ustings, 800-319·
ilunJIING
46281
-larrNI
3 br. 2 ba. $22,000 on rent- 3323 Ext t709.
GalllpoUo Co,_ College
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
SuPPLIJ;8
nttte wtttct. lt In
ad lot haat pump pon:h
(Careers Ctole To Home)
Court
Street.
Bed·
IIEHTS
AT
BUDGET
PRIDining
room
table
dark
'--,.;iiiiii,;,;;iiiii-_.1
viOtiUOn of 1M law. Our
15
2
Call Today! 740-446-4-367,
rooms, 1 112 bathl, Kilchen CIS AT JACKSON ea.. wood w/8 chairs txc, concl. •
1st time buyers· Qovem·
1-800-214.Q452
with stove and rtdrlgerator. TATES, 52 Wettwood Drtve Browning MtcntMidaa bow Bb:k · brick sewer pipes
lnfonned thlt Ill
mtnt loans· buy loans &amp;
R=l90.05-12748.
from $29710 $383. Walk" to 65% let .on, 26 • draw 2510 IMndOws.uniela. eto. c1audi
dwellings .ctv.t'-d In
eale· (740)446·3093 Oak· Off Street Parking, Close 10 shOp &amp; movies. can 740- 45 I
- ~
with many extras Winters Alo Grande OH
wood Superoanter
thliMWIPIP«Irl
1110 ........~,...................
Schools and DowniOwn 446·2588. Equal Houslng , phone 304·67S.1781 after Catl74cl.24&amp;-5121. '
av•llblt on an equal
n-ll.t'wu.l..l\f"i!AA.D
5·30 pm
2 bedroom mobile hoi11e for Area. S5951 month plus d• Opportunity
apportunlty bun.
posll and Relarence. No
.
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sale, (740)992-5071 pl.... Pets. (740)446·4926
Christy's Family Living,
JET
~
,
can after 4pm.
Oak firewood. S35 a load,
AERATION MOTORS
-,
2 bedroom tlome close 10 33140 New Lima Rd., Aut·
twa or more toads. $30
HOMES
128x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On· town, basement. River view.- land, Ohio, 740-7-42·7403 · Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In
7
(7401742-2697 or ! 40)992FOR SAlE
ly 5345 oo Per Month $4251 month; 3 bo&lt;lroorn In /IPirlm&lt;lnl, home and !railer s
AKC Yorkloo. Bom Augult
11 Ron Evans, 1" 2•th.
7285
8.99% Fl~ed Interest Rate town, 1• 112 baths. Good to- "rentals. Commercial store- lock.
Ready to Ool
Ul
()
' cation. 15001 month. Refer- fronts available lor laue. 800-537·9S2B.
(740)379·2282 ·
1•888 .928-3426
ni\NIED
house_ for sate on Poner
Vacancl88 now.
11
1 Creek Ad.catt eves 304· 3 bedroom moblre ho~me ror encea and deposit required.
To Do
MOBILE HOME OWNERS Blue HMiel'l,
&amp; fe.
675-7852
sate, ...
total
electric, &lt;740)446·3644.
Gracious Hvlng. 1 and 2 tnteRherm &amp; COttman. gas. matea,callaftaf3PMP;Ieue
All ~erosene wicks instal· New home. 3 bedrooms. 1 (7o40)~2·5856.
233 2nd Ava. COnvenient to ::e~:~~~'r!.: oJI d~ et~ff lumacea in- (74o)742"1103
'
led; repairing forced air ker- bath, IMng room, kitchen, 95 Clayton 14x65 exc. Downtown. 2 Bedrooms, 1 ApanmentS In Middleport . c u ,ng h 8 ldency heat Cocker Spaniel Pupplll.
osene heaters; lawn mow- dining, attached garage, 1+ oond., has new Pwat pump, 112 Balh, Kitchen wfth Stove F
$278-$348 C N 7~ pump systema. We carry 8 Full BlOoded. Parents on
ers; small engines. Mike acre. All level. Pond. underpinning
included and Refrigerator. $490/ 9~m 06o4 E . a
compiete line of MObile premisea. 5160. (740)oW8(740)446-7604
$74,900.(740)446-2801
$12,000. 304-675-3805 or monlhplus~eposllandRol· ~
. qual Housing home Plrtl &amp; 2988'
erences. No Pels. (740)4411IIUniUOs.
BENNETTS HEATIHG ,; ::-:=-=::-:--'---:::-:304 -a7s-7585.
Full Hf'vice hOuse cleaning, Newly constructed, single
·
4926.
Middleport, Beech Street, 2 COOLING (740)441-"11 Ran Terrier pups. TaUs
$R7.00 hour, very honest. story 1800 sq. toot home. Assumabl,~ ~..,loaCans- 1oMa!_Y 3 bedroom house, In the bedroom furnished apart· or 1..a.»-an• .:.S~!Docked. $100.00 {30-')875elerences available. Call Located 10 minutes from typas avanauoe.
r ~,~~;~· country, Gallipolis City ment, no pets, depoelt • .ret- WVM.
·""'••-•
1948
(740)4411-2977
Holzer Hospital, 20 mlnulas !all• . (740)446-3563.
SChoos, $35Qimo. pkJs da- eronc88, utilities PAid, NEW AND UIED FUR· - - - - - - - from Plllllnt Valey Hospi·
posit. 1740, 256•1702 after (740)992-DHIS,
NAHCES FOR ••LEI We
Georges Portable SawmiR. tat, off SR 160 on a private New Double Wide. $195
Pure- bred Norweign Elk
5
don't h~l your logs to the 1-112 acre lot. 3 bedroom, Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2 pm·
Very nice, 2·3 bedroom lnataldonl,Ftrc•• Eellmwaleabolh,
II Huoundll Put.Spploa
..·chao.mmA,.!',:
11
4 10 311 75
mm Just call 304-675-1957. 2-1/2 baths, big kitchen Bath. Free 'Oetivery &amp; Set·
apartment In town large you
a us, •
TAl-COUNTY CONSTRUC- w/oak cabinets, DR, LA up. 1·888-928-3426
~~==· ~~ ~~~ kitchen, LA, S5001m0. Ref- 1..00881 (740)446·6308, 1· South of Rio Grande on
TION.
New w/gas log fireplace, central
F.
(740) 992•5858,
erences &amp; deposit required. 800-2S 1-o098.
Wolf Run Road. First Place
Construction/Remodeling. air, laundry room, front
~
(740)446-3644
AESIDEN11AL AND
on Right
'Siding "Roofing ·orywaU porch &amp; 2·112 car garage. ___
FOR SALE
3 bedroom, central air,
COMMERCIAL
llll"'-~--:--'1
·we oO It All" Free Esti~ Immediate possession. Apw~shar/dryer, $300 per
AMANA· Hi Efficiency 92 +
FRurrs &amp;
mates. 874-41823/874·3855 praised at $125,500. Milke 132 acres with pond, tots ot month plus deposit, call ·
gas f\imaces, Super Hi Etfi.
VEGETABLES
offer. Call (740)446-451-4 standing limber, lolle!y 4 (7-40)992·2187, Lots availsciancy Heal Pumps and Air - Will haul away, clean out, from 8-5pm, M-F, or bedroom, 2·112 b8.1h home, b!ealso.
HOUSEHOlD
Conditioners. 10 year parts
clean up or move almost (740)446·3248 after Spm.
2 barns, rmra.... and cellar
GooDs
. and labor warranty Included, Richards Brottlera Fruit
APPLES
AND
anything. Call (740)446·
~ •AlliiiiMllNrs
COMFORT AIR HEATING Farm.
3 Bedroom on Route 2 , house. mobile home rental
7604
MUCH MORE. 24 mites
(304)675-5332
spot, below Mercerville on
FOR RFNr
Appliances: Aacondttlonad
AND COOUNG
North of Galllpolla on CounRoute 218, esklng $250K.
Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
(7401441-ll114
Pomeroy- all electric brick Call
(740)446-2661
or 1 and 2 bedroom apart- Refrlgrators, Up To 90 Days
1-IIJ0.481-0078
I \I&lt;\ I "I 1'1'1 II...,
B~
home, 3 bedroom, 2 baltl, (740)266-6593 after 4pm for menta, tumllhed and unlur- Guaranteed! we Sill New Relktenlltl HolM Ownera
\ I I\ I '- I I I( k.
OPPolnuNrrY
dining, kitchen &amp; llwlng more Info.
nlshed, aacudty deppeh re- Mlytag Appllancaa, .French Tappan HI efficiency 90 p1ua
. room, fireplace, all new .
.l.m1; &amp;
qulrecf. no pets, 740·992· City Maytag, 740-448·7195. ~· tumac:es including oil
,.
range, micro, air condition..
A
2218.
and
eloclrlc goa luma· ·rlO
FARM
INOT1CEI
&amp; heat, root &amp; carpet,
CRFA.GE
Bathroom sink cabinet 4 eee. HI Efficiency Heat
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· glasaed In back pon::h, large
1 Bedroom Apartment, Ae- drawers, 2 on each side. Pumpa, featuring Tappana
lNG CO. recommends that front porch, fenced in back 2 Acrea at 1379 Hamilton frlgerator, Rartga, AJC In· Aaktng $250. (304.773- Frae Incredible warranty
.
you do bullineu with people yard. (740)992-2571.
Road 57 000 Electric and duded, $289 Plus 09J)OIMt &amp; 5128
package
1984 Ford 1 Ton, 2 wheet
you know, and NOT to send
Watef Avi.nabM {7401258• Reference. HUO Approved.
•
BENNE'iT•s HEATING 6 drive Long wheel bale, 300,
money through the mail until PriCe Reduced. 3 Bedroom, 6005
(740)-Ml- 1519
Couch 84 Excellent $50. COOLING (J40) 441-1411 6 cyl. motor, o4 1peecl,
·
you have invastlgated the 2 112 Bath, 2 Car Garage, 2
Computer Oesk ••wood, Nke or 1-100-172·!H?
(740)591-8284, lea-ve mea·
offering.
.
Fireplaces, Patio Doors, 2.7 acres, uneven terrain, In 3 Rooms and Bath. 46 Olive new. 535., Twin Bad $20.
b
sage
. MLtC,h Morel CIOSI to HolzStreet Uttthiea Paid. Stove Misc. hems. (304)875·1504
www.orv •
-,..,------G Ill II
OH Welchlown, 52700• please
199'J 5 14 °~ TI II
A Establlahed Vending er '·
a po s.
call (580)563-3753, Leave and 'Refrigerator No Pets. For Sate: Recondhton&amp;d Sllllllte Syatem
~
IC
~ ra er,
Route! Earns Big $$. must (740)441-o310
name and number
5475 plus deposit. Referen- washers, dryers and refrig· B"TT"R THAN FR""III
~rand, Naw floor,
sell! 1-888-571·0225 E~et. Rio Grande Area, 2 Bedces Req~:~lred. (740)446- erators. Thompsons .ltPPII· ... ~
~-ondltton (740)5912005 (Florida Oniy AIN
3945
ance 3407 J k
A
8284, leave maaaage,
1 112 8 h L R Almoat Heaven!. Mason
1017)
rooms,
at ' ' ·• County. Wtsl VIrginia. Pre
nue ·
ac son ve· Gel Dish Networil: ..
Kitchen
Lai'I'IA
Level L.ot · Civil War Hoose. 1863
3 rooms fumi·•-•
u"lltles
• (304)675-7386.
No equipment 10 .....
-n or 52 Case DC whh 5 ft. drag
~ •
·~P
:~~JVU,
u
WORK FROM HOMEI
NO EXPERIENCE
NEEDEDI
COMPANY EXPlODING
EARN $1000-$8000/M0
PTFT
1·868-446-1510
www.EXMoneyTodey.com

