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                  <text>•
Monday, December

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page to • The Daily Sentinel

National Football League

College Basketball

Seahawks roll over Browns
SEATILE (AP) - Matt Hasselbeck
has the Seatt le offen se on a roll. And the
Seahawks turned in a great defensive
performance against the Cleveland
Browns. too.
" We're rolling. and we're not done
yet," Shaun Alexander said. "Thi s is getting exciting for us."
Hasselbeck threw for 328 yards and
three touchdowns and Alexander rushed
for 127 yards and another TD, leading
Seattle to a 34-7 victory Sunday over the
reeling Browns.
" We feel like we can do a lot better,
a nd this is not ou r final goal ,"
Hasselbeck said. "We have a final goal
- and we don 't talk about it a lot - but
we want to b~ playing at the end of the
year."
The Seahawks (8-4) had 463 yards one
week after getti ng 426 in an overtime
loss at Baltimore. Hasselbeck compl eted
26 of 35 passes with one interception,
and Seattle was a remarkable 11 -of- 15
on third-down conversions when he was

ln.

'That is a very key. stati stic in any
game, next to turnovers," Seahawks
coach l'ytike Holmgren said.
Darrell Jackson, whose troubles catching. the ball earlier this fa ll were well
documented, had eight receptions for
102 yards and two touchdowns, while
Koren Robin so.n caught six passes for
122 yards.
It was the tirst game in fra nchise history where the Seahawks had a 300-yard
passer, a 100-yard rusher and two 100yard receivers.
" We have so many weapons and
everybody is peaking right now,"
Robin son said. "On any given play, we
.
can hurt you."
Seattle improved to 7-0 at home for the
first time since 1984, matching a club
home-field record that year en route to a
12-4 mark. Going back to last season,
the Seahawks have won eight straight
home games and nine of I0.
Seattle remained one game behind St.

Louis in the NFC West while sending the
Browns (4-8) to their fifth Joss in six
games.
It was Cleveland's most lopsided loss
in three seasons under coach Butch
Davis, eclipsing a 23-point loss at 'Green
·
Bay on Dec. 23, 2001.
"We got beat by a good football team
today," Davis said. "We didn 't play very
well at times."
The only blemish on Seaule's solid
performance came on special teams. For
the second straight week, the Seahawks
had a punt blocked and returned fo r a
TD. Andre King ran one back 28 yards
with 3:23' to play.
Seattle ' s defense all owed only 47
yards rushing. Cleveland finished with
204 total yards, much of it coming on
late 'passes.
The Browns got inside Seattle's. 20
only once, and Ken Lucas intercepted a
pass by Kelly Holcomb to highlight
Seattle's best defensive effort since a 380 win at Arizona in Week 2.

STAFF REPORT

Meigs ·

We've got a couple of kids
hurt, but we've got five girls
I feel can play with aJOYbody.
"
from Page 6
A free throw by Payne
Brannon. " Renee usually with 4:13 left in the ,gafl.le
doesn ' t look to score as capped the R1ver Valley run,
much."
but it also proved to be the
River Valley was led by final points of the game for
Beth Payne and Becky the Raiders.
"We just talked about not
Lyons with nine points each.
Meigs led by 17 going into giving up," added River
the fourth quarter. The Valley head coach Harvey
Marauders lack of depth , Brown. "The girls we nt out
though, came into play.
. and played hard and got us
A basket by Ashley back to within eight. We just
Caldwell to open the fourth ran out of steam. Our legs
quarter continued a 13-0 run gave way there late in the
by the Raiders that began· fourth :quarter."
late in the third quarter and . . D~v1 s was fouled after
saw River Valley make it a makmg a bucket With 3:56
46-38 game. Sharon John son left on the clock, and after
had a four points during the mak1ng the bonus, helped
run while Payne Lyons and the Marauders regam a douLet~a McAven; also had ble-digit lead .
baskets during the run as the
From
there ,
Meigs
Raiders started to wear down regamed control of the game
Meigs.
to secure the win.
.
"We were dead tired," said
Metgs outscored R1ver
Brannon.
Valley 18-6 in the second
"We' re just not very deep. quarter to take a 30-16 lead
into halftime .

Ben gals
from Page·s
· Dillon said. ''Now we 're winning · them. As
long as I've been here, December was just
December, it doesn ' t mean too much. This is
different."
Tommy Maddox, 28-of-42 for 313 yards,
gave Pittsburgh its first lead at 20- 17 with a
16-yard touchdown pass to Hines Ward with
l :05 remaining . The Steelers rallied from a
14-3 deficit behind Jerome Bettis' !-yard.
touchdown run on a 75-play drive and Jeff
Reed's 39-yard field goal.
But after Reed 's short kickoff into a strong
wind and Brandon Bennett's 27-yard return
gave Cincinnati the ball at its 48, Kitna who has 18 touchdown r.asses and only one
interception in CincinnatJ 's seven victories got the Bengal s in the end zone in four plays.
· Asked the Ben gals' mindset with half the
field to cover in barely a minutl!, coach
Marvin Lewis said, " Let's go win the game."
Darned if they didn ' t. Kitna hit Peter
Warrick for 18 yards and Bennett ran 16
yard s. After an incompletion, Kitna found
Schobel for the Bengals' biggest touchdown
sihce they last won a division in 1990.
Back then, the Bengals used an early
December 16- 12 win in Pittsburgh as a
springboard to that title.
" I said the ~!f.~sion had to go through
· Pittsburgh," saicJt.:,ard, who made 13 catches
for 149 yard~-(They came into Pittsburgh
and stole a big,t:ictory."
·
Lewis intentls to do the same thing next
week in Baltimore. even if he wouldn 't guarantee it like Chad John son did be fore the
Bengals upset Kansas City. .
1

-~- -.-

·-

should not be, but we are," Huggi ns said.
"We're trying to create some offense
with defense, but we can't do that and
·sacrifice the other things we' ve done
well for a long time.
.
"It hasn't been that way before. I don 't
understand. I don ' t know why you'd
stand around and watch everybody else
play. That baffles me. We ' ve got a lot of
guys who never get into the fray."
The.ir traps and their guards saved
them.
Field Williams matched his care~r
high with 24 points, hitting eight of hi s ·
I0 3-point shots. Bobbitt, the first substitute off the bench, was 8-of-15 from the
field.
Everyone else was a combined 12-for36 from the field. Whaley, a junior college transfer who was expected to provide an inside scoring threat, missed
seven of his eight shots.

"I knew we could press
River Valley because I've
seen in some scrimmages
some teams had some success press ing them, " said
Brannon. "I didn't know if
we could press them with
our five main players,
because I knew we ' d be tired
if we did."
too many
"We had
turnovers in the first half,"
added Brown .
The Marauders led by as
many as 21 . in the third quarter, including a 46-25 advantage with I :25 left in the
third.
Meigs travels to Belpre
River
Thursday,
while
Valley is at Athens today.
River Valley won the
junior varsity game, 42-25
as Ashley Neville scored 17
points for the Raiders and
Haley Marcum added 14.
Jackie Wilson led Meigs
with H points.

Joey Haning 1 0-0 2. Justine Dowler 1 2-4
4, Sam Pierce 6 6-9 19, Angel Harter 3 00 6, Jaynee Davis 5 3-6 13. TOTAL - 22
14·25 59.
River Valley (0-1) - Sharon Johnson 3
0-1 6, Kristin a Naylor 0 0-0 0, Beth Payn e
4 1-2 9, Leslie Ward 1 0-0 2, Ashley
Caldwell 2 2·2 6, Becky lyons 4 0-0 9.
Kyla Adkins 0 0·0 0, Letea MeAvena 1 0-0
2, Jessica Murphy 2 o-o 4. TOTALS- 17

3·9 38.
3-polnt goals - Meigs 1 (Pierce) , RV 1
(lyons).

RIO GRANDE - The
Uni versity of Ri o Grande
Redmen basketball tea m
continued to roll. winning ·
their fifth game in six trie s
after an impre ssive 70-59
triumph
over
NAIA
Division
II
No.
22
Huntin gton
(Ind .) on
Saturday at the Newt
Oli ver Are na.
Huntington (8·3 ) surged
ahead 8-2 to start the game
and then Rio Grande 15-2 )
got busy on both end s of
the tl oor. The Redmen
turned up the defensive
pressure and used a bal anced attack on o ffense to
take a 32-25 lead to the
locker room .
A: key stat for the
Redmen in th e fir st 20
minutes was the fac t that
they turned th e ball over
only three tim es.
The seco nd ha lf started
mu ch like the first. wit h
Huntin gton us in g ·a 7-0
run to tie the game at 3232 with 16:32 to play in
the ga me. Rio countered
with a 7-0 run of it s own
to regain control of the
contest.
Lead by th e inspired
pl ay of 6- 1 sop ho more
g uard Cedric Hornbuckle,
the Redmen built the le ad
to doub le di gits and 't hen
he ld on at the fini sh.
The Redni e n seemed to
put the game away after
building th e advanta ge to
56-41, only to see th e
Foresters storm back with
a 10 :0 run to cut the
defi c it to five (56-51) with
nea rly four minut es to
play.
Rio Grande withstood
the run and put the game
away at the free throw line
using a 14-8 run to finish
off the Foresters.
Hornbuc kle topped th e
scoring c hart for the
Redmen with 16 points.

oolf3
:Ml ,:
.

The Dunbar, W.Va. native
also pull ed do wn seven
rebound s and di shed out
four
as sists.
Sean
Plummer racked up a ilou ·
hi e-doubl e with 12 points
and I I boards.
Juni.o r forward Matt
Simpson tossed in · 12
points off the bench and
sophomore guard Kri s
Wil son chipped in II
,
points.
Huntington was led by
center Steve Snider with
14 points and seven
rebounds . Ryan Thwait s
was th e top rebounder for
the Fore sters with nine .
Rio Grande shot a
respectable 47 percent
(26-of-55 ) from th e field.
de spite making on ly 3-of15 120 percent ) from
beyond the thre e-poin t
arc.
Ano th er problem area
thi s seaso n, for Rio
Grande . loo ked strikingly
better in thi s game. free thro w pe rcentage.
Th~
Redmen co nnected on 15of-20
(75
percent)
attempt s from the chari ty
stripe .
Huntin gton
strugg led
from the field. shooti ng
only 35.7 percent (20-of56) , in c lud i n ~ 4-of- 17
(2 3.5 percent) fr om threepoint land. The Foresters
~ ntered rhe night as a 73
pe rce nt free ·throw shooting team . however the y
made on ly 15-of-26 (58
pe rce nt) auempts on the
ni ght .
Both teams took ca re of
the ball as Ri o Grande had
I0
tu rnovers . a nd
Huntin gton commill ed I L
The Redm en won th e
rebounding battle . 39-34,
eve n thou gh Huntingto n
he ld th e edge on the offensive glass, 14- 11 .
Rio Grande w ill trave l to
Notre
Dame
Coll ege
Tuesday to face a vastly
impro ved Blue Fa lco n .
squad. Game time is set
for 7:30 p.m.

,o41'-l '-. •\nl

,1 , :\u . hh

• Kentucky holds off
Thundering Herd.
SeePage&amp;

Bv J. MtLES LAvroN
jlayton@ mydaitysentine!.com

OBITUARIES
Page 5
• Mary Geistwhite
• Donald Grimm
• Lalie Dodd
• Anna Elizabeth Phillips
• Russell K. Krider

• Highway shootings.
See Page 2
• Tips for the holidays.
See Page 5
• Community Calendar.
See Page 3
-. ~

WEAmER
Sunny, HI: 401, low: 20.

POMEROY -

W'I'I'ERIES

includmg everything from
creating sumptuous holiday
confections to making beautiful package bows were
given at the "Savor the
Flavor of the Holidays" program at the Meigs County
Extension office.
Joining Becky Baer, local
extension a~ent, and Linda
King, nutrition specialist, in

Buckeye 5: 2·3·6·9-17
)'

I!J:be 1!9attr:&amp;endnd ·

Tips on

makin~ the holidays bright

Pick 3 day: o-5-9
Pick 4 day: 9-3-3·9
Pick 3 night: 3-4-8
Pick 4 night: 8-4-4·7

.,

1n~1 \lltll\

West Vuginia
Dally 3: 0-2-6
Dally 4: 9·2·8-5
Cash 25: 3-4-7-1Q-21-24

because our sons. grandchi l· but mainly from the mem drcn and friends are serving bers themselves . It costs
in the U.S. military," Jan about $7 to· mail each packCardone, coord inator for the age out.
group.
"They appreciate what we
Cordone said at least I 0 do for them ,'' Cord one said .
care package recipients are
setvi ng in the Middle East. " We have gotten nothing but
In February, he r son, Trevor positive res ponses. It costs a
Cordo ne, wi II be among bit, but they are worth it."
Cordone said the packages
th em. A 19-year ve tera n.
Trevor will be working as a wi ll be mailed by Dec. 9
military police offi ce r possi- before the post office cutoff
bly in Iraq.
for ge tting a package over"I' m very concerned ab' ut seas in time for C hristmas. If
what is go ing on overseas," anyone is interested in helpshe said.
ing out, perhaps even adding
The Enduring Freedom a name to the Jist of package
Support Group fills small
recipients, Cordone said she
packages with letters fro m
can
·be co'ntacted e ither at
home, pictures of the community, prayers and ·other 949-2512 (J.D. Drilling
essentials that supply sol- Company) or at. home 949. diers needs beyond the bar· 2449. Generally, the group
racks. The cost to mai I the meets on Mon&lt;lays at the
.packages comes from dona- First Baptist Church in
tions from the community, Racine.

BvBRIAN

INDEX

•
•

Spprts

Weather

3
7•8
9
3
4
5
5
6
2

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· 111 Court St.

Pomeroy,
OH -·______
,.. ____

.,
--

J.

REED

breed@ mydai!ysentinel.com

1 SI!CnON- 10 PAGES

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
li:ditorlals
Movies
Obituaries

1 ..... ,

New Fruth Pharmacy in town ·

Store Manager Clinton Goad and Pharmacist Tammy Grueser
put the finishing touches on a Christmas tree on dtsplay in the
gift departme nt at Pomeroy's new Fruth Pharmacy store, which
opened to customers on Sunday. The new 11.000 square-foot
store rep laces the Middleport location which opened in 1984:
The new store 's pharmacy includes a robotic pill dispenser;
which is designed to reduce waiting time in the store's phar·
macy, and a .drive-through window for pharmacy customers. A
grand opening is set for Dec. 8 . (Brian J. Reed)

Cindy Olive ri ,
Southeast District ·
extension specialist,
demonstrates how
to make the perfect .
bow using a block of
wood with two nails
driven Into it. Oliveri
returned to Meigs
County to partici·
pate in the annual
holiday program
which she directed
for many years while
the Meigs extension
agent. (Charlene
Hoeflich)
.
presenting the program were Cindy Oliveri.
district extension specialist.
.Becky Nesbitt, Gallia County
agent, and Martha . King ,
Galli a program assistant.
· Brown emphasized the
importance of getting a
healthy start for the holiday
season by eating breakfast. A
·balanced breakfast consisting
of whole grains, protein, fat
and carbohydrates will provide even the most avid shopper with the energy to be able
to 'shop till they drop ' this All of the foods and confections prepared by the Extension Service personnel for the program
holiday season," said Brown. were shared with those attending, including Carolyn Bissell· of Tuppers Plains , !eft. and linda
Rtch of Chester. (C harlene Hoeflich)
Please SH Homemekers, 5

.,

~endars

""" " "''"I ' . .......

·uo;

Deer gun s~ason underway

'
Witho:ver
book.

•

Homemakers get tips at holiday happening·

INSIDE

Deto!lo on Paee A2

..
..
TODAY.~ ._

D
0

RACIN E - Care packages from home mean a lot
to soldie rs servin g anywhere, but perhaps more so
when th ey are far from
home.
The Endurin g Freedom
Support Group sends small
packages filled with a small
taste of home to soldiers
serving around the world.
The group formed two years
ago prior to the U.S.f led
invasion
that
bro ught
democracy to Afghanistan .
Frie~d s and relatives started
sending letters and pray~•s
of support tO a small list of
soldiers serving abroad and
at home. That li s! has gro wn
to more than 55 names.
" We want to support our
men and women overseas

hoeflich@ mydailysentinel.com

I

0

I' 1'-.l,\\

Mail carries Meigs County
to soldiers everywhere

SPORTS

Ohio

12 18 16 13 - 59
10 6 13 9 -38
Renea Bailey 6 3·6 15,

"We' re going to win three in a row on the
road ," said Lewis, whose team was coming
off a victory at San Diego. "That's not a pre·
diction, that's our goal."
Kitna was 18-of-32 for 271 yards and three
touchdowns, including first-half scores of 51
yards .to Kelley Washington and 4 to Chad
Johnson, who made six catches for 117 yards.
Cornerback Chad Scott was in coverage on
both plays.
"This was a reflection of our season: up and
down , up and down, and then at the end, a,Jetdown ," Bettis said. "It's tough to deal with."
Until the deci sive final drive , the Bengals
were ~careless in the second half except for
Shayne Graham 's 44-yard field gol!l that
·
.
made it 17-13.
The Steelers were in position to score just
before the end of the first half, but backup
quarterback Charlie Batch fumbled on second-and-goal from the I0.
Batch, playing only because Maddox left
fm three plays with a left leg injury, was
attempting to throw a screen pass. The ball
slipped 'Out of his hand and Cincinnati's John
Thornton fell on it. Referee Bernie Kukar
ruled Batch 's arm was not going forward making it a lateral that could be recovered,
not a pass.
The Bengals immediately ran a kneel-down
play to end the half, causing coach Bill
Cowher to confront Kukar and ask why the
play wasn't reviewed. Cowher couldn't challenge the call ·because less than two minutes
remained in the half.
..
"You would think they would at least look
at the play," Cowher said. ·
Told the replay official was Dale Hamer,
formerly the head linesman on Kukar 's crew,
Cowher sai d, " I guess that 's why he ' s
1
retired."

'
••

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Meigs 59, River Valley 38
Meigs
RiverValley
Meigs {1·0) -

6.

.'•

,'1'

ordered~·

...•

LadyTor.nadoes roll
past South Gallia, 6

bat·k

\~i!tllt frH-'t~\\''lilS ..

..,

.,

.

-

sports @mydailytribune.com

Huggins puzzled by Bearcats' flaws
played.
Which is it? It's too early to tell.
"We 've got to get guys focused," said
Tony Bobbitt, who had 21 points and a
school-record eight steals. "We've got
·guys in space right now."
Huggins wants to get back to the trapping style that becllme Cincinnati's hallmark in the 1990s, one that he abandoned in rece nt years for a straight manto-man.
When the Bearcats trapped Coppin
State (2-4), they got good results - 17
steals and 29 turnovers that were the difference in the game. They also got outrebounded 35-28 by a smaller team, and
gave up open shots in their halfcourt
man-to-man.
It was ali-or-nothing, a disturbing
trend for a demanding coach.
"We' re less than adequate in the halfcourt. The disturbing thing is that we

!1ot

Redmen score
big upset against
Hunti.ngton, 70-59 ·

College Basketball
C INCINNATI (AP) - Coach Bob
Huggins scanned the statistics sheet and
quickly focused on one line.
Robert Whaley, the Bearcats' 6~foot­
l0 center, played 18 minutes and had
one - one! - rebound. Huggins also
noticed that walk -on guard John Meeker
played the last two minutes and had two
rebounds.
"Maybe I' II · play Meeker there,"
Huggins said in a humorless tone.
He was joking about that change, but
others may be on the way following a
76-56 victory Saturday over Coppin
'State that left the Bearcats unbeaten and
their head coach unsure of what he ' s got.
. At times, No. 19 Cincinnati (3-0)
looks a little bit like Huggins' teams of
the early 1990s that pressed opponents
into submission. At other times, it looks
more like the 17 -win team of last season,
the one that got outrebounded and out-

1, 2003

AI Detwiller, owner of
Detwi!!er Lumber in
Pomeroy, checks in
two deer killed early
Jphn
Monday by
Witherell of Pomeroy
and Mitch Golden of
Hocking.
Little ·
Detwiller's and other
check stations were
busy as the deer gun .
season began .
(Brian J. Reed)

POMEROY - Hunter
orange will be seen everywhere thi s week, as deer
hunters from Meigs County
and beyond take to the
woods tor their shots at the
white-tailed deer.
The deer gun season
opene&lt;l
officially
on
Monday, and will continue
through Sunday, from a
half-hour before sunri se
until sun se t. The annual

Pluse-Deer,5

New campground
planned for Syracu,se
Bv J. MILES LAYTON
jlayton@mydailysentinel.com
SYRACUSE A new
· campground is in the planning stages on property near
Marina Dri ve off State Route
124.
At a recent meeting of
Syracuse Village Counci l
members listened to Judy and
Jane Williams discuss their
plans for de~eloping their
property into a campsite or .
possible RV park. Clerk trea-

surer Sharon Cottrill said
plans for the park are still
being developed and there is
' no firm date when it would
be open.
·
A report was given n daniage to a police cruiser when a:
deer crashed into it recently:
Both police chief Kevm
Dugan and Ryan Hill went to
an area hospital with minor
inj urie s but were back at
work in a fe~ d~ys. The dee~

,..... - c....,,. •IIIIKI.

