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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.myd!lllysenllnel.com

Thursday, January 15, 2004

Space initiative
may boost Ohio
research, A6

Lady Marauders

rally for win at .
NehonviUe-York,Bt

Middleport • .P omeroy, Ohio
:;o CF:'IirS • Yol. :;-t . :'lio. Hh

SPORTS
• Cavaliers fall to Warriors.
See Page 81

"""·m~tlail~"·nli•"'l.'·om

I Rill \Y , .J \Nl'.\RY 16, 200-1

Flu on decllne statewide; 19 .local cases reported
J . .REED

17,000
cases the health of all Ohioans this
because
BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
statewifle were inadverte ntly flu season." the health
not included in weekly department said Tuesday.
COLUMBUS -The Oh'io reports of the disease's outAccording
to
Meigs
Deparlment of Health has break reported to the state 's County
Health
rec.eived reports of 19 cases news media. Some 17,000 of Commissioner
Norma
· of influenza and influenza- these reports · were not Torres, the 19 cases reported
like illness from Meigs included in the weekly from Meigs County include
County, but has reduced its reports that totaled nearly -1'3 cases originally reported
classification of flv condi- 6,000 suspected reports of to ODH in December. and
tions statewide from "wide- influenza and ILl that ODH six others reported thi s
spread" to "regional."
had sliared with the media month. Those reports, Torres
The state health depart- and public.
said. represent llu patients
ment has received 23,31 1
"This reporting discrepan- who have- presented with
reports of intluenza and ILl cy would not have changed symptom s at Holzer Medical
since Oct. I. The number has what ODH has done or Ce nter or it s . emergency
been dramatically increased would have done to protect room, or who may have been
BY BRIAN

Tax Boatd
seeks to
close
loopholes
BY

J.

-

referred to the hospital by a between 10.000 and 14,000
family physician.
cases of influenza and ILL
The number of actual .llu · In li ght of a Nov . 17
and ILl c.ases is probably far announcement of a "drift"
higher than those reported. strain of influenza and the
Torres said. becau se so many nationwide vaccine shortage.
llu sufferers do not visi t a Torres s;iid local residents
doctor 's office or emerge ncy who were not immunized
room for treatment.
According to ODH, flu before the local supply of tlu
activi ty in Ohio is decreas- shots was exhausted should
ing. and this week, ODH concentrate on preventing
downgraded its reporting to the spread of the disease by
the. CDC to a "regional" cal- frequent hand washing.
avoiding common drinking
egory from ··widespread."
In an average tlu season, cups, and mher germ-preODH receives report s of vention methods .

Eastern .Bloodmobile

MILES lAYTON

Trivett low
bidder on
Rutland
project
BY BRIAN

JLAYTO~MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

J.

REED,

BREE D@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

INSIDE
• Does God like you? See .
Page A2

• ACLU asks Supreme
.,
Court to reject review of
VMI prayer
case·. See
,
Page A2
'
· • Genealogical Society
.offers one-on-one . .
instruction. See Page AS
• Law you can use. See
Page AS

WEATIIER

Dotallo on Pace A8

INDEX
2 SECflONS- 12 PAGES

·Calendars

As
As

Clllssifieds

B2-4

DearAbby

Comics

Bs

Editorials ·

A4

. Faith•Values

A2

Movies
Obituaries

As
As

Sports

81

Weather

A6

© 0004 Ohio Valley Publishlns Co.

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Tax Board recO!Umends that Pomeroy
Village Council . make
some changes to the tax
code which will close a
few loopholes and bring
the village ·in line with
other
municipalities.
Pomeroy has a one percent
income tax which applies
to anyone who works ,in
the village.
· "A ll we are doing is
modernizing the tax code
to make it more uniform
with everyone else," said
Je&lt;fn Durst, Pomeroy Tax
Administrator.
When the Tax Board met
in December, it recommended eliminating a
loophole that allows business losses to be deducted
from earned wages. For
instance, if a person made
$50,000 a year as an attarney but lost $10,000 a year
in rental income, that person could deduct those
losst;s from earned wages
and pay taxes only on
$40,000.
If Council approves
changing the tax code.• that
same attorney would pay
taxes on earned income
($50,000) and any gains
made from rental property
- no losses would be
deducted.
·
"If they · make money,
then they should pay their
fair share," said Durst.
The Tax Board wants to
eliminate a loophole that
allows businesses to carry
forward any losses. Under
the current rules, if a business owner has a loss the
previous year (and pays no
taxes), t~at person can
carry the loss over and use
it to offset any gains made
in the present year. For
instance; a business owner
who declared a net carryover loss of $10,000 last
year can apply it to $50,00
gains made this year and be taxed on $40,000.
The Tax Board wants to
eliminate this carryover
loophole so that the busi-

Plellse see Tax. AS

Students and faculty at
Eastern High Schoo l and
members of the community at
large, like Jenny Da iley of
Reedsville , pictured with
'Retired Senior Volunteer
Gladys . Cumings and Brian
Glenn of the Red Cross, waited
111 line Thursday to donate critically-needed
blood. The
school's Student Council sponsored the blood drive, held in
the school gymnasium, and
donors braved cold ·weather
and snow fturr ies in response
to a -regio nal blood shortage,
particularly shortages in type 0
negative and 0 pos itive blood
types. The shortage in the
regional - and national - ·
blood supply is blamed on the
recent holidays, travel sched·
ules, inclement weather, 'and
the widespread outbreak of flu
and flu-li ke illnesses.
(Brian J. Reed)

Rice ·re-elected Eastern board president
. STAFF REPORT

room of the
Eastern
Elementary Public Library.

TUPPERS PLAINS
John Rice was re-elected
Regular meeting
president of the Eastern
Local Board of Education,
and Shelia Taylor was elected
During .rhetr regular busivice president at the board's ness meetmg. board members
organizational meeting on · approved Amy Bubenzer.
Wednesday.
Jessica Brannon, Jennifer
Cbarles ,Weber wa~ named . Denbow, Joel C. Farrar,
legislative liaison and Taylor Jesstca Kmsey, Matthew
student achievement liaison . Kulber, Amanda Parry and
The board's regular me~t- Brian Sprague as substitute
· ings were set for 6 p.m. on teachers.
Bethan
Turano
was
the third Wednesday of each
.month, in the conference employed as an after-

school intervention teacher.
and Dixie Sayre. Sandy
Need s.
Rulhie
White .
Heather Wilcoxen , and
Carly
Hayes
were
emp loyed as after-schoo l
intervention teachers on an
as-needed basi s. when cla ss
size dictates additional
staffing .
Di strict . Treasurer Lisa
Ritchie was employed as the
Title I treasurer for the 2004
grant year.
Tim
Simpson
. was
Please see Rice, AS

The Pediatric patients and staff at Holzer Medico/ Cenlvr would like ·
to thank the November sponsors of lite Earl Neff Pediatric Fund:

Crow's Family Restaurant
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

To1111's Auto Clinic
Gallipolis

228MainSL

Drivo-11uu WiDdow

992-5432

Wlllla-. N. Eachus
AHomey at J.aw

. POMEROY -The Athens
. firm LC. Trivett Excavating
is the apparent low bidder on
1he sewer extension project
designed to serve the Meigs
Elementary School and a
planned senior li ving center
in Rutland.
Bids on the project were
opened at Thursday 's re gular
meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners. The Athens
firm bid $99,499 for the project.
D.V.
Weber
Construction Co .. Reedsville.
was the secopd- lowest bidder. with a bid of $120.660·.
Other' bidders were Perry
R,eclaiming , Inc ., Corning ,
$ 127.000:
Rose' s
Excavating. Inc.. Racine.
$143,000; and DJ. Gro up.
Inc., Beverly. $150.500.
Bids were tabled pending
review by Omni Engineering,
Indianapoli s. Ind .. and an
award is ' expected on
Tuesday. when th~ co mmissioners reconvene . Project
construction 'is ~xp ecteJ 10
begin in early Febru ary. and
should be compl eted in 60
days.
The in stall ation of a new
four- inch sewer li ne along
Ohio 124 and Little Leading
Creek will allow for sewage
service at the
Mei gs
Elementary School and at
Heaven on . Earth SeniOr
Living Center, a new senior
an
apartment
complex
Indianapolis developer plans
to build in the village.
The Meigs L:ocal School
District is now spending
$14.000 each month to haul
sewage from the new school,
just inside the village limits,
to the vi ll age's sewer treatment plant. Construction on
the new senior living complex. to be built by The
Legends Realty Co., also of
Indianapolis. is expected to
be completed in February. but
occupancy will not be possible until the expansion pro- ·
ject is completed .
Commis sioners
have •
rece ived $208,000 in grant
funding
through " the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission for the project.
Please see Trivett. AS

.,,

�•

Frldav. January 16, 2004

•

The Kings of Lancaster to peiform

When · it comes to intimate
relationships. like marital or
even ·family relatiOn ships.
two necessary factors are
incredibly important for
strength and stability.
The tirst has to do with
havmg love for the other,
about which volumes are
written and conversations are
filled .
But the second has to do
with 'likmg the oth~r. For
example. I not only love my
. wife. Terry. but 1 like her.
too. I like what she does, I
like what she says, and I like
how she relates to me.
Likmg her prompt&gt; passion
to spend time with her. She
is the one whom 1 both love
and 1ike .
The Scripture raises this
"liking" concern, too, as it
involves our personal relationship with God: The
Psalmist , points out, "The
Lord taketh pleasure in them
that fear Him. in those that
hope in His mercy."
One aspect of taking pleaThe Kmgs of Lancaster w1ll be in concert at 7 p.m . on sure in someone is that you
Saturday at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene. The pub- have a liking for them.
Therefore, we find here the
lic is mv1ted to attend.
significant suggestion that

Church calendar
50 Singing groups from seven
states. Tuesday: 6 p.m. till ?
Singing by AVoluntEler Chor, The

Ron
Branch

there is a bond of relationship with God going beyond
the scope of love. It is also a
bond of rel atio~ship with
God based on hkm.g. The
lovmg us a~d hkmg ~;~s
serves to ennch fello~sh1p
between God and the mdiVIdual.
.
. By way of contrdst, c~n·
s1der how we llften deal With
others. We are often prone !?
say about cenam ones, . I
love 1t.~em , but I do not h~e
them. To what posthon ts
that person _rel;gated from
your perspectiVe. .
.
In the broadest of terms. 11
usually means that you keep
the r.erson you- l~ve-but-do·
~ot-l1ke at a r~lal!onal distance . Your wtlhn~ness to
!nt:ract ts based only on as
1t 1s necessary. Thus, sh~l­
lowne ss of relat10nsh1p

RICHMOND, Va. (AP)
The American Civil
Liberties Union say s it 's
unnecessary for the U.S .
Supreme Coun to review a
ruling that declared the din·
ner prayers at Virginia
Military lnstitu'te unconstitutional.
In coun papers filed this
week.
ACLU
lawyers
argued "the lower couns in
Virginia merely followed
Supreme Co)lrt precedents
in concluding that the offi·
cial mealtime prayers at
VMI are unconstitutional,"
state ACLU executive director Kent Willis said. "There
should be no need for them
to review the case."
Attorney General Jerry
Kilgore had asked the high
court to review the case
after the full 4th U.S.
Circuit Coun of Appeals in
August refused to review a
and shower facilities. For infomna- tj1ree-judge panel's ruling
tion, call Promoter Evelyn Roush that mealtime prayers at the
state-funded military college
at 882·2049.
violate the constitutional
'
.
of church and
separation
Please e·msif calendar
Jubilee,
Jackson
County items to Christine Cozza at state.
Fairgi'OlJ'lds. FNe days wilh CMlr ccozza @ mydaifyregister. com
Kilgore has argued that

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beco.mes· the characteri stic
quality.
Do you want God 'to have
that attitude toward you? Is
it totally beneficial for us to
have a di stant relationship
with God?
Personally, I am grateful
that God loves me . But,
since deep fellowship with
God is the sweetest of all
human experiences, I al so
want God to like me. Thus,
what is that prompts God to
like me? Really - it is not a
hard proposition.
According to the clue s
given in this verse, we are
careful to note that it is not a
matter of God liking us on
the basis of what we do for
Him . Rather, His liking us
reaches out to the extent to
which we depend on Him. It
is right there in the verse.
First, God likes those who
revere Him, or "them that
fear Him."
.
When one fears and
reveres God, one posses~s
and expresses reverentml
respect for who God IS. The
mindset is that there is no
one who can be more to us
or do -more for us than God.
Furthermore, one who fears
and reveres 'God maintains a

Fellowship
Apostolic .

tht: blessings are like those
recited at the U.S. Naval
Academy and in the military, and that no one was
required to engag~ in
prayer.
_
"We stand by our brief
and we feel that the corps
of cadets has a right to participate in voluntary prayer
at
mealtime,"
Kilgore
spokesman -Tim Murtaugh
said Thursday. "It's part of
the fabric of the VMI educational experience."
The Supreme Coun can
rej~ct
the request for
revtew, leaving the prayer
ban intact, or it can agree
to hear the case and issue
its own decision.
VMI stopped the prayers
after U.S. District Judge
Norman K. Moon ruled
them unconstitutional in
January 2002.
First-year students were
required to attend the predinner prayer gathering, the
ACLU said, while upperclass students were not.
Though the prayers were
voluntary, the appeals panel
found that the Lexington

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Rlvtr \'alley
Ap6s tnlrc Wnrslup Center, H7J S 3n.l
Ave, Mu.ldl L·pu n , Kc\ 111 Konkl e, Pasto1,
Sum.l,ry. II a 111 Wcd nesda) 7 00 p m
YtlUih Fn 7 10 p m
Emmanuel t\poslolic Tabunar; lc Inc.
Lo•1r Kd olt Nl·w luu a Rd Rutl and ,
Sc n1 llc~ Suu 10 IJU a rn &amp; 1 ~0 p m .
Thurs 7 00 pIll Pas10r Mar1y R Hullnn

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of(,od
lim; -167, DuJUr ug L.111 c, Mason,
W.Vn Pa stor Nc r\ Tc nnalll . S unday
ScrVKCS 10 (I() .1111 ;J.Jld 7 r 111 .
P,Q

Baptist
Hope Hapll!il ( 'huR"h (Southenl)
570 Gr .m t St , Mrddlcpurt . Pasl11r Rev
l)avrU Bryan. Sumkt y sdn_llll · 9 ~f) a m ,
Wn rsh1p 11 u m umJ h p m Wednesd ay
Scrv K ~ - 7 p m
Ruthmd · ·irst Bllplist Church
Sund .ry Sdwnl · 4 JO a m. WIJ/slup ·
][I ..J&lt;; ,1 Ill
Pomt'M) First Baptist
Pastnr Jon Broder!. East Marn Si .
Sund.r y Sl hoPI • 1.} 10 ·• m , Worship ·
10 .10 a m.
First Southern Baptist
4 1872 Pn mc rt l) Prk c, Pastor E I .mr,rr
O' Br v,mt . Sund &lt;~} Sclwnl - Y l () ., m .
~o rslnp K I ~ .rm . 9 4~ .rm &amp; 7 OOp m ,
WcdncOO.ry Scr v r~o;cs - 7.00 p m.
··irst Baptl'it Church
'1\r ~ t o r Murk Morrow, 6th and P,1lmcr St ,
Mrddlcport, Sunda) School - 4 I 'i a 111 .
'Wu (~h rp 10 15 a m , 7 0 0 p m ,
F
'Wedm::sd.r} Scr VH: C· 7 ()(}rIll

Sliver Run ~apti!)t
Pas tnr Jnhn Sw anso n, Sum_l.ly School
lOam . Won;hr p - I l am 7 00 pm
. Wednesday Scrvrccs- 7·00 p m

26 years In local business
Rooting &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

Mus tc and Art Therapr es
Hosprcc and Resplle Care
?40-667-J 156 Fax: 740-667-0080
Phys1cal, Occ upil tl onal nnd Speech Therapres
We AcCept ,Mcdrc are, Med1curd, &amp; lnsumncc

Htlhlehem B11.ptisl Chun:h
Great Bend, Route 12-1 , R .t~ rn c, OH,
Pas to r D~m e l Mc ~ca. SuiHJuy School 9 Hl a m . Su nday Wnr~hrp 10 \ () a m .Wednesday Btblc Study- 6 00 p m

r

,,

Sunday ·
Times-Sentinel
•

Meigs • 992-2155

. ,•
. t

,,

.

Old Bethell&lt; rec WiU Haptist Church
2M 60 1 St Rt 7 . MrdrJl qmrt. SunrJ.1 y
Sc hoo l J 0 a.m . Ewnrn~ 7 00 p m .
Th urs~a y Se rvrccs - HXl
Jlillsldt' Raptisr Church
St Rt 143 JU~ t o il Rl 7. Pastor Kcv
J&lt;uncs R Anee , S1 . Sun d.1 y Um1 rc d
Se n r ~o;e, Worshrp - 10 30 am , (J p 111 •
Wednesday Scrv1ces -7 p m
\lctory Bapltst Jndej,endenl
N 2nd St Mrddleport Pa stm J n me ~
E. Keesee, Won;hrp · lOu 111 , 7 p m ,
Wed nc:;Uay Sc r v1~cs 7 p m.
~25

Faith Baptist Chur('h
Rmlroad St , Mtts.on, Sund11 y School - 10
am , Wors hi p - 11 a m . 6 p m,
Wc dnc~d ay Sc r-vr~oc s • 7 p.m.
Forest Run Bapttst
Pa!itm Anus H un. Sundny Schnul
,1 m , Wnrshrp - 11 am

r

10

MI. Moriah Haptlst
Founh &amp; Main St . Middleport. Pastor
Rc\' Gtlben Cr01g. Jr . Sunday School 9 ~ ()am , Wnrs hrp - 10·4 ~ .rm

r

"Lei your ltght so shine before
men. that they may se e your ·
good work s and gl onfy your
Father in heaven."
Mallhew 5. 16

50/32 East) anll eas ily accc s~ tb le from the
Appalachtan Htghwuy

Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor : Dav1d W1 scm an. Sunday Se houl
fl J O p m .
9 4 '\ am . Evcnr ng
Wcdnc~dU)' Scrv 1 cc~- 6 10p m

Keeping
Meigs
informed

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
"Old Fashioned Compass1on- Modem Care"
Nesllcd io a beauti ful country ~eumg (SR

Antiqult)' Haplist
Sum.l,ry Sdmul - 9 . ~0 .r 111 , Wm shrp \0 45 u.m, Sund ay E\ cmng 6 00 p m.
!•astor Mnrl: M L'{'tm1 :t~
Rutland Free Will Baptist
S,\]em St.; Pa ~ tor Jamll' Fortner, Sundn~
S~ h oul . 10 a 111, Evcnmg • 7 p m ,
Wcdncsd ay•Sen'llCS - 7 p.m.
St'cond Baptist thurch
WV, Sunday Sehoul 10 am, Mol'm ng wor~ h•p 11 am Evcmng- 7 r m
Wednesday 7 p 111
Ravt'n~v. OO&lt;l,

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Warm F rtf'r~dJ v
Atmu.\flhere

Third
flaclna, OH

209

Acts 24:16

·'
Homemade Desserts Made Dally
Home Coobd Meal!i &amp; Dally fJ'pecialv

"A Home Bank for

Home People"

Hours

6 t1n1 - 8 pm

IJvfi[{ie's 2{estauran{

740-949-2210

Open 7 days a wee k
.

74()..992·7713

Catholic
Sacred Hearl C athnllr Chuft'h
lbl M"ulhc rry Ave . Pomeroy, 992-'\M9M
Pas tt1f Rev Will1 cr E Hcrnl. Sal Con
4.45 5 I ~p m , Ma~~- .:'i ~ U p m .. Sun
~

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
'

740-949.- 2217

Many of us-have had the misfortune to suffer aJlrnken bone or to
sympathize with someone who has. The worst part is the pain of
the broken bone. Then there is the discomfort and confinement of
the solid cast, allowing no mobility of the area, no leeway for the
bone to bend . Yet, this must be so that the bone heals straight and
strong to support the body again.
Similarly, God heals a broken spirit. In Jeremiah 23:9, we read,
"My heart is broken within me, all my bones shake." For a spirit to
heal, we must stay close !o God, not bending to the familiarity of
"quick fixes." This may seem uncomfortable during times of
temptation, yet as the bone heals, so does the spirit, In due time.
Nehemiah 8:10 proclaims ".... the joy ofthe Lord is your strength."
.Is your spirit weak? Visit the Great Physician at your church or
synagogue this week. He will stren~then you.
SUNDAY
Lub

MONDAY

tUE~DAY

Luke

Luke

Luko

Luke

l:l·ll

4:!1·44

S:HI

lol J.ll

~1 · 16

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATUIIDAY

Luke
J;II•JS I

Luke

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

740-594-6333

. I -800·45 t-9806

Herbalife Independent
Distributor

c-

For a w ho le
new you

l :ll·l!

Jeanie Howell
33334 Hysell Run Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992· 7996

www.herbsndiet.com

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye .&lt;hall
ask what ye .wtll, and it shall
be done unto you.
John 15: 7
MEIGS FAMILY E)'ECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .f'ii:'.

507

(740) 992-3279
·~
Tol Free 1·877-583-2433

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they ,
shall see God.
. Matthew 5:8

"So I strive al~¥ays to
k.eep my conscience clear
before God and man."

Acts 24:/6

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TE~s
'190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
olaaues !·shirts and more .

llt'mlock Gron Christi a n Chun·h
Mrnr~ l er bnry Brnwn. Wur-.ltip
Y \()

~ ~· Ill
ll) ~ 111

Su nda&gt; S.::luml - 10
7 pm

.
Carolina Antique
E'r Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Pleasant
675-1160
Variety of furnilure. glassware, crafl s,
coll ection of boules &amp; plimittveOutside flea murket April - Oct.

Layaways Avail able

Trinit y Chul'&lt;'h
Scr ond &amp; I ynn. Pomeroy. Plr~lor ' Rc\
J1•nath ~n Nohk, WClrshr p I 0 25 am,
Sun,l;~y Sd1r&gt;ol 9 I 'i a 111

Brhle Swtl y-

Episcopal

Pom t' ro\ Church of Chnst
.21:! W Ma m St M rnr~Ll'f Aniln•nt
Mt&gt;rn'
l)\0,1111

r 111

Congregational

\\edncsday

s~rYil'C~

7 pIll

Grace Epist'opal Church
\~fl] M,nn St, f•rm rcroy, Su nday
,rml J!, ,] ~ Eud1an~t I I 00 am

S~hool

Holiness
Cummunily Cinl{ch"
P.1~tur
Sic\c rmnck
Ma1n Sir~ct.
Rutl.md Suod;;) Wnr,hrp- 1000 11 m

Pomeroy Westsidt t:' hurt'h nl t 'hrisl
~~::!2() Ch riJr cn\
H11 11 1c Rd, Sund,ry
s~ holl l

11 ll 111. \'.orshrp WcJncsda) Scr\lct'~ - 7 p.111

](},,Ill

'6

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Middleport Church of Christ
~ t h .mJ M,un, l'.t, lor AI l lart~lll l , Yllu Lh
Mr tmtcl Jt •~ h Ulrn, Sumlay Sd1uol I}~()
.am . Wllr~ h rr

K!~.I010 .r m.7pm.