:~.r~ad

__

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110 Help Wanted

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ili i i i ili oit-,J

convb.nnett

1

Start Your Business To· $~~90oat(7e 40)~s:::ion,
day... Prima Shopping Cen' ·
•
ter Space Available At Af· Scenic Country Ranch
fordable Rate. Spring Valley House 3 Bedrooms 1 1"12
Plaza, Cal 7-&lt;t0-446-0 101- Baths · 2 Car' Ga o&amp;
ered0eck.1
c -..- - ·
ing $75,000. 31134 Red Hill
o.X.Al'IU'..I!t
Road
Danville- Meigs
cOuniy.
(7o40)742·8004 .
TURNED DOWN ON
Ryan or Ami Holden.
SOCIAL SECU-TY /SSI?
~
MOUIL£ HOMtS
No FH Unlell We Wlnl
-888·5B2-334S
fUR SAlE
1
1

j

~

I

co...
Ac~aLoi.Ask:

r

r10 .

lloMFs
S

Acre.
$1.6 Mlllkln. For more infor·
malton Call Davis &amp;Associ·
ales Inc. ReaiiOrs MLS
Wilma Davis Broker,
,
(304)n6-1340
Indian Creek Equestrian Estales, 3-6 acra tots. west ot
Alo Grande, trom 125•900 .
(740&gt;245•5747
·

28x600oubtewldesittingon
rented lot With 2K8 walls,
thermal pane windows.
Priced to SaM. Point Pleasant area. (304)675-3689
ask for Rosemarv.
·
.
For Rent or Sale. Small
House S2SO. Month+ $200.
Deposit.
(304)727-3318
from 6pm·11pm.
For sale by owner: Nice bl·
level home on 1 acre near
Chester. Three bedroom,
two baths, one-car garage,
family room with fireplace,
sun room. New central heat·
ing &amp; ale system. One mlnute off Route 7, but still pri·
vale. (740)985-3981

MOllohan Carpel, 202 ClarK
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740)446·7444 1-877-8309182. Free Estimates, Easv
financing, 90 days same as
cash. VIsa/ Mastar Card.
Drive-- a- tittle save alot.
Main Street Fumhure
(30ol)675-1422
515 Main S1reet, Point
p
teasant

Looking To Buy A · New
Home? Don~ Have Land?
we Do!!! Hurry Only 10 Lots
New &amp; Used Fumlture
Left. 304·736·7295.
New 2 Piece Uvlngroom
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per Nice
acre lract near
Suites, $399. Buy, sen,
4
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest
Trade.
Rate With Air And Un· Gallipolis· easy terms, Applications belng _taken for N'
derpinnlng 1·888·928-3426 (7.40)446·3583
very nice 2 bedroom apart~ee used furniture/ applian·
ment. Country Setting yet ces . ( 740 )446• 1004 or
1981 Nashua MObile Hori1e Pr~me 2 · 112 acre lot for close to towA. 1743 Cente- (740)446-2680.
completely reptumbed, new building on· located on quiet nary Road. Water and
floo 1 &amp;
be road secluded area out
Queen Mattress Set. Slightb
r ng carpet 2 r. 1 ·
•
. ,
•
- Trasb Removal Included. ty Used. Still In Plastic,
din. rm.&amp; heat pump • !root side of city hmiiS jn Spring- NC. Total Electric- Tenant $ 150_ (740 )3SS-Ql 2tl alter
porch w/ awning e~ec. cond . field
Township. Asking pays electric Stove Frig Spm
.
304-576·..0 16
fiJo~~G~~~i~or :;:;· tnr~; Washer, orv&amp;r. DlshWashtr
1983 Schutt Mobile Home'. 3 (740)448·3248 Evenings.
Included . No Pels, Non
Bedroom, 1 112 Baths. Call
Smokers Only. $400 Oepos(740)441-1498
Wanted to buy: 5· 20+ Parli· it. $450 month. (740)«6.xuKIII"fb
• ally Wooded. Gallia County. 2205 or (7&lt;40)446-9585. Ask
GooDs
1987 14K60 Clayton Mobile Call alter 6pm. (740)446- tor_Virglnia.
Home. Gas Heat, Central 3945
Air, 2 Bedroom. 1.5 Bath,
Mod
~ Pur~ Wlnc~aster Slug
1 bed
S89QO. (740)367-7187
em
room apart· arre
ump uns. New.
5175 and ' 200· Dish Natment, ( 740l44S-D390
Blg 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2
Now Taking Applications- work Satetuta Dish
balh, save $5,155, delivered
HOl!SfS
135 West 2 Bedroom Town&amp; set up on your iol includFOR RENf
house Apartments. Includes
l~:tg skirting &amp; fiberglass
Water
Sewage, Trash.
~
stepa, Coles Mobile Homes,
$350JMo., ·740-446-oooB.
u .s. 50 East, Athens, Oh, 4 Room and Bath, Fumlsh·
740-592-1972.
act. Clean, Aalerences and Tara Townnouse Apart· Buy or sell. Riverine Anti·
Oeposl!
Required . . ments, Very Spacious, 2 ques, 1124 East Main on
Final Days, Nationwide In- (740)446-1519
Bedrooms, 2 FSoors, CA. 1 SA 124 e. Pomeroy, 740·
ventory
AeducUonl
1/2 Ball1, Fully Carpeted, 992·2526. Russ Moore,
{304)736-3409
Pik)t Program, Rentefs Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· owner.
•
Needed, 304 •736-7295 _
tlo, Stan $365/Mo. No Pets: ::-~:-:--:--:----Umited Or No Credit? Gov·
Leaae Ptua Security Deposit, Sue's Selectables on the "'T"
ammtml Bank Fin.tnce Only Wtly rent? government Required, Days: 740-446- in Middleport. Dolls, glass·
At Oakwood In Barbours- backed loans from $490 3481 ; Evenings: 740-367- ware, Aladdin mantels. and
ville. WV 304·736·3409, .
down. (740)445-3093
0502,740-446-0101.
·more. (7401992-Q298

