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                  <text>Pomero • Middle

•

Sunda , November 16,

rt • Galli olis

200

A Ntation rdnat for skins~ WtJlkns, aatt~Nlists
(AP) - If you make your
escape to a vacation home;
you might as well do it in
style. That's what you'll
experience with Plan APWB131 - Apres Ski.
. Floor-to-ceiling windows
allow the main communal
space to be flooded with outside light. A stone fireplace
warms the family and living
areas. The kitchen is large
and welcoming. The master
suite is sequestered from the
upper-floor bedrooms.
A steep, standing seam
metal roof sheds snow.
Natural stone is used when
possible. Composite planks
used for decking could replace
cedar on exterior walls.
DESIGN DETAILS
Architectural
style:
Bungalow Cabin
Total: 2,640 sq. ft.
First floor: I, 720 sq. ft.
Second floor: 920 sq. ft.
Garage:
Optional,
attached-detached
Overall width: 29-1/2 ft.
Overall depth: 36 ft.
Recommended lot size: 64
ft. wide, 100 ft. deep
3 bedrooms
Baths: 2 total
Laundry: second floor
Exterior
material( s):
Rough-sawn cedar siding
Foundation: slab on grade ·
·Windows : Large divided
light
2 in . x 6 in. stud exterior
walls
Interior walls: Tl-11 ·plywood panels
Fireplace and columns:
native stone
·
~oof material: standing
seam metal; roof framed with
composite urethane panels
Attic: no
Heat: hydronic floor piping

Tucker leads
Redwomen to Bevo title
win over Bedtel, Bt

Redmenbeat
Shawnee State to
claim Bevo title, Bt

home. Good flow and space to
entertain are important. Lowmaintenance materials are
becoming increasingly popular.
People want to enjoy a home,
not repair it." - Douglas
Wells, Wells Kastner Schipper

ARCHITECTURAL
GLOSSA RY
Composite urethane panels.
A roof with panels of plastic
foam
from
rigid
polyurethane;. made into
board form or sprayed on.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I

For a study plan of this
house, send $5 to House of
the Week, Box 1562, New
York, NY 10116-1562, call
(877)-228-2954, or order at
APHouseoftheweek.com. Be
sure to include the plan number. For downloadable study
plans and construction blue- Vacation retreats are in high demand, especially as interest rates remain low. The common denominators are plenty of natural
prints of House of the Week light and room for owners and guests to mingle. (AP .Photo/ AP House of the Week)
before April 2003, see houseoftheweek.com.

• Johnson backs up boast
with 24-19 win over Chiefs.
See Page 81

)

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·

Family, friends are Sisson's priorities
Central Committee, Treasurer
for the Republican Executive
Committee, a Trustee of the
POMEROY ~ Ask Judy Auxiliary of the Fraternal
Sisson what she likes to do Order of Eagles. Aerie 2171.
on a chilly fall day, and she and President of the Pomeroy
School
Alumni
doesn' t hesitate. She curls up High
with a good book in hand:and Association.
Before she was probate
a pot of chili on the stove.
clerk,
Sisson was clerk for
In the summertime. she likes
tn work in her flower garden. the juvenile court, and while.
Reading, gardening and cross- phy sically, the transition
stitch are her favorite things to Only involved moving over
do when she's not worlUng as to another desk, the work
clerk for the Meigs County involved is a different story.
"They're so different ,"
Probate Court, or working for
Sisson
said. "They're like
one of the organi7..ations she's
and
oranges. The work
apples
involved with. Sisson is a
member of Trinity Church, a in juvenHe division is fast
member of the Republican paced. Something's always
BY BRIAN l. REED

breed @mydailysentinel.com

' ··

reach out

and share everything including your minutes.

going on. Probate work . on
the other hand. is much more
serious and tec hn ical."
Sisnon is married to Jim
Sisson. and has two child ren
by another marriage. Debbie
Evans and Tom Werry. She
has two grandch ildren. and
five "special" grandchildren
- many wou ld cal l them
"step grandchildren."
" My ,grandchildren arc
perfect." Sisson sa id .
A lifelong resident of
Pomeroy. the former J~d y
Wehrung holds special memories of growiilg up here.
"My favo rite childhood Judy Sisson of Pomeroy stays busy with family, work. hobbies .
and work for a number of local organizations . She works as
Please see Sisson, A5
Clerk of the Meigs County Juven ile Court. (Brian J. Reed )

· Sister Grace Graber celebrates diamond jubilee
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

hoellich@ mydallysentinel.com

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Thelma Margaret
Hawley

INSIDE

DESIGNER COMMENTS
"Owners want open plans
and available light in a second

Q. Bob asks: l enjoyed your
article about replacing foundations. When I faced this problem a few years ago, I found
that the two bids I received from
general contractors were twice
what I eventually paid a house
mover to do the job. What's
more, since house movers do
the shoring up of houses daily, I
found that their equipment and
experience were far more suited
for this task than that of either of
the general contractors.
. A. We applaud your creativity,
but we have a few reservations
about the 50 percent savings you
report. House movers have the
equipment required to move a
home and make way for a new
foundation, but whomever you
hire, it is important to make sure
that he is properly licensed by the
state to do the kind of work needed. We recommend that the services of a licensed soils engineer
and a licensed civil or structural
engineer be enlisted to determine
the proper size and strength of
the replacement foundation.
Since the structural integrit~ of a home depends primarily on a solid foundation, this
i's· one area of construction
where one should not skimp.
When receiving bids, make
sure that each contractor uses
the same specifications. List
the s~cifications and have
the btdders price the differences. The right price is usually the average of the bids.
Some contractors offer low
prices by providing inferior
quality materials. Some also
pay their personnel "under
the table," not paying state or
federal taxes or not carrying
liability or worker 's compensation insurance. Doing business with this kind of contractor is risky. If a bid
sounds too good to be true, it'
probably is.

1 '\ 11

•

·SPORTS

ESTIMATED COST OF
CONSTRUCTION
Northeast $250,800
$290,400
Southeast $221,760
$253,440
Midwest
$234,960
$269,280
Northwest $224,400
$248,160
Southwest $253,400
$277 ,200

Questions
and
Answers

nil"\1...,•\nl

• School News, See
PageA2.
• Community calendar,
See Page A3.
• Two Virginia
courtrooms offer different
views on men accused of
murder, See Page A6.

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•
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740 nZ·0700
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2 SECTIONS -

A3
B2-5

B6

A3
A4
As
As
B1

A2
A2

© ao03 Ohio Valley PubU!!ihing Co.

PORTSMOUTH

Graber, the oldest of the
Graber .girls. she attended
Sacred Heart grade school
and graduated in 1940 from
Pomeroy High School.
"During my grade school
years I was a sacri sty girl.
member of the children's

ments and this has necessitat- school where ••ttendance
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com
ed some redesign to take the exceeds 950 students. Paul
line around those properties. McElroy, Meigs Local transThe mayor said he had 'ear- portation and maintenance
RUTLAND - Progress on lier secured verbal agree- supervisor, said each 3,500 gallaying new sewer lines from ments but not written ones Ion load costs the district $275.
the Meigs Elementary School from the two property own- !Jlat means the school district
to the sewage treatment plant ers, both of whom now feel ts paymg $550 a day (three
in Rutland has been delayed that the required 20 foot days a week) to get the sewage
because the project engineers
have been unable to secure right-of-way could adversely hauled to the treatment plant.
According
to
Mark
necessary easements from affect their propeny values.
Once
the
easements
have
Rhonemus,
treasurer
for
the
property owners.
been
secured
the
next
step
will
Meigs
Local
School
District.
Meigs County Economic
Development Dtrector Petry be to award a bid to a contractor it has cost the di strict more
Varnadoe said the engineers are for the installation of the lines. than $26,000 since January
still in the designing phase and Varnadresaidthedesignandbid to haul sewage away.
The village and the Meigs
trying to determine where the stages could be finished a~ earjy
as
January.
Actual
consuuction
County
Commissioners
lines will run. Recently, they
will
take
a
few
weeks
depending
received
gT'dnts
of $208,000
have been placing stakes on
on
the
weather,
he
said.
from
the
Ohio
Department
of
properties and doing survey
Meanwhile the Meij!.S Local Development
and
the
work to detennine the best path
Regional
for the sewer line which will run School District conttnues to Appalachian
more than a mile between the haul raw sewage from the Commission for 80 percent of
school to the treatment phmt the project cost of $260.000.
school and the treatment plant
Rutland Mayor Dick Fetty because the current sewer lines The village of Rutland will
said two property owners are inadequate to handle ·'the provide the additional 20 perhave declined to sign ease- quantity generated by the cem.or approximately $52.000.

years she taugh t primary
grades. giv ing piano and
mgan lessons and teaching
muSic to the child ren .
"The great challenge wa&gt;
to ignite the spark that would
make them hungry to learn.
proud to ac hieve. courageous to overcome the diffi·.
cu lt. to tap imo their skills.
become creati ve and inl'enti\e. " she said.
In 1982 Sister Grace joined
St. Aloysius. on the Ohii&gt; in
Cincinnati as parish organi st
a positio~ she held until
1994. During that t1me she
also mini stered as substitute
teachu at the schooL served
as a re li~ i ou s education coordinator ' for programs at St.
Joseph School in Cinci nnati.
and was a pan-time music
instructor at St. Vincent de
Pau l School there.
Whi le she is retired and
li vim! at the Motherhouse.
StSte~ Grace still plays the
organ at Mother Margaret
Hall. the Congregati on's
nursi n2 home.
Lookin g to the future. she
says her plans are to "spend
more time in prayer. be of
service to others when I can.
and use my talenis for the
glory of God and my Sisters. "

Blood deter111ined to
be human in possible
homicide case ·
BY J. MILES LAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysenlinel.com
POMEROY - An in vestigation is continuing by the
Meigs County Sheriff 's
Department, the Bu'reau of
Criminal Investi gation and
Identification and the Meigs
County Prosecutor 's office
in an effon to determine if a
home in Scipio Township is
a murder scene.
A resident of the home
was arrested on a bench
warrant from Meigs County
Coun last week. The subject's name was nol re leased
b): Sheriff Ralph Trussell.
Trussell said Monday

mornin g that re sults of forensic tests have revealed that
the blood fo und at the scene
is human blood and that
DNA tests are now being
conducted to reveal the
source of the blood. Results
or the test are expt'cted to be
released Wednesday. according to Trusse ll.
The investigation began
early Wednesday based on a
telephone call to the sheriff's depanment. the nature
of which has not been di sdosed. No bodv has been
found. and no Meigs County
residents have been reportec'
missing, the sheriff said.

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WEST VIRGINIA
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12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
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Obituaries,.
Sports
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Chapman.
It was during her early
years in Pomeroy that her
love of music developed the area that would direct her
religious life when she later
became a sister.
Born Virginia Cecilia

BY J. MILES LAYTON

INDEX

ATHENS

On her last visit to Pomeroy, Sister Grace Grabe r, this year eel. ebrating 60 years of religious life , spent the weekend at
Morgan's Rest. the home of her childhood . Here she sits in
the bedroom where she slept as a child.
"

New sewer line clogged with easement delays

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offer on a qualified AT&amp;T Wireless plan comes along in the next 90 days, take it. No hassles. No penalties. No kidding.

r e a C h 0 U t on the wireless service Ameri~a trusts

POMEROY - Imagine
the joy of vis iting the home
of your childhood for the
tirst time in more than 60
years and spending time in
the bedroom where the
dreams of what you were to
become began to take root .
That was the experience of
Pomeroy native Stster Grace
Graber who this year is celebrating her diamond jubilee
as a Catholic nun.
When she last returned to
Pomeroy she and two other
Sisters were guests at Morgan's
Rest, a bed and breakfast operated by Annie Chapmari.
The stately old house on
Lincoln Hill was home to
Grace and Anthony Graber and
their four daughters until 1941
when they moved to Dayton.
Sister Grace, now 81 .
retired , and residing at the
Mount. · St.
Joseph
Motherhouse ncar Cincinnati,
described the weekend spent
at her childhood home as a
time for "reflection and
appreciation, for her family,
for her church."
"We're still enjoying our
Pomeroy memones," wrote.
Si ster Grace in a letter to

choir and in the sixth grade I
became organist of my
pari sh, Sacred Heart Church.
My mother gave me pi ano
lessons and Msgr. Edw in
Murph y paid for my pip&lt;;
organ lessons," she sa id.
After the famil v moved to
Davton. Sister G'racc said it
was the associate pastor there.
Father William Staudt at
Corpus Christi Pari sh who
recognized "I had a vocation."
She recalled that after talking to Si ster of Charit y of
Cincinnati Henry Miriam
Miller, a relative by marriage. the priest and her parents. plans were made for her
entrance into the ministry on
Sept. 5. 1943.
After
entering
the
Congregation Sister Grace
dedicated he r mini stry to
education . She earned a
bachelor's degree in education from the College of
Mount St. Joseph and a master's in education from
Xavier
Univeli'sity
10
Cincinnati . In addition to
organ and piano. she became
proficient at viol in and harp.
She was a te ac her In
sc hools
in Ohio and
Michigan . and later served as
principal at St. Patri ck in
Cincinnati. For more than 40

sponsored by the American Cancer SQciety and Holzer Medical Center
A speciGI holiday &amp;vent honoring laved ones and he.lping aid cancer research

•

•

.;.:- -.
.........

---"'

·. ·

-·-·

.r

Friday, December s,· 2003
6:30 p111 ~ Gallipolis City Park
To donale $5 to the American Cancer Sociely for a personalized Chrishnos ornament per ·
.honoree, plea$8 call (740] 446·5055 before 4 pm on Thursday, December 4.
For more ' informa~on about the event, please call (740] 446-5679.
\

MEDICAL CENTER

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 17, 2003

Tuesday, Nov. 18 ,

Cryogenics
heats up MHS .

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Snow

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Ice

Via Associated Pre 5:l

Slight chance of. rain
BY THE ASSOCIATED PR ESS

Today .. .Partly · cloudy.
· Highs in the lower 60s. Light
winds.
Tonight. .. Partly cloudy then
mostly cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of rain after midnight.
Lows aro und 50. Southeast
winds around I0 mph.
Tuesday .. .A 90 percent
chance of showers and thunderstorms mainly from afternoon on. Highs in the upper
60s. Breezy southeast winds
I0 to 15 mph shifting to the
so uth 15 to 25 mph in the
afternoon.

Tuesday night...Occasional
showers and thunderstorms
then showers likely wi!h a
chance of thunderstorms alter
midnight. Lows around 49.
South winds 10 to 15 mph
shifting to the west after midnight. Chance of precipitation
near I00 percent.
Wedne sday ... Cooler.
Showers likely then a c!)ance
of showers in the afternoon.
Highs around 50. Northwest
winds I0 to I5 mph, Chance
of precipitation 60 perc~ nt.
Wednesday nig ht.. .Partly
cloudy. Lows around 36.

Now registering
students

co llege at 740.374.8716 or
check out the winter schedule
online at www.wscc.edu

MARIETTA
Washington·State Community
College is now registering
students for the intersession
term between fall and winter
quarters. Thi s co ncentrated
two-week session enables students to pick up additional
courses outside their regular
schedules. Students on special
financial aid programs may
continue their eligibility by
enrolling in these courses.
The intersession is scheduled
for Dec. 1- 16, 2003. A special
course for licensed practical
nurses (LPNs) seeking rv therapy certification will meet Dec.
1-5 from 8:00 a. m.-4:00p.m.
lntersession day courses
include PC Applications,
Business Law I, Basic Math,
Readinglndividualized, CAD
I, Digital Video Etlects,
Career Planning Seminar.
Transfer Seminar, American
Foreign Policy. Directed
Radiographic Practice II, and
Interpersonal Communication.
Cost for any intersession
course is $68 per credit hour
for Ohio residents and $ 136
per credit for non-residents,
plus a $ 15 reg istration tee, a
$2 per credit hom technology
fee, and any lab fees or textbooks. To register. stop by the
college between 7:30 a.m.
and 8:00 p.m., Monday
through Thursday. .and from
7:30a.m. to 4:30p.m., Friday.
For more information on the
intersession courses, call the

Honor roll
announced
TUPPERS PLAINS The following students have
been named to the honor roll
at Eastern High School for
the first grading period:
Grade 9: Brittany Bissell,
Tyler Lee, Alex McGarth, Erin
Weber. all A's; Jessica Amos,
Stephanie Baker, Sarah Boston,
Samantha Brown, Kimberly
Castor, Ryan Davis, Steven
Hudson, Sarah Martindale,
Michael Owen, Hollie Richard,
Justin Riebel , Cory Shaffer.
Grade 10: Taylor Russell, all
A's; Brandon Bartee, Brian CaslSJr,
Chris Davis, Nick Kuhn. Herbert
Mcintyre, Shawn Reed, Derek
Roush, Sam Wiggins, Charles
Wilson, Arpanda Windon.
Grade If: Derek Balll11. Chris
Carroll, Cody Dill, Adam Dillard,
Jennifer Hayman, Jessica Kehl,
Bryan Minear. Sara Pore, Jaime
Reel. Casey Smith, Morgan Weber,
~stu White, Chei"'U Young, all
As; Ken Amsbary, Jenny AmlCS,
Bnttany Bamett, Abbie Chevalier,
Canie Elberfeld, Andy FrJ!lcis,
Cassie Nuuer, D&amp;ren ScarlJrough.
Grade 12: Jessica Boyles.
Alyssa Holter, Andrea Warner. All
A's; Rachel Elliott, Chrissie
Gregory, Brittany Hauber.
Brendan Lind, Jonathan Owen,
Jessica Pooler, Sandy Powell, lia
Pratt, Bobby Pulman, Joe Richard,
Katie Robertson, Becky Taylor,
Nick Weeks, Denise West.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 21a-gso&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Policy
Published
every
afternoon,
Our mai n concern in all stories is to be Monday lhrough Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992-

2156.

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
postage paid at Pomeroy.

Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Oh io Newspaper

Our main nulhber Is
(740) 992-2156.
Deparlmenl extensions are:

News
Edhor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
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\

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POMEROY - Ted Gabry
of Hocking College recently
treated Meigs High School
juniors and seniors to a presentation in cryogenics the science of ultra cold temperatures.
Each of the students were
encouraged to touch liquid
nitrogen (a liquid at 320
degrees F). They participated
in a series of demonstrations
utili zing the cold liquid to
show its effect on semiconductors, styrofoam, balloons
and a variety of common
substances.
The students also took part
in experiments involving various types of modern products: plastics, alloy products,
cold-induced magnetic levi tation and modern paper
products.
Hocking College is an
innovator in current post high
school eduction, offering a
program in ceramic engineering and presently otlering a
program of study in alternative fuels.
Gabry conducted a visual
presentation incorporating
science into today 's modern
society

Meigs
announces
honor roll
POMEROY- Students in
tbe Meig s Local School
District who made grades of
B or above in all their subJects for the first nine-weeks
grading period qualified to be
listed on the honor rolls of
Meigs Intermediate , Middle
and High Schools.
They include:
Meigs Intermediate
School
Grade 3 - Casi Arnold,
Thomas Boyer, Matthew
Casci, Alyssa Cremeans,
Allyson
Davis,
Robbie
Dillon, Megan Dyer, Brittany
Eynon,
Delilah
Fish,
Christopher Folmer, Shana
Gorslene, Makenzie Greene,
Hall ,
Eddie
Kendra
Hendricks, Justin Hettinger,
Ashley Jeffers, Hannah King,
Marorie
Lewis,
Kayla
McClure, Jordan Meadows,
Jacob Mulholland, Shawnella
Patterson, Rachel Payne,
Emma Perrin, Tess Phelps,
Devin Price, Tyler Price,
Keana Robinson , Ashleigh
Sayre,
Kenzie
Shuler,
Maggie Smith, Michael
Snowden, Bethany Spaun,
Kyrie
Swann,
William
Taylor, Madelyn Thomas,
Dustin Ulb rich, Haley Will,
Au tumn Williams , Timmy
Wi se, Augusta Wright.
Grade 4 -- Cheyenne

Beaver, Darienne Betzing.
Bruno Casci. Olivia Cleek.
Danielle Cullums, Desirae
Cundiff, Kim Curl , Cory
Curtis, Michael Davi s, Wes
Davis, Chelsey Eads, Andy
Fairchild, Emalee Glass, Karl
Gueltig, Ronald Haning,
Cody Hanning , Raynee
Herman, Michelle Hilyard,
Stephanie Hoalcraft, Marlee
Hoffinan , Cassidy Hood ,
Jordan Jefl'ers , Taylor Jone s,
Jeffrey Kimes, Austin King,
Jon MacKnight, Steven
Mabr, Cody Mattox , Tanisha
McKinn~y.
Tiffany
McKinney.
Kassandra
Mullins, Brady Norville, Ben
Reed, DiJuan Robin son,
Jennifer Robin son. Nathan
Rothgeb, Jeffery Roush ,
Zach Sayre, Zac Sheet s,
Cayelynn
Smith, Je sse
Smith,
Travis
Tackett ,
Sharaya White, Victoria
Wolfe.
5
Alex
Grade
Ackerman , Alaine Arnold.,
Shellie
Bailey, Ashley
Bateman-Lee, Olivia Bevan,
Cameron Bolin, Kabrien
Borthwick, Hannah Cleek, T.
J.
Conlin,
Bethany
Cunningham, Nico le Davi s.
Heath Dettwiller, Taylor
Dowler, Nathaniel Eblin ,
Hope
Nate
Gilkey,
Hajivandi , Angela Hilyard,
Morgan Howard, Nicholas
Ingels, Jamie Jeffers, Kyle
Johnson , Shelby Johnson ,
Colt Kerr, Brandon King,
Marissa McAngus, Shannon
Mclaughlin, Tyson Morri s.
Jeremiah Myers , Chelsea
Patterson, Bo-D~ra Powell,
Braden Prater, TJ Quillen,
G~rrett
Riftle,
Aaron
Kasey
Roush ,
Robert s,
Chanqra Stanley, Daniel
Stewart, Connor Swartz,
Paul a
Tanner
Tackett,
VanMeter, Shannon Walzer,
Cody
Weaver,
Bobby
Wheeler, Carrie White,
Christian Woods.
Meigs Middle School
Grade 6 - Tyler Andrews,
Chelsey Arms, Jeremy Ash.
Lauren Barnes, Charity
Barthelm as. Dawn Bissell ,
lan
Bullington,
Kel sey
Burton, Ashley Carey, Alisha
Chapman, Justiri Cotterill,
Caleb Davi s, Kri stine Davfs,
Autumn Demoss, Je ssica
Doud, Megan Dunfee, Jacob
Dunn, Dustin Eads, Kristen
Eblin, Dale Ellis, Charles
Fitchpatrick, Joseph Foley,
Darby
Gilmore,
Kayla
Graham, Alyss Green, David
Grim , Veronica Grimm,
Megann Halley, Shawn
Hawley, Charles Haye s,
Breana , Hemsley, Benjamin
Hood,
Ryan
Jeffers,
Alexandria Jones, Scott
Kennedy, Pamela Kessinger,
Annisba Kopec, Cassandra
Morris, Shelby Ohlinger.
Brittany
Parsons,
Erin
Patterson, Jennifer Payne,
Corey Reitmirc. Jaco b Riftle,

Cassandra Smith, Latrici a
Smith , Cay la Taylor, Meri
Vanmeter, Ashley Walker.
Michael Wills Ill .
Grade 7 - Jamie Bailey.
Wyatt Ball, William B
s.Clayton Bohon, Arian olin ,
Chad Bonnett , Vir irii a
Brickles , Megan
B b,
Crockett Crow, Alexa ia
Cullums, Le 'Anna D vis ,
Kenneth Delong, An ony
Doan, Jennifer Fife, ames
Robert
Green,
harle s
Harming,
Amber Hockman, Li&lt;1n
Hoffinan, Jessica Holliday,
Corey Hutton, Lilly Jack s.
Terry
Jewell.
Morgan
Kennedy, Stephanie Lawson.
Morgan Lentes, , Caitlin
Leslie ,
Jahnna
Lydic.
Courtney Mayes , Jared
McKinney, Mason Mett s,
Jason
Morris,
Lindsey
Myers, Andrew O'Bryant ,
April
Oiler,
Raymond
Patterson,
Alexandri a
Patterson, Erin Perkins ,
Ripley Raubenolt, Calee
Reeves, Etin Reitmire , Sarah
Roach, Chelsea Smallwood,
Megan
Smith.
Meris sa
Snyder, Caitlin Swartz ,
K1mberly Sw1 sher. Tess
Thorns. Jessica Wagner,
Catie Wolfe
Grade 8 Samantha
Ackerman, Jacob Bame s,
Amy Barr, Talisha Beha,
Georgetta Brickles, Elizabeth
Cremenas . Robert Foreman,
Jr. , Chnstopher Goode ,
Rebecca Han stine, Bradley
Jon es, Kyle Kinnan, Kirk
Legar,
Chelsey
Noe.l,
Amorette Salser, Steven
Stewart.
Meigs High School
Freshman - Cory Dill ,
Dane E1chmger, Sarah Engle,
Kayla Grover. Ke ilah Jacks,
Sarah Lantz. Robert Reed,
Amanda Schartiger, Whitney
Smith. Krysta Stitt. Kri stin
Trader.
Sophomore Wesley
Ault, M1randa Beha, Thomas
Boyd,
Derek ' Brickles ,
W1lham Burbndge. Travis
Butcher, Samantha Cole,
Ashley &lt;;ook, Bryce Davis,
Jame s F1fe, Canta Gardner,
Ty son George, Brittney
Jacks, Nathan Jeffers, Julia
Johnson, Joshua Kennedy,
Jacob
Kennedy,
Taryn
Lentes, Meghan Leslie ,
Kayla McCarthy, Autumn

McLaughlin, Rebecca Rader,
Adrean
Reese,
Brandi
Reeves, Ray Sargent. Abby
Stewart, Whitney Thoene .
Leonard
VanMeter.
9Jtistopher Van Reeth ,
Veno , Joslmu
Junior - Grant Arnold,
Emily Ashl ey, Renee Bailey.
Jeffrey Baughman, Jeremy
Black sto n, Jenny .Sowles,
Raymond Colwell. Eric
Cullums, Mirinda Davis.
Trevor Depoy. · Rosann a
Dillard, Jodi Donahue, '
Patrick Dowell, Eddie Fife ,
Brandon Grover,
Rany
Harr.
Andrew
Henderso n, Amanda Hoyt ,
Kay Ia Icenhower, Aaron lble,
Ashliegh Kimes, Madi son
, King, Tiffany Ki~g . Cassie
Lee, Megan Mayes. Katie
Reed. Adam Snowden, Ruth
Snyder. Eric Sydenstricker,
Natashia Templeton , Brooke
Venoy, Elizabeth Well. Ros s
Well, Nicki Wilson, Natasha
Wise, Carl M. Wolfe ,
Jennianne Young
Senior - Jessica Baker.
David
Barnes ,
Donald
Barnell, Jessica Blaellnar,
David
Boyd,
Jaclyn
Bradbury, Kara Buffington.
Brandyn Bumgardner. Nicole
Burman, Alisia Burton, Kerbi
Buzzard. Kenneth Carsey,
Kathryn
Childs,
Joel
Clefland, Benjamin Collins,
Jaynee Davis, Jason DeMoss,
Justin DeMoss, Meagan
Dodson, Devin Erlewine.
Andrea
Fetty,
Kelly
Freeman , Juliane Glomm ..
Jack lyn
Gloyd , Ashley
Hall~y .
Jennifer Harri s.
Raymond He ss, Je ssica
Howell, Randall Hudson.
Michele Imboden , Lindsey
Jeffers, Courtney Kennedy.
Aubrie Kopec, Jon athan
Larkins. Sarah Lee, Aira
Little. Steven Major, Vince
Martin, Nicole McDaniel.
Sheena Morri s. Christina
Pauley, Jason Peckham,
Erica Poole, Brittany Powers,
Amanda Priddy, Ray Ratclff.
Melissa Ri chmond. Jess ie
Sargent, Nikolas Seagraves.
Angela
Smith,
Robert
Stamper, Miranda Stewart.
Clayton Sione, Amanda
Tobin, Corey Vaughan,
Rhonda Wagner, Carrie
Walker, Cass ie Watson ,
Jordan William s, Holley
Williams.

