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                  <text>ScoREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Zanesville 61 , Whee ll~ (W.Va.) Park 47
Zanesville
W.
Muskingum
53.
McConnels ~ i ll e Morgan 32

Prep Basketball
Glrll Basketball
.Belpre 48, Melga 33
MeigS

10

6

,,

~8

7

15 ,

6

-

33
48

W.Ve. prep beaketblll aco,.•

Wedneadlly'• Results
15 Girts
MEIGS tH . 11-1) - .Alstine Oowler 2 M
Bella ~re , Ohio 64 , Tyler Consolidated 35
4. Samrn; PieR:o 3 2-2 B. Angel Herter 3
Berkeley Springs 61, Hancock, Md. 41
0-1 6, Jayneo Davis 5 ~ 10. Joi1't Han;ng
Charleston Catholic 49, Chapmanville 36
1 3-4 5. TOTALS - 14 5--11 33.
FayeHeville 54, Herben Hoover 37 ~
BELPRE t3' 1, Hl) - Whitney
Hamlin 81, Buffalo 23
5 1·2 14, Shawntae Cline 2 o-1 4, Aubr8e
Spring Va lley ao . Roane County 25
Milklf 2 0-2 4, Holly GoalS 2 :H; 7, TWtha~ Tolsia 74. South Point. Ohio 72
Von l¥&lt;s 4 11-2 B. Ashley Hamilton 1 M 3.
Tygarts Valley 64 . Highland County, Va.
Britlar"!Y Ferguson 4 o-o 8. TOTALS - 20 33
4·13 48.
Valley Fa~ene 39, Guyan Valley 38
3-poiol goa~ - Meigs tnc&gt;r&lt;!J, Belpre 4
Zanesville. Qllio 61, Wlleeling Park 47
(Blackburn 3 and Hami~on) .

-m

Boys Basketball Standings
SEOAL
Marlena
Logan
Gallipolis
Warren
Pt. Pleasant
Athens
Jackson

League
w l

Overall
l

1

0

I

0

1
1

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0

1

w

0
0

1

I

1

1

0

0

0

1

0

2

Alexander
Wellston
Belpre
Meigs
Vinton Co.
Nelsorwille· York

League
W
L

Overall

0
0
0
0
0
0

2

0

2
1
1
0

0
0
1
1

0

2

0
0
0
0
0
0

TVC-Hocki ng
~ag{
Federal Hocking
Trimble
Southern
Eastern
Waterford
Miller

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

w

l

Overall
W L

2

0

2
1
2

0
0
1

0

2

0

2

Girls Basketball Standings
SEOAL
Marietta
Warren
Ath ens
Pl. Pleasant
Jackson
Gallipolis
Logan

leagu,e
w l

Overall
W L

2
1

0
0

4
3

0
0

1
0
0
0
0

I
0
1
I
I

2

2

0

I

2

2

1

2

0

3

TVC-Ohlo
Belpre
AleKander
Vin ton Co.
Meigs
Wellston
Nelson\iille-Yo rk

League
W
L
0
0

Overall

1
0
0
0

1
1

l
I
0
1
2

0
0

3
4

0

w

3
1

TVC·Hocklng
league

Southern
Trimble
Federal Hocking
Eastern
Waterford
Miller

Overall

w

l

W L

1
1
I

0
0
0

3
3
3

1

0

1

1

2

0

1

I
0

2
3

0

0
0

Ohlo High School Girls Baalcetball
Wednesday's Rasulta
Akr. Hoban 53, Akr. SVSM 42
Allian ce Marlington 48, Sebring 47
Amherst Steele 46, Rocky River 40
Ashtabula Lakeside 59, Painesvi lle
Harvey 50
Ashtabula SIS. John &amp; Paul SB, Cle. His
Lutheran E. 56
Atwater Waterloo 68, Mantua Crestwood

46
Avon Laks 55, Olmsted Falls 21
. Barberton 59, lyndhurst Bru~h 49
Bay Village Bay 65, N. Olmsted 45
Beachwood 4 8, Columbia Station
Columbia 19
Beavercreek 47, Greenville 19
Bellaire St. John's 64, Tyler (W.Va.)
Consolidated 35
Beloit W. Branch 45, Canal Fullon NW

26
Belpre 48, Po meroy Meigs 33
Berea 52, N. RidgB'Iille 35
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 50 ,' Parma
Normandy 49
Byesville Meadowbrook 34, Coshocton

27
Carrollton 6 1, LisbOn Beaver 29
Centerville 52, Piqua 32
Chagrin Falls Kenstoil 62, Kent
Roosewelt 42
Chill icothe 52, Jackson 49
Cols. DeSales 50, Cols. Watterson 46
Cots. Hartley 50, Zanesville Rosecrans

48

Pro Basketball
National Beskelball Association
EASTERN CONFERENCE
AHantlc Olwlslon
WLPct
GB
. 12 10 .54 5
Plliladelphia
10 11 .476 t ',
New Jersey
10 12 .455 2
Bostori
7
14 333 4',
Wastlington
7
16 .304 5',
New York
15
Miam1
3
19 .136 9
Orlando
Central Division
W L
Pet
GB
indiana
17 5
.773
t5 7
.682 2
New Orleans
14 8
.636 3
Detroit
Toronto
13 a
.619 3' ,
Milwaukee
10 12 .455 7
Atlanta
7
1"6 .304 10',
Chicago
5
15 .250 11
Cleveland
5
16 .238 11 •,,
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest Division
W l
Pet
GB
Houston
13 7
.650
Dallas
13 8
.619 •,
Denver
13 8
.619 ',
Memphis
12 8
.600 1
MinneSota
12 9
.571 1'1
Utah
12 9
.57 1 1',
San Antonio
13 10 565 1',
Pacific: Divllion
W L
Pet · GB
18 3
.857
L. A. l akers
14 5
.737 3
Sacramento
10 10 .500 7',
Golden State ·
10 10 .500 7\
Portland
9
10 .474 8
Seattle
7
11 .389 9 ~,
L.A. Clippers
8
13 381 10
PhoeniK

e

TVC·Ohlo

'

Cvyahoga Hts. 58. Richmond Hts. 45
Dover 58, Gnadenhunen Indian Valley

29
Dresden Tri·Valley 69, Philo 31
E. Cle. Shew 49, Cle. JFK 47
Elyria 49, Brunswick 42
Eudid 73, Cle. VASJ 71
Gartield Hts. Trinity 79, Garfield Hts. 57
Garrettsville Garfield 55, Rootstown 50
Geneva 39, Conneaut 29
Huber Hts. Wayne 61 , Spring. S. 48
Hudson 70, Macedonia Nordonia 59
Independence 64, Brooklyn 37
Jefferson Area 57, Ashtabula i::dgewood

.2ae s·,

Tueaday 'a Games
Toronto 100, Cleveland 93
Indiana 93, Washington 79
Atlanta 11 2, Denver 98
Miami 92. Phoeni11 72
Philaclelphia 78, Detroit 76
New J~ rsey 101 , Seattle 88
Golden State 98, Minnesota 95
Houston 93, Portl and 91
Sacramento 105. LA Clippers 95
LA. Lakers 98, New York 90
Wednesday '• Games
Boston 126 , Seattle 112
Orlando 95, Washington 91
· Memphis 103, Atlanta 90
Milwaukee 94, Golden State 89, OT
San Antonio 102, Portland 77
Utah 95, New York 73
L.A. Clippers t OO, Dallas 99
Thursday's Games
Detroit at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m
San Antonio at Houston, 8:30 p.m.
New Orleans at Phoenix. 10 p.m.
Friday's , Games
Denver at Philadelphia, 7 · p.m.
Minnesota at Washington, 7 p.m. ·
Toronto at Boston. 7:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Indiana , 7:30 p.m.
Memphis at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
New Jersey at Orlando, 8 p.m.
Seallle at Detroit, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Milwaukee. 8:30 p.m.
Sacramento at Utah, 9 p.m.
Dallas at LA. Lakers, 10:30 p.m
New Orleans at Golden State, 10:30
p.m.

College Basketball
Wednesday's College Basketball
Major Scores
EAST
Delaware 76, Loyola, Md. 71
George Washington 76, Towson 57
Holy Cross 66. Fordham 57
Long Islan d U. 78, Albany, N.Y. 65
Monmouth, N.J. B7, Hofstra 79
Rutgers 60, Penn St. 47
St. Bonaventure 65, lana 62
Toledo 95, Siena 7 1

SOUTH
Auburn- 73, Montana 51
Charleston Southe rn 92, Voorhees 73
Coppkl St. 68, Morgan St. 66 , OT
East Carolina 86, N. Caroli na A&amp;T 53
l ouisville 80, Seton Hall 71
Maryland 69, Florida 68, OT
Nicholls St. 83, Southern U. 80
Vanderbilt 85, Tennessee St. 64
Virginia Tech 80, VMI 56
MIDWEST
Ball St. 83, AnderSOfl, Ind. 48
Bradley 59, Butler 55
Creighton .61 , Nebraska 54
E. Illinois 80, St. Francis, Ill. 57
lnd.-Pur.-Ft. Wayne 81, Bowling Green

75
Indiana 66, Notre Dame 63
Kansas 80, Fort Hays St. 40
Kansas St. 54, Wichita St. 50
UMKC 72. Denver 68
Wis.·Milwaukee 86, Va lparaiSQ 82
Wisconsin 73, Wis.-Green Bay 57
SOUTHWEST
Texas Te&lt;:h 67, TCU 60
FAR WEST
BYU 92, W. Oregon 56
Boise St. 87 , IdahO St. 78
Colo rad o 84, Colorado St. 78
Fresno St. 66, Pacific 51
Portland St. 71 . Pacific, Ore. 43
UC Santa Barbara 66, Westmont 36
Wed nesday 's Women's Basketball
Major Score•
EAST
Army 74, Binghamton 62
Boston U. 79, Cent. Connecticut St. 49
DePaul 98. Manhattan 57
George Washington 76 , Boston COllege
75, OT
St. John's 57, Buffalo 47
St. Peter's 68, Monmou th , N.J. 37
SOUTH
c ·hananooga 66, High Point 53
Coppin St. 86, Morgan St. 60
Liberty 76, Norfolk St . 54
Maryland 76, Loyola, Md. 61
Xavier 75, Kentucky 60
MIDWEST
Or8.ke 61, Iowa St 36
Illinois 78, Bradley 50
N. Iowa 53. Wyoming 46
SW Missouri St. 79, 'Missou ri 70
Valparaiso 86 , lnd.-Pur.-Ft. Wayne 60
SOUTHWEST
No major team scores reported from lhe
SOUTHWEST
FAR WEST
Air Force ao, N.M. Highlands 56
Arizona St. 87, Texas A&amp;M-Corpus
Christi 74
Fresno St. 70, long Beach St. 65
Gonzaga 75, Boise St. 54
Oklahoma 90, Montana St. 59
San Diego 65. San Diego St. 60

Pro Football
National Football League
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Ent
PF

WLTPct
y-New England 11 .2 0 .846
Miami
. 8 5 0 .615
Buffalo
6 7 0 .462
N.Y. Jets
5
0 .385

PA

269 209
241 203
214 200
240 255

a

South
W L
Indianapolis
Tennessee
Houston
Jacksonville

T

10 3 0
9 4 0
5 8 0

Pet PF PA
.769 372 281
.692 347 261

.385 211 317

4 90 ' 3oa 229 264
North
W L TPct PF PA
Baltimore
8 5 0 .6 15 331 251
7 6 0 .538 28i 297
Cincinnati
5
.385 250 284
Pittsburgh
4 9 0 .308 212 250
Cleveland
We at
W L TPciPFPA
)(·Kansas City 11 2 0 646 388 267
8 5 0 .615 324 233
Denver
Oakland
3 10 0 .231 229 305
San Diego
3 10 0 .231 247 349
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Eaat
WL TPct PF PA
x-Philadelphia 10 3 0 .769 281 222
Dallas
B 5 0 .615 236 244
Washington
s a 0 .385 256 287
4 9 0 .308 209 286
N.Y. Giants
South
W l T Pet P~ PA
8 5 0 .615 248 249
Carolina
New Orl eans 6 7 0 .462 263 29,2
Tampa Bay
6 7 0 .462 244 19B
Atlanta
3 10 0 .231 241 342
North
WLTPct PF PA
Minnesota
8 5 0 .6 15 344 302
760538 332 276
Green Bay
5 8 0 .385 240 281
Chicago

a o

Detroit

.t

-·
9

0

.308 209 294

10 3 0
Seaftlo
8 5 0
San Francisco 6 7 0
Arizona

3

10 0

PF

Sunday'• Games
San Diego 14, Detroit 7
Green Bay 34, Chic_ago 21
Pittsburgh 27, Oakland 7
Jacksonville 27, Houston 0
Washington 20, N.Y. Giants 7
Indianapolis 29, Tennessee 27
Baltimore 3 t , C incinnati 13
Philedelpllia 36, Dallas 10
Minnesota 34, Seattle 7
Tampa Bay 14, New Orleans 7
San Francisco SO, Arizona 14
Buffalo 17. N .Y. Jets 6
New England 12, Miami 0
Denver 45, Kansas City 27
Atlanta 20, Carolina 14, OT
Monct.y't Game
St. louis 26. Cleveland 20
Sunday, Oec. 14
Buffalo at Tenn essee, 1 p .m.
Minnesota at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Atlanta at Indianapolis. 1 p.m.
Seante et St. louis, 1 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Houston at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
San Franci sco at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
JacksonvilkJ at New England, 1 p.m.
Clevelai'KI at 081'lver, 4:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.
Dallas at Washington, 4:15 p.m.
carolina at Arizona, 4 :15 p.m.
Green Bay at San Diego, 4:15 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at New Orleans, 8:30 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 15
Philadelphia at Miami, 9 p.m.

Hockey
National Hockey League
EASTERN CONFERENCE
A11entlc: otvtelon
W l T OLPisGFGA
Philadelphia
17 ·3 7 1 42 84 52
New Jersey
15 5 6 0 36 61 40
N.Y. Rangers 10 11 5 2 27 75 72
N.V. Islanders 11 13 2 1 25 72 72
Pinsburgh
s 15 4 2 18 54 98
Northeast Division
WLTOLPisGFGA
15 8 5 3 38,.. 81 73
Toronto
12 5 7 4 35 73 67
Boston
12 9 3 3 30 83 60
Ottawa
13 123 1 30 6366
Montreal
12 14 2 1 27 65 80
Buffalo
Southusl Division
W l T OL PIS GF GA
Atlanta
15 11 3 1 34 92 87
Tampa Bay
13 7 4 1 31 61 50
Ca rolina
8 11 8 1 25 55 68
Florida
9 14 S 1 24 61 79
8 18 1 1 18 70 89
Washington
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cantrel Dlvlalon
W L T OL Pis GF GA
17 10 3 0 37 10473
Detroit
St. louis
16 6 2 1 35 70 55
Nashville
14 11 1 0 29 67 66
8 14 4 1 21 55 75
Co lumbus
6 145 3 20 5381
Chicago
Norlhwett Division
W L T OL ·Pis GF GA
16 7 3 1 36 86 63
Colorado
15 7 4 2 36 87 66
Vancouver
Ca lgary
13 9 1 3 30 64 60
11 13 '3 0 25 73 82
Edmonton
tO 13 5 0 25 57 6t
Minnesota
Pacific Olwlalon
W L T OL Pts GF GA
Los Angeles
14 10 1 3 32 75 67
San Jose
9 89 229 6768
Anaheim
10 10 4 5 29 65 79
10 10 7 , 28 70 82
Phoeni)(
11 15 3 0 25 60 72
Dallas
Two points for a win,
and overtime loss.

one

point for a tie

Tuesday's Gamee
NY Islanders 5, Tampa Bay 2
St. Louis 3, Toronto 2. OT
Minnesota 2, Calgary 1
Carolina 3, Edmonton 2
Vancouver 4, PiHsburgh 3, OT
Wedneeday's Game•
Philadelphia 1, Columbus 1', tie
Montreal 2. N.Y. Rangers 1
Boston 1, Florida 1, tie
Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3, OT
New Jersey 1, N.Y. Islanders O, OT
Detroit 7, Buffalo 2
Phoenix 2, Dallas 1

Castellano, C Casey Martinez. C Nick

Bolton at Washington, 7 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Ottawe, 7:30 p,m
Toronto at Minnesota. 8 p.m.
LO&amp; Angeles at Nashville. 8 p.m.
Detroit at Ch~go. 9 p.m.
Carolina at CaiQBry, 9 p.m.
Colorado at Vancouver, 10 p.m.
Edmonton at San Jose . 10:30 p.m.
Fridey'a Gem.
Sl. Louis at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 7:31J p.m.
Montreal at Florida, 7:-30 p .m.
~hi ladelphia at New Jersey, 7:30 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Buffalo, 8 p.m.
Chicago at Dallas. 8:30 p.m.
Edmonton•at Phoenl)(, 9 p.m.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Northern Olvlaloo
W L
T
Pis GF
14 6
2 30 65
Johnstown
14 7
1 29 74
Wheeling
14 9
0
28 . 70
Atlantic City
12 7 3 27 67
Reading

Peoria

10 6

Cincinnati

12 11
10 10

Trenton ~

Toledo
Dayton

Tempesta , INF Jim Deschaine. INF J.P
Roberge, OF Mark Budzinski, OF Kevin
Gibbs. OF Jim Rushford and OF Mark
Smith on minor league contracts.

PITISBURGH PIAATE5-Ag reed to
te rms with OF Oaryle ward and RHP

Juan Acevedo oo m1nor teague contracts.
SAN DIEGO PAOAE5-Agreed to
terms with RHP Aklnori Otsuka on a two-

year contract.
National Balketball A11oclatton

NBA- fined Portlancl coach Maurice
Cheeks $7,500 tor verbally abUsing ofti·
dais and tailing to leave the courl in a
timely manner after his ejection against
Memphis on Dec. 7

lOS ANGELES CLIPPEA&amp;-Adivated

GA

4
1

49
65
50
54
24 54 52
25 &amp;4 62

1

21

48 52

992205863
7 10 2 16 51 70
SOuthern Division

W L
T
Pts GF GA
Florida
14 5
4 32 90 71
Greensboro
14 7
0
28 83 71
Columbia
13 5
2
28 69 56
Roanoke
12 9
25 77 73
South Carolina 11 9
1 23 57 57
Charlotte
10 9 3
23 70 71
Florence
8
10 3
19 56 73
Greenville
4
13 2
10 49 75
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Cenlrll Division
W L
T
PlsGFGA
15 5
3 33 78 62
Gwlnnett
13 5
2 28 59 42
louisiana
12 a 4 2a a5 72
Mississippi
12 7 2 26 71 66
Pensacola
982205055
Augusta
7 15 2 16 54 80
Columbus
5 15 2 12 50 84
Texas
PacHic Division
W l
T
PtsGFGA
15 8
2
32 89 63
Alaska
14
2a 65 54
Idaho
12 5 4 28 62 56
Las Vegas
10 7
2 22 51 56
San Diego
8 11 2 18 50 58
Bakersfield
7 14 2 16 60 88
Fresno
Lo ng Beach
6 12 2 14 44 70

a o

NOTE : Two points are awarded for a
win . Overtime and sllcotout losses earn
one point and are referred to as ties.
Wedneaday'a Games
Cincinnati 6, Johnstown 2
Charlotte 4, Fresno 1
Thursday's Games
Peoria at Dayton
Gwlnnett at Greensboro
Frldey'a Games
Cincinnati at Atlantk:: City
Greenville at Augusta
Charlotte at Bakersfield
Reading at Dayton
Columbia at Florida
Long Beach at Fres no
Trenton at Greensboro
TaKas at Louisiana
Mi ssissippi at Pensacola
Johnstown at Peoria
Florenc~ at Roanoke
Idaho td San Diego
Gwinnen at South Carolina
Toledo at Wheeling

Transactions
American League
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Waived INF·
OF Brian Oaubach.
DETROtT TIGERS- Agreed to terms
with 2B Fernando Vina on a two-year
contract.
TEXAS RANGER s-Agreed to terms
with 1B Brad Fullmer on a one-yaar contract. Named Stan Hilton pitching coach
for Clinton of the Midwest League.
National League
CINCINNATI REDS- Placed LHp John
Bale on walyers.
COLORADO ROCKIES- Agreed to
terms with 3B VInny Castilla on a one·
year contract.
MILWAUKEE BREWER5-Agreed to
lerms with Ned Yost , manager, on a two~ea r contract extension.
NEW YORK MET5-Agreed to terms
with SS .Kazuo Matsui on a three-year
contract.
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE5-Agreed to
terms . with lHP Jim Crowell. LHP Mike

MEMPHIS GA IZZLIE S-Acli~ated G
Troy Bell !rom the injured list. Placed G
Dahntey Jones on injured list.
PHIL 4DELPHIA 76ERS - Piaced G
Wi\He Green on the injured list. Activated
F Glenn Robinson on the Injured list.
Signed F Zendon Hamilton.
PHOENIX
SUNS-Fired
Frank
Johnson. coach . Named Mike D'Antoni
coach .
National Football Leegue
ATLANTA
FALCONS- Fired
Dan
Reeves. coach. Named defensive coordl·
nator Wade Phillips coach for the remain·
der of the season .
CLEVELAND BROWNS-Signed Dl
Felipe Claybrooks and DB Ron Israel
from the practice squad. Signed K Brett
Conway, RB Nick MaddO)( and FB Josh
Mallard. Signed K Derrk:k Frost and DE
Corey Jackson to the practice squad.
DENVER BRONCOS- Signed WR
Atnaf Harris to the practice squad.
DETROIT LIONS-Signed LB Jody
littleton and S Julius Curry.
GREEN BAY PACKERS--Si ~ned CB
James Whitley.
JACKSONV ILLE JAGUARS-Waived
WA Matthew Hatchette. Signed LB
Courtland Bullard.
MIAMI 00LPHIN5-Aeleased C Ben
Claxton off the practice squad. Signed
WR Carl Morris to the practice squad.
PATRIOTS-Re·
NEW . ENGLAND
signed FB Larry Ce nters. Released WR
J.J. Stokes. Placed LS Lonie Paxton o n
injured reserve. Signed LS Sean
PtkDermon. Signed P Travis Dorsch to
the practice squad. Waived OL Jamil
Soriano from the practice squad.
NEW ORLEANS SAINTs-Placed RB
James Fenderso n on injured reserv4i! .
Signed C Terrence Wagner from the
practice squad.
OAKLAND RAIDER5-Piaced OT John
Parrella on inju red reserve. Signed WR
John Stone from the practice squad.
Signed C Blai ne Saipaia to the practice
squad.
PITTSBURGH STEELERS--Piaced RB
Verron Haynes on injured reserve.
Signed RB Dee Brown.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-S;gnod FB
Ja sen lsom from the practice squad.
Sign ed WR Bosley Allen and WR
Jermaine ·Lewis to the practice squad.
Placed WR Arnaz Battle and WR Arland
Bruce on injured reserve.
WASH INGTON REDSKIN S-Re·signed
Ol Daryl Terrell . Signed LB Cllrton Smith
fro m the practice squad. Signed QB
Brandon Doman and DE Greg Wh ite to
the practk::e squad .
National Hockey League
COLUMBUS
BlUE
JACKETSRecalled 0 Jamie Pusher from Syracuse
of the AHL. loaned C Dan Frit sche to
the U.S. national junior hockey team.
DETROIT RED W1NG5-Recalled G
Curtis Joseph from Grand Rapids of the
AHL .
MINNESOTA WILD-loaned FWV Brent
Burns to the Ca nadian national junior
hockey team .
NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Recalled G
Ari Ahonen from Albany of the AHL.
TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS- Assigned
0 Ric Jackman to St. Jo hn's of lhe AHL.
WASHINGTON
CAPITALS-Fired
Bruce Cassidy, coach . Named Glen
Henion coach.
COLLEGE
.SAVANNAH STATE-Named Richard
S. Basil football coach.

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Falls 72
Medina Buckeye 57, Richfield Revere 49
Mentor Lake Cath. 62, Madison 38
M~adore 65, Mogadore 'Field 59 .
N. Royalton 50, Middleburg Hts. Midpark

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Brookside 25
Painesville Riverside 63, Chardon NDCL

\

Ji All Holiday Decorations
i

39
Parma 51, Medina 31
Piketon 62, Portsmouth Notre Dame 36
"Ravenna SE 42, Peninsula Woodridge

31
"Annual ~~entage yi~ld (APY) i_
s current aa of the date of this issue but is sublect to ch11nge.
$500.00 mrn1mum openmg depo.sil required. There is a penalty for earty withdrawal unless the
withdrawal IS made witllin the lrrsl 10 calendar days alter maturity. Not available f~r IRA's or
brolwed funds. This special is only available lor a limited lime.
'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

F Glen Rice lrom the injure(! list. Placed
C Olden Polyniee on the injured list

ECHL

All Artlfldal Trees
All Artlfldal Wreaths
l) All Seasonal Crafts
lf) All Artlfldal Garlands &amp;. Bows

'i

,, l l l '\ 1...,•\ , d

1 l

,

11

-

IJ{IIl\, , lllll,lHII\1 '

,

Thompson Ledgemont 61, Fairport
Harbor Harding 41
Thornville Sheridan 58, New lexington

Racine

Syracuse

• Davis bullies Bucks.
See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
CHARLESTON (APl breed@myda1lysenti neLcom
Striking Kroger Co. workers
in West Virginia, Kentucky
and Ohio ratitied a new conPOM EROY - A $7 .fXJO
tract on Thursday, endin~
· fun ds transfe r apprm·cd
their two-month standolf
Thu"day will allo w Meig'
with the Cincinnati superCo
unt y
Sheri ff
Ralph
market chain over medical
Tru "ell 10 make hi s fi nal
coverage.
dcp~11ie .,· payroll for 2fMI3:
Union officials said the
Meigs
Co unl y
contract was app roved 962approved
Commi " ione"
717 . A simple majority was
'
eve
ral
tra
n.
,
fe"
al
Tru"ell \
required to ratify the agreereque'l. including lhc '1&gt;7.000
ment, whic h covers some
tran , k r from Tru "cll 's con·
3.300 members of United
tract
re pai" line item into his
Food and Commercial
salaries line. Commi ssioners
Workers Local 400 who
al so approveu a $4.754.'!6
went on strike Oct. 13 at 44
transfer from the contract 'erstores in the three state s.
vice., fund to the supplies
Three stores will not
fund , and a $ 168.42 transfer
reopen. the company said.
Striking Kroger workers Dale Price , left, and Tracey Har per, from Tru,sell's ti res fund lo
Shares of Kroger rose I center, check in to review the newest proposed contract with
hi s supplies fund .
cent to $ 17.35 on the New Kelley Drum heller at the Charleston Civic Center in
ta bled
Co mmi " ionef\
Charleston, W.Va. 2003. (AP Photo/ Bob Bird)
Trusse ll 's request for a $688
Please see Kroger, AS

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Helen Bowers

INSIDE
• Sustainable forestry topic
of local radio program.
See Page A6
; • Roman Catholic bishops
tour Appalachia.
See Page A2
: • Community Calendar.
See Page A6

WEATHER
Clear, HI: 30s, Low: 20&amp;

Details on Pace A2

LoTI'ERIES
Ohio
Pick 3 day: 6-0-1
Pick 4 day: 4-7-4-3
Pick 3 night: 8-5-6
Pick 4 night: 2-3·1-3
Buckeye 5: 15-16-26-34-36

West Virginia
Dally 3: 3-3-5
Daily 4: 5-7-4-8
Cash 25: 7-9·12-13-14-16

BY

J.

for the agency. said the toy s
mean so much to the chi ldren.
" I think we have made a
difference each time we
deliver these gifts.'' he said.
Earlier
this
·week ,
Hollman traveled on narrow
muddy roads throu gh the
woods over hill and dale to a
liny mobi le home al the top
of a small hill. Hoffm an
knocked on the door and a
surprised man greeted him.
Hoffman said that as he gave
the man toys for his chi ldren. the man started to cry.
Chapma n sa id there are
many distressed familie s
lhis year in Meigs CoUI1ty
which boasts th e second
hi ghest unemploymen t rate
in the stale at 14.3 percent. A
lot of families have run out
of unemployment be nefits
makin g ihe holida ys a
strained time.
The loys go a long way to
maki ng the holida ys a bit
easier. Chapman said during
the next couple of weeks.