"''ci lnc~d . t y Sc n t•·c ~ -

7p

111

Keno Chunh 11f Christ
IJ JO .1111 , S uml .t~ Sdw u ] 10 ~() ,, 111 , P. r ~l~• r · Jdlr cy W.rll .llC, I \ I .rnd
~ rd SunJ.r)

WM~ h rp

lkarwal&amp;o"' Rldh't' Chur('h or l 'hrtsl
P.rsl1lr Uru ~c k rry Stmd.t: S,huul Y 111
.1111
Wnr~ h r p
Ill ~II .r 111 . 6 ~(f p 111.
Wcdn~~.t y St.'r\ llC., 6 lO p 111
Zion Church of l'hrrst
Pollll\'fl•)' Halfl ~oll\ r l h: Kd i RI l.llf
P 1' 1"1 ~ ogc r W.rt ~un , Sum!.t} Sd1uu l o.; ~0 am . Wmshrp
JO lO ,L m. 7 1)0
p m . Wcd n csd&lt;~y St•r\ r~c~ 7 p m
'l\1ppers f'lurn Church of Christ
ln •trumcnta l, Wo lr,hrp So.:rVKl' - 1J .1111
C:omnlu nrun 10 .1111, Sundu) ~l h &lt;&gt;tJI ·
lU 15 :r.m , Youlh ·.;; ~0 pm Sunday Arh lt:
Stu dy Wcdncsd.ty"' pm
Rradburv fhun·h of C'hri!ll
Mmr •ll! r To m Run}Oil ;\':l~'iS lk.rdhun
Ro.td MrJJ lcport, SunJay S\hool - ~ ~0
Worship . 10 .10 .r m
Rutland Church of Chri!iil
Sunday Srhofll - IJ JO a m Wor•h1p and
Commumon )U 10 .1m , Bob J Werry,
Mmr , ll'r
Bradford ('hurch of Christ
12.1 &amp; Rr.tdhury Rd.
Muustcr Doug Shnm hhn . Ynuth Mrnr slcr
Hrll Amberger SunU.ry Sll1u1'1 - 'J \1) 11m,
Worshll' . 8 00 u m io 10 ,, m .. 7 UO
p m . Wc dnc~da y Se r v 1 ~0:s 7 00 pIll

Corna o f S1 Rl

Uil'kor;v Hills Church nf Chrisr
E\'llllf!C ir , l Mrk.: M&lt;'llr&lt;\ S und.t~ Sdwo ] •
1.) a m , w,1rshrp - I0 a m , fl J\J r m,
Wcd nl':~ d .1y Sc r,· r ~c~ · 7 Jl m
Rerdsville Chu«'h of Chris t
Pastm Phrlrp Slurm S unda) S-e houl '} 10
. a m . Wnrsh1p Scr\ llC Ill 1fl ,t 111 Brhk
!)Judy. WcJncsdJy, 6 ~0 p m
()cxtt'r Churd1 of Chri~t
Potstm Brll Fshelm:m Su nda) sdl\lo iiJ IO
a m , NtHmu n W1ll ~u r c rtm e nd l'llt.
Sunday wnrsh 1p • 10 11) ,1111
Church of Christ
lnt er sc.~. lion 7 .tnd 1 ~-f W, l ~ v~ n ge lL ~ t
Dc nm ~ Sargcm. Sund .1 y Br l&gt;k Si udy ·
9 J {l .1 m . Worsh1p 10 ~ 0 a m .md 6 JU
p m , Wcdncsl.lny Bihlr Study· 7 p 111

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ in
Christian Ufion
Hunford . W Vn . P.1s1ur D.wrd C. rct'r
Sundn y Sc hool - -:l ~0 a m . Wnr ~hrp
IQ J O 11 m , 7 \Jif p 111
WcJnesJ,n
Sc rv r ~cs · 7 0(} p m

Church of God
Ml Moriah Churt'h uf (;orl
M1!c Htll Rd . R:ll'llll' , l' ,hl lll J.Ltn e•
Sauc rficl d . S und .r ~ Sd wo l · lJ 45 .r 111 .
Evemng 6 ]1.111 . Wcdnc~J ay St.:l\ ' l l~s · 7

pm
RuUand C hurch of God
l'a ~ l o r Run Heath . Suml.l)' Wnr sh 1p - 10
a.ru , (,
p 111, Wl· d n~~d ,t y Sc i \I~~~ · 7

Uun\lill~

Holint'Ss Chun:h
~10~7 St.ne Ruu1e n). Lan g~v ll c Pas10r
G.rr) J a~.k~Oil Sunduy ~~h()ol 9 \Q a m .
Sund ry wnn. l11p
10 '1,() a Ill &amp;- 7 p m .
W..:dnt''d I}' prayl'f ~l'T\'I l'&lt;.'- 7 p Ill
t:nl\ury P!IJ[rim l:h11J&gt;('I
H a 1n~ rm v 1jk
Ro&lt;ld
Pa~ iu r
Charlc.,
MLKrmw SL11\J,1y SdL1llll 9 J[) a m.
W&lt;ir\hlll - II ,r m . 7 Otl ]l lll , W~ d nc~day
Scrl rl&lt;..: 7 114l pm

Syracu.~

First C hurch of (~ud
Apple rmd Scl'tmd St~&lt;, P.r ~ lor Rei D.t&gt; u1
R us~e ll , Sund.1y Sd wol and \\'ill rshrp- 10

""'
Evcmng Sc rYrccs- ()1() p 111 . Wl•d•rcs\lay
Scrvr ccs · 6 3{1 ~1

111

C hnrth of (;od of Pmpti(cy
O.J W hite Rd nff St Rt I60. Pnstor· P J ,
Ch up ma n. Sund .r}' S dron~ - 10 am .
Wmr;;hrp • II ,r. m., We dncsd:l~' S~rv r o:es 7 p II)

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street

~

10 ,1 m .

Y.. ~dn esd: r y

Pint' Gnne H1hle Huhn es!i Clmn·h
1 /~ rmk i~ff H1 ~:!5. P.1 ~1or Rl·v 0 Ddl
M rnlc} Su ndu'~· s~ h nn l - 9 10 am .
v. ,.r,hrp - 1()11) u m . 7~0 p m .
Wl'dii ~'ILI V

Scf\ 1~'&lt;.' ·

7 10 p Ill

Wesll'yan Kibll' Holuwss l:hurch
7'- Pe.1rl S1. MrdUlc p,111 .PJ~Ior Re\
D:r\rJ Grl ~ ri Su nday Sd lllo l 10 a Ill.
Wtlr,hrp · 10 4~ p m . Sund ay Eve 7·00
p m. Wcd nl·,day S.:r\ rl't: - 7 ~0 p 111
ll).scll Hun llolincSl'i Church
Pu~10 r Rl'\ Lar~ y Lcm!c)•. Sund a) Sllllllll
- 9 '0 ,\ m . W,1r;;;h1p · 10 4~ :1m. 7 p 111.
fh ur.diLy' Brhk Stu J v .rnd Youth 7 p m
l.aurt'l C lifT l&lt;"rt&gt;l' Ml'lhodist Chun·h
RC\' Lt::s Strand! J nJ Myr,l L Slr,llldt ,
SunU.ry Sdl1•ul 9 10 ,\ 111 Wnrshrp ·
10 10 .I Ill &lt;Uld 6 p 111 ,Y..fli lle!&gt;d.ly SC IV\CC
701J pru

Latter-Day Saints
I hf t:hun h ur J~us
Chri st ur L.attrr· l&gt;u y Saint.~
St R1 160 ~4 6 6247 m ~46 - 7 4 8ti
Sun d.r} Sthonl I{J 20 II .1m , Relrcl
Sllllel y/Pn cslhouJ II 0~ - 1 2 00 noon
S,r,r am.: nl SerV ILe &lt;.J - 10 I ~ J nr ,
1/o mcm,tl;.mg m..::ctmg, l si Tlr un. - 7 pm

Lutheran
St. John Luthert1n Church
l'rn c Gr ov.:. W1Jrsh1p · \l IX) a m . Sur11J.1 )'
S~ hno l - I U 011 a m P. 1 ~ 11 1 r J ,mlc ~ I'
Br.u.l &gt;
Our Su,·iour Lulh~run Church
W.dtlU t .md He nry St s . R ,lvcns"- Ot.l d
WV.t . Pa-.tnr· Dav1d Ru s~dl Sunday
Sdll)(&gt;l . 1n no a m . Wnr, hlp - 11 tun
St. Puul Luthctan Church
Corner Syl·,rmorc &amp; s~~ tlnJ Si . Pomeroy,
Sund.l)' Sc honl · 4 4~ .1 111 . Wor,.; hip II
,, Ill Pn ~ lm J,llllC&lt;., p ll rmly

United Methodist
Graham United Mtthodist
WilfShrp _ lJ \0 am J 1~ 1 &amp; 2nd Sun), ,
? lrl p m. l lrJ &amp; 41h Sun ), Wcducsliay
Scr\LCC - 7.)0 Jl Ill
Mt. Olive Unittd Methodist
011 124 heh mU Wrlkewrlk. Pa~ h J r Rev·
R.1lph Spu e~ Sunday Scht"-l l' - 1.1 10 am .
Wnr~hr p
10 .~n .1 111. 7 p 111 . Tiru r~day
Scr\ ILt'S · 7 ]1 111
M e 1g.~

loopcrRtlvl• l,arish
N1'rthe.1s t Cl u ~ t cr. Alfred . Pa ~tur J,mo,:
Bt:.llll e S uml.1y Sdwul - 9 l O a m .
W.n·sh rr

II a m 6 10 r rn

Chester
]l,p,tm Jo~n ~ lk allr l!. Wor~h1p - 'J ,, 111
Sund.l&gt; Sd rut' l - 10 a m
f1111 r.-d ay
Scr\ llCs 7 p m

.1111
Suml.ry

jopp11
B• 'h R,tnd o lph.

Wnr ~ hrp

C)

10

Sd r ~•PI

- to lO u m

Long Dotlom
I) ·w .1m . Worshr p
Sunda)' Sth o•ol
10 11) d Ill
Rl'edsVillt:
Wn r ~h11l - I) 1(1 am ,. Sun d.1y Sthno l
1(1 ~0 ,1111, Frrst Surrd.ry t•l M11111h · 7 00
p \11 SCI'\' ICC
Ph1in ~

Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

St. Puul

L•

·--....·· .....

'

882-8200 www.andenonfb.com ...

Fa in rt· ~ Uihlt• ( lr unh
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\un d." \,luo"l &lt;I ~~I , ru' \\ ,.r,hll' -1111
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Heuth !Middleport I
P.1srur Rlld Bnw.er Su ml.l} Sd mol - ' J 10
a m w.1r&lt;dlr p II on am
Miners\ille
P .r ~ t o r Bot• RohmM)I I S umb ~
a 111 , Worsht p 10 a rn

s~ hool

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hulh hll o'ol~ hr p t. tu~.ld l l nr ( h r r•l
P,l \h&gt;T ]{ l\ lr.rn~llll lllchll' '•Ill, ,
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RoyR I Ouk Resort ( 'hupt'l
Flatw r ~ rd s

!{(lad. P.r,!lu (Jkllll RPI\0:
Sund.t) ~~. ..r~hip I I 11.._!11 Chrldrru ·,

'IJ

Sund.l) Slhool I I
.1111 \\edu n d 1\
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lommutul\ 11ft.'hrr i'&gt; l
P&lt;J11laml ltRIIII.' RoJ J&gt;,rqol h· rl ) Srm.!u.
11 IO a 111 W111 ~ hrp
S un da~· Sd wlll
]If ~0 .1,111 \\ ctllll'\&lt;LI\ Sl' fl llC\ 7 0!1

lk1hd \' o r ~ h1p l f nlt•r
Sl houl P.l'il ' l 'Rub B.lrl•\ 1.

:~~s'l~ :l~ll I~~·'.::1\ ~ ~;::~~:~ ~·~ ~ :~ q,~l;:t::c

Rock Sprin~
P,r, hlr Kt 1tl1 R,!tk l, Sunday School 9 I &lt;i
a 111
Wur shr r - . 10 .1 111 . Youilr
Felloy, s]up. Suml;q 6 p m"
Rutland
Suuda) Sdwo l . 9 ~0 a Ill . w.) r~ lllp .
10 ~ 0 a 111. l i1Uhd.ty Ser v rlt"~ - 7 p m
Salem Center
P.ts1o1 Wrlluun K M ar~ hiLII. SunUU}
Sdmol · I 1l J 'i ,r m . Wtlrshrp -- 9 I " n m .
Rrh k Study Mond,ry 7 00 pm
~ a Ill

Bethany
P .l~ t o t John G1lmor~ . Sund:1y Sd1nol
Ill
.1m . Wnnhrp - 9 " 111 . W~ dn c,JI.I y
Se r V Ile~- 10 am
l:armd· Sutlun
Carmel &amp; Bots hun RU ~ . Ra ~rn.:. Ohro
]1,Jstor John Gil more Sumluy S~.; hoo l
') 10 .t m , Wors hr p · 10 ~ '\am ' . Hrhk
Sllldy Wed ? 00 p rn

s~ huol

O!ISIS (hris ti:m t' dluv. ~ hip
( N&lt;•ll -Lil iH&lt;11\lll.ll l&lt;&gt;lhll I ~ I ]&lt;)~ "hlp I
Mcelrn g m thr 11ld Anwman l q~ron H.1ll ..
Suutlt h~t.ud r "''CIIIIC, Mu.ldkporl
P htt lr ( Jrrr , Sit.'\\ .1rt 10 IK) .1111 SunJ.1\
Otlwr nrcc'llllf!' 111 hnm r~

11

Sunduy S&lt; honl- I U J:S u m

Mormng Star
l'astur John Grl mure Sund.J}'
J m , Wor'i htp lllam

11

Easl Lelar1
Sunday St h r ~• l- 10 ,r m . Wnhhrp
· (} ,rm WcdncsU,ty - 7 pIll

Ynuth grnup fl pm W!!dn r~ d IY l'1111 &lt;'r\ rn
Pr.1 ~&lt;e 1 ,md Brhk Stmh 1 pill
\
Ash Slreellhunh
A~ h Si MrdJ leporl· Su11d.1) Sd 11 ~1 l
'I \(\
.t 111, Mnrnm g Will, lllp
10 ~o ,, m 6.: 7
pm Wet hll''ill,l~ S,•r\ IH' 7 1)0 [l Ill y, olHh
Srn lcl' - 7 110 pm
Agllpt' I ifl· ( tnli.' l'
' l ui i - G o'p~ l l h wc h , 1'.1'1" 1" l,&gt;lrn &amp;
l".tll} W.nk (,() \ S,·u•nd -\,, ~11'~'11 /]~
'il! 17 ScnKc \IIII I.' Su nd,11 Ill l(l ,r m.
Wcdnesd ,ly 7 p111
Ahund11nt (; ri!Cf R.l-'. I.
S rlllrd S1 ~ llll&lt;ll l'J'&lt;lll P.t,lc&lt;r luo:' 1
D , l \ 1 ~.
Sun.l ,ry ~~' 1 \ r&lt; l, 10 1 rn .
Wcd 1re,dJ) " I 'll~·. 7 p 111
'1 2~

Fuhh J ull (.usptl ( hurd1
I 'lilt!- llo llhHII 1', 1 ~ 1&lt; 11 Sl,' \(' ! {~,:, [ Siul&lt;li \
St h&lt;l&lt;ll lJ "\rf,lll l W\H,hlp 1) 111 l lll
and 7 p 111 w~·dn~'d·') - 1 p m. I nJ"
1d)lm "ill)l '1: 1\ ICl' 7 p Ill
Hllrrisonvillt• ( 'nmiiiUIIII\ nmn.h
P,t\1\)1 1 lraon Durh.un S u n 1l .r ~
'I llf
.I rn .uld i pIll

\~'e dl h' "'.l \-

7 ]1 Ill

i\liddlrp11rl C nmmunilv t hunh
'i7"&gt; Pearl St. 1\l rddlqwrl ., P,r, tor S. ur r
\nd c l ~ll ll
Su nd.r) Sdw od ](I .1111
l ·\l' lllll ~ 7 ~Op11 1
\\ l'dll c~d.r \ Sl'l\ltc'
711fp111

l'u~ t or

Rarlnr
Ptsl&lt;l r Pel~ Sh .r ftcr Sunday School - 10
.1 111 . Wnp.;hrp • II .I Ill Wr dnl'Ml,\) 7
pm
Coo]~lllc

Unitt'd Mellmdist l'ansh
P.1 stm . Helen Klrnc, Ct1uhrll e Churd1 ,
ltl
Mam &amp; F1f1h St. Sund.1y S~honl
am. Wor~ hip - lJ a m . Tu ~~d ay Se r v t cl!~ 7 p Ill
Helhell'hun·h
Rd . 46HC. S unJ;;&gt; s~·h ..ol - &lt;.J
am . Worshi p
10 .1m, WcJne&gt;;&lt;i,L &gt;
Sel"\' 1 \:'e~ 10 .l Ill

hlilh \'ullc\ 'l,rl&gt;l:rnttd(' ( hurt·h
B.ul q · ~~~~~ R11.rd P r' 1111 Re1 l tn l ll ~ ll
R.r\1.\ll ll Su nd ,r; t-.v ~· n r n ~ 7 p&gt;m .
l hw sd,l) Su\llC 7 p 111
S\'r,Jt'USl' Mrs~lfln
St. Sr r.lclhl'
s~ h ml l . jl) a Ill , I \Clllll~
\\'c\ hrc~d.l} Sr i I Ill' · 7 p 111

Hockinaport Church
Grund S tre~t . Sunday Sd1011] - ~ .ltl .1 m
Y..or sh rp • 10 10 a m , Pa ~fnr Phrlhp Ddl

~ · ~O

llrlzl'l Conmmnit~ Lhurch
0 11 Rt 12-1 P,l\tllr J" d-.o.'l Jl,u t Sund.l\
Schnnl \) &lt;.11 ,11\l \\nr ,h rp 10 Ill 1 Ill
7 \IJ r m

Church of the Nazarcnr
10 Jll ,r m &lt;tlld h

V.ctlnc~ Ju y Serv r c e~ -

'l,()

Sd1110l
.1111 ? p Ill

'' IO .r m

J pm

C hester (' huft'h of the Na :r_JU'l'IH'
Ro:\ lkrbL rt()rJ I ~ SunJayS,hnnl
4 10 :r m 'Wlll,hrp I I .rm . 11 r m .

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l'.t-h&gt;l \\ tl lll I{ 1,,,,11 \tlll&lt;l," " ' ''l&lt;l
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Sah·m ( ·~ 1 mmumt ' ( hu n h
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Rt·~ l t l nl lltlll C hrr ~ tian lt•llto \\ •hip
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Pentecostal
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\\\• r•hrp
\litld k pn rtl'lt , lll tl'l'ian
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II

Sen rn' 7 p m

l'a~t ur J,m LII\Clldt·r. Suml.l't Sdl&lt;l..•l ·

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MI. UliH' t'ummumt' ( hunh
f'asltlr L,r..., n· rru· Hu'h Sund.t\ Sd wnl
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. Syrllt'IISl' ( ' huft'h of the N11zarene
M1h· A dkm ~. Suml,l}: School Y ~n
.r m , Wtlr,h tp . 10 lll am . 6 p m
Wu lm·•d.J y S l·n r n·~ - ? (I Ill

Wn r ~ h rp

S und n~

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Lnn~

Rreds \'illl' Fl'llow ~ hip
Ch urch nl ihc NM ,rrenl' l\t~ t1or l.ym! ,r
Kuhn Sund .ty Sc hn•1l · 9 \ ll .1m
Wor sh ip - IU .l~ ,, n\. 7 p m . Wcdnc~d .ry
ScnrLC' -7 p 111

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ll~·cs lillt•( ' nmmunil~

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Presbyterian

f'uith ( : u~pel f..'lmn. h
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7 ~ I ) p Ill
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Mlddlfport Church ulthc N11zan!nc
Pa ~ tm Allen Mtdcap. Sunday s~·h,)l\ 1
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Nazarene

l'omero~

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Torch Cburrh
Cn Rd ti \, Su 11 day Schon] ·
•Wnrsh rp - 10 1[) ,, m

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Other Churches

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New Ha,·en. WV 25U!S
James H. And enon, Lf&lt;'t l\.~ed f'uneral Oh·fl•lor
Heidi S. Anderson , Forethou jlht •l&lt;'oner AI Pll1nnlrtg

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Blessed are the pure ............
mE
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....
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shall see God.
141112-1444
Matthew 5:8

ANDERSON
FUNERA.l. HOME

··oresl Run
P,l, J;lt Bob Roh uN m Su nda; Sd1nol
a m . Wohh lp · 1:1a m

of Sharon llolln ess Church
L1·adrng Creek Rd . Rutluml, l'a~wr R l·~

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P.1s1nr ArlanJ Krng, S un du~ Schon!
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Su nduy School • Y 45 a m , Worshrp · 11
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If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
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Pomeroy
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Pastor Rtlk Rule, S undH ~ Sl hfloJ I - I) 10
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school's emphasis on conformity pressured cadets to
participate in a religious
exercise.
· Evening praye,rs had been
a tradition at VMI since at
least the 1950s, except for
about five years in the
early 1990s, when cadets
didn't all eat dinner togeth·
er. Before the meal was
served, a member of the
cadet corps read a nondenominational prayer that
began
with
either
"Almighty God," "0 God ,"
"Father God," "Heavenly
Father,"
or
"Sovereign
God."
The ACLU .filed a lawsuit
challenging the prayers ' in
May 200 I on behalf of
Neil Mellen and Paul
Knick, two VMI cadets
who complained they were
pressured into participating
in religious activity. They
graduated in 2002.
. Mellen has been serNing
in the Peace Corps in
Micronesia and Paul Knick
is in the Air Force, Virginia
ACLU
legal
director
Rebecca Glenberg said.

r

Con -Jol :4'\ 'I I' u '

l:hurch of Jt&gt;Sus Christ Apostolic
VanZ;mdl und Ward Rd P:~swr· Jame s
M i lle~. Sunday Scht.o l
Evcnmg 7 ~0 flJII

healthy respect for the power
and will of God . If you want
God to like you. pro ve an
attitude of reverential depen·
dency on Him . It will enrich
your experience with Him.
Second. God likes those
who rely on Him . or "those
that hope in his mercy."
In the Scripture. "hope'' is
not w1shful thinking. Rather.
it is a grace from God based
on His sure promises. Thus.
the hope God gives is that.
because of Hi s mercy. He
will not condemn us on the
basis of the condemnation
we deserve.
.
Great lime of day - I
. depend on God tor that! But ,
accordmg to the statement.
God likes me for it. It is
because He knows I trust
Him . He knows I have faith
in Him. After all , "Without
faith, it is' 1mpossible to
please Him .:·
Hey, guys ' Give your wife
$I 00 th .
k ·ust because
. IS wee J
..
you hke her, and see 11 the
principle works for you . But ,
then again, she might expect
it every week, which would
not be good!

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

.

WORSHIP -GOD THIS WEEK

'I

ACLU asks Supreme Court to
reject review of VMI prayer case

Builders Quartet and The
Comptons.
Preaching
by
Worldwide Outreach Evangelist
Calvin Ray Evans. Wednesday: 6
p.m. till ? Open talent, all singers
welcome. Limil two songs.
Thursday: 2:30 p.m. till ? S1nging
by The Cookes and many more.
Friday: Noon till ? Pot lock dinner
and fellowship, everyone wei·
come. Singing begins 2:30 p.m.
with The Sin~ng Echoes, Mike
Upnght, The Birdsong Family,
The Browders and many more.
Saturday: 10 a.m. auction .wilh
proceeds going to the Jubilee.
Donated 1tems are needed.
Singing begins 2 p.m. wilh The
Wendell Birdsong Family, The
Browders, Eddie Lee and
Anointed and many mme. There
wil also be a program 1n honor of
veterans. General information:
Admission is free, oorGeSSions
available, camping space, bring
lawn chairs, ICMl offerings aocept·
ed, gift drawings each day, park·
ing attendar)ts, and restroom&amp;

.

Friday, January 16, 2004

Does God like you?
PASTOR RoN BRANCH

Saturday, Jan. 17
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
Missionary Ruth Eshenaur will
be speaking at 7 p.m., Pleasant
Ridge Church. Public inv~ed.
Sunday, Jan. 18
ADDISON, Ohio - Sunday
school. 10 a.m.. preaching
service, 6 p.m., with Rick
Barcus preaching, Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Wednesday, Jan. 21
ADDISON , Ohio - Prayer
meeting with the Rev. George
Holley preaching, 7 p.m. ,
Aadison Freewill Bapt1st
Church.
Sunday,Jan.25
ADDISON, Ohio - Sunday
school at 10 am., preaching ser·
VIC9 at 6 p.m. "wilh Pastor Ridl
Barcus preaching, Addison
Freewii BaptEt Crurdt
Friday, Feb. 20
POINT PLEASANT
Gospel sing, 7 p.m., Family
Worship Canter, 2416 Lincoln
Ava. Singing by One Heart,
Roush Family, Brian and
Family Connections, Kings
Daughters, and Seven. Love
offering to benefit upcoming
Band Area Gospel Jubilee.
May 11-15
COTTAGEVILLE 14th
Annual Bend Area Gospel

PageA2

FAITH •-VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

. www.mvdallysantlnel.com·

.

Blessed are the pure
heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

in

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Lei yo111 li~ht H ) .d wu' hefon•
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good u·ork.\ ond glor(f\· \'filii'

··so I ~trive always to keep
my conscience clear befo re
God and man." ·

Acts 24:

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Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

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�'

OPINION

The Daily·Sentinel

- '

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

·

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157 .·
www.mydallysentlnel.com

What's wrong with this
pi&lt;.·ture''
A muf\ and a womati are
seated next to eacb other on
pl ane. She is reading a
book. he is knitting.
· If you said, ' Men don'f·
knit , women do,' that's not
the right answe r. Actually.
there is nothing wro ng with
the picture.
More men are · knitting
today. inc.l udin g man y
whose names you will recogn ize - such as Roosevelt
'Rosey ' Grier, a former star
tackle with the New York
Giants pro foot.ball team and
the Los Ang'eles Rams ;
actors Russe ll Crowe and
David Arquette. and Robert
Gottlieb. former editor of
Th ~ New Yorker magazine.
A .contestant otl the paylime TV game show ' Who
Want s to be a Millionaire'
recently presented a handmade knitted stocking cap to
the
program's
host.
Meredith Vieira. The knitter-contestant was.a man . .
The owner of a yarn shop
in my neighborhood told
me recently thai one of her
cuslomers is a prominent
surgeo n who says ·knitting
keeps his fin gers nimble a prerequisite for a surgeo n.
But kn itting, it seems. is
still a hobby dominated by
women. During World War

Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

, Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free . exercise thereof; or abridging thefreedam
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
tlie Government for a redress of grievances."
.
.

-The' First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Moderately Co.nfused
RATS ... IF ONLY
MY SIX NUMBERS HAD BEEN
DIFFERENT

.

.

~

George
Plagenz

II . it was not 'unusual to see
women knitting in church
during· the sermon . They
were knitting such things as
socks for our so ldiers and
similar items for people in
war-torn England. Today.
'ce lebrity knitting ' has
hel ped to make knit)ing
popular with women of all
ages . Julia Roberts and
olher stars from the enterlainmenl world have taken
il up.
Professional women, too,
have joined the growing cirde of knitlers. ABC 7
Chicago
News an&lt;:hor
Chery l Burton reported a
while back on a group of
high-powered female attorneys who found a way to
kee p their stress under con trol.
'They knit. Yes, knit ,'
Burton reported. ' It's now
chic to knil and purl with the
girl s.'
· Labeling lhemselves the
Knitchiks, Evelyn. a member. explained to Burton that

knitting was something she
could 'totally control .... If I
make a mistake I can undo
· iL There's not a lot &lt;Ibout
yoyr life that you can say is
totally under your controL ·
Knittin g can also be an aid
to your prayer life. some
women have found .
A. lew years ago. Chris
Pd'korny
· started
a
knitting/crocheting/sewing
ministry al her church, the
Edge brook · Eva ngel ical
Church of Chicago. Her
group. ihe Crafty Angel s,
makes hats, scarves, mittens, baby c,lothes, sha)Nls.
afg hans and olher ·warm
things for the needy.
'Every once in a whi le I
will see somebody on the
street wearing a hat or scarf
that I made,' Pokorny says.
' It makes me warm all over.'
'The only rule we have,'
Po korn y adds. 'is that we
mus1 "ray for the person
wh o 111 rece ive the ite m
we an.: working on.'
Not many teenagers knit
but it mi ght be good if they
did . Young people need to
slow down and relax more.
But boys are apt to co nsider
knining sissified.
They oughl to· meet Grier.
the 300-pound, 6-foot-6inch ex-pro football player
of lhc 1950s and '60s.
Grier was the one who
played the ·memorable role

0. 0

and guys

of subduing Si rhan Sirhan
on the nigh t of Robert
Kennedy's assassination in
Los Angeles in 1968.
·
In addition 10 hi s autobiography,
' Rosey :
An
Autobiography: The Gentle
Giant'
(Honor
Boo ~s.
1986). he wrote ' Rasey
Grier's Needlepoint for
Men ' (Walker Co. 1973).
(Needlepoint is a cous.in. to
knitt ing and croc hetin g.)
Photographs of Rosey dping
needl epoint appeared In the
New York Times. on the
cover ol the Saturday
Evening Post and on the
centerfold of Lbok magazme.
And nobody would call
Grier a sissy.
· Before Grier became a
born -again Chrislian he had
a ' rovin g eye and a yen for
beautiful wome n.' That' s
why. he said, he got into
need lepoint. ' It was a handy
device for striking up conversalions with g irls, ' he
said .
Boys and young men: take
note.
For the rest of us. knitting,
needl epoint and crocheting
can be a W&lt;IY of not only
improving our prayer life
and our soc ial life but eliminating th e pres sures and
stresses of 2 1st-century liv1ng.
· Knit one,' purl two.

