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                  <text>Tuesday;October 8, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 8 6 • The _Dally Sentinel

ALLEY OOP

PHILLIP

THE
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band
1 -(lllng) 49 Dreued
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51 Rouoe
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54 All-pUrpoae .
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truckl
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56 Blvd.
12 Grt&amp;
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North

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Pan

Help opponent
Eric Hoffer, a U.S.
P.hilosopher, wrote:
' Propaganda docs not
deceive people; it
merely helps them to
HARNEY
decci ve themselves."
At the bridge table,
HERE COME'O "YORE
DON'T LOOK NOW,
ELVINE"Y SEZ TO
finding
a play that deVENTRILOQUIST!! .
LUKEY, BUT •••
TELL LOWEEZY .••
ceives your opponent"
DANG-- I
will he! p your score.
FEEL LIKE
How would . you,
A DUMMY
South. plan th e~' play
in rive clubs . on this
DOIN' THIS
deal? West leads the
spade 10 in answer to
. hi s partner's four·
spade opening.
.
This deal occurred
during the CavendishTeams Ch;unpionship, held in Las Vegas last May . After
East opens with a
textbook four spades,
promising a good
eight-card ·suit with
some 6-10 high-card
points, South's five ,
c Iub overcall looks
automatic.
Silli ng South was
Paul Soloway , a mul ..
tiple world champion
and the top ·masterpoint holder in the
known universe. He
could see that if the
opponcnl's hearts
were 2-2. he had
.missed a slam. If
hearts were 4-0, he
had no dmncc. And if
they were 3- 1, a dia·
~
mend shift at trick ·
&lt;
two would be lethaL
•z
~
How could he dis·
~
courage that shift?
~~~--ll-~~-L--~·~~~--~--~~~~
At trick one, · he
covered the spade 10
with dummy s king.
Now East, after winning with the ace,
thought there was no
harm in trying for a
trump promotion: He
led another spade.
However, Soloway
ruffed high, drew
trumps, conceded a
heart, and "claimed,
' his diamond loser dist...L..JUJu.o:.oz..::;_..il:l.....ma....Lil appearing on dumPEANUTS
my's fifth heart.
· If Soloway had
played low from lhe
dummy at· trick one,
East would have
overtaken with the
jack. Then, he might
have returned a low
sp~de, but a diamond
shift would have had
a lot of appeaL
Soloway made the
spade continuation
1!1...~~-----------------------------.....;.::&gt;Z;.;~=·;.;..:;;;:-L;..~ easy , and East naively
BETTY
. ' fell for it.
!

(301" INTO

CWT\lltJG

GROWN
CAN PlAY
• DRESS UP "

Htgen
10 Early jazz
13 The other
guya
1B Fictional
-DOWN
20 German
1 Rookie
m1e ttart
ooclol"ea
23 SeH·Imagea
2 Wyoming
24 llele out
neighbor
26 WeaHhy, In
3 Treaaure
Madrid
hunter'a aid
27 Chemlll'l
4 Pony pad
weight
s Cautious
6 Dog breed- 28 Tombstone
deputy
er'• org.
30 Piece ol
7 Senor's
. furniture
coin
8 "The Bells" 31 Locker
locale
poet
9 Actren- . 32 "Stir Wars"

dell

29 Dollop
31 Insincere •
34 Retl,.'o
kitty
35 BH part
36 Hlmtltyan
humanoid
37 Surface
trtnoport
38 Employed
39
1002
40 Frolicked
42 ActOrDevine
44 ConouHa

f:ul

••

Ope ni n11lead: • 10

·-

. Meigs .County's Hometown Newspaper

pathl
-·
Stack
60 Fomlly
Wom f;IUt
room
Pinder forte 6.1 Edible
Word ol .
root•
mouth
62 North
~ 22 Stared ot
Woods
25 Bualne11
roamer
16
17
t9
21

Souah

·MONTY

,;__, ..

56 Spare lte111
59 lnvoluritary

14 Prohibit
15 Fly ball

.. K I 4
\VI'sl

•

ACROSS

A LDER

~NO

Prep Volleyball: Meigs, Eastem crowned TVC champs

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

t ~f.O
lT WlTM SOME
1-i!:RM
I

c....,.•

book

Dl'inctll
33 •Don't rub

·Laid-off deputies picket at . courthouse

--1"
35 Leu poiHe
40 Dell bread
41 Wlpa1 Oull ·
43
45
46
48
49
50
51

li!IPPV

Sketched

Leuan
Imp
Obllglllon
flu bug
Knock flat
Crumple up
52 Stein IIIIer
53 Okla.
nelghbDI'
55 Pablo't
aunl

~er
High: 70s, Low: 60s
Details, A2

BY BRIAN

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

It' s more common tha n not

..------~-,!

i

Wl-lO ARE &lt;,JOO

"fAt-KIN&amp; 1'0'&gt;

I

l

M~AN.

that we can profit from things
we trul y CI1JOY doing. In tlie
year oheod yo u may turn o~
to be one of those people w,.,.
wi ll have fun in the process of

15 TH!ORE

ANt,.l"fHIN!&lt; YOU DON'T WANT?
RAISINS

m akin g money.

li

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0 et. 23) ·
- It"s possible you may have a
tough tj rn e kcLpi ng s~c rel s today. Be aware ot th is weakness and pay p&lt;trticular i.ltlention to an y lh mg. you' d nor-

·mall y bl urt out. Think· before
yo u speak. Libra . .trent your- ·

self to a birt hday gift. Send
fo r you r As tro-G ra ph predic ti ons for the year ti hcad b y

TilE G!:IZZWELLS

mai l1ng $2 ond an SASE to
Astro-G raph. c/o this

FAU~~ l .
'tlt il£ '(ctl
'0\.tU&gt;\\-\q
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C\.~'1'8?

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'{111;.5 \ruST \ t-.L\&lt;..It\q

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t;\:l\-\'1 \tLl M~ 'leAl ~
\)OZE:.I/ 0\'F l'oo"" !. ~

I

ne w s pa~

per. P.O. Box 167. Wickliffe,
OH 44092. lle sure 10 state
yo ur zodi ac sign. ·

SCORPI O (Oc t. 24-No.v.
22) -- Av11 id giving an y qd- ,
v ice 10 o the rs today. solicit ed
o r un':o;o lit: itcd. Sho uld yo ur
su ~gcstiom.

bt: fo ll owe d and
fai l. you might have to d eal
with an angry indi vidual.

SAGITTARIUS (N ov. 23Dec. 21) ·- Us ua lly yo u're
ve ry careful in"how yo u deal
·wi th othe rs. hut tmjay yuu

Pauline M. Reuter, 64

POMEROY -. "Criminals
doh 't ~et laid off' and "Three
commissioners plus one sheriff equal · layoffs" were two
sentiments expressed on picket' signs held by laid-off sheriff's deputies Tuesday .
The deputies began an

doghouses

informational picket in front and olher employees, Sheri ff
of the
Meigs County Ralph Trussell laid off most of
Courthouse
Monday, his staff last Friday, leaving
designed to make the public six deputies on the payroll to
aware ofthe financial difficul· provide law enforcement cov-·
· ties in the sheriff's depart· erage in the county.
me~t, which thel:' an(! ,many of
Tru ssell has closed the
thetr hand-pamte"d • Signs county jail, and will operate a
b!ame on the county commts· . day and evening shift and
'd · h h'f
s1oners.
The picket will continue for on 1Y some mt n!g t s t ts,
a week, according to Bill throug~ the end of the year.
Gilkey, president of the local
Trussell hopes that funds set
chapter
of
the
Ohio astde tor compensated leave,
Patrolmen's
Benevolent not claimed by some officers
Association, the union· repre- laid off, and funds anticipated
from an overtime grant, will
senting local deputies.
Citing insufficent funds in help keep a skeleton staff on
his salaries line item to pay the payroll until the end of
the salaries of all 17 deputies October.

POMEROY Meigs
County Humane Society. is
seeking unused dog houses
for distribution to needy
dog owners.
. Local residents who have
dog~ houses they no longer
need are asked to call 9492219 to arrange for pickup.

by Luis Campos
Todlly's clue: U equals W
WT

VR

WHVBWRWRB

CLWRB.''
·BVTZDR

"Z Y L

CVJYLKVX!i

WHVBWRVZWDR

ADULX

H V R 'T

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UVKKVJL

PUZHU

TZf,.OLRT

WORD
GA.Itl

- - - - - - Edited by CLAY R. POLLAN
letter~

cf

the

four sc:rombled wo rds below to form four simple words.

I

12N 1\ Ll

B

1°

I

E C N F E I=-~•
I
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A friend of mine is a dentist. He
also has a great sense of humor:
=·==·==·==·=::_-:~He hung a sign in his office that
,
read "Welcome To My ·- ..• ·
KE P C L I
statton."
5. \-

\ ·

-

I

L...

l--,1"'·6,.!:.~-~,-!=-.!ri-!::"TI~7-TI-i ()

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.

.

L..L..;..JL_l_---L-.._....1

@

Comp lete th .. chuckle quoted
by Hl ling 1n the m1ss 1n g words

you d e~Jelo p

•

from step No. 3 befOw.