·

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com
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www.turnpikeflm.com
CHURCHES
lighthouse Assembly of God - Gallipolis

www.LighthouseAssembly.info
ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com

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BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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WEB SITE
DIRECTORY

Public meetings
Monday, Nov. 17
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet in reces sed
session at 7 p,m. in th e
Counci I chambe rs in the
municipal buildin g.
LETART
Letart
Town ship Tru stees will meet at
II a.m. at the olllcc' building.
Thesday, Nov. 18
RACINE - Racine Water
Board will meet for a regular
meeting at I 0 a.m. in the
Counci I chambers in the
municipal building.
Wednesday, Nov. 19
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in regular
sessoin addt 7:30p.m. in the
elementary conference room .

Clubs and
Organizations
Monday, Nov. 17
POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter, Order of the Eas!ern
Star. will mce1 at the Shade
River Lodge. There will be a
6 p.m. potluck dinner wi th

meat ami &lt;.lrinks furni , he&lt;.l .
Member&gt; are urged to &lt;lllcnd
and to take their -rituals.
POMEROY - The Meig'
County Ri ght to Life will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at th e
Pomeroy Library.
Thursday, Nov. 20
CHESTER - The R&lt;xlders
2000 Car Club will meet at 6:30
p.m. at the MJ &amp; Family
Restrurant in Chester. Members
encouraged to attend.
. Thesday, Nov. 25
ATHENS - The Southern
Consortium for Children will
meet at I0- a.m . at the offlce.
507 Richl and Avenue, Suite
I 07, Athens.

Other events

Birthdays
Wednesday, Nov. 19
POMEROY .
Vi ctor
Hannahs who re; ide s at the
Roc ksprings Rehabilitation
Center will observe hi s 83rd
birthday on Nov. 19. Card&gt;
may be sent to him there.
Room 114.
Saturday, Nov. 22
TUPPERS PLAINS
Fredrick Goebel of Tuppers
Plains will celebrate his 99th
birthday on Nov. 22. Cards
· may be sent to him at P. 0 . Bo.x
256, Tuppers Plains 4575~ .
Thursday, Nov. 25
COLUMBUS
John
Crooks, native of Syracu'e
and a 1942 graduate &lt;&gt;I'
Pomeroy High School wil
observe hi s 80th birthday on
Nov. 25. He had a hip replaccment .in March and a second
surgery on the same hip in
August. He is currently doing
well and residing in '.1ayfair
Village Retiremen t Center.
Roo m 215, 30 II Hayden Rd ..
Columbus, 43235. He wou ld
enjoy getting cards fro m old

Tuesday, Nov. 18
POMEROY - The Me igs
County Health Department
will have a chi ldhood immu nization clinic, 9to II a.m. and
I to 3 p.m. at the office on
Memorial Drive in Pomeroy.
Take child's shot records. Each
chi ld must be accompamed by
parent or legal guardian , Take
medical cards if applicable.
acq!Jai nlan ce~.

Social Security Column
Changing seasons ·of the year and of your life
BY LISA CRUMP
, SOCIAL SECURITY MANAG ER. ATHENS

In most areas of the country. November is the month
when the last warm days of
fall fade away, and peopl e
hegin to prepare fur th e
winter ahead . Folks check
the furnace or lay in more
firewood for cold weather
months.
It is a common sense
preparation for changing seasons. But, unfortunately,
many American s do not
make as good an effort in
preparing for a major change
in "the seasons of their life":
the !ransition from work to
retirement.
According to the 2003
Confidence
Retirement
Survey, 61 percent of
American workers have not
tried to determine how
much money they wi II need
to save for a comfortable
retirement. Ahd, becaus~
they do not have any specific financial goal, they will
often underestimate how
much money they need.
The best way to avoid this
mi stakr is to do a little

kitchen table fin ancial planning and the best place to
begin is with Soda! Security.
Most folks can get a preny
good idea of what 1hcy can
expect from Social Security
JUSt by reading the Social
Security Statement that is
mailed to them each year. ' II
arrives two to three month s
before their birthday. II provides a personal estimate of
retirement, disability and
surv ivors benefits that a
worker and his or her tamily
may be eligible to receive
from Social Security.
Of course, Social Security
was never meant to be the
only source of retirement
income. Unfortunately, the
latest statisti cs show that 20
percent of older Americans
are living just on their
Social Security payments.
And , for about one-third of
the elderly. thei r Social
Security benefits represent
90 percent or more of their
mcome .
Financial planners say that
retirees need al least 70 to
80 percent of pre-retirement
income to live co mfortab ly.

For average w;~ge earners.
Social Security will replace
about 40 percent of their
preretirement 111&lt;:0me
about half of what you will
need, That means that workers need to supplement their
Social Security ch~ck with
pension s. person al savings
and investments.
There are now many retirement savings and investment
options avai lable to workers.
Options can include an IRA.
a 40 l (k). Roth accounts or
other savings and investment
ve hicles. Take advantage of
the opportunities they offer
and you will find a source of
financial wanmth when you
enter the autumn of your
years.
To help you understand just
what you 'fill need for your
retirement, you can use Social
Security's helpful benefit planners at www.socialsecurity.gov/-planners/index .htm and
you can check out the helpful
infonmation available from the
American Savings Education
Council's
website
at

Hart read thank yous from
Retired Senior Volunteer
Homeland Security gro up,
Hobart and Ann Cozart , and
Phyllis Young.
·
A discussion was held on a
cement rmnp to the back door
of the social room, and also the
need for a platfonm and railings.
Plans were made for the
group to go to the Wild Horse
Cafe for a Christman dinner
on Dec. 8. The regular meeting will be held Dec. II at the
church with secret sis ters
exchanging Christmas gifts.
lndi victuals not having secret
sisters, are invited to take a $5
gift for an exchange. Bernice
Theiss. Lillian Hayman. and
Ruth Simpson will have the
program and refreshments.
Cards were signed for
numerous residents who are
ill, bereaved, or needing
e ncouragement.
Hart reported OQ the last
noodle making sessions. She
said 319 bags of noodles had
been sold and the noodlemaking group voted to
donate !he money to the par-

sonage fund .
Betty Proffitt had the program and told about God's
ch ildren 90t doing as they
were told sometimes.
Hart served refreshments to
Edie Hubbard, Sheila Theiss,
Edna
Knopp,
Evelyn
Foreman. Betty Proffitt, Ruth
Simpson. Lillian Hayman.
Blondena Rainer. Fran Sayre,
Mabel Brace, Mildred Hart.
Martha Lou Beegle , Lois
Sterrett, Bernice Theiss,
Shirley Beegle, Aivs Harrison .
Janet Theiss. Julie Campbell.
&amp; Hazel McKelvey.
The January meeting will
be hosted by Mabel Brace
and Mildred Hart. with
Sterrett and Fran Sayre hav ing charge of th February
meeting. All area women are
invited to the meetings_

www.a~ . or.

Local folks
Sonshine Circle to
buy walkway stone
RACINE - Purchase of
one of the engraved white
stones to be used in creating a
walkway
at the
new
Mulberry Community Center
bui !ding was approved at a
recent meet ing of the
Sonshine Circle.
The b rick will cost $250
and wi II be engraved
"Sonshine Circle of Dorcas
. Bethany Church." The sidewalk will be built from the
playground across the front
of the building making the
structure handicapped accessible . The original sidewalk
and the steps leading to the
front door will remain intact.
according to Keith Rader,
director of the new owner, the
Meigs Cooperative Parish.
Lois Sterrett presided at the
meeting. She read scripture
James I : 1-12, and an arti.. ' from
cle from the book Joy Every
&lt; Morning" by Muriel Larson ,
titled "Count II All Joy".

PageA3

Holiday program
tQ be presented
POMEROY - A holiday
prognun will be presented at

Monday, November 17,

2003

Teacher·regrets lie that
ruined principal's career
DEAR ABBY: I am a
'choolteacher. Last year I
had a brief affair with a
much older. married man .
He wa.s the principal of my
school. I was deepl y in lo ve
Wi lh him and really to leave
my hu sband to be with him .
However. I got cold feet and
chose to )lay 'in my marriage. alt hou gh it had been
le'&gt; than perfect fo r years.
I confessed everything 10
my husband. and then told
the principal my deci sion . I
haven' t seen him &gt;i nce.
I t'ee l an overpowering
need to apologize to my
lover for what I did to him .
You see. I lied and led. my
hushand and the schonl
board to believe that I had
been taken adva ntage of. I
called him a "sexual predator" who had forced me into
the affair, and he was forced
to resi gn from the school.
Abby. he did not take
adv;mtage of me . I kne w
exactly what I was doing . In
fact. I still ha ve stron g feel ·
in gs for him .
Please tell me what I can
do to set the record straight
and • find
peace.
REMORSEfUL IN THE
U.SA
DEAR REMORSEFUL:
II won 't be easy. Begin hy
telling your hu sband the
tru th , Next. write a letter to ·
the school board and tell
them exactly what you have
told me. That will "set the
record straight. " Your cl ergyperson will have to help
you find peace, because you
have a lot to atone for. Please
don't wait.
Remember, the longest journey starts with a single step.

DEA R ABBY: I am a 24~ear-o ld. "av-at -homc mom
with I'.IO beaut iful little
girl\. My younge't da ughter.
"Tanya." i' 5 and , uffer'
from 'eizures and mental
probl ems. I feel I'm not a
good moth er because her
condition con,u mes me an&lt;.l
all I eve r do is cry. I told my
husband. "Steve. " that I
wou ld like to look IIlio
putting Tan ya in a group
home. but he adamant! y
refuse&gt; . Steve &gt;ays we "ill
'eparate before that happens.
I Jove my hu &gt;band and
my child. but I feel I'm going
crazy. I have no life. We've
spoken to profe &gt;l ionah.:
nothing they sugges ted i&gt;
helpful. Steve 's mother
promi sed to help. but ' he
makes excuses as to why she
can't watch Tanya, I'm u'ut of
ideas. What should I do? I
have to save my samty. -ALONE AND CONFUSED
IN TEXAS
DEAR ALONE AND
CONFUSED : It appears you
are 'hnu luering all the
res pon si bility for Tanva.
Howe ver. yo u also have
your olde r child to consider.
If you are a basket case. vou
will be un able. to pa;ent
either child properly.
It's time to talk to Tanva\
doctor about what opt(ons
are available -- . re,pite care
to take so me of the stra in off
you. or a group home for
your child . Do not give in to
your husband's blackmail.
He can't care for her by himself. and hi s mother ba s
already proven she won 't
step in. Please take care of
yourself.. By doing so, you'll
be doing the right thing for

Dear
Abby

both yo ur daughter,.
DEAR ABBY: My wife
and I ha ve a wonderful relationsh ip . We have see n both
good and hard time s durin g
our 30 years toge ther. My
problem is our sex life died
about two years ago.
I lo ve my wife dearlv, I
don 't want t(J hun her. but I
' till have physical need,
despite having had a stroke.
a heart attack. four bypa,-.e,
and arthritis. I ha ve abo
been disabled since 19 88
due to a back injury.
Abby. what can I do ' Mv
wife know' how strong rn;
sex drive is. but she will no
longer try· ;!nylhi ng sexual
Please help
STI LL
SLEEPI NG 10NLY I II\
THE SAME BED
DEAR STJ'LL SLEEPING : Ha ve a frank talk " 'ith
your wife . She mav be afraid
that sex could en d~ nger your
health . If that's the case .
have your doctor rea~~u re
her it is safe. If that's nol the

problem . ' he ' hou ld have
her hormone le1 els checked.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren. al'o
kno wn a., Jeanne Phill iP'·
and wa&gt; founded bv her
mother. Pauline Ph-i llips
Wnte Dear Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles.
CA 90069.
,

Named to
Who's Who
POMEROY -~ Tamara
BisseJ.I of Pomeroy, Tricia
Congo of Long Bottom and
Whitney Swnmerfield of Little
Hocking are among 62 students named in the 2004edition
of Who's Who Among
Students in American Junior
Colleges. They were selected
as outstanding campus leaders
from
Washington State
Community College, based on
their academic achievement,
service to the conmmnity, leadership in extracuniculru; activi ties &lt;md potenti&lt;~ for continued
success.

Celebruting spedal
days with you!
Sunday Times-Sentinel
740-992-2155

McKay birth
announced

the Meigs Museum at 7 p.m.
Monday (tonight) by y Becky
Baer.
Family Consumer
Sciences age nt and Linda
King,
Family
Nutrition
RACINE - Melody L
Program assistant of the Meigs Lawience and James Charles
McKay of Basham &lt;mnounce the
County Extension Office.
Baer and Kin g will be birth of their daughter. Kristin
offering h,int s .to help make Lorraine McKay. born on Aug.
holiday planning easier and 21 at O'Bieness Memorial
will demonstrate recipes thai Hospital in Athens. She weighed
6 pot•nd~. five ounces.
are easy to prepare.

Keeping .
Meigs
County
informed

Parkers vacation Chevalier birth
announced
in Florida
REEDSVILLE - Victor and
POMEROY - Margaret
Tracey Chevalier of Reedsvile
and Leland Parker have announce the birth of a son.
returend from a vacation in Dylan Lee Allan. on Oct. 31 at
Florida with her sister and Camden Clark Memorial
broth~r- in - law. Blanche and
Hospital in . Parkersburg. He
weighed
8 pounds. II ounces.
Jim Cook at Brooksville. and
her brother and sistei: in -law. · Mr. and Mrs. Chevalier have
Eugene and June Windland at three other children. Nicole. 9.
·
Katelyn. 4. and Taylor. 2.
Seminole. Fla. A highlight of
Grandparent s are Roger
their trip was getting to watch and Sheila Westfall and
dolphins in their natu ral habi- Vi ctor Chevalier. Reedsville,
tat in the bay ai Seminole .
and the late Grace Chevalier.

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992-2155

:. COMMUNITY HEALTH FAIR-

"Living Life With 1J·iabetes"
• Friday, November 21, 2003

• ·10 a.m.· to 2 p.m. ·
• Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
• Multi-purpose Room
• Public is cordially invited

Vendors,
FRiE Healthcare ScreenJngs,
. .. '
Educational lhformation, . ,
,
Promotional Items &amp; Door
Prizes
\
'

'

'

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel ·
..

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
'

-TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Nov. 17. the 32 1st day Jf 2003. There are
44 days left in the year.
.
Today 's Highlight in History: On Nov. 17, 1800, Congress
held it~ first session in Wash ington in the partially completed
Capitol.
·
On this date: ln 1558, Elizabeth I asce nded the English
throne upon the death of Queen Mary.
In 1869, the Sue!' Canal op·ened in Egy pt.
_
In 19 17, sculptor Auguste Rodin died in Meudon, France .
.In 1925, ac tor Rock Hud so n was born in Winnetka, Ill.
In 1934, Lyn~on Baines Johnson married Claudia Alta
Taylor, better known as "Lady Bird."
. In 1962 , Washington's Dulles International Airport was
dedicated by President Kennedy.
In 1968,' NBC-TV outraged football fans by c utting away
from the closing minutes of a New York Jets-Oakland Raiders
. game to begin a TV special, "Hei di," on schedu le. (Viewers
were deprived of seeing the Raiders come from behind to beat
the Jets, 43-32. )
. In 1970, the Soviet Union landed an unmanned, reniote. controlled vehicle on the moon , the Lwwkhod l.
In 1973, President Nixon told As~ociatcd Press Managing
. Editors meeting in Orlando. Flu.: "People have got to know
. whether or not their president is a crook. Well , I' m not a
crook."
In 1979. Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini ordered the release of
I 3 fema le and black American hostages being held at the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran.
Ten yea rs ago: By a surprisingly wide margin of 234 to 200,
the House of Represen tatives appro ved legislation implernenting the North American Free Trade Agreement in what
was seen as a major political vic tory for President Clinton .
Five years ago: The publ ic got to hear Monica Lewinsky 's
voice for .the fi m time as the House Judiciary Committee
released 22 hours of tape record ings secretly made by Linda
Tripp. Ismel's parliament overwhelmingly approved the Wye
River laml-for-peace accord with the Palestinians. Actress
Esther Rolle died in Cul ver City, Cali f., at age 78.
One year ago: Abba Eban, the statesman who helped persuade the world to approve creation of Israe l and dominated
~ .J srae li diplomacy for decades, died near Tel Av iv; he was 87.
Today·s Birthday s: Olympian-t urned-politici an Bob
Mathias is 73. Singer Gordon Lightfoot is 65. Movie director
Martin Scorsese is 61 . Act ress Lauren Hutton is 60. Actordirec tor Danny DeVito is 59. "Saturday Night Live" producer
Lorne Michaels is 59. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Tom Seaver is
,9. Movie director Roland Joffe is 58. Former Vermont Gov.
floward Dean is 55. Actor Stephen Root is 52. Actress-producer-director Yolanda King is 48. Actress Mary Elizabeth
Mastrantonio is 45. Actor William Moses is 44. Entertainer
. . RuPaul is 43. Actor Dylan Walsh is 40. Actress Sophie
· . Marceau is 37. Actress-model Daisy Fuentes is 37. Rhythm. and-blues singer Ronnie DeYoe (New Ed ition ; Bell Biv
DeYoe) is 36. Rhythm-and-b lues musician Jeff Allen (Mint
Condition)
is 35. Actress Les lie Bibb is 30. Actor Brandon
.,
Call is 27. Country singe r Aaron Lines is 26. Rock musician
Isaac Hanson (Hanson) is 23. Ac tor Justin Cooper is 15.
··.Thought for Today : "I am not afraid of tomorrow, for I have
seen yesterday and I ·lave today." -· William Allen White,
American journalist ( 1868- 1944 ).

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PageA4
Monday, November 17,

2003

I've always had a soft spot
for the Cleve land mayor
who. near! y 40 years ago.
after a Beatles concert in his
fair city ended in mayhem,
banned all rock concerts
from public venues. The reason? Rock music, he said,
"did not contribute to the culture of the city and tended to
incite riots." The words
sound fantastic now, but once
reflected a popular belief that
rock music was a cultural and
moral menace that would
undermine ... well , our cuiture and our morals.
The fact that he was correct
did little to thwart the march
of history that led straight to
the front door, some 30 years
later, of Cleveland's own
shimmering rock 'n' roll
museum -- the I.M . Peidesigned, $92-mi llion complex built to enshrine the
memorabilia of a. musical
movement that, from the far
side (i.e. losing side) of the
· cultural divide, is notable for
having brought free love,
hallucinogenic drugs ancL a
retlexi ve anti-American ism
to all us masses.
Andras Simonyi, Hungary's
ambassador to the United
States, sees something more
in rock 'n' roll -- and something more palatable to premodern Cleveland and the
rest of Square America.
Simonyi, who represents as
stalwart an ally as any the
Uni ted States has in "Old
Europe," recently visited the
rock museum to give what
USA Today described as "a

Diana
West

major address" on his conviction that rock 'n' roll was "a
decisive element" in vanquishing
communism.
"When we were listening to
the radio, we ,were part of the
free world, if only for a few
moments, whether the system
' we lived under liked it or
not," the 5 1-year-old ambassador told the newspaper,
recalling his youth under the
communist dictatorship in
Hungary that collapsed in
1989. "Rock and roll, tulturally speaking, was a decisive
element in loosening up communist societies and bringing
them closer to a world of
freedom ."
It's hard to know which constituency would be more distressed by Simonyi's formulation: Square America, thinking that the culturally degrading force of rock music had
aided in the West's triumph
over communism, or the Rock
Culture, thinking that its antiestablishment mantras had
furthered the Cold War strategies of Ronald Reagan.
In his 1996 book "A Tale of
Two Utopias" (W.W. Norton,
1996), left-wing journalist
Paul Berman touches on this

latter dilemma, relating the
obvious dismay and unresolved confusion the Rock 'n'
Rnll Left experienced amid
unreservedly pro-American
crowds in post-communist
Europe. He quotes a nonplussed Frank Zappa telling a
I990 audience of newly liberated Czechs that just as
they have been living with
secret police, "it will take
Americans a while to realize
that we have them, too."
(Huh?) Berman himself goes
to extravagant lengths to dismiss a sea of waving
American flags in a Czech
town as a joke. It's no stretch
to imagine the di sappointment both men would likely
feel over Simonyi's high
regard for, say, Edward
Teller, the Hungarian emigre
Strategic
Defense
and
Initiative-hero of the Reagan
administration, who was, as
Mr. Simonyi recently noted,
considered by communist
(and
liberal
Hungary
Americans) to be "public
enemy No. 1," but is now
thought of as a national hero.
The American Left's failure to understand that there
are people in this world who
prefer freedom as championed by the U.S.A. to any
workers' paradise isn't the
only key point to have been
lost in translation. As the
Cleve land Pl ain Dealer
reported, all those years
Simonyi and his chums were
li stening to rock 'n' roll ,
muth of it anti-American in
spirit, they never knew the

.

TOLEDO (A PI - 'fhc city
has lost nearl y $3 mi llion
over 13 years from a loan program meant to attrac t businesses and create jobs. The
Blade reported on Su nd ay ..
About a quarter of I he nearly $12 mill io n loaned to 160
busi nesse~ will neve r be
repaid. acco rding to the newspaper' s anal ysis of &lt;.: ity documents. The rev iew also fou nd
evidence of poor record keeping. including unsigned docu c
mcnt s. verb~] agreements nut
committed to paper and other
errors that have cost the cit y
thousands of dollars.
"The program kind of
re minds me of the Clint
EaSiwood mov ie 'The Good.
the Bad irnd the Ug ly' ...
Counci lman Pete Gerken said.
Among businesses that
failed to repay loans are a
shutte red pub that received
$40,000 and a failed craf'ts
salesman who owes the city
$38,000. The Blade reported.
Perhaps the most spectacu lar bust was manu facturer
Stewart Peterson Industries.
which defaulted on $350,000
in loans granted in 1992.
Before it closed, it paid the
city j ust $7 .7 85, or rough ly 2
cents on the dollar.
Former
Mayor
Carty
Finkbeiner, a Democrat elected
to the fi rst of two tem1s in 1993.
defended the program. saying
risk-taking is sometimes necessary to help small businesses .
His adminisu·ation issued more
than I00 of the loans.
"We ha ve to be cautious
but we also know that every
median or -large successful
business started as a tledgling
business." he said.

Sending a message on sexual harassment

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• •

0'fAHLER·
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2003 by NEA, Inc.

:

LETTERS TO THE
EDITbR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
. be less than 300 words. All letters are subject to
. :' editing and must be signed and include address
' and telephone number. No unsigned letters .will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
. addressinx issues, not personalities.
;' The opinions expressed in the column below
l are the ·consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
•' Co. editorial board, unless otherwise noted.
,,

s

"

"

--··- .

~·"'·~ · - ·-,

...........

Joan
Ryan

Health took its argument to
the Supreme Court. It is a
rational
argument. The
department says the state's
zero-tolerance law is not fair
because it holds employers
responsible for harassment
they didn't know was happening. They say employees
should be responsible for
reporting harassment in a
timely manner so the company can address and correct
the situation before being hit
with a lawsuit.
But · such a reasonablesounding procedure doesn't
play out so neatly in real
harassment situations.
It would shift the balance
of power toward businesses
and away from victims even
more than it already is. The
burden would be on the victim not only to prove the
harassment, .which often pits
the word of a low-level
employee against a supervi. sor. The victim .would also
have to prove she reported
the harassment to the right
person in a timely fashion.
The court would be left to
figure out who's telling the
truth: She says she told the
boss, the boss ~a&gt;'s she didn't.
If there is no evtdence of the

____ .... ........,.., . ... . ... .. ,
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report, the vict im can't sue.
"The real prOblem is there
would be no remedy then,"
said Shelley Gregory, an
attorney with the Legal Aid
Society-Employment Law
Center in San Francisco.
"You have to make employers responsible as a deterrent
(to sexual harassment) and to
provide a remedy to an
employee who has suffered
losses."
Says Charlotte .Fishman of
Equal Rights Advocates, "If
you don't have the courage to
buck the system and report it,
you can't go to the courts. If
the Supreme Court rules
against McGinnis, it will
mean a significant weakening
of the state law."
The point of a sex ual
harassment law is to stop sexual harassment. So the question is, how do you fashion a
state law that's going to maximize
yo ur
chances?
California legislators decided
the best way was to make
employers responsible for the
behavior of their supervisors.
(Employers are not as culpable in harassment between
co-workers.) The threat of
punishment gives employers
strong incentive to train and
monitor supervisors, and
most important, to set a tone
throughout the company that
harassment is not tolerated.
Attorney
Christopher
Whelan, who represents
McGinnis, has been involved
in harassment suits for 20
)'ears. l-Ie agrees that in a perfect world, a victim' could
present the facts to her supervisor's boss and the problem

,.
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would be promptly rectified.
But the boss might not be
eager to admit that he made a
bad hire or that he did a poor
job of managing him. The
two might be golfing buddies. The relationships might
be so complex, and run so
deep, that the only safe place
for a victim to find relief is in
a courtroom.
·:If employers are allowed
excuses (to avotd prosecution), they're going to take
them," Whelan said . "They'll
say (to the victim), 'You didn't report it soon enough, or
loud enough, or frequently
enough.' The onus would be
on the employee to follow
policy x, y and z stuck in
some employee handbook
somewhere."
Yes, California's current
sexual harassment law is
stricter than almost any other
m the country. But in a state
that so easily shrugged off
credible harassment allegations agamst the winning
gubernatorial candidate, the
last thing our Supreme Court
should be doing is softening
the law. We need a reminder
that in the messy soup of
power and humiliation and
betrayal that makes sexual
harassment so confusing for
people, one 'thing should be
clear: There must be zero tol-erance, from our courts and
from the man who is our governor.
•(Joan Ryan is a columnist
for the San Francil·co
Chronicle. Send comments to
her in care of this newspaper
or send her e-mail at joanryan@sfchronicle.com.)