I

FOR ALE

paid, $280 plus deposit.
(740 )4-46· 1340 ~
Applications being taken lor
small but very clean one
bedroom apanment. eountr;osentngyetclosetotown.
1743 centenary Road. water and Trash Removal Ineluded. Tenant pays ekK:·
·~ i'JC nd Elsctric Hee
·
a
t.
Washer, Dryer, Stove, Frig.
l'lcluded. No Pals. Non
Smokers Only. $300 depoa·
It, $350 month. (7...0)4-46·
9585 or (740)446·2205. Ask
for Virginia.

r "-·-

r·D

I.

.

\

buy. ~able to view Digital
Satlllhte TV In 4 dillerent
rooms. FREE 118ndard profesalonallnatallatlon. Ameli·
cas Top 100 our most popu·
tar programming. Hassle
tree In--Home Service Plan.
Packages stan at only
S 3 5 . 9 9/ month.
NBC,CBS.ABC &amp; FOX
available In most areas.

=
=

bru:~ior ::~.'".,';

::~~ fo~:cto~e::t~lyo~

(740)643-5217
8 N Ford Tractor, Ptows,
Disks. Brush Hog and Potato Plow, Good Condition.
(740)256-6574
Roper Wood Splitter, HeaV)'
DUty 6 HP l2" W"""• 6
•
'
-r•
eye bum, witt Spill 26"
blocks. call (740)446·2816.
Wheel H
La
Mo
12 HP, EC::Ient~it~:~:
Asking $500 (740)448·
·
9315

$49.99 Activation Fee tor 2
Recelvera, add $-49.00 per
receiver after 2nd. Includes
first month rree af all monthly programming services
that you choose. 12 Month
commitment and proof or a
major credit card or debit
card required .
•
Or ask aboul our "'Charter
I.JvEsrocK
Cable Bounty" and !like 9" 1.-------~
Fromotlona. Americas Top ----.
100
package
only e- hall Boer Does. Exposed
$9.00/month tor the first to full blood buck for Januyear.
ary kids. $275 each. Regl•
·
tered Botr Buck, $400,
Call PRO DIGITAL. today!! (740)256- 1724 evenings.
Your Local Authot!zed DISH
Networil: Retailer 74CHI69- AQHA and APHA weanllngs
9211 or 888·310.2495' Also and yaarllnga also colt and
check us out online 0
horse breaking- training
www.dtahretaUera.com/pro- 304-695·3319 or 304-675·
digital
3498.

j

II .SUzuki

~

. ,,,

aerie&amp;

~t_ted

"

.489

~23-for-.47)- · ......,,_. .ttul
~ .
·
!"'IIII"\"'... :".:,

IJ:idlana uv.. season..'HJ! .

record

al'\d

:~~'i:Tft,l;~; ·~:!tlj

NIIDED NOWAD...
WILL TRAIN ~~~

liira~;;;A::;;uros~~r

lind "IUIDIIlo:

c/o Dolly Senttnol

6

NilAn, 4
BASEMENT
-·-~-~ 85 ~ Ram
W'•:rEaPROOFINO
___;
s......,...o
4 -•Indo'
" "
Full-size; 81 1 , ...,.
r, Unconditional lifetime gua.r·
ttandard, (7-40)258·6228: antee. Local ref•enc81 fur·
(740)2&amp;11-1417.
nlsho&lt;l. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hra. (740) 441197 GMC Sonoma SLS, 0870,
1·800·287-Q576.
18,000 mlloo. king cab, Rogers WeleoproOIIng.
$7500, (740)192·4100 or
(740) 541-8532.

r ., .;.

$3,333.
1888
Pontiac Mako
S.nbird. Good
COndllion.

·--4-iiiijWJlll;j;
. --·
~

1989 Bronco II, 4x4, Excel·

•"""'

a Good Work Car $555. 1967
(740)387-0889 "

r~I
Residential or cornrnerclll
wiring, new eenrice or r•
patra. Mulor ~ olec·
tridan. Ridenour Eleotnca!,
,..,.HV\1\.......a ,
-6 5-17&amp;6.
...~ 304 7

lktY• Sell'or Trade

lovylng 1 t11, In
• • - of tho ... mil

limitation, far th•
bonelll ot &amp;vracuH
Vlllogo for tho
purpo• of currant

SAVE TIME AND
SHOP THE

ox~

.

1 raplocomont of o

lox off mlllotorote
not oxCHcllng 1 (ono)
mlllo for ooch ono

CIASSIFIEDS!

dollar of

valuatiOn,

which omounto to ten
conto (10.10) for ooch
ono hundred dolloro

CLASSIFIEDSI

BT

on1or of tho Boord
o Electlono, of llolgo
County, Ohio.

Doted Soptombor 7,
2001.
John N.lhle
Cholrmon

Rltll D. Smfth

Dlr.ctor

C10I t , 18, 23, 30,
2001
41C

7

ly ordor of tho BOird

~~~
- ~~~

F46

.

S.ld 10 llolng:

Pulillc Notice

of Elecllono, of 1111111
County, Ohio.

PUIUC NOTICE OF

SALE

Loodlng Croak
' Conoonroncy OloJrlcl
will ~ rocolvlng
-lod bldo until 4:00
Director
p.m. on Octobllr 23,
2001 11 the DlolriCII
(19) •• 11, 23, 30, olflco locotod ot
2001
34481 Cern Hollow
41C
Roed, Rutlend, for •
- - - - - - - 1110 Ford F280
Public Notice
Pickup Truck with
- - - - - - Utility Bod.
John N.lhlo
Chllrmon
Rltll D. Smfth

I

L,,-oi·-----··
MomKcY(]J;l!

For sale, 1995 Harley
Spontter 883 Hugger,
black. loaded with extras,
$6000 (740)949-2181

The truck may btl

. oMn 11 tho Olotrlcto
office Mcndoy·Frldly
8:00·4:00, until tho
bid opening, Olltobor
23,- 5:00 p.m. The
lruck will bo oold 11
·lo without ony
oxpre01 or lmpllod
worronty.
LCCD
roHntOI tho right to
eccopt or roloct ony
or oil bldo. tonno of

mllr-'~~

'--'------=--

ule, caah or certln.d

chock.