MILES lAYTON

jlayton@ mydailysentinel.com
MIDDLEPORT - Santa
Claus gets a little help each
year from Job and Family
Services in Meigs County.
As part of a Ange I Tree
project, slaff members collee! and deliver toys and
gifts to more than 450 ch ildren making their holidays
brighter.
"We do this because we
know there are a lot of children in the co unty as well as
their parents who may not be
able 10 afford gifts," said
Barbara Chapman. program
coord inator at Job and
Family Services.
For the past I 0 years, toys
have been d.onated by area
churches, bu sin esses and
schools. The toys are
wrapped and delivered to
children just before school
lets o ut for the holidays.
George
Hoffman,
a
researcher and grant writer

J.

REED

breed@mydailysentinel.com

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A6

Classifieds

B3·4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A6

Editorials

A4

Faith •Values

A2

Movies
Obituaries

As

As
BI
A2

Sports

Weather

© 2003 Ohio VaHey PublhdUng Co.

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Commissioners will
begin meeting with county
officeholders next week to
determine what they need to
operate their departments
next year, while balancing a
budget based on even less
money than they have had
on which to operate thi s.
year.
The
Meigs
County
Budget Commission has
estimated revenue for next
year at $3.26 million . Their
2003 budget was based on a
$3.4 million revenue certification, and a 2002 carlyover
balance of $195,000 .
Accordin g
to
Commissioner Jim Sheets,

trillhfe r from hi s food line
item into , upplie,. pending a
balance determ ination
By ltan, ferring funds from
line item' with , urplus balance s. Tru " ell ha' been able
to return deput ie' 10 work for
the last two months of the
vear.
· ,t.., county offices prepare
to clo'c their books for the
2003 budget year. comm issioner' approved a number of
transfer&gt; and appropriations
adjustmenh for other office, ,
well. Commi ssioners
a'
approved a 5 1.920 appropriation and a 1ransfer of
$ 1.528.30 for the engineer: a
$750 lr&lt;ln,fer for the board of
electi ons: a $ 1.020.77 appropriati on adju stment
for
Probate Court: a $39.000

the~e part-time Santas are
going to be giving away
model cars. a castle . a tea
set, several helicopter- and
airplanes and a bike or two.
Heather Haggy. co-chairman of the Angel Tree program at Job and Family
Services along wi th Dena
Dugan , said th e program
means a lot to so many people.
''We have been doing this.
coordinating thi s for the pas1
10 years because giving is
the right thing to do ... said
Haggy.

Right: Dena Dugan (sitting)

and Heather Haggy chaired
the Angel Tree program
which provided gifts to more
than 450 childre n around
Meigs County this holiday
season. (J. Mi les Layton )

the county expects a carry over at year end of approximately $200,000 - just
enough, he said. to meet the
needs of county operati ons
until real estate tax revenue
begins coming in later in the
tirst quarter of the new year.
Those needs include three
payrolls, estimated ·to cost
the cou nty $187,000.
Meetings between commissioners and county officials will begin on Dec. 17,
and
according
to
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport, will center
around the needs of inJ ividual departments, and a
re view of 2003 appropriations. While commissioners
said Thursday they are not
·able to project any specific
across the board cuts for

2004, Davenport said any
measures needed 10 approve
a balanced budget wi ll be
considered.
Commi ssioners imposed a
15 percent CU I in appropriations fi1r 2003, and a five
percent c ut in 2002 .
"We have asked the budget'
commission 10 confirm whal
we can expect in terms of
revenue for next vear before
we begin meeting" with office
holders," Davenport said.
The county continues to
adj ust its spending levels to
conform with dwindling
revenue, resulting from the
loss of personal properly tax
from mi'ning equipment
from · the Meigs Mines. as
well as cuts in local govern ment funding from the stale,
and lower sales tax revenue.

aruund the holiuay s. striking
Kroger workers and the
union representing them have
joined wit h th e Salvmion
Army to col lee! toy ., for
needy ch ildren. The collective drive began Tuesday and
will
continue
through
Monday.
The striking grocery work ers. &lt;ill members of the
UFCW Local 400. will help
col lect toys throughout West
Virginia. alo ng with other
union members. Local labor
centra l bodies wi ll coordinate
the collections within their
regions and the Salvation
Army will handle the distributiori, with Local 400 coordi nating with the charit y
agency.
"It has been a rough period
not only for our strikin g
members. but for many work -

Lowthers . "The members
underst and this and wanl to
do whm they can to help ·
make l~e holiday a happy
holiday. ·
The Salvation Army runs a
toy drive for the need y cverv
C hri stmas season . but thfs
year. through Local 400. the
toy drive wi ll have 1he additiona! support of the slate's
union members. Local 400
decided to lend a hand after
hearing that the S&lt;\lvation
Army was collecting less thi s
year because of the Kroger
strike. The labor movement
has always been a big supporter of the Salvation Army.
Strugg lin g families with
children throughout West
Virginia. Ohio and Kentucky
are to be th e recipients of the

Diabetes Support Group
The H,olzer Medical Center Diabetes Support Group will meet

Sunday, December 14
2:00 pm • 4:00 pm
HMC French 500 Room

Open 7 days a weeki.

Featured speaker - Billie Toothman of Purdue Pharmaceuticals
Christmas Dinnerl Please bring a covered dish to the meeting.
'---"-- __ !.?':.!~~~in_form~!on, or

LINOI.

I,
·-·---· ~·--~-------- -- - - ~ ~-.

1,

Commissioners eye Kroger Workers c_ollect
tighter 2 004 budget ~~r,~,~~~~~A~~,~~~~~~~; ~~~
BY BRIAN

til
--

,r,,

Angel tree program provides holiday cheer to children

740-949-2210 740-992-6333

ftijj

1\\\"'

Kroger workers ratify new contract; County Commissioners
approve year-end transfers
Pomeroy, Gallipolis stores close

SPORTS

GaiUpolls, OH
Phone: (740) 446-1711

26

_• tilt ;

•

.Sale Begins Frlday, Dec. 12 and
~rJtlnllles whlle quantities last/
2400 Eastern Avenue

37

Heisman hopefuls
•
struggled ht
big games, Bt

Southern clips
Falcons, 49.· 40; Bt

2003

Spiegel , RHP Adem Roller, C John

Anaheim 3, San Jote Z

come
BoGarden·•s
center

KSnerlng
Fairmont
40 ,
Clayton
Northmont 34
Kirtland 39, Pepper Pike Or,ange 29
LaGrange Keystone 33, Wel lington 25
Lorain Cath . 44, Lorain SouthvieW 34
Louisville 49, Uniontown Lake 48
Massillon Washington 69, Can. McKinley

Tal: Bowsher 65, oregon Clay 51
Tot Cent. Cath. 67, Tal. Rogers 30
Tot. Notre Dame 62, Tol. Start 61
Tol. Scott 62, Tol. WhJtmer 57
Tol. Waite 50, Tol. Woodward ' 45
Toronto SO, Richmond Edison 57
Twinsburg Chamberlin 54, Cuyahoga
Falls 32
Vermilion 49, Sullivan Black Rive r 25
Wes~ake 55, Fairview ' Park Fairview 21
Windham 36, Streetsboro 34. OT
Youngs. Rayen 73. E. Li-.erpool 60

P11

.769 373 266
.61 5 330 273
.462 298 2 44
.231 180 387

K-clinched playoff spot
y-clinched division

E EHlfU
f lbbiNO?v·-

Thursday, December u,
'[)1urodo)o'o lllmM

W L ' T Pet
• · SI. Louis

49

Rocky Rivar Lutheran W. 62, Gates Mills
Gilmour 33
S. Euclid Regina 70, N. Can. Hoover 46
Salem 63, Can. Cent Cath. 41
Sidney 35, Vandalia Butler 31
Solon 56, Ravenna 54
Spring. N. 5 1, :Xenia 44
Stewart Federal Hocking 66. Nelsonville·
York 38
Strongsville 88, Parma Hts. Valley Forge

PageBS

..

.,

'?!eg~sler, c~l! (740) 446•5080

M E.D I CAl C E NT E R
Discover the Holzer Difference
·'

www.holzer.org

�'

Page.A2

FAI1'H • VALUEs·

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 12, 2003

Roman Catholic bishops touring
Appalachia's mine-scarred .mountains

Ohio weather
Saturday, Dec. 13

'

PIKEV ILLE, Ky. (AP) for energy production, knowA group of Roman Catholic ing fu ll well that many in
leaders, including three bish- their ind ustry ar~ ignoring
ops, will tour Appalachia's appropriate enviro nmental
mi ne-scarred mountains next boundaries and causing real
week to get a firs thand look harm to local residents," he
at the effects of a method of said.
extracting coal know n as
Church leaders also will
mountaintop removal.
hear from miners and mine
Chu rch leaders also will lis- industry leaders during the
ten to the concerns of resi- visit to communities in east·
dent.&lt; who live so close to· the ern Kentucky. Rausch said he
mi ni ng operations that their hopes the tour wi ll spark a
homes shake each time explo· di alogue about ethical princisives are detonated, said Rev. pies that should guide the
John Rausch, coordinator for mining industry.
W.VA.
peace and justice for the 'Bishops scheduled to tour
Lexington diocese. "-·
the region are Ronald Gainer
"We want to hear ail41ut the of Lexington , Joseph Kurtz of
human effects and environ- Knoxville, Tenn., and Walter
mental effects of mountaintop ' Sullivan of Richmond, Va .
he said. "'We want They' ll be accompanied by
removal,"
Ftume&amp;
Scow
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Showers T-storms
Rarn
'"'
to hear local residents offici als from the Catholic
describe the horror of cracked Committee on Appalachia,
foundations, the threat of the National Catholic Rural
tlooding."
Life Conference and the
Rausch said he hopes the . Appalachian Offi ce of Justice
two-day tour, scheduled for and Peace.
Tuesday
and Wednesday, will
Bill Caylor, president of the
BY THE ASSOC IATED PRESS
Sleet..Rain .. Or freezing min likeToday ... Decreasing cloudi- ly. Lows around 29. Snow accu- bring attention to the plight of Kentucky Coal Association,
allected residents. ·
said he is concerned that the
ness. Highs in the mid 30s.
mulation up to I inch. Chilllce of
"We
also
are
hoping
to
hear
church
leaders will not get a
Tonight...Partly cloudy. precipitation 60 percent.
the struggles of those in the true picture of the mining
Lows around 20. Light winds.
Sunday
...
Ooudy
v.ith
a
Ell
p:rindustry as they make industry from the visit.
coal
Saturday .. .Mostly cloudy.
cent
chlure
of
snow
.
.Sleet.Rain.Or
their
living and deliver coal
Caylor said he doubts that
A 30 percent chance of snow
showers in the afternoon . freezing min...Then a chanre of
SOOW in tre afternoon. Highs mound
Highs in the mid 30s.
Saturday
night...Snow .. 37. Snow occumulation up to I inch.

~

Clearing and Cold.

the bishops will be taken to
see beautifully reclaimed
mountaintops · covered with
lush grasses for horses. cattle
and livestock.
Mining, Caylor said , has
created the onl y flat land sui table for building factories in
some of the most mo untainous counties in eastern
Kentucky, a fact that he hopes
the bishops don' t miss.
"We want them to see the
other side of the story,"
Caylor said. " If you' re not
given the entire picture, you
get a distorted view."
Representatives from the coal
industry will ad~ress the
Catholic leaders during a meeting at the Hindman Settlement
School on TueSday a!iemoon.
Later that evening, representatives from the environmental
groups Kentu~kian s for the
Commonwealth and the. Ohio
Valley Environmental Coalition
will be speaking to the church
leaders. Both are staunch critics
of the coal industry.
The bishops also will be
given aerial and ground tours
of mining operations in the
Hazard area.
The church leaders are

scheduled to visit a minescarred
mountaintop
at .
McRoberts where Rausch led
a religious serv ice a year ago,
praying for God to stop coal
companies from destroy ing
the iand. ·
Rausch sa id the barre n
mountaintops allow rain to
rapidly run off into the communities below, causing flooding that damages homes and
businesses. He said he wants
God to enlighten the hearts of
the mine operators and to
move them to use less damaging means to extract coal.
Kentucky"s Catholic bi shops last year iss ued a statement saying that mountaintop
removal mining damages
home s, water well s and
streams essential to animal
and plant life.
"We pray thlu society will
produce its necessary goods
and ser vices without destroying God's gift of creation,"
the bishops wrote. "'Society
must reject the false dichotomy of jobs versus the envi ronment and cre atively find
ways allowing workers to
earn their livelihoods while
respecting creation ."'

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPs 213·9&amp;o)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Policy

Published

every

afternoon,

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General Manager

Inside Meigs Counly

t3 Weeks . . . . .
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E·malt;
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Rates Outalde Meigs County
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r

r

r r ·r

r ·r

·r

·r r r ·r

· concerns, would just as soon
see the season expunged from
the national experi ence .
It is unfonu11ate that such
mindset predominates when
Chri stmas is approached from
Ron
the standpoint of business and
Branch
buying rather than with worship and adoration .
According to Scripture, the
three wi se men entered
Jeru salem looking for the
lated persuasion that children birthplace of the Christ child,
must be made happy, and fueled whom they knew to be the
by appeals to the conscience for King of the Jews. They were
acts of charity to alleviate the in the process of following
pain and suffering of the less Hi s star, and desired greatly to
fonunate.
worship him .
In the meantim e, from
But, "when Herod the king
behind the scenes of it all, the had heard these things, he was
face of the national economy troubled."" He was troubled
sports a wide smile as the corbecause his first response durporate boardrooms tally and ing
that Chri stmas season was
total the ~real '" Christmas
strictly bu siness oriented.
Cha-ching !'
But , becau se of such over- This is true because hi s busi·
bearing financial emphasis, ne ss was focu sed on selfmany of the common people interest, and the preservation
are left angry, harried, and of corporate power.
He thus becomes the origiresentful of a signiticant seanal
Christmas symbol of
son. The soul and spirit of
many
likewise troubled over
many become dampened and
depressed to the point that the the business that has come to
reason for celebration is predominate the Christmas
invalidated. T~.e impact laces season.
Common sense prevail s
society at la~e with complaining Christmas curmud- that the purchasing of'gifts to
geons who, spurred by wrong give others will remain a significant aspect of the

r

r r r r

r r

r r r r

Christmas scene and ·theme.
There is nothing inherently
wrong with that part of it.
But, the Christmas beginning point must be with the
exaltation of Jes us Chri st.
That was for emost on the
minds of the magi, even while
they had gifts in hand to give
Him . Their purchased gifts
were outward ex pressions of
devoted worship.
What mu st be spiritually
uplifted - not financially
exploited - is that the sole
purpose for Chri st's binh is
directly associated with God's
plan for the Cross and
Resurrection, throu gh which
mankind may receive· God's
gift of salvation. God incarnate
became flesh and blood that,
following human birth. "He
through death might destroy
him that had the power of
death, that is, the devil." Such
should thrill our soul s!
If we will approach
Christmas with the right concern- to adore Christ for His
providential salvation
what we consequently strive
to provide for our children.
friellds, and the less fortunate
will be ministered with joy
and blessing that wi II benefit
the heart rather than burr the
brow.

r

r

26 rears in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy, OR
740-992-6215
"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."'

Acts24:16
(740) 992-6451
" Mmmm ••• must he a television, There's the tcreen. I wonder where

Mom and Dad put that movie thingamajig. "
Though our toddlers and older childrtn appear to be be(:oming
increasingly intdligcnt at an ~tarlirr age, they do not 'have the wisdom and
the ltarned logit: lht:y nted to make sense of it all. Many of us haVI."
learned from aperience lhat curiosity and immaturity can be dangerous
p_artnen ... even m6re so in today's society a1 information bll!comes mort
acces.tible though alarmirtgly uncensored.
How can we h~lp our youngsten mak~ serue of it all? Parenu niwl
~nearly to teach their children righr from wrong and show them by
example the bask ptindple, of re.spom~ibility and Christian living. Yet,
no instruction is complete without regular family worship. We read in
~salm 22:27 ••..30, "And allrhe families of the nations shall wonhip before
Him ... me~ shall tell of the Lord 10 the coming gc::nerarin ~. "

Won't you ute the most reliable resoune available to give your
children the future they dettrve~ Let God help you illlld your family make
tense of i1 all a.' you attend your local house nf worship each Sabbath.

-

Me,

and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
John.J5:7

.

-· --- --~·

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'tOld Fashioned Compasslon- Modem Care'"
Nestled in a beauti fu l country setting (SR
50/32 East) and eusily accessible from 1hc
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740-667-] 156 Fax: 740-6fi7.00RO
Physical, Occupatiof7.nl·and S peech Thcrnpies
We Accept Medicare. Medi caid, &amp; Insurance

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209Thlrd
Ractne,OH

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7 40-949:.02217
Sizes available 5x1 0 1o Hi x 20

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(740)
992-2164
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7 40· 992- 7996

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bam - Hpm

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740-992-7713

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A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Pomeroy, OH 45769

Warm Friendly
A rmosphere

Home Cooked Meu/s &amp;: Daily Special.~
Open 7 days a week

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

a

RlnrV11llt)l
A]JO Stulic Worstiip Cemtr. 873 S..~rd
A~e ., Middleport, Kevin Kunkle, Pu stor,
Sunday, II a.m. Wcdnesdu y, 7:00 p.m.,
Youth Fri. 7:30p.m.
Emmanuel Aposlolk Tabern&amp;clt Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Ru!lantl .
Servicu: Sun 1Q:()jJ n.m . &amp; 1:][) p.m ..

Thurs. 7:00p.m.. Pastm Many R. Hulton

Assembly of God
Libuty Assembl y of G od
P.O. Bo.\ 467 , Duddinl! Lane. M01 sun,
W.Va., Pastor : Neil Ten nant , Sunday
Stll'ices- JU:UO a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Hopt Bapti'lt Church {Soulhern)
.570 Grant St. , Middleport , Pa .~ tm : Rev,
Duvid Bryun, Sunday sclmol - '):30 a.m.,
Worstti p . II :1..m. and 6 p.m.. Wedn ~sday
· · Service - 1 p. m.
Rulland Flrsl Baptist Churth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wurship .
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy t'in: t Haplbt
Pastor Jon Broc kert, East Main St.,

Sunday School · 9:30 a.m., Worship. ·
10:30 a.m
I

Hrst Southf rn Baplist
4 1872 Pomeroy Pik ~. Pastnr: E. Lamar
O'B ryant, Sunday School - •):.lO a.m.,
Worshi p · 8:15a.m.. 9:45 am &amp; 7:00p.m..
Wednesday S~rvit:es · 7:\Xl p.m.

Pas tor: Mark Morruw, 6th und Palmer St.,
Middlepon, Sunday Sc.:hool - IJ :JS a.m..
Worshi p · 10:15 a.m .. 7:0 0 p.m.,
Wednesday S('rvK:e- 1:00 p.rn

Harlnt Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Rick Rule. Sunday School - 9:JO
a.m.• Wo r ~hip · 10:40 n.m .. 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Services · 7:00p.m.

P a~tor:

Silver Kun Hw,ptis t
Joh n Swallson, Sunday Sc hnu l ·

!Oa.m., Worship - II ~.m .. 7:0() p.m .
,Wednesday Senic~s- 7:00p.m.
Mt. Union Bapti!OI
Pas tor : David Wi-.c m ~ n . Sun day Sc hool·
9:4~
a.m .. Eve ning - 1'1 :30 p.m ..
Wtdnesday Sef\lices . 6:30p. m.

Belhtrhem Baptist C hurth
G reat Bend, Route 124. Racine , OH.

Pastor : Daniel

Mec.:~ ll ,

Old Hethtl Frre Will Baptisl Churth
2R60l St . Rt. 7, Mid dlepo rt. Sunday
School · 10 a.m., Even ing - 7: 00 p.m.,
Thursday Sm·ices . 7:00

Hillside Bapllst C hun:h
St . Rt . 143 jusl off Rt. 7, Pu ~tur: Re~.
Jam es ~ - Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
StNice, Worsh ip·. 10:30 a.m.. 6 p. m.,
Wedne sday Services -7 p.m
· Vktory Baptbt Independent
~2 .5

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
t90 N. $econd St. Middleport, OH
7 4D-992-6128
Local source lor trophies,
niRnores !·shirts and more
Carolina Antlqu&amp;.
&amp; Craft Mall

312 8th St. Point PleaHnl
875-1180
Variety of furniture , glassware, crafts,
collection of bottles &amp; primitiveOutside flea market April- Ocl.

Layaways Available

---. - - ----- - - ' - -----::-'-.. -~-----------,-__._;_-~
•

Con.

- ~ - 4~ -1,1 I~ :1 11.

~ . m ..

l&gt;aile) ,.

N. 2n d St. Mi ddleport, Pastor: James

E. Keesee. Worship . IOa.m.. 7 p.m..
Wednesday Sell'iccs - 7 p.m
,F•Ith Baptist Church
Railroad St .. Mason, Su nday School - 10
a.m., Worship - II a. m., 6 p.m.
WednesdHy Se ll' ices · 7 p.m.

Forest Run Bapllst
Pn~ t.or : Arius Hun , Sunday Schoo l - 10
a. m., Worship - II u1.

Antlquil)" Oaptlsl
Sund ay School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:4.5 a.m., Su nda)' E\·ening - 6:00 p m.,
Pastor: MRrk McComas
Rutland Fm Will Baptist
Salem St.. PasTor: JBmie Fonn er. Sund ay
Sch ool - 10 a.m., Evening · 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Sm'ices · 7 p.m.
Srcond Baptll&gt;l Chun-h
Rave nswood, WV, Sunday School IU am-

, Mornin g worship l l am Evening- 7 pm,
Wed nesd8.y 1 p.m.

Catholic
Sacrtd Heart Cathollr Chun::h
161 Mulbe rry Ave., Pome roy, 992-.589 R,
Pa sior: Rev. W11 lter E. Heinz, Sat. Co n.
4:4.5·5:l!i p.m,; M11ss- .5:30 p.m .. Sun.

"Let your light so shine bef&lt;&gt;rel

men, that they may see
works and glorify
Father in heaven ."

Sun

Ma~~

- f.J 111

H emlock Grove Ch rt~Uan l'hurth
Mini ster: Larry I:Jrown. Wouhtp - Y 10
a.m.
Sunda)' School - 10: ' U am , B1hlc Study ·

Congregational
Trinlly Church
So:LoJtW &amp; Lynn, Pomo:rny. Pa~lor Rn
Jo lnalhan Nithlr . Worshtp 10 2, • m .

Grace Episcopal Ch urc"h
Pomeroy Chun·h of' C..: brltil
212 W. Main S1 . Mini ster: AnthOn}
Morri~

Sunday

326 E. M"'1n St.. Pumeruy, l&lt;e v. Jame ~
Bcmm:kt , Rev · Katbarin f oster, Sunday
S..:houl and Hnly Euchari5t II :00 a.m.

. -9.30 a.m., Wur:.hip·
10.]0 a.m., 6 p.m., Wcdm,:~dl:ly Scr~icc.:~ .
7 p.m.
s~· h{!Ol

Holiness

Flal wood!i
Pa~lnr

Communil)' Chun::h
Mam

Pastcw

Stt'\"C Tomek .

Pomeroy W~l\iide Church of Chrisl
JJ22t. Chi ldren ·.., Hmn e Rd .. Sunday
Srhool - 11 a. m.. Worship - ln:!..m.. 6 p.m.
We d ne ~b y Sell' ices · 7 p.m.

Rutland . Sunday Wor~hlp- 1 11 : 00 a.m .
Sunday Sen I(' C- 1 p m

Mlddlepor1 Chun:h o( Chris~
~th :mc.l Main. Pastm : AI Hart&lt;;On , Youth
Minister: Josh Ulm, Sunday Sc.:hool · 9.JO
;c.m .. Wursh1p- M: l 5-, 10 30 a.m.. 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Servi,·es · 7 p. m.

Gary

I O· ]0 a.m .. Pa~tnr - Jcffrcy Wa ll an~. 1~ ~ anJ

a.m.
1 0 :.~0 a.m., 6:30 p m .
Wed ncs•.by Se r vin:~ - fdO p.111 .

Worship -

Zion C hu rch or Christ
Pomeroy, Harr is&lt;J nv1llc Kd ( Kt. 14]1 .
Pastor: Koger Wat "&lt;m, Sunday Sdwol ·
9 : ] [) a.m . Wor ship · HUfJ ~ . Ill ., ? ·!ltl
p.m., W~ cln .: sd ay Service-.. · 7 p.m
Thppe~

Plain Chu rt'h orChrist

lnwumental. Worship Service - 9 o.m.,
Communion · 10 a.m., Sunday School -

10:15 a.m., Youth · 5:.~0 pm Sunday, Bihle
Study We dnc ~ d ay 1 pm
Br•dbury C hu n:h or Christ

Minister: Tom Runynn, .19~5R ElradbUr)
Road, Middleport, Su nday Sch()(1l · &lt;.Ufl
a.m.
Wnr~ h ip · Hl:.10 ~. m

Rutland Chun.·h or Christ
Sun day s,·ho(ll . 'J JO a .m., Wur.;hip and
Ctmllllllll ion - ]{) ~(J ;un ., Bt'h J. We rry,

a.m., Wor'1h1p · 9 a.m.

Danvil le H ulin~ l:hun:h
Pa~tcJr ·

schuul - 9 . ]() il.m .
SunJay Y..onhip - HUO ...m. &amp; 7 p.m ,
Wcdn c~day prayer "Cr\ICC · 7 p.m

He•th I MLddleport)
Pa stnr: Kod IJroY..er, Sunday Sdl-O•Jl ·
u m.• Wor~hi ] J · 1 1·00 a.m

CalvMry l'llgrlm C haptl
Hnrri-.nn\•illc R&lt;tad. !'a-.lllr: Chitrk~
Mc Ken1ic. Sunday Schonl 9 :]() a.m .
Wor ship . II tun .. 7:DO p.m .. Wedrlesda)
Servit"e - 7:(• ) p.m.

Mlnersvllk
Pa .~tor: Bob Robinson . Sunday School · 4
a.m.. Worship . 10 a.m.

Jad,M!II, Sul)d&lt;~y

Rost of Sh11run Hol lne5.'i C hu n-h
LcaU111g Creek Rd ., Rutland. Pust1&gt;r. Re\'
]Xv.·cy Kiny , Sunday ~&gt;c.: honl · 9:]0 a.m ,
SunJ&lt;J)
worship -7 p.m., WcdJJcsda y
pra)er meeting- 7 p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Rod Brower. Worship - 9 :30a. m.,
Sundily School- 10:35 a.m
Rock Sprinp
Keith Rade r, Sunday School · 9 : I~
a.m .. Wor~hip
10 a. m. Ynuth
Fellow ship, Sunday - 6 p.m.
Pa~t or:

Pine Grm·e Hiblt llolinm Chun:h
11.2 m1lc nff Rt. J25, P11stor· Rc\". O' Dell
M:mh-y. Su nday ~ h oo 1 - 1):3[) a.m .
Wmsh1p · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m .
Wedncstlay Sl!rvk e · 7:30p.m.

