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· Mondlly, J•n. 7, 2002

Pometoy, Middleport, Ohio

~eacler wams of Judgment in

News About Senior Citizens
In Meigs Col)nty

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antl-smokin1 campaip, 2

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Melp County's
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Evening_Dinp.ers

TUESDAY
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Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Tossed Salad
· Garlic Bread
Texas Sheetcake

Baked Ham .
Mashed Potllloes wllll GIBY)I
Green Beans
Stewed Prunes
WMe or Brown Bread

22

21

oven Frle&lt;l Flih

Hamburger

Creamed Potatoes
Buttered ·Splnach

Broccoli

Creamed Potatoes
Pears
Brownie

17

Cheesy Tuna Noodle Bake
Seven Layer Salad
Biscuit
Cherry Pie

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WMe or Brown Bread

Ground Beef Stroganoff
Green Beans
Roll- Juice
Cherry Delight

Salmon Patty
Mashed Potatoes
Mixed Vegetables
Strawberry Hash
While or Brown Bread

24
Oven Fried Chicken
Mashed Potatoes wnh Gravy
Glazed Carrots
Roll
Emerallsle Pudding

_1\laskan Pollock Fish
t.yoilalse Potatoe.s
Spinach
lliscuit
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Earthquake Cake
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Supp_
o rt Groups
~rJil('iJ~

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The Caring and Sharing Support
Group
meets
the
fourth
Thursday of each month at the
31.Jan Meigs County Senior Cenler at
29
•
1:00 p.m. The meeling date is
Chicken &amp; Nqodles
· Roast Beef Mashed Polato
•
January
24.
.
Green Beans
!lo Gravy Sandwich Plate
This support group is open
· !lalad
Coleslaw
to anyone with a loved one 'who
Roll
~emon Lush
·has Alzheimer's Disease. Come
'
Bishop Cake
and join , us for sharing
'
· information: to find out lhe
Tuesday January 15, Blood Pressure Checks
lalest news on Alzheimer's, or
just for the fellowship.
4:15p.m.· 4:45p.m.
The Stroke Support Group
will meel January 9 at 1:.00 p.m.
in the conference room at lhe
Cenler. Lia Tipton, Occupational
. Therapist. Holzer Rehabilitalion
d
f
IO OO
Center, is the coordinator.
The Meigs Mullipurpose w. d
et'lnes ay rom
:
a.m.
Nancy Stevens, from tiolzer
Senior Center is open Monday un I noon.
d'
. th e f act.,.tlator
. . d
Me 1caI Center, IS
through Friday from 8:00 a.m.
Old er adu Its are 10 vile to
until 4:30 p.m. Regularly auend 1he ac1ivi1ies scheduled.
scheduled aclivities held Join us for lunch and selecl what
AARP Tax Assistance
lhroughoul the week include you wanl from the a Ia carte
Income , tax as·sistance will
sewing, quilting, pool, bingo, menu or you can enjoy the be off offered to iow income
cards and games.
regular meal. Ala'Carte items are senior citizens (age 60 and over)
:. Dance team practice is held ' individually priced. ~ that cannot afford ford to go to a
.each M!'nday al I :00 p.m. Cost suuested donaljon for the noon paid income tax preparer.
:iS $1.00. per session atlended. meal js $2 00.
Complicated returns or
:The Kniuing Circle meets on
returns that require more lhan
· two. forms or schedules will -be
referred to a paid preparer.
Persons using the lax service
~··~· ::::.2&gt;1:0
· 2"12
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• !i!•G
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' ·;I·;l:
~· :i;;.r·Z
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· i:z·.z·. .;::·;:.-GJ:~-~... ;;;.z:.ii:•"ill
·• o:!"
Z' :ii
•:3:-i' \!Ill·:i
,·•Zi:l
"•i" li·m
··• ·must bring copies of !heir
'
:: A new beginner paint class ins1ruc1or. Please call Patty federal and state tax return from
lasl year, 'tax forms for the
:will begin on January 8 from Pickens at 992-2161 to register
·i:Js p.m.-3:00 p.m. This class for the classes. Intermediate current year and other relevant
'Will be held every Tuesday for 6 palnters ·can also attend this nialerials showing income ·for
the year.
weeks. Michelle 'Garreston is the class.

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Beginning Painting Classes

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------HEAP-----Are you or someone you know There are specific· ' income
eligible for HEAP~ .
HEAP is a federally funded
program designed to assist
eligible low-income Ohioans
·wilh their winter heating bills.

Sweetheart
Dinner Dance
with George Hall
Bring your sweetheart
and dance lhe night away
a the Center on February
14. George Hall will
perform from 6:00 pro •
I 0:00 pm with songs
from the past.
Dinner will be served
from 4:45 ~ .m. to 5:30
p.m. The cost for the
dinner and dance will be
$15.00 per person. If
you will only attend the
dance. The charge is
$10.00 per person.
The menu consists of :aaked steak, green
beans, mashed. potatoes
and 11ravy, roll, seven
layer salad and cherry
torte cake.

guidelines to be eligible for this
program and these 2001-2002
incQme guidelines are as
follows:
Total Gross
Size of
Household
Household
Income
I
up to $ 12,885
up to $17,415
2
upto$21,945
3
4
up to$ 26,475
up to$ 31,005
5
6
up to$ 35,535
7
up to $ 40,065
8
up to $ 44,59!5
For households -with more than
8 members, Add $4,530 . p.e r
member.- For more information, or to
receive a Heap application,
contact Kalhy Amott at (740)
992-2161.
Volunteers are needed at the

Hospice olilce.
Duties include filing,
· answering the phone and pulling
together packets of information.
You can call the office at 9927463 for more informalion.
YOU pick and chose your own
hours.

WE HONOR

Inc.

212 EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH

992-3785

GOLDEN BUCKEYE CARDS

31
Ham &amp; Bean Soup
Tomato Juice &amp; Cornbread
Spicy Bread Pudding
Peach Halves
White or Brown Bread

Deaths
Georg~

E. Holman, 79
Kathleen Kittle, 84
William Sponag~l, 83
Hurschel Wheeler, 67
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for the Meal Is $2.00

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WELCOME TO
THE NEW 5 ,•,
YEAR!
, .:;-4 ;

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• Sleep Apnea uipment
• Home Oxygen .
• Portable Oxygen
Overnight Pulse Oximetry
• Hospital Beds
• Wheel Chairs
• Bathroom Aides

•

Computer Classes
.interesled · in for upcoming
classes are needed. Please call
Tammy Queen al 992c2161 will)
. your ideas.

THE .MEDICAL SHOPPE

446·2206

24 Hour Emergency. Service
Medicare • Medicaid

=i:. ·

1410Jec
....
hlllpol•, o•lo 456, 1

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(740) 446-7283
1-800-458-6844
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70 Pine St.-eet, Gallipolis, Ohio

· 416 lurll••••• .._.
J·~·-·
45641

I·I00":4U~22..

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Weather Hllfl: 401, Low: 301

Details, 3

.

Drivers cited
RACINE -·
P~ul V.
DeCarli, 49, forest, Pa., was
cited for failure to control by
the GaUia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol following a one-car accident Sunday on Ohio 1;24.
Troopers said DeCarli was
eastbound in Sutton Township at 8:45 a.m. when he
lost control on snow-covered roadway, slid off the
right side of the road, went
over an embankment, overl\,\l:n.~&gt;!¢11,._fo-•lre\\1'~ .. ,
.. Tit'$ car w.ls moderately
damaged.
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Kristen L. Chevalier, 19,
46516 Ohio 248, Chester,
was cited for failure to con• trol by the patrol following a
one-car accident later Sunday on Ohio 681.
Troopers said Chevalier
was eastbound in Olive
Township at 12:15 p.m.
when she lost control in a
left curve, slid off the right
side of the road; -and struck
an embankment and a tree.
The car was slighdy damaged.

Lotteries
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OHIO

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W.VA.
Dally 3: 6·9-8
!)allY 4: 7-4-7-0

Casli 25: 7·9·12-13·15-16

Index
I Section- 10 Pl!pl

Weather

Michael, put away their school books
and · pencils Monday to enjoy the
winter's first significant sn.owfall. The
Davises built a snowman in the front
yard of their home on South Third
Avenue in Middleport. They are the
children of Chuck Davis. While
"hools wef\! closed, shops remained
open for business, but found some
extra snow-related tasks waiting.
Garrett Karr, a senior at Eastern
High School, came into town to
help his mother, Bobbie Karr, clean
the sidewalk at Hartwell House in
Pomeroy. (Brian J. Reed photos)

;

~lck 4 day: 0·6-4-8

SP.orts

Like their classmates, Nikki Davis,

8, and her 7-year-oid brother,

care makes
bid or state

Senate official
media."
OVP NEWS EDITOR
Carey said.
'· GALLIPOLIS -Jobs and
"I find that
education may be overI get more
worked themes in southern
done when
Ohio political campaigns,
I leacn the
but John A. Carey believes
issues and
they still represent the most
take a posiimportant issues to the
tion t~at is
regwn.
best for my
Having worked himself
district and
into " a policymaker position work to accomplish those ,
in the Statehouse after four goals.':
terms as state representative,
First. elected to 94th·
Carey looks to continue his House. District of Gallia,
push to improve local econ- Meigs, Ja ckson and eastern
omy and sc hools as a state Lawrence counties in 1994,
senator.
Carey listed among tho!!e
The Wellston Republican· ' accomplishmerits placement
announced his candidacy for. of industrial sites in each &lt;;&gt;f
the 17th Senate District seat the counties he represents,
now held by Michael Shoe'- changes in th e funding formaker a Bourneville Demo- mula for new school concrat, l~te last week, pledging struction and . keeping area
to remain part of the process highway projects ·on the
to effect change.
state's priority list.
"I do not hold many press
" I believe "that state govconferences or strive to get ern ment should empower
attention from the big city
Please see Carey. 3
Bv KEVIN KELLY

Pick 3 night: 3-0-0
Pick 4 nlsht: 5·5·5·3
8uckeye 5: 5·23·26·35·37
Pick 3 day: Q-4-0 .

Calendar
Classifieds '
Comics ·
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

Work
a-nd play,...

.

2

6·8
9
2
·4
3

3
5, 7-8, 10
3

c 2001 Ohio v.uey Publishina co.

HEATING ASSISTANCE

Applicatiorts still being ta~en
CHESHIRE - If the cost
of home heating has created a
heat-related emergency for
you, Emergency HEAP funds
are still. available through Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency.
.
HEAP provides help for the
area's neediest residents who
may be on a fixed income or
among the working poor.
HEAP helps senior citizens
and families with children
avoid the choice of "heating
or eating."
"People who need help
should choose HEAP," CAA
officials said.

Most of the HEAl' recipi'ents are neighbors living on
fixed income or working for
low wages. They are the elderly or single-parent household,
and the disabled. HEAP gives
them the ext~a help they need
to make it through Ohio's
cold winters.
Emergency HEAP provides
assistance to households that
have had utilities discQnnected, face the threat of disconc
nection or have 10 days or less
supply of 6ulk fuel. The program all6ws a one-time payment of up o S175 per heating
season to restore or retain

home heating services.
for propane and fuel oil
clients, the paymen t was
recently in creased to $250
because of the increase in fuel
prices.
Homeowners
or
renters may qualify if their
total household income is af
or below 15,0 perce nt of federal' poverty guidelines.
Emergency HEAP income
eligibility can be for the past
three or 12 months. Thqse not
qualifying on three months'
income are asked to present
their full 12- months' income
to see if eligibility can be .met
....... IH HEAP, :S

Holzer Mecllcal ·Therapy Center
Physical Therapy • Occupational Therapy
.
Massage lherapy • Speech Therapy
'When you choose your therapy provider, consider
Holzer Medical Therapy Center"
'•,

24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT SUPPUES and,8AACES
HOME OXYGEN and
R'ESPIRATORY EQUIPMENT
flllllliYIIY

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I'Your pa1d membership 10 the Me1gs County Council on Agmg, Jn:1 .
is a measure of support for the Multip.urpose Senior Center' and the
services provided· to older adults residing in Meigs County. Each
paid membership received veri lies 10 regional, stal~ and national
funding agencies that the Multipurpose Senior Cenler is providing
needed senioJ&lt;Jprugrams.
.

Hal Kneen-Fiowers &amp;
Vegetables

IALIS &amp; RINTALS

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improvement on
repprt cards

· Details, 3

The auggestad donation

Dl,Strt'ctS ShOW

based on 27 pre-set standards
set by the Ohio Legislature.
Those standards include
scores on fourth, sixth, ninth
and 12th grade proficiency
tests, as well as attendance
and graduation rates.
Bv BRIAN J. REED
Tliis year's report cards
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
include a new "excellent"
POMEROY - The latest ,category for districts meetOhio
School
District ing 2f&gt; or 'P standards .
Report Card&lt; 'show SouthThe other designations are
ern Local and Eastern Local as follows:
• "Effective," meeting 21 to
districts in a continuous
improvement category, and 25 standards.
• "Continuous ImproveMeigs Local, again, tmd er
academic watch.
ment," meeting 13 to 20 .
The Ohio Department of
• " Academi c Watch,"
Education released res ults of meeti ng eight to 12 .
the 2002 Local Report
• "Academic Emergency,"
Cards on Monday.
meeting seven ot less.
Southern sc hools went
Eastern Local's district
from worst to first in Meigs report . card indicates an
County's report card ratings, increase of six percentage
meeting 15 of 27 standards points in its graduation rate:
.based on the 2000-01 school from 85 percent on last
year. Eastern Local met 14, year's report to 91 percent
and Meigs Local 12.
.,this year. Meigs Local reportFor the Southern district, ed an 8 f percent graduation
the 2002 results mark a dra- r•te, also an increase, up from
matic improvement. , Last 78 and 79 percent in 2000
year, the district's report card and 2001. Southern Local's
reflected
a
one-point graduation rate held 'steady
de crease in standards met, at at 89 percent.
nine. 1!!, , 2000, the district
All three districts showed
met 10 standards.
·attendance rat es between 93
' Eastern held steady from and 95 percent for the threethe 2001 results, and Meigs year e.valuation period.
Local increased its mark by
Parents will receive printtWo points.
ed copies of their district's
The district ratings are report card in March .

~

Thank you for the
Meal Donations

for lhe Diabeles Support Group.
The meeting will be held on
January 17.
""
The cost for eiiCh membership is $5.00. You may purchase your
lnformalion on "footcare
membership al the Senior Center .or by mailing to: Meigs County
Senior
Center, 112 East Memorial Drive, P.O. Box 722, Pomeroy,
for Diabetics" will be the topic'J
OH
45769.
If possible, please include a stamped, self-addressed
of the January meeting.
envelope so lhat we can forward .your membership card to you.
Serenity House, Inc. is the I Thunk you for your support. '
·
sponsor of the Meigs County
2002
·
Support Group to provide ' Nuinc · '
Address
Membership
support, sharing and information ·
;;!J·
for residents of Meigs County J£i~tateJZIP
- - - - - - - - - - - - - whose lives have been' affected I
by domestic violence. The
Pam Schatz will be the
instruclor for a sweaiShirt class
Support Group gives everyone
lhe Opportunity to learn about
on February 19 &amp; 26. The cosl
the effects of domestic violence
will be $20.00 for· the. kit and
and ways to deal with it. The
instructions, You need to bri)lg a
group meets every Wednesday
· sweaiShirt that. has been washed
wilhout any fabric sQflener.
from 6:00 p.m.-8:&lt;)0 p.m. at lhe
Nutrition Education classes
Meigs Senior Center.
You'll make a spring bouquel
· facilitated by' Linda King, OSU
design for the front of your
Extension Office, will be held
sweatshirt that will stand out in
in the conference room at the
a crowd. Call Patty Pickens at
Center. The classes are as
992-2161 to register.
follows:
January I0- Figure out Fats lntennedlate P11lndng Class
January 24- Reducing Sugar
Intermediate painters are
January 31· Fiil up on Fiber
invited to attend this class which
All classes will be held from, will be held each . Tuesday
11:00 a.m. to 11:30a.m.
evening from 6:00 p.m.-8:00
No registralion is needed
· p.m. This class will begin on
January 8.
The tax assistance will be
' Birthday ':-riles
offered by Herman Carson and ·;
You should bring something
Leafy Chasteen from February , !he monthly btrlhday party with you each time lp paint.
5-April IS on Tuesday's and ' wtll be held -on January 24. Michelle Garreston is the·
Thursday's f from 9:00 a.m.- Bring. a friend and celebrate instructor and registration is
11:00 a.m. Taxes will be taken your btrthday at the Center.
required. Please call Patty
Pickens at 992-2161 to do so.
by appointment only. To make
an appointment, call 740-992Palnllnll Class
'
2161-.
This class will be held each
Thursday from I
p.m.-3:00
p.m. for those who know a few
strokes and. want to
D1·ana Coates, ~ ' .· , brush
.
he'
. .
h .
Dl 1 R ti d d S .
tmprove t tr pamtmg tee mque
re~,or, e rePran emor ·with acrylic paints
. . Call Patty at
vo un1eer ogram
.
9922161 lo register.
112 E M
.al D .
ast emon
nve,
, BINGO
P.O. Box 7l2
D
l'k
I b'
Pomeroy, OH 45769
~ ~ou 1• e J10 Pay mgo?lf
so, JOID us on anuary 10 at th'e
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740_992_2161
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Hal Kneen will be al the
extension 222
Center. Game time is scheduled
. Cen1er on January 24 to talk out
·nvp@meigsseniorcenter.com for 11 :OO a.m. and prizes will be
"Forcing Plants and Bulbs from
_..;.._....;;....______ awarded to the winners.
your own Backyard."
Whether you have a flower
garden or a vegetable garden, it
;V'I·
is never too eiuly to think about
)
whal you want 10 planl in the
•spring. The program begins at
11 :00 a.m.

Compule.r classes will nol be
o{t'ered during the months of
January and February. .
Ideas for whal you are

-Southem
goes from
worst to 1st

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24
Spanish Baked Steak Spaghetti with Meat Sauce
Meshed PotatOII wllll GIBY)I
Tossed Salad
WexBeans
Frutt Juice
Garilc
Bread
. Apricots .
White or Brown Bread
Ice Cream

30

2t

REPORT CARDS

Ravens make playoffs, 5

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Creamed Chicken
over Noodles
Pickled Beets

PHch Stice•· Perflldlon Sl1ed

28 .

Pork Chop with Dressing
Mashe~ Potatoes with Gravy
California Blend Vegetables
Applesauce
White or Brown Bread

23

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Mandarin Orantilft I Banana

15

Pork Chop with Dressing
Mashed Potatoes with Gravy
pma Beans with Com
Rolls
Fruit Whip
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16
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' ; Beef Stew
Chicken Tahltan
Turkey Tetrazzlnl
Buttered Rice
Buttered Brussels Sprouts
Biscuit
Spicy Fruit Compote.
Buttered Ceulflloww and Peas
Bl,hlng Pear Salad
Apple
White or Brown Bread
ornate Juice
White
or
Brown Bread
·Rice Pudding
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15

White or Brown Bread

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Whars .,_side

11
10
Baked Chleken Legs
Tuna NOO(IIa Casserole
Parsley
Buttered Potatoes
Peas .
Scalloped Cabbage
Citrus Salad
Tangerine
Peanut Buttar Cookie
WhHe or Brown Bread
WMe
or ~
Brown Bread
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!!eel Stew
Coleslaw
!liscun
!\pple Dumpling with Ice Cream

Chili
Tossed Salad
Choeae Chunk • Orange Juice Qanbony BlnlnO DoiiOht SOlid
1- ·' Sunshine Bar
CornBread
WliKe or Brown Bread
Butterscotch Pudding

Hot Dog
Baked Beans
Potato Wedges
Tropical Fruit
Iced Cupcake

THURSDAY

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$hor1y't Chlcl&lt;en Casserole
Mashed Potatoes wllll GIBvy

14

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7
Beef Tips in Gravy
over Rice
Spinach wnh Egg
P,ineapple Chunks
WMe or Brown Bread

• Evening meals are served
every Tuesday and Thursday
fJJ&gt;m 4:45 p.m.-5:30 p.m. The
suggesled donalion for the meal
is $5.00.
• Bring your whole family to
the Cenler for an enjQyable meal
a1 a greal price. All ages are
welcomet
·

JallU&amp;ry 2002

Meigs County Senior Nutrition Program
.....,
The Senior Nutrition Meal Is served dally at 12:b0.

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Monday · Friday 8:00 am - 4:30 pm
Extended hours by appointment

446·5-121

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MEDICA( CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

1·800·8.16·5 31

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. old

woman with one equally
healthy sister, at 90, and one sister
with lung disease- due to smoking.
Her daughters - both nurses. want to make posters for all th&lt;!
junior and senior high schools, "'ith
pictures of the two "good" sisters
climbing mountains or parasailing,.
imd the "bad" sister in her wheelchair, collJPlete with· oxygen tank.
They thiniC it would be a gre•t visual aid for their anti-smoking campaign.
Why stop there? Why not gather
up the ·pathetic creature in her
wheelchait 2nd drag her and her
oxygen tank around the junior and
senior high schools in person? Her
sisters could -do cartwheels while
she was being exhibited. Maybe
they could also provide stones to
throw at the evil one.
I've seen letters in your column

Dear
Abby
'ADVICE
suggesting that when someone dies
of lung disease, the obituary should
make that known, and should mention that the dear departed was a
smoker (preferably "heavy smoker").Yet so far I haven 't noticed any
calls for obituaries noting that "Jane
died of a heart attack. She .was obese
because she ate everything that did-.
n't bite back." Or, "Henry died of
liver disease because he drank like a ·
fish ." There's no end to ~he pleasure
we .c ould take in looking down our
noses at those people who are not as

-

it tolls for thee."
Pauline Phillips and /rer da r~ghter
jeanne Plrillips share the psrridonyrn
Abigail Viln Buren.