5:

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The Daily Sentinel

.

Ohio weather

OHIO

,

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KY.

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) Portsmo~th j 23o/40" ;

..

C 2003 AccuWeather, Inc.

~

W. VA.

.
.
0 --fti!o~--·~·
·

Sunny Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

Showers

...

T·storms

Rain

Flurries

., '

Snow

Ice

Via A.ssoci619d Press

Sunny and Cold
Today ... Sunshine. Highs in
the lower 40s. Northwest
wi nds 10 to 15 mph.
Tonight...Mostly clear in
the eve ning then becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 20s. Light winds.
Wednesday .. _.Increasi ng
cloudiness. Highs in the upper
30s. East winds around l0 mph.
Wednesday night...Mostl y
cloudy wi th a 30 percent
chance .of sleet or light rain.
Lows around 30. Light winds.
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
wi th a 40 percent chance of
li ght rain or sleet. Highs

Tuesday, December a,

arou nd 39. Southeast winds
around I0 mph .
Thursday night .. .Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent chance
of rain. Lows around 35.
Friday ... Rain showers likely and a chance of snow
showers. Highs around 42.
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with rain showers and
snow showers likely. Lows
around 32.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of rain showers and
snow showers. Highs around 42.
Saturday
liight. .. Partly
"cloudy. Lows around 33.

COLUM BUS (AP)
dental and ballistics tests link
Cri minal behavior experts it to at least one other case,
have . varying opinions on police say.
who might be re sponsible for .The task fo rce investigating
shooting at II vehicles along the shootings announced at
a five-mile stretch of high- · its daily new s conference
way.
Monday that local businesses
A Northeastern University have established a $10,000
criminologist believes two reward for information leadpeople could be behind the ing to the arrest and indictshootings that have occurred men! of the shooter.
since May along Interstate
Authorities have received
270 in southern Columbus.
more than· 350 tips on a spe"When I see a crime like cial phone line set up last
this i't's almost always two week. ·
friends who probably wouldRather than rely on a pron't do thi s separately, but file of the suspect, investigawhen they're together there's tors want to explore all possia cel"\llin chemistry, a certain bilities, said Steve Martin,
insanity about their relation- chief deputy at the Franklin
ship,:' said Jack Levi n, direc- County sheriff's office.
tor
of
Northeastern's
Expetts who study serial
Brudnick Center on Violence. shootings said they believed
"How do you share the joy the same person or group of
of ki lling or causing prob- people were responsible for
!ems if you're alone? You the 1-270 shootings.
can't brag about it or someForensic profiling is only a
one will turn you in," he said. hypothesis or educated guess
A Nov. 25 shooting that at best, experts said.
ki ll ed 62-year-old
Gail
"Probably what occurred in
Knisley of Washington Court the other nine shootings is
House - the only person hit they couldn' t find anything.
by a bullet - wasn't acci- They didn't recover projec-

tiles, any empty casi n ~s,"
said Lou Palumbo, a retired
police investigator who runs
a private security and investi·
gatiol) organization called
The Elite Agency Limited.
"There were no characteristic s to tie the shootings
together, but because it was
on the same five-mile stretch
it's probably the same individual or group of individuals," he said.
The shooter is likely someone from the surrounding
community, Palumbo said.
"He didn't have to travel
far. He's got a certain comfort level with that landscape
which could be what's allow-'
ing him to be drawn back to
the same location of the
shootings," Palumbo said.
The perpetrator is probably
a young male who feels frustrated and generally powerless in his life, said N.G.
Berrill, a psychologist who
profiles killers at his New
York forensic consu lting
firm.
"It's almost an infantile
rage is the way I would

describe it," he said.
Berrill said the shootings
were the work of a rerson
who loves the thrill o causing panic, although he may
not intend to kill.
"It's a very expedient way "
to terrorize a locale or community, so everyone. who
uses that road has to worry
that every time they' re in the
car they' re going to be shot •
by some sniper somewhere,"
Berrill said.
"So that' s really where the
pleasure lies in these individ·
uals, in the immense power
that they are able to wield by
stirring up anxiety and uncertainty," he said .
Random shootings are
extremely hard crimes to
solve, experts say.
"\Ne used to solve 90 percent of all murders, now it's
down to about 60 percent
thanks to crimes like this,"
Levin said. "There's no
motive, we don 't know relationship, there' s almost no
physical evidence - because
the killers took target practice
from a distance."

Citizen.Complaint Authority starts investigation

Additional police were di s- chased and fatally shot a black
CINCINNATI (AP) - A responded early Sunday to a
patched.
All six officers wl)o man who was seen running
civilian watchdog panel born report of a man passed out on
from riots that followed the the grass outside a fast-food responded - five whites and from a store that had been broshooting of an unarmed hlack restaurant. They told a di s- one black - were placed on ken into. Police, ·prosecutors
man in 200 I is looking into patcher that the man was awake administrative leave, which is and the Citi zen Complaint
the death of a black man who and "becoming a nuisance," standard procedure.
Authority concluded the shootwrestled with six officers try- and police were sent, according
The 200 I riots stemmed ing was justified because the
ing to subdue him.
to police radio transmissions. from the shooting of Timothy suspect was beating the otlicer
'lhis panel was created as The frrst two officers to arrive, Thomas, 19, who was wanted with his nightstick.
part of the city's attempt to have Baron Osterman and James on several mi sdemeanor
On Monday, the Cincinnati
transparent government, so that Pike, were shown on videotape charges and fled from police chapter of the National
citizens can be confident that striking Jones after he ignored when they tried to arrest him. Association
for
the
issues, claims, allegations -of orders to "stay back," took a Officer Stephen Roach shot Advancement of Colored
misconduct against police or swing at an officer and put his him in a dark alley and was People called for furth er
other city employees will be arm around an officer's neck.
later cleared at trial of crimi- changes in police use of force.
· fully and fairly investigated,"
A DAY ON WALL STREET
nal charges.
"If proper procedure means
Mayor Charlie Luken told mem- The officers knocked Jones
to
the
ground
and
fell
on
him,
you can use that kind of
A
federal
investigation
of
that
10.000
Dec. 1. 200 3
bers of tl1e Citizen Complaint
force
and
jabbed
or
struck
him
with
by
the
to clobber people
the
shooting,
requested
Authority on Monday night.
IbvJrnes -A~
9,500
~w
"We tum to you to do just that nightsticks at least a dozen city, resulted in an agreement repeatedly who are clearly
.in:hJ •;aJs
in this critical time in our history. times. They kept yelling, "Put to tighten policies on use of disarmed, then there's some9.000
.
We turn to you fora full and fair your hands behind your force and improve handling thing wrong with the poli cy,"
+11$.5?
back!" as they struggled to of citizen complaints.
said Calvert Smith, chapter
8,500
and thorough investigation."
OCT
NOV
SEP
OEC
9 ,899 .05
handcuff
him.
In
February,
a
white
officer
president.
Chairwoman
Nancy
High
Low
Pet. change
Record high : 11.722.98
from previous: + 1.19
9,902.23 9,785 35
Minson said investigators
Jan. 14, 2000
went to the parking lot of a
DEC. 1, 2003
2,000
fast · food restaurant on
Sunday, hours after a 350Nasdaq ~w~
1,800
pound man was struck repeat. &lt;('.
. .
~·!:&lt; ""&lt;i&lt;~
Wl[CSite
edly with nightsticks in a con1.600
,1·•"
frontation captured by police
,;' if'2il.li$'
:,..
cruiser video camera.
1,400
SEP
OCT
NOV
DEC
1,989.82
Nathaniel Jones, 41 , died at ·
High
Low
Pc1.change
Record high: 5,048.62
a hospital shortly after being
from previous: + 1.51
1,989.82 1,968.54
March 10, 2000
taken
into
custody.
Preliminary
autopsy
results
Dec . 1, 2003
1,100
I
he
had
an
enlarged
·
showed
I Starrl:nrl &amp;
1.050
heart, and his blood contained
R::x::ms 500
cocaine and PCP, or "angel ·
1,000
dust."
Both can cause bizarre or
oeo
SEP
OCT
NOV
OEC
1,070.12
aggressive
behavior,
High
Low
Rocord high : 1.527.48
Pel. chon~
Hamilton
County
Coroner
from pre11 us: + 1.13
1,070.47 1.058.20
March 24, 2000
!
Carl Parrott said.
AP
Minson said the complaint
board began its investigation
on its own, which it can do
when a death involves police
'
or when shots are fired.
Monday night's regular meetACI-27.50
Ganrett- 88.30
AD Shell- 45.59
ing
of the panel was disrupted
AEP-27.80
Gene!aJ Electric - 29.02
Rod&lt;wall -33.95
by four activists who
Akzo - 35.40
GKNLY-4.80
Sears- 55.94
Astlard lr&lt;:. _:_ 40.54
Harley Davidsoti - 47.75
demanded quick action.
SBC-23.20
BST -39.66
Kma~ -32 .71
AT&amp;T - 20.35
"It's apparent that you don't
BU-14.26
Kroger- 18.53
USB-27.82
know
what you' re supposed
Lid. - 18.14
Bob Evans-31.88
WsrrJ/s-39.26
to be doing and what your
Borgwamer- 79.92
NSC -21.79
Wai-Mart - 54.53
City Hok:ing - 35.45
Oak Hill Finarcial - 31
authority is ," said Nate
Worthingtoo - 14.65
Champion - 4.45
Bank Cl!1e- 43.73
Livingston Jr., a member of
oa1y stod&lt; reports ar. tre 4
9harming Sh:lps - , 6.38
CNB-27.18
the Coalition for a Just
p.m. closilg quotes of tl'e
Cot-27.16
Pooples-28.50
Cincinnati, which promotes a
Evan Bryce K0&lt;1~ers
previoosm(s~
tl\JPonl - 42.69
Pepsico - 48.70
boycott of the city.
·
prcMded t1,l smth Partners
DG-21
Prem"' - 8.15
"Merry Christmas"
Federal Mogul - 27
Rocky Boots - 18.50
ai Advest Ire. of Galipols.
"When they start fighting in
Mommy &amp;.. Daddy
the streets, you'll say, 'Why
didn't you do it the right way ? .
Why didn't you come to City
Hall ? Wily didn't you trust ·
Reader Services
(USPs 213-960)
us? Why dido ' t you talk to ·
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
us?"
Correction Policy
Published
every
afternoon,
Minson called police to
Our main co ncern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Court
accurate. If you know of an error in a Slreel. Pomeroy. Ohio. Periodical
escort Livingston and three
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy,
others from the room when
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
they continued to shout at the
Ohio
Newspaper
and
the
\
panel.
Association.
Our main number Is
Jones' death raised new
Postmaster: Send address correc·
Mail or drop off at:
(74D) 992·2156.
allegations of police brutality,
1ions to The Daily Sentinel , 111
Department extensions are:
Court Street , Pomeroy, Ohio
just as the city was starting to
45769.
recover from the effects of the
April 2001 riots and the boyNews
Subscription Rates
111 Court Street
cott that followed.
Editor: Cha rlene Hoef!ich. Ext. 12
By carrier or motor route
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext 14
Justice
Department
One month . .... .......'9.95
Pomeroy, OH 45769
spokesman Jorge Martinez
Reporter: J. Miles Layion. Ext. I3
One year . . ... . . .....'119.40
Dally . ... ... ........... 50'
said information was being
Senior Citizen rates "
gathered
to deteimine if fed- ·
Advertising
One month . •... .. ... .. '8.95
era!
action
was warranted.
Child's N a m e : - - - - - - - - - - - - - OUtside $ale•: Dave Harris. E)(t. 15
One year •••.••• • .- . •.. '96. 70
After seei ng the video,
Subscrib ers should remit in
ClaaaJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10
From: ____________________________________
Luken rejected activists'
advance direct "to The Daily
SentineL No subscription by mail
demand that he force Pol ice
Circulation
permitted in areas where home
Chief Thomas Streicher Jr. to
YourName: __________~--------~------carrier &gt;service is available.
' Dlatrict Mgr.: TBA. E•t. 17
resign . .

8ay Merry Christmas
.to C,omeone C,pecial
with a
&amp;ntinel Christmas An8el

~~

..

"
'
·.

_.

"'''

.•

•

Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E-mail:
news@ mydailysentinel .com

web:
www.mydailysentinel .com

Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .
. ........' 30.15
26 Weeks .
. .. '60.00
52 Weeks . . . . ....... '11 8.80
Rates Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . . . . .
. ... ' 50.05
26 Weeks . . . . .
. .. ' 100.10
52 Weeks . . .......... '200.20

I

..

* Actual Size 1x3
* Runs Wednesday, Deoember 24th
* Deadline.for entry Deoember 17th at 5:00

..
..

·-

..

·

· "What I saw was a 400pound man yiolently attacking a police officer in a manner that put the-lives of police
Address: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - officers at risk," Luken saia.
•.
Phone: __________~----------"While the investigations will
continue , there is nothing on
those tapes to suggest that the
Ads must be pre-paid
police did anything wrong."
•
..
Fire ~mergency rcrsonnel . L.::============:::;:;=::;==============~~

.

. .. --- ·---- --·---·

POMEROY
Meigs
Cou nty Board of Health
meets at 5 p.m., Dec. 3, conference room of the Mei g~
County Health Dept ., 11 2 E.
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy.
Meigs
POMEROY
Local Board of Education, 7
p.m .. at the ·Meigs Hi gh
School library.
•

Tuesday; Dec. 9
POMEROY
The
Bedford Town ship Trustees
will meet at 7 p.m. at the
town hall.
Thursday, Dec. 4
POMEROY - Leadin g
Creek Watershed meeting ,
6:30 p.m. at Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District
office, with Barb Flowers
from the Divi sion of Mineral
Resources Management as
speaker, to discuss mine
reclamation programs and
· past reclamation projects in
the area . Contact Cynthia
Bauers at Meigs SWCD ,
992-4282.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Townshi]l&gt; Trustees. regular
meeting, 6:30 p.m., township
build•ng
on
Rocksprings Road.

- ---··----~------.----------------'

RUTLAND - As a special remembrance project
tray favors for residents of
a nursing home will be
made by members of the
Rutland Garden Club and
brought to the annual
Christmas party on Dec.
22.
Donna Jenkins will host
the party featuring a
potluck noon luncheon
with a $3 to $5 gift
exchange by the members.
. A report was given by
Pauline Atkin s on the
Christma s flower show.
She along with Chelcie
Steans entered arrangements .
Eva Robson
assisted with the canteen,
and other members helped
with placement of entries
and welcoming visitors.
Marjorie Rice and Debbie
Bullington provided cookies
and ·sandwiches.
The new year book was
discussed, and members
were reminded of the special meeting on Feb. 16 at
the Laurel Cliff Methodist
church to prepare for the
regional meeting.
Rice hosted the meeting
and gave devotions titled
"Our Best Friend and For
all his Blessings." For roll
call members told about
their Thanksgiving arr.mgement.
A list of flowers and
their proper pronunciation
were given to members,
along with a book mark.
"Fall is Ending" was the
program th eme. "Every
Seed Counts" was the
topic of Bullington who
described herself as a
"crazed seed collector."
"Nothing make . me happier than to have little
glass bottle s, envelopes,
and glass jars filled with
seeds. ·1 can' t pass a flow!!r
without rubbing some off
into my hand and pocketing them for my · gatherings."
She said she enjoys sharing the seeds she collects
so that they too may enjoy
the beauty of flowers.
To stress the importance
of seeds to
farmers ,
Bullington said there was a

.-

1.1

•

Tuesday, December 2, 2003 '

Other events

Thesday, Dec. 2
POMEROY - Parent and
girl meetin g for all girl)\'"
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
' Co mmunity aged five and in kindergarAssociation. 8:30 a.m., den intere·sted in being a
Daisy Girl Scout from 5:40
People s Bank .
· to 6 p.m .. Pomeroy. Library.
Registration cost is $10.
Wednesday, Dec. 3
MIDDLEPORT The Financial assistance availfrom
Midd leport Literary Club able. Information
wil . meet adt 2 p.m at the Cindy Seymour at 742-2558
homeof Olita heig hton . or Jerrena Ebersbac h at 992Frankin Hunnel wil review 7747.
"The
Mas ter
Butchers
Singing Club" by Louise
Erdrich.
POMEROY - Childhood
Immuni zation Clinic, 9 to II
Thursday, Dec. 4
a. m., I to 7 p.m.. Meigs
POMEROY
- Meigs County Health · Dept. Bring
County Retired Teac hers shot records, medical card.
Association, noon luncheon.
Trinity Church . Eastern High Child must be accompanied
School Bell Choir to present by pa rent/l egal guardian.
musical program. Bring chil- Donati ons appreciated .
dren's books for Christmas
· gifts. Reservations for lunch
Wednesday, Dec. 3
may be made by callin g
MIDDLEPORT
992-32 14.
.
.
Revival at Vi ctory Bapti st
POMEROY
H•· lzer Church . 525 N. Second Ave.,
Hospice
"D inner
with with Evangelist Dr. Samuel
Friend s," 6 p.m., Crow 's (:. Gipp, 7 p.m. through
Family Restaurant. Call 992- Wednesday. Special mu sic.
7463 for information .
Pastor James Keesee invi.tes
the public.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers
Plains
VFW
Friday, Dec. 5
Auxiliary, 6:30 p.m. at the
RUTLAND
hall.
Communi ty
Candleli ght
Service, 7 p.m., Rutland
Church of the Nazarene.
Friday, Dec. 5
·
Live nativity by teens directPOMEROY
- Meigs
ed by Carla Wyatt . Special
Count y PERI Chapter 74
meets at the Mei gs Count y mu sic and co ngregational ·
ca rols.
and
Multipurpose Se nior Ce nter Chri stmas
with lunch at noon and the Poin settia Memory Tree
Christmas program with Hal lighted in honor of loved
ones.
Knee n at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 6
HARRISONV ILLE
HarriSonville Lodge 4 11 , 7:30
p.m. at the hal l. Refreshments.

Saturday, Dec. 6
NEW HAV EN - New
Haven Chri stmas parade, l
p.m. followed by visits with
San ta at the fire station .

Marriage offers protection:.~
for couple starting family · ·
DEAR ABBY: Our 32- -....--._
year-old daugh ter was
raised in a home with traditional values. She was ext:ited when she got engaged
last February to the fellow
Dear
she was li vi ng with. We
Abby
began making wedding
plans
Her interest in the wedding hegan to wane . On a
recen t visit she stated that a
marri age ce rtificate was j ust aut omobile he had better
a piece of paper. and they ha ve that '"piece of paper" or
don 't need to be married to he could be in a lot of troube wmmitted to each Other ble .
Abo. a driver\ license
or to · h a~e children. Her
ma
y be ""j ust a piece of
fian ce told us that giving
paper,'"
but you'd better not
their children love wou ld be
be caught dri ving without it.
enough.
When a person buys a
We don't understund whv
home
or any other piece of
she chan ged her mind about
propert
y. he makes sure that
marriage in such a short
he
has
that
··piece of paper. ..
period of time. They are
.And when a person gradutalking about having chilates
from high school. co l:
dren, so please answer soon.
lege
or trade school. that
.What can we say to make
her see the importance of "piece of paper" t:an make .
traditiona l famil y life'' -- . the difference between getWORR IED
MOM . ting a job or not getti ng one.
We li ve ou r lives with
ROSWELL. GA.
pieces
of paper. beginning
DEAR WORR IED: You
are overdue for a frank talk with a birth cert ificate and
with your daughter. Why on ending with a death certifiearth is she planning to have cate. And let's not forget the
childre n with someone she will -- another ve ry important piece of paper.
wou ldn 't want to marry''
So. when I hea r people
A marriage certitkate is
say.
"A piece of paper doesfar more than a "piece of
n't
mean a thing... I'm
paper." Your letter brings to
mind one that appeared in reminded of the classic
this co lumn in 1996. Its adage. '·I gnorance is bli ss."message bears repeating. - PAPER IS PROOF
The signature says it well.
Read on:
DEAR ABBY: Many cou- A marriage certificate is
ples who live together with- wri tten proof that a couple is
out marriage say, "We do n't officia ll y one unit. wit h
need a pi ece of paper to legal protection s and benemake our comm itment to fi ts for spou ses that si ngle
each other binding. A pi ece people do not enjoy. These
of paper doesn' t mean a include rights of inheritance.
the abi lity to hold title to
thing!"
WRONG' May I point out community property. health
that when a person buys an insurance benefits. and later
in life, Social Security bene-

tits. There is also the psychological benefit for al.l
concerned .
If something were to hap'pen to the father of her children, with no marriage certificate, your daughter and
the children wou ld be left
wi th nothin g -- no voice
regarding his medical treatment. no claim to hi s body.
I'm all for "romance," but
when children are being
considered. it"s time for a
dose of practicality. Please
urge your daughter to
rethink her position.
DEAR ABBY: I am director of client relations at
Genelex. an accredited DNA
testi ng lab. In your Amber
Alert column . you recommended that parents "~ "cp a
sampl e of DNA . such as
several strands of hair" for
identification purposes in
case the child is kidnapped.
Strands of hair are good
for DNA testing onl y if the
root is intact. Chances are
that if it were needed, no
DNA could be recovered
from several "strands" of
hair. A more effective way to
collect DNA is to utilize a
cheek swab. using a kit that
is avai lable through many
police stations. A full DNA
profi le can also be run in
advance through a DNA
testing lab. -- KRISTINE
ASHCRAFT. SEATTLE
DEAR KRISTINE : Thank
yo u for enlig htening me . ·
Parents, please take note. . .
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440 . Los Angeles,
CA 90069 .