Rutland
Sun day School - 9:J{) a.m., Wor ship 10:30 a.m.. TIIUrsday Ser~u.:es - i p.m.

W ~ l ey un

Dible Holinrss C hur£h
i~ Pem l St., Mlth.l!cpun . Pastor: RC\
David Gil bcn, Sumlay SdlUul . 10 a.m .
Wor ~hip - 10: 4~ p.m., Sund11y Eve 7:1)()
p.m.. Wednesday Sl!rvil.:c - 7:JO p.m.

Salt m Ctnler
. Pas to r: Wi ll iam K Marshall , Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m., Worship - 9: 15a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday H IO pm
SMwviUe
Sunday School. 10 a.m., ~orshir . 9 a.m.

llysell Hun Uoli nt":M Chu rc h
Pa~t01 : Kcv. Larry Lemley; Sunday Schl.)()l
· 9 : ~ 0 a.m. Wnrsh1p · 10:4_'i o.m, 7 p.m .
Thunday Bihle Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Bethany
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sund ay School · 10
a.m .. Wm ship
9 a.m .. Wedner.day
S~:rvic.:c !&gt;- I0 a.m

l.aurel Clif'f' Free Me!hodlott Church
Re\ . Lc~ Strand! omd Myra L . Stra nd!.
Su nday Sdtolll · 9 JO u.m. Wnrshi p ·
1 0 : ~0 a.m. and 6 p.m.,V.h lncsd ay Senic.:c
.

7 : ~)( 1

Clilrmei·S utlon
C u mel &amp; Ba~han Rds. Rac1ne. Ohm,

p. rn .

Paslor: John G1lmore. S und ~y" School ·
9:JO a.m. Worship . 10 :4.'i a.m . lJ1blc
Stud y Wed. 7:00p.m

Latter-Day Saints
Bradford Church of Chrisl

Hickory Hills Churth or Christ

Tht Chun::h of J esus
C'hri111 or tauer-Oay Sa ints
St. Rt. 160. H6 - 11 ~4 7 nr -44t.-74Rfl.
Sunday $(hool 10 :20· 11 a.m.. Relief
Snc iety/Pries thuod I t :05 · t 1:00 noon.
SaL·rament SNv icl' 9- 10: I 5 ~ . m . .
Home m;~ki n g !ll(.'l:!ing. I st l11urN. · 7 p.m.

Pastor: John Gil more. Sunda y School · II
a.m .. Worship · 10 a.m

East l etart
Pa~ tor: Sunday School - 10 li. m., WorNhip
· 9 a.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Lutheran
StJ o hn Lu theran Church
P 1 ~c

Reedsvillt Church ctf Chrl!t
~ Pa~tor: Phi lip Sturm, Sunday Scho()\: 9:Jll
a .1,n ., Worship Se rvice: lll·~O a.m., Bi bk
Stud)', Wedn ~sday, 6:.10 p m.

Radne
Pastor: Pete Shaffer, Sund ay School · 10
a.m., Worshir - 11 a.m.. Wedntsday 7

Grove, Wnrsh1p . IJ:OQ it.m., Sunday

School · IO:()(J a.m. Pastor: Jiim es P
Rrady

p.m.

Coolville Llnhed Methodist PariJh
Pastur: Helen Kline, Cool~i1le Church .
Main "&amp; Fifth St.. Sunday Sc hool - 10

Our Saviour Luthfran Church

an d Henr y Sis., RaH: n&gt;wo od.
W. Va.. Pastor: David Ruiisell. Sunday
S~,;hoo l · 10:00 a.m., Won; hip · I I u.m.
W~ lnut

Dtxtt r Churt'h or Christ
Pastor: Bill Eshelm an. Sundl y ~hoo l 9 :30

a.m .. Norman Will. superintenden t.
Sun day won;hip · 10:30 11. m.
Church or Chrlsl
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evange li st
Dennis Sargent. Sun day Hib lr Study .
9:30 11. m .• Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30

p.m., Wc~nc!tday Bible Study· 7 p. m

Christian Union

United Methodist
Grahom United Methodist
Worship · 9:30 a.m. (I st &amp; 2nd Sun ). ,
7:30. p.m. (3n.l &amp; 4th Sun ),Wi:dnesda y
Scr vi~,;~:-

Christian Union

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Churt'h or God
Mile Hill. Rd .. Raci ne, Pastor: James
Satterfie ld. Sund ay School · 9:45 a.m..
Even ing · 6 p.m., Wednesday Services· 7
p.m.
Rutl111nd Church or God
PasTor: Ron Heath, SundJy Wor~ ttip - I 0
a. m , 6 p.m., We~n esd~y Servi ces - 7
p.m

FIMit C hurt'h or God
Apple ~nd Second Sts.. Pastor: ReY. David
Russell , Sunda y School an d Worship · 10
S)· racu~

•.m

Mt. Olive Uniltd Mf thodls t
behind W ilke~v ilk . P'astor: Rc ,·
Ra lph Spires. Sund ay Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.,
Wonhi p - I 0 ~ .~0 11 .m., 7 p.m., Thu r&lt;Oda~
Services- 1 p.m

Off

1 2~

Meigs Cooperative Parish

Nonheast Cluster. Alfrl."r.l . Pas1or: Jane
Beatt ie, Sunday School - 9 :30 a. m.,
Worshi p- I 1 a.m., 6:30p.m.

Chtstt:r
Pastor Jane 9eallic, Wnrship - 9 a.m..
Sunday Sc hool · 10 a.m. , Thursday
Srn·ices · 7 p.m
Joppa
Pastor: Bob Randolph. Worship a.m
Sunday Sc hool · 10:30 a.m.
Loo~~:

Eveni ng

Se rv i ~·es·

6:30 p.m ., Wednesday

Service s- 6:30 p.m.

Churth or God or Prophtcy
O.J. White Kd. off St. Rt. 160, r astor: P.J

Chapman, Sunday Sc tt ool · lO 11 .m ..
Worsh ip · 11 a.m., W~dne~ay S ~ rvicc s 7p.m.

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
," h,tc.t ·~"*"
9 Fiftt!l Straer ,." "~taynw ~Wee!
New Haven, WV 25265
Coolville, Ohio, IJ••m•••
H. Anderson

Hockinapon Church

Grand Sutet, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Wors.hip · 10:30 a.m.. Pastor Phillip Dell
Torch Church
Co. Rd : 63, Sunda y School - 9:30a .m.,
Wo rship - 10:30 a.m

Nazarene
Mkldlepor1 Churth oftht Naurrnt
Pastor: Alle n Midcap, Sunday Sc hool ·
9:30 a.m..Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m..
w~u n e~ da y Se rvic.:es - 1 p.m., Pastor:
Allen Midcap
Ret&lt;lsvllle FelloW1hlp
Church of the Nazarene, Pauor: Teresa
Waldeck. Sunday School - 9 :]0 a. m.,
Worship - 10:4.'i a.m., 7 p.m.. Wedner.doy
Services - 7 p.m.

S)'racuse Chun:h ol the Nazarrne
Pastor Mike Adkms. Sunday School · 9:30
a. m.. Worship - 10 :30 a.m., 6 ·p.m..
Wednesday Sen· i~·es · 7 p.m

Bottom

Pomeroy Church of the N~rtne
Pas tor: Jan Lavender. Sun day Sc hool ·
&lt;uo a.m.. Worship - 10:] 0 a.m and 6
p.m.• Wednesday Services· 7 p.m
Chtsl~r C hurth ol the N•r.artne
Pastor: Rev. Herben Gmte, Sunda y SchiXM

7 p m.

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
21~ E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

~ervkc

CaJ.-.ry BI Wt ChuKh
Pomrruy. Pik.l!, Co. Rd.. P'~!otUf Kr\
Bl.ackwood. Sunday School · 9 31..1 ~ m .
Wursh1p
10.30 a.m.,
? )0
pm.
Wi!dol:5day SrrvJ.Ct . 1-:10 p m

· 6 30 p.m

Other Churches
fJaaU Cbrfsd•n t'ello•thlp
INon-dtl"lfJifllnatlonal (ellowshlp )
Mert.mg m the old A~ncan Ug11n1 H•ll
South Founh Ave nut . M1ddlepon
Pa.\ tor Chn~ Strwan 10 00 am Sunday
Other mceung~ 1n homts

SLinnriRt Com • Wlity ApotLOINCbom.
P•~tor· Wa~ R. JewelL Sunda} Sr n1t e
f)"{X) p m . Thursday · 6:00p.m

Community o( Chrkt
Portlimd-Rac.:me Rd . Pn tur· kiT) S1nger~
Sund a}' School - 9 _,(J a m . Vl on h1p .
IO:JO am. Wednc\da y "icrvKc' . 1 00

RejoldDJ Life Cll:u rch
2nd A~· e .. M~e.Jdlepon . Pa-" IOf
Mil1.r F~m111 . Putcn
bnrntu~
l.awrc~e Fcuman. Wor:.lup- I 0 (II'J 01111
Wedne'lday ServiCe~ . 7 p.m

.5W S

p.m

Btthel Worship Ce nter
Scht•nl. Pastor Roh !Jarhc-r.
A'~l'itllnt P a~tor: Karen [)a "'· Sunday
Wor ~h1p · 1011111. bemn g Wursh1p rr pm.
Youth group 6 pm. Wednesday Powtr 1n
Prayer . and B1hle Study · 7 pm

Che~rer

Clillon Tahc-nuacle Ch urch
Cl1 hn n. Y. Va. Sunda~ Sch&lt;ul HId m
W11f'ih1p · ? pm Wedne -.day Sen 1ce 7
pm

Ash Stl'ftt Churrh

New Ltf~ Vk'tory Cc:n1tr
George5 Creek Rood. Galhpol1' OH
Pa~ w r · 811! Staten. Sunday Servile' · 10
a.m &amp; i p m Wedlle 'iday - p m &amp;.
.Youth 7 p.m.

A&lt;ih St., MHXIkport· Sunday School · 9:30
a.m., Momwg Wou h1p · 10.30 am &amp; 1
pm, Wedne-.day ServiCe · 100 p m., Yuuth
Serl"lce- 7:00p.m.
Ap pe Life Ctnltr
"Full-Gospel Church··. Pa(tors John &amp;
PaT!) Wade . 603 S..:cnnd Ave Mason. 71J .
~0 1 7 . Serncc time · 'iu nday 10 ·.~(1 a m ,
Wrdnrl&gt;day 7 pm

~7" 3

Full Gotpel Chu rch of lh t
Sa,·io r

Rt .1311 .

Je\M' \lorr1• .

pm

Sa l~ m fommuni l~·

Churr h

Road. West Co!umhm . \', Va
Pa~wr · Clyde FerrelL Sund.ll~ Sch&lt;11.1l 4 liJ
am. Sunday t'\enmg S(f\ 1cc tt prn.
Wedne\day semce 7 pm

Hob!lon Chrisliu Ftlknn;hip &lt;.:huiTh
Pastur Henchel While. Sunda) Sd\!XJIIU am. Sunday Chun::h serviLe · ( ' II rm
WeJnesday J pm

Harrl'iOOville Communily Chun:h
Pas10r · Theron Durham . Sunday · Y 'll
a.m and 1 p:m.. WednfsdaJ . 1 p.m

AH toration Ch ri, tia n F r llow~hi p
9 'M Hnnpcr Road. Athen'. P :t~hlr

Lunmc ('(lat.s. Sunda~ w.,r-. h1 r
W edne~ay 7 run

Mlddlepor1 Commuaily Chun:h
515 Pea rl St ., Middlcpon , P~stor : s~ m
And e rso n, Sunday S'ho•'l 10 a.m ..
E\'emng · 7:]() p.m. . We dn e\da~ Sen ll' C •
7:30pm

pm

Pentecostal
St

Wilham

H"hack.. Sunda~· Sch&lt;"lnl
HI am .
E' enmg · i p.m.. Wcdnc ~a ~ Sen 1rc~ · 7
p.m

Syracuse Mission
B ri d~cman

St., Syr aru~e. Sundu~
School · 10 a .rn, bmmg 6 p.m ..
Wednesday ServH:e · 7 p.m.

Presbyterian

H•ul Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hart, Su nda y
School · 9:30 a.m., Wurship · lO ·Jil a.m.
7:30p .m.

Dyesvllle Community Churtb
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.. Worsh ip 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.

PeniKMial AJ!itm b l ~
I ~-4 . Rae me. Pa '! tor

Rt

S~ncww

First United Prnbyluian
P11sWr: Robcn Cwv., Worship · 11 ~ m

lfarriAOnvUlt&gt; Presbyterian Churrh
Pastor Roben Crow. Worship· 9 11m

~llddlepor1 Prftb~·tll!rian

Pa5tor: Rober Crow., Worshi p· 10 am
II

Faith GMpeol Churth
Lon g Bonom, Su,nday School - 9:JO a.m..
Wors hip · 10:45 a. m.. 7.30 p m ..
Wedne sd11y 7:30 p.m.

MI. Olin Communily Church
Pas tor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School ·
9.30 a.m .. Evenmg- 6:30p m.. Wedneday
S!'r.ria • 7 p.m.

Fall Gospel Ll&amp;h•hou.
33041 Hiland Road. Pomtmy. Pastor: Ror
Hunter. Sunday School · 10 a.m .. E\'emng
7:30 p.m .. Tuesday &amp; Jhursday · 7:30
p.m.
South Bethd Community Ot•rm
Si lver Ridge- Pastor Lin da Damewood,
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worsh1p Service
lOa.m
Carleton Interdenominational Church
Ki ngshUT)" Road. Pastor: R ob~ rl Vnn..:e.
S~nday Schoo l - 9:30 o.m.. Worsh1p
Sen·ice 10:30 a.m .. Eveni ng Servlce 6
p.m.
Freedom Gospel MiWon
Bald Knob, on Co . Rd. 3 I, Pastor: Rev
Ru]j:er Willford, Sunday School· 9:]0 &lt;~ .m .
Worship- 7 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulberry H!i. Rd., Pomcn~y. P a~ t nr RnjL.awinsir: y. Sarurda) Sernci." S Sahhath
School . 1 p.m.. Worshtp . ~ p.m

United Brethren
~t .

Hermori United B~thrm
in Christ Church
Teu~ Commun1ty )6411 WKt ham Rd ,
Pastor· Pettr Manindale. Su n da ~ School 9·]0 am. Wor1hip - JO· JO am . 7 UO
p.m . Wedncsdt)" Services - 7· 00 p m
Yf'uth group mt:eting 2nd &amp; 4th Sunda~s
7 p.m.
Edtn United Bred11a Ia Chr81
State Route 124. Reedsville. Sunday
Schovl - II a.m., Su!lday Wof...tup · Ill·()()
a .m. &amp; 7:00 p.m. Wednesda y Scro1 ~1."~ ·
i :OO p.m.• Wednesda~· Y(luth s~n ICC .
H IO p.m

Wes~e,...

Coolv ille Road, P11stor · Ke\·. Ph ilh p

Ri denour. Sund ay Sc hool - Q:JO a.m..
Worship - JOJO a.m.. Wedne!.day SeNice

·992-5432

6nouffn'•
~irt &amp; IINfetp

Blessed ar.,e the pure ''So I strive always to keep
Pf.I:ICIU" before

'a'Jutuel;:"'~ &gt;

~

Acts 24:1

'

Fax: 304·682-821

_ _ __

Meigs Counry·s Oldest Flori&gt;t
EastMain
~
Pomeroy, Oh
•.
~ let

yc cend yo1.1r tflooghti with cpi!CIIII care'

740-992·2644 74().992-6298

MY llrace is
for thee: for mY
strenath Is made
Perfect In weakness.

II Cor. 12:9
Office Service &amp;Supply
137-t N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

_
---------------~- - ...

••

Il l tK1 am .

La np villt Christian ( 'hun-h
FuJI Gospel, Pa.~wr· R o~ n ,1&gt;,.1 us~el.
Su ni.la v Sd11)(JI 9 30 am, , Y. 1• r~ Jup 10 &lt;u
am · ? 00 pm, Wednr:...Ja~ Sc·n 1rc .. ·()11

Ba1l ey Ru n Ru ad. Pastor R c~ Emmett
Raw son. Sunday benmg 7 p m.
Thursday Sm rce · 1 p.m

White's Ch•pel

Pasrnr
~ · I".J

U ,·inliJ

L r e~ m!!

Faith hU 4;o![pel Cburt'h
Long Houom, Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
Sc hool - 9·JO a.m. Wor~hip · 9· 30 il.m
and 7 p m , Wednesda y · 1 p m., Fnday (eiJ o':"' ~hlp \efVIl"e 7 p m

Mol""lll! Ch•pel Church
Sunday §Chool · lU a.m.. Worshi p ·
a.m., Wednesday Ser.•1ce · 7 p.m.

AnflljUI I y.

Serv•ce' Salurday

. Abund11nt G race K . ~-. I.
923 S. Timd St., 'V1 iddlcf:ltlr1. Pastor Teresa
D01vi~.
Sunda y ~e r vice. I 0 a m ,
Wcdnc~da)' se rv~c.:c. 1 p.m

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
Jbegollten son... "
Prescriptions
John 3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy

____ _ _ _ __ ___L__

faith f"dloftlalp C,_. for Cbrilt
PastOf· Rtv Franklin o.dlcm:, Sef\ ICf'
f-nd.ay. 7 p m.

Paitor· Wilham Ju.~o u s. Sullda~ SchHol
10 00 am . Mommg W01sh1p . 10 45 a m .

1

740-992~606

Bn;an M1y,

p m . Wcdf~Hdr!y 81bk: Study • 7 flJ p rn

am . b l O pm ." Wednelday

Ponland Flrsc Churdl ollht Nuare111

1411

I, l'uLOr

Sundly .Xbool - 9:30 a.m , WONhtp - 7 00

m , Wontup -

ROCKSPRINGS
ICm•w'o: Family Restaurant
REHABILITTION CENTER
"FNturlng Kentucky FMd
The care you dtserve clost to homt
Chicken"
36759 Rocksprings Rd .
W. Main St., Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH 45769

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

Bill

9 :.~ 0

Sunday School · 9 :30 a.m.. Worship .
lO:JO a.m
Rerd!lvill e
Worship - Q :.~O 11 .m.. Sun day School HUO a.m.. First Su ndn ~· of Mont h · HlO
p.m. ~n· ice

K&amp; C JEWELERS

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abi(Je in Me, and My
Full line ol
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Produ~ts + ask what ye will, and it shall
· Financial ·
be done unw you.
Services
AGENCIES Inc.
John 15:7

Bethel Churth
Townshi p Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m. Worship· - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Se rv ices· 10 a.m.

7:30 p.m.

Hartford Church of Christ In
Hartfo rd, W.Va ., Pastor :Dav1d Greer,
Sunday Sc hool • 9:JO a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m. 7: 00 p.m.. Wednesday
Sc"ices- ~ : 00 p.m.

a.m., Worship · 9 a.m., Tuesday Services .
7 p.m.

Sl. 1-'aul Lutheran Church
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy,
Sunday School · 9 : -l~ a. m.. Worsh ip . 11
a.m. Pas1or: James P. Bmdy

~

Lewt, W Va Rt

Fallh Vall ey Tahtrn•u·tt- Chul'('h

Mornin g Star

Evangeli st Mike Moore. Sunday School ·

9 a.m., Worship · 10 a. m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Scnic.:es - i p 111.

1,1 )I)

Pearl Chapeol
Sundily St:hool , 9 a.m., WUrsh1p . 10 a.m

Mini ~ t cr

Corner or' St. Kt. 124 &amp; ·Bmdt"lury Rd ..
Min i ~ t cr: Dl~t~g Sh~ mblin , Youth Mmi ster
Bill Amhcrger. Sunday Sd1l1nl · 9·.10 a.m.
Wnrsh ip - K:/10 a.m.. I O:]Il :un .. 7: 00
p.m .. Wedne sday Ser\'iccs -7:110 p.m

10

ForrA Run

Jrd Sunday

Bearwallow Ridge Church of Chrisl
Pa stor:8 ruc e Terry, Sunday Sd mttl -IJ:.\0

Ke1th Rader. Sunday School
II ii.m

Wnr~}up .

Pas10r: Bob Robinson, Sunday S£hool · 10
Jlfl57 State Rou te 325 . Langbvllc,

Keno Church of C h ri~ l
Worsh ip - 9·.10 a.m., Sunday Sch1Hll ·

a.m..

Street.

IJKo NUirne

(I(

Suo&lt;ily School - 9 30

Surn:iMY

Enlt'rpmt

Pas1or: Arland Kmg , Sunda} S..:hool ·
lO:JO am. Wor~tup - 9 } t) am . H1 ~ll!
Study Wed 7 30

7 p.m
F•lninr Btbk U.urtb

llutJ..ud Church

SeroiC:t~ -

Asbury tSyracust J. PastOr· Bub Rob1nson.
Sunday School 1,1:4~ • m.. Wonh1p II
a.m.. WednfiMilly Mrvu.:c:• · 1 lOp m

Episcopal

7 p.m.

9 :30 a.m., Wor·dup - II am . &amp; p m .
Wednrlidly Sft"v1cts - 1 p m

I U)O

CtntraJ Clusttr

Suntlay s._ hno19 : lS a.m

992-3785

740 ~667-3110

1\lppen Plalu Sl. Paul
Pu10r J ~IK But lit . Suoillly School · 9
~ - m , Worshtp • I U.tr..m . Tut!lda) Stf"\ tee'
-7 JOp.m

K:]!ta.m.

' "~-

Church of Christ

Sumhly Sc.:hool ·

9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship · 10:30 a.m..
Wednesday Dible Study-6:00p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

740-949-2210

Herbalife lndepBndent
Distributor

For a who le ,
new you

Father in heaven.' '

Soecialist

n

G
If ye abide in

"Let your light so shine before
men, th at they may see your
good works and glorify your

Racine, OH

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

VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor : Jam es
Miller, Sunday School
10:30 "m.
Evening . 7:30 p.m

Fou rth &amp; M11io St. , Middl eport. Pastor:
Rev. Gil bert Craig, Jr., Sunday School ·
9:30 a.n·l., Worship - 10:45 a.m.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH
740·992·212.1
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing

29670 Bashan Rd.
P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Churdl of Jnut Chri.tt Apostolic

Mt. Morl•b Bapdst

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's Carpenter Serulce

F.ellowship
Apostolic

Flnt Baptisl Church

Christmas curmudgeons have the wrong concerns

Is it not incredulous how
our supposed independentminded society allows itself
to be nationally manipulated
by commercial strategy and
material innuence to focus on
gift-buying that starts the day
after Thanksgiving, and culmin ates with on e day of
orche strated exchange on
December 25?
We are moved and motivated
enmasse by the mass of retailers
who are very careful to keep us
apprised of how many shopping
days are left ' till Christmas as
though trying to prick - or
pick - our wallets to action.
The news media involves itself
with worrisome reports, in
advance to the tina! shopping
day. that Americans may not be
buying enough at Christmas to
sustain productivity, as though
trying to throw a gigantic guilt
trip on us. It is uncanny that we
annually step right into sync
with them.
Such
is
accomplished
through the exploitation of fact
- the binh of Jesus Christ and
the gifts of the three wise men.
It is frenetically energized with
greater emphasis on legend Santa Claus. Furthennore, it is
under-girded by. an inescapable
emotional pressure to please,
prodded by a careful and calcu-

WOR-SHIP GOD THIS WEEK

•

�'

Page A4

OPINION.

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • 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

VIEW

NATIONAL

Soldiers' pay
The Post-Standard, Syracuse, N.Y., on problems with soldiers' pay:·
~

A recent General Accounting Oflice report found that in a
survey of Army Natio nal Guard . soldters serv111g . 111
Afghanistan and Iraq, 450 of 48 1 soldters had trouble gettmg
paid or receiving certain benefits.
.
One soldier reportedly was asked to submtt documents to
get his housing allowance. and was advised that everyth111g
would be worked out. When he returned home, however, he
was told it was too late to get the money. Another soldier was
dispatched o n a four-day trip through dangerous territory to
try to strai ghten out pay mix-ups. In another case, 34 soldiers
were mi stakenly told they owed the government about
$48,000 each.
Serving one 's country during wartime is a great enough sacrifice. Soldiers should not have the added burden of wonder.
ing if they will get a paycheck. ...
The government must immediately correct these problems. With
trouble spots growing around the.world, it will be hard enough trx·
ing to entice people to serve thetr country. But what wtll make tt
harder still is the belief that when they do sign up, they may have
to fight for America and ti ght for America to pay them.
·

Friday, December 12;

2003

VVhy God became man
'

Louis Cassels has been forgotten by most people today.
That isn't too unusual; the
man has been dead almost 25
years.
Wh ile here o n Ea rth ,
George
Cassels was a newspaperman
Plagenz
-- religion edi tor for United
Press International -- and
most journalists wi ll tell you
that few attain an immortaliBut he didn't believe all
ty .o f any sort.
But Louis Cassels li ves!
that stu ff about God becomHis story, "The Parable of ing man , whi ch churches
the Birds," for those who proclaim at Christmas. Why
have heard it, is one that few would God want to do anyhave ever fo rgotten. With thing like that ?
that story Cassels ac hi eved
So when his famil y left to
an immortality usuall y attend midnight services on
reserved for the saints, sel- Christm as Eve, he stayed
dom by humble newspaper- home.
men.
Shortly arter the family
"The Parable of the Birds" drove away, snow began to
is a Christmas parable that fall. He went to the window
Casse ls wrote in 1959, and and watched th e flurries gethas been reprinted many ling heavier and heavier.
times since it fir st appeared Some time later, as he was
in newspapers across th e reading his newspaper by the
fire , he was startled by a
country 44 years ago.
ll has also been read many thudding sound that was
times on the radio. I broad- quickly followed by another.
cast it that first year over the
Then another.
CBS station in Boston where
When he went to investi1 worked. I've included it gate, he found a fl ock of
here, to the best of my mem- birds huddled miserably in
ory, for all of you to read:
. the snow. They had been
Once upon a time, there caught in the storm , and in a
was a man who looked upon desperate search for shelter
Christmas as a lot of hum- had tried to fly through the
bug. He wasn't a Scrooge. He window.
was a very kind and decent
"I can't let these poor creaperson, generous to his fami - tures lie there and freeze," he
ly, upright in all his dealings thought. "But how can I help
with other men.
them?"

Then he ren.embered the
barn. It wo uld provide a
warm she lter. He quickly pu t
on his coat and boots and
tramped through the deepening snow to the barn. He
opened the doors wide and
turned on the light.
But the birds diun't come
in.
"Food wi ll bring them in,"
he thought. So he hurried
back to the ho use fo r breadcrumbs, which he sprinkled
on the snow to make a trail
into the barn.
To hi s dismay, the birds
ignored the breadcrumbs and
continued to flop around
helplessly in • the snow. He
tried shooing them into the
barn by walking around and
waving his arms. They scattered in eve ry directio n -except into the warm, lighted
barn.
"They lind me a strange
and terrifying creature," he
said to himself, "and I can't
seem to think of any way to
let them kno~ they can trust
me.
"If onl y I could be a bird
myse lf for a fe w minute s.
perhap s I could lead them to
safety."
Just at that moment, the
church bell s began to ring.
He stood silently for a while,
liste nin g to the bell s pealing
out the glad tidin gs . of
Christmas.
Then he sank to hi s knees
in the snow. "Now I under-

stand," he whispered. "Now I
see why You had to do it. "
Here is another Christmas
story to brighten your holiuay ...
Audie nces have bee n
stimding during the singi ng
of the "Hallelujah Chorus"
since 1743. There are two
versions of how this tradition.
began.
One ve rsion is that King
George [[ was attending a
pe rfo rm ance
of
the
"Messiah" and had already.
bee n sitting fo r two hours by
the time the "Hallelujah
C horu s" was sung.
Feeling the need to stretch
his legs, he got up: The audience, seeing their king stand,
followed protocol and stood, .
too.
The other version is that
King George II was attending .
the oratorio' s fi rst London
perform ance and was so
moved by the "Hallelujah
Chorus" that he involuntarily :
rose from his seat. Out of:
respect to their king, mem- :
bers of the audience naturally
rose, too.
Of course, much of this is
hearsay, and many have
specul ated whether the king
had even attended the perfor:
mancc in qu estio n.
Well , whi chever version
you believe, may you enter
into this holiday season with
a merry heact and warm
th ought s!