Genealog.ical Society offers D~ughter hurts after hearing
one-on-one instru.ction
Mom wish .she had no kids
BY · CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - · For those
who have n' t the slightesl
idea abo;it how to begin
researching their ancesiry,
Count y
the
Meigs
Genealogical Soc iety is
offering individual help.
The county's oldest organi zation promoting in vestigation into ancestry, -will
be giving classes for anyone interested wtro wants
to learn the ftmdamenta)s
ol' seeking out their family
tree.
While many groups ha ve
used a cl ass setting for
instruction.
the
Genealogical Soc iety is
offering to set up one-onone personal classes at no
cos.t with the amount of
in structi on to be deter, mined hy the learner. ''Thi s
style of l&lt;;;arning "i iil give
lhe most personal altenlion
possible to learners," said
Keith Ashley. president.

.

A-----.
WINNING

OTTO
NUMBERS

ooomo

Consumer
Information
Column

Q.: "What is the maximum
number of points I can getfor
·speeding?
· A: Under the old law, il'
you were going 86 miles per
!)our (MPH) on a freeway and
bad three prior offenses, you
:Would be assessed 12 points.
:rhe new law says that if you
!Ire driving 30 MPH or more
pver 1he speed limit, you will
be assessed four points,.
regard less of any prior oftenses. That also would apply if,
for examJ?Ie, you were going
50 MPH m a school zone.

---

GfA~If.R. 1130
© 2004 by NEA , Inc.

Q. : Do · you always get
.points for speeding?
A.: No. In order to get two
points for speedi ng undercurrent law, you must be going
more than 10 MPH over the
speed limit in a 55 MPH
'zone and more than five
MPH in any other speed

I

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned [etters will

Rice

be published. Letters should be in good taste,

from Page A1

On to Mars!

The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherWise noted.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

·

(USPS 213-960)
i:lhlo Valley Publishing Co.
Published

every

afternoon,

Our main concern In all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of"an error in a
story, call the newsroomat (740i 9922156 .

Monday through Friday, 111 Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper

Our main number Is

Association.
Postmaster: Send address correc·
tions to The Daily Sentinel. 1 11

(740) 992-2156.

Department extenalona are:

Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reportar: Brian Reed. E~~:t . 14

l!oportor: J. Miles Layton, Ext 13

Advertising
Outalda Satea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15

ClauJCirc.: Judy Clark,

Ext 10

Circulation
Dlatrict Mgr.: "tBA. Exl. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

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' 13 Weeks
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President Bush's call fur a
new
and
ambitious
American space initiative,
wit h the uliimate aim of
landing men on Mars. has
understandably met With a
mixed response .
Although the project will
take
decades,
thereby
spreading the very considerable expense over many
years, there is .no wholly satisfactory answer to the
objection that the money
ought to be spent on noble
objeclives much closer to
home : the eradication of
hunger, disease and sheer
ignorance, to name only ,
three.
To reply that it is humanity's inescapable destiny to
press onward - first across
great oc.eans and virgin continents. and then outward
into the solar syslem, and
even beyond it - sounds at
first like a fooli sh. even arrogant sentimentality. But anyone who has studied human
hi story with a · mod ic um of
thoughtfulness knows just
how imperative that impulse
is, and how powerfully it has .
contribuied to the progress.
a nd the essential happiness.
of ma nki nd . It is the obligation of the Uni ted States, as
the techno logical leader
among the world's nations,
to respond to thai impulse in
our time, and Bush's propos-

•

..... -

•'fl

'

~·-~

William .
Rusher

al indicates .that he is up to
thai responsi bility.
The current American
space program has cle~ly
reacbed · a dead end. The
construction and maintenance of a space station, and
its regular resupply by space
shultles, have been remarkab le ac-hie-veme nts, albt&gt;it
costly ones in bolh lives and
treasure. But the landing of
men on the moon in 1969
and a few subsequenl years
we re the last really hisiOric
steps that I\IASA took, and
the experiments recently
de~ised by high school students to occupy the time of
astronauts in the space shuttles are little more than
insults to the human intelligence.
Bush proposes to build a
pe rm anenl space station ,regularly occupied by men
and women. on the moon,
and to us~ that to stage expeditions to Mars, 35 million
miles away. It will be well
toward the middle of the

21 sl century before we get dence whatever, · as ' nearly
there, but the effort will. inevitable. '
evoke prodigies- of technoJ3ear in mind that, during
logical creativity year by our earlier roJ:&gt;Otic explo"
year, with incalculable col- ration of Mars, when scienlateral benefits.
ti sts noted an un ex pected
II is too bad that NASA, in chemical reaction to some
its effort to whip up and sus- tempting concoction they
tain public interest in the had sent along, one idiot
current exploration of Mars . with a s:cientific degree
by unmanned robots. has made headlines by exclaimseen filto in sist that its prin- ing , 'Something up there
cipal purpose is to search for likes chicken soup! '
·evidence of past or presenl
We are lonely. here on our
life on our neighbor planet. little blue-green planet, and
That unquestionably cap- we would dearly love lo
tures the public imagination, believe that we have compaand helps justify the ny out there in the immensiexpense, but the directors of ty of space. And perhaps we
the project certainly know do - although it's a bit omibetter. Earlier probes of both · nou·s that the- Search · for
the moon and Mars have Extraterrestrial Intelligence
established 'that both are has been scouring the sky
bone-dry and bitlerly cold . fdr decades without finding
without the slightes t evi- so much as a single rad io
dence that f!ife,' or some- tra nsmi sslon suggesti ve of
thing analogous to it, has anything but pure static,
ever existed on either.
Someday we may have to
Of course, a scienti st, even face lhe fact that we have
if free o"f cynicism, can be as this whole gigantiC place to
romantic as a teenage girl, ourselves. _And with that will
and some have managed to come the realization that
convince themselves that mankind is more special
liquid water once did, and even than we tho4ght, and
may s.till (in hidden caves) that we had better get on
exist on Mars. 'From there, a wilh looking around the
few (like writer William l
property.
Broad in the Jan. I I New
(William Rusher is a
Yor~ Times) even rush &lt;O n to Distinguished Fellow of the
predict the presence of life. Claremont Institute fur the
describin g its appearance in Study of Statesmanship and
water, on exactl y no evi- Political Pl1ilosophy.)

"Genealogy is the second set up to meet the person's
accord ing to the
largest hobby in the Uniled needs.
States, second .only to gar- Society president.
dening," said Ashley.
While the emphasis is on
" It's use ful in learning those interested -in researchpersonal and general hi sto- ing their local ancestry
ry, in identify ing heallh research, anyone . wishing to
inform ation in families, learn how to research can
useful for inheritance pur-. parti cipate, said Ashley.
poses, in locating lo st although he noted there , is
cousins. and in obtaining more information available
membership in hereditary to
those
with
Mei gs
organizations like Sons of County ancestry.
Union Veterans of the Civil
Interested
indi vidual s
War or the Daughters of . may call 992-n74 or 949the American Revolution," 4000 to make arrangements
for classes.
he explained. .
Things that can be covMembership 111 lhe
crcd in the instruction Genealogical Society "
include types of data open at thi s time at a cost
which needs to be collect~ of $7 per person . Th is
cd, how to obtain records. · entitles the member to the
using correspondence to get · quarterly soc iety publicadata, and learning different tion, "The Megaphone ."
information formats.
The society meets bi Ciasses will be offered monthly and is a chanered
either at Racine in a large. chapter
of the
Ohio
personal genealogy library Genealogical Society, the
or at lhe Meigs Cou nty nation's largesl state society
Mu suem in Pomeroy. An with chapters in all Ohio
instruction schedule will be counties.

Law You Can Use
Leg islation Changes Point
.System for 'J:r&gt;\ffic Violation s
...
· Q. : I know that I can ge t
poinb for speedin g. How
does the state detenmne how
.many points I oe t''
· A.: Before J:muarv. 2004.
~when major chan~es in the tml~
tic law became eil'e&lt;:tive, some
points were &lt;L~sessed ba&gt;ed on a
complicaled formul a. Now,
:\)Dints for speeding are based
on how fasl you were trJveling.

·addressing issues,- not personalities.

· The Daily Sentinel-. Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com -

2004

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Friday, January 16,

Friday, January X, 2004

.

a

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

PageA4 ·

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It's chic to knit'and purl with .the girls

The Daily Sentinel
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employed as volunteer varsity boys basketball coach.
The board approved posting the position of extended
program teacher at the high
school for the remainder of
the school year, to be hired
on an as-needed basis.
The board approved a $3,(XX)

Trivett
from Page A1
)vtiile the remaining $51,000
needed to complete the project will be paid by the vil lage.
Meigs County Economic
Development Direc tor Perry
Varnadoe s&lt;tid yestercjay t~e
~ n gi n ee r estimated lhe cost of
the proje&lt;:l., at bet ween

the judge told me that I could
take a course and have 1wo
points taken off my record.
but that I could only du that
once in my life. Is thai true
under the new law?
'Q.: What other offenses'
A.: Under the new law. you
result in points?
can still enroll in a remedial
A : There are other moving driving instruction course and
violations, such as failigg to have two points removed
stop at a SIOJ? sign, going from your dri ving record, but
through a red light or making now you may take the course
an illegal tum, that will result as many as five times in your
in two poinls being assessed
against you. Offenses such as life (alihough not more than
willful fleeing or eluding of a once in any three-year period).
law enforcement officer, failQ. : "When can I take the
ing to stop and disclose identiremedial
drivin g course to
ty at the scene of an accident,
get
two
poinls
orr my record''
drag rdcing, driving under
A.: You may enroll in the
license suspension and driving
course
as soon as you get 1wo
the
influence
of
alcohol
under
points.
and you must ·enroll
and or drugs are among the
violalions that will result m six be tore you have accumulated 12
poinls being assessed against points. If you wail until you gel
you. There are other offenses 12 points, you will be ineligible
m which four points may be to take the remedial cour.;e.
assessed, such as underage
drinking and driving, and
utw Yrm Ccm Use is a week/r
operating a mo.tor vehicle with consumer legal infonnatiiHI aAwillful or wanton di sregard of l/11111 jJrovided as a puhlic sen1ice of
property or person.
the 0/rio State &amp;rAssociati011 and
the Ohio State &amp;r FowulatiOI'I.
·Q.: How long do the points This article was pre/Jared by
stay on my record?
Kenneth A &amp;ssin, past president
A: Any points assessed will of the Cuyahoga County Bar
·stay on your record for a period Association antfrequetjl lecturer
of two years. If you accwnulate
a total of 12 points in a tw()oyear on traffic and D UI law throughperiod beginning on the date of out tile Stole rf Ohio. Articles
lhe flrst conviction, your driver's appearing in ·this column are
license will be suspended for a in1ended to provide broad. geneml
period of six months. This is information about the lmv. Before
applying this itifonna!ion to a specalled a "Class D" suspension.
cific legal problem, readers are
1 Q.: "Wnen I went lo court urged to seek advicefrom an attorfor a speeding ·ticket once; l!e)l

zone. Forexample, going 65
in a 55 MPH zone IS Si,Jeeding, and you may rece1ve a
ticket, but no pomts will be
assessed againsl you.

DEAR AB BY: I am a 13. year-old grrl. and I know I
am not wamed. One ni ght I
heard my mum talking to
her new boyfriend about
wishing she had no kids so
she could do th ings without
having to sneak around. I
don 't know what to do.
Is · it my fau lt that she
doesn't want me? Please
help me, Abby. You help so
many ot)ler people - please
start with me. - UNWANTED IN OTTUMWA. IOWA
DEAR
UNWANTED:
None of this is vour fault,
, and if your mother knew
what you overheard . she
would probabl y want her
tongue amputated. I am sure
she loves you very much.
However. adults sometimes
speak in "shorlhand" - and
what she MAY have been
trying to communicate to her
boyfriend was ihat. overwhelmed with
pare ntal
res ponsibiliti es, she was
longing for the relative freedom of her vou th :
Clip thi s column. Show it
to your mother an'd let her
explain the spec ifk detail s
10 you - after ~he apologizes. that is.
DEAR ABBY: I grew up
in a small town where I was
sheltered from the real
world . I am now in college
and reali ze how much I
don ' t kn ow.
I rece ntl y encountered a
siiUation I had no idea how
to handle. My fri end confe ssed to me that she·, gay.
Although I was surprised . I

from Page A1

Local Briefs
BPA meets

wasn 't upsel because I love
ner as a fri end.
Unfort unately.
at
the
moment she poured her
hea rt out to me. I didn 't
know what to say. All I
could mu ster was, ··u mmm
... OK. " Abb)'. I felt awful !
If someth ing like thi s happens again . .is there pmper
et i4u et1e to use'' I don't
want to be in se nsit ive .
Coming out . is difficult
enou gh wi thout having to
fi gure out what the person
you confided in is feeling .
Your thoughls, pl ease. OPEN -MINDED
BUT
CLUELESS
. DEAR OPEN -MINDED:
There is no rule of eliquette
for how 10 react when someone comes out to you. The
best advil:e I can offer is to
think with your heart and
offer your support . Say.
"Thank you for trusting me
enough lo tell me. It doesn' t
change the way I feel about
you . Ym1 are my friend. and
I love ·you.'' It's hone st. It's
clea r. · lt" s reass urin g: . And
it's what the person needs to
hear.
P.S. It 's nol loo lale to say
1

9001)9_

D e panm~n t'

on Fifth Street
and I :45 p.m. ~~ the Raci ne
Ameri can L c~ i o n PoSI flO~
on State Rmne 12-t. The public is in vi ted.

Monday, .Jan. 19
RA C IN E - A rece.,.;cd
meeti ng of Racine Vil lage

· Council wil l be held at 7 ~-Ill.
in Council Chambers al vi llage hall.
'
Wednesday, jan. 21\
MIDDLEPORT - Reg ula r
meeting of
Board of
Middleport Board of Publ'ic
Affairs. 5:30 p.m .. coun~ il
chambers. Meeting c han g~d
due to holiday.
\

Monday. Jan. 19
MIDD LEPORT -· The
Meigs Cnunty Ri ght to Life
will meet at 7::&gt;0 p.m. at the
· Middleport Church of Christ

Clubs and
Organizations
Saturday, Jan. 17
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 779 and Star Junio r
Grange 878 will meet at I
p.m. to work on ABD quilts
follo..yed by a 6:30p .m. supper and degree practice at
7:30 p.m. Members are
encouraged to participate in
the activities.

Thesday, Jan. 20
MIDDLEPORT - Spec ial
meetin g of Middleport Lodge
363. F&amp;AM at '7 JO p.m. for
practice in the Master Mason
degree for inspect ion. All
oflicers asked to attend.

Church services
Saturday, Jan. 17
MIDDLEPORT The
Kings of Lancaster will prese nt a concert at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene at 7 p.m. Pastor,
Allen Mid ca p invites lhe
pbulic. Re freshment s will be

MIDDLEPORT
se rved,1
Middleporl Board of Public
Affairs will meel in regular
purchase Service agreement for from Carolyn Ritchie .
session at 5:30 p.m . on Jan .
GALLIPOLIS - Modern
• Recognized board memDavid Weeks as technology
Woodmen
of America 'Camp
support person for the school bers with certificates of . 21. in council chambers. The · 6335 will have a brunch from
Sunday, Jan. 18
year. and authorized the district appreciation in recogniti on of meetin g date was changed 10:30 a.m. to I p.m. at the
Jose
phine
Smith will be 94
Board
Member due to the holiday.
administration to develop a pro- School
Ponderosa Steakhouse 2 15 years old on Jan . IH. Cards
posed purchase service agree- Recognition Month.
Upper
Rive r
Road. may .be sent to her at room
• Set the next meeting for 6
ment with Kevin Fick to work
Gallipolis. The camp will 3 12A. ~:/o Overb rook Center.
p.m . on Feb. II in the conferwith technology in lhe district
pay $2.50 toward the cost of 333 Park SL Middleport
The board also approved ence room of Eastern
each person's meal. A draw- Ohio . .t57h0.
profession developthent funds Elementary Public Library.
in g will be held for a famil y
Attending were _Ritchie .
for four faculty members and
Edna C lark. formerl y of
dour pri ze.
approved unpaid leave for two Rice. Taylor and Weber, Greg
Hcml u&lt;:k Grove. will observe
MARI ETTA - A Buckeye
Bailey, Howard Caldwell .
faculty members.
her 95th hirthday on Jan. 18.
Sunday,
Jan.
18
Valley
and Superintendent Deryl Hill s/Hocking
The board also:
RACIN E - The presema- She no w res ides with her
• Heard a lunchroom report WelL
Reg ional
Deve lopment tion and raising of fl ags hon- daughter in Proctorville. Her
Di slri ct
Executive oring those servin g in the mailing add ress is Ed na
Committee meetin g will he military will be held at I p.m. Clark. 208 TR.
II SH
the Ohio Publi c Works held at7 : 15 p.m. on Jan . 27 at al
$100,000 and $125,000.
Proctorville.
the
Rac iAe
Fire
Commission.
the
di
slrict
office,
245
Mill
ers
also
Commissioners
Commissioners also labled opened a bid of $550 for the Lane , Marietta.
action on a bid for a concrele purchase of a 1991 Ford
· box cui veri from Mayle ambulance · from · Meigs
Enterprises, Inc :, Be1pre, to Emergency Servi ces, and
be used on a bridge replace- referred the bid lo EMS
The Home National Bank wishes to
men! project on Bald Knob- Admini strator Gene Lyons.
express their deepest sympathy to the
Stiversville Rd .
Present
were
The sole bid for the culvert Commi ss ioners
Jeff
family of Claudia Roush,
was referred 10 Engineer Thornton , Mick Dave nport
dedicated and treasured employee for
Euge ne , Triplett, who has and Ji'm Sheets. and Clerk
Stanlnuat
sec4red funding for the GIoria Kloes.
l forty-seven years. Claudia served as
bridge replacement through

Birthdays

Committee
to meet

Other business

laminate

Carpet

111nlnuat · $695
.

per

VII.

Saturday January 17th, 2004.
Syracuse drive thru will
be op.err until 1:00. Racine
office Will dose at 12 nQ!"'
omljJI4)ye,es may attend tlte Services.

e .. nd sanitJtry sewer Improve-

the prevention or tlimlnation

of slums and blight, or meet an
need of the community.
Citizens are encouraged to
this meeting on February 2nd
at 7:00p.m. to provide their Input the VIUages CDBG program.
Village of

\---- - - -- -- --------··-

vice-president and head bookkeeper.
She will be greatly missed.

starunuat

ments, park acquisition and impi'Ovements, demolition of unsafe
structures, rehabilitation of housl~g and neighborhood facilities and
planning. The activities must be
benent lowand moderate income persons,

Abby..,

Public meetings

11 css owner pay~ .taxes on
$50,000.
Dur st said th e state
W&lt;lnt s to have a uniform
due dat e for filin g ta x
return s and so th e · Tax
Board reco mmenJ s c hangin g th e .du e dat e from
April 15 to April 30.
' Finally. the Tax Board recommends mandatory filin g
for all village rcsidcnls.
Cou ncil is in the process of
reviewing these changes
before the members formall y
vote on them ...

The Village of Racine intendJ to apply.to the Ohio Department of
Developme.nt for fundln~ unde~the Community Development Block
Grant (CDBGi Small Cities Pr gram, a federally funded program
administered by the State of 0 lo. .
.
·
.
The first two publi~ hearings \wlll be held at 7:00p.m. on
February 2, 20114 at the Municiial Building, located at 405 Main
1:st:t'"'l. Racine, Ohio to provide. IUzens with pertl~enllnformatlon
I ::~~~:~t:t~he CDBG programs, lnc!ing an ..planation of eligible
l1
and program require ents. The CDBG program can fund
broad range of activities, inclu lng: economic development prostreet, water supply, drain

Dear

Community Calendar

Tax

~~----------------~------,
Public Notice •

1,~....

th.at to you r friend .
DEAR ABBY: We live in
the tidy bca&lt;:h city of Santa
Monica. Cal if. Ju st around
1he corn er from u&gt; is a fa stfood restaurant : The number
of people who slop to eat in
front of our house is
astounding. but that 's not
what bothers me.
What upsets me is the
number or . fo lb who dump
their trash on our lawn when
they ' \'e finished eating.
They are usually construction workers or parents with
young child ren.
Since schools often read
your columti in class. perhaps the students could write
in and give us ,an expl anation of why thi s kind of littering is ac&lt;:eptable nowaWA NTING AN
davs . EXPLANATIO N
DEAR WANTING: We
both know the reason - it \
because they' re too lazy to
dispose of the trash in an
appropri ate way. In the tidy
beach city of Sanla Moni ca.
and in manv 'other cities,
there are law's against littering. I suggest you info rm the
police about your problem.
I'm sure they' ll welcome the
c h~nc e to gather so me ex tra
revenue for the city.
Dear Ahl&gt;r is ll'rillen hi'
Abigail Va il Buren. als;J
kii0\1'11 11s Jel/111/l' Phillips.
a11d was frm11ded /iy her
11101/to: P11ulin e Pill/lips.
Write
Dear Ahhv
at
1\ II 'WDmrAI&gt;hr.cum iir P.O.
Box 69440. L!is A11geles. CA

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:_The Daily Sentinel

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I

- PageA6

OHIO

Friduv, January t6, 2004

.I .

Scores and standings, Page 82
Prep Scoreboard, Page B6

'

.un. IS. 2004

!iGw .lollll
I••uatl'lals
l'ji~fF~~;._--- H$0

annel

IO.S$3.11$

::w:.Sr tO.I,

OCf

001 \

!)((

. . · to.•n.
""' 11
to.5112.74

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-

. -·
11.12\lte
..., ,. 2000

-- t.r:m

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com

+15M'
10,56385

Friday, J~uary 16, 2004

-t-0$ '
2. 10908'

'

5tatlllard a

-ot~

Poor's 500

~

RIINift

..0.2&amp;
5e638

2000

etC

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1, 1to

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~!.!.""!"'

1.026 ,... ~igha

Dooelinod:

1,600

...~....
2

Volu-: 2.246.171.040

,_.,
l 050

••e

1Jnc~o"80d:

Advoncod:

1 64(1 ,... highS

Doclinod:

t.501 fttwlo'lit

327

3t6

Pierce scor~s 31 and hits
game-winning jump shot

Saturday's gamea
Man's Bask!llball
Rio Grande at Tiffin, 8 p:m.
Woman's Baak!llball

STAFF ijEPORT

Rio Grande atTiffin,6 p.m.

sports@ mydailytribune.com

Sunday's games
Indoor Track and Field

Rio Grande at Cincy Open

Nasdaq diary

1Jncho"80d:

Lady Marauders

Rio GrandE
sports

1. 132 OS

NYSEdlary
-

4

Volume: 2.196 733.1G6

.,.

NELSONVILLE - Sammy Pierce connected
on two jump shots inside the tina! minute, lifting
·Meigs to a 53-5 1 come-from-behind victory at
Nelsonville-York in girls basketball Thursday.
,
Pierce scorched the Lady Buckeyes for 3}
points. helping erase a 20-9 first quarter delicit.
The Lady Marauders doubled up its hosts, 16-8,
in the second frame and only trailed 28-25 at the
end of the first half.

Tlleaday•a gamea
Men's Basketball
Rio at Shawnee State, 8 p.m..
Woman's Basketball

Rio at Shawnee State, a•p.m.

Prep Schedule
Friday, January 16

Local Stocks
ACI -29.65
AEP - 31.14
Akzo -39.14
Ashland Inc.- 45.75

BBT-36.69
BLI-14.33
Bob Evans - 32.40
BorgWarner- 93.38
Ci1y Holding - 35.58
Champion - 4.60
Charming Shops - 6.10

Col-32.72
DuPon\- 44.47
DG-22.10
Feoeral Mk&gt;gut -.24

MILES lAYTON

JL'WTON® MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Starting
this year, Ohioans who
own a motor vehicle. other
than those that are excluded as listed below, may
register · their vehicles for
the next two succeeding
registration years.
Ffouse" Bill 87 allows for
biennial registration now.
The legislation became
effective Jan. I. If a
motorist wishes to participate in the biennial registration, he or she will need
to pay the registration fee
for both years.
So far only one person
in Meigs County . has taken
the BMV up on this offer.
· "! don't think many people will take advantage of
this like they would in the
. cities or suburbs because it
might be more convenienJ
for them there," said Sue
Maison, beputy Registrar

at the Meigs County
Bureau of Motor Vehicles.
The cost for registering a
passenger car &gt;n Meigs
County for one year is
$39.75 - $31 for the validation
sticker,
$3.50
deputy registrar fee, and a
$5.25
permissive
tax
(which varies depending on
where the vehicle is registered).
If the motorist chooses
to take advantage of the
double registration program, the cost for two
years is nearly double
$77.75 the $3.50 processing fee is cut in half
to $1.75.
Also, the
motorist will pay two years
worth of permissive taxes,
based on the most recent
fee chart.
Once an individual pays
for biennial registration,
there will be no· refund.
For example, if the vehicle
. is sold before the second

year begins, the owner will
not receive a refund: Also,
if a motorist upgrades and
buys a different class vehicle, he or she loses any
registration fees already
spent and must purchase a
new validation sticker.
"I don't see it as a big
advantage esp~cially if you
change classes' of vehicles,"
said Maison.
This new registration system can potentially harm
the local bureau of motor
vehicles office ' because it
splits the $3.50 deputy registrar fee in half the second year. This fee is used
to pay the deputy registrar
and that person's staff. If
the fee is cut by numerous
motorists taking . advantage
of biennial registration, it
could impact the number
of people and thus · the
speed and quality of service at local bureau of
motor vehicles offices.