ProUd to be apart of your life.

Local Briefs
members to
'
remember others

The Daily Sentinel

, General Manager

Wednesda)l, Dec. 3
PAGEV ILLE Scipio
Township Trustees to meet ,
6:30 p.m., Pageville Town
Hall.

Rutland Club

fer Picture
Prepaid

Mall Subscription

Tuesday, Dec. 2
ALFRED. Orange
Town ship Tru stee s, 7:30
p.m. , home of th e clerk.
Osie Follrod.

RACINE
-Southern
Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m.,
high school. Coaches. parents urged to attend.

Tuesday, Dec. 2

Local Stocks

The Daily Sentinel

· Public meetings

Page 3 .,.

\

•

Community C~lendar

Clubs and
Organizations

.

.

BYTHEBEND

The·Daily Sentinel

2003

Opinions vary on highway shootings perpetrEttor :

Wednesday, Dec. 3

1 Clnclnnalf :24"140° I

Page2

time when seeds were
saved from a crop of corn
one year for the following
year. One bad ear could
result in nearly a thousand
fewer stalks in the tield,
and I0 to 12 less bu shels
at harvest time, she added.
-That practice stopped on
most farms when hybrid
corn became available.
Atkins talked about ornamental cabbage and kale
noting that they are g1own
for colorful fall an winter
foliage. They wi II grow
12-18 inches tall and are
widely used for bedding or
large pots.
Leaf color is pink, rose
or white, and the pl ant s
improve when the temperature is 5Q degrees. They
produce tall cl usters of yellow flowers. There are several varieties recommended
for planting including cabbages
delight
mixed,
Northern Lights,. ornamental. mi~ed and Tokyo
mixed and the kale Nagoya
mixed, red and white peacock, and Red Chidori.
Whole heads make s a
striking and unusual element in floral arrangements, Atkins noted.
Symbols of Thanksgivi ng
including turkeys, pilgrims.
an Indian corn were given
by Rice.
The first
Thanksgiving was really a
harvest feast which lasted
three days. A true thanksgiving is a day of prayer,
. she said.
Rice gave a history of
the first harvest dinner and
told of the hardships
endured by the pilgrims
who landed on Plymouth
Rock. She said" the no
landmark on our shores is
more famous than the
Plymouth Rock, but noted .
that before · the revolutionary war, Plymouth Rock
was a forgotten rock.
During the next century
it was . hauled to the town
square, then to Pilgrim
Hall
(a
museum
in
Plymouth), acco rding to
Rice.
Finally
it
was
brought back to the water
front. To keep people from
chipping away · at the rock
for souvenirs, it was placed
in a pit surrounded by an
iron railing.
She described Plymouth
Rock as a symbol qf faith

and hope and of something
to be reli ed on . "' It might
be ca lled a svmbol of the
Pilgr im s themse lves, the
brav e

men,

women

Subscribe today • 992-2155

and

children who worked hard
togethe r
to
found
Pl ymouth .'' said Rice.
She noted that our first
Thanksgiving was ce lebrated in Jul y of 1769 in
California . Thanksgiving
Day as we know it today
was established during the
Presidency of Franklin D.
Rooseve lt who declared it
as a holiday to be celebrated on the fourth Thursday
of November every year.
The gardening hint for
the meeting dealt with
window boxes and the suggestion that one be used
for bundles of gourds and
dried
pri vet
berries
enhanced with a few cut
flowers.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On We.dnesday, _December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but
not forgotten . They will be similar to the sample below:
~· ish,

select one or the rottowing fREE verses below t~
accompany your tribute.
I. We hold )OU

David C. Andrews

Seminar offered

July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

MARIETTA
The
McDonough Center of
Leadership and Business at
Marietta Coll ege will be
offering a one-half day semi nar on "Take Control of
Managing Your Stress"
Friday. The seminar will be
held from 8:30a.m. to 12:30
p.m. on the Marietta College
campu s in the. McDonough
Center building.
Stress is an unavoidable
part of our lives. However, in
an environment of taking on
more responsibility because
of downsiling and other economic issues. managing
stress takes on even more
urgency than normal. This
seminar focuses on strategies
and techniques to take control of managing the stress in
your life.
Learn how the body reacts
to stress, how stress helps and
hinders, what you control and
what you do not control, how
to practice coping strategies,
and a five-step model for
managing stress. Thi s seminar is targe ted to individuals
who are looking to improve
the quality of their lives. ·
The haif-day se minar fee is
$69 ~nd includes tuitilln and
cours'a material s. To register,
call the Office of Business
Training at The McDonough
Center, (740) 376-4624 oremail at lead@ mariettacedu.

May God's angels
guide you and

.\\1

--.- ----···-·----------

111

our th u u g:ht~ and memories fore\'cr.

~-

protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearls,
John and Mona Andrews aJ\d

!amity

May God cradle you in Hi ~ ann~. nov. and forcYer.
l Forner m i&gt;~scd. never forgotten . May God hold.you in the palm of
H1 .o.; hand.
-! . Thanl ~ou for the wonderful da )s .wc shared together. My prayers
wil l be wnh you unol we mct•t again.
,
5. The days we shared we re ~weer. I long to ~ee you agam in God's
ht.'avenl y glory .

6. Your w urage omd brJvery Mtll itbpire u~ all. and the memory of your
:-.mile tilb u ~ wi th joy and l&lt;~ ught c r.
7. Though aut o f ~ti gh t. you' ll forever he in mv heart and mind .
8. The day11 may (."OITl(' and go. hut the times ~-e share&lt;! will al ~ays remain.
9. May the light of peace ~hm u on yuur face for eternity.
I 0. Ma ~ God ''&gt; angels guide you and protect you throughout rime.
I I . You were a li ght in our life that hums forc,·cr in our hearts.
12. May GOO's graces 'hinc over you for all 11me.

13. You arc in our thought~ and prJye~ frum morning to night and from
year tu year.
1-t. We send thi . , mc'i«.1gl' with a lovin g ki ss for etern al rest and happiness.
1~. May the l ord hie ." ~ you with l·l ts graces and wann. loving heart.

TO REMEMBER YOLR LOVED ONt: IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEN D $7.00 PER LISTING • $ 12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to
The Oaily Se ntinel
With Fonde•t Memories
Ill Court St. , Pomeroy, 011 45 769

J)EADLI NE: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 12 Noon,

r-------------------------------------,
Plca.sc

publish my tribute in !he special Memory Page o n Wednesday. December 24.

·

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
'

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Stniet • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Diane K. Hill
Controller-Interim Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

NATIONAL

VIEW

Africa
AIDS
.fight
c. .
Telegraph Herald, Dubuque, Iowa, on the AIDS Fight:
President Bush had it right I0 months ago when he called
for more money to fight AIDS in Africa.
"'Seldom has hi story offered a greater opponunity to do so
much for so many," Bush said in the State of the Union
address in which he pledged $15 billion over five years to the
cause .....
A law passed in May to implement Bush's landmark initiative authorized up to $3 billion in AIDS funding for the fiscal
year that began Oct. I. But the president himself only sought
$2 billion for the year, arguing that more money could not be
efficiently spent AIDS activists and African leaders strongly
disagree ....
AIDS experts had advised the president that $3 billion a
year for five years from the United States could begin to stem
the epidemic. After a visit to Africa, Bush vowed that support.
Since then, his enthusiasm for the issue has waned ....
Helping Africa could easily be viewed as part of combating
terrorism. ... An uneducated, poverty stricken

popul~tion

Tuesday, DeceiJ,lber 2,

Page4
Tuesday, December 2,

200~

Obituaries

Fight not over despite Medicare bill passage
Do you think that the
Medicare light is over after
passage of a drug benefit after
years of debate culminating in
an all-nighter on the House
floor and an attempted filibuster in the Senate? Or, after
President Bush signs it into
law? No way.
Democrats are convinced
they can tum Bush's ·victory on
Medicare into the domestic
equivalent of his 'Mission
Accomplished' flight-suit landing on the USS Abraham
Lincoln at the end of the Iraq
war.
They plan a nonstop campaign at the presidential candidate and Congressional level to
convince seniors that the GOP
drug plan adopted last week is
a fraud, worse for them than no
bill at all. ,
I don't think it will work,
especially with the 35 millionmember AARP allying itself
with Republicans to defend the
plan - and willing to spend
millions on new television ads ·
and infonnation handouts to its
members.
In fact, I'd guess that the
more attention Democrats
focus on Medicare - and the
more
the AARP and
Republicans say about it- the
more help it will be to Bush
and the GOP, who normally
trail Democrats badly on health
care issues.
The continuing debate may
also be useful in informing
retirees and their children
exactly what's in the bill and
what isn't.
·
Congress probably should
not have passed the bill it did,
but rather a less-costly measure
that helps only the most needy
and those hit by catastrophic
drug costs.
The bill is priced at $400 billion over I0 years, but the
Congressional Budget Office
estimates that in the second I0
years, as more baby boomers
retire, the cost wiU be between
$1.3 trillion and $2 trillion.
Already, trustees of the
Social Security system esti-

Morton
Kondracke

mate that by 2025, Social
Security and Medicare will use
up all the funds in their own
trust accounts and account for
28 percent of all federal
income tax revenue. By 2040,
it will be almost half. , ·
The children of baby
boomers will bear an enormous, perhaps unbearable, tax
burden paying tbe retirement
costs of their parents - including those in the top income
brackets who could easily pay
their own way.
As the always-brilliant
Newsweek columnist Roben
Samuelson pointed out last
week, the Medicare bill is a
form of pork barrel used by the
GOP to buy the votes of
seniors, who narrowly supported Democrat AI Gore in 2000.
Of course, Democrats would
have made it more expensive
yet.
Nonethele~s . it's been passed
and Bush is delighted to sign it.
The question now is: Will the
intended beneficiaries be
happy with it and vote
Republican?
A poll released last week by
the
University
of
Pennsylvania's
National
Annenberg Election Survey
shows that U.S. adults are split
almost evenly on whether the
drug bill should have been
passed, 40 percent to 42 percent.
Among respondents 65 and
older. only 33 percent favored
the bill and 49 percent opposed
it.
However, AARP National
Policy Director John Rother
said the poll was worded
unfairly by identifying the bill

as ~ Republican,' failing to identify 'opponents' as Democrats
and concluding with the claim
that the measure might "eventually destrOy Medicare.·
That's a key argument of
Democrats, based on the fact
that in 20 I0 there will be an
experiment in six metropolitan
areas in which standard
Medicare will compete with
pri vale insurance · plans for
seniors' business.
But that provision is drastically watered down from the
original House GOP measure,
which called for nationwide
wmpetition between Medicare
and HMOs. That difference
will not be. hard for
Republicans and the AARP to
explain.
Another line of Democratic
attack is that the benefit for
seniors is too small. Rep.
Roben Matsui, D-Calif., chairman of the Democratic
Congressional
Campaign
Committee, argues that a person paying $4,000 in drug bills
will have to foot $3.000 of
them.
Rother acknowledges that
that's so - but that Mat.~ui had
selected the $4,000 cleverly to
fit within the 'doughnut hole,'
or benefit gap- created by the
fact that $400 billion isn't
enough to pay all of the drug
bills run up by U.S. seniors,
which total $1.6 trillion.
'Even thin benefit is better
than nothing,' Rother said.
'And, since there's not enough
to do everything for everybody,
we felt it's better to do the most
for those who need it most.'
Low-income seniors will
get $600 worth of drugs free
and have to pay only $! for
each prescription of a generic drug and $3 for a brandname drug. The government
will pay 95 percent of the
cost of drugs for .those paying above $3,600 a year.
Democratic pollster Mark
Mellman told me ·that 'there
are some other lines of attack
that are going to be very,
very effective. For example,

Russell K. Krider

this bill does nothing about
controlling drug costs. It forbids reimponation of drugs
from overseas and forbidi
the government from negoti'
ating prices with drug companies.'
.
Rother said that's also true
and that AARP will work on'
costs later. But I hope that the
GOP will stand flllTl against
price controls - or imponing
price controls from overseas
- which will undermine med' ·
ical research, as it has done il}
Europe.
Mellman
said
that
Democrats also will argue that
a 'cap' on Medicare outlays
will eventually force a reduc:.
tion in benefits, but Rothef
countered that it takes an act of
Congress to enforce the cap. ··
And, Mellman recalled that
in 2000, Bush attacked Gore in
campaign ads for proposing a
plan that would require seniors
to make a 'once-m-a-lifetime!
choice' to be in or out of his
Medicare plan. 'This plan
forces the same choice, he
said.
Not so, acconding to Rother.
The new law will allow late
sign-ups for drug insurance but
imposes a 'delayed enrollment
penalty ' of I percent per
month, staning at 35 cents.
Rother said he finds it amusing. that Democrats are so hostile to the Medicare bill. 'I
agree with someone who said
that if this same bill had bee11
proposed by Bill Clinton;
Democrats would be all for it
and Republicans would be
against it.'
In fact, he said, Clinton di~
propose a much less generous
measure, coveting only 50 percent of a senior's first $2,000 in
outlays. 'Democrats were all in
favor of that. '
All this back and fonh will
serve
to
emphasize;
Republicans delivered th~
goods. That may be what has
Democrats so mad.
(Monon Kondracke is exec-.
utive editor of Roll Call, the
newspaper of Capitol Hill.)

could experience governmental collapse and chaos, ripe for
recruiters for terrorism.
President Bush had it right the first time. Congress should
keep the promise Bush made to African nations and increase
its finan cial commitment ....

OK, THIS .
IS /'t\Y DRU6

PlAN!

Eledions

ARLINGTON - Russell
K. Krider, 79, of 13759 C.R.
24, Arlington, died Sunday,
Nov. 30, 2003 at his residence.
He was born Dec. 25, 1923
in Racine to Raymond F. and
Freida (Koenig) Krider. He
married Katherine Rice Aug.
23, 1947 and she died Nov.
10, 2002.
• He is survived by one stepdaughter, Mrs . Harold (Jean)
Pilcher of Findlay; two stepsons, Kenneth Searles also of
. Findlay and William Searles
[)f Florida; nine step-grandQhildren; two
brothers,
Marvin Krider of Racine, and
J.ohn Krider of Pomeroy; and
four sisters, Alta Dtll. of
Reedsville , Manha Bruch of
Mt. Vernon, Elsie Raines of
Ft. Myers, Fla. and Minnie
Bloch of Lady Lake, Fla.
, One brother, Telhmar
Krider, preceded him ip
death.
Mr. Krider was
retired from Cooper Tire and
Rubber. He was active in the
Army in World War II . He

Campground
from Page 1
dented the passenger side of
!he cruiser and broke the .
glass in the window. The car
was repaired and back on the
foad a week later.
· Council also apl?roved an
ordinance regulatmg noise
tmitted by motor vehicles
and/or the playing of sound
amplification equipment at
ucess levels. This includes
1\sing electronic devices to
operate so und amplification
from within a vehicle so the
sound is plain!~ audible at a
&lt;1istance of 50 feet or more.
' A contest to determine who
has the best decorated home
in the village for the holiday
season. was discussed and it
was noted that the first place
winner will receive a prilli: of
$100; second place $75; third
place- $50 and founh place
$25. The home must be located in the village to qualify for
participation. The judging
will take place between 7 and
9 p.m. on Dec. 13.
Mayor Bill Roush appointed Rick Chancey to the
Meigs Housing and Advisory
Committee
and
Eric
Cunningham to the EMA
Mitigation Committee. Floyd
Hickman and Ryan Hill were
appointed and approved as
pan-time patrolman for the
village.

Presidential primaries
Homemakers

Herald-Journal, Spartanburg, S.C., on presidential primaries:
The presidential primary system is broken. That fact can be
seen in the decision by several states to cancel their primaries
next year. ...
The current system favors those who can raise big money
early. It favors the. early front-runner, and it denies influence
to voters in states with late primaries ....
The effect is that the nominee is chosen after these early primaries....
The leaders of the national parties know how to fix the situation, but they aren't willing to force states to abide by a
more sensible system.
Early primaries should be held .in small states, where candidates don' t have to raise as much money io be competitive ....
And small states don't have enough delegates to give the
nominati ~n to any candidate. As the process proceeds, larger
and larger states would hold their primaries so that the big de legate states would vote last.
That would prolong the selection process, giving parties a
better chance to compare candidates and giving most
Americans a chance at having a meaningful vote on their
'
pany's
nominee ....

•

· LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are W{!lcome. They should
·•
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed and include address
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
Letters should be in good taste,
dd.~.~intP issues, not personalities.
The
expressed i~ the column below
are the
of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. 's editorial board~ unlfss otherwise noted.
I·

www.rctailysentinel.com

2003

'ips for home safety during the holidays
was a lifetime member of the
VFW Post #5645 in Findlay,
lifetime member of the
AMVETS , and a member of
the Loyal Order of the Moose
No. 698.
Funeral services will be
held at II a.m. . Thursday,
Dec. 4, 2003 at ColdrenCrates Funeral Home. Burial
will be in Bechtel Cemetery,
Van Buren. Visitation will he
from 2 to 4 6 to 8 p.m. on
Wednesday at the funeral
home. Memorial s may be
made to a charity of the
donor's choice in hi s memory.

Lalie Dodd
NEW HAVEN , W.Va. Lalie • Virginia "Jenny"
Dodd, 83, New Haven;
W.Va., died on Tuesday, Nov.
25, 2003 at Wyngate of
Gallipolis.
She was born on April 26,
1920 in Frankfort. W.Va.,
daughter of the late Cornelius
and . Nannie
Edmiston
Williams .
There will be no funeral
and no visitation. Burial will
take place at the convenience
of the family at Kirkland
Memorial Gardens .
Arrangements were handled by Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home in Mason,
W.Va.

Mary M. Geistwhite
RACINE Mary M.
Geistwhite, 81, Racine,
passed away on Friday, Nov.
28, 2003, at her residence .
She was born Aug. 17,
1922, in Sistersville, W.Va.,
daoghter of the late J.R. and
Stella Stokes Sandy. She was
a homemaker and worked for
many years as a hospital volunteer at the Manatee
Memorial Hospital in Florida
and Ohio Valley Hospital in
Steubenville.
Surviving are her husband,
Simon H. "Si" Geistwhite; a
daughter and so n-in· law,
Judy and Ron Clark of
Racine; a step son, Richard
(S usie)
Geistwhite
of
Newburg, Ore.; two grandchildren, Leanne (Shawn)
Cunningham of Pomeroy and
Heidi Geistwhite of Long
Island, N.Y.; two great grandchildren,
Kali
Morgan
Cunningham and Brayden
Nash Cunningham ; and a
brother, Junior. Stokes of
New Matamoras.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her sister,
Virginia Huggins; and three
brothers: Lloyd Sandy, Donald
Sandy and Clarence Sandy.
Friends called from 5 to 7
p.m. on Monday, Dec. I,
2003 at Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine . Additional

from Page 1

The invisible Supreme Court
Supreme Coun Justice
David Souter has said 'the day
you see a camera come into
our counroom, it's going to roll
over my dead body.' But the
Supreme Court - which
decides cases that affect millions of Americans- is not his
court. It's ours.
In Richmond Newspapers
Inc. v. Virginia ( 1980), where
two reponers challenged a
judge's decision to close a murder trial to the press and public,
Chief Justice Warren Burger,
writing for an 8-to-1 majority
of the court about the necessity
for open courtrooms, said:
'People in an open society do
not demand infallibility from
their institutions, but it is difficult for them to accept what
they are prohibited from
observing. '
Thomas Jefferson wrote that,
'there is no danger I apprehend
so much as the consolidation of
our government by the noiseless, and, therefore, unalarming instf\Jmentality of the
Supreme Coun.'
The U.S. Supreme Coun will
not pennit televising of its oral
arguments. Accordingly, most
Americans - if PfeSsed- do
not even know the names of all
nine of the most powerful peopte in this~ountry.
:
By watching oral argume~JIS,
as I have at the court, you not
only learn about the cases, but
also about tbe justices - :the
acuity of their questions, tljeir
temperaments, and how ~ey
often criticize
otper justices

mr

.