Bush in Iraq
The Daily Leader, Brooklrave11, Miss.,
i11 Iraq:

011

President Bush

Obituaries
' ATHENS
Helen
Bowers, 68, of Stewart, for merly of Meigs County.
died on Tuesday even ing,
Dec. 9. 2003, at CamdenClark Memorial Hospital in
Parke rsburg, W.Va.
. She was born on March
9, J935, daCtgh ter of the
late Ralp h and Gladys
Bowers. She was a retired
nurs ing assistant at Arcad ia
Nu.f' ing Ce nter in Coolville.
· Services are I p.m. on
Saturday, Dec. 13. 2003 at
Jngers &amp; Sons Funeral
Home in Athe ns, with burial to follow at Carthage
Cemetery.
: Frie nds may call fro m 6
to 9 p.m. on Friday at the
funeral home.

,
,,

KeEJping .
Meigs
informed
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Meigs • 992· 2155 ·

TO USE IT.'

,

It was so secret that even his parents did not find out until
he failed to show up for Thanksgiving dinner. President
George Bush's surprise visit to Baghdad Thursday morning
caught the world by .surpri se .
. . .
Conside nng that JUSt days ago a cargo (Jiane flymg mto
Baghdad was struck by a shoulder-fired miss 1le, it was a gutsy
move by the President and one that should lift the spirits of a
nation beginning to have second thoughts about a war being
fought half-a-world away.
A calculated risk, the President flew for eight hours, landed at
Baghdad International Airport and spent two and a half hours
serving food and mixing with troops before returning home.
Surprised soldiers gave praise to Bush.
" It was a display of confidence in our ability to protect not
just us, but him," said one soldier.
" My morale had kind of sputtered, now I'm good for another two months.:· said another.
'-"'hen times get tough, a good leader takes risk and rallies the troops.
· While his opponents will undoubtedly call it a political
stunt, in reality he was doing what he has done all along provide good strong leadership.

••

Concert
Scheduled
POMEROY
- Trinity
Church in Pomeroy will host
its annual holiday concert,
with the chu rch's bell choir,
choir
and
Riverbe nd
Community Band at 2 p.m.
0 11 Dec . 21.

Giveaways planned
REEDSV ILLE -Golden
Harvest Food Pantry in
Reedsvi lle wi ll distribu te food
from I0 a. m. on Dec. 20, and
Hearts and Hands Clothing
Pantry will hold a free clothing, toy and househo ld goods
giveaway at 9 a.m. on Dec. 20
at the Fellowship Church of
the Nazarene.

@fi!Hl.~. 12126

C 2003 by NEA, Inc.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR ·

.
1

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All/etters are s~bject to
editing and must be signed af!d include address
and telep~one number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
(iddressing issues, not personalities.
, .
: The opinions expressed ·in the column below
are the. consensus of the Ohio .Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

· --~-··-

--

··-- ..... ·-·-

.,_

There was never any serious hope that the Democrats
in the legislature would consent to
Gov. · Arnold
Schwarzenegger's plan for
pulling California out of the
hole they have dug for the
·state in the past five years.
Both the Senate and the
Assembly are securely in the
pockets of the powerful special
interests
their
Democratic members were
largely elected to serve: the
state employees' unions. the
Indian 'tribes that own or
want to start casinos, and,
above all, the California
Teachers Association.
The Democratic legislators
(and, of .course, Gov. Gray
Davis) had run the state $38
billion into debt by squandering money they didn't have
all over these and a handful
of other powerful friends.
When they l~arned that the
new governor wanted to put
a legal cap on future state
spending, their response was
a mirthless chuckle.
Their solution, of course, is
simple: more taxes. It is
·always more taxes. If
Schwarzenegger promised the
voters he wouldn't raise taxes,
so much the worse for him.
Schwarzenegger's additional proposal, t() cover part
of the state's deficit by floating a new $15 billion bond
issue, didn't meet with their

William
Rusher

approval either. In this .case,
they attributed their refusal
to a concern for the voters'
children and grandchildren,
who supposedly would have
to pay off the loan. But precisely where was their compassion for future generations when they saddled the
state with this overwhelming
debt in the first place?
Fortunately, California law
provides the governor with
an alternative way of trying
to get what he wants, and he
can be counted upon to
invoke it. Under the state
constitution, "initiatives" put
on the ballot by petition
have, if passed, the force of
law. They constitute, therefore, a highly effective way
of putting laws on the books
that the legislature would
.never consent to pass.
Schwarzenegger, who was
·swept into oflice in a burst of
popular fury over excessive
spending by the J·egislature,
is perfectly situated to take
advantage of the initiative

process. The head of steam
that elected him has by no
means dissipated. He can go
directly to the people and ask
them to put initiatives on the
ballot next November to
impose a spending cap on the
legislature and authorize a
bond issue to cover the gaping hole in the state budget.
He can then stump the state
asking voters to '' send a message" to the legislators by
passing both .
It is interesting to note that
this will be the very election
in which voters are simultaneously be ing asked to
choose between President
Bush and a Democratic challenger, and 111 which
California Sen . Barbara
Bo.xer, a Democrat, will be
up for re -election. This will
confront
California's
Democratic strategists with
the problem of delivering the
state for Boxer and Bush's
Democratic opponent while
many voters are in a foul
mood over the conduct of the
Democratic legislature .
It would be nice to think
that Schwarzenegger could
also bring about the ouster of
·a good many of the
Democratic
legislators
whose behavior has caused
the state's fi scal mess. But
thanks to a bipartisan gerry mander engineered three
years ago, virtually all of the

------ ------- -------------- - - ---"'..'"'•·4

members of the legislature -Democratic and Republican
alike -- will be running in
districts lovingly designed to
guarantee their re-election,·
barring an electoral tidal·
wave. (The Republicans
agreed to thi s on the instructions of Bush's political
Svengali Karl Rove, as part
of a deal to hold onto the
GOP's California Hou se
seats, even though it insures
Democratic control of the
legislature until the next
redistricting in 2010.)
In
any
case,
Schwarzenegger seems likely ·
to prevail in the initiative battle, rolling over the legislature
that has rejected his proposals.
That rnay not make the legislature
any
.the
less
Democratic, but the spending
cap, which will index increases in spending to inflation plus
the growth of the state's population, will put a severe crimp
in · 'the damage these specialinterest puppets can do.
Of course, everything·
depends on Schwarzenegger
not losing hi s nerv.e. But
there is no sign of that yet. so'
the message to the big'
spenders may yet be, "Hasta•
Ia vista, baby!"
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Clr1remont Institute f or thi
Study of Statesmnnship and
Political Philosophy. )

State Park otlice, State Route
349 north of Welbton. a1 5 p.m.
on Dec IM; a dmwing fur three
trappe,.., at the ~ayne National
Forest office on U. S. route 33.
wuth of Nelsonville on Dec. 19
at 10 a.m .; a dmwing at the U.S.
Forest Service, Wayne National
Forest,
Iron ton
District
(Jackson and Gallia Coumie&gt;J
Trapper; are reminded to
arrive earlv and to have with
them a current valid Ohio
hunting licen;e and fur taker
permit. Beaver trapping season opens Dec . 26 and
ex tend&gt; th rough Feb. 29 for
all of Ohio. except the area
north of 1-76 and east of 1-77.
Fo,r fu rther information on
beaver trapp ing. refer to
Publ icati on 85. Ohio 20032004 Hunti ng and Trapping
Regu lat ion&gt;.

Opens practice

Beaver trapping
permits available
in drawings

Throughout the hol 1day season, members of the Pleasant
Valley Hosp1tat Auxiliary are hosting a "Memory Tree" w1th
bulbs that feature the names of fami"' and fnends who are Ill
or have passed away. The tree 1s displayed 111 the ma1n lobby
of the healthcare facil 1ty and for $1/ bulb anyone can add the
name of a loved one to the spec1al tnbute . Bulbs can be purchased at the Vo lunteer Transport Desk or for more Information please call . (304 ) 675·4340. Ext. 1146. Shown addmg
names to the tree are, left to right. Alv1n R. Lawson . JD.
FACHE. chief executive officer of Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Arlene Cook. first vice·pres1dent of the Auxiliary and Charles
Fulks. president of the volunteer organization.

AT HENS The Ohio
De partment'· of · Natural
Resources (ODNR ), Division
of Wildlife has anno unced
that publ ic draw ings will be
condu cted to · issue beave r
trappin g permits on public
huntin g areas in southeastern
Ohio where beaver trapping
is usuall y prohibited.
Successful appli ca nts will

J.

POM EROY
- Dwight
Icenhower, Pomeroy's own
Elvi s Pres ley tribute artist.
entertain ed employees and
friends of Oh io Vall ey
Pu blishing Co mpan y at the
company's a nnual Chri stmas
Pm1y, he ld Wedn esday at the
Meigs Multipurpose Senior
Center in Pomeroy.
The party was hosted by
e mployees o f Th e Dail y
Sentinel.
A catered dinner was
se rved to those atte ndin g:
Freu and Pauline Hoffman,
El aine Forbes, Brenda Davis,
Ron and Judy Clark, Ke lli
May, Ju stin May, Betty Tope,
Margaret Finnicum, Gayland
and Hele n Bush, Homer and
Carol Tate, Miles Layto n,
Ni col e Bowman , Charlene
Hoeflich, Brian Reed, Julie
Mitc hell , Ro ger and Pam
Caldwell , Dav id Harris, Dina

Eblin, Hobart Wilson, Jr.
Jeremy Schneider, Ed and
Jane Ann Slagle, Larry and
Pat Boyer. Bob and Jo y
Atwood. Paul and Terra
Barker. Odie 0 ' Donnell,
Matt and Betsy Rogers,
Diane Hill , Dillon Hill ,
Kevin O verbeck. Tom and
Phyllis Roach, Hele n Davis,
.Ioyce Davis. Chris Rathburn,
Jamie Sexton, Cassie Will,
Jennile r Nease, C huck and
Martha Govey, April Roach,
Christa Martin, and Megan
Tripp.
Door prizes were awarded
foll owing Icenhower 's per·
formance.
The Ohio Valley Publishing
Company is owned by
Community
Newspaper
Holdings, Inc., Birmingham,
Ala., and publishes The
(Pomeroy) Daily Sentinel,
Gallipoli s Daily Tribune.
Point Pleasant Register, The
Sunday Times Sentinel and
Tri-County Marketplace.

Kroger

California's next hurdle: the legislature

be assigned permits for specific areas. Drawings will be
conducted at Cooper Hollow
(Jackson County). Tycoon
(Gallia Coumy), and Crown
City (Gallia and Lawrence
Counties) Wi ld life Areas.
A drawing t(x a total of four
trappers will be held at the headquaners of the Cooper Hollow
Wildlife Area, 5403 C H &amp; D
Road, four miles south of the
junction of State Route 327 and
U.S. Route 35. at 9 a.m. on
Tuesday, Dec. 16; Di llon
(Muskingum County). Simco
and Woo&lt;.lbury (Coshoc ton
County) Wildl ife Area~.
A drawing for a total of seven
trappers will be held al the
Woodbury Shooting Range on
State Route 541. at Coshocton,
at ~oon on Dec. 20; a.t drawing
for two tmppers at Lake Alma

Proud to be apart of your life.
Subscribe toda.y • 992-2 155

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REED
breed@myd ai lysent i ne l.com

&amp; IWJ NOT AFMID

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary are hosting a 'Memory Tree'

Local Briefs

'

BY BRIAN

I'VE GOT THE' FLU

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.myd a ilysentinel.com

2 003.

.

Helen Bowers

VIEW

NATIONAL

Friday, December 12,

ny to manage costs so that it
can compete with a g rowing
number of nonunion retailers.
Those retailers include
from Page A1
Wal -Mart.
"We are extremely pleased
York Stock Exc hange follo wto
have a new contrac t in
ing ne w ~ of the vote.
place so that our employees
Health care cos ts were the
can
return to work and we
main obstacle to a contract.
can begin serving our cusKroger' s previous offer
to mers again ," said Pete
before the strike was to William s,
president
of
increase it s contribution to a
Kroger's Mid-Atlantic marhealth and welfare lund by 8
percent a year. Aduarial keting area.
"With the holiday season in
studies showed that the profull swing, we have a lot of
posal would have bankrupted work · ahead of us. We're
the fund unl ess it reduced the
looking forward to welcomlevel of benefit s it covered.
, Under the new contract.' ing back our e mployees,"
Williams said in a statement.
[).roge r will pay I 0.5 perce nt
Kroger pi an ned to begin
tpward union health benefits. recalling workers Thursday
"The health care issue carnight and to reopen 41 stores
r)ed the day," said Local 400
by 7 a.m. Monday. Fuel cenPresident Jim Lowthcrs.
ters could reopen Frida~ .
"That was our number one
Kroger spokesman Archte
iSsue. "
Fralin
said . .
· Gary Donaldson , a worker
"It's a two-week job and
at a Morgantown store, said
the contract ensures adequate we're going to do it in four
days," he said . "We want to
health care.
"This should be enough to get our stores open ."
keep us covered the same as · Stores in Gauley Bridge,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
and
before the contract ran out,"
Gallipolis, Ohio,. will not
Donaldson said.
Other details of the con- reopen, Williams said.
"As we said before the
tract were not immediately
work
stoppage began, Kroger
available but a Kroger offiwould
reopen as many stores
cial said it allows the compaas we believe we can eco-

h'

from Page A1
toys. Those i111eres1ed wi ll he
as ked to fill out appilcauons
and mu -; t meet the

Kenlucky al'o will continue
participating
1he trau iiion
in bell · ringing cnlle...:tion" for'
the Sal\·;llion Ann) nuhide·
lucal '"'re&gt; on Dec . 20 .
Union mem her' parti,·ipate
eac h \'Car in the pracl ice and

n ~ce~~ary

cri teria. Fo r more infonncitiun co nce rnin g th e to y U ri v~.:.

peopl e shoul d ca ll Local
400's Charlest nn office at I800-525-8329.
Loca l 400 memhe" in
West Virgini a. Ohio anu

Transfers
from Page A1
ATHENS - Halesh Patel,
M.D.. F.A.C.P., has started a
solo medi cal practice at 530
W. Union St.. Suite C.
Athens.
Patel joined a group practice in 2001 . after being in
pri vate practice for four
years.
Patel has had extensive
po st-gradu ate training in
internal medicine sub-specialties at medical instituti ons in the United Kingdom
and United States. including

the Uni ve rsity of Wale s
Hospital s
111
C ardtlf.
Do wnstate Uni ve rs ity on
New York, Johns Hopkins
Hos pi1als and Univ ersity of
Marland Hos pi tals. He is
also a medical o ncologist
trained at the Universi ty of
Maryland Cance r Center and
National Institutes of Health.
Patel is al so board-certi fied in internal medicine anu
a fell ow of the American
Cnllege of Phys icians.

tramfer from the Board nf
Me ntal Re1a rda1ion a nd
Develop menta l Di sab iln ie&gt; ·
tra nsfe r out line i111 o the
board 's insurance illlC . an&lt;.J a
$ 1.000 a p p ropr i &lt;~tio n adjllstment for the MR/ DD board.
and a $63 1.78 tran&gt;fer for th e
treasurer.
Commi ssioners
aho
apprnved a 5250.000 loa n
from Farmers Ba nk and
Savin gs
Company
ot
Pome roy for the MR / DD
board . in anti cipatio n of rev-

nomi cally
operate.
Unfortunatel y, the impact of
the strike , combined with the
projected cost of re stocking,
does not make it econo mically feasible for us to. reope n
these three stores," he said in
a statement.
Lowthers would not comment on the company's decision to close the stores.
Workers at those stores can
exerci se seniority ri ghts to
transfer to other stores.
Pharmacies in the closed
stores will remain open until
all customer presc ription

in.format io n is transferred to
other pharmacies, Will iam s
said.
After the vote . a group of
workers · di smantl ed
a
makeshift shelter outside a
Cha rleston store that had
been used by pickets. Inside.
managers walked the aisle &gt;
checking inve ntory and
updatin g pri ces.
Fralin said some item s
would be de livered to stores
Thursday evening.
" By God, I hope to go back
to work tomorrow," said Ri ck
Robinson. who works at a

Kroger in Weston. "Thi &gt; &gt;ilting around for nine wee k,,
I' m tired or i1. Hum in~ i'
ove r. let 's go."
'
Ta lks to sett le a South ern
Cali fo rni a grocery store labor
di spute that has idl ed worker'
si nce Oct. I I hro ke off
Sunday.
Kr(Jger-ow ned
Ral phs is one of three chai ns
in vol ved.
Al so. nearl y 4.000 Indiana
Kroge r worke rs have worked
with out a new comrac t for

pcn:nniall~

rnoney than
ipa t in~

· rai~~
;!fly l)ther

more

panil: -

group . . in Kanawh(.l

Co.
The hell ringing will take
place throughout the 'tate at
\ ariou" luc.1tion.-.. . i ncluding
Kroge r.

enue frnm the huard\ recently -apprn\·eu Je,v Farme"
Bank offered 1he lowest
interc . . t rate •: three local
bank&gt; suhmittin~ rates for
cun . . tdcrJtiun . ~
Home
1\ati11n.d Bank of Racine
ntlered a 2.Y percent rate. and
People'
Bank.
N.A ..
Mariet1;1. a rate of .1 .5 percent .

The &gt;ix- molllh nole wi ll be
paiJ off with pn&gt;ceed&gt; from
the fir, t-half re;d c'tate ,etllement in earl\ 21X&gt;4. and
wi ll all&lt;m the board In pay
teacher,. and wn ttn ue &gt;er'ice&gt; at th e· Carleton School
and \1cig, lndu,lric, while
awaiting.

k\· ~ prt)l•.' ~~·tb .

nearlv a month .

The

labor truuble' ha\'e
taken a toll tin K rn~cr's bottum li ne. Ea rher tlli' week.
th e company reponed a 'i7
percent dwp in thi rd quarter
earnin,g~. pri m ari l ~ hecau-.e
of the s1rike. The company
al"' reduced its forecast fo r
the rest of the year.

FRI 12112103 · THURS 12116/03
TUES BARGAIN $3.75 ADMISSION
I

SWEETHEART SPECIAL

I

i

ON

SAT &amp; SUN ONLY
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:30PM •

MEIGS MEMORY
GARDENS
2 Side-by-si~e Spaces ·
Only $10.70 per month
Call Ken for an appointment

740-992-7448

.............,...
11.1, o\{, 1 '\

ll.l l

~IMI '

''"

ATTENTION ALL VISITORS
.

.

We are currently in the midst of the flu season.
I

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL .c ares about the health'of our community.
'

.

.

We respectfully request that the very .young, immunocompromised (ill) and
elderly refrain ·from visiting patients in the hospital during flu season.
For more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1248.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

�BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Ru tland Free Will Bapti st
Churc h will be presenting a
Christmas play, "Three
Nails," the story of the birth,
Monday, Dec. 1S
RAC INE- Raci ne Village death and re s u rr~.: tion of
Council will meet in recessed Jesus Christ, 7 p.m. at the
session in Council chambers churc h. Pastor Jamie Fortner
invites the public to attend.
at 'the municipal building.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m . at
the office building.

Clubs and
Organizations
Friday, Dec. 12
MIDDLEPORT The
Widows Fellowship will
have a Christmas luncheon at
the Golden Coral at noon .
Members are to take a $ 1
exchange gift. Let your caller
know if you intend to attend.
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 7:30 p.m. at the hall .
New officers to be in stalled.
Monday, Dec. 1S.
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harri sonville Senior Citizens
will meet. at II a.m. A putuck
dinner will be served , blood
pressures will be taken, and
all seniors are invited 10
attend.
Wednesday, Nov. 17
MIDDLEPORT The
Middleport Li terary Club
will meet at 2 p.m. at the
home of Betsy Parson s.
There will be a group discussion of "Skipping Chri stmas"
by John Grisham .
Saturday, Dec. 20
RUTLAND
The

ATHENS - "This Time
Around:
Reinventing
Community," a weekly feature series on the WOUB
Radio Network. is beginning
a new quarter of programming about Appalachian
Ohio.
The focus will be on technology and its impa't on the
region . The . first show
e&lt;amined how some small
businesses and craftspeople
are using e-marketing to
overcome the distance s
between them and their customers. and the second
show looked at what people
in the region think about the
·impact technology is having
on their everyday lives.
In upcoming weeks, the
program will look at issues
ranging from building the
information super-highway
in our region to new building technologies like Straw
Bale home construction.
The Dec. 16, 8:30 a.m.
program will focus on sustainable forestry. There is
really no new technology
involved in this topic, but
there is a new way of thinking about the woodlands
around us and how to use
them.
Producer Sandra SleightBrennan talks with Meigs
County
resident,
Lee
Woods;
herbali st
and
Equinox Botanicals owner
Paul Strauss, also of Meigs
County: and Scott Bagley,
Coordinator
of
Rural
Action's Forestry Program : .
to &lt;jiscover how and why
many people are taking the
herbal tradition s of the

Saturday, Dec. 20
MIDDLEPORT
Modern Woodmen's holi day
breakfas t 8:30 to II a.m at
the Golden Coral in
Gallipolis

Social Events

Saturday, Dec. 20
RUTLAND
The
Rutl and Free Will Baptist
Church will be presenting a
Chri stmas play, "Three
Nails," the story of the birth,
death and resurrection of
Jesus Chri st. 7 p.m. at the
church. Pastor Jamie Fortner
in vites the public to attend .

Saturday, Dec. 13
RACINE - Sant a Claus
will be coming to the town of
Racine I p.m. at the Racine
Fire Department building.
Parents can ha ve their children's pictu res taken with
Santa. Each child will receive
Thursday; Dec. 18
a treat. Cookies, hot chacoRACINE - Regular meet- · late and coffee will be served.
ing. Pomeroy-Racine Lodge The event is sponsored by
164, F&amp;AM . Members urged businesses and organi zations.
to attend.
For more information contact
Kathryn Hart , 949-2656.
Saturday, Dec. l3
MIDDLEPORT - Annual
EAST MEIGS - A holiinspection. of Bosworth
Council will be held at the day concert will be presented
Middleport Masonic Temple at 7 p.m. at Eastern High
following a 5 p.m. dinner. School. There will be perforReservations for the dinner mances by the concert choir,
are to be made wi th Dan
Arnold. 992-5963 by Dec. 6. the handbell choir, and the
concert band.
POMEROY Return
Jonathan Meigs · Chapter,
DAR. Christmas luncheon I
p.m. at the Meigs Museum.
Saturday, Dec. 20
Hal Kneen to. provide a proRUTLAND
The
gram of holiday music.
Rutland Free Will Baptist
POMEROY ·
Church will be presenting a
· Burlingham
Modern Christmas play, "Three
Woodmen dinner at Millies 3 Nails," the story of the birth,
to 5:30 p.m . For more informatiion call Mildred Zeigler. death and resurrection of
Jesus Christ, 7 p.m. at the
992-7770.
church. Pastor Jamie Fortner
invites the public to attend.

Church events

Sustainable
forestry topic of
local radio program
Meigs
countians,
herbalists to be
featured

Page /_6

Appalachian region to a
world-wide market.
"This
Time
Around :
Reinventing Community" is
a year long seri es that
explores the fabric of community, how and why communities change , and what
the future may hold for
Appalachian Ohio. Features
focus on communities within rhe ·wouB
Radio
Network coverage area and.
includes four quarterly callin discussion programs. A.
companion website is available
at:
www.thi stimearound.org and allows
community members to
interact online . The program s repeat on Tuesday
afternoons at 4:00 p.m.

Friday, December 12,

•

DEAR ABBY: I am a 16problems with alcohol and
year-old girl with a problem
depression. He was recent! y
di agnosed with sc hizophreI can' t talk to anyone about.
I have been with my
nt a.
I love George dearl y, but
boyfriend, "Jo n," for about
live months. He has always
my ro le in hi s life has
Dear
been kind of jealous and
switched fro m girlfriend to
Abby
controlling. Recentl y my
caregiver/provider. I am not
parents told rne I couldn 't
sure what to do. He refuses
see him anymore.
to get help but is stuck 10 me
Jon became furiou s when I
like ~ lost child . How can I
told him how my parents
save hi s and my life before it
fee l, and now he \ talking into doing something to your is too late? - DESPERATE
about killing them so we can p)trents - and you will be IN NEW YORK
be together. I know he is an accessory becau se you
DEAR DESPERATE: True
knew it was going to happen lov ers Jnust al so be true
senous .
I really love Jon. He is the and did nothing.
fri ends, and ri ght now
I urge you to warn your George desperatel y need s
first boy who has shown an
parents about Jon's threats,
interest in me.
My parents and I have so they can protect them- o n;~ll him. as a concerned
- and you . As much friend , that because you love
always had a great relation- selves
you may love him, you
- .
ship and my mom is like my as
cannot reason with someone him, he mu st get prolesstonbest friend. I totally don ' t
is irrational and possi- allhfehlp d . ' t h·
want to see them get hurt. I who
bly homicidal.
, e oes!l
ave money,
don 't know what to do. I
P.S. Do NOT allow Jon 10 &lt;+' he can still ltnd helpm New
can't tell my parents and I make you feel guilty for York 111 a nu~ber ~! - places :
can ' t tell the police. I have wantmg to protect your par- One o f the. large academtc
tried to talk Jon out of it, and ents. Your first responsibtlity hospttals mtght be the place
tell him they will learn to is the safety of your family. to start.
.
.
accept him over time . He just So please don't wait. Tell
In any meamngful .relatJon gets mad and says I am tak- them NOW. A good way to sh1p. both p~ople mvolved
ing their side. Please tell me begin would be to clip this swHch c.areg 1vmg rules at
what to do. - ANONY- letter hand it to them and tell vanous tunes. ThiS 1s called
MOUS IN FORT MYERS. them 'rhat you wrote it.
"nurturing." But being made
FLA.
DEAR ABBY : 1 have to feel obi igated beyond
DEAR ANONYMOUS: I been dating "George" for affection is etllrapment hope your sense of self- nine months. Since the day 1 and that you must avotd.
preservation is stronger than met him , I knew he was a litDear Ahby I S wntlen b\'
your sense of family loyalty. tie odd, but that was one of Abigail Va n Buren. also
The boy you are involved the qualities that first attract- known as Jeann e Phillips.
with appears to have seriou s ed me to him.
and was fo unded by her
mental problems . He desperIn the last three months, morhn: Paulin e Phillips.
ately needs psychological his behavior has become Wrile Dear Abby al
evaluation and counseling . worse. He is now homeless, WHw.DearAhbY.rom r;r P.O.
Unless you do something penniless, jobless, and has · Box 69440, Los Angeles. CA
now, Jon could talk himself
90069.

Keeping
Meigs
informed .

Saturday's games
Boys Basketball ·
River Valley at Southern
Girls Basketball
Logan at Gallia Academy
South Gallia at Coal Grove
Wrestling
Gallia Academy ·at Ripley

~7~ZJ~

~-.~

50%DII

4.~ 1ffc.

AU Oillmo,.d B~t~ceteh .