•

By
Boord of
Loodlng
Crook
Con.-voncy Dlotrlct,
Prooldont, Chorloo
Birrell. Jr.

r1,-------,J
11:;.-~~~--.,
HAY &amp;
GRAIN

Buck a· bale sate, squate
bales ·$1 .00 OUler hay up to
$2.00, round bales $15.00
each 304-875-4869
-------Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tlo
Grubb'a Plano· Tunlng &amp; Straw, Year ·~ound Delivery
Repairs. Problems? Need &amp; Volume Discount AvaMaTulied? Call The Plano or. bte.
Heritage
Farm.
740-446-4525
!301)675-5724.

Seder's final . kick was perfeet. He showed none of the
ill effects ·of having ~is right
leg grazed bf a horse that was
on the field for pregame festivities. The . kicker backed
into the horse and their legs
accidenully met.
"It rubbed a little luck off
on me." said Seder. who put
Dallas up 3-0 with a 28yarder just before , halftime,
but also missed from 41 and
52 yards. "It turned out pret- .
ty well. It was a little excitement for the pregame."
If not for the exciting ending, this game -might have
been remembered. for the
long injury report for both
teams.
Washington's Pro Bowl
tight end Stephen Alexander
sprained his right ankle and
rookie cornerback Fred
Smoot sprained his left knee.
Dallas lost receivers Joey
Galloway
(sprained left
ankle) and Reggie Swinton
(strained right hamstring)
and fullback Robert Thomas
left

••••
992-2155

I

Entertainment
Center,
Weight Bench, Sega Satum
wlltl 4 games, Copper Cell·
lng Light, wOOden blinds,
Sink with Vanity. Sell Otter.
(304)675-6880
..
Firewood for Salt. 5150 per
truck Load. (740)441·9476

long."
·

0•

mlnum -•Is, while, Cab, lariat, (304)633 8804
26,000 mllos. $9,250 060. or (740)886-7602

. wflh
Tan Interior, Seata 7,
Four Doors with auto opener, t&lt;eyteu Entry, Air, Power Wlnclowl, Locka. Seats,
Rear Air, Rear Back Up
Sensor, CO Player, Good
Tires, Extra Clean. Exeat.
!tnt Condition. 57~
miles. Call (740)446-8176
9am-4pm-.

The runners kept the
chains moving, with Hambride converting a third-and2 and Smith setting up the
game-winning kick with a.
13-yard run that put him
over 100 yard! for the first
time in •even games.
"We made the plays whe11
we had to," said Smith, who
· had 107 yards on 25 carries.
"We were kind of limited.
We worked with what we
had, like .we have all year

Dod •

1999 Pontiac Grand Am, ::_me~•::sa':"ge~.- : - - - : - - kJaded, V-6, CO player, alu· 97 F150 4JC•, EJCtended

1999 Wlndltar SE Van, Ro&lt;l

Washington, which is two
-losses from starting 0-7 for
the second time in four yean,
can uke its only consolation
in barely losing. The Red,skins had been ·beaten by at
least 14 points in every game
while getting outscored 13525.
Both teanu came in at 0-4
and playing so poorly that
Washington defensive end
Kenard Lang called this the
"Gutter Bowl" because both
teams "are trying to climb
out of it."
For the fi'rst three quarters,
the teams played down to the
game's nickname. Instead of
being so equally bad that rhe
game was competitive, they
traded silly mistakes.
Then came an exciting
fourth quarter that featured
three of the game's four
scores.
Tony Banks started it with
a 31-yard touchdown pass to
Michael Westbrook that put
the Redskiru up 7-3. A 39yard field goal by Seder made
it 7-6 with 6:36 left.
Washington answered with
a long, slow drive that was
supposed to run out the
clock, or leave Dallas with
little left. Then Stephen
Davis, .who had 99 yards on

game.

of valuation for five
(8) yeera.
Tho Polio for oold
oloctlon will open ot
1:30 o'clock A.M. ond
romoln opon until
7:30 o'clock P.M. of
lllddly.

1998 Ford Contour, Dark 97 Aatro Van. 55,000 miles,
Green. Looka Good, 77,000 air. C::NIIt, UH. PW, PL,
mllae, $5000. Call (740)448- AWFM Cauette, dual air
2624
bags, ABS, seats 7, like
.:...:-----'---new, (740)3711-2134 leave

(740)245--9753

win."

Page A 7

23 carries, changed ewrything by. fumbling at the
Cowboys 38.
With 2:40 to play and two
limeouts
left. Anthony
Wright completed pasm to
Darrin . Chiaverini · and
Raghib Ismail - his only
healthy receiver&lt; - to reach
the Washington 34, then Dallas shifted to its ground

&amp;