Nat
Hentoff

in the guise of the q1,1estions
they pose to the lawyers before
them.
On July 6, when two of the
. justices Sandra Day
O'Connor and Stephen Breyer
- appeared for nearly half an
hour on ABC's 'This· Week'
with George Stephanopoulos,
this rare sighting of members
of the highest coun in the land
was heavily reported by the
media. It was so . unusual
because the justices are
shrouded in such secrecy that
even in the transcripts of their
oral arguments, tbe justices are
not identified by name as they
ask questions.
Columbia
Journalism
Review reporter, Karen Aho, in
the September/October issue,
noted that 'in 1996, a RadioTelevjsion News Directors
Foundation study found that
only 4 percent of people who
got their news from television
could name the (Supreme
Court's) chief justice.' Years
before, I was in Justice William
Brennan's chambers just after
the Telease of a National Law
Journal survey, which showed

how many Americans knew
And in the Sept. I~
the names of the justices.
Washington-based
Legal
'Justice O'Connor, then the , Times, William Suter, the heaa
only woman on tbe Supreme clerk of the U.S. Supreme
Coun, was named by more Couit, who strongly opposes
than 20 percent of those sur- televising oml arguments, told
veyed. But only 5 percent reporter Jonathan Ringel that
knew of Justice Brennan. 'he feared late-night comics
When I mentioned that, Justice such as Jay I..eno would try to
Brennan chuckled and, refer- use tel~vision images to makt;
. ring to another member of the fun of the justices, which Suter
coun, said 'Harry Blackmun said would be 'degrading to the
got only I percent!'
judiciary."
Justice Brennan told me he
More degrading to open con,
wanted cameras at the oral stitutional democracy is the
arguments ~use the citizen- Supreme Coun justices;
ry at large knows so little of extreme distance from the res1
what the coun does, and there- of us. Leno would at least geJ
fore does not understand as morepeopleawareoftbecoun;
much as it should about the and C-Span has pledged to
· effects of tbe coun's decisions. carry the oral arguments in fulL
So why are justices still hid- Many other television stations
ing from us? One reason is that would give enough time tQ
they cherish their privacy. Ruth respectfully allow Americans
Bader Ginsburg told the to get to know the coun.
Canadian publication Lawyers
Dahlia .Lithwick, Supremt;
Weekly a few years ago:
Coun correspondent for Slate .
'David ... can go to the online magazine, wrote in The
supermarke.t and do his shop- American Lawyer: 'Imagine~
ping, and no one will notice.
Congress or the president con,
How nice for Justice Souter! ducted themselves like sq
And I once heard, on televi- many stealthy vampires - all
sion, the lute Justice Byron in darkness and a swirl of blac~
White say, during an appear- cloth.' But Justice' O'Co!Uior
ance at a seminar, 'It's very urges us to 'try and understand
selfish I know,' but, he added, the ideas that gave th~
he preferred anonymity.
Constitutiot:~life.'
·,
The reason some other jusWhy,
then,
Justice
tices often offer as to why they O'Connor, can we not sit via
keep cameras out of their television in your, and our;
counroom was given to law counroom?
,
students
at
Stanford . (Nat Hentoff is a natjonally
University: 'They say they are renowned , authority on th8
not a part of a national enter- First Amendment and the Bill
tainm~t network.'
of Rights.)
~

Nesbitt talked about "five a
day, the color way", a guide
to the health benefits of colorful fruits and vegetables.
She said it's essential to get a
colorful variety of fruits and
vegetables into your diet
every day because each color
contributes to the wide range
of vitamins, minerals, fiber
and phytochemicals that the
body needs to stay healthy
'lind energetic and give protection against disease.
r Oliveri gave tips on using a
crock pot to alleviate "the
problems of ... what's for dinner" after a day of shopping.
She said a great way to end a
long day of shopping for holjday gifts is to return home to
a cooked meal - one slarted
In a crock pot before leaving
!he house.
· King discussed the difference between servings and
(!onions and the importance ·
of taking a sensible approach
to control calories and keep
weight in a healthy range.
Baer demonstrated how to
inake holiday treats to eat and
~ive as gifts. She suggested
,naking confections ahead
abd freezing, then !living
them as gifts wrapped m col\lrful foil or cellophane and
llelivered in pretty holiday
iins.
•· Recipes for every course of
h dinner and foods prepared
from them were sampled by
those attending the program.
- For the evening's craft
~verybody was provided ribbon for a bow with Oliveri
(jemonstrating how to make
the perfect one .using a simple
handcrafted bow maker of
two nails in a block of wood.
I:

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

Deer
from Page 1
deer season is considered a
boon to Meigs County
tourism, bringing wildlife
enthusiasts to hunt, eat in
local restaurants and shop in
local stores.
According
to
Meigs
County Wildlife Officer
Keith Wood, I ,039 deer were
checked in at local check stations on Monday, down
slightly from the first-day
check total for 2002 of I ,050.
Hunters in Meigs County
can take up to two deer,
either two does or a buck and
a doe. Meigs is one of 54
counties in the state where
two deer are permissable
with an ad~itional deer permit, accordmg to ·the OhiO
Department
of Natural
Resources.
A deer permit is required in
addition to a valid hunting
license. Hunters may take
only one antlered deer,
regardless of the zone in

calling hour
will be
observed from 6 to 8 p.m. on
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2003 , at
M cC Iave -Chandler -M iII s
Funeral Home, 611 North
Founh St., Steubenville,
where services will be conducted at II a.m . on
Wednesday, Dec. 3. Rev.
Mike Adkins will officiate.
Interment will be at Union
Cemetery in Steubenville.
Local arrangements are
under the direction of
Cremeens Funeral Home in
Racine.

Donald Grimm
BELPRE - Donald E.
Grimm. 85, Belpre, passed
away at 12 :35 p.m. on
Saturday, Nov. 29, 2003 at
Overbrook
Center
in
Middleport .
He was born June 7, 1918
in New Haven, W.Va., son of
the late James Elmer and
Anna Lawson Grimm.
He was a retired truck driver for T &amp;M Produce of
Belpre. and worked previously for the American Viscose
Co . and Romie Miller
Produce. He attended the
Rockland United Methodist
Church and was a veteran of
the U.S. Army during World
War II . He was a member of
the Belpre Post of the
American Legion.
His wife of 51 years,
Benha Marie Duffy Grimm,
survives. Also surviving are a
brother, Roderick Elmer
(Marjorie) Grimm of Racine;
a sister-in -law, Carrie J.
Roush of Racine; and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides ·his parents, he was
also preceded in death by a
brother, John Delben Grimm,
and a great niece, Brenda
Grimm.
Services will be held at I
p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 3,
2003, at Cremeens Funeral
Home in Racine with Rev.
Vickie Cundiff officiating.
Burial will follow at Letan
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call from 5 to
8 p.m. on Tuesday at the
funeral home.

Anna Elizabeth Phillips

It is always important to
j!ow safety rule; in the
me, but during this time of
: year, it is imperative .
teck out your house to
mre that holiday fe &gt;tivitie'
n't result in tragedy.
~!way s have cabinet door'
d drawers closed to avoid
mped heads. Keep pan
ndles turned inward to prent accidental jolts that
uld cause a hot pan to
ill.
Do not use a chair to reach
!h shelves. A foot stool or
ladder is much safer.
~ver climb on them in
; k-feet. To funher prevent
Js. use nonskid ru gs. espeuly on waxed floors.
L)on 't wear loose flowing
&gt;eves or garments, such as
ftans or lounging pajamas.
the · kitchen .
Handle s
uld catch and pull pans off
t stove or the material
·uld come in contact with
lu or an open flame. ignit-1 the clothing. If . thi s
'rurs, "Stop, drop and roll. "
r severe bums, seek medii help. If the burn is
nor, rinse with cool water
1 several minutes. Don ' t
o the area with butter.
'at only makes the injury
·!Zle and causes more damt.

.. \void an electrical octof. Too many appliances
Jgged into an outlet can
ase a short in the wiring .
I not allow cords to drape
·Wn over the counter where
·Oiiarices can easily be
jled over. Likewise, do
·r allow cords to run across
t stove or the sink. The
ter and the e le'ctricity
•uld cause an electrocution.
lep aerosol cans away
in the stove or an open
lne because they can
olode at high tempera.tes.
· 'lammable materials such
tpaper towels and napkins
· ~uld also be kept away
1m the range. Stir with
-lOden spoons while cook i. Metal ones may become
b hot to handle . Likewise,
Ike sure that a pan· s lid
hdle does not conduct
ht. Open lids away from
'I to divert the steam.
; \!ways use hot pads or pot
Jders when removing dish( froni the oven. Do not
i a towel. because it is not
tk enough to prevent a
tn. In addition, it may be
mp, which could result in
aeam burn. Be aware that
cklaces and other jewelry
ty burn you as the heat
thes from an opened oven
;_or. Don't place hot glass
ps on a cool surface or one
·U
is wet. This can cause
•

the glas&gt; to shatter.
Wash kniv e; ;eparately.
Do not put them into the
di shwater while doing the ·
re st of the di ; he&gt; . Sim:e the
sud' hide &gt; them . \omeone
Becky
could accidentally pick them
Baer
up by the blade, cau,ing a
cut. Store 11'nives in a 'eparate drawer or in a knife
block.
Usc pl ast ic cutting bo&lt;trd' ·
wooden one&gt; allow microor- 'ure th ti't it i' cold before
ganism; to hide where they refr ige ratin g it prior to eatcan contaminate food . To Ing .
l.k careful of \\here 'ou
·avoid
rc -t:untamin&lt;:tlinn .
'
tore
food and dea tllng ; up·
wash knive,, utemib. and
plie,
.
Do nut keep clc;ming
cutting board&gt; thoroughly in
hot. so ~py water before products and poi"&gt;nou'
material;, under the 'ink
using them again .
.
Watch food when cooking where litt le ch ildren can ')!Ct
- never leave it unattended . in tu' them . Never put p&lt;.&gt;i,onou' ' ub, tancc' in food c·onBe careful when deep·frying tainer&gt;
that could be mi,tak·
foods. Don ' t allow ice or
en
for
edible
items. 'uch a'
water to ge t into. the hot oil. motor oil in a pop
botllc . and
Severe splattering will occur. never ;,tore food anJ
clean·
Slowly lower frozen foud &gt; mg supplle ' 'ide -by ·,idc .
into the fat. If the g rea'~ i&lt;.
Do not mix clean ing prod·
smoking. it could combust. uct&gt; and bleach when 'am til.·
Never put water on a grease ing ,urface, . Toxic fume'
fire . To put out the fire. u&lt;.e may be given off that c·an .
a fire extmguisher designat- cause 'evere illne" and P'"·
ed for grease fires, ilr put a 'ibl'v even death . Rci&gt;d the
lid on the pan and remo ve it Iahti! on the cleaning product
from the burner.
anJ ,peci fi cal ly follow its
Keep hot food&lt;o hot and dirc&lt;.:t iom.
cold foods cold . Remember
Candles. a popular form of
the two hour rule - never home dccora!I L&gt;n panicubrl)
leave perishable foods out at during the ho li day&gt;. 'hou ld
room temperature for more be gi\'en ' r ec ial at1 ent1on .
than two hours in order to Only burn them on protected
prevent food poi son 1ng. heat·resi stant ' urface;, "" ay
Cheesecakes, custard. pecan. from tlammabl e curtains.
pumpkin and cream pie&lt;o drapes. or other cornbu;,tible
need to be refrigerated. Be items. Do not place in drafty
aware of raw egg product s. areas which ca n cause the
Don't eat raw cookie dough candle;, to dri p exce"i' ely.
or batters. whether home- Never lea,·e ca ndl e, burni ng
made or commercial. or unattended .
eggnog unless the egg&gt; ha ve
Extinguish candle' onL·e
been pasteurized.
Re&lt;Jd they burn dov.n tu v. nh1n
labels to determine 1f th e two inches of the ' urmu nd·
these foods. cider and ju ice&lt;o ing decora tinn, or canJic
have been proce ssed to kill holder Nner snuff out a
harmful bacteria.
candl e by using water. It can
Thaw frozen turkeys slow- cause some ca ndle holders 111
ly in the refri gerator before break and wi II make the wax
roasting. Always use a meat splatter. There shi&gt;uld he at
thermometer in the inner least th ree inches bet" een
thigh area close to the breast. each candle when gmuping
but not touching the bone. to them in arrangement s. Thi'
be sure the bird reaches the wi ll help prevem them from
proper cooked temperature ·. melting eac h ot her alon g
180 degree s Fahrenheit . their tapers.
Stuffing should anain 165
Check Chri , tmas tree
degrees. Fish and seafood . lights to make sure there are
such as oys ters. need to be no bare wires and that all
cooked thorough ly. Raw plug.-.. are . . ec ure and are l iL
oysters and shellfish .:an apprmed. Don't run exte ncause serious health prob- sion L·o rd ." acros:-. floor-..
lems. especially for people where people can trip . Be
with weakened immune sys- certain al l L' (ll1necti{Hh are
tems.
ti ght. .
As a final \\·ord of caution .
Be cautious when buyin g
or rece1 vin g mail -o rder kee p the tree weJJ . watercd
perishable food gifts. If and use a fireplace 'creen
the food is to be kept with wood that doe,n ' t
chilled. let the re cip ie nt spark. All ol the'e precauknow when to expect the tion., can help kee p yo ur
gift. They shou ld open it lo ved ones and home s&lt;Jfc
imm ediately. &lt;Jnd m&lt;~ke durin!! the holiday season.

BELLE. W. VA. - Anna
Elizabeth Phillips. 85, of
Belle. W.Va., died Monday,
Dec. I, 2003 in Cedar Bluff,
Va.
She was born April I0, 1918,
daughter of the late Henry D.
and Rena Mae Johnson.
She was preceded in death
by her husband, Ralph
Wayne Phillips.
The graveside service will
be held at 1. p.m. Wednesday,
Dec. 3, at Graham Cemetery ~"-----------------------------­
in New Haven, W.Va. with
Rev. Richard P. Nease officiating. There are no visitation
hours.
The cost of ead1 dog license County Courthouse. II you
'j&gt;OMEROY
Meigs
,tunty Auditor Nancy Parker will be $4 per dog and kennel prefer to purchase your
·(Ieser, has announced that license will be $20 per kennel. license by mail. application.'
which they hunt , hunting ·q and kennel licenses for If purcha~ed after the Jan. 31 will be available in the Dailv
method or season.
deadline, the penalty wi II be an Sentinel on Dec. !-+and Jari.
Hunters must wear a vest, )4 will be available Dec. I. additional $4 per dog license 9 They may also he purcoat, jacket or coveralls that log licenses are required and $20 per kennel license.
chased from WL!}iam Dye .
are either solid hunter orange Haw. Section 955.0 I of the
Licenses may be purchased Meigs Count) Dog Warden.
or camouflage hunter orange. :.cJo Revi sed Code states Monday through Friday from
Resident&gt; may contact the
and may use 10, 12, 16, 20, tt every person who owns. 8:30 to 4:30 p.m. at the Meigs Countv
Auditor\
28 or .410-gauge shotguns, lqls or harbors a dog more Meigs County Auditor's Office at 991-:26'!8 with ailV
handguns with a five-inch ;m three months of age. Oftice which is located on questions regarding the pur·
minimum barrels, using Sll purchase a license for the second floor of the Meigs chase of a 200-+ Jug lt cense.
straight-walled canridges of U dog before the 3sl day of
.357 caliber or larger, muz- ,Juary .of each year .
zleloading rifles of at least - - . - - - - - - - .38 caliber or larger, long- .!'
bows, or crossbows. Rifled
barrels are permitted when
using shotgun slug ammuni- , .
I
,.
tion . ·
~
Check points in Meigs ", ,
County, according to Wood, .
ro
·
·ADA
are: Baum Lull)ber and Little .:
f\ rtU\
John's Deer
Chester;
Hill' s Processing.
Citgo and ·,•·
Sun-Fun Pennzoil, Racine ; ; - .,
,.
All 1t7le1 of carpet are lacluded:
Little John's, Tuppers Plains; ~· ~[)ally Se"tinel · ·
Jeff's
Carryout
and . sc1!(be r()l}ay • 992-2155
IERBER CARPET, SAXONY CARPET,
Dettwiller Lumber, Pomeroy; '. .· iny4ailfsm
. 1jnel.com
TR,tCKLEII CARPET, IBAG CARPET,LEVEL
Joe's
Country
Market ,
Rutland; Pick and Shovel, "'·
LOOP CARPET aad SCULPTURED CARPET.
".
Salem Center; Twin Oaks, ~ , ., :
No eztra cbaqe lor mo'ri111 luralture
. ....
Five Points; ·Alexis Taylor
Gardens, Portland; By the .1
or I'HlOYlDI old carpet.
Way Grocery, Langsville;
and Country Comer, Albany.

T"ime to buy dog tags

0nun .B'·E

'

n·r

'OF·Y:Q
·UR.'LIFE,

·

CaD us or 1t0p in.
We'll COllie to Jour bo•e and •euure
for a lree ao obllptloa quote.

'
Pomeroy, OH •
'I

••

�..

..

'

Tuesda~Dec. 2, 2003

6

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

www.mydailysentlnel.com

~ribune

- Sentinel - ~e

,'i...

i~ter

•

#

CLASSIFIED

'
Tuesday, December 2 , 2003

Prep Schedule
Today
Wrestling
A1ver Valley at Athehs Tri·Match
Thursday, December 4
Girls Basketball
Warren at Galha Academy
Jackson at River Valley
South Gall1a at Cross Lanes Christian
Meigs at Belpre
Eastern at Southern

Friday, December 5
Boys Basketball
, , Chesapea ke at Gallia Academy
River Valley at Mt::igs
Eastern at South Gallia
' • OVCS Tournament
Girls B asketba ll
OVCS Tournament

'
r·

,.

Saturday, Decembe r 6
Boys Basketball
Gallra Academy at Meigs
Eastern vs . Greenlield McClain (at Zane
Trace Tourn ament)
OVCS Tournament
Girls Basketball

aves

Tournament

Wrestling
River Valley at Union Loca l Invitational
Meigs at Meigs Invitational

Couch's injury
not as bad as
first thought
BEREA tAP) - Browns
quaJ1erbac k Ti m Couch sustained a sprai ned knee ligamen t in Sunda y's loss at
Seattle. btit the injury isn't as
bad as originall y feared.
"I thi nk I got pretty lucky
after watching the replay,"
Couch said Monday.
Couch. who was brought
in to start the second half in
place of an ineffec ti ve Kelly
Ho lcomb, was inju red on
just his tifth play. On a 5yard completion to ti ght end
Dame! ! Sa nders, Couch got
his legs tangled in a heap of
bodi es and went down awkwardly.
He 'was helped off the field
and clio not return. An MRl
. test take n Monday was negative.
" It has loosened up a bit,''
said Couch, who was making his first appearance since
Oct. 26. " It was sore after
sitting lor three hours on the
plane. but it 's better."
Couch is hoping · that he' ll
be we ll enough to dress for
Monday ni ght's game against
St. Louis. He won 't be starting. though. as coach Butch
Davis said Holcomb will
open against the Rams.

Boozer back
with Cavs, Diop
injured
CLEVELAN D (A PI
Ju st as the stru gg ling
Cleve land Cavaliers we re
about to get healthier with
the ret urn of forw ard Carlos
Boozer. they' II be without
center DeSagana Di op.
"W hat el.se is new," said
coach Pa ul Si las. whose 413 tea m hi" been st ung by
inj uri es . .
Diop. who I"" give n th e
Cavs much-needed interior
de fense, sprained his right
knee in Saturday's doubl eovertime loss to Memphis.
The 7- footer will not travel
with the club fo r road
ga mes thi s week in Denver
and against the Los Angeles
Cli ppers.
Sil as did not know how
long Diop, who had four
points and eight rebounds
in 24 minutes before getting hurt. will be sidelined.
A team spokesman had no
other details about Diop's
status.
The Cavaliers have lost
31 straight rnad games, dating to. a Jan. 12 win last
season at Seattle.
Cleveland is also in the
mids t of a six-game losing
streak. All six losses have
come without Boozer, who
has been sidelined with a
sprained ankle.
The second-year forwa rd.
averaging 10.5 rebounds in
II ga mes, prac ticed on
Monday. Silas said Boozer
will slart in Tuesday\
ga me ag;~i n s t the Nuggets.
The Cavs are al ready
without
guard
DaJ uan
Wagner. who · underwe nt
knee surgery last mo nth
and will be ou t ano th er
eigh t weeks.