~~"'"'""

Oiam1111d S«ifaift 'Pendattls
50% ,

(1/3 cf. &amp; IIIHJIIJ

pendanl"' earr;ngs

Monday's games
Girls Basketball
Eastern at River Va lley
Miller at Meigs
Southern at OVC
Athens at Gallia Academy .
South Gallia at Hannan
Poinl Pleasant at Marlena

Eastern girls
basketball game
postponed

Browns' Davis
not interested in
Nebraska

112 ct. $699
1 ct. $1999

&gt; BEREA (AP) - Cleveland
f:irowns coach Butch Davis
tried to end persistent rumors
by saying he has no interest in
Interviewing for the Nebraska
coaching job.
"I have po interest whatsoever in going to Nebraska,"
Davis said after practice on
Thursday.
Davis said he liked
Comhuskers athletic director
Steve Pederson, but the.coach
told his agent Marvin Demoff
a few weeks ago to politely
aecline if the school called .

Sunday December 14, lOOJ J:JO P.M.
Me_ips Co. High School Gym
SpeCHII Appearance By Santa!
1ickit PriaAt Door:Ailults $11.00 Chi/Jren $7.50
4 &amp; Nruler admitttd FREE! Fun For1l1e Entire hlmilyf

Alldi&lt;me Partidpotion For Evtryontl
Thu show u spmumrd hy m.
Pomeroy-Middleport lions Club

••••.•iHf"DEFENDERS"" Of"OllfFREE.DOM .....•....•..•...~
the 3664th MAINTENANCE COMPANY of the NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY for
their dedication and patriotism.
1

••

,....... .....

________ ---- - · - -· -

,

..

Our thoughts and prayers are with tht:m - as well as their families and

.

Meigs junior
high girls sweep
Athens

••
••
••
PLEASANT ••

'

THE PLAINS- The Meigs
eighth grade girls basketball
team defeated Athens, 25·22.
,Leslie Preece led the
Marauders (2-2) with I0
points.
. Meanwhile, the seventh
grade' team also defeated the
Bulldolls, 28-20. Catie Wolfe
led Me1gs,(3-1) )Vith 10 points.

VALLEY
:
fl'iends -during this holiday season.
H OSPITAL :•
··············································~·················
- - -·- -

- ·---- ~ !

••

~y mn as tum .

Due to the
flu at Miller.
there wa s no
re ~e

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern 's varsity basketball
game against Waterford,
orginally schedul ed for
Thmsday, was po stponed
because of the tlu affecting
the Eagles .
The game has been
rescheduled for noon. Dec. 20

'Diamtmd
Sotilaim

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL would like to thank the service personnel of

HEMLOC K - Out " ori ng
Miller 2 1- 17 in the fin al
round. the Southern Lady
To rn adoe s
overcame a
l a te- g a me
Miller lead
to wi n 4'1-40
Thur , d a y
nig ht in a
Tr i- Vall ey
Co nfe re nce
H o&lt;: kin g
'--~;;____, .D 1 v i ' ion
girb basketball ga me 41
Dunl ap

River Valley, Meigs at Warren
Invitational
Point Pleasant at St. Albans Red
Dragon Tournament

... .,,\....::.;-

Sui Setting! 1/flt II""P Earrings
50%,

NEVER SEEN BEFORE!~~~"•u·

•••

114 ct. $199 (reg. $399)
112 ct. $499. (reg. $999)
1 ct. $1199 (reg. $2399)

•\"1-..o:'lll/l":,,.,.,\,.--.;~:,,

Bv ScoTT WOlFE
Sports correspondent

Invitational

CLEVELAND (AP) - .
Baseball's Battle of Ohio will
be back at Jacobs Field next
season after all.
The Cleveland Indians
announced Thursday they
w1ll renew their interleague
· rivalry with the. Cincinnati
Reds at home with a threegame series at the Jake from
June 11 - 13.
The Indians were originally
schedul ed to host the
Montreal Expos on those
dates . However, the club
asked Major League Baseball
to drop the E&lt;pos and replace
them with'lhe Reds.
"They were able to accommodate us," Indians team
spokesman Bob DiBiasio ·
said . "We felt the Reds were a
better draw for our fans."
The Indians will play at
Cincinnati on July 2-4.
Ohio's two major league
reams have played 27 times in
the regular season since baseball adopted interleague play
in 19997. The only se.ason
when the Indians and Reds
didn't meet was in.2002.
: The Indians lead the series
15-12.

Meigs • 992-2155

o.turl

49~40

Indians to play
host to Reds
next season

· Sunday
Times-Sentinel

flt~u, cht~ice·ring.

SHS
clips
Falcons,

Today'a games
Boys Baakatball
Belpre at Meigs
Easte rn at Waterford
Federal Hocking at Southern
Cross Lanes Chr. a:t South Galli a
Girts Basketball
P. Pleasant at Herbert Hoover
Grace Christian at Hannan
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at St. Albans Red
Dragon Tournament

Subscribe today • 992-2155

&amp;~.~

Friday, December 12, 2003

Prep Schedule

Proud to be apart of your life.

juggler
Velltr/l,&gt;quiist
&amp; Comedy Magicia11
Roger Depard

1

Boyfriend's _angry threats
must be taken seriously

YOUR ·
YOUR

~~'~~'•ALL NEW SHOW.'

Prep Scoreboard, Page 82
Cavs down Pistons, Page B&amp;

2003

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

,.

h--

- t:-·- - --

Meigs point guard Sammy Pierce (20) takes Nelsonville-York's Megan Sears off the dribble during Thursday's TVC-Oh1o
contest. Meigs won 46·40. (Brad Sherman)

Davis bullies Bucks
Davis scores 20,
grabs 18 boards as
Meigs downs N-Y ·
BY BRAD SHERMAN

bsherman@mydailytribune.com
ROCK SPRINGS - It was the season's first meeting between two of the
Tri- Valley Conference's premiere post
players - and round one went to
. Jaynee Davis and the Meigs Lady
Marauders.
Davis scored 20 points and grabbed
18 rebounds in leading her team to a 4640 victory over league MVP Whitney
Maiden and the Nelsonville-York Lady
Buckeyes Thursday night in girls basketball action .
"Jaynee can take a game over like
that," said Meigs coach Paul Bmnnon.
"She's very good offensive!~."
She was also solid defenstvely, as she
was just two steals shy of a triple-double.
Her counterpart in the post. Maiden,
shook off a slow start and scored 12 of
her team-high 14 points in the second Meigs· Jaynee Davis (30) works for position in the post as Nelsonville-York 's
Jordan Bateman (42) defends. Davis scored 20 points, collected 18 rebounds
PleaH 11M Davis, BJ
and was just two steals shy of a triple-double. (Brad Sherman)

r ve

game.
So uth e rn
I 4-U.
3-0 l
g&lt;&gt; t a 'care
lat e in th e
Sayre
game wh en
Mil le r 10-3 )
we nt ahead twi ce at 35-34
and 37-36. Katie Sayre put
Southern back on top for
good with a dr iv in g field
goal and Deana Pullin s
helped fini sh the Lad y
Fa lcon&gt; off wi th eleve n of
her game-hi gh 13 point'
coming in the final ro und.
Behind Pullin s' 13 poi nt s
and 'i x rebounds. Katie
Say re fin ished with 10 potnts
and six rebound' after sitting
out 'everal minutes after tak ing a knee in the cheekbone.
. Ashl ey Roush had another
good game with nine potnts.
Ashely Dunn had li ve points
and a team-hig h seve n
rebound s. Brooke Ki ser six .
Kri stiina William' four. and
Joanne Pickens 'two.
Je." il:" Hill had an other
good uefen,ive ga me "' did
Sw;an Bra uer tor th e
Tornadoes.
Emily Bray and Ashley
Hea vener each had I0 poin.ts
to lead Miller. whil e
Courtney Hoops added six .
Jenne Bolya rd live . Brianne
Hinkle three . and Kel si
Brown three.
The fi rs t half of the game.
Southern diun 't show up to .
Meanwhi le . Miller
play.
used it youthful enthusiasm
and an extended perimeter
defense to keep Southern on
the ropes. Southern made
numerous bad passes and ten
turnovers the ftrst quarter.
After trailing much of the
frame, Ashley Dllqn put
Southern up · 6- 5 and
Southern grabbed a rebound
with 19 seconds left. Going
for the last shot Southern
threw it awav and Ashlev
Heavener drove home a layup to give Miller a 7-6 lead
after one frame .
Miller continued to lead by
as much as five points in the

Please 1ft Southern, 83

Heism·an hopefuls struggled in big games
Bv JosH Duaow
Associated Press

NEW YORK Jason White
·appeared to be a lock to win the
He is man Trophy unti.l he flamed out in
the Big 12 title ga111e.
Luckily for Okl'lboma's qtlarterback, he was not alone.
Three of the four finalists for college football's most prestigious award
had their worst games of the seaso11
~ conference championships.~~~ .: ~. , _?
In a. sport where late losses often
count much more than early ones in
the rankings, White, Pittsburgh receiver Larry Fitzgerald and Mississippi
quarterback Eli Manning hope the
same doesn't hold true when the

.,

~ · .----

a.· !.;

Ml

11

Yfelsman ts awiidt.t Sa!Utday night.
White threw at least two touchdown
passes every game until wilting
against the heavy pressure from
Kansas State's defense Saturda~ in the
Big 12 championship game. ·

- -

·- -

relaxing and not playing. and others
are playing a championship game
against one of the best reams you will
play the entire year." Oklahoma coach
Bob Stoops said. "I believe most people will take that into consideration."
White was the only finali st who
played last weekend, after some of the
922 ballots had already been sent in .
Manning was at home after completing only 44 percent of hi s passes in ·
. a November showdown against LSU,
costing Ole Miss a chance to play for
the SEC championship. Fitzgerald
White went 27-for-SO for 298 yards. was R&gt;rovering from .a three-catch
no touchdowns and two interceptions effort against Miami in a loss .that cost
Panthers a share of th~ Big East
-in the 35-7 loss, turning what ·looked the
title
.
like a Heisman runaway into a potential! y close race .
PleltH-Hei-.B:S
"Some guys are sitting at home

.. ,_,

•'

�,

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 12,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Prep Scoreboard
fAelgs 46, Nelsonville-York 40
Nelsonville· Yot'k

12 4

12 12 -

40

Meigs

15 10 13 -

46

NELSONVILLE-YORK (0-4 , 0·2) -

8

Ah

Standall 1 0·0 2. Megan Sears 2 1·2 6,

Kateigh Bunt1ng 0 o-o 0. Jenmler Andrews

Q 0-0 0, Megan Edwards 5 0-0 10, Jordan
Bateman 4 0-0 8 , Jennifer Bishop D 0-0 a,
Whitney Maiden 7 0-3 14. TOTALS - 19 1S40.
:MEIGS (2·2, 1· 1) - Renee Bailey 6 1·2
l.J, Joey Haning 1 0-0 2 , Justine Dowler 1

Cm Hughes 74, Day CoL WMe 49
Cm . loveland 39., Mason 35
Cm . Made1ra 56. C1n . Fmneytown 18
Cm . Ma riemont 49, Cm. lnd1an H•ll

4.4

Cin. MI. Healthy 72 , Cin. Woodward

16

Cln Mt Notre Dame 76 , Gin .
Ursu line 33
Cm . Se ton 47, Ctn. Sl. Ursula 46
Gin Taft 80 , Day. Belmont 21
~2 2, Sammy Pierce 3 2-2 9, Angel Harte r
Cm . Tu rpin 42, Hamilton Ross 32
0 0-0 0, Jaynes Davis 7 6-10 20 TOTALS
Clarksville Clmton-Mass1e 54. New
- 18 9-H5 46
Richmond
39
3-polnl goals - NY 1 (Sears). Me1gs 1
Collins
Western
Reserve
56,
(Pierce)
Ashland Crestv1ew 35
Cots. Evangel Christian 39, Cots.
.
Southern 49, Miller 40
Southern
6 10 12 21 - 49 Wellington 30
Miller
7 10 6 17 - 40
Cols School fo r Girls 39, Cols. Tree
"SOUTHERN~ Ashley Dunn 2 1·4 5, ot Life 34
J.ess1ca Hill 0 0·0 0, Deana Pull1ns 3 7-12
Columbian a
Crestview
54 ,
1.3, Katie Sayre 2 6-8 10, Susan Brau er 0
0.0 0. Brooke Kiser 1 4-8 6, Joanne Lowellville 49
Conhnental 75, De f1 ance Tinora 18
Pickens 1 0-0 2, Ashley Roush 4 1-&lt;l 9,
Convoy C restview 46 , Columbu s
Kristiina Wi lliams 2 0-1 4 TOTALS- 15
19-37 49
Grove 38
MILLER - Lora Spencer 0 0·0 0,
Cortland Maplewood 41 , Andover
Courtney Hoops 3 0-3 6, S1era Toth 0 0-0 Pymatuning Va lley 38
0~ Bnanne Hinkle 0 3-4 3, Jenna Murphy 0
Covmgton 57, W Ale)landria Twin
Q.-4 0. Chrissa Beachey 0 0-0 0. Jenne
Valley _s 35
Bolyard 2 0-0 5, Emile Bray 4 3-4 10, Kels1
Dalton 65 A1ttman 28
Brown t 1-3 3, Sham Hoff 0 0-0 0, Ashl ey
Day. Carroll 92, Day. Stebbins 36
rleavener 5 0·1 10. TOTALS- t 5 7-21 40.
Day Dunbar 70 , Cm. Withrow 5 1
J-po1nt goals- Me1gs 0, M1ller 3 (Bray 2.
Bolyard)
Day. Jefterson 95, A1d . Christian 28
Day. Meadowdale 62, Gin Aiken 7
Ohio High School
Day. Stivers 65, C1n. Jacobs 21
Girls Basketball
DeGraff Riverside 36, Manari Cath .
Thursday's Results
30
-Akr Centrai·Hower 80, Akr Garheld
Delaware
Buckeye Vall ey
71,
94
Cal edonia River Valley 62
:Akr Ellet 72, Akr Buchtel 27
Delphos Jefferson 60 , Van Wert
Akr Elm s 39 , Mogadore Chnst1an 32 Lincolnview 30
Akr F1res ton e 73, Ak r. E. 31
Elida 59, Kenton 49
Akr Kenmore 57, Akr. N 31
Enon Greenan 63 , Spnng. NW 48
Akr Manchester 59, Akr Coventry
Fatrl awn 45, Houston 31
45
Fayat1 ev111e 64, Peebles 43
Albany Alexander 50, Wellston 40
Ftndlay 64, Lima Sr 30
Ansonia 49 , Newton 38
Franklin 5 1, Middletown Fenw1ck 45
App le Creek Way neda le 48, W.
Franklin-Monroe 71, Tipp Ctty Bethel
Salem NW 31
25
Arcadia 57, Vanlue 54
Ft. Loram1e 57, Botkms 45
Arcanum 60, New Paris Nat1ona l
Georgetown 66, Williamsburg 23
Trail 49
Germantown Valley View 43, Day
Arltngton 45, Le1ps1c 31
Oakwood 30
Ashland Mapleton 46 , Monroeville
Gtbsonbu rg 71, Elmore Wood more
36
53
Bascom Hopewell -Loudon 42, Tiffin
Glouster Trimble 68, Stewar t Federal
Calvert 39
Hockm g 47
.....,
Beave r Eastern 59, Franklin Furnace
Goshen 59, W1lm.ngton 49
Green 56, OT
Hamler Patrick Henry 68 , Delta 34
Bellbrook 54, W Mil to n M1lton-Umon
Hanmb al R1ver 40 , Whee lin g (W.Va .)
29
Llnsly 47
Belpre 53, McAr thur Vinton County
Ironton 60, Portsmou th 49
39
Jackso n 65 , Athen s 42
Berlin H1land 59, Tuscarawas Cent
Jamestown Greenev1ew 56 , Sprmg.
Cath 34
NE 40
Bloomdale Elmw oo d 70, Millbury
Kalida 66, Antwerp 37
Lake 35
Kette ring Alter 53, Hamil ton Badin
Bowling Green 55, Holl and Spring
44
35
Kmgs Mills Ki ngs 44, Little M1am1 41
Bradford
33,
Un 1on
C1ty
Kinsman Badger 50. N Bloom field
M ISSISSinawa Valley 29
Bloomfield 34
'
Bridgeport 52 , Woodsfield Monroe
Lalayette Allen E. 54. Bluffton 51
Cent. 42
Lewistown Indian Lake 52, Urban a
Bnstolvllle Bnstol 36, Lordstown 36
50
Brookfield 37, Sharpsville (Pa .) 25
Lima Bath 51, L1ma Shawnee 50
Cadiz Hamson Cent 59, Wmtersville
Lynchburg Clay 58, Ripley Ripley·
Indian Creek 49
Union-lewis -Hu ntington 31
Caldwell 61.
New Matamoras
Manchester 86, W. Umon 12
Frontier 33
Mana Stem Marton Loca l 50 ,
Canfield 45 , Cortland Lakevi e w 28
Delphos St John's 36
Cardington-Lincoln
64,
Gallon
Massillon Chnst1an 49 , M e ntor
Northmor 30
Chnst1an 6
Carey 60, Bettsville 15
Mass1llon Tuslaw 54. K1dron Central
Casstown M1ami E . 46, Bellefontain Chnslian 44
BenJamm Logan 35
McComb 46, Dol a Hardm N orth ern
Cin Anderson 61, Batavia Amelia 32 33
Cm. Christian 43, Mid Christian 33
Men tor 57, Rocky Rt ver Magnificat
Cm. Clark Montessori 67, Cm . SC PA 38
14
Mtam1sbu rg 67, Spnngboro 32
Ci n Glen Este 59, Walnut Hills 35
Middletown MadiSOn 62,
New
C m. Hamson 70, Cm. Wm ton Woods Lebanon DDue 42
.
55
Millersburg W. Holmes 57, Wo oster

2003

Tflway 36
Minford 78 Portsmouth W. 29
Mmstar 58. Ft. Recovery 43
Mississtppi Deaf 42, Oh1o Deaf 35
Morral Ridged ale 61 , Mt Gilead 32
Mt. Orab Western Brown 75 , BethelTate 60
Mt Vernon Academy 21 , Libe rty
Chnstian 20
N. Jackson Jackson-M•Iton 70,
McDonald 49
N
Lewisburg
Triad
63 ,
Mechantcsburg 46
Navarre Fairless 55, E Can 35
New Bremen 46, St. Henry 40
New Carlisle Tecumseh 40 , Spnng .
Shawnee 39
New Knoxvtlle 37, Rockford Parkway

21
New London 41 , Greenwich S. Cenl.
35
New
Madison
Tr1-Village ' 49,
Lew isburg Tn-County N . 16
New Riegel 43, Fremont St. Joseph

36
New South Walas (Au s.) 67 . Cm .
Western Hills 25
Newcomerstown 58, Bowerston
Conation Valley 43
Ntles McK inley 52, Mmeral Atdge 29
Oak Hill 85, Wheelersburg 41
Old Forl 43 , Fostoria St Wendelin 38
Orrv111e 49, Wooster 45
Oxford Tal awanda 59, Lemon Monroe 38
Pa ndora-G ilboa 53, Cary- Rawson
41
Pauldmg 60 , McGuffey Upper Scioto
Va lley 27
Pemberville Eastwood 53, Genoa 44
Perrysbu rg 52, Whitehouse Anthony
Wayne 28
Pomeroy Meigs 46 , Nelsonville-York
40
Portsmou th Clay 64, Portsmouth
Notre Dame 27
Port smouth SCIOtOVi(le 100 , New
Boston Glenwood 26
Preble Shawnee 58, Eaton 33
Racme Southern 49, Hemlock Miller
40
Ridgeway
Ridgem ont
43,
Waynesfi eld-Goshen 40
Au ssta 68, Jackson Cente r 42
S. Webster 46 , Lucasville Valley 22
Salineville Southern 66, Youngs
Wils on 35
Sandusky 59, Manon Hard•ng 42
Sarahsvi lle She nandoah 45, Old
Wash ington Buckeye Trail 43
Shaker Ht s Laurel 60, Elyria Lak e
Rodge 35
Smithville 50, J eromesville Hillsdale
40
Sparta H1ghland 44, Marion Elg1n 35
Spencerville 77, Lima Perry 45
Spring Kenton Ridge 98, Sf Paris
Graham 37
St . Bernard 63, Felic1ty 38
St Bernard Roger Bacon 44, Gin
Purcell Manan 32
St. Cla~rs v 1lle 64, Rayl and Buckeye
46
.
St Marys Memoria l 58, Defiance 50
Steubenville Cath. Cent 53, Weirton

(W.Va.) Madonna 23
Strasburg-Franklin 75, W. Lafayette
Ridgewood 36
Sugarcreek Garaway 68, Malvern 33
Swanton 51, Montpelier 36
Sycamore
Mohawk 57,
Attica
Seneca E. 32
"'
Sylvama Southview 43, Maumee 25
Tipp
City
Tippecanoe
59,
Bellefontaine 43
Tontogany Otsego 51 . Kansas
Lakota 42
Troy Chris tia n 54, Xenia Christian 35
Van Bu re n 62 , Findlay LibertyBenton 45
Van Wert 64, Ce l1na 60
Ve rs ailles 46 , Coldwater 41

31
W. Jefferson 50, Plain City Jonathan
Alder 36
'
W. L1ber1y-Salam 62. Spr ing Cath .
Cent. 43
Warren Hardmg 63, Youngs. Mooney

Bowl
In a surprise announcement and
despite getting beal by Kansas S1ala
35·7 011 Saturday night, Oklahoma
will taka its 12· 1 record to square off
lor lhe national title against LSU in
the Nokia Sugar Bowl on Jan. 4 in

54
Warren
Howland
48, Warren
Champion 38
Warren JFK 45, Struthers 28
Wayne svtlle 52 , Clayton Northridge
27
Willoughby
Hills
Cornerstone
Chnst1an 59, Elyria FBC S 18
Worthington Christian 67, Danville
42
Yellow Springs 5 1, Xenia Nazarene
35
Youngs. Liberty 63, Lee tonia 50
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 48,
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 34
Ohio High School
Boya Baakelball
Thurodoy'o Roauna
Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 72,
Cleveland .Fuchs Mizracht 68
Can . Heritage Christian 74. Cle.
Horizon 51
Castalia Margaretta 65, Milan
Edi son 49
Cols. Harvest Prep 77, Cols. Liberty
Christian 32
Kirtland 67, Orwell Grand Valley 82
Maryland Dea f 93, OhiO Deaf 25
Massillon Chnstian 56, Mentor
Christian 50
MI. Vernon Academy 62, Evangel
Chnst1an 46
Oak Harbor 62, Huro n 45
Port Clinton 58, Sandusky St. Mary's
55
Sandusky Perkm s 64; Clyde 60
Willoughby
H1lls
Cornerstone
Chn st1an 49, Elyrta FBCS 39
Kilbourne
54,
Worth1ngton
Groveport 50

W.Va. prep basketball scores
Thurtday'a Resulta
Girls
BraKton County 52, Clay County 40
Bridgeport 54 , Robert C. Byrd .22
Broadfordmg Chnsttan, Md . 21,
Martinsburg Fai th Christian 10
Calvary Baptist 35 , Gauley Bndge
17
Capital 77, Cabell Midland 26
Fayet1 ev11ie 48, Valley Fayette 23
Fort H1ll, Md. 56, Musselman 35
Frankfort 42, Allegany, Md. 37
Gilmer County 54, Grafton 43
Glenvar, Va ., 39 , Mercer Christ1an 34
Hundred 61, Tnntty 46
Jeffe rson 42, Hampshire 36
Lew1s County 75, Lmcol n 40
Magnolta 81, Uri1on Local, Ohio 33
Morgantown S6, Elkms 43
Mount V1ew 57 , Midland Trail 51
North Marion 43 , P reston 39
Pad en C1ty 71, St. Marys 62
Parkersburg 69, St. Albans 30
Pike View 68, Pocahontas, Va . 34
Pocahontas County 80, RIChwood 35
A1ver, Oh10 40, Lmsly 27
Roane County 45, Wlrt County 38
Shady Spnng 58, Greater Beckley
Christian 53
Southern, Md . 57, Tucker County 51
Steubenville Central , Ohio, 53 ,
Madonna 22
Summers County 108 , L1berty
Rale igh 18
University 55, East Fairmont 46
Valley Wetzel66, Liberty Harrison 21
Wahama 61, Buffalo 27
Webster County 61 , Oak Hill 41
Westside 33, Scott 23
Woodrow Wilson 85 , ~eadow Bridge
39

Tuesday, Dec. 16

New Orleans Bowl
North Texas (9-3) vs
Memphi s (8·4)
7 p.m (ES PN2)
I.

Thursday. Dec. 18.

Monday, Dec. 22

Tuesday. Dec. 23
Fort Worth

GMACBowl

Tangerine Bowl

at Mobile, Ala .
Louisville (9·31vs.
Miami (Ohio) (12·1)
7:30p.m. (ESPN2)

at O~ando , Fla.
North Carolina
Slate (7·4)
vs. Kansas (6·6)
5:30 p.m. (ESPN)

TCU (11 · 1) vs.
Boise Stale ( 12-1)
7 30 p.m. (ESPN)

Wednesday, Dec. 24

Thursday, Dec. 25

Fnday, Dec. 26

Las Vegas Bowl

Hawaii Bowl

Motor City Bowl

New Mexico (8-4) vs.
Oregon St. (7-1)
7:30p.m. (ESPN)

al Honolulu
Houston (7·5 ) vs.
' Hawaii (8·5)
8 p.m. (ESPN)

at Detroi1
Bowling Green (1 0·3)
vs. Northwestern (!Hi)
5 p.m. (ESPN)

Salurday. Dec. 27

Monday, Dec. 29

lnslght.com Bowl
at Phoenix
California (7·6) vs.
Virginia Tech (8·4)
8:30p.m. (ESPN)

Continental
Tire Bowl
at Charlotte , N.C
Pittsburgh (8·4) vs.
Virginia (7·5)
11 a.m. (ESPN2)

(Texas) Bowl

Pettitte agrees with Astros, Yankees and
Dodgers agree tentative deal for Brown
NEW YORK
Andy
Pettine pUI on the jersey of his
hometown Hous10n Astros
and prepared to make another
pitch -to Roger Clemens.
The New York Yankees got
busy, too. After seeing their
longtime lefty leave for $7 1/2
million less than 1hey offered,
the Yankees zeroed in on
Kevin Brown - trying to
work out a trade for Jeff
Weaver.
"When I left there after
(World Series) Game 6, I
never really envisioned
myself in a different uni·
form," · Pettitte said . "I
thoughl that they' would try to
make a serious push to sign
me then ."
·
There was plenty of action
across baseball Thursday, and
the winter meetings haven' t
even staned yet. The annual
· swap session starts Friday in
New Orleans, with Alex
Rodriguez,
Vladimir
Guerrero and Greg Maddux
certain to be mentioned most
prominently.
Former AL MVP Miguel
Tejada said he expects to sign
a contract by ' the end of the
weekend, but wouldn't say
with which team. The
Oakland Athletics say 'they
can't afford to give him the
long·term deal he wants, and
Seattle is interested.
·Free agent catcher Benito
Santiago found a new home
in Kansas City, the Chicago'
White Sox and pitcher Mark
Buehrle agreed on an $18
million, three-year contract
and the Mariners gave multiyear deals to outfielder

Randy Winn and pitcher
Ryan Franklin.
Also, 41-year-old pitcher
Dan Plesac retired after an
18-year' career.
Pettine accepted Houston's
heavily backloaded $3 1.5
million, three-year deal after
weighing a new offer from
the Yankees on Wednesday
night.
The Yankees' lasl offer was
for $39 million over three
years, with only $26 million
over the 11rst two seasons
guaranteed.
But the Astros play near
Pettitte' s hometown of Deer
Park. an important f.ac tor for
the pitcher's family.
"They really wanted me
here," Pettitte said. "My heart
started pulling me and tugging me· to come back down
here and play in front of the
Astros and the Houston fans. "
Pettine will get $5.5 million next season, $8.5 million
in 2005 and $17.5.million in
2006, according to contract
details obtained by The
Associated Press.
Pettitte, 31, was signed by
the Yankees in 1991 and went
149·78, including 21·8 with a
4.02 ERA last season. If he
had stayed in New York, he
would have had the chance to
surpass Whitey Ford's 236
,victories and become the
winningest pitcher in team
history.
With the Astros, he joins a
team tryir~g to rebuild and
win at the same time .
Houston dealt closer Billy
Wagner to Philadelphia last
month in a cost·cutting move.
Pettitte will combine with
Wade Miller and Roy Oswalt
to form a powerful front three

in the rotation.
Pettitte would like to get
Clemens, his former Yankees
teammate , on the Astros.
Clemens has said he is retiring to spend time ·with his
family in the Houston area.
"I left him thi s morning.
He's still working out with
me. We' ll see what happens,"
Pettitte said. "I know the
media's already hit him up on
that, and if I feel there's a
chan_ce, I'll hit him up on it,

In One Week With
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Items

al San D1ego
Washinglon
Slate (9-3) VS
Texas (10·2)
8 p.m. (ESPN)

at San Jose. Calif.
Fresno St (8·5)
vs. UCLA (6·6)
10·30 p.m. (ESPN2)

Music City Bowl

Sun Bowl

Liberty Bowl

at Nashville, Tenn
Wisconsin (7·5)
vs. Auburn (7·5)
Noon (ESPN)

at El Paso. Texas
Minnesota (9·3)
vs. Oregon (S-4)
2 p.m (CBS)

al Memphis, Tenn.
Utah (9·2)
vs. Southern
MissiSSippi (9·3)
3 30 p.m. (ESPN)

Silicon ,Valley
Classic

Ht:LPWM'IID

Wednesday, Dec 31

....... ... . .....