4X4• runs
g5KJC1, tooka good, call,
1990 Chevy Cornaro. auto- (740)256-6997
malic. T·Tops, co p l a y e r - - - - - - - wllh Mn&lt; alf'j). new parla. 111611 Ford Club Wagon XLT
new tiras. 12,300. (740144 I· Rallo&lt;l roof, fully automallc
0815
whHI Chair lift. (740)245·
~~~:-~-:-~-: 9212
1990 Pontiac Grand Am, 4 :=.:=-:-:--:--:---::door. Auto. Cruise. White 1998 Geo Tracker ConverU·
12500. (740)39&amp;01&lt;6 allar ble, 4x4, 6 speed. AM/FI-4
_5pm,::::..-:---,:-:-=-:-,- Stareo, IVC. Groat Condl·
-ICon. S3800. (140)441·1505
1993 Gao 88,000 mlleo :;or:-'(7:.4:.:0:.:1446.:.:.,-8:;1:.:8:;1~-:­
new tires, AIC, new battery
$1250.
1998 JHp Grand Cherokee
1179 KaWIIIIkl 1000 wiiOW 50.000 mllol 304-675-3668
miles, new tire• ,new bat· or leaw metaage.
tory
.
t4 Plymouth van, runa
$1250. 304-674-1527
good, (740)992·11910.
1995 H-1 Ellnlra, PS,
PB PW. Air brand new 9o4 S-10 Elazer Tanoa packlraMmt..;lon ~er warran- age, 4x4 Auto, V-8, ttather
. ty. Now llmlng """ &amp; rslltJIH Interior. Very good condl·
head.• $4,200 (7401258· l~)8 ~f~er, S6300.

6BOO

FINOINniE

native.
"It would've been ugly to
go into the bye week 0-5,"
safety George Teague said.
"When you haven't won any
games, it plays on you mentally. It's good to come our
and win against a rival team,
regardless of what our
records were."
"We can't say we're on a
roll," said running back
Emmitt Smith, "but it's a
good feeling. We did things
out there that we deserved to

Sentl~l•

Ohlo#.1344 WVS15
ID Refreshments

from the Classifieds!

lent~~- LOW Mileage.

mE SKY'S
mE LIMIT
WITH WHAT
YOU CAN

DAN SMITH -AUCTIONEER

P.O. Box nt-13
Pomll(!y, OH 457ae

lr'
• _.1MPRO_IIoME_'YEMI!NI'S_ii ilooll

'--,.;FORiiiitiiS.W:iiiiiiioo_,.lll8

-,
1978 Corvette, White with
Red lntenor, T-topl. Automane. $7500. (740)386·
0406
-------1986 Ford. F-150, 300, 6
cyl., 4 sp!ted. 4, 4, runs
good. $900 (740)247-2961.

S/1 TURDAY. OCT. 20. 200 I I 000 liM

Loolled on St Rt1241n Portland, Ohio.
Will take consl4nments on Sot at8 AM.
Alreac!v Cons!qntd;
· 1980 Jeep with Hardtop, Gravity
Wa4on, Century Sprayer, EIIIVCIIor,
N.H. Gr1nclerMixerforparb.

OPERATOR
WANTED

=c~lnder,

..

·~t t~ \ "\•.1'111&lt; 1 \ t tc 1\

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION

DATA
.ENTRY

... vt'CAI.L NOW
t ·888·974·JOBS

86

r

Wins. :

• e:l'\
a"\ a 1,,....,

h ,; ·

ERA in l'il§

Public Sale and Auction

Help Wenllld

BINIFITS AVAILABLI
MANY SHIIITS
AVAILABLI.

c8

i

lJH'•

, ,..,..,er

II CleiitJlJd 1 12

I

11

Ga•Notes

t
·. -£,;.

....,.,.....
Dl'...,any_
.........

,...._per

,
•

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - Marshalls football ~
doesn't have to worry about switching conferences next year- at
least for now.·
·
12 hits tit(J .the dlviq
Memben of Conference USA voted Monday to put off any deci88\'leS ,
&amp;et by
sions on expansion.
Martinez in 1995 ··
"Expansion remains an agenda item for the conference," CommisSu~8 .8QQ 1i.V$rage
sioner Mike Silve. "There are several matters that need to be addressed
.
.
in the coming months. The Boald discussed expansion at length, but
. at comebacks,
decid~d that it was not ready to proceed at the present time."
Conference USA was intrigued by the idea of adding Mar.hall,
Moyer be~t the Indians for . , Plnie~fi~~lcPAaf.on
which has dominated the Mid-American Conference since joining it the second nme m the senes Sele wtU ·atart GarpEI of
in 1997.
·
and f~urth time this season, the Al-Qs;· -~ '
,
Conference USA currently has 11 football memben, and adding a · allo~ng o_ne _run . and three
~a• +. iJ:l
12th could allow the league to hold a lurntive televised conference h1ts m SlX 1nrungs.
~ •r • .. ·- 'i , _;_ ., _. ·· _1.:.. • }
The 38-year-old, pitching !!!Y!~IO!l,~;M~:J
championship game.

Pltfel•tw. llmltalton or
dr.ar'.mlnlltlol'l bleed an
raot, COlOr, religion, ...
llmittal ...... Of .........

141

For sale tg. ranch style
home, 4 . br.. ,3 ba .. w/
scr~ned m1P.SIIO porch, 2
· - - - - - - - " =:::c:.o..::.:.;,.:..__ _ _ car garage $78,000.
URGENTLY
NEEDSD·
Absolutely Free Info!
ptssma donors, eam $45 to Commerict(J lots lor sale or
Eam 1482·4781 PTIFT
$60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly. leasa, In Pt. Pleasant 304·
Work From Home
Call Sera-Tee , 740-592· 727-3318 can between
www.bAich123.com
6651 .
Spm-12.

\.

'

'G:t
___....,..

Wanto&lt;l Truckdriver 5yrs.
Min. e~~p~~rience. COL, wide
load exp. Is helpful, add&gt;
lklnal skills ike welding &amp;
rigging a plus. Pay is based
on akllls &amp; exp. (30413445125

.
OUTDOOR CAREERS
•tUr.:lngFieldCrew

•Weekly Pay Bonuses
•Tough Job• Great
iic""r'-~~---.,
company·
WmANIIDBuv
Must .enjoy physical outdoor
WCN'k. pouell strong lead·
t..--oililiiiiioio-_.J -erahip skills, have a good
driving record, and be flexi·
~bsolute Top Dollar. U.S. ble in QH, WV and mid·
SUver, Gotd COins, Proof- east States.
sets,
Diarnondt,
Gold
OSMOSE, INC.
Rings,
U.S. Currency,Call Toll· Ff'M tar
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Seclnformatton
ond Avenue, GlllipOiis. 7.401.&amp;77-871-1731
446·2a.t2.
EOE MIFIOIV
www.o.mo...com
Wanted to Buy: Standing
Timber. (7o40)370-2758.
I \11'1 1n \II ' I
:--:-:--:--:--:--:-:-:\I H\ I ( I 'Paralegal Needed. Estab·
""~-----..., llshed Huntington Firm.
110
Contact Kelley SeNices.
HELP WANTED . (800) 295•9470

r

• Stlrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 DtYI

I'•HFUw-II"6 HFUw-l

\\\!!I \I I \I I \ I "

•
••

As 47,867 stood and
·cheered,
the
players
exchanged hugs ancl highfives near 1econd base before
heading to a clubhouse celebration.
And now, the Mariners
advance to their third ALCS
- they also appeared in '95
and '00 - but for the first
time, they'D have home-field
advanuge when they get
there.
Suzuki, the speedy Japanese sensation whose legion
of fans grows with every
infield single, gave Cleveland
headaches all series long. He
went 12-for-20 (.600),
scored four runs and set the
table for nearly every
Mariners' rally.
The Indians mana~d just
four hits and will have the
w~nter to think about what
ought have been. .
Cleveland was m command of the series following
a 17-2 blowout in Game 3,
but the Indians couldn't put
away the Mariners, who
after running away from t!te
AL all year, showed they re

The Dally

on three days' rest. walked
onet struck out seven and
got just enough help from
plate
umpire
Mark
Hirschbeck's low strike zone
to make it topgh on the
Indians.
The Indians' Nos. 3through-6 hitters - Roberto Alomar, Gonzalez, Ellis
Burks and Jim Thome went a combined 0-for- I 4
with six strikeouts. Alomar
hit into two inning-ending
double plays.
Chuck Finley, who fell
behind 4-0 after 14 pitchos
in Game 2,. was in trouble
this time in · the second,
loading the bases with walks
to Martinez and John
Olerud before hitting Mike
Cameron.

Tribe

NASCAR RESULtS
en..-.

• e. cs1
j
I

Pomeroy, Mlddtepot't, Ohio

(10) 7, 14, 21, 2001

ate

=====_,.;..;;.....;_

Buy, Sell or Tl'lde

1989 Ford 1 Ton dump
truck , excellent cond ition.
11 ,434
actual
mltn.
$11,000. Call (740)268·
6690

''

lnlht

CLASSIFIEDSI
I,

,.
'

�• Pomeroy, Mlcldtsport. Ohio

Tundlly, Oct. 16, 2001
Oct. 18, 2001

---

--·-

JOID' ,

~
•lllwHc•u
•GL 111
•Cu :tills
Rt a~tlng

The Dally S.ntlnsl • Page A I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

ACIIOIS

• HtrUriWJI

• Top • R1151oval • Trl111

... eo....

FREE ESTIMATES

...

' 11·•·.11 Cll!ll\
F"\ II Hl'l(l'-1"

•

J •• t l

-·•

•

·na·
an ...

6 4 It 11
" Q .I •
t I

• 114
t I
• KQtU

- 57=•
-

.Jill~

K • •

11-or

3()

OOIGIAUCIKJN
FIMHtt-,
lneurecl

.JI HHY S
lJSLD