Lotteries

PRINT NUMBER ED LETTERS I
IN THESE SQUA RES

_€)__-~: :.~:.:i-'cA: :R~.:;~;:.:~.:.;~:.: ER_l_ET--ER-s_T_o-~.i_·.~.\_J..!_·..J!.._...L!_...Li_.~.\-lfi'
SCRAM-lETS .ANSWERS .

Abrupt· Leech • Amuse ·Rumple • REMEMBER
We had watched a man act very foolishly at a party.
My husband commented that when a man forgets him- ·
self he usually does something everyone else will RE· ~

'

might throw away your g11od
manners and leave an imp'res-

sion you won't like. Get back
in character.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19) -- Even in operat ion s
where you usually follow ex. plicit procedures to the lcller.
today you may have a tendency to stray from this exactne ss and do so methi ng

,·oolish. ··
AQUARIUS (J an. 20- Feb.
19) ·- Avo id gelling into anything risky wi th anolher today. especial ly if the control
isn't in your hands. If you
have any dubious or un ~.:e rt ai n

feelings concerning the endea vor. back off quickly.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch
20) -- There is ·a possibility
th nt both you and your spouse
could be a bit more touchy
th i.ifl. usua l 'today :.:tbmH dome~I IC

issues . Try to pu ll to-

ge th er in stead of tugg ing
apart.

ARIES (Mnrch 21-April 19)
-- Your dc!' irc . may be co n!' truc ti vc to d :..~y. but un l e~~
you get org an ized fi rst. yo ur

methods and proce dures

m n~

be so hclte r- skcltc r lhcy wo n 't
be effecti ve.

TAU RUS (Apri l 20-May
20) '-- Usuall y you r taste is

preuy good, but today some
rose-colored ~la ss e s could
blur a purchase you ' 11 make.
Unfonunalely, once you live
with it for a while. you could
end up hating

it.

GEMINI (May 21 -Junc 20)
-- What may appear clever to
you mi ght not play well with
your associ ates ioday. If
yo_u' re not careful you could
come off as being either tact·
less or cold hearted. so guard
yo ur words.
CANCER (Ju ne 21-July 22)
. -- Rather than try to recti fy a
mi sunderstanding you m1 e ~t
have with another today, ) ""
are more Iikel y to remain si·
lent and brood about the al·
\cgcd injustice. Make

&lt;~mends.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)-- If

fur some slrailge reason you
1hink yo u have to buy n

frie ndship, dismis s thi s
thought Immediately from
your mind. Purchasing popu·
larit y is always a bad invest·
ITICilt.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
·· To you. a remark you make
today may appear harmless.
but to your listener,;, it may
be extremel y offensive. If this
occurs. apologize and e•plain
yoursel f.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli processed the following cases in ,Mayor's
Court Tuesday:
Fint:d were: Raymond E.
Klein, Middleport, $JOO and
cos.ts, underage consumption, $200, underage con. sumption, $100, open container, $100 public intoxication; Kenneth R Smith,
Pomeroy, $500 and costs,
three days in jail, DWI, $15,
speed; Joseph · Conley,
Middleport, $300 and costs;
· contributing to the delinquency of a minor, $300,
· contributing; Michael Taylor,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs,
assault.
. Forfeiiing bonds were:
Susan Scott, Bidwell, $63,
speed; Lisa Smith, Pomeroy,
$75, expired registration;
Ryan J. Lemley, $67 speed.

OHIO
Pick 3: 8·5·6
Pick 4: 8·3·1·0
Buckeye 5: 11-14-25-27·32
Mep MIUons: I 0.34-43-47·50
Mesa Ball: 25
Pick 3 nlpt: 4·1 ·6
Pick 4 night: 9·5.!6-9

News Editor
POMEROY
A
$600,000 maintenance and
bus garage to be built
behind the new Meigs
Elementary School building
at Rutland was discussed at
Tuesday night's meeting· of
the Meigs Local Board -o f
Education.
The dis~ussion · ~entered
on what kmd of butldmg to
construct , pole type or
block, and whether to hire
·an architect to design it or
h_ave_the bo_ar~ set up spect·
ftcattons, b1d tt out~ and let
the . contractor hire the
archllect.
Before making any further
deci sipn s on the 60-by-120
building, it was decided that
1he transportation supervisor, Paul McElroy, and per·
har.s
Superintendent
William Buckley would
check out bus garages in
several other school districts.
to.
The proposed garage will
have three bays. one for
routine repairs, .one. where
major breakdown repair can
take place, and a third as a
wash bay or a place to do

·Index
2 Sections ..; 12 Paps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
··
Obituaries
· Sports
Weather

JORDAN HIU

Southern golfer goes to state
BY DEREK TAYLOR

·Staff writer

=::.:..:=::.:..:_ ___ _ _

RACINE - Most athletes
entering their senior year in
their chosen sport don't take
very kindly to having a new
varsity coach.
In the case of Southern's
Jordan Hill, however, a
changing of the guard turned
out to be just what the doctor
ordered.The arrival of first-year
Tornadoes head coach Ike
Speitcer was the first event

.· AS
B4-S

BG
AS

A4

A
A3
Bl-3
A2

in what turned out to be a
banner year for Hill, Who
will culminate his senior
campaign
beginning
Thursday in the Ohio Slate
High
School
Golf
Championship Tournament
on the Grey Course at Ohio
State
University ~ in
Columbus.
It marks the first time in
lhe history of the school a
Tornado has qualified for the
state toumament.
"It was easy," Hill said of
the transition to golf the

Spencer way. ''He wanted to
do it and he came in and has
done a good job. I thou ght he
was about ready to have a
heart anack when I qualified
for state, though.'"
Spencer said Hill has all
the tools to take his game to
the next level.
"Jordan's a very focused
golfer," Spencer said. "He's
an outstanding kid, a good
student and he doesn't say
much of anything.

Please see Golfer, AJ

Statehouse candidates outline agendas
Republican
J i m m y
Stewart,
both
of
Athen
s
BY BRIAN J. REED
County,
StaH writer
outlined
their ecoPOMEROY - Two strate- · nomic poligies for improving the eco- cy agendas
nomic climate of Meigs ~I the meet·
PANCAKE
County and three other coun- mg, hosted
ties in Ohio 's new 92nd by Overbrook Center in
House District were outlined Middleport.
by candidates for the new
Pancake, a Nelsonville
. house seat, during Tuesday's native, said his union back·
· Meigs . County Chamber of ground does not preclude him
Commerce monthly member- from an understanding of the
ship luncheon .
needs of small business ownDemocrat Jim Pancake and ers, and said his platform

Chamber hosts
Pancake, Stewart

W.VA.
Daily 3: 7-3·9
Daily 4: 0-9· 3-()
Cash 25: 2-7·8-10-19-25

minor repairs:
There will also be an
office, conference room for
the drivers. rest room and
storage space .
The construction is being
financed with state money.
Buckley stressed that the
project needs to go to bid
not later than January so
·that the work can begin in
February or early March.
- " Timing- s ·-- important
because the building needs
to be complered before the
contractors on the school
job start the extensive
paving around the new
school," he said.
The fini sh date on the
h 1 · J 1 18 · h
sc 00 . ts u Y . wtt · sludents to move mto the new
bUilding for the 2003 -04
school year.
· It was noted that a $9 ,993
state grant to be handled
through Washington State
Community College has
been awarded · to the tech
prep program at Meigs
High .
Michelle Miller was hired
as a first · grade teacher at
Rutland Elementary School
for the remainder of the
school year.

BY CHARLENE HOEFIJCII

WT

'O(g'\l~j}li-~b~'S*

O Rearrange

new garage

DOLJI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"In spite of my age and what people
may aay, wish, hope or pray lor, l'm.sllll good at what! do.•
-Boxer Larry Holmes
.
·
.
I nAI U'AILJ

Meigs Local .
.Board discusses

RACINE
Dorc;~s
Bethany Sqnshine Circle
will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the church. Ann Boso and
Peggy Hill will have the program and refreshments. All
women are invi\ed.

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are creal~ from quo18tions by famous
people, pas1 and present. Each leHer In the cipher stands lor anolher.

"HVR

Laid-&lt;Jff Meigs County sheriff's deputies held signs outlining their
grievances with Meigs County commissioners Tuesday, during an
informational picket in front of the Meigs County Courthouse.
(Biian J. Reed)

arde meets

CELEBRITY CIPHER

- -----~~....._----,.,Bv BERNICE BEDE .O soL

Deaths
Seeking

'

GAHFlELIJ

J. REED

writer

Slaff

Details, AJ

MEMBER!

Wedn esday. Oct. 9, 2002

Informational
picket to last
through Friday

includes tax
incentives
and access
to start-up
and expansion funding
through
a
district-wide
r·e v o I v i n g
loan
pro,
gram .
S
" S m a -1 I
TEWART
businesses. new businesses
and bu sinesses looking to
expand need tax incentives,"
Pancake said . "I've ber.:n lead·
ing the charge, with others, in
Athens County to promote
new business."
Athens County offers a

revolving loan program for
business start-ups and expansion .. as does Meigs County,
and Pancake said a similar
district-wide program would
be beneficial in improving the
retail and industrial climates.