Lady Tornadoes roll past South Galli a
BY Scon

WOLFE

Sports Correspondent
RAC INE - Picking up ·where
they left off last season, the RacineSouthern Lady Tornadoes claimed a
season opening 7 1-25 win over the
South Gallia Lady Rebels Monday
nioht in a non- leag ue var.&lt;ity basketball contest in Southern's ·Charl es
W. Hayman gymnasi um . All II
Lady Tornadoes hit the scori ng column in a great team effort. There
was no reserve game.
Southern was led by a 19-point
effort fro m senior Katie Sayre. who
also grabbed seven rebounds in a
fine all -around game. Juni or point
guard Brooke Ki ser added eigh t
points, senior Deana Pullins added

seven point s and
had a team high
seven steals, Joanne
Pickens
notc hed
seven point s and
had nine rebounds.
and reserve guard
Linda Eddy poured
in seven poin ts and
had a couple steals
in a great overull
Sayre
dfort.
Ashle;: Dunn had
six poi nts, Kri,tiina W1lliams rive,
JesSica Hill fnur. Susan Brauer four.
Kasie Sellers three. and As hl&lt;!y
Roush one.
As hley Clark and Chelsea
Canaday shared top-scori ng hono rs
for South Gallia wi th seven points

ead , Ju lia Gwinn
had fi ve point s and a
14
name-h ig h
~ebounds. while Ji ll
Swain atlded four
and Jessica Cantrell
two .

Southern . blasted
to an I I-0 start
behi nd eight Sayre
points and a trio of
markers
from
Pullins
Pullins . Savre hit
both th e inside and outside ii1 keeping the Gall ia defense oil balance.
Applying imcnse defensive pr~s ­
sure. Southern cont111ucd 1ts blit1.
The effort was fue leJ by I0
Sout hern stea ls and 12 poinh from
Sayre. who gained support from

Dunn. Hill. Pullins and Kiser. Each
mcmh~r of that quartet scored in the
first round.
South Gall ia 's first score came on
th e second of two free throws fro m
C.nmell and another pair of safeties
from Ju lia Gwinn. who had already
establish ed herself on the boards
with several rebounds. Southern le(j
25-3 after the first rou nd.
Southern laid back in a zone the
entire second fram e as Pickens,
Su san Brauer. and As hley Rous h
came in wi th some quality min utes.
Pickens and Wil liams put together a
couple early scores whi le Snyre,
Dunn and Kiser also notched tall ies
as Southern ro lletJ tu a JR- 13 lead at

.'

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CINC INN ATI - Sixtyfive seconds le ft. Thousands
of · ye llow towels are
twi rling like tops, makin g
the Ste elers' fi eld see m
even more daunting for the
team known to crumbl e at
the end .
Not thi s time. Not thi s
season .
With their most im portant
dri ve in a doze n years. the
Cincinnati Be nga ls di spe ll ed an other round of
doubts and set up a fir stplace showdown with _the
Baltimore Rav ens.
Jon
Kitn a's
18-yard
touchdown pass to tight end
Matt Sc hobel with 13 seconds left Sund av delivered a
24-20 victory ihat stunned
Steelers fans - and plenty
of Bengals fans.
" It was a game for hi story
for us," offensive. tackl e
Willie
Anderson
said
Monday. "Hopefull y it will
ha ve a hu ge impact fo r us
down the line somewhere."
For now, it kept the
Bengal s and Ravens tied for
first in the AFC No rth at 75 heading into their rematch
in Baltimore.' The Bengals'
34- 26 victory at home on
Oct. 19 became a springboard for their playoff run LEFT: Baltimore Rave ns linebacker Ray Lewis laughs during training camp in Westmi nster. Md., in this July 31, 2003 photo.
- six win s in the last seven RI GHT: Cincinnati Bengals coach Marvin Lewi s ye ll s to his team dur ing the Be nga ls' 21-14 win over the Cleveland Browns in
Cleveland on Sept. 28. Marvin Lew1s used to be Ray Lewis' defens ive coordinator. On Sunday. Marv m' s Be ngals meet Ray
Please see Bengals, 10
and the Ravens in the most intriguing game of the NFL' s most intrigui ng weekend in several seasons. (API

Kentucky holds off upsetGreen not back
minded Thundering Herd
with Browns as
suspension ends
BY Joe

KAY

Associated Press

BY ToM

WITHERS

Associated Press
BEREA
Willi am
Green's strange and troubled season has taken a
new twist.
Cleveland 's running back
did not rejoin the Browns
from his NFL-im posed
fo ur-game suspension as
expected on Monday, raising more questions about
hi s future with the team.
Green was banned for
four games las t month for
viol ati ng the league's substance abuse program. The
23-year-old, who has a history of drug and alcohol
problems. was eligible for
reinstatement Mond ay.
However, the club's leatling rusher, whose fi ancee
has been accused of stabbing him in the back with a
knife, was not at the club 's
train ing facility.
The Browns said they
were awa iting word from
lhe league on Green's status.
" He did not take part in
any team related acti vities
to day." team presjdent
Carmen Policy said in a
statement. " We are preparing for Monday nighi's
game wi th St. Louis as
though William will not be
available.'"

It's possible that Gree n
could be fac ing furt her discipline from the NFL.
When Green was suspended by the league. the
Browns said it invo lved
alco hol. To be suspended
for fo ur ga mes, Green had
to have a!ready been
enrol led in the league's
treatment prog ram.
Accordin g to the league's
collective bargai nin g agreement , another violat ion.
results in a four- or six~a m e suspension. A fo urth
mfracti un wu uld leaq to a
player sitt ing out for a year.
Spokesman Steve Al ic
said .the leag ue "had not hing to report on Green at
thi s time."
The player's agent. Tom
Condon. did not return a
phone message seeking
comment.
Brow ns coach Butc h
Davis said it, was premature

Please see Browns. 10'

CINC IN NATI - Marshall
was within six poi nts, and the
two sections of gree n-dad
fans were starting to mise a
ruckus and anticipate an upset.
Gerald Fitch wo uldn 't let it
happen.
The senior guard scored 24
points and made the decisive
shots down the stretch
Monday night, hel ping No. lJ
Kentucky hang un for an 8976 victory in ·the Wildcats'
home away from home.
Fitch, who had a career-high
36 points agai nst Tennessee
Tech on Friday. was the only
consistent threat fur Kentucky
(3-01. which let a 13-point lead
dwindle to six in the closing
min mes.
Fitch ended the comeback
by hitting a pull-up jumper
that started the seven-point run
that closed it out.
.
" You've got to have it every
game, especiall y if you' re
going to be the guy they
depend on," said Fttch, who
went 10-of-19 from the field. ·
"They got it down kind of
close, and we were kind of Kentucky guard Gerald FitGh'
drives against Mars hall
flat. I was just try ing to pick it defender Lavar Carter (311 in the first· half Monday. (API
up."

Marshall ( 1-2) hi t 10 1pointers to keep Kentuckv fidgety, but missed its lasi five
shots frnm beh ind th e arc as it
faih:d to score over th e last
lou r minutes.
Kelen na Azubuike added 16
po nts antJ Erik Daniels had 14

for Kentucky, which ha~ won
all II of its ga mes wi th
Marshall.
Ronny Dawn led Marshall
with a career-high 23 points,
going 7-of-9 on 3s to prevent
the Wildcats from pu lling
away. He hit his fi rst li ve 3~

poin t shuts, several of them.
fro m behind the NBA li ne on
the floor.
· "Ronny Duwn W&lt;JS excited
l&lt;l play,'' Marshall coach Ron
Jirsa said. '' He was as hot as

Please see Kentucky. 10 .

.r

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ANNOUNQMFNrs 1

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Bu sl n eas Days Prlar To

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Sunday In-Column : 1 : 00 p . m .
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POLICIES: Oh io Valley Publishi ng ,.......," the rlghl to .ctlt. raj.ct, or cancel any ad at any time. £rrors mutt be report.ct on the hriM dr," ot
and only the first lnMr1JOt1 We shall not be
any lou or ew:penae that retult s l rom the pubUcttlon 01 omlulon of an adveniaemant. CorrecUon wit! be mtcte In tM first available edition . • Bo•
are a lways confidential. • Current ra te card applln . • All real aabta advertlumanta are subject to ti'Mt Federal Fair Housing Act or 1168. • Th11 ~.,.,._,, .
accepta only hatp w.nt«&lt; ada mteting EOE atandarda. Wa will rwt knowingly acc.pt any ad 11erti1l~ in 'lloa.Uon ot the law.
Trlbune-Sentintl·Regial ar .,.111 bl reapon-'blelor no mor a thtln the. coat of the lptiCI occupied by ttM

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

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New Log Home on 1.3 2.38 Ac., beautifully wood- Security deposit Ava ilable
acres. land contract avail- ed. accessible driveway. 1st week of Dec. (304 )675·
able, if "needed $240.000 Green
Twp ..
$49.000 . 3654
(740)256·9247 o• (740)6450S7Q

~

HOMJ.S
FOR S AI.E

•

Office Fu rnitu re
New. scratch &amp; Dent
SaVi! 70°· ~ 1·800-527·466 2
Argonaut 519 Bndge Street
Guyandotte!Hunt111gton M/F
Old Cuoboa ro !lower

om

Gooo Cona1t10n 1304 !895 ·
3403

\II Ht ll\\111.._1

oil"l,...O_Ji(.;..)l.IS
"'.'-EH&lt;.;..M
_J;;I;;;;;;
GOOI"l'

L--------,.J

Good Used Appliances,
t BR. downtown , upstairs. Aecond1!10ned
and
references, depoSit , no pets, Guaranteed
Wa shers,
446·0 139
aild
Dryers,
Ranges .
Retngerators, Some start al
1 BR. Galhpol1s Downtown
$95. Skaggs Applianc es. 76
area. No pets, reference and
V1ne Sl. , (740 )446·7398
deposit required.
$375
monthly (740)645-2088
Light pme bed10om su1t
Queen size poster bed with
platlorm drawers, dresser.
mmor, chest . n1ght stand
and Jewelry armolfe. $4 00
Call f3p4)675-6787 after 6
pm

Tra11er. dual axle 1111 oed
new treat~d floor 13.000 lbs
max S699 (740\245·5648
Tr 1-axel Kenwortn Log Truck
w1th 120 Prentt ce Log
Loaaer. askmg S16 .000
03 Cat Dozer. 6 way o1aoe
$15.000
John Deere 440 0 skldder
ve ry
good
cond1tro'l
$22 .000
2002 John Deere 790 4x4
compact tractor. 6 ft l1n,sto
mower, 5 f1 hiler. new cond• IIOn. $11.500
89
GMC Ut•lity trucl
(740)446-6783 or 1740)645 2480

IIIJJJ'I(;
Mollohan Carpel. 202 Clark ~
Chapel Road . Parler Oh10
{740) 446-7 444 1-877·8309162 Free Eshmates. Easy Block tJr•ck sewer p•pes
l1nancing , 90 days same as w•ndows. 11nte1s elc Cl aua£:
cas h V1sal Master Card W1nters. R•o Grande OH
Dnve- a~ linle save alot

Bt
St 'I,,Jt:s

•

--------1600 Sq. ft . 3 year old Ranch
style home. 2 1/2 car
garage . 3 bedroom, large
icitchen. dinning room , living
room, 2 1/2 baths, laundry
room, front porch , all custom
oak trim doors and cabinets.
All electric .. Very welt layed
out, beautiful interior on 1
1/2 acres ... Won't last lOng at
only $lt 5 .ooo ... Call 740•
445.45 14 or 740 _446 •3248
after Spm,

--------2003 Oakwood 16 xeo . 3
bedroom, 2 bath, all the
extras, asking :s29 _000 must
be
mo"ed ,
evenmgs

- -- - -- - - 3 bedroom home in Chester.
many improvements. Rent
$395 .00 deposit $395.00
(614)501·8339 atter 5pm

(740)949- 2446

3 bedroom, 436 Main St ., $350deposit. fi rm . No pe ts.
1 bedroom upstairs." $300
Rutland , $350 a month ,
mon th $250 deposit No
$300
deposrt ,
HUD
pets. {740)7 10-1467 or
approved, {740 )593-7113
(740)286-0189.
3 br. ranch house for rent .
$375.00 a mon . in New 4 rooms and a bath. All utili·ties paid. $400/month. 46
Haven. no pets 120 Howard Olive St. (7401446 _3945
51. 304-675-3458
BEAUTIFUL
APART4 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 car
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
garage. No pets. $650 plus
PRICES AT J ACKSON
deposit. (740)441·1 184.
ESTATES', 52 Westwood
4 b r, 1 1/2 baths. Located on Dri'Je from $297 to $383
SA 141 nea r Centenary. Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
Equal
$700 per month. Deposit &amp; 740-446 -2568 .
r,e ference required. Call Housing Opportun ity.

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

3 bed room apartment on 3rd
St, Racine , rent plus depos11
&amp; utilities, (740)247-4292
3 bedroom, $450 month ,

FI NAL CLEARANCE
Just a few 2003 model
homes remain, come early.
make your pick·l hen·tal~ to
Ernie or Lynn , get the besl
possible pm.:e, you 'll be
4 bedroom house lor sa le or pleasantly surprised, loun·
rent on At 248 in Chester, dations. heat pumps, central
Oh, please call aller Spm airs and septic systems ou r
specialty, Cole's Mobile
16 14)50 1-8339
Homes . 15266 US 50 E.
Athens . Ohio 45701, PH; Wise man Real Estate at Furnished one bedroom Apt
740-446-3644.
clean, no pets. Must be will·
74Q-592· 1972
'
074
1170
E)(perienced C row n and
Y AIUt SALEM tSOU.ANEOUS
House tor renl m West ing to gtve refere nces
technicia n.
PoMEROY/Mroou; Bridge
Cotumbia
on AI 62 1 mile Phone. {304)675· 1386
Good used 14x70 2br/2blh.
(740)592-4 137
days.
Will help with delivery. Call from Mason Walmart DNV, Grac1ous living. 1 and 2 bed·
25 Seriout People wanted
lr door moving sale! Where: (740)594-6725 evenings
Harold 740-385-9948
whirl pool tub . 2br. Lg. room apartments at Village
Who wa nt to LOSE weight
ballas Hill's residence on
All reel "tat. advert leJng
K i I c h I L A I 0 e c k . Manor
and
Ai&gt;o~ers ide
Home Wark Needed.
We Pay You Cash tor the
lr)o this newa pa ~ r Ia
Wolfe Road, State Route For assembl y work. Send 1
$400.mol$400.
Sec.
Apartments
•n
Middleport
pounds you LOSE!
N ew t 4 wi de onty $799
subject to lhe Federal
338 located in the green· size N10 se ll addfessed
Sate. Natural. No Drugs.
down and only $169.76 per Deposit. Full Basement or From $278·$348. Call 740·
Felr
Housing
Act
of
1968
.houses next tO Martin stamped envelop too:
consider
sellmg. 992-5064 Equal Housing
S00·201-0832
month . call Niicki, (740)385- will
which make• It Illegal t o
.Marietta Gra\181 Company in JC
(304)773-9 167
OpportlJnilies
7671
actvertlte "any
WAr--M&gt;
·Apple Grove, Ohio, When: PO Box 87
11iRl
prefere nce, limitatio n or
To Do
:becembe r 1 to December 3, Wau aeon, Oh. 43567
discrimination baaed on
New 2003 Do wblew1de. 3 SA
·;woo, Items: two Rudd furrace , color. religion, se•
&amp; "2 Bath . Only $1695 down
naces. submergible pumps. MAN AG IN G
STYLIST Gedrges Portable Sawmill,
fam'llal stMua or nat ional
New I bedroom apt Phone
and &amp; 295/mo. 1·800·69t - 14x80 Mobile home, excelappliances, clothes. furnt - NEEDED for busy salon . don't haul your logs to the
origin, or any Intention t o
740-446-3736
67n
iure, Home Decor. books SASSY
SCISSORS
lent condttion .' 3 BA. 2 tun
make an y tueh
and something tor everyone. (740)44 1-1560 or (740)256baths. all electric, niCe yard . . - - - - - - - -preference, limitation "o r
Porter area . $400 month, North 3rd Avt . Middleport. 2
6336 .
dlacrlmlna11on .''
8 lSINffl'i
Specia l Sale- bod y pierc ing
$400 depos it . References bedroom furnished apt.
ANti
8
UUJJ1NGS
BUSINFliS
:Jewelry
at
Angie's Medl Home Health Agency,
Thfa new• PIII*" will nol
required. (740)446·4514 or Deposit
&amp;
re ference
OProlmJNrl)'
knowingly eccepl
·F!eamarket on 1·2·3, 9:30· Inc. seeking a fu ll·time LPN
Building &amp; Business in (740)446-3248 arter 5 p.m.
raquil'9d. No Pets (740)992·
• ldve!11Hrnentl lor real
5:00 also 25t sale lor more 1o perform chart audits and
__
w_tw_
ca_rpe_l_. •-,-,,-po-rc-h. 0__165
_ _ _ _ _~-Gallipolis. Ohio. ha s 4 __bd
therapy coordina tion for the
n tate which 11 In
ABSOLUTE GOLOMINEI
2
inlo. 740·992·9734.
, rentals Can show good
vlolatlo.11 of the law . Our
Gallipolis, Ohio area. Mu st 60 vending machine• wHh
Now Taking Appl icationaprofits. Ali at one wow price. Very nice. no pets. In
readers are hereby
W~NliD
2 Bedroom
be licensed both In Ohio and
e111cellent locatlon1
Gallipoli s. 74()-446·2003 or 35 West
Informed
thM
ell
owner can help finance . 740• 446.1409.
West Virginia . We offer a Mu ol Sell II II00-23W982.
Townhouse
Apartments,
m8uv
dwelllnga adYef'l ttedln
(7&lt;lli367-7B8S.
cor,npetitive salary, benefl,s·
Includes Water Sewage,
thla new..,.per are ·
2 Bedroom mobile home in Trash , ~o . , ..740-446·
Absolute Top Doll
U.S. package and 401 K. E.O.E .
avallabtt on an equ.l
~HIO
VALLEY
PUBLISH
Ra c•ne area. NO PETS. 0008.
Please
send
resume
to
430
Silver,
Gold
Cbins,
NG CO. reeommends tha
(740)991!-5858
li!&gt;portunlty "''"·
Proo!sets, 6iam ds, Gold Second Avenue. Gallipolis,
Twin Rivers Tower is accept~u do business with peo
Alrtgs,
~- Currency, - OH 45631 . Attn : Olana
Nice 2 Bedroom Mobil e i n ~ applicati ons tor wafting
M.T.! t --eoin Shop, 151 Hari6SS , Clinical Manager. ' le you know, and NOT t
Homo Sandhill Rd. Deposit list tor Hud·subslzed. 1- br.
House tor . Sale: 8612 Stale
end mOney th rough th
Second Avenue, Gallipolis,
apartment. call Ens-6679
Need 7 ladies to sell Avon , ~ail unlit you haVe lnvesti Route 7 South . (740)44_1·
&amp; References.
740·44S-2842
EHO
Call 740-446-~58
0953
1304)S75·6156
ated the offerlno .