Iron and zinc are mineral&lt; that are important
nutrients. Iron helps carry oxygen throughout
the body. It is a part of the blood's hemoglobin
and lll)'Jglobin in the muscles.
'
Zinc is a nutrient that helps funn protein
and assists in making blOOd. healing wounds,
and developing and repairing body tissues.
It is also necessary fur many metabolic
p!PCesses involving enzymes.
TIME OUT FOP TIPS
Women need more iron than men. Females
19 to 50 years of age. need 15 milligrams per
•
day. Men 25 to 50 years old need 10 mil- they can actually help absorb and utilize iron
ligrams.
trom other focxis.
.
.
Only 83 pen:ent of women reach their rec-· Iron .'' also absorbed more readily during
ommended daily allowances (RDA). Men growth spurts, pregnancy or when there IS litde iron in the body.
. tend to get more than .they need
Good sources of iron include liYer, fortified
If it is not esiential, it will not' be absorbed as
ce~. clams, oysters and soybeans. Additional easily.
fOods, such as dried apricots, lima beans,
If there is an iron deficiency. an"'!lia can
spinach, breads, shrimp and dri~- beans also occur. This happens because red blood cells
supply some iron.
decrease and beoome smaller. This may be
The iron in meat, fish and poultry is used caused by insufficient iron intake or blood loss.
more easily than iron from other sources.
Females 19 to 50 years of age need 12 milIn fact, ifthey and/orVitamin Care present, ligrams of zinc per day. Men of the same age

BY EuZABETH CRUMP

Here's
an
important
announcement from Social
Security.
.
If you're under 65, there's
still a limit on how much you
can earn and still collect your
full Social Security retirement
benefit amount.
Last year, you could earn up
to $10,680 before yout benefits were affected.
·
This year, the limit is
$11,280. If your earnings
exceed that amount. $1 will be
· deducted from your benefits
for every $2 over the earnings
limit.
Special limits apply for the
year you reach 65 ..

•••

•

·'•
•

Social . Security
urges
employers to file error-free
wage report!. The wage
reports filed by employers in
January (and February, or
through March for electronic
filers) reflect the amount of
wages paid to employees and
. the taxes withheld for Social
Security, federal, state and
Medicare during the previous

year. SoCial Security receives
240 million wage reports a
year.
Small employers are more
likely to have errors 'in their
wage repofts. Large employers are required to make wage
report! by magnetic media or
electronic filing, but businesses with fewer than 250 ,wage
reports have the option of filing by either magnetic media
or paper, a more error-prone
process.
Errors in · fil~ng these
reports can be costly, both to
workers who rely on the
earnings information for
accurate retirement, survivors,
disability,
and
Medi~are hospital insurance
benefits, and for employers .
Corre~t reporting saves time
~nd money for the employer
and for the government.
Social Security irwestigates
more than 200,000 wage
reporting errors annually. The
Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) can assess penalties for
the· employer if discrepancies
in wage .reports are not corrected.
Correct reporting insures

{Ber:ky Boer is Meigs Coutlly~ Extension agent
for family and am.sUrner scienaslrommunity devdopme&gt;U, Ohio State !./niversity.)

employees have the
vo.;age amounts credit"
ed to their Social Security
records. These amounts are
used to calculate .. the Social
Security benefits payable to
the worker and to his or her
family if the worket dies,
becomes disabled, or retires
and determine the worker's
eligibility for Medicare coverage,' Employers should use
the W-2 form for the proper
year. For example, a W-2 form
for 2000 cannot be used to
report 2001 wages:
Be sure to file Copy A of
the W-2 form with Social
Security. When a copy other
than "A" is filed, it is more
costly to . process and may
result in er.rors.
Fr~quent er,rors also include
a mlsplactd digit in 'the Social
Security number, failure to
reflect a name change in the
newly married or divorced
and incorrect or misspelled
names, particularly in the case
of Hispanic and ·Asian surnames.
(Elizabeth Crump is manager
of th~ ~opal Security office in
Athens.)

Saunders
deployed to
Arabian Sea
FT. COLLINS, Colo. Jeffery C. Saunders has been
deployed to the Arabian Sea
ab.o ard the nuclear-powered
aircraft
carrier
U.S.S.
Theodore Roosevelt.
His divisien is VF-1 02
Diamondbacks, and he specializes in working with F14 Tomcats and F-18 Hornets.
He is a 2000 graduate o.f
Eastern High Schpol. He is
the son of Lisa Saunders of
Fort
Collins, and the
grandson of Dorothy Par~er
and the late Albert Parker.
Saunders can be contac.t-

'
Saunders
ed at Jeffery C. Saund ers,
Commanding Officer, VF~
102, Unit . 60126, F.P.O.
A.E.O. 9504-6116 , U.S.S.
Roosvelt.

•

that

prop~r

Show Your AppreclaUon To ..
Your·Favorlte Team Member!
.

Volleyball, Basketball, Football, Wrestllng,
Cheerleaders, Band Members, or any other winter
sport with-a special ad in the 1\lesday. January
29th Edition of the Daily Sentinel.

Support Group, 2 p.m. at
O"Bieness Memorial Hospital,
Athens, in Conference Room
B-9. To include video and
exercising especially for those"
recently diagnosed with
Parkinson disease.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local Board of Education,
organizational meeting, ' 6:30
p .m. followed by the rllgular
meeting.

TUPPERS PLAINS -iVFW
9053
meeting, Tuppers Plains
.
'
POMEROY - Meigs Coun- hall, 7 p.m .; meal, 6:30 p.m .
ty Health Department child·
of days.
hood Immunization clinic,
FRIDAY
TLJesday, 9 p.m. to 11 and 1
POMEROY
~ Widows FelTODAY
p.m. to · 3 p.m. at 112 E.
CHESTER
Chester memorial Drive, Pomeroy. ·lowship, Friday, Craw's Steak
Town!ihlp Trustees, end-of- Take child's shot record. Child House for lunch.
year and organizational meet- must be accompaniec:l by parLONG 'BOTTOM - Hymn
ing, 7 p.m., Chester Town. ent qr i.egal guardian.
sing
at Faithf..ll Gospel
. Hall.
Church,
Friday, 7 p.m. Deliv. . •
.
1 •. • THURSDAY
ered
will
sing. ·
POMEROY' :.... 'Yoga clllssls
POMEROY Preceptor
starting, 6 to 7 p.m. through Beta Beta, Beta Sig!Tla Phi
SATURDA'(
March 12, Meigs Multipurpose Sorority, Lutheran Church ,
RACINE ~ Racine Grange
building. Call992-2161 to reg- 6:30 p.m: Pr(lgram by Jane
ister or for more Information. Walton. Hostesses, Ruth Rif- gene111ogy workshop, 1 p.m. at
fle, Velma Rue and Reva Racine. Openings still available. Call 949-4000 to register.
ATHENS Parklns"n's Vaughan.

carey
flom Page 1

the individual," he said. "It
does us no good to complain
that we are not attracting
industry when we do not
have adequate industriahites.
I made it a priority to help
counties establish at least "one
industrial site with utilities in
each .county."
Carey also worked on
establishing the Local ExpeHighs in the&gt; uppedOs: South'-\ dited Partnership Program,
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
west wind 10 to 20 mph.
Exce?.tional . Needs Program
Sinus suffererS beware.
Wednesday
night
..
.
Mostly
and
mak~ changes to help
The National Weather Ser. poor diStriCts With assets that
vice is · predicting wet and cloudy. Lows near ·40.
Extended
forecast:
mak~ them look wealth1er
warmer conditions.
Thursday... Mostly clofldy th~n t~ey actually are m real•Precipitation in the form of
.
.
rain or snow showers is in the "'(ith a chance of showers. . ty.
Highs
in
the
upper
40s.
.
Carey
satd
he
worked
w1th
forecasts for every day into the
Thursday
night ... Partly the . governor and 0~10
weekend.
Highs on Wednes~ will cloudy with a chance of snow Department ofTransportattOn
or . rain showers Lows in the to ensure des1gn and prepararange near 50 . .
·
tiom of vari~us road projects
Sunset tonight will be at mid 30s.
Friday. .. Mostly cloudy with a contmue.d so that when
5:23, and su11)'ise on Wednesday
chance of snow showers. Highs fundmg was ava1lable,, the
is at 7:53 a.m.
in the upper 30s.
P~Je?~ would be ready to
Weather forecast:
Partly
cloudy
with
build.
Saturday
...
Tonight... Partly cloudy. Lows
His goals as senator include
in \he lower 30s. West wind a chance of snow showers.
Lows
in
the
upper
20s
and
continuation
of his open door
around 10 mph.
sessions "where I ·get the
Wednesday... Partly cloudy. highs in the upper 30s.
ideas, sup~r?;:~nd concerns of
the people I represent," using
his experie*ce and knowledge to .be a) key player in the

LOCAL STOCKS

AEP-43.95
Arl:ll Coal- 23.23
Akzo-&lt;45.56

AmTec:IVSeC-39.91
I·

·Your Message
without pletur~
\ '

'

\

(Actual $1.:ze 1 col x' 2")

_for, only

•s

LOCAL EVENTS
Community calendar Ia published as a free .me. to nonprofit . groups wishing to
announ&lt;:e meetlnga and epec:lal
events. The calendar Ia not
designed to pnxnolll ..... or
funckailenl ol any type. bm8
- prlntlld only .. . , _ permill and cannot be P • tiS sci
to be pr'•lllld a lpiiCiftc number

.'
'

CROWN CITY - William Lester Sponagel, 83, Crown
City. died Sunday, Jan. 6, 2002, at his residence.
He was born Oct. 3,1918, in New Haven, W.Va., son of the
late William and Roxie Graham Sponagel. He was a retired
cheffor the Uptowner Inn.
Surviving is a brother, John Frecker of Dayton.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Kathryn J. Rankin
Sponagel.
Graveside services were held at 3 p.m. today, Tuesday, Jan. 8,
2002, at Crown City Cemetery, under the direction ofWillis
Funeral Home in Gallipolis. There was no visitation.

SYRACUSE- G&lt;!o~ E. Holman, 79, of 1188 CoUege
Road, Syracuse. passed away at 7:20p.m. on Sunday,Jan)Jary 7,
2002, at his residence.
Born J2nuary 31, 192~ in Sutton Township of Meigs County. he was the son of the late Henry Holman and Letitia Wicklin,e Holman.
George was retired alter 29 years of service •t th&lt;! Central
Operating Company, Phillip Sporn Plant in New Hav'en, West
Virginia.
He was a 1942 graduate of Racine High School, and a 1951
graduate of the Western Pennsylvania Horological lmtitute. He
was a member of the Racine First Baptist Church, served as
village treasurer of Syracuse for 23 years, Scoutmaster for 15
yean for Syracuse, Troop 243 of the ~oy Scouts ·ofAmerica in
which he received the Huntington, West Virginia, District
Award of Merit in Scouting.
He also was manager fm several years of the London Pool in
Syracuse. He was an active member of the All American lndi'
an Motorcycle Club and the Ohio
Valley Chapter of the Indian Motorcycle Club.
Surviving are his wife of over 50 years, Ruth D. Roush Holman, whom he married November 25, 1951, in Letart, West
Virginia. Also surviving is a daughter, Brenda Holman Stuart
and her husband, Doug, of Syracuse, and two sons, G. Rodney
Holman and his wife, Peggy of Racine, and Kenton D. Holman
and his wife, Linda, of Rochester, New Hampshire.
Six grandchildren survive, Angela Sniart, John Stuar£, Luke
Holman, Trish Holman, Erin Holman and Mindy Kay Holman. A ·step-granddaughter, Kathy Broyles, also survives.
Also surviving are a sister, Helen Jean Holman of East Tavas,
Michigan; a sister-in-law, Ona Faye Holman, Hastings, Michigan; and a brother- in- law, Chester Barnett of Columbus; and
several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a sister, Gladys Barnett; and two brothers, P~ul Holman and Raymond Holman .
'
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday, January 9, 2002, in
Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating will be the Rev.
Rick Rule. Interment will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday, January 8, 2002,
from 4-8 p.m.

•
k
Wet and warmer th IS ·wee

•J.•

I'

Hurshel D. Wheeler, 67, Nelsonville,
formerly of Stewart, died Sunday, jan. 6, 2002, at his resid~nce.
He was born March 31, 1934, in Sweetland, W.Va., son of the
late Oscar and Melv~ra Pel~ Wheeler. He was retired from
Athens Flooring.
Surviving are his wife, Maxine; two sons and a daughter-inlaw,'Darrell and Gloria Wheeler ofTuppers Plains, and Robert
· Wheeler of Shade; a daughter, Debbie Tolson of Marietta; eight
grandchildren and two great grandchildren; a brother and ·Sister-in-law, Archie and Aundene Wheeler; and two sisters and
brothers-in-law, Correna and Jon Cottrill, and Reva and Vester
Walker.
.
He was also preceded in death by his great-granddaughter,
and several aunts and uncles.
Services will be Wednesday at 3 p.m. at Hughes- Moquin
Funeral Home, Athens, with Pastor Michael Thomas officiating. Burial will follow at Greenlawn Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.

William _Sponagel

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.I.

.

NELSONVILLE~

MILITARY NOTEBOOK

need 15 milligrams. Wome.n only conswne
about 80 percent of the RDA for :tine. Men
take in 99 percent
Beef, lamb, liver and oystt!rs are exceUent
sollices of zinc. Other red meats, poultry, fish,
fo~ed cereals, yogUrt' and ricotta cheese also
contain some zinc.
Even though many feeds contain a little
iroq and zinc, ifeaten in large quantities or fiequeiuly. they also become good sources of
these mineral&lt;.
When ·a variety of foods are eaten, these ·
essential nutrients will be suppliedVery seldom·
do healthy people need iron or zinc supplements.
However, doctors may prescribe ir&amp;! for
pregnant or lactating women.
Both iron and zinc can be lost during cooking. To prevent this trom happening. cook in
very small amounts of water and only fur the
shortest possible time.

Employers·urged.to double~check wage.reports·. .

Hunhel Wheeler

. - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,";

IT'lr--:

'

Obituaries
POMEROY - K.athle&lt;!n Kittl&lt;!, 84, Pomeroy. died M6ltday.
Jan. 7, 2002, •t her resid&lt;!nce. '
·
She was 'born on Aug. 28, 1917, in Griffithville, Lincoln
Cm!nty, W.Va.; daughter of th" J.te Winfred and Emmermay
Hodge Miles. She was a gradu•te of Hamlin High Schwl and
Bc;auty School. She attended Victory Baptist Church.
Surviving are her husband, Richard D. Kittle of Pomeroy; a
daughter and son-in-law, Patricia and Benny Dent of Pomeroy:
and a sister, Sapho Dent of Pomeroy.
She was also preceded in death by 'her son, Arthur Kittle; her
granddaughter, Kimberly Dent; her sister, Sally Browning; and
her brothers, Troy, Sh!rley, Edward, .Buster and Clyde Mills.
Services will be 2 p:m. Wednesday in F~her-Acree Funeral
Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev.James Keesee officiating. Burial
wi~ follow at Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the
~meral home on Wednesday from 1 p.m. until the time of service.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Holzer Hospice, Meigs County Branch, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
.Ohio 45769.

SOCIAL SECURITY
'.

•• 2002

DEAR. ABBY: I was intrigued
by the l&lt;!tter from the spry 81-year-

Becky
Baer

-

POmeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Geo;ae L Holman

Men, women have different nutrient needs

.

Tue8d8y,JM.I,2002

Ashlard tn::. - &lt;46.22
AT&amp;T-18.48

Bari&lt;One-38.118
BI.J-10.50

i!ob EvM8- 25.03

BagWomer- 52.04

~-3.14 .

Charrnn;j Shops- 8.16
Cly Hok*ll-13.25

CCJI-19.45

DG-16.05
Oul'a1t -44.65

(Actu~l

size 1 col x 4")

for only

s

Haltay Davldaon -54.47
Kmart-4.96
Kroger- 20.52
lJrlds End- 50.46
Ud.~15.84
NSC~20.40

Please fill out and return with your payment to:

Shoney's- .32
VIal Mart 57.39
Wetrtl•- 30.19
WOitli igiCli' 14.57

""*"'

"""'*'" -

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 21 3-NO)
,Ohio Volley Publlolllng Co.
Published every alternoon, Monday
through Friday, l1t Cou~ St ..
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
- p a i d at Pomeroy.

Correction Polley
Our main ooncem In all stories Is
10 be accurale. tl you know of an

~ The Auoclahld Press and
tho Olio Newspaper Aaaoclation.
POitmllter: Send addreaa correctlonll 10 The Dally Sentinel, tt1 Cou~ . ·
St .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

error In a story, call the newsroom

al (740) 992-2156.

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On the Web

1

acceptable for Emergency
HEAP.
· The 12~month 'period or ·
the three-month period for
Pap 1
the test is determined from
the date of applicatio,.; makon a regular basis.
The deadline for Emer- ing it possible for some with
decreased income during
gency HEAP is March 31.
The Regular HEAP program these periods to qualify later
·
offers heating assistance once in the program.
Examples of these types of
·per heating season to lowincome households while situations could occur from
defraying the high cost of layoff, strike, retirement, dishoine
heating. Regular ability or death of a spouse or
HEAP pays a portion of eligi- household member. Docuble households' winter heat~ mentation verifying income
must be . provided when
ing bills.
-The amount of assistance is applying for HEAP. Also, a
determined by total house- copy ' of the applicant's recent
hold income, .the number of electric bill is required.
The following income levpeople in the household and
els
by !&gt;ousehold sh.ould be
the type of heating fuel used.
The income guidelines for used to determine eligibility.
both programs are the same. These income guidelines repHowever, Regular HEAP resent the 150 percent calcurequ_ires the previous 12 lation ate revised annu,ally.
Allowable annual income
months' income while the
.
h
h
•
.
\
past t ree mont s mcome " · for a one-person household is

HEAP

from

-

13Weeks
26Week8

52 Weeks

$27.30
. $53.82
$105.56
outaidt Melli• County

S2v.25

.558.88
$109.72 .

P~

A3

LOCAL BRIEFS
Report Incidents

lence alter allegedly biting her
husband on the face and slapping her mother-in-law. She
is being held in th&lt;! Southeastern Ohio Regional Jail in
Nelsonville awaiting a court ·
'
appearance.
- • David Leonard, Pomeroy, ·
on charges of telephone harrassment.
• Jerry Lewis, Racine, and
Darrell Michaels, Middleport,
for failure to pay old fines.

POMEROY
M&lt;!igs
County Sheriff Ralph TrusseD
reported the foUowing complaints as reported by local
resid&lt;!nts:
• Kevin McLaughlin ofJaymar Sand and Gravel,
Reedsville, reported the theft
of I J Allen Bradley &lt;!l&lt;!ctrical
magnetic starters and 14 Allen
Bradley breakers.
• Summer Groves of
Pomeroy _reported her purse
and WIC coupons stolen.
• Donna H&lt;!nry, Tuppers
Plains, reported that someone
POMEROY Deputies .
had bro~en the tailJi~ts on
of
the
Meigs-County
Sheriff's
her 1983 Honda.
• David Corbin reported Department \nvestigated the
the theft of a Remington · following accidents over the ,
weekend:
41 0-gauge rifle.
• Brian W indon ofPomeroy
was traveling west on ·Russell .
Road near Pomeroy when a .
deer
ran i\}tO the path of his
POMEROY
Meigs
Counry sheriff's deputies 1994 Ford Ranger, causing
arrested several people over moderate damage to the drithe weekend for domestic verUs side of his truck.
• Charles J. Knapp of Syra- ·
violence complaints and other
cuse
was driving north on
charges.
Mike Binegar ofAlbany was ' Saturday on Ohio 143 in Sciarrested alter allegedly assault- pio Township when a deer ran .
ing his wife. She reported to into his path, causing' minor ·
officers that he had allegedly damage to his 1993 Chevrolet
threatened to shoot any law .truck.
• Ruth
Lambert · of
enforcement officers respondPomeroy was driving north '
ing to their home.
Lovers' Lane
near
Deputies, with assistance on
Pomeroy
when
she
lost
con.
from
Athens
County
deputies, found him at his trol of her 1991 Buick and .
slid into a ditch.
home with a firearm.
No injuries and no citations . .
O'Dell Blake, Middleport,
was charged with obstruction were reported.