COMPU Jf~Hs

rtalodelta~o plaMbl...

eledrkol, . . _ . -

........ ...srepalr
pon:hel, .. dockl.

Tire Barn

Owner
Charles R. 0111

Pomeroy

..... 992-7445

c.l

591-9254

,.
••

Advertise

l6

••

4NT

In this
space
for$50
per
month

...... . . .

~F.-

.....

JW

51 "ThtGold

:t.

22 Wl'ltll

23181ore

....

,.... ,... .....
I'MI

dot'a...-

20._._

V\1\neraM: t:ul·Wnt

a...w....

Ill Qua. '
n1lghbar
Ill TOiof

11 Expert
17Doat

a

AQJIJ JI

• A*

..........-.

Road

t KIIH

.....

::rtwe•

Utlf.dotehkt
Uflxup
54

IMler: SouLh

Spedolbo .. aew

WI~&gt;Die

¥Alii

•

• luckttTruck

... ....

IG

6 AK t

Jir~

• Stulllp &amp;rlndl~~g

-

., IIIII I l l

Ulhuk

TrHS.rvlce

7401•1m

.....
.......
-·

NJ:A Croeeword Puaale

2.1:;:;1,...

' .....

on

~=
31 a.-

A chance

.......

32~

In discussing journalisiS and journalism,
the Pole Rys:r.ard Ka puscinski wrote, ."Our
job is like a baker's
work - his rolls are
wty as long as they're
fresh; after two days
they're stale; after a
week, they're covered
with mold and fit
only to be thrown

34 Ollamln

ofllclll

35 Ctolhlng

31 Spou..

37 Holy.,._
D Kotp

yokklng

out."

'229.00*

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

* FREE INSTALLATION

Hill's Self
Storage
1296&gt;70 Bashan
Racine, Ohio

4Sn1

COINIO
CHILD CARE

--·-

3'

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

lllJIDIUIIIIIIIl

otllullng -u....-

All Makes 'Ii'actor &amp;
Eqolpmentl'llrta

oQnlwl• Sind •Toplllll

Factory Authorlud

J......
Hill

ofUI Dirt -Mulch

992-4119 1-800-291-5600

CJUe·lli l'llrta

T1111n Plllll

687-8329
·WHY DRIVE ANYWHERE ELSE?
Shade River AG Service

Dtalen
1000 St. Rt 7 Soulh
COolv1111, OH 46723

(740) 992-3470
Male ShUIIn
Home vlslr

. P/B

Haircuts
Available

CONTRAOORS, INC.
Roclne, Ohio 45n1

'740-985-3948
CONCRE!f/ILOCI/BRICK

•demv•AgiELivlce,lac
St. Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

740 • .,.....

Cuslom Computers
Service, Repairs, and
Upgrades

1.t

• Footel-1, Walla, Slept•

1i,iii0iiiiir 1Wtno U1.111111o!e

*FULLY WELDED
* Sll YEAR WARRANTY

EXCAVATING

aaJ

FlatWorll,
ReplaCements, • W11k1
'and.Drlvea • Stodl ·
Cnte Fnt Eadmates

A GOMPLETe P~YSIGAL
liT G 11'1
IeFORt PAfl T ICIP;. 11'1
·
Ttle TIMf Tfl"IALS.

*FREE IN HOME ESTIMATE

DIPOYI 18
11.\ULIHG ad · PARfl
WICit'l

'We'll fix it or elsel'

VIsit OUr Showroom Oa Stale Route JJ
6 Milts North Of Pomeroy, Ohio, AI Couaty Rood 18

• No Dealen or Coa~n Please
Vloa/Maoltrtard
wv ,!013477

.ALUEL

24'120'

N-1210UBLE WAll
PUSTIC
FIRST COME.
FIRST SERVEI
$211.11 PER JOINT
.REGIURLY
$327.11 PER JOINT

OT~efl

li&gt;IOfli&gt;S,
1'1 11
weUTfSTS
flU ,.
ANI&gt;

~.Few RUNSf
~~§~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~T~tt:E~f'oi~T~fS~T~A~~~
l
-· •

,Cellular

eff Warner Ins.

740-687o0600

992-5479

ServiDI Oldo ud W.v.
wv lll.l171l

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.

Sunset Home
"Construction

Rocky R Hupp. Agent
A ox 1B9
Mtddlcpor l. Ohto 45760

Bryan Reeves

Local 843-6264

~w Homel, Room Addition•.
Garage~, Pole BuUdlnga, Roots,

M¢icare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Denial, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers; . ·
Mortgage; Major Medica!
• Nursing Home

Siding, Deckl, Kitchens, Drywoll
I More

FREE ESTIMATESI

740-742-3411

.,

..'•

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

'*

CARPENTER
SERVICE

IF Tf.IIS HAPPENS, AS A
WORLD FAMOUS ATTORNE'{.
Wf.IAT DO. VOU Tf.IINK YOU'LL
USE FOR YOUR NOTES ?·

(10'111' 610'11201

(740)992-3194
!192·6635

·-Adclltlonal
Pub!lc Notices In Ne•..pope.rs.l
Your Rlaht to'Know, Delivered Right to Your

. Roofing • Gut~ere
Deckl • Concrete • Electrical
Plumbing • Paint • Flooring

97 Beech st.
mlddlepert,

YOUNG'S

·-Ga" - ad.1llng

• - I I Plumbing
• ROOfing I Outton
• Vlnylllcllnt • Polntlnt

. NOTICI! OF

amount• to alxtean
-~~ ($0.11) for - h
LIYY IN IXCEI8 OP one hundred doHtrl
ol vllutllon tor a
TMI! TBC MILL
oontlnuhlll period of
LIIIITA'I'ION

ILICTION ON TAX

1-

. n.uilld Code,
II
1101.11(0),

8101.18, 57GUI

NOTICI! Ia hereby

atven
t~al
In
pureuenoe of •
Reaolullon ol the
Boord of County
COIIIMI ..Ionerl ol
ltle CGunty of Melga,
,_.,
Ohio,
pUHd on lhe 11t
tilly of AUIUit, 2001,
there
will . h
•ub1111D1d to 1 vote of
the people ol tald
aubdhllalon at a
QI!HIIIAL -ELICTION
to· be .. held In the
County ol Malga,
Ohlll, ot tha "''!Ulor
plaCia Ol Voting
· tlleraln, on tho lth
. dly ol Novambar,
2001, liM queatlon ol
leVying • tn, In
• - of the ten mill
llmlt.tlon, lor the
. bonalll ol Mel go
County lor the
1J1urpoae
of
. Mlllnt~ance, capital
· COitltructlon, end
op«aaon of Ctrllton
School ond Melga
lncluetrlet Worklhop
lor per~ona wllh
Mental Retardallon
and Devalopmanlal
. Dlubllltlee.
SlkUIIX being:

an adcllllonal tox of
1.1 mllta ot a rato not

axotadlnt · 1.1 milia

. tor IKh -

valuotlon,

dollor o1

.which

ume.

TIM Polio lor aald
llectlon will open It
1:30 o'clock A.M. ond
ramtln open until
7:30 o'olock P.M. of
uld tilly.

•r

-r

of ""
o Ellcllona,
ol Board
Melga
County, Ohio.

· Dotod Saptambor 7,
2001.
John N.lhle
Chairman
Rita D. Smith
Director

(10) 8, 11, 23, 30, 2001
4tc
·
Public Notice

• Ptllo end Poroh DIOka

peraon and aatata of
Oliver 1!. llollay, on
IIIOOIIIpltenl.
Unleaa excepttono
lnJ fllld thiNio, uld
ICCOUnl will be lilt tor
hearing · bllora uld
Court on the 11th dly
of NDVImbar, 2001, ot
which time .. ld
aooount will bo
conaldand
and
continued from dly to
day until finally
dla_..tof.
Any
peraon
lntareelad moy lila
written exception to
aold oocount or to
mottera pertolnlng to
tho execution of the
truet, not 1e11 thin

five doya prior to the
dele lilt lor haerlng.
Robart E. Buck
Judge
Common P..•• court,

Probete Olvlalon
Malga County, Ohio
(10) 11 . .
•

IN THE COMMON
Public Notice
PLEAS COURT, .
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO·
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE MAnER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
The annual elec!lon
ACCOUNTS,
of 'the Board !)I
PROBATE COURT Dlrectore· lor the
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO Melga
County
Aocounta
lnd Agrlculturol Society
vouchara of the will be hold at 1111
following nomod Coon
Hunlera
fiduciary hao bean building at the la1r
Iliad In tho Probata grounda, on Monday,

Thl polla will ba open
Free Estimates
trom e:oo p.m. to t
V. C. YOUNG Ill
p.m. on 11tc11on tilly.
992·6215
Till election aholl 1.-..ii.""li""'III"'LW·"""'1111.,-..J
be by bellot. lallota
muet ba marked with
en •x• oppoalta tho
nome or It will not ba
countad. Tha coaling
of votes lor dlrtctora . CONSTRU CT ION
by' proxlea lo not to •NawHomu
be permitted.
Only raaldanta ol •• Siding
Rooflng
Melge
County • Remodeling
holding membarahlp • Gar•gn
tlcklta, for otleaot15 •Addldona
daya bllora tho date • Deck•
of llectlon, may vote.
• Home Ropalra
Membort of the
eoclety muot declare , Free Estimates
lhelr candidacy lor 740-992-1101
tha office of Director
or992 ~ 2753
of the Society by
filing wllh the
Sacrtlltry, Debbie
Watoon,
•2455
TRI-COUOTY
Wooele Rd., Coolville,
TRHDSPORT
Ohio 45723; a petition
llmt!stonel
olgnad by 10 or more
S.nlon Discounts ·
tiiembora of the
muttlpteliNid
aOCIIIy Who are
Discounts
reoldento of Melgo
County, at looll 7

SMITH'S

day•

before

(10) 11, 23, 2001

Ohio for approval and
-Iemen!.
ESTATE NO. 24805·
S!xtHnth Account of
Jennifer L. Shiell,
GUirdlan of the

).

,

CBECKTHE

WANT ADS FIRST!

Speclllllzlngln
roofing, plumbing,
drywall,
nJmodlllng,
addition• &amp; dlckl
Frwntlmotn
10 yra. experience.
In the buelnue
Reftlnncea