Gannett 88.14
· General Electric- 32.00
GKNLY -S.OO
Harley Davidson - 46.aa
Kmart- 29 .39

Kroger -

18.68 ·
Ltd.-17.95
NSC -22.77
Oak Hill Financial- 30.41
Bank One - 50.42

.OVB-28.30
Peoples - 31.02
Pepsico- 4S.50 ·
Premier - 6.70
Rocky Boots - 27.94

The /following vehicles
qualify for biennial registration:
passenger car,
motorcycle, moped, farm
truck,
non-commercial
truck, mo1or home.
Vehicles that are excluded from biennial registration includ~ :
Those that are up for a
biennial inspeciion for the
following year: commercial
trucks, commercial trailers,
church buses, commercilil
buses, transit buses, placards, temporary tags, recreational
vehicles;
ATV,
snowmobiles, school buses,
restricted plates including
DUI plates. ·
Also, motorists that purchase· organizational plates
that require supporting
forms on an annual i;&gt;asis
. are excluded. Limousines
are excluded, because owners must show annual
proof of insurance.
1

··Space initiC~tive may boost Ohio _research _
Bv JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCIATID PRESS WRITER

Ohio's space researchers
are ready to hitch a ride on
President Bush 's call for
manned missions to the moon
and Mars.
Bush's plan could boost
research at Ohio's space technology centers and rejuvemite an aging aerospace work
force, aerospace experts said.
NASA's Glenn Research
Center in Oeveland and WrightPatterson Air Force Base already
are involved in the Current
unmanned mission to Mars,
worldiJg on projects ranging from
the rover's rec~eable batteries
• to the air-bag landing system.
Fonner astronaut John Glenn
said Thursday that the Glenn
Research Center is in a good
position to benefit from Bush's
plan because much of its work
mvolves propulsion systems.
"They re going to be a very,
very important center in thts
new effort," said Glenn, a former U.S. senator from Ohio.
He said Wright-Patterson's role
will depend on how involved the
Defense Department gets in the
NASA initiative.
Rich Christianson, deputy
dire-ctor of the Glenn
Research Center, said it is
difficult to predict specific
effects on the center until the
finer details, beginning with
the budget, are worked out..
"The nature of ·the work
that we do will apply to anr,
JlOtential
mission,'
Christianson said.
About 2,000 workers are
employed at the center in
Cleveland and a satellite sta. tion in Sanduskv.
On Wednesday, Bush outlined a multibillion-dollar
effort to return Amesicans to

'
Employees watch President Bush's speech at the electric
propulsion-lab at ·NASA Glenn Research Center In Cleveland on
Wednesda)'. Much of the space-related research, and development In Ohio Is done at NASA Glenn and Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base near Dayton. (AP Photo/Mark Duncan)
the moon· as early as 2015 and a moon jnugrarn is fme, but
and use it as a waystation to . I don't want to see NASA get
Mars and beyond. He called stripPed of the budget for the
for development of a new stabon to do these other things,"
vehicle carrying astronauts to he said. ''My main concern is
the space station and the that they not rob the s(lltion."
Former astronaut Kathryn
moon.
The plan also calls for retir- Sullivan, a member of the
ing the space shuttle by the Ohio Aerospace and Defense
end of this decade and quick- Council, said she hopes
ly concluding the U.S . oblig- Bush's initiative will '!transations to · tile International form and move forward· and
evolve the array of things"
Space Station.
Glenn -said he doesn't want done at the Glenn Research
the United States 'to abandon Center and Wright-Patterson.
Sullivan, the 1irst Anx:rican
the space station beca1;1se the
research and. expenments wanan to walk in spa 20 ~
done there can have civilian ago, said she also ~ it will
imJMe the ~ gtlbatlll kl
benefits.
jwnpintotre~
wale fate.
" To lay out a Mars program ·

,,

·- '

r~lly

for win at

Nelso~ville- York

turnovers and eventually pull even at 48 apiece.
and pull out the victory in the clvsing minutes.
. Meigs improved to 4-2 in Tri- Valley Conference .
Ohio contests and 7-4 overall. Ne lsonville- York ,
who was playing its lirst game under inlerim head
coach Bob Clagg, saw its record worsen -w 1- 10
and 1-5 in Ohio play.
Jaynee Davis scored eight points and Justine
Dowler seven in the winning effort. Teammates
Renee Baily and Joey Haning chi pped in live and
two respectively.
Whitney Maiden paced . Ne lsonville- York with
Davis .
Dowler
Pierce
I(J markers. Samh Higgins went for 14 and Ali
The second eight minute-s were closed out by a Standall also rec hed double figure s with II .
9-2 Meigs run .
Meigs plays host to River Valley Saturday.
The third quarter was a draw. but Meigs used a Ne lsonv ille-York plays a makeup game Monday at
potent full -eoun press in the fourth to force Alexander.

Boys Basketball

Meigs residents slow to go for
biannual vehicle registration
Bv J.

Bt ·

The,Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

Market watch

A OAV ON WALL STREET

.

"It's aginjl. It's dwindlin&amp;. ·
It's not bemg replenished,'
she said.
Scientists at the Glenn
Research Center are involved in
the mission to Mars that landed a
rover on the surface Jan, 3. They
tested the rover's air-bag landing
system by simulating the lancfing in the Space Power Facility,
a 122-foot-hi~ vacuum chamber that can sunulate the atmos. phere and climate on Mars.·
. _.More than 50 drop tests of
the landing system were performed by bouncing it off of
natural and simulated rocks
similar to those found on the
Martian s11rface.
Researchers there are also
watching to see how· much
energy the rover's solar cells
Will be able to generate under
Mars' sunlight and how dusty
the. solar panels can get
before the rovers begin to
lose power.
And the research center
was also involved in controlling static charges to the
rover to prevent damage to its
instruments.
En.gjnc:ers at Wright-Patterson
Air Porce Base near Dayton
developed the rechargeable lithiwn ion batteries designed to keep
'the rover fwictioning at night and
provide extra power during intensive daytjme opel111ions. ·
Scientists at the base have
also been working on tech.
nologies for space vehicles,
including rocket propulsion _
and guidance systems.
"We have · an ongoing
working relationship with
NASA and share, whenever
possible, common technology investment efforts," said
.Col. Jack Blackhurst,.chief of
the Air , Force Research
Laboratory's.space sector. ·

RD Shell 47.4S
Rod&lt;well ~ 36.40
Sears- 45.88
sse- 26.74
AT&amp;T- 2i .1,6
USB- 28 48
Wendy's - 38.89
Wai·Mart - S3.49
Worthington - 17.05
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. dos·
ing quotes of the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith Partners at
Advestlnc. ol Gallipohs.

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today¥ 740-992-2155

Gallia Academy at Point P-leasant
Chesapeake at River Valley
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; at Meigs
Ohio Valley Christian vs. SoLJth Gallia (at
Rio Grande)
Trimble at Eastern
Waterford at Southern
Wahama at Hannan
Girls Basketball
Ohio Valley Christian 'vs. South Gallia (at

Rio Gfande)
Wrastling
Gallia Academy, River Valley at WSAZ

Invitational
Point Pleasant
Tournament

at

Winners

Choice

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about complex
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here for you.

your situation, your
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Houri: Mon-Fri 9 to 6 ,Sat 9 to 5
Other HOun by Appoint ment

~Din.(llf.o; .

CJ'Ui~~~~'.v!f~

•

Cavaliers fall
to Warriors
Bv

Saturd11y, January 11
Girts Basketball
R1ver !Iaiiey at MeigS

JANIE McCAULEY

Associated Press

Aa\le.[lswood at Watlama ·
Wrestling
Gallia, Academy, River Valley at WSAZ
Invitational
· Point Pl easant at Winners Choice

TotJrnament

We're taJC
· professionals for a
reason . No matter
ho_w complicated

NBA

Cavaliers
activate Newble,
waive Sundov
CLEVELAND (AP)
The Cleveland Cavaliers
activated
forward
Ira
Newblc, placed guard J.R.
Bremer on the injured list
and waived center Bruno
Sundov on Thursday.
Newble mi ssed the last
S IX games with. a right
quadriceps bruise. , He has
pl ayed in 24 games thi s season, averaging under five
points and three rebounds
per game.
Bremer was put on the
injured li st with a right
ankle sprain. He has played
in 29 games, averaging
nearly four points per game.
Sundov had been on the
injured list with tendinitis in
his right Achi lie s. He
appeared in just four games
for the Cavaliers, averaging
just more than two points
and two rebounds per game.

Freshman ·
Marauders fall to
South Gallia
'

MERCERVILLE
South Gallia's freshmen
boys defeated Meigs, 50-34
Wednesday in .boys basketball action.
The Rebels evened their
overall mark to 2~2, Ryan Geiger scored 18 for
the winners followed by
Steven Call and Michael
. Pope with nine apiece.
Dustin Vaniriwagon and
Casey Richardson paced
Meigs with nine and eight
apiece.

Blues topple
- Blue jackets
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Eric
Bogu,niecki scored twice to ·
lead slumping St. Louts past
Columbus.
Mark Rycroft added a
goal and an assist fo r the
·Blues. Chris Pronger and
Dallas Drake also scored for
St. Louis, which won for
just the fourth time in its
last 14 games.
.
Backup goalie Reinhard
Divis made 23 saves to
improve his ,record to 3-0
and keep the Blues perfect
against the Blue Jackets (4Q-Q, Q) .

Geoff Sanderson, Nikolai
Zherdev and Todd Marcha.nt
each had a · goal and an
· as ~~ for Colum,us. ,

OAKLAND, Calif (AP)- Clifford Robinson had a season-high 35 points, including a Ci!feer-high seven 3-pointers. and the Golden State
.
Warriors defeated LeBron
James and the cold-shooting
Cleveland Cavaliers 119102 on Thursday night.
James went 4-for-12 from
the field in the first half and
tlnished 8-for-21 with 29 '
points, six rebounds and six
assists. He did plenty to
entertain the selloUL crowd
of 19,602, too.
The 19-year-old rookie
had a sensational one-handed dunk with his left hand
late in the third quarter and
another impressive slam
early in the fourth .
With 7:12 left. he was
fouled trying to dunk and
fell hard .into the basket support. He hopped up immedi- .
ately, wearing a btg smile.
· But he couldn't do
enough to help the Cavs
improve their dismal road
record. They are 3-19 on the road and were trying to betler
their road vtctories total from last season (3-38).
Erick Dampier had his 19th double-double with 18 points
and II rebounds and Jason Rtchardson added 25 pomts for ·
Golden State, which had lost nine of its last I0.
'iJ•.
........
The Warriors had only 10 players available, including
center Adona! Foyle, who was activated from the injured
list earlier in the day. Coach Eric Musselman didn't want to
use Foyle, but sent him in at the 8:42 mark of the second
quatter. Foyle received a nice ovation when he checked m,
but limped as he ran up and down the court and played only
4 minutes. He didn't return.
.
Point guard Nick Va~ Exel wa_s placed on the injured _
reserve with left knee mflammatmn and Bnan Cardmal,
Golden State's spark plug off the bench, missed the game
with the tlu.
Eric Williams added 21 points for the Cavs. who played Cleveland C~valiers guard LeBron,James attem pts a layup under Go lden State Warriors cent~r
Erick Dampier in the second quarter 1n Oakland, Calif., on Thu rsday. At left IS Golden State s
Jason Richardson. (API
Please see CaYS, 86

119

1Ol

Lady 'Does down Miller Waterford clips Eagles
Bv Scon

WOLFE

Sports Correspondent
RACINE- Outscoring Miller 38-27
the second half, Southern (I 0-3) came
from behind to defeat the Miller Falcons
· (2-10) Thursday night in a girls Tri' Valley Conference Hocking Division
basketball contest. .
Southern struggled early, but came to
life in the second half with better
defense and a spark of life from Brooke
Kiser who had 12 second half p&lt;)ints.
Kiser ended the ni~ht-with 12 points and
two steals, wh1le collecting five
rebounds. Katie Sa,Yre led the Southern
charge with 18 pomts, eight rebounds,
and four assists.
·
Southern had eight people hit the
scoring column. . Deana Pullins added
nine points, Ashley Dun!) six, Jessica
Htll five; Susan Brauer five, Ashley
Roush four and Kristiina Williams
three. ··
Miller was led by Emile Bray with 16
points, Jenna Murphy with 13 points
and four steals, Lora Spencer seven,
Kelsi Brown six, Ashley Heavener four;
J_enna Bolyard three and Courtney
Hoops two.
Miller took a 2-0 lead'· to start the
game after Emile Bray drove baseline
for a lay-in, then Sayre countered with a
three point drive-in to give SHS the
lead. Bray hit another goal for a 4-3
Miller lead, then Pullins hit a.bucket for
a 5-4 Southern lead. Free throws from
Dunn, Pullins, and Sayre g~ve Southern
an ll-4 advantagl, but Southern went

flat allowing Brown
and Heavener to hit
buckets around a
Murphy free throw to
cut the score to 11-9 at
the end of the period.
Southern held a lead
early in the second
frame, but Bray ·nailed
a three painter and a
deuce, while Murphy
came off the bench to
Sayre
notch four points and
give Miller a 17- 15
lead .
Say re and
Willia m~hit
lield
goals tor Southern. but
Brown hit a tield goal
and a pair of safeties to
give Miller a 24- 19
advantage.
A pair of Pullins free
throws. cut it to 24-21
as Southern forced
Miller into a turnover
Kiser
on the next possession
with II seconds lett on
the clock. Southern fanned wide for.the
3-pointer with Sayre getting possession
and nailing the tri-fecta to tie the score at
the half24-24. Sayre had 10 ofher 18 at
intermission.
Southern played its best defepse of the
night in the thtrd frame , outsconng the
visiting Falcons 15-5. Southern altacked
the bucket and drew several fouls.
allowing Kiser to go 6-6 at the line and

Plene see S,utbem. B6
\

Bv Scon WoLFE
Sports Correspondent

points. Desiree VanDyne four, Kayla
Miller four, TitTariy Wallace seven.
Bethany Amrine two and· Mallory
McCutcheon one.
"We are going to have to get off to
better starts," said Eagle mentor
Rick Edwards. "We cannot afford to
get down like we luive been lately to
stm1 games, and continue to ex pec1
to be able to get bac k in them. Just
like tonight. playing that poorl y in
the fi rst qum1er on the road will not

WATERFORD - Outscoring
Eastern 57-37, the Waterfo rd
Wildcats had an easy time with the
Eastern Eagles Thursday night at
Waterford Hi~h School during an
important Tn -yall ey Conference
Hocking Division basketball game.
Eastern really mi»ed the services
of Katie Roliertson, who went down lead to good things f~)f us. We havc
with a knee i_njury just one week ago gut to be ready to play as soon as we
and IS awaltmg the rcsuhs of an get otT the bus."
·
·
-MRI. Roberstsoth who a-veraged
'
Eastern
fell
behind
earl
y
anti
nearlv I0 rebounds a game was really mi ssed on the offensive boards, never really got into the tlo\V.
an area where Eastern cla!med JUSt Trailing 16-2 after one round.
Eastem fell behind at one point 22-7
three rebounds for the game.
before
mllying to 29- 18 al the half.
·Outscoring Waterford 25-8 in the
Wate1ford on&lt;;e again took the
thirtl petiod on December. 21. the
upper
hand in the third round 15-10
Eastern Lady Eagles Iabncated a
ami
Eastern
was never abie to
dramatic comeback in defeating the
Wildcats 52-41 . Thursday, there was bounce back. Down 44-28 after
three rounds, Eastern fe ll to·57-37 at
no coming back.
Eastern was led by the familv qual the finish.
Eastern hit !5-39 twos. 0-6 threes.
effort of Morgan Weber and Erin
and
7-12 free throws. The Eagles
Weber who each notched 12 ,points
grabbed
19 rebounds( Erin Weber 7, ·
apiece. Alyssa Holter added six
5). six steals (Hupp 3), fou r
Hayman
points and Jen Hayman SIX pmnts
and four assists. Knsta Whtte added asststs (Hayman 4), 20 turnovers
one in what ptoved to be ,Eastern's and 20 foul s.
Wa!ed'orct: was 20-45 on twos, 0-3
second lowes! scoring tally of the
on threes. 8-1S at the line. with 16
year.
Waterford was led by the 78-point rebou nds, seven steals, 13 assists
effott Of Haley Drayer who also had (hlrayer 5). 15 turnovers and ·16
.,
five assiSis in a fiery night for the fouls. ·
There was no reserve game.
Wi Ideals. Hope King added II
1

�c

Frlday:January 16, 2004

Others recervtng 12 or more potpts t t
C le Cent Ca th 48 12 Platn C ty Jonathan
Alder 41 13 Lynchburg Clay 37 14
Burton Berksh re 32 15 Waynesville 22
16 Cortland Maplewood 19 17 Lafavett!l
Allen E 16 18 (t e) Jeromesvrlle Hillsdale
M ddletown Fenwtck 13
~

Pro Football
NFL PlayoH Glance
Wlld-c•rd Playoffs

Saturday Jan 3

Tennessee 20 Baltimore 11
Carolina 29 Dallas 1o
Sunday Jan 4

DIVISION IV

Green Bay 33 Sea ttl e 27 OT

lnd anapohs 41 Denver 10
Divisional Playoffs

" Salurday Jan 10
Carol na 29 St Lou s 23 20T
Ne N England 17 Tennessee 14
Sunday Jan 11
lnd•anapohs 38 Kansas C ty 31
Ph1ladelph a 20 Green Bay 17 OT
Conference Championships
Sund~ Jan 18

AFC Champlonahlp
tndtanapo l s at New England

Mansfield St Peter s (7 ) 9 1
Day Jefferson Twp (5} 9 0

1
2
3
4
5

3 pm

ICBS)
NFC Champtonshtp

191
175
Ma r aSten Ma r onL~al(6) 81 161
Berhn H land (2) 9 0
'1-42
Ct n Se~n Htlls (2) 9 1
t 07
6 Plymouth (2 ) 9 1
101
7 Covmgton 9 1
87
8 Bascom Hopewell Loudon 8 2 83
9 Hanmbal R1ver (1) 10 1
78
10 Gous terTr mble (1)90
76
Others rece vrng 12 or more potnts 11
M ller C ty 72 12 Con i nental 59 13
M nster 57 14 M llersport 40 15
Sha dys1de 39 16 (I e) McComb Ft
Lorame 38 18 Rchmond Dale SE 19 t 9
Mogaelore 17 20 (I e) Wtndham P tsburg
Frank n Monroe t4

Carel na at Ph ladelptua 6 45 p m (FOX)

Pro Basketball

Super Bowl
Sunday Feb 1

NBA

At Houston

625pm ICBS)

CONFERENCE

EASlE~N

Prep Basketball
COLUMBUS Oh o (AP) - How a slats
panel ol sports wr ters and broadcasters

rates Oh•o h gh schoo g1rls basketball
teams n the I rst week y Assoc ated Press
poll of 2004 by OHSAA d 11 stons w th
won lost record and total po nts (I rst place
votes n pa entheses)

DIVISION I
1 Cham nade Julienne ( 14) 10 0
2 Beaverc reek (3) t0-2
3 Cots Mtffl n (4) 9 D
4 Ctn Mt Notre Dame (3) 9 D
5 Barberton 12) 9 0
6 PICkerngton North 0) 10 1
7 Massrllon Perry (1) 10 t
a Wadsworth 9 0
9 Youngs Boardman ( 1) 9 0
10 Mentor a 0

266
155
154
147
129
127
116
t 14
99
65

a,

Others rece vmg 12
more po nts 11
Perrysburg 52 12 Zanesvrlle 39 t 3
Sylvama Northv1ew 33 14 Eastlake N ~0
15 To! Bowsher 2a 16 Chtlhcothe 27 17
H I tard Darby 24 18 Mar etta 20 19 (t1e)
Wooster Lodt Cloverleaf 14 21 Day
CarroU 13 22 Stow Munroe Falls t 2
DIVISION II
1 Sprmg Kenton Rtdge (15) 13-Q 233
2 Cols Bexley (S) 10
181
3 Oak Harbor (1) 11 0
145
4BelotWBranch {1)91
111
5 New Albany (3) 1 1 1
114

o

6 Dover (2) 9 0

108

7 Ottawa Glandorf 9 1
8 St Marys Memor al 9 1

92
78
9 Upper Sandusky 9-1
70
10 Cuyahoga Fans Walsh Jesu t (2) 11 1

Atlantic Division
Wl Pet
21 16 56B
New Jersey
20 21 488
Boston
18 21 462
Phtladelph a
16 24 400
New York
15 24 385
Mtam
WaShington
10 27 270
9 30 23 1
Orlando
Central Division
WL
Pet
lnd ana
29 11 725
Delat
26 13 667
Mtlwaukee
22 17 564
New Orlean s
22 17 564
Toronto
20 17 541
Ch cago
12 27 30B
eveland
12 27 308
Attanta
11 29 275

c

WESTERN

San Antomo
Dallas
Houston
Denver
Utah
Memphrs

7 Atwater Waterloo 9 0
8 New Middletown Sprrng 9 0
9 Newark Cath 9 1
10 Smlthvrtle 10 1

89
71
55
53

11
13
GB

t6
16
17

1
4 112
4 112
4 1/2
5 112

20 1a 526

6 1/2

WL
27 9
24 11
19 17

Pet
750
686
52a

16 19 457
16 21 432
16 22 421
1326:333

Dakota
Idaho
SouKFa ls
Gary
Aocldord
Great Lakes
Yakma

17
20
12
14
1t
to
6

7
a
12
t2
14

17
20

58 0 109 0 4 5
595 119 5 43
525
520
465
46 5
450

885

37

940

36

795
76 5
630

32
28
24

Teams recel'le three pomts lor a w n one
pont !or each quarter won and 1/2 porn!
for any quarter !ted No potnts awarded
dur ng ove rrrme
Thursday s Games
S oux Falls 1 t3 RoCkford 97 (6 1)
Idaho 125 Yakrma 103 (6 1)
Friday a Gamet
S oux Falls at Gary
Great Lakes at Dakota
Saturday s Game
S oux Falls at Gary
Sunday a Games
Rocktord at Dakota
Greatlakes•at Yak ma

Oregon 84 Washmgton 74
Oregon St 52 Washrngton St 41
Se~cramanto St 76 Portland St 64
Santa Clara 75 Pepperdme 68
Southem Cal 99 Arrzona 90
St Marys Cal 70 Porttand 51
UC Irvine 66 UC Atversk$165
UCLA 66 Anzona St 58
Utah St 66 Paetflc 51

Womens Basketball
Thursday a Women 1 Basketball
MaJor Scores

Atl•ntlc Division

W L T OLPtsGF GA
Phtladelphra
New Jersey
flY Rangers
NY Islanders
Prnsburgh

SOUTH
Alabama 67 M SS SSIPPt 62
Aubu n 72 Georg a 54
Aust n Peay 67 E Kentucky 61
Belmont 72 Mercer 59
Florda St 8~ Wake Foresl73
Hrgh Point 74 Winthrop 40
James MacUson 64 George Mason 53
LSU 74 Flonda 59
Lipscomb 82 Georg a St 78
Loutsrana Monroe 86 Lamar 40
Maryland 91 Georgra Tectt 87
Murray St 71 Samford 61
N C Wtlm ngton 64 W tlham &amp; Mary 50
New Orleans 76 New MextcO St 54
Northwestern St 75 N cholls St 60
Old Dommton 87 Towson 34
South Alabama 57 Lou srana Lafayette

21 11 10 1
ta 16 6 4
20 l9 4 1
11 26 5 3

53 100 81
46 120 116
45 .:t25 115
30 86 161

North•ut Dlvitlon

W L T DL Pto GF GA
Toronto
Ottawa
BOston
M ontreal
S'uftato

24108 3

59 127 108

23 11 7 3 56 143 90
2011 104 54110106
23165 2 53 11 699
18225 1 42 109 1t8
Southeast Oivlelon

EAST
Boston U 72 UMBC 53
Cornell 61 Columbta 50
Delaware 78 Hotstra 47
Harvard 73 LafayeHe 52
Monmou th N J 59 Robert Morns 49
Outnnlptac 64 Long Island U 57
St Franets Pa 69 Fa rletgh Dtektnson 50
St Peters 73 Fairfield 61
Wagner 75 Mount St Marys Md 72

20 10 10 5 55 120 104

W l
Tampa Bay
Atlanta
Florida
Carohnll
W ash ngton

21 15 6
19 20 4
14 19 10
14 19 9
13 26 5

1
2
2
2

1

49
44
40
39
32

105 93
126 136
96 120
80 104
109 141

Central Division

W l

w

150
113
109
95
86

104
104

115
135
12t

W L T OLPtaGF GA

25107 2 59 135 96
25 12 7 2 59
221 44 3 51
18 197 1 44
15 17 13 0 43
Pecl11c Division