Report

accidents

Arrests repo'rtecl

of justice alter allegedly lying
to deputies and Middleport
police officers as to the
RACINE Bethanywhereabo·u ts of Michael
Dorcas
Sonshine
Circle
will
Conlin, who was suspected of
domestic violence. Blake . meet at the church on Thursrepotedly told deputies that day, 7 p.m. Program will be
Conlin wasn't in his home, provided by Lois Sterrett and
but Conlin was reportedly refreshments by Linda Russell
later found hiding in a show- and Kas Seckman-Bissell. All
er.
~o~nen in the community are
David Nance· 20 Racine InVIted.
· was charged wi~h d;iving teit .
of center, failure to signal driving under suspension, disorCHESTER Chester
.derly coriduct, failure to com- Township Trustees will hold
ply, and felonious assault after their year- end and organizaa pursuit by Racine Marshal tiona) mee ting on Tuesday at
, Curtis jone~.
6 p.m.
,.
Jones attempted to stop
Nance for a traffic violation,
according to Trussell's report.
RACINE - School will be
He turned off Carmel Road
onto Horse Cave Road, and out of session in Southern
crashed in a ditch, and then Local Schools on Wednesday
backed up,&lt;&gt;'!llegedly crashing due ~- previously scheduled
teacher inservice training.
into Jones' cruiser.
Also charged recently were:
• · Danny Pendleton, Middleport, on a charge of
POMEROY Meigs
domestic
violence, · after
County Genealogy Society
allegedly assaulting his wife.
will
not meet Tuesday.
•
Timothy
Gibson,
Reedsville, on a charge of Trustees meet
domestic
violence, after
allegedly assaulting his wife POMEROY - Meigs County
and making threats toward · Township Association will hold
its annual meeting
h er.
. on Friday, at
• Stacy Counts, Syracuse, on 6:30 p.m . at · the Meigs
two counts of domestic vio- Multipurpose Senior Venter.
Dinn~r will be provided

To meet

·
·
:

Change meeting

·

'No school

Meeting oft

$12,885;
two
persons,
$17,415;
three. people,
$21, 945;
four
people,
$26,475; five people, $31,005;
and six people, $35,535.
Households with more than
six meml:?ers should add an
additional$4,530 to the yearly income.
Both Emergency HEAP
and Regular HEAP applications can be completed at the
Gallia CAA HEAP office, 420
Silver Bridge Pla2a, Gallipolis,
or ,the Meigs CAA HEAP
office, 186 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.
.
Applications will be taken
by appointment from 9-11
a.m. and from 1-3 p.m ., Monday through Thursday. This ,
year, CAA is still operating
under the ·appointment system to apply for Emergency

HEAP. Contact 992-2222
(Meigs County) and 4461018 (Gallia County) to
schedule an appointment.
The toll-free number for
Regular HEAP inquiries is 1800-282-0880. For the hearing impaired with a telecommunication device for the
deaf (TDD), 1-800-6861557.
For more details, contact
the Cheshire office at 36 77341 or 992. 6629, the Gallia
County ·office at 446-1018,
and the Meigs Counry office
at 992-2222.

.
·
·

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,
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_...._..._ _ CI..YK t '"~ - - - - - . . .
If MOHEY liOESlfT Your MONEY CAN GROW
• rv7GIOV ~
~TREES.,.

Mal
subsaiDtlon
lnolde ..o.g,-cotniY--52 Wooks

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Senate and best represent the
· district, and . prds
for
improvements to the region's
economic and . educational
health.
"Our next ~hallenge is to
make sure that r.ural Ohio and
the rest of the state are in a
position to, compete in the
new economy," Carey said.
"We have a .good start with
funding for the Appalachian
New Economy Plan and
Workforce Development, but
we have much further to go."
Carey, whose public service
· career started as a field representative for · U.S. · Rep.
Clarence E. Miller and
included two terms as Wellston's mayor, opt&lt;!d against
another term in the House
due to term limi15.
He was named chai~man of
the House Finance Committee this term.
Shoem~ker announced · his
reelection plans in November
for the 17th District, redrawn
last fall to include I 0 counties
instead of the previous eight.
The dis.trict now includes
Clinton, F~yette, Gallia, HighJand,
Jackson,
eastern
Lawrence, Pickaway, Pike,
Ross and Vinton counties.
Deleted from the previous
setup were Meigs, Scioto and
western Lawrence counties.

The Deily Sentinel •

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NATIONAL VIEW

In the grand scheme, John
Walker is small potatoes
• The. News-Enterprise, Elizabethtown, Ky., on john
Walker..To hear some people tell it, John Walker is no better
than . Benedict Arnold. The American turned Taliban fighter
turned wartime detainee, they believe, deserves a similar fate as
that of the Revolutionary traitor: 'permanent banishment from
the homeland.
Or worse.
As much as we despise Walker's choice to stand on the
enemy's side, he shouldn't necessarily be condemned for his
actions, no matter how disturbing they might have been.
• John Walkers can be found aU over America at our Army
posts, Navy and Air Force bases and Marine Corps camps.They
.don the uniforms of the armed forces, vowing to fight to ptotect the freedom of the United States against any and .aU enemies, even if the enemy is their native countrymen ....
To ostracize, prosecute or execute Walker would be nothing.
·more than an act of hypocrisy. Get what we need from him,
: and let him go. Let the world deal with him as they will the
·rest of the defeated Taliban.
· Certainly, Americans' ill feelings toW.rd Walker are under·standable.
Walker, captured late in November afterTaliban and ai-Qaida
.fighters surrendered near rhe Afghan ciry ofKunduz,didn'rjusr
·. break bread with the enemy, he was the enemy. ·
But in the end, what damage has he done? None. He's small
· potatoes on a terrorism smorgasbord.
Spit him out. The main course, Osama bin Laden, will be
served soon.

:TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

' Today is Tuesday,Jan. 8, the eighth day of2002. There are 357
'days left in the year.
' Today's Highlight in History:
· On Jan. 8, 1935, rock-and-rolllegend Elvis Presley was born
in Tupelo, Miss.
On this date:
In 1642, astronomer Galileo Galilei died in Arcetri, Italy.
In 1815, U.S. forces led by Gen. Andrew Jackson defeated the
British in the Battle of New Orleans, the closing engagement
'of the War of 1812.
· In 1894; fire caused serious damage at the World's Columbian
·Exposition in Chicago.
In 19 I 8, President Wilson outlined his 14 points for peace
after World War L
, ln . 1959, Charles De Gaulle was inaugurated as president of
· Fr;mce's Fifth Republic.
In 1964, President Johnson declared a "War on Poverty."
In 1973, secret peace talks berween the United Stares and
North Vietnam resumed 11ear Paris . .
1
In 1976, Chinese premier Chou En-lai died in Beijing at age

,78.

•

'

.

••

•

••

........,........ryl.2002

..' --------------~------~
TuF.sll\y's

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing .Editor
Charlene Hoeflich

' In 1982, American Telephone and Telegraph settled the Jus' rice Department's antitrust lawsuit against it by agreeing to
divest itself of the 22 BeD System companies.
In 1987, for the first time, the Dow Jones industrial average
closed above 2,000, ending the day at 2,002.25.
:: 'ten years ago: President Bush collapsed during a stare dinner
. ~ in Tokyo; White House officials said Bush was suffering from
. :stomach flu.
: ~ Five years ago: The stare of Arkansas pur three me"' to death
. ·.in the second triple execution since capital punishmem was
:reinstated in 1976. The U.S. Supreme Court heard .arguments
·: on whether co allow physician-assisted suicide. Russian Presi: :dent
. Boris Yeltsin was hospitalized with early signs of pneuma-

.. · ma .

: One year ago: Former Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards was
. :sentenced to 10 years in prison and fined a quarter of a miUio'n
·dollars for extorting payoffs from businessmen applying for
. ·riverboat casino licenses. (.Edwards remains out of jail as he
. :aJ1peals his conviction.) Pope John Paul II was awarded the
. :Congressional Gold Medal.
·
; Today's Birthdays: Actor-comedian Larry Storch is· 79. Actor
· :Ron Moody is 78. Comedian Soupy Sales is 76. Broadcast ·
· :jourpalist SanderVanocur is 74. CBS newsmaq Charles Osgood•
': is 69. Singer Shirley Bassey •is 65. Country-gospel singer Crisry
·: Lane is 62. Actress Yvette · Mimieux is 60. Physicist Stephen
· : Hawking is 60 ..Rock musician Robby Krieger (The Doors) is
·; 56. Rock singer David Bowie is 55. Movie director John
·· McTiernan is 51. Acrres.&lt; Harriet Sansom Harris is 47. Actress
.; Maria PitiUo is 37, Rock musician Jeff Aberctombie (Fuel) is
· : 33. Actress Arni Dolenz is 33. Singer R. Kelly is 33. Actress
· )nny Lewis is 26. Actor Scott Whyte is 24.Actress Gaby Hoff::,
· .man is 20.
·
. , Thought forToday:"The devil is easy to identifY. He appears
: when you're terribly tired and makes a very 'reasonable request
&lt; which you know you shouldn't grant.'' - Fiorello LaGuardia,
&gt;: mayor of New York Ciry (1882- 1947). ·

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 882-2151• Fu:: 11112·2157

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• S,..rrler I4Jus parting shots; Page 8
- Colltge, pro hoops, Page 10
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~e

LAMBRO'S VIEW

Restoring Argentina 5finandal health risky proposition
..
'

BY DoNALb I.AMBRO

dent state-run businesses.
standards because openness stimulate (a)
WASHINGTON, With all of
Calling for a return co the leftist, state- · gains from specialization and trade, (b)
Argentina's economic illnesses, the worst · regulated economic policies of old, innovation and efficient production, and
medicine you couldi prescribe would be Duhalde called the move to free market (c) adoption of sound policies."
zealous trade protectionist, anti-free economics "a failed economic model
"Our findings are consistent with this·
market president.
that led to the desperation of millions of view: persistently ojllen economies had
Bur that is what happened last week Argentines. We need a new model now.'' higher levels of per-capita income and
with the installation of Eduardo
That leftist model will substantially grew more rapidly than those that were
Duhalde, a leader in the dominant Pero- .increase state controls over the economy more closed;' it reported.
nist parry, who seems intent upon restor- and raise government trade tarif!S and
Countries that were hopeless econom. ing the nationalist economic policies of quotas to protect its chiefindustries from ic backwaters have shown what trade
,Juan and Eva Peron in an attempr .to res- foreign competition - a disastrous step openness, deregulation and privatization
cue Argentina from its financial collapse. backward.
·
can do for them.
Ridden with debt, bank closures and
Duhalde's so-called new economic
For example, throughout the past two
with money · and investors fleeing the . model is reaDy one of the oldest in the decades, Mexico, China, Ireland and the
country, Latin America's third largest world, and he cannot point to a country Philippines "were among the countries
economy has turned into an economic where it has worked.
registering both a sizeable increase in
basket case. Taxes and trade barriers have
The story of the g1;0wing global econ- (their) Trade Openness Index and a huge
been raised in the face of recession and omy is aU about free markets and free increase in trade as a share of GOP,'' Herprivatization of state-owned enterprises trade turning closed, failing economies itage reported .
has been abandoned.
into engines of growth and prosperity. It . One reason why free trade, denationaiLooming behind aU of this is the Inter- is where trade barriers · have been low- ization, and economic deregulation have
national Monetary Fund, which has ered, tax rates reduced, state-run busi, been the most important global ceopushed higher taxes and ' austerity as a nesses sold off to priVate enterprise, and,t n~mic reform&amp;&lt;~&gt;f1tlt~ lase !,CVetal q~~dj:s
condition for more IMF bailouts.
.
access to the -marketplace opened up to . is because more and more failed
. Argentina, once the high-flying econ- people with ambition and dreams of a economies have chosen to copy what
omy of Latin America in a deregulatory better life.
·works.
era of free trade and free markets, is
Hong Kong, Singapore, Belgium, GerChina looked at the United States and
entering the fifth year of irs recession. many, Great Britain, the Netherlands and other open ecopomies and decided that
Unemployment is nearly 20 percent and the United States are among the most if free market capitalism worked for us, it
the poverty rare is at 40 percent.
open economies in the world, according would work for the Chinese people,.too.
Unfortunately, Duhalde, Argentina's to. Trade Openness Index produced by And it has.
·
fifth preside~t in four weeks, appears to the Heritage Foundation. These and simArgentina stiU has too many statebe the wrong man with the wrong eco- ilarly open countries are among the most owned industries, tariff rates running
nomic philosophy to bring Argentina prosperous in the world.
cl~sc to 14 percent - twice the average
back from the brink.
On the other end of the spectrum, rate - too much of its economy operatPut into office by the Peronist Parry, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Burundi, Iran, ing in the black market to avoid bureauwhich controls the legislature, he · is Sierra Leone, Syria a'nd Algeria were the cratic obstacles and corruption, and tax
blaming aU of Argentina's economic most protectioni&lt;t and closed economies. rates that have ·held back growth,
woes on what he says are the failings of And they are the poorest in the world.
increased joblessness and poverty.
the free market reforms that the country
The lessons from this are clear and
This is a couptry that is in need of a
implemented in the 1990s at the urging obvious, Heritage said in its latest annual strong dose of free market capitalism, but,
of th~ United States. That was the time report, Economic Freedom of !he World: instead, it is recreating into the past.
when Argentina began reducing its trade The "more open economies will grow
(Donald L.ambro is filling in for the vacaimport barriers and selling off irs ineffi- more rapidly .and achieve higher living rio11i11g Morton Kondracke.)

a

WASHINGTON TODAY

Presidential hopefuls face tighter schedule this year
BY WIU. LEsTER
toughness to govern issues;' said AI From, longtime Democrat Don Fowler ofSouth
WASHINGTON - Democrats pon- founder and president of the centrist · Carolina. "He's dearly an established
dering a run for president in 2004 have Democratic Leadership Council.
national figure, much more of a known
plenty of work to do this year on a
Much of the candidates' political work quantity than anybody else:'
timetable squeezed at one end by die ter- will be out of public view: recrpiting
Gore is expected to announce this ·
ror attacks and at the other by a primary staffers, visiting ac.tivists, raising money. month his resurrected political action
schedule that could have the fastest start They.also will campaign in key states and committee with a new name- Leaderyet.
speak publicly on top issues.
, ship '02- filed with the Federal Election
The tasks will vary from one politician
Some of the more active potential Commission in October. The Gore team
to the next, but each must build a politi- Democratic candidates - Sens. John will explain then how they wiD use the
cal .network, raise money and begin to Edwards of North Carolina, Joe Lieber- PAC to help Democratic candidates in
oudine why he or she wants to be presi- man of Connecticut, john Kerry of Mass- 2002.
dent.
ach'usetts; House Democratic. leader Dick · Gephardt will travel the country work. "Candidates arc beginning to· look at Gephardt of Missouri; the 2000 nominee, ing for House candidates in his bid to gain
what they should ac~omplish this election 'Tennessee's AI Gore - already have visit- another six Democratic seats in 2002 and
year," said Democratic consultant Donna ed states with early presidential contests become House speaker. Senate Majority
. Brazile. "Clearly they want to increase such as. Iowa and New HaJI'lpshire.
Leader Tom Daschle will travel the counname recognition and visibility, recruit
The most prominent Democrats on the try as he works to hold onto the Democexperienced staff, find finance people, list ·have political action committees rais- rats' 50-49-1 ma]oriry.
local .and state people. You'll • see them ing money to pay for political travel al).d
Stares havebeeninvitedbytheDemoc·inc~a.&lt;ing their travel by summer."
to help campaigns of other Democrats. rats to move their presidential qmtests
The largest task for aU in the next year 1Wo who face the most work this year close behind' Iowa's caucuses ~nd New .
is to understand clearly why they are run- raising their public profiles already are Hampshire's primary in 2004. And conning and determine how t~ com~unicate . busy
sidering that President Bush's job approval
that to voters, said veteran Democratic
Edwards, who started his own political is running· close to 90 percent, the politi- .
activist Doug Sosnik, a former senior action committee late last summer, has a cal climate brihgs some unusual chal- ·
adviser ih the Clinton White House. They trip planned to New Hampshire in early lenges.
'
also ' need to set out a winning political February to raise money tor state Democ"It's almost more important what they
approach that will play weD with both rats. Kerry started a PAC in December don't do; ' said Charles Jones, a polit¥;al
Democrats and swing voters in 2004.
called the Citizen Soldier and is launching scientist and professor ~meritus at the
"The challenge for Democrats this ye~r. a new Web site.
University of Wi.consin. ''They don't
as it will be in 2004, is to prevent the
Some potential candidates can wait a want to beconle prominent in the wrong
party's image from rev~rring back to the little longer to declare their intentions.
way:•
pre-Clinton image, when people trusted . "You have Gore in one category and
(Will Lester covers politics ~nd pclling for
Republicans on the strength and the everybody else in another category." said , TI~e Associated Press.)

.

NCAA llen'a Baek.etball
llonc:lay'a Gam"
.Binghamton 69, Albany, N.Y. 61
,Bolton U. 70, HarUord 56
,'Brown 99, Coast Guard 67
;can~atus 81, Marist eo
• Manhattan 98, NlaiJilre 56
• New Hampshire 64, Army 73
Oklahoina 69, Conneclieut 67
Penn 75, Fla. International 49
Vermont 60, Northeastern 77
Wake Forest 87, Navy 65
.Aiab. St. 96, Ark.-Pine Bluff 73
•Alcom St. 97, Grambling St. 87
·Belmont 87, Mercer 65
, B:-cookmen 75, N.C. A&amp;T ffT, OT
Col. ol Charleston 71, ETSU 64
Delaware St. 77, Morgan St. 67
·Drexel 56, William &amp; Mar}" 56
Elan 91 , Coastal Carolina 80
Florida Atlantic 77, Campbell 60
Ga. Southam 101, Appy St. 89
Georgia St. 92, UCF 64, OT
High Point 77, Char. Soulhem71
, Howard 84, CoP,pln St. 67
Jackson St. 68, Southern U. 60
: Lipscomb 104, Rochester Ml 64
· LA-Mon~ 87, Tx.Arllngton 79
Md.-East. Shau l'bHI St. B6. or
•. Northwestern Sl 69, Centenary 72
:Old Dominion 60, Delaware 58
: S. Carolna Sl 72, Florida A&amp;M 69
Samford 65, Jacksonville 58
· Stetson 89, Jacksonville St. 63
Tenn.·Martin 108, Berry. 74 ,
• W. Carolina 77, Furman 67
· Wofford 73, The Citadel 64, OT
· Butler 62, Cleveland St. 45
E. Michigan 61, Akron 60
• Illinois St. 81, Wichita St. 71
.. S. Illinois 64, SW Missouri St. 74
Tennessee St. 94, SE Missouri 82
· W. Illinois 96, St. Ambrose 63
';Lamar 89, Sam Houston St. 87
·Denver 78, Morris Brown 50
UNLV 66, Air Force 54

Eastern gets notice in first hoops. poll

COLUMBUS (AP) -To absolutely no one's surprise. two- time defend..
ing state champion Akron St. VincentSt. Mary is again No. i.
The Fighting . Irish have a new
coach but LeBron James is back for
his junior season, and that was enough
for the voters in the inaugural Associated Press state boys high school basketball poD ofrhe 2001-2002 season.
St. Vincent-St. Mary was selected as
the top team in Divi.iion II - up a
notch after winning state championships the last rwo· years in Division
III.
Eastern, coached by Howie

.

Caldwell, received
several votes and
wat number 19 in
the first poll.
The
· Eagles
recendy knocked
off Belpre, a state
tourney qualifier a
year ago.
Last year's poD
Caldwell
champion in Division I, Columbus
Bn;&gt;okhaven, picked up where it left
off. Wheelersburg was the choice in
Division Ill and New Washington
Buckeye Central was No. 1 in Divi-

NBA
Monday'a Gamee
" Charlotte 94, Denver 80 ·
Portland 96, . Cleveland 72
··' Phllly- ~16 : L.A. Clippers ·92
hC)rlando 98, Boston 87
··Minnesota 109, Detroit 93
Seattle 100, Chicago 68
, San Antonio 90, New York 79

'•'

Panthen fire
· George Seifert

'

Teams vie for

next Japanese
supentar ·

NEW YORK (AP) -The
New York Mets, Texas
Rangers and Anaheim Angels
W\!re among the teams that
):&gt;id to •obtain the rights to
Japanese left-bander Kazuhisa
, Ishii.
The Yakult Swallows, who
.. won ·the CenEral League tide last
season, notified the commissioner's office in New York last
week that .Ishii was being ·formally "posted;' the term used .
· when a player in the Japanese
,leagues wants to switch to the
" llllljon.

Dave Ca~ sill
.,

In hospital

IRVING, Texas (AP) - Dal' las Cowboys coach Dave
Campo remained hospitalized
in Detroit but might return
home later in the day.
.. Campo spent the ~ght at
Henty Fojd Hospital because·Of
flulike symptoms after the
·, Detroit Lions beat Dallas 1~-1 0
. on Sunday.

: · -=·
ORCHARD P.AJU&lt;, N.Y.
, (AP) - Defensive end Phil
Hansen, one of the last ties to
., the ·Buffhlo Bills' Super Bowl
years, announced his retirement.

241 for a 29-poim edge on No. 2
Toledo St. John's.
Wheelersburg holds a 32-point lead
on Waynesville, with Casstown Miami
East, Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley and ·
Marion Pleasant all wiihin striking
distance.
The closest race was. in Division IV.
where Buckeye Central held a 6-1

PlenesHPoii,IO

•

ss.