MINERSVILLE - .Thelma "Stub" Hawley. 94, of
Minersville, p•Mcd from this life on earth to eternity in heaven on Thursday, November 13, 200J at Saint Mary\
Hospital in Huntington W. Ya.
Thelma was born on April II . 1909 in Minersville. to the
late Edith Leona and Jame' Sylve,tcr Hood . She was a 25year employee of Elberfeld's Department Store in Pomeroy.
She was a member of the E.U. B. Church in Syracu se and the
Asbury United Methodist Church , also in Syracuse. She followed Christ's example by dedicating her life to doing for others. She loved to cook and served her homemade noodle&gt;, pres
and buns to all thut came to visit.
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death hy her husband, Chris Edward Hawley : a son James (Jimmy) Hawley: a
sister, Lillian Smith: a sister and hrother-in-law. Alma and
Byron Hysell ; a brother-in-law. Harry K. Clark : three broth·
ers. Ja mes. Paul Allen. and one .&lt;till -born : a cousin who made
his home with her. Merle Bath: an uncle. Clifford Hiller, and
u son-in-law. Larry Bail ey.
.
.
She is survi ved by four daughters: Betty (Dtck) Ash. of
Syrucusc. Mur~aret. Ann (Don ) Dailey of Chillicothe. Elan.1e
(Mick) Miller of Middleport. and Sharon (Harold) Johnson of
Minersville: a dau ghter-in- law. Lois Haw ley ~ ~ Pomeroy. a
sister and nephew, Eileen Clark and Maurrce Smrth of
Minersville, many gramlchiltlr~ n . great-grandchi ldren. greatgreat-grandchildren. ni eces, nephews. and specral frrend &gt;.
Harold i111d Lcra Jone,.
Fu)leral services wi ll be he ld at I p.m. Monday. Nove mber
17 al the Ewin o Funeral Home in Pomeroy wit h the Pastor
B~b Robinson ~md Pastor B. J. Dailey, her grandson. of
Chill icothe. officiating.
The f&lt;tmi ly wil l receive friends on Su nduy from 5 to 9 p.m .

Report: City loses $3
million from loan program

-.
Arnold Schwarzenegger
ought to attend the sexual
harassment training required
of all hired state employees.
It would send the message he
failed to send during his campaign: That he takes sexual
harassment seriously and that
it will not be tolerated on his
watch.
Despite the focus on sexual
harassment
during
the
Clarence Thomas hearings 12
years ago and more recently
during
Schwarzenegger's
campaign, we're still trying to
figure out how to keep it from
huppening and what to do
when it does.
These are the questions
before
the
California
Supreme Court right .now in
the Theresa McGinnis case.
McG innis · sued
the
California Department of
Health Services after longtime physical and verbal sexual harassment by her supervisor. Her supervisor repeatedly asked sexually explicit
requests. She feared retaliation if she reported the
harassment because she felt
her supervisor, a longtime
employee, had many friends
in upper management. She
knew he had worked in the
state Office of Civil Rights
with the people who would
be investtgatmg charges of
harassme nt. She told coworkers about her supervisur's behavior, and they told
her she might not be believed
and would be labeled a troublemaker in any case.
When an appeals court
ruled in favor of McGinnis,
the State Department of

PERSPECTIVE: Fish fight over'in-J1ouse ·

Thelma Margaret Hawley

meaning of the lyrics. As
Simonyi put it, "Most
Hungarians didn't understand
what these guys were singing
about. The rc.. l power was tn
the music." Indeed, Simonyi
titled his talk "Rocking for
the Free World," a play on a ·
1989 Nei 1· Young song,
"Rocking in the Free World"
-- a tune USA Today notes is
"a s.avage attack on the policies of Ronald Reagan and
the first President Bush ...
(and) anything but a celebration of democracy."
, This is not to discount
Simonyi's ex perience. But it
does suggest th at just as
beauty is in the eye of the
beholder, so, too, is prodemocracy boosterism in the
ear of the listener. Frankly,
it's hard ~o imagine Jimi
Hendrix , John Lennon or
Jani s Joplin -- a few of
Simonyi's old faves -- relishing a supposed role in helping the military-industrialcomplex, assorted capitalist
pigs and the rest of
"Amerika" win one for the
Gipper.
Not that they did. really.
While rock music has been a
strangely alluring symbol of
Western culture, its narcissistic and destructive hedonism was never- enou gh to
destroy comm uni sm. That
took democratic ideals and
will --simple, enduring and
uni versal.
(Diana West is a columnist
for Th e Wa shington Times.
She can be contacted via
dicmaww @a//global.net.)

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Obituaries

A tale of two rock 'n' rolls

The Dailv Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

M;onday, Noveml)er •.7•.~003

In 1990. citv leaders starfed
the program to help businesses get off the ground. To make
risky loans more palatable to
banks, the cit y wou ld loan up
to a third of the money needed
for a proiect at low interest
rates. typicall y 4 percent.
If the company fai led. it
wo uld repay the banks· loans
bet&lt;Jre the city's loans. The
city used as seed money
some of it s yearly hlock
grant s from
the U.S.
Department of Housing and
Urba n Development.
In annual reports to the federal age ncy, the city said the
program was helping to create
or re tain thousands of jobs.
The ci ty's loan monitoring
required each app licant to say
how many jobs it expec ted to
make or retain and to file
periodic job creation reports.
However, The Blade found
that 40 percent of the companies
never filed the reports. The
. newspaper also estimates that,
tor every tive jobs the city hoped
to create, onl y three exist today.
· Records provided by the city
to The Blade also fail in many
cases to show how a committee of bankers voted on loan
requests. The committee
included representatives from
area banks, most that were
granting loans to the same people seeking loans from the city.
Despite its criti cs, the program has helped dozens of
busi nesses get of the ground ,
and some have flouri shed .
In 1999, the c ity loaned
Acklin Stamping $ 150,000 as
part of a multimillion dollar
loan package. At the time the
company had 2 1 employees;
it now has 75 people.

Sisson
from Page A1
memory is li ving on East Main Street. overlooking the river. and sitting on the front
porch. I can re member sitting on the porch
and li stening to the crickets and locusts 111 the

COLUMBUS. Ohio (APJ
- The Legi,lature &lt;,ecm&gt;
ready to adopt the &gt;mall mouth bass as the officral
&gt;tate fi&gt;h , after .years of
throwing &gt;Uch bill; back in
the lake .
If the Senate approve1 Pre&gt;ident Doug White 'ays
he'll pu'h for it - the smallmouth will finally have tnumphed in its fight with the
walleye to join such symbols
as the ladybug (state msecl),
the black racer snake (state
reptile) and "Hang On
Sloory" (s\~te rock song).
The offtctal -f"h frght
began in the I?80s ".:hen the
smallmouth tnbutc hrst was
proposed. Downstate lawmakers loved the tr sh.but 1t
mn,.up ag,unst the walleye
lobby. led by then-Senate.
Pres1dent Paul Gri i ~nor of
C hnt~m on Lake E~r e,
,md other l&lt;tkeshore l awmc~kers.
"Gillmor was asked bv the
press ahout the smallniouth
hill. He said it was going to
Jrop dead unless the walleye
was substituted for it," forPre sident
mer
Senate
Richard Fi nan, a Cinci nnati

Republican , 'aid Friday.
Ever since, lawm ake"
could count . on at lea' t one
state fish brll per two-year
;e~sion, and rh e 'P''""H'
cou ld count on their demi;e.
However. late Thur;day night
the Hoose approved a compromise between the ;mallmouth
and walleye camp&gt;.
Rep . Tonv Core , a
Ru shsylvania' Republican
who.1e district includes the
eastern shore of Grand Lake
St. Mary.\. sponsored an
amendment to a bi ll authorizing li cense plate s that
honor zoos . The amendment
would make the smallmouth
the official fi,h .
However, it included a
provision sponsored by Port
Clinton Democrat Chm
Redfern to authorize a special license plate proclaiming Lake Erie the "wal leye
capital'' _ and the compromise was born. It passed the
House 88-3 and was sent to
the Senate.
White,
a Manchester
Republican. said he wou ld
support its . passage out of
respect for Core's fa ther. the
late Rep. Ed Core. who

;on

pushed for the . 'mallmouth
when Wh rte wa' 111 the Hou..e.
"There \ ,everal ofu1 o~er
here who 'eneJ wrth Ed.
Certain!) I will tr) to mm ~
it in the memory of i l good.
friend.'' White ,a rd .
Finan. informed that the
bill had cleared the House.
harled "another of our g lor~;
ou1 1tring of &gt;tate 1ymbol&lt;..
Finan had littl e tolerance
for \tate 1ymbol s and 'pecial
licen'e plate,, \ay ing \ uch
bill&gt; tied up the valuable
time of legi1latofl .
"My favorite one is the
state ,nake. I ahva) s rhou ght
we should put in an amendment that the state farm
implement wou ld he the hoc.
because the farmer woul~
need rt to krll al l the , nake,.
Finan said w-ith a chu..:klc .
He also felt rece nt . addi·
tions. such as the state r111·ertebrate fossil 1hot elu s) or
the wrldllower ii&lt;Jrgc whrk
tri lli um ) trivialit.ed the original symbols . The \carlet carnation was adopted a' the
1 1
b 1 · 1'10'
state I ora sym o 111
_
and the card mal became the
state bird in 1933.
Redfern - one of th e

three ."no" vote s - said he
got tired of de lendmg the
wa lleye_ aga1111t "a gr~at _de~!
ul 1mear' and propaganda
put out for the mem~r&gt; by
the 'ma llmouth lobby.
..
"I ..a1d to. Tony about SIX
months ago. It you want l? we
can have a compronme . He
-,;ud he appreCiated !~ and we
could put It together, Redfern
laid. "'' ve come to the conclu;ion that we uughr to ~e a
bad 1ituauon a brt hetter.
Core drd not return a call
seekinF comment. _
Redf ern sard profits from
the sale of the 'pecra l plates
- about ~250.000 a year is
anticipated - wrll go to the
Oh1o Sea Grant Ex.tem1on
program\ Stone Island latx!rato ry at Put-In-Bay. whrch
offer' ci&gt;llege-level_cour'"'
in marine conserva11on .
Redlern_ call s the small mouth a fr gh~er that helps to
drav. anglers toumt dollu"
to Ohio. though not as much
money a' the walleye draws.
Wallc:e 1arh should note
h h
d
11
t at 1 c state rccor sma muuth - 'J pound1. K ou~ces
- wa' . caught amo ng the
v. alleye rn Lake Ene .

Identity thief to be examined for multiple personality disorder
CLEVE LA ND (AP) - A
judge has delayed 'the sentencing of a former school
lib rarian conv rcted of stealing a dcaJ woman's identity
umil a psychiatrist can determine whether she ·suffers
fmm multiple personality
Jisorder.
Last month. jurors con·
victcd a woman who prose·
cu tors say is Elizabeth
Roberts. 52. of Cleveland an ex-convict who sto le the
identity
of Charmaine
Woods. then appare n ~l y
\:ame to believe the charade.
Roberts lit first was ruled
incompetent to stand trial.
But followin" a brief stay at
a mental he~lth clinic, she
was convicted on three
counts each of foroery and
using forged docum~nts, one
cou nt of identit y theft and
one count of tampering wit h
records.
Last week, a judge ordered
a psyc hiatri c exam ination
before her se ntencing. She
faces one to five years in
prison and up to a $10,000
fine .
Since a fingerprint check
showed her true identity
when she sought a promotion two years ago , and
throughout her trial , Roberts
has insisted she is Woods.
Prosec utors have said
Roberts took over her
Columbus classmate's identity to become a teac her,
because state law prohibits
felons from teaching.
A review of Roberts' complicated li fe by The Plain
. Dealer shows the women 's
families moved to the same
neighborhood in Columbus.
Both dropped out of high
school in 1968; Roberts
because she Wi!S pregnant,

Woods because she had
rheumatic fever.
.
. Woo~s dr ed of the til ness
111 January 1969 at the same
hospital_ where Robert s had
g1ven br rth four months earlier.
Roberts moved to Summit
County, married and went to
prison in 1978 for welfare
fraud . Over the nex l 15
years. records show she took
on several rdenut res before
prosecutors say she settled
on Woods.
Usrng
that
identi ty.
Roberts graduated Irom
Kent State Universit y in
1995 . Cleveland sc hools
hired her as a hbranan 111
1996: she worked at five
schools over seven years.
Teachers and students
complained of her beha vior.
She reportedly cursed at
chtldren ·and somet rmes took
therr shoes as pumshment. '
She insisted officials were
wrong an~ twrce sought !~de­
pendent lrngerprmt venltcation from a ~rivate company.
After the frrst application
again showed the prints were
Roberts', she submitted a
second set that didn't match.
Investigators said they later
learned Roberts had a mentally drsabl~d woman supply
the fingerpnnts.
Later,
burn s
made
Roberts' prints unreadable.
Court records show that
during the early 1990s.
Roberts sought ment al
health coun selin g for a mul tiple personality disorder.
Co urt
records
show
740-753·3400
MOVIES

Roberts - '""'un g she was
Woods - told .court psycho.logtst George Schmedlen
111
March . that couldn t
remember much of her life _.
She sa id she was born 111
Georoia and mnveJ to
Clevcland wit h an older man

who t&gt;cat her "' badly thar
'he l&lt;"t much of her men.lory 111 the late 1980s. She sard
she ..:ouiJn t remember her
education or the people who
rahed her. and appeared
confu 1ed h\ a television
news repon ;on her case

Coming Thursday...
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summertime, and being surrounded by all my
family. "
"We would just visil with each other. "
"Friends and fami ly are the most important
things in li fe to me," Sisson said. "Health is the
next important thing, and then fi nancial stabilit y would be a low third on the li st."
"I am what I am," she said. ''What you see is
what you get.''

'
Pomeroy, OH · • 992-3671

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PageA6

NATION •WORLD
Two Virginia courtrooms offer different Trade ministers meet to
views on men accused of murder
start negotiations on Free
Trade Agreement

The Daily Sentinel

CHESAPEAKE. Va. (AP)
- One sniper suspect says he
didn't do the crime. Lawyers
for the other say he shouldn't
be held responsible for it.
A jury in Virginia Beach was
to
resume
deliberations
Monday in the trial of John
Allen Muhammad. and consider Muhammad's own assertion that the evidence would
show he did not terrorize a
region for three weeks last fall.
In nearby Chesapeake. the
jury in the trial of 18-year-old
Lee Boyd Malva was expected to hear a much differe nt
approach Monday.
: Malva's lawyers told jurors
they would not suggest
a uthorities had the wrong
:man, but that he is innocent
by reason of insanity because
he was brainwashed by
:Muhammad , a 42-year- old
Army veteran he looked up to
as a father figure.
. Malva is charged in the Oct.
14, 2002, slaying of Linda
.Prank! in outside a Home Depot.
Muhammad is charged with the
Oct. 9, 2002. slaying of Dean
Harold Meyers at a gas station.
Muhammad and Malvo
each are accused of killing
more than one person in a
three-year period and terrori zing the Washington, D.C ..
re~ion in a bid to extort $10
m1Ilion from the government.
Jurors in Muhammad's trial,
which began Oct. 14, learned
relatively
little
about
Muhammad's personal life,
while Malva's attorneys stressed
the personal during their nearly
two-hour opening statement
Thursday, showing a photograph
of Malvo holding a Bible.
They described his unhappy
upbringing in Jamaica, with his
mother frequently leaving him
with relatives or strangers as she
moved around looking for work.
"They are really making a play
to save his lite" by planting the
idea, even before the sentencing
phase that would follow a conviction, that Malva was a child
who was manipulated," said
Andrew Sacks, a defense attorney who has handled prominent

Monday, November 17, 2003

Sniper suspect John Allen Muhammad is escorted back into
court after the jury made a request at th e Virginia Beach
Circuit Court 111 Virgmia Beach. Va,, Friday. The jury began
deliberations Friday. The jury asked the judge for tape player
so they could re-hear tape recordings entered into evidence.
(AP Photo)
.
murder cases in Virginia.
Sacks said it could be difficult for the dd'ensc to undermine what appems to be an
overwhel ming amou nt of evtdence against Mal vo. including
DNA and lingerprint evidence
and a confess ion to, police in
which prosecutors say Malvo
bragged about the shootings.
So. ·'even if that (insanity)
defense doesn't ily, it gives
them the opportunity to begin
sensitizing the jury to the human
side of their client,'' Sacks said.
That approacll could work,
uiven that the jury includes
~eve ral people wi th ties to
children . including a teacher. a
ret ired teac her. a re tired assistant principal and a lunchroom
monit or. sa id Donald H.
Smith. an Old Dominion

University sociology professor 1\'hO studies jury behavior.
The strategies of the defense
attorneys for the two suspects
differ outside court as well.
Muhammad 's
atto rneys
have said little to reporters,
while Malva's attorneys hold
daily news conferences.
Smith said his research has
shown that JUrors frequently
violate court instructions to
avoid li1edia accounts while a
trial is still in progress.
"I don 't mean to impugn
an y of these jurors" in the
Malvo case, Smi th said.
"They may be exceptional.
But my (eeli ng is that most of
these peo ple probably are
reading the newspaper, watching the news, going about
their lives as they usually do."

MIAMI (AP) - Trade
officials from 34 nations in
the Americas are · negotiating
de tai ls of the world's largest
free trade bloc, a · proposal
that wi ll likel y · determine
whetl1er local supermarkets
se ll beef from Brazil or
oranoes fro m Florida.
Agricultural tariffs and
subsidies are among the most
con tentious topics of discussia n for business offici.a ls
from across the Western
Hemisphere who on Monday
start three days of meetings
in Miami on a Free Trade
Agreement of the Americas,
or FfAA.
Brazil," which is co-hosting
this week's meeting along
with the United States, wants
the United States to reduce
or eliminate subsidies. quotas, tariffs and other barriers
that protect American farm ers. The United States says
agricultural issues should be
decided by the 146-member
· World Trade Organization.
Brazil stood up the United
States and Europe in
September, leading a group
of more than 20 nation s who
pushed for the elimination of
agricultural subsidies. Those
talk s collapsed with no
agreement, but many smaller
Latin American nations have
and
abandoned
Brazil
returned to a more U.S.friendly stance.

They
include
several
Ce ntral Amencan nat1ons, a
region. that as a . whole is
wrappmg up negottat10ns ?n
a free trade agreement wllh
the United States.
After the WTO talks collapsed, the Untted States
focused its efforts on negoti ating the FTAA, which it
hopes to have complete by
early 2005. The free trade
ag reeme nt wou ld eilmm ate
or reduce trade barriers
among all nations in the
Western Hem1sphere, except
Cuba, and ha ve a collect! ve
output of more than $ 14 trillion a year. .
Farm producers may have
the most to lose - or gam.
Florida orange. ~ row~rs have
opposed Brazil s e1fo1H to
lower U.S. tariffs on oran!\e
juice imports, while BraZil 1s
fi ghting to . remove U.S.
1mport restn ct10n s on 1ts
booming beef i n~u s try.
Many manufact urers 111
small . poorer nat1on s are
afraid they will be wiped out
by more powerful U.S. competitors.
.
Anthony Hosang, president
of Trinidad &amp; . Tobag o's
Manufacturers' Association ,
said many are jokin g that the
agreement should be called
the Free Trade Agreement
"for" America because many
believe the United States wi ll
walk away from the negotia-

Sunday at the St. James Theau·e,
as well as by telephone and on
the lntemet. Prices ranged from
$30 to $ 100. though a lnmted
number of tickets for the best
seats in the house were available for $480 each.
More than 39,000 tickets
had been sold by lhe time the
St. James box ottl.ce closed at
I 0 p.m. , the show s producers
told the Times. Internet and
telephone orders were still

'

'

tions with all the benefits.
The FfAA proposal is also
drawing criticism fron) anti-.
globalization activists. a motley mix of environmentalists
and union activists who plan
to stage street protests
throughout the week.
There are si gns that Latin
America won' t tolerate a deal
that doesn' t help the region
as a whole. During the lberoAmerican summit this weekend, Mexican President
Vicente Fox said he and the
leaders of Argentina, Brazil
and Ch ile would fight for an
agreement that would help
- not hurt - smaller Latin
American countries.
And Mex ico, whi ch has
more than 30 free trade partners, doesn 't seem to be in
any hurry to find new ones. ·
Economy
Secretary
Fernando Canales said last
week he was going to take a
break from seeki ng out any
more deals. Although he said
he is ..,.still _ interested in an
FfAA , bu SJ ness leaders have
complained that the di Zzy ing ·
pace of free trade negotiations have made it hard to
take full advantage of the
agreeme nts already sealed.
On the Net:
FTAA
confere nce:
htt p://www. miam iftaa 2003.co
Ill

Stop
th e
http://stopftaa.org

FTAA:

Keeping .Meigs County
.·
informed
'

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs. 992-2155

KICK OFF

'The Producers' breaks its own
Broadway box office records - again
NEW YORK (AP) - "The
Producers" broke its own
Broadway box office. record
the day tickets went on sale
for the limited-run return of
Nathan Lane and Matthew
Broderick to the show.
Sales on Sunday totaled $3.5
million as of 10 p.m.- the highest one-day take in Broadway
history, according to Monday
editions of The New York Times.
. Tickets went on sale at noon

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

THE

being taken after that time.
The musical - based on
Mel Brooks' 1968 movie of
th.~ same name - also .set the
previous one-day record for
Broadway sales , scori ng more
than $3 million the day after
it opened in April 200'1.
It remained Broadway 's
hottest tJcke! unt1l Brodenck
and Lane lett m March 2002.
Smce then, 1ts fortunes have
sagged.

HOLIDAY
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Monday, November 17, 2003

Labonte wins
race dominated
by Elliott
HOMESTEAD, Fla . (AP)
- A blown tir~ on the last
lap cost Bill Elli ott a second st raight victory and
gave Bobby Labonte the
win Sunday in the era-ending Winston Cup race at
H omestead-Miam i
Speedway.
Elliott had a dominating
victory a week ago at
Rockingha m and was eve n
stro nger in the Ford 400,
leadi ng 189 of 267 laps on
the reconfigured I 1/2- mile
Homestead oval.
He held off Labonte on a
restart nine laps (ro m the
end and pulled away, drivi ng into the first turn of
the last lap lead ing Labonte ·
by abo ut fi ve car- lengths
and apparently on the way
to an easy win.

As Elliott drove off turn
two on the track new ly
changed fr(lm a nearly flat
6 degrees of banking to 20
· deg rees, hi s Dodge wiggled
and slowed as hi s ri ght rear
tire' came apart. That sent
pieces of sheet metal and
rubber flying and ignited a
fire in th e whcclwcll.
Labonte, who stru ggled
early in the race and had
not led a lap al l da y, shot
past El li ott on the backstretch and beat runner- up
Kevin Harvick to the finish
line by 1.749 ' seconds half the front straightaway .
Thi s was the la st race for
R.J. Rey nolds Tobacco Co.
after 33 years as a major
spo nsor for NASCAR.
Be ginning
in
2004,
NASCAR 's top stock car
series will be spon sored by
Nexte l Co mmuni cations
and will be known as the
Nex tel Cup.

Redmen beat Shawnee State to claim Bevo title
BY BUTcH CooPER

bcooper@ mydaitytribune.com
RIO GRANDE - Bodies
tlyin~ th rough the air, players
bangmg under the boards and
literally lighting for the ball
in the pile of humanity.
Toss that . in wi th higher
than usual emotions and you
have the makings of a typical
Rio Grande/Shawnee State
battle.
Shawnee State, which lost
to Rio Grande when the two
teams last met ,during t~e
American
Mideast
Conference
tournament
game
in
championship
Portsmouth, has the core of
its team back.
The Golden Bears had the
size and experience advantage, but you can throw that
out the window as the
Redmen proved in their 5552 upset win over No. 14

Shawnee in the Bevo Franci s
Tournament championship
game.
"It was very physical. but
everytime we play Shawnee.
it is physical ," said Rio
Grande head coach Earl Thomas of Plummer. "He \
Thomas . "Last year, we had more athletic than about anythe bi g, strong bodies down body he's going to go against.
if\~ ide and physical was kind He 's just awful ly hard to
of our game . I was a little stop."
concerned with some of (our)
For the Golden Bears (2- 1).
new guy s not being quite as Adam Davenport 'cor~d 16
strong inside. I really liked points and Andre Horton netthe way our guys battled."
ted 14 poi nts. Delano
Sean Plummer. who was Thomas led Shawnee State
named tournament MVP, led under the glass wi th I 0
the Redmen (2- 1) with 20 boards.
points to go along with eight . The Redmen led 55-48 late
rebounds. Meanwhile, Cain in the game when Horton
Vandall had 13 points. connected on a pair of free
including three 3-point goals. throws.
·
while Matt Simpson scored
Ri o's Kri s Wilson then
eight points with three blocks mi ssed the front end· of a oneand Seth Deerfield grabbed and-one with 22 seconds left.
nine boards.
as Shawnee State got the ball
" He's got to be our go to back and made it a threeguy down inside," said point game on a Horton

Johnson backs up boast with 24-19 win over Chiefs
I

Meigs SK, race
November 29
ROCK SPRINGS - . The
Meigs cross country team
will be holding a 5K road
race beginning at "II a.m.,
Nov. 29, at Meigs High
School. ·'
The event is open to all
walkers and runners age six
and older with variou s
prizes being awarded .
. There is a $16 registration fee with proceeds
going to the Brandl Thomas
Memorial
Scholarship
Fund. The fund is used for
Meigs g'raduates who have
participated · in cross country or track &amp; field .
For more information,
call Meigs cross country
coach Mike Kennedy at
992-7552 (home) or 992- ·
3058 (work).