"! want to create a revolving loan for all the counties in
this district," Pancake said. "It
would offer start up funding
and make it possible for busi· nesses to add new employees
to their payroll s."
Pancake said he al so favors
changes in the formula""' and
point system used to award
Issue 2 mfrastructure grant~ to
counties, villages and townships, and. favors measures to

eliminate the 30 percent
match required for village
participation in the program.
Stewart, who serves as
Athens City Auditor, said his
goal in seeking the statehouse
seat was "to get the economy
· in Southeastern Ohio started
again."
.
To do that, Stewart said, the
area, and Meigs County in
particular, must take advantage of the new infrastructure
now under con struction,
including the county's new
school
facilities,
the;
Ravenswood Connector · and
improvemehts 10 U.S . ·33, to .
I
d
Pease see Agen as, A3

-

.... .

C 2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Holzer Medical Center Respiratory Therapy Department's 2nd Annual

Respiratory Fall Symposium
Friday, October 25 • 7:30 am - 4:00 pm
HMC Education &amp; Conference Center

--~--~----~-------- .
M\;f
D IC A L C E NT E-R

A one·day event that gives ·respiratory care professionals

Discover the Holzer Difference

the opportunify to }earn and review different aspects.
..,_ and concepts in the respiratory field.
For more information, or to register, call Sandy'Moore -at

(740) 446-5919

www.holzer.org
J
I

I

�7
,.

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Thursday, Oct. 10

COLUMBUS (AP) - Four women
have sued Bank One, accusing the operator ofOhio's child support collection and
payment system of illegally delaying payments..
'They held onto them, kept ahigh bank
balance, collected interest on it and made
millions off of the backs of children,"
Geraldine Jensen, president of the
Association for Children for Enforcement
of Support, said Thesday.
· Four mothers represented by the national advocacy group filed the lawsuit in
Montgomery County Common Pleas
Court in Dayton, where one of the women
lives, on Monday in hopes afforcing Bank
One to return all .interest it earned by
allegedly del~ying the payments.
·
Thewomen asked the court to allow the
suit to proceed as a class-action, meaning
that about 900,0QO parents who collect
child support in Ohio each year would be

.1Columbuo ls1 ~/70' I

W. VA.
•

.
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Inc.

C2002

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Sunny

pt

aoucty

ClOudy

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Rain

Flurries

included. The suit seeks up to $74,999 in
damages for each person in ihe class
action.
'- ·
· Th~ lawsuit says Bank One violated a
feder-.11 law that requires checks to be
processed and sent to families within·two
days of ttie receipt of.the money.
Jeff Lyttle, a spokesman for the
Chicago-based Bank One, said he could
not comment on the suit because the Company had not seen a copy of it.
The Ohio Department of Job and Family
·Services says Bank 0ne processes checks
within two days in nearly every case.
When checks are delayed, it is because
they have insufficient information on
them, making it difficult to match checks
with recipients, said Jon Allen, an agency
spokesman.
·
·
Jody Rule, a mother of four and one of
the women who brought the lawsuit, said
that since Bank One began processing

Flying in style _·

Ice

Former Traficant juror
helps imprisoned former
congressman's campaign

•

Cloudy today with a chance of rain
Weather Forecast
Today ... Considerable
cloudiness. Highs 63 to 68.
Calm winds. · . t
Tonight...Mostly c)oudy. A
slight chance of rain after
midnight. Lows in the lower
50s. Calm winds. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Extended Forecast
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
. with a chance of rain. Highs
in the upper 60s. Northeast
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
rain 40 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of min.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Chance- of rain 40 percent.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of rain. Highs in the

checks, her weekly $135 checks consistently are delayed three days to two weeks,
"It creates great anxiety," ~aid Rule, 33;
a waitress from Wooster. Thetr father
always pays his child support I just never ·
know -when the checks are coming. It's :
been a nighbnare."
.
Since December 1999, the state has pmd
Bank One about $115 million to run the
system in which county child support
offices send payments to the state, which
then depOsits the money m the Bank One
account for distribution. ·
The state had been criticized for awarding Bank One the contracts without competitively bidding thel)l. ·
In August, the state awarded a new competitively bid seven-year, $234 mil_lion .
conttacno ACS State and Local Solutions
of Washington, D.C. The com~y won
out over Bank One, which had bid $274
million.

'

Snow

lower 70s. Chance 'of rain 40
percent.
Friday night...Partly cloudy
with a chance of rain. Lows in
the mid 50s. ·Chance of rain
30 percent.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 70s. ·
Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs in the mid 70s.
· Columbus day... A chance of
showers
during
the
day... Otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Tuesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in ·the mid 40s and
highs in the upper 60s.

Aroundup of the daily markets
Oct. 8, 2002

12,000

Dow Jones
Industrials

11 ,000

Pilot Bill ·Leff, of Dayton, flies his WWII-era trainer T6
Texan over Springfield, 111 : Left will perform his aerobatIcs and fireworks show this weekend in Air Rendezvous· at
Capital Airport. (AP)

GIRARD (AP) -A juror executive Richard Detore
who helped convict James before the House ethics
A. Traficant Jr. on racketeer- committee raised questions
ing charges is volunteering about the conduct of proseat the former congressman's cutors.
campaign office.
Detore didn't testify durLeo Glaser, 54, a design ing Traficant's trial. 'Before
engineering technician for the ethics committee, he
FirstEnergy Corp. and a res- said government prosecuident of the Cleveland sub- tors tried to pressure him
urb of Independence, into lying about Traficant so
Tuesday pight visited they could convict the conTraficant's campaign office gressman.
in Girard, I he Warren
Glaser
spoke
with
Tribune Chronicle reported Traficant briefly after the
Wednesday.
· h 11
f th ~ d
Glaser said he is now con- trial 10 a a way 0 e .e •
era!
courthouse
in
vinced Traficant was coo- Cleveland.
victed on · trumped-up · "Richard Detore's testicharges.
"I hope people do send a mony (before Congress)
message to the politicians in ~as my reasonable doubt,"
D.C. to let them (the people) said Glaser, who was juror
decide who gets elected, and No. 8 at the trial. "I feel that
they should stay out of the I got cheated. I didn't make
process," he said.
the wrong decision, but it
In July, Traficant filed a was the only decision I had
motion arguing the testimo- based on the information I
ny of Virginia business had."

10,000
9,000

.06

High

Law

8,000

7,622.M
7,331.42
Record high: 11,722.98

OCT

Jan. 14,2000

..

7,000

· Oct. 8, 2002

2,000

Nasdag
composite ·

1,8QO

1,!00
. F&gt;ct. Chlllt m
H1;h

+0.88

1,144.13

!,400

p~W®e

Low
1,109.84

,200

Record high: 5,048.62

Oct. 8, 2002

1,200

Standard&amp;
Poo(s500

1,tOO

798.55

c11argo m

900

pm~ous

+1.69 ,

H1;h

800

Low

80886
782.96
Record high: 1,527.46
M.arch 24, 2000'·

700

JUL

AUG

SEP

.

~

.COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio State senior psychology major, said on a
University student Jamie Bumb sleeps recent afternoon as she sat on a bench
with a baseball bat in her bedroom.
0!1 campus waiting to view an art exhibOther female students - who make · it.
up about half of the enrollment at the . Houses and apartments, some of them
nation's second-largest ·campus - are , run-down from parties or age, crowd the
. carrying pepper spray, walkmg only in densely populated city neighborhoods
&gt;· groups and locking their windows as around campus where a majority of the
police search for a serial rapist they sus- upper-class students live.
.
The assaults happened early iQ the
pect committed five attacks near the
school since May.
morning. The man, described as being
"Three of us will walk 20 minutes out .in his 30s, entered through an unlocked
of our way just to make sure everyone door or window or knocked on the door
gets home safe," Francine Simms, a and asked for someone, then pushed his

way inside.
He also is wanted in several break-ins
at women's apartments and is suspected
of an attempted rape.
Bumb, 20, a junior architecture major,
said she walks about 10 minutes alone
from her apartment to he.r first class at
7:30a.m.
·
"As I'm walking, I'm looking over ·
my shoulder," she said.'
She and her roommate, senior
Heather Garrnann, had their landlord·
install a peephole in their door and keep
their windows locked at night.

Man sentenced to 20 years for inseminating stepdaughter

1,000
~ct.

Students carry pepper spray, walk in groups as police hunt rapist

t,OOO

OCT

March 10, 2000

OCT

AP

Local Stocks
AEP- 22.91
DuPont- 37.35
Pepsico- 41.10
.Arch Coal- 15.70
Federal Mogul - .49
Premier- 6.53
Akzb- 33.44
USB -17.15
Rocl&lt;wfll- 1M7
AmTech/SBC - 20.48
Gannett- 67.81
Rocky Boots- 5.07
Ashland Inc. - 24.40
General Electric- 23.35 RD Shell - 40.65
AT&amp;T -10.S3
GKNLY-3
Sears- 31 .n
Bank One - 34.82
Harley Davidson- 47.65 Wai·Marl- 52.60•
Kmart- .40 ·
BLI- 13.56
Wendy's - 34.63 ·
Bob Evans - 23.86
Kroger - 12.83
Worthington - 19.88
BorgWarner ~ 41.10
Ltd. - 12.90
Dally sleek ,reports are
Champion - 2.30
NSC -21.07
the 4 p.m. closing
Charming Shops- 4.32 Oak Hin Financial -21.1o quotes of the previous
City Holding - 22.70
OVB -21.25
day's transaction~, proCol - 21.87
·
BBT- 32.99
vided by Smith Partners
DG - 12.85
·at Advest tnc.