CHARLOTTE, N:C. (AP)
- - George Seifert was fired as
. coach of the Carolina Pan~ rhers after three years capped
• by an NFL-record 15 straight
losses that the owner said
'took an.the passion out of the
franchise.

The complete AP
rankings are on
Page 10

Wizard·of
Ozleads
Hall
inductees

WORLD CLASS- Ravens ~ight end Shannon Sharpe jumps ov~r .diving Vikings Robert Griffith after a receptlqn from quartelback Elvis Glbac which he ran for 36 yards Monday. (AP)

Ravens leap into playoffs
BALTIMORE (AP) - Now that they're finally a
part of rhe playoff picture,'the Baltimore Ravens see
no reason why they can't duplicate the success they enjoyed a year ago.
The Ravens won the NFL championship last season as a wild~card team,
and that's the route they'll have to take
this year if they plan to be in New
Orleans riext month playing in the
Super B"owL
"Right now, we're in the playoffi, and everyone's 00. Records don't matter," Baltimore middle linebacker Ray Lewis ·said Monday night after the
Ravens qualified for the postseason with a 19-3 win
over the Minnesota Vikings.
· "It's all up in the air right now. !'Jew Orleans is our

destiny," Lewis declared .
Baltimore (10-6) will open the playoffs Sunday on
·rhe road against the Miami Dolphins. The New York
Jets will play at Oakland on Saturday in the other
AFC game next weekend.
Terry Allen ran for 133 yards on 23 carries and
Matt Stover kicked four field goals for the Ravens,
but it was the defense that carried Baltimore to victory.
Baltimore forced four turnovers, held Minnesota to
17.9 yards in total offense and limited Randy Moss to
two catches for nine yards.
"We played great defense, we ran the ball well,"
Baltimore coach Brian BiUick said. "That's a great

.

.· CAA.
N

J

.

Please see Oz. 7

Onder New Ownership

No Sunshine State
far ·sob Stoops
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Bob Stoops said 'No' to
Florida on Monday, sending Gators athletic director Jeremy . ·
Foley to Denver to talk with Broncos coach Mike Shanahan.
Waiting anxiously back in Gainesville are a handful of
players, including quarterback Rex
Grossm~n. who wants to see. who · the
Gators hire to. replace Steve Spurrier
before they commie to coming back next year.
"I would love to come back and play," Grossman said. "I
am not ready to leave, but it may be the 'best decision for me
in the NFL. Who knows?"
Grossman, the runner-up for the Heisman Trophy, said if
Shanahan were the coach, he would love to come 'hack. But
he needs to know by Friday, the deadline f0r underclassmen
'
·
to declare for the NFL draft.
Foley wouldloye to make a hire by Friday, as weD - not
o~ly for the sake 'of th e' players who are already Gatqrs, but
because recruiting begins again in earnest on Saturday.
He knows he won't get Stoops, who ·was widely reported
to be his first choice. Foley traveled to Norman, Okla., early

NEW YORK (AP)- Ozzie Smith wasn't
the fastest, didn't throw the hardest, didn't hit
the farthest.
The Wizard of Oz did show how shortstop
should be played.
"I don't think anybody ever played. the
position any better than he played it," former
Cardinals manager Whitey
Herzog said Monday, a day.
before Smith found out
whether he was elected to
the Hall df Fame on the first
try.
"Was he the best?" Herzog
said. ''He made more diving
plays th~n ·I've ever seen. I
don 'r see how it was pos.ible
Sm~lt-h;.._.J to pl;.y it any better than
Ozzie played it."
Gary Carter, Jim Rice,
Bruce Sutter and Rich Gossage top the
holdovers from last year, when Kirby Puckett
and Dave Winfidd were elected on the first
try.
To be elected, players had to be listed on at
least 75 percent of the ballots of lOcyear
members of the Baseball Writers' Association
of America. Just 36 players have been elected
in their first year of eligibility. There are 251
people in the Hall, overall.
Smith, 47, was a 15-rime All-Star in his
career, which ended in 1996. '
"Tomorrow I'm going to wake .up and,
turn the page, and my life goes on," he said
after his final game. "It's been a great career
and I have a lot of great moments to look
back on, and I'm going to try and enjoy life
a little bit now."
.
He spent 19 seas~he major leagues,
breaking in with San Diego in 1978. Smith
played four years with the Padres, then finished with 15 years in St. Louis .
Smith won 13 NL Gold Gloves - all in a
row {rom 1980- 92 - set shortstop records
for most assists (8,375) and double plays
( 1,590) and entertained fans with a backflip
when he ran out to shortstop at the start of
games. The Cardinals retired No. 1 in his

PI••• see Ravens. 7

Ted's.BP (formerly Middleport BP) ·~
·
Wheel• &amp; Dealt

.

Has Stepped Up To The Pump!

BP .WELCOMES:
011 Changes

Shocks

\

Tire Sales
&amp; Service

iTune.:ups
•

Brakes
Full S~rvlce
Pump
Monday-Saturday
6AM-9PM
Closed Sunday

Rob Lawson,

.,

r

Rollback
Services

New Service Manager
Rob invites family andfritnds alikt to clltck out
Ted's full servit:e sllltion!

((Quick. &amp; Courteous 'Service"
.

Ted Dexter, Owner
540 General Hartinger, Middleport, Ohio
,

(740) 992-1400

PIMM ... Stoops. 7

\.

-·

sian IV in balloting released Monday
night.
,
Dru Joyce has taken over for Keith
Dambrot, who returned to the college
ranks, at St. Vincent-St. Mary. But
wirh James again anchoring the Irish,
they were an e.Sy choice in Division
II. They ·received 22 first-place votes,
mdre than any other teani in the vatmg.
· Ottawa-Glandorf was next in Divisian II bur trailed by .54 points.
Brookhaven, off to a 7-0 start after
. having its unbeaten season shattered
in the state semifinals .lasCyear, stockpilecl the most points in the poD, with

�•
2002

TUaa~~Jan.

The Dally Sentinel• P - A 7

Ohio

ai::ttbune - Sentinel '

A&lt;llamotlc. LDit of Porto, .c-1 lor ..... -

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Cant

==~=:-

~~ ~
-Am.

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2871.

.

UFE YOU DESERVE!

r

lncomapotentOlllll

I

r

2ba Ires deHvary &amp; setup. In tale 3Q.4-67S.55ol8
house financing 10 quallllod

B~
OPI'olmJNny

10

McClure's Restaurant now
hiring all 3 locallons, full or
~
part-time, p~k up appllca·
tlon at location &amp; bring back
INOTICEI
ADOPTION .
between
9·JOam
&amp; OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
Birthmotherl We prom•se to lO:OOam, Monday lhru Sal· lNG CO. n&gt;eommenda that
lo~ your baby uncondoUOn· urday. .
you do business with people
ally throughout l1fas Joys
you know, and NOT to send
and . Challenges. Conflclen· F»iano Player tor small char- money through the mall until
llal. Legal . .Call Margaret lsmatlc church. If Interested uou have inveotlgated the
d Leo 1 1186-203.()333
'
an
·
please call &lt;740)398.()4 14 offertng.
Gain Contldonco In An Sales Poailion. Immediate
Unco,.ln Wortd. Loorn el· Opening. Apply In ·Por1l0n. Start Your Business To·
rectlve sell clefense moves

tocla

I J Clarl&lt;' K
Y • ay
s enpo
-~~le School. 740"742·
.

r

GIVFAWAV

I

:;._.,J
Found· young malo dog, viclnlty ot Eastern HIQh

, g:r.4~6~om

inside billfold.

======

~~;:::~~o~;e C:::o~

rMMIMY auch

potle&lt;o-. llmltollon or
dlurlmlnatlon."

Tilll - p t f win not
knowingly_,-

H-

' Reward. (740)446·2380

elude the day· lo- day su·
pervlslon of the homes. Hvertluauwnla for,_
Musl have ·on year ••perle
wlllclllt..
~~·~~---....... ence and a four year degree
:_~_"!:!! lin a human services tlold: •-lonolllltlow.our
r; r...,. ,..........,., previous personnel oupeM· iut htnloy
~---:i:i;-ilia.,.l slon pra1erred. Valid driver's
lnformecl that ell
'
license, three yoors good -llngllelvottl-ln
R~k Pearson Auction Com· driving ••penance and ada11111 nnopopu oro
/&gt;any, lull tlmo auctlonHr, quote aulomoblla lnStJrance
ovlilobltonanoqual
. complete, auction service. required. Must live wi1hln 30
appartunlty .,.._,
L - W66,0ttlo &amp; Weal minutes/ 30 miles o1 home.
VIrginia. 304-773·5785 Or Flexible hours. Liberal ben, 304-773·5447.
otll packa~. Solary: 523·
•· Send
25 0001 year.
WANIID
resume rlO
HOMES
•
to:
Buckoye
Community
FOR S•• •
.
10 BUY
. Services, PO Box 604, ,
~
~
Jockao~. OH 4:;640·0804.
Absolute Top Ooll,r: U.S. All resumes muot be_posl· 3 bedroom house tor sale
· Sliver, Gold Coins, Proal· mart&lt;ed by 1116102. Equal on -.nd contract, (740)992·
i eels, Diamonds, Gold Opportunity Employer.
sese.
.
Rings, U.S . Currency,· STNAI CNA Pan· time posl· 3 Bad
M.T.S. Coin Shop, ~51 Sec· tlon available on all shifts.
;~o5m332°" Route 2 •
304
ond Avenue, Gaillpolla, 740· Scenic Hills Nursing Cenlor. ( )II ~
·
' 446·2842·
Slop by an&lt;IIIU
oulan appll' 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, Sat up
calion or call Pam Caldwell on Prtvato Property. Take
for
more
Information. ovar payments. (740)448·
I \ 11' 1 ( 1\\11 \ I
" I H\ II I "
(740)446·7150
3583.
URGENTLY
NEEDED· -3-4 bedroom, 2 balhs, lr, dr,
ho . lbu"WiNm&gt; t'oan;:,,OO.:,~· ::,m2 1~ :=~~·~·~«';:':~.!

I'

------_.1-

I

l
L

$:

'::

wanted, no CJ?l. 23
or otdor, good drivr,ng"'· old
rocord, benotllo, drug
ocraon, oenlors welcome. 1·
·531-8553.
WORK! EXCELLENT
oPAYI Aoaornbla products at
I hOme. CaII Toll Free
,Ext. 12170
11-800·4117-5588
www.h0mo]oba.conv12170

•-rl·

Driver&amp;

..:;,;;.;,;;;,.;;;;~===;.:,.

Exporltlteod Cuhlor Need·
ed (3(1.4)885-3893
· ·
~P wanted cartng lor lhe
oldorly. Oarat Group Homo,
,_ pay1ng fl1)nlmum wage,
now·oniftt: 7arn-3pm, 7am·
5pm, 3pm·11pm, 11p,m·
1om, cotl740-992·5023.
'

I

All of your homo rapalrs, ad·
dlllono &amp; romoclellng. 24hr
emergency IOIVict, Hnlor
citllena diacount . 22vra.
a•". (304)578·2065
'
~

Experienced care takor for
siCk or -rty. Retorencaa.
(3041373.7244
Top to Botlom Cleaning
StrvlcO. Prolalllonal clean·
lng at anordable prices.
Realdsntlal. offloe, remodellng and conatruclion cloan
up. ConlideniOll.. 992·2979
or 992·1391 .
,.-

~~ p":~~~ ~~~..~~~ ~~: pi~ do~ilt

(740~·4043

I

fllr al

(740)742·2931.

For t:oncrote, Angto; Cflln.
Flal Bar, SIMI (fttlnfl
For Drains, Drivowaya &amp;
Wakwayo. L.\L Scrap Mtt·
o1o Open Monday, Tueaday,
W - y &amp; Friday, llorn4:30pm. Clooed Thursday,
SaiU)1:'l &amp; Sunday. .
(740
7300
ntl,

King Slzo Walarbod - 12
Dfa...,.
undemoath, $I :IS.
(740)44e 8962
Large pickup lead mixed

flrliWOOd, wtll deliver localy,

$4S.OO 949·2587 ovenlngo

me~ls. Very Spactoua, 2 Mattreu and BoK Springs, . New Sentenlil . 22 Rifle,

Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, I $95. Qull~ng Frames. S2S.
112 Balh, Fully C8rpoled, Truck \oppor, Flbarglau,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa· Back and Side Sliding·Winllo, Start $385/Mo. No Poll, tlowl, 91" long x 80" wklo,

Fancy Slook. Stml Auto.
$145 Call (740)4411·1127

::.:=·:.::~..::::=~=-

WOrd Processor Brother

Laue Plua Security Oapoelt $50.
·
POP 300 ·Color 1nic Jet, Uka
Roqulred, Daye: ·740-.4418Now,
$t50.
Phone
3481; Evanlngo: 740-367· Molal Oook, 4 Dfawora on (740)37i-2727
0502 740-448.()101.
One Side, 301120, Very NicO iir;;;.;;~;;;..----,

r

'

PO!Ioct lor Sludanla BvluliNG
1WinRiverli&gt;werloowOC&gt; -'&lt;,S20.(740)985-4409
SllPI'IJm;
oeptlng appllcallont to&lt; 110
1
=~
lnl.:!n~
~ Block brick oowor p1peo
EDH
oil &amp; olaclrlc tumae.. tn- ..,......:..-, lirrt'ota, ole. - . .....:
·
•• _,....
""(304)875-ee78.
eluding hi oltlelancy IINI Wln141rs, Rio Granda, OH
Pllc:plt-r-"""t
line W~ ~~flaa 00740-245-5121.
Very nice, 2.3 bedroom •~· pa- &amp; 0
I
Ia
'""'' 19
,..,
~PDn.
apartment, n town, rge IENNEn'a HI!AnNG • Llll!lll!.i~----.,1
kitchen, LA, $500/ma. Rof· COOLING (740)441-9411 ..,
eronca &amp; dopooil required. or 1-1f10.1'12-7
·
..
(740)448-3&amp;44
·
• 3/4.A~Itll(l it/4 '8oro
der Collie Pup tor Sale.
Sac£
Atnulng
M.,.bollom (140)388-9033. Call after
-RIM'
. -.oughll
7pm.
·

=,::.'·

r .

·-='-. -

r!

I'""".-lllllt'''

Count:'

m;~a.

whHo, 2 Sable. (740)388·
'
I \ h \I .... I 1'1'I I I
,\ I I \ I ..., I t II

sm-,

Area. $ 5951 monttt plua de-

posit and Reference. No
Pell. (740)4411-4826

~~toroomr••
.;,n 1 1 n'~ocapausen·
•.
,_.
w1•
$200 dlposll, 5330 per
monlh rani, renl lncludoo
walor, sower &amp; trash,
(7&lt;1Q)378-ll111
3 Roome and Borh, Newly
$155.38/mo. Call Kavena, month plua deposit .. Mull RemodeletJ
Downatalra
see. In Point Pleaunl. Slove and Aalrigor- A~
740.385.7671 .
· Paid. 411 01• Iva
Now 2002 14 wide Onl (304)«175-8678
utiHIIsa
3a pa~ 3br. Houae, wllh family Slraol-11476. (740)4411-3845
5899 Down &amp; 5155 _

2

==-------no

Carr Harold 740-

month

385·7S71.

'.

:i~n: ~~ ,.':':/'" 1~4~
8

0

dowe, priced 10 sale. Call

(304)875·3189 (806)4744391 ask tor Rosemary.
Onl• $8 50 down and
$t6l _ _month~layou

38

_ , &amp;·While. Vlluod ovor
$250., Anllquo
Iron dolt or dog bod $68
(304•-•·2438
·
·
,.,_
FIN Gu Fu._ and Air
Conditioner EotlmiiOI. Coli
~ond~r"Whlripoo~Retrlg· (740)446-8308 or 1·800·
orator, $100. Call atlor 28Hl098. If you don't cell
8:00pm. (740)446-11066.
"'we bolh loaol

Dzr·

...,_

4x5 Round BaiH ol Ha•,
,
$10each.(740)387-&lt;l186
-------4x50 1000 pound round
bolos, olorad Inside, $20,

(7401985·3949

.us.

I

Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Straw, Yur 'Round Dotlve!y
&amp; Volume Dieoount.Avella·
ble: Heritage
Farm.
(304)1175-572•.
I 1~ \ '\ " 1'1 II~ I \ Ill I\

Auros
f'(8

SALE

Clf'I!OI, 202 Clatk Full Size Bed, All L---::Oiirii::iliio-,J
Cl1opat Road.' Porter, Ohio. wood. ~ Honda -

Motlohon

(7401446•7444 Hn-830- Whaalo. COntpltle ~n
11162 . F- EotlmaiOI, euy Walarbod, 131 tor oooh
room, completely renovat· IEAUTIPUL
APART- flnanctna 80 dlya 'aame 81 ttem. (7&lt;40)44-2805
~us A~'.;,:l ~~Otamon~ MENTI AT.IUOQI!T PRJ. caeh. Vli.J Multr Card. Grubb'e Plano- Tunlna &amp;
Polnl Pleasant (304)11 75 CE8 AT JACKSON ES. Drive- a· lillie uve olol.
Rllpalrt Probl-? Nttd
8876
..
)r:,e:;:~\~~w!'~ Waahor,
Dryor, .uq~:~~:ISTht
Dr.
.
4 bedroom houealn Racine ·lhoP 6 movlel. Call 740- Etlctric Range, $95. FI'Oitacross from park, nice ,._.6-2508. Equal Houalng FrH Refrigerator, $~50 . Hardy MurM 13.00 MCh 4
neighborhood, heal pump Opj&gt;ortunlty.
.
Whlripool Slack Waolltr 1«110. Open Sat. 8-llpm. &amp;
heat &amp; r.onlral air S500 par
and Dryer, 1350. Rotri911'a· ..,. 111 '11L Dowh&lt;Jrot Groen·
month 1500 dipolll In· S.ec:h ·St., Mlddltpon, 2 lor, Ukt Now, $300. Skagge 110uoo Mt. Allo. (304)8915eludes walor oowor lruh bedroom furnished apart· AI&gt;P.I"ncoo, 78 Vln. SlrMt. 3740 leave mollage or
'
(304)8815-3789
·
17401949.22 ; 7 call, 78m: menl, uillhloo _paid, depolil (740)4411-731Ml

°

..:.;,;,:;..;..;.::.::::..:=--

rio

j

· A~...,,........,.,

Plltno

.