avall~ble. Owner:
· Terry Lemm
741).

2.()

9

Howardl.
Wrltesel
Roofing • Home

1/Dttt~~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland.Rd.

hearts
go down,
Notemust
that
seven
losing a trump trick.
-- However, seven diamonds needs some
careful
handling .
What would you do
after West leads the
club king?
South's three-spade
rebid is a splinter, in ,dicating game values
with four hearts and
at most a singleton
spade: North, with no
club control, shows
his di~mond support.
South, who has run
out of ideas, uses
00
Blackwood (which is
GUI&lt;
FISCH
not recommended
t&gt;o:;E
with a void) before
&lt;:.H tl'FS 7
bidding seven in his
longer, stronger suit.
At first glance, you
can pitch your low
club on . dummy's
spade ace, but what
wiU you do about the
heart loser? Instead,
after pulling the missing trumps, you must
discard two hearts
from hand on the ace
and king of 's pades.
Then you play a heart
to your king, a heart
to dummy's ace, and
ruff a heart in your
hand. After that suit
splits 3-2. you are
home. You return to
dummy ~ith a trump
and discard the club
eight on the established heart seven.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by
Cempoa
c.,.., CII'J)Iog,..,..,.Lull

Colobrity
loom~- b y _.., putlncl pmem. Eocflltltl&lt; In lht ciphtr-

Todlly's clue: C equals 0

'DVRWNMO
XKMYO
-

VA

SKMBYBC

BNMIKI

'V
RN

Gutters· Down
Spout
FrH Est/milliS

949·1405
591-5011' .

W cdncsdily, Oct. 17. 200 t
There is a strong pouibility
in the year ahead you might
meet ·~nt!l-eonc who has con-

CONSTRU
PROJECT?

nl'Ctions th.at could help fuf- ·

thcr a penom.l desire . It'll
bring yoU joy.
LIBRA (Sept. l3~0ct. 23) ~
- You"rc kidding younelf Eoday if yo u t.alk. younclf into
purclu sing something you
want but c.m ill afford. Face
rt'ality if yoli wish to keep
your b;nk accuun't healthy.
Libra, treat yourself to a birthday ~ft. Send for your AnroGraph prediction! for the year
ahead by mailing S2 Hid SASE
to Astra- Graph, r:/o this
new~pi!per. P.O. Box lt17,

WE CAN HELP

&amp;~

SAND
LIMESTONE
TOPSOIL

c~:~~~=i 1
METAL C

PLASTIC

~Snodgrass' Upholstery

GEOTEXTILE

Wtckhll'c. OH 44092~0167.
Uc sure co state your Zodiac

REBAR &amp; REWIRE

DELIVERY AVAILABLE

~ign .

LAROE OR SMALL ,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- Expecci11g othen to do
Your bidding today will lead
to a severe Jet duwn. No one
is going to jump when you
say. hop. just because Y.ou
want it
SAGITTARIUS. (Nov. 23~
Dec. 2l) -- Using thttery. in
hopes of bcing able to manipulate another won't work
~o~ay. This penon will see

"Hrlpi"' You ro Rtcovtr Yo111Jnvmmm"

814~2

A~~elnt, Ohio

I

K

tor-·

TKRW
AORWXI.'

QNERVBA

YNTX

DVRWNMO.

VW'R

I

UXWXM

NYP.'

ERWVBNT
(:1
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'Had I known I would ba here today, I.
would have oaved all my rookie cardo: - (Hall of Famt .
Inductee) Dave Winfield
•

£trs·

'::~~;~' S©1\~~l£
....__ _ _ _ _
ClAY I. POllAN
l~ltt~

~y

I

WOlD
tiAMt'"

Rearrange letters of
0 four
ocrambled -d1

the
below 10 form four slfllllll words.

I I I I 1I
OLDYFN
2

I

1

r
~~
~M~I~G~E~R
E'

1

I
I. 1
• .

:::,_!!:,'

K

;:

4

Thanks to credit cards, I nc
longer have to worry about keep
'~:;~::;~~~:_, lng up with my neighbors. I wort)
rl
s 0 F T R y 'about keeping up with • • • -- -.

1--rl;..._T~-~I'!grl;-,ltr&amp;-1 0 C~mplott
'

tho chucklo quottd

by filling In thl mlulng wordt
'f.OU develop from 1tep No. 3 below.

·PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQU~RES

6 UNSCRAMBlE
ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWE$
•

SCIAM-LITS ANSWERS
Latest- Fount- Panic- Kimono • KNIT ONE .
"The car needs a new muffler," the husband told h1s
new wife. She replied, "I'll try and KNIT ONE."

Air Conditioning : Refrigeration
$48 Service gea, fuel oil, and
h1at
for wlntar

Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992-5232

by any pair who
could get there
knowing what they
were doing.

Maintenance-

the

annual election of
director• Ia held.
Only
regularly
nomlnlted
candldotte who have
mat tho filing
raqulrementa will be
eligible lor election
•• director.

Court, Melgl. .County, November 5, 200 1. 2tc

OCTOBER16l
LAMM'S
CONSTRUOION

Gently squ.e eze this
deal -- does it feel
fresh? With a fit in
two suits, NorthSouth did very well
to finish in the right
one. To· be honest,
though, I guessed a
sequence to reach
seven diamonds, and
would be impressed

\

''

right through yout little ploy ·
:and do j1.1st the opposite of
what you want.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22Jan. 19) -· Anyone who tries
to wia;Je out of paying his or
her fair share of the expenses

of the tab today, no matter
what the excuse. will not be
well thought of. Don't you be
that penon.
AQUARIUS U•n. 20~Feb.
19) - Disappointment can be

expected today if you think
that in merely desiring some-

thing for yourself. it will materialize. If you want something, you must be re~ponsible
for producing it.
PISCES (feb. 20~Mmh 20)
-- When wishful thinking is

confu1ed with realistic

opti ~

mistu, you deny youndf the
opportuniry to succeed. Don't
live in a 4rram world Eoday.
ARIES (March 21-April19)
- Someone might attempt to
use you today in order to
· benefit him/~enelf at your
expense. Do.n't fall for a ~oh
story without checking out
whether the f:KB arc true or
not.
TAURUS (April 20-M•y
20} -- Before entering into a

partnership · arrangcm~nt today, take time to wc1gh the
adv;mUges 01 gamn the disadvantages. The latter may nul~
lify the fonner.
,
GEMINI (May 21-junc 20)
-- Projecu or tasks could get
. foiled up tod.:.y if the instructions arc un clear or nm concise enough 10 do the JOb
properly. Defore beginning
any undertaking, know what

you're getting in[O.
CANCER Qunc 21~jnly
22} -- ilutt out of &lt;m?tltcr's
business today, eve n af you
think you 'rc being hdpful. If
anything goe5 wrong, you'll
be blamed anJ/ ur held accounuble.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22) ~­
The last person you should go
to fvr advice today is some ..
body who sees only the dark
side of things , even if that's
what you think you need to
consider. The advice will be
wrong.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-- UsuaUy you~re ,the. type of
penon who considen every
last detul before you set about
doing a u~k . U11fonunately,
this may not be the case today
and your job co uld get
botched.

IJ

�FLY YOUR FLAG
TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!
••..

..••

Here at Vaughans, we don't just believe

•••
•

in customer service, we prove it. Tbe take

•

at

It or leave it attitude you get at the big ·
stores won't be found here. Our meat
department alone has over 150 years of

Melp County's

Hometown News,.per

customer service. Our meat cutters, Dick
Gaul has over 52 years, Dale Little bas
over 25 years, Loyal (Joe) Holman has 22

Residents
for
SB 128

years, and Dick Vaughan has over 54

•

years. They are eager to cut your special

.......... i

I

roasts, steaks, or any other requests that
you have. Here at Vaughans, we will cut,

'

f
'

.

I

slice, roll &amp; tie, or tenderize any of your

''

special cuts. We enjoy taking care .of the

I

customer's needs, it's not an extra seryice, ·
it's just the way we do busine~s. If you're
having that special party or event, please
come in and let us personally cut your

Address concerns
over local
smoking ban

main course. For quality and service you
deserve • shop at Vaughans.

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Loin lnd

Par
Roast

Baal
Gr011nd Fresh