.

Outback Bowl

Bowl

Missouri (8,4) vs.
Arkan sas (8·4)
7:30p.m. (ESPN)

Colorado St. (7·5)
vs. Boston
College (7 ·5)
10:30 p.m. (ESPN2)

at Tampa , Fla.
Iowa (9·3)
vs. Florida (8·4 )
11 a. m (ESPN )

Gator Bowl

CapHal One Bowl

Rose Bowl

at Jacksonville, Fla.
Maryland (9·3) vs.
·West Virginia (8·4)
12:30 p.m. (NBC)

at Orlando. Fla.
Georgia (10·3)
vs . Purdue (9·3)
1 p.m (ABC)

al Pasadena, Calif.
Michigan (10·2) vs
usc (11·1)
4:30 p.m . (ABC)

lNG 20031 FEDERAL HIRE·
FULL BENEF ITS . PA1D
TRAINING 1-aoo-892-5 549

EXT95.

at Miami
Miami (ID-2) vs.
Florida St. (10·2)
8.30 p rn. (ABC)

Cotton Bowl

Peach Bowl
at Dallas
at Allanta
MISSissippi (9·3) VS.
Clemson (8·4)
Oklahoma St (9·3) vs. Tennessee(10·2)
2 p.m. (FOX)
4:30p.m. (ESPN )

Sunday, Jan 4
Sugar Bowl
at Tempe, Anz
al Bo1se, Idaho
at New Orleans
Ohio St. (I 0·2) vs .
Tulsa (8·4) vs.
Oklahoma (12·1)
Kansas St (11 ·3)
Georg1a Tech (6·6)
vs, LSU (12·1)
8 p.m. (ABC)
Noon (ESPN or ESPN2)
8 p.m (ABC)

Humanitarian Bowl

NOTE. All ttmes EST

SOURCE Assoc1ated Press

Lo!rrAND

AP

Judge says Stringer's survivors
owe the Vikings, other defendants

starts in 2001 and 10 in 2002,
but he rebounded to m·ake 32
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - court fees and other lawsuitstarts last season, when he
The
survivors of Korey related expenses.
had the second-lowest ERA
Stringer
owe the Minnesota
The judge filed the order
in the NL behind Jason
Vili.ings
and
other
defendants
this
week. In April, Larson
Schmidt.
in
the
family's
lawsuit
more
threw
out most of the lawWeaver, 27, has struggled
than
$4
7
,000,
a
judge
ruled.
suit
's
claims
and dismissed
since the Yankees acquired
Hennepin
County
District
the
allegation
s
of negligence
him from Detroit in July Judge Gary Larson ruled that
2002, failing to keep his spot plaintiffs Kelci Stringer, the against the Vikings and their
in the rotation. He was 7-9 player's widow, his estate, employees. ,
with a 5.99 ERA last season, and his parents, James · Korey Stringer, a 27-yearand allowed the 12th-inning Stringer and Cathy Reed- old Pro Bowl offensive tackle
homer to Florida's Alex Stringer, are responsible for from Ohio State, collapsed
too."
·
Gonzalez that won the pivotal $47,588.03 that defendants after practicing in high heat
New York wasted little time fourth game
the World · spent on expert witnesses, and humidity on July 31 ,
2001, at the Vikings' training
finding a replacement, agree- Series.
depositions;
medical
records,
camp.
ing to the outline of a tentative trade wilh Los Angeles
that would bring Brown for
Weaver, two baseball officials said on the condition of
anonymity.
The Yankees would send
Los Angeles two minor leaguers and $3 million to cover
part of the $15.5 million
Weaver is owed in 2004 and
2005 - $6.25 million next
year and $9.25 million in
2005.
Brown, who has the right to
Motors
block a trade, must approve
any deal and has not yet been
approached, agent Scott
Boras said. Players must pass
physicals, and the Yankees
want to review Brown's contract before signing off on the
trade; the officials said.
Brown, who turns 39 in
March, signed baseball's first
$100 million contract with
the Dodgers, a deal that has
two seasons remaining at $15
million annually.
He was 14·9 ,with a 2.39
ERA last year for Los
740·992·6614 • 1-800-837·1094
Angeles~ but has pu shed for a
trade to a team closer to his
home in Macon, Ga.
........ _,.
· Injuries limited him to 19

tJf

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1ces, we llave an opportunity
to offer employment to AN 's
part time/ fu ll 11me. We offer
12-hour ·s hifts, extremely
compet1t1ve wages, 40 1K
"~qual opportunity employ· plan and excellent health
and dental Insurance Apply
e
1n person or call Judy
_ H
_ o_m
_e_W
_o_rk
_ N_eed
_ ed_.Barcus,
AN tDO N
at
For assembly work Send 1 (740)446-7 1t 2
SIZe ~1 0 self addressed
Arbors at Gatllpolla
stamped envelop too.
170 Pinecrest Drive
JC
Phone ' (740)4.&lt;&amp;7112
PO Box 87
Fox : (740)446-9088
Wauseon, Oh. 43587

I&lt;I \I I " I \ I I
n..-l.l:.o.l

'

$9t60- Save th is
Week-'s Feature Home . New
Save
2003, 4 bedroom, 3 bath,
over $9.000 In Factory
Options at Dealer Cost,
2280 sq. ft., Huge Family
room , Purchase ThiS Home
Fr iday 12/ 12 or Saturday
1211 J and rece1ve a free Hot
Pomt Washer and Dryer
Cole's
Mob1le
Homes,
15266 US 50 E. Athens.
Ohl o 4570t "Where You Get
Your Money's Worth"

r

L&lt;m; &amp;
ACREAGE

'"---iaiiiiiiiiiiiiiia-·
28 ac res m/1 on Scemc
Onve 15 mtn

$35,000
8142

from town
Call (740 )388·

2 bedroom, WIN carpet
wood deck , very, very mce
In
OaiUpohs.
Phone
(740)441;·2003 or (740)448·
1409

One Bedroom Apt an 2nd
floor in Po1nt Pleasant Call
(304)675·21 44

or two people No pets, ref-

erences. (740}441 -01 81

E H.O

3 Bedroom mobile home
located on Forrest St
Henderson , Wo/ $300 per
month, will accept assistance . Ph. (304)675·3626
Trailer for rent, ideal lor one

r

APAR'IMENfS

IURREVT

All r••l . .tat• ad'tlllrtltlng
In this newapeper Ia
aublect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1181
which mekl'llt utegat to
ltdvertiH "env
prefer•nce, limitation or
dlacrlmlnetlon baNd on
race, color, religion, Hx
famlllel at.lua or national
origin , or anv lnlentlon to
make anv euch
praforenca, limitation Df

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious
2 Bedrooms. 2 Floors. CA t
1r.i. Bath, Newly Carpeted .
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool .
PatiO, Start $385/Mo No
Pets. Leaae Plus Security
DapoSII Ae&lt;:julred, Oays
740-4.o46-3481 . Evenings
74Q-367-Q502

r

$350 mo , ut1l1t1es paid
2 Bedroom house, full base- depos1Vrefere nce required
menl, stove and re frigerator. No pets. t740)446-3667.

furnished 1n Town $400. par
month,
plus
deposit
Aequ1rod.
References
(304)675·8902
2 BR and 3BA, both
water/trash pa1d . no pets,
need references, near porter
388·1100

dl acrlmlnetlon."
Thla nowsp11p11r wtll not
knowingly accept
l:dv~rtiMmenta tor real
estate which Is In
violll'lion of the law. Our
reader• are hereby
Informed that all
ctw.mngt advertiMd In
lhlt newt.,..,. are
av•l..bla on an equ•l

opportunity ba ....

2 m11es from Pomeroy, 2
bedroom , k1tchen furnished,
$350+ utilities. $350 depoSII,
no pets. (740)992 ·5421
2br house m New Haven
$300 a month. Ref &amp; secunly
dapos 1t
reQuired.
(304)882·2890
2br. References &amp; deposit.
No Pets (304)675-5 162

3
Bed room
Brick,
Mercerville Road, Ctose to
New Log Home on t 3
schools, $500/mo
Call
acres, land contract avail(740)25 6·1 417 or (740)256·
able, 1t needed $240.000
6228.
(740)256-9247 or (740)6450870
3 bedroom home wlbasement m country. near
Ranch, 3 Bedroom, 2 Car Rodney
$500/month
garage, New Haven, W.Va Deposit
&amp;
references
Photos. mtormat1on onhne (740)245.Q380 after 8pm
www orvb com,
cOde 3 bedroom
house In
~j;~_03 or call 304 • 882 · M1nersv1lle, $400 per month,
depostt ,
HUO
$250
approved. (740)949·2025

r:

MOIIILE HDME'i

fUR SALE
~ow--iliii.iiiiiii;.,_.l
1997 OakwOod 14K70, payoff $17,500 'o rtake over pay·

3

Bedroom house 1n
$325.00 ·$400 00
+deposit. (740)992·0175

Pomeroy

ments. (740)•4t -8571

..,11"".,

eo_,

z

176 MWEJ.ANF.Ol5= I

90 Fleetwood 14x70 S1.999
• (740)709·111111 or (740)288·
1805

T2~~~e. r
=

Rea lity, 740-992-

Partly rurn . 3 br. houH out
Now 2p03 Doubtawide 3 BR bade ol lolar1, vood """' &amp;
&amp; 2 Bath Only $1895 down chalr like new 304-88.2&lt;~a7o

21 Strtoul Ptoplo Wonted

Who want to LOSE weight
We Pay You Cash tor the and &amp;29 5/mo. 1-800-691.

~677=7====..,---,

j

D~

MOIIIUFORftl'.i"ll

Buy or sell
A1venne Used Trumpet $300 Call
A.nt1ques 1124 East Main ( 304)675~4729
between
on SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740.
~
992-2526 Rus s Moore.
I \ 1 ~'1"1 l' l 'llt"'
owner.
\ • I \ I '- II II h.

r~~'r

3 yr old Dell co mputer. " - - - - - - - - ·

Pleasant Valle~ Apartment
Are now taktng ApplicatiOns
for 2BA , 38R &amp; 4BR ,
Appl ica tio ns are taken
Monday thru Fr1day. from
9·00 A M -4 PM Otf1ce IS
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve Po1nl Plea sant . WV
Phone No IS (304 )675·5806

m

Med1 Home Health Agency,
Inc seeking a lull·t1me AN
Case Manager tor th e
Gallipolis Oh10 location
Must be li censed both m
Ohio and West Virginia
Min1mum two years supervision , management and
home he~;~~lth &amp;Kpenence We
offer a competitive salary,
benellts package, 401 K, and
flex t1me E 0 E. Please
send resume to 352 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis , OH
45631 Attn D1ana Harless. The Point Pleasant Register
has an 1mmed1ate full-lime
AN Clinical Me.nager
customer service pOSition
Medi Home Health Agency, available Successful appll-.
Inc . seakmg full ·time and cant must be computer li terPAN Physical Therapists, ate. able to work w1th numand PAN Physical Therapi st bers, and enJOY worktng
Pos1110n
Ass1stants tor Oh10 and w1th the public
West V1rgm1a client base otters all company benef1ts
We offer competitive salary including health, dental,
E.O E SIGN·ON· BONUS vis1on . and life 1nsurance,
tor lull-time status Please 401 K; pa1d vacatton, and
send resume to
352 personal days For employSecond Avenue . Gallipolis, ment consideratiOn please
OH 456 31 Attn : Diana send resume to:
Apr1l Roach
Harless,
RN
Clinical
c/o GalltpoUa Dally Tribune
Manager.
PO Box ole9
INHO cun ror &lt;.;nn11mao1
Gallipolis, OH 45831
You can earn up to
•roachOmydellytrlbune.oom
$8/hour by calling on
behalf of major Non-Profit
Wanted ~ auto parts managand Political
er, Inventory, billing, counter
organizations. We slao
work, cell (740)"49·2217
Ofttr ~aid training
1am-9pm, Hill's Cla11lc
and holldev•: Call today.
Cars
'
1-Bn-483-8247 ext. 2454.

Don ~ate Motors

Norttt 3rd Ave Middleport 2
bedroom furn ished apt
Oepostt
&amp;
reference
required No Pets (740)992·
0165

House and 112 acre of land
m Flalrock, West Virgir'la 1 and 2 bedroo m apa rtCompletely reflntshed home. $ 10 ,000. Call aft er Spm ments, furnished and unfur·
Great location. 1n GallipoliS (740)992·6769.
nlshed, secunty depos1t
Ohio 3 bedrooms. 2 full
r equired~ no pets, 740-992baths pnced to sale now LOIS N9 &amp; 10 Heatley S 22 18
Add1t1on 1n Bidwell Two
Phone {740 )446-9539
large 18\lel lots Price to sa le 2 Furnished sma ll apart now Phone 740-446-9539. ments for rent Living room.
kitchen . bedroom. &amp; bath. Twtn Rivers Tower IS acceptI&lt;I '\ I \I 'each all utllttles petd Ing appliCati ons tor waiting
C;;::=::;;:===~ $275
except electric {304)675- hst for Hud·SUbSIZed, 1· br,
HousFs
1365
apartment, call 675-6679
FOR RL"'lf
258 State St, 1 BR , furn EHO

Tt1e Gallia Lawrence Farm
Service Agen cy 1s accepting
applications tor a full tune
permanent off1ce position
w1th benefits. Applications
may be picked up at , the
Farm Serv1ce Agency oft1ce,
111 Jackson P1ke room
1571, Gallipolis Oh10 4563 1
or by calling the office at
(740)446-8687. All applicatiOns must be returned to the
office by 4 30 pm Monday,
December 22, 2003

80().201-01132

2 bedroom mob1le home
Water. sewage, trash pa1d
No pets. Secunty depos1t
reqUired Call (7-40)441 4540

~

FOR SALt:

Substitute AN wanted lor the
Me1gs County Board on
Me ntal Reta rdation and
Developmental Disabil ities,
hour s 9am-3pm, must have
current AN license 1n the
state of Ohio Prefer eKpen·
ence in publiC health nurs1ng
and/or work1ng With children
and aduhs with developmental disabilil!es Send resume
by Friday, December 25th to.
MCBMROD, 13t 0 Carleton
Street , P O
Bo11 307,
Syracuse, Oh 45779

pounda
you LOSE
!
Sate, Natural,
No Drugs.

1r

lllKSALE

Jovce

~tUet ~~ ~'~Lie teaUt- tue tAe ~-.

-~

PR~ONAI.

Therapl•t ~ri'l:io~~"'-""!'H~&lt;·~-·~··-....,

•
1

Now you can haw borders and oraphlcs
lL.1o
addedtoyourclasslfledads
(.~
1m
Borders 53.00/per ad
l!ill
Graphics SOC far small
S1.00 for Iaroe

MOIIII.E HDME'i

I~

SERV~
-TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wint
1-888·582·3345

competitive salary, . flextble
work hours, and generous
benefit package
Send resume to
Tn·State Physical Th erapy
Inc
PO BoK 375
Barboursville WV 25504
For Job lnq wes call 304733-9870

i

Brick In Gall!poU1 . 3 bedbasement,
rooms, !•bat•
. ;J
, ,, ,
Acldreeura wanted lmmedl·
at.ayl No experience necas2000 14x70 3 bedroom, 2 carport, $6SO, references ,
blth, dishwasher, atove, ret. dapoalt. no pata 740-448Jary. Work at home. Call
(&gt;10&amp;)447-«!97
large back deck and front ;9;,20;,;9,.1""'_ _ _
otepa InCluded. $20 ,000 ,
An Exctrltnt way to 11rn
.
1740)379·2928
money. Let• talk tht ·
bedroom , 1 bath hout
NEW AVON.
OCittd In Rodney VIlli
2003 "OakwOOd 16xBO. 3
Coli Ma~lyn 304-882-284~ Now Hiring Dancers. Inquire
I, family room , living room
bedroom, 2 bath, all the
304-875-6919
II AT 35 Adult Video &amp;
ew heat pumpllurnance
extraa,
asking
$29,000
must
April 30ol-812·3630
bookstore . Day &amp; ntgtlt Oolllpollo
SOD/ month +depoal t
Collogo be
moved,
evenings
ohlffs.(304)93J.49DO
or
740 6·3128
(Carears Close To Home) (740)949·2446
1304)549-5898. Amatouro
·Call TOday174Q--«S-4367,
Middleport, 3 bedroom
WelCOme ,
1·800·2 1.o4-o452
NHCf lo uii-Good otun home on nice quit street, for
www.galllpolllwirHrcollegl com R~l. Only tefL
rent or 11le, owner will
A~ •90-05· 1274 997 Redman 16x72 $10,999; fin ance, conlact
Dottle

Call Randy Reed at (740) 112·6614
or 800·8:57·1094.

'-.:-~=:=.~) ~

j

and

occypttlonal

Bus~

~
&lt;:41
PHI O VALLEV PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business with pea
~e you know, and NOT t
end money ltuough th
~ail unit I you have 1nvestl
ated the offer ing_.

Physlc•l

Seekmg
Theroo!st

1o

.r.~~~OrroimJN~:~~'~f~IY~~

H1ring · Clerk!Treasure/ITaK
Adm1n1strator
Pos1t1on
Appointed positiOn, full t1me
w!benelits, apRhcation &amp; JOb
description may be picked
up at the MuniCi pal Bu1l d1ng
at 174 E College Ave eam
to 4pm Deadline 12119/03

Vacation T 1me.·Aiterat 1on
Shop Closed 12/1 9,-0pen
KVC
1/6.
Hr's.
Behavioral HealthCare
Tuesday/INednesdayfThursd
MASON
ay 10-5 , or call (740)446- .Fam1ly Serv1ce Specialist.
6188 . Happy Holidays thts is a case management
Shirley &amp; Howard
position and applicants
must llave a Bachelor
degree and be WV soc1al
GIVFAWAY
work licensable Pay starts
--at S11 29 hourly DOE
2- a week old pupp 1es.
KVC provides In-home and
male, 1 female Very cute foster ca re serviCes to chl1and smart. Ca ll (740)2 56- dren and families KVC
6413.
otters e)(cellent tra1n1ng.
1ncludmg LPC supervtslon,
3 tree klnen s, 2 mas &amp; 6 and benefits Send resumes
to HR Dept.. 200 Bradford
moa., (740)985-4416
St , Charleston, WV 25301
4 puppies - t male , 3
Call SQ0-835 -5277 Fa" ·
females. 112 baKer , have 347 -9728. E-ma11.
bean wormed and have 1st wvhrOkvc org. EOE.
shots
Great
to r
Christmas (740)992-1 080
Make 50% selling Avon
L1m1ted
ttme
ONLY
6 hall Lab puppies, about 6
t 740)44&amp;3356
weeks old , and fuzzy Can
{740)245·91 14
Great MANAGING
STYLIST
Chri stmas Gitlll
NEEDED for busy salon .
SCISSORS
1 Guineas to give away Call SASSY
(740)441-1880 or (740)256·
740)992·9463
6336

r

Friday, Jan. 2

Orange Bowl

ANNOUNCE ""

MENf.USPS1SLD UP TO
S29.16 PER HOUR. FREE
CALL/ A P P Ll CAT I 0 N
INFORMATION NOW HI A-

Thursday, Jan . 1
San Francisco

C-1 Beer carry Out permit
tor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs County, send letters
of Interest to. The Daily
Sentmel, PO BoK 729·20,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PUBLIC

....

Independence Bowl
at Shreveport, La.

to-

Detcrlption • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrewlltlon•
• Include Phone Number And Acld1'4111 When NHded

Tuesday, Oec.30
Navy (8·4) vs.
Texas Tech (7·5)
4:30p.m. (ESPN)

992-2151

POLICIII: Ohio Y.t.., Puttllsl*tg ,......... at. right:
~ or HnOet eny ad • sny diM. lmn mu..: 1M r.ported on lhll ftnl ~ of
lrlbuM·hntlnll ,..,..._wHIM rapoMittlrl hH' no men ttwn tM co.~ vf 1tw ~peoe~ ~ tM .mw Md only U.. ftr~t ln.rtion. W.
no1HII
enr lou • npenN h i I'MUIU from the pubNcdDn ar orniiMon at ., ~"'- eorr.mon will be made In me ti1M ...,.. ..,.,. adhloft. • Bo•
lrll ..WIJII oCHrftct.ntial. • Cun.nt r.e. unl ~-· • AU r.l Nwtl HvwtiHIMnta .,..
to the Fed«1l Fair HDUIIInt Act of 1111. • Tht. ,.,,.........

• Stllrt Your Adt With A Keyword • Include Complete

Holiday Bowl

(304) 675-1333

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

Alamo Bowl

Houston Bowl

l\egtster

Oearllfiru

at San Antomo
M1ch1gan Slate (8·4)
VS. Nebll!Ska (9·3)
9 p.m. (ESPN)

Saturday, Jan. 3

Baseball ·

The

m:rtbune - Sentinel .f:'l\egtster
C ·L A S S I F I ~-

lklahOIDI and lSU
baad8dlorSugar

Vincent Warren 42 , Marietta 37
W. Carrollton 37, Trenton Edgewood

~·

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

2003-04 COLLEGE BOWLS

Fiesta Bowl

BY RONALD BLUM
Assoc1ated Press

Friday, Dec. 12,2003

....-- r,..

$650, for more Informa tion Baby P)lgmy goals cute•
Ready for Chnstmas Call
call (740)2 45-0155
740)24-5--9142
Cheiry Janssen P1ano.
ltw&amp;
excellent conditiOn, $1 ,000
GRAIN
t995 Grey Sulek Lasabra.
Own owner, excellent conditiOn $3,00J (304)675-5688 Dec 16 wtll be the last
tobacco sa le at
Dell computer W1th Cannon Farmers before Chrtstmas
or Roy
copter/pnnte rrscanner~a)l .n 1-888-844-4365
Mayes
304·675-2428
one wldask Ltke new. used

only.a little. (740)992.0274.

For Sale Hay aboUt 200Cl
For sale Tra1ler 4x8 drop bales S2 00 per bale Phone
(7 40)446-7857.
Oed (740)645-0921
Aooncl Bale hay l1 rsr anct
second cunm~ Orchard
grass and clover Cau
Stock.. Call Ron Evans. 1- (740)446-7787
80().537·9526
JET

•ERAT10N MOTORS
Repatred New &amp; Re built In

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steal Beams. P1pe Rebar
Far
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel Flat Ba r. Steel
Gratmg
For
Dra1ns.
Dnveweys &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
SCrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fnday. Oam--4 JOpm . Closed
Satun1ay
&amp;
Thursday.
Sunday (74&lt;l)44&amp;-7300

UpstairS,
2BR ,
S love I R e fr1 g erato r
Walerrrrash tnciuded. $285
BEAUTIFUL
APART· plus depos1l Call after
MENTS
AT
BUDGET 7•00pm (740}446-7620 or
PRICES AT JACKSON Daytime (740)441-0583
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383
Office Fumlturw
Wa lk to shop &amp; mQ\#19&amp;. Call
New. scratCh &amp; Dent.
Equal
740·4•6-2568
Save 70% 1-800-527-4662
Housing Opportunity
Argonaut51 9 Bridge Street ,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Couch Pastel flowers on Guyandotte/Hunt1ngton WF
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
white back~ round $100
PanasoniC 2r TV w1th storTownhou se
apartment s Caii 74Q-446-Q123
a~e stand 2 years olds.
houses &amp; mobile homes
$200. (30ol)892·8278
FOR RENT. Call !740)441 ·
Electric Range. $100. GE
1t11 for application &amp; infor- Washer Nice
$100,
mation .
Kenmore Washer- Like New.
Cartage Apt. 4 rooms, $250 $175; Kenmore Dryer, $150;
a montt1 Call (304)875-5540 Kenmore Ref ngerator. $150; Block., brick sewer p1pes.
or j304)675·4024 aak for Chest of Drawers wrth m1rror wlmtows. lintels, etc Claude
and dresse r. $140, Couch Winters, Rio Grande. OH
Nancy.
and Cha1r $150, 4119ry ntee Call740-2-45·5121
Efficiency Apartment, 3 d1n1ng chatrs. $40 each. Full
rooms and batn All utiltbes S1za bed w1lh box springs
Downstairs.
919 and mattress, $145 Queen
patd
Second Ave $285 month s1ze box springs and mat(740)4.&lt;&amp;3945
tress. St 50, 10% aft Sale 6 Vr old
tamale Snow
thru December, Skaggs Macaque
Monkey-tame
For Lease : 1600 sq Feet,
Appliance, 76 Vtne Street. S1 500. Call (740)388-8 1_42.
beautifully restored 2nd
(740)446·7398
floor, 2 bedroom apt 1 1/2
AKC Lab puppi8S. 7 wks on
baths. living and dimng
For
sale
operational Dec 23rd C.tmstmas Eve
room . rear deck. Lots of ator·
Craflmatlc bed 5500.00 304· pd·ups Availa ble yellow
age 'HVAC
Downtown
576·2262
S300 1740J985·J32il
GaUtpolla. Alt modern amenluea. $600/month Security Oood Used Appliances.
AKC miniature Schnauzer
and key deposits No pets
Recond ltiOn&amp;d
and pupptes, sal! &amp; pepper. black
References
required.
Guaranteed
Washers, &amp; Stiver, vet checked , call
(740)4-46....25 or (740)4-46·
Dryers,
Ranges.
and (740)696-1085 for puce &amp;
3938
Refrigerators, Some stan at avatllbill1)'.
FOJ Lease 2 floor, apaciou1. $9~ Skllggs Applianoea , 76
totally remodeled, 2 bed· Vlnt St , (740)446-7398
AKC Pomeranian pupp1es. 4
rooma, 1 1/2 baths, unfurtemalea and 2 males $300
nished apt. New HVAC and Matching couch and chair, 17 40)388-884.2.
appliance•
$600/month, recliner. In good conditiOn.
Chrlatmaa puppies AKC
plua utll!tlaa. Downtown 5110 Coll(740)441·9&amp;12.
Gallipolil. Security and Koy
rtglatertd Silky Te rrier 3
ct.poelt required. No pete. MollOhan Clrpet, 202 Clark tema le . 2 mat11 $476 6
Aaferencaa
required . Chapel Road , F'Mtr. Ohio. WHka okt. 2-10 month old ,
(740)H6 GBB2, 6:00 to 6.00. (740)446·7...... 1·877-830· ftmalll $800 (7 40)448·
9162 FIM Ettimottt. Euy 3756 flpm·,llpm only.
Furnlthed one bedroom Apt financing, 90 dllyt 11me u
clean, no pett. Mutt be wlll-- e111rt VIHI Master Card. Cocker Spaniel pupp111
lng to give rerere ncea. Drive- a· little ...... aiOt.
Sufi cotor, ahota, 6 weeki
Phone (30ol)e75· 1388
Old. Clll(740)446-4233.
Thompaon1 . Appliance &amp;
Grttcloualivlng. 1 and 2 ~
Ropotr-875-7388. For Olio. Melt
F-omerlan·dog-very
room apartmenll II VIllage
re-condhton~
1utomsrtc gentle Andtf J H. Yoder,
Manor
and
Riverside
wuhlira &amp; dl)'tfl, reFrigera- 103.21 St Rt 141 , Gallipolis
Aparlmlnta in Mlddltpart.
tors . gas and t lectrtc OH 45831
From $278-$348. Call 740ranges, a1r conditioners, and
992-5064. Equal Houamg
wrlngt r wathtrt. Will do Open your hHrt tttla season
Opport\tnltlea.
~ra on major brandl In lnd gtvo 000 o1 lhtlt _ ,.
derful dogl 1
hOmO.
Moellrn ono boclroom IPI lhop or at your home.
740
0380
Motgl Counly Dog Pound
UNCI furniture Store, 130 Phont (740)992·3779 1or
New 1 bedroom apt. Phone Bull'lllle Pike. Mattrauea.
more lntormaHon : Siberian
74()..U6-.3736
drtltert, eouohea. bunk Husky (ma lel. 3 yi-s ,
ml~t
bocla, good rafrlgtra.,.. gaa Bo"er/ Aottwtlltr
range , recllner1 , what--nota (female), 3-4 yra., 1mall
Grave
Monumenta. whlhl f'oklngeoe (male) •
(llonil typo)T.
17•0)448-4782 Gtlllpollt,

t

t

-r

••e

t:lNtl Mil. ,.,.,_ .

il[H~lirnaio)

)'!t..