9• Okle Acl11ova, 98,000
mlloo, blue. CD player
($300 value), clean car,

~~~!2·31iJ.40)742·3102,

;,c.::..:..;;::,.;:.:.:.;:__ __

·

·

p1t0no

SUe's ~!HI on the "l"
In MkldtopQfi. Dolle glUewatt, Aladdin ma..O... ond
more. (740)992.()2118

17_,_7

s---

Rnldenllal Home OWnera
Tappan HI ot!icloncy 90 piUI
9U tu,_ Including oil
and, aloctric 9U tuma·
M--J...·-~--~-~
Hll Elllcloncyri
'li' Hoot
••~
, -·..-. oofu na appane
MEaciiANDiiE . FrH lno:redlblo warranty
Package.
ot
ch"""o
S~lru
-UNNI!TT'I
HEATING a
1 101
running bart lor t&gt;ltnd cab, COOLING (7•0)441-9418
Dlamonll toolboX eloriod ar 1-.a72..,.,
c•romo ralll tint'·• wrap ~.comlblf'lnllt
"
• ~
bugahtlld all oh Cho\ly 911- Two 'Coleman Pep-up
vorado, all tor $300, Carnparo- C&amp;nop)l, ltle7
(740)~149
. ond 11189 Nttd Work. Good
W1nltr Project. Bolh For
Bed Complete $125 Ccf S1400 (740)M.2225
f01 '
'
·
'
·
and End Tabloo, S75· T\00 Now Chalnlow Chalnl
HICio bod, 175. Mict&lt;toVavt wil Ill on 13 - Slend S25 (740" .. ~42
·
•
·
~·
112 price, $14.00 -h.
(740)446-tl27
JeT
AERATION MOTORS - n o Spoclal: 314 200
RopalrW&lt;I, Now &amp; -ltlln PSII21.115 Por 100; 1' 200
Stock. Cltll Ron Evans, I· PS1,437.00 Por 100: All
600-537·9528.
Brau Compnoaolon Fhllngo
In Stook.
RON IYANI I!N'ImiPRIISunwolt Tanning Bed. $500. u Jockaon, Ohio, HIOO.
(304)773-5000 .
537·9528 ,

r

I:",;..,_

I

r:;s .

1998 Ka..... ki'Mulo 550,
Mala! Top, Roll Bar, Wlncf.

ehleld, 1 Hitch, Like New,

r

~

114800.. (740)379-2788

ActiOn will offer for .me the
folowlng repou=u~ automoblea. 1993 Clltvrolttt.u-

mlna Von, $4312, 19i2
Buick Century, $4350. l993
Dodge Oynall)', 13126. Tilt
Cora will bo OOklas Is 1«
the lllled price or for lhi

I.Miy'e Auto StiH· 1898
Ford Muetang, $1200~ 1887
Ford E·150 Van $850
1992 Man:ury ~ ' , $600:
1992
van,
!~~2
Otcle Cullau
.--~·~. $800. 111110 Ford
Tomp, $900. 111114 Dodge
8-250 V.n. 1850. 1090 a.o
Tracker, $850. 1885 Okle
Cutlaoo Supremo, ,$800.
1985 Buick sorn.-, $400.
1988 Old• Calala; 1800.
1990 c.....,, Lu-•- ....,
1989 ch;f c,;~;if, ffi'
1800. 1985 Ford F-i&amp;O .
Plct.up $750 111811 Pon1loc
Flroblrd. 11200. 11!88 Ford --..
e
••~
-· ....
lOOn. ~. 1-eta
P~. 1800. 11188 Doclot
Oynaaty, 11000. 1990 Ford
~
· - 1-• F-e
- . ~- ~• ·
• von, 1800. 111811 Foro
F·l50 Pickup; 11200. 1990
G.o Mt4ro, 1750. ltle7 Ply·
mou4tl Hortion, $400. ttle7
0od91Caravan, 1550. 1990
GJO- Storm, 1800. 19811
Dodge Ontnl. $480. 198e
Mtn:u,l:;· 1800. 111ee
Foro
,, 11000. can
(740)388-9
.

0.:: 'II:

11; lhenoa North 13
dill'
41' .... to.
point. t111110e North 1
dig.... t' Weat, 14
fell; Jhenoa·North 53
dig-• 2' Eaa1 10
IHI' Io the Sou-11
corner of Margaret
...,k'e lot; thence
louth22dlg1M8M'

E11t 110 feat to thl
loulhllat comer of
W.K. Smart'a loJ;
thence North 23
dig,... I' Will 201
faat 10 a cori)Or of
Nichol• Slow'• land
In lite EMI line ol W.
K. lmart'o lol; lltenoa
North 53 dlgiWa 31'
Eaat 7 lilt to lhe
corner of the creek,
the oorporeUon Una;
lh~a• Soulh 25
daO'"il I' Eall 4U
fell to lhl North nne
of S.E. Curtle (now
D:M. Curtle); thence
South 10 dlgi'MI 45'
W11t 211 1111 lo the
Eaet line of. tho
Pomeroy and Racine
road; lhlnOI Norlh 21
degr111 110' lhenc•
with the aald Eaat
line -of the road to lite
pi- of beginning.
. Excepting 201100
acre convay•d by
Henry · Rouah and
Merle Rou1h lo C.H.
Bryoon and Welle
Bryaon, by dead
Recorded In Volume
221, Page 405, Malge
County Dead
Racorde.
Furlhlr,
. EXCEPTING and
RESERVINQ onto the
granlora
lha
following dlocrlbed
,.roal:
Beginning 11 lhe
South1111 corner of
the property diCrlbld
In Dead Book 253,
Page 173 of I he
Malga County Dead
Recorda; · I hence
South 110 degr111 45'
Well, 211 fHt to thl
Eaal line of the
Pomeroy Recine
Road (S.R. 124);
thence along till 1!111
line of aald Pomeroy
Racine Road In a
North111t dlraollan
50 feel to 1 point,
thence North · eo
degrHI 54 mlnulll

HelpWanlld

' A1:1roPARrs &amp; ·
· AaDUJm~

Ala you looldna tor onglnoe
or tranamlsaJons? Give me

a_cal ot (740)448.0SI9

DUE TO OUR
CONTINUED GROWTH,
TURNPIKE OF
GALLIPOLIS HAS

lludgtlAll p
-olana
Typn,
- -·
To

Ov• 10.000 Transmlllllionl,

Rebuild K11o, 740-245-15877,
Cell: 339-3785.

F8CfSWgfJ~lrfs:

8.AII!MINT
10 - k old Rlbarl•nl
WATERPROOFING
Uncondlllonol llfotlmo .guar·
Huaky (f)
arrtot. Local reteroncoa turyaar ol.d Full
nlahod. Eotablllhed I 97S.
Bloadld
o.ntan
can 24 Hra. (740) 446·
Shepherd
(f)
0870,
1·800.267.()576.
year old Full
Rogoro Walarprootlng,
Blootlld
,
Dalmatian
C&amp;C OoneraJ Homo Maintf.
year
old mlald
ntnco- Palnllng, vinyl flkl.
18rrler
lng, carpentry, doorl, win- . liolha, mobllo home
repair and men. For frH

- c a l l Chal, 740-882·

Nlllor'-rO..Coulr

~;::·:w.o:::'":L::·:::=~

8323~'iiE&lt;miil"na

I.

Realdenllll 0( commarcl1l
wiring, now, IOMco or ,..
palra. Mallei Llcanltd 010etrlclan. R - r eltC1rioal.
WV000308. 304-ll715-1788.

Help Wanted ·

(la!Na· Molge Communliy

lndopondont HoroaiHe Die- hlglltot ohor. ·Bless will be
1tributor, Cell F« 'Produol Or occepted until 1,2:00pm
~
Opportunity. (740)441-1982 . Wadntoday, January 18,
2002. R&gt;r more Information
Buy or ull. Rlvtrino Anti· Pinch P1oa1 Draper AnUqut GMCAA (740)882·
quee, 1124 Eut Main on Satin Light Beige and cteoo- ~ 8021 01 (740)387·7341
SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- rati"£ Rod. Will till 810 10 GMCM , _ 111e rigttf
~'528. Ruoo Moort, ft. tn~.;. S7!.J.or . au. toroi_I.,...Wioloniblcll.
--·~ ,

I

1~

Hay ror 1111, aquare bales.
Also, 3 good Crodco winFirat Elvia Plate made. &lt;IOwa. 740-882·5533

$800 ao1c1ng

i .

"I 10:\ H I ..,

r•o -"'C"' . I.~~"~'·a u~,.!:.j"~"ie:··~
&amp;
c~ Lr___HAY
G_RAIN
___,

wuhorl, dry.,. and rofrlgerators Thomplona Appll·
anco. 3407 JockoOn Avo""" (304)8715-738S
•
.
Lito Model GE W~shor,
SIOO. Lola _Model Whl~
$ 75 · ~ Wah AI·

By vlrlue of an
Ordlr ~ Sale duly
laauad oul of the
Court ol Common
Pleaa of Perry
County, Ohio, In the
CIH at Caunlrywldl
Home L011ne, Inc .. va.
Lnnne M. Young, ol
al, DIW\clanta upon 1
Judgement therein
randlred and being
CaN No. 01CV053 In
aald Court, I will otler
for public lila lllhll
Sherlll'a Office of the
Perry
County
Courthouu, New
Lexington, Ohio
43714, on Morch 7,
2002, at 10:30 a.m.,
lhe following land(e)
olid tanemenl(a), 'to
wit:
Situated In the
Tciwnahlp ol Sutton,
County of Melge,
IIIII of Ohio:
Being In Sactlon
11, Town 2, Range12,
Lol No. I, Sutton
Townahlp, VIllage of
Recine,
Molge
County,
0 hI o.
Beginning In the 1181
line of lhe Pomeroy
end Racine RCNid, 513
feel from a polnl
which -re Nortll 38
dagraae Weal In the
lntar11ctlon of lhe
Pomeroy and Racine
road with lhe Will
line of Sactlon 11,
aald polnl baing 1110
fell
from
lha
Southwell corner of
Lot No. I In SectLDn

...

per month. cau NUdcl, 740- 3 BA Hoose In AJo Grande, Schools and OowniOWn For Sale:. Reconditioned ery, $20.

385·7671.
S350/ monlh plus dopoall.
No Pets, ~eterencea.
New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 (740)245·5439
balh. Only $995 down &amp;
$189.62/monlh. Call Cheryl, .3br. hOUI8 In Point Pleas740-385-7671. ·
ant. ~o Pals. (304)675·
5929
Now 2002 14 wide only
$789 down &amp; $155.38/mo, 3br. Houae, wltll family
Call Nikki, (740)385·7871. room, 2 biths, IOiolly rt·
New 2002 14 wide only modeled. 2 story In HIIIOri·
$799 down &amp; only cal dlalrlet,
pall! $550.

:il'i

CLASSIFIEOSI
-

moving_ muat uti,

Owner NEW AND U8EQ STEEL
mo1&lt;o of· Sllol Boama, Pipe _ ,

A;:::

""''
""'
&amp; references, no pete,
1opm
a ,_ hOme. Call 1·500·
·
(740)992.()185 ·
837-3238 ask for Mike. ' 4 Rooms &amp; Bath, $3001
,
Pll t P
Sl I P month 52 Olivo Stroot Chrlaty • Family Living,
r~ram, ng C. a- (740)448 3945
· 33140 New Lima Ad., Rutrant, No rediV Bad r8dll,
'
'
Olnd, Ottlo, 740.742·7403.
and Government ~oans for 9 J"QOml, 3 baths, CIA and Apar1ment, home and trailer
Rentalll. Own Your New Heal $500/ mo (740)446· rentals. Commen:lal sloroH070
me ·Today! !740)«6· ~4734.
·
!~~!-!_J.Valloblt 101' loaoe.
35
·
·•-~• now:
·
s 111 Fl
1
D
MolinE IIOMfS
~
nanc ""· own ~
RfNI'
Gracloua Jiving. 1 and ~ 2
ymenll as low 11 t%. __:
FOR
• bod_, ap&amp;rtrnMa at Vll·
Prequallty by phone.
,
11go Manor and Riverside
~~rn'e J~:~~~~ &lt;74014411-3570·
14•70, 3 bedroom, atoclrlc Apartmonll In Middleport.
2883.
We have approldmataly 20 heal,. $300 monlh, $150 do- From S278-$348. Coli 740used homes tor under pool, no . pels, (740)742· ~~2·5064 . Equal Housing
For aala by owner. Nice bl· $2,000, call1·800-837·3238 2714
Opportunllloe.
level home on ~ acre near for Info.
Chesler. ThrH bedroom,
2 Bedroom Mobile Homo. North 3rd A,._, Mkldla1wo balhs, one-car garage, 1987 14,10 mObtlt home, 3 _Close 10 Town. (740)258· port, 1 &amp;2 bedroom tumlsh·
family room wllh llroplace, bedrooms, . 2 lull baths, 8574
ed aparlmonll, dapooll &amp;
sun,room. New central heat- I
tI
t
h
reference•.
no pets,
lng &amp; ole syatom. One ml· 1 oye, ro r gara or, O!lt Baeutllul River Vlow Idee! (740)992.()185
nute off Route 7, but sun prt· pump, aome new carpet, For 1 Or 2 P.apte, Rotoronvata. (740)985-391!1
new w~lar lines, now vlny1 ceo, Dopo~t, No Poll, Foa· Now Takl~"=tlonohouoa replacement won· tor Traler . Part&lt;, 740-441· 35 Wlf4 2
TownFS: Brand Now Home 1500 s~:g· vooryngoodrancondledltlonlot·,' 0181 . .
.
Wh0ua118
,AP8Sertmonwa!:,'-Tra·•,
8
IQ ft., 1 ~12 acre lot,
...
"''
$115,000. Call for Info. $12,000 or beat ohar. Call Mason 3br. Trailer. 1285 $350/Mo 740 448 0006
(740)387.(]521
7783
.,
.
(740)448·45141 (740)4411·
plus dopolil. (304)875River Bond p - ,_ 8C·
32411
·
1867 14x70 , 3 br./2blh, Trailer In Mason naXI· lo ceptlng opptlcotlonl
·
tort br.
Romodoled 3 bedroom, In 54995. Will halp wkh dollv· Wal·man, C.A., covorod Hud Sulloldlze Apl. to&lt; t11o
Mkklloport, call Tom Andtr·
CaH Kov11118, 740-385- carpon 740-992·3061
elderly &amp; dlublod. EOH.
8
2
(304)882-3)21
100 after 5pm, 11 40199 ·
·
Trailer In Racine. 2 bod·
3348·
1990 Floelwood 2 bedroom room, carport, nice nolgl&gt; Sludlolofllcloncy apartment.
homo-call Cheryl 0 740· borhood, S375 per montll, S225 untumllhed, S250 tur·
Buy1 Sell or Trade 385-9621 . 2002 SUnpoinle S375 dopooh lncludea WO· nlshed, S300 depolil, walor,
3 badroom/2bath t4 • 70. tor,
sewer,
garbage, trash 1 - .-Middltport,
must sell-call Mike 0 740- (740)949·2217 call 7am- (740)591-&lt;1649, (74o) 596385·2434.
IOpm.
·
34116. .
•

875·1429.
Domino's now laking appll·
cations ror sara drivers, Galllpolla and Pomeroy loca·
lions only. Apply In pe""'"·

12o-v.

ask tor Cheryl.
~,!R·5~:!,~~ncopl~a
Modem 1 Bedroom Aport· Trailer Spol tor Ron!. 2 SIS. (740)441-1127
'
mont (740)4411.()390
t.!ilol Oul ol Northup on UnIRS Spacial! We'll molch poall. 011 Slroal Pa~~~·
·
cOin Plko. (740)44e-11044 Complo4o Sal World Book
your tax return up to $2,000. Fenced In Yard. (740
Encyclopedia with ltand,
CaN (740)4411-3093 lor do· 2580
Bedroom Apl Gall"""lo.
$85. End Tablo, $25. Small
1
tails.
W
P kl
Boys Bike with Training
1
52·75 '""'th
3
1 125· 1
Llmlled Or No Credll? Gov·
.. ,
No
emmont Bank Flnanco Only Hud approved, plck·up opaftor 8:00pm .
N;!
At OakWOQd In 88jrboura· pUcatlon at 5 Cave Street, 1 br. Fumlahed Apt. Uving
,
Ita p':,~7j2s. Satallltill
ville, WV 304-738·3409.
Pomeroy.
room, kllchln, balh. All utilll· ••':tanc10: R-·•ttlonod
$75. (740)448·
.....,
_,""
Mual aoll· 14•70 mobile 3bedroomhomoMinsravlllt leo pd. Excepl Electric. Wa ra, Oryert, Rangoe, 7 8
homo, call 740·:185-2434 area, river vfow, $450 par (304)875-1385
Rofrlgrotora, Up To 90 Doye Arowood S50 Dump Truck
ask for Elaine.
month, ralerences required. 15 Court Street. 2 Bed- Guaranteed I We Set:~ Load. (7..0)379-2758
depooll required, no palo, rooma 1 112 bah Kllcllon Maylag AppiOlncoa,
New 14x70 3 brl2bth Only 740·992-llm after 5pm.
wltll .iova and nlfrloerator City Maytag, 740-4411-7785. Arowood· $45 pickup load.
$975. down and $189.64
ott Slraol Porklng, Cicoo IIi
(740)441.0108. Local Dotlv·

• ,WOrking From Home? Call

4~12 yr. old Cottage s~e

1 Bedroom Apartmenll,
S2ll8 monlh. Dopoall &amp; Ret·
oranco. HUD Approved.
(740)441-1519
1 Bedroom Apl Balh KitchLM Room' ••7'1l/
WI,
ng
,mo.
(740)367·7015
·
Tara TownhOUIO Apart·

Id

miles N. en old 33 from
Meigs High School, 'by appolntmant only, (74o) 593 •
6937

~~NI ;~~::;a;~~,:'~~

•••

Grad

I.303

r

I

•

H

earning whal you
.
aro worth? 51 500 _5klmo Wyngate ol Gallpolla, a II·
Froolnto 800.22 1.1457.
censed Asolaled Living
Community, Is now hiring
,' AroyouSortousAboul torthetollowlngpoalilons:

Now For Froolnlonnallon. Full·llme or part·llma cooks: houeo,noar river Mason
1 888-601-4358
Part·llme LPN
area, near Walmart lg,
www,~ooceas4u4mo.com
poroh, fenced yard 304·773'
Coma work in a warm and 5452
Attention!
lrlondly almoophare whore
Eam 2nd . Income without you can make a dlffarance. 8~6 Main Street, Pt. Pl.
2nd job up tc
Please aend resume to: 300 Completely Refurbished. 2
S25.·$75.111r. PI-Ft
BriarwoodDr.,Galllpolls, . story, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed·
1-800-218-7543
OH 45631 .
rooms. Large Kitchen,
""""" D
Large Utility Room, LA/ DR/
www.............. ,. reemt.com 11«i
BLSNESS
Family. Rm. New Carpet
""·· --·~
throughout. FIA &amp; IVC,
.,"'""""'
•

.''•

N

Runs on

area, laundry mom, central $ 160· Security ~ and approx. 3 ICNI, exc. CONt.
loti 10 pounda· 200
·
·
air, underplmlng. 8x,18 cov· RoferencM Required. Cell cia, etec. l1oot ret. _required Ploolola, quitiOOIInlry 0111, poundo euy, quick, Ful AKC Chlnooo ~Shola,
ered porch. 8•10 building. (740)387 7780
304-895-3400.
tl
IN
modale Dramallc Ra ... lla. 100% WOrmed, Now
ng
(304)875-7116 or (304)«175·
~~gao StOO occo~
H Nolurol, Dr. Rooommondod. Depolito to hold.
•
5018
Pllol Progrom, ·Ronltrl
~
al
Homoi, 7~ 'All&lt; about PRI!I! Somplo" (740)388-9325
Foraa~ ~8x70, 3 bedroom, Needed, 30-'-73&amp;-7295.
-FOR lbNr .
, 992·2187.
(7.0)44~·1982
Re~l , red Pomeranians, 8
2 balh, call 740-385-9&amp;21
AT&amp;T Anawerlnc BoNlee, old. S250 each. 1

hours Weekly. C&amp;lt Sera- raga with 2 br, 1 bath, apt., Point Pleasant area. 2x6
Tee, 740-592-6651 .
bam, 19 acres fenced, 1112 walls, thermal pane win-

"'" yoo

'

.

no

Fat":b]o&lt;IHouo:!.~ctF-...of
lMII
... ~
whlcll mo1&lt;oo Hlltepl to
"ony

pllcatlons tor 3-11 Full· time
AN Supervisor and a 3·11
Part· lime RN SupeNisor,
Please slop by and till oul

1~~~~~: ~~~~,:~~~\~~) ::~~- R·:~~~·~:~~lll~s s:~:

•

t

aCross

:J

lnthla,.....perle

lion available lor a residen1181
1 Loat: Earring with Nice very
program tor people wtth
181

'•'

tafneer Spom and Alloy a.

Gt
=

° ":aa"

!92-4167

•

COuntry, S2751 monlh
plus S200 dopooll and utllllloa. Call (740)256-e202
2 BR All electriC St Rt 7 8
10 rrdlea lrom tOwn, Rotor:
llllC81I and Deposll Re1~ N Pela $271l/
qu r..,.
o
.
monlh. (740)441-1589. Call
alllr 3:30pm
11M1

Haven. 112 mile torm Moun- 2 br ·Mobile Home

Call (304)675-2470

r

ion (740~ 7150
- rallgl
Loll U.dioo Billfold. OWned 1 ·
,:;:;: ,,.;u, or:;~
·
by a Senior Citizen. Needs SOCIAL WORK POSITION·
papars from Inside biNfokl. Program COordinator pool: orlflln,"' ony Intention to

i

bUyers. (808)474-4391 or COmmercial Building lor
(808)4747568 allor 5
Reni.'Codar StnMII, GalllpoIOl, oH. (740)258-8881
11168 12&gt;150 House Trailer, For Sale DrfVe-lhru Conven2 BR, $2300. (740)379· lent.store with block 110: , :
92S7
building. 14x70 m lo
1970 Champion 12x80 2 hOme. 15 pluo Acres. Local·
bedrooms. $3,000 OBO. ed on Rt. 33 outside of Now

c

' School, black w/whit&amp;, call Scenic Hills Is accepting ap~

lo_ID_,_&lt;7_40_)7-42_-2080
__·_ _
Lool uodln BIIWold. OWned
' by a Senior Cilizen. Needs

2 bedroom, Fumiahecl. In 2218.

1980 Hll~resl, Nice Condl· Groat LocaUon. owne111 Ro- rom ow avon
e
Uon, 2 BR, Gal Furnace, tocaUng..Coll (304)882·2859 school, _need 3 ret. S200.00
Central AC, I OWner, or (304)675-0180
dop. $300.00 • mon. 304·
$7500. (740)258-1914
982·1107
Bring Flesume. Acquisitions dav... Flrlme ShoPPing Cen2br. Trailer In Country $2 75
J I 151 2nd A G I ter Spaoe AvaiOlble AI Af· 1985 Skyline 14,70, 3 badowe ry,
vo., • · fordable Rate Spring Valley room Good COndHion can
month, $100. Deposit.
llpolls.
Plaza, can7.W-446.oto1 .- Hareid, 740-385·9948.·
16
~304)5711-3117 or (30415112·
Soles RtprtMnlllllvo
HOI.ISI!li
Large National .Company
~ 11991 Manelon 14x70, 3
FORRI1Nr
3 &amp; 2 BR Mol&gt;lle Homo In
Sooka Rep tor Local Area,
SERVJ&lt;Ei
• bedroom ~•cellenl condl·
Porter. You Pay Doposll
$600 weakly plus commls·
.
lion, call Kavana, 17401385· I ·3 Bedrooms Forecloted and U111Kioo. Call (740)388alon, plus bonuses, plus full
TURNED DOWN ON
i948.
Homes From $199/MO., 4% 9162
benefits. ~at year eamlnliJB,
Down, 30 Yeara at 8.5%
50· 70K. Fax Reaume: ~rL ~E~UAW ~~~? 1991 Mansion 14x70, 3 APR. For uo~nga. 8Q0.31 g. 3 bedroom lrallor on Stale
(757)473·3547
;'a":3 5 n bedroom, Will help with do- 3323 E•t. 1708
ROIM 1431n Pomeroy, tlrot
1
· · ·
livery, call Harold, 740·385·
·
month rtnl plue dtpoaK,
Scenic Hills Is accepting ap9948.
1 bedroom, $3001 mo. plua Hud approved, (740}992plicalions for a 32 hour a
1995 16•"" excallenl con· deposit. References re- 9523
weak till- In LPN tprthe 1f.7
~
I ed ~- .. &amp; R.-..
·
dlllon,.wlll htlp wHh delivery, qu ~ ; oN0- , -·..-'18' 3 bedroom, t balh oil aloeS
!~l~.ica~gnbyo~ndc~/1°~:~
call Nikki, 740·385·9948.
tor.
N ' ' '&gt;Galllpolt. lrlc, nice clean homt,
Celdwell .lor more Informs(74014463987
palO, (740)992·2187
tlori. (7401446.7150
1995 Clayton 14x70 2 bed· 2 BR Homo· tn Galllpolli
Allrul01tato -rtlolng rooms 2 tull baths, dining $300 2 BR Trailer 1250• 3 br. moflllo home IIIIa oo

I

Free to good hOme Pupplea. Part Eskimo while
.spiWAtJslralllan shepherd.
Beautiful wHh
dlsposl·

•AI• ..._

Malga

.S ituated In tho
Stall of Ohio; County
of Malgo and In tha
1978 Ford F·150 Automat· ToWn o hIp
of
'
Columbia·
lc, V-8, 83,000 actual
•~•
I 91- ~ Excelon1mllol,
eon. Situ- · In _....on
.dillon. 34600. (740)446- 23 and 21 of aald
4053
Calumblo Towlllhlp,
.
and baing Lot 12 In
1984 Chevy Truck, 414• Rollin~ Maadowa
Rune Good. Now Tires ond 1
Rime, Aol&lt;lng 1350D. can ubcllv elon ol aald
(740)388-11047
Section• 11 MI. forth
In the recorded plat
1995 Cholly 5-10 Excetlonl ofaald aubcllvlolon In
condftion. S3500. (304)875- Plat Cabinet 7·A,
,69118
lhlga County, Ohio
1997 Chavy 5-10.truck, r811, Plol Recorda,
.v-a engine, olr, ~~~. crul10, Currant
Deed
a"""" cau., 5 op., 87,000 Recorded on 10.03-87
mlln, (740)992·7769 .
In Volume 17, Page
227.
.
!~
Property commonly
L_ __.........
...,..,_.,J known
11:21171 Old
. 8tr111, Route 341,
1982 Ford Bronco, v.a, au- Albany, Ohio 41710.
lo. 4 wd, machanlcolly Porcel No. 01·
oound, voty lltllo ruot, camo 00141 000
.
trom C.lltomla 5 yoors. ago, Located at 21175
$t ,500. OBO. Dayo Old s•-~ R ~ •••
(304)875-3952
- - ou- - ·
- - - - - - - - Albllny, Ohio 41710.
87 Aatro von, 158,000 rrnt., Apprallll value:
air, cruise, 1111, PW, PL, $100,000.00
AMIFM Cauotta, dual air 10% caoh depoalt
bage, .ABS, 10a10 .7; llko or certified check
new, Muot ~~ (740)379- .-qulred on day of
2134 IHw mueaga.
aale, bolance due
ATTENTION: AMISH
upon conflrmlllon of
TRANIIPOIITAllON a 1111. · Dead Ia IIIUI
CHURCHES.
upon peyment of
l-2001, 15 P._vane batanee. Thle land(1)
LowMI~raCIMn
or
1enement(a)
can Amy c.rtor
connol be eold tor
TurnplkaFard
, {7401441 1100
1111 than two·thlrda
MoToRCYCLES
of the lppraleed
~

- ..-..-............. .

Sherllf of
County

(1) •• 15, 22, 28,2002
(2)1, 2002

~· I
i"--lllllliiiiiii;iiiiil;;..-'
-SuE
.

Geo&lt;ges Portable Sewmlll, 14x80 alap/eldlng 2X8 fiOOOo Sq. toot oommerioal 2 bedroom, tor ulo or rent, 1 and 2 bedroom apart· Kenmore otackablo wllhtr Noll 'I'" small chicken
don1 haul your logo 10 the walla. , 14x70 alap/skling storage wilh 14,000 oq. toot quiet community, nlcO cloln rnonll, tumlahodltll(l unlur· ~~-One yoarotd. Hkt 0991, ~ 1 dozon or$8 per
milljustcall304-675-1957. 2•8 wolls 3br. 2ba., Llle, oloWklo area. Call ERA home,(740)992o2167
nlehed, aecunty clopOallnr ,_ "COndhion. Groat tor cue (740)965-3958
modal double wldae 3br. Town &amp; Country Real Ea~
quired, no pets, 740-882- apartment or mobile home.
'

Ohio singles lonlght, call toll
FREE Info. Full Training.
free 1· 600·766·2623 ext wymJeodpEntemd3ft!'l com
162t .
888 884 4325

~

_..., ...

value. Only tllaaa
1'M1 ..... - . due
Pl)'llbllll of till
dati of aale 1hall ba
paid I rom · the
. praCMdlofllla .....
.
Ulll M. Mlc"Hit
A1101111V lor Ptalnllfl
Shaprlo I Felly
. 100 Well 11. Clair
Ava.
leca...s Floor
CIIYIIMCI, Ott 44113
(211) 121·1130

417... on March 7,
2002, II 10:00 a.m.,
91 Plymouth Acclaim, 4 thl following land(o)
Door, 158•000 mllol. S2000 end llnemenl(l) to
. 080. (740~wit:
'

{740)Ue 11044

. Private Party Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Ooys • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Soles • Limit 3 Per Person
Hall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

. . llfwp . . ,....,.... •Cunwnt rlill _,._....

c:ouru-.e

~ ~4_.·~ POI!IIrOy, ' Ohio,

11iil 'io~ It M~~~OMfS - Ir =~ 1r ,~ 1r ~ It=: It==

Bo YOUR OWN 110581

Why wail? Start mooting

.

lly virtue of 1 0n1at
of lata duly llluacl
out ot lila Court of
Comnion
Pl111 of
.
Parry County, Ohio,
lnllla-ofChll'tlr
0 n1
C ra d It
Corporallan VI, Jack
E. Clark, at II.,
Defendlnte upon a
Judgement · therein
rendered and baing
Caaa Na. 01.CV.012
In llld Court, I wiH
otter for public ....
.. lila lherlfl'l Oflloa
of lite llelgl County

- · Door l.oc:l&lt;l, Sunroof.

rn Next Day's Paper
Publication
Sunday ln·Column : 1:00 p.m. Sundly Display: 1: 00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper
Thursday tor Sundays

• Start Your Ads ~lth A Keyword • Include ComPlete
Description • Include A Price • A'IIOid Abbrtvlatlons
• Include PhOne Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Da)IS

~. l~==~:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

coo-..

{304) 675-1333

Public Notices in Newspapers.
Your Right lo Know, Delivered Right to Your Door.

NOTICES

13715. 1117- Atn,
Am, 1883
87K, 4 - · 142Q&amp;.
IOIK, 12eee.
~~
Cavollor, 1131&lt;,
S24115. COOK IIOTOIIS,
(740~103
""-m1
1
.• ~" ~-·• Lu na, ...,
good
tiCIOiy alloy
wheele, 114.000 OBO.
(740)882·24811
19116 F&lt;J&lt;d Probe GI WNto
S9K, s.oli. WI,:

1\egtster
Word Ads

PUBLIC

... -.(304II715--

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Dally ln·Column : 1:00 p.m.

·

oriQlnll miiM. IICIIIhl

In one Week With U's

M.onday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m :

Stoops
from,..,

311

llell !lodge ~.

IH-:T\11, SPH 'I ,\l.IS 'I"
Previous experience helpful.
State of the art equipment.
Great working atmosphere.
We offer a benefit package,
including 40 fk. medical and
retirement benefits, a five ·day'
work week and no Sundays.

No Phone Calls Please

5? Clarence Flelelt!!r ·

81twHn to a.m. a 7 p.m.

Hl!uWANID&gt;

~-~~~~~~~~
Need help

pavin_
g for
".
XMAS.

•

Full tbno ..... oad
.....daJ pctllllolll

·NOW . u.oe
HIRING bo•-

available. Eanlrom
to $7AO per bour
plue polea4lal-'dy