Peoples - 24.1 0

AKRON (AP) - A man molesting his stepdaughter
was sentenced Tuesday to 20 was acquitted because of a ·
years in prison for impreg- loophole.
nating his teenage step- ·Lawmakers changed the
daughter with a syringe and law in 1996 to include pene-·
violating rape laws he had tration with any object as a
· pushed legislators to enact. component
to
rape,
John Goff, 41. of Stow, · Previously, only sexual
quoted Bible verses and said intercourse was considered
he forgave the judge, police, rape.
prosecutors and his stepShenna Grimm, who was
daughter.
.
16 when she became preg"I forgive you for tearing nant, broke down as she
my life apart ... and taking spoke in court. "You stole
away my only son," Goff my childhood and made my
Summit
,County life miserable," she told
told
Common Pleas Judge John Goff. "For that you should
Adams.
be punished."
Goff was found guilty
Goff, who has been her Shenna Grimm leaves the Summit County Courthouse In
Aug. 29 of two counts· of stepfather since she was 3, Akron, after her stepfather, John Goff, was sentenced to 20
rape, two counts of sexual · stared at her, slowly shaking years for her rape. Goff was convicted of rape in August for
battery and one count of his head "no" back and forth. impregnating Grimm with a syringe because her mother,
endangering children. The . Goff and his wife asked Goff's wife Narda Goff, was unable to conceive due to a hysmaxiintnn possible sentence Grimm in December 1998 to terctomy.(AP)
was 25 years in ·prison.
I
allow Goff's semen to be
He was convicted of injected into her. Narda Goff feared John · Goff after he
Although Goff said he forbreaking the rape laws that could not have children threatened her with a gun gave Grimm, he also
he and his 'wife', Narda, cam- because she had a hysterec- and said he would hurt her accused her of lying to the
paigned for in the 1990s tomy. Grimm testified that mother if she did not coin- court.
after a man accused of she agreed because she ply.

AR,MD

•.Address:
• AIIPOI-IDIS:
2907 Jacksen Avenue -. 'l&amp;laphoniJ: 13041 675·5911
Polm Pleasant. wv 25550
Fax: 13041 615·8182
h

· New patients are being accefted through a referral frrnn your primary care physician.

-Obit~aries
Pauline M.·
Reuter
. MIDDLEPORT - Pauline

1

.:.' died Tjlesday, October 8,
· 2002, at her residence.
. She was born November
: ' 26, 1937, in Minersville,
; · daughter of the late Rollin
t · and Margaretha Maag Wolfe.
' ' She was a graduate of ·
·.• Pomeroy High School.
·
She is survived by her bus. · band, Donald E. Reuter of
· · Middleport; sons and dau!lhters-in-law, Scott and Ltsa
Reuter of Gallipolis, and
"· David and Boo Reuter of Fort
'·· Walton Beach, Florida;
1 • gr:mdchildren,
Courtney,
,. · Jeffrey and Kelsey of
Gallipolis, and Crystalle,
Pauline,Jeff; Juree and Natee
of Fort Walton. Beach; sisters
and brothers-in-law, Cathy
and
Don
Ervin
of
Middieport, and Debbie and
Steve Miller of Columbus;
and brothers and sisters-inlaw, Fred and Jennie Wolfe of
; Racine, -John and Pam Wolfe
of Pomeroy, and Jim and
Nancy Wolfe of Milwaukee,
" . Wisconsin.
'
She was preceded in death
, · by her parents and a brother,
.. Harold Wolfe.
There will be no service
.. and no caffing hours.
·. ,Arrangements are by Fisher
... Funeral Home in Middleport.
_ . In lieu of flowers, dona,,:.tions may be t:nade in her
.memory to Holzer Hospice,
" Meigs County Branch, 115
'East
Memorial
Drive,
" Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

--~-------

--- -.-

POMEROY .- Local band Liquid
Crystal released its· first· CD last
Saturday to the delight of their many
fans.
"We signed with UDance Records
about eight months ago," Adam
Krawsczyn, band guitarist, said.
The name of the CD is "Just One of
Those Days." ·
The band consists of four musicians ..In addition to Krawsczyn there
are Nate Sisson, lead singer and guitar; Nick Michael, bass; and Sean
Walton, drummer.
While their title track is "Just One
of Those Dars," their song
"Congratulations' has been on the
radio for six months.
Has the success gone to their
heads?
"Right now, we're trying to decide
on a booking agent and want to play
out on the road as much as possible,"
Krawsczyn said. "I don't think any
one of us has ·any pretenses of being
famous. We just want to' play music
every nigh• and sell a lot of COs."
Although Krawsczyn is modest
about the band's success, the first
time he heard his music being played
in public, it took him by surprise.
"It was SUJreal," he said.
"I was in Wai"Mart shopping for

Female
serial killer

CDs and I heard this song that sounded 'farniliar. Then I realized it was our
'Congratulations.'"
Krawsczyn said he just stood there
staring at the stereo until the song finished.
"It's hard to describe. It's a very
gratifying feeling to hear yourself on
the radio."
•
All of the band members are from
Pomeroy except Michael, who .is
from Middleport.
Sisson ·and Krawsczyn previously
played in a local . band called Three
Chord Charlie. When they disbanded,
the two friends and bandmates decided they wanted to write and play origina! music.
·
The duo then recruited Walton from
another local band named Loose
Thread.
"We were really big fan.s of his he was definitely our first choice," he
said.
Michael . joined the , band in
February.
"When he joined, everything fell
into place," Krawsczyn added. "We
were a perfect fit and the band was
legitimized."
·
The band's sound has a punk influence, yet Krawsczyn said . it's still
main~tream. r&lt;?ck. If. one · has to
descnbe th71r umque sound,
Krawsczyn satd they have elements
of Foo Fighters and The Who with a

Agendas

put to death

..

·. ·Local ·Briefs
Receive grant

CioHer .

'·

. j

·

Local band Liquid Crystal releases its first CD.
touch of Matchbox 20.
Liquid Crystal's first release party
took place at Casa Cantina in Athens,
but its local release party is open to
the public and will start at 9 p.m.
Wednesday, Nov. 27 at the Court
Stteet Grill
·
·

The CDs can be purchased at the
Court Street Grill, all three Criminal
Records locations, School Kids
Records in Athens, and from Liquid
Crystal's web site www.Jiquidcryslalsite.com, where its tour dales are
posted and are updated regularly.

Audit: foster care agency
missp~nt

nearly $5.4 million

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
state
audit
released
Wednesday found that a
foster care agency misspent
nearly $5 .4 million, the
largest amount of questioned costs of the 24 such
organizations reviewed so
far.
.
·
Specialized Alternatives
for Families and Youth of
Ohio, the largest foster care
agency in the state, had said
that a substantial finding
was likely because of the
agenc-y's size -and the way
the state auditor's office is
in~erpreting federal spend·
ing requirements.
"This is the most extensive case of improper
spending that we have
found to date," said Auditor
Jim Petro. "State and county agencies must improve
their oversight to ensure
that foster care dollars get
to kids."
The .Ohio Department of
Job and Family Services
asked Petro in 1999 to audit
the state's child welfare
system, after reviews of
some agencies revealed
misspending.
Counties contract with
such agencies ·to recruit,
screen and train individuals
to be foster parents and provide temporary emergency
care for foster children.
Agencies receive subsidies
for each child, and part of
the money then is given to
foster parents for the ehild's
care.
In the 23 previous
reviews, a•ditors said they

found more than $4 million
in misspending. Before
SAFY of Ohio's audit, the
largest finding was $1.2
million against V Beacon
Inc .
Most of the questioned
spending by SAFY of Ohio
came in .the form of prohibited payments to its. parent
company,
SAFY
of
America, according to the
audit, which covered 1997
through 1999.
The parent company
charged SAFY of Ohio a
$12-per-day fee for each
youth in foster care. SAFY ·
of America could not provide dOcumentation of how
the fees supported the foster
care program, according to
the audit. Those fees added
up to nearly $3.2 million.
· The parent company,
which is based in Delphos,
was not audited.
. The audit also · said that
SAFY of Ohio hired The
Children's
Home
of
Delaware to manage some
of its services, and used for
management purposes $1.1
. million in taxpayer dollars
that was meant to help chit dren.
SAFY of Ohio declined
immediate
comment
Wednesday.
Ho'."ever, in a statement
releas.ed Tuesday to The
Cincinnati Enquirer, Ben
Brooks, president of the
SAFY board of directors,
said the questioned costs
"present a grossly unfair
and misleading impression"
of agency operations.
·

-

The Daily Sentinel

Outolde Soteo: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Outelde Salel: Jessica Evans, Ext. 16
·
ClonJCtrc.: JUdy Clark, Ext. 10
ClonJCirc.: Cyn11tla Swisher, Ext. 11

Circulation
Dlotricl Mgr.: Mike Jenkins, Ext 17

•1

· --- - f

BY KRIS DOTSON

. Staff writer

tourism-based industry and
traditional industry, and
benefit from all aspects of
development,"
Stewart
fn.m Page-A1 ·
said.