132 103
10189
11 2 118
98 97

W L J OLPtsGF GA
19 11 11 4 53 110 98
16 14 10 4 46 11 2 112

San Jose
Los Angeles
Phoenllc
Dallas
Anahetm

16141 2 2
19198 0
13207 5

4.6

111 114
46 91 103
38 91 117

GB
2 112
a
10 112
11 112
12
15 1/2

Mens Basketball
Thursdllyl a College Buketball
Major Scares

EAST
Drexel 82 Delaware 75
Monmouth N J 72 St Francrs NY 69
Siena 7 1 Atder 64

SOUTH
Austm Peay 65 E Kentucky 59
Duke 76 N C State !57
Georgta Tech 75 Vtrgrnta 57
Jacksonville St 96 Tenn Martin 85
Louisiana Tech 73 San Jose St 62
Loursrana Monroe 82 Lamar 64
Loursvrlle 76 East Carol na 66
Mtddle Tennessee 92 Arkansas St 86

OT
Morehead St 73 Tennessee Tech 58
Northwestern St 90 Nicholls St 55
SE Loutsrana 78 Te~tas San Antonto 88
Samford 61 Murray St 58
South Alabama 76 Louts ana Lafayette

73
W Kentucky 86 Ark Utile

Rock 71

Wednesday 1 Gamee
Houston 95 Boston 80
lndtana 85 Atlanta 78
New York 120 Orlando 11 0
Detroit 95 Toronto 91
New Jersey 115 Washmgton 103
M nnesola 100 San Anton10 93
Dallas 125 Phr1adelphta 122 20T
LA Lakers 97 Denver 71
Thursday 1 Gamea
Memph s 108 Chrcago 93
Milwaukee 86 New Jersey 83
Toronto 78 New Orleans 74 OT
Utah 97 Mlamr 85
Phoen x 105 Portland 96
Golden State 119 C eveland 102
Friday 1 Games
Boston at Orlando 7 p m
San Anton to at lnd1ana 7 p m
Seattle at New York 7 30 p m
Washtngton at Detrott 8 p m
Dallas at Denver 9 p m
Golden State at Phoenix 9 p m
M1am at L A Clippers 10 30 p m
LA Lakers at Sacramento 10 30 p m

Butler 72 Loyola of Chicago 54
Detro t 70 Ill Chicago 67
S Utah 74 Oakland M1ch 73
SE M ssourt 81 Tennessee St 75
SW M ssour St 69 lndtana St 63
UMKC 85 W llhnots 50
Valparaiso 70 lnd Pur lndpls 66
Wrs Milwaukee 80 Youngstown St 74

SOUTHWEST
Hawarl 66 SMU 65
North TeJCas 72 Denver 67
Oral Roberts 85 Centenary 71
Stephen FAus tm 64 McNeese St 60
TeJCas St 82 Texas Arhngton SB
UTEP 79 Nell8da 76

FAR WEST
Cal St Fuller!on 74 Long Beach St 66
E washmgton 63 N Anzona 57
Fresno St 78 Botse St 61
Gonzaga 92 San Franc sea 50
Idaho 74 CS Norlhrtdge 70
Loyola Marymount 76 San Diego 68
Montana 91 Idaho St 76
Montana St 61 Weber St 48
New Orleans 70 New MeMICO St 59

Tenn Mart n 79 Jacksonvt lle St 70
Tennessee 86 South Carohna 58
Tennessee Tech 97 Morehead Sl 76
Texas San Anlonro 52 SE Loutstana 51
TrOy St 66 Jacksonv !le 61
Va Commonwealth 63 Drexel 53
v rg nia 66 N C State 62

IIlOWEST

Cleveland St 59 Wrs Mrlwaukee 57
Iowa 72 Indiana 65
Loyola of Chicago 55 Youngstown St 45
Mtehlgan St 55 Ohto St 47
Mrnnesota 74 111rnols 59
Penn St 68 Mlchtgan 56
Purdue 71 Northwestern 41
SE Mtssour 102 Tennessee St 45

SOUTHWEST
Arkansas St 69 Middle Tennessee 62
McNeese St 62 Stephen FAuslin 59
Texas A&amp;M Corpus Chrrstl 74 UMKC 60
Texas Arlmgton 67 Texas St 54
W Kentucky 61 Ark Ltttle Rock 57

FAR WEST
Anzona 75 Southern Cal 64
Arizona St 73 UCLA 58
Bose St 52 Fresno St 50
Colorado St 54 BYU 52
E Washington 73 N Ar zona 66
Gonza11a 72 San Franc sco 61 OT
Hawau 67 SMU 50
Idaho 71 CS Northridge 57
Long Beach St 77 Cal St Fullerton 65
Louis ana Tech 84 San Jose St 71
Loyola Marymount 63 San Diego 52
Montana 76 Idaho St 66
North Te~tas 70 Denver 68
Oregon St 62 Waahlngton Sl 51
Pacrflc 67 Utah St 58
Peppard ne 85 Santa Clara 82
Sacramento St 56 Portland St 50
St Marv s Cal 63 Portland 58 OT
UC Arvers de 55 UC Irvine 53
UTEP 85 Nevada 54
Utah 57 Wyommg 39
Washtngton 95 Oregon 50
Weber St 78 Montana St 58

'

Hockey

National Hockev League
EASTERN CONFSIENCE

Two pornts lor a w n one po nt for a he
and overt me lass
Wednesday a Games
Ca,lgary 3 Washmgton 3 I e
D13:trolt 4 Chicago 2
Montreal 2 Atlanta 1
Los Angeles 2 Mrnnesota 2 tie
Thursday 1 G1mn
Boston 1 But1alo 0
New Jersey 3 N Y. Rangers 3 fte
Tampa Bay 5 Carolina 4
NY Islanders 4 Ottawa 4 t e
St Louis 5 Columbus 3
Nashv lie 4 Phoenix 3
Colorado 4 Dallas 1
Edmonton 1 Anaherm
San Jose 3 Vancouver 1

o

Friday • Gamea
Los Angeles at Columbus 7 p m
Toronto at Phtladelphra 7 p m
PhoentJC '81 Detroit 7 30 p m
Carolina at Atlanta 7 30 p m
Pittsburgh at M nnesota 8 p m
Saturdays Games
Washrnglon at New Jersey 1 p m
Boston at Ottawa 7 p m
NY Rangers at Montreal 7 p m
Buffalo at N Y Islanders 7 p m
Phtladelphia at Toronto 7 p m
Tampa Bay at Flonda 7 30 p m
Minnesota at St Lours 8 p m
Edmonton at Nashvtlle 8 p m
San Jose at Colorado 9 p m
Dallas at Calgary , 0 p m
Anaherm at Vancouver 1 p m
Sunday 1 Games
Atlanta at Caroltna 1 30 p m
Ptttsburgh at Washtngton 3 p m
Los Angeles at Ct11cago 7 p m
Edmonton at Columbus 7 p m

o

ECHL

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Northern Division

WLTP1oGFGA
25 10 2 52 135 105
24 9 1 49 115 66
21 9 7 49 114 94

Wheeling
Atlantic C ty
Peora
Johnstown
Reading
Ctncnnall

20 14 3

43 98 95

1812 6 42 10090
17 17 2 36 94 96

82

11 5

•

t40

W L T Pts GF GA
Columbia
23
Ftor1da
20
SouthCaona21
Greensboro
21
Roanoke
20
Ctlarlotte
18
Florence
14
Greenvtlle
S

11 4
t2 7
13t
17 1
15 2
t4 5
17 5
27 3

50
47
43
43

151 117
135 129
10391
140 132
4~ 122 12a
41 11 7 11 3
33 101 123
15 94 15t

WESTERN CONFERENCE

c .1t • Cuun r OH

Central Division

WLTPtsGFGA
MISSISS pp
LOUISiana
Gw nnett
P.ensacola
Columbus
Augusta
Texas

T OLPtsGF GA

27 13 4 2 60
24 13 5 1 54
21 16 6 2
11 23 7 5 34
11 24 6 3 31
Northwasl Division

Colorado
Vancouver
Calgary
Edmonton
Mmnesota

1

T OLPtsGF GA

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit
St Lous
Nashvlle
Chrcago
Columbus

16 13 3 35 92
14 11 4 32 95
14 20 3 31 96
Southern Division

Trenton
Toledo
Dayton

23 I I 6
23 t O 2

52 150 11 2
48 11 2 90

19 12 5 43
19183 41
16 17 4 36
12 23 4 28
Pacllie Division

123 119
102 11 0
99 t 2)
102 156

•

WLTPtsGFGA
24112 50 11 599

Idah o
Las Vegas
Ala ska
SanD ego
Bakers! eld
Fresno
Lo ng Beach

22 1t 5
22 1t 3
21 9 3
10 18 6
10 21 4
10 23 2

49
47
45
26
24
22

11299
120 9t
101 86
89 107
97 138
84 132

NOTE Two potnls are awarded tor a wtn ~
Overllme and shootout losses earn one-.
potnt and are eferred to as lies
Thursdays Games
Columbus 4 Aug us t~ 3
Dayton 3 Peor a 2
Friday 1 Games
Trenton at AtlantiC C ty
Greenv lie at Augusta
Alaska at Bak.ersfreld
South Ca ol na at Columbta
Columbus at Floren ce
Roanoke at Flor Cia
San Dtego at Fresno
Greensboro at Gw nnett
Long Beach at Idaho
P ensacola at M SStSS ppr
Johnstown at Pear a
Charlotte al Read1ng
Lou srana at Texas
Dayton at To edo
Crncrnnat at Wheelrng
Saturday 1 Games
Charlolle at Attanttc Crty
Greensboro at Augusta
Las Vegas at Bakersfmld
Greenvtlle at Columbus
Columbra at Florence
Roanoke at Flor da
Idaho al Fresno
South Carol na at Gw nnett
Pensacola at M ssrssrppt
Johnstown at Peor a
Trenton at Read ng
Alaska at San D ego
Lou is ana at Texas
Oayyon at To edo
C1n1nnat at Wheehng
Sunday a Games
Gre nsboro ill Columba
Lon Beach at daho
Pensacola at Lou s ana
Alas~a at San Otego
Clncjnnat at Toledo
Atlantic City at Whee 1ng

Transactions

\

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD

22 12 3 47 119 100

American League

ANAH~tM ANGELS- DeS gnated OF

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~
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w th C B~n Oav s on a one year contract ..
National League
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w th LHP ~ J Nttkowsk on a mrno r league
contract
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AHP Joe Borowsk i on a two year contract
PHILADE~PHIA PHILLIES- A;eed to
terms wtth SS Jtmmy Roll ns on
e year
contract \

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IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
HOME
NATIONAL
BANK
PLAINTIFF

vs

GEORGE BRICKLES,
JR AKA GEORGE
BRICKLES
AKA
GEROGE BRICKLES
ETAL
DEFENOANTS
CASE NO 03 CV 63
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue ol an
Order ol Sale lasued
out or lhe Common
Plaaa Coun ol Meigs
County Ohio, In the
case of the home
National
Bank,
Plaintiff vs George
Brlckles, Jr
aka
George Brlckles aka
Geroge Brickle&amp;, et
al Oelendants, upon
a Judgment therein
rendered, being Case
No 0~ CV 63 In said
Coun, the Sheri!! ol
Meigs County Ohio
will offer lor sale at
tha front door ol the
courthouse
In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on the
13th day ol February
2004, at 10 00 am,
the following lands
and tanamanta, looat·
ed at 2020 Liberty
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ott
45769 A complete
legal dewcrlpllon ol
the real tahlta Ia aa
loilowa
Parcel No 1
Tha following real
atotata altueteclln the
Vlllaga of Pomeroy,
County ol Mtlga and
State ol Ohio, and In
the
townahlp
2,
Range 13 and In Low
Noli 307 and 308 and
boundad
and
daacrlbecl 11 lollowa
Beginning at tha
aouthwaal cornar ol
lot ol 18/1 oo acre a
aold
by
C
W
Dabney'a halra to
Adlm Bentz, thanca
aouth 51 degree• 12'
Waat 110 !Mt acreII
1 run; thence aoulh
13 daflrHI 55 e111
318 IMI to the north

(

l

line of a lot sold by
Charles W Dabney to
AS Darrow In 1865,
thence following said
line south 38 degrees
east 198 feet thence
south 7 4 degrees
eesl 228 feet thence
north 85 t/2 degrees
East 268 feet, thence
north 7 112 degrees
West 75 feet to the
sough corner ol a lot
ol one and 28/100
acres sold to George
Sauer, thence north
12 degreea West 170
feet to the southeast
corner of a lot sold
Wm Hopkins !hence
along said Hopkins
south line north 81
degrees west3221eet
to the south corner of
a lot of ten and 61100
acres sold to George
Jolley thence along
said Jolley s southwest line north 34 1/2
degrees west 2661eet
to Bentz south east
line thence along
said line south 56
degrees 12 west 31
feet to said Bentz
southeast
corner ,
thence along his line
north 35 degrees
west 100 feet and 9
Inches to the place ol
beginning containing
4-80,., 00 acres, more
or less
Parcel No 2
The
following
de1crlbed real elitate
elluale In tho Village
ol Pomeroy, County
ol Malga and Stata ol
Ohio, and being In the
e01t hell ol 100 Acre
Lot No 307, and
dll~rlbed II loiiOWI
Beginning at a
etakl No 4 at the
nonhwtll corner ol
what waa formerly
0 H
Jolley 1 lot,
th~nct
aouth
12
daQreea 1111 230 IHI:
lhanca
north
81
dagreaa weal 322
IMI, thence north 28
112 d!tG'"' east 250
IHI, lhll)!ll eouth 74
dagrHI teat 188 IMt
to lha place ol beginnina, containing 1·
281100 acrea and
being lha aame lot

l

deeded by Dabney
heirs to Wm Hopkins
by deed dated march
2nd,
1876,
and
recorded In Vol 48,
Pages 275-276 ol the
Records ol Deeds ol
Melga County, Ohio
Parcel No 3
following
The
described real estate
slluate In the village
ol Pomeroy, In the
county ol Meigs and
Slate ol Ohio In
Township 2 Range13
aa follows, to-wit
Beginning at the
Northeast corner of a
lot sold to Wm
Hopkins by C W
Dabney s heirs In the
100 Acre Lot No 307
thence north 89 1/4
degrees east 267 feet
thence south 21 1/2
degrees weal 329
feel, thence south 36
degrees west 102
feet, thence north 12
degrees west 400 leet
containing 1 28/100
acres, more or lea•
Parcel No 4
The following real
estate situate In the
County ol Malgs and
Stste ol Ohio, and In
the
VIllage
of
pomeroy, Being In the
east hsll ol I 00 acre
Lots 306 and 307
Beginning at the
crooked oak tree
southeast of the new
barn, thence South
34 dagrHa Eaat 287
leol, thence south 74
degreaa Eaat 151
leal, thence North 89
degree• Eaet 75 IHI
tHence
North
12
degrHI Wtll 2191HI
to a etump, !honea
North 18 112 dlflrHI
Wtat 329 fHI to tht
place ol beginning,
containing 1·3211lcrtl, mora or 1111
Reference
Dood
Volume 48, Page 389,
Melga County Olllcltl
Record•
Auditor 1 Parcel Not
18-00501 000,
ti00502 000 and 18·
00503000
The above deacrlbed
real llhlla II IOid I I
Ia wllhoul wlrranliee

or covenants
PROPERTY
ADDRESS
2020
Liberty
Avenue
Pomeroy, OH 45789
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT
$12,000 oo the real
eatale cannot ba sold
lor leas than two·
thirds the appraised
value
TERMS OF SALE
10% down day ol
sale
balance on
delivery ol deed Sold
subject to 2003 and
accrued 2004 real
estate taxes
ALL
SHERIFF S
SALES
OPERATE
UNDER THE DOC·
TRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR PROSPEC·
TIVE PURCHASERS
ARE
URGED
TO
CHECK FOR LIENS
IN
THE
PUBLIC
RECORDS OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO
GUARANTEE AS TO
THE STATUS OF
TITLE
PRIOR TO
SALE
Douglas W Little,
Attorney lor Plaintiff
(1) 9,18, 23
Public Notice
SHERIFF S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
Csaa Number
03-CV.058
Wechovla Bank ol
Delaware, National
A11oclatlon, lktl Firat
Union Notional Bank
ol Delawlira
Plalntill
VI
Alan D Stout, II al
Dellndantl
Court ol common
Pl111
Melge County, Ohio
In pureuanca ol an
Order ol Sale to me
directed •from eald
Court In the above
entitled acllon, I will
expose to 1111 11
public auction at the
on
Courthouae
February 27, 2004 at
~000 am, ol uld
day the following

'

•o

described real estate
Situated
In
the
Township ol Rulland,
County ol Meigs and
Stale ol Ohio, In
Section 12 Town 5
North
Range 14,
West Beginning lor
relarance
al
the
aoutheaal corner ol
Section 12, thence
weal 1830 IHI to a
point, thence north
2360 !eel to the Intersection ol Nichola
Road and Leading
Creek Road being the
true point ol beginning lor the following
described real eahlte,
thence
following
Nichols Road north
01 deg 30 54. eael,
349 84 feet to a point,
lh~&gt;nce
laavlng
Nichola Road and fol·
lowing the common
propeny
line
ol
Capehart
official
recorda 15 page 87
and Stout ~nes
official reiords 10
page 679, lOUth 88
deg 29' 06" eaat ,.
163 85 feet to an Iron
pin ael and pasalng
an Iron pipe found at
19 80 !eel, thence
crossing the Iota ol
Stout and Owena olll·
clal record• 10 page
679, south 16 deg 03
48 weal, 142 34 IHt
to an Iron pin sal,
thence continuing to
cro11 the Iota of
Stout and Owens offl·
clal record• 10 pa~
879, lOUth 13 dlfl 48
1&amp; eael, 138 83 IHt
to lhe cantarllne ol
Leading Creek Road
and palling an Iron
pin 111 at 110 18 !HI,
thence
following
Leading Creek Road
the next lour (4) bearIng• ond dlalancaa,
Thence eouth 57 dtg
24 32" waat, 33 85
1111 to a point,
Thence aouth 11 deg
41' 15" Will, 51 55
1111 to 1 point,
Thence eouth 87 dtg
13' 11" Will 33 78
IHI to a point,
Thence eoulh 73 dag
44' 50 ' Wllt 1 64 23
!HI to 1 point being

~~

Eaq
Maguire II Schneider,

LL P
250 Civic Center
Drive, Suite 200
Columbue
Ohio
43215
814-224-1222
(II 8,16, 23
Public Notice
Public Notice.
Notice 11 ~oreby
iven
that
on
llurday, Jenuary 17,
2004, at 10 00 a.m., •
public ule will ba
held at 211 Wall
Second
Streat
Pomeroy, Ohio In the
parking lot ol the
Fermer• Bank and
Savings Company
The Farmers Bank
tpd
Savlnga
Sompany Ia selling
lor cash In hand or
ctrllllad chack the
following collsllrei

l

1981 CHEVROLET
(clsnlcl
Malibu
Landau
1G1AW27JXB041780

6
1993 CHEVROLET S·

0

t

1GCCS1440V8t 29178
1995
DODGE
AVENGER
ES
4B3AU52N7SE074391
1997
PLYMOUTH
NEON
4D
3P3ES47VOVT607321
The Farmero Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio reserves the
right to bid at this
aale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to aele Funher,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savlngo
Company reserves
the rlghllo reject any
or all bids aubmlned
The
above
described collateral
will be aold aa Ia
where 11 , with no
01preaaed or Implied
warranty given
For further lnlormatlon or lor an
appolnlamenl
to
lnepect
collateral,
prior to aela dale contact Cyndle Gillilan or
Diane Rector at 9922136
1/14,15,18

•
Public Notice
The
Annual
Financial Report ol
lhe Rutlond Townehlp
TruiiHI II compilll
and available lor
revlaw by apolntmenl
by contacting the
Clark al742-4805
1/16
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
ltaletl bide will be
ICCtptad II the 011101
ol Yllllfla Clerk, 320
E
Main
Slraal,
Pomeroy, OH 41719
until
Monday,
February 9, 2004 at
1·00 PM locel time lor
lhe purchaaa by the
VIllage ol Pomeroy ol
~

one new 1-Ton dump
truck with snow plow
and spreader box,
and at said time and
plsce
publicly
opened and read
aloud Bids may be
mailed or delivered In
advance to the public
opening
The spaclllcatlon
documents may be
obtained
!rea ol
charge to Interested
parties by contacting
the Village Clerk at
(740) 992·2543 or at
the addreaa stated
above
Each
proposal
must contain the lull
name ol the party
submitting the bid
and all persona Inter·
ealed therein The
VIllage ol Pomeroy
reservas the right to
waive any Informal~
ties or Irregularities
The Village
alao
reeervaa the right to
reject any or all bids
or to Increase or
decrease or omit
Items and/or awsrd
the bid to the lowest,
reaponalve
and
responsible bidder
By order ol the
VIllage of Pomeroy
John Musser, Mayo1
(1) 16 23

1

HHPWANTFD

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- : - , - - - - - - , -- Older used school band
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currently
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Med ca
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The post! ons requ re the to
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related env ronment s destr
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Htrtng/ Full Beneftls 1 800 resume 1o
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842 1622 ext 225
63 112 S Court St
""GOV T POSTAL JOBS" At hens Oh 45701
PUBLIC
ANNOUNCE Fax 740 59 3 3852
m
a 1
MENT·USPS15LD UP TO E
$29 16 PEA HOUR FREE melr ssa brown@ba.:te

CALLIAPPLICAT ON com
C 1 Beer Carry Out perm 1 INFORMATION NOW HIA
lor sa le Chesler Townsh p lNG 2004 FEDERAL HIRE
Me gs County send letters FULL BENEFITS
PAID
of nterest to The Da ly TRAINING 1 81)().692 5549
Senlmel PO Box 729 20 EXT 95 nlal lwusps
Pomeroy Oh o 45769
Addressers wanted rmmeCI
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FOUND
sa y Work at Home Call
405 44 7 6397
Fema le small lavors Jack
An Excellent way to earn
Russe ll blacklwhlt e blue
money Lets talk the
eye Redmond A dge area

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NEW AVON

Ca ll Marlyn 304 a82 2645
Joyce 304 675 6919
Aprtl 304 882 3630

lodge

AVON I All Ar eas ' [To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears 304

675 1429

1

''me

Pr. I'LEAsAI\'f

I

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CARLYLE

CAl

110

P~ov'G~e&gt;

• "A WAictiE71&gt; CAT-Foot&gt;

•

Claaa A COL Drivers
Wanted
M n or 1 ye ar exp Medrcal
Ins 401 K Home weS:kends
domtct le n JacKson OH
Sign Bon us 34cent per
m le 95°o N o to uch NO
NYC freight

Coli 1 aoo-652 2362

110

EMt s Paramedics
Nursing
Ltfe
Ambulan ce
Gall a Now s the trme to dtscover a
county statiOn s cur ently chall engrng new career
htrtng Please app y w th n alt er n at ve Correctional
Nursing with CMCI
1740)446 7930
Fast
grow ng bus ness
Cash ers and cooks needed
lor all sh Its Full and part
1me Sencf res um e to DallY.
Sent nel
PO Box 729 8
Po meroy Ohto 45769

HERE IS A GREAT
OPPORTUNITY TO COME
GROW WITH US
Kuntzman Truck ng an 80
yea r old establ shed com
pany w th term nals tn
AI ar ce and Columbus OH
Is open ng a new lac ty tn
Ptkelon OH to beg n opera
t o ns February 1 2004 Only
ha d worktng e.:penenced
drtvers w th a clean MVR
and a mmrmum of two years
e)(per ence need apply

WE HAVE INITIAL
OPENINGS FOR
15 COMPANY DRIVERS
AND
15 OWNER OPERATORS

"RN FT (temp)

LPN Per Diem

CMAa FT!Days
Call Christi Hendrix

Phone

(304)

674 2440

Fax (304) 674-0163

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EDEIAAPIDTR

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eJCpenses paid Ca ll Mary

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for the pos Iron ol lull hme
Commumcattons
Cente r
Operator

equrv a ent
rs
equrreCI
Prevrous experience n fele
phone operator se t! ng pre
!erred
Prevrous c encal
expe rrence helpf u

EEO/AA Employer
4 Year Apprent ceshtp
2004 AP PLICATION OATES
Jan 26 27 28 &amp;
Feb567
9 OOam to 3 OOpm

peop e oca
hO wanl to earn mone
ht e losrng we ght show
ng
others
h ow
nlormattonal
DVO/C
variable upon request 740
4t 1984

.,VALLEY PUBLISH
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Behind In your Mortgage
or In Foreclosure? Dent
Se or I te Bankrup cy
Ser ~ ces Guara1 teed Ca I
A LL STATE S MORTGAGE
MEDIATION
1 888-615 8673 eJCt 490

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W n
t 888 582 3345

Uo-.~"
H&gt;H

S\H:

SLll&lt;lOI,,

I"" &amp;

At liE I&lt; I

For SCJIG 79 106 AcrP.S
A ve vew poducng ol &amp;
gas wei s ::. 125 000 304
529 7 106 a o 5pT

Land lor sa e 90 acres
de\ 9 opme1 t lana n ong SR
43 nea Ha sonv I e (h gl
&amp; d y\ (740 7'&lt;2 3033
moble hone s t e~
rwa abo S11 5 pe r mo 1h
c Jdes 1v c~ t e sewer 1 ash
cal [H 0)992 2167
N ee

5550

mo

8 rm Ranc h l ull bas en enr
Cemetery Lot s to sale 3 bed oom 2 1 2 balh s 2
K rkland Memor af Gardens t 2 ac es F R cove ed
.lO 44
No 335 A 2 Lots $ 1 075 AI deck $99 900 no land con mo
- - - -- - - tour lots $2 000 (304)675 !acts (740) 446 2 19Ci
,.., I ed oon
M dd leuorl
3222
depos l
Floral couch Love sea t
Good condtt on
pnce

$300 00 1740)992 360 1
Free emoval of used appl
ances tn the Galhpol s area
Call (740)441 1690

