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P-. D8 • &amp;unbap 1timel-&amp;tnlind

.

•,

Grocer

employees over the years .
One
especially
dedicated
employee has been Alberta Hub•
bard, who has worked with Baer
faw ..... D1
for more than 44 years.
cut meats, which has brought in
"I've worked with Helen for a
customers from all over.the Ohio couple of days;• joked Hubbard.
Valley.
" It's really been a wonderful
"Most of my busineis has been experience working with her. I
advertised through word of couldn't find anyone nicer to
mouth. I have customers from all work alongside.
over who come here to Syracuse
"We have both had the opporto sample my salads and meats."
tunity to see everybody grow up
"I've even had people from around here. I wouldn't change
Canada and Texas stop by so that that experience for the world."
they could purchase some of my
Baer recently celebrated her
salads to take .home with them," business's 30-year anniversary by
added Baer.
holding an open house for the
Baer attributes most of her public.
business success to strong deterPrizes, taste tests, and various
mination, hard work, loyal cus- contests were available for all to
tomers, and a number of good enJoy.

•

Kneen
fuwn Pllp D1

used, acres treated, rates applied
and for what pests. This information will be used as an aggregate
information source by the Environmental Protection Agency
when implementing the 1996
Food Quality Protection Act.
Reduction in chemical exposure
is necessary to help prevent future
medical problems, however the
agricultural community wants
this based on current farming
practices, not the highest label
rates. For information call Travis
Smith,
USDA
Agricultural
Resource Management Study
.
coordinator
at (614) 728-2100.
'

•••

Bymes
LomPIIpD1
the grower who takes the financial risk in raising the crop.
This year, only quota holder
payments will be based upon the
farm basic quota. Producer payments for the farm will be based
upon the combined average of
actual 1999 marketings and farm
effective quota.
Growers who want to determine the number of pounds for
which they will be paid ("payment pounds") can add their
1999 marketings and the farm's
1999 effective quota and divide
by two.
The term "producer" is detined
by anyone who shared in the risk
of producing the 1999 crop. This
year's simplified application
process should eliminate much
ofthe previous confusion.
In developing this plan, the
Ohio Department of Agriculture
tobacco program leaders relied on
Ohio grower representatives, the
Ohio Tobacco Advisory Committee, the Ohio Certification
Entity and other tobacco states
for input and suggestions.
Additional help sessions for

Sunday, September 24, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleeaant, WV

completing applications have not
been scheduled as of yet, thus
please watch the ag news section
of this article for updates: For
more information regarding the
distribution of Ohio's Phase II
settlement funds, please call the
OSU EKtension office at 4467007.

Are you interested in non- tra-

ditional farming opportunities?
Plan to attend the seventh annual
Country Living Field Day from
10 a.m . to 5 p.m. Sept. 30 at Kenwood Farms, located off State
Route 9 two miles south of
Augusta in Carroll County.
A smorgasbord of alternative
farm income opportunities will
be presented. Join a marketing
alliance to produce branded beef,
shift into organic production of
corn aod soybeans or think about
a new enterprise such as shiitake
mushrooms, pastured raised poultry, beekeeping, herb production,
intensive grazing or heritage livestock production.
Admission to all events at the
Country Living Field Day are
free. Program flyers may be
picked up at my office or by calling the Carroll County Office of
OSU Extension at (330) 6274310.

Htve you ever thought of
becoming a tree farmer or wood
lot manager?
If you are looking for free tree
If so, consider taking the Fall
seedlings, the Marietta and
2000 Tree Farm Tour being held
Zanesville State Forestry NursOct. 13-14 in Washington Couneries have released their 2001
ty. If you are trying to reclaim
Tree Seedling Price Lists to my
strip-mined property you are
.()ffice. Either pick up order blanks
here or call the Ohio Department especially invited to see what
of Narural Resources, Division of American Electric Power is doing
Forestry at (877) 691-8733. in their reforestation program
Orders are being taken now for neor the Muskingum River Generation Plant.
delivery next spring.
Preregistration (SS per day) is
These 1- and 2-year-old
seedlings offered provide a great requested, as space. is limited.
way to add diversity to your Contact Ed Smith, East District
wo:&gt;od lot at reasonable prices. Extension Specialist at 732-2381
Papaws, persimmon, buckeyes, for details.
butternuts, chestnuts and hickories are just some of the native
(Hal K11een is the Meigs County
trees available. Orders are filled on
agriadt11re
and natural resourcts
a &amp;rst-come, first-serve basis.

BY DIAN VWOVICH

While the experts would
agree that tech stocks are here to
Pepper
stay, not everyone wants to play
that it has been a tough couple of that game with small- or midweeks for pepper growers is an cap stock funds . So here's a
understatement.
large-cap growth fund that is
Misconceptions about quality tech-heavy with names in its
standards, rnisinformation about portfolio that you 're sure to
grading, unusual worm problelliS, know.
and frequent farm visits from
The TCW Galileo Funds
company representatives have us Large Cap Growth Fund, (800all discouraged and questioning 386- 3829) has been around
the value of this program and the since the mid-1990s. The catch
worthiness of our efforts.
is, you had to have big bucks Although company feedback $250,000 - to become a sharehas been less thafi positive, all of holder. In March 1999, however,
you have a right to encourage- the fund introduced its N shares.
ment and praise for the action The minimum investment on
that you have taken to produce a that class of shares is $2,000.
quality crop. Although encour- From March through December
agement doesn't get ycu full pay- 1999, the fund's N shares were
ment for your peppers, everyone up 50.85 percent. This year,
deserves to have their efforts vali- through the end of August , their
dated, not discounted.
total return was up over 10 peraennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia cent.
County~ Extension agent for agriwlWendy Barker has been porttrlre and natural resources, Ohio State folio manager ofTCW Galileo's
University.)
Large Cap Growth Fund since

Ag news
producers: Saying

its inception in 1997. She
explains her investment strategy:
BARKER: We are very
focused and style-specific, looking at just the growth part of the
large cap market. What that basically means is that we just
hyper- focus on the stocks that
make up the various indices, like
the S&amp;P Growth Index and the
Russell 1000 Growth Index, and
really don't deviate too far away
from the Barra Growtli Index.
Now, I don't want to give you
the impression that we're like a
closet index fund. We're not. We
don't have to own any the companies that are in the indices if
we don't want to.
VUJOVICH: I'm a little confused here.
BARKER: In the Barra
Growth Index, specifically, there
are currently about 112 names,
and the top 20 names, based on
market capitalization, account
for 60 percent of the entire
index .
What we'll do is really study

Details, A3

•••

•••

•••

agent, Ohio State University Exten·
sion.)

NEA funds: Best of the blue-chip tech stocks
NEWSPAP£1! ENTERPRISE ASSOCIATION

Society news and notes,
Brownies fall to Raiders,

Tu•sday
Hlp: 60s; Low: 40s

the top names. And they include
companies like General Electric,
Intel and Cisco. Say Cisco makes
up about 7.5 percent of the
index. Because we're focusing
on the index, and we're representing the weightings that they

represent, we make our bets
accordingly. ... So, if we really
like Cisco, we're going to own
more than that 7.5 percent. If we
don't like it, we'll own a little bit
less.

buy high, and sometimes you buy
low, experts agree you 'II come
O\,lt better in the long run.
facwn,...D1
Different kinds of investments
carry different kinds of risk, so
high interest rates on credit card mix your investments. Diversity
debt can more than ovenhadow can flatten out the effect of risk,
any profits you make investing.
and invest for the long term.
Using your disposable income to
Day to day, or even month to
pay down your debt is usually the
month fluctuations are less likely
best thing for your bottom line.
Then, when you're ready to to cost you sleepless nights when
begin investing, use a fixed you allow your money to grow '
amount each month and have it over time.
A good financial plan can be a
deducted from your checking
account. That way you won't have great blueprint for a successful
to remember to pay yourself, nor. financial future. Talk to a financial
will you stress about trying to advisor about how to begin.
{Bryc. Smith is an investm;,t
time the market.
That's called dollar cost averag- executive for Advest Inc. in irs Galing, and, although sometimes you lipolis office.)

·Money

OIL&amp;GAS
EXPECTED TO
DOUBLE rN PRICE ...
HEATING BILLS
GOING THRO~?lf~THE ROOF.

.""'~:
:=

There's Never Been A Better Time To BUY!

HOMES

A 8Uil81DIAfW OF OAK...OOD HOMES COAPQRAT'I()"'

Oakwood Homes of Gallipolis, Ohio

Meigs County's

as

Volume 51, Number

740-446-3093
RegisterTo WlN a new 200 1 PT CRUISER!
FREE Satellite Dish with every application!
Every home REDUCED - even plant inventory!
ALL applications accepte~ - Bank Reps On -S i tc!
Sp ec ia l F inancing- FRI- SAT SUN ONLY!

Hometown NewspafHtr

so Cents

Combined health fair set for Pomeroy on Nov. 17
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

PO MERO Y - W•th a goal of
h elp i n g

se m o r

Cit ize n s

sta y

heal thy. th e Meib" County C ouncil o n Agin g aml th e Meib"
Coun ty Health Departm ent will
stage a combin ed health fan.
prostat e sc-reening and flu shot

"It's something like one-stop s/roppin)l. You !'1lll
,{/et mall}' of your medical nt•t•ds taken care of""
tlu same da}' in the same /milding. "

clinic on N ov. 17.
In a planning session held last
wee k. th e sponso rin g agen cies
call ed on residents, partic ularl y
th ose ove r 50, to participate in
the broad r ange of in1muni zati o ns

All snvices w ill take place in

and exa1ninarions that w ill be
otrercd fre e or a t a minimal

the Se ni o r Cl· ntt•r roo m s, w ith
th e e xcepti o n . of th e p rostate

charge.

screening, whi ch will be handle d

in th e Hea lth D epartm ent offices
on th e second fl oo r of the mu ltipu r pos e building. All program s
arc sc heduled for 'J- 11 a.m. and

poetry
contest
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

RUTLAND - "Cathv Lentes
proves d1at Appalachian ·Ohio is
perfectly capable of inspiring art
that can speak to people every-

Le nt es is an in creasingly-

accompliShed poe t whose work
has bccn published in a number
of respected poetry j ournals,
including Bl ueline, Appalachian
H t'r itage,

Riv~rwind ,

Pin e

Mountain Sand and Gravel. and
Nr:xps.
In I994. the Antioch Writm
Worksh op in Yell ow Springs
award ed Lentt·s the Judson
JemnK' scholarship. ami in 1997,
she can 1ed .t writer's n.::sidt'IKY at
the Vermo nt Studio Ct'ntcr in

Johnson.Vt.
LentL'Ii ren·!veJ th e fi ~r-plac e
award ;u cert·m o nies earlier this

month ar th e J.let'ce Museum c'm

the campus of ETSU

Please see Poetry, Page A:J

ATH ENS (AI') - T he O lu o
Board of R ege ms 11 reco mmending a p la n intend ed to hel p
Ohi o's Ap palach ian regio n catc h
up w ith 111 ore rec hn o logicall y
:uivanred ~1 n· as .
T he pro poo;;;tl is know n a.;; " Th e

New

Econ omy

Partnen hip." Th e rege n ts. wh o
oversee h 1gher edu ra rion . sent th e

propo&lt;a l tn C ov. llnh Taft fo r
inclu sio n in the exec ut ive hudge r
he w ill gtw to the Lt·gisla rure

ea rly nt.'x t ye1r.
O hi o Uni vn,iry wou ld lead
the $1!.5 million , two -yea r pb n to
bui ld a reKional teclmo lot,'Y infrastruc tu re. The u mversity would
collabo rate wit h oth er coll eges
and u n ivt.·rsities, busin esses an d
nonprofit and g;ovnnm t·nt agcn -

on Ag mg exec utive d irecto r. is to
reach m ore p eopl e.
It also co ntribut es to m ore d li( ie nt use of staff and vo lunteer-.;

Bv MICHELE

w ho work in th e program. a nd is
m ore cost effecri ve, sh e said.
" It's so m ethi ng lik e one-stop

shoppin g. You can get many of
yo ur medical needs taken care of
o n th e sam e J ay in th t:: sam e

bc•ilding," she sai J.
Th e tl u &gt;iwts usually bring in

Please see Health, Page Al

held at the fair. Mason County
children, ages 5 to 7, will be interPOINT PLEASANT, WVa. viewed o n stage by Brandy
- It is almost that time again Barkey, Mi ss Mason C ounty. The
time to remember th e first battle dress for the event is "church
of th e American R evolution.
cloth es."
Main Street will be full of
Paula Simp kins said the
activity O ct. 5- 8 as th e Battle pag&lt;;ant begin; at 4 p.m ., with late
Days Celebration marks th e registration to begin at 3 p.m .
226th anniversary of the TuYoun g · Miss Battle Days is
Endie-Wei Park battle on O ct. open to Mason Co unty teens.
10, 1774.
13- 17, and begin s at 6 p.m. PriIn hono r of this year's event , va te interviews in this divi sion
Susan Baker, de.sign er for Th e will begin at 4 p.m . Simpkins said
Ohio River Bear Co., has crafted the competition will includ e
''The. Parn o r."
spo rtswear,
Baker, a desceninterview and
Applications fin the dressy
dent of W illiam
dress.
Morris Jr., who pa.1:erm ts are a11a if a bit•
T h~
foug ht in the batMiss
Battle
Days
at Cortnter]Jarts,
tle, design ed th e
Victol'ia 's Prtml a11d wi ll follow the
16- in ch
bear
Young
Miss
excl usively for th e Brid~rl, Peoples Bank pagea nt , SimpBattl e
Days ·Nortlr Hranclr aud ill ki ns said . It is
M t' ll lorial Com- 111/ tlrt• Jltlaso11 Cortllt}' .op e n to youn g
mittl'L'
\V01 11 Cll tltJil l tfl L·
Sdrools.
T he handn,tade
co unty
w ho
co llectible beJT is
tu rn ed 17 years
dressed in a patrio t Vi rgi nia line old by Sept. I. 20lJ(I and Will be
unifo r m, idl:'ntic al to th ose worn no older than 21 by J an. I. 200 I.
by the Point Pleasant C hapter of Judt;in g w ill be hdd in street
tht· N ati onal Soci~ty So ns of the wear, inte r view and eve nm g
CARTER

OVP NEWS STAFF

where.''

Appalachian poet or about the
Appalachian ret,~on .

O n e of tlu: reaso ns fo r co m binin g the three prog rams mto
o nt' thi s ye ar, accorJin g tu Susa n

Battle Days
will feature
firm's latest
creation

WinS

So &lt;aid puct M;.ggie Anderson,J Ud!;e of the 20UIJ App;Jachian Poetry Contt!it, 111 a-.vanling
the Rutland wuman the contest's
first prize.
Lentes ' poem, "Approaching
Chester, Ohio," incorporates a
lovt: for history and an appreciation of the natural beauty of "
Meigs C ounty, wlu ch she ;md
her husband,John, and their tlm:e
children have made their home
for the past 13 years.
Th e prize- wimung poem was
printed in th e Summer 21JUO edition of Now &amp; The n: The
Appalachian Magazine, published
by the Center for Appalachian
Studies and Serivces at East Tennessee State Unive.,ity in Johnson City.
The contest wa" limited to

l -3p. m .

O liver. Mei t,;' County Coun cil

Lentes
•

Appalac hian

V"
V"
V"
V"
II'

I

. September 25, 2000

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SHOOTING -

Bryan Yonker. Pomeroy, assists 12-year-old R. J. Leach, Racine , with shooting a muzzleloading rifle at National Hunting &amp; Fishing Day near Che ster. Special empha sis is placed on safety at the
annual event, with all shooters required to wear both eye and hearing protect ion . About 60 youngsters participated in the annua l event.

Meigs IKES Club observes
National Hunting &amp; Fishing·Day

Am erican
au t h ~o.· nti c

H.. r.:.·voluti on,
.111
tri-corncr hat an d

]\ J W 'l"S&lt;Kk .

BY JIM fREEMAN
SENTINEL CORRESPONDEN T

C H EST E R

Na ti o nal

Hunting ;.t nd Fishin g Day was

obse rved S3 turdav at th e M ci~,'S
Cou nt y IKES Clu b n car Chester.

T ht· .11 11H&gt;St

d ~1y-lo n g

even t

ft·at un:d dL·m ow;trnti t&gt;Il S an d
hands- on in ~lruc ri o n tOr yo un gsters, some o f whotn Cl lll t' fi-om
out of th e count y to partiCipate
in the annua l obs n v~li1 Ct'.
Youth s h a d tilt' opportumty to
practi ce th eir m,rrksm amhip w ith

University proposes· initiative
to bring technology to Ohio

This Weekend Only!!!!

Monda

.

pol'm s w ritte n either by. an

.,•==

AS
81

ues in shaping po li c i l"~ .tn.d p la m
for th e infi·ao.; tructun._·.
" It\ a c b s,ic d ig ital- d ivi dt•
iss ue \VI;' fart· in o;;outht·;Jst e rn

Ohio," said Sharon Brehm , the
O hio Univcr\ity provu~t. " In fr ast ru ( tmc is t ht· bread ,md buttn.
If yo u do 11 't I J ~\Vl' Jllfi·astructurl'
and connectivi ty, you 'rL' no t in
th r.:.· ~a m t'."
T he m iti ativc \Vou ld t'mp h .lsize snJall - bu siiWSii d evt'lopnl e JJt.
dista nn· learning, L'k·ctronic co m m en:t' ,md o t ht·r tJTnds.
"Th e w h ole goa l of this 1s t:co nonJ ic dL•ve lo pn wn t.'' llrchm o;:~i d .

'" Appala ch ia needs that. We're
eith er gomg to be wit h the rest of
th e stare m oving fOrward or we 'rl'
!\oin!' to be· left behind"

,

a var il'ty of tl rc ann 'i.. inc luJing
nlU zz lc- loa din g ritlcs . .22 ritlcs.
~ h otg un s. and buw and arrow.
(J thn acti v nic s iJJ c!udcd a
'coon ho u nd t•x hlb itio n. turkey
ca1l 111g deJ no nstr:ltio ns, trappin g,
hun rn 'i.afl·rv cd u c HJ oll , a tree
stand display: shotsh c·l l reloa din g.
canoein g an d lHh c rs.
T h ~.· yo ungst e i·s WL"I't' th t· n
tr&lt;:at ed to a lun c h , \.vhic h incl ud ed dca burgns.
Till· c:vt'Il t w as directed hy
Brian Morri\on . club pres ident.

Sentinel
:z
n
Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
S(lorts
Weather

Pages
A6
B2-4
BS
A4
AJ
B I ,3,6
AJ

Lotteries
OHIO
Pic k 3: ::!-1'1-K; Pic k 4: 11-.\- 1- 9
Super Lotto: 1-5- 111- 11- 1H- 1~
Kic ker: 1-;}-2-S-9-6

W. YA.
Daily 3: S-h-.1 Daily 4: 4-c-2-H
&lt;' ::Ot~~~

1th othn

cl ub 111 L'IllbLT" and

ad u lr ~ a~~ i st in g.

C lu b
c~I J'V

St•cn.· t .lry / Tr~.· asu rcr

Dill s~u d th t'rl'

about
(JO
yo un gstt' fl~ .lt tt·n Ji n~ til t'
Na ti onal Hu m ing .111 d F i~ h1 11~
l ) ,ly obse rvance.
" 'J./r.:.·'vt' been d o ing rlw.; fnr
\VL'I't'

ab out I 'i to I (t yean," ,,,i d I ) i)J.
'' As .1 co nstTYati n n gro up,
we'rt• obligated tu in t rod ulT
yo un ~ pco pk to huntin g and
tls hm g.'' he added.

" Th L' Patrio t'" is ~I V, J i bb k t(J r
$5H. L)L) and will be sold dur in g

llattle Days. H e can also h&lt;
orderc·d by callin g 1 -H IIII-~ 13-·
-111 55 o r visiting www.o h!on vtTbcar..;.co m o n the Int ern et.
, t ) n O ct. 5, c h ild!'l'Jl. ll ' t' JI.!'l anJ
young wolllt' ll li-u111 acro"is
M a\OJ I Coun ty w ill parncipate in

tlm·e Battle Days pageants at the
State· Theatre.
The Litt le M r. ;md Miss conrest \vill bt' s1 milar

to

rlw event

Appl ic ations for the pageants
.Ht' ,lvJil.lblt: ar Cu un tcrpa rts. Victor ia\ Pro m am.! Bridal. PL'l&gt;pks

Bank North Br.r nch ami in all th e
Mason Co unty Sc h ools. T he
abso lute J eadhne for application
in th e: Junior M 1s~ anJ M iss Bartle Days pageants is Sc· pt. 2H For
m ore m tOrm ati un, c o nr;K t \&gt;;u Jb

Sin1pkms ar 117 '\-4 122.
Frid ay, hu m 10 a. n 1 to -l:JO
p.m.. fourth grade swdt•nrs tl·01n
rilL' tri-co unry .1re;1 w ill p.trti( ipare in a Livin g Hism ry Day ,1r

Please see BaHie, Page Al

Residents pull together after tomado

Today's
Sections -

\\ 1

gown.

( ll linV.ill,·\ l'uhh•h•nt-: ( ''

XEN IA (AI') -

R c·s iJ ents .rrl' ti ndlllt,: ti lll e 1\ n

fu n .l!l d -;plrHu ,d rell(,:niu n ·'" tht·y try to p u t thei r
co JH ll lll llirv b.11.:k tu~ct h n f~) ll owi n g ,, rorn .1do that
klllcd onl' .p tT~llll ,11~ d lllj u rni ab o ut 100 o tlw rs.
SL huol otllci ,tl" C&lt;; (l !ll. ltL' lllOTL' tha n 7,000 people
attL' IHkd th L' Xcm .1 H igh School ho m ecom ing
ga m e .1gaimt Springtll'ld :"Jonh High Sc hool F~iJay
mgllt. two d,Jy\ .1tl~.·r rhc &lt;;to rill tbtrl'11L'd b u dd u1g'\.
tlprnotcd trL' L' ' and rns.;cd vchicll's . Morl' t h.111
$27 ,Ot )IJ 111 dn n .lti o n ~ from art•a b u sitw.., s cnahiL"d
area n,·-.;tdl'nt" ttl .l ttt·n d the . g&lt;mh.' fo r fre t•
lkft.)J'l' tht· ~.111\l' • .1 group of t'lclllt'ntary -~tf h on l
stud t' llb w.l.l.k t· d ont? tl~ c\ fl~'iLI ,md h uistt•d .1. b.m.ncr
that rl·ad . Jl)74 Xt•ma Lrvc": 2()(1(} Xcm ,l L!VL'"
Agam .''
In 14.J7-L .1 twi\tcr hit Xcn i.t .md sourhwe"t Oh io,
ki llin g .1 .\ peopl&lt;".
. ThL• gamt• all mn·d TT'&gt; idc nts In tJkc a bn:.1k ti'o m

thl' ditlirulr task of s .d va~in~ wh.lt is left of ther r
h ome~ .md hu..,lnl'~St'\.
" People' h:lvt•n'r fo rgottL' II w lut h,1ppl' ned."
J m o m t•nr

Mayor John S .1 r.1~ra s,1id . "It lt·ast fo r
tht'y'rc trying to have cl ~ood rime.''

Police Sfrt. S(ott 1\il~t· r s.ti d ht· \\'.IS imprt·..;sc d by
the "iiZr and rh t• mood of th e c rowd ~ n d.1y nig hL
" lr '" amazin g to SL'i..' how rhi " tmvn has CO ili L'
togetha." Angn sJJ d.
·

R,·,iJcnt Rob m Kc'hl s.lt in the bll'achers w it h
her blll ily, n1osr nf whom \\'l'rl' exh~H Js t e d .1ll:L'r two
tbys o f L·k an up. Sh e s;1 id she urgt·d ht'r t:JJn ily t o
.Htcnd tht• g,lll lL' .lllYW,ly.
" 'Jle Jon 't h,I\'C elecrn c t )f rckphonc :· she "ai d.
"Our w i ndows al'L' all blow o ut and trt....-s arc go n e.
b ut when l saw my 5-yt'&lt;lr- o ld son sundmg o n the
porch ~are. it wa~ th e hes r tt-clin g l'Vl' r. We ca me h ere
rnn ighr just to gt·t away ti·om it for a\vh ik."

Sprin;.'titld North stucknts abo sh owed th ei r
"lUpport t( Jr the t'l)lll lllll niry hy colkrrin i'.; $()20 fo r
the city .utd di-.p layi ng a 7-foot bann er that re3d.
" ()ur tho ughts .l rt" \vlrh you ."
Earl ier m the day. two mcm lw r'i of t h t~ Xe n ia

Ch urch of Cod, Bryan Sturgill .m d Donald
H u m phrey. climbed among thL· \\Tcrk ~lt:!;t' o( th l:ir
ch u rr h and t'H."cted an Amcn ra n tbg and a Ch r ist-.
ian f1.1g.

�BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Initial voting
daeets union

The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency said it might
help plan the restoration.
The company has said the
COLUMBUS (AP) -Voting
: by Kroger workers was continu- dam was built to halt erosion
. ing Monday on a new contract along riverbank land it owns.
The dam stretches nearly the
: ihat union officials call one of
: the best deals they've seen.
width of the river near RockWith a vote of 1,651-951 in bridge, about 40 miles southeast
favor of the contract after the of Columbus.
first day of voting Sunday, it
Fudge said the river should
appears that the pact has been
return to normal once the
approved, union officials said.
"Congratulations, the con- restoration work is complete.
''I'm really glad," said Valeri"
tract you just approved was
: achieved through your commit- Fox, co-owner of a canoe livery
: ment ... and solidarity;' Rebecca along the river. "It was pretty
· Berroyer, president of Local ugly."
· 1059 of the United Food and
Fox was one of several boaters
Commercial Workers Union, who photographed the newly
told members.
built dam last month and comThe contract affects about
plained to government agencies.
12,000 workers at 77 stores in
She said the dam alters the
central and southeast Ohio.
river's
natural flow, creating a
Berroyer called the pact the
"best package Y!e have had in shallows on one side that makes
canoeists run aground and jeop. over 20 years."
Union members had voted to ardizes the habitat of fish, turtles
.s trike if negotiators did not and other wildlife.
agree on a contract late last
week. Pension issues, wages and
prescription drug coverage had
been among the sticking points
in the talks. A settlement was
reached early Friday morning
WESTLAKE (AP) - The
Cincinnati-based
Kroger
World's
Fastest Pumpkin Carver
expected to keep the stores
paced about , surveying the
open if workers walked our.
orange beauties at a garden center on Sunday.
Finally, Jerry Ayers snatched
up a IS-pounder and whispered
CROTON (AP) - About to obser\iers, "It really doesn't
100,000 chickens were rescued matter which one I pick, but it
this weekend from the Buckeye looks impressive if I study the
Egg Farm that suffered damage pumpkins first."
from a tornado that touched
Dozens of · jack-o-lantern
down last week, the farm's chief enthusiasts and carver wannabes
executive said.
visited Gale's Westlake Garden
1Welve barns at the farm were Center in this Cleveland suburb,
badly damaged, and about I
hoping to learn from Ayers how
million chickens of the nearly 7
million used for production to carve fancy faces.
Ayers, a 60-year-old retired
have been at risk there since the
storms, said Bill Glass, the com- insurance salesman from Baltipany's chief executive. The more, Ohio, convinced most of
chickens' feeding systems at the his students that they, too, could
farm are not working properly carve a pumpkin as lovely as his.
because of the storm damage.
It's all in the nose and the
"The birds are important to knife, he says. ·
us, and we want to see them
"Most people make a nose the
treated as fairly as we can," Glass
size of a dime. No way. Our
said.
Animal rights advocates from noses are 25 percent of the
.OOH-MAH-NEE Sanctuary, length and width of our faces.
:in the southwestern Penmylva- Interesting jack-o-lanterns have
: nia community of Hunker, were big noses. My mother had a big
:among volunteers who saved nose," he said.
·the birds.
With a series of crescent cuts
: OOH-MAH-NEE workers
using a knife with a sharp, flexi:transported them four hours
:back to shelters, said sanctuary ble blade, Ayers turned pumpkins into radiant jack-o:coordinator Cayce Mell.
lanterns.
His Guinness Book
: More rescue trips are planned
record is 1 minute, 3 7 seconds to
·for this week..
: "We're dealing with millions gut and carve an 18-pounder.
:of animals, and we wish we But like any responsible profes·could take more," Mell said.
sional, he advised folks not to
Lorri Bauston is shelter directry that at home.
tor of Farm Sanctuary. She said
"Carving pumpkins isn't
that although she doesn't agree
with productjon methods used about speed. It's about having
on the animals, she said she was fun and not getting cur;· he said.
Though he carves about 800
happy to help because the
chickens were suffering.
pumpkins a year, he says he has
Farm Sanctuary is a national never sliced a finger. And he
network of shelters for aban- docsn 't bake pumpkin pies.
. doned and abused animals that
" I leave that to my wife," he
. helped coordinate the rescue
said.
· efforts.
Most of the pumpkins Ayers
Mell said the rescued animals
will be used for educational out- carves are sold at charity aucreach programs and won't be tions. The ones he carved Sun.day were sold ro benefit the
put ~ack into production.
Glass said the hens that cannot Make-A-Wish Foundation.
be relocated or did not survive
will be disposed of according to
federal regulations.
Croton is about 25 miles
northeast of Colu mbm.

Fastest carver
shows off

lhousands of
hens rescued

Company will
remove dam
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Army Corps of Engineers says a
southeast Ohio excavaun g co mpany will tear down an 1Uegal
earthen dam it built across the
Hocking R iver.
The corps told Ricketts Excavating of Lancaster thi s .week
that the dam must be disman tled.
The company violated th e
Clean Water Act and the Rivers
and Harbors Act by adding soil
and other fill to the river without a permit , said Tammy
Fudge. a regulato ry specialist
with the corps.
She said excavating co mpany
owner Harry Ri cketts has
pledged to remove the dam and
res[ore [he river to its previous
condition as soon as possible.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Methodists search for ~ays to serve population
REYNOLDSBURG (AP) - A United
Methodist Church official says roday's successful congregations manage to be large and sn1all
at the same time.
The Rev. Craig Miller said that if churches
are to thrive, they must offer people two things:
personal contact and worship variety. He said
those are traits common to the megachurches
that have grown from small beginnings to having thousands of members in the last decade.
"They become larger in terms of the total
worship experience; they become smaller
because they will focus on developing small

groups;' he said.
"Evangelism in the '60s was like the Billy
Graham rally. It was a give-your-life-to-Christ,
one-on-one appeal to people:· Miller said.
"We're finding tocby that people are not looking to be converted.They're looking for a conversation."

Miller, direcror of new congregational
development for the denomination, led a
three-day conference this weekend at the
Reynoldsburg United Methodist Church on
how to evangelize in the 21st century.
Miller said it's critical that his denomination

TOLEDO (AP) - . The practice of selling "pouring rights" to
sofr drink companies may be
profitable for schools. but it's not
in the best interest of the students, a group of Toledo dentists
says.
It's hoping to go national with
its effort to educate apparently
complacent parents about soft
drink marketing in schools and
tooth decay among children.
The dentists say their teen
patients increasingly are showing
up with cavities. The dentists
blame part of that increase on the
widespread availability of soft
drinks in schools.
The Toledo Dental Society has
given $10,000 to the local education campaign by the Soft Drink
Task Force of Northwest Ohio.
The Ohio Dental Association,
sparked by the Toledo Dental
Society, has given $10,000 to
underwrite a similar statewide
educational campaign.
Next month, the association
plans to attend the annual meeting of the American Dental Asso-

ciation and encourage the group
to take similar action.
'T m proud Ohio is leading the
country," said Dylan Bernstein, a
native Ohioan. who works for the
Oakland, Calif.-based Center for
Commercial-Free Public Education, he said.
His group was formed to fight
what it saw as improper marketing to a captive audience - students.
Granting exclusive "pouring
rights" began three years ago, and
about 200 school districts in the
country have them now, he said..._
Soft drinks have been in t~e ·
schools for years, but the new
contracts usually stipulate that
machines be added and other
actions be taken to increase the
exposure of soft drinks to children.
Tok'&lt;lo Public Schools recently
entered into a 10-year contract to
sell Coca Cola in the school's
vending machines and will earn
$450,000 in each year of the contract.

Dissolution filed

involve )'&gt;ung people. "If it does not effectively reach out to children and youth today, then
the church 20 to 25 years from now will not
have very much leadership," he said.
The Rev. Dottie Escobedo-Frank. said her
fint task when she became pastor of Mission
Bell United Methodist Church in Glendale,
Ariz., was to determine the community's
makeup.
She found that even though most people in
her community were baby boomen, most
members of her congregation were older than
that. So she changed the way she preached.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Paddling students for misbehaving is
on the decline in Ohio, with
only 43 of the state's 611 school
districts having it as an option
for disciplining students.
"It's certainly moving in the
right direction," Nadine Block
of the Columbus-based Center
for Effective Discipline Inc., an
anti-paddling watchdog group,
told The Plain Dealer for a story
Sundiy. "But for kids who are
being paddled and sometimes
injured, it's not moving fast
enough."
Corporal punishment is outlawed in prisons and mental hospitals, but stili allowed in schools
in 23 states, including Ohio.
More than 700 Ohio students
were paddled in the 1998-99
school year, the latest statistics
that are available. More than 500
of the students were from a
dozen districts, mostly in the
southern and western parts of
the state.
U.S. Department of Education statistics show more than

1.4 million incidents of paddling
nationwide in 1982. By 1994,
that figure had fa llen to about
470,00().
Despite opposition by such
groups as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association, paddling still has its advocates.
In a recent national survey,
nearly 40 percent of parents and
. 75 percent of teachers supported
corporal punishment in schools.
In districts that reinstated corporal punishment, parents who
do not want their child paddled
can sign a waiver forbidding
school personnel from striking
their child.
Robert Surgenor, a police
detective in suburban Berea, is
an advocate of spanking children
who misbehave. In ·his self-published book, "No Fear: A Poli'ce
Officer's Perspective;· Surgenor
argued that a lack of discipline,
including corporal punishment,
can lead to child delinquency.

New school motto: •And now a word from our sponsor'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Enter
Columbiana High School's main
lobby and a prominently displayed wall plaque about 8 inches
high may catch your eye.
"The varnished wood stands
out because our school is almost
all red and white," principal
Joseph Shiven said. "It's a pretty
sharp contrast."
The words. on the plaque
mean a lot to the school district:
"Naming Rights to the R.A.
Carletti Family with Grateful
Appreciation."
Financially pressed public
schools have adopted a tactic
from professional and college
sports. Selling naming rights to
part of a school or athletic complex, school districts can raise
· money without having to ask taxpayers or the state for help.
"We're a school district that
the current formula of school
funding iri Ohio does not suit
very well," said Joe Rottenborn,
superintendent of Columbiana
Schools, a small rural district in
northeast Ohio. "We had to find
new, innovative ways to raise revenue here."
Any piece of Columbiana's
new high school which
opened this month, replacing a
nearly 100-year-old building is for sale at a rate of$1 per square

foot per year.
For the 800-square-foot main
lobby, the Carlettis' $8,000 donation ensures the plaque will hang
there for I 0 years. Other donations include. $10,000 for 125year rights in the SO-square-foot
vestibule that leads into the
school's athletic 'Complex.
The school district invests the
money and will use the interest to
pay for capital improvements,
Rottenborn said. Once all the
payments are made from all the
deals, the school district will have
$23,395, he said.
A recent report by congressional investigators said schools
across the country are making
commercial deals with little state
oversight.
London High School in central Ohio is looking to sell naming rights to raise money for athletics.
"It's a business," said Terry
Nance, London's athletics director. "A lot of what we do at the
high school level depends on our
funding."
The Ohio Supreme Court
twice has ruled the state's school
funding system is unconstitutional because it relies too heavily on
local property taxes, creating disparities between rich and pour
districts.

Rottenborn said his district,
with 1,050 students in kindergarten through 12th grade, also
loses money because of an influx
of well-off residents without children.
"We've got a situation where
we have a brand new high school,
the taxpayer didn't have to pall a
bond issue, in fact they turned
two down, and we got no state
fundi1g because the property val-

uation is rising," Rottenborn said.
The chairman of the Senate
Education Committee, Madison
Republican Bob Gardner, said
Columbiana's new high school is
part of $2.6 billion the state has
spent since 1997 for new buildings and renovations.
He said selling pieces of new
schools is appropriate as long as
local school boards approve.