·
s.
a
id
he
also
Stewart
.
further local efforts t·oward
f;~vors legislation lessening
developin~ the economy.
··
- Paid notice ·
"It can t be said the the · reliance on a property
for school funding, and
STARKE, Aa. (AP) Meigs County isn't gettin~ tax
of a portion
the
earmarking
killer Aileen Wliornos its share of infrastructure, '
--------------------- Serial
of
the
state's
income tax
was executed Wednesday, Stewart said. "There's . for schools.
more than a decade after she . approximately $300 milRacine Mayor Scott Hill
murdered six men along cen" lion in new schools, roads
updated
chamber members
tral Aorida highways while and a new bridge coming to on progress
the develthis county, and it's impor- opment of a with
workiilg as a prostitute.
new
water
sysWuomos, 46, became the tant to plan for develop- tem in the village, report·'
.
I Oth woman executed in the ment."
ing that the project's design .
"When I see what's hap- has
United StateS since the death
CHESTER - · Chester
been completed, and
penalty resumed in 1976, pening here, it's easy to see that water line installation
~. Volunteer Fire Department
according to the ·Death that.new jobs will come."
· received an $825 VFD assisj
Stewart said he supports is now umierway.
Penalty Information Center.
tance grant from the Ohio
Chamber
President
Sue
She was pronounced dead a combination of industrial Maison reminded members
Department of Natural
from lethal injection at 9:47 development and the devel- of a Business After Hours
· Resources.
.
a.m. in F1orida State Prison opment of Meigs County event 'at the Carpenter Inn
·The local department is one
and Southeastern Ohio as a ·
near Starke.
·of 69 to. receive support for
and Conference Center on
destination
for visitors.
"I'd just like to say.I'm sail-training, safety equipment
Thursday;
the Fourth
"There is criticism of Annual Halloween Cruise
ing with the Rock and I'll be
and emergency water access
back like Independence Day tourism-related job devel- to Nowhere on Oct. 25, and
projects. ·
with Jesus, June 6, like the opment, because they tend the annual dinner, with
the
' • Administered by
movie, big mothership and to be low-paying jobs, but guest
~ ODNR Division of Forestry,
speaker
Oscar
all. I'll be back." Wuornos . there's no reason when we Robertson on Nov. 4.
volunteer fire assistance
said from . the execution can't have both a healthy
.- ~ranis provide federal matchchamber. The Rock is a
' .. mg funds of up to $10,000 to
;,. communities with popula- · Biblical reference to Jesus.
• · Wuronos had ftred her
tions Iinder 10,000. Funds are
attorneys and droi?Ped her
what I knew I was capable
,.. used to upgrade equipment at
appeals despite lingering
existing fire deparhnents, to
of doing." .
questions over her sanity.
,. , assist new departments with
"He doesn't say much,"
Wuornos was sentenced to ·
· organizational. training and
Spencer said. "He stays
from PageAl
death six times for killing
'; ~equipment co.sts, a_nd to
with me on overnight trips
· upgrade excess . equipment
middle-ag~ men in 1989 and
"I really think he has the the team takes and just
prov~ded by the U.S. Forest
1990 and spent 8 decade on ability to play for a college wants to win at all costs."
Aorida's death row.
· Serv1ce.
·
.
"I've had a lot of people
The death warrant was program
somewhere,"
based 011 her first murder vic~ Spencer continued. "He help me out," Hill said,
------,----·
R' hard M 11
leads by example, he does- giving credit to a. pair of
·• '
urn,
Ic
a ory, a n 't let distractions bother local golfers in particular.
Clearwater electronics shop
owner whose body was fOimd · him and it seems the more
"Ryan Norris, who grad'in 198~ in Volusia County.
pressure that is on him the uated from Southern and
During her 1992 mW'der better he is."
played golf at Glenville
trial, Wuornos testified that
Hill, who spends his win- State, has helped me out a
Mallory ·raped, beat and ter months as the Southern lot," Hill said. "Him and
sodomized her and that she High point guard on the Ty Roush, the club pro at
•
I •
· killed him in self-defense. basketball court, had a Riverside, and a really
'' ••
After standing trial for 42.33-stroke average per
I •
good golfer, have really
1- •
Mallory's death, Wuomos match during the regular
pleaded guilty to five other season through the dist~t help make me a better
golfer."
·
murders in Marion, Pasco and tournament.
Hill said that while
Dixie counties.
The mark was actually
reaching
the state tournagood enough only for sec.·
ond-best on the team, as ment is a prize in and of
Jordan's cousill Ty Hill, a itself, how he believes the
..
junior,
shot a 41.78 mark experience will be judged
I '
through
the year.
will completely be deter''
In fact, it was Ty Hill mined by his own expectaReader Services
.(USPs 213-960)
who was named to the First tions.
co"ectlon Polley
Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
T~am ·
All
Tri-Valley
"Right now I fell if I play
': Our main concern In all stories Is to be Publtshed
every
afternoon,
Conference list, while. up to my capability I will
,, accurate. tl you know of an error tn. a Monday 1hrough Friday, 1 11 Court
Jordan was honored on the be satisfied," Hill said. "If
. Slory, call tho newsroom at (740) 992· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
· ' 2156.
class postage paid at Pome;oy.
Second Team of that honor I do ,that, I'll be happy no
Membllr: The Associated Press
roll.
and
tho
Oh.lo
Newspaper
Our main number Is
It was the senior's expe- matter if I would finish
Association.
(740)992·2156.
.
rience and calm, however, first or last at 'state."
Pootmooter: Send address correc·
Department extensions are:
That tenacity will come
' '
tlons lo The Daily Sentinel, 111
that propelled him through
., .
handy ' beginning
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
distnct play and wrote his in
News
45769.
Thursday
with a practice
ticket to Columbus.
Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
"I hadn't really played up round at the Grey Course.
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 13
Subscription Ratea
Reporter: Agnes Hapka, Ext. 14
to my expectations before The 36-hole championship
By carrier ~ motor route
Sporto: Derek Taylor, Ext. 14
then," Hill said. "It was match begins Friday and .
· One monlh ............'9.95
•
One~ ye~~r •• • , • • ••••• •'119.40
just a matter of me doing concludes Saturday.
:
Advertising
Donv ..................611'
:

PLEASANT
· VALLEY
HOSPITAL .

,local· band hails·release of first·CD

~ :M. Reuter: 94. of Middleport, ·

I

I

---

The Daily Sentinel • Page A 3

I•

A Physician Specializing In Gastroenterology

•

www.myda_
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•

Wednesd•y, october t, 2001

Parents collecting child support sue Bank One

Ohio weather

Wednesday, October 9. 2002

PageAl

'

1

General Manaaer
C~arlene Hoe111ch, Exf.12

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Opinion

.The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Wednesday, October t, 2002

:_Th_en_ail__;;,.y_s_ent_in_ei_ _

-.
--=B~f the Bend

Fiancee left waiting has
time for second thoughts

The
Daily
Sentinel
'
.
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
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'

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.·
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Publisher
Bette Pearce
Managing Editor

Charlene Hoeflich
Editor

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NATIONAL VIEW

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Confirm

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Burden is
. .
'
commtsswners
.

jurist's capabilities .should
override controversial stances
• Chicago Tribune, · on judicial nomi11ee Micha el
McConnell: He's a law professor who thinks the Supreme
Court erred in the case of Bush vs. Gore ..He opposed the
impeachment of President Clinton. He once represented
Chicago Mayor Harold Washington in a dispute with white
aldermen . He has praised a Supreme Court decision barring
prayers at hi gh school football games.
· Given these views, it's no surpri se that 'Michael
McCon nell 's nomination for a seat on the lOth Circuit Court
of Appeals has drawn fierce criticisrn. The surprise is that it's
coming from Dl:mocrats and liberal interest groups, including
the National Abortio.n and Reproductive Rights Action
League and Americans United for Separation of Church and
State . ...
· Last month, the Senate Judiciary Committee finally gave
McConnell a hearing, 15 months after he was nominated. And
what was learned ought to shame his more ferocious critics
into silence ....
His critics make much of the fact ·that he has f;iulted the
legal reasoning of the ·1973 Supreme Court decision giving
abortion rights constitutional protection. But even pro-choice
law professors have criticized the ruling for its weak reasoning. No one on the bench agrees .With every Supreme Court
deci sion , and no one should have to. All that can be asked is
that judges accept .them as binding. ...
.·
McConnell will bring to the bench a formidable intellect
and a respect for the vital role played. by the federal judiciary.
The Senate should be proud to confirm him.

TODAY IN HISTORY '.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Dear Editor:
Meigs County citizens need to know
the facts.
The 1999 sheriff's onJce budget set
by the commissioners was $611,569.
Additional appropriations given to the
previous sheriff by the commissioners
made his budget $714,000 at year end.
The 2000 budget set by commissioners,
including ·Mr.
Davenport,
was
$601,458. Commissioners again gave
1
d
1·
.·
a dd 1t1ona money at year en , resu ttng
$ 14 000 C
in
ommon
senseto tells
us
that 7if, in• two· years,
the cost
run the
sheriff's office was $714,000, that must
· be what is needed for operational
demands .