1ao

w,N'.. .,
ro Do

House mamten ance All
types ol epa
Ca pentry
lnsu at ng
Patnt ng
Roof ng 20 years expe
ence Ca ll (740 )367 0437

All real estate advertts ng
m 1hts.newspape s
subject to the Federa l
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes 11 tllega to
advertt se any
preference hm1tat10n or
d scrtm nat on based on
ace color rei gron sex
fom Ita! status or 1al onal
orlg n or any Intent on to
make 8ny such
preference llmtlal1on or
dlscnmlnatlon
Th is newspaper w II not
knowtngty ~~:ccept
advertisements tor real
esto1e which s m
violation of the law Our
readers ere hereby
lnforiTM!!'d that all
dwell ng s advert1sed n
th1s newspaper ore
avallsbte an an equal
opportu nity bases

Not A Company ust an hO r
f'St handyman H aul IQ
Gullers
ch m ney s 000
jObs ~ 3 04)882 2 196
P a 10 Tun ng 33 years e~~: pe
r ence n t ' counly area
Ctiarles Scoll (740)44 6
2932 Gall polis.OI'I

For Sa e or Ront 3 bed
room 2 ca g arag-e Ranch
Addav!lle school d st ct

Tarts

a

m

supPort services (reception
billing and medical records
fl ing) to an ou tpaltent clin ic
Past experience w th multi
pie li ne te lephones data
ent ry and work n ~ rn an

J5U

new he al pump
p umb ng electr ca l ca rpet
RI, N I \I.~
hardwpod ff oo s M ddlep o I
GED
(740)992 232 1 (740 )4 16
Get your "-tiS equ va enc y
08 t 5
d ploma wtth our easy home
10
study course 1 800 569 4b 2 t/2 Ba loc ated al 2906
2163 e•t 310
Ann stan Dr
Pt
Plea
$79 500
(304)61 7
170
be :i oo
f CU!:&gt;8
2
2380 (304)617 9922
MLo;;cEt.I..ANEOU'i

INSTRUL,10N

~~~b6:5 3348/ask
tor
Home
Serv ces
u
a
1
t
y
FORECLOSURE
Aesrdentla i!Commerc al
4 bed 4 bat h house on!~
Cleanrng Prolessronal Fast
$9 900 for hst ngs c al
Ser 111 ce Allo rdable Rates
1 800 719 300 1 e ~l 1144
Free Est ma tes
(304)593
2301 (Leave Message)
Hom e w th 3 Ac es n West
ac ross
from
Support S.rvleet Work1r Wantmg to s t wtth elderly Co umtna
Ba
lheld
Pnced
be
ow
Floatad Woodland Ce nters lady datly fro m 8 2 30 Ca ll
appra sa l
$4 5 000
Inc a Community mental tobt H n (Leon 458 1088)
1304)773 5343
health
agency
servrng
southeastern Ohto for 30 W II do babysrtt ng n my
MoRn 1 Ho'n"
years Is seeking qualified home Full trme and part
IUH SAI.E
appl cants for the posit on of ttme openings Non Slll9k
Support Serlo' le es Wo rker mg
Chr stan
Mme
200 3 16M80 Oakw ood 3
Candidates must possess a (7 40)446 3126
High School Dtploma or
====~--, bedToom 2 bat h w appl
ances must be moved
GED The successful candl
even ngs (74 0)949 2446
date w ill provrde clerical
Substitute Teacher A de for
Chtld Care Center must
have an mterest and Clesrre
to work WJth young ch tldren
Reply to Magre Years Day
Care Center 201 Htgh St
Point Pleasant WV 25550

3 bed oo n 2 ta
Del ~ e ud ar d set up on
A h ~e coa se foundat on
w th heat pum ~C
o n y S39 900 00
Coles Mob e Home!'\
t 52o6 US 50 E
Athens Oh o 4:_o 0
74 0)5q2 1d?
Wh e e Y~v~.o
Ge
Moneys Wor lll-.

Ill \II S I\11

3 bo droom house 2 bath
Galllpoha Career College w/atlached gar age on 1
(Careers Close To Home)
ac e St R 124 c
o
Ca ll Today 740 44 6 4367
Ru11and
Cl ose to new
I 800 21 4-04 52
school
$48 GOO 00
www go hpot scareorco logo com
(740)992 3t9 4
Rea 1190 05 12748

150

Fleet.,., cod mob !e home lor
sa le 2 b C A po ch out
bid take over pay rn e 1s 304
675 3146
New 3 bedroom 2 ba th O n y
on y
5995
down &lt;~ nd
$194 36 pe mon n Ca
Karena 740 385 7671

BusiNI:'S.'
l'H,\tNtN!,

Georges Po rlable Sawm II

ncludrng the name s ol th ree
elerences on or before
Janu ary 23 2004 to Ms
Phyl s
Maso n
SPHA
D recto
of
Human
Resources Un vers ty of A10
Grande PO Box 500 At o
Grande OH 4567 4 E.m.ail
pmasoo@r!o edu fax 74 0

H0

245 4909

Dehve yM'arehouse person ~E E OED lor busy salon
sASSY
SCISSORS
needed fu ll trme 1mmedl
740)441 1880
0
ately openrng must have
740)256:§336
good dnvrng record apply at
Opera! ng Engmeers
Ltfe S1yte Furniture 856
Medl
Home
Health
Ag
encv
are
the men and women
3rd Ave Galllpo Is 9 5 no
Inc
seeking
part lime who operate and repair th e
phone calls
Admtnlstrattve Support per
equrpment thai butlds
Dtslr ct CrrculatJon Sa es son m the Galltpohs Ohro
Amerca l
Manager (Full t me pos t ten) area Mu st h gh a H1gh
Res ponslblhttes
mclud e School Otploma and three
Eam As You Learn
recruiting and tralnmg ol car years tela ted business
r ers customer service and eKperrence
payroll and We w ill be accepting applf
meeting sales goals If you blllng preferred
E 0 E cations with a $10 00 cash
have a positive attttude are F'lease send resume to 352 non refunclab e fee at the
a self starter a team player Second Avenue Gall pol s
following location
we would ltke to talk to you OH 45631
Att n Diana
Must t:Je dependable and Har ess
Login Training Center
have rehable transportal on
30410 Strawn Ro1d
Posit on offers all company
Logon OH 43138
1-888-385-2517
benefits ncludmg health Medical Ontce Aecept on•st
EOE
dental vrsron and life lnsur exp preferred computers &amp;
ance A01k peld vacation typing skills a must Ma I
Qwn.,..Qperaloral FIHt
and pe(sonal days Please • resume to Box EB 12 200
Owntrl NMded
send res ume to
Main St Pt Pleasant WV
•Perc entage Paid on the
Paul Barker
25550 or fax resume 10
Gross
(304)675 7800
Crrculat ron Manager
~eekly ~ettlements
Oh o Valley Publishing
"$500 Sign on Bonus
a25 Third Ave "
II
~
·Home Evety Weekend
' Galllpol s Ohio 45631
II
•Call 80(),652 2362 tor
Or ema I to pbarkerO my
application and lnfbrmatlon
darly trrbune com

JI10

COMMUNI CA

01'1-'UKilJN ln

10

JC2029 or 800 222 8215 x AI appl cant s mu sl subm 1 a don 1 haLl your logs to lhe
9541
elter ol tnterest and resume m•ll 1ust call 304 67 5 1957

CMS

~ ' ···~

2004

Respons bt l lles tor lh s full
ttme 12 month pos tron
nclude but are no! I m ted
to route ncamtng outgomg
Contact us now to ea rn an d spec al calls and pe r
what opportunru es e.: st for form ng var ous recep1ron st
hrghly mottvated professmn dut tes lor the umve sty stu
als ke yoursett1
dent cente area by greet ng
and race~ ng v Sitars deter
Lakin Correctional Centet m n ng needs and prov1dmg
for
Women·
West necessary mtormattOn and
COlumbia WV
d rect ng people to appropr
ate sources
"RNs FTIPTIPer
Diem
Nights
A, htgh school dtploma or

E

(866)671 2274

Post ng Date January 9

FULL TIME

FOR MORE IHFORMA Chendrix@cmastt com
TION CALL BUCK AT 1
Jan

POS TION
ANNOUNCEMENT

We ve got a gre at luture liONS CENTE R OPERATOR

awa t ng you w th all lhe
advantages you deserve
You I en10Y a smaller patten!
load greater var ely &amp;
autonomy a slower pace
Full t1me wa tress apply 1n less paperwork and more
mvolvement support and
perso n at the Hoi day In n
collaborat on than you can
HEY DRIVERS!
I nd n a hosprtal or other
health care setttng

800-871 1949
Begtn n r g Monday
19th

140

'

HFIJ' WANHil

HELl' WANll.ll

offtce sell ng preferr ed Must
be able l o type 30 cwpm
tam liar w th oltrce equip
me n! such as computers
calculators phones cop ers
etc Postllon wrl be a travel
rng one work ng n Gall a
and Me gs Outpat ent c n ~s
rout nely and n the Jac+;son
Oulpat en1 cl me as needed
Woodland Centers Inc Is
a not tor profit private
communlly mental health
center serving
Gallta
Jackson
and
Meigs
Counties
Competitive
Salaries and
benefits
package Including pa1d
vacation and alck time 13
paid holidays retirement
plan health life and drs
ability Insurance offered
Poaltrons w II be ftlled
contingent upon funding
Please send Resumes to
Sherry Gordon Manager
of Human Resources
Woodland Centers Inc
3086 State Route 160
Gallipolis Ohio 45631
EOEJAA Employer

© 2004 by

www com1cs com

11'\\'\(1\1.

HF Ll' W~NH'J)

8USINfX~

t&gt;ISH N~VG R... fia-1--? " r----1:-w~ng~h-::t~=',~c-ne-:-lt

110
currently
seek ng
Medtcal Superv so rs to our
new Athens Center Full
and pa rt t me hours
avarlable $1 B 41 per hr
The pos rllons requ re the fol
low ng
Current AN licensure
Current F rst Aid and CPR
certltcatton
Effect ve mterpersonal lead
er sh p organ za t o n techn
cal and problem solvtng
skt s
A ,J:om mttment lo qua lrty
safety customer servrce and
regu a tory compltance
We offer competrtwe com
pen saltOn and fu benef ts
For mor e nfar mat on on
BtoLtle P lasma Servrces
plea se vts t our website at
http /fwww b olleplasma

Now you con hove borders and graphiCS
"'"-'
added to your classified ads
·~
Jr1'o
Borders $3.00/per ad
Groph1cs 50¢ for small
$1 00 for Iorge

Display Ads

EOE MIF/ ON

Babysrtter neede ~ close to
Green Elem 1mmed ately com
tor latch key type 1~ervrce 3 Plea.se send cove letter and
4 Famrly Yard Sale Bam ? mornings &amp; 1 evening alter resu me to
Me 1ssa Brown
Jan 17th &amp; 18th at Krodel school (740)446 aJ31
63
t l 2 S Court St
Clubh ouse lots of dtfferent
TIRED OF WORKING
Athens Oh 4570 t
WEEKENEDS\&gt;
Fa.: 740 593 3852
M-F 9-5
E mal
FfT CNA WANTFD
mel ssa_br ow n@baxter
at a Gal pohs Do~tor s
com
Offrce
EOE M/FIDN
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Beneftls Pa1d Vacations
S ver
Gold
Cons
Bookkeeprng &amp; acco unt ng
3 Years EKperrene~
Proolsets D amonds Gold
Preferred
fu 1&amp; pa t 11me send resume
A ngs
U S Currency
Marl Resume to
to The Oatly Sent nel PO
MT S Corn Shop
151
1616 Grant St
Box 729 8 Pom e oy Oh
Second Avenue Ga hpolts
Portsmouth OH 45653
45769
740 446 2842
OR FAX 740 355 1
Chr shan Rock Band ne eds
male voca list If nterested
call (740 )44 1 1236 ask lor
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Joseph

YARD SALE·

Ads

Dall'f In-Column 1 00 p m
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day s Paper
Sunday In-Column 1 00 p m

KIT &amp;
1110

Reward for sa fe return of
Appl cat ons now be ng
small redd1shlbrown male
accepted for bartender/wart
Dash!und Call (740)446
ress at the PI Plfa Moose
4,65

the true point ol
beginning.
Containing
t 0831
acres more or leaa
Subject to all legal
easements, leaeea,
and rights of way of
record Iron pin sell
are 518 x 30 rebar
with plastic I D caps
labeled PMR 6196 all
other monuments are
aa noted, be the 1ame
more or lesa, but subject to all legal highways
Parcel
Nos.
34·
Properly
1897378
Addreaa
30410
Nlcho)a
Road,
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
Prior
Instrument
Rllerance Volume 84,
Page 68 &amp; Olllclal
record volume 96
Page 518
Appraleed at $55,000
and cannot be sold
lor laaa than twothirds
of
the
appraised
value
Ierma ol Sale 10%
down on day ol ala,
balance upon delivery olthe deed
Ralph Truaaell
Melga County Sherlll
Karl H Schneider,

Wor~

• Staf'\ Your Adll With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrevlationiJ
• Indude Phone Number And Address When Needed
e Ads Should Run 1 Days

Items

2476

Rlu;.ht

l\egister

Sentinel

(304)675 6130 or (304)675

v-oo .... .-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

-

ijtribune - Sentinel
CLASSIFIED

Friday,Januaryt6,2004

54
2112
6 112
61 12
7 112
16 1!2
16 112
18

579
579
575
553

17

Continental Basketball
Association
W l
OW PTS AVG

MIDWEST

299
206
191
156

143
93

22
22
23
21

Sacramento
LA Laker s
Seattle
LA Clippers
Portland
Go den State
Phoemx

DIVISION Ill

5 Archbo)d II) a 0
6 Oak H1ll (1) 9-1

7

Pac/1/c Dlvltlon

w

o

6 112

CON~ERENCE

26 11 703
26 13 667

M nnesota

Others receiving 12 or more points 11
Hamilton Badn 61 12 Thornvrlle Shendan
54 13 Garf e d Hts Tnntty 45 14
Mrllersburg
Holmes 43 15 Salem 41
16 KeHerlng Alter 40 17 Jefferson Area
30 18 Navarre Farless 28 19 Canal
Fulton NW 26 20 Perry 19 21 Copley 17
22 Cols Easlmoor 16 23 Ltma Bath 14
24 LeWistown lnd an Lake 12

2 Orrville (1) 11-Q
3 Youngs Ursuline (3) 9
4 C n Madetra (1 ) a-o

3
4

Midwest DIYialon
WLPetGB

65

1 S Eucltd Aegna {21) 11 0

GB

S..urday 1 Gamet
Memph1s at Ph ladelphta 1 p m
Mtnnesota at Houston 3 30 p m
Toronto at Atlanta 7 p m
Seattl e at Wash ngton 7 p m
Orlando at New Orleans 8 p m
lndrana at New Jersey 8 p m
New York at Chtcago 8 30 p m cDetrort at Milwaukee 6 30 p m
Cleveland at Utah 9 p m
Dallas at Portland 10 p m
LAC ppers at LA Lakers 10 30 pm
Sunday s Gamet
San Antonto at Boston 12 30 p m
Portland at Phoe mx 8 p m
M am at Denver 9 p m

•

www.mydailysentlnel.com

PageB2:

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

\

-

pad no
pe s efe encos &amp; dopos
eq ed nea ~ o 1e 3138
1100

It n shed l\ che o s1 ee
pa k ng No p~;~ s S355 n o
ptl s l t t 1 es Depos and
e lerence (740) 146 4926

2b R£ fo et e~ &amp; jepo
No Pets (304 675 ::~ t 62
4

oom c. 1 tlh srove
rei dg A C lu n ::; I ed No
pets 260 State Sl S bO pe
mo 5350 dep A nnte pews
I I Ref eqwred i 7AO ~J 46
0076
Ho 1seo 01 3oonbatl
heat Nc pets
elecl
Rnl e P 1re
rf'q cd
(30 I o 5 6 15:1
P Plef!S:j 1 Ia Qfl d b
t 2 ba ve y p vatt&gt; fenced
yard l~ase relu e ces &amp;
sec dep eq u ed 5550 a
mon no pes (30 I 674
6 146
-T-w o--26
- -A - ,-B-Ih- homes
K ngsbu y
Ad
nua
Hem sonv I e Bo h r~at vety
new S400 l~f! mo Hn plus
ut 11es
se~,;u ly
U t I ty
depos ts requ red No pets
no smok r g t740)742 3033

Moun~

IOK

UO\It.-;

Rt :-n

1969 12x60 Schullz 2br
elecT c heat a/c $250 a
no 111 +ut i tl es no pels or
FOR SALE ask ng $3000
I rrn (304 675 4874

2 bedroon mobM llOme tor
rent
N ewly Temoeleled
Ambels de Dr ve Kor $275
month
$2( 0
Clepos 1
97 mobtle home reduced to A ele e 1ces equ red Now
sell 14x80 3 br 2 ba AC &amp;.II ava lal:lle 740)388 8070
app lances WID 1eady to
move n lot 24 Fam ly Pr de 2 Beelroom moo le hOme n
MH Pa rk 27 4 t833 or 304 Aa crne area NO PETS
(740)992 5858
261 3816

1..

�. ...
•

Friday, January 16, 2004

;-Friday, January 16, 2004.
f,ALLEY 00P .

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sel\tinel • Page 85

'"

RN RN RN RN

NEA Crc:isswotd Puzzle

BRIDGE

The Arbors at CiaUipoli~ ·

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

has Registered Nurse
Openings!!!
We are cl:Hrently seeking
an RN Supervisor for
Full-Time
on the 1-11 Pm Shift .
Mon-Fri (Wee~ends off).
Competitive wages,
excellent benefit package.

•

The Arbors of Gallipolis
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis,· OH 45631

r

MOBJLt: H OME:&lt;;

·In Memory

RJR .RENT

•
111 Loving Memory
of
GEORGE E.
SELLERS

2 bedroom mobile home.

Spring
$300/rent

Valley
area.
+ $250fde:osit

Call
(740)441-6954
(740)675·2900

2000

Oakwood

or

home. 14X80 3 bedroo m, 2

bath, total electric .. central
air. Asking $21 .soo.oci. Can
move or rent tot tor $100
Call (740)992·9263

Mobile Home lor rent. 3br.
·w/washer &amp; dryer, stove &amp;
rei. (3_04)576-9991
Nice 2 or 3 bedroom mobile

home includes water, sewer.
trash, no pets, starting at
$300 per month . call
(740)992·2 161

Lotted mrd sadly
missed.
Family and Friends

r

January 21st ·
Good nmes is from
5 pm -7 pm
Wayne's Place 7 pm • 9 pm

MISCEMFR.CHANDUAN~
~

r

HOUSEHOUl
1 and 2 bedroom apar tments. lu rnished and unfurnished, security deposit
requi red. no pets. 740·992· 27 in. Mitsubishi color t.v.
picture in picture. Excellent
2218.
con dition.
$ 150
Call
2 bed room apt St. At 160 (740)388-0416
past Holzer. $475 mo.
(740)441·0194 .
Couch &amp; Love seat for sale
1 yr. old exce llent condition
2 Furnished small ap art·
576·2663
ments for rent. liv!ng room.
kitchen. bed room . &amp; ba th . Deluxe q ueen head boardw/
$275. each au utilities paid mirrors &amp; wl drawers
eJCcept electric . (304)675- $350.00 call alter 2pm.304·
1365
593-0830

Engla nder pellet burn ing
stove heat up to 2200 sq. ft .
bui lt in ai rwash &amp; blower
system brass louvers &amp; win·
dow trim . corner Stand &amp;
exhaust system $650 call
458·2552

JET
AERATION MOTOR S

GoODs

Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740.446·2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

COHVENIEHTLV LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
a partments,
houses &amp; mobile homes
FOR RENT Call (740)441 ·
1111 tor aji!plication &amp; infer·
mation.

F urnished one bedroom Apt
c lean, no pets. Must be willjng to give references .
Phono. [304)(;75· 1366
---'-~-----

''

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·room apartments at Village
and
Rivers ide
M ano r
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.
Middleport, Nortt1 4th Ave., 2
• br furnished apt. , dep. &amp; ref.,
no pets, (740)992 _0165

l

New Haven, 1 br. fu rnished
apt, dep. &amp; ref., no pets,
(740)992-0165
bedroom
apt.
Single
Gallipolis.
Wasl:ler·dryer
hook- up. Appliances. dffstreet parking. Water paid.

NEW AND USED . STEEL

r

B

r

ee

0

eJ&lt;erCISe or OS

eigh1? Treadmill, electri
175; Sears belt Massage
60. Call 740 441 -0441 .

PETs

2 Rat terrier puppies. only 2
born in litter, 6 weeks old. 1mate Hemale. (740 )256 _
1997

CKC reg ister11d Cocker
Spaniel
puppi es
Talis
docked and dew cl aws
removed, First shots and
wormed. Asking $250.00
{740)742-2525
'--'-------Full -blooded Maltess . vet
checked on 1· 13·03, 5/years
old. House broken. Very well
$100
Used Furniture Store. 130 man·nered.
Bulaville Pike. mattresses, 080.(740)446·4326
dressers..
couches,
Germ8.n Ronweiler puppies
bunkbeds, recliners, whatnots . Grave monuments. for sale. Mother &amp; fathe r on
(740)446·4762. Gallipolis , prerT)ises. Call (740)28815_9~
2-·- - - - - - OH, Hrs. 10-4 (M-S). Sun . _
_
by appt. .
German short hair AKC puppies. 11 weeks old. Call for
Was her $95; Dryer $95;
{7 40)441·
elect ric range $95; GE appointment
refrigerator, frost free $125: 88
cc_2_6_·- - - - , - - - - Kenmore washer/dryer set Registe red . Lab ~uppies .
$3511:
Hot
point Chocolate and Black. Call
washer/drye r set $190; 1740)367·7566.
Upright freezer $125;couch ,
miniatures
love seat &amp; chair $250; din· Schnauzers .
champion
sired
pups,
AKC,
ing table $25; Broylehill chair
black,
salt
&amp;
p'pper.
$50; full size bed with box
springs &amp; mattress $95 ; (740)667·3404
Queen size bOx springs &amp;
mattress set $1 50; twin size Squlrreldogpupp;os$75.00
1 lop squirrel dog . (304)675box springs &amp; manress $80.
Skaggs Appliance
76 Vine Street Street
(740)446-7398
llllll'...:~~~.;;;.;.._.,
b

ri6 1Pii3F2 -~-~--.,·

i

SPORTING
Gooos
~~--------,1

no pets, deposit. $270
month. After 6pm 740-446· NWTF Knight In line Muzzle
• 4043; Day 740·339·3063.
l oading Shot Gun. New In
f irm.
Cat!
$400
Tara
Town house box .
740
245·5047.
Apartmen ts, Verv Spacious.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1/2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Poet,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Buy
or sell . Riverine
Pels, Lease Plue Security
Antiques, 1124 east Main
Oepoalt Required, Days:
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 74Q.
740·446· 3481 : Evening•:
992·2526. Russ Moors ,
740-3S7·0502.
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
lng appllcatk&gt;na fQJ weiltlng
lilt for Hud·IUbllt&amp;d , 1• br,
apartment, call 675· 6679
Dell Dimension 4400 PC, to
details
to
list,
manv
1Wo 2 bedroom apts. for rent $1000.00
304·593·0830
In Syracuse. $200 deposit. call after 2 pm.
$:POpe( month, rent Include
water, sewer &amp; trash suffi· Kenmore chest freezer 15,8
clenl Income 'required to cubic feel $75 ceramic kilm
qualify for rani , 740-378· 19 1/2 inches deep $275
B111 :
.
·call(304)578-2668

EHO

Krell antique grand pia no in
good condition $1000 dol·
5
yr_
old
Iars.
thoroughb red/quater horse
$500 695·3943

Steel Beams, Pipe : Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Chan nel, Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains,
. ·
D1n1np
room ~u ·1t e . c hina Grati ng
cab inet. table &amp; .six chairs, Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
bedroom suite, bed, chest &amp; Scrap Metals Open Monday.
dresser, Chest freezer, end Tuesday. Wedn esday &amp;
table s,
odds
&amp; ends. Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
(740)446-3053.
Th ursday,
Saturday
&amp;
- - ' - - - - - - - - , Sunday. (740 )446-7300
Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
UJLI&gt;ING
Guaran teed.
Washe rs.
SUPPUES
Dryers,
Range s. " and
Refrige rators, Some start at Block, brick, sewer pi pes.
$95\ Skaggs Appliances. 76 windows, lintels, etc. Cla ude
Winters , Rio Grande, OH
Vine $ 1., (740)446·7398
Call 741l-245·51 21.
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road , Porter, Ohio.
RJRSAIE
(740)446-7444 1-877-830·
9162. Free Es timates, Easy
financin g ~ 90 days same as 2 female CKC Jack Russell
Wo rmed/shOts.
caSh. Visa/ Master Card. puppi es.
Grive- a- tittle save alot.
$ 1j 0 each. (740)256-6341 .

Delightful, 1 &amp; 2 BR unit s
near Holzer. C/A high effi·
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
ciency gas furnaces. Quiet
RePair-675·7388. For sale,
location. $359 to $485.
re-condi tioned
automatic.
(740)446·2957.
wash ers &amp; dryers. fefrigeraFor Lea se; 2 floor. sPacious. tors. gas and electric
totally remodeled, 2 bed· ranges: air conditioners, and·
rooms , 1 112 baths. unfur· wringer washers . Will do
nlahed apt. New HVAC a nd repairs, on major brands in
applia nces .
$600fmonth, shop or at your home ·
plus utilities. Downtown
Gallipolis. security and Key
deposit required. No pets.
References
req uired.
(740)446·6862 , 6:00 to s:OO.

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Ca ll Ron Evans, 1•
800-537-9528

740-992-7599

m_b.,_d_g_r'_'_'-h-ay_._s_1_5_
.
!:'40)245·5047.

~

FOR SALE

0

100. 5x5 round ba tes ot
99 Chevy Monte Carlo Z34 .
clover hay. Call {740)256·
BlacK wlblack leather interi·
6011
or, sunrool. on -star. handsFor sa le: Squ are bales of free phone- syste m, . tully
allalla and orchard gra ss, loaded. 67K miles, excellent
(740)94H657
condition . $6,000, (740) 379·
2719.
Hay Auctions held 11'16104
Flertilngeburg KV, 1124104 99 Olds Alero, $4,600; 99
AA Truck Stgp In LewJa Buick Century, $4,500: 00
Ccunty KY and 2/7/04 Cll evy M_al ibu; 00 Dodge
Maysville. KY. Buy and Sell Neon·, $3,400: 97 Mere.
Hay or Straw by the square Sable, $2,500: 97 Buick
bale or roll in va rious lot Skylark , $2,000; 98 Old s
sizes. _Auctions beQin at Achieve , $2.000; 98 Ford
noon . rain or shine. Contact Escort. $2.800: 99 Cavalier,
Auction Manager Jim Grant $2.800: 1· 96 ~an Ams @
for more details 606·883· $2,000; 95 P0n[ Gran Prix,
3289 OR 606-584 ~0143 .
$1 ,800; 96 Chevy Lumina,
$ t ,800; 93 Buick, $1,500; 96
Hay tor sale $ 1.75 bale can
Cavalier. S2, t OO: 94 Forc:l
for details {304)882-2575
Probe, $1,800; 89 Cadillac,
Hay for sale: large round $a,9.5 : 93 Eagle Talon ,
bales, 740-992-7015.
$1 ,295; 97 Mere. Mystic ,
Hay for Sale: Round and $1,000.
B&amp;D Aut o Sates
Square bales. Barn kept
Hwy. 160 N
Ph: 304-675- 1743 or 740(740)446 -6865 •
446·1 104.

750 E11st Stnte Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

~ac:hlne Quilting - Regulated

GOT A CUP OF
SUGAR, LOWEEZY

1/ 14/ 1 mo _pd

79,000

m1les.

):,, l~,i /1'~'1(. &amp;

$7,500

THANKS FER TH' TIP .
I'Ll BE SHORE AN'
NEVER ASK HIM FER .
NUFFIN' !!

"W.V's # 1 C h evy. Pontiac. Buick . Old s
&amp; Custom Van Dealer"

LEFTOVt.fZS
,A..GI\1 i'l

THE rt\05T Mlt-IOY\r-.IG
~e.

"

t-IC.VE.R

_._.,

If'(. r&lt;IE-1\TLOI&gt;F

WHE!'oi1TWI'0
FI':.£~L'1 COO~(£C&gt;I \

"lfeellike
l'mout
on a limb!"

I l l'

"Not me!
My money is wifh

Skin, Cut,.
wrap&amp;
Freeze ·
For only

F MmURcva.~ I
40

: BIG NATE

Rocky.Hupp Insurance

5¥

P ass

Pass

P as s

59 Iced drink
so Dusl
collectors
61 Co88t
Guard off.

DOWN

16 Stun
Exonerated

17
19
21
22

Social peer
Be prone
Elev.
Wished
Curiosity
Ms. Thurman
Essay byline
Newman or
Simon

30
32

34 Suggestive
36 - mater
38 Tc;, 's partner

P as~&gt;

39 Empires
41 Friedan or
Ford
43 Tavern
44 Cow's
moulhlul
45 Flatten
48 Lampoons

-.r'lllrthday:

and Financial Services,
Box 189, Middleport, OH
Phone : 843-5264 ."

$45

'

YOUNG'S

f~~:=:!=~~·:

CAR.PENTER
SERVICE tt.

• Ro·om AdditionS &amp;
Remodeling
• New Gar.ages
•-Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vlnvl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patlo.and Porch Decks

Ra,ctuced Winter Rates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy, Ohio
22 Years Loc al

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes,
Room Add~lons,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
kitchens, Drywall

&amp;More
FREE ESTIMATES!

'

I
fj:

Gifts &amp; Gift Baskets for all of
your holiday 11eeds
UPS Shipping Services

·.··.. ·.
.·
·•

lloliday Hrs. : Mon 10-8 pm: T-Th 10-6 pm · ~
·
l' ri. &amp; Sat. 10-S pm; ~un. Noml · 4pm
·..:

PEANUTS .

Located itl Hi.'iloric Dow11town Pomemy . . · :·.

tt
L .. ··...

I 00 E. Main

'1'0U'RE WELCOME ..

.. .

BUT I DIDN'T CARE

740-992-7696 . . .~
..·· ·
~~r~tdir.~~~~~

Advertise
in this
.space for $1 00
per month.

FOR TI-lE PART A60UT
Tlo!E STUPID D06!

1/16/04

OJR NEXT GM\E
IS AGAINST
T\1ETiG~

740-742"341

AND OUR LA\;T

GAMe IS AGAINST
1Hf: SEARS

~IONS AND T\Gal.S

ANO 9€ARSrOHMY!

2001 Pontiac Sunfire. 2 Ford F- 150 f)U , $2,500; 95 Superior
Home
Chevy PU, 55,o'Oo miles,
door, 30.000 miles, CD,
Maintenance We do all '
repairs on homes, plumbing,
auto. $4.500.(740)256-1618
Auto Sales
carpentry,
etc. water tanks.
"9 6 OIOsmobile Cierra 4Hwy. 160 N.
'
1
(740
)446·2805.
door,
power
steering,
{740)446·6865

$4,50~&amp;0

c ruise

controi, AJC , 101 ,000mUes. I S H O P C L A S S I F I E D S I
Good condition. Well main·
·
.