Salute your fauorite fireman and/or
fire Department with an ad on our
Are Preuention Page monday,
October 9th.
Only

$

NOTICE

OHIO CHILD SUPPORT PAYMENT
CENTRAL (CSPC)
P.O. BOX 182394
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43218
PAYMENTS ARE TO BE MADE VIA MONEY ORDER
WITH THE NAME AND CASE NUMBER ON IT. THE
CASE NUMBER WILL BE ON THE MONTHLY
BILLING STATEMENT YOU WILL RECEIVE IN THE
MAIL.

Donald Eugene Jones
GALLIPOLIS- Donald Eugene Jones, 58, 1562 Kemper Hollow
Road, Gallipolis, died Sunday, Sept. 24, 2000 at his residence.
.. B~rn Sept. 12, 1942 in Addison, son of Opal Cremeens Jones
W1lliams of Gallipolis, and the late Clarence Jones, he was a selfemployed carpenter and founder of D &amp; R Contractors.
He was a member of Carpenters Local 650 in Pomeroy, and Local
1159 in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He was a member ofVFW Post 4464
American Legion Lafayette Post 27 and Prospect Church. He was ~
U.S. Army veteran of the Vietnam Conflict.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Maxine Caldwell
Jones, whom he married Jan. 25, 1964 in Gallipolis; two daughren,
Dawnine (Barry) Yeauger of Cheshire, and Connie (Mark) Johnson of
Centenary; three sons, Ronald (Anna) Jones of Bidwell, Kevin Jones of
Columbus, and Rodney L. (Anna) Jones of Gallipolis; a stepdaughter,
Jeanie (Donald) Melvin of Tampa, Fla.; seven grandchildren and five
stepgrandchildren; his· stepfather, Marion Williams of Gallipolis; four
~ters, Delma (Donald) Karr of Middleport, Betty Wise (Kenneth Turl)!y) of Racine, and Barbara (Aland) Lopez and Ruth (Buck) Dunlap,
both of Gallipolis; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
·Gallipolis, with the Rev. John M. Jeffrey officiating. Burial will be in
Mina Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-9 p.m:
Tuesday.
A graveside flag presentation will be conducted by VFW Post 4464
·and American Legion Lafayette Post 27.
·

REEDSVILLE -Jack Lance, 61, Reedsville, died Sunday, Sept. 24,
2000 in Pleasant Hill Manor Nursing Center, Piketon.
Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home,
·coolville.

Health

be tuberculosis and tetanus shots
and diphtheria boosters.
Holzer Medical Center will
be on hand to provide cholesterol
from Page AI
and blood sugar testing, and Dr.
more than 900 senior citizens, Mukesh Kumar of the Pleasant
said Oliver, and some don't return Valley Hospital Clinic will do
, for the health clinic or prostate skin cancer screening.
.. screening. By having all of the
There will also be representa.P!Ograms the same day, it increas- tives of the Health Steps Wellness
. es the target audience for all the Center there to arrange screenprograms.
ings, and representatives of the
· While the flu shot clinics are Health Insurance Information for
· usually held in October, the date People with Medicare to discuss
·this year had to be changed issues relating to medicare coverbecause of vaccine availability.
age.
The amount of vaccine availThe Ohio University College
able is complicated by two of Medicine arthritis program
important factors, according to will be available to do fitness
the Center for Disease Control assessments, and Health Recovery
(CDC) - the yield of a needed Services Inc. and Serenity House
component which appears to be will have representatives on hand
lower than expected limiting the to discuss those programs.
·supply that can be developed in
Appointments are currently
·time for the flu season, and man- being made for the · prostate
.. ufacturing issues.
screening clinic. Screenings are
Since there is a possibility that handled by appointment only to
. there may be a shortfall in be made by calling 992-6626. The
influenza vaccine for the 2000-01 tests will include PSA bloodwork
season, an emphasis is being to be drawn on Oct. 23 with a
placed on getting senior citizens prostate exam by a physician dur· and others at high risk vaccinated ing the clinic.
first.
. Funding for the lab work is
However, representatives of the being provided by Grant Rivertwo local agencies emphasized side Methodists Hospitals.
. :.rhat they do not anticipate probProstate cancer rates among
&lt;Jems in getting the needed vac- men over 50 reportedly concine. Seniors with Medicare cards tributed to over 40,000 deaths in
will be asked to present them 1999. Smoking is said to con. when completing forms for flu tribute to many different types of
· shots.
cancer, including prostate, and as
Other immunizations available with many other kinds of cancer,
. and offered at no charge during early detection can make rhe dif· the combined fair and clinic will ference between life and death.

License issued
POMEROY · - A marriage
license has been granted in Meigs
County Probate Court to Jeremy
Dewayne Runyon, 24, Middleport, and Tonya Michelle Well, 23,
Middleport.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency Services
answered 15 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday. 1:45 a.m., Condor
Street, Clinton Houtcher, Holzer
Medical Center;
4:03 a.m., Beacon, Duane
Qualls, HMC;
9:42 a.m., North Second
Street, Robert Miller, treated;
11:50 a.m., Middleport, Arthur
Hess,HMC;

2:14 p.m., Holzer Medical
\.enter Clinic, Connie Higham,
HMC;
Sund1y, midnight, Long Run
Road, Carry Moore, St. Joseph's
Hospital;
1:43 p.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Alice Globokar,
HMC;
3:58 p.m., Second Street, Gene
Wolfe,HMC;
11:34 p.m., Rutland, assisted by
Rutland, James Fish, HMC.
RACINE
Saturday, 6:58 a.m., Bashan
Road, Francis Butt, treated;
11:48
p.m.,
Bald
Knob/Stiversville,
Michael
Creameans, treated;
Sunday, 12:12 a.m., Ohio
River, water rescue, Andy Patters,
no injuries;
1:07 a.m., Bashan Road,
Zachary Carson, HMC.
RUTLAND
~ay, 8:14 a.m., County
Road 1, assisted by Columbia
Township, Central Dispatch and
Pomeroy, motor vehicle accident,
April Balch, O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Sunday, 9:57 p.m., assisted by
Central Dispatch, Owl Hollow
Road, William Watson, HMC.

Conferences set
RACINE - Southern Local
will
be
holding
Schools
parent/teacher conferences for
the first nine weeks on Wedr· .' oday from 4-7 p.m.
Parents may call their child's
school to schedule a conference,
if they have not already done so.

VALLEY WEATHER

Cool temps will remain
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The rain will end but the cooler temperatures will remain for
the rest of this week, the National Weather Service said.
Lows tonight will be in the 40s
and highs Tuesday in the 60s,
about 10 degrees below normal.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:23
and ·sunrise on Thesday at 7:24
a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tonight... Cloudy with showers and fog. Lows near 50. North
wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
80 percent.

Tuesday... Cloudy with fog and
a chance of showers until midmorning. Highs near 60. Chance'
of r.ain 30 percent.
Thesday nighr. .'.Cl~aring. Lows
in the mid 40s.

Extended forecast:

'THE PATRIOT' - Point Pleasant .Battle Days Memorial Committee
members Joann Sauer and Brenda Merritt display The Ohio River Bear
Co.'s original "The Pat riot,· designed in honor of Battle Days. The creator, Susan Baker, is a descendant of one of the soldiers in the Oct.
10, 1774 battle at Tu-Endie-Wei State Park. (Michele Carter photo)

Battle

from Page AI
the park.
During this time, children will
visit the encampment and learn
about the era. From noon to 8
p.m., an art show will be held at
Fort Randolph Terrace. At 7:30
p.m., a lantern tour will be held
through the encampment at TuEndie-Wei Park.
The Heritage Queen pageant
kicks-off activities on Saturday at
10 a.m. at Gunn Park. The first
"Burning Down The Bridge"
Chili and Salsa Cooking Contest,
sponsored. by the Farmer's Market
and Battle Days, will be held
underneath the Bartow Jones
Bridge from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m .
Registration forms are now
available at the Main Street Office
and the field is limited to 20. The
ox roast and bean dinner will be
held at 11 a.m. The parade begins
at 10 a.m. at Central Elementary
featuring NSSAR President Gen.
Bruce B. Butler.
The art show is on tap from
noon to 8 p.m. The Kanawha Valley Pipes and Drums will perform

in the park at 1 p .m., followed by
magician Phil Luckeydoo and
Andrew Lewis Volunteer Drum
and Fife.
Point Pleasant resident and
author Carlene Thompson will be
featured from 2-4 p.m. as the
author in the park. The Colonial
Governor's Reception will be at 7
p.m. at Fort Randolph and the
Colonial Ball is slated for 9 p.m. at
the Lowe Hotel.
In addition to items above, the
day will be filled with activities.
entertainment, crafts and encampments.

Sunday begins with the Colonial
Church Service at 10 a.m. in TuEndie-Wei State Park. The art
show continues from 1-4 p.m.
At 2 p.m., the 226th annual
Memorial Service begins in the
park in honor of those who lost
their lives on Oct. 10, 1774. The
Battle Days committee is expecting several states to be represented
at the service.
For more information on Battle
Days, call675-3844 or 675-1050.

Women did not contpetc in
Olyntpic events until 1·900, und

the winter events were not held

until 1924
France .

Wednesday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the lower 40s and highs in the
mid 60s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the upper 30s and highs in the
upper 60s.

in

LOCAL STOCKS
Gannett- 49'~~~

AEP-35'•

Akzo - 42}"

4n.

AmTech/SBC Ashland Inc. - 32~.
AT&amp;T -29lo
Bank Ono-36

Bob Evans- 17 ~~
BorgWarner - 32}..
Champion - 2~
Charming Shops - 5),
City Holding - 7\
Federal Mogul - 6),
Firstar - 22'·

General Electric -

Harley Davidson -

Kmart- s~.
Kroger- 2~.
Landa End - 22l.
Ud.-23'1.

sn.
46~

Oak Hill Financial- tsl.

OVB- 26lo
BBT- 29).
Peoples - 14lo
Premle( - s~..
Rockwell - 28~

Rocky Boots- Slo
AD Shell-60~
Sears - 34 1!•
Shoney's -l.
Wai·Mart - 50),
Wendy's-19\
Worthington - 9'!.
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's .trans·
actions,
provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

Poetry

The Daily Sentine~

Approaching Chester, Ohio

Correction Polley
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be accurate. If you know of an error in
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'

POMEROY - An action for
foreclosure has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Aurora Loan Services
Inc., against Virginia Mcintosh,
and others.

for me, since, even afier 13 years,
we're still outsiders because our people are not from this area."
"Still it feels like home;· Lenres
said, "and I am interested in that
sense of homecoming. It seems to
be a theme I come to a lot in my
writing."
."We're still living our history; '
Lentes told The Daily Sentinel last
week. "It's easy to feel a shilling back
and forth between history and the
present day. and I hope to capture
that every day sense of history."
"I like to create vivid pictures in
my writing;• Lentes said.

Show your support and appreciation
lledl r---!~!~~r~~~!~~n~!S! ___ , 11~1

IIC::dll Phone 11-·- - - - - - - - L----------------------~

Foreclosure
panted

area's rich history when she wrote
"Approaching Chester, Ohio." It
was inspired by a trip home from
from Page AI
West Virginia, at sunset.
" I experienced this sense of
The Lentes family lives in a 19th- almost a warp in time that I feel
. century farmhouse outside of Rut- quite often in this area, with its deep
~ land, and the history of the farm and
sense of history;' Lentes told the
· the figurative ghosts of the house are magazine. " I was thinking about all
: keenly felt.
the other people who had gone
' That history, and the history of before us, traveled this rbad, and had
: their adoptive Meigs County, is seen the same courthouse up on the
: ofi:en the inspiration for Lentes' hill."
: . lnore powerful works.
"I was just thinking about com· Lences also felt the power of the ing home - though this isn't home

Reader Se.-vices

1
1A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - -

POMEROY- An action for
dissolution of marriage has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Maureen E. Hennessy, Pomeroy, and Joseph A.
Wilson, Brigeman, Mich.

EMS logs 15 calls

Jack Lance

John Doe
Ftre Dept.

llt:~l~ Your N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - -

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Dentists concerned about Some Ohio schools
students
soft drinks in schools

EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1, 2000 THE MEIGS
COUNTY CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT
AGENCY WILL NO LONGER BE ACCEPTING CASH
PAYMENT$. ALL PAYMENTS ARE TO BE SENT BY
MAIL TO:

•

Monday, September 25, 2000

Monday, September 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· P-ee A2 • The Dally Sentinel

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LAst night the sky ignited;
trees blazed up
matclt-stmck by the selli•.g Sl/11 .
Hig/1 011 the /till, rite old courthouse
windows j1m11ed, t/re,z jlickmd
as if lit by candle glow.
Time wried backsuddmly horses' hooves
clattc7ed on ltarde11ed grotmd,
cold 11Atee&amp; creaked on stone.
Lo•tgins for home,
I pulled "tY shawl close,
(tho11glt I had 110 shau.l or l1ome
there),
and l£•mzed imo my husband~ body,
my childrm s breath risi•t~ behi11d me,
radiam , whirr as boue.
- Cathy
Len res
("Approaching Chester, Ohio"
tint appeared in Now &amp; Then magazine.Vol. 17, No. 2, Sutru11er 2000 . .
Copyright. Center for Appalachian
Studies and Services, 2000. Used
with permission .)

Holzer Meigs Clinic

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:

••.,
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Mammograms during the month of October.

NoV&lt;711ber

Screening $55.00 (Regular $85.00)
Unilateral $85.00 (Regular $125 .00)
Diagn.ostic $100.00 (Regular $195.00)
•

Call now for an appointment
Extended hours available
(740) 992-0060

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769

( /40) 992-0060
Holzer Clinic ..... ~~ tk "P'Io~~tide
www.holzerclinlc.com

Chuntonix .

�BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Initial voting
daeets union

The Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency said it might
help plan the restoration.
The company has said the
COLUMBUS (AP) -Voting
: by Kroger workers was continu- dam was built to halt erosion
. ing Monday on a new contract along riverbank land it owns.
The dam stretches nearly the
: ihat union officials call one of
: the best deals they've seen.
width of the river near RockWith a vote of 1,651-951 in bridge, about 40 miles southeast
favor of the contract after the of Columbus.
first day of voting Sunday, it
Fudge said the river should
appears that the pact has been
return to normal once the
approved, union officials said.
"Congratulations, the con- restoration work is complete.
''I'm really glad," said Valeri"
tract you just approved was
: achieved through your commit- Fox, co-owner of a canoe livery
: ment ... and solidarity;' Rebecca along the river. "It was pretty
· Berroyer, president of Local ugly."
· 1059 of the United Food and
Fox was one of several boaters
Commercial Workers Union, who photographed the newly
told members.
built dam last month and comThe contract affects about
plained to government agencies.
12,000 workers at 77 stores in
She said the dam alters the
central and southeast Ohio.
river's
natural flow, creating a
Berroyer called the pact the
"best package Y!e have had in shallows on one side that makes
canoeists run aground and jeop. over 20 years."
Union members had voted to ardizes the habitat of fish, turtles
.s trike if negotiators did not and other wildlife.
agree on a contract late last
week. Pension issues, wages and
prescription drug coverage had
been among the sticking points
in the talks. A settlement was
reached early Friday morning
WESTLAKE (AP) - The
Cincinnati-based
Kroger
World's
Fastest Pumpkin Carver
expected to keep the stores
paced about , surveying the
open if workers walked our.
orange beauties at a garden center on Sunday.
Finally, Jerry Ayers snatched
up a IS-pounder and whispered
CROTON (AP) - About to obser\iers, "It really doesn't
100,000 chickens were rescued matter which one I pick, but it
this weekend from the Buckeye looks impressive if I study the
Egg Farm that suffered damage pumpkins first."
from a tornado that touched
Dozens of · jack-o-lantern
down last week, the farm's chief enthusiasts and carver wannabes
executive said.
visited Gale's Westlake Garden
1Welve barns at the farm were Center in this Cleveland suburb,
badly damaged, and about I
hoping to learn from Ayers how
million chickens of the nearly 7
million used for production to carve fancy faces.
Ayers, a 60-year-old retired
have been at risk there since the
storms, said Bill Glass, the com- insurance salesman from Baltipany's chief executive. The more, Ohio, convinced most of
chickens' feeding systems at the his students that they, too, could
farm are not working properly carve a pumpkin as lovely as his.
because of the storm damage.
It's all in the nose and the
"The birds are important to knife, he says. ·
us, and we want to see them
"Most people make a nose the
treated as fairly as we can," Glass
size of a dime. No way. Our
said.
Animal rights advocates from noses are 25 percent of the
.OOH-MAH-NEE Sanctuary, length and width of our faces.
:in the southwestern Penmylva- Interesting jack-o-lanterns have
: nia community of Hunker, were big noses. My mother had a big
:among volunteers who saved nose," he said.
·the birds.
With a series of crescent cuts
: OOH-MAH-NEE workers
using a knife with a sharp, flexi:transported them four hours
:back to shelters, said sanctuary ble blade, Ayers turned pumpkins into radiant jack-o:coordinator Cayce Mell.
lanterns.
His Guinness Book
: More rescue trips are planned
record is 1 minute, 3 7 seconds to
·for this week..
: "We're dealing with millions gut and carve an 18-pounder.
:of animals, and we wish we But like any responsible profes·could take more," Mell said.
sional, he advised folks not to
Lorri Bauston is shelter directry that at home.
tor of Farm Sanctuary. She said
"Carving pumpkins isn't
that although she doesn't agree
with productjon methods used about speed. It's about having
on the animals, she said she was fun and not getting cur;· he said.
Though he carves about 800
happy to help because the
chickens were suffering.
pumpkins a year, he says he has
Farm Sanctuary is a national never sliced a finger. And he
network of shelters for aban- docsn 't bake pumpkin pies.
. doned and abused animals that
" I leave that to my wife," he
. helped coordinate the rescue
said.
· efforts.
Most of the pumpkins Ayers
Mell said the rescued animals
will be used for educational out- carves are sold at charity aucreach programs and won't be tions. The ones he carved Sun.day were sold ro benefit the
put ~ack into production.
Glass said the hens that cannot Make-A-Wish Foundation.
be relocated or did not survive
will be disposed of according to
federal regulations.
Croton is about 25 miles
northeast of Colu mbm.

Fastest carver
shows off

lhousands of
hens rescued

Company will
remove dam
COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Army Corps of Engineers says a
southeast Ohio excavaun g co mpany will tear down an 1Uegal
earthen dam it built across the
Hocking R iver.
The corps told Ricketts Excavating of Lancaster thi s .week
that the dam must be disman tled.
The company violated th e
Clean Water Act and the Rivers
and Harbors Act by adding soil
and other fill to the river without a permit , said Tammy
Fudge. a regulato ry specialist
with the corps.
She said excavating co mpany
owner Harry Ri cketts has
pledged to remove the dam and
res[ore [he river to its previous
condition as soon as possible.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Methodists search for ~ays to serve population
REYNOLDSBURG (AP) - A United
Methodist Church official says roday's successful congregations manage to be large and sn1all
at the same time.
The Rev. Craig Miller said that if churches
are to thrive, they must offer people two things:
personal contact and worship variety. He said
those are traits common to the megachurches
that have grown from small beginnings to having thousands of members in the last decade.
"They become larger in terms of the total
worship experience; they become smaller
because they will focus on developing small

groups;' he said.
"Evangelism in the '60s was like the Billy
Graham rally. It was a give-your-life-to-Christ,
one-on-one appeal to people:· Miller said.
"We're finding tocby that people are not looking to be converted.They're looking for a conversation."

Miller, direcror of new congregational
development for the denomination, led a
three-day conference this weekend at the
Reynoldsburg United Methodist Church on
how to evangelize in the 21st century.
Miller said it's critical that his denomination

TOLEDO (AP) - . The practice of selling "pouring rights" to
sofr drink companies may be
profitable for schools. but it's not
in the best interest of the students, a group of Toledo dentists
says.
It's hoping to go national with
its effort to educate apparently
complacent parents about soft
drink marketing in schools and
tooth decay among children.
The dentists say their teen
patients increasingly are showing
up with cavities. The dentists
blame part of that increase on the
widespread availability of soft
drinks in schools.
The Toledo Dental Society has
given $10,000 to the local education campaign by the Soft Drink
Task Force of Northwest Ohio.
The Ohio Dental Association,
sparked by the Toledo Dental
Society, has given $10,000 to
underwrite a similar statewide
educational campaign.
Next month, the association
plans to attend the annual meeting of the American Dental Asso-

ciation and encourage the group
to take similar action.
'T m proud Ohio is leading the
country," said Dylan Bernstein, a
native Ohioan. who works for the
Oakland, Calif.-based Center for
Commercial-Free Public Education, he said.
His group was formed to fight
what it saw as improper marketing to a captive audience - students.
Granting exclusive "pouring
rights" began three years ago, and
about 200 school districts in the
country have them now, he said..._
Soft drinks have been in t~e ·
schools for years, but the new
contracts usually stipulate that
machines be added and other
actions be taken to increase the
exposure of soft drinks to children.
Tok'&lt;lo Public Schools recently
entered into a 10-year contract to
sell Coca Cola in the school's
vending machines and will earn
$450,000 in each year of the contract.

Dissolution filed

involve )'&gt;ung people. "If it does not effectively reach out to children and youth today, then
the church 20 to 25 years from now will not
have very much leadership," he said.
The Rev. Dottie Escobedo-Frank. said her
fint task when she became pastor of Mission
Bell United Methodist Church in Glendale,
Ariz., was to determine the community's
makeup.
She found that even though most people in
her community were baby boomen, most
members of her congregation were older than
that. So she changed the way she preached.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Paddling students for misbehaving is
on the decline in Ohio, with
only 43 of the state's 611 school
districts having it as an option
for disciplining students.
"It's certainly moving in the
right direction," Nadine Block
of the Columbus-based Center
for Effective Discipline Inc., an
anti-paddling watchdog group,
told The Plain Dealer for a story
Sundiy. "But for kids who are
being paddled and sometimes
injured, it's not moving fast
enough."
Corporal punishment is outlawed in prisons and mental hospitals, but stili allowed in schools
in 23 states, including Ohio.
More than 700 Ohio students
were paddled in the 1998-99
school year, the latest statistics
that are available. More than 500
of the students were from a
dozen districts, mostly in the
southern and western parts of
the state.
U.S. Department of Education statistics show more than

1.4 million incidents of paddling
nationwide in 1982. By 1994,
that figure had fa llen to about
470,00().
Despite opposition by such
groups as the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association, paddling still has its advocates.
In a recent national survey,
nearly 40 percent of parents and
. 75 percent of teachers supported
corporal punishment in schools.
In districts that reinstated corporal punishment, parents who
do not want their child paddled
can sign a waiver forbidding
school personnel from striking
their child.
Robert Surgenor, a police
detective in suburban Berea, is
an advocate of spanking children
who misbehave. In ·his self-published book, "No Fear: A Poli'ce
Officer's Perspective;· Surgenor
argued that a lack of discipline,
including corporal punishment,
can lead to child delinquency.

New school motto: •And now a word from our sponsor'
COLUMBUS (AP) - Enter
Columbiana High School's main
lobby and a prominently displayed wall plaque about 8 inches
high may catch your eye.
"The varnished wood stands
out because our school is almost
all red and white," principal
Joseph Shiven said. "It's a pretty
sharp contrast."
The words. on the plaque
mean a lot to the school district:
"Naming Rights to the R.A.
Carletti Family with Grateful
Appreciation."
Financially pressed public
schools have adopted a tactic
from professional and college
sports. Selling naming rights to
part of a school or athletic complex, school districts can raise
· money without having to ask taxpayers or the state for help.
"We're a school district that
the current formula of school
funding iri Ohio does not suit
very well," said Joe Rottenborn,
superintendent of Columbiana
Schools, a small rural district in
northeast Ohio. "We had to find
new, innovative ways to raise revenue here."
Any piece of Columbiana's
new high school which
opened this month, replacing a
nearly 100-year-old building is for sale at a rate of$1 per square

foot per year.
For the 800-square-foot main
lobby, the Carlettis' $8,000 donation ensures the plaque will hang
there for I 0 years. Other donations include. $10,000 for 125year rights in the SO-square-foot
vestibule that leads into the
school's athletic 'Complex.
The school district invests the
money and will use the interest to
pay for capital improvements,
Rottenborn said. Once all the
payments are made from all the
deals, the school district will have
$23,395, he said.
A recent report by congressional investigators said schools
across the country are making
commercial deals with little state
oversight.
London High School in central Ohio is looking to sell naming rights to raise money for athletics.
"It's a business," said Terry
Nance, London's athletics director. "A lot of what we do at the
high school level depends on our
funding."
The Ohio Supreme Court
twice has ruled the state's school
funding system is unconstitutional because it relies too heavily on
local property taxes, creating disparities between rich and pour
districts.

Rottenborn said his district,
with 1,050 students in kindergarten through 12th grade, also
loses money because of an influx
of well-off residents without children.
"We've got a situation where
we have a brand new high school,
the taxpayer didn't have to pall a
bond issue, in fact they turned
two down, and we got no state
fundi1g because the property val-

uation is rising," Rottenborn said.
The chairman of the Senate
Education Committee, Madison
Republican Bob Gardner, said
Columbiana's new high school is
part of $2.6 billion the state has
spent since 1997 for new buildings and renovations.
He said selling pieces of new
schools is appropriate as long as
local school boards approve.

Salute your fauorite fireman and/or
fire Department with an ad on our
Are Preuention Page monday,
October 9th.
Only

$

NOTICE

OHIO CHILD SUPPORT PAYMENT
CENTRAL (CSPC)
P.O. BOX 182394
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43218
PAYMENTS ARE TO BE MADE VIA MONEY ORDER
WITH THE NAME AND CASE NUMBER ON IT. THE
CASE NUMBER WILL BE ON THE MONTHLY
BILLING STATEMENT YOU WILL RECEIVE IN THE
MAIL.

Donald Eugene Jones
GALLIPOLIS- Donald Eugene Jones, 58, 1562 Kemper Hollow
Road, Gallipolis, died Sunday, Sept. 24, 2000 at his residence.
.. B~rn Sept. 12, 1942 in Addison, son of Opal Cremeens Jones
W1lliams of Gallipolis, and the late Clarence Jones, he was a selfemployed carpenter and founder of D &amp; R Contractors.
He was a member of Carpenters Local 650 in Pomeroy, and Local
1159 in Point Pleasant, W.Va. He was a member ofVFW Post 4464
American Legion Lafayette Post 27 and Prospect Church. He was ~
U.S. Army veteran of the Vietnam Conflict.
Surviving in addition to his mother are his wife, Maxine Caldwell
Jones, whom he married Jan. 25, 1964 in Gallipolis; two daughren,
Dawnine (Barry) Yeauger of Cheshire, and Connie (Mark) Johnson of
Centenary; three sons, Ronald (Anna) Jones of Bidwell, Kevin Jones of
Columbus, and Rodney L. (Anna) Jones of Gallipolis; a stepdaughter,
Jeanie (Donald) Melvin of Tampa, Fla.; seven grandchildren and five
stepgrandchildren; his· stepfather, Marion Williams of Gallipolis; four
~ters, Delma (Donald) Karr of Middleport, Betty Wise (Kenneth Turl)!y) of Racine, and Barbara (Aland) Lopez and Ruth (Buck) Dunlap,
both of Gallipolis; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 2 p.m. Wednesday in Cremeens Funeral Chapel,
·Gallipolis, with the Rev. John M. Jeffrey officiating. Burial will be in
Mina Chapel Cemetery. Friends may call at the chapel from 6-9 p.m:
Tuesday.
A graveside flag presentation will be conducted by VFW Post 4464
·and American Legion Lafayette Post 27.
·

REEDSVILLE -Jack Lance, 61, Reedsville, died Sunday, Sept. 24,
2000 in Pleasant Hill Manor Nursing Center, Piketon.
Arrangements will be announced by White Funeral Home,
·coolville.

Health

be tuberculosis and tetanus shots
and diphtheria boosters.
Holzer Medical Center will
be on hand to provide cholesterol
from Page AI
and blood sugar testing, and Dr.
more than 900 senior citizens, Mukesh Kumar of the Pleasant
said Oliver, and some don't return Valley Hospital Clinic will do
, for the health clinic or prostate skin cancer screening.
.. screening. By having all of the
There will also be representa.P!Ograms the same day, it increas- tives of the Health Steps Wellness
. es the target audience for all the Center there to arrange screenprograms.
ings, and representatives of the
· While the flu shot clinics are Health Insurance Information for
· usually held in October, the date People with Medicare to discuss
·this year had to be changed issues relating to medicare coverbecause of vaccine availability.
age.
The amount of vaccine availThe Ohio University College
able is complicated by two of Medicine arthritis program
important factors, according to will be available to do fitness
the Center for Disease Control assessments, and Health Recovery
(CDC) - the yield of a needed Services Inc. and Serenity House
component which appears to be will have representatives on hand
lower than expected limiting the to discuss those programs.
·supply that can be developed in
Appointments are currently
·time for the flu season, and man- being made for the · prostate
.. ufacturing issues.
screening clinic. Screenings are
Since there is a possibility that handled by appointment only to
. there may be a shortfall in be made by calling 992-6626. The
influenza vaccine for the 2000-01 tests will include PSA bloodwork
season, an emphasis is being to be drawn on Oct. 23 with a
placed on getting senior citizens prostate exam by a physician dur· and others at high risk vaccinated ing the clinic.
first.
. Funding for the lab work is
However, representatives of the being provided by Grant Rivertwo local agencies emphasized side Methodists Hospitals.
. :.rhat they do not anticipate probProstate cancer rates among
&lt;Jems in getting the needed vac- men over 50 reportedly concine. Seniors with Medicare cards tributed to over 40,000 deaths in
will be asked to present them 1999. Smoking is said to con. when completing forms for flu tribute to many different types of
· shots.
cancer, including prostate, and as
Other immunizations available with many other kinds of cancer,
. and offered at no charge during early detection can make rhe dif· the combined fair and clinic will ference between life and death.

License issued
POMEROY · - A marriage
license has been granted in Meigs
County Probate Court to Jeremy
Dewayne Runyon, 24, Middleport, and Tonya Michelle Well, 23,
Middleport.

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs
Emergency Services
answered 15 calls for assistance
over the weekend. Units responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
Saturday. 1:45 a.m., Condor
Street, Clinton Houtcher, Holzer
Medical Center;
4:03 a.m., Beacon, Duane
Qualls, HMC;
9:42 a.m., North Second
Street, Robert Miller, treated;
11:50 a.m., Middleport, Arthur
Hess,HMC;

2:14 p.m., Holzer Medical
\.enter Clinic, Connie Higham,
HMC;
Sund1y, midnight, Long Run
Road, Carry Moore, St. Joseph's
Hospital;
1:43 p.m., Holzer Medical
Center Clinic, Alice Globokar,
HMC;
3:58 p.m., Second Street, Gene
Wolfe,HMC;
11:34 p.m., Rutland, assisted by
Rutland, James Fish, HMC.
RACINE
Saturday, 6:58 a.m., Bashan
Road, Francis Butt, treated;
11:48
p.m.,
Bald
Knob/Stiversville,
Michael
Creameans, treated;
Sunday, 12:12 a.m., Ohio
River, water rescue, Andy Patters,
no injuries;
1:07 a.m., Bashan Road,
Zachary Carson, HMC.
RUTLAND
~ay, 8:14 a.m., County
Road 1, assisted by Columbia
Township, Central Dispatch and
Pomeroy, motor vehicle accident,
April Balch, O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Sunday, 9:57 p.m., assisted by
Central Dispatch, Owl Hollow
Road, William Watson, HMC.

Conferences set
RACINE - Southern Local
will
be
holding
Schools
parent/teacher conferences for
the first nine weeks on Wedr· .' oday from 4-7 p.m.
Parents may call their child's
school to schedule a conference,
if they have not already done so.

VALLEY WEATHER

Cool temps will remain
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The rain will end but the cooler temperatures will remain for
the rest of this week, the National Weather Service said.
Lows tonight will be in the 40s
and highs Tuesday in the 60s,
about 10 degrees below normal.
Sunset tonight will be at 7:23
and ·sunrise on Thesday at 7:24
a.m.

Weather forecast:
Tonight... Cloudy with showers and fog. Lows near 50. North
wind 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
80 percent.

Tuesday... Cloudy with fog and
a chance of showers until midmorning. Highs near 60. Chance'
of r.ain 30 percent.
Thesday nighr. .'.Cl~aring. Lows
in the mid 40s.

Extended forecast:

'THE PATRIOT' - Point Pleasant .Battle Days Memorial Committee
members Joann Sauer and Brenda Merritt display The Ohio River Bear
Co.'s original "The Pat riot,· designed in honor of Battle Days. The creator, Susan Baker, is a descendant of one of the soldiers in the Oct.
10, 1774 battle at Tu-Endie-Wei State Park. (Michele Carter photo)

Battle

from Page AI
the park.
During this time, children will
visit the encampment and learn
about the era. From noon to 8
p.m., an art show will be held at
Fort Randolph Terrace. At 7:30
p.m., a lantern tour will be held
through the encampment at TuEndie-Wei Park.
The Heritage Queen pageant
kicks-off activities on Saturday at
10 a.m. at Gunn Park. The first
"Burning Down The Bridge"
Chili and Salsa Cooking Contest,
sponsored. by the Farmer's Market
and Battle Days, will be held
underneath the Bartow Jones
Bridge from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m .
Registration forms are now
available at the Main Street Office
and the field is limited to 20. The
ox roast and bean dinner will be
held at 11 a.m. The parade begins
at 10 a.m. at Central Elementary
featuring NSSAR President Gen.
Bruce B. Butler.
The art show is on tap from
noon to 8 p.m. The Kanawha Valley Pipes and Drums will perform

in the park at 1 p .m., followed by
magician Phil Luckeydoo and
Andrew Lewis Volunteer Drum
and Fife.
Point Pleasant resident and
author Carlene Thompson will be
featured from 2-4 p.m. as the
author in the park. The Colonial
Governor's Reception will be at 7
p.m. at Fort Randolph and the
Colonial Ball is slated for 9 p.m. at
the Lowe Hotel.
In addition to items above, the
day will be filled with activities.
entertainment, crafts and encampments.

Sunday begins with the Colonial
Church Service at 10 a.m. in TuEndie-Wei State Park. The art
show continues from 1-4 p.m.
At 2 p.m., the 226th annual
Memorial Service begins in the
park in honor of those who lost
their lives on Oct. 10, 1774. The
Battle Days committee is expecting several states to be represented
at the service.
For more information on Battle
Days, call675-3844 or 675-1050.

Women did not contpetc in
Olyntpic events until 1·900, und

the winter events were not held

until 1924
France .

Wednesday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy. Lows
in the lower 40s and highs in the
mid 60s.
Friday... Partly cloudy. Lows in
the upper 30s and highs in the
upper 60s.

in

LOCAL STOCKS
Gannett- 49'~~~

AEP-35'•

Akzo - 42}"

4n.

AmTech/SBC Ashland Inc. - 32~.
AT&amp;T -29lo
Bank Ono-36

Bob Evans- 17 ~~
BorgWarner - 32}..
Champion - 2~
Charming Shops - 5),
City Holding - 7\
Federal Mogul - 6),
Firstar - 22'·

General Electric -

Harley Davidson -

Kmart- s~.
Kroger- 2~.
Landa End - 22l.
Ud.-23'1.

sn.
46~

Oak Hill Financial- tsl.

OVB- 26lo
BBT- 29).
Peoples - 14lo
Premle( - s~..
Rockwell - 28~

Rocky Boots- Slo
AD Shell-60~
Sears - 34 1!•
Shoney's -l.
Wai·Mart - 50),
Wendy's-19\
Worthington - 9'!.
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's .trans·
actions,
provided by
Advest of Gallipolis.

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

Poetry

The Daily Sentine~

Approaching Chester, Ohio

Correction Polley
Our main concern in au stories is to

be accurate. If you know of an error in
a story, call the newsroom at (740)
992-2156 ..

News Departments

Attach This Coupon to Your Photo and Mail Or Bring
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street Pomeroy, OH

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or

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Other services

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'

POMEROY - An action for
foreclosure has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Aurora Loan Services
Inc., against Virginia Mcintosh,
and others.

for me, since, even afier 13 years,
we're still outsiders because our people are not from this area."
"Still it feels like home;· Lenres
said, "and I am interested in that
sense of homecoming. It seems to
be a theme I come to a lot in my
writing."
."We're still living our history; '
Lentes told The Daily Sentinel last
week. "It's easy to feel a shilling back
and forth between history and the
present day. and I hope to capture
that every day sense of history."
"I like to create vivid pictures in
my writing;• Lentes said.