In 2001, the commissioners negligently set the sheriff's . budget at
$6.JO,OOO. For two years, the cost 10

commissioners.
Complaints have increased by 30 percent since last year, and the calls
become
increasingly, dangerou s.
However, every year the budget gets
cut, placing deputies in higher risk. It
appears to me that the commissioners ·
put a price tag on the law enforcement
· of Meigs County, but what will be the
final cost? The. death of a deputy, or perhaps an innocent citizen?
· Deputy Scott 'Ihtssell
Pomeroy

Oil+.
h ll
'JJer a C a enge

Dear Editor·.
Dr. Joan Herbers, the new dean of
Ohio State's College of Biological
Sciences, says that scientists should use
"established methodologies to investigate the natural world" (9 September.)
Creationist_scientists agree. The scientific arguments against evolutionary
theory are at least as strong as the relioperate the sheriff's office was over ·
d d h
1 ·
$714,000. The commissioners solution: gtous ones. 1n ee , t e evo ut10nary
dogma contradicts established scientific
To refuse to appropriate additional laws and principles.
. '
money as they have done in the past,
A basic law of biology is the
and only after deputies were given a Biogenetic Lllw, which states that life
layoff notice in December 2001.
comes only from life. Evolution teaches
The commissioners · gave some that once upon a very long time ago,
money to make the last payroll in 2001 • nonliving chemicals became alive.
which was just over $8,000. Anyone Since this has never been observed by
· can do the math and see that the current loday's biologists, the early earth must
sheriff saved the county money rather have had ditferent rules and processes.
than overspending, as the commissionBut this explanation violptes the priners would have the pubhc beheve.
. ciple of uniformitarianism, which ~tates
Thts year, the co,mnussiOners appro- that the natural processes that shaped
pnated the shenff s off1ce w1th only the earth in the past are the same ones
$596,000. Of that~ $520,000 was plac,ed we can observe today.
mto the s;tlanes hne 1!e'!l. The remamc
The Second Law of Thermodynamics
mg money was placed mto hne Items states that a .closed system can never
mandated by law. The comm1sstoners become more ordered. Evolution teachdid n~t ~pp~opriate monies into the es that somehow the universe (a closed
shenff s Ime 1t~m to pay h1 s bills, such system by definition) became more
a~ contract servtces and repa1rs, gas and ordered, without any intelli&lt;&gt;ent input.
otl, and even supphes .to buy paper.
· Evolution teaches that ail plant and
Money had to be transferred out of animal life on Earth is descended from
salaries to those other line· items to a few common ancestors and students
operate the sheriff's office. You will are led to believe that 'this claim is
find this information in the aud~tor's proven by the fossil record. In fact, the
office, an~ I encourage the pubhc to fossil record shows no such procession,
.
but rather that living kinds appear and
request thts 1.n~ormau?n· .
In my opm10n, thts .ts mtsrnanage- disappear abruptly, with no transitional
ment by the commiSSIOners, not the forms .
This advancement happened purely
sheriff. To my knowledge, they have
not done this to any other officeholder. by cha11.ce, ·w e're told, yet the brightest
Davenport made reference to an over- . scientist with the best modern equipJ,
time grant in 2000, which is false. No ment can't alter
organism beyond
grant was received that year. The sher- certain narrow limits. Science requires
iff's office did receive an overtime that results be reproducible, and that a
grant in 2000 of $27,8000, which still process orphenomenon mu·st be repliwasn't enough to cover salaries when cated or observed.repeatedly. Evolution
·
attempting to cover cuts initiated by the as preached cannot. be.

Today is Wednesday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of 2002 . There
are 83 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 9, 1888, the public was first admitted to the
'·
Washington Monument..
On this date:·
In 1635, religious di~sident Roger Williams was banished·
from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
.
In 170 I, the Collegiate School of Connecticut- later Yale
University- was chartered.
.
In 1776, a group of Spanish missionaries settled in present. ·day San Franci:;co.
In I930, Laura Ingalls became the first woman to fly across
. the United States as she completeq a nine-stop journey from
Roosevelt Field, N.Y, to Glendale, Calif.
In 1936, the first generator at Boulder (later Hoover) Darn
began transmiuing electricity to Los Angeles.
In 1958, Pope Pius XII died. (He ·was succeeded by Pope
John XXIII)
·'
.
In 1962, Uganda won m)tonomy from British rule.
In 1967 , Latin American guerrilla leader Che Guevara was
executed while attempting to incite revolution in Bolivia.
In 1975, Soviet scientist Andrei Sakharov was awarded the
Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1985, the hijackers of the Achille Lauro cruise liner sur.
rendered after the ship arrived in Port Said, Egypt.
· Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council voted to ban all
military flights over Bosnia-Herzegovina. The 102nd ·
Congress adjourned. .
.
Five years ago: Hurricane Pauline·struckAcapulco, Mexico,
killing at least 150 people. Dario Fo, the unabashed leftist
BY JtM MULLEN
bought a house all that rent money
playwright who was prosecuted by Italy, denounced b;y
Sue can always find some silly would be equity." So we bvught a
Roman Catholic Church leaders and barred from the United
excuse to go to Home Depot. Uke if we hou se in the country. Now all that
States, won the Nobel Prize for Literature.
don't patch the roof, the ceilings will money is equity: For Home Depot.
One year ago: In the first daylight raids since the start of
collapse. If we don't replace the three
Don '! beheve me? Try to find a parkU.S.-Ied attack.s on Afghanistan, jets bombed the Taliban
missing risers on front porch steps, ing space at one. You have to drive
stronghold of Kandahar. Letters postmarked in Trenton , N.J. ,
someone will sue us. If we don't get a around for a half hour waiting for
were sent to Sens. Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy ;-t he leiters
new freezer, all the food will spoil. She someone to leave. Some of them are
later tested positive for anthrax. Americans Eric A. Cornell
ne.eds grout. She needs spackle.l arn a open 24/7. 1:-saw a sign in their lumber
and Carl E. Wieman, and German-born U.S. resident
city boy; I know nothing about this department once that said, "No wood
Wolfgang Ketterle won the Nobel Prize in physics. Director
stuff. Half the time I think she's talking cut after I0:30 p.m." If so many people
and choreographer Herbert Ross died in New York at age 74.
about making dinner.
wanted their wood cut after 10:30 p,m.
Dagmar, who I?arlayed her dumb blonde act into tele vision
"Pick up a nice little wine, dear, . that they have to make ·a sign, we are in
Jame in the early 1950s, died in West Virginia at age 79.
we ' re having ' Braised Grout Stuffed the middle of a national do-it-yourself
with Spackle on a Bed of Wilted Frisee epidemic . No contractor I know is
' Today 's Birthdays: Actor Fyvush Finkel is 79. Senate
and
Sauteed Wild Mushrooms."'
. working at 10:30 p.m. It's hard enough
Minority Leader Trent Lou, R-Miss., is 61. Singer Jackson
Browne is 54., Actor Gary Frank is 52. Actor Richard Chaves. \ And I don't want to know anything to get.them to work at 10:30 a.m.
about il. The three scariest words in the
The Home Depot shoppers are
is 5 I . Actor Robert Wuhl is 51 . Sharon Osbourne is 50. Actor
English language to me are "Do It obsessed with kitchens and bathrooms.
Tony Shalhoub is 49. Actor Scott Bakula is· 48. Musician
Yourself." Why on Earth · would you If they 're not remodeling them, they ' re
James Fearn ley (The Pogues) is 48. Acfor Michael Pare is 43.
want do it you rself .when you can pay adding new ones. I expect to start seeRock singe r-musician Kurt Neuma nn (The BoDeans) is 4·1.
someone el.se to do it for you?
ing real estate. ads soon that read "Nine
·Cou ntry singe r Gary Bennett is 38. Singer P.J. Harvey is 33.
The
sheer
size
of
places
like
Home
bathroom,
two-bedroom home, newly
Cou ntry siilge r Tommy Shane Steiner is 29. Sean Lennon is
.
Depot
and
Lowe's
·prove
I'm
in
the
remodeled
professional kitchen with
27. Actor Randy Spelling i,s 24.
· Zachery Ty Bryan is 21.
minority here. but their size should also cathedral cei ling, granite cot.~nter tops,
Thought for Today : "If we would o
give, just once, the
be a warning sign to all homeowners. · Viking stove, sink carved frpm a solid
same amount of reflection to what we w nt to get out of life
When we were renting an apartment in block of Carrara marble. Second bedthat we give to the quesfion of what to do with a two weeks '
the
city, our friends would always wag room co uld be turned into a lOth ?athvacation, we would be startled at our false ·tandards and the
their
fingers and say, " You're just room."
aimless procession of our busy days." ·othy Canfield
throwing money away on rent. If. you
Home improvement ~tores arc full of
Fisher, American author "nd essayist ( 1879- 195

an

If we really want to teach science,
how about just teaching what we know,
the empirical evidence of what the earth
and its . systems actually do, without
insisting on any "explanatory myth" of
origins. If students want to know how it
all came to exist, explain that there are
ditlerent views, and challenge the students to decide for themselves based on
the evidence and arguments.
Imagine - challenging them to think
and decide. What might this do to education? Some might choose evolution,
others creation. As long as the school
doesn 't tell the students what opinion
they must hold, it would not be teaching
· Th'IS wou ld be an tmprovemen
·
t
re 1·tg1on.
overtoday's schools, where evolution is
taught as sa~red dogma, and .anyone
who notices its inconsistencies is
scorned as a heretic.