~~~~d $2,5oo.oo 17401 949·

F.asi
P ass

Ieeder
58 Hum

prince~

26

~orth

57 Ocean tish

punches
15 Asia n

29

AstroGraph

740·742·2076 I

99 O lds Silhouette. premier
package, flip clown TV, VCR .
loaded . 90.000 mites. white.
$6,795.00 (740)742·3602

r

windows,

55 Cotton unH
56 Largo VISO

1 Monk'shood
2 Della
(hyph.)
Street's
22 Bade or
penner
Bendler
23 " Ben- -"
3 Ala
discount
24 Gen.
(2 wds .)
-Bradley
4 Babytood 25 Walk bllek
5 "--no
and forth
ld&lt;111l "
26 Lubricates
6 Thug's pM!ce 27 Wilson
7 Pollee
predecessor
badge
28 Round lent
8 Herr's
31 Gentle
spouse
person .
9 Sioux City 33 Myrna site
of old movies
I 0 Movie spool 35 Shrm barks
11 Fleetwood 37 Border on
40 More
18 Harass
lu:xurlant
20 Swab brand 42 Safe to eat

44 Glvesadam
45 Sulk
46 Nol plentitul
47

Mount -

of Sicily
48 Tweet
49 Picnic
spoiler
50 Pipe joints
51 Adjust

a clock
54 Historical
period

Yest erday, .1 gave a d€al 1n wh1ch an
unlike ly lead-directing double luckily
tu rned a probable minUs 600 into plus
990 (duplicate scoring) : In this deal.
tho ugh, East made his luck allrick lh ree ·
with a great play. Do you see how he
talked South into faifing in"s1 1&lt; spad es?
South's lhree·dia mond rpbid is, as tar as
Norl h's concerned , a game-try. Norma lly,
South would have a hand that is too
strong to pa$s out two spades. but too
weak to jump to game. It primari ly asks
partner if he ha s help tor this side suit
North, with two aces and Jn ly a doubleton diamond , was happy lo aCcept the
game -try_Here. thougll , South was think·
ing abo ut slam, and when his partner
eJ&lt;pressed enthusiasm . South shot into
si)( spades via Blackwood.
At most tables durin g a tournamen t on
the French Riviera. declarer won trick
one with dummy's club ace, played oil his
two top diamonds, th en ruffed a diamond
111 the dummy. When the queen dropped.
South drew trumps and conceded only
one heart trick.
by Luis Campos
Celebr'ty Clpller C'YPiog rillllS au! crsa!ed bom quotauon5 by tamous people p.asl ano presem
Howeve r. Jean-Chr istophe Quanttn.
EacM letter 1n 1he Cipflel slar.ds 1n1 enoltler
when the diamond king was cashed at
Toctay s clue: P equals H
trick tluee, deceptively dropped his
" X' W H
MIE
EPXA
NDHIYVJNZEXIV
queen! Now Sou th, thinking Eas t was ou t
of diamonds, ruffed a low diamond with
dummy's spade ace. Then he played a
OXEP
IDCXVZDB
NHINAH
NJDAJHC
trump to his king and cashed the spad e
queen. Wl1en West discarded, South ha d
GB
AZDMH
UIOYHA ."
to lose a trick in each major. He prob ably
also uttered an impolite French word.
AEHWH V
ANXHRGHDM
The hard part is to lt1ink oltll.is play in the
first place. Try to get out of the hab1t of
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ·A pla~ue on em.ne nce' I hardly da re cross the
always following suit with your lowest
street anymo re wfthou1 a convoy . -Igor Slravinsky
card .
(c) 2004 by NEA. Inc 1·16

Lanesville, OH

Round bales $ 12.50 Sguare Pontiac Bonneville. nice run·
bales 2nd-cutting grass ning ca r, $2,500. Ca ll 200 3 Artie' Cat 400 $4500
304 ·773-5098
$2.50. Ear co rn $2.50 a (740 )446·6565
busheL Ground ear cor n
lloATS &amp; MOTORS
TRUCKS
$4.50 for 100 poun ds
11&gt;R SALK
RJRSALE
(740)992·2623

brakes.

Pass
Pass
Pass

VIP
4 Swine
8 Fragrant
t ree
.11 Daybreak
12 Slangy no
(hyph .)
13 Canape
topper
14 leather

CELEBRITY CIPHER

]1645 SR Jl5

(740)256;6346 .