Show your support and appreciation
lledl r---!~!~~r~~~!~~n~!S! ___ , 11~1

IIC::dll Phone 11-·- - - - - - - - L----------------------~

Foreclosure
panted

area's rich history when she wrote
"Approaching Chester, Ohio." It
was inspired by a trip home from
from Page AI
West Virginia, at sunset.
" I experienced this sense of
The Lentes family lives in a 19th- almost a warp in time that I feel
. century farmhouse outside of Rut- quite often in this area, with its deep
~ land, and the history of the farm and
sense of history;' Lentes told the
· the figurative ghosts of the house are magazine. " I was thinking about all
: keenly felt.
the other people who had gone
' That history, and the history of before us, traveled this rbad, and had
: their adoptive Meigs County, is seen the same courthouse up on the
: ofi:en the inspiration for Lentes' hill."
: . lnore powerful works.
"I was just thinking about com· Lences also felt the power of the ing home - though this isn't home

Reader Se.-vices

1
1A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - -

POMEROY- An action for
dissolution of marriage has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Maureen E. Hennessy, Pomeroy, and Joseph A.
Wilson, Brigeman, Mich.

EMS logs 15 calls

Jack Lance

John Doe
Ftre Dept.

llt:~l~ Your N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - -

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

LOCAL BRIEFS

Dentists concerned about Some Ohio schools
students
soft drinks in schools

EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1, 2000 THE MEIGS
COUNTY CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT
AGENCY WILL NO LONGER BE ACCEPTING CASH
PAYMENT$. ALL PAYMENTS ARE TO BE SENT BY
MAIL TO:

•

Monday, September 25, 2000

Monday, September 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· P-ee A2 • The Dally Sentinel

.,

Aclvertlolng
· Clrculotlon
Ctassllled Ada

Ext. t104
Ext. 1103
Ext.

To sand a-mall
galtribune@eurekanet.com

ttOO

(USPS 21uecll
Ohio Vallay Publl•hlng Co.
Published every afternoon , Monday
through Friday, 111 Cour1 St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. Second ·class postage paid at
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Po1tm1ater: Send address corrections to
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Sl 09.72

LAst night the sky ignited;
trees blazed up
matclt-stmck by the selli•.g Sl/11 .
Hig/1 011 the /till, rite old courthouse
windows j1m11ed, t/re,z jlickmd
as if lit by candle glow.
Time wried backsuddmly horses' hooves
clattc7ed on ltarde11ed grotmd,
cold 11Atee&amp; creaked on stone.
Lo•tgins for home,
I pulled "tY shawl close,
(tho11glt I had 110 shau.l or l1ome
there),
and l£•mzed imo my husband~ body,
my childrm s breath risi•t~ behi11d me,
radiam , whirr as boue.
- Cathy
Len res
("Approaching Chester, Ohio"
tint appeared in Now &amp; Then magazine.Vol. 17, No. 2, Sutru11er 2000 . .
Copyright. Center for Appalachian
Studies and Services, 2000. Used
with permission .)

Holzer Meigs Clinic

••••••••••••••••••
••
•.,
October is
•· National Breast Cancer •
:
Awareness Month
:

••.,
:

The Best Protection
is early Detection

••
•
:

··~···~ ···········

Holzer Clinic is offering reduced rates on
Mammograms during the month of October.

NoV&lt;711ber

Screening $55.00 (Regular $85.00)
Unilateral $85.00 (Regular $125 .00)
Diagn.ostic $100.00 (Regular $195.00)
•

Call now for an appointment
Extended hours available
(740) 992-0060

Holzer Meigs Clinic
88 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH 45769

( /40) 992-0060
Holzer Clinic ..... ~~ tk "P'Io~~tide
www.holzerclinlc.com

Chuntonix .

�.. ..

D_a_il~y_S_en_t_in_e_l_____________________,~:~·~~~~~~~~i~·~~~~~~~--~~--------------~M~on~d~~~·s~•~ph~~-=-~-:~~~~-~~
The Daily Sentinel
~~I@
TO 5ETTHE

_Th_e__

. 'Lst#bSslid ill. :1941

stahler@fuse.net

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager ,
Utkrs tu t/u nh'tortUY

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Toys for tots

SWIFT SUIT AS
MANDATORY

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

WORK ATTIRE.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

ATTENDS CONVENTION - Repre senting Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, DAR, at the annual Southeast District conference in Lancaster, pictured here with Linda Wetzel, state DAR regent. are Peggy
Moore, Mary Rose . (Wetzel) and Anna Cleland.

lcotM. Tlle1 sho•Id H lin tlum JOO wotds. AU latus .n sMbj«t

i~teiruk tJdt!rtlu fUll/ Ilkphon• nulft!Jcr. No •ruirlfflll.tkrs will
IH pllbliJieut. Ltttm shoald ;, rood laSII', adtlr~ui,. iJJ.f'J, nat /NTSUIIflliml.
The opinin11s eXII"':fled in 'M toluntn bflow #rfl tlw etmllttllll ofrM OlliD Vallry P1161Wtint
Cu.'s l'liituriol boorJ, unMu nl
·

10 #dilltil IUUIIIUISI H ,;,,.,d

.. •

otm.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Maladies
Cure the ·Olympics' ills
bifore it's too late

Annuall y Mei gs Co unty Granges make stuff'ed toys to be distributed
t&lt;&gt; ill and di stressed children . In previous years they have been given to
Vc rer.1ns ML·mor i:ll Hospita l for kids co ming to the emergency room .
Now that the ER is closed, the toys were given this year to the Meigs
Coun ty Entcrg:c.; n cy Medi cal Service. Hen: Gene Lyo ns, EMS director,
~l cc cpts HS stuffed toys, from Grange representatives , lt-ft to right, Jan
Ma comber and OpJI D yer, Star. (Lyons) and Rosalie Story, Hemlock
Grange

• The News-Journal, Daytona Beach, Fla., "" Olympics
Games' maladies: The Super Bowl ca n't match it. Neither can the
Daytona 500. And soccer's World C up comes close, but doesn't finish first. No sporting event inspires the same kind of patriotic pride,
admiratiOn for athleti c endeavor and interest in sports like the ·
Olympic Games.
Despite the historical grandeur, the Games today are suffering
&amp;om several maladies.
The International Olympic Committee co ntinues to sting from
investigati ons that uncovered bribery schemes that influenced site
selection. ... Athletes using performance-enhancing drugs still
plague the Games' credibility. ...
Adding to those troubles, enjoyment of the Sydney Olympics has
been .compromised by NBC, holder of exclusive broadcast rights.
The network decided to show all of its coverage on tape delay hours after the events already have taken place ....
Commercializing the games may pay the bills. but it threatens to
sap the Games' spirit and leave .a bad taste on the public's palate.
Broadcasters. sponsors and the IO C all need to heal the Games' ills,
or the world 's interest in the Olympics sa dl y will fade .
• Los Angeles Times, "" Social Sec11ri1)1 proposals: First, don't take
too seriously the nUJOr presidentia l cand idates' plans to "save" the
system. Both of their proposals rest on the dubious supposition that
the federal government will pile up a whopping surplus over the ,
. coll ecting rly $4.6 trillion more than it spends. Second, don't worry
about Social Secu rity's ability to mee t its obligations. No president
and no Congress will allow the nation's most popular social program to fail.
Right now the system is in good shape. But starting in about 15
years things look less rosy. That's w hen the first of the 76 million
baby boomers bo'r n between 1946 and 1964 leave the labor force .. .
(and) the current 3.4-to-1 ratio of workers to retirees will decline
to 2 to I. That's when Soc ial Security will have to start dipping into
its trillions in su rpluses. Soc ial Security's trustees project that those
surpluses will be gone by 203 7. .. . .
Neither Gov. George W. Bush , the GOP presidential nominee,
nor Vice President AI Gore, the Democratic standard-bearer, has said
much about tim loonung structural problem of too few workers
paying for too many retirees ....
In the end, rai sing payroll taxes could be th e surest and most
broadly acceptable way to keep the system healthy. For starters, the
ceilmg on earned income subject to th e tax.- $76,200 this year could be mcreased or e lim inated .... Unpalatable though the idea of
payroll tax increases might be, it still appears tn be th e best way to
assure [h e ~yste m 's sol vency.

TODAY IN HISTORY

DAR members attend conference

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Protecting the rights £?!.babies who are born alive
There hasn't been much attention paid to a
bill, H .R. 4292, approved on July 26 by the
House Judiciary Committee. The vote was
. 22-10.
Titled the Born-Alive Infants Protection
Act of2000, the bill- if enacted into lawwo uld, as the Congressional Quarterly reported, "prevent the killing of infants who are
born alive accidentally or during an attempted abortion."
The bill would apply, in federal law, to any
infant "completely expelled or extracted from
the mother's body - displaying any of several specific signs of life: breathing, heartbeat
and/or definite movements of voluntary muscles." This could occur at any stage of the
pregnancy, whether or not the infant's lung
development "is believed to be, or is . in fact,
sufficient to permit long-term survival."
For example, "many infants are born alive
at 20 to 22 weeks and survive for hours ....
In fants are also born alive at 23 and 24 weeks
and have a 39 percent and 54 percent chance
for survival."
The bill 's sponsor, R.epubli_can Charles
Canady of Florida, notes that this act would
state what is already a principle of existing law
in 41 states and the District of Columbia:
" Infants who are born alive are persons under
the Constitution, entitled to th~ protection of
the laws."
In Roe vs. Wade, which established the
right to an . abortion, Supreme Court justice
Harry Blackmun also pointed out that once
born, an infant is indeed a person under the
Constitution.
Why is such a law re-establishing so basic a
legal principle needed now' Because, says
Canady, of the recent Supreme Court decision overturning a Nebraska statue banning
partial-birth abortion- in which an infant is

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
partially extracted from th e mother. Clarification is needed, Canady continued, to make it
clear that an infant cannot be killed once he
or she is fully ouLside the mother's body.
Te$tifYing fur the bill, Jill L. Stan"k, a regis.'·
tered nurse, told of infants born alive during
abortions who are put aside until th ey die. She
cited "a live aborted baby who was left to die
on t he counter of t he Soiled Utiliry Room
wrapped in a disposable towel. This baby was
accidentally thrown into the garbage, and
when they were later going through the trash
to find the baby, the baby fell om of the towel
a,n d onto the flo or." The baby was indeed disposable.
Others testified against the bill , maintaining
that the Born-Alive Protection Act vio lates
Roe vs. Wade because it defines the viability
of the fetus by applying it to all stages of prenatal development. Viability means that the
fetus is sufficie ntly developed to live outside
the uterus.
Jud iciary Committee member J errold
Nadler, a New York Democrat, rebutted the
opponents and supported the bill , even
though he described himself as being "as prochoice as anybody on Eart h."
I can attest to that, because Nadler repre-

sent; the district where [ live in New York.
Nadler said unequivocally that, under longestablished legal principles, "if an abortion is
performed, or a natural birth occurred, at any
age, even t hree months, and the product of -:
that was living outside the mother, and some- •
body came and shot him, I don 't think there's ::
any doubt that person would be prosecuted ;;
for murder."
•
Yet the N ational Abortion and Reproduc- ·
tive Action League (NARAL) - whic h often
calls pro-lifers "extremists," as AI Gore does - ;,
furiously objected to the bill. NARAL accus- ;;
es "anti-choice lawmakers" (Nadler?) of mak- ·::
ing fetuses into persons "at any stage of devel- :
opment, thereby directly contradi cting one of
Roe's basic temrts.11
Helen Alvare, formerly with the National
Conference of Catholic Bishops, responded: •
"Abortion advocates now insi st that the decision to ki ll a fully born infant , at any stage of :
development, is a personal and private med- ·
ical d ecision." NARAL says the killing is up
to the mother and the physician a t any stage. •
The Born-Alive Infant Protection Act is
likely to pass the House, but its prospects in .
the Senate are uncertain . Under Senate rules,
a companion born-alive infant bill can be
delayed until it dies, or it can be fi libustered .
Senators who are for only one choice co uld '
well decide to deny a hum an being, wholly
removed from his or her mother's body, the
right to stay alive as a person under the Con- '
stitution .
·
•
Says Helen Alvare: "The pro-life conunu- •
nity predicted that failure to stop partial-birth
abortion would lead to infanticide. Now, •
NARAL is arguing for precisely that."

(l\fat Hentoff is a nationally renowHed cwtlwrity
"" tile First A me.,dment and the Bill of Rights.)

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

To day is M o nday, Sep t. 25, the 269th day o f 2UOO. There are 97
days lett in th e yea r.
To day's H ighlight in Histo ry:
On Sept. 25, 1789, the first Congress adopted 12 amendments to
th e ConstitutJ o n and sent th em to the states lo r rauficatwn . (Ten of
th e ame ndments becam e the l:lill of Ri ghts. )
On th is d ate:
In 1690, o ne o f the earli est 1\m eri can newspapers, "Pubhck
O cc urrences," published its first - and las t - editJon in tloston .
In 1775. Am encan R evolutio nary War hero Eth an Allen was captured by th e Bri tish as he bl a n attack on Mo ntreal.
In 1H90, Pn.:sident Bt'lljJllliJJ Harrison signed a lllt' asure c.· srablishing Sequoia National l'ark .
In 1890. Wdford Woodrutr, presid ent of the C hurch of Jesus
Chri st of Latter-day Saints, i'I'\Ucd a manift''ito formall y ren o unci11 g
the practi ce of polyf(a my.
In lH97. Anl LT JCtlll author Wi lli:un Fau lk ner wa" bor n in New
Alban y. Mi".

In 1457, w 1rh

.\IJO

Army troops &lt;.;tanding guard . 11i n e black chil-

dren, force d to wn hJra" from Cc nrr.d Hi gh School in Littk R oc k.
Ark .. bl'C ci U ~t: of unruly w hitl' crowd . . , \\'t.' f L' L•sco rtc d to class.
In 1'17.1. the three- Jll ,lll ere\' ' nf the U.S spac,· labontory Skybb
II spla~hc d down ~atd y in the 1 P:~c itic ali:er 5lJ da)'S 1n orb it.
In 197H. 144 peop le were ki lled w hen a Pacific Southwest Airlin es lloe in g 727 .111d " pr ivate pi""" co lli ded over San Diego.
In 1979, the mu "i ical " EvltJ" ope ned on Broadway.
In 1'1H I. Sandra I )ay () 'Co nn or wa"i sworn in as tht." firs t female
j usrlce on the Supre me Co urt.
Ten yea rs ag;o: The UN Secur ity Council vo ted 14- 1 to im pose
an air cmb:~ r~o agal ll '\t lrc1q . (Cub.1 C l 'lt th e lone dis\enting vote.) In
a vidcot:~ped lllC"i&lt;~age to Amc.:rlc:-tm. lr:1qi Pre"iident Saddam Husse in
warned that if Prc"iitknt Bmh bunc hed a war aga inst hi'\ country, "it
wo uld not be up to him to end lt."
Five year..; ago: H. os'l Perot announced he wo uld fo rm a new
Independence l';m y that wou ld tie ld its own White H o use candi date and woul d try to bL· tht' 'lwing vote in co ngressio nal races.
On c ycJr ago . Vi ce· Prnu.knt AI Co re and fo rmer Senato r BilJ
llradlt·y «.JU ,tred off' in bJCk-to-b,tck speeches to th e Democratic
National Commi ttn· '" ~.t c h so ught support for hi' 2000 presidential camp.1ign.
Today'&lt; IJ Jrthdays: Base ball Hall of F.1m~r Phi l Rizzuto is 82. A13C
New1 corre1polldci1t Barbara Walters is 69. Cou ntry 1ingcr Ian Tyson
is ft7 . Rhythm - Jnd- blu c' ' mgcr Jc\Sc RuS\c ll is 61.

BUSINESS MIRROR

•

US. held hostage by the imbalance of trade
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YOR.K - It is generally described
as the U.S. trade deficit problem but it's really
the world's problem . And foreigners as well as
Amoric ans arc responsible for it.
lly any measure it is a huge problem . In
dollars, it is likely to 'run around $350 billion
this year, which is the one- year difference
between what Americans buy from foreigners
and they buy from us .
As a resulr, billions of dollars remain in the
hands o f nati ons that export to the Umted
States, giving them an ~normous potential
power to effe ct th e America n economy and its
sec urities markets.
Most Am eri cans don't worry abo ut it very
much ; neith er do most foreign ers.
fore1gners believe in a strong U.S. ecunomy. lt absorbs much of the output of their fac tories, and it provides a great opportml ity for
them to inves t their dollars in U .S. securiti es.
And Americans, of co urse, believe in a
stro ng eco no m y beca use it is rhe m ateri al basis
of the good life, which often means owning a
fo reign car, trips to Europe and elec tro nic
gadgets mad e abroad. And thi s doesn't eve n
count imports of oil to kee p things humming .
Th e on ly o nes who worry, it seems, are the
bankers, the Federal R ese rve and some handwringers m government who are always
insisting tha t foreigners mu st buy more thin gs
from America.
·

It isn't that Americans don 't try to sell mo re
goods to foreigners. By thfir nature, American
companies are always ready for battle. And
their goods are competitive in price and quality.
But remember, the economies of these foreign nations, usually referred ro as tradi ng
partners. are not as capabl e of absorbi ng
Americans goods as w'lare of theirs. They are
smaller and weaker.
Bu t there are o th er reason s too, at least as
Ameri cans see it , th e most co mm on hl'inp:
that some governments in1pose artifi cial
restraint~ on imports in o rder to protect
dom esti c produ cers.
Fo r many yt·ars. rlw biggest U.S. trad e
deficit was w ith Japan , wh1 ch the U.S. govern ment and Am nicnn m anufac w re rs acc u"ed o f
unfair competiti o n by llll'ans o f a regulatory
and tariff maze .
The trade deficit with C hllla has now
edged high er than th at ofJapan , risin g to S7 .6
billi o n in Jul y, the largest monthly U.S. defi cit
with any nati01L Bl;lt thi s country also run s
defi cits with Canada a nd Western Europe. and
th e situati on is n 't imp roving.
The persistent d efic its and the d esire to
shrink th em were maj or fac tors in th e Senate
decisio n to override human rights reservation s on lo ng- rcrm tradc relat ions wi th ·
C hin a.
The stated U.S. aim is to e ncou rage C hina

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

826 Third AVI., Gllllpolll, OhiO
740-U8-ZU2

·1

Aow. •

~

Wh e n those do llars retu rn they ofte ll come
in the form of mvl'm nents in U.S. assets, such
as corporatt: cnterprist:s and U.S. govL·rnment
sec urities, 111aking America Uepe ndcnt o n fo r-

:
.
:
:

•
.
':
:

C l ~JWr S.

T he Finan cial Markets Center, a think ·
tank , estimates that foreign ownership of U.S. :·
assets have risen from $29 1.(. billi o n in I '176 :
to S6.97 trillion at year-e nd 1999.
,
Sho uld trade defi cits keep rising. the own- ~
e r~ o f those a-;sets mig ht hegin ro wonder if :
their investments are safe. And the next step :
might be to withdmw th em .
;
People would und~rsta nd thm.
'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0~}0
74()..91~· 2158

r1

25,2000,

POMEROY Four representatives of R eturn Jonathan M eigs
C hapter, Daughters of the Amer ican R evolution, attended the annual
Southeast DJStri ct Co nference of the Ohio Society, DAR, held rece ntly at Best Western Hotel in Lan caster.
Goi ng from here were Mary K. Rose, regent: Peggy Moore, vice
regent; and Anna Cleland recording secre tary. The district is co mp os~d
of 20 chapters w ith a total membership of 1274.
·Ohio Sta te. Rege nt Linda Wetzel called the conference to order, and

South east Distn ct Din:ctor Anna Seadel gave the welcom e.
Katherine Colbu rn, National H1 stonan General, led the con fne nce
members in sm ging the Na tional Anthem and bro ught greetings from
the nationa l otli cc. She reminded m t: mbl'rs of d1e Amrri cana Colkction in the Amen ca na Room , a repository of over 5,000 do cu me nts
fOcusi ng on early Ameri ca :~nd also thL' specia l collection of NSDAR
History. ThL· DAR Library hniJ s llLHe n ah; in ge nea lob'Y ~mel r(.·le\~111t
local hi,wry: lo U,IlOI) boo ks includm g unpubli shed genealob"' typescr ipt s and genl'alogi l al penodicab .
rteportS .111d pl.ms fur thl' t'&lt;llllillg year \\'L' fl' prL',l'!Hed by fh,l irlll('ll
.md committet.·s. Tht.• ch,n rma n of the Allll'ric.ln Hmory Contl'S t
announced the to pi o of th e Lill'lllL'" w be wriHen thi~ \'L';Ir: "lfThL·
C apit&gt;l Walls Co uld T&gt; lk", IXOO- I'JOO . two e\'ellts th.1t .haw lud an
impact on our nation. and 11 Thc Nom in .nio n SpL'cc h for C h ristopher
Columbus into the H all of f ;mtc" .
The St.ue Sc holarship C homuan urged chaptl'TS to p ubli c i z~ thl·
DAR. schularsh1ps that arc a\·a Jlabl e and ell courage stude nts to apply
for sc holarships includingAmen can Hi story Scholarship, Politie3l ScieJKc, Hi story. Govt·rmnent. Enmomi &lt;.:, N u rsin g, McdJ c;Il and Occupational Therapy S chnLmhip s.
Marilyn Vaglia, state v ice regem , ann o un cl'd her candidacy for the
oflice of State R egent of () bin. She t1Jm ed Ma rcia Seife rt, national
chairman . DAR. Schools. to serve Js \'ice regent; Beverly Sc humaker
of Nabby Lee Am es Chapter, Arhells, for Sout heast Distri ct dire ctor :
and Roberta Roush of Frenc h Colony C hapter, Gallipolis, state hi stonan.
A symboli c graduation was held for state offi ce rs and chapte r
regents, co mplete with caps Jnd gow ns and graduation certifica tes in
recognition of their service to the DAR in this final year of the cur-

rent adminisuario n.
Wetzel annou nced that the Ohio State DAR Conference will be
held at the Columbus M arriot North H otel on March 9, 10 and 11.
Georgane F. Love, president general. Nati o nal Society DAR, will be
the keynote speaker on opening night. The Southeast District Chapters will se rve as hostess for the state conference. A planning m eeting
was set for Nov. 4 at the Marriot North Columbus Hotel.
The next meeting of the Return Jonathan Meigs DAR will be held
Saturday when the C hapter wtU be ce lebrating Constitution Week. A
luncheon w ill be held at noon at Crow's Steak House with members
being the guests of Eleanor Smith, Grace Eich, Anna Cleland, Mary
Morris, Mary Lew Johnson , and R oberta O'Brien . Reservations
should be made to El eanor Smith, 992 2639. T he DAR meeting will
follow at the Pomeroy Library at 1:30p m . Jam es Lochary will be the
speaker. Following the meeting grave m arking ce rem oni es w 1ll be held
fur Margaret Dutton and Dorthea Fisher.
Anyone interested m joi nin g the R eturn Jonathan Me igs C hapter
as invited to contact R ege nt Mary Rose o r any R eturn Jonathan
Meigs Chapter member.

Carroll birth announced
PORTLAND B,'nny and
Sand y
Carroll
of
Portl and ·
annoLmce th e birth of a da ugh ter,
Ca rlene Faye C arroll. Aug. 21, at
the Holzer Me d ical Center.
Th e mfam we ighed e1ght
po unds, SIX oun cl's. l~randparl'n t s
are Jo hn · and Fram: l'~ Fo ster of
Racine. aml Nanc.v Carroll of H arrisbmg, J&gt;a.
·

Carlene Faye Carroll

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

o Day Sale
NO RAINCHECKS

Prices Goad luesday, Sept. 26th &amp;Wednesday, Sept. 27th Only

FRESH PORK STEAK OR

Count

GREEN G

·3/$

L.b.

Products
$ 99
24 pkcube

11-15oz.

BALLARD'S

UNITED VALLEY BELL

Wieners

c

LA T

PEPSI &amp; MT. DEW

S le Ribs Peas, Beans, Cor

c

WHILE SUPPLIES

rinking Water

3/$1

12 oz. pkg.

us #1
set Potatoes
$ 19

Gallon

BOUNTY

Paper Towels

c

Single Roll

10#

to lower its own restraints and allmv freer
trade in a competitive markctph~ce, with a seco ndary goal of exporting U.S. methods and
values as we ll .
Such a route to correcting trade imbalances
is a long o ne, because C hina's potentially hu ge
markets a~ot as devdoped as other trading
partners, and \'vtll takes years to achieve parity.
In a way, the Senat~'s action illustrates how
Sl'rious and untenable is a t r.1dl' imbalance that
kL·t•ps mounting year .aft er yl'ar sin ce.: 1975,
an d h l,&gt;'-V impo rtan t it is to stop th l' dollar out-

ljo/111 C wm ijf i.~
cidtt:d Press.)

Page AS

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

MOST OUT OF OUR
EMPLOYEES, I~
CONSIDERIN6 THE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

business mwlystfv ,· The A sstJ- ::
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200 Main St., Point Plu1ent, W. VI. ""
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304-&amp;7 5·1333

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�.. ..

D_a_il~y_S_en_t_in_e_l_____________________,~:~·~~~~~~~~i~·~~~~~~~--~~--------------~M~on~d~~~·s~•~ph~~-=-~-:~~~~-~~
The Daily Sentinel
~~I@
TO 5ETTHE

_Th_e__

. 'Lst#bSslid ill. :1941

stahler@fuse.net

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

Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager ,
Utkrs tu t/u nh'tortUY

Larry Boyer
Advertising Director

Toys for tots

SWIFT SUIT AS
MANDATORY

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

WORK ATTIRE.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

ATTENDS CONVENTION - Repre senting Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, DAR, at the annual Southeast District conference in Lancaster, pictured here with Linda Wetzel, state DAR regent. are Peggy
Moore, Mary Rose . (Wetzel) and Anna Cleland.

lcotM. Tlle1 sho•Id H lin tlum JOO wotds. AU latus .n sMbj«t

i~teiruk tJdt!rtlu fUll/ Ilkphon• nulft!Jcr. No •ruirlfflll.tkrs will
IH pllbliJieut. Ltttm shoald ;, rood laSII', adtlr~ui,. iJJ.f'J, nat /NTSUIIflliml.
The opinin11s eXII"':fled in 'M toluntn bflow #rfl tlw etmllttllll ofrM OlliD Vallry P1161Wtint
Cu.'s l'liituriol boorJ, unMu nl
·

10 #dilltil IUUIIIUISI H ,;,,.,d

.. •

otm.

NATIONAL VIEWS

Maladies
Cure the ·Olympics' ills
bifore it's too late

Annuall y Mei gs Co unty Granges make stuff'ed toys to be distributed
t&lt;&gt; ill and di stressed children . In previous years they have been given to
Vc rer.1ns ML·mor i:ll Hospita l for kids co ming to the emergency room .
Now that the ER is closed, the toys were given this year to the Meigs
Coun ty Entcrg:c.; n cy Medi cal Service. Hen: Gene Lyo ns, EMS director,
~l cc cpts HS stuffed toys, from Grange representatives , lt-ft to right, Jan
Ma comber and OpJI D yer, Star. (Lyons) and Rosalie Story, Hemlock
Grange

• The News-Journal, Daytona Beach, Fla., "" Olympics
Games' maladies: The Super Bowl ca n't match it. Neither can the
Daytona 500. And soccer's World C up comes close, but doesn't finish first. No sporting event inspires the same kind of patriotic pride,
admiratiOn for athleti c endeavor and interest in sports like the ·
Olympic Games.
Despite the historical grandeur, the Games today are suffering
&amp;om several maladies.
The International Olympic Committee co ntinues to sting from
investigati ons that uncovered bribery schemes that influenced site
selection. ... Athletes using performance-enhancing drugs still
plague the Games' credibility. ...
Adding to those troubles, enjoyment of the Sydney Olympics has
been .compromised by NBC, holder of exclusive broadcast rights.
The network decided to show all of its coverage on tape delay hours after the events already have taken place ....
Commercializing the games may pay the bills. but it threatens to
sap the Games' spirit and leave .a bad taste on the public's palate.
Broadcasters. sponsors and the IO C all need to heal the Games' ills,
or the world 's interest in the Olympics sa dl y will fade .
• Los Angeles Times, "" Social Sec11ri1)1 proposals: First, don't take
too seriously the nUJOr presidentia l cand idates' plans to "save" the
system. Both of their proposals rest on the dubious supposition that
the federal government will pile up a whopping surplus over the ,
. coll ecting rly $4.6 trillion more than it spends. Second, don't worry
about Social Secu rity's ability to mee t its obligations. No president
and no Congress will allow the nation's most popular social program to fail.
Right now the system is in good shape. But starting in about 15
years things look less rosy. That's w hen the first of the 76 million
baby boomers bo'r n between 1946 and 1964 leave the labor force .. .
(and) the current 3.4-to-1 ratio of workers to retirees will decline
to 2 to I. That's when Soc ial Security will have to start dipping into
its trillions in su rpluses. Soc ial Security's trustees project that those
surpluses will be gone by 203 7. .. . .
Neither Gov. George W. Bush , the GOP presidential nominee,
nor Vice President AI Gore, the Democratic standard-bearer, has said
much about tim loonung structural problem of too few workers
paying for too many retirees ....
In the end, rai sing payroll taxes could be th e surest and most
broadly acceptable way to keep the system healthy. For starters, the
ceilmg on earned income subject to th e tax.- $76,200 this year could be mcreased or e lim inated .... Unpalatable though the idea of
payroll tax increases might be, it still appears tn be th e best way to
assure [h e ~yste m 's sol vency.

TODAY IN HISTORY

DAR members attend conference

HENTOFF'S VIEW

Protecting the rights £?!.babies who are born alive
There hasn't been much attention paid to a
bill, H .R. 4292, approved on July 26 by the
House Judiciary Committee. The vote was
. 22-10.
Titled the Born-Alive Infants Protection
Act of2000, the bill- if enacted into lawwo uld, as the Congressional Quarterly reported, "prevent the killing of infants who are
born alive accidentally or during an attempted abortion."
The bill would apply, in federal law, to any
infant "completely expelled or extracted from
the mother's body - displaying any of several specific signs of life: breathing, heartbeat
and/or definite movements of voluntary muscles." This could occur at any stage of the
pregnancy, whether or not the infant's lung
development "is believed to be, or is . in fact,
sufficient to permit long-term survival."
For example, "many infants are born alive
at 20 to 22 weeks and survive for hours ....
In fants are also born alive at 23 and 24 weeks
and have a 39 percent and 54 percent chance
for survival."
The bill 's sponsor, R.epubli_can Charles
Canady of Florida, notes that this act would
state what is already a principle of existing law
in 41 states and the District of Columbia:
" Infants who are born alive are persons under
the Constitution, entitled to th~ protection of
the laws."
In Roe vs. Wade, which established the
right to an . abortion, Supreme Court justice
Harry Blackmun also pointed out that once
born, an infant is indeed a person under the
Constitution.
Why is such a law re-establishing so basic a
legal principle needed now' Because, says
Canady, of the recent Supreme Court decision overturning a Nebraska statue banning
partial-birth abortion- in which an infant is

Nat
Hentoff
NEA COLUMNIST
partially extracted from th e mother. Clarification is needed, Canady continued, to make it
clear that an infant cannot be killed once he
or she is fully ouLside the mother's body.
Te$tifYing fur the bill, Jill L. Stan"k, a regis.'·
tered nurse, told of infants born alive during
abortions who are put aside until th ey die. She
cited "a live aborted baby who was left to die
on t he counter of t he Soiled Utiliry Room
wrapped in a disposable towel. This baby was
accidentally thrown into the garbage, and
when they were later going through the trash
to find the baby, the baby fell om of the towel
a,n d onto the flo or." The baby was indeed disposable.
Others testified against the bill , maintaining
that the Born-Alive Protection Act vio lates
Roe vs. Wade because it defines the viability
of the fetus by applying it to all stages of prenatal development. Viability means that the
fetus is sufficie ntly developed to live outside
the uterus.
Jud iciary Committee member J errold
Nadler, a New York Democrat, rebutted the
opponents and supported the bill , even
though he described himself as being "as prochoice as anybody on Eart h."
I can attest to that, because Nadler repre-

sent; the district where [ live in New York.
Nadler said unequivocally that, under longestablished legal principles, "if an abortion is
performed, or a natural birth occurred, at any
age, even t hree months, and the product of -:
that was living outside the mother, and some- •
body came and shot him, I don 't think there's ::
any doubt that person would be prosecuted ;;
for murder."
•
Yet the N ational Abortion and Reproduc- ·
tive Action League (NARAL) - whic h often
calls pro-lifers "extremists," as AI Gore does - ;,
furiously objected to the bill. NARAL accus- ;;
es "anti-choice lawmakers" (Nadler?) of mak- ·::
ing fetuses into persons "at any stage of devel- :
opment, thereby directly contradi cting one of
Roe's basic temrts.11
Helen Alvare, formerly with the National
Conference of Catholic Bishops, responded: •
"Abortion advocates now insi st that the decision to ki ll a fully born infant , at any stage of :
development, is a personal and private med- ·
ical d ecision." NARAL says the killing is up
to the mother and the physician a t any stage. •
The Born-Alive Infant Protection Act is
likely to pass the House, but its prospects in .
the Senate are uncertain . Under Senate rules,
a companion born-alive infant bill can be
delayed until it dies, or it can be fi libustered .
Senators who are for only one choice co uld '
well decide to deny a hum an being, wholly
removed from his or her mother's body, the
right to stay alive as a person under the Con- '
stitution .
·
•
Says Helen Alvare: "The pro-life conunu- •
nity predicted that failure to stop partial-birth
abortion would lead to infanticide. Now, •
NARAL is arguing for precisely that."

(l\fat Hentoff is a nationally renowHed cwtlwrity
"" tile First A me.,dment and the Bill of Rights.)

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

To day is M o nday, Sep t. 25, the 269th day o f 2UOO. There are 97
days lett in th e yea r.
To day's H ighlight in Histo ry:
On Sept. 25, 1789, the first Congress adopted 12 amendments to
th e ConstitutJ o n and sent th em to the states lo r rauficatwn . (Ten of
th e ame ndments becam e the l:lill of Ri ghts. )
On th is d ate:
In 1690, o ne o f the earli est 1\m eri can newspapers, "Pubhck
O cc urrences," published its first - and las t - editJon in tloston .
In 1775. Am encan R evolutio nary War hero Eth an Allen was captured by th e Bri tish as he bl a n attack on Mo ntreal.
In 1H90, Pn.:sident Bt'lljJllliJJ Harrison signed a lllt' asure c.· srablishing Sequoia National l'ark .
In 1890. Wdford Woodrutr, presid ent of the C hurch of Jesus
Chri st of Latter-day Saints, i'I'\Ucd a manift''ito formall y ren o unci11 g
the practi ce of polyf(a my.
In lH97. Anl LT JCtlll author Wi lli:un Fau lk ner wa" bor n in New
Alban y. Mi".

In 1457, w 1rh

.\IJO

Army troops &lt;.;tanding guard . 11i n e black chil-

dren, force d to wn hJra" from Cc nrr.d Hi gh School in Littk R oc k.
Ark .. bl'C ci U ~t: of unruly w hitl' crowd . . , \\'t.' f L' L•sco rtc d to class.
In 1'17.1. the three- Jll ,lll ere\' ' nf the U.S spac,· labontory Skybb
II spla~hc d down ~atd y in the 1 P:~c itic ali:er 5lJ da)'S 1n orb it.
In 197H. 144 peop le were ki lled w hen a Pacific Southwest Airlin es lloe in g 727 .111d " pr ivate pi""" co lli ded over San Diego.
In 1979, the mu "i ical " EvltJ" ope ned on Broadway.
In 1'1H I. Sandra I )ay () 'Co nn or wa"i sworn in as tht." firs t female
j usrlce on the Supre me Co urt.
Ten yea rs ag;o: The UN Secur ity Council vo ted 14- 1 to im pose
an air cmb:~ r~o agal ll '\t lrc1q . (Cub.1 C l 'lt th e lone dis\enting vote.) In
a vidcot:~ped lllC"i&lt;~age to Amc.:rlc:-tm. lr:1qi Pre"iident Saddam Husse in
warned that if Prc"iitknt Bmh bunc hed a war aga inst hi'\ country, "it
wo uld not be up to him to end lt."
Five year..; ago: H. os'l Perot announced he wo uld fo rm a new
Independence l';m y that wou ld tie ld its own White H o use candi date and woul d try to bL· tht' 'lwing vote in co ngressio nal races.
On c ycJr ago . Vi ce· Prnu.knt AI Co re and fo rmer Senato r BilJ
llradlt·y «.JU ,tred off' in bJCk-to-b,tck speeches to th e Democratic
National Commi ttn· '" ~.t c h so ught support for hi' 2000 presidential camp.1ign.
Today'&lt; IJ Jrthdays: Base ball Hall of F.1m~r Phi l Rizzuto is 82. A13C
New1 corre1polldci1t Barbara Walters is 69. Cou ntry 1ingcr Ian Tyson
is ft7 . Rhythm - Jnd- blu c' ' mgcr Jc\Sc RuS\c ll is 61.