If you have an opinion on this issue, I
encourape you to express it to the memc
bers o the Ohio State Board of
Education. in care of the Ohio
D
r· Ed ucat10n,
..
Off'
f
epartrnent o
1ce o
Board Relations, 25 S. Front St.,
Columbus, Ohio 43215-4183.
Ten of the 19 members of the board
are appointed by Gov. Taft, and he's
very interested in what ·the voters o'f
Ohio think as he weighs his recomme,~t­
dation to the board. Call his office at
614-466-3555 and let him know what
you think.
Larry Wilcoxen
Racine

Why is this?

•

Dl!ar Editor:
Why is it that a -county with an abundance of road building materials has so
many bad roads?
It was my understanding the welfart; ·
to work program was implemented
sometime ago. The Sutton Township
trustees informed that they have no
money to fix roads, except their ·own,
but they ·attend meeting once a month
and pick up a check, not to mention all
the· othe\ things. This is not what they
were elected to do.
I would hate to think, I had children
riding a school bus on some of the roads
in Sutton Township. If there is ·no
money, then shut the operation dowh
and stop collecting welfare .
If the roads were ditched and properly maintained, there wouldn't · be so
much upkeep and just · maybe there
would be enough funds. The deadl:t
.
,
drag just doesn't do it.
Grace Holter
Racint

a

'

THE VILLAGE IDIOT

A place .UJith little fascination-- for the unhandy man ,

I

,,
•

.

guys (well, except •for my wife and
scads of other women like her with
lazy, loser, good-for-nothing, buttglued-to-the-sofa husbands) who are
going to install hot tubs and Jacuzzis by
themselves. Guys who are buying pres:sure hoses to clean their decks, decks
that they bui It with wood that they
bought here and presumably had cut
before 10:30 p.m. There are guys buying tools to cut bathroom tile, tools to
cut pipe, tools to cut wire. .
On one trip I had to use the restroom,
which always seems to be a two-mile
walk from the fr.ont door, past. guys
who are buying screen doors, 4-by-8s,
miter boxes, arc ·welders, PVC pipe,
crushed -marble and hardware cloth. 1
get to the Men's Room, walk up to the
urinal ; and it's full. It seems I have dis~
covered the one thing do-it-yourselfers
can't do. I' m in a store full of gur.s wh~
can install a toilet, they just can t flu s~
one.
,
Jim Mullen (• rhe author of "/r Take6
A Village Idi ot: A Memoir of Life Afte'r
the City " (Simon and Schuster, 200/ J,
He also contributes regularly tq
Entertainment Weekly, where he can bf
reached atj'im- mullenew.c;om
•

..

., :

!

DEAR ABBY: I am
engaged to a man who has
been married twice. He has
a child by each of his exwives . He
has
been
· divorced from his first wife
for seven years. They have
. a friendly relationship.
Whenever they drop off or
pick up their 9-year-old
son, they spend at least 25
to 30 minutes talking. I
sometimes go with him, and
he will leave me in the car
for that amount of time. He
can't understand why I get
upset. He thinks I am jealous, , which I am not. I'm
glad he has a good relationship with her since he doesn't with his second wife.
They're alway.s arguing
over their 2-year- old.
Abby, do you think I am
biting off more than I can
chew? ·- LEFT IN THE
CAR IN DES ;MOINES
DEAR LEFT IN THE
CAR: Only you can answer
that question. You are
engaged to a man with a
past -- and the "souvenirs"
to prove it.
From my perspective, it is
. rude to keep someone wait- ing more than 15 minutes .
. However, because · you
know what to expect, I suggest -you take a book or a
couple of magazines with
you. It will lessen the boredom.
His ex-wives will always
, be the moth~;rs of his chit: dren, and this problem
won't go away by itself.
Since the situation ts upsetting, premarital counseling
might · help you and your
fiance resolve this issue
before you get to the altar.
. DEAR ABBY: I am a 14.year·old girl who really
.needs your help. I'm in love
· with a boy, "Lowell," who
is two years older. We've
.kissed and stuff. Lowell
_says he loves me, but the
othmg is he failed to tell me
he already has a girlfriend.
He goes to a different
school, so I just found out.
Lowell now knows I
· .know this, but maintains
that this girl is "obsessed"
with him and he only "pre·
tends" to be her boyfnend
to make her happy.
Abby, on top of this; I'm
Mormon and can't date
· until I'm 16. (I think my
· parents are catching on I) ••
IN HOT WATER WI'I'H
LOVE
. DEAR
IN
HOT
WATER: Let's see:
.. (1) He goes to a different
-school.
(2) He may not be level. ',ing with you regarding his

Abby
ADVICE
relationship with . the other
girl.
(3) You're not-allowed to ,
date for two more years.
Bottom line: Face the fact
that this relationship is
going nowhere.
.
P.S. Please don't be discouraged. I have a hunch
when · you are 16 you' II
meet a more eligible young
man you' II like as much as
Lowell.
DEAR ABBY: I'm a 40sometbing . flight attendant.
My . husband and I spent a
lot of money · to have his
vasectomy reversed so we
could have another baby. It
·failed.
I began artificial insemination. After I mentioned
the situation to one of my
co-workers, she said she
knew that a handsome
young pilot we fly with had
donated his sperm at the
same clinic I used. Happily,
I am now pregnant.
.
I suspect my girlfriend
told the pilot because he
now goes out of his way to
avoid me. I can't be sure,
but the pilot matches the
description in the clinic's
donor catalog of the specimen I used.
This whole thing is supposed to be anonymous, but
I'm dying to talk to the
pilot to confirm my suspicions. If the pilot is the
father, should I tell my husband? •• FLYING HIGH ·
IN CLEVELAND
DEAR FLYING HIGH:
The paternity of rour baby
cannot be determmed without a DNA test, and sperm
banks usually have many
anonymous donors. I see no
reason to discuss this conjecture with either the pilot
or your husband.
· P.S. rm · taken aback at
the thought that the pilot in
question would have discussed his "donations" with ·
your co- worker.
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van 8 uren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded b¥, her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear · Abby at
www.DearAbby.com
or
P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

.

I

·Annual meeting OES
·
Grand Chapter announced
COLUMBUS
The
Grand Chapter of Ohio
Order of the Eastern Star
hold its 113th Annual
Grand Chapter session in
Battelle Hall at the Ohio
Center, 400 North High
Street, Columbus; Oct. 2730.
The 2002· "Ties that Bind"
session will be presided
over by
Worthy Grand
Matron Carolyn McCahan
.of N orion, and Worthy
Patron .Richard Manifold of
Fairfield.
A vesp~r service will op~n
the meetmg at 3:30 p.m . m
the 8yatt Regency South
ballroom at 3:30 p.m. on
Sunday, Oct. ,27, with the

will

meeting the following day
at 5 p.m. Installation of officers for 2003 will take place
on Wednesday, Oct. 30.
The Order of the Eastern
Star is a benevolent, educational, and social organiza~
tion of men and women
with close ties to the
Masonic Fraternity.
The nearly 80,000 members in Ohio are committed
to helping fight disease and
suffering as well as provide
scholarships to students in
religious training. Grants
are given annually to institutions and individuals
around the state.
In 200 l, grants totaled
$142,000.

•

We've Got Answers.

We'll help you get thit insurance coverages and .
limits you need. We~re a single SOilrce lor ALL '

. your Insurance ~:

Tuesday, Oct. 8
MIDDLEPORT .. Top's Oh
570 Middlepon. 5 10 6 p .m.
weighin, 6 to 7 p.m. meeting .
Rejoicing Life church .
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Chamber o( Commerce, monthly
membership luncheon, noon to I
p.m., Overbrook Center. Jimmy
Stewan and Jim Pancake, State
Representative ca'ndidates, to
speak .

MARIETTA - A performance of "The Escape of
Jane" by Patricia Thomas
Wilson, depicting a runaway slave's harrowing
escape to freedom on the
Underground Railroad with
her seven children will be a
feature of the Friends of
Freedom Society, Inc .
meeting, Oct. 18-20 at the
historic Lafayette Hotel in
Marietta.
The play will be presented at 8 p.m. on Friday of
the summit at the Mid-Ohio
Va I ley PI ayers Theater.
Admission is $5. ·
. Another feature of the

Friday, Oct. 11 ,
POMEROY .. Widow's
Fellowship, noon at Crow's
Family Restaurant .

Church services

Sundly. Oct. t:5
· RUlLAND .. Ruiland O&gt;Urch of
t73rd annivasary to be celebrated at homecoming day, I0:30 a.m.
worship and conununion stJ"Vice~ ooon
carryin dinner: I p.m. af1emoon Str·
vice with Bob Werry, minister, and
"Forgiven 4."

RACINE .. Special services,
Red Brush Church of Christ,
Bashan Road, 7 pi .m. SaJureay;
Saturday, Oc:t. 12
, 10 a.m and 6 p.m. Sunday.
POMEROY .. Burlingham
Denver Hilt of Foster. W. Va. to
Modem Woodmen, 5:30p.m. adt
the hall . Theme Hallpween. hog- . speak.
dogs, cider and donuts provided.
Take covered dish and come in

meeting will be the presen. tation of a national award
from . the U.S. . Forest
Service. It will be presented to the Chief of the U.S. ·
Forest Service for exem-·
· plary volunteer service to
the
Wayne
National
Forest 's
Underground
Railroad
Preservation
Initiative.