$6-$8

Bo. pert of.
&amp;rOwlnlkllm warkl!ol ,
to pro1oct your oicond

amondmentrtahl&amp;
Per Hour c..orleatod ..........
Full/Part Tlmo
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

1 888 974-JOBS

-..troraarowlq
Joe.~ ball- Call

Milling OUr Sal1t11 Brochu1111l

• .....ll7·!3&lt;U
exL llU 10 1tl!tdole
an l•tervllw,

Gonulno OiJponunltyl

CONSUMER LOAN OFFICER
The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Conipany
of .Pomeroy,. Ohio Is seeking an
expa~enced Consumer Loan Offlcllr for Its
Gallipolis, Ohio Branch location. QuaiHied
candidates will have 1·3 yeara direct
lending experience In personal and' reel
estate (1·4 family) financing transactions,
be compuler lllerate and possess go(l(j
customer relations skills. The Farmers
Bank offers a con\potltiva salary,
commeneurate with experience, and fringe
benefits package. Send cover letter and
detailed resume lo:
Farmara llttnlc • Savlnp Company
ATTN: Human 11Mo14rcea DI111C101'

PO Box 821 Pomaroy, Ohio 41788

Fannaro lllnk Ia an ·Equal Houllng Lander
Membll FDIC and an Eqilal OppOrtun(ty

FIN Suppllol, Poatagel
Start lmmoclllltl)ll
For Froo lntonnallon,
COli Toll Froo:
t -888-815-1835.

Monday to talk to the
Soonen coach, who was
defensive coordinator for rhe
Gaton.
When it was over, Stoops
had decided to uay, although
he denied reports h'e had
negotiated a new contract for
a fat raise.
When he arrived in Denver, Foley started working on
Shanahan,
wh·o
became
friends with the athletic
director during his four sea-

Eall approxl,...ly emergency reacue
210 IMt to till 1111 equipment to tho
line of lila property Rutland
Fire
dlacrlbld In DHCI Department, ltelga
Book 213, Page 173 County, Ohio. will be
of lhl lhlge County - ~~by I~ Melga
Deed
lleoorele; ~"r
thence South 25 Comml11lonera 11·
detrlll I' Eaal their office ot the
approlllmalaly 411Mt Courthou.., Pomaroy, •
elong Hid Elll line Ohio 41711 Unlll10:00
to the place of A.ll,
Thuradoy,
beginning,
January 31, 2002 and
-lnlng .25 aorae, then II 11 :00 A.lt 11
mora or-·
uld otnce opa...;d and
The
above read aloud lor lha
dlacrlpllon Ia bllld following: .
on prior wrl111n
Purehi...DIIIvary ·
faomP~~&amp;eS .
dlecrlptlone and Ia of
Emergency
not
a
ourvey Hydraulic Reacua
combination going into the
dllorlpllon. It lo tha Toole. s,.clllcallone
lntenllon of tha are provided In bid playoffs."
gre111ora to raurva • paokll.
The Vikings (5-11) were 0atrlp ol property
Spaclllcallona, and
tronuna flfty fell on bid Ierma mey be . 7 on the road and playing
Stale Routa 124 and · aeeured. 11 lhe ofllca with third-stiing quarterback
running from Jh• of Melga CounJy
·
Spergon Wynn, but the
loutllweollrly oamer Commlulonoro
to lite South-terty CourthouH, PcHn..ily, . Ravens couldn't pull away
comer of lhe abov• Ohio 4578.. Phone f until Jamie Sharper scored on
oonvayod PI oparty.
7 4 o • 112.2 at 5.
A
.
R•aervlng to thl dlpoall ol s o dollara B-yard fumble return wtth
Stlto of Ohio, will ba required l,o r 1:37 left after Peter Boulhawe-. all oil, gao, Mch 101 ol plano and ware's fourth sack of the
coal, and olher apoclllcallona, check
mlnerall with the made
night .
right of enlry for the· payablelo
.
"Offense
wins
games,
p u r Po I I
of
The full amaunl Will defense wins championships,"
proapecllng for, relumld within thirty
diYIIoplng,
(30) dayt alter receipt , Lewis said. "Just ride us, baby,
producing
or of bide.
we'll get you there:•
oparallng lor the
Eoch bid mual be
I
• ·
1· ·
llml, and the right accam,.nled by either
Ba timore s VICtory e mu01 occupancy lneoflr a bid bond In an nated the Seattle Seahawks
11 the aame Ia amount ol100% oflhl from the playoff hunt. Seaeaaantlal to ouch bid amounl with •
praopactlng,
IUrely aellolaclory lo hawks quarterback Trent Dildl'talcplng,
the alorooald Malgo fer, who took the Ravens to
operating
or County
the Super Bowl last .season,
producing.
Aleo, Commloalonaro or by
.....,lng to lite • - certllled
check, led a late Seatde charge that
or· Ohio, the UH ol caahlera choc'k, or ultimately came up short.
a1r11m1 flowing 1-r ol credll upon •
El · G b
gg1 d for
through Hid lando or eolvent blink In the. . VIS
r ac stru e
abulllng from · the amount ol not 1111 much of the season as the
umo, end eo much than 10% of lha bid replacement for Dilfer, the
of the banka thereof amounl In favor olthe fint quarterback to be sup" may ba ftiOIIUry IIOtloald Malga
lor auch anJoymenl County
planted after winning the
and protactlon of Comm1111onere
. Super Bowl. Grbac finished
euch etroame from
Bid Bondi 1hall ba
h
h
eroolon,
accompanlod by Proof t e season wit 18 intercepcontamlnatlon or of Aulhorlty ol the tions compared to only 1S,
cllpollt of lldl,.nt.
olflclal or agent touchdown passes, . but he's
Located 11 47885 olgnlnglhl bond.
State Route 124,
Bldl ahall ba oealed still playoffs and Dilfer isn't.
Racine, Ohio 45771. · and marked 11 Bid lor
Still, Grbac will likely have
Appralaal value: R u II and
FIre to perform better than he did
~2,000.00
Dapartmanl "Jaw1 ol
· &lt;
10% caah depoolt . Lila" ProJocl and
Monday .night 10-,or-27,
or certified check mailed or dellveradlo:
160 yards - i f the Ravens are
required on day of
Melga
County to made any headway in the
oale, balance due· Commlellonera,
upon confirmation of CourthaUN, Pomeroy, playoffs.
·
ule. D11d to 111111 Ohio 45718
. There won't be any postUIIIOn. payment of
Allenllcn of blddare
blllanca. Thli land(e). Ia called 10 all of lhe
or
tenament(l) requlre,.nla
cannot be oold for contained In lhll bid .1111 than two•lhlrdl ,.cket, particularly to
of the eppraleed the Fedoral Labor
volue. Only tho11 Standardt Provlalona
-1 " - taxee due and Davle·llacon
and Pl)'lbllll of lhl Wagaa,
varloua
dole of 1111 aheN ba lneurenee
honor.
.
paid from tha requlremonta, varlauo
"One
thing
about
Ozzie is
, _ , of1heula. equal opportunity
provlelona. and the that he always found a way to
roqulremenl lor •
LIUM.Michllll
payment bond and get it done," Herzog said. "He
Attom., for Plalnllfl
performanoa bond for wasn't blessed with what I'd
Shaprlo I Folly
800 Weal St. Clair 100% of the contract call a strong shortstop arm.
Ave.
·
price.
No bidder may He used his quickness and
SacondFioor
Cllvalond, OH 44113 withdraw hie bid learned to throw on the run.
wllhln thirty (30) dayo
(2111) 121·1530
after 1111 actual data of He always was able to get the
Sherllf of Malgo the opening lhareof,' job done in his own special
The Melga Counly way.
County
Ccirnml111cnera ·
If there's any knock on
reaerve the right 10
(118, 15, 22, 21, 2002
reliCt
any
or
all
bldl.
Smith,
it's offense: He batted
(2 2002
Jell
Thornton, ·- 1·ust .262 in his career with
Preeldlnt
,
Public Notice
Malga
County 2,460 htts,28 homers and 793
Commltalonore
RB!s . ·
'
NOTICE TO
(1)
8,
15,22
3TC
CONTRACTORS
"It's . been a lot of fun,"
Sealed propoa1lo
Smith said during his ·final
lor the Purchu•·
Delivery of epeclflc
season. "People have been
nice to me. I've been shown a
lot of respect and a lot of
admiration for what I've tried
to bring to the game, and
that's all you can ask."
Carter, an 11-time All-Star,
· is on the ballot for the fifth
time. He was picked on 42 .3
percent of the ballots in his
firs~ appearance in 1998. His
percentage dropped to 33 .8
the following year, then
increased to 49.7 in 2000 and
64 .9 in 2001.
Carter's career average
(.262) was even lower than
Smith's but he hit 324 homers
with 1,225 RBis. His 298
homers as a catcher are the

Ravens

from Paps

.

.

s.

),

.

..

season for the Vikings. Mi'\-·
nesota was playing its fir~t
game unde; interim , coach
Mike Tice, y."ho took over f~~
Dennis Green on Frid~-!
Although the Vikings scor
first, they never added to the , ,
first-quarter field goal. ·
.'
Wynn went 13-for- 29 fot;
86 yards and two lnterce~
tions. Cris Carter, playin~
perhaps his final game wid\
the Vikings, had five catche~
for 60 yards. The 15-year vet;.;
eran, who has been va~
about his plans for next year,
remained noncommittal after
the game:
"My gut's not telling me
nothing right now," he said. 1
Down 6-3, the Vikings hai:l
a chance to take the lead late
in the . first half when Dale
Hellestrae, playing his first
game with the Ravens,
bounced a snap to punter
Kyle Richardson .
·•
Richardson couldn't get a
handle on the ball and finally
just pounced on it, giving
Minnesota a first down at the
Baltimore I 0.
·
But Wynn immediately
1

threw an interception on a
pass to Moss in the end zon~.
and Brandon Stokley turned•a
shan pass into a 46-yard gaiR,
setting up a field goal and a 93 lead as the first half expired.
The Vikings never seriously
threatened to score in the second half, and now the Ravens
can look ahead to another
playoff run, beginning with .a
trip to Miami.
·
sixth-most.
Rice, on the ballot for the
eighth time, was fourth in last
year's voting at 57.9 percent .
The eight-time All-Star and
1978 AL MVP had a .298
career average with 382
homers and 1,451 RBis.
Suttt;r · (47.6) and Gossage
(44.3) are bidding to join
Hoyt Wilhelm and Rollie
Fingers as the only relievers in
the Hall.
Smith headed II first-time
candidates, a group that also
included pitchers Mike Henneman, Jeff Russell, Scott
Sanderson and Frank Viola;
infielders Alan Trammell,
Robby Thompson and Tim
Wallach;
and ·outfielders
Andre Dawson, Lenny Dy~­
stra and Mike Greenwell.
Players with 10 or more
seasons who have been retired
for five years become eligible
for the Hall . Unless elected, a
player remains of the ballot
for 15 years unless he ~s
picked on less than 5 percent
of the votes .
The others on 1the ballot
were Bert Blyleven, Dave
Concepcion, Steve Garvey,
Ron Guidry, .Keith Hernan-. ·
dez, Tommy Jdhn; Jim Kaat,
Don . Mattingly, Jack Morris,
Dale Murphy, Dave Parker,
Dave Stewart 'and Luis Tiant.
· The last time the BBWAA
didn:t 'e lect any . players was ·
1996, the first time since 1971
and only the seventh ever.

LOll Walglt~
'Ct10ap FDA Approvod Dltl PMa
'Oldro..
fOil

Public Nottce

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Orange Townlhlp
Annual Financial
Reporl Ia complete
and avall.ble for
review by oppoln-nt
II the home of the
clerk, Oele Foil rod
(740) R5•31181
111 ~uc
.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The
Rulland
Tawn1hlp
Annual
Report Ia completed
_and available lor
review 11 the Clark'l
011101 upon roq11111.
Opei.Dvor, Clerk
740-74i..z&amp;OI
111 a tTC

.

i

sons as offensive coordina~
at Florida in the early 1980!! •
'
Shanahan's contract pays:
about $4 million a year and:·
he
. would almost certainly:
take a pay cut. He has a ne~
house in Denver, and his rep-;
utation is still strong, even
though rhe Broncos have had;
three straight disappuintingi _
seasons on the' heels. of two
•
straight Super Bowl ti!les.
Asked about the search;
Monday, Foley refused com-:
ment. He is essentially a one~
.
man search committee HI'
charge· of replacing Spurrier. :

•

Buy,_W or..Trade
., In the

CLASSIFIE .

�TuMday,' Jan••• 2002

PM• A I • The o.lly 81 liMit

fit'

•

NI:A Cro11word Puaale

Spurrier says farewell,
and gets ready for NFL

ACIIOII

,.

'

be so bad. In some wayt, Spurrier was a
victim of his own succea. The Caton
went from humble aandtrdop to dou ~
ble-digit favorites over Spurrier's 12 seasons of succeu, and that got to be a burden.
"It's like a disgrace when we· lose and
a relief w~n we win," he $ald.
Nobody won quite like Spurrier.
. He was the patriarch of Florida football, the man who generated the success;
and the fun, that took the piOgralll from.
years of troubled mediocrity to 122 victories in 150 games.
1
But be wasn't really a father figure. A
sneaky big brother \\ias more like it always trying to outfox the ocher guy, or
, get away . with something nobody else
would dream of.
That crazy Emory &amp; Henry formation, the halfback passes and double
reverses, punting on third downs. All that
stuff was Spurrier at his best, and worst,
and it made Florida refreshingly unique
in an ever-growing world of copycat
coaches and programs.
Spurrier knows he rubbed people
·
wrong, but be did it by choice.
He jtold of receiving a letter from a fan
who was troubled by watching him rant
and rave on the sidelines during a ~5-0
victory over Alabama in 1991. He figured maybe · the guy bad a point, He
changed his persona the next week and
the Gators got drilled by Syracuse.
"I came back home and apologized to
the players," he said. "I said, 'Fellas, that
iryle may work for some people, but it
doesn't work for me.That's the only JIOY
I have a chance to be effective.'"
So, the visor tossing, the yeUing at the
quarterbacks and the steady barrage of
complaining resumed, and it never really stopped:
·
Florida fans loved it.
They loved the way he turned ancient
rivalries against Auburn and Georgia
squarely in Florida's favor. They loved
the way be dominated Tennessee for a
while, ·and bow be helped make · the
Florida-Florida State really mean something.
. But the party is over.
Spurrier said it was time to go, before
he got pushed out the doo r.This job, he
said, bas chewed up and 1pit out every
man who has held it ov r the last 75
years.
Sure, people told him be would never
be like the others.
He is, after all, the guy who won the
Heisman for Florida, then rescued the
program when it needed help, and rook
the Gators to their only national tide
and won them six Southeastern Conference titles.
His wife, Jeri, was crying,·and the rtst
of the Gator Nation was wondering:
Without Steve on the sideline, how will
thinS' ever be the same?

Michael Jordan's wife files for divorce
CHICAGO (AP) - Michael Jordan's
wife has filed for divorce, seeking to dissolve her 13-year marriage to the world's
most famous basketball
player, the Chicago Tribune reported on its
Web · site Monday
night.
'
' lri a petition filed Friday in circuit court in
Waukegan, Ill., Juanita
Jordan cited. "irreconcilable differences" in
Jordan
seeking a dissolution of
her marriage to Jordan.
She seeks permanent .custody of the
couple's three children, the 25,000square-foot "marital residence" in Highland Park and half the couple's property.
The petition listed the couple as J,
Vanoy Jordan and M. JeffJordan.
"It is the parties' hope that the media
respect the family's need and desire for
privacy in this painful matter;• Juanita
Jordan's lawyer, Don Schiller, told the
Tribune.
The six-page petition says irreconcilable differences have caused "the irretrievable breakdown" of Mrs. Jordan's
marriage to the basketball superstar and

~=tit =~to

•

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
35537 Sl. Rt 7 Nonh • Pomeroy, OH 4S720
Equine 12
12% s-t Horteleed ................ $5.00150
SWN!Stuft

12% SY1eel Hol'leleed ...........,.... $4.40150
Hunttrt Prldt 21% dog food .........SUS/50
Economy Beef 12% 110ck feed ..,.. Se.751&amp;0
TriCI Mtntrll81ocka .................... l4.71111 DO
11% l,a tr Crumbell ..................... $8.85150

...........
' 'fl

~

~

~

•

ReddenJ,Ial

CIM . ~·

741-192~10

~

It T.U-- It CoMiruola
II Qelllllo
U Heullnlo

...

t QI
6

~~=

Il l

....

hunter

\'ulnertble: Both

Case-IH Parts
Dealers
/()()() SL Rt. 7 SoMth

-•-••u--

740-667

97 Beedlst.
middleport, 011
rx1r &amp;1rl121')

(740] 992~3194

992;.6635

t1 FREE

IN HOME I!STIMATE
• FULLYWELDI!D
• 50 YEAR WARRANTY

'

Vliii.O.r SIIOw,_ On Sto.. Route 11

•

f Mllao North ()t - t..Ololo, At CouotyRo.ol 18

• No Doolen or Ceati'ICI&lt;in Plaut
VIII I Mulartord

I GdTA
PROBLEM,

JONES'

Tree Service

. ' Tl'!ll!'l

Additions

REIULIILY
$321.01 PER JOINT

992-4119 1·800·291-5600

( I IV-I I~ I I Ill 1'\

Drywall, and

..........
FIIUlE

· '\ --.... ..

• Top • Removal • Trim

. (740) 992-0739

......

HE A.IN''T
'THAT

MAW-I NEED
tlo2.00 !!

ROBERT BISSELL
(ONSTRUOION

II

••

• New HOmtl
•Giragtl

• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

•Complttl
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

1111'111llllll

Owner: '1\rry Llmm

% c.A'Lt, Tttl~ MY
....,.. ''OVAL OFFICE.~

FIRST SillED
$200.00 PER 111111

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

I. \i\F\I 'S
· Roollna, Deeka
RemodeUna,

1·121.1UWill
PLISTIC
fiRSTCIIL

°FREE INSTALLATION

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

.FREE ESTIMATES

tJ4oJ892-3148
,..,,,

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Hupp Aqcnt
Box I B'l
Mtddleporl . Ohto 4~,160
Local 843·5284
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Relirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
Rocky R

740-992-1671
712&gt;/l'FN

•

•'

.! THE BORN
LOSER
.
~ ~

. A~ l'l&amp;O, I. ~i 1,000 ..,

~, ~~~~·s ~~C£-1\~
ON

SiOO:.~\ $9:&gt;t-..~~!

1-877-466-1234
.
(740) 949·1511 .

12·12
Pd I Mo.

Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash Available

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves

.rNew Homes, Room AddiHona,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofl,
Siding, Decks, Kltchena, Drywall
tMore ·

FR~E ESTIMAT~Sl

740;.142-3411

BlG NATE .·· ·
DR lllaeel Cat

Advertise

in this
space
for
•so per
month

' ' •••) , .. , .•

;~

.I, ' ' " " ' "

51&lt;.11.1.Et&gt;.

......

·~r ~o .~

~,£.~7

.,

~ -

....

li

r,. ..

Po&lt;.cT•.-ol South raised to four

BUT If" YOU

HANI&lt;o t N TI-l ERE , Tfi.Y

••
..

••

PEANUTS
0

•

0

0

•

•

0

0

0

•

0

a

II

0

0

0

•

•

0

•

0
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0

~

()
(J

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio
'10AM-4PM Mon·Sat

JANUARY al

(740) 992-590S

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Calebrlly Cipher crypiOQt'ams are created from quotations by famous"'
people, past and present. Each lener ih the cipher stands for another.

Today's clue: B equals M

'Z E L

(UPXAUP

F E I· P

CRL

R F F

I P F H

ZRo\AELXM'L)

c

BRUEOF

RMK

c

LZRAPK

FEHHFP

II

p

Z R K

TEH

BISSEll

.COII1IACTOIIS, IlK.
AIOine, Ohio 45771

spades.
. West won trick one
with the diamond
king, cashed the diamond ace, and continued with the diamond jack. Declarer
Hc;~thcr Dhondy c.liscardcc.l a low dub
from
her. hand
(North). Now West
Icc.! a fourth diamond,
f.1cilitating . declarer's
task. Dhondy threw
another dub, ruffed
in the dummy, cashed
the :Icc-queen of
spades, crossed to the
heart ace, dtcw the
last trump, and finessed the heart jack
for her contrad.
However, if West had
shifted to, say, a club
at trick four, Dhondy
would have succeeded with a heartclub s4ueezc on East.
The curiom tnay
~ark it om.

BUilDERS Jilt

740-111-at ..

COHCIElf/ILOCI/IIKI
• Footen, Walla, Stepl •
Flat Work.

· Repi~Cernenll, • Walko
' ond Driv•• • Stancil

c....

.FrtcEstlmatel
Scrvln1 Ohio and W.V.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Oarqes
• Replacement
Windows • Rooting
COMMflOAllllll ~
FFIEE ESTIMATES

74(1-912•7598
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

WVIf031712

"-~~

WL•dtiL'sd.,y. J.m. IJ, 2\lll2
l 1 l·r~ ~ 111:1 l llh jet·ti vt•s (_·;111

hr
a( llil•vc d 111 ihc n:ar ;~ ] u:ad
tlm~LIJ.( h diligl'nt work :md .tr tl'llliml to dl'tfl ik Yuu haH

Home Improvements

Siding• Remodellnc
Porchn•Deckl
Add-on'• • ROonn•

1h c lllt'llt.d . ph y~ i c;~ l and fi -

QuolhyWork
FREE ESlU{ATES

Bill

ll alt d:tl w hcrc: with;d t o ar-

.

nlmpli'h !lu:~c t• nd~.
CAI ' RI CU il.N (IJ &lt;·c 22J.ll l. 19} -- You 111 i ~ h 1 not
li.dl y _; ipp n.•t:i,l f l' ~UIIl l' l ll'lpfu l

,•
'•

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XI

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p

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w.t y Im lay. J USt ln·c:n!'L' 'or .1
pn'j udin· yo u h ;~ rhn r :l f.:-lill'l
tht• so urce. D o 11 "t he.• ro ur

In this space
for
'25 per month

.Self-Storage

XM X
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "He was a friend, disciple and son to
me. George (Harrison) was a brave and beauti(ul soul." -

(Sitarist) Ravi-Shankar

.

·

··

WOIO

GAM I

O Rearrange

letters

of the

four Kl'(lmblod wordo be·

low to fcirm four a;i_mple wards .

I
1 I I' I r
DEFERE

1

I·
I

wH

E RT

IA IF TI'. E LI. , ..~:

I found a new way of doing a
very tedious job, "The more orlgi" nal a discovery ," my friend said
,..,-..,0:-"l!r--,r:R-:;:-T-:W-:--.Y,..--,1 :t~ _r~ore obvlous it seems •••• .

6

1. I§ I '

8

I

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I'

PRINT NUMBfRED
LETTERS
•

.

.,. UNSCRAMBLE
V ANSWER

I I I I I I II I I

FORI

•

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Effort - Joust - Husky· Awhile ~ WHA TS 11 FO R
Our small san stood amazed wl1 ile he watche d his
first snowfall He stood quietly fo r awh1le. then l1e turn ed
to me and asked . "But WHAr s it FOR?"

'1buJ'

-'Birthday
lll i~llt

yo u n •ly u po11 til l' remllrt'-'S or

di ~c uu ra~L' yo u frw u gtli11 ~ 01f~
rt.!r th l'l ll o r ~low. dnw u v. m u

N t·. ~:tti ve

d.Jy, n could Tl'"U li in a hi!J;

pro gn· ~~ .

L' Oi ll lll L' Im

nm t ;.L· ~, tlf \"llllr ·' ~"' ''" i :J tl·~ to -

k td mnl. Til L' m1l y Jll'nO il ym1

·

ARIES (M.orrlo 21-Ap ri l i'J)
-- N o nmlly yol •'n· not o n ~.· Ill

c:m d''fH'II~~ o n j, you.
VIRGO (A11:;. 2.1 -St·pt. 22)

Tt.!f1 C:ll u u s ub&lt;~ot;ll lt i :11 1.1 d hl', l i"~:JY
o r !-to~c. t p. yt&gt;t loti.!)·." w itl w ut

-- SIL'L'T dt'.ll"
[ \ ld .IV

,\~,, ll J\1

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buy som c th i n~ fro m ~o m t•o fl c

to

AstnJ - ( ;n,ph. c/u tim

Jlt' \\' ~ I'"Jll' r.

337.9.5 HllnJ RJ.
/'om rrtiJo DIM.

•

740-992-5232

I

iCCI

" ngtltl lBkllft at Dttfoit Pi51ona

I

TA U RUS (A pril 211 - Mav
::!0) - It m i~h t not he ~uc h :1
snoJ idL• a tntf:t y I n lr:Jdt.! or
lu:c.1me ~ h 1.• or he i~ vou r
ti-i~· ml. Yll u :uught gt..· t a b.c i\ L' r

IJ .O. Ji nx 17 :i l-l.
Murrol}'. l·hll Stolti n n, N c.• w

dL•al fi·mn :m u n a tt.1chc d pt'l' so n or ,J'Iin n .
(; f. MIN I (May 21-Juuc 211)
-- JJon 't t•xpc.•ct otht' rs to bt· ·
m p porriVt• of yn ur i ut c rc ~ n
today 1f you. yu ur u;lf an• n "t
w ill i n ~ to cnopt'r:J h' .1ml \h.1n•

York. N Y 1Dl.)(l Be sur r ro
state.· yt t~I T Zmliar ~it-:n.
AQU ~ I l. I US Unn. 211-reb.
I'J) -- l(s l&gt;t·~ t m try to ~l' l
yu ur credito r\ orf yu m h:Kk a~

wi th thm1. \ h a ·

l~ou ul wa~llL'~

t l u.· o th l'T.

,J,~nr i . ltl'

.tmHhn. I ln11.t tw

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Cellular
Advertise your business on ·.this page for
Jeff Warner Ins.
one month for as low as $25
992-5479
Phone 992·21 SS

DXWX

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High Bl Dry

WMXCEMU

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AIIJI'I IIII

At the other table ,
the Am eri can West
overcalled one noirump with three diamonds, in the modern
style. North, under
pressure, . competed

TO S.TAY CLOSE ... WELl.,
1\HVTHIIIC. CAll AAPPEI\I!

c.AI'IE .

Guitars • Some Furniture • Crafts
Now Available • Tiaer Sharp Knives

W1111am 8tll'rult,k, Allonley ·
&lt;740&gt; m.sm
Atlleal

2NT