BUSINESS MIRROR

•

US. held hostage by the imbalance of trade
BY JOHN CUNNIFF

NEW YOR.K - It is generally described
as the U.S. trade deficit problem but it's really
the world's problem . And foreigners as well as
Amoric ans arc responsible for it.
lly any measure it is a huge problem . In
dollars, it is likely to 'run around $350 billion
this year, which is the one- year difference
between what Americans buy from foreigners
and they buy from us .
As a resulr, billions of dollars remain in the
hands o f nati ons that export to the Umted
States, giving them an ~normous potential
power to effe ct th e America n economy and its
sec urities markets.
Most Am eri cans don't worry abo ut it very
much ; neith er do most foreign ers.
fore1gners believe in a strong U.S. ecunomy. lt absorbs much of the output of their fac tories, and it provides a great opportml ity for
them to inves t their dollars in U .S. securiti es.
And Americans, of co urse, believe in a
stro ng eco no m y beca use it is rhe m ateri al basis
of the good life, which often means owning a
fo reign car, trips to Europe and elec tro nic
gadgets mad e abroad. And thi s doesn't eve n
count imports of oil to kee p things humming .
Th e on ly o nes who worry, it seems, are the
bankers, the Federal R ese rve and some handwringers m government who are always
insisting tha t foreigners mu st buy more thin gs
from America.
·

It isn't that Americans don 't try to sell mo re
goods to foreigners. By thfir nature, American
companies are always ready for battle. And
their goods are competitive in price and quality.
But remember, the economies of these foreign nations, usually referred ro as tradi ng
partners. are not as capabl e of absorbi ng
Americans goods as w'lare of theirs. They are
smaller and weaker.
Bu t there are o th er reason s too, at least as
Ameri cans see it , th e most co mm on hl'inp:
that some governments in1pose artifi cial
restraint~ on imports in o rder to protect
dom esti c produ cers.
Fo r many yt·ars. rlw biggest U.S. trad e
deficit was w ith Japan , wh1 ch the U.S. govern ment and Am nicnn m anufac w re rs acc u"ed o f
unfair competiti o n by llll'ans o f a regulatory
and tariff maze .
The trade deficit with C hllla has now
edged high er than th at ofJapan , risin g to S7 .6
billi o n in Jul y, the largest monthly U.S. defi cit
with any nati01L Bl;lt thi s country also run s
defi cits with Canada a nd Western Europe. and
th e situati on is n 't imp roving.
The persistent d efic its and the d esire to
shrink th em were maj or fac tors in th e Senate
decisio n to override human rights reservation s on lo ng- rcrm tradc relat ions wi th ·
C hin a.
The stated U.S. aim is to e ncou rage C hina

YOUR OPINIONS COUNT.

826 Third AVI., Gllllpolll, OhiO
740-U8-ZU2

·1

Aow. •

~

Wh e n those do llars retu rn they ofte ll come
in the form of mvl'm nents in U.S. assets, such
as corporatt: cnterprist:s and U.S. govL·rnment
sec urities, 111aking America Uepe ndcnt o n fo r-

:
.
:
:

•
.
':
:

C l ~JWr S.

T he Finan cial Markets Center, a think ·
tank , estimates that foreign ownership of U.S. :·
assets have risen from $29 1.(. billi o n in I '176 :
to S6.97 trillion at year-e nd 1999.
,
Sho uld trade defi cits keep rising. the own- ~
e r~ o f those a-;sets mig ht hegin ro wonder if :
their investments are safe. And the next step :
might be to withdmw th em .
;
People would und~rsta nd thm.
'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0~}0
74()..91~· 2158

r1

25,2000,

POMEROY Four representatives of R eturn Jonathan M eigs
C hapter, Daughters of the Amer ican R evolution, attended the annual
Southeast DJStri ct Co nference of the Ohio Society, DAR, held rece ntly at Best Western Hotel in Lan caster.
Goi ng from here were Mary K. Rose, regent: Peggy Moore, vice
regent; and Anna Cleland recording secre tary. The district is co mp os~d
of 20 chapters w ith a total membership of 1274.
·Ohio Sta te. Rege nt Linda Wetzel called the conference to order, and

South east Distn ct Din:ctor Anna Seadel gave the welcom e.
Katherine Colbu rn, National H1 stonan General, led the con fne nce
members in sm ging the Na tional Anthem and bro ught greetings from
the nationa l otli cc. She reminded m t: mbl'rs of d1e Amrri cana Colkction in the Amen ca na Room , a repository of over 5,000 do cu me nts
fOcusi ng on early Ameri ca :~nd also thL' specia l collection of NSDAR
History. ThL· DAR Library hniJ s llLHe n ah; in ge nea lob'Y ~mel r(.·le\~111t
local hi,wry: lo U,IlOI) boo ks includm g unpubli shed genealob"' typescr ipt s and genl'alogi l al penodicab .
rteportS .111d pl.ms fur thl' t'&lt;llllillg year \\'L' fl' prL',l'!Hed by fh,l irlll('ll
.md committet.·s. Tht.• ch,n rma n of the Allll'ric.ln Hmory Contl'S t
announced the to pi o of th e Lill'lllL'" w be wriHen thi~ \'L';Ir: "lfThL·
C apit&gt;l Walls Co uld T&gt; lk", IXOO- I'JOO . two e\'ellts th.1t .haw lud an
impact on our nation. and 11 Thc Nom in .nio n SpL'cc h for C h ristopher
Columbus into the H all of f ;mtc" .
The St.ue Sc holarship C homuan urged chaptl'TS to p ubli c i z~ thl·
DAR. schularsh1ps that arc a\·a Jlabl e and ell courage stude nts to apply
for sc holarships includingAmen can Hi story Scholarship, Politie3l ScieJKc, Hi story. Govt·rmnent. Enmomi &lt;.:, N u rsin g, McdJ c;Il and Occupational Therapy S chnLmhip s.
Marilyn Vaglia, state v ice regem , ann o un cl'd her candidacy for the
oflice of State R egent of () bin. She t1Jm ed Ma rcia Seife rt, national
chairman . DAR. Schools. to serve Js \'ice regent; Beverly Sc humaker
of Nabby Lee Am es Chapter, Arhells, for Sout heast Distri ct dire ctor :
and Roberta Roush of Frenc h Colony C hapter, Gallipolis, state hi stonan.
A symboli c graduation was held for state offi ce rs and chapte r
regents, co mplete with caps Jnd gow ns and graduation certifica tes in
recognition of their service to the DAR in this final year of the cur-

rent adminisuario n.
Wetzel annou nced that the Ohio State DAR Conference will be
held at the Columbus M arriot North H otel on March 9, 10 and 11.
Georgane F. Love, president general. Nati o nal Society DAR, will be
the keynote speaker on opening night. The Southeast District Chapters will se rve as hostess for the state conference. A planning m eeting
was set for Nov. 4 at the Marriot North Columbus Hotel.
The next meeting of the Return Jonathan Meigs DAR will be held
Saturday when the C hapter wtU be ce lebrating Constitution Week. A
luncheon w ill be held at noon at Crow's Steak House with members
being the guests of Eleanor Smith, Grace Eich, Anna Cleland, Mary
Morris, Mary Lew Johnson , and R oberta O'Brien . Reservations
should be made to El eanor Smith, 992 2639. T he DAR meeting will
follow at the Pomeroy Library at 1:30p m . Jam es Lochary will be the
speaker. Following the meeting grave m arking ce rem oni es w 1ll be held
fur Margaret Dutton and Dorthea Fisher.
Anyone interested m joi nin g the R eturn Jonathan Me igs C hapter
as invited to contact R ege nt Mary Rose o r any R eturn Jonathan
Meigs Chapter member.

Carroll birth announced
PORTLAND B,'nny and
Sand y
Carroll
of
Portl and ·
annoLmce th e birth of a da ugh ter,
Ca rlene Faye C arroll. Aug. 21, at
the Holzer Me d ical Center.
Th e mfam we ighed e1ght
po unds, SIX oun cl's. l~randparl'n t s
are Jo hn · and Fram: l'~ Fo ster of
Racine. aml Nanc.v Carroll of H arrisbmg, J&gt;a.
·

Carlene Faye Carroll

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

o Day Sale
NO RAINCHECKS

Prices Goad luesday, Sept. 26th &amp;Wednesday, Sept. 27th Only

FRESH PORK STEAK OR

Count

GREEN G

·3/$

L.b.

Products
$ 99
24 pkcube

11-15oz.

BALLARD'S

UNITED VALLEY BELL

Wieners

c

LA T

PEPSI &amp; MT. DEW

S le Ribs Peas, Beans, Cor

c

WHILE SUPPLIES

rinking Water

3/$1

12 oz. pkg.

us #1
set Potatoes
$ 19

Gallon

BOUNTY

Paper Towels

c

Single Roll

10#

to lower its own restraints and allmv freer
trade in a competitive markctph~ce, with a seco ndary goal of exporting U.S. methods and
values as we ll .
Such a route to correcting trade imbalances
is a long o ne, because C hina's potentially hu ge
markets a~ot as devdoped as other trading
partners, and \'vtll takes years to achieve parity.
In a way, the Senat~'s action illustrates how
Sl'rious and untenable is a t r.1dl' imbalance that
kL·t•ps mounting year .aft er yl'ar sin ce.: 1975,
an d h l,&gt;'-V impo rtan t it is to stop th l' dollar out-

ljo/111 C wm ijf i.~
cidtt:d Press.)

Page AS

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES

MOST OUT OF OUR
EMPLOYEES, I~
CONSIDERIN6 THE

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

the Bend

The Daily Sentinel

business mwlystfv ,· The A sstJ- ::
..

-

200 Main St., Point Plu1ent, W. VI. ""
I
304-&amp;7 5·1333

FRESH CHIQUITA

CHARMIN REGULAR WHITE

Bananas

Bath Tissue

c

c

UNITED VALLEY BELL

2%Milk
·S 79

· 4 roll pkg.

lb.

Gallon

FLAVORITE

FIELD TRIAL BITE SIZE

Apple Juice

Dog Food
64

oz.

$

99
16lbs.

298 SECOND STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT. 26, 27TH, 2000 ONLY

�Page A&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 25, 2000

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
OU sponsors annual ,
American History contest
POMEROY -- Meigs County's high sc hoo l sophomores, juniors
and sen tors are mvited to participate in the first round of Ohio Uni ver&gt;~ty' s 54th American History Co ntest , Oct. 2-20.
The multiple c hoice test will be compl eted by students at their local
hi~h schools and first round winners will be announced in N ovember.
Students from across O hio w ill be taking part.
Those who qualifY for the final round of competition, a four-questiun essay exa m , will take the exam on the Athens campus N ov. 30.
T hose who receive scores in the 99th pe rcentile of the state and those
with the hi ghest sco re in their county o r the second and third highest
score m each cou nty in at least the 95 th perce ntile of the state are eli~ibk

Fi r&gt;t pnze 1s .1 fo ur-yea r, full tuition scholarship to Ohio University :md S 1110. Anv additional 11 sc holarships an d cash awards will be
givc.·n to th t· to p sm dt·nt scorer in the con test.

Outstanding high sc hool awards ofS !50 and S I 00 wiU go to th e top
t\\'o schoo ls in · three t:atc-gories, ba~ed on the size of the sc hool's 1 1th
and 12th g r;1dc classes . Sc ho ols with the largest number of wmnt·rs 111
the co ntes ts's two rounds will reu:ive awards.

( l hio Uniwrsity's College of Arts and Sciences, H IS tory D epa rt11lL'tlt

.1 n d Office of Adtn issio ns sponsor the co ntest .

Meigs SWCD annual
banquet set for Oct. 10

were paid.
T helma Henderso n reported on "P raying, 'the Hymnal" from
"Response." M ary Jo Barringer read a letter w hic h she had received
from Susan Shaw of H amburg, Germany. ·.v ho told of her family's
experie nce in mission .
Poole had the prayer calendar, and chose Jane Hathaway, missionary
in education at M cCurdy Schoolm Espanola , N .M . The group signed
a birthday card for her.
Barringer led the program. "Pledge Service -- Jesus' Friends in a
G lobal Village," with all taking part in reading and discussion .
Pasto r Ja rie Beattie gave the grace before refreshments served by
Barringer: sandwiches. finger fi&gt;ods, ange l cake and gelatin dessert .
Others present were Sar.th Ca ld well. Florence Ann Spence r and Charlotte Van M ete r.
The next meeting Wi ll be hdd at the church on Oct. 10 and the
program will be the World Thanks Offering.

High School n ~;tr Po m eroy.
Th e ll1t'~.?[ in g will incl ude th e election of two ntt"mbers to tilL·
Ml.. tgs SWCD's fivt&gt;-nkmber Boa rd of Supervisors.
In additwn, awards wi ll be presente d to this year's Outstanding

Co mrib utor. Guodyea r Fanner, Soil Judging Co ntest , Big Tree Contest and H ay Show Contest winners .

The new Metgs County Soil Survey will also be released to th e
pub lic Jt the me etin g.
Candidates for the Meigs SWCD Board of Supervisors mclude Joe
Boli n o f Rutland ; Howard Caldwell ofTuppers Plains; Marco Jeffers of
Albany; Patty Manzey of Pomeroy; Tim Thoren of' Racine. The winning candidates will serve three-year terms commencing Jail. 1, 2001.
Prospective voters must be at least 18 years .of age and own land or
reside in M eigs County. Ballots may be cast at the Meigs SWCD office
at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, on Oct. 10 between 7 a.m. and 3
p.m . Absentee ballots can be requested, in writing, from the district
office between five to 21 days before the election.
Ron Ramey of Lancaster will be the quest speaker at the banquet.
He is a lo ng-time education , humorist and Fairfield County community leader. H is discussions also include a humorous presentation on

Prep·Sports
Football

Brinker birthday announced
POMEROY - Saria h Brinke r
celeb rated her fourrh btrthday
rece ntly at (h C' home of hl'r grand-

Ruth Crouch had" r,·.rd111g. "The Quilt. " Mory Li&lt;lt• had a re, ding, "Whispers of l nvc.u
The secretary's reporr \\ ',\'&gt; g tYL'I1 by JL'.H1 Stour. Th L're WL' re 16 sick
calls taken . The tn.·astl rt• r's rL'pn rt w:1s g1n· n by Ann S.1uvagt'. A freewill

said. '1
''
The me eting was dosed by th e Lo rd 1s Praye r in unison.

Attending were Hope More, Mary Li sle, Jea n Stout, Ann Sauvage,
Freda Wilson. Elma Louks. Ruth C ro uch and M arie Houdashelt.

BroQks celebrates birthday

Ticke ts mu st be purchased by Sept. 28 .

UMW discusses Festival projects
Projec ts for the Festival of Sharing and reports from

Nettle Brook•

RACINE Nettie Renee
Brooks, daughter and stepdaughter
ofJeff and· Marisa Brooks, celebrated her Slxth birthday on Sept. 13 .
She had a birthday party with a
Barbie theme, which was celebrated with cake and ice cream.
Her sister, Mackenzie, also
attended the parry, along with
Peggy and Jacob Ridgway, Jean
Trussell, R enee and Zachary Carson , Teresa, Scottie, Autumn and
Makya Trussell , Gwen, M organ and
Garrett Hall ,Vicki Heldrieth, Sarah
R eitmire, Harold, Ainber and
Cody Broo ks, Ken , Viola and
Kenny Brooks, Tammy, David, Gracie and Dillan Dye.

parents.

dunng tht: bu sin ess m eeting, as well as program books and magazines
ftH ~no I :HH.i S!..' IL' ction of n am es fo r designated g iving. Annual dues

C ah·. in· crt·a m . c hips. and
dnnks wt.·r~: ~c n'c'J A b;tlkrma kitten theme was cJ rricd o ut fiu thl'

party.
At te ndin g w en: Sa ruh 1s
m other, Anunda Brinker ; h er

g randpare nt s, Butc h ' "d Pen ny
Brinker, Scott and Mindy Brinker;
Lois, J D. Daylon and Lindsey
Jenkins, Virgtl and Pam Dill , Sally
Holman , Shirley, Debbie, Tyler and
J J Willis, M ary and Do nn a
Bowen, Bill . Kim , Amber, and JorSarlah Brinker
dan Snuek; C heryl C lark, and
Kennedy C lark .
,
Sending gifts were Mildred Hubbard , Audra , R ob, and Wade Harrison, Missy, Bill, Alex and Josh Morris , Marianne H endri cks, Garry
Cremeans; Chuck and Jan VanCooney, Jane Williams, Bob and Barb
Stewart.

( ;,ltillll,l. Alph.1 Unl!c ron. llliWltJun of new lllL'Illbcrs, M o nday,
ldO p.m. Pundcrlm .Jackso n.

Blood pressu res Will be taken.
POMEROY vice

VetemlS Ser-

Co mn1ission , 7 &lt;lO

p.m.

Monday, 117 Mem orial Drive,
Po meroy.

TU PP ERS PLAINS - EastLocil IJo.1rJ of Ed ucation.
5)JtT J,ti meeting, 7:30 a.m. , Ele mL·ntary ronfc:rcnre room , to d ist'rll

em s AthL·m- Meigs E~lJ c Hional
Scrv1ce Ccmcr merger :-m d possibl e truck p u rch:t~e.

RAC INE -

South e rn Local

Bo:1rd of Educ:nion, regular ses-

sion, ~:30 p.m Monday, Sou thern
f-1 tgh Sc hun! C:lfcten.l.
HARJUSONV ILLE -

Har-

risonvill e Se niOr Citizen s Mon-

d ay, II :30 " m

"

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Poli cy committee,Athens-Mcigs Edu cational
Se rvice Center, Tuesday, 6 p.m at
th e Po m eroy office, 320 East
Main Street.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
FHEE INSPECTION

POMEROY - Mei gs Co unty Health Department immunization clinic Tuesday, 9 to II a.m.
an d I to 3 p.m. 112 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Take c htld's shot
records. C hildren to be accompanied by parent/ legal guardian.

town hall .

We will meet or beat any
competitor's advertised
price on the same tire.

(A P) Emertatnment highli ghts
during the week of Sept. 24-30:
In 19~4. "The Tonight Show"
nude its debu t o n NBC w ith host
Steve Allen .
In 1'16" ... The Be w rl v HiUbilli e"" prL'IlliL·red on C BS.
In I!)()'-'. the Bc:1 ch Boys madt"
thL·lr flrst ·'PP('H.m cc on "Tht.• Ed
Sul h\.',lll Show"
\
AJ,., 111 I 'llo.J The Bull" lltkk
Sho\\'" pr~..· nut' red on N BC .
In 11H•7.Jnh n Lt.·nnon .1 11d P.w l

M cC.trtllL' )' ·'P PL'.lrL'd 011 "T ht•
I ),l\ ' id rrn\{ Shm\·" to {,Ilk .ibom
ch e \ ' lltue ' uftr.Jit\tt'ndcnt.ll tncd lt.ltJoll ,1\ L1u~ln by thL' M.dHri..;hi
M .d1 c' h Yo t;l.
ln I !J(,r; , "(,() MIIHHL', .. ntlliL' 1t'
tkhu! n n ( ~ BS. \\'Jth rt'portL·r,
I I,l iT\" H.L',l ~( mL' r ,1nd M 1kL· W.\IJ:Jt'L'

In I%') ... Ab bey Ro .1 d: · tire·
lk .1rk&lt; l.1q ~wd1n .1 lbum, \\' h
rcl e.l\cd

111

Bnt.l tll .

In I '17.&gt;... ( ;O.lt·, Hc.rd Suup·· b)

the R olling Sto nes went gold; the
Stones admjtted tt wasn't their

favorite album.
In 1975, the movie ve rsioi1 of
"The Rocky Horror Prct ure
Show" had its pn: micn: m West-

wood, Calif
In 1977, "The Love 13oat" pre&lt;m ered o n ABC.
In 1980, the Stray C.1ts wert•
sig ned to An~ta R l'lo rd., 111
Britain.

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport ·

OF GALLIPOLIS
Quick Lube

enera ®G4~ Multi-Point
Inspection
~~~~~~ ~~~
S~~~~

Sorvlcolncludoo up to 5
quarto or Motorcrafl oil
and new Motorcratt all
rnter. Dloool vohlcloo
may be extra.

Wheel Alignment Cooling System

I

Service

95

Sternwheel Riverfest Parade
"Sign Up &amp; Line Up"

Saturday , September 30th
at 10:00 am
Line-up at Pomeroy ball fields
at 9:00am
Call Mindy Morris at the Tourism
Office for details (740) 992-2239
Trophies will be awarded!

'ftllloii...,_!Wt .....

ALL

Miller
0·0 5-0
Eastern
0-0 4·1
Trimble
0·0 3·2
Southern
0·0 2· 3
Waterford
0·0 2·3
Federal Hocking 0-0 1·4
Friday's Games
Wahama 28, Southern 18
Eastern 57, Hannan 6
Miller 48, South Gallia 22
Meigs 3, Fairland 0
Federal Hocking 26 , Alexander 6
Chesapeake 49, Belpre 12
Nelsonville-York 28, Trimble 7
Portsmouth 66 , Vinton County 0
Waterford 35. World Harvest 0
Wellston 38. Rock Hill 7
This Week
Wellston al Meigs
Federal Hocking at Southern
Trimble at Eastern
Nelsonville-York at Vinton County
Waterford at Miller
Belpre at Alexander

rips Browns
OAKLAND, Cal if. (AP) Forget T im Brow n and Andre
Rison.
"By far, I have the best hands
·on the tea m," said Raid ers lin ebacker Willi am Thomas.
Thomas interce pted Tim
Couc h twi ce as Oakl and
down ed C leveland 36-1 0 on
Sunday and toppled th e Browns
out of their first-place tie in the
AF C Central. He ran one of the
pi ckoffs back 46 yards for a
touchdown .
"I've be e n wo rkin g on
Th o mas for a long time, th e last
thre e or four weeks, about getting us going and getting the
big turnovers," Raiders coac h
Jon Gruden said. "We had a history together back in Philadelphi a and I had a lot of recoll ections of him turnin g games

ALL

Jackson
2·0 5-0
Logan
2·0 5·0
Galli a Academy 2-0 4· 1
Point Pleasant 1·1 4·1
Athens
1·1
2-3
Marietta
0-2 1·4
Warren
0-2 1·4
River Valley
0-2 0-5
Friday's Games
Logan 28, Point Pleasant 7
Gallia Academy 23, Warren 14
Athens 41, River Valley 6
Jackson 34. Marietta 12 ·
1hls Week
Point Pleasant at Jackson
Gallia Academy at River Valley
Athens at Logan
Warren al Marietta

Fall Maintenance
Package

Tire Rotation and
Brake Inspection

s2295

·Inspect lrie friction 11111erial, caliper
Oflll!llon, rol1111, drums,hoses and
conntctions ·~spec! parking blae for ·
damagundproplfOfi!!ltion•Rollte
and in,...
41Jres ifiM"'I llllf""""
"1"'
~
ope!llloo •Ro~le and inspect 41lres
111

....

,. ... ,. .. ,

~lrenheel vehi~~s extn.
"~'-"-·'*'

Automatic Transmission
Oil Change

$64

95

~nspect rad~tor for leaks •Cl1eck •
hose~ clamps and belts •Presm

test system for leaks •Drain radiator
•Includes up to 1gallon ol coolant
- · h1

I C.. _ _ _

GALLIPOLIS

nsmiss~l\1ransaxle fluid 'lnsped

nd lubricate linkage corrtr~s (where
applicable) ·Road test

$25 of any internal automatic
transmission repair.
~c..ta..r.-.

Today's Matches
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30
Southern at Vinton County, 5 :55
Eastern at Belpre, 5 :55
Federal Hocking at Meigs, 5:55
Ohio Valley Christian at South
Webster. 6:00
·
South Gallia at Symmes Valley,
TBA
Tuesday's Match
River Valley al Warren. 5:15
Logan at GalliaAcademy. 5 :15
Fairland at South Gallia , 5:30
Nelsonville-York at Southern .
5:55
Alexander at Eastern , 5:55
Meigs at Miller, 5:55
Wednesday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Meigs , 5:30
Oak Hill at Meigs. 5:30

Golf
Today's Matches
Wahama at Galha Academy, 4 :30
Tuesday 's Matches
Gallia Academy at Ch il licothe.
4:30

Cross Country
Tuesday's Meet
Meigs home meet, 4 :30

Meigs 4th, Southern
5th in TVC toumey
BELPRE O hi o Division
golf c hampion M eigs tln ished
fourth in the TVC O hi o / H oc king D ivi&lt;io n Int erdivisional Golf
tournam ent hel d last Thursday a.t
Oxbow
Waterford fi nished with a .125
to win the tourrument, B~lp re
followed wtth a .}5 1. Trimble had
a 353 , foll owed by Mei~;S 3o3.
Southern 40 I ;uid Wellston with a
405.
Adam Conrath of Waterford
fired a 75 to win match m edalist.
M eigs sco re' included Ni ck Dettwilk r and Thad Bu nr!':ardner
with RRs. Jeremy Banks .lllded a
93, Ca rson Midkiff added a Y4,
Andy Davi &lt; a 98 and Jason
Knighr with a I 03.

it," said Grobe. " l thought th ey played very
well down the stretch. Our kids, for w hatever reason . didn't play very sharp in the
first half. I'm disappointed we didn't play
with more consistency."
The Bobcats struck hard in the third
quarter.
At the 6:29 mark in the third, Ohio
sophomore quarterback Dontrell Jackson
ran one in from four yards out on a keeper for the touc hdown .
Jackso n had 50 yards rushin g on nine
carries and 92 yards on 4-of- 15 passing.
But, he threw two interce ptions, both of
which were hauled in by Akron se nior

Oakland

around.''

Tyrone Wheatley ran for two
2-yard tou c hdowns and Zack
Croc kett added another for the
R aid e rs
(3- 1).
Sebastian
Janikowski, Oakland's top draft
pi ck who entered -the game 2fo r-5. hit fidd goals of 37 and
3 1 yards.
After passin g fo r a career-high
3 16 yards last Sunday in C leveland's 23-20 victory ove r th e
Steelers, Tim Couch was 16-of29 for 141 yards. Hi s lone
touchdown was a 15-yard TD

Volleyball

&gt;Change up to 5quarts of automatic

2·wheel
Check and adjust camber and toe.
Additional ~rts and labor mar be
required on some vehicles.

Hocking Division

ALL

-.-.,u•.cco~~~-·On~.

CELEBRITY FLASHBACKS

3·2
3·2
2·3
2-3
0-5
0-5

"(Derr) said take the first down," said
Akron head coac h Lee Owens.
" It wasn't that I lost con fidence in our
defense," Owens added. " l kn ow it's not
the prece ntage call. l just didn't want the
clock to stop."
Akron jumped out to a 17-0 second
quarter lead on touchdown runs by
&lt;ophomore tailba ck Brandon Payne and
seni or fullback Tony M cCray in the first
quarter and • 44-yard field goal by Derr
with 6:22 left at th e half.
Sophomore Kevin Kerr got the Bobcats
on the boa rd just before halftim e with a
20-yard field goal at the I :11 mark in the
seco nd quarter.
" First of all, I give Akron a lot of cred-

Wahama
2·3
Hannan
1·4
Soulh Gallia
0·5
Friday's Games
Miller 48, South Gallia 22
Wahama 28, Southern 18
Eastern 57, Hannan 6
This Week
Friday's Games
Parkersburg Catholic al South
Gallia
Saturday's Game
Burch at Hannan

URNPIKE
IRES

ALL

0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0
0-0
0-0

Aft er starting the season
2- 1 and wirh a win ove r Minn esota
already under their belts, the Ohio University football tea m wanted to begin its
Mid- Amer ican Co nference schedule with
a bang.
O n Saturday. it was more like a whim per as Ak ro n placekicker Zac Derr booted
an 18-yard fie ld goal with 24 seconds left
in the game to hand the Bobcats a 23-20
loss.
Derr actually kicked th e game-w inning
field goal tw ice.
After knocking o ne through from 28
yards o ut with 1:55 left, a roughing the

snapper penalty was called against O hio.
The Z ip s accepted the penalty for the first
down and took their own go-ah ead field
goal' off the board.
"The general thought in coaching is not
to take points off the board," said Ohio
head coach Jim Grobe. " I thou ght all
along; he was going to take (th e penalty)
and take more time off the clock."
Time is what th e Zips took off the
clock throughout the late stages of the
fuurth quarter, usmg up 6:27 on th e drive
that would lead up to IJerr's wi nning
kick.
"As soon as I knew that there was a
penalty, I knew I had to kick it again," said
Derr.

Area non-league

POMEROY - Scott Autherson and C rystal gcals announce the
birth of thei r tlrst child," so n,Josh Edward Autherso n,Aug. 12 at the
Holzer Medi Cal Center. Th t' infant wctgh ed six p o unds, three ounces
and was 1 R inches long.
Grandparents. are Mary Be, Js an d Am anda Lemley of Middleport

The Community Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

TVC

SEO

Autherson birth announced

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY C. ow rnin g
Board of the Athens-Meig' Ellucational Service Center, sp ecial
board meetin g. Wednesday. Sept .
27, 6 p.m. at th e Ath ens office,
507 Ri chbnd Ave. Purpose to
discuss (~eilities.

Bv ButcH CooPER

SEOAL

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
MONDAY
JACI&lt;Sl&gt;N ll elta Kappa

Meigs
Nelsonville· York
Belpre
Wellston
Alexander
Vinton County

TVC

missionaries were di scussed during the recent nteeting of the Alfred

U nited Meth odiSt Wo m en.
The meeting was opened with prayer by Nina Robinso n, tho welco me by Nell ie Parker,' president, and group reading of the Purpose.
Secnot.1ry M artha Poole and Treasurer OSl e Mae Follrod read their
reports wh ich .we re .1p proved. 35 friendship calls were approved.
The grou p disc ussed kits and blankets for the Festiva l of Sharing

Bobcats drop MAC opener to Akron, 23-20
ATH ENS -

was o pe ned by all rc.:pc:;tting The Purpose in unison .

district o ffi ce.

Monday, September :ZS, ]000

TVC
Ohio Dlvtalon

The St.·ptl·mber bJrthd,Jy of h ·ed,1 Wilson was Hot ell The d evotion
was given by Ann Sauv;1g:L·, titlL·d. "The Smile."
Old busml'SS an d new bu sinL·ss \\'\.'IT discussl·d . A letter from Good
Works .was read by S;-tu\·JgL·
The program was give n by FrL·d Wilson. titled 11 Missions." The
scr ipture was taken fro m Joel. C lup tc·r 12.
"Making Decisions11 w:1s another to pic using d iffc rc.nt c haracters i'n
the Bible. A poem was read by"' t•ight yea r-old girl , "What Jesus Had

Page 81

OVP SPORTS STAFF

SYRACUSE --The Sy rKmc· Asbury United M ethodist Women
met recently at the c hurc h for their Septc mbn me e ting. The mee ting

Tickets for the ham and roast beef dinner are ava1lablc for S7.50
from Meigs SWCD Superviso rs Tom Theiss, Chns Hamm, Joe Bolin,
M arco Jeffers, and John Rice, or from aU clistrict employees or at the

NASCAR: Stew(!rt wins, Page 8 3
Royals rock Tribe, Page 86
8 enga/s buttg/e, Page 86
Herd fa /is to UNC, Page 86

HIGHLIGHTS

Syracuse UMW holds meeting

o utho u ses.

The Daily Sentinel

MONDAY'S

ofT~rmg w;:Js tah· n .

!'OM EROY - Th e Mt·i6" Soil and Water Co nserva tio n Oistnct
.mn uo lm ee tin ~ and banquet will be hdd Oct . 10 at 7:10p.m. at Meigs

ALFRED -

and great-grandparents are Laura
Autherson of Syracuse and Frances
Albright of Gladys, Va .

Inside:

Cincinnati rallies
to top Houston
C INC INNATI (AI') - R eds
m anap;er Jack McKeon, who
may not be asked back next
year, said goodbyt· to f m s after
Sunday's homt· tlnak·.
H e stood in front of th e R eds'
dugout :md waved t(n St'Vt'l ,1l
.seconds, savo rin g th t:" 4--3 L'OlllCfrom - behind vic tory owr the
Hou ston Astros.
"That's a f l't"llll"JHJOU'\ W~ly to

en d the season at ho me," M cKt.. on said . " It kind of remi nds you
ofbst year and th e way Wt' came
back to pull a lor of ga mes out.
Uut we're nOt re;td y to r lose o ut
the season yet. We 've "it ill got six
to go, and we're gmng to give it

our best sho t."
The Reds were otr Monday.
then ope n a thrct:"-game series in

Milwaukee.
" It was ni ..:e to win o ur final

one hert' and come fro m
behind," Me Keon said .
C hris Srynes hit a two-out,
two-run homer to complete a
three-run ninth .

" I was on dt·ck hoping that
Alex (Ochoa) would get a ho me
run," said Styne~. w ho \vas ~t it-

less in his first three at-bats. " I
d idn't w:mt .moth er All.The· tirst
three didn't !(O all that well."
Chris Sc·xton had " le.t d- otr
si ng k'. and D mitri Young doubkd. One n m scO J'l'd o n Sca n
C:tsl:'y's sacrifln· tly and after

Ot'iwa flied out, Stynes hom ered to left tid d. his I I th this ~t·a­

CO LU MBU S (A P) - Jot·
Pate rno \Va~ expect ed t o pile up
J fCw coachin g mil estotlt'S this
seaso n. but not h kL· this.
Six pLlyL·rs scored touch downs
as No. I~ O hio State handed
Patt·rnn hi s 11 1n~t lopsi ded loss
and h·i, wor't ' tart ever with a
45-6 lo'\S on S.1turlby in th e Ui g
TL·n o p ener fo r both tea ms.
'' We c1n 't go out and bu y a
bottl e o f tncdic in t' r_h :l t wi ll
ma ke

Please see Reels, Page B6

Soon after, Wh ea tley scored
on a 2-yard run for the Raiders,
who bounced back after a 3324 ho me loss to Denver last
Sunday.
Oakland took the lead on
Wheatley's seco nd 2-yard run
to open the second quart er. The
key play of the drive was Ri ch
Gannon's 48-yard pass to
R.ison, who had three recepti om for 54 yards.
Wheatley fini sh ed with 21
carri es for 63 ya rds.
Midway throu gh the secon d
qu arter, the tlrowns got down
to Oakland's 33 on Erric
Rhett's 42-yard run. But Dawso n's 42-yard fi eld goal atte mpt
went wide right.
Thomas, a I 0-year veteran
lin ebacker and two-time Pro
Bowl player picked up by th e
Raiders 111 th e off&lt;eason,
snagge d hi s fir st interception

the opening drive. And he had

Couch again, thi s tim e with a
running scoop catc h that he ran

"The game got away from us
atier I made a toupl e of bad
t hrows," Couch said. " It's a long
seaso n and we ' ll JUSt keep

back 46 yards fo r a to uch down.
Thomas and Gruden o;;o rnt'-

times jokingly discusse d using
the linebacke r ar tight end

Please see Browns. Page B6

No. 14 Buckeyes bomb Penn State

'\ tunn ed Paterno &lt;:.:ud. " \Ve have
to wo rk ar it."
Stuck on .1 1.S caren victor ies,

an NL record wirh 242 hom e
nm s, lost Friday when ~lcin ­
nati outhomned the Astms 6-3.
and Saturday when Stynes
homered durmg tl1 e R eds'
three-run eighth .
Saturday\ game \VJS dchyed
nearly two hours in the eighth
innin~. A light rain fell most of
Sunday afternoon and whe n
Stynes cam e to bat. he sensed
that he would make the find!
out or win th e game.
"One way or the other, ewry-

first series.

just on e inrerception go in g into
rhe g ame .

Cleveland (2-2) wun just two

A o::. tro"i manager Larry DiL•rkcr
\ Va'\ fru '&gt;tr;1tt•d again.

Di erker, who"it' team has "iet

onside kick failed, puttmg Oakla nd on th e Browns 43 for its

go m g."

'\O il .

" I've seen thi s &lt;rutl all yt•ar,"
Dierker said.

down, C leveland\ attempt at an

late in the second quarter. It led
to C rockett's scorin g run .
On the Browns' next possession with less than a mtmttl' left
in the hal f, Th om as pi cked off

pass to Darrin C hiaver ini on

TAKING IT TO THE HOUSE - Raiders linebacker William Thomas outruns Cleveland quarterback Tim
Couch with an interception return for a touchdown Sunday in Oakland ' s 36-10 win . (AP)

games al l of last season in its first
year back in th e league . Phil
Dawson hit a 29-yarder in the
second quarter to account for
the rest of the Browns' sco ring.
Afte r C hi ave rini 's touch-

e\'nybndy

bt'tt cr,"

a

Paterno remain s fivt· victones

shy of tying Bear Bryant for the
must wins by a major college
C0:1Ch.
Th e loss ~pvc Penn State its
first 1-4 start under · Paterno,
mat ching the sc hool's wo rst
record th rou gh five games since
I %4 when Rip Engle was head
coach.
The margin eclipsed a 49-11
loss to UCLA in 1966 - Paterno 's first ~eason as th t' h ead

coa ch of the Nittany Li ons and a 44-6 loss to Nebrask.t in
the 1983 Ki ckoff Classic.
" I don't know what to do
except tor th e way I've always

~om·

it," a bewildered Pat erno
said . Asked what his next m ove
was, h e said , " I don't kn ow. R eally, I've got to si t back and take a
look at it. If I fdr strongly about
&lt;o mething, I'd teJ J VOtL"
O hi o State n wwd to 4-11 for

O n the next play. R ashard
Casey's pass in tetncpted by Nate

thL' ..;eventh tim e in th t· b st 1()

Wc,tbrooks c.trrlcd cornerback Urvan
Scott alonl!;. t{Jr the
.
final 5 yards on thl' swct'p
around kft end .
C;tSL'Y· who has bt·t·u replaced
in L'\·cry g.ullt' o;;o far. wJs pulled
in f~1vor of backup Matt Sen-

Y'''"·

Head coach Jo hn Coo per

wasn't sur p r ised by t he outcome,
bur W&lt;lS by th e m argin.
'' Never did l dream we would
beat Penn State a's badly as we

di d," he sai d.
Steve Bt'llisari was 111-of-17
for 2113 yards, including a tluky
I H-yard touchdown pass to Darnell Sanders . Dnek Comb&lt;
rushed fur R6 yards on 23 carries
and had " ! -yard TD run. and
nos eguard
Mik e
Col li ns
re turn ed a fumb le II yards for
an other score.

Ckments. w h o returned 1t 12

yards to th e Penn State 411 .
A I Y-yard p.\S" to I )rnv Cartl'r

helped '"t up .J erry Wcltbrooks'
3-yard T D run.

neea. On hi' second play, Senn eca \Vas hit by defensive ·L~nd
Bren t Jo hns on whik settin~ up
to pass .md fumbled, wi th
Col lins picking up the ball and
rumbling int o th e t• nd zone for a
38-6 lea d.
. Ohio State forced three
tu rnove rs and hmited Penn StatL'
to 93 yards ru &lt;hing and 120
yards pming .
Casey finished 7 -of-1 R for 94

Th e Nittany Lions trailed 17111 the thtrd 4uarter alt er
McCoo ski rted r i~ht en d on a 2yard run. But R yan Primanti · yards with one intt'rreption.
McCoo, who gained 2 11 yards
missed the extra-point kick.
.
on
22 carries ;1 year ago in Penn
Th e Buckeyes put th e game
out of reach with three rapid-fire State's 23- 111 win over Ohio
State, led the Nitt.my Liom with
touchdowns.
First Combs capped an 11 - .14 yards on 13 attc·mptl.
" It 's one of those years.'' Paterplay, 5-mi nutc march with a 1no said with a ~hrug.
yard dive to m ake it 24-6 .

6 early

�Page A&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Monday, September 25, 2000

SOCIETY NEWS AND NOTES
OU sponsors annual ,
American History contest
POMEROY -- Meigs County's high sc hoo l sophomores, juniors
and sen tors are mvited to participate in the first round of Ohio Uni ver&gt;~ty' s 54th American History Co ntest , Oct. 2-20.
The multiple c hoice test will be compl eted by students at their local
hi~h schools and first round winners will be announced in N ovember.
Students from across O hio w ill be taking part.
Those who qualifY for the final round of competition, a four-questiun essay exa m , will take the exam on the Athens campus N ov. 30.
T hose who receive scores in the 99th pe rcentile of the state and those
with the hi ghest sco re in their county o r the second and third highest
score m each cou nty in at least the 95 th perce ntile of the state are eli~ibk

Fi r&gt;t pnze 1s .1 fo ur-yea r, full tuition scholarship to Ohio University :md S 1110. Anv additional 11 sc holarships an d cash awards will be
givc.·n to th t· to p sm dt·nt scorer in the con test.

Outstanding high sc hool awards ofS !50 and S I 00 wiU go to th e top
t\\'o schoo ls in · three t:atc-gories, ba~ed on the size of the sc hool's 1 1th
and 12th g r;1dc classes . Sc ho ols with the largest number of wmnt·rs 111
the co ntes ts's two rounds will reu:ive awards.

( l hio Uniwrsity's College of Arts and Sciences, H IS tory D epa rt11lL'tlt

.1 n d Office of Adtn issio ns sponsor the co ntest .

Meigs SWCD annual
banquet set for Oct. 10

were paid.
T helma Henderso n reported on "P raying, 'the Hymnal" from
"Response." M ary Jo Barringer read a letter w hic h she had received
from Susan Shaw of H amburg, Germany. ·.v ho told of her family's
experie nce in mission .
Poole had the prayer calendar, and chose Jane Hathaway, missionary
in education at M cCurdy Schoolm Espanola , N .M . The group signed
a birthday card for her.
Barringer led the program. "Pledge Service -- Jesus' Friends in a
G lobal Village," with all taking part in reading and discussion .
Pasto r Ja rie Beattie gave the grace before refreshments served by
Barringer: sandwiches. finger fi&gt;ods, ange l cake and gelatin dessert .
Others present were Sar.th Ca ld well. Florence Ann Spence r and Charlotte Van M ete r.
The next meeting Wi ll be hdd at the church on Oct. 10 and the
program will be the World Thanks Offering.

High School n ~;tr Po m eroy.
Th e ll1t'~.?[ in g will incl ude th e election of two ntt"mbers to tilL·
Ml.. tgs SWCD's fivt&gt;-nkmber Boa rd of Supervisors.
In additwn, awards wi ll be presente d to this year's Outstanding

Co mrib utor. Guodyea r Fanner, Soil Judging Co ntest , Big Tree Contest and H ay Show Contest winners .

The new Metgs County Soil Survey will also be released to th e
pub lic Jt the me etin g.
Candidates for the Meigs SWCD Board of Supervisors mclude Joe
Boli n o f Rutland ; Howard Caldwell ofTuppers Plains; Marco Jeffers of
Albany; Patty Manzey of Pomeroy; Tim Thoren of' Racine. The winning candidates will serve three-year terms commencing Jail. 1, 2001.
Prospective voters must be at least 18 years .of age and own land or
reside in M eigs County. Ballots may be cast at the Meigs SWCD office
at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, on Oct. 10 between 7 a.m. and 3
p.m . Absentee ballots can be requested, in writing, from the district
office between five to 21 days before the election.
Ron Ramey of Lancaster will be the quest speaker at the banquet.
He is a lo ng-time education , humorist and Fairfield County community leader. H is discussions also include a humorous presentation on

Prep·Sports
Football

Brinker birthday announced
POMEROY - Saria h Brinke r
celeb rated her fourrh btrthday
rece ntly at (h C' home of hl'r grand-

Ruth Crouch had" r,·.rd111g. "The Quilt. " Mory Li&lt;lt• had a re, ding, "Whispers of l nvc.u
The secretary's reporr \\ ',\'&gt; g tYL'I1 by JL'.H1 Stour. Th L're WL' re 16 sick
calls taken . The tn.·astl rt• r's rL'pn rt w:1s g1n· n by Ann S.1uvagt'. A freewill

said. '1
''
The me eting was dosed by th e Lo rd 1s Praye r in unison.

Attending were Hope More, Mary Li sle, Jea n Stout, Ann Sauvage,
Freda Wilson. Elma Louks. Ruth C ro uch and M arie Houdashelt.

BroQks celebrates birthday

Ticke ts mu st be purchased by Sept. 28 .

UMW discusses Festival projects
Projec ts for the Festival of Sharing and reports from

Nettle Brook•

RACINE Nettie Renee
Brooks, daughter and stepdaughter
ofJeff and· Marisa Brooks, celebrated her Slxth birthday on Sept. 13 .
She had a birthday party with a
Barbie theme, which was celebrated with cake and ice cream.
Her sister, Mackenzie, also
attended the parry, along with
Peggy and Jacob Ridgway, Jean
Trussell, R enee and Zachary Carson , Teresa, Scottie, Autumn and
Makya Trussell , Gwen, M organ and
Garrett Hall ,Vicki Heldrieth, Sarah
R eitmire, Harold, Ainber and
Cody Broo ks, Ken , Viola and
Kenny Brooks, Tammy, David, Gracie and Dillan Dye.

parents.

dunng tht: bu sin ess m eeting, as well as program books and magazines
ftH ~no I :HH.i S!..' IL' ction of n am es fo r designated g iving. Annual dues

C ah·. in· crt·a m . c hips. and
dnnks wt.·r~: ~c n'c'J A b;tlkrma kitten theme was cJ rricd o ut fiu thl'

party.
At te ndin g w en: Sa ruh 1s
m other, Anunda Brinker ; h er

g randpare nt s, Butc h ' "d Pen ny
Brinker, Scott and Mindy Brinker;
Lois, J D. Daylon and Lindsey
Jenkins, Virgtl and Pam Dill , Sally
Holman , Shirley, Debbie, Tyler and
J J Willis, M ary and Do nn a
Bowen, Bill . Kim , Amber, and JorSarlah Brinker
dan Snuek; C heryl C lark, and
Kennedy C lark .
,
Sending gifts were Mildred Hubbard , Audra , R ob, and Wade Harrison, Missy, Bill, Alex and Josh Morris , Marianne H endri cks, Garry
Cremeans; Chuck and Jan VanCooney, Jane Williams, Bob and Barb
Stewart.

( ;,ltillll,l. Alph.1 Unl!c ron. llliWltJun of new lllL'Illbcrs, M o nday,
ldO p.m. Pundcrlm .Jackso n.

Blood pressu res Will be taken.
POMEROY vice

VetemlS Ser-

Co mn1ission , 7 &lt;lO

p.m.

Monday, 117 Mem orial Drive,
Po meroy.

TU PP ERS PLAINS - EastLocil IJo.1rJ of Ed ucation.
5)JtT J,ti meeting, 7:30 a.m. , Ele mL·ntary ronfc:rcnre room , to d ist'rll

em s AthL·m- Meigs E~lJ c Hional
Scrv1ce Ccmcr merger :-m d possibl e truck p u rch:t~e.

RAC INE -

South e rn Local

Bo:1rd of Educ:nion, regular ses-

sion, ~:30 p.m Monday, Sou thern
f-1 tgh Sc hun! C:lfcten.l.
HARJUSONV ILLE -

Har-

risonvill e Se niOr Citizen s Mon-

d ay, II :30 " m

"

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Poli cy committee,Athens-Mcigs Edu cational
Se rvice Center, Tuesday, 6 p.m at
th e Po m eroy office, 320 East
Main Street.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
FHEE INSPECTION

POMEROY - Mei gs Co unty Health Department immunization clinic Tuesday, 9 to II a.m.
an d I to 3 p.m. 112 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Take c htld's shot
records. C hildren to be accompanied by parent/ legal guardian.

town hall .

We will meet or beat any
competitor's advertised
price on the same tire.

(A P) Emertatnment highli ghts
during the week of Sept. 24-30:
In 19~4. "The Tonight Show"
nude its debu t o n NBC w ith host
Steve Allen .
In 1'16" ... The Be w rl v HiUbilli e"" prL'IlliL·red on C BS.
In I!)()'-'. the Bc:1 ch Boys madt"
thL·lr flrst ·'PP('H.m cc on "Tht.• Ed
Sul h\.',lll Show"
\
AJ,., 111 I 'llo.J The Bull" lltkk
Sho\\'" pr~..· nut' red on N BC .
In 11H•7.Jnh n Lt.·nnon .1 11d P.w l

M cC.trtllL' )' ·'P PL'.lrL'd 011 "T ht•
I ),l\ ' id rrn\{ Shm\·" to {,Ilk .ibom
ch e \ ' lltue ' uftr.Jit\tt'ndcnt.ll tncd lt.ltJoll ,1\ L1u~ln by thL' M.dHri..;hi
M .d1 c' h Yo t;l.
ln I !J(,r; , "(,() MIIHHL', .. ntlliL' 1t'
tkhu! n n ( ~ BS. \\'Jth rt'portL·r,
I I,l iT\" H.L',l ~( mL' r ,1nd M 1kL· W.\IJ:Jt'L'

In I%') ... Ab bey Ro .1 d: · tire·
lk .1rk&lt; l.1q ~wd1n .1 lbum, \\' h
rcl e.l\cd

111

Bnt.l tll .

In I '17.&gt;... ( ;O.lt·, Hc.rd Suup·· b)

the R olling Sto nes went gold; the
Stones admjtted tt wasn't their

favorite album.
In 1975, the movie ve rsioi1 of
"The Rocky Horror Prct ure
Show" had its pn: micn: m West-

wood, Calif
In 1977, "The Love 13oat" pre&lt;m ered o n ABC.
In 1980, the Stray C.1ts wert•
sig ned to An~ta R l'lo rd., 111
Britain.

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2nd, Middleport ·

OF GALLIPOLIS
Quick Lube

enera ®G4~ Multi-Point
Inspection
~~~~~~ ~~~
S~~~~