•

I ine and took it the rest of the
wav for a 77-vard score .
Rudi Johnso n ran for 165
yard' and Kifna lhrew two
C INC INNATI Pop the touc hdown pa"e' and avoided a
corks and make the toast. you game-tu rn ing
mi ~t ake.
a~
Dolphins. The perfect reco rd Cin cinnati positioned ;ihelf to
ts safe tnr o ne more season.
pull off the up,et.
Guaranteed.
The Bengal s' in,pircd defense
Cincinnati 's Peter Warrick made the difference. stuffing one
eclipsed Kansas Cit y's ce leb rat - of the NFL's most dangerous
ed playmakers with a 68-yaru teams until it wa, too late.
punt return and a 77 -yard touc hSmoke from fireworks duri ng
down catch. setting up a 24- 19 the Ben gals ' player introductions
victory Sunday that left the obscured the coin toss and stil l
Chiefs much less than perfect.
hung ove r the field at the kidTrying to become th e first off. For most of the game. the
team since 199~ to start I 0-0. the Chiefs· offen'e played I ike it
Chiefs instead unraveled aga1nst was in a fog.
the up -and-coming Bengals 15 Kansas Citv had tremendou s
5 ). who backed up their boast field positio1i for mo,t of the
and fini shed the day tied for fi rst game. but didn't ge t mo vi ng
in the AFC North.
until Warrick gave the Bengals a
Re ce iver Chad Johnso n - le ad big en&lt;;ugh to let their
who had repeatedl y guaranteed defense relax .
the victory - wa s in the train Tren t Green threw two touch er's room getting an intra venous down passes in the fina l seven
inj ection for cramps when minut es. the last one a 3-vard
Warrick made the b1 ggest play o1 to" to Jason Dunn wit h 3: !"9 to
the Bcngals · renaissance season . go. The Chiefs never got the ball
The victory mo ved them inlo a back .
first-pl ace tie with Baltimore in
Not e1·en e.xtraordinary kick
the AFC North. The Bengals ret urner Dante Hall could make
haven't been in con ten tion this a dent in the Bengals ' mome nlate in a season since 1990. the tum . In one telling moment. he
last time they had a winning drew a pena lt y for kicking the
record.
ball away angrily after a botc hed
Warrick . a top draft pick who return .
sy mbolized their 12 years of
Warrick. a top pick in 2000.
misery. pulled off the plays that fini shed with six catches for a
pulled them out of the malaise.
career- hi gh 11-1 ya rd S;. Chad
He made one cut and headed John son had seven catc he s for
upfield on a punt return ea rl y in 74 yards. and th rew the final
the fourth quarter, pullin g away block on Ru di Johnson 's 54-yard
from the pack for a 68-yard run in the game-ending drive .
score that made it 17-6. He
As Kitna took the snap to take
hoisted the ball in ce lebration a knee _in the closing seconds.
when he reached the 20-yard Chad Johnson stood on the field
line .
with hi s righ,t index finger raised
At that moment , members of and Bengals players doused head
the undefeated '72 Dolphins - coach Marv in Lewis on the side the NFL's only unl:!eaten team - line .
could get ready to . hoi.st their
The crowd of 64,923 - a
annual ritual and give a toa st to record for Paul Brown Stadium
their distinction.
- broke into one final cheer
Johnson was back in time to when Baltimore ' s 9-6 loss to.
see the clin ching score six min- Miami in overtime was shown
utes later. Warrick grabbed a on the scoreboard. meaning th~
long pass from Jon Kitna down improbable Bengals were back
the middl e, made a 360-degree in first place for the first time in
spin to shake tackler Eric
Warfield at the Chiefs' 44-yard I J years.

BY Joe KAY

Associated Press

:72

Eastern High
school season
passes available
EAST
MEIGS
Be ginning Monday from
8:30a.m. to 3 p.m., basketball passes will be availab le
for purchase in th e main
office of Ea stern High
School.
Senior citi ze n passes may
be purchased for the 20032004 basketball season for
$10. Seniors must have a
Golden Buckeye card and
be a re sident in the Eastern
Local School District to
qualify for the reduced
price pass which is good for
botli junior and high school
basketball.
The girls basketball pa ss~
es for adults for the season
are $30 and is good for all
~iri s basketball games. both
JUnior and senior high
school.
The boys basketball passes are $25 for the season
and are good for all boys
basketball games, both
junior and high school
level.
Athletic events for the
school year are $4 for adults
at both high school and~
junior high events, and $2
for students for hi gh school
events and $1 for students
for junior high events.

Shawnee State . though . bucket.
With 16 ,econd, . left. went on an 11 -0 run to take a
Vandall received the inbound · 1 ·ee-point advan tage .
A Simpson . 3-pointer with
pass. but was apparent ly
shoved out of bound,, but JU't a little over 10 mmute'
instead
Shawnee
State le ft 'napreu the · run and
,parked one for the Redmen.
regained pm.,ession.
That's when Rio Grande\ an 11 -2 ,erie' that helped Ri o
regain 'ome control of the
defense kicked.
Horton mi;,ed a 3-pointer l'.ame
·
attempt a' the 'econd\ ' Th~ clo'e't. the Golden
clicked away. but Thoma' got Bear' would ever come to
the rebound and disheu it out re gaining the lead came ·in
to Antwain Lavender. who the final 'econd' a' the
also mis,ed on hi' }-point Redmen picked up the big
' hot at the buzzer a' the wm .
Redmen held on for the win.
" It mean' a lot. e'pecially
"We didn 't finish quite the to a team that \ '" young a&gt;
way I would 've liked to. but \\ C are ... 'aiu Thoma' llf the
we held on and had a real• win . "Ju, t to prove we can
so lid defen sive po"e&gt;sion beat the people in the upper
that last 13 seconds.'' 'aid eche lon of our league and
people who are nationally
Thomas.
The Redmen tried to put ranked ...
Rio Grande hit·, the road
this game away earlier in the
second half "' they took a Jg. for the Oetiance Tournament
30 lead with a little over 16 beginning Friday.
minutes on the clock.

Cincinnati Bengals receiver Peter Warrick (80) is lifted In the air by Mike Goff (63)
after Warrick scored on a 77-yard reception against Kansas City, Sunday, in
Cincinnati. Cincinnati won, 24-19. (A~ )

Tucker leads Redwomen to Bevo title win over Bethel ·
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@ mydailytribune.com
RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande remained unbeaten
after turning in its most complete performance of the
early basketball season
Saturday night.
No . 20 Bethel was expected to be a tough match up for
Redwomen, but that turned
out not to be the case. Host
Rio Grande cruised to an
easy · 86-59 victory on the
final night of the Bevo
Francis Classic.
Rio Grande coach David
Smalley said he was pleased
with his team's play on both
the offensive and defensive
ends. "Tonight I thought we
brought both phas'es of our
l

game together, I'm really
"(Bet.hel) is a good basketexcited about what I saw ball team , they are well
tonight," he said. "This test' coached, very physical and
tonight, we passed with fly- aggressive,"
commented
Smalley. "That' s what we
ing colors."
Rio improved to 4-0 on the needed to see ri ght now - a
year as it now enters a diffi - team that could be really
cult three week stretch in the physical and aggressive with
schedule. The team will play . us and challenge us."
six straight road games,
Rio responded to that chalincluding trips to New York lenge. The Redwomen never
and Tennessee. before final- trailed in the contest and was
ly returning home to open up only tied once, . when the
conference
play
on · score was t_wo ap1ece.
.
A sohd hrst half shootmg
December 13 against Mount
Vernon Nazarene.
performance translated 'into
Conversely,
Bethel 's a 17-point lead at the break.
record evened to 4-4 with .That lead only swell ed m the
the . setback; the Lady second half, eventually balWildcats ' other losses came loaning to the final margm
.
.
to very · go0d teams in of 27 . .
Shawnee State, Cumberland
Once agam, the· R10 bench
College
and
Arkansas contributed greatly to the
Baptist. ·
cause. The .non-starters comMagenta

Black

bined for 46 points led by
Annie Tucker's 16.
Tucker averaged 9.5 points
and 4.5 rebounds per game
during the Bevo and was
named Most Valuable Player
of the classic for her efrorts.
Also making the All-Classic
team from Rio were Alkia
Fountain (8.5 ppg. · 5 rpg)
and Lauren Fox (7.5 ppg).
Tiffanie Hager scored 15
points on Saturday to go
along with her game-high
eight rebounds while teammate Tiffany Johnson ad~ed .
14 markers off coach
Smalley's bench.
Kala Morton, Becky
Hanks and Sharon Allen all
shared top scoring honors
for Bethel with eight points
apiece.
After the game, Smalley

'

spoke about some of hi s
team's goals for the season.
Two of those goals were met
as his Red women won the
rebounding battle (41-32)
and held their opponent
under 60 points . He also
talked abou t more long-term
goals.
"In the long run. we want
to win a national champi onship," he stated .. "We want
to put ourselves'in that position - it may be this year, it
ma~ be a year from now, b1,11
that s our ~oal and that 1s ·
what the k1ds are working .
towards."
The journey continues at
the Daemon College Classic
on
Friday
when
the
Redwomen face the host
Wildcats. Daemon is 3" I on
the season thus far.
' l

'·

�•
•

'' .
'

In Memory

mrtbune - Sentinel -

'

. '·..
..•.·.

ster

In Memory

CLASSIFIED

.•..

Nov. 17, 2003

Monday, Nov. 17, 2003

www.mydailysentinel.com

~tip

CHARLES
BARRETT

Cow11tr. OH

''

II 117111-211103

c~ul.l

artbune

To Place

counay, OH

(304) 675-1333
(7Or40)
992-2156
Fax To (740) 992·2157

·
7 40

0

Offtee llot&lt;P-~

Oearlgire&amp;&gt;

Word Ads

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
•.

Items

:~ r

,

ANNOUNCEIIIFRI'S 1

HELP WANfEil

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

,

KIT

r

GIVEA\'VA\'

lwright@ic.net

I

FOUNIJ

Fo und- 2 young Blue Tick
co"on hounds, Goose Creek
Rd . area, (740)698-7101
Found- small black case on
Bullernut.
ca ll
to
ID
17401992·3629
Found: Beagl e pu ppy in
Cente nar y area. Call to
id entify. Call (740)446-0 184.

Found: Male tricolored Need 7 ladies to sell Avon,
Beagle with trai ning collar Call 740-446-3356
Call (740)446·9303.

(ELDERLY CARE)
Care for your loved one.
Light cleaning, hot meals,
shopping, etc. CMA with
Excellent References.
1304)882-2766

organizations. Make up
to $8/haur plus benefits.
Full or part time
· sh ift s available.
Call today.
1·877-463:-6247 ext. 2454

Reward lost female German
Sheppard. Las t seen in West
Col umbia (304)773·5 t74

1· Shift or evenings. (304)549·

i ........--..

.

5696 Local

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Coi ns,
Silver,
Gold
Proofsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rings ,
U.S. Currency,M.T.S. Coi n Shop, 151
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
740·44 6·2842.
Honda 250. must run and be
atreet worthy. 74Q-245·5027.

I \ 11'1 I~' \ II "\ I
" I "\ I j I '-

1660 WEEKLY SALARY
po11lblt mailing ou r 11111
broch~Htl !rom homt. No
txptrltnct
ntcttllry.
FT/PT Cltnulnt O~portunlly.
9upplleo ~rovldtd , Including
CUitomer m«lling l1bt11. Call
1-108·688-1700 (24 houro).

A + Ctrtlrttd Ttchnlcltn

·

Part-Time
Com munity
Director. Organized, well·
motivated and outgoing per·
son needed t o manage and
implement the March of
Dimes West Virgi nia State
Chapter's
Walk-America
events in Pt. Pleasant. Job
begins on January 7 and
ends May 31: approll .. numb.. r of hours wlll .be 20 per
wee~ . Job can be wor~ed
out of your home; computer
ntclll&amp;ry.
Prlm•ry tkllll neceuary
Include ability to orgtnlzt
and prlortllzt: outgoi ng ptr·
tonality: experience In work·
lng wltl'l volunteer• : ttlf·
111rter who 11 prbactlvt. Job
hlllory ol li1111, IPICial
tvtnt management and/or
lundroll l"'l.
Stnd r11um11 lo Mindy
Smith, Stolt Olroctor, WV
Chopltr Morch of Olm11.
3508 Sttunton Ave .. Second
Floor, Charlteto n, WV
25~

needed for Full-time or Ptrt·
tlmt , drop off resume, at 303 Styllll noodod lull and pori·
Main Street. Pt . Plaaunt or ti me. Be your own bou .
Rent or work on comml118.&lt; (~)875-5283
alon. cnoae your own acnedA REALISTIC
ule. Call 740·446·4247.
OPPORTUNITY
Poraonol Touch
Learn To Earn

$10k+ permomnNo1
MLM
Training
Provided.
CA ll lor Info.
1-800-881-1 540 Ext. 3258

()

rto

=~M~O-U-ILE~H~O-M-E'i~
~~-~---..,
FUR SALE
~
Ho~
Hl\11'1111

rlO.

vinyl sid ing, Thermalpane
window, {740)985-4288

AU real estate advertlalng
In this new1paper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of t968
whleh makes it lllegallo
advertise "any
prelerence, llmlhltion or
discrimination bl!laed on
race, color, religion, lex
familial statui or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
prelerence, limitation or
discrimination."
Thlt newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertlnmentt for real
e1t1te Which II In
violation of thl 11w. Our
reeder. Ire hereby
lnfor!Md thai all
dwelllnga advertind In
thll MIWIPiper lr.
aYiillble on IM lqUIII
opportunity beNe.

I

SOCIAL BICURITY 1881?
No FH Union We Win I
1-888-582·3345

In Syracu11, 3 bedroom. 2
bath. ntw wlndowa, patio on
front. beaulllul cove rod deck
In back, 74~87-0874 or
740·591-8298

I SHOP CLASS·IFIEDS
•

New 2003 Doublewldt. 3 BR month rent , $400 aoeurlly
&amp; 2 Both. Only $1 6&amp;5 down do~ool l , no ~11 . llovt, lrlg.
end &amp;2&amp;5/mo. 1-800·591· &amp; dlohwothor, (740)848·
8777
7004

I

Hou11 for rent. 2 BR, CIA,
~ AND BUILDINGS • no Pill, 54&amp;0 plul dtpooll &amp;
utlll!l11. Call (740)448·431 3.
Comm trC Ia ii i nVtll men I Truelworlhy lomlly loo~lng
~ro~trty, 812 Seeond ovo .. for I home on larid contract
Clolll~ollo , Clrll! looollon. 4 or
to ronl then buy,
rtnltl unlti, $5,000 down, RtftrtnCel IVIIIIbll. 1•0·
land contract to ballnct. 448·3750 doy or 740·38&amp;·
Contact Jol'lnny AUIIIII ror 0496 -nlngo.
•

!,.• •

;::~~~~·

~
rio

Ill .._ I \ I "

Jlousml
IUR R£Nr

c M~~'!.O.:.\mj I
cvn .IV..I'II

2 bel. w/w carpet, air, porch.

Very nlct , no pete. ~n
Clalllpollo. 7•0·446·2003 or
74().446·1409.

12
bedroom
Bidwell,
Oh .
$300
+ depoelt
(740)367·
2 bedroom 14x70, near Clay
7015 or (740)367-7748
At
7 South .
achool
baiera 8pm.
(740)256·1664

~--------------------------~

f'.O_•H•~iiiii
Eiii1iiOi0ioL•U_.ll

1 and 2 bedroo m ap artments, furnished and unfu r- ..
nished , security deposit
required , no pels, 740.992- For sale Light green couch,
love sea t and rocker. $100.
2218.
(304)675·7929
2 bedroom apartment avail·
able in Syracuse, $200 Furniture &amp; household item
depos it, $315 per month for sale. (304)675· 2466
rent, rent includes· water,
Good Used Appliances,
sewer, trash, no pets, rental
Reconditi on ed
and
application, references and
Guaranteed.
Washers,
sullici ent, income to qualify,
Dryers,
Ranges,
and
(740)378-61 1'
Refrigerators, Some start at
2 Furnished sm all apart- $95. Skaggs Appli ances, 76
ments for rent. Living room . VIne St., (740)446·7398
kitchen, bedroom, &amp; bath.
Like New wheel chair. $150.,
$275. each all uti lities paid
Dinette Set . $100 .. Co nsole
except eleclric. (304)675- TV $50., Sofa bed &amp; chair
-13-65. , - - - - - - $50., 3 bar stoo ls $30.,
3 8R Ranch· LR. K. DR. Mi crowave $20., 25ft. Chest
bath, 1 car garage. 1 yr. freezer $50., Ca ll (304)675lease. dep. ref. $500 per 2933 after 6:30 or leave
message. All in Good condi·
month . (740)245·5 114.
lion .
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
IIENTS
AT
BUDGET Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
PRICES AT JACKSON Chape l Road, Por ter, Ohio
ESTATES, 52 Westwood (7 40)446-7444 1-877- 830Drive from $297 to $383. 9162. Free Es tima tes, Easy
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call financi ng, 90 days same as
Equal cash. Visa/ Master Card.
740-44 6·2568.
·
Drive- a- lit11e save alot.
Housing Opportu nity.
Gracious living . 1 and 2 bad room apa rtments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in M id dlepo rt.
From $276·$348. Call 740992·5064 . Equal Housin g
Opportunities

In Memory

LAB TECHNICIAN

""''P••perl

blade

15'

Ca rriage . good A.A. Tie
machine. Diesel Engi ne.
good cond ition . Phone
1740)286· 1309

r

WHITE 'S METAL
DETECTORS
Ron Allison
588 Watson road
Bidwel l, Ohio
(740)446-4336
BUD~ lNG
SUPI'Lif:~

Block , brick , sewer pipes.
windows , lintels, etc. Claude
Winters , Rio G rande, OH
Call 740-245-5121 .

r

I'F:Ts
IURSALE

Border Collie pups, Classic
markings, working , Imported
blood line. great Chris tmas
gil1(740)379·9110.
Norwelgn
Elkhound
Puppies 6 weeks old. $75
each. 4 mites south of Rio
Grande, off 325 Right on
Wolfe Ru n Road 1 :;t place
on the right at A&amp;A
Woodcrafts.

F'Rurrs&amp;

aPid dear to us,
TI1011,11h C,&gt;d ca/le.l
fOil aUJ(l)i.
I ~ftm 'it and rlri11k

of you a11d speak of
l10w ycm died.
To think J'O" co11ld
nor say goodbyr
&amp;jorr J'O" closed
J'OIIY eyes.

Yolfr weary hours
and days ofpain,
Yonr troubled nixhts
art past.Aud in my
aclriux heart I know
Y01' lttwe swe~•t rest
aJ last. 8111 sornt•
sweet day u.~'ll meet
again, hryorultl•i' toil
and strffr.i#'/1 clrlSJl
otlter's llaud tmce
IliOn" aud hmlt"
etLTtuU lifo.
b)• t~ 'ffi• Dom

dallghtt'T'-NiJnq: .stm.l \'•m1un1&amp;.familit..s.

Potatoes for sa te son $ 1o,
Mon-Sa t.,
65002
State
Route 124. Reedsville. Oh.

I \1( \1 ' ' 1'1 '1 11'
.\11\l "' ll lt h

I_

washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- Will pay $20 .00 each lor junk
tors , gas and elec tric or unwanted automobiles to .
ranges, air conditioners, and haul away. (740)992·0 4l3 or
wringer washers. Will do 740 992 _1071.
repairs on major brands iil

Room y 2 SR. 1 bllh,
onachtd goroge, 5400 ~tr
NIW AND UIID ITIIL
month, dlpooll &amp; 1 yr. ltllt,
Still Beam1, Plpt Rebar
roloronco. (740)245-5114.
For
Concrete ,
Angll,
Tara
Townl'louu Chonntl , Ftot hr, S1111
For · Orolno.
Aporlmtnlo, Very Spoclouo. Clrollng
2 Bodroomo, 2 Flooro, CA, 1 Drlvtwoyo &amp; Wolkwoyo . L&amp;L
Sore~ Mtlolo Opon Mondoy,
1/2 Botn, Newly Ctr~tltd, 1\i11d1y, Wtdnlldoy &amp;
Adult Pool &amp; Btby Ftool , Frldoy, 8om·4:30~m. Clo11d
Polio, Slorl $385/Mo. No
Thurodoy,
Soturdoy · &amp;
Pete, Ltlll Plul S:tcurlty Sundoy. (740)448-7300
Do~ooll Roqul rtd, Ooyo:
740-448·3481; Evtnlngo: Oak gvn ctblntt with drtw·
740·387-0502.
t r. $GO bought 01 E m~lro
Furniture, llkt new. Call
l'Win AIVIrt Towe r It acctpt· (740)446·2888
lng appllcauont lor walling
lltt for Hud·IUbtlzed, 1· br,
Office Furnlturt
apartment , call 875·6679 Ntw, scratch &amp; Dtnt.
EHO
Seve 70%. 1·800·527-4662
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street,
Wanted : Someone to share
QuyandoHa/Huntlngton. M/F
my large hon\a with. Located
south 325 near Rio Grande Sears Stair ~astir. Like
$300 and $150 deposit now. Make Ollor. (304)675·
(740)245-9844.
4027

I11 Memory ~f
NORMANM.
HYSELL
Orr His Britl1day
No••· 17, 1918
The angels arr s'!ftly
guarding a quiet and
silt•ut gnu~t;
For In it lies a
precious one
~loved but could
not 54we.,
11re tlzitr~s )'Oil
aluuys did for 11s,
I d1ink '1f &lt;'ll&lt;r)' da)•.
Thry keep yon nmr

Sad~• mi~tJ

VE:GEUHI .I:~

~cck ing

temporary

-l-0 Hr. workweeks antic.:iparcJ. Uvertnne may
be required. Must havt: ~ minimum of a t wo
year asscx: liHL''- dcgrct• in chcmi3try, ph ysic~.

hiology. or the equi valcm .

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
137 S. 5th Avenue
Middleport, Oil

Mu,..,l have a

(740) 992-7533

moderate knowlt.:dgc omd . . ki ll n e~.:c!'.sary to
perfornl work wi th ~ landard [ahoratory and

Cand itlate\ arc to 11uhmit resum es to:
llumun Resources l&gt;ept.
1'. 0. Ho• 1051
Ne w Haven, WV 25265·1051

2003 Ford Taurus·SE. V6 ,
auto transmission, 14,000
m1les, loade d. good condi·
.fion . $9 .500. (740}441·0157
or (740)441·0337

By Ntwcm hcr 2 1, 2003

VANS&amp;
97 Ford Escort . 5 sp. , n1ce
4-WDs
clean car. runs great, $1700
OBO must sail. 740·41 6·
0174
1998 Suburban 1500, 4)(4,
loaded, emascula\el Garage
98 Chrysler Newyorker,
kep t. nonsmoker, 64,000
excellent condition , runs
miles. New 11res, NADA
great, $2995 OBO must sell,
515,500. 515 .000 OBO
740·4 16-0H4 .
(740)44t-9593
be fore
720
10pm.
TRllCKS

1 ; ~vtr 1_5 ttars
f..rptn~nct
·'

1/

Ortr 50 .\founts
tm DisplaJ'

Sunset Home
Construction

DEER
PROCESSING

Bryan Reeves
New Homes • ..•.
Room Additions ,
Garages, Pole
'Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens , Drywall
&amp; More

Skinned , Cut
&amp; Wrapped
Summer Sausage
Maplewood lake
Christian
Campground
St. Rt. 124 between

BISSELL

BUilDERS InC.

New Home-. • Vin yl
Sidin g • New Garage~

• R c p l a~.:ement

Window\ • R oofing
COMMERC IAL

and

RESIDENTIAL

FREE ESTIMATES

740·992·7599

750 East Slate S1ree1 !'hone (740)593-6671
Athens . Ohio

FREE ESTIMATES!

Racine &amp; Syracuse

740· 7 42·341

AJC , $1 .900 080. (740)256·
t618 o r (740) 256-6200.

1

200 1 CR 80 dirt bike. asking
1999 F250, 4WD, cruise, S1 ,400 Call (740) 446-19 73.
AJC. AM/FM cassette. bed
liner, topper also inctudecl
Fiber glass Tonneau cover Honda Four·Trax. 2000, exc.
extra
wheels &amp; tires co ndition. $2,500. (740)2450372 .
$17,700. 740-446 -7554
Sl R\ 11 Is

r

VAro6 &amp;

4-WDs

I

1989
PI y mouth
Grand
Voyager, ru"ns good , new
parts. $1 ,000 or make offer.
(740)38 8·8475
1992 Dodge Caravan, 4
cylinder, automatic, 161,000
miles. very good condition ,
second owne r, $1,200. Call
740-446-7215 or 740-44 67669.

~IO

HOI\tE
hii'ROVI:MENI~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondi tional lifetime guar·
antee. Local re terences furnished. Esta blished 1975.
Cal l 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers" Basement
Waterproof ing.

Quitting · Regulated &amp;Itch
18 Pattern~ •bailable
Connie Curnutt
895-3862 Shop
owner/operator
895-3512 nome

Wt&gt; buy quilt lops
9 miles from Pt. Plea sam
on So nd Hill Ro•d .

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio ·

·Dean Hill
New&amp;: Used
4 75 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

45771
74()-949-2217

2001 Oldsm obile S1thoutte
Van , loaded , leather seats,
premium sound.. tract ion
co ntrol . 76 .000 m1les. asking
1995 FORD E350 CUBE $12,900 Phone (740)446·
BOX
TRUCK
CALL 4672, (74 0)441-1034.
(740)446·9416. M· F 9· 5
Loca ted
1391
Saffo rd
9 1 Dodge Caravan LE .
School. Gallipolis .
l oad~d. one owner. 66K.
t 996 Ford Explorer Eddie $1500, 740-9 49-2 481 or
Bauer. Mu st se ll. Loaded 740 -992-6145 leave mes$7600. abo. Ca li 674-0089 sage.
after 5 pm.

MIJIUHCYLUS

~chine

Hill 's Self
Storage

1991 Dodge Ram 250 . 4x4
Cummins Turbo Diesel. new
tires. new paint . $6.500
OBO 1740)256· 1589 .

r«&lt;

Let me de t: fer ycul

949-2734

2000 Ford F 550 Dte seL 4
t 988 Chevy 5· 10 tor1g bed. doOf, 4 wheel drive w1th flat
rransmtss10n . bed . (740)44 6-9317.
needs
(740)949-2908

t 996 Toyota Terc el. auto,

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Madt

mRSALE

·'· ·S,Izn ~'x10'

to 10'1130':

Hours
7:00AM · 8:00PM

0

0

We found our new
family through the
classifieds!