Round bales ol hay. Phone 1980 F-150, 3()().6 cyl. , 2 79 Bass Trucker ~oat. 16 It
(740)388·8823 .
wo, 4 speed. $650 080. Troll ing f.r'lotor &amp; Fish Find er,
with
trailer.
$1,400.
(740)367-504
1
Square bales for sale. 1st
740 446·931'7
and 2nd cutting. $2.00 and 1989 GMC S·15 4WO
$3.00 per bale. (740)245· longbed, 4.3 V-6, mileage
Atml PARTS &amp;
9044. 0
ACLl:l."&lt;;(JRJJ&lt;:&lt;;
139,000
pr ice
$2,500.
IH\\ ... I'ORI \Ill)\
Phone: (740)446·2519 or
(740)709· 1661.
96 Ford Pick Up. Wrecked ,
10
straig l11 6 motor, standard
Au tu;
1992 Chevy Silverado. short
transmission. 4 new tires.
HJRSALE
bed, 2 wheel drive , loaded.
740·645·2950 or 740·388·
$4,995.
(740)682·7512
0173
1
$500!.Hondas ,
Chevys, (evenings) .
Jeeps, etc
! POLICE '-,-.::....'-----IMPOUN DS
Cars from 2 .1988 Dodge DaKota Fiberglass Truck Topper tor 8
$500. For listi ngs 1·800·719· trucks. Both run, I for pari s, ft. bed. Dark blue, e~~:cel l ent
3001 ext390 1
$700/both. {304)882-312 1 condition.
$300,
call
or (304)695·3665
[740)245·5047.
1965 Chevy Impala. Black, 2
200 1 Chevy S-10. 15,000
door, 283 Power glide,
"'I R\ I( I "'
miles. Call (740)446·0864.
power
steering ,
Rally
wheels. $2.200, (740)379- 68 Ford 314 ton w/li ft ga t ~.
HoME
9038.
$2000.00 OBO (304)882·
L\IPROVEMENTS
2196
1989 BMW excellent condilion 567·2663
95 Dodge 4JC4 PU, $4,600;
BASEMENT
:::::.c::..:D
.:..o:::d.:.
g::e::.N
_e_o_n_. - -.-98 Ford F-150, $5 ,200; 98
19 98
75 000
WATERPROOFING
miles. cruise, tilt. air, $1,850 Ran ger 4" 4 · $ 3 ,600; 9 7 Unconditional lifetime guar·
080. 740·256·903 1 or 740· Mazda PU. $2.350: 00 antee. Local references lur256- 1233.
Chevy 5- 10 PU $3,500; 88 nished. Establish ed 1975.
~~~--,--.,.----- Chevy Silvera do, $2 ,1350; 93 Ca ll
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
2000 Plymouth Neon, auto, Nissen PU, $1,500; 93
0870, Roge rs Basement
58,000 · niiles,
$3,300. Ranger auto $2,000 ; 98 Waterproofing .
(740)2q6·6346.
Ford Windstar, $2,600; 95

West
Pass

53 Beneficiary

..

1-800-822-0417

''"

92 Ford Bronco. l ull size,
.4WD. $2000, 740·742·2420

98 F150, 4x~, V6. 5-speed,

1 B'LIEVE IT WUZ
BEN FRANKLIN WHO
SAID, "NEVER A BORRYER
NOR A
LEN'DER

Ripley, WV 25271

~ct'11)')130' '' :

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

200 1 Dodge Dakota. club
cab, V6, auto, 4x4, 18 ,000
mil es, $11,300. ~740)256 6346 .

?

South Church St ~

:r::SJ:a•• s1i~ o• "17

~ _ ··-

'f)

,~ "~

.

High 8l Dry
Self-Storage

I \I n I .., t 1' 1'1 II ..,
,\ 1 1\l .., ltUI,

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740·992·5232
r aa: ew oan
ushel Manure Spreader.
act'lanlcauv good shape
1 300. 740 245·CM85.

7 Horses very g8ntle, kid
safe, healthy, had all shots.
$600 .00
$1 ,500.00
(740)742·3802

BARNEY

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

740-949-2217

House trailer on 1 acre lot
with deck and central air,
outbu ilding . $32,000. Ca ll

r

i

Be.•

Racine, Ohio
45771

P :"·".i!LH..•td, ......¥'h,t~ '''"''··

hKJ62

morsel

1 Business

23

Make your luck
with good play

Stltc:h

18 Patterns 4¥allable
Connie CUrnutt
895-3982 Shop
perator
895-351211ome

29670 Bashan Road

o?

KQ./ 96

: FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Hill's Self
Storage

2000 S-550 Diesel , 4 door,
4JC4. $24,000 . Ca ll (740)4469317

ofo K H

Ope n i ng lead : ... Q

Let me do 1\ for y oul

. 02 Honda Ode ssy Ex
10,500 miles . Excellent condition .
$24,000.
Call
(740)245·92 14

Q I0 7 -

South

4 NT

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

4-WDs

•

•

¥ K Q

Ta~e

VANs &amp;

¥ 1\t0 83
• B tl S
ofo QJ91U

.

A Betler Wav. Even' Da J'

·UNI'S PAINTING

,. 1(18 53
• J 6 s 4

,.
••.
3
,.

milu.from Pt. Pleawrt
Sand Hill Road.

30

"''I

OUT 'ON MV OwN /

u_h_;_"_
45_7_6_Y__,
(740) 992-2
139

GRAIN

50ME.THJN '

Soulh

rtf buy q11ilt tops ·

1,000 lb. Round bate ol

l ~~~ I

NeW Hollanct 3 beater
$11hage Wai;lon on 10 ton
NH Gear. $2,900, excellent
condition. (740)643--2285.

TH~.5

Fl6 .. ¥ GOIN' ON ..ERE. Jilt
~· IF GUZ WON 'T HaP,
1
1U. ,J~T ~..... FINO

7

Deale r: South
Vulnerable : Nor t h-Suuth

Pomeroy Auto Parts
Machine Shop Senice
119 W Mcnnd Sl.

• -

•

.

RESIDENTIAL

To

Ir..____HA_v_&amp;__... L-P~o_m_._"'_Y_·
_c_., (.,o--•A•IJI'OS••••I1'

W••sl

4 :1
AI043 2
East

"" 5

Window s • Roo fing
CO MMERCIAL and

Us For
Corne
All Your Needs

APARI'ME:N'ni
RJRRFNr

r

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMEHTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood

...... Dill.

.•

New Homes • Vinyl
Sid ing • New Garages
• Replacement

•li111SIOI8

..,

•
.

CALL T&amp;D HYDRAUL.ICS,
ask for Terry @ 740-985-4384

FREE ESTIMATES

OJ .lf;·M

• A 4 l
¥ 9 7 2

BUILDERS Inc.

Hauling
•Sand•Din .
740·985·3564

1\;orth

BISSEll

R.B
Tmcking

(Special on Budweiser Products)

or two people. No pets, ref- Gallipo lis. Rent: $350 per
erences. {740}44 1·0181.
month &amp; $350 deposit
required . 6 mos. lease ;
waterl1rash
paid .
Call
Debbie or Judy at (740)4467323 (Lib rary).
1 &amp;2 br. apt in downtown Pt
Pleasant no pets &amp; sec dep
\II IH II \\I)ISI
required 740-446-2200

4 room apt. $450 + deposit
No pets. Call (740)367·7015
before 8pm.

If medical care is all about caring with
heart's tender louch and warmth of
tears and smiles along wilh lhe cutting
care, well, you can count on us!

· Promolion for Classic Brands
will be games , prizes and
·
lots of'fun -

UpStairs, one b'edroom
TraileF tor rent, ideal tor one aparfment at 65 1 2nd Ave .,
~

238 1st Ave. large upstairs
·apt. lurnlshed kitchen , no
pe ts, 2 br. 1 bath, $365/mo.
plus utilities. Deposit and
refere nces (740)446·4926.

Alhens, Ohi9 45701
Phone: (740) 592·5918
Office Hours: 8arn-5pm (Mon-Fri)

Good Times &amp;
Wayne's Place

October 27, 1917
january 16, 2003

mobile

Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coypon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
5 FRE E
Last

530 West Union Street
• Suite C

I

Each has fu ll l year warranty on parts und lal:!or.
Priced·rrom $5,000 &amp; $13,000 w/op tion.~ a ,·ai lable.
Also l'irn'. Hawklin't! Brushog.", box blades, grader
blades utility trailers, goosenecks. and more.
And •••&amp;.w_ Massey Ferguson Tructors.
Call for detail
As always \ II(' still ha\'e hydraulic hoses, oil and
repair cylinders.

6:311

Internal Medicine
Medical Oncology

Good Times
Welcome "Eiete"
Saturday, Jan. 17th
10-2

EOE

BING02171

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4!30
Early birds start

Halesh M. Patel
MD,FACP

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Jan. 18
680 - Slug Shoot
12 Noon

Please Apply in person at:
o

PATEL CLINIC

Pomeroy Eagles 2171
''Third Shift" Band
Friday &amp; Saturday
8:00 - 12:00

How Avolloble ot T&amp;D Hydroullcs
• Farn'l Pro Troctors
20 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
25 Hp 2 Wheel Drive
30 Hp 4 Wheel Drive

Pomeroy Eagles

52 Mare's

"fHE SAME "fHINC:J
c,&gt;QLl ARE

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 BeechSt
middleport, OH
(1 D'K10' 610'1120')

(740) 992-3194
I

Room Addltlona a
Rlmodellng

• Naw Garag~~s
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing 6: Gune.-.
,
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• ,Patio and Porch Dicks

Free Estimales

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomaroy, Ohio
22 Veers

•

'

0

al

992-6635
SEASONED
FIREWOOD

...............
Dll&amp;LIC111

lllllllcl
992-2269~

J.L

.Electric
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph 740-ttl·OIIl:!l
Ceii740-SIII•I073

ROBERT
BISSELL

COIISTRUCDON
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

! - K/1.\IEI-\'T MADE
U?

MY MIND
~n

Saturday, Jan. 17, 2004
By Bernice Bede 'O sol
In the year ahead, don't be 100 hasty about
giving up old item s. fri ends or means ot
doi ng · somethin g. tn fact , the opposite
should be applied: do what 'you can to
stren gthen or improve upon what you now
have in your life
CAPRICORN (De c. 22·Jan. 19) - Take
care when conversing with other s today, so
that you don't talk without thinking and let
the cat out ot the bag concern1 ng someth in g H1at you prom ised To keep to yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - Unless
you are budget -consciouS today. you may
a llow yourself to get involved in an outSide
ac t ivit~ th at would end up cosling you tar
more than you ha'd e~&lt; pe: c led am! leave you
brok e.
P ISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- You may be
an ext remely capable person, but even you
have limi tation s. Belore yo ll accept an
assignment , make certam you have the
wherewithal to competently do th e job
ARIES (March 2 1.-Apn l 19) - Prolit !rom
yo~ r past exp eriences instead of repeating
tactics today that previously proved to be
unsuccessful . Untess you co nce1ve of a
more worKable appr oac ll , failure will be
repeated. ,.
TAUR US (April 20-May 20) - Tbd ay you
may associate yourself w1t11 a person who
has complicated you r allairs 1n the past. II
would be a mi sta ke to get talked into enter·
ing into a new venlum wi th this individual
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) - Be careful
today not to ma kll a serious decision
based on flimsy mlormati on o'r hearsay. If
you fail to take measures to ga ther peril·
nen t facts, you'll be doing yourse lf a great
disservico.
CANCER (June 2 1·Jul y 22)- Unless a
project you're working on has your lull
atte ntiOn, a m1shap could occur toda y. so
don't allow yourself to sl ip into daydreamIng. espec1ally 1f you're involved wi th anything hazardous
LE O {Jul y 23·Aug. 22) - It's quite pOSSible
that you ~o u ld me et someone today who
wi ll maKe a pow'erful first impre ssion . but
qu1ckly lade with lime _Hold ot t 1n Clevetop·
ing any kind o f a relationsl1ip.
VIRGO (Au g 23-SepL 22) - A potential
problem could develop today in a family·
related matter because of losing patience
m coping with the issues 1nvolved.
Suppress any agitation so you can better
deill :."lith things.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) -Take th e time
to read all instruction s before att~mpllng to
pur sometnlng togetner or· opera1e new
equipment. It may not be one of your better
days tor guessi ng hOw th1ngs should be
done.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2 4-Nov. 22) - Make a list
of necessary ilems before going shopping
today or you cou ld come home w1th ba g·
luis of useless Items and an empty w1111 et
Be a disciplined shopper.
SAGITIARfUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) It
iTiight be tar easier to pacify another by
yielding to his or her pressuie tactics today,
but il wouldn't be wise. Do only what you
know to be -correct or you ctJuld be asking
lor trouble.

TltAT OAIIT
PUUIII

0 four
Reo,ange letten of
tcrornbltd wordt
low 'o form loiJr wotdl.

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~ou develop from st«!p No. 3 beb..

~ PRINt NUMSEREO LEITH\ IN
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UNSCRAMSl£ ' lOTERS 10
Gfl AN SWER

SCIAM-lETS ANSWERS
Thrash- Unwvd · Starl&lt;- Define - DIDN'T HEAR
'Remember,' mom told us kids,·~ something sounds
t oo gooclto be true, there's usually so mething you
'DIDN'T HEAR!"

ARLO &amp; JANIS
IHI:. FOODCHAlJllt:.L ~
ifiE- TRAV~L CHA~~E.L!

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�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.cQm

Prep Scor~board
Prep Standings
Boys basketbjtll
SEOAL

rum
Marietta

Logan
Gallia Academy
Warren
Athens
Jackson
Point Pleasant ·

SEQ

ALL

5-1
5-1
4-1

8-2
7-4
7-4

2-4

4-6

1-4
1-3
0-4

3-6
3-6
1-8

TVC
Ohio Oivl$lon
Thl!!n
M
Alexander
2-0
Belpre
2-1
Wellston
2-1
Vinton County
1-1
Meigs
1-2
Nelsonville-York
0-3
Hocking Division
TVC
Iellln
Trimble
3-0
3-0
Eastern
1-2
Southern
1-2
Federal Hockrng
1-2
Miller
0-3
Waterford

ALL
7- t
7-2
5-5
7-3
6-4
2-8

ALL
8-3
7-4
7-4

6-4
2-9
0-9

5-4

. 2-6
2-6

SEOAL .

SEQ AU.

Warren

Jackson
Marietta
Gallia ·Academy
Athens
Logan
Point Pleasant

6-0
5-1
6-2

11-1
10-3
11 -3

2-5

5-6

2-5
2-5
0-5

4-8
5-9
0-7

TVC

Ohio· Division
M

Al.b

5-1

9-4

4-2

9-2

Southern
from Page 81
gaining follow-up jumpers
from Brauer and Sayre.
Dunn had a bi~ influence in
the frame, grabbmg three key
rebounds, hitting an inside
bucket and two free throws for
four points. At !he end of three
rounds Southern led 39-29.
In the finale, Kiser took coil. trol·ofthe game with six points

Amrine 1 0&lt;0 2, Tiffany Wallace 3 1-4i 7,
Hope King 4 3-4 11 . Kayla.Miller 2 G:O 4.

TOTALS - 23 8-15 57.

3-point goals (Drayer) .

39 /
.
.Ehda 63. Celina 50
Elyria 52, Rocky River Magnificat 42

Fayetteville s:j, Ripley 30

EST (none). WAT 3

Eastern
2 16 10 9 - 37
16 13 15 13 -57
Watertord
EASTERN (8-4, 4-3) ........ Alyssa Holter 2 24 6. Morgan Weber 6 0-0 12. Jessie Hupp
0 0-0 0. Jan Hayman 3 0-2 6, Erin Weber 4
4-4 12, Krista White 0 1·2 1. TOTALS - 15
7·12 37.
WATERFORD (8-4, 4-2) - H&gt;ley Drayer
11 3·4 28. Desiree VanDyne 2 0·1 4,
Mallory McCutcheon 0 1-2 1. Bethany

Findlay 46, Manon Hardmg 33
Findlay Uberty-Benton 41 , Cary-Rawson
Ohio High School Girll Bllkttball · 27
'
Thursday'• Rtlult.
Franklin 54, Fairborn :&gt;Q. OT
Akr. Centrat-Hower _74, Akr. N 31
Fremont Ross 45, Sandusky 40
Akr. Ellet 57, Akr. Garlleld 49
Fremont Sl. Joseph 50, Carey 43
Akr. Firestone 76. Akr. Buchtel 36
Gallipolis Galfia 65 , Point P leasant
Akr. Kenmore 50, Akr. E. 15
(W.Va.) 40
.
Albany Alexander 59 , Wellston 45
Genoa 54, ElmOfe Woodmore 49
Anna 46, Houston 41
Germantown Valley View · 72, Preble
Arcadia 45, McComb 33
Shawnee 34
·
Archbold 65, Monpelier 43
GibsontJurg 58, Millbury Lake 40
Bainbndge Paint Valley 43. Frankfort
Girard 54, Hubbard 32
Glouster Trimble 46. Stewart Federal
Adena 31
Bascom Hopewell-Loudon 56, Attic a Hocking 44 ·
•
Seneca E. 47
Hamler Patrick Henry 54, Metamora
Bellefontaine 36, New Carlisfe Tecumseh Evergreen
27
Harrison 71 . Anderson 54
Belpre 45. McArthur Vinton County 31
Ironton 59. Portsmouth 54
Berlin Hiland 65, Sugarcreek Garaway
Jackson 43 , Mariett.l 38
51
·
~cksan Center 41, Sidney Fairlil.wn 32
Johl"!stown Northridge 47, Howard E.
Bloomdale Elmwood 63, Tontogany
Knox 31
Otsego 46
Bluffton 76, Uma Perry 49
Kidron Cent. Christian 59, Can. Heritage
Bowling Gree,-, 58, Sylvania Southview Christian 54
44
Kinsman
Badger
46,
Andover
Bradford 34 . Ne'Nton 25
Pymatuning Valley 44
BrookYille 46, Middletown Madison 40
lalayette Allen E. 43, Columbus Grove
Casstown Miarni E. 77, St. Paris Graham 25
42
Lebaoon GS. Trenton EdgewoOd 18
CE;~nterburg 53. Fredericktown 35
l ees Creek E. Clinton 57. Elanchester
Chesapeake 53 , Cheshire River .Valley 47 '
,
36
.r l emon·Monroe so, Day. Stebbins 37
Chillicothe Huntington Ross 60, Piketon
lewistown Indian Lake 50, Tipp City
45
·
Tip"Pecanoe 39
lima Bath 47, onawa-Glandorf 43
Chi llicothe Unioto 56, Williamsport
Westfall 40
little Miami 47, Cin. NW 40
Chillicothe Zane Trace 44·, ChillicotHe SE
Logan 52, Athens 37
38
loudonville 49. Medina Buckeye 42
Gin. Glen Este 47, Mason.34
leVElland 55, Batavia Amelia 26
Cin ._Madeira 35, Gin. Wyoming 20
.
Magnolia
Sandy
Valley
40,
Cin. MI. Healthy 75, Day. Meadowdale 52 Newcomerstown 38
Cin N. College Hill 37, Cin. Landmark
Maria ·Stein Marion local 50 , Ft.
Trinity 62
"
RecoVery 45
·
Gin. Notre Dame 39, Campbell County
Marion Elgin 51 , Caledonia River Valley
(Ky.) 30
49
C1n. Purcell Manan 44, Cin . Withrow 42
Marion Pleasant 62. Mt. Gilead 37 •
Gin. Shrader 31, Day. Stivers 27 ..
,.Medina High_
land 40, Shaker Hts. latJrel
34
Cin. Taft 82, Cin. Woodward .11
Cin. Turpin 34. Kings Mills Kings 66
Miamisburg 51. Ox1ord falawanda 45
Clarksville C~inton - Massie 59, Clermont
Middletown Fenwick 44, SP.ringboro 30
NEAS
Milford Center fairbanks 75, Lima
Col!;. Hartley 58,. Cols. E. 48, 20T
Temple Christian 28
Continental 64, Ottoville 58
Miller City 63, Ft. Jennings 27
Copley 53. Strongsville 51
Milton-Union 44. Eaton 36
Covington 39. Arcanum 27
MOgadore 69, Akr. Spring. 37
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 50, Massillon
Morral Ridgedale 40, Cardington-Lincoln
31
Tuslaw 48
Danville 45, Utica 44
MI. Vernon 57, Marysville 44
Day. Dunbar 61, C1n. Hughes 60
Mt. Vernon Academy 39 , Madison
Day. Jeflerson 74 , Xenia Christian 50
Christian 27
DeGraff Riverside 27, Marian Cath. 26
N. Can . Hoover 81 ,
Massillon
Delphos Jefferson 50, Ada 29
Washington 54
Delphos St John's 62 , Rockford
N. Lewisburg Triad 59, Spring. NE 30
Parkway 43
Napoleon 63, Lima Sr. 52
E. Can. 48, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley
Navarre Fairless 41, Akr. Manchester 36

of her own, and two assists that
led to two Sayre scores. Jenna
Murphy, however;wouldn't let
Southern break free, hitting
three buckets and two free
throws that .constantly. kepi' the
Falcons wtthm stnkmg dtsc
tance.
Hill and Roush swapped
buckets of the fqllow-up variety while Pullins, who turned
in her always hustling floor
game, hi I a pair of free throws
going down the stretch. Kiser,
however, was the glue that

kept the Tornadoes together in seven assists (Bolyard 3), 10
the finale.
steals · (Murphy 4 ), 19
The Lady Tornadoes held on · turnovers and 35 fouls.
for the 62-51 win.
Southern (2-5) won the
Southern was 17-57ontwos. reser\le game 36-24 led by
1-9 on threes and a miserable Linda · Eddy and Bethany
25-50 at the line. Southern Vance with 10 each. Kasie
grabbed 44 rebounds (Sayre 8, Sellers added seven, Amber
Roush 8). had 10 assists (Sayre Hill three, and two each from
4, Kiser 3), 10 steals, 19 Ashley Teaford, Jordan
turnovers and 26 fouls.
Neigler, and Adelle Rice.
Miller was 17-44, 2-5 on Miler was led by Brandi Pierce
threes, and 11-32 at the line. with 12.
.
Miller grabbed 33 rebounds
Southern goes to Vinton
led by' Spencer with II , had County on Monday.

Non·League
A!.!.

Hannan .
8-3
Wahama
5.-4
Ohio Valley Christian
5-3
Soulh Gallia
1-1 0
Meigs 53, Nelsonville-York 51
Meigs
Nelsonville-York

9

so·

16 12 16 -53

20 8 12 11 - 51
MEIGS {7-4, 4-2f- Renee Bailey 1 3-4 5,
Joey Haning. 1 0-0 2. dustir~e Dowler 3 0-4
7, Sammy Pierce 13 2-2 31 . Angel Harter 0
().0 0, Jaynee Oa\IIS 3 2·1 1 B. TOTALS21 7-21 53
NELSONVILLE-YORK (1-10, 1-5) - Ali
Stcindall 4 2-4 11, Megan Sears 0 2·2 ·2.
Kayleigh 1 0-0 2. Sara Higgins 6 0-0 14,
Megan Edwards 0 2·2 2, Elizabeth Runyon
0 0-0 0. Jordan Bateman 2 0·0 4, Whitney
Maiden 5 6-9 16. TOTALS - 18 12-17 51.
3-point goals - · MGS 4 (Pierce 3 and
Dowler), NY 3 {H iggins 2 and StandaU) .

Al.b
.4-2

Girls basketball
Thl!!n

Meigs
4-2 7-4
Vinton County
4-3 4-9
Nelsonville-York
1-5 1-10
Wellston
1-6 1-9
Hocking Division
Il1llm
MALl.
Trimble
6-0 11-0
Waterford
4-2 ' 6-4
Southern
4-3 10·3
Eastern
4-3 6-4
Federal Hocking
1-5 B-8
Miller
Q-6 2-10
Iellln

Non-League

Team
Hannan
Ohio Valley Christian
Wahama
South Gallia

Thl!!n
Belpre
Alexander

'

ALONG
THE RivER

Southern 62, Miller 51

Miller
9 15 5 22 - 51
Southern
11 13 15 23 -62
MILLER (2· 10. 0·6)- Lora Spencer 3 1·9
7, Courtney hoops f 0-0 2, Siera Toth 0 00 0, Jenna Murphy 4 5·11 13, Jenna
Bolyard 1 1-2 3, Emile Bray 6 2-5 16, Kelsi
Brown 2 2-4 6, Sherry Hoff 0 0-0 0. Ashley
Heavener 2 0-Q 4. TOTALS- 18 25·50 62.
SOUTHERN (1 0-3, 4-3)- Ashley DtJnn f
4·8 6, Jessica Hill 2 1·3 5, OE!sna Pullins 1
7·10 9. Katie Sayre 6 5·12 18, Susan
Brauer 2 1-2 5. Brooke Kiser 3 6-12 12,
Ashley Roush 2 0·1 4, Krisliina Williams 1
1-2 3. TOTALS - 19 11-32 51 .
3-polnt goals- Mll2 (Bray), SO 1 ( ~ayre)

Waterford 57, Eastern 37

.

New BrBmen 53, Versailles 50, OT
New Lebanon Ob:le 59. Day. Northridge

19
New Madison Tr;...Village 52, Ansonia 45
New Riegel 48, Old FOft 30
Ohio Deaf 53, Village Academy :J3 •
Oregon Clay 78, Tal. Woodward 63
Oregon Stritch 70. Tol. Ottawa H1lls 42
Oxford Talawanda 45. Miamisburg 51
Pandora-Gilboa 39, Leips1c 26
Paulding 55, Van Wert Llncolnvtew 39
Pemberville Eastwood 62, Karfsas
Lakota 46
PerrysOOrg 65, Holland Spring. 37
Pickerington Cent . 42. Westervil le N. 33
·Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe 68. New Paris
National Tra11 25
Plain City Jonathan Ataer 58, W
Jefferson 35
Pomeroy Meigs 53, Nelsonville-York 51
Portsmouth Clay 38, Franklin Furnace
Green 32
Procto rville Fairland 54, Ironton Rock Hill

Wooster Triway

81 . Sullivan Black River

34
Worthington Ctlrlstian 60, JohlistownMonroe 44
,
Yellow Springs 56, Middletown Christian
28
Ohio High School Boys Basktttball
Thursday 's Results
f;vangel Christian 72 , Liberty Christian
Ironton 79, Portsmou th 55
MI . VBJnon Academy 66, Mad1son
Christian 36
Muskmgum
Christian
51,
Excel
,
.
Academy 40
Ohio Deaf 30. 1/il .l~ge Academy 42

35

40

48

St. Henry 41 , Coldwater 36
G1lmer County 42, Roane Count'/ 37
Hannan 53, Elk Valley Christian 30
St. Marys Memorial47, Van Wert~
Strasburg·Franklln
51,
Zoarville
Harman 62, WVa . De~! 38
Tuscarawas Cent. Catn . 27
Heritage Ct"l'ristian, Md. 50, Faith
Sycamore Mohawk 55, N. Baltimore 44
Christian 13
Sylvania Northview 79, Maumee 1B
Hunting ton 65, Cabell Midland 49
Tol. Cent. Cath. 57, Tol. Waite 40
Lewis County 43. Robert C. Byrd 27
Tol. Scott 74 , Tol. Libbey 28
Matewan 63, Williamson 17
Tol. Start 75, Tol. St. Ursula 59
Montcalm 61. Gauley Bndge 22
.._. Nilro 102, St. Albans 46
Tol. Whitmer 52, Tal. Rogers 38
Trenton Edgewood 18, leban on 69
Notre Dame. Va. 69, Martinsburg 32
Philip Barbour 72. Lincoln 39
Troy Christian 60, Ridgeville Chnstian 44
Uniontown Lake 63, Can. Timken 38
PikeView 71 , Bluefield 33
Urbana 56, Spring. Shawnee 33
Pocahontas County 57. Pendleton
Van Buren 53, Arlington 21 .
County 44
Vanlue 47, Dola Hardin Northern 30
Ripley 101. Riverside, 24
Vincent Warren 65, Williamston {W.Va .)
Ritchie County 40 . Doddridge County 36
46
Sissonville 67. Herbert Hoove1 30 •
W. Alexandria Twin Valley S . 65 .
South Charleston 74. Parkersburg 41
Lewisburg Tri-County N. 31
SotJth Hamson 53, L1berty Harrison 32
Spring Valley 72, Hurricane 57
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 66 , Bowerston
Conotton Valley 28
St. Joseph 56, Buffalo 31
St. Mary s 45, Ravenswood 22
W. Libe rty-Salem 51, Mechanicsburg 36
Walnut Hills 37, Cin. Winton Woods 62
Steubenville, Ohio 64, Linsly 55
Wapakoneta 63. lima Shawnee 35
Summers CotJnty 52. Princeton 33
Waterford 57 , Reedsville Eastern 37
Tolsia 57. Wayne 37
Wauseon 48, Swanton 43
Tug Valley 73, Guyan Valley 44
Turkeytoo1 , Pa. 49, Union 44
Waynesfield-Goshen 62, Ridgeway
Ridgemont 51
University 73, Elkins 41
Waynesville 48, Carlisle 21
Warren Local. Ohio 65.Williamstown 46
Whitehouse
Anthony Wayne
57.
Webster County 42, Oak Hill 39
Rossford 45
Westside 95, Uberty Raleigh 24
Williamsburg 45, Batavia 44
Winfield 54. Logan 39
Wooster 61 , Massillon Jackson 52
Woodrow Wilson 44. Nicholas County 41

•

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.

~...

6

o

Cavs

.

o

o

o

a

o

a

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6

6
6

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

~...

Examples of Sizes and Prices
1 INCH AD ..... $5.00
'
11/z INCH AD .. $7.50

6

(APPROXIMATELY 30 WORDS)

Happy
I st Valentine's Day
Tessa!
~Mommy &amp; Daddy

6

6

66

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Frank Casella, 79
• Blanch Lutz, 94
• Kimberly Powell , 32
• Stephen Powell, 49
• Irene Raines, 75
• Elmer VanMeter, 82
• Betty Webster, 75
• Otto Wise, 65

for In .Memocy Valentine Pets

MY

- 2004.

Writing this love
message gives me the
opportunity to tell you
lust how rnuch I love
you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
I sometimes don't
show It but I
do.
Valentines

INDEX
4 SECTIONS- 28 PAGES

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
O)iituaries

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Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

·Name:__________________________~-------------------------Address: ----------,---~----------Size of Valentine: _______~--~----------------,--------Amount Enclosed: __________________________________

-----------------~-----------·---

.

~{ • ~~~~ ~; ;rl~; I~ ;h~.-a~t~-~~r;;, ~~t~ ;o~; p-a;,;;.e~;,::Valentine Pets c/o The Dally Sentinel,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·For more lilfa: 992·2155

·

A4

As
Bi

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Valley PublishlnK Co.

POMEROY -- Life will
be a little easier for senior
citizens who might hav.e to
take refuge in a shelter during an emergency because
of a special project of the
Homeland Security Retired
Senior Volunteers.
Over the past several
weeks, about 20 volunteers·
have been gathering up items
to go into 200 disaster kits.
The kits will be stored by
Bob Byer, director of the
Meigs County Emergency
Management office, making
them readily accessible for
disiribution when elderly
residents arrive at a shelter.
Each one of the disasier kits
contains a variety of personal
items a washcloth and
towel,
soap,
shampoo,
deodorant, tooth brush, toothpaste, tissues, bandages,
lotion, a rawr, and towelettes.
All of the items are new,
many are in the small personal size like those used in
motels and hotels, and everything was donated for the kits .
"All of these items was given
by . the good" people of Meigs
County," said Diana Coates,
RSVP director for the Meigs
County Council on Aging.

More than 200 disaster kits have been prepared by Meigs
County's Homeland Security RSVP volunteers. ihe kits will
be stored by the Emergency Management Office at locations
where they .will be readily accessible to elderly residents in
emergency shelters, Here volunteers, Donna Nelson, Diana
Coates, june Kloes. and Betty Coughenour. left to right. fill
plastic bags of personal items to be put in back packs,
(Charlene Hoeflich)
"Churches , bu sinesses, packs and computer bags
organizations, agencies, .girl 'Used to contain the items
scouts, and individuals all were provided by the Pike
helped by either bringing in County Community Action
items or giving money to buy Agency. Some of them were
things. It was a cooperative new, some were ~·seconds",
effort. Otherwise we couldn't and some had been used and·
have done it," she added.
Please see Kits, AS
Coates said thai the back

Some were brand new. some were ·seconds'. spme were
used and needed to be cleaned and repaired, but all of the
back packs and computer bags were in good shape before
being {lacked with personal care items to be given to ·senior
citizens at emergency centers. Here Arlen Graham, left, and
Jack Coughner, check them out. (Charlene. Hoeflich)

broadcast work, Taylor is a
poet, artist, author and educa-'-========"'-- tor. She is also listed in Who's
GALLIPOLIS - On Who in America.
Monday, the national focus
Taylor currently has some
will turn to honor (allen of her artwork on display at
civil rights hero Dr. Martin . the
Bossard Memorial
Luther King Jr.
Library in Gallipolis through
Locally, the Southeastern the Education through the
Ohio Branch of the NAACP Humanities project. Her artwill host a celebration at I works feature Bill Clinton,
p.m. Monday at the Paint Bob Hope, King, and other
Creek Baptist Church, 833 American/world
icons.
Taylor's painting of Clinton
Third Ave., Gallipolis.
This year's featured speak- is part of the pennanent coler will be Nell~e Ruby Taylor. lection at the William
Taylor is the host and produc- Jefferson Clinton Presidenlial
er of "In Tunes Like These," Library in Little Rock, Ark.
a television show broadcastHer most recent painting,
ed in the Cleveland area on "Freedom's Trail , Gallia
Adelphia Public Television. County, Ohio," depicts the
She will present 'The Path of history of freedom to the
'King, The Path of America" present day in Gallia
in her speech Monday.
County. This artwork is on
Thylor, who currently resides display at the library.
in. Oeveland, graduated from
Taylor was recendy bonNorth Gallia High School in ored by Morris Dee and Rosa
1965. She also attended the Parks who placed her name on
Gallipolis Business College the Wall of ,Tolerance at the ,These paintings by Nellie Ruby Taylor are some of the many on display at the Bossard Memorial
IU!d Buckeye Hills Career new Civil Rights Memorial Library in Gallipolis. (Agnes Hapka)
Center. In· addition to her Center in Montgomery, Ala.

~.

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'\{ City/State/Zip:
6 , A moun I Enclosed:
...;
For

A3
C4-5
D3-5
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Sports

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~

~ •""~L£N11NE PETS ~
~

Coumy history. Crow has
presided over a wide variety of
cases to eliminate co11Uption
among public officials.
ffCrow win&gt;. he will be the tirsl
pei';Oil from Meigs COWlty to
serve a' a judge for tl1e fourth
Dislrict which includes Gallia,
Meigs. Athens. Hocking, Jack.\On,
Meigs and Vinton COWlties.
The winner of the
Republican primary will face
ihe Democratic nominee in
the general election in
November. Facing no primary
opposition. Douglas Bennett.
a retired Athens County
Municipal Court Judge. wiil
be the Democratic nominee .

STAFF REPORT

(APPROXIMATELY 40 WORDSI

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A
WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

Judge Fred Crow

Crow has pksided over lelony
cases including 20 homicide
cases. Crow wa' one of seven
judges selected by the Chief
Justice of the Ohio Supreme
Court to preside over a death
penalty case involving one of the
mn1ates charged wrth murder m
the Lucasville riots in 1993.
The Ohio Supreme Court has
assigned Crow to be a visiting
Common Pleas Court Judgc in
nine of the 14 counties making
up the Fourth Appellate District.
In addition to capital and felony
cases, Crow has presided over
many civil jury trials, including
one with a $6 million dollar verdict - the largest in Meigs

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

2 INCH AD'... $10.00

ADS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY
NOON,
FRIDAY,
FEBRUARY 6,

J. MILES lAYTON

Marietta Municipal Court
judge and !o4cFarland is a magistrate of the Scioto County
POMEROY -- MeigsCoWlty Probate/Juvenile
Court.
Common Pleas Ju~e Fred Crow Driscoll is an Athens County
Ill has filed lo run m the March Assistant Prosecuting attorney
Republican · primary for' the and Collins is a Ironton
fourth Dislrict Court of Appeals. Municipal Court Judge.
He joins four other
Mumcipal court judges hear
Republicans, Milt Nuzum, cases involving misdemeanors
Matthew McFarland, Robert where offenders may be senDriscoll and Clark Collins tenced to no more ·than six
who have tiled .
. months in county jail.
With 15 years on the bench.
Crow was elected to the
Crow is the only common office of Meigs County
pleas judge running for the Prosecuting Attorney in
position held by Republican 1977 where he served for 12
David Evans, who is not seek- years before being elected to
mg re-election. Nuzum is a hi s current position.
BY

JLAYTON@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Local artist Taylor featured at MLK Day celebration

WEATIIER

!APPROXIMATELY 60 WORDS)

Happy Valentine's Day
Cupid's arrow Is
stra~ht and true,
In brlh ng this thought
o love to you.
I'm sorry aboot the
other night.
When we had that
terrlb~ fight.
A Sentlnellove message
was a good Idea.
To show you lust how
much I love you, Marla.

Crow seeks spot on appeals court. bench:

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

• Foundation awards over
$200K in grants See Page
A2
.

Friday
· . February 13th
in The Daily Sentinel

St.:!:; • \'ol. ;~R. No. -l:i

:!OII-I

HOERJCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

~
~ Also a special section is available
6 ...

Hoppy Valentine's Dciy
Grandma, Grandpa,
Mom, Dod, Sister, and
Brother...
Thanks far belpg such
a greot family!
t Love You Very Much!

3 INCH AD ... $IS.OO

Our Special Page(s)

"'""''''") • :\liddlq11wl • (,allipoli~ • .JanllaJ') tX.

RSVP volunteers assemble disaster 'kits

6

........ "For Pets Only"
will be published

With A Sentinel Love Message!

• Redmen begin indoor
season. See Page 81
• Marauders blast
Nelsonville. See Page
81
• Hot-shooting 'Peake
downs Raiders. See
Page 81

6

~......

--Your Way--·On February 13th -(APPROXIMATELY 20 WORDS)

...

~

It's Valen-timel

from Page 81
their fifth game of a seasonlong six-game road trip.
Speedy Claxton, flaying in
place of Van Exe . had II
points, seven rebounds and
tied a career high with II
assists.
Richardson scored five
straight during a 12-6
Warriors' spurt in the third
quarter as they built a 72-61
lead. Golden State, which .
won its third straight at home
against Cleveland, hit big
shots down the stretch.
Robinson made three of his
3s, including two in a row.
late in the · game . The
Warriors were 10-of-13 from
long range.
·
Cleveland made only I 0 of
its. first 27 shots in the first
quarter, when both teams
went to the free throw line I0
times. The Warriors led 6055 at halftime behind 50 per'cent shooting.
·Golden State sold out for
the third time this season.
Robinson tied a franchise
best for 3s in a game with
Chr,is Mullin and Tim
Hardaway.
Notes: Van Exel missed
seven games earlier in the
season because of injury. He
had surgery on his left knee
Nov. 20 and sat out the first
three games of the season.
Later, he was sidelined again
with knee pain. Foyle ori~i ­
nally went on the injured hst
Dec. 16 and has missed 34
games. He had surgery on his
left knee Nov. 6. Foyle
briefly
against
-played
Philadelphia on Nov. I
before his setback.
Mussleman is happy to see
Lenny Wilkens back in the
league as New York's new
coach. "It's great to have a
Hall of Fame coach because
it gives credibility to the
league," Musselman said.
"It's hard to find a better
coach for the job." ... The
Cavaliers activated F Ira
Newble, placed G J.R.
Bremer on the injured list and
waived C Bruno Sundov....
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
. receiver Keyshawn Johnson
attended the game and so did
49ers great Ronnie !_ott and
actor Delroy
Lindo. .
.

o

SPORTS

~

among the...

~ Pet ValentinesI ~
~

-

Ohio\ alit') l'uhli,hin~ ( ••·

~ Picture-your pet . ~
6

2004 North American
International
Auto Sliow, B1

·Tornadoes splash
Waterford, D1

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

•.,. •.,. rYrY to~ ..~ ~~ .,.~ .. ~ ~~ .,.• •• rYrY

6

LIVING

SPORTS

W.Va. prep basketball scores

Spring. Cath. Cent. 54, Cedarville 53
Spring. Kenton Ridge 61 . Sp"ring
Greenan 37
St. Clairsville 57, Cad1z Harrison Cent

Racine Southern 62, Corning Miller 51
Rockford Parkway 43, Delphos St.
John's 62
S. Charleston SE 59, Jamestown
Greeneview 37
S. Point 54. Coal Grove -Dawson-Bryant

.

·u n a

29

Ttlursda)! 'l Results
Girls
Beallsville. Ohio 85, Paden C1ty 29
Braxton County. 63 , Calhoun County 37
Bridgeport 54 , Tyler Consolidated 24
Brooke 41 . Weir 36
Cameron 79, Valley Wetzel 70
Capital 75, George Washington 63
Chapman"Oille 55, Gilbert 50
Charleston Catholic 55 , Scott 50
Cross Lanes Christian 50, Teays Valley
Chrisllan 20
.
Easl Fairmont 65. Preston 52
Easf L1verpool , Ohio 44 . Oak Glen 39
Fairmont Senior 64. North Manon 57
Fayetteville 64. Valley Fayetl e.4t
. Gallia Academy, Oh10 64, Point Pleasant

51

.

Church still making
improvements, C1

.

.

.

Friday, January 16, 2004

RHJ

NING

I~

ANIJ....Ue.

~

Pictures at $8.00 each, ~

J-"',;?''"f•· ~;;7" ... ~ ... ~~'~...-"'.....??·~~··

- · - --~---'---~---'--~----

- - - -- -

'
.,-----

I•

••

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