40

AP·\ IOMEI'o~~

2 Bedroom Mobile Home.
Located behmd Fox·s P1zza
on
Sandhill
Road PI
Pleasant .
$31?0 ./ monlh
(indudes· water and sewer)
Call (304)675-3423

r

SAl -E~

.,.,or

MOBILE H OMES

HtJ.r W ,\ NTFJJ

T;mbe•land o• slandlng lim· Medi 110me Heallh Agency.
ber and oil &amp; gas productior Inc . seeMing a PAN fuiHme
·C-1 Beer Carry Ou t permit or m1neral nghts, 740·236· stalf Physica l Therapist for
:tor sale, Chester Township, 0035
Ohio and West Virginia client
.Meigs County, send letters
base . We offer a competitive
·of interest to : The Daily
I \11'111\ \ II '-1
salary, benellts package and
Sentinel , PO Box 729·20,
401K E.OE . $5.000 SIGN'' I&lt;\ H I "
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
ON-BONUS. Please send
110
resume to 352 Second
New
Hope
Cookbooks
Avenue , GaiUpolis,
OH
1
.$6 .00. In Memory of Barbara . ._ _ _ _ _ _ __
4563 1 AM. Oiaf"a Harless,
·Rollins loca ted at the Mason
R.N. Clinical Manager
:Jar ana Willtfs Sible on M a1n A leadersh•p sem inar will be
held on Nov. 25. 7pm. at Pt. m=~~'rn:'!'l'~~::'l'l
· ~tre e t.
Pleasant L1brary 11 you own 1Ne~o casn TOr L.nns1mas .
You can earn up to
Say good bye 10 high phone a bus1ness or want to have
$8/hour by ca lling on
b ills! New local phone se rv- one please attend This can
behalf of major Non-Profit
ice with FREE unlimited change your life . Everyone
and Pol1tical
. nation wide long D1stance welcome .
organizat ions. We also
·1·800-635-2908
0&lt; - - - - - - - Offer paid training
A REALISTIC
·www.FreedomMovre com l itp
and holidays. Call today.
OPPORTUNITY
: aysyou. Local Agents w ant·
1-S"H-463-6247 ext. 2454 .
Learn To Earn
·ed
$ t Ok + per month No I MLM
Trai ning Provided .
NORRIS NORTHUP
Gall for Info
OOOGE
1-800-88 1- 1540 Ext. 3258
Full Time Sal es Person
1 full grown male rabbit. 4
LOCATION: 252 UPPER
An E)(cellent way to earn
: ~ aby rabbits, 2 mo . old ,
RIVER AD.
money. Lets talk the
·4740)992-1002
GALLIPOLIS OHIO
NEW AVON .
UNLIMITED INCOME
·a eautilul female kitten , very Call Ma ri lyn 304·882·2645
POTENTIAL
Joyce
304-675-69
19
·playful and loving . Rescued
NO EXPERIENCE
:1rorn dog . Needs warm Apr il 304·882·3630
REQUIRED
home. (740)446-3153.
Assistan t Manage r. local Must poses good peop le
ski lls, ambitious alt1tude,
Free 2 one year old cats. chain restaurant , competi ·
and the desire to succeed .
live
salary.
fle)(lble
schedule.
Fixed and Declawed. Indoor
paid vacation Prefer at least
home on ly. (740)367-0871 .
two years eJtperience . Send Now Hiring Dance rs. Inquire
:Free Ao twe 1ter Puppie s resume to BOX 548 c/o at RT 35 Adult VIdeo &amp;
Day &amp; night
Gallipol is TriOune. P.b. Bo)( bookstore.
.(740)367·0467
shif ts. (304 )937·4900
or
469, Gallipolis, Oh. 45631.
(304 )549-5696. Amateurs
U l&gt;TANIJ
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or Welcome
FUUNIJ
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304·
Southern Hign School in
675-1429 .
Found· Whipplo Rd/5 Point s
Racine, Ohio is seeki ng a
·area, 6 mo. old blonde pup. AWESOME CAREER
Varsity Football coach .
;Lab/Shepherd mi)( . male. $1 4.S0-$36.00+/HA. .
ead coach ing
Previous h_
(740)992·2475
Postal 2003f04
exp erience Is pr8terred.
Full Benefits, No exp. r.flq., Anyone interested, please
Found : Older male beagle
Call Now
send resumes to Ryan
Nea r St . AI 141 and
Le mley, At hletic Director,
1-800-875- 9078 E•l. 2072
Ad
Call
Neighborhood
Southern High School, P.O.
(7 40)446·32 17.
If
not AWESOME CAREER
Box 98 Racine. Oh io 45771
claimed by weekend will S 14 .80·$36.00+/HA.,
take to shelter
Postal 2003/04
Temporary Pa inter needed
Full Benefits, No exp. req ., (apRrox. up to 12 week~) .
Lost: BlackfWhite male Call Now
EKperience preferred bu t not
Wal Ker Coon Hound with tan , ~800·875 ·9078 Ext . 2012
necessary. If in terested
ears. Lost on Clay Chapel
please stop by A ock~ prings
Road/ Friendly Ridge Area . BARTENDER TRAINEES Rehabilitation Center, 36759
NEEDED! $250 a day
1740)256·6233
Rocksprings
Road ,
potential . Local positions
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 or conREWAAD.... Brown. ladies available. 1-800-293-3985
tact Meli ssa Wams ley a t
purse,
Chester -Tuppers e)(l. 1975
Plains area. Friday-Saturday - - - - , - - - - - - 1740)992-6606
H ealth
NOI.Iembe r 28th-29th. No Controller "
based
1n EKtendicare
Services,
Inc.
is
an
equal
,guestions asKed ! (740)667· Gallipolis. Required to travel
.6500 home . (740)992·5 102 to branch locations in opportunity employer lhat
workplace
·Work
Colum bus,
Cleveland, encourages
diversity. M/F ON
:r·.· . YA"fi
Toledo,
and
Det roit.
nv
. ~
Minimum
requi rement s: Wanted : Nice, loving, experi·
Bache lors
degree
in
enced cook that works well
accounting, with 3 years
with children. Inquire withm,
experience. Send resum e to
French City Chilli Care
Y ARD SALF.•
CLA 565. do Gallipoli s Daily
Gante r. 300 Third Avenue.
G~\ LLIPOLIS
Tribu ne. PO Box 469
No PhO ria Call s.Pieese
Gallipoli s OH 45631 .
:MOIJing sate, Saturday 9-3, - : - - ' - - , - - - - - - - 1
8 USINI'Ri
·pee . 6, ra in or shine, note- Elderl y Middleport coup le
1.
TRAINING
book
computer,
dining seeks
assistance
with
tabl es &amp; chair, beds, reclin· household
chores
in
Gallipolla Career College
i f, dresser. chest of draw· exchange for rent and utility
ers, lots of books, keyboartl, tree residence next door. ' (Careers Close To Home)
much misc. Rio Grande· Prefer mature married cou- Call Today! 740-446·4367,
1·S00·2 14-0452
locally made Bldg. beside pie . References and good
Lear Photog raphy At. 588 driving record requ ired. www.galtipofiscareert:ollege.com
A '90" 05 " 12748
across from BP Gas.
(304)675·1066
~
'

Display Ads

D a lly I n-Co lum n: 1: 00 p .m.
Monday ~ Fr l d a y fo r I nserti on

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

Please see Southern. 10

BY Joe KAY
Associated Press

Word Ads

Oearllfir~

3 bedroom house. 4 1/2
acres , ci a, 'fenced pasture.
vtr.yl siding, T hermalpaf1~
wmdow, (740)985-4288

~

r M~!.E~1ES 1 _~_40-4_·~-~-·03_-_90_b_edr_oo_m_•_P_'-

rL--------.J
AI\TIQllt~

..

1

-

Buy
or se ll
R1verme
An11que s. 11 24 East Ma1n
on SA 124 E Pomeroy. 740•
992-2526
Russ Moore.
owner

2

Da1mat1an
pupp.es
motherttather tult t)jOOCied . b
females.
males. $12 5
(740)992-9832 ready X·mas
week .
- ' ' - - - -- - - M1nrature Dachshund pup·
p~es l male anct I female
First shots (740)379-2389

j5o40 M--·· 1.1 .I
·~

• N ..., u ,....
. ~ ·~~

FoR S,\J.t:
OR THAlli'

MtliLliAM&gt;ISE

99 13:Z.Go Golf Car t. New t 3 rentals, mce. 3 bedroom
Battery. Factory Charge r. house 50 acres 2 m11es
Gall1polls.
Good
Canopy. Great
Shape. hom
$1799. (740)245-5648
I \In I -.. 1 1'1'1 II o,
Cemetery plot and vault tor
.\ I I \ I .., II ll "
sale . $1 .200 neg Oh•o
Valley Memory Gardens
1Ur
FAR\1
6 14-527·461 6

t::OUI1'11fl:l'oT

Deer Cut $35 -$40 will t'-11
open 1111 endol season \·~···,. JD 40&lt;40 CIH.A , 134-AIC
Located in Gall•potra F'"V • new t•res and Mw 1ntenor
area. Johnson Lane Look JD 12 t 9 Mo·Co. rebwlt Call
tor s1gns
7&lt;40 256·6011
For
Sale
Celestron
LIVFXI0 .:..1\.
Telescope VIsual DieCk t - L________,.
1 /4 ~ New ConditiOn . $400.
(304)675-5096
Polled Hereford Helers 1 Y'
old Dark Red (304)882·
JET
2426
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New 8 Rebuilt In
H A\" &amp;

r

Stock Call Ron Evans, 1· L~---•G
iil'i1Riii~iltN0.-SQ0.537 ·9528
-

•

Kenmore
wt.Sherl dryer,
$1oo: exerc•se b1ke. $30,
(7401992-5544
Like new SOlid wood corner
hutch . 4 piece oak. desk set
(desk , typing table, 2 drawer
file cabinet) White gas cook
stove-works great. New
compaz
IJ750
printer
Electrk: typewriter. Women's
and girts ski suits-excellent
condttion .
Longaberger Baskets
..Call afte r s·OO pm.
740-446-4518

,.

[716
A1.!1US
L,___FOR
ii-- IISiAi .i;E;,_,.J
$SCXJ! POLICE IMPOUNDS
Hondas. Chevys. Jeeps. e1e1 .
Cars from ssoo For listings
1-S00:7 19-3001 ext3901
$5001 POLICE IMPOUN.DS.
Hondas. Chevys, Jeeps, etc!
Cars from $500 For listirlgs
1·800-719·3001 ext3901

'r , )

�Page 8 • The Daily Sentinel

• Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2003 •

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tueada~Dec.2,2003

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

ALLEY OOP

NEA Cro .. word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Puhli&lt;.' Nu1k~8 In ""'"'"~'~1," 1""'·•·
Your IU ~t ht t o Know. l)"li'-t&lt;n:&lt;l Mtw.hLIU Ynur l)onr.

Phillip
Alder

I

SMrlll's Sala of Raal
Estate
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County
"'MERICAN GENER·
Al FINANCIAL SER·
VICES, INC., Plalntlll

VI
JOSEPH W. PULLINS,
el al., Defendants
Ceoe No. 03· CV .()65
In pursuance to an
order of sale directed
to me In the above
entitled action, I will
offer for sa le at public
auction, at the front

door of the court·
house in Pomeroy,
Ol:llo, in the above
named county, on
January 16, 2004 at
10:00 A.M., the follow·
ing described real
estate and mobile
home, to ·wit:
tho
Situate • in
Township of Orange,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio;
Baing a part of a
tract of land last
transferred to Luther
E. Boothe as recorded In deed Book 259
at Page 251 , Meigs
County
Recorder's
Olllce, Meigs County,
Ohio, also being a
part of the Northeast
Quarter of Section 23,
Township 4- North,
Range
·12-West,
Orange
Township, ·
Meigs County, State
of Ohio, and more
particularly described
as follows:
Being at a point on
tho East Section line
ol Section 23 which
bears South oo· 01'
4P" West a distance of
1093.65 feet from the
northeast corner of
said
Section
23,
Township
4-North,
~nge 12-West;
. • Thence along said
East Section line
South 00' 01 '49 " West
a distance of 768.49
feet to a railroad
spike set in the center
line of State Route
#681;

Thence
leaving
said Section line and
along the center line
of State Route #681
South 76' 43' 38"West
a distance of 464.60
feet to a p.k. nail set
in the center of a
bridge crossing the
East branch of the
Shade River ;
Thence
leaving
said center line and
along the center line
of said East branch of
the shade River the
following six courses;
1. North 01 ' 38' 58"
East a distance of
149.88 feet to a poir I;
2. North 39' 14' 03"
East a distance of
125.80 feet to a point;
3. North 31 ' 22'11"
East a distance of
160.28 feet to a point;
4. North 05" 46' 30"
East a distance of
158.46 feet to a point;
5. North 16' 33' 02"
West a distance of
165.41 fe&lt;!l to a point;
6. North 40' 36" 36"
East a distance of
t 12.63 feet to a point;
said point being the
intersection of the
center line of said
East East branch of
Shade River and the
center line of a ditch;
Thence
leaving
said center line of the
East branch of Shade
River and along the
center line of said
ditch North 69 " 49'
41" " East passing
thru a railroad spike
set tat a distance of
255.40 feet and going
a total distance of
259.02 feet to the
principal point of
beginning containing
5.8004 acre tract
more or less subject
to all legal easements
and right-of-ways.
Bearings
were
assumed and are for
the determination of
angles only.
The above descrlp·
tlon was prepared
from an actual survey
on the 16th day of
June, 1987, by C.
Thomas Smith, Ohio
' Prof a 8 8 ion a I

Surveyor j6844,
Excepting and reservIng to Luther E.
Boothe the gas &amp; oil
on the foregoing real
estate.
Address:
47155
Booth
Road,
Coolville, Ohio Parcel
No. 10-ooo61 .001
Said real estate will
be sold together with
the 1987 Nashua
mobile
home,
Identification Number
NZOHCNCX770142FK
017092 and being
registration no . 10·
00088.
Said real estate
and mobile home are
appraised
at
$22,000.00 and can·
ne&gt;t be sold for Ieos
than two-thirds of the
appraised value.
TERMSOFSALE : The
successful purchaser, as soon as his bid
Is accepted, shall be
required to deposit
on the day of the sate,
In caah or by certified
check payable to the
Sheriff, 10% of the
amoUnt
of
such

the town of Pomeroy, - place of beginning, a
accepted bid but in
distance of about 91
but Is It (sic) under·
no event less than
leal.
$1 ,000.00. The bal- stood and agreed that
Saving and except·
the rights granted by
ance or the purchase
ing the First Ward
this deed to use said
price shall be due and
House lot situated in
payable to the Sherlll sewer are not to be
Pomern)' Eagles
within thirty (30) days exclusive , and fur- the northeast corner
BINGO 2171
of said Lot No. 296
from the date ol the thermore It Is underEvery
Thursday
stood and agreed that and being 18 leal lac·
confirmation
sale.
&amp;
Sunday
lng on Nya Street and
the Grantees, their
The purchaser shall
Doors Open 4:30
•
heirs and assigns, are exte~dlng back at
be required to ay
137 S. 5th Avenue
interest
on
said to maintain the said that width a distance
Early hirds slart
Middleport, OH
sewer at its present of 26 feet. The right
unpaid balance at
6:30
and
privilege
is
herelocation
at
their
own
10% per annum from
(740) 992-7533
Last
Thursday
of
by reserved to John
the. date of confirma- expense.
every
month
0 . Roedel and Martha
Parcel 2: Situated in
tion of the sale to the
l" Over 15 tears
All pack $5.00
date of ·payment of
the County of Meigs, Roedel, their heirs
F..rperitnce
and assigns to use a
the balance unless in the State of Ohio
. Bring this coupon
sewer that is conand In the Village of
the balance shall be
Buy $5.(HI
•
Ot~tr JO Mounl.~
structed across said
made within eight (8)
Pomeroy.
Bonanza
Get
on
Di~play
TFN
I
lot
above
described
All of Subdivision
days from the date of
5 FREE
from the coal bank.
No. 2 of Lot No. 189 in
sale .
with the right and
Burnap's Addition to
All Sheriff's sales
said
Village
of privilege of entering
operate under the
DEER
Sunset Home
said premises for the
Pomeroy, extending
doctrine of Caveat
PROCESSING
purpose of making ~
Construction
from High Street on
Emptor. Prospective
Lincoln Hill to the repairs to said sewer
purchasers are urged
Skinned, Cut
Bryan Reeves
Rutland Road now as occasion .-,.ay.
to check for liens. The
&amp; Wrapped
New Home!'. • Viny l
New
Homes,
known at (sic) the require.
Sheriff makes no
Summer
Sausage
Siding
• New Garages
Room Additions,
Parcel No. 2:
Lincoln Hill Road,
guarantee as to sta·
Situate
in
the
village
Made
except 23 fe&lt;!l oil of
Ius of Title Prior to
LARRY SCHEY
• Rcplan:rm:nl
Garages, Pole
sale.
the west end or side of Pomeroy, in the
Maple~oe&gt;d Lake
Buildings, Roofs,
Window s • Roofing
sold by E.F. Felger to county of Meigs, and
Ralph Trussell
Christian
Siding,
Decks,
COMMERCIAL and
Slate
of
Ohio,
to
·wit;
Harry
Felger,
Vol.
76,
Meigs County Sheriff
Campground
Beginning on Nye
Page
342,
Meigs
Kitchens, Drywall
Donald A. Cox
RESIDENTIAL
at
the
Attorney for Plaintiff
County
Deed Street
St. Rt. 124 between
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES
750 East State Street I' hone ( 7~ 11)59J -(,6 7 1
Northeast corner of a
Records.
(11) 25, (12) 2, 9,16,23
Racine &amp; Syracuse
FREE ESTIMATES!
Athl'ns, Ohio
Also the following
lot heretofore deeded
740-992·7599
949-2734
A
by Curtis D. Reed and
real estate In said
740-742·341
Laura Alberta Reed to
County of Meigs and
Public Notice
State of Ohio, Village John M. Roedel by
deed dated April· 24, Courier/Messenger
The State of Ohio,
of
Pomeroy,
and
1899, recorded in
described as follows:
Meigs County
• Professfonrrf
Volume 84, Pages 84,
Subdivision
No.
Mortgage Electronic
• ConfldentltJI
386-387,
Let me do ;t for youl
Three (3) of Lot No. Page
Registration
Bob Bock
Records of Deeds of
189
In
Burnap 's
Systems,
Inc. as
!Ita chine
·Regulated
.
Meigs County, Ohio.
Addition
to
said
Nominee
fOr
(740) 245-5027
1) Thence South
Village of Pomeroy
18 Patterns Available
Household
Realty
1
parallel with Nye
extending from high
Corporation
aka
Connie
Cttrntttt
895-3962
Shop
·
.,
Street eighteen (18)
Street on Lincoln Hill
Household Finance
feet;
to the Rutland Road
Corporation
AIJ"fO&lt;i
owner1operator
89!i·3!i12 nome
2) Thence tforth
now known as the
Plaintill
FOR SALE
I#
eighteen (18) feet;
vs.
Lincoln Hill Road.
3)
Thence
East
. Gall McAbee fka Gail
Except the coal
9 miles from Pl . P/casaut
'
1987 Buick Grand National.
twenty-six (26) feet to 95 ,000 miles. looks and runs
underlying the above
Zirkle, etal.
011 Sa11d Hi/1/!odd.
I
the place of begin- good . $7,900. (7 40)446·
described property
Defendants
with the right to mine
ning. Saving and 4034.
Case No. 02 CV 102
the same which has
excepting all coal and
In pursuance of an
;
;
other minerals under- 1998 Caclillac Calera
Order of Sale in the been reserved by ·preVANS&amp;
lying the premises Garage kept, 27.000 actual
above entitled action , vious owners.
4-WDs
$15 ,000.
Call
grantor, miles.
Reference
Deed : . hereby
I will offer for sale at
together with the (740)446 -4467 or (740)446·
Volume 133, Page 61,
public auction, at the
I
1966 Chevy Blazer, 4X4 .
right to mine the 4262.
Courthouse
in Meigs County Official
I
29670
Bashan
Road
Dean Hill
same without any 2000 Buick l;fegal LS. 41k $850.00 080 (740)742·
Pomeroy, Ohio, in the · Records.
Racine , Ohio
unnecessary damage miles, excellent cond ition , 2877
Auditor's Parcel Nos.
above named County,
.\5771
New &amp; Used
on the 30th day ol 16·00960.000,
16· to the surface of $9,500
Estate
Sale
740·949·2217
1991 Dodge pickup . 4 W.O.:
16· same.
January, 2004, at 00961.000.
475 South Church St.
(3041675·2208, 965·5597
S. W.B. ; AIC ; 96K m11es .
Address:
00055 .000
10:00 o'clock a.m.,
&amp;
16· Property
Size~
5'cX1
~
·~ ·i·
•
r
Ripley, WV 25271
1508 Nye Street, 2001 Sunlire, 30.000 miles, $3,500. (740)245·5213
the
00054.000
following
to 10'x30',
Subject to all leases,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 auto, AJC, CD player, $5,200
described real estate,
to wit :
easements and right·
Parcel No: 16·00790· 080. (740)256·1618 or 2000 Ford F 550 Diesel, 4
Hours
(740)256 ·6200.
door, 4 wheel drive with flat
Situate~. in the State
of-way of record.
000
··w.V's #I Clw vv. Pun liaC" . 1-itlit'k . . Ohls
bed . (740)446·9317.
Owner :
TERMS OF SALE : :.....=:..:..=---,.,..,--ol Ohio, County of Current
7:00AM
·8:00PM
91 Firebird. V·B. auto ,
tv. C u s1om Vnn D£"alr- r"
111411 mo. pd
Nathan M. Hansen
Ten (10o/o)percent of 114.000 miles. asking
Meigs and Township
Property lit: 101 High
the highest bid, cash $2 .000: 97 Grand Am 2001 Ford Explorer Sport.
of Salisbury and
or certified check, 74.000 miles. 6 ely, auto. 4x4. white-grey trim. leather
being
further Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
due on the day of $2700: 96 Ranger. 4 ely, 5 int .. lull y loaded . 29.000
45769
described as follows:
"I lost my shirt
sale, balance due sp .. 106.000 miles, $2.000: mil es. Excellent cond. 60
PP#
16·00055.000,
Being all of Lot #440
mo.100.000
mile
transferupon
confirmation
of
in the stock
and 15 feet adjoining and 16·00960.000
92 Range r. 4 ely. 5 sp ..
)~ .. /1;/(' ..J,, ff ~~~
the sale by the Meigs 107.000 miles. $ 1200 : able warranty. $ 16,000.
part of Lot #441 and
Prior
Deed
market!"
97 F250, 4~4 . loaded. sharp.
County
Court
of (7401742·2357
being a part of the
Reference : Volume
31645 SR 315
(7401446·6783 or (740)645·
133, Page 61
Common Pleas, the
same real estate con·
Langsville, OH
deed will be issued 95 Bl ue Neon. 5 speed. 4 2480.
veyed by James R.
Appraised
at :
upon the balance door. 86.000 mites, $ 1.400 - - - - - - - - 740-742-2076
Eads to James !! $30,000.00
or best o ffer. 740-256- 1652. 2001 Oldsmobile Sithoutte
"Not me!
of
Sale:
being paid .
Allen by deed record· Terms
Skin. Cut,
My
money IS wtth
Cannot be sold for
Appraised
at 95 Ch rysler N ewyorker. Van, loaded, leather seals,
ed in Deed Book 197,
Wraplr
prem ium sound , traction
less than 213rds of the
$30.000.00
Page
65,
Deed
Rocky Hupp Insurance
excell ent condition, leath er
Freeze
Records of Meigs
appraised value. 10%
Kim M. Hammond power sunroof , runs great, control. 76 ,000 miles, asking
and Rnanciol Services.
For only
$12.900. Phone (740)446·
(0062572)
County, Ohio.
down on day of sale,
Box 189. Middleport. OH
$2500 must sell, 740-4164672, (740)441·1034
cash
or certified
Leonard A. Cuilli 0174 .
Parcel Nos. 15·01407·
1
, Phone: 843·5264'" .
check, balance on
(0067712)
000 &amp; 15-01 408-QOO
' ',.J..~~.~clmO~·o ""~ .~v .
Attorneys tor Plaintiff . 95 Toyota 4-Runner L1mited.
confirmation of sale.
Said
Premises
Keith D. Weiner &amp; V6 , automatic. 4x4, PW, PL ,
Ralph E. Trussell,
Located at 760 Laurel
Associated Co., LPA
Sun roof. Tilt, Cruise, A/C .
Street·,
Middleport, Sherlll , Meigs County,
75 Public Square, $3.500, (7401379·2280.
Ohio
Ohio 45760
Reimer &amp; Lorber Co.,
Said
Premises
Fourth Floor
TRUCK."!
99 Blazer LS. 4 door, 4&gt;&lt;4 ,
L.P.A.
Cleveland ,
Ohio
F~R SAl'~
loaded. 54,000 miles. excel·
Appraised
at
44113
L.~---·viiiOiiiiii~iio
. _.-J lent condition
$11 ,900
$11,000.00 and canBy: Dennis Reimer
Tel: (216) 771·6500
'
(740)446·6251 .
not be sold for less · (Reg. #0031109)
Fax: (216 ) 77 1-6540
1987 Ford F250 Diesel ~40
than two-thirds of James C. Wrentmore
(11) 18, 25, (12) 2
w!Tu rbo, 2" Lill, Aluminum
MO'IURCYCU.."i
(Reg. #0046779)
that amount.
1.
Wheels, Goose Neck hitch, __
Terms
of
Sale:
Attorneys for Plaintiff
much
more.
(740)256·
1360.
$5,000.00
2450 Edison Blvd.
down,
2002 Honda 350 Rancher
remainder upon ten·
P.O. Box 968
1987 Ford Ranger e&gt;c:tend four wheeler. $ 3.200 .
der of de&lt;!d.
Twinsburg,
Ohio
0
cab, run s good , new tires. John Deere Gator. eleclric
Frank &amp;Wooldridge 44087
S1200. (740)992·6897
dump. (740)446·6783 or
Co., L.P.A.
(330) 425-4201
1992 Chevy 314 lon, 5- 740 645-2480.
Attorneys for Plaintiff
(11) 18, 25, (12) 2
CAMPERS &amp;
speed . wltopper. $3 ,500
BOO
South
Pearl
Street
Columbus,
c au 740-446·8832
MuruR HoMES
Ohio 43206
Public Notice
1995 FORD E350 CUBE
(614) 221-1662
BOX
TRUCK.
CALL 1976 Taurus Camper. Se ll
(11) 25, (12) 2, 9,16, 23
SHERIFF'S SALE
(740)446 ·9416. M-F 9·5. coalailled 20 11. new lires, &amp;
CASE NO. 03 CV 012
Located
1391
Safford brakes, everything works ,
The State of Ohio,
School. Gallipolis .
clean. $1,200. (740)388·
County of Meigs,
Public Notice
Syracuse, Ohio
9327.
1996 Toyota Tercel , auto.
Pursuant to the com-..1 f{\ IC I ..,
Now op::n ror
AJC, $1.900 080. (740)256·
SHERIFF'S
SALE, mand of and Order of
REAL ESTATE
Sale issued from the
1618 or (740)256-6200.
r,r:::.ar--~::-----,
Chrisl.ma~ Season.
HOME
CASE NUMBER
court of Common
Poi nsettia s, Pots and
1998 Mazda 82500 extend·
IMPROVEMENlS
02·CV·133
Pleas of said county,
ed cab. white . 4/speeci. 2
hanging baskets.
GMACMORTGAGE and to me directed, in
wei .. 59 ,000 miles, ac. cd .
CORPORATION
the action ol The
Open
daily Monday
bed liner , (740)992·9229
BASEMENT
Plaintiff
Provident Bank vs.
after 6pm $7 ,500 obo.
WATERPROOFING
lhru Saturday 10·4
VS
Fred E. Ray, et al.
- - ' ' - - . . . . . : . _ _ _ _ Unconditional li fetime guarClosed Sundays
NATHAN M. HANSEN,
2001 Chevy S- 10, Dark antee. Loca l references fur·
I, Ralph Trussell,
metallic green, 4 cyl., 5- nished. Established 1975
et al
Meigs County Sheriff,
740-992-5776
speed , A/C , CD. cruiseftilt, Call
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
shall oner lor sale at
Defendants
exc_condition. 14 ,(X}(I miles, 0870, Rogers Ba sement
COURT OF COMMON
public auction, to be
will se ll for pay off $10,100 Waterproofing
PLEAS,
held at the Meigs
(740)446·0864.
MEIGS
COUNTY,
county r.ourlhouse,
OHIO
on January 9th, 2004
In pursuance of an at 10:30 o'clock a.m.,
Order of Sale to me
the
following
directed from said
described lands and
Court in the' above
tenements to wit:
entitled action, 1, will
Parcel No. 1:
expose to sale at pubSituated In the Village
lic auction on the of Pomeroy, County
front steps ol the
ot Meigs and State of
Meigs County Court
Ohio; •
House on Friday,
Beginning at the
December 19, 2003 at
northeast corner of
10:30 a.m., of said
the First Ward House
93 Columbus Rd.
day, the following
and also the north·
described real estate:
ea11 corner of Lot NO.
'Parcel 1: Situated In
296,
the
Village
ol
1) Thence southerly
•
•I
Pomeroy, County ol
along the west side of
Meigs and State ol
Nye Street a distance
33795 Hiland Rd. '
Ohio: Being Lot No. 1 of 95 fe&lt;!l to the north
Pomeroy, Ohio
and 23 feet oil the
side of a driveway,
Licensed &amp; Bonded
westerly side of Lot
2) Thence along
Ph 740·99l·09ll
No. 2 adjoining said
said driveway south
Ceii740·59H07l ;
Lot No. 1 in Burnap's 78 deg. 30 min west a
'-'
distance of 50 feet,
Addition to the town
of Pomeroy. Said Lot
3) Thence north 3
YOUNG'S
No. 1 and part of Lot deg. 40 min . west 30
No. 2 and being in
feet,
,subdivision ol Lot No.
4) Thence north 64
, 189 In said town of deg. 30 min. -st 55
• Room Addltlont 1:
Pomeroy as recorded feet to the face ol the
Remodeling
cllll,
in Volume 231 , Page
• New Homes
•
New Garages
5) Thence northerly
893 of lhe Meigs
·Garages
• Electrical I PlumbJng
Cou!liY Records.
along the face · of the
• Rooflng &amp; Gutters
• Complete
Furthermore, the
cllll a distance of
• Vtnyl Siding &amp; Painting
right and privilege to
Remodeling
about 29 feet to the
• Patio and PorCh Deck•
maintain and use the
north line of lot" No.
IN MASON
Free Estimates
existing underground 296;
.
IOXIO · S35 .00
V.
C.
YOUNG
Ill
sewer through Lots 2,
6) Thence easterly
10X20 • J55.00
Stop &amp; Compare
199
and
17
in
992·6215
along the north line of
Pome1oy.
OhiO
Burnap's Addition to
said lot No. 296 to the
22 Y. rt ocal