Sorvlcolncludoo up to 5
quarto or Motorcrafl oil
and new Motorcratt all
rnter. Dloool vohlcloo
may be extra.

Wheel Alignment Cooling System

I

Service

95

Sternwheel Riverfest Parade
"Sign Up &amp; Line Up"

Saturday , September 30th
at 10:00 am
Line-up at Pomeroy ball fields
at 9:00am
Call Mindy Morris at the Tourism
Office for details (740) 992-2239
Trophies will be awarded!

'ftllloii...,_!Wt .....

ALL

Miller
0·0 5-0
Eastern
0-0 4·1
Trimble
0·0 3·2
Southern
0·0 2· 3
Waterford
0·0 2·3
Federal Hocking 0-0 1·4
Friday's Games
Wahama 28, Southern 18
Eastern 57, Hannan 6
Miller 48, South Gallia 22
Meigs 3, Fairland 0
Federal Hocking 26 , Alexander 6
Chesapeake 49, Belpre 12
Nelsonville-York 28, Trimble 7
Portsmouth 66 , Vinton County 0
Waterford 35. World Harvest 0
Wellston 38. Rock Hill 7
This Week
Wellston al Meigs
Federal Hocking at Southern
Trimble at Eastern
Nelsonville-York at Vinton County
Waterford at Miller
Belpre at Alexander

rips Browns
OAKLAND, Cal if. (AP) Forget T im Brow n and Andre
Rison.
"By far, I have the best hands
·on the tea m," said Raid ers lin ebacker Willi am Thomas.
Thomas interce pted Tim
Couc h twi ce as Oakl and
down ed C leveland 36-1 0 on
Sunday and toppled th e Browns
out of their first-place tie in the
AF C Central. He ran one of the
pi ckoffs back 46 yards for a
touchdown .
"I've be e n wo rkin g on
Th o mas for a long time, th e last
thre e or four weeks, about getting us going and getting the
big turnovers," Raiders coac h
Jon Gruden said. "We had a history together back in Philadelphi a and I had a lot of recoll ections of him turnin g games

ALL

Jackson
2·0 5-0
Logan
2·0 5·0
Galli a Academy 2-0 4· 1
Point Pleasant 1·1 4·1
Athens
1·1
2-3
Marietta
0-2 1·4
Warren
0-2 1·4
River Valley
0-2 0-5
Friday's Games
Logan 28, Point Pleasant 7
Gallia Academy 23, Warren 14
Athens 41, River Valley 6
Jackson 34. Marietta 12 ·
1hls Week
Point Pleasant at Jackson
Gallia Academy at River Valley
Athens at Logan
Warren al Marietta

Fall Maintenance
Package

Tire Rotation and
Brake Inspection

s2295

·Inspect lrie friction 11111erial, caliper
Oflll!llon, rol1111, drums,hoses and
conntctions ·~spec! parking blae for ·
damagundproplfOfi!!ltion•Rollte
and in,...
41Jres ifiM"'I llllf""""
"1"'
~
ope!llloo •Ro~le and inspect 41lres
111

....

,. ... ,. .. ,

~lrenheel vehi~~s extn.
"~'-"-·'*'

Automatic Transmission
Oil Change

$64

95

~nspect rad~tor for leaks •Cl1eck •
hose~ clamps and belts •Presm

test system for leaks •Drain radiator
•Includes up to 1gallon ol coolant
- · h1

I C.. _ _ _

GALLIPOLIS

nsmiss~l\1ransaxle fluid 'lnsped

nd lubricate linkage corrtr~s (where
applicable) ·Road test

$25 of any internal automatic
transmission repair.
~c..ta..r.-.

Today's Matches
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30
Southern at Vinton County, 5 :55
Eastern at Belpre, 5 :55
Federal Hocking at Meigs, 5:55
Ohio Valley Christian at South
Webster. 6:00
·
South Gallia at Symmes Valley,
TBA
Tuesday's Match
River Valley al Warren. 5:15
Logan at GalliaAcademy. 5 :15
Fairland at South Gallia , 5:30
Nelsonville-York at Southern .
5:55
Alexander at Eastern , 5:55
Meigs at Miller, 5:55
Wednesday's Matches
Gallia Academy at Meigs , 5:30
Oak Hill at Meigs. 5:30

Golf
Today's Matches
Wahama at Galha Academy, 4 :30
Tuesday 's Matches
Gallia Academy at Ch il licothe.
4:30

Cross Country
Tuesday's Meet
Meigs home meet, 4 :30

Meigs 4th, Southern
5th in TVC toumey
BELPRE O hi o Division
golf c hampion M eigs tln ished
fourth in the TVC O hi o / H oc king D ivi&lt;io n Int erdivisional Golf
tournam ent hel d last Thursday a.t
Oxbow
Waterford fi nished with a .125
to win the tourrument, B~lp re
followed wtth a .}5 1. Trimble had
a 353 , foll owed by Mei~;S 3o3.
Southern 40 I ;uid Wellston with a
405.
Adam Conrath of Waterford
fired a 75 to win match m edalist.
M eigs sco re' included Ni ck Dettwilk r and Thad Bu nr!':ardner
with RRs. Jeremy Banks .lllded a
93, Ca rson Midkiff added a Y4,
Andy Davi &lt; a 98 and Jason
Knighr with a I 03.

it," said Grobe. " l thought th ey played very
well down the stretch. Our kids, for w hatever reason . didn't play very sharp in the
first half. I'm disappointed we didn't play
with more consistency."
The Bobcats struck hard in the third
quarter.
At the 6:29 mark in the third, Ohio
sophomore quarterback Dontrell Jackson
ran one in from four yards out on a keeper for the touc hdown .
Jackso n had 50 yards rushin g on nine
carries and 92 yards on 4-of- 15 passing.
But, he threw two interce ptions, both of
which were hauled in by Akron se nior

Oakland

around.''

Tyrone Wheatley ran for two
2-yard tou c hdowns and Zack
Croc kett added another for the
R aid e rs
(3- 1).
Sebastian
Janikowski, Oakland's top draft
pi ck who entered -the game 2fo r-5. hit fidd goals of 37 and
3 1 yards.
After passin g fo r a career-high
3 16 yards last Sunday in C leveland's 23-20 victory ove r th e
Steelers, Tim Couch was 16-of29 for 141 yards. Hi s lone
touchdown was a 15-yard TD

Volleyball

&gt;Change up to 5quarts of automatic

2·wheel
Check and adjust camber and toe.
Additional ~rts and labor mar be
required on some vehicles.

Hocking Division

ALL

-.-.,u•.cco~~~-·On~.

CELEBRITY FLASHBACKS

3·2
3·2
2·3
2-3
0-5
0-5

"(Derr) said take the first down," said
Akron head coac h Lee Owens.
" It wasn't that I lost con fidence in our
defense," Owens added. " l kn ow it's not
the prece ntage call. l just didn't want the
clock to stop."
Akron jumped out to a 17-0 second
quarter lead on touchdown runs by
&lt;ophomore tailba ck Brandon Payne and
seni or fullback Tony M cCray in the first
quarter and • 44-yard field goal by Derr
with 6:22 left at th e half.
Sophomore Kevin Kerr got the Bobcats
on the boa rd just before halftim e with a
20-yard field goal at the I :11 mark in the
seco nd quarter.
" First of all, I give Akron a lot of cred-

Wahama
2·3
Hannan
1·4
Soulh Gallia
0·5
Friday's Games
Miller 48, South Gallia 22
Wahama 28, Southern 18
Eastern 57, Hannan 6
This Week
Friday's Games
Parkersburg Catholic al South
Gallia
Saturday's Game
Burch at Hannan

URNPIKE
IRES

ALL

0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0
0-0
0-0

Aft er starting the season
2- 1 and wirh a win ove r Minn esota
already under their belts, the Ohio University football tea m wanted to begin its
Mid- Amer ican Co nference schedule with
a bang.
O n Saturday. it was more like a whim per as Ak ro n placekicker Zac Derr booted
an 18-yard fie ld goal with 24 seconds left
in the game to hand the Bobcats a 23-20
loss.
Derr actually kicked th e game-w inning
field goal tw ice.
After knocking o ne through from 28
yards o ut with 1:55 left, a roughing the

snapper penalty was called against O hio.
The Z ip s accepted the penalty for the first
down and took their own go-ah ead field
goal' off the board.
"The general thought in coaching is not
to take points off the board," said Ohio
head coach Jim Grobe. " I thou ght all
along; he was going to take (th e penalty)
and take more time off the clock."
Time is what th e Zips took off the
clock throughout the late stages of the
fuurth quarter, usmg up 6:27 on th e drive
that would lead up to IJerr's wi nning
kick.
"As soon as I knew that there was a
penalty, I knew I had to kick it again," said
Derr.

Area non-league

POMEROY - Scott Autherson and C rystal gcals announce the
birth of thei r tlrst child," so n,Josh Edward Autherso n,Aug. 12 at the
Holzer Medi Cal Center. Th t' infant wctgh ed six p o unds, three ounces
and was 1 R inches long.
Grandparents. are Mary Be, Js an d Am anda Lemley of Middleport

The Community Calendar
is published as a free service
to non-profit groups wishing
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed
a specific number of days.

TVC

SEO

Autherson birth announced

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY C. ow rnin g
Board of the Athens-Meig' Ellucational Service Center, sp ecial
board meetin g. Wednesday. Sept .
27, 6 p.m. at th e Ath ens office,
507 Ri chbnd Ave. Purpose to
discuss (~eilities.

Bv ButcH CooPER

SEOAL

COMMUNITY CALENDAR
MONDAY
JACI&lt;Sl&gt;N ll elta Kappa

Meigs
Nelsonville· York
Belpre
Wellston
Alexander
Vinton County

TVC

missionaries were di scussed during the recent nteeting of the Alfred

U nited Meth odiSt Wo m en.
The meeting was opened with prayer by Nina Robinso n, tho welco me by Nell ie Parker,' president, and group reading of the Purpose.
Secnot.1ry M artha Poole and Treasurer OSl e Mae Follrod read their
reports wh ich .we re .1p proved. 35 friendship calls were approved.
The grou p disc ussed kits and blankets for the Festiva l of Sharing

Bobcats drop MAC opener to Akron, 23-20
ATH ENS -

was o pe ned by all rc.:pc:;tting The Purpose in unison .

district o ffi ce.

Monday, September :ZS, ]000

TVC
Ohio Dlvtalon

The St.·ptl·mber bJrthd,Jy of h ·ed,1 Wilson was Hot ell The d evotion
was given by Ann Sauv;1g:L·, titlL·d. "The Smile."
Old busml'SS an d new bu sinL·ss \\'\.'IT discussl·d . A letter from Good
Works .was read by S;-tu\·JgL·
The program was give n by FrL·d Wilson. titled 11 Missions." The
scr ipture was taken fro m Joel. C lup tc·r 12.
"Making Decisions11 w:1s another to pic using d iffc rc.nt c haracters i'n
the Bible. A poem was read by"' t•ight yea r-old girl , "What Jesus Had

Page 81

OVP SPORTS STAFF

SYRACUSE --The Sy rKmc· Asbury United M ethodist Women
met recently at the c hurc h for their Septc mbn me e ting. The mee ting

Tickets for the ham and roast beef dinner are ava1lablc for S7.50
from Meigs SWCD Superviso rs Tom Theiss, Chns Hamm, Joe Bolin,
M arco Jeffers, and John Rice, or from aU clistrict employees or at the

NASCAR: Stew(!rt wins, Page 8 3
Royals rock Tribe, Page 86
8 enga/s buttg/e, Page 86
Herd fa /is to UNC, Page 86

HIGHLIGHTS

Syracuse UMW holds meeting

o utho u ses.

The Daily Sentinel

MONDAY'S

ofT~rmg w;:Js tah· n .

!'OM EROY - Th e Mt·i6" Soil and Water Co nserva tio n Oistnct
.mn uo lm ee tin ~ and banquet will be hdd Oct . 10 at 7:10p.m. at Meigs

ALFRED -

and great-grandparents are Laura
Autherson of Syracuse and Frances
Albright of Gladys, Va .

Inside:

Cincinnati rallies
to top Houston
C INC INNATI (AI') - R eds
m anap;er Jack McKeon, who
may not be asked back next
year, said goodbyt· to f m s after
Sunday's homt· tlnak·.
H e stood in front of th e R eds'
dugout :md waved t(n St'Vt'l ,1l
.seconds, savo rin g th t:" 4--3 L'OlllCfrom - behind vic tory owr the
Hou ston Astros.
"That's a f l't"llll"JHJOU'\ W~ly to

en d the season at ho me," M cKt.. on said . " It kind of remi nds you
ofbst year and th e way Wt' came
back to pull a lor of ga mes out.
Uut we're nOt re;td y to r lose o ut
the season yet. We 've "it ill got six
to go, and we're gmng to give it

our best sho t."
The Reds were otr Monday.
then ope n a thrct:"-game series in

Milwaukee.
" It was ni ..:e to win o ur final

one hert' and come fro m
behind," Me Keon said .
C hris Srynes hit a two-out,
two-run homer to complete a
three-run ninth .

" I was on dt·ck hoping that
Alex (Ochoa) would get a ho me
run," said Styne~. w ho \vas ~t it-

less in his first three at-bats. " I
d idn't w:mt .moth er All.The· tirst
three didn't !(O all that well."
Chris Sc·xton had " le.t d- otr
si ng k'. and D mitri Young doubkd. One n m scO J'l'd o n Sca n
C:tsl:'y's sacrifln· tly and after

Ot'iwa flied out, Stynes hom ered to left tid d. his I I th this ~t·a­

CO LU MBU S (A P) - Jot·
Pate rno \Va~ expect ed t o pile up
J fCw coachin g mil estotlt'S this
seaso n. but not h kL· this.
Six pLlyL·rs scored touch downs
as No. I~ O hio State handed
Patt·rnn hi s 11 1n~t lopsi ded loss
and h·i, wor't ' tart ever with a
45-6 lo'\S on S.1turlby in th e Ui g
TL·n o p ener fo r both tea ms.
'' We c1n 't go out and bu y a
bottl e o f tncdic in t' r_h :l t wi ll
ma ke

Please see Reels, Page B6

Soon after, Wh ea tley scored
on a 2-yard run for the Raiders,
who bounced back after a 3324 ho me loss to Denver last
Sunday.
Oakland took the lead on
Wheatley's seco nd 2-yard run
to open the second quart er. The
key play of the drive was Ri ch
Gannon's 48-yard pass to
R.ison, who had three recepti om for 54 yards.
Wheatley fini sh ed with 21
carri es for 63 ya rds.
Midway throu gh the secon d
qu arter, the tlrowns got down
to Oakland's 33 on Erric
Rhett's 42-yard run. But Dawso n's 42-yard fi eld goal atte mpt
went wide right.
Thomas, a I 0-year veteran
lin ebacker and two-time Pro
Bowl player picked up by th e
Raiders 111 th e off&lt;eason,
snagge d hi s fir st interception

the opening drive. And he had

Couch again, thi s tim e with a
running scoop catc h that he ran

"The game got away from us
atier I made a toupl e of bad
t hrows," Couch said. " It's a long
seaso n and we ' ll JUSt keep

back 46 yards fo r a to uch down.
Thomas and Gruden o;;o rnt'-

times jokingly discusse d using
the linebacke r ar tight end

Please see Browns. Page B6

No. 14 Buckeyes bomb Penn State

'\ tunn ed Paterno &lt;:.:ud. " \Ve have
to wo rk ar it."
Stuck on .1 1.S caren victor ies,

an NL record wirh 242 hom e
nm s, lost Friday when ~lcin ­
nati outhomned the Astms 6-3.
and Saturday when Stynes
homered durmg tl1 e R eds'
three-run eighth .
Saturday\ game \VJS dchyed
nearly two hours in the eighth
innin~. A light rain fell most of
Sunday afternoon and whe n
Stynes cam e to bat. he sensed
that he would make the find!
out or win th e game.
"One way or the other, ewry-

first series.

just on e inrerception go in g into
rhe g ame .

Cleveland (2-2) wun just two

A o::. tro"i manager Larry DiL•rkcr
\ Va'\ fru '&gt;tr;1tt•d again.

Di erker, who"it' team has "iet

onside kick failed, puttmg Oakla nd on th e Browns 43 for its

go m g."

'\O il .

" I've seen thi s &lt;rutl all yt•ar,"
Dierker said.

down, C leveland\ attempt at an

late in the second quarter. It led
to C rockett's scorin g run .
On the Browns' next possession with less than a mtmttl' left
in the hal f, Th om as pi cked off

pass to Darrin C hiaver ini on

TAKING IT TO THE HOUSE - Raiders linebacker William Thomas outruns Cleveland quarterback Tim
Couch with an interception return for a touchdown Sunday in Oakland ' s 36-10 win . (AP)

games al l of last season in its first
year back in th e league . Phil
Dawson hit a 29-yarder in the
second quarter to account for
the rest of the Browns' sco ring.
Afte r C hi ave rini 's touch-

e\'nybndy

bt'tt cr,"

a

Paterno remain s fivt· victones

shy of tying Bear Bryant for the
must wins by a major college
C0:1Ch.
Th e loss ~pvc Penn State its
first 1-4 start under · Paterno,
mat ching the sc hool's wo rst
record th rou gh five games since
I %4 when Rip Engle was head
coach.
The margin eclipsed a 49-11
loss to UCLA in 1966 - Paterno 's first ~eason as th t' h ead

coa ch of the Nittany Li ons and a 44-6 loss to Nebrask.t in
the 1983 Ki ckoff Classic.
" I don't know what to do
except tor th e way I've always

~om·

it," a bewildered Pat erno
said . Asked what his next m ove
was, h e said , " I don't kn ow. R eally, I've got to si t back and take a
look at it. If I fdr strongly about
&lt;o mething, I'd teJ J VOtL"
O hi o State n wwd to 4-11 for

O n the next play. R ashard
Casey's pass in tetncpted by Nate

thL' ..;eventh tim e in th t· b st 1()

Wc,tbrooks c.trrlcd cornerback Urvan
Scott alonl!;. t{Jr the
.
final 5 yards on thl' swct'p
around kft end .
C;tSL'Y· who has bt·t·u replaced
in L'\·cry g.ullt' o;;o far. wJs pulled
in f~1vor of backup Matt Sen-

Y'''"·

Head coach Jo hn Coo per

wasn't sur p r ised by t he outcome,
bur W&lt;lS by th e m argin.
'' Never did l dream we would
beat Penn State a's badly as we

di d," he sai d.
Steve Bt'llisari was 111-of-17
for 2113 yards, including a tluky
I H-yard touchdown pass to Darnell Sanders . Dnek Comb&lt;
rushed fur R6 yards on 23 carries
and had " ! -yard TD run. and
nos eguard
Mik e
Col li ns
re turn ed a fumb le II yards for
an other score.

Ckments. w h o returned 1t 12

yards to th e Penn State 411 .
A I Y-yard p.\S" to I )rnv Cartl'r

helped '"t up .J erry Wcltbrooks'
3-yard T D run.

neea. On hi' second play, Senn eca \Vas hit by defensive ·L~nd
Bren t Jo hns on whik settin~ up
to pass .md fumbled, wi th
Col lins picking up the ball and
rumbling int o th e t• nd zone for a
38-6 lea d.
. Ohio State forced three
tu rnove rs and hmited Penn StatL'
to 93 yards ru &lt;hing and 120
yards pming .
Casey finished 7 -of-1 R for 94

Th e Nittany Lions trailed 17111 the thtrd 4uarter alt er
McCoo ski rted r i~ht en d on a 2yard run. But R yan Primanti · yards with one intt'rreption.
McCoo, who gained 2 11 yards
missed the extra-point kick.
.
on
22 carries ;1 year ago in Penn
Th e Buckeyes put th e game
out of reach with three rapid-fire State's 23- 111 win over Ohio
State, led the Nitt.my Liom with
touchdowns.
First Combs capped an 11 - .14 yards on 13 attc·mptl.
" It 's one of those years.'' Paterplay, 5-mi nutc march with a 1no said with a ~hrug.
yard dive to m ake it 24-6 .

6 early

�Monday September 25 2000
Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Monday, September 25, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

NASCAR

S!~~~ ~!~:.!~u~~~.~~:e_~!m:~~.~-~~ EPR6~1

,YPerao11111
AniiDIIncernent
G - o y Lo81 Found
Van!
and Wonted
ToDoAcn
llu81 Be Paid n Advance
TRIBUNE OEADUNE
2 00 p m the dey before
the ed Ia to run
Sunday Monday ediUon
2 00 p m Friday
S£NDNEL Q§AQUNE
1 00 p m the day before
the ed 11 to run
Sunday Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday

S....,

180 Wanted To Do

230

a

440

Professional
Services

ATTENTION DEVtLOPERS 32
Aces ML Appoamaey

Apartments
for Rent

0

Ac e Lake w h s and Mob a
Home W h Add On S99 500
740~78

MERCHANDISE

a

510
RENTALS

a

Household
GOOds

App ances.