0

1-800-822·0417
·w.v·s #I

Che,y. Pontiac. l:!uick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van Deal•r·

1! 1411 mo . pd

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday

"!lost my shirt
inthestock
'1
market!"
/!

&amp; Sund ay
Doors Optn 4:30
Earl y birds ;tart
6:30
Lasl Thursday of

every monlh
All pack $5.00

Bring lhis coupon
Buy $5.00

Bonanza Get
5 FREE

!

"'Not me!

/

My money ts wilh

, RoCky Hupp Insurance
, and Financial Setvices.
\ Box 189, Middleport, OH
, Phone. 843 -5264.' ,

..
----

'"-..~~

YOUNG'S
• Room Additions &amp;
Rem odeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; F'lumblng
• Roofing .&amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding I Painting
• ~atla end Porch Decks

Commercial Reside(llial
Bulldo:.er &amp; Back/we Tru ck;,,g Service~·
Septk S)'stem Jnstallaliun
Lund Clearing

li(Jme Sites Po11ds Dn' ••eway.~
740-991· 3470
Tu/1 Fru 1·866-267.0072

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

l'omtro_,.. Ohio

Pom&amp;r o~. OhiO
22 Ytuu Local

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES
General Contracting
Homes, Garages,
Concrete Work
Roofing •All types

sale,

~'='--~-~--.,

HAY &amp;

..__ _ _Gi'iiRAiiiiiN,;,-_..1
New Farmers Tobacco Co. is
now receiv ing to bacco. First
sale is Nov. 18. Call New
Farmers
1-888·844-4365

740-992·7953

OI'ooo-~---­

Wicks Hauling
and
Excavating

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Free Estimates

Syr thoroughb red/Qua rt er .
horse $600. Sockie Horse
8yrs $400. or trade fo r a
good
childrens
horse.
1304)895·3943

r

I ndustry

Area

perso nnel .

AL1'0S

LIVF.'ITOCK

lor

WV

Local

chemi cal analy tin g equi pment.
Ent ry level y,. agc rate ~) appro11.imately $ 15.50
per hour wi th modcrut~o: benefit pa~.:kagl:! being

/riif'";;;;...;.:;;.;.;____,

Baby , pigs
(740) 949-2908

Ma ~on Coumy.

IURSALE

. ~~W~ANTE-~--.,
Thompsons Appl ia nce &amp; 11!~!:1
Repalr-675-7388. For sale,
nlBUY
re-conditioned
au tomatic

1

New 1~ wide only $799.00
down and onl y 5169.76 per
month.
Call
Karena
(740)385·7671 .

BUliNI!!tl "

\ Ill« II 1\IIISI

IURRFJIIT

r

Need to se ll-Good cl ean
Ropes.
98 Schult 16x80 $ 14,999: 97
Champion 16x80 $11 ,999;
97 Clayton 16xll0 $11,999,
97 Redman 16x72 $10,999;
90 Fleetwood 14x70 $7,999.
(740)709· 1166 or (740)288·
1805.

r

AllooMENrs

Deposit.
references. Modern 1 BA apt. No pets, shop or at your home.
$700/month .
Ph one $250 includes water." $100
deposit Call (740)446-3617
(740)446·7995.
ANI1QUES
3 br. ra nch house for rent, Modern one bedroom apt
$375.00 a man . in New 740·446·0390.
A restaurant co unter pie
Haven, .no pets 120 Howard
North 3rd Ava. Middleport. 2 cupboa rd has slide doo rs;
St 304-675-3458
bedroom furnished apt. an oa k drop leuf table, near
&amp;
reference Meigs-Gallia line. (740)992·
3b r. house in Henderso n. Deposit
l aundry room, lanced yard, requi red. No Pets {740)992- 7012
out building Deposit &amp; 0165
Buy or sell.
Rive rine
References
required.
Now Taki ng Appllcatlo ns- Antiq ues. 11 24 East Main
(304)675·4082
35
Wes t 2
Bedroom on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740Apartments, 992·2526. Russ Moore,
4 br, 1 1/2 baths. Located on Townhouse
SA . 141 near Centenary. Includes Wate r Sewage, owner.
$700 pe r month. Deposit &amp; Trash, $350/Mo., 740-446 reference requi red. Call 0008.
Wiseman Re al Estate at One bed room . fu ll bath,
740·446·3644.
kitc hen w/stove. In town
3-Piaque
Ga s · Heater
75 Locust , 3 be droom, $550 w/private parking. Cable, $143.95, ~O 'x 1 0'x6' Kennel
per mo., deposit &amp; refer· electric, gas wate r. &amp; $189.95 .
ences required. (740) 446· garbage included . S400
Paint Plut Hardware.
month. 740·446·2414.
3667.
(304)6754084
Availab le soon- Nice 3 BR Pleasant Valley ,;Apartment
all app liances. S450 + Are now taking Applications Blue Lift Chair, exce llent
co ndition. $225. {304)674&amp;
referen ces . tor 2 BR. 39 R &amp; 4 BR .,
deposit
(740)446-~ 079 .
Applications are
taken 0108 or (304)675-5753
- - - -- - - - - · Mond ay thru Friday, from cng1anaer r-SH 8I :;)tave w1
II attachments. used
For Lease PriYate 4br, 1-1/2 9:00 A .M.- 4 ~. M . Office Is
bath house In Historic Pt. Pl. Located at 1151 Evergreen ~nths. ov8r $1,700 value.
District. Fully re novated , all Drive Point Pleasant, WV For $1,000, (740)379
appli ances .
$650./mo. Phone No Is (304)675·5806. 093.01 51285101512851
Security and reference• E.H.O
JET
required . For application Rooms for rani : Back of
' AERATION MOTORS
=72_7_'5_9~3-·1_4_54
_ _ _ _ _ Addison , close to Gavin and Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
For sale or rent- 4 bedroom Kyger Creek plants . Call Stock. Call Ron Evant, 1·
800·537-9528.
houoo In ~meroy, $450 a 367 ·01 02.

99 14x70, 3 BA, 2 bath, vinyl
siding, shingled roof, vinyl
windows, 6' walls, lots of
upgrades on prh•ate lot in
Green Twp. , 3 mites form
Gallipolis. {740)446·8935
aft er 6pm.

FINAL CLEARANCE
Just a few 2003 model
homes remain, come early,
make your pick-then-talk to
Ern ie or Lynn, get the best
possible price, you' ll be
pleasantly surprised, loon·
dations, heat pu mps, cen tral
ai rs and septic sysrems our
specia lty, Cole's Mob ile
Homes, 15266 us 50 E.
Ath ens, Ohio 45701, PH;
740-592·1972

Morto-g11, Mortgtgttlll
We offer competitive Interest
rates on mortgages end
debt consolidation• and
lpeclaUze In good and bad
credit Call toll free to find
out about cur low lntere1t
rttll and rtc tlvt expert ~- 4 BR •. 2 bath, attached
~~rage , ttoragt building,
advice.
1...H3M718
112 ocro lot. 3 m1111 lroir
own on 141 . F'rollltlonall
'
ondocaped , CIA, omok
Nttd lxtl'l oat1'17 WI lrl reo
l'lomt .
Aikin
lho loon opeelollol, we don't
~5Uoo Cell (740)441
IPICUIOIO, good Or bod crtd· 11851 .
It txctpttcl. Thtrt art no
1111, 1111 o~provol. end low Houat undtr conltructlon·
lnterlll rat11. For mort Info ronch llylt I 880 oq. M. with
call loll lrto 1·868·882· full blltment &amp; atttcl'led
8875.
gorogo. Clolllpollo Cllyochool
dl1trlct, Green attendance
orll. (7-40)448·7833:

TUANI!D DOWN ON

(304)773·5604 after 7pm.

Cole's Mobile Homes
US 50 East. Athens, Ohio,
45701 , 740·592·1972

G)

"'

r

RENT

1985 mobile home r no
smoke, no pets, .appliances 3 bed roonl trai ler. Ho use
included . nice porch, $8500 newly remodeled . 3 bed3br. 2 full baths, dec k, 080, (740)949·2486
room Patriot area. No pets.
whirlpoo l tub. Located near
(740)379·2540
schoo l in Gallia. Owner 2 mobi le homes. 2 1/2 ac res
tina nc ing
is
available. a miles West of Jackson OH 3 BA, 2 bath, acre lot on cor(304)675·1352
on
R1.
35.
$70.000. ner. Conveniently located in
(740)286·6287.
town. Exce llent condition .

fJHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO. recommends tha
ou do bust1tess with pee
le you know, and NOT t
end money through th
~ail until you have 1nvesti
ated the offering.

mLoAN

FOR

10 Used hom es under 2 Bedroom,
bath house.
$2,000.00. Call Nikki. Call No
&amp;
Pets.
Deposit
References required . $350.
3 bed room home, 15 min. (740) 385·9948.
from town Gas he at, newly
Month . Phon e (304)675·
remodeled.Phone (740)379· 1983 Uberty mobile home
5578
9887 .
~4 x60, 2 bedroom, under·
pinning, 8x16 porch, must 2 be droom, Front St. ,
3 bedroom house, 4 ~ 12 be moved $4,500. 740-367· Mason, $350 month, $300
acres, cia. fenced pastu re, 7025!7 40-645-0508.
deposi t, references, no pets,

l ocal ve nding route 60
machines locations included
all lor $ 10, 995. 800-509·
7909.

r

HousEl&gt;

fURSME

excellent "locatlons
Must Sell! I 8()().234·6982.

MONEY

NEA, Inc.

r::l:!;""-"":':""----,

ABSOLUTE GOLDMINEI

"'

•

© 2003 by

PI'OR11JN[f\'

Now Hiring Dancers, day

~

()

Beautiful Dream Home
3200sq. lt. with wrap around
deck, upstairs balcony, 4-112
acres. 4br, 2ba , la rge livi ng
r o9~ wffireplace. dining
room, 2 car garage. Owner
financing
is
available.
(304)675· 1352

1 1"\\\(1\1

t

0

www.comics.com

rent· a store f ront in
Historical
downtown
Pomeroy, Oh facing river.
(7401589·7122

3 bedroom, in country, $300 Nice new mobile home tot
deposit &amp; $300 a month, for rent_ $125 a mon th.
(740)992·6313
(740)446 -0 ~ 75 or (740)6755965.

PI ~yoS,_l-.

60 vending machines with

Lost:
Black/White Border Collie in
Flatrock area. (304)675·
6780

WANTED
TO Buv

"'"'"~

6-A~IMI'::l~

MISCF.U. \NEOUS

"--------r'

to perform chart audits and
therapy coordination for the
Gallipoli s, Ohio area. Must
be licensed both in Ohio and
West Virginia. We offer a
compe titive salary, benefits
package and 40~K . E.O.E.
Please send resume to 430
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
O H 45631. Alln : Diana
Harless, Clinical Manager.

W~N~A

r:1-::70Fi:ll.::;:::;::;:;.:.:.:..;::;:;...,

I

Maso n next to Wei -Mart, eta.
carpor t , sto rage bu ilding ,
references req uired . deposit
$450 mo nth, (740) 992·396 1

52 ~

992-5479

Help Wanted

lnt crt'~ t cd

j

2 bedroom. fu rnished in Commerci al property tor Sawmill

Rea #90·05-127 4B

Help Wanted

offered.

SPACE
ML'iCFJ.IANEOU~
·--IUiiRiiiREN"Iiiiil,;,r..... ........IUii i iR,;,RFii'iiio.....
Nf
......ME-·RCiiii:HA.iiiioiiNiiUiiiL~iii
·E_.
420 MOBILE HoMES ·

.......

Earn money for Christmas
Female Rat Te rrier puppy to by sell ing Avon call Joyce 25 Serious People Wanted
give away. Good wi th kids. 304·675·69 19
Who want to LOSE weight
(740)388·9932. anytime or
We Pay You Cash for the
teBve message
Jewel ry
sa lesperson -for pounds you LOSE!
Christmas season . Must be Sate, Natural. No Drugs.
Gray femal e killen . Very
dependable, enjoy dealing 600-201-0632
friendly. Call (740)446-8 192.
with public &amp; have exce llen t m~~~----~
WANfEil
skill s.
Apply
at IIlO
Inside hom e only. Brown math
To Do
stripped male kitten . litter Acquisition, t 5~ 2nd Avenue
tr ained. all shots Ca ll Gallipoli s. No phone cans
Cleaning
lady. Hone st,
(740)446·0961 or (740)44 1· please
dependable,
reasonable
1721.
Live in tor elderly lady. Teays rates. Ca ll 740-256-8 128
Male German Shepherd. Valley area. (304)882-3322 ask fo r Tammy.
Bla ck Lab. and 3 ca ts.
(304)675·6680
Looking for Rock Guitarist Need a Babysitter? Please
Mother dog plus 5 Puppies 3 and singer to join band. Must call (740)446-1858.
mon th old, all males. Chow be seriou s to play a lot. Call
!Husky mix ..· (740)992-1002 Robbie (740)742-3200
Will sit with elderly. No lifting.
la&lt;rJ·ANJ)
Medi Home Health Agency, Call and leave mess age at
Inc. seeking a full-time LPN (740)245-0191.

r

Thursday for Sundays

&amp; CARLYLE

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or The Vi llage of Rutland will
Sell. Shi rley Spears, 304- be accepting resumes for
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permit 675· 1429.
th e position of Office
tor sale, Chester Township,
Manager. Candidate s must
Meigs Co unty, send lette rs BARTENDER TRAINEES work well with the public, be
of interest to: The Daily NEEDED! $250 a day compu ter literate, ca pable of
Sentinel, PO Box 729-20, potential. Local . positions doi ng multiple tasks and
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
available. 1-800-293 -3985 provide strong work refe rences. This is a part time
Chase Merc hant Servic es ext. 1975.
position with 30 hours a
accept all major cred it cards
week and includes PER S.
now also debit telecheck ebt Class A COL Drivers
Send resume no later than
Wanted
gift card . I'll analyze your
November 21 Send resume
current processi ng sta teto PO Box 420, Rutland , OH
experi
Minimum
of
1
year
ment reduce your cost and
45775 or fax to 740·742ence.
Medical
Insurance.
improve cash flow make
0303
appointment 304-755-046 2 40 1K, Home Weekends,
Domicil e in Jackson, OH ,
or 800-767-2484 ext 9960
Sign on Bonu s, .34¢· per 140
BUSINE'&gt;.-&lt;;
SENIOR PORTRAITS!
mile, 95% No touch. NO
TRAINING
Get You best deal at :
NYC freight.
Main Street Photography. Call 1·800-652·2362
Gallipolis Career College
51 1 Main Street,
(Careers Close To Home)
Point Pleasant
Delivery/Warehouse person Call Today! 740·446·4367,
Call for Appo intment
needed, furniture store, lull
1-800·214·0452
(304 )675·7279
time, immediately opening, www.gallipoliscareercotlege.com
apply at lite Style Furnilure ,
656 3rd. Ave, Gallipolis. no
phone calls

Publication
sunday Display: 1:00

POLICIES : Ohio Valley PubUatllng reaervea the right to edit, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Error• must bfl reported on the first dey of
Trlbun•Sentlnei•Regllter will b.- r"'ponalble for no mere than the coat of the apact occupifld by the error and only the first lntertlon. We t hall not
any lo" or expon11 that retultllrom the publication or om leeton of an advenleement. Correction will be made In the first available ediUon. • Box
&amp;re alway• confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All real estate advertlaementa are subject to the Federal Fair Housing·Act of 1968. • Thla
I help wanted 1d1
EOE 11andard1. We will not
I
I
In violation of the law.

• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

.._.~
Lh•o-----~Lh.o_"_~··.'!~

\.'\'\ ( JI \(I \II \ IS

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Bu slne•li Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid•

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description ·· Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

Jeff Warner Ins.

Miss You Dad,
Your Children

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{J~
Jr1',
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Cellular

882 -3598

~

Disp!av Ads

Dally In-Column: 1 :00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Inserti on
In Next Day ' • Paper
Sunday In ~ cotumn: 1:00 p.m.
Frld&lt;ov For Sunday• Paper

Monday thru Friday

l\egtster .

Sentinel

... (74r0Fa)x .,.'o4(46&gt;-2342

ca~f;~::y

I

111f Broken Chain
We little knew tl1at morttitl)l
Tluu God waJ goi"g to call your t~ame.
In life we lo11rd you dearly,
ill death Wt' do tlae same.
It broke our hearts lo losr )'OU 1
you did nor go alonr.
For part of us went with you,
rhr day God mlled you home.
You left us peacifu l m emorir:s,
your lovt• is still our guide.
And though we cannot see )'OU,
you are always at our side.
Our family cl1ait1 is brokt,,
and "oclaing .st'erns the samt'.
But as God calls 145 otze by one,
17JC ella in wifl link again.

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

''

Hanging Rock Deer Processing
Skin. Cut, Wrap
$35.00 . $45.00
1/2 mite out Hanging Rock Rd .
Hartford, WV

Advertise
in this
space for $1 00
per month.

55001 POU()E IMPOUND S.
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Ca rs from $500. Fo r listings
1·800·719·3001 OX1 3901
$5001 POLI CE IMPOUNDS .
Hondas, Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Cars from $500. For listings
1·800·719·3001 old 3901

~R~
High 81. Dry

1985 Chevy Caprice Ctaaslc
2dr., V·8, 305, good eondl·
tlon. $2ISOO. (304)882·2936·

SeH·Storage

1 99~ Eagle Vltlon. Power
ovory1hlng, CO, $1 ,500 or
b111 ollor. Coli (740)256·
1882.

33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

19g4 Nl11an Alllmo. 81,000
mllll, IU!O, IOOdtd, $2,600,
1898 Noon outo $2,000:
1988 J11p Clrond Wogonor
(740)248·0372 .

740-992·5232

suoo.

HOME CREEK
ENTERPRISES

1998 Cl rondom g9K $2,495,
1994 Ctntu •y 88K $2,495,
1991 Covtlltr 98K $1 ,495,
1ill5 ClMC $3,ill5. Wo toke
tradl l
COOK MOTO~I
(7-40)448.01 0$

IMPORTS

Athe~a

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

J&amp;L
Eledric

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

Ph J40-N2-otSJ

Licensed &amp; Bonded

(lO'xlO' 610'x20')

Cell J40-111·107:S

ROBERT
BISSELl

(740)992-3194
Backhoe, Dozer,
CllmlcTI•
992-6635
• New Homes

Foundations,
S~ptic Systems,
Water and Utilitie

1997 Saturn. 4dr, 5 IPttd.
e~ece ll ant condition . Great
oallty lee1Urll. (304)675·
4214
2001 Sunrlre, 30,000 mll11,
I UIO, AIC, CO player, $5,200
OBO. (740)258-1818 or
(740)266-8200.

• Garages
• Complet~
. Remodeling

M0-112·18J1

740.992·7953

Stop &amp; Compare

11!3

..

.

·~-- - ... -- --~ -

·- ...

,.
~~

-- ...----·---

.

..... ~ .

·&lt;

�• ~AN CY PARKER GRUESER MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR 114 On Ad 3 75A Ex
2 6258A
1 1242A
' l&gt;ELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE
The land, lots and part of lots returned delinquent by the County
Treasurer of t;1elgs County with the taxes assessments Interest and
penalties charges thereupon agreeable to law are o ntalnad and
described lnthe following list

• PARCEL
LEGAL
NAME L EGAL
DliSRIPTION
TOT DLQ
BEDFORD
:
•
TOWNSHIP
:
MEIGS LSD
• 01-G0878 OOIBauman
Daniel
F
&amp;/Or
Ch 6rlolle A Sec 30
T3N R13W 3 OOA Out
' of 1562A
300A
$37 02
• 01 00009 000 Braun
: Michael B Let 7 W Of
• St Rd 33 Part of 63A
: 2A, $30 89
• 01..(){)u94 000 Casteel
John &amp; Casteel Della
Sect 28 2 26A Out of
24 16A
226A
$104 98
01..(){)443 002 Erwin
; Timothy R Sect 32
, T3N R13W 10 OOA out
of1400A
IOOOA
• $53 80
0 1·00027 000 Jacks
Wanda Lot Sect 17
Part S Of Rd W of
Church Lot
50A
$370 71
0Hl0860 000 Lawson
Mark F &amp;/Or Amanda
Lot Sect 16 On N
Of
Sect
Line
19 7475A Ex 18 091 A
I 6565 A
$150 85
01..(){)861 000 Lawson
Mark F &amp;/Or Amanda
Lot Sect ·17 On S
Line Of Sect 75 63A
Ex 21 909A 53 721 A
• $129981
01..(){)862 000 Lawson
Mark F &amp;/Or Amanda
Lot Sect·13 · 17 W Prt
of 77A On S Line Of
Sac 50A, $8 91
01·00863 000 Lawson
Mark F &amp;/Or Amanda
Lot Sect 17 Mill Lot
' WPrtoiS112ofSW
114 BOA $8 30
01 00021 004
Lightfoot Kelll D Fr34
T3N A13W 2 303A
Out 016 251 A 2 303A
$23 29
01 00151 001 McDade
Carl W &amp;/Or Robon D
Sect 22 Fr18 T3N
R13W 6 57 A Out of
20 OOA 6 57 A $733 95
01 00349 OOOMotcheli
John Lot Sect 13·36
NE of SE 114 &amp; of NE
114 (30 341 A New
Survey) $203 37
01·00349 001 Molcheli
John Sect 36 T3 R13
5 659A Out Of 50 OOA
5 659A $170 66
01 00510 OOOMitchell
John Sect 30 Wl/2 Of
NW 1/4 (5 892A New
Survey) $96 56
01 00510 009 Mitchell
John Sect 30 T3 R13
, 2 399A
Out
Of
'1 8 434A
2 399A
~ $71 83
• 01 00290 003 Moon
' Phillip A Sect 18 T3
A13 10 075A Out 01
24 136A
10 075A
$310 25
0Hl0648 000 Sauters
E Leon
&amp;/Or L
• Chrlstone Lot Sect 1
NE Part Of SW 114 PI
43A
; Of NW 114
$1 ,24610
01.()()649 000 Saulers
E Leon
&amp;/Or L
Christine Lot Sect
13 1 S Of SW 114 Ex
15A S &amp; 1379A W
• 21 21A $131 27
: 01-oo&amp;SO 000 Sauters
~
Lean
&amp;/Or L
Christine Lot Sect13
1 NE Part Of SE 114 Of
NE 114 SA, $54 56
01.()()576 ooo Whaley
Herbert E &amp; Sheila A
Sect 28 NE Part Of
&amp;OA 02A Out Of
2 40A AI Of Way 02A
$191
01·00577 000 Whaley
Herbert E &amp; Sheila R
Lot Sec 28 E End Ex
2 40A 54 67A Ex
5 OOA
49 67A,
$215 61
01 00223 000 Whaley
Herbert E &amp;/Or Sheila
Lot 13 21 22 N PI W
PI E114 SE PI N E of
SA
681
6 5256A
Ex3 09 3 4358A
$675 06
01 00844 000 Whaley
Herbert Eugene &amp;lOr
Sheila R Lot Sec 22
&amp;A Of 32 95A E Soda
of AI E 681 SA Ex
2 272 ExO 381 3 374
$511 04
01 00510 014 Wolle
Michael T &amp;/Or Hart
Lora Sec 30 T3 A13W
~ 694A Out Of 8 47A
3 694A $256 83
!;;11ESTER TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
03·00328 002Balley
Roy Lee IJOr Crystal
J, Sec 13 T4N R12W
Or54A Out Of 2 BOA
0,54A $16 19
03 01099 OOOBauer
Robert Michael &amp;/Or

Carrie A, Sect 32
(640) SE PI of NE 114
4UlOA Ex 9 3846A
•• 31 :&amp;154A $138 85
03·00122 OOOBrewer
c/o
James
• :John
Goodrich
Lot 14
(262) F7 T4 A12 W
:en~
Ex
25A W,
$264 58
• 03·00123 OOOBrewer
John
c/o
James
.lloodrlch Lot M1 4
{640) NW Cor Ex 1/BA
" 'If 2A $13 52
03·01696 OOOCarl A
Ritchie Royally lnl
Columbia
Natural
Resources Inc $2 86
&amp;3 00060 000
~rnahan Donald P
~Or
Kelly
D
llect 12·3 (840) SEPT
'01 NW 114 W Of Rd
4 50A, $151 03
03· 00223 OOOCionch