~~~~~~~~] _r----:=:==::-::=c:-.:"" with three spades, and

THEY'RE T,O,LL.E~.
THEY'RE MORE

' !!ot&lt;O GAME TODAY, MEN!
'· THE5E GuYS AR.E
UNDEFEATED. THt~'LL.
l!&gt;E A 11)U&lt;!.H • TOUGH

C111e • Re.lnlntlfOII

IITIIIJC I fair dlaaibudon of ISseiS lfiiOIIg
· etedlton. Apenon soina tltroqah bankruptcy
may ~n certain property, known u
"exempt" property,' for hla or her ponQnat u~e.
Thl• may includo a car, a hou~e, clodtel,·ttnd
· ltoUiehold aoocJI. You ohould dinc:t any
quallona reaardlna banltrupli:y 1111n ltiOntOy
before ptOceedlng. Pot lnfolmadon reJIIdina
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game, but with three
good spades, surely
sh e should tuyc cor.- ··
rccted to three spades.
Two no-trump went
two down when
West cashed her

,,

0

BANKRUPTCY.

N'cu111

M~

m1ntmum,
South
wasn't !nterested in

~ a'\t(.!\~'(

Advertise in
this space for
s100 per
month

\\.f!t t

USA-2 t.am in
th e Venice Cup won
iu quarterfinal match
against the European
champions from England 2&lt;&gt;5-211. Thi s
was particularly pleasing because England
·· had won the qualify-'
ing match 5'.1-17.
Although this deal
was good for Engbnd, I am including it
becau se everybody
bids nonstop these
days, and it is good to
sec silen ce workit,l g
. better for once.
After South opened
with a strong no trump. the English
We st; R.hona Goldenfield ; dc c id~d to
pass rather than bid
her diamonds. North
tr;lll sfcrred to show
her five- card spade
suit, then continued
with two no-trttmp to
invite game. With a

24'12r

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With, to
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Pierre
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9 High
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25 Yank'tloe 65 Hurricane
plattaua 42 Auddtr't
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piece
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14 Occupied 43 - de
25 Wegner
pool
19 Gl enter·
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lalnero
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47 Common
33 Acid roln
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country
mateo .
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24 Supormon'o 52 Ancient
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30 Pleo al •••
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40 o\nlmll hide 8 Prince Val'a 32 PBS kin
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44 o\lohatokon 7 Backfire
neighbor 60 - Kippur

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thai future attempts at reconciliation
"would be impractical and not in the
best interests of the.family."
.
The couple was married Sept. 2, 1989,
in Las Vegas. Their children are Jeffrey,
13, Marques, 11, and Jasmine, 9.
Jordan cited a desire to spend more
oHaullng oJ.ImniOnl
time With his family when he t'etired oQravtl• lind •ToptOII
ol'lll
oMulch
from the Bulls the first time in October
1994 and again in January 1999.
He maintained his Chicago-area ·residence when be returned to b~sketball .as
a front-office executive with the Washington Wizards last season, but his decision to resume his playing career bas
kept him in Washington full:.time.
The petition describes Jordan as "a
well and able-bodied man who is capable of making suitable provisions for the
support and maintenance of the Peti. tioner and for the support and education
of the parties' children in a style commensurate with that enjoyed by the parties. during marriage."
Jordan, who was paid more than $30
million in his final season with the Bulls,
is one of the world's richest atblttes.
He plays at home Tuesday night
against the Los Angeles Clippers.

•

41 "WIIalwa
tMI1"

I O..orlll.

I t t I

GAINESVILLE. Fla. (AP) - Natunlly, Steve Spurrier had some explaining to
do.
He did it Monday during his final
news conference at Florida; an hourlo'ng
"fareweU party," as he called it, that was
·historical, hear.twarming and hilarious,
enough to fiU a do!zen notebooks and
bring back a hundred memories.
It was vintage Spurrier, a virtual Best
of Steve Hour, full of admissions (maybe
he really did run it up too much), denials
(no, he doesn't have an NFL. job
wrapped up)' and one-liners. \ '1 guess
I'm supposed to cry because that's what
all those FSU people say I do.')
Looking unusually formal in a black
suit and an. orange-and-blue Gators tie,
the coach's blue eyes sparkled as he
summed up his career at Florida, the reasons for his sudden resignation and his
NFL prospects. Of course, he couldn't
resist taking a final shot or twO at all
those foes who loved to hate him over
the years, and the new enemies he miaJtt
make in the pros.
But regrets about the decision? "I
don't look back too much right now," he
said.
The decision was building as his 12th
season wore on. A conversation with
John Lombar.ti, the school president
. who recently ~tepped down, led him
·
down this road.
"Somehow, late in the year, it started
hitting me that this was as good a time as
any to say goodbye," Spurrier said.
"Although certainly I was hoping, as we
all were, that it would be after the Rose
Bowl."
.
Now, he'll be shooting for the Super
Bowl, although the team he'll do it with
has yet to be determined. Carolina has
an opening. So do Minnesota and San
Diego. Spurrier said be hopes to have his
new job within a month, but he was
evasive when asked about where he
might wind up.
He said be didn't necessarily have to
coach in Florida - sorry Bucs fans but wanted to go somewhere, if 011ly to
see whether his style of offense, his style
of coaching, can work at the NFL level.
"I figured I better go now, or it's going
to be too late;" the 56-year-old coach
said. "I don't wane to coach too far into
my' 60s. By then, I'll be playing golf four
or five times a· week."
He stressed that he doesn't want a job
where he's in charge ofpersonnel or the
salary cap - "They've got other guys
who can do math, don't they?" - and
he doesn't think being in the NFL has to
be a 100-bour-a-weekjob.
"I saw a story saying Jim · Haslett
comes in at 4:30 every morning- that's
not doing him much good," Spurrier
said of the Saints coach, who went 7-9
this year.
Also, coaching an underdog wouldn't

The Dally Sentinel • Page A I

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�Page 10

The Daily Sentinel.