Rec ond

wasne s o ye s Ranges Ae

g A o s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se New Maytag Ap
p an a&amp; F e ch C y May ag
40-446 7795

BEGIBTEA Pf!PUNE,

2 dlyo before the ad It
torunby430pm

a

s.tunlay Monday
edition- 4 30 Thursday

DNd/1,.. oubj«:tto
hotldaJ18

~-to

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals
ATIENTION ALL STUDENTS
We have ove
200 jobs ava lable mmedia ely
Fu and part me ava able

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plus elerra bOnuses
Kyou need WOrk Qh BWFrf

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pe son

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from home Reques FREE de a s
www 9 success c;;om
New &amp; Used F
tu e
New 2 P ece l ngroom Su es
$399 Buy So hide

ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE $0
aown Ne s S50k Wo k 7 h s

New To Vou Thrift Shopclo
9 Wes Stimson Athens
740-592 842
Qua
c o h ng and ho seho d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
Th sday Monday h u Sa u day
900.5 30

Ca dy
VE ND NG
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n
ee
7 494 8695
a ea To
24h s

a

v

60

New and Used Fu n u e So e
be ow Ho aay nn Kanauga Buy
a ew bed oom s e and ge he
rna esses ee New H de a bed

60as $399
994 Oakwood Spec a ECI on
4 70 2 Bedroom 2 Bath AI App ances n ud g Washe &amp;
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Lost and Found
CONSULTANTS NEEDED Fas
es g ow g pa y pan HOUSE
OF

LOYD S Pa y

o

Ct'lo ce

CHR STMAS AROUND
PSYCH CS TAROT READERS &amp;
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MA DR
V PSYCH C L NE
WORK FROM YOU R HOME OR

WORLD G
Ame can wa

chand se &amp;
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i

740 36
080

Stewart sn t th nking much
aGout anything but how to run
tl\e next lap or w n the next race
Hts numbers m two seasons of
W nston Cup racmg are gaudy by
any standards but he II let every
body else dec1de what they mean
If anybody had told me I d
have seven w ns by this t me n
nty second year I would have told
them they were crazy Stewart
sa1d Sunday after wmn ng the
MBNA com 400 at Dover
Downs lnternattonal Speedway
The v ctory was his fourth this
year tymg Rusty Wallace for the
senes lead In 1999 Stewart set
records for success by a rookie
Now he has a cl ance to lead the
CirCUit m w ns something Jeff
Gordon has done five years m a
row
But Stewart doesn I worry
about that or h s prospects for
w nn ng the champ10nsh1p n
2001
We want to go on wmn ng
every week but t s not like were
n a compeuuon to see who can
w n the most races he md We
JUSt want to w n as many as we
can
If anything Stewart s a b1t dis
appo nted he s 459 po nts behind
teammate Bobby Labonte n the
standmgs After fimsh ng a rook
e record fourth n po nts last
year Stewart IS fifth
He s dr ven by the need to
constantly 1mprove and some bad
firushes have hurt him
We JUSt want to get back our

have to trade this wm today for
five top fives 1 would do t
because cons stency s worth
more than w ns
He s r ght about that and his 4
3 edge m VICtor es counts far less
than Labonte s 13 8 advantage n
top five fin shes
Stewart concedes that he thinks
about future champwnsh ps and
even conSidered w nmng one as a
rookie But he says two seasons on
the c rcmt have demonstrated JUSt
how difficult that IS to accom
plish
On Sunday Stewart became the
first dr ver to sweep the races at
Dover Downs Internat onal
Speedway smce Jeff Gordon m
1996
He d d so after a bad begmmng
to the weekend He started 27th
m a field of 43 In June when he
won the MBNA Platmum 400
the dr ver from Rushville Ind
started 16th
Stewart downplayed the 1mpor
ranee of startmg first
Po es are n ce but you get to
take the p1cture w th the b1g trophy on Sunday he sa1d We
know we run good on Sunday
and were putttng an emphas s on
wmrung races
Crew ch ef Greg Z1padelli s
confident that they will contmue
to do JUSt that m the conung
years
Stewart ended a run of three
stra1ght w ns m this race by Mark
Martm who had a transrrusston
proble n and wound up s xth He

f.~: : : : : ::::::9 65

5

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nois 42 Tenn Martin 7
Eas Carolna 34 Sy acuse 7

Eon 3 N Caro naA&amp;TO

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Flo Ida 59 Kornuclly 3
Florida A&amp;M 3 Tennessee S 8
FJo Ida 5 3 lOu SVI 8 0
F mlln35 VM 2
Georg a 37 New MexiCO S 0
G80fg a Southe n 3 Chattanooga
G ambl ng S 49 MVSU 3
Hamp on 42
Utah 34
Howa d 35 Morgan S 23
Jackson S 3 Souther U 0
Mary and 45 M dd e Ten essee 27

M&lt;:Nooso S 4 AJco s 2
Murray St 4 nd ana S 2
Nonh ca o na 20 Ma sha

THE

Ea n money me
a e
800 749

HEATING

CDSTI

560

Pets for Sale

720 Trucks for Sale

ennessee 70 Lou s~ana Man oe 3
Tennessee Tech 9 E Ken ucky 3
UAB 3 LSU 0
UCF 52 W 11m &amp; Mary 7
Vanc:lerbilt 26 Duke
W Caro na 39 ETSU 2
Wofford 24 Cha es n Southern 0

Mclwol1
Ak on 23 OhiO 20
Bose S 47 Cent Mictugan 0

Dayton 55 Mo ehead S
ndia a 42 C nc: nnatl S

Kansas 42 S

Regs e ed Dachshund
Puppy Red Ma e 9 wee s o d
s sho s a d Wo med 740
3 9 2238

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New
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J:::&lt; :i)87 8767
82 73
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93 62

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Un oad Tucks A d 2 Caahte s 0
Chucks Home s Tuck oM Sa e
See Hom e Sa e Manage Fo
Mo e De a s 0 A mo y Rou e

Kansas City
M Mesota

P due 38 M neso 8 24
Va pa 8 so 35 Au n Peay 28
W
nos44 NcholsS 3
4
W Kentucky 38 SE M ssou
W M chtgan 2 To edo o
Southwtar
Alabama A&amp;M 40 P at e V ew 0
Arka sas 28 A aba.ma 2
Bay Of 28 S
Fonda 3
ate. ahoma 42 R e 4
Sam Ho sen S 38 exas A&amp;M K ngsVJ e
SOu he n M ss 28 01 ahoma S 6

cu 52 Arkansas S 3
Taxas 48 Hous on 0
T ane 29 SMU 7
Tu sa 22 Lou s ana eCh o
U EP 39 Hawa
Fa West
Ai Fo e23 Uah 4
Arizona S 44 U ah S 20

BYU 0 UNLV 7
C8PoyS035MonanaS 4
E Wash ngton 27 Webe S 24 OT
FesoS 7Caifona3
daho 38 Washi g on S 34
dahO
4 sacramen o
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New Mexco 35 N A z na 28

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529 5

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Po
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TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS ?
No Fee Un ess We W n
888 582 3345

S9 00 Hou No PhOne Ca s

Galllpollt
&amp; VIcinity

Seatt e

87 69

Oakand
Anatlem

85 69
80 5
70 86

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x-c nched diVIS on

449

Ca

Low Mon h y Paymen

800-948 5878

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on 0

Home&amp; Ca

800 948

0
2
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35 SanDegoS 3
SanOego39 Meno3
Sou hem Ca 34 San ose S 24
S Marys Ca 36 Cen Wash ng on 29
20T

Malo League Socce
P ayoff G I OCiil
Ou1rterf na Round
Seed ng n paren heats
Co orado (8 va Kansas City 1)

4

5
7
6
8
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640
594
583

545
457
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20

Sa u day Sapt 16
Kansas C ty Coo ado 0
Wedn18day Sept 20
Kansas C y 0 Co orado 0 e
Sunday Sap 24
KansasC y3 COoado2 Ka sasCtyw

seres

4 4

268

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Kansas c~ 9 c eveland 0
M nnesota 6 Ch cago 'Nhite Sox 5

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Naw Eng and (7 vs Ch cago (2

F day Sept
C cago2 NewE gad

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Tueaday Sept
New Eng a d 2 Ch cag

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9 Texas 2
Seatt e 3 Oak and 2
ToayaGamu
Ch cago (Ga and 4 7} a

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05pm
M nneso a Kinney 2 2 at C eve and Burna

Tampa Bay

rN son 0-4

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7

0

705pm
Detroit (Spa ks s 5 a N Y Yankees Good
en64 705pm

A ah&amp;~m Belcher 4 3 a Oakla d Zito 5 4
OOSpm

,

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

F day Oct 6
LosAgeesa Ka asCy830pm

ece sary
Ch cago vs Now Yo k Now Je say
Tueaday Sept 26
NewYokNew esey Ch ag Bpm

Now
Factory Ou le
C ass Lanes WV
Save hO sand A nven ory
'

31 0 Homes for Sale

8

Tuesday Ocr 3
Kansas C y a Los Ange es 0 30 p m

moe Me cedes

Mu docks

REAL ESTATE

5

F day Sop 22
Ch cago 6 New Engla d o Ch cago WI s
se es 6-3
New Yo k New Je sey (3 s Oa as 6)
F day Sept 5
OT
New Yo k New e e 2 Oa a
WedneSday Sept 20
New Yo k New e sey 2 Oa as
New
~rkNew eseywnsseres60
Sam na Round
Kansas C ty vs Los Ange ea
F day Sept 29
Los A gees a Kansas cry epm

(Woodad3 o

5-6 705pm

s

oa Ang• ea 5) vs Tampa Bay 4)
Thu aday Sep 4
Los Ange es Tampa Bay 0
Wldnead1y Sapt 20
Los Ange es 5 ampa Ba~ 2 os Ange es

22
2

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Sund1y • Gllmea
Tampa Ba)' 6 Toromo o
Batt mo e Boston o

56 8

9

60

72

Anahetm 5 Taus 4

Need We A d 5ep c No Down
Paymen Requ ed La ge Se e

8

995
747
740

2
7

Slturd•V • Gamea

Paymen

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

56 6

N V Yankees 3 Detroit 8
To onto 7 Tampa Bay 6
Oak and 8 Seatt e 2
Boson8 Ba moe7 0 n ngs
ChcagoWh eSoKS M nesoa3
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67 88

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Neb aska 42 owa 3
Northwes em 4 Wiscons n 44 20T
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os Ange es

EJol1

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South Ca ol na 23 Mss ss pp S 9

Amertcan L.Ngua

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

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0 Opm

884!

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Clemson 3 Vi g n~a o
Davidson 7 Emory &amp; Henry 4
Delaware St 42 uoony 25

005pm

0402 Ask ng s 4 ooo

OFF CE MAG KAL 800 3 0

62

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Aubum 3 N
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Bethune-CookrMin 4 Morris Brown 9

problerm
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Stewart le.il!§;3 of the 400 laps y Attanta
8263 584
811 87 57 3 !2
mcluding the last 54 In June he Now York
Florida
7382 47
led 242
Mon1roat
87 B8 432
25
6392
28
The wm ended an e ght race I'll llldalpha
Conlnll
losmg streak for the 1999 W n
583
C ncmna
82 74 528
9
ston Cup rookie of the year
M !waukee
70 ee 449
2
59 87 442
22
Jeff Burton who led every lap a XHouson
lou
Pittsburgh
85 9
47
26
week earher while wtnrung n e-go
a2 83 40028/2
Loudon N H and Jerry Nadeau xSanFanciaco WHI93 B3
5!16
were among those who had the l.ml Angelo
B3 13 532
0
AriZona
82 13 529 0 !2
look of wmners But they fell out Colorado
78 n
503 4 !2
With blown t res At least five cars san ();ego
75 8
48
8
x-d nched division title
left the race that way
y-d nched playotl berth
a.turday a O.mn
Z1padell admmed the race
S Lou s 8 Chocago Cubs 5
made him somewhat uneasy but
Florida 3 Colorado e 12 nn ngs f8 n
Cincinne e Houston 4
sa1d he was never concerned
IV zona 7 San F anc sco 5 a game
about Stewart hav ng a problem
Pmlburgh 4 M waukee 2 s game
A ama a Mortrea o
We seem to be very conserva
N Y MOIS 7 Pllillldelpt;a 3
uve m that area at most race
M !waukee 5 Pittsburgh 4 o M ngs 2nd
game
tracks Z1padelli sa1d We II fin
Los Angeles 2 San Diego
San Francesco 9 Arizona 5 2nd game
sh second or fifth before we take
SUndiY I 0.,_
a chance on ru rung a race car or
C ncinnat 4 Houston 3
N Y Mets 3 Pllillldelph a 2
hurtmg a dr ver
A Bnta 14 Mont ea !5
Labonte s lead m the ser es
Mlwaukoo 8 Pittsburgh 5
Ch~a~go Cubs 0 S Lou s 5
standings grew to a season high
Coio&lt;ado 9 Florida 3
249 pomts w th a fourth place
Arizona 8 San Franasoo 3
LOs Atlgeles San Diogo 0
fin sh Burton and re gnmg Wm
n.ctoy'oA 1anta GlaVJne 9 9) at Montreal (Vazquez
ston Cup champion Dale Jarrett
7) 705pm
who crashed early m the race
F'h adolph a (Person 9 5) a Chicago Cubs
~29) 805pm
were the b1ggest losers
Arizona (Johnson 8-6 a Co orado Rose
The1r troubles allowed seven
4-3 905pm
Tuood&lt;oy 0 Clllmot
ume champ10n Dale Earnhardt to
Mont eal (Hermanson 2 4 a F o da
move mto second place w th a Demps or 3- o 705pm
on (Holt 7 5) a Pmsburgh Benson 9fimsh of 17th Jarrett fin shed 2 Hous
705pm
Allanta (Burket1 9-6) a N V Mots (letter 6
32nd to rernam third 26 7 po nts
7) 7 Opm
back Burton wound up 36th and
I'll !adolph a Daa 3 9 a Chicago Cubs
fell to fourth n the t tie race a Uebe 2 0) 805pm
C ncinnat (Pa s 2 5 a M waukee
po nt behind Jarrett
(Wright 8-8 8 05 p m
Arizona S olllemy e 9-8) a COloradO (JaMs
Ricky Rudd a four nme w n
3_. 905pm
ner at Dover fin shed third
s Lou s Benes 1o-9 at San Diogo (Ea on
Dollo111 8

&amp; Cook n The

TEMPORARY LABORERS l
CASH ERS Need 4 Peop e To

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m s be sold
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To ee 866 88 885

See

u

6 o

s

F day Oct 6
New o k New e se a Ch ago B p m if
ne e ary
Champ onsh p
Sunday Oc 5
30pm
a Was ngo DC

a Oak ad

0 304 769-0925

Sa u day Sap 30
Ch ago a New
k New e sey 6 p m

0

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BRUNER LAND

740-441 492

AFC
BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT

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40 446
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D

Apa he Mesa New Gea Boxes
Cables
e B x Ra ge Awn g

GoOd Shape Day
N gh

40 245 52

40 446-7753

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Company, o corporal on
llconoed n the Stall of Ohio
to provide 11 d aurety
Each propoeo
mutt
cont. n the lull neme ol the
Pony or portlto oubm tt ng
tho propoool and a
peraono Into toted therein
Each blddor muot tubm t
ev donee of It txpe tncoo
on pro1ecto of olmllor 1 zo
and complex ty The owne
lntendt and roqu roo that
thlo p oJect be completed n
later than October 30 2000
A I contractor• and
eubcontracto 1 lnvo ved
w th th a project w I to tho
extent p tel coble uto Oh o
producto
mate It 1

Imp aman1at1on or tho
p o1ect
Add t onaly
conlraclo compliance w th
tho Equa Emp oyment
Oppo tun ty equ omenta
or Oh o Adm n etrat ve code
Chople 123 tho Governo a
Execut vo o de 94 9 aha 1
be oqu od
B ddora muot comp y w th
tho p ovalllng waga ratee on
Pub c Imp ovemonto n
Molgo county and tho
VII ego or Syr&amp;CUII Oh 0
•• determ ned by tho Ohio
Depa lment or nduetrlal
Relet ono
The Vlllaga or Syracuoe
reaervea the ght to wa ve
lrrogularltloa and re1oct any
orol bda
VIllage or Sy acuao Sha on
Cottrill Clerk Treaoure (9)
18 25

I

SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

810
110

Help Wanted
TRANSPORTATlON

710 Autos for Sale

Ta a Townhouse Apa men

&amp;

Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
FIOo I CA
2 Bill h Fu y Cl
pe td Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
TIC

I To

Pa o S o S385 Mo No Pa 1

1101 WEIKLV GUARANTIED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MEN
FROM HOME PART
T ME NO E~PEA ENCE AE
au RED
80 0 74a 57 a .,

230

12 0

Socl on 153 54 of tho Ohio
ROVItod Code Bid oacu lty
rurnlohed In bond ro m
ahol be loouod by 1 Su ety

tltd~u ore wry much

0

0380 E

bond n accordance w th

l""'uld .lilt~ to !honk 11U
our fanUly, frierul• ond
ilt, qrea clturclt•• for
tlioir proyort arul cordo
fo"'' lrlti&amp;Hu and

4413 0 0

ASSEMBLY AT HOME C a I
o I ewe y wood IIW ng yp
ng G ea Pay CALL 800 795

can ba obtained at •• d
oflloo altar Stplembor 23
2000 at $25 00 po 111
wh ch monty wl
bo
olunded
to
the
unoucoeaolul blddora upon
the return ol tho complete
111 n good condition no
more than ten (1 0) dtyo
otter 1he b d doll Chockt
ohall be modo poyab o to
tht V logo or Syracuoe
Ohio
Etch b ddtr o required to
turn oh with 111 propootl a
B d Guaranty tnd con! oct

Card of Thanks

Sec

y Oepot ~~
qu ed Oeya 740 445 348
E en nga 740 3157 OS02 HO
1111 P u1

Home
Improvement•

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed propooolo w be
rece ved at tho ofllco ol tho
Moyor Munlclpo Bu d ng
Third Str . .t Syracuu
Ohio until 12 noon loco
time on Thurodoy October
5 2000 tor lurnloh ng ol 1 1
oarvlon
obor
and
motorlala oxcopt upho I
wh ch will ba turn ohod by
the M norlty Buolnno
Enlorprlat
(MBE)
cont tctor noceoaery lo
ccmp 81e the p o)tct known
11
Syracuu
Stroot
Roaurlaclng and at oa d
tlmt and ploce pub c y
opened and road a oud
Conlrect documenta b d
oheoto and tptcll cat one

Proleaalonai
Servlc"

•
40 446

E

AERAT ON MOTORS
RtPI td New &amp; Reb
In S ock
Ca !=~on E ana 800 53 9528

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93 F

50 4 4 V8 ooks Good
Good 65 000 M es
$6000 080 40 256 42

A Cl R

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Spol:li&gt;lllianlu to Lorrr
ond &amp;tbara Bake for
r..otllltlioroJor WI wlten
we .....u.d litem

.R"" Cowchirr

~:arvlce•

and abor n the

Help Wanted

110

AUD TOR
Cerl fled 0 Com pan)
Compa y Ca

F equen T ave
Grea

Benefi s

40 k
Camp Wage
Pa d Vaca ons and Ho days
Ma Resu me 949 K ng A e
Co umbus Oh o 432 2 o
Fax 6 4 42 6525
Call M Swanson

6 4 42 7500.. 265

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�Monday September 25 2000
Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel • Page 83

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Monday, September 25, 2000

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

NASCAR

S!~~~ ~!~:.!~u~~~.~~:e_~!m:~~.~-~~ EPR6~1

,YPerao11111
AniiDIIncernent
G - o y Lo81 Found
Van!
and Wonted
ToDoAcn
llu81 Be Paid n Advance
TRIBUNE OEADUNE
2 00 p m the dey before
the ed Ia to run
Sunday Monday ediUon
2 00 p m Friday
S£NDNEL Q§AQUNE
1 00 p m the day before
the ed 11 to run
Sunday Monday edition
1 00 p m Friday

S....,

180 Wanted To Do

230

a

440

Professional
Services

ATTENTION DEVtLOPERS 32
Aces ML Appoamaey

Apartments
for Rent

0

Ac e Lake w h s and Mob a
Home W h Add On S99 500
740~78

MERCHANDISE

a

510
RENTALS

a

Household
GOOds

App ances.

Rec ond

wasne s o ye s Ranges Ae

g A o s Up To 90 Days Gua
an eed We Se New Maytag Ap
p an a&amp; F e ch C y May ag
40-446 7795

BEGIBTEA Pf!PUNE,

2 dlyo before the ad It
torunby430pm

a

s.tunlay Monday
edition- 4 30 Thursday

DNd/1,.. oubj«:tto
hotldaJ18

~-to

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

Personals
ATIENTION ALL STUDENTS
We have ove
200 jobs ava lable mmedia ely
Fu and part me ava able

EARN up1oS15/hou
plus elerra bOnuses
Kyou need WOrk Qh BWFrf

Co 1-801).829-5753
Co 10dlly a11r1 omonow
CM Developme Group
M enn um e eserviCes

Now hiring ..,. drlvll"'

Dom nos PIZza n Pt Pleasan
exable hours apply
304 675-5858

pe son

OWN A COM PU EA Pu
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wo k $25 o $75 pe hou working

from home Reques FREE de a s
www 9 success c;;om
New &amp; Used F
tu e
New 2 P ece l ngroom Su es
$399 Buy So hide

ABSOLUTE GOLD M NE $0
aown Ne s S50k Wo k 7 h s

New To Vou Thrift Shopclo
9 Wes Stimson Athens
740-592 842
Qua
c o h ng and ho seho d
ems $ 00 bag sa e e e y
Th sday Monday h u Sa u day
900.5 30

Ca dy
VE ND NG
e
n
ee
7 494 8695
a ea To
24h s

a

v

60

New and Used Fu n u e So e
be ow Ho aay nn Kanauga Buy
a ew bed oom s e and ge he
rna esses ee New H de a bed

60as $399
994 Oakwood Spec a ECI on
4 70 2 Bedroom 2 Bath AI App ances n ud g Washe &amp;
0 ye Fu ace And Hea Pump
A
E ec c
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Move

Lost and Found
CONSULTANTS NEEDED Fas
es g ow g pa y pan HOUSE
OF

LOYD S Pa y

o

Ct'lo ce

CHR STMAS AROUND
PSYCH CS TAROT READERS &amp;
ASTRO DGERS NEEDED FOR
MA DR
V PSYCH C L NE
WORK FROM YOU R HOME OR

WORLD G
Ame can wa

chand se &amp;
9909

i

740 36
080

Stewart sn t th nking much
aGout anything but how to run
tl\e next lap or w n the next race
Hts numbers m two seasons of
W nston Cup racmg are gaudy by
any standards but he II let every
body else dec1de what they mean
If anybody had told me I d
have seven w ns by this t me n
nty second year I would have told
them they were crazy Stewart
sa1d Sunday after wmn ng the
MBNA com 400 at Dover
Downs lnternattonal Speedway
The v ctory was his fourth this
year tymg Rusty Wallace for the
senes lead In 1999 Stewart set
records for success by a rookie
Now he has a cl ance to lead the
CirCUit m w ns something Jeff
Gordon has done five years m a
row
But Stewart doesn I worry
about that or h s prospects for
w nn ng the champ10nsh1p n
2001
We want to go on wmn ng
every week but t s not like were
n a compeuuon to see who can
w n the most races he md We
JUSt want to w n as many as we
can
If anything Stewart s a b1t dis
appo nted he s 459 po nts behind
teammate Bobby Labonte n the
standmgs After fimsh ng a rook
e record fourth n po nts last
year Stewart IS fifth
He s dr ven by the need to
constantly 1mprove and some bad
firushes have hurt him
We JUSt want to get back our

have to trade this wm today for
five top fives 1 would do t
because cons stency s worth
more than w ns
He s r ght about that and his 4
3 edge m VICtor es counts far less
than Labonte s 13 8 advantage n
top five fin shes
Stewart concedes that he thinks
about future champwnsh ps and
even conSidered w nmng one as a
rookie But he says two seasons on
the c rcmt have demonstrated JUSt
how difficult that IS to accom
plish
On Sunday Stewart became the
first dr ver to sweep the races at
Dover Downs Internat onal
Speedway smce Jeff Gordon m
1996
He d d so after a bad begmmng
to the weekend He started 27th
m a field of 43 In June when he
won the MBNA Platmum 400
the dr ver from Rushville Ind
started 16th
Stewart downplayed the 1mpor
ranee of startmg first
Po es are n ce but you get to
take the p1cture w th the b1g trophy on Sunday he sa1d We
know we run good on Sunday
and were putttng an emphas s on
wmrung races
Crew ch ef Greg Z1padelli s
confident that they will contmue
to do JUSt that m the conung
years
Stewart ended a run of three
stra1ght w ns m this race by Mark
Martm who had a transrrusston
proble n and wound up s xth He

f.~: : : : : ::::::9 65

5

6-3

San F anasco (Ortiz 3- 1) a

E
nois 42 Tenn Martin 7
Eas Carolna 34 Sy acuse 7

Eon 3 N Caro naA&amp;TO

•

Flo Ida 59 Kornuclly 3
Florida A&amp;M 3 Tennessee S 8
FJo Ida 5 3 lOu SVI 8 0
F mlln35 VM 2
Georg a 37 New MexiCO S 0
G80fg a Southe n 3 Chattanooga
G ambl ng S 49 MVSU 3
Hamp on 42
Utah 34
Howa d 35 Morgan S 23
Jackson S 3 Souther U 0
Mary and 45 M dd e Ten essee 27

M&lt;:Nooso S 4 AJco s 2
Murray St 4 nd ana S 2
Nonh ca o na 20 Ma sha

THE

Ea n money me
a e
800 749

HEATING

CDSTI

560

Pets for Sale

720 Trucks for Sale

ennessee 70 Lou s~ana Man oe 3
Tennessee Tech 9 E Ken ucky 3
UAB 3 LSU 0
UCF 52 W 11m &amp; Mary 7
Vanc:lerbilt 26 Duke
W Caro na 39 ETSU 2
Wofford 24 Cha es n Southern 0

Mclwol1
Ak on 23 OhiO 20
Bose S 47 Cent Mictugan 0

Dayton 55 Mo ehead S
ndia a 42 C nc: nnatl S

Kansas 42 S

Regs e ed Dachshund
Puppy Red Ma e 9 wee s o d
s sho s a d Wo med 740
3 9 2238

Toron1o

New
York
Boson
Ban moe

J:::&lt; :i)87 8767
82 73
8 75

69
63 9
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93 62

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Un oad Tucks A d 2 Caahte s 0
Chucks Home s Tuck oM Sa e
See Hom e Sa e Manage Fo
Mo e De a s 0 A mo y Rou e

Kansas City
M Mesota

P due 38 M neso 8 24
Va pa 8 so 35 Au n Peay 28
W
nos44 NcholsS 3
4
W Kentucky 38 SE M ssou
W M chtgan 2 To edo o
Southwtar
Alabama A&amp;M 40 P at e V ew 0
Arka sas 28 A aba.ma 2
Bay Of 28 S
Fonda 3
ate. ahoma 42 R e 4
Sam Ho sen S 38 exas A&amp;M K ngsVJ e
SOu he n M ss 28 01 ahoma S 6

cu 52 Arkansas S 3
Taxas 48 Hous on 0
T ane 29 SMU 7
Tu sa 22 Lou s ana eCh o
U EP 39 Hawa
Fa West
Ai Fo e23 Uah 4
Arizona S 44 U ah S 20

BYU 0 UNLV 7
C8PoyS035MonanaS 4
E Wash ngton 27 Webe S 24 OT
FesoS 7Caifona3
daho 38 Washi g on S 34
dahO
4 sacramen o
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Nevada 35 Wyom ng 28
New Mexco 35 N A z na 28

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529 5

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223

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552

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Po
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TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR TY ISS ?
No Fee Un ess We W n
888 582 3345

S9 00 Hou No PhOne Ca s

Galllpollt
&amp; VIcinity

Seatt e

87 69

Oakand
Anatlem

85 69
80 5
70 86

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449

Ca

Low Mon h y Paymen

800-948 5878

it e

on 0

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800 948

0
2
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35 SanDegoS 3
SanOego39 Meno3
Sou hem Ca 34 San ose S 24
S Marys Ca 36 Cen Wash ng on 29
20T

Malo League Socce
P ayoff G I OCiil
Ou1rterf na Round
Seed ng n paren heats
Co orado (8 va Kansas City 1)

4

5
7
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640
594
583

545
457
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Sa u day Sapt 16
Kansas C ty Coo ado 0
Wedn18day Sept 20
Kansas C y 0 Co orado 0 e
Sunday Sap 24
KansasC y3 COoado2 Ka sasCtyw

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Kansas c~ 9 c eveland 0
M nnesota 6 Ch cago 'Nhite Sox 5

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Naw Eng and (7 vs Ch cago (2

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C cago2 NewE gad

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New Eng a d 2 Ch cag

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Seatt e 3 Oak and 2
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705pm
Detroit (Spa ks s 5 a N Y Yankees Good
en64 705pm

A ah&amp;~m Belcher 4 3 a Oakla d Zito 5 4
OOSpm

,

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

F day Oct 6
LosAgeesa Ka asCy830pm

ece sary
Ch cago vs Now Yo k Now Je say
Tueaday Sept 26
NewYokNew esey Ch ag Bpm

Now
Factory Ou le
C ass Lanes WV
Save hO sand A nven ory
'

31 0 Homes for Sale

8

Tuesday Ocr 3
Kansas C y a Los Ange es 0 30 p m

moe Me cedes

Mu docks

REAL ESTATE

5

F day Sop 22
Ch cago 6 New Engla d o Ch cago WI s
se es 6-3
New Yo k New Je sey (3 s Oa as 6)
F day Sept 5
OT
New Yo k New e e 2 Oa a
WedneSday Sept 20
New Yo k New e sey 2 Oa as
New
~rkNew eseywnsseres60
Sam na Round
Kansas C ty vs Los Ange ea
F day Sept 29
Los A gees a Kansas cry epm

(Woodad3 o

5-6 705pm

s

oa Ang• ea 5) vs Tampa Bay 4)
Thu aday Sep 4
Los Ange es Tampa Bay 0
Wldnead1y Sapt 20
Los Ange es 5 ampa Ba~ 2 os Ange es

22
2

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Tampa Ba)' 6 Toromo o
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60

72

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Paymen Requ ed La ge Se e

8

995
747
740

2
7

Slturd•V • Gamea

Paymen

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

56 6

N V Yankees 3 Detroit 8
To onto 7 Tampa Bay 6
Oak and 8 Seatt e 2
Boson8 Ba moe7 0 n ngs
ChcagoWh eSoKS M nesoa3
C evoland
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545 B 12

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75 80

67 88

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Miam Ohio 45 Ken S
4
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nos 3
Mi htga S 27 No e Dame 2
N owa37 SephenFA s n30
Neb aska 42 owa 3
Northwes em 4 Wiscons n 44 20T
Oh10 s 45 Penn s 6

os Ange es

EJol1

5

Nonnwes em s 23 LOu s ana La ayene 2
South Ca ol na 23 Mss ss pp S 9

Amertcan L.Ngua

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

a

s

0 Opm

884!

8 ooam

Clemson 3 Vi g n~a o
Davidson 7 Emory &amp; Henry 4
Delaware St 42 uoony 25

005pm

0402 Ask ng s 4 ooo

OFF CE MAG KAL 800 3 0

62

I

-

The Cnadiil 4

Aubum 3 N
OOIS 4
Bethune-CookrMin 4 Morris Brown 9

problerm
Eaot
W L Pet G8
Stewart le.il!§;3 of the 400 laps y Attanta
8263 584
811 87 57 3 !2
mcluding the last 54 In June he Now York
Florida
7382 47
led 242
Mon1roat
87 B8 432
25
6392
28
The wm ended an e ght race I'll llldalpha
Conlnll
losmg streak for the 1999 W n
583
C ncmna
82 74 528
9
ston Cup rookie of the year
M !waukee
70 ee 449
2
59 87 442
22
Jeff Burton who led every lap a XHouson
lou
Pittsburgh
85 9
47
26
week earher while wtnrung n e-go
a2 83 40028/2
Loudon N H and Jerry Nadeau xSanFanciaco WHI93 B3
5!16
were among those who had the l.ml Angelo
B3 13 532
0
AriZona
82 13 529 0 !2
look of wmners But they fell out Colorado
78 n
503 4 !2
With blown t res At least five cars san ();ego
75 8
48
8
x-d nched division title
left the race that way
y-d nched playotl berth
a.turday a O.mn
Z1padell admmed the race
S Lou s 8 Chocago Cubs 5
made him somewhat uneasy but
Florida 3 Colorado e 12 nn ngs f8 n
Cincinne e Houston 4
sa1d he was never concerned
IV zona 7 San F anc sco 5 a game
about Stewart hav ng a problem
Pmlburgh 4 M waukee 2 s game
A ama a Mortrea o
We seem to be very conserva
N Y MOIS 7 Pllillldelpt;a 3
uve m that area at most race
M !waukee 5 Pittsburgh 4 o M ngs 2nd
game
tracks Z1padelli sa1d We II fin
Los Angeles 2 San Diego
San Francesco 9 Arizona 5 2nd game
sh second or fifth before we take
SUndiY I 0.,_
a chance on ru rung a race car or
C ncinnat 4 Houston 3
N Y Mets 3 Pllillldelph a 2
hurtmg a dr ver
A Bnta 14 Mont ea !5
Labonte s lead m the ser es
Mlwaukoo 8 Pittsburgh 5
Ch~a~go Cubs 0 S Lou s 5
standings grew to a season high
Coio&lt;ado 9 Florida 3
249 pomts w th a fourth place
Arizona 8 San Franasoo 3
LOs Atlgeles San Diogo 0
fin sh Burton and re gnmg Wm
n.ctoy'oA 1anta GlaVJne 9 9) at Montreal (Vazquez
ston Cup champion Dale Jarrett
7) 705pm
who crashed early m the race
F'h adolph a (Person 9 5) a Chicago Cubs
~29) 805pm
were the b1ggest losers
Arizona (Johnson 8-6 a Co orado Rose
The1r troubles allowed seven
4-3 905pm
Tuood&lt;oy 0 Clllmot
ume champ10n Dale Earnhardt to
Mont eal (Hermanson 2 4 a F o da
move mto second place w th a Demps or 3- o 705pm
on (Holt 7 5) a Pmsburgh Benson 9fimsh of 17th Jarrett fin shed 2 Hous
705pm
Allanta (Burket1 9-6) a N V Mots (letter 6
32nd to rernam third 26 7 po nts
7) 7 Opm
back Burton wound up 36th and
I'll !adolph a Daa 3 9 a Chicago Cubs
fell to fourth n the t tie race a Uebe 2 0) 805pm
C ncinnat (Pa s 2 5 a M waukee
po nt behind Jarrett
(Wright 8-8 8 05 p m
Arizona S olllemy e 9-8) a COloradO (JaMs
Ricky Rudd a four nme w n
3_. 905pm
ner at Dover fin shed third
s Lou s Benes 1o-9 at San Diogo (Ea on
Dollo111 8

&amp; Cook n The

TEMPORARY LABORERS l
CASH ERS Need 4 Peop e To

Appalachian S 6

m s be sold
NO Oeaters Please
To ee 866 88 885

See

u

6 o

s

F day Oct 6
New o k New e se a Ch ago B p m if
ne e ary
Champ onsh p
Sunday Oc 5
30pm
a Was ngo DC

a Oak ad

0 304 769-0925

Sa u day Sap 30
Ch ago a New
k New e sey 6 p m

0

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
BRUNER LAND

740-441 492

AFC
BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT

De

BUDGET PR CES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 Wos wood

e om $289 o $3 0 Wa k o
shOp &amp; mo es Ca
40 446
2568 Equa Hous ng Oppo un ty

D

Apa he Mesa New Gea Boxes
Cables
e B x Ra ge Awn g

GoOd Shape Day
N gh

40 245 52

40 446-7753

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Company, o corporal on
llconoed n the Stall of Ohio
to provide 11 d aurety
Each propoeo
mutt
cont. n the lull neme ol the
Pony or portlto oubm tt ng
tho propoool and a
peraono Into toted therein
Each blddor muot tubm t
ev donee of It txpe tncoo
on pro1ecto of olmllor 1 zo
and complex ty The owne
lntendt and roqu roo that
thlo p oJect be completed n
later than October 30 2000
A I contractor• and
eubcontracto 1 lnvo ved
w th th a project w I to tho
extent p tel coble uto Oh o
producto
mate It 1

Imp aman1at1on or tho
p o1ect
Add t onaly
conlraclo compliance w th
tho Equa Emp oyment
Oppo tun ty equ omenta
or Oh o Adm n etrat ve code
Chople 123 tho Governo a
Execut vo o de 94 9 aha 1
be oqu od
B ddora muot comp y w th
tho p ovalllng waga ratee on
Pub c Imp ovemonto n
Molgo county and tho
VII ego or Syr&amp;CUII Oh 0
•• determ ned by tho Ohio
Depa lment or nduetrlal
Relet ono
The Vlllaga or Syracuoe
reaervea the ght to wa ve
lrrogularltloa and re1oct any
orol bda
VIllage or Sy acuao Sha on
Cottrill Clerk Treaoure (9)
18 25

I

SERVICES

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

810
110

Help Wanted
TRANSPORTATlON

710 Autos for Sale

Ta a Townhouse Apa men

&amp;

Ve y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
FIOo I CA
2 Bill h Fu y Cl
pe td Adu Poo &amp; Baby Poo
TIC

I To

Pa o S o S385 Mo No Pa 1

1101 WEIKLV GUARANTIED
WORK NG FOR THE GOVERN
MEN
FROM HOME PART
T ME NO E~PEA ENCE AE
au RED
80 0 74a 57 a .,

230

12 0

Socl on 153 54 of tho Ohio
ROVItod Code Bid oacu lty
rurnlohed In bond ro m
ahol be loouod by 1 Su ety

tltd~u ore wry much

0

0380 E

bond n accordance w th

l""'uld .lilt~ to !honk 11U
our fanUly, frierul• ond
ilt, qrea clturclt•• for
tlioir proyort arul cordo
fo"'' lrlti&amp;Hu and