Ronald &amp;/Or Debra
SS (840) PI Of 59A E
Of Rd 1 08A Out Of
12 OSA 1 08A $47 84
03.()()224 000 Clonch
Ronald L IJOr Debra
J Sec 5 (640) Part Of
59A E Of Rd l A Out
Of 31 68A
lA
$786 95
03 005§6 001 Davo s
Greta L Frac 36 T2
R1 2 1 92A Out Of
104 79A
1 92A
$375 06
03 00324 000 Evans
Marion R &amp;/Or Debbie
Lynn Sect 21 15 SE
Cor Of Frac Prl Of
23A 20A $687 35
03·00325 000 Evans
Marlin R &amp;/Or Debbie
Lynn Sect 21 (262)
8 88A Of SW Prt Of
22A E Prl Ex 39A N
888A $8562
03 00225 000 Evans
Ray
&amp;/Or
Marion
Debbie Lynn,Sect 15
(262) Fr6 SW Part Ex
School Lot Ex 1 1OA
63 56A $1 104 24
03 00226 000 Evans
Marlin
Ray
&amp;/Or
Debbie
Lynn
Sect 15 Fr 36 (262) E
Part Ex 39A N 8 79A
$7829
03·00396 000 Friend
Brett c/o Beny Friend
Sect ·3 (640) Part Of
Pearmans 23A 19 75A
Ex 3 777A 15 973A
$906 74
03·00791 000 Jenkins
Timothy A, Sect 28
1 08A 01 2 50A In W
Prt of S Of Rd 1 044A
(New
Survey)
$1,309 52
03 00478 003
Johnson Charles F Fr
12T3 R 12 E11201W
112 9 9916A Out Of
54 98A
9 9916A
$423 49
03 00631 000 Jordan
Phillip
Dale
c/o
Aulhie J Jordan
Sect 1 (640) T4 R 12
48 X85 E Of Rd SE
114 08A $15 04
03·00632 000 Jordan
Phollop
Dole
c/o
Ruthle J Jordan
Sect 1 T4 R 12NW
Corner
II 50A
Church Lot Keno
12A $15 04
03.()0633 000 Jordan
Phollop Dalec/o Ruthle
J Jordan Sect 12· 1
lA,
(640) Moll Lot
$11 95
03 00711 000 Klaober
Carl E c/o V1ck1e
Klaober Sect 23 (640)
E Sode of S 112 779A
Out of 69 25A 779A
$4 64
03 00112 000 Klaiber
Carl E c/o Vickie
Kiaober Sect 17 (640)
SW 114 13 379A Out
Of 72A
13 J79A
$918 35
03.()0810 000 Marcum
Mochael
W
&amp;/Or
Connoe J Sect 18
T3N A12W Part Of
The SW 114 2A Out Of
4839A 2A $10414
03-01322 004 Marcum
Mochael
W
&amp;/Or
Connie J Sect18T3N
R12W 2A Out Of
42 39A
2 OOA
51 ,165 94
03 00790 000
Mcintyre C D Sect 28
Nw Prl Of Frac 24
21A $420 04
03 00792 000
Mcintyre C D Nw Prt
Of Free 24 Sect 09A
$26 61
03.()0793 000
Mcintyre C D Sect
Frac 24 ·28W 112 Of
Frac24 41A $5359
03 00794 000
Mcintyre C D Sect
28(640) 20A Of 1 79A
in N Prt NW Of Ad Ex
Oil &amp; Gas
20A
$37 40
03·00981 000 Parker
James E IJOr Bobboe
Jean Sect 25 NE
Corner Of NW 114 3A
$1 284 97
03 00686 001 Price
Janna L Elal Sect 36
T3N A12W 642A Out
Of 5 OOA
642A
$621 06
03 00610 001 Richard
lve
Renee
&amp;/Or
Johnston Lawrence
Grant Jr
Sect19
T4 R14 Part Of SW 114
1 50A Out 01 3 30A
$674 96
03·00860 003 Riffle
Julia D Sec 18T3 R12
22 1857A Out Of
43117A 22 1857A Ex
171857A
SOOA,
$185 54
03·01114 000 Short
Herbert &amp; Martella c/o
Fredrick
&amp;
Sally
Gerlach
Sect 8
(640} SW Of NW 114 &amp;
NW Of SW 114 Wol Cr
431A $13308
03.()()778 006
Stelhem Jeffrey M
Sect12T2N R13W
2 9879A Out Of 9 94A
And 9961A Out Of
8 55 3 9840 $605 91
03 00835 001 Wolfe
Lora J Sect 17T3 A12
993A Out Of 70 75A
993A $286 97
COLUMBIA
TOWNSHIP
ALEXANDER LSD
05.()0382 003 Bruner
Land Company Inc
c/o John &amp; Joan
Chesser
Sect
7 T9 R15 Parcel 3
II 278A
Out
Of
132 044A
II 278A
$182 68
05· 00017 000
Byrd
Gall Sect 3 Out 9 79A
SW PI 84A NW Of N
1OOA NW 114 Ex 03A
5 17A, $21710

Monday, Nov. 17, 2003

Wwvl.mydallysentinel.com

Page 84• The Daily Sentmel

05·0 0079 OOOB yrd
Gall, Sect 12 1 532A
$1,176 54
05.()()179 001 Hamon
Randy A Sect 23 T9
R1 3 II 3664A Out Of
24 85A
II 3684A
sa76 56
05-G0320 001 Harvey
Geron &amp; Rebecca
Jean Sect 26 T9 R15
946A Out Of 33 50A
946A, $112 31
05.()()382 007
Johnson Nick D &amp;/Or
Cathy L Sect 7 T9
R15 Parcei71 2 169A
Out Of 132 044A
12 169A, $130 66
05-00312 000 Llsshlre
Ltd Sect 2 w 112 Of
SE 114 Ex lOA SW
9 275A New Survey
$122 47
05·00473 000 Lovell
Mary c Sect 23 w PI
Of N 114 Ex 54A
065A Out Of 128 46A
065A
$3 26
OS 00382 011 Lyons
James L Jr., Sect 7 T9
A15 Parcel II 5 744A
Out Of 132 044 A
5744A
$64 99
05 00250 000
James
Saunders
Wesley &amp;/Or Kathy
Jean c/o Leon &amp;
Thelma
Woodrum
Sect 23 N Of NW 114
2 75A, $408 64
05.()()251 000
Saunders
James
Wesley &amp;/Or Kathy
Jean c/o Leon &amp;
Thelma
Woodrum
Sect 24 S Of SW 114
25A, $613
05·00673 002 Smart
Clint M, Sect 17 T9
R15 4 49A Out Of
84 696A
4 49A/
$106 91
05 00223 000 Vogler
Ronald Lee Elal c/o
Ron Vogler Sect 8 NE
Corner 23A $1 ,060 02
05 00224 000 Vogler
Ronald Lee Elal c/o
Ron Vogler Sect 8 NE
Part Ex 28A NE
35 75A $185 54
05.00158 000
LEBANON
TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
06 · 00072 000
Blankenshop Gary S
clo
J1mmle
L
Blankenshop Sacl 34
NW Corner
9 75A
$39 29
06 00093 000 Cooper
Randal
A
&amp;/Or
Cooper Phyllis J
Sect 28 SW Pari 19A
$341 02
06.()0094 000 Cooper
Randal
A
&amp;/Or
Cooper Phyllis J
Sect 28 S Part Of SW
114 58A $233 92
06 00095 000 Cooper
A
&amp;/Or
Randal
Cooper Phyllis J
Sect 28 T3 R II SE
Corner 5 4A Out Of
57 25A 5 4A $54 35
06·00096 000 Cooper
Randal
A
&amp;/Or
Cooper Phyllis J,
Sect 28 W Part Of SW
114 75A $3 07
06·00097 000 Cooper
Randal
A
&amp;/Or
Cooper Phyllis J,
Sect 28 NE Of SW 114
&amp; NW of SE 114 lA
$3 86
06 00061 000 Cooper
Randall A Sect 25 T3
All
NW
Corner
16 82A Out 0151 85A
16 B2A $21116
06 00063 00, Hamrick
Wanda L &amp; Glenn C
Sect 11·22 S Part Ex
Folchle Wlleys 11 31 A
$35 05
06.()0064 000
Hamrick Wanda L &amp;
Glenn C Sect 11·22
SE Corner Above
DeWoHs Run Ex 1A
6 65A $20 81
06-ooO&amp;S 000
Hamrick Wanda L &amp;
Glenn C Sect II 22
E Of Long Bonon &amp;
Hazel Part Of BA
65A $2 31
06 00066 003 Harris
Robert S Sr &amp;/Or
Trennla Sec 34 T3N
AIIW 0 82A Out Of
88 8286A
0 82A
$538
06·00121 002,
Mlilhone Steve A
Sect 33 T3N R11W
Out
Of
5857A
5 5122A
5857A
$347
06·00050 000
Mlilhone Steven A
Sect 33 S End Of 50A
Out Of 20A 10 932A
$148 32
08 00009 001 Powell
Estherla M c/o Wilbur
Vancooney Sect 27
T3N AIIW 1 OOA Out
Of 29 75A
1 OOA
$5034
LEBANON
TOWNSHIP
SOUTHERN LSD
07· 00002 000 Adams
Alver A c/o Harry W
Adams Ill Lot 28 Old
Portland $16 61
07·00394 001
Allen
Thomu A Sect 35 T2
All 160A Lot 1178
1 099A Of 6 313A ,
086A Of 1A, 045A Of
387 sa5 40
07.()()885 000 Bailey
Gregory 0 &amp; Kandlko
Kathleen
A
Nka
Bailey Kathleen Sect
13 S Prt 015A WEnd
1 33A, $72 20
07·00072 000
Carpenter
Freda
Sact13 SW Cor w Of
Adamo 24A, $132 43
07 · 00073 000
Carpenter
Freda
Sect 19 NE Prl Of SE

Sec38(1D0-2t5)W End
Ex 12A
11A W Of
Rd EI Coal 16 50A EI
3 384A 1 $259 83

a.

$487
07-G0075 000
Freda
Carpenter
Sect 19 NE Prt Of SE
114 N Of Ad 1 56A Ex
9628A
5972A
$1 62 41
07.()()185 000 Delong
Louisa Hilda c/o Jeff
Delong, Sect 24 E
Part Out Of 15A
I lOA, $93 37
07 00971 002 Jo nes
Danelle Sect 20 T3
All S Of NW 114 Of
SW 114 1A Out Of 23A
lA, $308 88
07.()()356 000
Lawrence Charles A
Etal Sect 24 (640)
Out Of Con Of SW 114
5 33A, $9437
07.()()357 000
Lawrence Charles A
Etal , Sect 24 Sw
Ex School Lot &amp;
Stanearl Lot Ex 66A
110 74A sat8 56
07.()()359 000
Lawrence Charles A
Elal, S24 (640) Out Of
158 90A Pel SW Ex
School &amp; Staneart
Lot 38 67 A ,$42 53
07 00562 002 Linkous
Dwight D IJOr Marla
L IOOA Lola 184 &amp;
185 3116A Out Of
38 571A &amp; 1 325A Out
56 67A
4 441A
$108 55
07.()()244 000
Nottingham Tommy
Nottingham
And
Elfreda Sect 24 NW
Cor Of 99 77A NE 114
Of 45A
5 50A
$9742
07·00003 001 Pickens
Calvon D 160A Lot
1185 Sec 33 T2N
All W 12 649A Out
Of 38 483A 12 649A
$185 51
07-G0004 001 Pickens
Calvin D 160A Lot
1186 Sec 33 T2N
All W 4 636A Out Of
22 858A
4 636A
68 06
07 00534 000 Pickens
Calvin D, Sect 33
(160 1187) N PI Of
36 30A E PI Ex Coal
II 30A $47 80
07·00535 OOOPickens
Calvon D Sect 33
(160·1185) Out Of NE
Cor Of Sect
50A
$244
07·00536 000 Pickens
Calvin D, Sect 33
(160·1186) Mid On N
Lone E 112 Ex Coal
7A
$29 99
07 00537 000 Pickens
Calvin D Sect 27
(160 1186) Mid On E
Line Ex Coal 7 25A
$3077
07·00538 000 Pickens
Calvin D, Sect 33
(160·1186) S PI Of NE
18 3/4 Ex Coal 12A
$50 61
07.()0539 000 Pickens
Calvon 0, Sect 33
(160·1186) SE Corner
Ex Coal
13 70A
$5834
07 00540 000 Pockens
Calvin D Sect 33 E
End Ex Coal
33A
$367 35
07 00061 000 Pullins
Vicky, Sect 36 Mid On
E Line Of NE 114 E Of
Rd &amp;A $260 58
07 00770 001 Sellers
Gregory A Sect 23
160A Lot 1171 T2 All
5 OOA Out Of 44 84A
5 OOA $18842

OLIVE TOWNSHIP
EASTl:RN LSD
09 00128 OOOArnoll
Thomaa A &amp; Carol A
Sect 30 N Part Of SW
1/4 30A, $644 99
09-oo058 000 Baker D
M c/o Jerry Ann
Schafer SecL 19-24
E Side Of 1112A
06A,
Barber Shop
$1 93
09-G0079 000 Barber
James E Sr &amp;/Or
Diana L Sect II SE
PI 0171 55A S Of Mid
Ex 75A C Lot 6 95A
$129 26
09.()()367 000 Bissell
Roger &amp;/Or Sherr!
Sect 24 NE Part 2A
$16 11
09.()()368 000 Blseell
Roger &amp;/Or Sherrl
Sect 24 SE Of NE 114
Ex
Noland
6A
$930 51
09.()()166 000 Booton
Dale Allen, Sect 35
T4 R II Mid Of S PI
Of SW 114 Of 30 565A
5 019A, $286 99
09.()()170 000 Boston,
Sect 17·18 SE PI
1 50A N PI 36 75A SE
PI Ex SOA
20A
$500
09.()()171 000 Boston
Dale Allen, Sect 17Tr
In W End SE Of Rd
2 77A, $20 33
09.()1014 000 Collins
Charlene, Sect 30 w
Part Of
Part Of w
1/4 12A $50 25
09·01017 000 Collins
Charlene, Sect 30
Mid On S Line N Of
Rd &amp;A, $191 31
09 00356 000
Delacruz Domingo D
&amp;/Or Angela M, Sect
23 Nw Cor Of E Part
Of 55A 1A $703 29
09 00448 000 Epling
Robert S &amp; Timothy S
c/o Robert S Epling
Sect 12 NE Prt Out Of
2209A 1A, $1611
09 00575 002 Epling
Aobeol S &amp; Timothy S
c/o Robert S Epling
Sect27T4 Rill 736A
Out Of 2 27A 1 736A
$135 41
09·01320 ooo Heady
Leah L, Lot 24 4A Out
Of 10 70A Ex 1 70A
4A, $5143
09·00378 003 Jones
Donald
G
&amp;/Or
Melissa J Sec 16 T4N
AIIW 0 943A Out Of
II 355A
0 943A,
$120 83
09 02030 001 Jones
Donald
G
&amp;/Or
Melissa J, Sec 16 T4
RIIW 0 726A Out Of
0 9778A 0 726A $5 75
09·00841 004
Mccrady
Ronald
Charles &amp;/Or Virginia
Rose
528A
In 50A Lot 120 &amp;
472A In 30A Lot 121
T-3 R·11
1 OOA,
$161 87
09 00859 000
Mendelson Jeffrey
Elal, Sect 3 9 NW Prl
Of 43 45A E Prt Ex
150AW lA $2032
09 00860 000
Mendelson
Jeffrey
Eta I Sect 9 10 E 112
Of 42A SE Prt Ex 2A
SE Prt 21A $174 27
09·00861 000
Mendelson
Jetlrey
Elai Sect 3 ·9 Nw Prl
Of 43 45A E Prt 1 50A
$100 26
09-oo&amp;72 001 Nelson
Mark P &amp;/Or Stacey J
IOOA Lot 103 T4N
RIIW 0 318A Out Of
4 OOA 0 318A $3 84
09-oo&amp;83 001 Nelson
Mark P &amp;/Or Stacey J
IOOA Lot 104 T4N
AIIW 1 595A Out Of
18 43A
1 595A,
$677 59
09.()()936 000 Newlun
Harold Lot3 -4 ·19.
24 SE Cor Next To
Shumaker
75A,
$9910
09.()()937 000 Newlun
Mary A Lot 24 SW Prt
01117A E Of Swains
6 &amp;A 25A $11 91
09.()()938 000 Newlun
Mary A, Lot 24 SW Prl
Of 4 SOA On W Line
Of Swain
50A,
$24 55
09-oo939 000 Newlun
Mary A, Lot (139) SE
Cor Below Guyon Ad
42 42A, $358 37
09.00940 000 Newlun
Mary A Lot 24 N End
Of 2 1/2 A SW lA
$4832
09-oo941 000 Newlun
Mary A Lot (23)
McKee Add $4 22
09-oo942 000 Newlun
Mary A Lot (24)
McK.. Add $4 22
09·00943 OOONewlun
Mary A Lot (122) E
Side Of Mill Lot Ex
1/2A S 50A (Sec 24)
50A, $8 44
09 00944 OOONewlun
Mary A, Lot (123) S
112 Of lA E Side Mill
Lot 50A SOA $8 44
09 00871 OOIPuillna
Floyd 70A Lot 120A
T4N All W 675A Out
Of 2 OOA
675A,
$1111
09·00934 OOOPulllna
Floyd
D11n
Sect 25 Trl in NE Cor
Of Sect 25
1 50A
$3759
09·01053 OOOPutman
Donald IJOr MarlSac! 16T4 A11187A
Out Of 9 85A 1 87A
$9400
09·01145 OOORood
Marjorie Sect 4·10
Lot
116·#7
Dlv
Randolph Est 1 OOA
$2 29
09·00242 001 Runyon
Jason
Lee
Sect 23, T4 All , NE

s

LETART TOWNSHIP
SOUTHERN LSD
08·00430 ooo Boothe
Tina Lynn, Seen ·7
30A Of 5 50A W End
Along Bull Cane
Road 30A $34 90
08·00473 001 Boothe
Tina Lynn IOOA Lot
271 &amp; 272 3166A In
Lot 271 &amp; 1 0415A In
Lot 272
4 2075A
$135 II
08 00033 000 Durst A
Larry Sect 12 16
(640) Near Mid 2 52A
$20815
08 00034 000 Durst A
Larry Sect 12 ·16 N
Side Of 26 112A Lot S
Prt 53A $439 59
08·00650 000 Durst
Ralph Larry, Sec 16
(640)N Side S 253
1/2A W PI 29A
15 899A, $264 01
08·00135 001
Elias
Janel K, 180A Lot
1190 T2 All 36 289A
Out Of 108 867A
36 289A $263 32
08 00431 000 Harper
Brenda A Sect 12 1
7 Mid Of Ad Ex Coal
26 58A $122 96
08 00432 000 Harper
Brenda A Sect 12 1
70nNLineEOIAd
Ex Coal
4 90A,
$682 88
08·00417 000 Hawk
Toby Sect31(212) N
Side Ex 14A Highway
Ex
Min
24 23A
$257 25
08-00185 001 Jarrell
Joey 1OOA Lot 269 T2
R12
791A Out Of
27 OOA 791A, $956 30
08-oo458 001
Montgomery Robert
Keith &amp;/Or Linda K
1OOA Lot 248 1 OOA
Out Of 7 OOA E Of
Village Lola W End
lA $1 333 37
08 00658 000 Smith
William K, Sect 11 ·26
(640) Near Mid Of N
112 On River Ex Coal
9 95A, $219 86
08.()()893 000 Wagner
Betty L, Sect 7 Lot
•272 W End Coal Only
51 A, $106 20
08·00615 000 Wolle
Charles
~ola
Sec 3 7 (215) W Part
Of 60A Ex Coal
13 OOA Ex 1 616A
11 384A
$52 73
08·00616 OOOWolle
Charles
Lola

a.

a.

Corner 1 OO" c Out Of
17 82Ac
I.OOA,
$3117 76
09 01277 OOO Sm llh
Linda K, Sect 7 II Out
01 315BA SOI Rd Ex
f 2A 50A, $48 24
09·01 061 OOOSm llh
Linda
Kay
&amp;/Or
Donald E, Sect3 9-10
N PI Of 25 25A SW
Part 160A Lot 1161
1212A $50 61
09· 01 062 OOO Smlth
Linda
Kay
&amp;/Ro
Donald E Sect 11 ·39·10 Mid Of S Pa rt
160A Lot 1161 22A
$92 06
09 01226 OOOTreglla
Lou ie P &amp; Benedict J
c/o Louis P Treglia
Sect 10 6 55A Out Of
7 55A Out Of 7 55
6 55A $27 64
09 0122 7 OOOTreglla
Lou is P &amp; Benedict J
c/o Louis P Traglla
Sact 10 NW Ql Of
160A Lot 1164 40A
$167 62
09· 01228 OOOTreg lla
Louis P &amp; Benedict J
c/o Louis P Treglia
sect 9 N Part Of 40A
1 89A $7 67
09·01229 OOOTreglla
Louis P &amp; Benedict J
c/o Louis P Treglia
Sect 10 Mid &amp; N Prt
Ex Mid &amp; N Prt Ex lOA
SW Cor 30A, $125 81
09 01230 OOOTreglia
Louis P &amp; Benedict J
c/o Louis P Treglia
Sect 10 W Part Ex
56A W 37A $154 98
09 01231 OOOTreglla
Louis P &amp; Benedict J
c/o Louis P Treglia
Sect 11 S Of SEI/4 Of
SW 114 20A $83 62
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
EASTERN LSD
10·00440 000
Barringer Mitchell D
&amp;/Or Driggs Lisa R
Lot Sect 15 NE Part
Of 30A N Part Of S
1 474A
IOOA
$1 880 48
10 00342 002
Bauerbach Scott A
&amp;/Or
Amber
M
Sec 6 T2 A12 2 036A
Out
Of
69 172A
2 036A~75 96
10·00435 000
Lambert Violet c/o
Theresa Queen Sacl
12 R 12 T4 694A,
$276 01
1O-G0181 000
Maynard Boney &amp;/Or
Belly L
)
Lot ,13
Hickory
Acres
S~tbdlv
1
X 400'
$630:57
10-00061 001 Pullins
Joseph William &amp; E
Faye, Sect 23 T4N
R12W N Of SR 681
.S BOA Out Of 37 A
5 BOA, $160 34
10·00471 004 Ritchie
Charles A Sr &amp;/Or
Kathy A Sect 6 T4
R12
845A Out Of
26 84 7A
845A,
$1614
1D-00573 000
Robinson R Rex &amp;
Wilma Lot Sect 24
SW Part 0175 67A AI
Forks Of Rd
41A
$234 59
10.00576 000 Sovel
Carol
Ann
Aka
Buchanan Carol Ann
Lot Sect 5 W Of SA 7
In NE 114 2A Out Of
31 60A 1A $772 58
10-G0756 000
Wingrove James, Lot
Sect 15·21 On W Line
8 54A, $89 36
10.()0757 000
Wingrove Jameam
Lot Sect18 SE Of SW
1/4 28 87A Out Of
33 44A
28 87A
$319 87
1o 00333 000
Yost
Richard Thomas &amp;/Or
Pamela Sue Lot sect
23 NW Prt
65A,
$929 40
10·00334 ooo
Yost
Richard Thomas &amp;/Or
Pamela
Sue
Lot Sacl·24 In SW Prt
S Of Rd Ex Coal
1 03A $44 50
10·00335 000
Yost
Richard Thomas &amp;/Or
Pamela Sue Lot Sect
12 24 Near SW Cor
lOA $6 91
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
11 00062 OOOBiack
Connie B Sect 10 In
S Part 015217A Mid
On S Line W Of Rd
lA
$1,046 51
11.00115 000
Bullington Phillip L
Sect 36 NW Part Of
NW 114 Ex 112A NW &amp;
3A
NE
28 50A
$1,023 51
11-01146 003
Caldwell Tlmothy,Sec
30T5N R14W 19 297A
Out
Of 28 9229A
19 297A, $120 87
11· 00157 ooo Clark
Myrtle Etal, Sect 1 N
Part Of 22 50A W Part
Of
59A
5 50A
$25820
11-oo&amp;13000 Gilmore
Gary w IJOr Emily J
Etal, Sect 32 SE
Corner Ex t4 Vain
Coal 10 82A, SilO 12
11•00480 000 Holman
Roger L &amp;/Or Sally
Lot Secl 1 Fr 4 T-tN,
R·14W
Clair-Mar
Eetates
9882A
$1,105 74
11.()()732 000 Mitchell
Edward
Lawrance
Fr33 T6N A14W New
Survey 2 6527A Ex
2 533iiA
0 1191A
$042
ll-oo733 000 Mitchell
Edward
Lawrence
Fr24 T6N R14W New
Survey
38 0794
Ex 7 4602 Ex7 4602
Ex 9 4326 II 7264A
$63 80
11-00386 000 Norris

Oliver W ii/Or Debr1
K Lot, Sacl·2 {840) 2
Tr N Happy Hollow Rd
Nr W Sd Sec 2 202A
$71 00
11.()()231 001 Partlow
John Sect 27 T6 R1 4
II 148A
Out
Of
26 14A
11 148A,
$6991
11·00273 004 Pierce
Jeremy &amp;/Or Pierce
Martin
Part
Of
Fraction
36
T&amp;N
R14W 2 724A Oul Of
39 185A
2 724A,
$92 79
11· 00850 001 Priddy
Gary L &amp;/Or Araka A
Sect 2 T6 A14 Mid N
112 2 472A Out Of
39 40A
2 472A
$2,281 23
11.01141 004
Richa rds Ronald A
&amp;/Or
Kathryn
V,
Fraction 4 T6 A14
1 644A
Out
Of
41 347A Ex
716A
928A, $378
11.01319 000 Ritchie
Charles A Sr &amp;/Or
Kathy A, Lot Sect ·8 N
Of Ad 552A Out Of
89A 552A, $640 99
11.()()913 000 Romine
Dalbert Howard c/o
Romine
Tom
Lot Sect ·21 Near Cor
N Of Rd lA, $15 24
11·00535 000 Rural
Action Inc, Sect 28 E
lnd
135 82A
Ex
67 87A
67 95A
$1 ,889 02
11..(){)701 003 Stewart
Kelly D &amp;/Or Chaffee
Marlene D Sect 3 T6N
A14W 1 174A Out Of
22 45A 1 174A $66 35
11· 00639 000
Vlny
Joseph E Sect 30W
Part Of SE 114 51 37A
$649 99
11·00640 000
Vlny
Joseph E Sect 3~
Mid On E Line 63 BOA
S429l1
11· 00641 000
Vlny
Joseph E Sect 30
Near Mid Of E 112
49 28A, $299 88
II 01184 003 Walker
Danny L IJOr Judy K
Sect 13 T6 R14 1 OOA
Out Of 94 396A Lot 2
1 OOA, $112 74
11· 00737 000 Wolle
John M &amp;!Or Carrie A
Lot Sect ·2 SW Prt Of
41 85A Mid Of N 112
Ex Coal 1A $239 80
11.01026 001 Zdonlak
Debra, Sec 16 T6
R14W 3 OOA Out Of
55 25A 3 OOA $78 44
RUTLAND VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
12 00248 000 Atkins
Lorello,
Sect
B,T 6,R 14 SW Cor
Lot #17 491A Of
1516A
2494A
$65 85
12·00400 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partershlp c/oHerbarl
Grate Payne Lot &amp; N
Part Of Church Lot
57A $753 30
12 00406 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Parlershlp
c/o
Herbert Grate
Sect
8 (640) Mill Lot &amp; Strip
N 18A $232996
12·00131 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Herbert Grate
50 X
100.$100 90
12·00135 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Herbert Grate
Lot
37 15A $569 30
12 00136 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Herbert Grate
Lot
(640) N Slda St At124
19A, $4809
12 00137 000 Greta
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Harbert Grate Sec 8
(640) Prt 014A SW Of
SE 114 N Of Rd 38A
$122 94
12·00402 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Herbert Grate Sect
8 (640) Out Of 1 18A
SW Of SE 114 N Of Rd
Ex
17A
44A
$254 94
12·00403 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Herbert Grate Sect
8 (640) Off S End Of
lOA 1 OIA, $451 40
12· 00404 000 Grate
Investments Limited
Partnership
c/o
Harbert Grate Sect
14(282) Of 39 18A NE
Cor Bordering On
Main
St
16A
$1,534 04
12·00405 000 Grate
Investments Llmltad
Partnership
clo
Harbert Grata Sect
8 (640) E Of Rd N Of
Drug
Store
16A
$34 67
12·00407 000 Grata
lnveatmento Limited
Partnerahlp
c/o
Herbert Grata Sect
14 (262) NE PI Of
70 54A Next to K Of P
09A,S19286
12·00274 000 Kaull
Paul M &amp;!Or Debbie S
Lot 36 16A, $308 97
12 · 00047 001
Kennedy Robert K,
Sact 8 T6 R14 51A
Out Of 10 70A 51 A,
$94 22
12·00201 000