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY

Il

""on

.
'

••

•
•

4

liNDA'S PIINnNG

~ling

Sti~ch j

II .
i••:
I' ..
I •

1:
I

I

BARNEY
STILL CLEANIN',
ELVINEY 7

I

SIGH, A WOMAN'S
WORK IS NEVER
DONE!! ~

i

P"'": J t\Y

1--11-\f'.-T YOU Will f\tOU\""1
1-\'i bKU\U:'l ..

OUR DANG MISTAKE WUZ
EVER STARTIN' IN TH'
FURST
({'))
1

f"ii1~:_P~LACE

1-1?

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i[':J ... 'N\Tf\ ('., GREP-.T OCN. ~0
0C UNI'{):)Ufo\\ t-IG 1\600I I

P"I)UI 'iOU i·W.JE.. \0 1\'\&gt;f'/\\ T,
c.U:H&gt;..\NLY 1:) t\1'\ lJi'\1-..'X&gt;UM\r-\(,

SOUl 1
•

lI
BIG NATE
AMISH LOOKING

HI .
AL 1•

GUY~

MIGHT BE
TIME TO
LOSE THE
BEARD .

•

SVT WMOEVER IT 15
BETTER 6ET RID OF= IT
BeCAUSE IF HE TMROW5 IT
AT M~. I'M 60NNA POUND
111M INTO THE 6ROUND!

BETTY

GARFIELD
ME. .

NEITHE~

IMPORTS

CARPENTER (1 O'x10' 61O'x20')
(740) 992-3194
SERVICE

992-6635

RQBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

Sou&amp;b

We!il

North
I :'IT

t: Hs l
Pass

4•

Pass
Pass

4•
Pass

Pass
Pass

loser on dummy's second top club. But
which major-suit finesse should you r1sk?
Suppose you lake the trump finesse and
it wms. How many tncks do you have?
One spade, seven hearts, one diamond
and lwo cl ub s - only 11 . So. you still
need the spade finesse to work . Next.
suppose you take a successtul spade
linesse. How many tricks do you have?
Three spades . s1x hearts . one diamond
and two clubs - 12!
After winning wtlh the diamond ace. take
a spade fmesse _If 1! loses. you will go two
or three down . But when it wins . ca ll lor
th e heart queen. tempting East to cover
Whe n he plays tow, lhough, go up w1th the
hear t ace . repea l the spade finesse . and
cash dummy's black-suit winners. ciis·
card1ng your two diamond losers.
The finesse . as we have just seen. can be
enigmatic. The mystery of the Sphinx 1s
olten· called an enigma . S 1r Winston
Churchill said that Russia was a riddle
wrapped in a mystery 1nside an en1gma .
But in bridge . clear thinking and counting
usually solve th is enigm a

G

Astro-

Strllllgy
Covllr
Rovtr't
troll
Kimono
motorial
Lnerory
complltllon
High spirits
OcUittcurw 10 Outlll
Chaney
14 Movie
of fllrndom
workplaces
Society
19 Coutt..u't
newcomer•
oeo
21 Rtor,
DOWN
to Popeye
22 SIMI
Ordlnanco
a glance
23 Gumbo
Moutht ,
In biology
vegetable
Burning
24 Singer
Cortes foe
- Diamond
Radiate
25 Diner
Gloomy
29 Short-llvad
Cop show
30 Jon
vehicles
in81:rument
(2 wdo.)
32 MaunaMarx or
35 Cry
ot dlomoy
Malden
Staring et
36 Big cet

61
62
83
64
65
86

t
2
3
4
5
6
7

8
9

37
42
43
45
4&amp;

Mel role
Forolront
Arroganco
Shacka
Comic
- Htrdy

47 Oemt
50 Dwlndlad
5i Wrttlng
fluldi
53 Tin
5I PIHiie Bind
58 Hurrah!
59 Colltr
80 Dooh

width•

1
I

.

-... 'lllrthda!Y:

YVednesday, Dec.3,2003

By Bernice Bede O.ol
A number of 'changes are apt to be in the
oHing for you in the year ahead . Even

2~·Jan .

19) - Don't

get In ttle way today of people who aretry·
lng to bring under control a matter over
which vou haye little or no command.
They'll make sure everything will work out
to your advantage.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-!reb. 19) - Thla il!l a
good day to make amend&amp; with an old
friend who you've been neglecting lately.
The measure&amp; you take will a15ure this
pen1on that 11he or he still means a lot to
you .
'
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 201 - Today wtll
be favorable , especially where your career
or finances are concerned . However. It will
be up to you to make the most of the
opportunities as they develop.
ARIES (March 21-April 191-Look to your
past experiences for soluti ons to solve
problems which confront you today. You
possess the necessary knowledge that wt11
get you over any current ro~gh spots
TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20) - It's bes t not
.'llrliS iS ?R0~'31.Y
to discuss any confidential cr sens1tive
Information you posses about the affairs ol
another with those who are not directly
RIGHT~
tnvolved. Staying mum assures privacy
and success
GEMINI (May 2 1·June 20)- It you have
something be neficial 10 Sha re today. fi rst
contact your old fr ie nds 10 see il they are
1nterested 1n receiving it . They deserve the
first option to take it or turn it down .
CANCER (June 21-JL.:Iy 22) - It coukl
prove important to give priority today and
tomorrow to matters that can further your
personal ambitions. Atthts ttme . this is the
area where you will be tl'le lucktest
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Situations WhiCh
others may l1nd far too diff icult to ma nage
could turn out to be re markably easy for
. - - - - - - , . . . . - - - - - - . - - - . ,. you to handle today. Step into the breech
yd1en you see others floundering
LET THI!l Bl&lt;
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22)- Use your tal·
OUR LITl'LI&lt;
ants and.abilities tOday to implement neeo·
SE.CRET
ad changes that you know would enhance
the security of your entire family. The
N
peace of mind it brings promotes accord
~
and harmony.
,•
LIBRA ~Sept . 23-0ct. 23) - This cou ld be
~
one of the bener days to tron out matters ol
~
importance that affect both yo~ ,and your
~ rs
mate. Your chances of findino better cours·
li ~
es of action are currently excellem.

I

J

1

E

~

...

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Companng me w11h Sandi KoufaM os like
compartng (car patnter) Earl Scheib with MtchelanQelo.'
- Former pitcher Don Sulton

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Pelvis· Olden· Hyena ·Jersey. OVER "f EAD

Some of Granny"s old say ings never 'T1ade much
sense to me . The funniest one was . "Havtr1;l a bird in
hand is better lhan one OVERHEAD ·

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extremely useful in achieving material
gains from others th~n your usual sources

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CAPR1COAN (Doc.

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SAVINGS

''

",

though you may nol 1nit1ate them , chances
are you will welcome these alterations,
because they'll turn out to be quite tav:&gt;rable for your position.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)- Any
situation that requires a managerial toi.Jch
will be your cup of tea today. You're good
on your own , Out w ill be a stand out il you
have a number ol competent aaaistanta to
help you.

Get AJump

~ Eiedric

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Eooy lou

53
54
55
57

two aces miss1ng. Still. to drive that n1ne·
cou nt lo slam was optimistic
You can 1mmed1ately throw one d•amond

THE BORN LOSER

•

It 'Orond
Conyon 11.
I 2 Scratch
13 VOIH for
15 Bulb
t 6 wnntta'a
reply
(2 wds.)
t 7 ·ttrtrnony
18 CPR pro
20 Mullin
, morMI
22 Explorer
- da Leon
25 Gnome
28 Family MOo
27 Barely
manage
28 Strllies back
31 Estrada
of fllmo
33 Gradeschool org.
34 Auel
heroine
38 Unllnnod
39 Not him
40 Unlucky
number,
to Nero?
41 Reluctant

The finesse IS a straiQhtforward tech·
nique : You try to win a trick w1th a card
lower than the best held bY. the opponents. As you know. in theo(y, a stmple
linesse ts a 50-50 proposttion . Bul occa·
sionally there wtll be deals li ke th 1s one
You have blasted 1nto s1x hea rts. West
leads the diamond k1ng. How would you
plan the play?
South used the Gerber ace-askmg con·
vention to make sure that there weren 'l

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'4 SNd

�Tuesday, December 2, 2003

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page to • The Daily Sentinel

•
.'

Prep Scoreboard

Ben gals
Greenan 75 Yellow Sbnngs 68
Hamilton 47 . lancaster 45
Hann1bal A1ver 55 . Bella1re 48
Hunt1ngton Ross 65 . Wh1teoak 48
Ironton 67 . Rock Hill 34
Jackson 60. Wellston 39
Lebanon 55, W. Ca rrollton 41
Leetoma 65. Voungs Woodrow W1l son 19
LoUisv ille St Thomas Aqu inas 54.
Youngs . Card1na l M ooney 34
Lynchburg Clay ,;. 1 Greenfield McClain

Ohio High School Girls B asketball
Mon day's Result s

Girls Basketball
Southern 7t , South Galt Ia 25
South Galt1a
3 10 3 9 - 25
Southern
25 13 16 t7 - 71
Southern {1-0)- Ashley Dunn 3 0-0 6 ,
Jessica Hill2 0 ·2 4 . Deana Pullins 3 1-1
7, Katie Sayre 7 5-8 19, Susan Brauer 1 2·
2 4, Brooke Kiser 3 2-3 B. Joa"ne Pickens
2 3-3 7. Ash ley Roush 1 1-2 1, Kristuna
W•ll•ams 2 0·0 5, Kasie Sellers 1 0·0 3.
Linda Eddy 3 0·0 7. Totals- 27 14-2 1 71
Sooth Gatlia (0- 1) - Knsten Halley 0 00 0. Jessica Cantrell 0 2-5 2. J1ll Swa1n 1
1·2 4, Ashley Clark 2 2-3 7. Elke Schuster
0 0-0 0. Chetsea Canaday 2 3·4 . 7, Lacy
Lane 0 0-2 0, Stacy Fe tlure 0 0·2 0, Julia
Gwinn 0 5-6 5. Totals 5 13-24 25.
3-point goals - South Galt1a 2 (Ciar ~ .
Swain). Soulhern 3 (William s. Se lle rs,
Eddy) .

Kentucky
from Page6
hot could be."
The ove1w helming m:uority
of the crowd of 13.913 wore
blue and wh ite for Kentuc ky\
annual visit to Ci ncinnati. The
Wildcats are 8-1 a!J.Itime ut the
downto wn arena, the on ly loss

to Dayton in 1999.
Jirsa was an assislanl at
Dayton when it pulh;d off the
upset. He also was one of
coach Tubby Smith's assistants
at Tu Isa and Georg1a.
Jirsa tri ed every sun of
defense to slo w Kentucky.
with limited success . The

Atwater Waterloo 62 . Sebrmg McK•nley

24
Barne·sv11le 68. Cad•s Harnson Cent 29
Bella•re St Johns 55, Bridgeport 36
Belmont
Un1on
Local
63
New
Matamoras Frontier 42
Beverly Fort Frye 45, Stewart Federal
Hockng 43
Brookfield 46 , Kmsman Badger 45
C1n Walnut Hills 58. Shaker Ht s 45
Cortland Maplewood 34 , Cortland
Lakev•ew 32
Day. Carroll 54 , ·OJ&lt;Iord Talawanda 43
Day Chaminade-Jut•enne 60. TrO!'fOOd
Madiso n 21
Day_Jetterson Twp 67,'oay. St1vers 44
Day. Northridge 48. Xellla Chr 44
Eastern P1ke 45. Manchester 33
Enon Greenon 75, Yellow Spnngs 68
Fa1rborn 44 Edgewood 16
Girard 51. McDonald 48

Old

Wash•ngton

Buckeye

Trial

from Page 6

43 .

W oods ~ eld Monroe Cent. 42

Rayland Buckeye Local 54, Wintersville

lnd1an Creek 43
ROssford 59, Tal. Maumee Vall. 37

Sarasv1lle Shenandoah 61 , Waterlord 55
Sharon (Pa ) Kennedy Cath 49, Warren
JFK 39

Spnngooro 46. Day. Lemon Monroe 42
Spr1ngboro 46, Lemon-Monroe 42
Steubenville Cath Cent. 60. Toronto 38

26

Struthers 47 , Youngs. Chaney 37

21

Sylvanta Northview 89 . Tol Woodward 3 1
Tal. Bowsher 80 , Sylvan•a Southview 42

Manst1eld Temple Chr. 41 , Evangel Chr
M1am1 Vall 52 , Tn -County N. 29
MiamiSburg 46 Franklin 40
M1ddletown Fenw1ck 58. Day. Stebb1ns 2 1
N. Adam s 59, Hillsboro 44
N Lewi sburg Tr t.~td 56. DeGraff Riverside

41
New M iddle tow n
Palestin e 37

Sprinqlield . 46.