•

WANTm
Medl Home Private Care 574.()501.
AN Suporvoaor lor
Wipolla o111c:e. Full blnoflt Receptionist position full
eon oow at 1-BQO. time. con1act C~ at Dr. Georges Portlbte Sawmill:
133--5848 or fax reaume to Wlltmortland office ~ · don1 haul your 1oQ8 to trte
:S·T~2315.
773-5333.
miM ju11 call 304-675-1957
'fooking

loclc•

..

To Do

Yot!CIW

2 )'It,

$5001 POLICE IMPOUNDS
Hondas Chevys Jeeps. etcl
Cars from $500 For l1shnga
1-800-719-3001 ext 3901
1991 Ford Tempo OLS
autoltl'lnt Neeos body won.:
but runs good.' $500 00
(740)992.()274
1993 Ltl1TIIna. AP VLS. $950,
1988 Honda C1v1c auto .
$600 1994 O!ds Cut1asa
Calais , $1 ,450 j 740)38 8~
9906
199.3 Mazda 323 102K runs
excellent. good fuel mileage.
$BOO Call (7-'0 )256·14B7

1994 Cadillac Sedan DB1111le
. W ~tte 67.000 m1les eKC •
cond $6900 304-675-7256-.
PI Pklaaant Hardware
1996 Pont1ac Grand Prix 4
door auto. $2.295 Day 740446· 1615 or ewnmg 7 0446·1244 .
1997 ,

INTREPID

92K

$2 995; 1989 CHEV TRUCK

V/6 AUTO. tt4K

$2 495.,
1997 Z·24 116K$3. t 95 118
others starting at .$395
COOKMOlORS
(740 ........ 103
1998 Saturn SL 4 dr 5
sp manual ABS 1 owner
$4299 30 4-675-6199 or
722·3862

95 Chryaler Newyorker.
excellent conclitiOr'l , leather
power sunroof runs great.
12500 must ae ll, 740-4180174

••1•-

For
1984 ,C adlll • c
atrtteh limo, tah condition.

r=
oo~ng

$500. (740)~ 92·3002

1

1989 GMC Ft5 4x4 , long
bed , 4 .3 Iller, automatiC Ct ll

740-109-9888.
1999 Dodge DakOta Spon.
48K mllaa, bedl 1ner, color
mltct'ling runn bdl . WS
vlaorlltghtl.
$10.000,
(740}192-6276 after 5pm
95 Chevy

-

$10, 4K4.

5

· CIMI&gt;Y- No rua1 COM

(TO\) 245-11102.

v.4-":ns"

·---iiiiliiiiio•.,l
1996
Jeep . CherokH
100,000 mltn, 4x4, tilt , CD
P'IYOf, "'"' good $2,500
OBO (740)256· 1233 or

r':0)256-11031.

II' ••~·

j

""''""'-'I,Ul'i .

Vfftllnla HouM Oln4ng 1ltbtt Oormen Slleppanl mi•. 4
with • 8 ch alra oak wood . mo. old
Nice large 2br. aptr'tment tn' $250. Cti1 (30ol)675·1383
=Reo-:111-11-~-~
, --C-hr-tll_m_ll_ 2001 ~. II.. new$ 1,20(1
quiet area. AN KitChen appU- LIM New
9
Coil 700-40U138-ovtnlngo
Mobile Horne tor rent. 3br ances turnlahed Call after
· oaaot1 Houna. 7 - •· or '1-1761-doy uk for
wlwasher &amp; dryer, stove &amp; 5pm weekday~ , and all day W11htf I Dryer togefl'ler
hod 111
WHQndl. (304)675-7828
$75.00 (304)Sil3-4308
$2SO.
Coli (140)3111-11327. Roll.
ret. (304)576-9991

-lnd-

(

.'

••

�• ., • " •• • •

Friday, Dec. 12, 2003,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

•

1

7 •

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I

.;1- ~

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• ''• •

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fric:tay, Dec. 12, 2003
OOP

Announcementi

. . . . '-'.&amp;..:

-

• •• •

•

~~

•

1 ,

. ,. ...

'I

..,

1 '4!

-# ~

'1'

_...... -

.....-..
t

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l\~
Chevy EnQine transmission
4x4, 350 bored 40 over flat
tops, 4 bolt main 15,000

miles, 700A transmiss ion

1s.ooo miles. Still in the
truck, can drive and check
them oul. Ru ns v(lfy good
Asking. $1200. (304 )675·
6440

For sole, tires 265175/A15
RWL Dayton, SO% tread
mounted on alum. Wheels
fits 85 chevy 4-wheel drive.
As~ng

$200.(304)675-6440

r M~

1

11- 1/2 foot slide in truck
ca mper. Has everything.
(740)645-(}921 .

1988 GMC Camper for sale.
(740)446-4325
'I Inti,...,

HoMI£
IMPROVEMENJ'S
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
GB70, Rogers Basement
YYaterprootlng.

1-r• •

CUI." D

Shoop

There will
be no
Bingo
at
Rutland
•
American
Legion
on

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5 .
NEA Cro .. word Puzzle
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

CHRISTMAS DANCE

an d

':=::::;;~=~

•
·.

Gifts &amp; Gift Baskets for all of
your holiday needs

Meigs County Senior Center

·.·

UPS Shipping Services

Entertainment by George Hall
no&gt;lC.A admiSSion $8.00/per nAo,onnL,
$5.00 with 2003·2004
Senior Center Membership
Info call Belh

(740) 992-2161

~

NOIHATTER
WH'ATYOUR

Tues- Euchre

{!j
... THE
NEWS"A4PER
HAS
SOIHETH'I"NG
FOR YOUH

e:=,

~"'=~~~:!!:'$~

December 16, 2003
Dinner from 4:00 • 4:45
Dance from 5:0P - 8:00

·12/15/03
12117103

Wed

&amp;

Fri.- Karaoke

Thurs.- Pool Tourn
Sat Band AM IX

9-1

BIBLE SALE
One Week Only!
(Dec. 15th - Dec. 20th)

·

· ~·.
·

. Holiday Hrs. ! Mon 10-8 pm; T- Th 10-6 pm ~
·
·
Fri. &amp; Sat. J0-5 pm; Sun. Noun - 4pm
.

~ . Located in Historic Dow~town Pomeroy · .

f;l

~·:

100 E. Mom

·.

740-992-7696

~

M~~~~-·~
Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan RNvea
New Homes,
Room Ad!lltlons,
Garages, Pole
~\llldlnga, Roofs,
Siding, Decks,
Kitchens, Drywall
&amp; More
FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742-341

f3,adlo,d
Ch,islmas
J,ee 1a,m

17401 992·3505
11 -28 lh 1u 12-?•1111 lLu k

Cut your own

Rl J3 W

t., !11

h!il

F .1~ t

~ortb

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds slarl

•

Regular $79.99 SALE $49.99
· Free Imprint!

Come To Us For
All Your Needs

F. 3 2
+ QJJtl!j
• i 4 2

Cellular

6:30
Last Thursday cf
every month
All peck $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get

Ee, P.'

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

5 FREE

WILLA'S BIBLE
BOOKSTORE

Pomeroy Auto Part.li
Machine Shop Service

416 Main St.
Pt. Pleasanl, WV 25550

UU"'i"&amp;ID

wvlth t h •

304-675-5833

cl.ssl1fleclsl

.SHOP CLASSIFIEDS

119 W SecoRd St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457(19

1740) 99Z·Z139

New Homes • Vinyl.
Siding • New Garages

CourierI Messenger

• Replacement
Windows • Rooting

• Prof..s/onal
• Confidential

COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

Bob lltJdr

FREE ESTIMATES

24S·S021

Income
1200· Admissions •
General Public
1·1·1-1220· Season
Tickets
(Season
Passes 42,448.00
1·1-1230- Admission
Tickets - (General
Admission Tickets)
93,591 .00
Total
1200·
Admissions - General
Public 136,039.00
1300 Privilege Fees
1·1-1310·
Concessions
(Concessions
10,236.00
1·1· 1320Building
Space
(Building
Space) 4.650.00
1+134QGround
Space
(Ground
Space)
9,163.00
Total 1300- Privilege
Fees
24,049.00
1400- Sales During
Fair
1-1·1430 ·
Glasses/Mugs (Other

sates-coffee cups
35.00
1-1·1490; Other Sales
(Other Sales
22.00
Tolal 1400· Sales
During Fair
57.00
15DO- Racing Fees &amp;
Charges
1·1-1510· Eritry Fees
(Entry Fee)
5,410.00
1H 540- Speed Fees
(Speed Fees)
11 ,980.00
1+1590- Other Race
Rocelplll (Other Race
Rocelplll)350.00
Total 1500· Racing
Fool &amp; Charges
17,740.00
1600 Sales During
Other Activities
1·1·181Q- Sale of supplies · (Sale ol sup·
plies)
43.20
Tolal 1800· Sales dur·
lng other activities
43.20
1700·
Ulllltlea
Reimbursements
1·1·1710- Electricity
Utllltlao 200.00
Total 1700· Ulllltlea
Relmburaementa

Total 1900- Rentals

22.602.00
2100- Stale Support
2·1·2210· Ohio Fairs
Fund
(General
Operations)
3,332.00
2·1·2130- Ohio Fairs
Fund
(Track
Maintenance)
5,000.00
2·1·2140· Ohio Fair
Funds (Stake Racing)
24,384.00
2+2150· Ohio Depl
of Agrlc (Junior Fair
Reimbursement)

4,208.85
'
Total 21 DO· State
Support 36,924.85
2200·
Local
Government Grant In
Aid
2+2210·
County
Govm"t
Grant
(County Senior Fair
Money) 800.00
2·1·2230·
County
Govern
Grant
(County
Jr
Fair
Funds) 500.00
2+2240·
County
Govern Granl (Capllal
Improvement)
3,200.00
2·1·2270Counly
Govern
Grant
(General Operalion
Fund)
2,000.00
Total 2200· Local

Government Granl In
Aid
6,500.00
3100
Restricted
Support
1·1·3130
Sponsorships
(Sponsorships)
5,720.00
1-1·3140- Promotions
(Promotions)
762.60
Total 31 DO- Restricted
Support 6,482.60
3200Unrastrlctod
Support
1-1·3210 • Gilts &amp;
Donations (Gilts &amp;
Donations)

434.25
1·1-3290·
Other
Unreatrlcled (Dihor
. Unrsstrlctod Support)
41,451.35
Tolal
3200Unrsatrlctod Support
41,885.80
34DO- Tronolors ·In
1·1·3400Translora In
80,472.25
Tollll 3400 • Tranoleroln 60,472.25
3500 Advances In
1·1·3500 Advenctt In
9,495.00
Total 3500 • Advances
In 9,495.00
3800·
1-1·3800
lntoreot (lntereot)
843.29
Totallncoma
370,889.78
Groos Profit
370,889.78
EXPENSE
4000- Salarl11 &amp;
Wage a
1·2-4011). Secrelary'o
Salary
(Secretary
Salary) 5,512.50
1·2·4030- Graundo
Maintenance

200.00
1800-Foes
1-1-1810. Clo88 Entry
Foeo (Class entry lee)
621 .00
•
1-1-1820·
Mamberohlp
Foaa
(Membership Foes)
2,25!).00
1·1-1830Contaol
, _ (Conlttl Fees)
4,585.00
Tohll1800 Foee
7,451.00
11()[). Rontalo
Renllll·
1·1·1120Building
(Building
Rent)
800.00
1·1·1130- Renlal •
Csmp Sltao (Ranllll·
Camp Sites
( G r a u n d 1
10,345.00 '
Maintenance)
1-1-1940Rental·
6,188.58
Equipment (Ranllll · 1-2-4090- ·
Other
Equipment Income)
S.larleo
(Other
2,059.00
S.larleo) 1,853.00
1·1·1950· Rental • Talel 4000- Selarlea &amp;'
Stella, Pan (Stall , Wllgtt 13,552.08
Rent)
2.875.00
5000 Benetlbl
1' 1·196QRental·
1-2·5010 • Retlrsmonl

.

219.53
Total 5000 Benellls
219.53
61 00· Administrative
Expenses
1-2-6110· Board al
Dlrsclors (Directors
Expense)4,308.96
1·2·6130· Grounds
Maintenance
(Grounds
145.00
1·2·6140
Memberships (Admin
Expanses)
661.88
Other
1·2·6190·
{Other
Expenses

Servlces)987 .02
1·2·7330· Veterinary
Services {Veterinary
Servlces)600.00
1·2·7340· Contractual
Entertal( Entertain me
nt)
28,860.45
1·2-7350Ride
Company Expense
(Ride
Company
Expenses)
43,873.88
·1·2·7390·
Other
Services
(Other
Servlces}2,373.00
Total
7300Prolesslanel Services
78,892.15
7400
Property

expenses)

Services

82.07
Total
6100·
Administrative

1·2·7410 • Security
Services
(Night
Watchman)
4,898.00
1·2·7430· Computer
Services (Computer
Servlces}248.83
1·2·7440· Cleaning &amp;
Janitorial (Cleaning &amp;
Janitorial Ser)
4,116.00
1·2·7450· Grounds
Keeping
(Grounds
Keeping) 4,200.00
1·2·7460Trash
Hauling
(Trash
Hauling) 2,053.96
1·2·7470·
Sound
System
Service
(Sound System)
2,950.00
1·2·7490·
Other

Maintenance Expen)

Expenses
5.197.91
•
6200· Race Supplies
&amp; Materials Expen
2·2-6210
Race
Trophies &amp; Blank
420.00
2-2-6290- Other Race

Expenses

(Race

Suppllos)BS.OO
Total Race Supplies &amp;
Materials Expen

(Capital
Outlay·
Equipment)
1,093.97
2·2·791 o- Land
8.532.00
Total 7900· Capital
Outlay 61,093.97
8000 • Dabt Service
1·2-8090·
Non
Sufficient Fund (Non
Sufficient
Fund
Charges) to.oo
Total
8000· Debl
Service 1o.oo
9100 Senior Fair &amp;
Open Class Expen
1·2-9110- Senior Fair
Judges (Senior Fair
Judges)! ,210.86
1·2-9210 ·Senior Fair
Premiums
(Senior
F.alr Trophies Etc)
4.226.90
2-2-9120 • Senior Fair
Premiums
(Senior
Premium, Ribbons)
800.00
Total 9100· Senior
Fair &amp; Open Class
Ex pen
6,237.76
9200
Contest
Expenses

1·2· 9220·
Conlesl
Premiums (Comtesl
Premiums, Trophy)
16,560.63
Total 9200· Contesl
Expenses
16,560.63
9300 Junior Fair
Expenses
1·2·9310- Junior Fair
Judges (Junior Fair
Judges} 1,267.88
1·2·9320. Junior Fair
Premiums
(Junior
Fair Premium Money)
3,294.26
1·2·9390·
Other
Junior Fair Ex (Other
Junior Fair Expense)
3,000.00
2·2-9320. Junior Fair

505.00
6400 • Supplies &amp;
Materials
1·2·6410·
Office
Supplies
(Office
Supplles)797.03
1-2·6420· Grounds
maintenance Purchased
Serv
( G r o u n d s (Other
purchased
Maintenance Supp)
Servlces)9,504.00
404.38
'
Total 7400· Property
1·2·6490·
Other Services 27,770.79
Supplies {Supplies &amp; 7500 • Advertising &amp;
Materials)
Communication
1,305.35
1·2-7510· Legal Ads
Total 6400· Supplies (Legal Ado)
&amp; Materials
362.58
2,506.76
1·2·7520 Newspepero
6560Payroll
Ad (Newspaper ads)
Expenaes
626.20
Premiums
(Junior
7100
Ulllllles · 1·2· 7540· Printing &amp; Fair Premium)
Expense
Pub Feeo (Printing 4,708.65
1·2-7110· Electricity lees)
765.49
Total 9300· Junior
(Electricity)
2-2· 7520- Newspaper Fait Expenses
7,717.65
ada (newspaper ads)
12,270.97
1·2·7140·
Weier 190.00
9400·
Other Fair
(Water) 1,450.82
Total
7500·
Expenses
1·2-7150·· Telephone
Advartlalng &amp; com·
1·2·9490· Other Fair
(Telephone
munlcatlon 1,944.27
Expanses
(Other
, 2,216.34.
7600
Repairs
Uveatock aalo)
2·2·7110· Electricity Expenao
34,417.32
{Electric)
1-2-7610- Equlpmanl Total 9400- Other Fair
1,000.00
Rapolra
(Repairs· . Expenaea
202·7140·
Water Equipment)
34,417.32
(UIIIItles· water)
830.41
9500· Tranalora • Out
200.00
1·2·7630·
Building
1·2-9500· Translara
Total 7100 Ulllllles Repalra (Bldg &amp; Site Out
60,472.25
Expenoo 12,584.81
Ropalra} 873.43
Total 9500· Translera·
7200- Racing
·
1·2·7690·
Olhar Out
80;472.25
1·2·7220- Race Puroe Repairs
(Other 9600- 9600 Advance•
(Reco Puraa)
Repairs} 461.89
1-2-9800- Advancoo
22,874.00
Total 7600· Ropelro
9,500.00
1·2·7290- Olhar Race Expenn 1,955.53
Total 8600 - 9600
Rellled 1,175.00
7700a
lnaurance
Advancea
2·2' 7220- Race Purse Expenaea
9,500.00
(Race
Puree} 1·2·7720- Insurance - 9700
Other
24,384.00
Llablt'ty
(Liability
Mlace,llaneoua
2· 2·7230·
Starling
lnourancs)
Expenses
Gate
(Racing
14,771 .54.
1·2·9710
Non
Starting Gila)
2·2·7720- lnourance • Sufficient
Fund
800.00
Liability
(Liability (Chock Wrlle Olio)
2·2·7240·
Photo lnaurance)
864.00
Flnllh (Photo Ftnloh)
361.86
1,-2·9730- Reluncla ol
700.00
Tollll 7700- lnaurenco Depoelts (Rolunda of
Track Expensea
2·2·7250·
Depoe Ita)
Maintenance (Trees
15;133.50
.200.00
Malnlananco)
7800
Rant/Laue Total 9700 - Other
393.04.
Expenoea
Mlocollanooua
2-2-7260- Announcer,
1·2·7850- Rant Motor Expeneea
Judgeo,
(Racing.
Yehlcl~a
(Motor 1,084.00
Announcero, Juclgeo Yohlclea) 3, 101.85.
Tollll Expenss
etc)
850.00
1·2·7870- Rent/Lease 418,136.82
Tollll 7200- Racing
Equipment · (Rant Net Ordinary lncome50,978.04
Equip). 3,170.00
48,247.13
7300· Profeaolonal Total
7800 Not Income
Servicea
Rent/Le- Expenna
48,247.13
1·2·7310Legal
6,271 .65
(12) 12
Sorvlcoo
(Legal 7900 Capital Outlay
· Servlcsa)2,398.00
1·2·7810 Land
1·2' 7320- · Auditing
51,488.00
Services (Accounting
1-2-7840- Equipment

lass.

•

J '

as low as
$50 per month

~~·

,.

--...J

/14/NlJTt TtftJI:E ~ TtfOlJ6tfT
TtfAT t..A5T COMMAN/&gt;MENT
""' ''Le-e
OT&amp;J!Ie.Q
SA ,.,,
.....
fll',.
S, "'
"e'.'

750 Eas1 Sla1e Street

Phone {740)593-•66711
Athens, Ohio
A Beuer

,..

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

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." · ~ 1\··1' A:_; 1=

1'1achlne Quilting- Regulated Stitch
18 Patterns Anllable
Connie Curnutt
B!t!i-3962 Shop
owner(operator
B!t!i-3512 Home

BARNEY

Wr!it
Pa ss
Pass

Nort b
2t
:1

~T

rcooK- Tf\E. Cf.\IET Sf. t-IT rA-E 1\ ""~
: SU.SOi-1'5 GRE.f.Tlt-l&amp;:)
;CN&lt;.I:&gt;! l GU£~~

,..&amp;.JT ITDOE.St-.1'\SI'-.'&lt;
01"-1 Tf\E lt-6\0C 1

1\N'iTf\1~ '[ GUE.:)5 fiE DOC":&gt;t'l\ CJ'.RE. FoR'
~C. 1\U.. \W,T

r-\UC.\-1. (

1\FTE:R. 1\LL I

740-742-2076

BIG NATE

'"Not me!
My money is with
Rocky Hupp lnsuronce
and Financial Services,
Box 189. Middleporl. OH
843· 5264."

HERE , LET ME SEE
WI&lt;AT YOU'RE READING ..

HU88ARDS
GREEnHOUSE

Advertise
in this
spacefor$100
per month.

Syracuse, Ohio

Now op:;n for
Ch ri~lmas 6eason.
Poinsettias, Pots and
hangi ng baskets.
Open daily Monday
thru Saturday 10-4
Closed Sundays

'' WOOF WOOF
WOOF. WOOF
WOOF WOOF
WOOF WOOF"

Ti-1AT'S RIDICULOUS!

THE LADY AT
THE LIBRARY SAID
HER D06 LOVED IT

•
BETIY

..

740·992-5776

..·~· . .

·~'R~

I BOUGHT
YOUR C.HRI51"MA5

ANI' YE5,

IMPORTS

High&amp; Dry
SeH-Storage

PRESENT

Athen•

'

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

J&amp;l

Eledric
Licensed &amp; Bonded

97 Beedl St.
middleport, OH

CARPENTER (lO'xlO' 61D'x20'1
(740) 992-3194
SERVICE

992-6635
SEASONED
FIREWOOD

................
IIIII &amp; llcllt

lllllllck
992-2289~

32
33

35
37

40

earl
48 Flighlleoo
blrda
49 Suddenly·
bright star
50 Thrive
~ Night
hunter

of TV
Cuslard
Ingredient
Myrna of old
movies
Wrote on
glass
Forceful
people
Yearned

two

assumes that West has four ami South
two. So. East wins the second round of
diamonds, then returns a heart.
South. needing to get into the dummy.

G

31!145 sR ns
Lanasvllle, OH

45

31 Maude

story lnal os strange bul bel~evable. Tell a
triend about someone . you know whom
(s)he doesn't. Then. some days later. ask
someone else in your c1rcte tl (s)he has
heard the rumor. It so. dtd (sthe get tl
right? Probably not.
At the bridge table. some defenders ·gas·
sip" by playtng cards at random . re lustng
to help partner Others sttck to the facts.
making sure partner has the key in forma·

With useless cards,

Y." ~·tr ..,&amp; ... ·

5

'"*

stick to useful facts

leads the spade king . West plays the
eight: high from a doubleton . East can see
what is happening: he ducks his ace
South w11f probably continue w1th a low
spade 16 dummy's queen. but East grabs
tt1e trick and the contract must fail.

•
•f\l CARE.S
'
, FOR 1"\E.

I

For only

41 Sweater
letter
23 Monootlc
42 About that
title
time
24 Dll*!r"o
43 ·· Loo
25 Lively danca
G.anl"' olar
27 Stole
45 Sacral
29 Habeas
meeting
corpus, e.g. ~ Fell on -

HowreliableiSgossop?Tofindout start a

sequence .
South has only five lop tricks: three hearts
and two clubs. But he sees potential tricks
in both pointed suits.
After w1nning the first trick, South plays
the diamond king. West has unimportant
diamonds, so he should drop the six (or
. eight }, starting a h1gh-tow to show an even
number of cards . If West lias two dia ·
mohds. South has four: there is noth1ng
the defense can do, East therefme

"W,V"s #I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick. Olds
&amp; C u stom Van Dealer··

Wrap a.
Freeze

.J

and forcing ~wo clubs, then ret&gt;1dd1ng

1-800-822-0417

Skln,·cut.

t:asl
Pass
Al l pass

thought! "

22 Slips up

no-trump, shows a balanced 23·24 points
West leads the heart jack, top of his

Dean Hlll
New&amp; Uaed
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Raci ne, Ohio

YOUNG'S

Dealer: Soutll
Vulnerable : Both

1ntennlfl

47 C~lng In
51 Ocean flter
52 TV award
53 Gal~n
14 Iced drink
cargo
15 FriZZ"~ do
55 Made
16 Overcharge,
an .. A"
slangily
56 Twosomes
17 Towered
57 Promlu
over
58 Like the
19 Duplicate
horizon
20 Catch a
59 Fast plane
glimpse of 60 Cobbler"•
21 Machine
tool
par1a
23 South Sell
DOWN
locale
26 Punk
1 Lb. or tsp.
28 King ,
2Marohgr888
in France
3 Dog noll
29 Battle
4 Chicago
30 Defy
airport
authority
5 Evening34 Tool
gown fabric
for boring
6 Exhaust
36 Yellow
7 Ceiling
Pages
opposlte
contents
8 Gleans
38 I, to
9 Disgusting
Claudius
12 Retort
39 Unliable
13 Gelaway
41 Sly
18 ··Just--

South's sequence. opemng an artiiiCial

9 miles from Pt. Ple.sant
· on Sand Hill Road .

740-992-5232

A K Q
t K 2
.t. AM, .l 3

oPjlneo
44 Eltlntml
deflree
~ Typo of

tion to find the lethal defense.
In this deal. how should East and West
card to defeat three no-trump?