Mossman

Sueen,

Sect · 8 32 Nxt To
Presbyterian PI Of
50A 20A, $48 91
12.()()202 000
Moeaman
Susan,
sect 8 East Of Road
Out Of 50A
15A,
$281 84
12· 00399 ooo
Tillis
Danny
R
IJOr
Saundra, Nw PI Of
84A E End Ex Let N
21 A, $297 117

t2-G0374 ooo fillio
Danny
R
&amp;/Or
Soundra K Sect 14
(262) NE Cor Of Lot 7
1011X110
28A,

$689 98
12.()()065 000 Tillil
Danny
R
&amp;/Or
Saundra Koy Sect 14
(262) Near NE Cor
Joining VIII Joining
Lot 21 5 49A Ex
432A $41 35
12-oo046 OOf)
Vanmeter Paul A &amp;/Or

Kennedy
Angela
Irene Sect, 8 (640)
Naar Mid On S Line
Of NW 114 Ex 1 05A
1 05A
$77 36
SALEM TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
13-G0037 000 Barren
Gerald F Sr Etol c/o
Belly
Caldwell
Sec 19 SE Of NW114
Of 58 75A Ex H4 Vein
Coal 1 17A $102 80
13 00038 000 Barrell
Gerald F Sr Elal c/o
Betty
Caldwell
sect 19 Near Mid On
N Llna Of Sec lA
1 OOA, $99 25
13.()()296 000 Barren
Gerald F Sr Etal c/o
Betty CaldWell, Sect
14 ·5 (3) Longstreth
Add $26 78
13.00445 000 Bass
Steven John &amp;/Dr
Emily
Ruth
Loll , $22 83
13 00446 000 Bass
Steven John &amp;/Or
Emily Ruth, Lot 2 Ex
16 N Side, $76 71
13·0044 7 000 Bass
Steven John &amp;/Or
Emily
Ruth
Lot2 Longstreth Add
16 N Side, $7 46
13.()()727 000 Denney
Ronald &amp;/Or Ginger K
Lot 2 AI 325 $766 26
13-00623 002 Earls
Shawn Sec 2 TBN
R15W 5 3357A Out Of
43 0609A
5 3357A
$266 81
13.()()395 000 Gilmore
Gary W &amp;/Or Emily J
Elal, Sect2 TBN A 15
W 24 26A Out Of
47 229Ac
24 26Ac
$175 60
13..(){)396 000 Gilmore
Gary W &amp;/Or Emily J
Elal Sect 2 T BN A 15
W 3 4A Out Of
127 5546Ac
3 4Ac
$24 80
13.()()405 000
Goodman Billy J &amp;
Antonia M, Sect
25 T 8 A 15 NW Cor
Of NE 1/4 3 061A Of
40A
3 061A
$120 10
13.00406 000
Goodman Billy J &amp;
Antonia
M, Sect
25 T8N,R 15W, 2 55A
Out
Of
30 879A
2 55A, $35 05
13.00613 000 Haefner
Clarence
A &amp;/Or
Cheryl L Sect 18 NE
Cor Of NW Ql Of Sect
18 50A $118 16
13 00272 000
Hanners Barbara L,
Sect 23 NE 114 Of
47 23A
2A
$61 23
13·00777 000 Hayes
Theodore P, Sac! 18
T8 R 15 N11r Mid On
N Line Out Of 94 06A
5 03A
$65 77
13 00778 000 Hayes
Theodore
P
Sect 18 Near Mid On
Line E PI N Of Rd Out
Of 99 53A
5 47A
$655 60
13.00574 009
Hannlngton Evan
Scott sect II T8 R15
SE Cor 7 2148A Out
Of 21 3337A 7 2148A
$1 75718
13.()()574 011
Hennington Scott
Sect II T8 R15
7 3288A
Out
Of
10 8289A
7 3288A
$140 60
13 00651 ooo Hisle
Charles A IJOr Reda
F St 5 ·15 8 S Prt Of
NE 114 OF NE 114
Back Lane
7 36A,
$154 27
13·00652 000 Hisle
Charles R IJOr Reda
F Sect15 ·8·5 NE Cor
13 79A, $27 63
13·00653 000 Hisle
Charles R IJOr Reda
F Sect 15 -8 -41 011 S
Side or 80A E 112 ot
SE 114 BOA $126 67
13..(){)580 005 Mulllna
Timothy L &amp; Karen D
Sect 1 TB AI Tract 15
6 045A Out Of 41 54A
6 045A, $950 82
13..(){)522 000
Nottingham Tommy
And
Nollingham
Elfreda, Sect 36 SE
114 lA $14 57
13.00523 000
Nottingham Tommy
And
Nottingham
Elfreda, Sect 15·7-36
In SE 114 of SE 114 lA
$5082
13-G0161 003 Savage
Donald E &amp;/Or Lorelei
Sect 25 S 112 Of SW
114 2 OOA Out Of
37121A
200A
$9887
13.00373 002
Smallwood Bobby J
Fr 35 TS R15 53 087A
Out
Of
58 OOA
53 087A $1 300 99
13-G0374 000
Smallwood Bobby J
Sect 28 NW Part Ex
14 Vein Coal 21A
$213 02
13.00375 000
Smallwood Bobby J
sect 34 NE Cor Ex 114
Vein Coal
6 SOA
$3780
13·00161 010 Walker
Debra A, S 112 Of SW
1/4 Sect25T8N R15W
5 OOA Out Of 12 OOA
5 OOA, $395 33
13-G0507 000 Watroba
Michelle, Sect 17 lOA
Out Of Mid. E Side Of

'

'

40A Ex J4 Vein Cool
lOA, $77 20
13-G0508 000 Watroba
Michelle, Sect 18
1 38A Of E Sida Of
15A Ex J4 Vain Coal
1 38A
$17 72
13-G0565 001 Welch
Tony L &amp;/Or Gwenne
c/o Gwan na Grady
Sect 14 AI TBN R1 5W
3678A Out Of 15 54A
3678A $148 21
SALISBURY
TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
14 0 1 6 75 OOO Ace
Hig h Music Inc, Sect
20 8 5A
3 (640)
$670 64
14-G001 2 000
Anspach Eugene F
&amp;/Or
Judy
Sact 13 34 {1 1)0.327)
NE Cor Next To
Maynard Coal Co
66A
$70 85
14 · 00961 0 00
Anspach Eugene F
&amp;/Or
Judy
Sect 34 (100·327)
50 X15 W St Rd J7 PI
Of 54A 07A 1 91
14 01722 OOOAihens
&amp; Pomeroy Coal &amp;
Land Co The Sect 34
(640) Coal Mid Of N
3919A $68 74
14.()()287 000 Brooko
Dorothy Jane &amp;/Or
Thomas P, St 34 T 1
R 13 (11)0.370) On E
Line Near Mid Of
19 56A 87A $175 92
14 · 01453 001
Carpenter Randall A
Jr Sect 29 T1 R13 Pel
12 61A Loll 57 &amp; 24A
Lot313 94A $706 01
14·00505 000
Cremeans Michael E
&amp;/Or Draama Sect 15
(262) E of Pomeroy
Athens Rd
83A
$606 09
14-G0767 000 Demoss
Esther L, Sect 16
(640) SW Part Of Sect
16 1 &amp;OA, $504 80
14-oo299 000 Doerler
Henry Jr &amp;/Or Patty
c/o Patty Thompaon
Sect 8 (640)
Of
Williamson S Part Of
85A 15A $8 78
14.()()300 000 Doarler
Henry Jr &amp;/Or Patty
Ann
c/o
Patty
Thompson
Sect
8 (840) S Part 0 161A
Bel Chester Rd 50A
$85 70
14 00152 000 Family
Homes Inc Sect 16
(640) 62A Of 44 04A
SW Of SE 112 N Of Ad
48A
$2064 74
14· 01304 OOOFialslg
William
&amp;
Klein
Barbara m Sec 9 (262)
SW Prt Of SW 114 Of
Ad lA $17 64
14·00410 OOOFolmer
Daniel Rm Sect 8
{640) NE Part Bet
Pom Chas Ad &amp;
Forest Run 4A 2 35A
$270 00
14 00485 OOOGomer
Charles E Etal c/o
Paul
S
Gomer
Sect 34 (100·327) NW
On Ad Ex Coal Out Of
19 34A lA $24 42
14·00518 OOOGraham
Michael &amp;/Or Charyl
Lynn Sect 17 (640) In
N Part Of SW 114
2812A $851 82
14-01582 00 Hickman
Floyd C &amp;/Or Mary B
Sect 24 (1 00) NE Cor
01 3 30A
Penny
Surv 51 A, sa 40
14·01583 OOHickman
Floyd C &amp;/Or Mary B
Sact34 ·35 (100) Near
Mid Near S Line 50A
$362 50
14·00688 001 Hysell
Gary F Sect 31 T2N
R13W, SW Corner
29A Out Of 86A
$103 82
14 01140 001 Hysell
Gary F, Sect 31 T2N
A12W 316A Out Of
46 59A
316A
$725 72
14·00198 OOOKaull
Paul E &amp;/Or Frances
M Out Of 8 75A Trl In
S Part 1A, $58 76
14 00823 OOOKing
Danny A, Sect 25
(640) 160 X170 E Of
Allen Gilkey 1 04A
Ex 166A
294A
$5 33
14· 02348 OOOLittle
Donald
&amp;
Lola
Royalty
Interest
Herald 011 &amp; Gas Co
$445
14·00691 002Riflle
Manhew EdWard IJOr
Krlatlna
Gall
Frac 24 T2 R13 2 OOA
Out
Of
29 03A
$1 021 10
14·00997 001 Smith
Jaal\n a./Or
Amy
554A In IOOA Lot315
&amp; 446A In IOOA Lot
304 1 OOA, $56 45
14 01394 000
Sprouae Charles IJOr
Ernestine Sec 8 (640)
T2 R13 S Prt Of 7A
NE Prt Of S Of Pom
Chao 50A, $8 40
14 · 01395 000
Sprouae Charles IJOr
Erneotlne, Sec 8 (840)
Prt Of 4 25A Mid E Of
NE 114 lA, $199 98
14 01339 ooo Welch
Gwen
Hutk
Sect 26 (640) Und 112
Of 75A E Line Of
Union Ave
1 OOA
$16 02
14.01599 OOOWIIIIamo
Clarence
J
&amp;/Or
Catherine
Jill
Sl 36 TIN R13W
(100.315) WEnd Of N
1/2 2 224A
2 224A
32 05
14.01600 OOOWIIIIams
Clarence
J
&amp;!Or
Catherine
Jill
St31 T.2N A 13W(840)
Mid Of SW 114 On B
Line 1 924A 1 1124A
$1 ,844 01

s

•sa

(Contlnuld on Page 85)

Monday,Nov.17,2003
(Continued frum Page
84)

MIDDLEPORT
VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
15-00118 ooo easel
David P Lot (411)
Pom 411 , $662 55
15.()11 oo 000 Casto
Chester
&amp;
Lori
Lot 29 201 A Out Of
96A 201A $410 49
15.()()295 000 Coates
Celesta c Lot 412
Pom f412 w 112
$475 21
15 00943 000 Craig
Steven &amp; Gloria J
Lot (124) Pa lmer a
2nd Add 124 E 112
50X50 $642 24
15 00944 000 Craig
Slaven &amp; Gloroe J
Lot (123) Palmers
2nd Ad d 123 E Part
Of Strip 4X50 $5 85
15·01111 000' Dowler
David Secl 29 50A
Ex 10 Sode
50A
$56 72
15 01112 000 Dowler
David Sect 29 20A
On W Line Of Corp N
Of Ad 20A $19 07
15 01968 000 Dowler
Davod Sect 29 (640)
119 21A N Of Leading
CrW Of Mid Ex 1 36A
9410A $575 51
15·01221 OOOEdwards
Marvon R Lot 66
Coalport, $68 48
15.()1222 OOOEdward s
Marv lnR Lot 66C
10X90 $16 33
15 004 26 OOOEII Is
Qren L IJOr Peggy L
Lot 15 Horton &amp;
Bosworth Add $79 25
15.()()889 000 Haynes
Doris, Lot 59 Behan
2nd Add Ex 18 N
$339 61
15 00927 000 Hudson
James David &amp;/Or
Barbara
Ann
Lot 22 Rivervi ew
Acres
Subd ov
$588 65
15 00686 000 Hyse ll
Noah, Lot PI Of Lot
H477 40X70 3 011 SW
PI Of 477 Pomeroy
Add $180 18
15 00932 000
Johnson Davod W
&amp;/Or
Betty
L
Lot 7 Hobart Add Mod
62 Front 30 Rear
$816 67
15·00058 000
McCarty Roy &amp;/Or
Tammy
Lot
(16)
Rive rview
Acre s
Subdivision $640 54
15 01575 000 Powell
Shelby
M
Lot 136 Bosworth
Add $81 02
15.()()651 000 Sogman
Megan Beth &amp;/Or
Davod Lot 37 Horton
&amp; Bosworth Lot 37
$369 92
15 01968 002Stover
Yvonne Sec 29 Tl
A13 N Of Leadong
Creek W Of Mod
1 041A Out Of 96 50A
1 041A $1 277 98
15 01343 OOOTaylor
John L Etal Lot 24
Behan
2nd
Add
$66 70
15·01344 OOOTaylor
John
L
Etal
Lot 8 Behan 1st Add
112 $197 88
15 01~77 OOOW eich
Tony c/o Gwenne
Grady, Lot 29 06A PI
Of Brick Yard Lot Of
Back St 06A S3 25
15 01478 OOOWelch
Tony clo Gwenne
Grady Lot 29 12 E
Side 58 Park Sl
$221 08
15 00102 OOOWolls
Mike
&amp;
Karen
Lot (18) Alv ervoew
Acres
Subd1v1slon
$1 409 33
15·01440 OOOWol son
Randy
A
&amp;/Or
Elizabeth J Lot #12
Old Bosworth Add
$1 290 74
15 02019 OOOWolson
Randy
A
&amp;/Or
Elizabeth J N Sode Of
Lot #12 Old Bosworth
Add 12 X 114 $12 98
15 00103 OOOYoung
Darrell T c/o Kathy
Strickland Lot 82
Bosworth Add Ex 40
AII01Lo183 $61 3 01

s

POMEROY VILLAGE
MEIGS LSD
16 01719 000 Ca slo
Chester
L
Sr
Lot 432 Ex 75 XIOO
Of W End $223 04
16 01720 OOOCasto
Chester L Sr, Lot 432
5 XIOO
W
End
$6 78
16·003&amp;2 ooocundiff
James c/o Margaret
While Lot 143 N 112
Debnay Add, $13 67
16-G0399 000
Davidson Mila J c/o
Mila
Woods
Lot 527114 $940 97
16 - 00229 0000111
Irene M c/o Mary Jo
Wolfe , Lot 14 Lincoln
Helghta Add $577 84
18.01950 OOOEdwardo
Mervin Jr Lot 282· 17
Sub 438 3/4 17A W
P1rt Of 173 N Of
Rlnehlrt
17A
133812
11·01884 OOOFietcher
D1vld A &amp;/Or Di1n1 S
Lot
38
Lincoln
Helghta Add f2114 811
11·01111 000
~ormyduval Timothy
L, Lot 18 lub 4
Cherry It
ze X80
13131
18.01814 000 Gerntl
Yond• K Lot 328 4

...1 11
18-01881000 Gerntl
Yond• K Lot 101 &amp; Trl
On NW Side l!x Trl BE
Cor $38 71
18.01813 000 Gilmore
Jerod Donlel &amp;/Or
Brook Lynn Lot 321
MtciWtlc 8t, S1 09 31
18-ooe34 000

The Daily Sentinel e Page .85

www.mydailysentlnel.con:r

Gloeckner Elizabeth
Lot 377 E Part Ex
Scoll Lot $204 29
16 00635 000
Gloeckner Etlubeth
Lot 584 Back Of Lot
377 $23 12
16.()()867 000
Imboden Earline Etal
Lot 258 Sub 90
$152 06
16.()0917 000
Johnson Jessie &amp;
Berlha c/o Sol &amp;
Lealer
Johnson
Lot 35 V B Horton s
Add sa 11
16 00918 000
Johnson Jessie &amp;
Bertha c/o Sol &amp;
Lealer
Johnson
Lots 26 ·27 28 $67 54
16·00919 000
Johnson Jessie &amp;
Bertha c/o Sol &amp;
Lealer
Johnson
Lot 36 V B Horton s
Add $11 78
16 00920 000
Joh nson Jessie &amp;
Bertha c/o So l &amp;
John son
Lealer
Lot 34 V B Horton s
Add $8 17
16.()()921 000
Johnson Jess1e &amp;
Bertha c/o So l
Lea ler
Johnson
Lot 29 &amp; 30 90 XI OO
$6 32
16 01833 000
Johnson Terry L II &amp;
Me li ssa c/o Melissa
Johnson
Lot1 2
$775 95
16.0 1834 000
Johnson Terry L II &amp;
Meli ssa c/o Melissa
Johnson
Lot
303 Out Of Lot 303 25
Wide X 94 X 103 5
054A
$8 61
16 0 1092 000
McKe nzie Bruce l
Elal
c/o
Kelly
McKenzoe
Lot 80
$9 98
1 6· 01 0 9 3 000
McKenzi e Bruce L
Etal
c/o
Kelly
McKenzoe Lo1 262 18
N Of E Bauer &amp; W Of
Sedore
Ex
Coal
5 52A
$473 03
16 01 585 ooo
Mills
James A &amp;/Or Selly G
L ot
434,
1 98A
$611 56
16 01176 000 Moon
Phollop Ar thur Elal
L ot 257 Sub 19112
5110 28
16.01 284 000

a.

Ohling er Rosa c/o
Jeffrey Ohlinger Lot
492 $63 42
16 01 285 000
Ohlinger Rosa c/o
Jeffrey Ohlinger Lot
492 112 Strop 78 w
Sode &amp; 18 S Of Lot
$972
16 0 11 53 000 Rilchoe
Charl es A IJOr Kathy
A Lot1224 28A E Of
Fetger &amp; Merrick Ex
Coal 28A $52 40
16 01370 OOORitchle
Charles A Sr &amp;/Or
Kathy A
Lot 23
$27 33
16 01 371 000 Aotchle
Charles A Sr &amp;/Or
Kathy A
Lot 31
$874
16 02401 001 Rolchle
Charles A Sr &amp;/Or
Kathy A Sec 8 T2N
R13W Part Of Lot #
279 0 055A $76 61
16 02402 ooo Ritchie
Charl es A Sr &amp;/Or
Kathy A Loi 280 80
On So uth Sode New
Survey
0 095A
S55 57
16 02403 000 A l lc~le
Charles A Sr &amp;/Dr
Kathy A Lot 281 Lot
S Sode 80 On W
210 On E Side Ex
New Survey 0 053A
S282 01
16 01435 ooo Roa ch
Daron
Doyle Elal
Lot 262 ·25 125 Off W
End Bet Cem &amp; Rd
Sl 415 87
16 00664 000 Saulers
Conno e L Lot 284
Rear 284 20 From
Cliff To End Of Lot
$4 81
16 00665 000 Sauters
Connoe L Lot 284
Horton s Add All In
Front Of 20 From
Cliff
$468 38
16·01948 000
Townsend Helen
Lot 185 35 N Side
S123 65
16 01949 000
Townsend Helen
Lot 186 10 S Soda
52039
16 00753 000 Wilson
Gerry L &amp;/Or Shirley
A Lot 551 60A 60A
S378 19
16-01956 000 Woods
Mila
Lot
523
S1 ,516 63

a.

SCIPIO TOWNSHIP
MEIGS LSD
17·00264 001
Amburgy Arnold Jr
&amp;/Or
Sara
Sect 34 T7N R14W
1 OOA Out Of 24 86A
1 OOA $14 30
17·00648 000 Andrus
Gertld A Jr &amp;/Or
Temmy A Sect 17
{840) In N Pert Of SW
114 22A, 1112 21
17-00818 003
aeughmln John
Trulltt Friction 24
T7 R14 8 0050A Out
Of 112 04A 5 OOIOA
110011
17·00570 001 Ieard
Keith D, Preotlon 38
T7 R14 50 882A Out
Of 84 BOA 50 812A
878002
17·00831 ooo
Bell
Devld J &amp;/Or April K
Bect30 4 888A Out Of
12187A Ex 3 0713A
1 OOA, 1814 80
17-001122 001 Blneg1r
Mlcheel Allen, Sect 28
Fr 31 T7R14 3 OOA
Out Of 13 42A 3 OOA
$3488
17·00188 000 Bleck

James &amp;/ Or Tracl
Sect 2 (640) Mid Of S
112 On N Line OIW Of
Ad 6A sats 31
17 00427 000 Boring
Robert E
Lot 8
$500 07
17-oo090 000 Cogdill
Brandl J Lot Sec 23
(640) SE Prt 60A Ex
32 50A
27 SOA
$383 07
17.OQ090 001 Cogdill
Brandl J, Sec 23 T7
R14 32 50A Out Of
6000A
32 50A
$136 35
17 00159 000 Coles
Etel
Edward H
Lot Sec1·15 (262) NW
Cor Of S 152A 6 42A
$83 41
H 00160 000 Coles
Edward
H
Etal
Lot Sect 15 (262) W
Prl Of NW 114 50A
25A $71 38
17.()()179 000 Cotterill
Steven
D
&amp;/Or
Barbara C
Lot (9)
$16 20
17.()()180 000 Cotteroll
Steven
D
&amp;/Or
C
Barbara
Lol Sec ·16 (640) NE
of NW 114 Ex 16A Ex
SA Ex 1 526A 3 474A
$1 08 29
17 00640 000 Hocks
Cyn thia Loll&amp; $33 23
17 00641 000 Hocks
Cynth ia
Lot
15
$791 13
17 0041 5 000 Hyatt
Troy &amp;/Or Maro lyn
Sect 36 T7 A14 N Mid
112 Out Of 40A Ex
3 49A
12 815A
$913 37
17-oo472 000
Kennedy Perry E Lot
Sect 14 15 NE Part
Of 37 50A
5 50A
$58 53
17 00473 000
Kennedy Perry E Lot
Sect ·14 · 15 (262) NE
Part SOA $165 19
17·00494 000 Ko stoval
Jan M &amp;/Or Tamara
Lynn Lot Sect 23
(640) NE 114 S Of Ad
N Part Of SE 1/4 108A
$597 91
17 00495 000 Ko stlval
Jan M &amp;/ Or Tamara
Lynn Lot Sec 23
(640) N Part Of NE 114
N
Of
Rd
88A
$1 609 67
17 00861 000 Kostoval
Jan Mochael &amp; Tamara
Lynn Se c 17 (640)
NW Cor W Of Ad NE
Of SE 114 Mid Of SW
114
Ex
87 573A
18 271 A $474 01
17 00978 000
Pagevolle Properloes
Inc c/o Anne We st
Sec9· 10 (262) Fr 12
All &amp; S Of Rd 24 93 Of
65A 24 93A Sl 883 II
17 00630 000 Phollops
Paul
&amp;/Or
Dtane
Sect 4 NE Of SW 114
&amp; NW Of SE 114 52A
$454 80
17 00631 000 Pholllps
Doane
Paul
&amp;/Or
Sect 4 E 20 Downong
Survey 145
20A
$560 62
17 00632 000 Phillips
Paul
&amp;/O r
Doane
Sacl 4 Mod On S Lone
Of NW 114
lOA
$42 08
17 00922 002 Rankin
Eric &amp;/Or Rhonda K
Fr 34 35 T7 A14
7 454A Out 0110 42A
7 454A $60 56
17 00173 003
Rayburn Royal A &amp;
Rosalie A Sect 18 T7
R14 6 156A Out Of
63 299A
6 156A
$98 64
17 00173 004
Rayburn Royal A &amp;
Rosalie A Sact 18 T7
R14 5 812A Out Of
69111A 5812A
$94 65
17·00173 005
Rayburn Royal A &amp;
Rosalie A, Sect 18 T7
A14 5 OOA Out Of
74111A
500A
$85 01
17 00868 000
Aobonson Marilyn
Sect 24 NE Part 01
101A NW Of NW 114 &amp;
NW Of NE 1/41700A
$184.09
17 00682 000
Robinson Warren E
IJOr
Robinson
Robert L, c/o Warren
E
Robonson
Lot
Sect 18 NE Cor Of
NW 114 50A $5 21
17 00227 000 Savage
Edward L Lot Sect
14 24 SE Corner
10 95A $182 05
17·00575 000
Thompaon Roger
&amp;/Or Durham Melissa
Lot (1), $61 25
17· 00577 000
Thompaon Roger
&amp;/Or Durham Melissa
Lot (3) S52 08
17·00578 000
Thompean Roger
&amp;!Or Durham Melillo
Lot (2) 545 81
17·00681 000
Williams Andrew J
&amp;/Or Ama Sue Lot
Sect ·3~ (840) B PI Of
SW 114 Ex 18 314A
Soutli
18 115711A
$811114
17-()()f 52 OOOWIII Kin
6/0r
Kimberly
Lot lltot 14 II W Of
Mid 20.811A b I 1188A
,. t34A
oa

use

SUTTON TOWNIIHIP
BOUTHI!RN LSD
18· 01211 000 Arnott
Robart I! BJOr Debrt
K Sect 24 8 Pert Of
30A Nl! PI 01107A N
3A, 113 70
18 00403 000 Arnall
Thamaa A &amp;/Or Csrol
A, Sect 11 Prt Of 340A
E Of Wolf Run 2 93"
SIB 811
18·00821 ooo Bean
M~rvln &amp;/Or Rh11
Lot
21
Bub
A
$482 98