AI fteStore

age lb.

age lb.

Fresh Spit

MouataiiUitll'

Cbicken

.Pork

Breast

gc .lib. roll

89Cib.

' '

Whole Superior

,.
n
lams.

Superior

.Bologna

age llo~.

•• 691b.

Assorted

Par
Cbops
lb.
1

ISDA lnspeclld B11f

Boneless Chuck
Roast or
English Roast

.

SJ191b.

Bacon
1119 16 az.

C Cola· Chocola
II Packs

FROM STAff REPORTS

RACINE - Deciding when to hold
trick-or-treat for Racine's children
topped ·the agenda of village council's
recent meeting.
Council scheduled trjck-or-treat for
Oct. 30, 6-7 p.m., and asked all residents
participating to turn on their porch lights.
A fire siren will round to begin and end
the Halloween activity.
Council noted that daylight savings
time will have ended by trick-or-treat and
that it will be dark. Parents are urged to
dre5s their children in light colored costumes in order to be seen by motorists.
In other matters, council approved a

ilk

RCOILY
LIMrr I

• • • Gal•

Chopped Bam

Iatoes
c 10 lb.

WASHINGlie's memory and
OPERATION
TON (AI') -The
gain new leads, the
nation's anthrax
Justice Deparanent
released
photoscare took on new
gravity after precopies of the two
liminary tests sugenvelopes, showing
gested the strain of
identical block letbacteria found in a
ters and addresses
written slanting to
letter to the Senate
leader was highly
the right.
refined, and thus
While hundreds
perhaps produced ENDURING of people who may
by experts.
FICEEDQM have been exposed
The FBI was
to anthrax took
• President Bush precautionary
investigating
antibiotics, Daschle
strong similarities praises young
in
handwriting donors, A2
said the letter sent
and style, includto his office coning identical anti- • House walking tained "a very
American
lan- on bill to
potent form of
fight money
guage, between laundering. A2
anthrax that clearly
was produced by
the letter sent to
Senate Majority • Taliban asks
. someone
who
Leader
Tom U.S. to slow down kneW' what he . or
Daschle in WashC bombing. A2
she was doing."
ington and a letter
Three governwith anthrax sent to NUC ment sources, all speaking on
News anchor Tom Brokaw condition of anonymity, said
in New York.
In an effort to jog the pubPluM IH Altllcks, A:J

Racine-sets trick-or-treat for Oct. 30

Broughtons

HIP: 101 'Low: :SO.

'IOday"s

Sentinel

lb.

1 SedloM- 12 ......

Calendar
Classifieds

Comics
Editorials

ttiiUIIftiDDOUIILI

·' Obituaries

resolution authorizing th e clerk to take
Deferred Public Employee Retirement
System (PERS~ deductions for village
employees as well as permitting the
employees to . participate in the Ohio
Public Employees Deferred Compensation Plan (PEDCP) at no cost to the village.
Clerk David Spencer was approved by
council to attend a continuing education
seminar at Cambridge on Friday for
trainiqg that is required of all village
clerks.
Spencer informed council t)ut a visiting training clerk has currently been
assisting him with financial records on the

Bv ToNY M. LEAcH

Lotteries

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -Witches, monsters, goblins, and ghosts of all shapes and sizes are
expected to congregate on the ·Pomeroy
levee next week to take part in the third
annual "Halloween Cruise To Nowhere."
The masquerade dance/ cruise, co-sponsored by the Meigs County Tourism Board
and Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, is scheduled to take place on Oct.

BS Bu!Mye 5: 1-3-7-20-28
M

A3 W.VA.

&gt;2Sil!POI.!Irts~_ _ _..JB!l.lt...3u,26 •Dally 3: 2-2-9 Daily 4: 2-&amp;o-5

COUPONS

state computerized accounting system.
Mayor Scott Hill reported that the electrical upgrade at the squad building and
annex has been completed, however, the
state inspector requires additional work.
Council also:
• accepted the rates and amounts of taxarion as established by the County Bl).dget
Commission;
, • stressed the importance of the replacement levy for current expenses, which is
to be voted on during Nov. 6's general
election;
• approved the financial reports, minutes
and the payment of bills.

Board, chamber to host Halloween cruise

Details, A6

AS
OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 4-HI; Pick 4: 2-3-1-Q

W~
. u;e;ga.llthJSear_______r_A!l&gt;l6

PluM ... THtlfy, A:J

Strong fonn of
anthrax sent tp
Senate leader

ed and blue handprints of Mid-Valley Christian
School students form the stars and stripes on a
'unique American flag created last week. "Old
Glory" was the theme of an afternoon's worth
of activities on friday, and students learned the
history and present-day meaning of America's greatest symbol,
~ tront .th~ flag's· origins· in;fetsy .Ross' Philadelf.hia, Pa.,•home,
to the meaning of the flag today - especially in the days folI'C)wing the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks . .
Airman First Class Andy VanVranken visited students during
their assembly to discuss his role as a police officer for the U.S.
Air Force, and put his own handprints on the flag. His mother,
Sandy VanVranken, and Sue Dewhurst, both teachers at the
school, assistep first grader Olivia Smith and third grader Tyler
Goble with the project.
When com)&gt;leted, the flag will hang at the school's front
entrance. (Brian J. Reed photos)

Bali Sliced

Russett

a unique flag

'

Chuclcwagon

•• 69

MIDDLEPORT - "My
livelihood is at stake. I just
· can't afford to lose business
because of this smoking ban."
Millie Duncan, owner ,of
Millie's Restaurant at Bradbury, discussed the effects of
Meigs County's smoking ban
on her small business with
memben of an Ohio House
Committee last week, and,
she said, received a sympathetic ear from lawmakers.

Duncan, along with Dottie
Turner and Roland Eastman,
both of Pomeroy, testified
before the State Government
Committee 'on Oct. 11 in
support of Senate Bill 128,
which would prohibit nonelected boards of health from
enacting smoking-related
legislation without approval
oflocal elected officials.
In September, the Meigs
County Board of Health
passed a ban on smoking in
public places, including ban,
restaurants and other privately-owned businesses, effective
Nov.l.
A similar ban approved in
Lucas ,C ounty has been set
aside by a federal judge.

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

,••

If 'WOU GO •

26 from 7-11 p.m. aboard the Rubles '
"Party Barge Sternwheeler" and will
include refreshments, a cash bar, music by
local DJ, Tom Payne, and prizes for best
costumes.
Betsy Nicodemus, Meigs County
touhsm director, said this year's event will
continue with the traditions that have
made the masquerade party such a huge
PI~•• IH

WIEN: October 26 from 7-11 p.m.

Aboard the Rubles' "Party
Barge SterrnNheelef
HOW MUCH: Boarding passes are $15
per person for chamber and tourism
board members and $20 for the public.
WANT 'IICKET57: Cal!
_
\'loHEAE~

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Cruln, A:J

Oclober Is

407 Pearl
Street

Physical Therapy Monlh

UPS
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Video Rental
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(740) 992-3471
ROUNDvs~ Member Store

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Art of Caring"

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MEDICAL CENTER
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For more information on the physical therapy services Holzer Medical
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(740) 992·2104 in Meigs CdUnty.

,,

www .holzer.org

r

I

·.;.:.;~··-

;;;:-

·-........-

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~-

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