E

Tnad 56, OeGrall Riverside 41
Vincent Warren 57. Belpre 44
Western Brown 68, Goshen 6 1
Wheeling (W.Va .) Linsly 46. Steubenville

37
Youngs . Boardman 75. Hubbard 31
Zanesville 67 . New Concord John Glenn

42

N1les McK1ntey 37 Youngs Liberty 34

Smith said. "We tried a num- out tu guard him earl y...
her of people on Dawn and
Dawn hit two more 3s. and
couldn 't slow him dow n. David Anderson had a pull-up
That'., the biggest disappoint: jumper and a three-point flay
lront 1 me.
that cut it to 64-60 with I :18
Four turnovers set up a 1.1- ment. That was our Ac nilles
heel
ton
ight."
left. makin g the two sections
point run that put Kenttd:y ·
Dawn
hit
three
consecuti
ve
of
Marshall-fans erupt. Smith
;:, head to stay 28-17 1111dway
3s
:1&gt;
Mm·shall
stayed
close
in
huddled
with his coaches durthrough the halt'. The Wildcals
repeatedl y bad playe rs slip free the ope nin ~ minutes. Fitc h ing a timeout. discussing a
inside for easy baskets. making then chasea him around the course of action .
The decision: take it inside.
up for thci r poor outs ide shoot- lloor. limiting him to one more
3-po in te r in the hal f as Azubuike's dunk staned a 13-4
mg.
Fitc h had 12 points in the Kent ucky full ed ahead by as splll1, which he completed by
steal ing Dawn's crosscourt
fi rst hair. when his main job nwny as I. pnmts.
By that point. the Wildcats pass and goi ng in lor another
was to try to shut down Daw n
after an e:u·Jy ilUITYof 3-point- ~cn se d the uame mi ght come dunk.
Dawn made another long 3ers. The JUnior gu:u·d slmuts 42 clown to whether they C&lt;luld
slop
Dawn.
pointer
and Marvin Black
perce nt from behind the arc.
''We
kind
of
underestimated
dunked
off
a rebound. cutting
one of the best marks in
him
.
and
he
burned
us,"
it
to
82-76
with 4:27 to go.
Mm·shall history.
Daniels
said.
··we
knew
he
Fitch's
pull-up
jumper ended
''I'm J isappomted in the way
we defende d the 3-poilll shot.'' could sh&lt;xJl. bu t we didn 't gel • the comeback.
Wildcats took a .n.34 hal ft ime
lead by running last breaks and
t ~tkin\ ,_aJ va n tage l)f Marshall 's

two dau ghte rs. Sh e ha s
pleaded innocent to charges
e n dri vin g and marijuana of fel onious assa ult and
possess ion . He has a pretrial domes tic violence.
from Page 6
Gree n to ld poli ce th e
hearing
schedul ed
fur
injury was a~cide nt a l, that he
to speculate on Gree n's Wednesday.
The Brown s · suspend ed tripped while walking up
future in Cleveland.
him
for th eir Nov. 9 game at stairs.
"Everybody
recognize s
During a search of Green's
that William has some iss ue s Kan sas C ity for "conducl
ri ght no w that he has to det rimenta l to the team ,'' and home on the night nl· the
address and take care of,'' lhe league counted th at gu me al kged stabbin g. police discove red a stainless stee l
Davis said. ·'When th ose as pan of its suspensinn .
On
No
v.
19,
Green
was
kni fe with suspected blood
things are taken care of and
resolved . we' ll decide what allegedly stabbed with a on the blade imbedded in a
knife by Asia Gray. his girl- kitchen cabinet door.
William's future is ."
They also round marijuana
friend
and the mother or his
Green, a first-round dral'l

in four separate locations in
Gree n's re sidence, and confi scated perso nal papers
belong ing to the couple.
After a slow start last season. Green ru.shed for 887
yards - 726 yards in th e
final seven games - and led
the Browns to their fir st
playoff appearance since
1994.
Green has rushed for 559
yards and one touchdown
this seuson.

Canada y had six of her
seven in th e last fram e as
Southern coasted to a 71 -25

South Gallia was 5- 39
ove rall with 2- 10 trey s, and
a 13-24 ni!'hl at the line
while grabb1ng .18 rebounds
(Gwinn 14). South Gallia
had five steals (Gwinn 2) . 38

pick in 200 I. was arrested
Oct. 27 on c har ~es or drun k-

Browns

Southern
from Page 6
the half.
Play got sloppy both ways
in the lhird frame, however.
both clubs hustled well. The
Tornadoes missed numerous
lay-ups on the break to keep
their overall output ·,down.
but continued to hold a comfortable lead . Linda Edd y
came off the bench to spark

a stug nant Suut~ern otle n ~e .
Eddy grabbed two steals. hit
a pair of lay- ups and drilled
a three pointer to ~ ive . SHS a
53 - 16' lead alter three

'W in .

Southern wa s 24-60 from
the two point range, 3- 18 on
Kasic Sellers ami Jess ica treys. 27-7X ov erall . and 14Hill had great effort s in the 2 1 at th e line. Southern was
fourlh quarter. with Sellers outrebound ed 38-34. but
picking up three steal s and was led by Joanne Pickens
drillin g a three poi nter. with nine. Sayre se ven , and
Ashl ey C lark had a good Pullin s si x. Southern had 3R
floor game for the Rebel s. steal s (Pullins 7. Dunn six.
while. Canaday hit a two Roush six) . 14 turnovers,
fi eld ~ o a ls for Coac h four ass ists (Ki ser two ), anJ
Chaney s
youn g
club. 2 1 foul s.
rounds .

turnovers, two assi sts , and

19 'fou Is.
Southern .hosts Eastern on
Th ursda y 111 Tri -Valley
C o nrerence

games, th!'ir bes t stretc h
since their J&lt;JHX Surer Bow l
season.
'The guys who have bee n
aroun d here for a few years
- we haven' t had this
ma ny wins.
linebacke r
Ad ri an Ross said. "It 's great
to be play ing for someth ing."
One qui ck. efficient drive
prov ided more evide nce
th ai the NFL's worst tea m
since 1990 has tu rned its
hac ks on ih hi story.
Durin g thei r 12-yea r ru n
as ' a runn ing JOke. the
Bengals perfe cted tl1e a rt uf
blowing games at th e e nd .
That 's wh y the Heinz Field
crowd fe.lt sec ure when
Hin es Ward 's to uchdo wn
catch putt he Steelers up 2017 with onl y 65 seconds
left.
Playe rs on th e Be nga ls
bench were so fru str atcu
that coach Marv'in Lew is
wa lked ove r and deli ve red a
soothin g mess age .

" After they scored their
last touchdown , the wliole
offense was like. ' Aw .. ." '
Anderson said . "Marv in
imm edia te ly came ove r to
us and said , · He y. don ' t
worry about it .' We were
ju st going craz y. and we
~n ew from th e exc ite ment
in his voi ce and hi s eyes
that we had to do so methin g."

.

.

Brandon Bennett returned
a short kickoff 27 yard s.
Kitna threw an I R-yard pass
tu Peter Warrick, Bennett
ran 16 yards on a surprising
draw play, and Kitna threw
an incompl eti on that left
Cincinnati at the 18-vard
line with 23 seconds Iet't.
Kitna threw to Schobel on
th e next play for a touchdown that co uld ha ve a
long- lastin g impact.
"We're really confident
right now." Ross said . "I
think for the few guys that

might not be believers, it
so lidifies
where
we're
goi ng and wliat our goals
are . It gives everybody
more self-confi de nce."
Instead of bei ng priSone rs
uf recen t his tory. these
Be ngals are turnin g to pages
muc h farth er back.
Si nce 1990, the Be ngali
have n' t bee n to the playoffs
or fin ished with a winning
Un til recentl y,
record.
th ey' d go tten littl e national
atten tio n exce pt for their
los ing and their occasional
nove lt y ga me - the Shula
vs. Shu la matchup in 1994,
for exa mpl e, whe n Bengals
coac h Dave Shul a lost ' to
pa pa
Don's
Miami
Dolphins.
On th e few occ asions
when they've sneaked into
th e
spotli ght .
the y' ve
bombed. They made a rare
Sunday ni ght appearance in
Atl anta last season and got
embarrassed, 30-3.
Lewi s ha s turn ed them
into th e kind of team that
can handle pressure, including the kind that comes on a
last-minute drive .
"We've had a big game
for the last five weeks, and
it will be big for the ne xt
four we have left," Lewis
' aid Monday. " It does n' t
re all y c hange. The same
thin g's on the line, just like
it was last week ."
A victory in Baltimore
would give the Bengal s the
equival ent of a two-gam~;
lead with three to go th eir head-to-head sweep
would make them division
champions if they finish
with the same record.
As much as they try to
kee p on the blinders. the
playe rs can' t help but take a
peak down the road they
have n' t traveled in a long ,
lung lime.
"We're trying to take it
one game at time, but in the
same sense ... if we keep
winnin g . we have the
opportunity to do something
thi s team hasn' t done in
more than I 0 years,"
Bennett said.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

LeBron, Bt

•·
.) 0 ( ., . '

I ~ • \ "I. .)4 . ' " . h-

Middleport prize drawing underway Vaughan to chair

• Blue JacRets 2, Mighty
Ducks 1. See Pilge 81

BY BRtAN J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com
MIDDLEPORT
Christmas shoppers can now
regi ster at Middleport stores
for over $5,000 in big-ticket
prizes, to be given away
Dec. 23 in conjunction with
the Middleport Community
Association 's
Chri stmas
promotion.
The prizes include a 36inch flat- screen televi sion. a
DVD player, Palm Pilot .
Game Boy, portable CD
player, three bi cycles. a
mini -vacation, merchant gift
certificate s
and
a

OBITUARIES

• Family Medicine.
See Page A2
• Community Calendar.
See Page A3
• NASA braces for
landing on Mars.
See Page A6

WEATHER
30s, low: 20.

Ohio
Pick 3 day: 2-4-6
Pick 4 day: 5-8-7-2
Pick 3 night: 6-5-2
Pick 4 night: 7-1-4-8
Buckeye 5: 18-20-24-28-36

'2300°
set

"Dundee" Sectional

'1299set95

0

.

SJ995 .

Great Selection
of

Beautiful
Pictures!

l!tbe J)ajip 6entinel

Witlro~er 150 p,botograpbs, this 100 page
book contahis \\'est Virgitlla Disasters.
Mountain St!Ue Tragedies that have
. ~hanged our lives.
. '~ SUver 1'ridge Collapse

"Dundee Double"
Double Reclining Sofa
W/Rocker Recliner

• Bluestone Bridge Span.Collapse
• Mine Explosion Rocks Beckley
• Fire Deebnates Business District
.• State FlOOds Leave DeVIIStatlon
1. . 1\ Exploslou at Farmlngton•No.9 Mine
.; l' .'• Polo- IU,ver Brellks!IS"Bankfi
•··
'l • Mon~'lt\rin M~ Disaster
• ·. (&gt; { '
• S~ Tonitldo Crisis
,' '·j, } .·. •Wb!tafllle Bridge &lt;::ollapse
. '' ll '
, , M.n d others!

i

"·:)~~ ·~ ~ __ ~ _.-:·.·- _9/l..D.fl!~ !'9-'!.~~ _lf(_IM_I!-! ____________ .: _
Please enter my order for: A Pictorial History of West Virginia Disasters
u ,•· - - copy(s) STANDARD EDITION

0

(Special $19.95)

D
0
,

Nome_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

. ·

have enclosed an additional SS.OO for each book to City

Phon••- - - - - - - - - - - - -

I om enclosing StO.OO deposil per STANilA RIJ.
Balance due when book Is picked up or
befor&lt;1blpmen1.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH

.---= =-

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

B3-4

Bs
A3
A4
As
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B1

A2

© 2003 Ohtn Volley Puhtlshtng Co.

Dooley and Susa n Baker
will beg in work ing on the
assoc iation's 2004 membe r·
· campaig n. The associash1p
ti on will offer three Jeve b of
member.s hip nex t yea r,
includi ng an indiv id ual
members hip, a busi ne" .
members hip an d a third.
more ex pensive leve l of
membe r.ship whi ch wi ll
·

Please see Drawing. AS

cold. The teachers then contact the bank wi th names of
the students and the appropriate coat sizes. Edwards
stressed that the bank is still
taking name s up to Dec. 10
for the multitude of coats it
has to offer.
The charitable program did
not evolve overnight. During
Donna Edwards, coordinator for the Coats for Kids program · the year, People's Bank takes
at People's Bank, and People Bank manager Joan Wolfe all sorts of donations to pay
look over a bunch of winter coats that will find new owners for this program. Naturally
in the days ahead. Edwards said the program gives between coats are donated by con60 and a 100 coats to children in Meigs County each year. cerned adults. but the bank
(J. Mi les Layton)
has a lot of bake sales and

ed ·trea, urer

Jill Curry has 'erved as the
a~"uc i at i on\

MIDDLEPORT - Dodger
Vaughan will preside over the
Middleport
Communi!)
A"ociation next year. rep lacing Tom Dooley. \I ho
decli ned re -electiun a' the
assoc iati on·,

pre~ i J e n t .

Members aprrmcd

o,ecretarv this

year.
Doolev 'aid the association 's effort' to attract retail
traffic in the village th rough
'pecial eve nts and promotion s was &gt;uccess ful this
year. and en&lt;:auraged member' Ill work with Vaughan
anu uther me mbers to continue tho'e effort' in the new

the

nom ina tion of Vaughan Ltnd

ot her otlic'er' at Tue,d;,v·,
mon thly a ~ ... ociat ion m~etil1g .
Dooley and An~ie Ed \\ ards
· were 'c lccteJ n )., ice pre"de nt s. and Sue Stone secre-

\Car.

food sa les to. raise money.
Several times duri ng the
past year whil e Sama Claus
has been \1 atch ing to 'ee
who ha:-. h..:~n na ugh ty or
ni ce. bank employees hal'e
bee n at the top of hi ' li st hy
offer in g t a:-;ty mpr..,e ).. , to
tempt hun gry so ul s who
need a small snack whik
cunliu ct ing a ri nan cial tran. . ac ti on. Chili . tacos :md sneral types of desert s have
rai sed money to buy. clean
and rep air wi nter coats.
Donations to th e project are
sti ll bei ng aci.:epted.
Edwa rds sai d the num her
uf chi!J rc.n r~ y ue;,ting coah
has increaseJ each year. Th e
winter gear will he di stnhuted durin!,! the next kw
weeks.
.. Th e n u m ~e r \\ ' ~ !!iH· o ut

varies, bu l il gro\\ " ~o· \·ery
year:· she said.
Wo me n at lhe Me i"'
&lt;'
County Senior Ce nte r ha ve
al so contributed tu the Coat'
for Kid s prot: ram by provid ing to boggans. Di ffere nt col ored toboggans and hats may
be a necessity as the lemperatu re dips and cars ' cream in
pain seekil1 g escape from the
ch ill y wind . The Meigs
Count y Lib ra ry ha s al so
donat ed seve ral pai r.s o r

be held by
God's Net

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
hoethch@ mydailysentinel.com
The
MIDDL EPORT annual "givea wa y" sponsored by God's N.ET. will be
held Friday and Saturda y at
the
old
Middleport
Eleme ntary School on Pearl
Street in Middleport.
Keith Rader. director of the
Meigs Coo perati ve Pari sh.
sa id Tue,day that one semitrai ler load has already
1 arri v~d and that three others
1 art: expe&lt;.:ted 1
11 before Friday.
The trail ers are packed
with furniture and clothing
and miscellaneous item s.
e\'en things like doors and
windo\\·s. said Rader. Food is
not inducted. he noted.
Distributi on will take place
on Fri dav from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. with an ything remaining
to go out on Saturday. All of
the items wlll be moved into
the school for easy selection .
Rader ' aid that assistance
i' needed in unloading the
. trail ers and noted that those
who assist in the unloading
will be given"first chance" at
the hundreds of items to be
·distributed free of' charge.

I

Please see Glve••IIY· A5

gloves.

over I()() tons nf mu stard cas
into the harbor and the "air
over the city pf Bari. and
POMEROY _ Tue sday none of the cre w of the John
marked the 60th anni versary H arve~' li ved to reveal th e
of a World War 11 event many secret. It was n' t until an
describe as "the second Pearl in vestigation much later that
Harbor.'' and Don Mullen of the truth was r evealed.
Pomeroy remembers it well . " A ret1red msurance agent
He was there.
and tormer Me1gs Count y
The Germans' strike on the CommiSSioner and school
Bari board men;,ber. Mullen keep~
English -controlled
Harbor in Italy, on Dec. 2. a copy ol D.1saster at Baf'.1943, is considered the worst an acco unt ot the attac k w;nt·
Allied shipping disaster of ten by Glenn B. lnlleld. as a
the war, other than the attack memento ul h1s ex penences
on Pearl Harbor. Seventet;n whlle servm g 111 . the 15th
ships were destroyed. and Arm y A1r Corps D1v1s1on.
eight others seriously damStat10ned at . the h~adquar.­
aged . A thousand military ters syuadron m Ban. a half perso nnel we re killed in the mtle tram the harbor. Mullen
'·"Don Mullen of Pomeroy, 80, was a first-hand witness to the attack. and even more civil- and h1s fellow a1rmc n could
attack on Bari Harbor in Italy. Tuesday was the 60th anniver· ians Jied.
onl y stand at the wmdow and
sary of the attack many call ' the second Pearl Harbor... A
Most notably as a result of w ~'.t c h the attac k.
. .
copy of a book about the attack is a cherished memento of the attack. one ship rel eased
Our mdar was not Junehis war-time service. (Brian J. Reed)x

ti oning." Mullen said . "At the
time of the attack , it was
under repair. so basically
nobody knew anything about
what was happening until the
bombs bej;an to fall."
The allies could only
res pond with anti -aircraft
wea pons. and four and a half
hours later. the raid was over,
the ships were sunk and thou sands were dead.
Many more would suffer
the effects of the mustard gas.
and Mullen theorize s that the
had publicity of the secret
sl:ISh of mustard gas was the
primary motivation for keeping the attack a secret for so
long.
Now. .as nearly 1.500
World War II veterans die
each day. the full story of the

PIHII see Mullen, A5

sponsored by the American Cancer Society and Holzer Medical Center
A special holiday event honoring loved ones and helping aid cancer research

fURNIS H ING~

•

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tarv. Di ck Owen wu' re-elect-

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@ myda11ysent1nel.com

Love Lights a Tree

----Ati -ai:8Jiui- ----liJI iililniis -;,; isiitiV.si --'•

Other business

Middleport association

BY BRtAN J. REED
breed @mydailysentinel 1com

A3

Movies

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Please ship my book(s) to lhe.address at riaht I
be shipped.

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a SECTIONS -12 PAGES

. • ~Wowell &amp; Wyomlpg Floods

. •&amp;Jiiisevaln Mine Explosion

in

Mullen remembers World War II attack

West Vll'ginia

INDEX

for gift
giving!

• Deva5tii.tlni(Snowstorm Hits Bluefield

1

hel d

POM EROY - The colJ
weather has many child ren
in Meigs County anxiously
awaiting the spring - or a
warm coat from People 's
Bank. The bank has given
out coats to hundreds of chil .f'
dren since 1989.
"We do it to help kee p area
children who can not afford
coats warm." said Donna
Edwards. coordinator for the
Coats for Kids program .
Edward s es timates th at
betwee n 60 to I 00 kids.
sometim es more. are give n
coats each year. Edwards
said teachers from all acros"
Meigs County watch their
students carefully and make

LO'I'l'ERIES

All Leather "Mansfield"
Sofa&amp;. Chair&amp;. 1/2

foint tll~ll$ant 3l\rgi5ter

bi ngo even!
Nove mber.

note s as to who isn ' t w earing
a co&lt;Jt when the weathe r ge ts

orderedt
cfi)allipoU51llailp t!l:ribune

Longaberger hol iday basket.
accordin g to A" nciati on
President Tom Dooley, who
discussed the , giveaway at
Tuesday's month ly assoc iation meeting.
The association wil l draw
winners for the grand prizes
from entries made th roughOut the shcJpping season at
parti ci pating stores. Those
parti cipating me rchants "':ill
also conduct t~e 1r o wn 111hou se drawmp lor s t art;~..
merchand1 se an? gdt cert1f1cates on M~ndays betwee n
now and December.
The assoc1at 1on purchased
the grand prizes wi th the
proceeds from a basket

BY J. MILES lAYTON
jlayton @mydailysentinel .com

INSIDE

cloudy, Ht:

I ' " '"

Winter weather charity warms more than hearts Giveaway to

Page AS
• Sylvan Cleland
• Shirley Pauley

Partir

' III II II

1

992-2155

Division opener.

" " " ." " d.ll" "

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Detail• on Pallo A2

PICK UP YOUR COPY

\\ 1-.ll' I·.S ll " . I&gt; 1·.( I :\II! I I{ :I · :! 00 :I

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Hocking

Deer kill do\\n on first day
of gun season , Bt

Carmelo sweeps

f,'

-

Frlclay, ·Dece111ber 5, 2003
6a30 . p111 • Gallipolis City Park

•

To ~onote $5 to the American Cancer Society lor a personalized Christmas. ornament pe(
honoree, please call (7401 446·5055 before 4 pm an Thursday, December 4 .

MEOICAL CENTER
Discover· the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

For more information obovt the elient, pleos,e coll(7 401 446·.5679.

.,.,

..

•

,.

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