18.()()587 001 Burton
Lori D Sect 16 T2N
A12W 2A Out Of
10 50A 2A $608 58
18.()1325 000 Dovls
William D IJOr Coral
D Secl12 30 W PI
3 28A SE PI 42 314A N
End 98A, sa 53
18.01327 001 Davis
William D &amp;/Or Coral
D Sec 36 T2N R12W
2 5964A
Out
Of
17 SOA
2 5964A
$22 34
18 01329 001 Davis
William D &amp;/Or Coral
0 Sec 36 T2N R12W
2 4236A Out Of 3 37 A
2 4236A $20 71
18·00949 003 Davis
William
D
Jr
1OOA Lot 283 5 5429A
Out
Of
81 838A
5 5429A $178 38
18 00949 004 Davis
William D Jr 100 Acre
Lot 283 1 6345A Out
Of 74 695 1A 1 6345A
$52 75
18·00950 003 Davis
Wolllam D Jr IOOA Lot
284 2 355 A Out Of
69 37A 2 355A $76 19
18.()()952 001 Du rham
Broan E &amp;/Or Rebecca
R Sect 24 W Sode Of
Ad 160A Lot 1220 T2
R12 5 OI A $177 56
Hl-01167 000 Durham
Brian E &amp;/Or Rebecca
A Sect 24 160A Lot I
1220 302 A Out Of
75 97A T2 A 12 3 02A
$12 56
18·00266 000 Grueser
Ja mes J Jr &amp;/Or
Melossa K Sect 16
R 12 T2 Mod H53 &amp; 6
Ex Coal 095A Of
43 193A
045 A
$19 00
18 00267 000 Grueser
J ames A Jr &amp;/Or
Melissa
K
Sect 16 SE PI N Of
Salser s W Of Ad Ex
lOlA 103A $19 00
18·00269 000 Grueser
J ames A Jr &amp;/Or
Mehssa K Sect 16
063A Out Of 44 49A
063A $19 00
18 00973 000 Hood
Stephen
Todd
Sect 36 NW Cor Of
5 52A OnW LoneS Of
Aosong
96A
$100 72
18·01 290 000
Hunt
Roc hard L Lo1 73 73 E
Maon, S237 66
18 00897 001
Johnson Jill L Sec
25 T3N A12W 0 618A
Out Of &amp;A &amp; 0 280A
Out 01113 21A 898A
$1 551 90
18·01 284 000 Logan
James Dwoghl Lot 63
SA Sub A SA $47 52
18·01285 000 Logan
James Dwoght Lot 63
Sub C $33 56
18.00101 000 Medley
Dwight P &amp;/ Or Joyce
M Sect 31 T 3N A 12
1 34A $291 83
18 00486 002 Roush
Debra J Sect 10 T2 A
12 1 OOA Out 017 30A
1 OOA $671 96
18·00926 000 Roush
Robert
G
&amp;/Or
Komberly K Sect 12
22 S Line E Of Rd
39A $111874
18 01219 001 Roush
Robert
G
&amp;/Or
Kimberly K IOOA Lot
281 T2 R12 075A Out
Of 26 302A
07 5A
$11 38
18.()1146 000 Simms
Mary Donna Lot tOO
300 E Of Lot 317
1 33A 1 33A $548 18
18 01185 002 Smith
James H Sec 19 T3N
R12W 2 OOA Out Of
30 142A
2 OOA
$51 91
18· 01216 000 Stobarl
Donna Sect 9 S Pt S
Of Rd Ex Coal 2 673A
Ou t Of 25 67A 2 673A
$71 90
18 00004 003 Taylor
Chad L &amp;/Or Rebecca
D 160A Lot 1201 T2N
R12W 2 759A Out Of
100687A
2882A
$112 54
18 00189 000 Thacker
Anthony W &amp;/Or
Tonya R Sect 12 16 S
PI 011772AW Of Cr
Ex
Coal
64A,
$325 31
18 00726 OOOWhlte
Ell Davod &amp;/Or Evelyn
Irene &amp;/Or Ebersboch
Jenmfer L Sect 2
#108 &amp; 130 Heck
Surv 50A $10 14
RACINE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
19·0014 5 OOOArnoll
Thomas A IJOr Carol
A , Sect16(640)WOI
Wolf Run
IIA
$6 20
19.00242 000
Copplck Jorry Lot 65
5386 88
19·00206 001 Crouch
Tony C Sac 18 T2N
R12W 0 147A Out Of
0 43A 0 147A $88 14
111· 0027j 000 Dowell
Jeffrey Sr &amp;lOr Erlco
Sect 18 {840) 17A
Mid f3 On N Line Of
11ayman 17A 185 31
111·00408 000 Rouah
Normen H &amp;lOr Jentt
K o/o Lerry Filhtr
Lot 14 P Wolfe f14
$4381
19· 00408 000 ROUih
Normen H l/Or Janet
K o/o L1rry Flehtr
Lot17, 1882 71
IYAACUII YILLAQI
80UTHIAN LSD
20.00111 000 Davia
Wlllilm D Jr, Lot 2
111ghlewn
Subdivlelon HIS 12
zo.oot 82 ooo oevle
William D Jr, Lot 3
Hlghlawn
Subdlvlolon $130 17
2D-004t1 000
Downing Mells11 A, 5
Ex 13A N 152 47
20-G0482

oco

Downing Mellua A
29 $77 61
20-00040 000 Grueser
Mei1111 K, Lot 81
$186 52
20.()()740 000 GruaMellua K, Lot 83
$133441
20.00257 000 Harrla
Paul Eugene U &amp;/Or
Sharon
Renee
Sec16T2 A13 (299)
Out Of 34 A
279A
$2 817 73
20.()()122 000
Lavender
Mary
Janice Lot 24 0909A
Ex 0036A
0873A
$14 18
20.()()124 000
Lavender
Mary
Janice PI Of 293 S PI
Ea Lola &amp; 34A To Sl
Ay Ex 26A 1 2633A
Ex 5889A
$11 84
20.()()125 000
Lavender
Mqry
Janice Lot 22 Part Of
08953A Ex 0151 A
07443 A $1 4 60
20·0021 9 00 1Pickens
Calvin D &amp;/Or Kaaron
K Lot 295 T2N R1 2W
Parcel N3 674A Out
Of 3 75A
674A
$457 99
20-G01 90 000
Reynolds Floyd A
&amp;/Or
Shi rley
D
Hlghlawn
18
Subdivision, $945 52
And notice Is he re
by given that the
whole of such several
tracts lots or p arts of
lots woll be cerliloed
for fo reclos ure by
t he County auditor
pursuant to law or
forfeited to the Stale
unless the taxes
assessments
and
penalties are paid
Nancy Parker
Grueser - ;llltfltor of
Meigs Co unty Ohio
Nov 17 24

WHAT

STYlE...

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHO
In Ro Change of Name
of
Glenda
Nicole

Goble
to Nicola Lynn Goble
C11e No 31200
•
NOTICE OF HEARING
ON
CHANGE
OF
N"ME
Applicant
hereby
gives notice to all
lntereated
peraona
that the applicant hn
filed an Appllcttlon lor
change of Name In the
Probate
Court
of
Meigs County Ohio
requesting the change
of name of GleQda
Nico le Goble to Nloole
Lynn Goble The hear
lng on the application
be held
on
will
December 17 2003 at
In the
1 30 p m
Probate
Court
of
Meigs County
Glenda Nicole Goble
PO Box 206
Syracuse OH 45779
(11) 17

If ~o, ~ou ~ualizy fora

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT PRO
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PRO
BATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchers of the follow
lng na med loducla ry
has been flied In the
Probate Court Meigs
Co unty
Oh io
l or
approval and sal lie
ment
ESTATENO 30482
The Thord Account of
Bernard V Fultz and
Nanc y Arnold (Long)
Co Trustees of the
Testamentary Tru st of
Elizabeth
Cutler
Deceased
ESTATENO 31395·
The Second And Final
Account of Mannmg
Kloos Trustee of the
Testamentary Trust of
V
Clay
Tuttle
Deceased
Unless exceptions
are flied thereto said
account will be set lor
hearing before said
Court on the 17th day
of December 2003 at
WhiCh
t1me
SBid
account will be con
sldered and continued
from day to day unt1l
finally dosposed of
Any person Interest
ad may file wrollen
exception
to said
account or to matters
pertaonlng to the axe
cut1on of the trust not
less than love days
prior to the date set lor

H~r~' ~ a~ JOU n~~o to ~o".

fill out t~f ~ou~on ~~low
an~ ~ro~ off or mail it ~t~ a
~O~J of ~our ~~oto ID.

~~llt~~(il mat[~ ~rt~unt

'lin! J~nnlltliiltr
The D~r &amp;ntinel

heanng
J S Powell
Common Pleas Court
Probate Division
Meigs County Ohio
(1 1) 17

iun~~~" 'imr~ ·it~tlnd

Public Nottce

...THE
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

•I

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Racine Vollage
Council will accept
sealed bids lor a 1993
Ford Crown Vic Pollee
Car The bids will be
opened at 7 30 p m at
the Municipal bulldong
on December 1 2003
All bods must be
receoved by the vollage
no later than 4 p m on
December 1 2003
Bids must be on a
sealed
envelope
marked Car Bid
Bid Item
1 1993 Ford Crown
Vic Pollee Car Vln N
2FACP71 W9X152395
Minimum bid saoo 00
This car will be sold
as Is no warranty
expressed or Implied
will be placed upon
thos vehicle by the vii
lage
You may view this
vehicle at the Racine
Fire
Department
Building located at 5th
and Pearl Streets
Aacone Ohio
The Racine Village
Council reserve the
right to accept or
relectany or all bids or
any part thereof
David
Spencer
Clerk/Treasurer
Village of Racine
(11) 17 24

' Once 10u ~ave s1gned u' lor~e Se111or~scoont jOUr renewalnotice 11111 reflect 1our Ciscoont

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••

Suoscnoers ~ame _____~
Aaaress _______
'

CI~IStateQI~ -----~none, _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Ma~ or ~op off~~ cou~n ~on~ wrt~ acoprol rour ~~to 10 !o
Ollio Yal~r ~~~~'"~ ~ oBd~, Gil1~~. Oil ~1

1

1,, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ral«! in thl!
~aving~
you'll find
in ths
Cla~~ifisd~!

�•

'

Monday, Nov. 17, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

ALLEY OOP
OOP

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

11-17-03

.. 5 4

• • 2
•AK 9874
"'A J 7

West

~ast

•

8 7

9

1(18763

• J 10 9 3
• Q J
• Q 10 6 5

• 3 2
• Q 9 84

... 10 5 2

Soulh
o11AK Q6 2
9 A K 9 5
• •J

_.. K 6 J

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable: Both
8oulh
1 tft

2•
3 tft
64

Wesl

:"&lt;&lt;orth

t:ast

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2t
3 "'

Pass
Pa!:iS
Pa!:iS
Pass

&lt;l •

Pass

Opening lead: • 8

.

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Online sites provide
interesting material

~UCLE'A~
pow~

GOOD
FER YOU,
MISTOFER

'NORJ&lt;.

AN' FER

bearer

relative
39 Grass skirt
go-with
41 Extinct bird!
42 ldltarod
terminus
43 Tennyson
heroine
44 Specs
preceder
46 Boxing

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
11Jf! ' , J 'l • \ td

,~

'\ o

victory

29 Canned fish
31 OV"ercome
33 Hair·styllng
goo
35 Gp - diet
36 Sharperedged
38 PBS

47 Rebekah 's
son
48 Fender flaw
50 Rest
51 Sturdy tree
52 Epoch

,.......,.,....,........,,....-

ME!!

\~ ~E:.I\LLY D\&lt;.1\GGIW:o

Wf\Y, 5Y Tf\1:'&gt; \ltl\t:.lM'i
IT W1\", t-IE.XT tl\01--\11-\ 1\LF£/\tJi

I

trump?
Gravis only discusses South's rebiddi!lg
three- not two- hearts , the jump promising maximum count. But that badly
burns up bidding space. After a two-overone response, opener's new-suit rebid is
forcing for one round. Then, North rebids
three clubs, fourth-su it game-forcing, asking for more inform ation. South bids
spades a second ti me because that suit
looks like a six-carder. Finally, after North
raises. South jumps to slam.
The simple line is to win the spade lead ,
cash the top hearts , and ruH a heart in lhe
dummy. East overruffs, but at the cost of
his natural trump trick. Back comes, say, a
spade. Declarer draws trumps, plays oil
dummy's top diamonds (discarding his
la st heart), and ruHs a diamond. When
they break badly, South falls back on the
club fi nesse to make his slam.
Go to www.bridgeru n.co m; for more
details.

G

BIG NATE
Oi&lt;.?

.JIJST PO YoUR t&gt;EST,
OK, BOY ? THE.RE 'S
NO PRESSURE ! ALL YOU
H AVE TO DO I S ... 15 .

you HEAP?
-JUST

~eAT

TtiE

CAT!
j
~------------~· ~~----~~~

PEANUTS

··auorl-l
THE RAVEN.
'NO PR06LEM"'

BETTY

...

GARFIELD
OR 50
t'VE: H!:ARP

SCRATCH .
SCRATCH
SCRATCH

AstroGraph
&lt;Your 'lllrih&lt;IIQ':

Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2003
By Bernic:e Bede Osol
You'll have plenty go1ng lor you in the year
ahead and life could prove to be quite
lucky tor you at times in ways that will
make you stand out. Friends and associates will wan t to come along lor the ride .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- Cancel the
shopping spree you had planned lor today
if you don't have a hold on your spending
habits. Te mpting items will be all around
you and you could end up bUsted and
broke.
5AGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Your
need for anen tion today could cause you
to step out of character and use tactics
that draw notice to yourselt th at would tarnish your image. Being gracious wi ll get
you what you want.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - No
matter how good the e)(cuse, obligations
and responsibilities should not be neglect·
ed today or else you might have to pay the
piper tor your s1ns of omi ssion.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Be particularly careful to whom you go lor as~J s ·
ta nce today should you be in need of a
favor. Th e wrong choice could tie conditions to his or her help and put you in an
awkward position
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- This could
be one of those days when (without real- .
izi ng It) you might rub the wrong people
the wrong way. Watch that you don't accidentally step on anybody's toes.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) - If you don't
have a handle on yourself today you could
get cocky about things going well and
become a bit bossy with co-workers.
Instead. try to make them feel like part of
a team .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - AlthOugh
your better judgment Is flashi ng warning
signals today. your love aHair with beautiful things could cause you to spend foolishly and end up costing you more money
than you should spend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -Even if you
feel someone in your family doesn't
deserve it. try to be as tolerant and considerate with this person as you are with
your friends. It'll pay ott in the long run.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) ._ The problems you encounter at work today are likely to be of your own doing. yet you might
try to kid yourself into believing the fault
lies with others and cast blame bn innocent associates.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You are goinQ: to
have to be e)l(!ra prudent in the manage·
ment of your funds today or etse you coutel
easilY squander .a bunch of dollars you
really don't have to waste .
'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Should
someone do sOmething today that really
disturbs you, be careful not to vent your
fru straiions and anger on innoce n!
bystanders. Direc t your ire at the real cui ·
prit.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Before you
cross swords with the boss today ove r
something about which you're not too
pleaseel or receptlve. remember who
signs your paycheck. Hold your tongue
and hold onto your job .

.

SOUP TO NUTZ

ltJ ~, JJ\\

•

1

'\ t) \ J\II~II&lt;I H

.·oo 1,

\\ 1\ \ \ lllul . d ,

military trained him to be a
vehicle mechanic, Deem didn't think he would be called
into active service. Deem ·said
POMEROY - Uncle Sam he was sulllrised when he
needs a few good men to received the phone call late
serve in these troubling times one evening last week about
and one of those soldiers is when he needed to report and
Tony Deem, a principal at where he needed to be.
Meigs Elementary SchooL
"I worry about myself, but '
More than a week ago, I have a lot of younger guys
Deem's unit with the West under me with babies who
Virginia Army National have been called up," he said.
Guard was put on alert and
Deem said has been called
then activated within hours. to serve 18 months, which
" I never thought I was includes three months of
going to be called up," said training on both ends of a 12
Deem who is a staff month tour of duty. He was
sergeant. "We were put on among many men in the
alert in 1992, but nothing area, including Meigs Local
happened. !thought it would School Board member John
be the same this time."
Hood, who have been "acti- Tony Deem, the kindergarten through second grade princiThe father of three has vated" or called into service.
pal at Meigs Elementary. fin ishes up his last day before
served nearly 20 years with
reporting for duty. (J. Miles Layton )
Please see Deem, AS
the National Guard. Since the

J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

• Owens shines in
primetime as 49ers beat
Pittsburgh. See Page B1

BY

CELEBRITY CIPHER

morntng
pursuit
successful
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

hoeflich@ mydailysent1net.com
POMEROY - Following
an early Tue sday morning
pursu it on country roads.
crashing of hi s 1ruck. and a
foot chase. David M. Person s
was taken into custody by the
Meigs County Sheri ff' &gt;
Department.
Meigs Count y Sheriff
Ralph E. Tru&gt;'ell reported
that just after midnight the
she ri ff's office '&gt;'as notified
by off-dut y Racine marshal
Curti s Jone\ that a black Ford
truck had rammed into a
!995 Oldsmobi le parked at
the rear uf a residence located
at ~ 17 Vine St. in Ra&lt;:ine .
When the truL·k left the
scene Jones followed in hiS
personal car. The truck proceeded north on Ba shan Road
and wen t into a field on
Pleasant'; Road and turned
off the lights .
Enroute to the location,
Sheriff Trussell &gt;potted the
truck which th~n sped away.
After a 23-minute pursuit
in volving sheriff's deputies
assisted by a Rutland pol ice
offi&lt;:er. contact with the truck
was lost. However within
minutes. deputies found the
truck crashed on Bigle y
Ridge Road . Persons was
taken into custody following
a short foot chase into the
woods.
He was airli fted to Cabe ii Hunti ngton Hospital for .
treat ment uf minor injuries.
and then tran sferred to the
Huntingto n jail where he
remain s pending a hearing.
reported ShenffTrusselL

My Good Sam wins top award at banquet

by Luis Campos
Ce!ebnl)' Cipher r::ryptogr001s are createc tromQUOtatiOns by famous recple. pasl and p1asent
Each lener In ltle Cipher stand s for anotll!ll

Today 's clue. Vequals W

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

"WP
ON

VBHZ
B'LZ

TBGGTZ

MOGZD

GN

DGOYGZA
WNYZ.

B' W

KNNI ,

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

KNNIBXC
0

0

CYZOG

WBKYNVOLZY ."
RYN

CNTHZY

IZX

POMEROY Brooks
Sayre's three year old colt
pacer named "My Good Sam"
. took a top award at the recent
banquet of the Southern Ohio
Valley Colt Circuit.
Owners and drivers of
champion harness horses
who raced during the summer
months at II Southeast Ohio
county fairs were honored at
the event held in Zanesville
"My Good Sam," ownl!d
by the late Wilma Styer of
Waterford and her brother
(Brooks Sayre,) is stabled
and trained on the tra~k at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Thi s year the colt pacer won
four of the II races in the circuit securin~ the trophy for
the best in hts category.
"Sam" was tr.rined by 81·year-old Sayre and his assis. tant Steve Swatzel of
Pomeroy. This is the second
year "My Good Sam" has
captured the top award. Sayre
smd he kept the plaque last
year, but gave it tci his driver,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Harley Haning

CYZZX

PREV IOUS SOLUTION -" I was neve r a fan of any actor ou ts1de of James
Cagney .. . I always liked Cagney·s style and energy.w- Clim Eastwood
(c) 2003 by NEA. Inc t 1·15

T:~~:t~~, scctR~lA-~t-~s·
0 Rscrrongt
le!lerJ of tha
fovr scrambled words be-

WOlD
GAM I

fdit•d by Cl..A.Y R. POllAN - - - - - -

low

I

WEATHER
Showers, HI: 70., Low: SOa

10 form follr slmolt wora~ .

LAPLA .P

I' I I I I'

I FIT, .l
Ll

~

The
a seminar on
.• .
_. - ch ild rearing had no children,
. __.NI._I_,_D_..w...,.y-'---'1:-'-; which proves tha t the person with
no children is the one who thinks
'r--::-:------, they know how to bring them . -

Detail• on Page A2

o

I III
rl- ,I,. . ~. .,YI. . .;L:.,.I.:;.,B-rul.-.:o,_s l--1~ -0

q~o"d

-complete ·the chuckl•
_;.L-...J.L-...L.-.L.
-!..
.
....J.
by IHi inliJ in the miuing words
L.
yo:J develop from step No . 3 below.
~ PRINT NUMBERED LEiTERS IN

THESE SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

I ., - t • -

oi

.l,ttll•l · ···•·

Princ.ipal Deem called to active duty ·Deputies'
early

SPORTS

On this deal. how would you (Soulh) lry to

I

PANG!:ROUS!

19 Lauper's
"- Bop"
20 Umbrage
22 Chief exec
23 Naval ott.
24 Tiny legume
25 lnvlte·lnits.
26 Palm read·
er's phrase
27 Gazed at
28 Anller

make six spades after West leads a

Tf\ IS f/\Ot-1Il-L

CAl~ ARe

~Sivlduat.

49
50 Loundry
amount
53 Alleviate
54 Cosmonaut
apace lab
w~h
55 "Othello"
14 Pay dirt
plotter
15 Not written 56 Actress
t6 Coup d'Meg 17 Fled
57 Tokyo,
18 Most foxy
once
20 Small bit
58 Barely
21 " SO! "
scrapes by
22 Pan of mph 59 Away
24 Value
DOWN
27 Tubb
of country
1 Courts
music
30 Latin I verb 2 Nobleman
3 Mule's
31 Skippers •
sound
OKs
4 Ms. Garbo
32 Jerk
5 Struck
34 Wide st.
a match
35 Uses a
charge card 6 All- sudden
36 Welles'
"Cillzen -· 7 Poker stake
37 Composed B Bull,
In Barcelona
39 on the
9 Smelt - up-and·up
40 Walk softly 10 Lucy
Lawless
41 Billy role
Williams
12 Dirty
42 At close
politics
quarterg

the more individual- or unique - is run
in New Zealand by Vii Gravis. He puts out
an e-zine (that word must exist by nowl)
several times a month that covers all
ranges of Player from the near beginner to
mcpert. (The different levels· are kept separate.) The main drawback from our poi nt
ol view is that lhe bidd1ng is Acol-based,
with four-card majors and weak (12- 14)
no-tru mps. But the card-play isn't affected. and Gravis offers some uselul
insights. His writing style is definitely individual - or unique.

BARNEY
MAN

1 Fly
4 Dollop
8 ToriH
11 Rowboat's
need
13 Teeming

Kids in Ohio, Michigan
dream of playing in
'Tite Game', Bt

All's well with
Browns after blowout
of Cardinals, Bt

Answer to Prevloul Puule

Miele like •

More and more Web sites are providing a
variety of bridge entertainment. One of

Pl-ANt

I'M STRICTLY A
CATC..
RELEASE

c1tch~r

45

LorrERIES

"My Good Sam" owned and trained by Brooks Sayre of Minersville, took the award fo r outstanding thre.e year old colt pacer in the Southern Valley Colt Circuit. Here "Sam:· driven by
AI Jones , makes a run for the finish at the 2003 Me igs County Fair.
AI Jones, this year. Jones also a day, seven days a week !here ers, dri vers, tminers and fair
won a top driver's award.
from his home in Minersville representati ves attended the
banquet where awards were
"I began training horses to feed and care for them.
when I retired at age 62 from
As for the times when he's given to the owners of the best
the U. S. Corps of on the road traveling to fairs. horses and to the top drivers.
Engineers," said Sayre he says his wife, June. is right
Taking home the lop troadding "I have no plans for to there beside him. ·In addition phy for hi s two year old filly
retire from training horses."
to the fairs, Sayre says he pacer with hi s horse.
Easter"
was
Currently he has three hors- sometimes races at Scioto ;, Perfect
es in training at the fair· Downs and at Lebonan.
grounds. He makes three trips
Approximately I00 ownPlease see S1m, AS

Ohio
Pick 3 day: S- 1-9
Plck4day: 3-0-7-3
Plctl3 night: 4-7-9
Pick 4 night: 8-9-6-4
BuckeyeS: 4-16-21-23-35

Southern replaces pop machine with milk Two injured in accident
Bv J. MtLES LAYTON .
jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com

·-

Eschew- Knife- Valid- W/1eeze - VICES

The mom was going to punish her son for hiding cookies in his bj!d His grandpa laughed and told the mom ,
"Mas I people would rather be saved from their conse~que nces tha n their VICES ."

West Virginia
Dally 3: 5-5·5
Dally 4: 0-3-9-5
Cash 25: 1-4-11-13-15-19

ARLO &amp; JANIS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGE,S

YOU ~E.E, 't1HA1'5 HAPP~~IUC.
Ho~~,

oou·r You~

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

·. Editorials

A4

Movies
Obituaries

As
As·

Sports

B1

Weather

A2

© 2003 Ohio Valley Pubtishln&amp; Co.

RACINE -In the area with a reputation for
dairy fanns, th.e American Dairy Council
awarded a $1.•000 milk vending machine grant
to Southern Elementary SchooL
By adding a milk vending machine, valued at more than $3,000, students have a
healthy beverage choice that Mickey
Kucsma, principal, said is better than carbonated drinks. The school sells more than
300 bottles a week.
Kucsma said the milk machine is only a
small part of a ·coordinated school health
program that emphasizes fitness and .
health. She said students are rewarded for
exercising and this translates into academic progress. Kucsma said the Southern
Local School District is the only district in
· the county with such a program that integrates health with academics.
The program. which started this fall, is in
part based off the results from a California
study which discovered that healthy active
students equals improved attendance rates,
less discipline referrals, and an overall
improvement in proficiency tests.
'.'Good nutritinn aids academic progress,"
Kucsma said.
The milk vending machine grant pro-

Southern Elementary health and physical
education teacher Scott Wickline accepts a
$1000 check toward the purchase of a new
milk machine from Stacey Stradley of the
American Dairy Association . Wickline said
the new machine sells more than 300 bottles of milk per week. (J. Miles Layton)
gram is part of the dairy promotion checkoff program and must have been purchased
by the school from one of five distributors .
Schools serving grades six through 12 are
eligible to apply for the $1,000 grant, and
sdiool distrtcts may receive up to two
grants per district.
·

Troopers from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol are currently investigatmg this two-ve hicle
crash that occurred just after 1 p.m. Monday on Oh io 7 near
Middleport. The drivers of both vehicles were flown by medical helicopter to Cabeii-Huntington Hospital in Huntington ,
W.Va .. for medical attention . Further information was not
available at press time .

lhe Great American·

...

Nove•ller20

.
HMC's Tobacco Prevention Center
encourages you to be smoke-free on "Thursday!

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Differe'nce

For more information on tobacco use prevention or cessation, call

www.holzer.org

(740) 446-5940•.
••

I

~-

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