U-t buy quilt tops

FOR LAST SOURCE
OF TITLE SEE D.B.
324, Pg. 597 of the
Melga Caunly, Ohio
33795 Hiland Rd.
Recorda ot Doeda.
·Parcel
No.
11·
Pomeroy, Ohio
00025.001
Tho
Plaintiff
requeoto that aeld
premlou be oald,
your Interest therein
lorocloaod and lor
any olhor rollol aa
ahell be )ulland equl·
lllblo.
You ars required Ia • Room AddiHone &amp;
anawor the aald com· . RemOdeling
plaint by Joonuary 9,. • New Garages
2004 or Judgment by • Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Default will be ren- • Roofing 6 Guttera
dorsd agelnet you.
• Vln~l Siding &amp; Palnttng
MARK K. McCOWN, • Patio and Porch Oecka
REG, NO. 0068743
Free Estimates
ATTORNEY
FOR
V
.
C. YOUNG Ill
PLAINTIFF
992·6215
(11) 7, 14, 21 , 28 (12)
Pomeroy, Ohio
5, 12
Z2Y&amp;
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I

K J II :1

.........---T-tf_A_T_'II_A_S_A_S_C_A_Il_t-!f_O_Il_A----, , Avoid dubious gossip;

I

29670 Bashan Road

j -1

t A 74
• Q 10. 6

O~ni ng l,ead: •

45771
740·949·2217
Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
MID-STATE TRUST, IV
PLAINTIFF.
CASE NO. 03·CV·I02
vs.
MARY J. HAWK, ET
AL
DEFENDANTS.
Montgomery Ward
will take notice that
on August 28, 2003,
Mld·State Trust, IV,
flied Its complaint
against you In the
Court of Common
P18as
of
Meigs
County,
Ohio,
requesting the Court
to
terminate
any
Interest that you have
In
the
premises
desc·rJbed as follows:
Situate
In
the
Township ol Rutland,
Meigs County, Ohio:
BEGINNING at a point
In the centerline of
Route 124, said point
Is where the centera
line of Corn Hollow
Road Intersects with
Route 124i thence
with the centerline of
Route 124, S. 50 Dog.
33"E., 153.97 laotto a
point at thB center of
a bridge; thence N. 37
Dog. 1 132" E., 24.91
feet to tho true point
of beginning, said
point Is also In the
northerly right of way
line of Route 124;
thence leaving said
rlghl of way and
along a severance
line lhrough lhe prop·
arty
of
Douglas
Chapman, D aB, "109,
Pg, 395 (lour calls)
and following lho
centerline of a small
creek lor (two calla),
N, 2 Deg. 25' 13" E.,
94.17 feel, N. 35 Dog.
20137" E., 60-51 feet
to a point; thence
leaving said creek, S.
54 Dog. 08'43:' E,
313.52 feet passing
an Iron pin at 20.00
feet to an Iron pin, S.
41 Dog. 28'39" W.,
184.01 leetto on. Iron
pin In the Northerly
right of way line of
Raule t 124; thence
along aald right of
way line, N. 48 Dog.
31121"" w., 248,211eet
to tho point ol BEGIN•
NING and conhllnlng
1 .00 Acraa, more or

t

¥

in.this
space for

Let me do 1t for

. AJII~ 7

•

Hill 's Self
Storage

Storage
(Storage
Rental) . 1,748.00
1-1-1990
Rental·
Other
(Reserved
Parking) 4.975.00

•

JIIJ!f6 7
B fl 5 :J

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740-992-7599

Public Not.lces ln. New s p a p e r s .
Your Rlyhl to K..-.u-.. Dellvcr..-d Rla&amp;hl t.u Vu~.- l&gt;~u.-.

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•

NIV Life Application Bible

• t HOIVIE

MEIGS
COUNTY
AGRICULTURAL
SOCIETY
Profit &amp; Loss
December
2002
through November
2003
Ordinary
Income/Expense

•

www.mydallysentlnel.com
BRIDGE

2003 Suzukl AM 125; rOde
very llnle, like new. Cost
$4,850. Sell $3,800 or trade
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Ph 7oiO•tt2-ot:sJ
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ROBERT
BISSELL

giv~

fHEN THE
GAME'S AFOOf!

by Luis Campos
. Celeb"!ty C•plle! Ct)'OIO{Irams are cr~1ea !·DI"1 QLJOiaiii}I1S 1t1 t11rr-.owi peook! oa~r ano prM#JN
Each teller ·~~ :Opr&gt;e' star.:~~ l(lllr()lhf•

TQday s rJue Z eauals P

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION ...- "It you re an art1st 'fOI.. try to ~eep an ear to the

count

ground and an ea1 to yoU! heart " - Bruce Sonngsteen

(&lt;12003 by NEA. Inc

AstroGraph

12·12

.,.,.,. 'lllrthda,y:

Salul'day, Dec. 13, 2003
By Bernice Bede Oaot
Your range ol interests and activities co uld
be substantially expanded •n the year
ahead . This will be due in pa rt to an optimistic ou Uook and curiOSity about the
world alou nd you and warrhng to experience it all
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21)- Act 111
accordance wilh your own Ide as today and
ignore all the kibitzers. You know what you
Want and how you want to do 11, ana any·
thing you personally manage Will work out
favorably.
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19) - EnJOY
the assistance you receive today and don't
feel under the gun to immediately retllro
favors that anybody does tor you. Let rt be
known that you 'll balance accounts at a
later date.
AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - Fnends
are likely to be involved rn seve ral lacets of
you r lite today, but one thrng they won 't be
is a problem. Your friendly na1ure turns
everyone into a pleasant. allable person.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Any objective that is truly meaningful to you can be
accomplished today, because you won 't
hesitate to throw your lull weight Oehind it.
No job or challenge w111 be too overwhelm·
ing .
ARIE S (March 21·April 19) - What you
thought ye"sterday co uld be considerably
diHerent to what you think today. The
clouds could lilt on a v1ewpoint you had
been rocked into and bring sunshine into
your li te.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - There's no
reason not to let emotion play a role in your
judgment calls loday when lhey involve
people about whom you care a great deal
Just don't leave logic aut of the p1cture.
either.
,
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- You have the
wherew1thaiJoday to roll with !he punches
and come out on lop Your opt1mism won·t
allow any setback to get you down and
'
defeat your 'r'Jining spirit .
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - That whiCh
you oHer today, whether It be a produd or
a service. has high market value. so k.eep
this in mrnd when a cheapskate attempts
to grind you down Demand what you're

wonh .

ANI' I,IE5,
I HIP II

CELEBRITY CIPHER

I

SCIPRY

I' I I I I'

I
I~I':. ,. :. . ;.,I.1~f ~
I
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I
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The people in a srr.allr::.u" sl
town can spol the toun5: very
I
1
'"' easily Tounst are the people
I I I
who travel to se e d1fferent
L-..l...,....J_L-..J.-.l. .....J
r-::-:--::--=--:----. places then :omplain becaJse
1-·

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b,. f.!l,,g •n the m•nu·"W ...,...J , d1

\ltl~&lt; develot: from ~lep Nc 3 bel :•w

SCIIAM·lETS ANSWERS

12-tl•OJ

Devour · Gran. While • Noggin- FUNDING
Overheard at high powered business meebng: "That
new executive is a true expert He tloesn"t have all the
answers but knows how to get them with the proper
FUNDING'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

LE O (July 23·Au~ . 22) - Any antisoc1al
mood you may wake up with tOday has no
lite leit in it and smrles will Quickly replace
frowns. Make some plans whh a fun pal
and get out and enjoy yourself.
VIRGO (Aug. 2J·Sept. 22)- The day ian'!
apt to' amount to much If you ara too reciu·
slve today. You don't ha\le to get out on lh!l
town, but do aomethlng interesting wht1
your ftmlly or lo'lld on11 and you'll Dent·
fit.
L.IBRA (Stpt. 23·0ct. 23) - You're 1mart
to atrlvt to do more llttenlng than talking
today whtn" In the t:~rtltnot otlrltndl and
IHOCIIIII. You'll l11rn IOmtlhlng of grQ1
lnttrMI, and lt'ltlr ldtll Wl ll OIIOk for you.
SCORPIO (Oct, 24·Nov. 22) - Act upon
opportunltlta •• tach one arlttl and your
pro~• tor AOhltvlng your go111 tOday
will 101r. It won't maft•r II th•y're m~llrlal
or non-material, you'll attain your dHlrea.

SOUP TO
. NUTZ

CIISTIIm•

-~·--

__ _

...... ......_,
..,
.........
~

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

JU-882-1m
Stop &amp; Compare

...

I
'I

•

�-.....
Friday,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Boozer, James drives Cavs past Pistons Heisman
CLEVELAND (AP) LeBron James has decided
it's time to take control of the
Cavaliers.
Cleveland's star rookie had
23 points and nine assists,
and Carlos Boozer scored . a
career-high 28 points as
Cleveland finally won on
national televi sion, 95-86
over the Detroit Pistons on
Thursday night.
James, whose addition to
the Cavs has given th em
unprecedented
exposure,
ex pectations ancj . pressure ,
helped Cleveland improve to
1-5 in prime-time telecasts.
"We finally got one," said
James , .who followed coach
Paul Silas' orders and drove
to the basket more than he
has all season. "We needed to
get one - whether it was on

TV or not."
Cleveland has won just two
of II , but this was a victory
that the Cavali~s ·may one
day look back at as the night
they became James ' team .
The No. I overall pick has
been reluctant to take on a
leadership role, but with 22
games now under his belt,
Jame s thinks it may be time
for him ~o start showing the
way.
" I haven't made myse lf the
complete leader of this
team," he said.
But he certainly took a big
step.
"Oh, yeah," he said. ''It's
going to change."
Cleve land also snapped an
eight-game losing streak to
Detroit. The Cavs hadn ' t
beaten the Pistons since Dec.

Davis
from Page 81
· half and also pulled down 12 boards.
Maiden 's strong second half performance brought the Lady Bucks all the way
back from an It-point deficit, but the
effort was all for naught.
"The only thing (Davis) didn't do was
stop Maiden, but she did a good enough
job that we won by a few points," Brannon
commented.
The game was the. third in four nights
for Meigs, and Brannon said fati gue was
definitely a factor. "Defensively, (Davis)
was dead tired; we put her on the toughest
person at Belpre, she had the toughest person at Warren and her legs were shot. But
I couldn't have asked her to play any better - she did what she could to get us the
win."
The win evened Meigs' record at 2-2 on
the season and 1-1 in the Ohio Division.
The woes continue for Nelsonville-York,
as the team is winless in four tries and two
league contests.
The Lady Buckeyes started out
Thursday's contest well and claimed a 12-

4, 2001.
The
win
was
also
Cleveland.'s first over a team
with a winning record since
the Cavs defeated New
Orleans last April 5.
Ricky Davis, whose name
continually pops up in trade
rumors, had 15 points, nine
rebounds and five assists.
Davis also had a vicious
dunk , cutting through four
Piston s in the fourth quarter
to throw one down as the
Cavs were putting it away.
Richard Hamilton, who
scored a career-high 44
points in a win over
Cleveland on Nov. 28, led the
Pistons with 19 points but
was bottled up by the Cavs.
Tay shaun Prince added 14
points for Detroit, which shot
just 36 perce.nt from the field,

8 lead after one quarter.
However. Meigs outscored its guests
15-4 in the second stanza to claim a seven
point edge at intermission. The lead grew
to as many as II in the second half before
Nelsonville- York staged a comeback.
A I0-4 run to close out the third quarter,
coupled with a 6-2 run to open the fourth,
shaved the Lady Marauder lead to a single
point with four minutes remaining in the

game.

,

Alter a Davis bucket at the other end
extended the lead back to three, Maiden
scored four points in a single trip down the
floor to give Nelsonville~ York its first lead
since the midway point of the second.
But Meigs' Renee Bailey answered with .
a short jumper to give her teum buck the
one-point udvantage.
It was the first uf three straight jumpers
by the junior, the third of which gave her
team a bit of breathing room with a 43-40
lead.
Bailey, who tinished Thursday's contest
with 13 points, has had problems sticking
around for the conclusions of games Jately
due to foul problems:
But her s.hooting Thursday helped stave
off the Lady Buckeye's upset bid.
"Bailey scored I5 in our tirst game
against River Valley, but has fouled out of

was outrebounded 45-28 and
has lost three straight.
"We're playing losing basketball right now," forward
Ben Wallace said . "I' ll take
the Blame, it's my fault ror
letting guys give little effort.
We 've got to get down and
play guys, and we 've got to
share the ball.
"And we ain ' t doing that."
Pistons rookie Darko
Milicic, selected with the No.
.2 pick after James in the
NBA draft, had a shot
blocked and missed a wideopen dunk in the final seconds .
Milicic still hasn't scored
this season.
"I wanted to see if he acted
like he belonged," Pi stons
coach Larry Brown said . "He
acted like he was insulted ."

both games since then, so she hasn't had
many opportunities," explained Brannon .
"Last ni ght against Belpre, probably
played six minutes total in the whole
game.
.
"Bailey just did an outstanding job
there at the end offensively and defensively."
Davis and Sammy Pierce, who added
nine points and three assists to the cause,
hit free throws down the stretch to seal the
victory.
Besides Maiden, Megan Edwards wa~
the only other Lady Buckeye in double
ligures with 10.
Meigs also won the junior varsity contest by a count of 28-12.
Meagan Clelland led the winners with
ei~ht points followed by Jackie Wilson
wnh s1x. Julie Glomm, an exchange student from Germany, scored her first po\nt
of the season.
Keleigh Bunting, Meagan Edwards and
Sara Burton each scored four each for
Nelsonville-York.
Meigs will next host TVC-Hocking foe
Miller on Monday.
Nelsonville-York will continue the
search for its tirst win of the new season
when Waterford visits Athens County,
also on Monday.

(Heavener 6, Bray 5), nine
and made several turnovers . tory drive.
steals . (Bolyard 4 ), 20
Sayre
Roush,
Dunn
,
and
and untimely fouls. Emily
bray grabbed a steal and was had big steals with Pullins turnovers, and 29 fouls.
Southern goes to Ohio
fouled for a three point play, twice cashing in and Roush
from Page 81
then followed that up with a another late in the game. Valley Christian Monday.
long three pointer. A Bray Southern held on for the 49second round as Southern free throw and a Bolyard 40 finale.
continued its offensive dol- three pointer gave Miller the
Southern hit I S-43 and 19drums. Miller led 17• 16 at lead, 35-34, at 3:27 left in the 37 from the line, while grabthe half.
bing 27 rebounds (Dunn ·7,
game.
Southern took the lead
Pullins hit a pair of free Pullins 6, Szyre 6). Mil ler hit
behind five Kiser points and throws· to put SHS up then, 15-38 overall, 12-33 two's,
gained a little breathing Hoops hit a shot from the 3-6 three 's, and 7-21 at the
room in the third frame to block to give Miller its last line.
lead 28-23. In the early part lead at 37-36. Sayre then hit
Southern 13 steals (Pullins
of the final round, Southern
4,
Roush 3), four assists, 16
a driver to l:\ive SHS the lead
opened up a 34-25 advan- and the SH:&gt; defense came to turnovers, and 20 fouls.
tage.
life, sparking Southern's vic- Miller had 25 rebounds
Then SHS went haywire

Southern

from Page 81
'
• Only Michigan's
Chris
Perry- a long shot to win the
award. - delivered when it
counted most. He capped a
spectacular seasoQwith a 204yard, two-TD game in a 35-21
victory against Ohio State that
sent Michigan to the Rose
Bowl.
"If he w)ns the Hei sman
Trophy, he will certainly be
very deserving," Michigan
coach Lloyd Carr said . "I
think he had a great year play-mg a~amst great competitiOn.
And m our biggest games he
had his biggest games."
This year's Heisman vote
ligures to be a two-man race
between
White
and
Fitzgerald, with the decision
coming down to the definition
of what "outstanding" really
means.
The award for the "most
outstanding player" is usually
limited to quarterbacks or running backs - only six winners didn't play one of those
two positions.
The winner also almost .
always plays for a top team,
which hurts Manning and
Fitzgerald.
Only one of the last I5 winners played for a team with as
many losses as the three
. Manning's · Rebels (9-3) )lad
this season.
And only once since Notre
Dame's Paul Hornung won
· the award on a losing team in
1956 had a winner played for
a four-loss
team
like
Fitzgerald's Panthers (Steve
Owens, Oklahoma, 1969).
What also hurts Fitzgerald
is that no sophomore has ever
won the award and no pure
receiver has either. Desmond
Howard, Tim Brown and
Johnny Rodgers also returned
kicks when they won the
Heisman. ·
But none Jllf them put up
numbers like Fitzgerald, who
had 87 catches for I,595 yard.s
and
22
touchdowns .
Fitzgerald has caught a touchdown pass in a record 18 consecutive games dating to last
season.

More
than
statistics,
Fitzgerald has put together a
highlight reel of his own with
catches that defy belief.
"Unbelievable,"
Notre
Dame
coach
Tyrone
Willingham s~id. "I'm watching tape and I' m saying as a
coach, 'Don't you dare throw
the .ball! He's triple covered! '
And it's like he's the only guy
there because he comes away
with it."
But Fitzgerald is involved
in only a handful of plays a
game, unlike White.
Few could have envisioned
White coming to New York
for the Hei sman ceremony
when his career took a second
major jolt on Sept. 7, 2002.
White crumpled to the twf
with a tom ligament in his
right knee, ending his season
and putting his career in jeopardy. White considered quitting because he tore up the
oth ~r knee a year earlier.
Instead of giving up, White
never stopped working. He
beat out tl)ree other quarterbacks ·to earn the No. I job
before fall practice and then
became the biggest key to
Oklahoma's record-setting
'
offense.
" During my rehab. there
were people saying that there
was no way that I was going
to come back or be as good as
I was," White said. "That really drove me and ignited me
this season."
White , The Associated
Press Player of the Year, led
the nation in passing efficiency, completing 64 percent of
his passes for 3,744 yards,
with 40 touchdowns and eight
interceptions.
When compared to the last
I0 quarterbacks to win the
Heisman, White's efficiency
rating of 167.99 ranks behind
only
Florida's
Danny
Wuerm~! in 1996.
"His emergence as a great,
great football player is the
story of college football."
Stoops said. "The biggest difference in our team is that
Jason White is the quarterback. It ought to be pretty
obvious."
Whether the voters feel the
same will be revealed
Saturday.

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

not forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below: /
I

Always in our hearts,
dohn and Mona Andrews and

• Tornadoes hold off
Lancers. See Page 81
• Preserve memories of
. your hunt with photos.
See Page 86
.
• Meigs tops Belpre.
See Page 81

OnnuARIES
· Page A5
• William Robert Atha
• C&lt;~,tolyn F. Burton
• Manda L. Eastman
• Ernestine E. Price
• Ita Mildred Roush
• Ina F. Harr
• Roger D. Ireland
• Frances G. Lingerfelt
• Brian "Toot" Mullen

A2

24 PAGES

D2-5

insert

Editorials
Obitttaries

Region
Sports
Weather

r-------------------------------------

1

Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Wednesday, December 24.

• \lidcllt·porl • ( ~.tllipuli~ • lh.•t.'t'tllht'l'

BY BRIAN J. REED
breed@mydailysentinel.com
POMEROY

-

Meigs

County oflicials have begun calculating the losses to loca) government and the impact to the
local retail economy ,as a result
of the closing of Pomeroy's
Kroger supenmarket.
The Kroger Co. announced
Thursday it would close the
Pomeroy, Gallipolis and
Gauley Bridge , W.Va. ,
stores, following the settlement of a two-month strike

by union employees.
Meigs
County
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport said Friday the
commissioners plan to contact high-ranking Kroger
officials in Roanoke, Va., to
discuss
the
company's
announcement that it plans
to close the Pomeroy store .
In particular, Davenport
said, the comm issioners plan
to discuss the status of industrial revenue bonds the commissioners agreed to renew
last su mmer at the request of
Kroger attorneys.

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
hoeflich@mydailysentinel.com .

Comics

'

Pomcro~

1-J . :!CHt; ~

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ol. : ~H ~ '\u . -lC•

The $2.8 million in bonds
were tirst issued in the early
1980s to fmance a major addition to the Pomeroy store .
_ While the county has no
financial obligation in relation
to the issuance of the bonds.
Jeff Thornton. president of the
board of commissioners, said
he believes the company has
"moral obligation" to keep the
store open in light of the com:
missioners' willingness to
renew the bonds to Kroger 's
!inancial benefit .

.
'

'

a
The closing of Pomeroy's Kroger store was announced Thursday
by company officials. The closing of it. and the Gallipolis and
Gauley Bridge, W.Va., stores followed the resolution of a nearty
2-month strike by Kroger employees. (Brian J. Reed)

Please see Krocer. A&amp;

Doll beds help spread holiday cheer Taft to

Classifieds

The Daily Senru;el
With Fondest Memories
111 Court St., Pomeroy; OH 4.5769
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 12 Noon

Gallipolis

Meigs officials weigh impact of Kroger closing

SPORTS

2 SECTIONS -

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED .
Fill out the form below and drop off to

161 3rd Ave .

()hio \ 'alh·~ Puhli~hing ( o .

INDEX

15. May the Lord bless you wilh His graces and warm. loving heart.

.french City
Foot Clinic

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

Details on Page

14. We send Jhis message wiJh a loving kiss for eternal rest and happiness.

Sponsored by :

•

Sleet and anow, HI: 30., low: 30s

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family

... -.!-· ... ...

446-1860

WEATHER

I. We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.
2. May God cradle yOu in His arms, now and fore\'C r.
J. Forever missed, never forgoucn. May God hold you in Jhe palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared wgether. My prayers
wilt be with you unJil we mecJ again.
5. The days we shared were sweet I long 10 see you agmn in God's
hei!Venly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery slill inspire us all. and Jhe memory of your
smite fills us with joy and laughter.
7. Though out of sigh!, you'll forever be m my h~an and mind.
8. The days may come and go, bur the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the lighl of peace shine on your face for eternity.
tO. May God's angels guide you and pro1ec1 you JhroughouJJimc .
II. You were a ligh1 in our life Jhar burns forever in our hearts.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all rime.
\3. You are in our thoughts and pruycrs from morning to night and from

guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

.....-

1l'lhie Adlven~ wre~ - r!l
~ooi off Cha'i!1tmi!is, t\:TI

If you wish, select' one of the following FRE[ verses below to ·
lac,conlpaloy your tribute.

May God's angels

·-

ALONG THE RIVER

• Community corner. See
Page A2
• Community calendars.
See Page A3
• New York tourism
booming. See Page A6

On Wednesday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but

-

.....

D~ember 12, 2003

INSIDE

David C. Andrews
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

-~

© 2ooa Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - I f a warm,
fuzzy
feeling
about
Christmas is escaping you
about now, consider doing
something nice for someone
who might 110t otherwise
have a happy holiday.
Your generosity will not
only cheer the recipient, but it
will also make you know
inside that it is indeed more
blessed to give than to receive.
The Meigs Cooperative
Parish has numerous programs underway to ·make
sure that disadvantaged families in Meigs County not only
have a nice Christm~s dinner,
but gifts for the children.
To help carry out that
objective, special projects
have been underway for
weeks by organizations
around the county.
One such project taken on
by the Methodist women of
the Chester, Alfred and St.
Paul Church of Tuppers
Plains was to create beautiful
doll beds from tomato baskets, and put dolls in handmade colorful clothing in
them to be given to little girls.
Twenty-five were completed this week and delivered to the parish Friday
morning by Pastor Jane
Beattie, who worked alongside the church women to
create the unique gifts.
Ruftled material in color-

.

attend
connector
•
open1ng
Bv BRIAN J.- REED
breed@ mydailysenlinel.com
FIVE POINTS - Gov. Bob
Taft . and Ohio Department of
Transporta t i o n
Director
Gordon
Proctor will
attend a rib- ·
bon -cutting
ceremony
· for
th e
Ravensw 0 0 d
Connec10r
Taft
on Tuesday.
Dec. 23.
According
to
ODOT
Dimict I0 in Marietta, the
dedication of the 15-mile section of U.S . Route 33 has
been set for 9:30 a.m .. and
will be held on the new highway near its junction with
O~io 7 at Five Points. Signs
wi II be posted.
,
The public is invited to
attend the ribbon -cutting ceremony. according to ODOT
public information officer

The Rev. Jane Beattie delivers dolls in colorful baskets. all handmade by women of the
Chester, Alfred and Tuppers Plains churches she pastors, to the Meigs Cooperative Parish
to be given out at Christmastime. (Charlene Hoefl ich)
ful prints enhanced with ribbon and lace cover the baskets both inside and out. ·
The dolls in the beds are
nic6ly dressed in outfits

made by the women. Some
hold bottles, other have
pacifiers: some wear ,hats to
keep theu heads warm, and
all-e6me with coverlets.

The same women who used
their time and talent to make
the dolls in the beds. made flannel pajamas and nightgowns to
keep the children warm.

Ple•se 1ee l'llft. AS

SOAR continues its
search for a home

Businessman steps up to aid calam

BY CARRIE ANN WOOD
ciwood@ mydailytribune.com

-In
GALLIPOLIS
Westerns, the bad guy
always wore black.
But in the real world,
sometimes the good guys
wear black, too.
If you asked local business
owner Jeff Knotts, he ' d tell
you that he's nobody special
- just a regular guy doing
what anybody else would do.
But, under his big black wwboy hat and shy grin is a huge
heart and the will to use it.
Knotts doesn ' t Iike the
spotli~ht, but he was thrust
into Jt Tuesday ' when he
delivered a truckload of furniture, food and toys for the
Green family of Rock
Branch, W.Va.
Teresa and Roland Green
lost their home and all their
belongings last week in a
house tire that also claimed

GALLIPQLIS -Advocates
for those addicted to drugs and
alcohol are continuing their
· search for a site to house a proposed reaJvery facility.
Southeast Ohio Advocates
for Recovery (SOAR) is looking for a home to continue the
efforts.in establishing a residential recovery center in the area.
The group is at a standstill
unless a facility can be found.
The proposed recovery facility would serve Gallia. Meigs
and
Jackson
counties.
Everything the group needs is
falling into pi~ except for
the stumbling block of not
havinl' a place to house the
participants in the program,
ac.cording to Dick Moore,

who's been affiliated with
SOAR since its beginnj.ngs in
Apri12002.
The group was started out of
public concern over growing
Oxycontin addiction and crimes
related to addicts supporting
their habit any way they could.
Through public meetings,
a grot!P was formed.
SOAR members want to
have a structure large enough
to house I0 males. The men
w&lt;mld receive counseling
with residential stays between
six and nine months.
SOAR had looked at two
buildings on the grounds
Gallipolis Developmental
Center and contacted Gallia
County commissioners about
using the old children's home.
PIHH IH SOAR, A&amp;

BY MtWSSIA RUSSELL
mrussell@mydailytribune.com

the life of
their
3year-old
daughter,
Destiny.
Their 2year-old
daughter,
Kristen, 1s
now listed
in critical L.;._ _
condition at
Knotts
the Shriners
Hospital after she underwent
SJ!rgery for the bums that
cover most of her body.
The Greens, with very little money and no car, were
unable to make the drive
back and forth from their
home to Kristen's hospital in
Cincinnati, so they stayed
with her during her ordeal,
leaving their other two children with family members.
As a father of three. Knotts
said he couldn 't begin to
envision what it would be

.

lik·e to be in that situation .
"! just can·t imagine," he
said. "To be separated from
even one of my children, or
to lose one of my children
and be on the edge of losing
another one. while still having to worry about pulling a
roof over everyone 's head.
"The y're just living on
God's good graces right
now.'" Knotts added.
Knotts said he caught the
tail end of the TV new s one
evening and was immediate-

Pie•se see Aid, A&amp;

,

I.
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