With the MVP award and
the Rookie of the Year award
already among his accomplishmenu, Allen Iverson
added another that might
have seemed a bit overdue.
.With 30 points, 11 assis~
and 10 rebounds, Iverson had
the
first
triple-double
·
of his NBA
career as the
Philadelphia 76ers defeated
the Los Angeles Clippers
·116-92 Monday night.
"It feels good to finally get
one. It took me six years,"
Iverson said.
- The Sixers never trailed
after the first basket, had runs
·of 14-4 in the first quarter,
19-5 in the second ,and
opened a 22-point lead in the
third. .
.
Harpnng had 19 pom ts
and 12 reqounds, Dikembe
Mutombo had 16 points and
12 rebounds, and Aaron
McKie added 14 points for
the Sixers, who shot 5l.6
percent.
It was Philadelphia's first
game at the First Union
Center since.Dec. 21, follow~
ing: a seven-game road trip
through the West. The players
wore headbands for the
fourth straight game, a sign of
unity after the · latest rumor
that coach Larry Brown is
going to quit.
"I was concerned about
this game because I thought
we'd be tired," Brown said.
"We started out with such
life. I think when you start
out and it is too easy, it is very
difficult when a team comes
back at you. We handled it
very well."
·
TimberWolves 109,
Pistons 93
At Minneapo,lis, Kevin
Garnett scored. 23 points and
.Gary Trent had a season-high
20 as the Timberwolves won
their fifth straight game.
. Garnett added 12 rebounds
and Trent 10 as the Wolves
dominated the boards, 51-30.
Minnesota had six players in
double figures.
The Wolves erased an early
seven-point deficit with t_heir
most productive quarter of
the season. Minnesota scored
38 points in the second quarter, with Trent scoring eight
during a decisive 27-10 run.
Trent's three-point 'play
with 3:21 left in the third
q10arter gave the Wolves their
biggest lead, 85-62.
Jerry .Stackhouse · led
Detroit with 24 points and 10
assists.
Hornets 94, Nuggets 80
At Charlotte, PJ. Brown,
who missed (::harlotte's previous game with a sprained
ankle, had a career-high 22

A
.
NB

.
'

. !,

'

POll
from PageS
edge in first"place votes but
leads
South
Charleston
Southeastern by just eight
points. Russia, with 123

CIRCUS SHOT - Philadelphia 76ers' Allen lvarson (3)
drives in for an underhand
layup Monday. (AP)
rebounds and Elden Campbell' added 21 points and 18
rebounds.
·
Tmil Blazers 96,
Cavaliers 72
At Cleveland, Dale Davis
scored 20 points and grabbed
15 rebounds to lead the Trail
Blazers, who won to start a
string of four road games in
five' nights.
Seven of Davis' rebounds
came at the offensive end as
the Trail Blazers dominated
every. aspect. Portland had
lost seven of its last eight on
the road.
Zydrunas llgauskas scored
11 poinq; to lead Cleveland,
which has lost six of eight
and now embarks on a six·game Western trip.
Instead, Cleveland shot 35
percent from the field, was
outrebounded 47-37 and
trailed by more than 20 points
for most of the second half.
Magic 98, Celtics 87
At Orlando, Mike Miller
had 27 points, ninerebounds
and five assists as the Magic
gained their third straight
1
wn.
Tracy McGrady added 21
points for Orlando (18-18),
which reached the .500 mark
for the . first time since Dec.
13. McGrady was limited by
the flu, but still shot 9-for-18
with seven rebounds and six
assists.
Paul Pierce had 20 points
for Boston, which l9st for the
fifth · time· in eight games.
Antoine Walker added 19
p 0 ints and·nine rebounds.
Boston closed within two
poi11ts on Walker's layup with
three minutes remaining, but
Orlando closed the game on a
12-3 rurt.
Spurs 9.0, Knicks 79
At San Antonio, Tim Duncan saifk four free throws in
the closing minutes · and
scored a team-hillh 21 points.
A 3-point basket by Charles
Smith put the Spurs up 81-68
with fewer than five minutes
remaining, but the Knicks
charged back with nine
straight points to pull within
four with 2:35 left.
Duncan's foul shots reignited the Spurs, who finished
the game with a 9-2 run.The
backbreaker for the Knicks
was a 3-pointer by Bruce
Bowen that put San Antonio's
edge back into double-digits
with 43 seconds left.
Allan Houston paced the
Knicks with 22. ·
SuperSonics 100,
Bulls 88
At Chicago, Gary Payton
scored 26 points to lead Seat-

NCAA

tie to its eigl;th wi1; in nine
g~mes.

Vin B~ker added .13 points
and Rashard Lewis had 12 for
the Sanies, who scored 32
points off of 25 Chicago
turnovers. The Sanies also
dominated the Bulls inside,
getting 48 points in the paint.
Ron Artest scored ·26
points and Ron Mercer
added 16 for the Bulls, .who
have lost four strai ght after
winning their first two under
coach Bill Cartwright.

points, Centerburg (122) and
Tipp City Bethel (120) are
lurking nearby.
The poll continues for
seven weeks with champions
in the 56th annual poll ·
announ~ed at the end of the
regular season.

Hason

2001 ~2002

pollS for The Assoclat·
ed P'resa (records through games of Jan.
8):

DIVISION I

Record

Pta

7.()
9-0
8·1
10·1
9.()
6·1

241
212
153
153
97
69
• 66
60
53
52
52

1, COlo. Brookhaven (17)
2. Tol. St. John's (3)
3, 'Cfn. Wlntoo Woods (4)
Hamilton (3)
5, Dublin Sciolo (1)
.a, Warren Harding (1)
7, Dublin Coffman
a. Lakoloood St. Edward
9. Cots. Independence
1o, Shaker His.
Wooa1er

6-1

s-1
s-o
6-2
9..Q

Others receiving 12 or more points: 12,

Sprlnglleld South 44. 13, Tot. Sco1t 39. 14,
Tot. Cent. Cath. 37. 15, Ctn. LaSalle 36.
1a, Conlon 111eKinley 23. 17 (tie), Center·
viNe. Westerville Soulh 21 . 19 (tie), E. "lv·
0rpool. Xenia 20. 21, Zanesville 18. 22,
Cleve. Glenville 18. 23, Lancaster 13.

DIVISION IV

. DIVISION II
I , AI&lt;. St. Vln.·St. r.lary (22) 7·1
235
2, OhaWII·Giandorl (3)
9.() , 161
• 3, Warrenavii!H«s. ·
9· 1
150
9-o
112
4, Cantoo So&lt;ilh
&amp;, Dcv8f
e-o
88
85
a. 51. Bemard Roger Bacon 8·2
7, Willard
7·1
a. Footorla (3)
6·1
72
9, Port Clinton
9-o
71
10, Wash. Court House (1) ' 6.()
a1
Others receiving 12 or more polnta: 11, lawn 47 .~ 15, Defiance Ayersvme 48. 16,
"OUdolwllle 53. 12. Nllto 111eKinley 44. 13, Cots. Wellington 34. 17, Berlin Hiland 26.
Cote. Beechcrofl 43. 14, Cambrl&lt;lge 42. _1&amp;, McComb 2,13. 19, Reedavllle E111tarn
15, Whllel1all· Yearling 37. 16, Bellevue 34. 23. 20, MIAster 22. 21. Sycamore Mohawk
17 (tie),. . New ConcOrd John Glenn, Sun- 21 . 22. Sugarcreek Garaway 17. 23 (lie).
, bury Big· Walnut 26. 19, Golllpollo Gatlla Lanc8stor ·Fishor Cath., St. Henry 16. 25
Acad. 25. 2Q, Youngs. Ursuline 20. 2 1, (tie), Covlnglon, Ft. Recovery, Old Fort 13

n

Hometown Newspaper

What's inside

HOUSE FIRE

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOLS

Distri-ct could

save up to
$24,000 on
fuel expenses

Deaths
Thereon A. Johnson
Kathleen Kittle, 84
William Thorla, 30
Details, 3

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Pomeroy ~an ·survives
fire, listed as Serious' .

Hlp: 40s. Low: 40s
Details, 3

.

'

6

'

Consumer
a edit soars

Man st-!ffering from ,burns, lacerations ifter fleeing blaze
the up stair s bedroom.
His twin brother, Blaine,
POMEROY
· A who was · downstairs when
Pomeroy man is in . serious the fire star.ted, rece ived
condition at Cabell Hunt- minor burns when h e went
ington Hospital, Hunting- upstairs to ass ist Dwayne .'
ton, W.Va ., where lie was Blaine was treated at the
trarrsportep by MedFlight scene.
. ·.
f b '
d
..fior t re.atm~ nt o . urns _an • Rick Blaettnar, acting fire
other InJUries suff.ered Ill a chief for the Pomeroy Fire
fire Tuesday mormng.
Department, said that when
. Dwayne Qualls is being firefighter s arrived on the
treated at the hospital for scene at 6:51 a.m., flames
burns to the upper part of were shooting out of the
his body, along with severe second floor of the wood
lacerations suffered · when· , frame, two cstory house
he broke out a window in located at 1761 Chester
BY CHARLDE HOEFUCH

• WASHINGTON (AP) ~
f).mericani increased their
qorrowing in November by
tpe largest amount on
record. A big rise in a\'to
loans spurred by z.ero-interest rate financing offers led
the way.
C.e~~e'r 'ttedit sOared by
a seasoitlny"';ldjusted $19.8
billion in November, or a
14.6 percent annual rate, the
Federal Reserve reported
Tuesday.,
, : The dollar increase was the
biggest since the Fed began
record-keeping in January
1943 and the percentage
iNcrease was the largest since
November 1995.
Economists were expecting · consumer borrowing to
rise, but by a lot less around $3 billion to $4 billion during the month.

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web site at www:rggolf.com.

Clsl115: 7-8-13-16-19-22

Huntsville,

Index
..

''

Montgomery, and

Calendar '
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaties

·

eight Trail sites. Experience ~78
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Weather

tiM
NORTHWEST
\J

c 2001 Ohio VaHey

A I R L I' N E So

D]FSfacility .
offers swices for

3
Publ~hins

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

"one-stop"

• 1Hdloii-10Pipl

Mobile and you're in

o~

co.

center for
th,ose seeking · work
and those
seeking
'trained
empl?ye~s

w:as g1ven
to
Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce members during their
Tuesday meeting.

Teresa Lavender ·of the
Meigs County Department
of Job and Family Services
discussed the center and the
services it provides.
One-Stop Centt;rs were
implemented in Ohio counties las t summer, as the result
of the Workforce 'Investment
Act of 1998. That legislation
consolidated 17 workfoce
programs, including the Job
Training and Partnership Act
OTPA), and placed services
offered through those programs in local' control.
Working with GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency, University of Rio
Grande, Meigs Cou1;1ty Economic Development Office,
and the Experience Work&lt;
Senior Workforc e Solutions,
Green 'thumb prograni,

Holzer

of yours.

I

•

neW''"

'

•

''

among other programs, the
center offers resume preparation, job search, and other
services', and offers a resource
center providing updated job
listings , and ed'ucational . and
financial aid and labor market information.
The center is located- on
the second floor of the DJFS
offices in Middleport.
·~No
longer will our
clients be limited by any eligibility
refjuirements," ·.
Lavender said." Anyone who
comes into the door seeking
employment will be gladly
served."
~
Lavender said that the centers will also be valuable to
employers see king specifically- trained workers, because a
special employee/ employer
·match syste m will be used .

I

~

•

POMEROY - Meigs Local School District could save
$24,179.79 in the cost of natural gas this year because it participates in the Metropolitan Educational Council (MEC)
self-help gas program, a MEC press release said.
This is the third year that Mei!l" Local has gone .with
. MEC in an effort to reduce utility costs.
·
The first two years after deregulation of g.S, the district
contracted with· a subsidiar-y of Columbia Gas. ·
This year it is in the self-help natural gas service with
Enron Energy Services as the provider.
In talking with Superintendent William Buckley Tuesday,
he said that despite Enron 's bankruptcy," the district shouldn't get hurt, although the savings might not be quite as
much."
He said that if Enron is unable to fulfill its contract, then
the backup would be through the Columbia Gas consortium of school districts.
Buckley said that . the tremendo us buying power allows
MEC to purchase products in larger quantities and that
translates into savings for member districts.
Because of the Enron bankruptcy and the possibility of a
change o( supplier, the superintendent acknowledged that
the savings might not be the $24,000 MEC has. proj~cted
and the distri ct had planned on.
·
MEC is made up of more than 143 school districts and
related agencies in central and southern Ohio.
It reported that last year, l89 MEC member school districts· and re1ated agencies that subscribe to th e MEC SelfHelp Gas Program saved $2,971,165, based on a price comparison with c.,lumbia Gas (August 2000-July 200\ actualized volumes) .
This is the 15th year MEC has teamed up with a provider
to bring school districts savings on natural gas. The gas supplier transports. natural gas to schools using Columbia Gas lines .

Thornton remains'
·in trauma unit
fROM STAFF REPORTS

HUNTINGTON, WVa . Meigs County
Commissioner JeffThornton is expected to fully
recover from a second surgery performed las t
weebnd. •
·
Meigs Co unty Commissioner Mi ck Davenport
said Tuesday Thornton remains
in the trauma unit at St. Mary's
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va .,
following a second surgery on
. Saturday.
Thornton was fir st admitted
to Pleasant Yalley Ho spital in
Point Pleasant, WVa., the
weekend of De c. 29 for e~ner­
gency gastrointestinal surgery
Thornton
and was tran sferred to the
Huntington ho spital on· Friday
after spe nding a week in the intensive care unit
at PVH .
.
.
A family member reported Monday that
Thornton was in critical condition following his
second operation·, but is expected to make a full
recovery.
"He's coming along a · lot better," Davenport
said .
Davenport conducted last Thursday's regular
commission meeting in Thornton's absence.
Thornton, a Racine Democrat, was elected in
1996, and is now serving his second term. In
2001, he was elected president of the Board of
.C ommissioners.

Equip111ent, Inc•.

Oxygen and Related ~ervices.
Medical Equipment and Supplies.
'

Rates will vary dependlnQ on point of departure, season, and hotel. Price Is per person, based on double occupancy at
rpre·selecled hotels. Does not Include taxes and surcharQes. Some reSirlcllons may apply. Subject to avallablilly. May not
be available in all areas. These advertised prices will Increase affer.february 14, 2002.
Tum 1M ctn!IIUon•: T11nl '-riH, Air lrml tickGI:I mu1t IN booked by Stllltmbtt 30, 2002 and llml tomp!ftlld ~ NOYtmber 13, D2.loeldlt R-..lrttMMt:
Tri'ltlls Pllrmlttad on Nonhwnt Alrllnft and on Nonllwe&amp;l Altllnk lliglltl operalld by Mtuba ~Uon and hprm Alrllnelllnc. Rutmlo!M 1111 TJcb~Nw:
Ticket• mll!t Ill lulled 11 least 14 lllVI prior 10 Mptlttlll. Same day standby ptrmined. Uptra!!tl 1ft not ptrmitttd except WOr1dPtrb t111t card USIQrldft,
Sa.IUrday n~h t llll)' tequlftd. Maximum stay 30 11m. Stopovers art net ptrmlllld. OIMI Wa-,JDouble Ooen Jaw Iff not perm ~!ltd. Fares art not ~ombiOibhl 111111
NW pubNSI"Itd tarn. Not 'II lid with any otllt r dlsc!alnts, coupons or travetawanli. tNI11111 Mil CIIICIHaUon; Tlcbll art non retullllabl61. Cllanon kl return~
and date permtlled lor 1 SIOO admlnlstratl¥t In, howt\'tr any tha~~Qt must mttllhe condition• olthe
pun;hlsed.' Nam.- chlf!Ufl not PKmlttKI once
ticket hli been Juued. Worldl'elil Mllt11t Pnsenger1 1r1 el~iblt for WorldPetl!s millage crtdlt~ Mlftlloltll Taatllf111: Puunger Facility cflarges D1 up to
$18 roundtrip Pill pmon. ami $2.75 ladtrat exclu to ptr ttlght SIIQment apply to lirllrn. AtlighiiiQmtm Is fiellnld ua rakeoH and.• llrnling.

a.m.
Cause of the fire is
unknown , th e. acting chief
said. He 'also noted • that
there was r)o in surance . The
Middleport Fire Departmcnt was on th e sce ne to
assist.

One-stop employment
center open for business

MIDDLEPORT An
overview of
a
new

•'

Birmingham,

ea&amp;y driving range of 21 courses

Road, Pomeroy.
The fi re was contained to
two seco nd floor bed rooms, Blaettnar said, with
only water, smoke and heat
damage to the downstairs.
Thre e tru cks and 14 fire me1,1 Were there until 9:29

CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

emplqm,~

w.vA.
Dally 3: 3-6-9
P•IIY 4: 4-8-1-2

and golf packages. Visit the Trail

Trail stops in

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

OHIO ·

included.

hotel packages.

.I

Lotteries

3 rounds of

•

'

Weather

DIVISION Ill

1' Waal1. &amp;.dt Can. (6) 10·0 ' 150
2. S.C. Soulheaetem (1)
s-o
142
3, RuBOta (1)
e-o· 123
4, Centorllu'lj (7)
• 7·1
122
5, 11pp City Bethel (6)
IH
120
8, MeG. Up. Sciolo Val. (1) 9.()
104
7, Zenesvtlle ROMCrane (3) 8·1
60
8, Convoy Crestview
8·1
75
9, BrlstoMflo Bristol ( 1)
9·1
72
10, Set&gt;nng McKinley
7·0 • 68
Others rteelvlng 12 or more points: 11,
Shadyside (1 ) 59. 12, sandusky St. Mary's
(1)49. 13, Dalton (I) 48. 14, Sidney Fair·

AWp County's

Tuesday morning fire. (David Harris)

Springboro ta. 22, Ravenna Southeast 15.
23, Akron Centrai-Hower 13.
1, Wheet•r•burg (8)
' 9.Q
205
2, waynesville (6)
9.()
173
3, Ca88town Miami East (4) 9·1
160
4, Zoa.vlfle Tusc. Val. (3)
9.()
144
5, Marion Pleasanl (1)
7-Q
1'20
6, Newton Faits (2)
8·1
98
7, Clove. Cant. Cath. (1 )
8-1
60
6, Versailles 8·1
67
9, Elyria Cath. (2)
IH
65
10, Bedloro Chane! (2)
6·1
52
.Haviland Wayne Trace
7;.1
52
Other1 receiving 12 Of more points: 12,
Canal Winchester 50. t 3, Findlay Liberty·
Benton 41 . 14, N. Lima S. Range 38. 15,
Metamora Evergreen 33. 16, Bloom..Car·
roll 24. 17, Cardlngton-Uncoln 22. 18,
Brooklyn 1!1': 19 (tfe), Cln . Madeira ,
WOOdsfield Monroe-Cenlrlfll12.

to

a1

FIRE- Heavy damage was incurred to the Quails home on Chester Road, Pomeroy, In an early

~- AP PREP HOOPS P.Ou. .
COLUt.1BUS, Ohio (AP) - How a SIBle
panel of sports writers and broadcasters
rates ot15o hlgh school boys basketball
taams In ttJe; first ot seven weekly regular·

••

Gonzaga hordson in ·m
ALBUQUERQUE. N.M. (AP) - Gonzaga
The loss snapped New ,Mexico's (10-4) eightguard Dan Dickau will relish his scoring in 011er- game winning saeak.
time. Ruben Douglas will anguish overhis missed
Dickau also had 10 iwists and no rurnovm
opportunity at the end of regulation.
while playing aD 44 prinutes.
.
Guard Blake Stepp led th~ B~' scoring
No. 18 Gonzaga beat New Mexico 95-90
' Monday night because of with 20 points .
Dickau's . solid shooting in
No, 5 Oklahoma 69, Connecticut 67
overtime and Douglas' failure
in Harford, Conn., · Ebi Ere's driving jumper
at the foul line late iri the with 16 seconds left, Oklahoma's only field gqal
final seconds of the second hal£
· over the finalS 112 minutes, gave the No.5 Soon•
Dickau scored eigh,! of his 19 points in over- ers a victory over Connecticut (8-3).
Ere, a junior college transfer, finished with 24
time and Gonzaga (-13-2) survived an ill-advised
technical and a big second half rally by the Lobos. poin.ts and nine rebounds as Oklahoma '(12- 1)
Dickau got the chance to take over in overtime won its 11th sttaight game.
when Douglas missed two free throws with 7 secHollis Price .added 17 paints for Oklahoma,
onds left in regulation and the game tied at 78.
which finished with a 45-32 rebounding advan''l'm sure people will ~!..yell on those free tage, including 28-12 at the offensive end.
throws," New Mexico coach Fran Fraschilla said.
Caron Butler led the Huskies wicq 25 points,
"They'll be. talking about them 30 years from while Johnnie Selvie had 12, and freshman Emeka
now."
Okafor had 11 points, eight rebounds and eight
.
Douglas' missed free throws seemed to cfrain the blocked shots.
. Lobos, and the Bulldogs- no strangers to presN~ 19 Wake Forest 87, Navy 65
sure - seized the opportunity.
In Annapolis, Md., Cr:rig Dawson scored 21
"We wanted to come out aggressive," Dickau points, all on 3-pointers, and Wake Forest (12-3)
said of the overtime. "I wanted to attack the rim never trailed.
and set the tempo for the rest of team."
Darius Songaila had 18 points and 12 rebounds,
He did, going 6-for-6 at the folll line and Taron Downey added 15 points, and Josh Howard
adding a short jumper that put Gonzaga ahead to 14 for Wake Forest.
stay at 91-89 with 35 seconds left. Forced foul ,
Jehiel Lewis led the Midshipmen (5-1 0) with
·
New Mexico picked on Dickau, who hit four 14 points.
foul shots in the final 19 seconds.
No. 24 Butler 62, Cleveland St. 45
Gonzaga, one '?f only three teams to reach the
In &lt;;:leveland, Rylan Hainje and Thoinas Jackround of 16 in the N~,AA tournament in each of son scored 14 points apiece for the Bull,dogs (14.
.the last three years, overcame New Mexico's sec- 1 overall, 1-1 Horizon), who looked rusty early in
. ond-half rally an'd a hostile crowd of 17,423 in their first game sin\e losing.the conference openhe Pit.
er to Wright State in double overtime last iNeek. ·

'

Literary Club reviews Civil War book, 2

........,......, .. H02

Iverson gets fi~ career triple-double
BY THE ASSOCIATED !'fiESS

.

M E o a cAL c E NT E R

288 7 s;pte Route 760 • ~allipolis

Discover the Holzer Difference

For more information,.call

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..•

•

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