4413 0 0

ASSEMBLY AT HOME C a I
o I ewe y wood IIW ng yp
ng G ea Pay CALL 800 795

can ba obtained at •• d
oflloo altar Stplembor 23
2000 at $25 00 po 111
wh ch monty wl
bo
olunded
to
the
unoucoeaolul blddora upon
the return ol tho complete
111 n good condition no
more than ten (1 0) dtyo
otter 1he b d doll Chockt
ohall be modo poyab o to
tht V logo or Syracuoe
Ohio
Etch b ddtr o required to
turn oh with 111 propootl a
B d Guaranty tnd con! oct

Card of Thanks

Sec

y Oepot ~~
qu ed Oeya 740 445 348
E en nga 740 3157 OS02 HO
1111 P u1

Home
Improvement•

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed propooolo w be
rece ved at tho ofllco ol tho
Moyor Munlclpo Bu d ng
Third Str . .t Syracuu
Ohio until 12 noon loco
time on Thurodoy October
5 2000 tor lurnloh ng ol 1 1
oarvlon
obor
and
motorlala oxcopt upho I
wh ch will ba turn ohod by
the M norlty Buolnno
Enlorprlat
(MBE)
cont tctor noceoaery lo
ccmp 81e the p o)tct known
11
Syracuu
Stroot
Roaurlaclng and at oa d
tlmt and ploce pub c y
opened and road a oud
Conlrect documenta b d
oheoto and tptcll cat one

Proleaalonai
Servlc"

•
40 446

E

AERAT ON MOTORS
RtPI td New &amp; Reb
In S ock
Ca !=~on E ana 800 53 9528

,

93 F

50 4 4 V8 ooks Good
Good 65 000 M es
$6000 080 40 256 42

A Cl R

...tcomod
Spol:li&gt;lllianlu to Lorrr
ond &amp;tbara Bake for
r..otllltlioroJor WI wlten
we .....u.d litem

.R"" Cowchirr

~:arvlce•

and abor n the

Help Wanted

110

AUD TOR
Cerl fled 0 Com pan)
Compa y Ca

F equen T ave
Grea

Benefi s

40 k
Camp Wage
Pa d Vaca ons and Ho days
Ma Resu me 949 K ng A e
Co umbus Oh o 432 2 o
Fax 6 4 42 6525
Call M Swanson

6 4 42 7500.. 265

FREE
YARD SALE
SIGN

wllh ad!
Get yours
today

�Monday, September 25,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

2000

':Uonday, September 25, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
40 Salon buya
•1 High pointed
hill

PHIU.IP

now PARTinG OUT

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760 .
Local 843-5264 .
September Special
1 Large 1 Topping
w/2 Liter coke

1Mteotca:re Supplement;

tftl

Home

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue or on Order or
Solo 111uod out of tho
Common Plooo Court or
Molge County, Ohio, In the
. coot of tho Home Notional
Bonk, Plaintiff, vo. Allen L.
Pope oko Alton Pope, otal.,
Defendanta,

upon

•

Soolod propo1111 will bo
recolvod altho olllco altho
Mayor, Municipal Building,
Ohio, until 12 noon locol
time on Thurodoy, October
5, 2000, tor turnlohlng of oil
motorlalo nocoooary to
complotothe project known
u
Syracuse Stroot
Resurfacing , end at aald

Judgment therein rendorod, limo and place, publicly
being Cooo No. OQ..CV-68 In opened and road aloud.
eold Court, I will otter lor
Contract documenll, bid
ealo at tho front door althe ohoote and opeclllcatlona
Courthouee In Pomeroy, con bo obtained at oald
Molgo County, Ohio, on tho olllco allor September 23,
13th day at Octobor, 2000, 2000, at $25.00 por oot,
11 10:00 a.m., tho following which monty will 1&gt;1
Iondo and tonomonte, refunded
to
the
IOCIIIod ot 2371 Third Street, unoucco11tul blddoro upon
Syrecuoo, Ohio 45779. A the return at tho complete
completo legal description aot In good condition no
of tho rool eotote Ia I I more than ton ·(10) doyo
tollowo:
alter tho bid dolo. Chocko
Tho following deocrlbod ahall be made poyoblo to
rool ootota situate In tho VIllage of Syrocuao,
Syrocuoe Vllloga, Molga Ohio.
Tho VIllage hao agreed to
County, Stole of Ohio, In
Lata 2 and 3 or the "Sot·Aolde" at lout
Subdlvlolon of Bullington's $20,000.00 tor Primo
Eototo, and being a parcel · Procurement ol motorlala
created out of the Orville B. from a cartlllod Minority
and June A. Sayre property Buolnoll Entorprlll (MBE)
(Volume 185, Pogo 131, vendor. This material will ba
Molgs County Deed uoed by tho povlng
llecordo) bounded and controctor. Eoch bidder
dolcrtbed ao follows:
must submit ovldonco that
B 1
Commencing ot a atone 11 18 Ml
with an "x" chloolod Into It
nor 11Y us neat
line of Enterprise aa certified by I
fou nd on tho north
·
the
Stott
Equal
tha aforamantlonod Lot 2; Employment Opportunity
eald atone being located on Coordinator.
Soyro'a north line at the
Each bidder Ia required to
aoutheoat corner of the furnish with Ita propoaal, a
Paul and lrta Baker property Bid Guaranty and contract
(Volume 180, Page 355, bond In accordance with
Molga County Dood Section 153.54 of tho Ohio
Recorda) and at tho Revised Code. Bid oocurlty
aouthweol corner of the lurnlohod In bond form,
VIrgil L. and Martha L. ohall bo laouad by a Surety
Colllno property (Volume Company or Corporation
315, Pogo 395, Meigs llconaedln the State of Ohio
County Died Recorda);
to provide aald aurety.
Thonco Wool 88.50 roet · Each propoaal muat
along tho north line, or Lot2 contain the lull nama altho .
(being also Sayre a north Party or partlea oubmlltlng
line) to an Iron pin sot by the propoaal end all
this survey In a drainage peraono Interested therein.
ditch and tho point or Each bidder muat submit
beginning or the real ootate evidence of Ha oxperloncoa
described haroln;
on pro)acto of almllar alze
Thence along 8 new
parcel bound~ry by .the

aubcontractora Involved

with this project will, to tho
extant practicable, uso Ohio
producto and matorlalo In
the Implementation of this
project.
Bidders muot comply with
the prevailing wage rateo on
Public Improvements In
Melgo County and the
VIllage of Syracuoo, Ohio,
ao datormlnad by tho Ohio
Department at lnduatrlol
llalatlono.
Tho VIllage of Syracuao
ro10rvea tho right to waive
lrrogularllloa and reject any
or all bids.
VIllage or Syracuoo
Sharon CoHrlll
Clork·Trellurer
19116. 25

aurvey at Salser's northeast
corner on the nor1h line of
the aforementioned Lot 2;

Thonca Eaat 16.50 fool
olong tho north line of Lot 2
(bilng alao Sayre's north
line) to tho point of
beginning containing 0.965

acrea.

Sub)oct to all legal
eaaementa.
Tho above doocrlpllon was

made In accordance with an

actual aurvey conducted by
James Stewart PS7426 on
June 3 and 7 , 1993. Bearings
are baaed on the survey

rocordod In Volume 185,
Pago 131 , Meigs County
Deed Records and are
Intended only to axpraaa
1ngular measurement.

llalarence Olods: Volume
11 , Page 709, Meigs County
Olllclal Recorda and Volume
335, Pogo 725, Molgs County
Deed Records.
Audftor 'a Parcel Nos: 20·

PubliC Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
Olllce of Contracta
Legal Copy Number: 000503
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Date: 09/18/2000
TE21 ·G000(562)
Sealed proposals will
accepted from all _pre·
qualified bidders at the
Office of Contracts of the
Ohio Department of
Transportation, Columbus ,

Ohio, until 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday,
October
25,2000
For Improving Section
MEG·124·12.52, State Route
124 In Rutland Township,
Melga County, Ohio, In
accordance with plana and

specifications by grading,
dra ining , paving with
asphalt concrete on 8"
concrete baae end by
conltructlng structure No.

MEG-124·1252, a throe open
reinforced concrete slab on
reinforced concrete capped

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

Prices

740-992-1506

A&amp;lan holiday
•5 Actor u.-.
o46 Car
a111mblera'

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY" ,
IPr·otect your guns, family hei ~ooms. coin and Cll!'d
r~~~~~'ns, legal papers , investment records, photo
11
cameras,
household . inventory
arrd
sentimental items will be sale.
For more Information call

•an.

48 Papaete'e
leland
51 Towera over

55 Stabbed
56 Antenna

IADMLUMID

11'. 11'1'. za

740-992-5232

ca•n~a,.u•

West
"' K tO 5 2

East
•J987 3
., J 7

• K 10 6

• A 9 4
... 9 4 2

., 8 3

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
GALLIPOLIS

Bulltlo•er &amp; Bacldaoe

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Hou"" &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy•le,... &amp;
Urililwa

State Route 7,

baclc to Our
regular laoUI'I"

1\lppers Plallla

Tuea-Frl1o-&amp;

:

Sat. 10-4

Washinitoa Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Chlldcare Services
740-667-6329

auppllea
• WOOden craftl

• Bullets

740-992-4559
8!1100 1 mo pc1

-HANING·
u:..:·., .....a
FREE ESTIMATES

Svracuse. OH

740-698-6735

•AKQ

140·992-5176

Standing timber large
or small tracks. T o p
prices paid also.

•••••••••••••••

BISSELL IUIL~EIS
INC.

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Dozer work.
FrM Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging

Before 6p.m. Leave Message
Aller 6 pm· 740·985-4180

COMMERCIAL and R!SIDEIITl~

after 8:00pm
740-992 -5050
(Randy )

FREEt ESTIMATES .

The CRAFTY,

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.

(Factory Outlet)
All ?ertical bhndo are
made 10 order at our
location
UP TO 70% OFF

• Verticals • Wood
• Mitrlo 4 Etc
144 Third AYI. Galllptlls

446-4995

Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"l'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progreaalve top line..
Uc.l! DO-SO """""

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

PAW DO

IF

THIS
MESS

HE

chaintawt, tillers ,
generators , snowb!owere,
weedeatera, pick-up and

_

request.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Open Mon-Frt M; Sat. 11-4
Sun. Closed
Phone 7-9-2804
Ownor .Jim Plckena
~ochonlc· BIU J_!!ns•
'
t'ana Mar ·Tamra o'lckont:

;,·

• TI\E'i ~'{

'.

•
•

~IC.t. (;0'(:) Flt-1\~f\

"""l

:&gt;I Cot\

U..ST .. .

•

HILL'S

SELF STORAGE
29670 Beahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzas 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
"(

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% SWeet feed - 15.25 I50 lbs.
•12% Cattle feed '6J5 I 100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Bag food 16,75 I50 lbs.

• fall ferUIIzers

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

SELLERS CONSTRUCTiON

Phone!

(146) :l~.J·-oo

740-985-3831

. "A Better
R:Jtland, Ohio

-

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers. carpets. etc. ·
Mon - F ;·l 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

·(740) 742-8888 , . ,
1-888-521-0916
HARTWELL HOUSE
We now oiTe r Gift &amp;
Wedding Re gis try
We have Village Candles

992-7696

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC
CONC RETE
MASON RY
BAC KH OE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

·FACTORY DIRECT·
VInyl Replac•mtnt
Wlnclo·Any Size Double Hung.
$229.00"
•frHIIst......
• frH I• Howtt lstflllftl

,...... ,

• Willie • Tilt"" • ~

SMITH'S COfiSTROaiOfi
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

M11d It done, gl111 111 • c1ll
FREE ESTIMATES
Gr11t Prloed on Mew Homu

9.92-2753

• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740-696-1176
or 740-696-1233 '
DEPOYIIG
PARtS
· AB Make. Tractor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 South

992-1101

OFRCE EIPREII
IIIIIIEIIIERVICEI
All Types of Business .
Support Services

Advertise

o,ttoo.......

SYSTEMS. INC.
99i!-4119
~800-291-5600

"No doolon or ton~odon ploi!O
wv•o23477

VI1H our ahowroom on
Ohlol It coun

pile piers and abutment•
(Spans: 26'·5 3/B", 37'·9" ,
26 '· 5 1/4" C/C baerlngo
roadway: 36'·0" F/F curb
w/6 '-0" Sidewalks and
concrete railing) over Lillie
Leading Creek.
,The reel eetate cannot . be " The
dolo ut lor
aold for loas than two-thirds completio n ol this work
altho appraised value.
s hall be aa oot forth In tho
TERMS OF SA~E : 10% bidding propooa l." Plana
down day of sale, balance on and Spoclllcatlona are on
delivery of deed. Sold llle In tho Dapartmont of
1ubject to accrued real Tranaportatlon.
estate taxes.
Gordon Proctor
James M. Soulaby
Director of TranaportaUon 1I,______~!:!!.!~!!!!!!!!!!.,;.,
3T 9(11 ), 9(1B), 9(25)
(9) 25, (10) 2, 2tc
11

Old 18

00567.000 and 20-00563.001
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
2371 Third Stroot, Syracuse,
Ohlo45779
IlEAL
E S T ATE
APPRAISED AT: $70,000.00.

f as low as 25
____.J

:---

!i' ~

, L------'

: PEANUTS
I SUPPOSE TJ.IERE ARE TIMES WHEN 't'OU CANNOT
IMA61NE TR~IN6 TO 60 THROU61i LIFE WITHOUT ME ..

.

''

32 Move llko a
dog's tall
34 Plftaburgh
team

351mpoaolve
39 Wild oheep
43Notcookod
oomucll
45 Music butt's
ourchaao
47 r.SIIvor" ftnlah
48 Boxlnll"
victory abbr.

49 Anecdote
collection
50 Towel word
52 Small Inlet
5311omoto
54 Artlul

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

Today's cluo: Y equals W

.' YO'UO

IIWHP

TZ

I L H P

V T I 0

MTR

ROBV '

EHZEHZZBfiH

I 0 X P

VEFOTZ,

W H P

T Z

VIHP

II W B Z

-

VBZBMOI

KBEF

IIOBV'P

HZKSIHOP .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The linls ol autumn - a mighty flower garden I
blossoming under the spell of the enchanter, Frost• - John Greenleaf
Whinier

T::~:t:~' ·s«:~4\llA-l&amp;t.trs·

- - - - - - 141114

0 Rearrange

WOlD
lAIII

~r CLAr I . POUAN - - - - - -

leuers of the

four scrombl.d words be-

low to form four simple worda

rI I

GA VE AR

I I I

S I T0 J

N A L U N 1::-

Once again my neighbor came
home late from a golf game. He
13 I ~- ::; found a note that read : "Your din:
L-...1..-.I.,_...L._J.
. .....J.~ ner is-- the-- -'"

t-l-,.-.,.,.---.-.,.,-1'

Bu RDI T I
t--,-1
I --rl--rl--rl-:-'-ri-:-S-i O Complolo
.

•

•

.

.

.

.

tho chuckle quo1od

by filling in the missing words

.__.__,__..._..___...__, you develop from step No. 3 below.

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
f t UNSCRAMBLE A60VE LETTERS
10 GET ANSWER

11:1

To get a current weather
report, check the

Fusion - Impel - Weary - Jungle . UP the REIGNS

Sentinel

While studying dictatorships one teenager remarked
lhat a dictator doesn 't have enough sense to give UP
t~e REIGNS .

IMONDAY

SCRAM-lETS AI\!SWERS

SEPTEMBER 25

'Your

'Birthday

1-800-828-0212

8 13 1 rno

QUALITY WINDOW

Brian Morrlson/RtKine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

••

0401 861-3224

·'

Stato Route 33
6 Mllea North ~moray,

MY

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

' Must lit wllhln MIG. Specs '

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

'''•

27 Roman 502

MA,ttll'lf

IT

THE BORN LOSER
. 1""

S

Of

50&lt;j CD

EXCfiVfiTINQ :

(740) 992-3470

I

J..IFS

~WICK'S41j
HfiOUno qnd ;
Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•,
Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

Tt'IS'

~-~~$'0/tl)
IN_

__

1

tranuctlon

BY PHILLIP ALDER

When I hunted for a quotation
including the word "lure," I
tho ught I would get some thing
about fi shing . Yet none of the
three mentioned that pastime. I
found one from "Romeo and
Juliet," one from "The Rubaiyat
TOOK
of Omar Khayyam, " and thi s
@
from Wallace Steven s: " The humi'AONfY!
~m
ble are the y tha t move abo ut the
world with the lure of the real in
the
ir hearts." Having read that
'Oll!l~E ~h
a~!
severa l time s, I'm still not sure I
tHO.
g~
understand it. No wonder my
~·
Chambers ' Biographical Dictio,
~~
nary mentions that Stevens wrote
9-25
" impressioni s t and highly intel t1P..v•!i S'
lectual verse relying for e ffect
upo n rhythmic
and
tonal
imagery."
There is a declarer-play that
P""~'( f-\ELLO TO Tf\E. ~ICC.:)\ GJ'i~
lures people on , whe ther they be
'(OJ~ f..IJ~ Gi)t.IW\ MfL\ I
humble (no t many g ood bridge
pl a yers are ) or in search of the real
(whatever that might be) . You
race into fo ur hearts. West leads
th e c lub jack . How would you
ste p through thi s 52-card world?
Yes, pe rhap s S o uth s h ould
ha ve rebid three no-trump: but
with four he arts, No rth mi ght not
ha ve passed .
You start with nin e top tri cks :
==~=-::::-=:-:-=~ o ne spade. fi •e he art s and three
c lubs . So. you could try the spade
fin esse. Fine if il wins , ye t what
happens if the fin esse loses&gt; Wesl
will ex it wilh a spade . leavin g yo u
a maj or unde rdog to a vo id three
diamond losers.
In stead . g uarantee the contrac t
with an endpl a y. After winning
tri c k one. draw trump s, c ash the
remaining club tricks, and e xt!
with the ace a nd quee n of spades.
Wh oeve r win s with the spade
kin g mu st e ither open up diaON TJ.IE OT~ER HAND, UI~AT's W~ON6
monds or concede a ruff-and-disJUST 60IN6 THROUGH LIFE?
c ard . Whic heve r he selec ts, you
lose only two diamo nd tric ks.

10 Court dlvldor
11 Unretlnod
molal
t3 11u11lan
wagon
1a. Molt aged
19 Thlator
dlatrtct
20 Shoutor
22 Mil-t
23 Egg dlah
24 SeCondhand
25 Van Gogh,
e.g.

Lure of finesse

IN

We service mowert,

1

Shankar
5 An Aotalro

6 Tex01clty
7 Umpire
8 Weight
9 "Graph" finish

Opening lead: • J

OUR
FRONT
YARD?

Fnturtngtwo Brlgga &amp;
Strotton trained
mechlnlca

•

: 740-742-8015 or
: 1-877-353-7022

WHAT WOULD

RACINE MOWER CLINIC

delivery available on

3 The dam agcy.l
4 Mutlclan

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer: South
Wesl North East
Pass
Pass . 2.,
Pass
Pass Pass

992·6215

: Quality Driveways,
: Patios, Sidewalks
: 25 years Experience
: FREE ESTIMATES

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacemen! Windows
• Room Additions
• Roofing

BLIND SPOT

992-5479

HUBBARD'S
GRIINHOUSE

WANTED

"Take rhe pain our
of paintingLet me do irfor you"

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

fall Mums 6 for SI 0

Also Gourds &amp;. PumPkins.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Sat 10-6 Sun- Cloaed

llowlllriln
•. doctrfatl &amp; Pis I' 1

Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn . ..._..I

CODDECTIOD

DOWN
1 Powertullnlta.
2 "Ballad" llnloh

'fQ9 5 4 2
• Q8 3

V.C. YOUNG Ill

CODCRETE

'"WJe rtl

• Candle making

•AQ

• ......... G.tton
• ¥llyl Sll!fltl &amp; ,......
• hilt &amp; , .... Docb
Free Estimates

.,-.. --WIIB
........ .

9

Certified in Meip,
Athens and

CARPENTER SERVId

17401 ttHI31

57 Car•van stop
5I Bleak

Soulh

.

...... , .... , ••• It.

Servil!B•

The Countr~
Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

YOUNG'S

HeuQpr

OF

7/2R/TFN

Intends and requlroa that
following three courses.
this project be completed
1. South 36' 09'22" Eaot
159.95 fool to an Iron pin sot ~::00 late than October 30,
by this survey In said
Ali contracton and
2 South 33' 41'52 ' East
66.36 foot to an Iron pin sot
by this survey In oald
drainage ditch:
3. South 34' 00'03" Eaat
145.75 footto an Iron pin sat
by thla ourvey In oald
drolnaga ditch on tho south
llno of tho aloremontlonod
Lot 3 (being also on Sayre's
oouth line);
Thonco Wast 240.30 loot
along tho aouth line of Lot 3
(bolng alao Sayre's south
line) to an Iron pin sat by
thla ourvey at tho southeast
cornor of tho Nlal E. and
VIrginia Salser property
(Volume 196, Page 361 ,
Melgo County Daed
llocordo), passing an Iron
pin oat by this survey at
35.75 foot. :
Thence along Selsor's
1111 Uno North 321.85 feat
to an Iron pin sot by this

fOR lliORl lllfO PllAS[ CAll

44 !:!thaalt

Prmmvy, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

and complexity. The owner

d111lnage ditch;

----·

33795 Hi!A'IIIi RJ.

•a Hollcoptar

•

... J tO 8 7

Richard Hunt
35845 Cleland Rd . Langsville
742-1309
Lost: Blue &amp; Gold McCaw
parrot, any info. Cal1742-1309

Public Notice

~~~
HighBl Dry

Self-Storage

Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
IErnerge~IY Funds; Mortgage;
--Medical •

Public Notice

ALDER

Jacksonville Jaguars a1 1ndiana~lis Colts (Live) (CC)

•, Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2000
'
Bec au se you s hould ha ve
: oppo rtuniti es to ass ume mo re
: direct control ove r your pe rsonal
~ affairs in the year ahea d, more
~progress c an be made. It ' ll be up
'&lt;to you to do so, howe ver.
·: LIBRA (Se pt. 23- 0 ct. 23)
;So meone to whom you 've been
attracted but have never had the
'oppo rtunity to get to kno w bette r
.may walk into your life today. It
.co uld be a better match than you
:1hought. Trying to patch up a bro .ke n romance? The Astro-Graph
.M atc hmake r can help you understand what to do to make the relati o nship w ork . M a il $2 .75 to
M atchmake r, c/o thi s newspape r,
P.O . Box 1758, Murra y Hill Station, New Yo rk, NY 101 56.
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22)
D on ' t take your eye off the ball
today, eve n when you have to deal
with periphe ral obstacle s. Your
objecti ves c an be reache d if you
keep thi s in mind .
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 2 3-Dec .
~ I l Happy lidings may be on the ir
way tha t will serve to elevate your
ho pes and ex pectations. Th e good

ne ws may have some thin g to do
w ith geuing togethe r with someone you haven't see n for a while .
CAPRICORN ( D ec. 2 2 -Jan.
19) Any persi stent hunch you get
today. espec ially if it is of a finan ·
c ial nature, s hould be hee ded
today. Your intuiti ve pe rce ption s
could put you o n a winning trac k.
AQUARI US (J an . 20· Feb . 19).
Th ere could be go od juslifi cati on
for optimism today, particul arl y
regarding invol ve me nl s with
friends. M a ke plans to sp end
some time with those you enjoy
being with .
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Someone who has been wanting
to do something nice for you as a
reciprocation for the consideration
you showed them recently may
find a way to do so today.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
What makes you luckier than
u sual today · in a partners hip
arrangement is that the person you
selected has high, idealistic stan·
dards. Mutual benefits can come
from such principles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 )
You ' re in an e specially good

ach ie vemenl cycle today. whe re
anything you .take on is possible
to do. Do n ' t put limitation s o n
your c reativity .
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20 )
Thi s is o ne o f th ose days in
whi ch yo u should do we ll soc ia lly with so meone you m eet. T he
two of you cnuld find muc h to
d iscuss that you have in co mmon .
CANCE R (Jun e 21-Jul y 22)
A lthoug h yo u can be a lo ne r
so metim es w hen il co m es to
accomplis hing proj ecls. teamin g
up with someone who has the
s ame goa l could be an ad va nt age
today.
LEO (Ju ly 23 -Aug 22) Be a
good li stener and a kee n o bserv ·
e r today, because there are slrong
indk uti o n s that you could p rofit
fro m the wisdom and experie n.:e
of so meone who has been there,
d one that.
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Se pl. 22l
T hai whi c h is due you cou ld
co me your way today. No mutte r
w hat you think, your past efforts
have no t gone unn oticed or u nappreciate d , as you ' ll now d iscover.

I.

�Monday, September 25,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

2000

':Uonday, September 25, 2000

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

OOP

NEA Crossword Puzzle
40 Salon buya
•1 High pointed
hill

PHIU.IP

now PARTinG OUT

Rocky R. Hupp, Agent
Box 189

Middleport, Ohio 45760 .
Local 843-5264 .
September Special
1 Large 1 Topping
w/2 Liter coke

1Mteotca:re Supplement;

tftl

Home

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue or on Order or
Solo 111uod out of tho
Common Plooo Court or
Molge County, Ohio, In the
. coot of tho Home Notional
Bonk, Plaintiff, vo. Allen L.
Pope oko Alton Pope, otal.,
Defendanta,

upon

•

Soolod propo1111 will bo
recolvod altho olllco altho
Mayor, Municipal Building,
Ohio, until 12 noon locol
time on Thurodoy, October
5, 2000, tor turnlohlng of oil
motorlalo nocoooary to
complotothe project known
u
Syracuse Stroot
Resurfacing , end at aald

Judgment therein rendorod, limo and place, publicly
being Cooo No. OQ..CV-68 In opened and road aloud.
eold Court, I will otter lor
Contract documenll, bid
ealo at tho front door althe ohoote and opeclllcatlona
Courthouee In Pomeroy, con bo obtained at oald
Molgo County, Ohio, on tho olllco allor September 23,
13th day at Octobor, 2000, 2000, at $25.00 por oot,
11 10:00 a.m., tho following which monty will 1&gt;1
Iondo and tonomonte, refunded
to
the
IOCIIIod ot 2371 Third Street, unoucco11tul blddoro upon
Syrecuoo, Ohio 45779. A the return at tho complete
completo legal description aot In good condition no
of tho rool eotote Ia I I more than ton ·(10) doyo
tollowo:
alter tho bid dolo. Chocko
Tho following deocrlbod ahall be made poyoblo to
rool ootota situate In tho VIllage of Syrocuao,
Syrocuoe Vllloga, Molga Ohio.
Tho VIllage hao agreed to
County, Stole of Ohio, In
Lata 2 and 3 or the "Sot·Aolde" at lout
Subdlvlolon of Bullington's $20,000.00 tor Primo
Eototo, and being a parcel · Procurement ol motorlala
created out of the Orville B. from a cartlllod Minority
and June A. Sayre property Buolnoll Entorprlll (MBE)
(Volume 185, Pogo 131, vendor. This material will ba
Molgs County Deed uoed by tho povlng
llecordo) bounded and controctor. Eoch bidder
dolcrtbed ao follows:
must submit ovldonco that
B 1
Commencing ot a atone 11 18 Ml
with an "x" chloolod Into It
nor 11Y us neat
line of Enterprise aa certified by I
fou nd on tho north
·
the
Stott
Equal
tha aforamantlonod Lot 2; Employment Opportunity
eald atone being located on Coordinator.
Soyro'a north line at the
Each bidder Ia required to
aoutheoat corner of the furnish with Ita propoaal, a
Paul and lrta Baker property Bid Guaranty and contract
(Volume 180, Page 355, bond In accordance with
Molga County Dood Section 153.54 of tho Ohio
Recorda) and at tho Revised Code. Bid oocurlty
aouthweol corner of the lurnlohod In bond form,
VIrgil L. and Martha L. ohall bo laouad by a Surety
Colllno property (Volume Company or Corporation
315, Pogo 395, Meigs llconaedln the State of Ohio
County Died Recorda);
to provide aald aurety.
Thonco Wool 88.50 roet · Each propoaal muat
along tho north line, or Lot2 contain the lull nama altho .
(being also Sayre a north Party or partlea oubmlltlng
line) to an Iron pin sot by the propoaal end all
this survey In a drainage peraono Interested therein.
ditch and tho point or Each bidder muat submit
beginning or the real ootate evidence of Ha oxperloncoa
described haroln;
on pro)acto of almllar alze
Thence along 8 new
parcel bound~ry by .the

aubcontractora Involved

with this project will, to tho
extant practicable, uso Ohio
producto and matorlalo In
the Implementation of this
project.
Bidders muot comply with
the prevailing wage rateo on
Public Improvements In
Melgo County and the
VIllage of Syracuoo, Ohio,
ao datormlnad by tho Ohio
Department at lnduatrlol
llalatlono.
Tho VIllage of Syracuao
ro10rvea tho right to waive
lrrogularllloa and reject any
or all bids.
VIllage or Syracuoo
Sharon CoHrlll
Clork·Trellurer
19116. 25

aurvey at Salser's northeast
corner on the nor1h line of
the aforementioned Lot 2;

Thonca Eaat 16.50 fool
olong tho north line of Lot 2
(bilng alao Sayre's north
line) to tho point of
beginning containing 0.965

acrea.

Sub)oct to all legal
eaaementa.
Tho above doocrlpllon was

made In accordance with an

actual aurvey conducted by
James Stewart PS7426 on
June 3 and 7 , 1993. Bearings
are baaed on the survey

rocordod In Volume 185,
Pago 131 , Meigs County
Deed Records and are
Intended only to axpraaa
1ngular measurement.

llalarence Olods: Volume
11 , Page 709, Meigs County
Olllclal Recorda and Volume
335, Pogo 725, Molgs County
Deed Records.
Audftor 'a Parcel Nos: 20·

PubliC Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbua, Ohio
Olllce of Contracta
Legal Copy Number: 000503
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Mailing Date: 09/18/2000
TE21 ·G000(562)
Sealed proposals will
accepted from all _pre·
qualified bidders at the
Office of Contracts of the
Ohio Department of
Transportation, Columbus ,

Ohio, until 10:00 a.m.
Wednesday,
October
25,2000
For Improving Section
MEG·124·12.52, State Route
124 In Rutland Township,
Melga County, Ohio, In
accordance with plana and

specifications by grading,
dra ining , paving with
asphalt concrete on 8"
concrete baae end by
conltructlng structure No.

MEG-124·1252, a throe open
reinforced concrete slab on
reinforced concrete capped

•New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE
ESTIMATES
740-992-1671

Prices

740-992-1506

A&amp;lan holiday
•5 Actor u.-.
o46 Car
a111mblera'

"THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY" ,
IPr·otect your guns, family hei ~ooms. coin and Cll!'d
r~~~~~'ns, legal papers , investment records, photo
11
cameras,
household . inventory
arrd
sentimental items will be sale.
For more Information call

•an.

48 Papaete'e
leland
51 Towera over

55 Stabbed
56 Antenna

IADMLUMID

11'. 11'1'. za

740-992-5232

ca•n~a,.u•

West
"' K tO 5 2

East
•J987 3
., J 7

• K 10 6

• A 9 4
... 9 4 2

., 8 3

HOWARD
EXCAVATING CO.
GALLIPOLIS

Bulltlo•er &amp; Bacldaoe

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

Hou"" &amp; Trailer Site•
Land Clearing &amp;
Grading
Septic Sy•le,... &amp;
Urililwa

State Route 7,

baclc to Our
regular laoUI'I"

1\lppers Plallla

Tuea-Frl1o-&amp;

:

Sat. 10-4

Washinitoa Counties.
Your Quality 24-Hour
Chlldcare Services
740-667-6329

auppllea
• WOOden craftl

• Bullets

740-992-4559
8!1100 1 mo pc1

-HANING·
u:..:·., .....a
FREE ESTIMATES

Svracuse. OH

740-698-6735

•AKQ

140·992-5176

Standing timber large
or small tracks. T o p
prices paid also.

•••••••••••••••

BISSELL IUIL~EIS
INC.

Interior
FREE ESTIMATES

Dozer work.
FrM Estimates
Call T&amp;R Logging

Before 6p.m. Leave Message
Aller 6 pm· 740·985-4180

COMMERCIAL and R!SIDEIITl~

after 8:00pm
740-992 -5050
(Randy )

FREEt ESTIMATES .

The CRAFTY,

Pomeroy Eagles
Club Bingo On
Thursdays
AT6:30 P.M.

(Factory Outlet)
All ?ertical bhndo are
made 10 order at our
location
UP TO 70% OFF

• Verticals • Wood
• Mitrlo 4 Etc
144 Third AYI. Galllptlls

446-4995

Main St.,
Pomeroy,OH
Paying $80.00
per ga"l'
$300.00 Coverall
$500.00 Starburat
Progreaalve top line..
Uc.l! DO-SO """""

740·992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

PAW DO

IF

THIS
MESS

HE

chaintawt, tillers ,
generators , snowb!owere,
weedeatera, pick-up and

_

request.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Open Mon-Frt M; Sat. 11-4
Sun. Closed
Phone 7-9-2804
Ownor .Jim Plckena
~ochonlc· BIU J_!!ns•
'
t'ana Mar ·Tamra o'lckont:

;,·

• TI\E'i ~'{

'.

•
•

~IC.t. (;0'(:) Flt-1\~f\

"""l

:&gt;I Cot\

U..ST .. .

•

HILL'S

SELF STORAGE
29670 Beahan
Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217
Slzas 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'
Hours
7:00AM- 8 PM
"(

Stop In And See
Steve Riffle
Sales Representative
Larry Schey

"Ahead in Service"
• Western Pride 12% SWeet feed - 15.25 I50 lbs.
•12% Cattle feed '6J5 I 100 lbs.
• 21% Hunters Pride Bag food 16,75 I50 lbs.

• fall ferUIIzers

•

750 East State Street
Athens, Ohio 45701

SELLERS CONSTRUCTiON

Phone!

(146) :l~.J·-oo

740-985-3831

. "A Better
R:Jtland, Ohio

-

Truck seats, car seats, headliners,
truck tarps, convertible &amp; vinyl tops,
Four wheeler seats, motorcycle seats,
boat covers. carpets. etc. ·
Mon - F ;·l 8:30 - 5:00
Over 40 yra experience

·(740) 742-8888 , . ,
1-888-521-0916
HARTWELL HOUSE
We now oiTe r Gift &amp;
Wedding Re gis try
We have Village Candles

992-7696

P/8 CONTRACTORS, INC
CONC RETE
MASON RY
BAC KH OE SERVICES
BOBCAT SERVICES

·FACTORY DIRECT·
VInyl Replac•mtnt
Wlnclo·Any Size Double Hung.
$229.00"
•frHIIst......
• frH I• Howtt lstflllftl

,...... ,

• Willie • Tilt"" • ~

SMITH'S COfiSTROaiOfi
• New Homes
• Garages
• Siding

• Remodeling
• Decks
• Roofing

M11d It done, gl111 111 • c1ll
FREE ESTIMATES
Gr11t Prloed on Mew Homu

9.92-2753

• Custom Garages • Roofing
• Concrete Work • Decks
• Additions
740-696-1176
or 740-696-1233 '
DEPOYIIG
PARtS
· AB Make. Tractor &amp;

Equipment Parts
Factory Authorized

Case-IH Parts
Dealers.
1000 St. Rl. 7 South

992-1101

OFRCE EIPREII
IIIIIIEIIIERVICEI
All Types of Business .
Support Services

Advertise

o,ttoo.......

SYSTEMS. INC.
99i!-4119
~800-291-5600

"No doolon or ton~odon ploi!O
wv•o23477

VI1H our ahowroom on
Ohlol It coun

pile piers and abutment•
(Spans: 26'·5 3/B", 37'·9" ,
26 '· 5 1/4" C/C baerlngo
roadway: 36'·0" F/F curb
w/6 '-0" Sidewalks and
concrete railing) over Lillie
Leading Creek.
,The reel eetate cannot . be " The
dolo ut lor
aold for loas than two-thirds completio n ol this work
altho appraised value.
s hall be aa oot forth In tho
TERMS OF SA~E : 10% bidding propooa l." Plana
down day of sale, balance on and Spoclllcatlona are on
delivery of deed. Sold llle In tho Dapartmont of
1ubject to accrued real Tranaportatlon.
estate taxes.
Gordon Proctor
James M. Soulaby
Director of TranaportaUon 1I,______~!:!!.!~!!!!!!!!!!.,;.,
3T 9(11 ), 9(1B), 9(25)
(9) 25, (10) 2, 2tc
11

Old 18

00567.000 and 20-00563.001
PROPERTY
ADDRESS:
2371 Third Stroot, Syracuse,
Ohlo45779
IlEAL
E S T ATE
APPRAISED AT: $70,000.00.

f as low as 25
____.J

:---

!i' ~

, L------'

: PEANUTS
I SUPPOSE TJ.IERE ARE TIMES WHEN 't'OU CANNOT
IMA61NE TR~IN6 TO 60 THROU61i LIFE WITHOUT ME ..

.

''

32 Move llko a
dog's tall
34 Plftaburgh
team

351mpoaolve
39 Wild oheep
43Notcookod
oomucll
45 Music butt's
ourchaao
47 r.SIIvor" ftnlah
48 Boxlnll"
victory abbr.

49 Anecdote
collection
50 Towel word
52 Small Inlet
5311omoto
54 Artlul

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

Today's cluo: Y equals W

.' YO'UO

IIWHP

TZ

I L H P

V T I 0

MTR

ROBV '

EHZEHZZBfiH

I 0 X P

VEFOTZ,

W H P

T Z

VIHP

II W B Z

-

VBZBMOI

KBEF

IIOBV'P

HZKSIHOP .
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "The linls ol autumn - a mighty flower garden I
blossoming under the spell of the enchanter, Frost• - John Greenleaf
Whinier

T::~:t:~' ·s«:~4\llA-l&amp;t.trs·

- - - - - - 141114

0 Rearrange

WOlD
lAIII

~r CLAr I . POUAN - - - - - -

leuers of the

four scrombl.d words be-

low to form four simple worda

rI I

GA VE AR

I I I

S I T0 J

N A L U N 1::-

Once again my neighbor came
home late from a golf game. He
13 I ~- ::; found a note that read : "Your din:
L-...1..-.I.,_...L._J.
. .....J.~ ner is-- the-- -'"

t-l-,.-.,.,.---.-.,.,-1'

Bu RDI T I
t--,-1
I --rl--rl--rl-:-'-ri-:-S-i O Complolo
.

•

•

.

.

.

.

tho chuckle quo1od

by filling in the missing words

.__.__,__..._..___...__, you develop from step No. 3 below.

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
f t UNSCRAMBLE A60VE LETTERS
10 GET ANSWER

11:1

To get a current weather
report, check the

Fusion - Impel - Weary - Jungle . UP the REIGNS

Sentinel

While studying dictatorships one teenager remarked
lhat a dictator doesn 't have enough sense to give UP
t~e REIGNS .

IMONDAY

SCRAM-lETS AI\!SWERS

SEPTEMBER 25

'Your

'Birthday

1-800-828-0212

8 13 1 rno

QUALITY WINDOW

Brian Morrlson/RtKine, Ohio
(740) 985-3948

••

0401 861-3224

·'

Stato Route 33
6 Mllea North ~moray,

MY

Advertise In
this space for
$25 per
month.

' Must lit wllhln MIG. Specs '

Residential, Commercial
Free Estimates
Fully Insured

'''•

27 Roman 502

MA,ttll'lf

IT

THE BORN LOSER
. 1""

S

Of

50&lt;j CD

EXCfiVfiTINQ :

(740) 992-3470

I

J..IFS

~WICK'S41j
HfiOUno qnd ;
Hauling •limestone •
Gravel• Sand • Topsoil•,
Fill Dirt• Mulch •
Bulldozer Services

Tt'IS'

~-~~$'0/tl)
IN_

__

1

tranuctlon

BY PHILLIP ALDER

When I hunted for a quotation
including the word "lure," I
tho ught I would get some thing
about fi shing . Yet none of the
three mentioned that pastime. I
found one from "Romeo and
Juliet," one from "The Rubaiyat
TOOK
of Omar Khayyam, " and thi s
@
from Wallace Steven s: " The humi'AONfY!
~m
ble are the y tha t move abo ut the
world with the lure of the real in
the
ir hearts." Having read that
'Oll!l~E ~h
a~!
severa l time s, I'm still not sure I
tHO.
g~
understand it. No wonder my
~·
Chambers ' Biographical Dictio,
~~
nary mentions that Stevens wrote
9-25
" impressioni s t and highly intel t1P..v•!i S'
lectual verse relying for e ffect
upo n rhythmic
and
tonal
imagery."
There is a declarer-play that
P""~'( f-\ELLO TO Tf\E. ~ICC.:)\ GJ'i~
lures people on , whe ther they be
'(OJ~ f..IJ~ Gi)t.IW\ MfL\ I
humble (no t many g ood bridge
pl a yers are ) or in search of the real
(whatever that might be) . You
race into fo ur hearts. West leads
th e c lub jack . How would you
ste p through thi s 52-card world?
Yes, pe rhap s S o uth s h ould
ha ve rebid three no-trump: but
with four he arts, No rth mi ght not
ha ve passed .
You start with nin e top tri cks :
==~=-::::-=:-:-=~ o ne spade. fi •e he art s and three
c lubs . So. you could try the spade
fin esse. Fine if il wins , ye t what
happens if the fin esse loses&gt; Wesl
will ex it wilh a spade . leavin g yo u
a maj or unde rdog to a vo id three
diamond losers.
In stead . g uarantee the contrac t
with an endpl a y. After winning
tri c k one. draw trump s, c ash the
remaining club tricks, and e xt!
with the ace a nd quee n of spades.
Wh oeve r win s with the spade
kin g mu st e ither open up diaON TJ.IE OT~ER HAND, UI~AT's W~ON6
monds or concede a ruff-and-disJUST 60IN6 THROUGH LIFE?
c ard . Whic heve r he selec ts, you
lose only two diamo nd tric ks.

10 Court dlvldor
11 Unretlnod
molal
t3 11u11lan
wagon
1a. Molt aged
19 Thlator
dlatrtct
20 Shoutor
22 Mil-t
23 Egg dlah
24 SeCondhand
25 Van Gogh,
e.g.

Lure of finesse

IN

We service mowert,

1

Shankar
5 An Aotalro

6 Tex01clty
7 Umpire
8 Weight
9 "Graph" finish

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Sat 10-6 Sun- Cloaed

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Pomeroy, Ohio
22 yn . ..._..I

CODDECTIOD

DOWN
1 Powertullnlta.
2 "Ballad" llnloh

'fQ9 5 4 2
• Q8 3

V.C. YOUNG Ill

CODCRETE

'"WJe rtl

• Candle making

•AQ

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Candle ShoP

CONNIE'S
CHILDCARE

YOUNG'S

HeuQpr

OF

7/2R/TFN

Intends and requlroa that
following three courses.
this project be completed
1. South 36' 09'22" Eaot
159.95 fool to an Iron pin sot ~::00 late than October 30,
by this survey In said
Ali contracton and
2 South 33' 41'52 ' East
66.36 foot to an Iron pin sot
by this survey In oald
drainage ditch:
3. South 34' 00'03" Eaat
145.75 footto an Iron pin sat
by thla ourvey In oald
drolnaga ditch on tho south
llno of tho aloremontlonod
Lot 3 (being also on Sayre's
oouth line);
Thonco Wast 240.30 loot
along tho aouth line of Lot 3
(bolng alao Sayre's south
line) to an Iron pin sat by
thla ourvey at tho southeast
cornor of tho Nlal E. and
VIrginia Salser property
(Volume 196, Page 361 ,
Melgo County Daed
llocordo), passing an Iron
pin oat by this survey at
35.75 foot. :
Thence along Selsor's
1111 Uno North 321.85 feat
to an Iron pin sot by this

fOR lliORl lllfO PllAS[ CAll

44 !:!thaalt

Prmmvy, Ohio

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

and complexity. The owner

d111lnage ditch;

----·

33795 Hi!A'IIIi RJ.

•a Hollcoptar

•

... J tO 8 7

Richard Hunt
35845 Cleland Rd . Langsville
742-1309
Lost: Blue &amp; Gold McCaw
parrot, any info. Cal1742-1309

Public Notice

~~~
HighBl Dry

Self-Storage

Life Insurance; Burial
Final Expenses; College, Retirement,
IErnerge~IY Funds; Mortgage;
--Medical •

Public Notice

ALDER

Jacksonville Jaguars a1 1ndiana~lis Colts (Live) (CC)

•, Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2000
'
Bec au se you s hould ha ve
: oppo rtuniti es to ass ume mo re
: direct control ove r your pe rsonal
~ affairs in the year ahea d, more
~progress c an be made. It ' ll be up
'&lt;to you to do so, howe ver.
·: LIBRA (Se pt. 23- 0 ct. 23)
;So meone to whom you 've been
attracted but have never had the
'oppo rtunity to get to kno w bette r
.may walk into your life today. It
.co uld be a better match than you
:1hought. Trying to patch up a bro .ke n romance? The Astro-Graph
.M atc hmake r can help you understand what to do to make the relati o nship w ork . M a il $2 .75 to
M atchmake r, c/o thi s newspape r,
P.O . Box 1758, Murra y Hill Station, New Yo rk, NY 101 56.
SCORPIO (Oc t. 24-Nov. 22)
D on ' t take your eye off the ball
today, eve n when you have to deal
with periphe ral obstacle s. Your
objecti ves c an be reache d if you
keep thi s in mind .
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 2 3-Dec .
~ I l Happy lidings may be on the ir
way tha t will serve to elevate your
ho pes and ex pectations. Th e good

ne ws may have some thin g to do
w ith geuing togethe r with someone you haven't see n for a while .
CAPRICORN ( D ec. 2 2 -Jan.
19) Any persi stent hunch you get
today. espec ially if it is of a finan ·
c ial nature, s hould be hee ded
today. Your intuiti ve pe rce ption s
could put you o n a winning trac k.
AQUARI US (J an . 20· Feb . 19).
Th ere could be go od juslifi cati on
for optimism today, particul arl y
regarding invol ve me nl s with
friends. M a ke plans to sp end
some time with those you enjoy
being with .
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
Someone who has been wanting
to do something nice for you as a
reciprocation for the consideration
you showed them recently may
find a way to do so today.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
What makes you luckier than
u sual today · in a partners hip
arrangement is that the person you
selected has high, idealistic stan·
dards. Mutual benefits can come
from such principles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 )
You ' re in an e specially good

ach ie vemenl cycle today. whe re
anything you .take on is possible
to do. Do n ' t put limitation s o n
your c reativity .
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20 )
Thi s is o ne o f th ose days in
whi ch yo u should do we ll soc ia lly with so meone you m eet. T he
two of you cnuld find muc h to
d iscuss that you have in co mmon .
CANCE R (Jun e 21-Jul y 22)
A lthoug h yo u can be a lo ne r
so metim es w hen il co m es to
accomplis hing proj ecls. teamin g
up with someone who has the
s ame goa l could be an ad va nt age
today.
LEO (Ju ly 23 -Aug 22) Be a
good li stener and a kee n o bserv ·
e r today, because there are slrong
indk uti o n s that you could p rofit
fro m the wisdom and experie n.:e
of so meone who has been there,
d one that.
V IRGO (Aug. 23-Se pl. 22l
T hai whi c h is due you cou ld
co me your way today. No mutte r
w hat you think, your past efforts
have no t gone unn oticed or u nappreciate d , as you ' ll now d iscover.

I.

�AMERICAN LEAGUE

Royals rolit Tribe,
KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP) The positive spin was going ip
Cleveland\ clubhouse.
The five-year reign as Al Central champs is over. Now, the only
route to the playoffs is as a wild
card.
"We really haven 't thought
about winning the division for
the last two weeks. We've been
trying to get in as a wild card,"
Jim Thome said after Sunday's 90 loss to Kansas City, which
clinched the division for the
White Sox. "That's been where
we've been the whole time.
Chicago has played weD and they
deserved it."
Cleveland, the only team to
win the Al Central before Chicago this season, trails Oakland by
one game in the wild card race
with a week to go.
Blake Stei'! pitched seven
innings to lead the Royals, who
entered 72-83.
"I said last week that this series
was crucial because of the way
they've always played us," Thome
said. "They've got four or five
guys who consistently put the ball
in play and are .300 hitters. A
team like that you 've really got to
look our for.
"We don'tlook at the Royals as
being sub- .500. Throw that
record out the door. They've got a
good ballclu b."
The Indians headed home to
play a unique day-night double-

Monday, September 25, 2000

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B6 • The Dally Sentinel

header Monday. Cleveland plays
AL Central champion Chicago in
an afternoon makeup game
before playing Minnesota at night
· in a regularly scheduled night
game.
Since 1900, only once has there
been a three-team doubleheader
at the same ballpark. The St. Louis
Cardinals beat rhe New York
Giants 6-4, then lost to the
Boston Braves 2-0 on Sept. 13,
1951, at Sportsman's Park.
"It's getting in and winning the
whole thing that's important,"
Thome said." Are we going to get
in? I hope we do, and I think this
is going ' to be a big key for us
when we do that we've had this
opportuniry to play following·
two or three teams."
Ste_in (8-4) allowed four hits
and has given up just rwo earned
runs in his last 24 innings. The
right-hander has won seven of
last eight decisions.
''I'm throwing strikes with all
three pitches," Stein said. "Not to
say that they are great pitches, but
when you throw three pitches for
strikes it throws them off balance.?'
The Royals scored five runs in
~he third off Charles Nagy (2-7)
to take a 6-0 lead. Gregg Zaun
led off with a walk and went to
third on a soft single to center by
Jeff Reboulet. Johnny Damon
followed with an RBI single to
make it 2..{).

9-0

After a sacrifice bunt, Mike
Sweeney hit a sacrifice fly. Jermaine Dye walked and Joe Randa
added an RBI single, scoring
Damon with his league-leading
!31st run , two short of the Royals team record.
Jamie Brewington came on and
gave up consecutive RBI singles
to Carlos Beltran and Mark
Quinn.
Nagy gave up six runs. four hits
and two walks in 2 2-3 innings,
raising his ERA to 8.21.
"We can't have too many more
days like today;' Indians manager
Charlie Manuel said. "Every
game we play cuts into our time.
We got beat and we didn'.t
·
deserve to win."
The Royals added two more
runs in the seventh on Quinn 's
rwo-run double off C hris Nichting. Quinn now has 77 RBls,
which leads aU AL rookies.
Notes: Sandy Alomar caught
his 945th game in an Indians uniform, passing Luke Sewell for
third-most games caught in
Cleveland history. ... Manny
Ramirez had his 49-game string
of reaching base safely snapped at
49 games. He was 0-for-3. ...
When Chris Haney appeared in
the eighth inning for Cleveland,
he was the 32nd pitcher used by
the Indians this year, extending a
major league record.

North Carolina holds off Marshall
CHAPEL HILL. N.C. (AP) It will become known as "The
Drive'' if North Carolina goes on
to have a winning season and
lands a bowl bid.
Momentum had shifted to
Marshall midway through the
fourth quarter Saturday night
when the Thundering Herd
closed to 20-15, going 49 yards in
two plays following a 14-minute
power outage.

With 7:09 left, Marshall was
poised to hold the Tar Heels (3-1)
and get tl]e ball back one more
time. That sce nario never materialized for the Thundering Herd
( 1-2)'
North Carolina's two most crit-

icized units - the offensive line
and tailbacks got five first

Browns
fromPageB1
when they were in Philadelphia.
"He always talks abo ut that
tight end thing;' Thomas said
about Gruden. "But he hasn't followed through with it."

downs and held the ball the rest
of the game en route to the key
victory.
The Tar Heels drove froin their
own 22 to the Marshall 8 as the
Thundering Herd was unable to
hold down freshmen running
backs Brandon Russell and Andre
Williams. Russell had 34 yard' on
the decisive drive, while Williams
chipped in with 16.
The fourth-quarter rally, thanks
to a pair ofTD passes by Ronald
Curry in a span of 2:22, was the
first by the Tar Heels since trailing
Clemson by a touc hdown in
1998 and winning 21-14.
NOTES: Curry's 292 passing
yards gave him consecutive 200yard games for the first time in his
career. .. .. Kory Bailey's 101

receiving yards were a career
high ..... Alge Crumpler, who the
Tar Heels are promoting for AllAmerica honors, had five catches
after getting just one in the first
three games..... The Thundering
Herd suffered a bad break when it
lost Maurice Hines to a muscle
pull. Hines returned a punt 56
yards in the first quarter to set up
a Marshall field goal, but he didn't play in the second half. ....
Once again, the Tar Heels didn't
force a turnover. After four
games, the defense has only been
able to come up with two fumbles ..... The ACC sack leaders got
four more against Marshall and
now have 22 in four games.

Grtiden kiddingly replied: " I
may have to accommodate him ."
Couch was charged with intentional grounding in the endzone
late in the second half for a
Raiders' safety.
Gannon, criticized for favoring
receiver Brown, spread it around a
little more this time, going 14-of23 for 179 yards.
Top overall draft pick Couttney

Brown, who sacked Kent Graham
of the Steelers three times last
Sunday, was quiet against the
Raiders.
In
fact, Gannon
remained untouched by the
Browns all day.
"I don't think it's a step ba ckwards," coach Chris Palmer said.
"But they're a good football team
and this is a very hard · place to
play."

Weclnesd.y

Hllh:70s;Lotw:40s
Details, A3

Hot Ravens batter Bengals
BALTIMORE (AP) - The
Baltimore Ravens have once
again established themselves as a
playoff contender.
There's no mistaking the statu~
of the Cincinnati Bengals, who
are dearly the NFL's worst team.
Jamal Lewis nn for 116 yards
and a touchdown, and Tony
Banks threw for two scores Sunday, yet all that offense wasn't
really needed by the Ravens in
their 37-0 rout of the Bengals.
Cincinnati (0-3) gained only 4
yards on the ground and 94 overall in a humiliating defeat. Bengals
quarterback Akili Smith left with
a concussion in the second quarter. but there's some question as
to whether he would have made
a difference against a defense
eager to bounce back from a
shoddy effort in a 19-6 loss to
Miami last week.
"I think everybody was upset
by the Miami loss," said defensive
end Michael McCrary, who had a
team-high seven tackles. "We
knew we could play better. We
had to get this victory and forget
about that loss."
The Bengals can surely play
better, because they can't get
much worse than · they looked
against Baltimore (3-1). Cincinmti has been outscored 74-7 this
year, leaving some question as to
wheth.er coach Bruce Coslet will
last until December.
Coslet. obviously frustrated
over the defeat, summed up his
feelings in I 0 seconds.
''I'm going to be short;' he
said. "You saw the game. Congratulations to the Ravens. They
played a heck of a football game
and we didn't play very well at all.
I'll just leave it at that. Thanks."
The Baltimore defense figured
to have its way against the punchless Bengals. After Smith was
knocked out the game, it became
a sure thing.
"We were concerned about
Akili because of his athleticism.
We were concerned about him
getting out of the pocket and
making big plays," said Rob Burnett said, whose crushing sack left
Smith woozy.
Smith's replacement, the 240pound Scott Mitchell, never got it
going in his first NFL appearance
m more than a year. Mitchell,

who played in two games with
Baltimore last · season, went 14for-23 for 97 yards.
"1 can't say that I felt rusty, but
I wasn't into the flow of the
game," he said. "We didn't have
any rhythm or continuity to what
we were doing."
Smith. the Bengals' second-year
quarterback, left after being
slammed to the ground by Burnett, who entered the backfield
untouched on a stunt. Smith
walked off the field on his own,
~~-~m
"I just remember getting hit,
and laying on the ground, seeing
srars, stomach huu, throat huu,"
Smith said. "It was a pretty good
shot, but I feel a lot better now."
It was the Ravens' second
shutout this season an,P their most
lopsided win since the franchise
moved to Baltimore in 1996.
"There was a lot of rhetoric
during the week about this test

\ ll tt\ t • l;ti l

I

and that test, and .how you handle
this situation and that situation,"
coach Brian Billick said. "OI?viously. we passed the test."
Dating back to last season,
Cincinnati has lost five straight.
three by shutout.
"I don't know what the prob!em is. Your guess is as good as
mine," Smith said. "We've just got
to keep working hard and pull
together. We're at the bottom, so
there's nowhere to go but up."
The Bengals managed only 31
~~~~~~~as
many turnovers as first downs
. (three). The Ravens, meanwhile,
scored on .four of their five possessions to rake a 24-0 lead.
"We got kind of cold over
there, the offense had the ball so
long," McCrary said. " It's a good
feeling. The whole defense unit is
merging together and the offense
is clicking. You can't beat that."

Society news and notes, AS
Tuesday
Prep Volleyball: Meigs win 10 straight, Bl September 16, 1000

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 86

Middleport discusses clothing expenditures
BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

MIDDLEPORT -The issue
of paying for work clothes for village employees was discussed
when Middleport Village Council
met in regular session on Monday
evemng.

Stephen Houchins, president
of co uncil, presided at last night's
meeting in the absence of Mayor

policy of purchasing monoSandy lannarelli.
Councilman Roger Manley grammed items for street, sewer
raised questions about a $148 and cemetery workers , and the
invoice &amp;om Middleport Trophies policy has been discussed a numand Tees for T-shirts, polo shirts ber of times at council meetings
and jackets for village employees, - usually when the bills arrive.
After a tie vote. on paying th e
representing only a portion of
village's
bills, with council memclothmg which has been . purchased for the workers during the bers Robert. Pooler, Kathy Scott
and Rae Gwiazdowsky voting no
current fiscal year.
The vi llage has had a standing and Houchins, Manley and Bob

Reds
from Page 81
everybody was ready to go
home," Stynes said. "It was an
ugly day -yesterday was an ugly
day. But I guess it was a good day
for th e fans ."
He homered off Octavio Dotel
(3-6), who blew his SIXth save in
21 chmces.
Sco tt Sullivan (3 -6) ' pitched a
p crf~·...t ninrh fi) r ~ h e win .
M ot&lt;es Alou had a pair of RBI
singles. for Houston, and Lance
Berkman doubled in the other to
give' the Astros a 3-0 lead.

burgh . ... With the season finale m
Cinergy field, demolition of left
and center field stands was set to
begin Monday so construction
can start on a ballfield scheduled
to be ready foe the 2003 seaso n.
The R eds will play two more
years in Cinergy field, which will
have about 42,500 seats after
14,000 are removed .... four statues of Crosley Field-era players
will be placed .at the entrance to
the new ballpark. Based on fan
voting, the four players chosen are
catcher Ernie Lombardi, outfie lder Frank Robinson, fmt baseman
Ted Kluszewski and pitcher Joe
Nuxhall.

to pay all bills. including th e
clothing bill , althou~;h so me

lishm ~nt

to

council members voiced their

review the bill and th e village's
policy of purc hasing the clothin~;

o ngoing opposition to the cloth-

items.

" I don 'r think rhe Village of
Middleport should be buying
anyone's clothes," Pooler said.
Gwiazdwosky suggested that
counci l consider giving sam~.·
emp loyees a clothing allowance

of a committee

ing purchases.

Houchins appointed Robin son. Gwiazdowsky, Manley and
Bernard Gilkey of the Board of
Public Affairs to the committee-.
and council subsequently voted

rather than purchasing monogrammed ite ms.

Council approved an Anti Displacement and Relocation
Assistance Plan, which outlines
poli cies relating to relocating resid ents affected by eminent
domain claims which might arise
ouc

of

tht"

village's

sewer

Please see Coundl, Pace A:S

'

... to the retirement of your dreams.
Reti~ent

can be one of the
'm o5t active times of your Ufc ... and
one of the most expensive.
Whether you're 30 yors or 30
months from rctlrrrnent, reviewing
your financial goal5 and d~loptng a
110und Investment plan Is always a
good idea.
Fortunately, one of the best things
id' life is free-an initial consultation
whh a Raymond James Financial
A4.visor.

Mclin urges Democrats
to get out the vote

Commission
considers

children.
"People need to have the
POMEROY - A call for right to make choices. What we
Democrats to "take back the in government need to do is to
State and nation for the people'' provide the groundwork for
was given by Ohio .Senate them to make good decisions ,"
Minority Leader Rhine McLin. McLin ·said.
I)-Dayton, ke ynote speaker at
In cornments before intro(J:!e Meigs CoUitty Democrats' ducing McLin, State Sen. Mike
l«cnnedy Day Dinner held Shoemaker spoke on behalf of
Monday night at the Senior Cit- the re-election of Justice Alice
izens Center.
Resnick and the election of
In a talk marked with humor, ca ndidate Tim Black to the
McLin challenged the party Supreme Court of Ohio.
faithful to "go out and bring in
He said the result of the electhe voters in November because tion will be a determining factor
the decisions made then will in th e future of how education
impact the rest of this c·cntury."
is funded.
She listed education as the
Also speaking at the dinner
most cha ll enging issue being was Zack Hill for Sixth District
faced today and '"id the mission U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland; Betsy
of the Democrats is to take the Herald Nicodemus, candidate
current system to a place where for clerk of coutts; Tom Lowery,
. it be$te...__""'·all children.
candidate for recome~,._Janet
'rli.e future of Social Security," ' Howard and Jeff Thornton,
Medicare and Medicaid, the cost com tmss ioner candidates; Sherof health care, assisted living, iff James Soulsby, a write-in cannursing homes, and prescrip- didate for sheritT; and John

shortfall

budget

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

For your f~ consultation-and a plan designed to help you reach the kind of
~tlremcnt you'll enjoy, plcasc call Dianna l.aw!ion today.
....... c.ll ua: 1·177-371-7571 or 7411-892-2133;

RAYMOND JAMES
fi]NANQAL SIRY!CE§

... ~ •• .

INC

"••11 • 1 · ·~

L,~led •' P.oplts S.nk

Cour1 &amp; Second Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

atples hr...

Dlanoo Lowsan. CFS · . ., .
IJtZ&amp;2il8
Flnenc'"' Advilor
•...,... .,,._,.. ..._ ..,.... _ , _
SecurffiH Itt olleftd ndusr;ely ~ Ra'f"''''C)nd James Financial Sel'w:H. Membe1 NASOfSIPC.
an~~ bl'oklfldealer, located 11 Peoplft Bani!. lnveslmeols ARE NOT FDIC INSURED. ARE
NOT SANk DEPOSITS, NOR ARE THEY GUARANTEED BY THE FINANCIAL INSTITUTION.
SUBJECT ro RISK AND MAV LOSE VALUE.

tions, are the concerns of this

Lentes, seeking re-election for

party. said McLin.
Sh e then emphasized the
~1portance of opportunity to earn a living, to feel safe. and
to have adequate day care for

county prosec utor.
Sue Maison, Democratic
Party chairm'an, spoke on behalf

BY BRIAN J. ReED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY
Meigs
County Commissioners and
Sheriff Jam es M. Soulsby discussed financial needs of the
sheriff's department during the
commission ers' regular Jneeting on Monday.
Soulsby told commissioners
that a $1,500 bill to Davis

Pharmacy in Noble County
and a bill for housin~; prisoners
in the Noble Co umy Jail need
immediate payment so that the
county can continue housing
priso ners there.

Th e pharmacy bill is the
result of the county's legal
requirement to ~rovjde med1" l!!!tl tJA..! ilnd mdlial:ions •li&gt;r
inmates w hik· they are tncarcerated.
Many inm ates are now

housed in the Noble County
fa cility under the terms of a
contract with Meib"S County. A

Please see Dinner, Pace A:S

LOOKING IT OVER- Several students, from left, Steve Kauff, Anthony Nutter, Calvin Holley and Caleb
Ellis, join Bill Williamson, instructor. to check out the motor on the new pickup donated to the automotive
technology training program at Meigs High School. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

New truck enriches MHS program

limited number of inmates are
still housed in the Meigs jail, as
well.
Soulsby did not specify the
total amount due to Noble
Counry, but Jan e t Howard,
prr·sident of the board, said that ,
nearly $50,1)00 in outstanding
bills for th e sheriff's department remain unpaid, and commissione rs must find adequate

ti.mds somewh ere within the
cou nty's general fund to pay
them.

Ohio

Houston starter Wayne Miller
had allowed one hit until Brady
Clark's pinch- hit single with two
outs in the sixth. Sexton doubled
to deep center field to drive in
Clark to make it 3-1 and preserve
the Reds' string of 15 7 straight
games with at least a run, the
third longest streak to start a season in the major leagues.
The 1979 Brewers went 160
games and the 1993 Phillies went •
158 games. The only team to
complete a season without a
shutou t was the 1932 Yankees in a
156-game season.
Notes: The Astros are off Monday before starting their final
three-game road series in Pitts-

Robinson vot in g yes, council discussed and approved the estab-

tl lllll'tlitlti'

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

with 258 yards on 20-of-32 passThe next Akron drive would
eventually result in the Derr's
mg.
"Ohio came out and played game-winning field goal.
inspired football in the second
"They did what it took at the
from Page 81
half," satd Owens.
end of the game and we clidn 't,"
cornerback Dwight Smith,
Early in the fourth quarter, said Grobe.
Ohio will visit Western Michiwho mterce pted three passes last Derr made it a seven point Akron
gan Saturday at I p.m . The
week agamst Central Florida. lead with a 40-yard kick.
Smith leads the MAC in interJust over a minute later with Chippewas handed Toledo a 21cepuon'&gt;.
10:55 left in the game, Jackson 10 loss over the weekend.
Sen ior Raynald Ray ca ught pitched the ball to backup tail"These guys like to play," sai d
three of Jack~on's passes on the back Jamel Patterson, who took it Grobe of his own team. "They're
afternoon for 82 yards. Ray also down the right sideline for a 58- not going to have a problem to
had 62 yards rushing on eight yard touchdown to tie the game get back up against Western
at 20-20.
carne5.
Michigan."
'
A 48-yard ftdd goal by Kerr
It was Anderson's second conAkron (2-2. MAC 1-1 ) wi ll
later in the third cut Akron's lead secutive 100-plus yard game as he play host to conference fo e
to17-13.
finished with 107 yards on 10 Miami.
"When you get a team down carries.
Defensively fo r the Bobcats,
like that at halfttme. they're going
Ohio (2-2, MAC 0-1) outran senior free safety led all j1laycrs
to comeback with inten sity," said the Zips 293 yards to 133.
with 14 tackles. Matt Spitler had
"We drove the ball when we 12 and To m Wilbac her each
Akron
semor
quarterback
wanted to," said Anderson. " We recorded I 0.
Butchie Washington.
Washmgton finiShed the game just couldn't punch it in."

50 Cents

MY 10 CARDINAL RULES As YOUR COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Exercise strlnQent review of the annual budget.
Develop and maintain a solid worklnQ relationship with the
Township Trustees and VIllage Councils.
Provide adequately for the mandated governmental offices
and their employees.
Increase Commissioner-to-Commissioner contact with our
neiQhbor counties.
Maintain specific office hours and meeting times where public
. Input will be received and appreciated.
Make the Important decisions affecting county citizens without
Influence from politics, personalllles, and prejudices.
Enforce spendlnQIImlts within the constraints ofthe county
operating revenue. Always remember, tax dollars ore not
Commissioner dollars, they are dollars ofthe taxpayers.
Advocate a stronQ voice for Meigs County locally, regionally
and at the state and federal level.
Decide only after full evaluation of the various positions
utlllzln9 the law as II applies to the Issue before the
Commissioners.
10) Lead - Never Follow.
Advocate- Never Abdicate.
Be FruQal- Never Frivolous.

SPEAKER - Ohio State Minority Leader Rhine Mclin called on
Democrats at Monday night's Kennedy Day Dinner to get behind
the Democratic candidates and work to get out the vote. Pictured
with her here are Democratic Party Chairman Sue Maison, Sheriff
James Soulsby, and Commissioners Mick Davenport and Jeff
Thornton. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

POMEROY
Tuesday's
Ameri can Heart A,so ciation
Hea rt Walk will hon or Ureanna
Crisp, a you ng s\l rvivor of _heart
dise.l'it', ,md is bl'ing held 111 mcm-

orv of Addi e Norri,.
.Teams and individuals from
across Meib" County will p,~ttici­
pate in rhe local walk, wlm:h will
begin at Kroger at 4 p.m .
The eighth annual walk is
sponsored loca lly by Wal - Mart of
Mason, W.Va., Home National
Bank .mJ Farmers Uank &amp; S:wings Cn., with Holzer Meigs
Clini c sc:rv in g as an :tssociare
sponsor.

Melqs County must have Commissioners who understand that tax
dollors are to be conservatively and Independently spent to provide
adequate mandated public services and offices.

Tim year's walk w ill be hdd in
memory of Addie Norris and in
honor of Ure,mna Cri'P· the y&lt;.·a rold daughter of Lori .md Alan
Crisp. and granddau ~h t e r of Bob
K o ush of Pomerov, Shirley
Rou sh of Wtchita. K.m., and Jo
Ann Crisp of Racine.
After a he nt murnn1r w.t~

All other expenditures must occur only after our necessary public
services are provided.
MeiQs County faces a period of declining revenues. We must limit
our spendlnQ; not Increase our taxes

1

Breanna Crisp

"This is an example of how a
large corporation and a local

business work together to help in

work at lo ca l d,·a lershi ps and

the education of our ynu;1g peo -

gara~cs,

ple," said Williamso n ,
He sa id that GM and Don Tate
Motors have alw3ys been gre;n
.; upporters of the vocati01nl :tuto
technology prog ram

•

Meigs.

Wtlliamsun, mstructur, tOr train-

ing purposes in the classes he
teaches. It cannot be sold, dis -

the schoo l.
He said then· is ,, good job

Todays

Sentinel
l Sedlons - 1l Pages
Cal~ndar

Classifie!!s
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
S11orts
Weather

85
A4

AJ
81,3-4,6
AJ

Lotteries

ffiOM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - A dedic·ation
etTL'mony and b.tlloon l.n11Kh will
takt• pbce m PnnH.·roy at the Stnn~

wheel ll..ivc rkst 2111111, "Rally by
the River" in memory of .1 i o n ~rq:!;ubr of thc rivt-r tCstival.

, tlllll'

C.1rl Robert Wn~ht, llL'tter
known a:-. "C.1pt.1in C.u'L" wi.\1 . be
rt'llll'llliKTI.:'d during. a o:rcr iHmy
.md

omo
Pick 3: Ct-2-X; Pick 4: 0-5- 1-6

Buckeye 5: 13- 11&gt;- IR-34-17

W:YA.
Daily 3:

Ceremony
scheduled
during festival

AS
B2-1

~ -'!-~Daily

4:

b-H-7 -~

h:1lloon

Lllllllil

on

th e'

Pmncroy Antphitlll·att'r on· S.ttur-

day .tr 7 p.m.
Wnght. ,\ l o n~tinH.' tl·"ri v.1l rt;g;ubr .md l'.lpt:llll of th~..· Stl.'mwhn·l er, USS Mud Sm·k. di cJ Au~. 17.
2000 ,\t hi ~ n::-.idcn c.T .-tfttT :1 lo ng
I

Please see Heart. Pace A:S

as well as others who
· have gone on to truc k n~ ntal and

Williamson said that :ill of the
cars and rru cks, as well as numn-

Please see Festival, Page A:S

t

I

clt

ous engi nes on '~· hi c h tht: students work, have been don,1tc:d to

Crisp, Norris honored

The Commissioners must manaoe a $3,000,000 annual budoet.

This I pledoe to do os your County Commissioner.

POMEROY - Meigs High
School has a new tru ck to be
used in its automotive technolob'Y
training program .
Last week. a 1999 C hevrolet
Silverado LS 1500 4- whed drive
pickup was donated by General
Motors Corp., C hevrolet Motor
Division. and Don Tate Motors
Inc of Pomeroy.
The truck will be used by Bill

market for swdents who co m pl ete the automotive tcc hnolot,ry
training, and 1U111ed several \vho

posed of or transferred .

nannnal auto ~111d truck n:pair
bminesses.
Cu rn:.·ntly, \Xlillt amson has 2S
JU1110r
and Sl'lltor S[Ude n t'i

Sou lsby said tth e payroll line
item for his department will .
also carry a deficit balance by
year-end. He asked the commi ssione rs to co nsider sources

tor the funds necessary to pay
th e department's outstanding
debt and anticipated expenses
for th e remamder of the year.

Thl...' commissioners took no
at·tion , but Howard said the

.: nrolled 111 the program. Two
!'ears oi training .m~· combitH.' J

county will expenence a
"ro ugh time" in n1eeting the

with .tcademic work dur'ing the
rc.·gu lar schoo l day to give a wellrounded cd~1cation tOr ..,tudl'nts .

expen ditures

this

year,

Please see Budcet. Pace A:S

USS MUD SOCK MODEL

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