Saturday's events include
presentations by the U.S.
Forest
Service
on
"Preservation ·of Early
African American History
an d
th e
Un d ergroun d
Railroad" by Ann Cramer
and :tvfary McCorvie and

ATHENS Beginning Sunday
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital will
sponsor a week·long telephone survey
of more than 360.Aibany-area households to gather residents' opinions
about the area's healthcare services. ,
Representatives
from
Ohio
University,. on behalf of O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, will conduct the
survey from Sunday, Oct. 6, through
Sunday, Oct. 13.
The survey will include a variety of
questions regarding what types of
healthcare services Albany-area residents need and would like available to

- Pomeroy
JEFFW-R

113W. 2nd~

ld Lll . . . .

....... ._COiol'fMI'

· --0'---~0H-1&gt;
DVCW11AID

au;,.·,

Birthdays
CHESTER -- Thclrnll Hayes will
observe her 90th birthday Sunday. ·
Cards may be sent 10 her at 48238
Slate Roiule 248, Lohg Bottom.

"The
Underground
Railroad in the Upper Ohio
Valley" by Henry and
Sandra Moals Burke.
The keynote speaker at
the evening banquet will be
Dr. Charles L. Blackson,
internationally renowned
biblio'phile,
lecturer,
genealogist, and scholar on
the Underground Railroad ..
At 11 a.m. Sunday, a historic marker will be dedicated to . commemorate
David Putnam Jr.• a staunch
leader of the abolitionist
movem.ent 1·n Mart'etta. The
marker will be located at
the end of Putnam Avenu~

on the west side of the
Muskingum River. The
dedication is free a"nd open
10

the public .
The deadline for Summit
registration is Oct. 9. For
more information, vts1t
www.OhioUndergroundRai ,
lroad.org.

The organization is an
. all-volunteer
non -pro~it
organization, whose sole
purpose is to research,
identify, document and preserve
Underground
Railroad sites.

them in Albany including various specialized medical services, urgent care.
dental services, rehabilitation and
exercise programs, pharmacy services
and healthcare services for children.
All individual answers will · be completely confidential, only the totaled
·
responses will be reported.
Rick
Castrop,
president
of
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital, urges
those who are asked to participate in
the survey to take a few minutes of
their time to answer the survey questions as candidly as possible.
"Your responses ·will help us learn

your optmons about the healthcare
services that are currently available to
you.as well as thosfl.you would like to
see added so we can make important
decisions about the expansion of
healthcare services in Albany," ·
Castrop said.
·
Last year., O'Bleness purchased a 9acre tract of land in Albany. One acre
of that land was leased to Dr, Wayne
Myles for his Blizzard Lane practice . .
O'Bleness is investigating what services could be brought to Albany to
complement Dr. Myles' practice.
..-

State Fair
reseiVe cha·mpion
. RACINE Mallory practice, and dedi.c ation"
Hill took reserve champt- over the summer while
on in barrels and cones at competing in tri-county
the Ohio State Fair com- area events.
Next month she will
petition where she competed in the quarter horse attend the Quarter Horse
· contest with her horse
"Quest.'
1
Congress on the State fairThe daughter ·o'f ·Perry · grounds where she wiJ.I
and Bobbi Hill attributes compete with horses from
her success to "hard work, around the country.

Mallory Hill and her horse "Que1t"

The-Forsyte Saga' in a. brand-new TV miniseries
NEW YORK (AP) - · For many viewers, just the mention of "The Forsyte
Saga" triggers images of a bygone age. It
was an era of quaint customs and curious
wardrobes hardly understandable to us '
now- but so much fun to look back on.
· Ah, those distant days of 1969! For
that, of course, was when ''The Forsyte
Saga". premiered in the United States,
causing a sensation throughout .its 26-

week run.
·A. s~rawling costume drama that
begms m 1870&gt; London, the BBC production drew from a trilogy of novels by
Nobel laureate John Gals worthy focusing on the upper-crust yet scandal-ridden
Forsyte clan.
.
·
. In that long-ago era (that .ts, 1969-70)
before people had home vtdeo players
and hundreds of channels to choose

v

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'

· from, "!'he Forsyte Saga" was embraced
as something ground-breaking and notto
.be missed. Unfolding in black-and-white
splendor on a total budget of $728,000, it
was the very definition of appointment
TV.
. It hooked critics, too. "One of the significant cultural events of this century,"
novelist James A. Michener wrote in TV
Guide in a typical rave.
1

The Meigs Local ~
Talented &amp; Gift~d
frog ram would like to
·invite you to .

Open House at Meigs
Middle School

the Stat.e Golf

Wednesday, October 9, 2002
4:00 -7:00p.m.

we are all very
proua of you!!

This is an opportunity for students,
families, and community members to
. '- have an insid~ glimpse of student i _
"achtevement.
./ '

Tournamelft. .

Call me ... Stop by... - ifs ybur choice!
.,,..,

Homecomin~s

Monday, Oct 14
POMEROY .. Meigs County
Republican Pany to meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Republican headquarters .

Albany area targeted for healthcare services survey

oAito oHome oflnancial Pioducts o8usiless

.._

costume.

Story of Underground Railroad to
·be featured at ~he Lafayette Hotel

182-1479

............ •

Thursday, Oct. 10
·
POMEROY .. Alpha Iota
Masters Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 6:30p.m. St. Paul
Lutheran Church. Program ~y Hal
Kneen on herbs. Margaret Stewan
and Manha McPhail hostesses.

CONGRATUlATIONS!!
J
Hill
··Gooa ·luck ln

Got Questions?

Wednesday. October 9. 2002

Community Calendar
·Clubs and
Organizations

Dear

Page AS

Dad. Kevin,

Granama Roush,
Aw1ts. Uncles
Cousins

&amp;

'

�Inside:

wwwr.mydallyiMII'Itinel.com

Page A 6 • The Daily Sentinel

Twins take Gal'!le 1, Pa~ 92
Scoreboard, Page 83

Land Transfers

Society Briefs
The class, which is free of
charge, will be held in the
hospital's basement confer- ence rooms Monday, Oct 21,
POMEROY -- . Bus_iness through Thursday, Oct. 24,
and _labor _are featured m _an from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. each
arch1ves d1splay at the Me1gs _ day. Participants are adv1sed
County Muse um .in obser- to auend all four sessions of
vance of Archives Week in the class.
Ohio.
The class is designed to
The exhibit .will remain _on provide information and
display
tbrough
m•d- resources to community
November.
. members living with diabetes
Items from former bus1- or recently diagnosed with
nesses are featured . and diabeteS. The goal of the class
include .Pomeroy nauonal is to offer information that
bank, Stansbury Drug Store, will help people with diabetes'
Sm•th Stud1o, F.M. Coates make positive choices about
Hardware, Shumway Aonsl, their life style and diabetes
Elqerfelds, Me1gs Theater, management.
Goessler Jewelry, Koehler
The class will cover a wide
Brewery. Maag Ear, Nose and range of topics such as:
Throat, Cover Bakmg Co. Learning to live with diaAiso mcluded are Items from betes, monitoring diabetes,
longume current busmesses. maintaining proper nutrition,
regulating blood gluc 0 se
(sugar) a'nd modifying behaviors.
Barb Nakanishi, n;gistered
dietitian, and Laura Ballinger,
ATHENS -- .In support of education coordinator, will
National
Breast Cancer lead the class.
Resources and educational
Awareness Month, O' Bleness
literature
will be available at
Memorial
Hospital and
the
classes
. A physician's
Radiology Associates of
Athens will provide free written referral is .required to
mammograms to 25 women attend the class. The referral
should include diagnosis and
who meet speci fie criteria.
To qualify for a free mam- hemoglobin Ale test results if
mogram, a woman must be 4{) available.
To register for the class, call
years old or older, have not
Nakanishi
at (740) 592-9205 ..
had a mammogram during the
past three years and have no by Oct. 15. Nakanishi can
health insurance, including also. provide information
about the dales and times of
Medicaid or Medicare.
Any woman who meets the future classes.
criteria inay call O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital's commu·
nity relations department at
(740) 592-9300 to receiye a
certificate for a free mamma·
gram. The malnmograms
ATHENS -- A .classroom
will
be
performed · in refresher course for older driO'Bieness' ~diol&lt;?gy depart- vers is being offered . at the
ment. ·Radtologtsts from O'Bleness Memorial Hospilal
Radiology · Associates of in Athens.
Athens will interpret the
O'Bleness is offering 55
mammograms.
ALIVfJMATURE DRIVING
Tuesday, Oct. 15, from 1 p.m.
until 5 p.m. and Wednesday, ·
Oct. 16, from 1 p.m. in hospital basement conference room
B-11. Participants are asked
ATHENS -- O ' Bleness to attend both afternoon sesMemorial Hospital in Athens sions. All dfivers, especially
will offer a four-session dia - those who are 50 years old
be.tes education class later and older, are invited io participate in the 'program:
this month.

Archives display
at museum

Free ·
. mammograms .

R. f h d · ·
e res er nving
course offered

Diabetes
class offered

TIME O ·UT
FOR TIPS

Getting past 'pet peeves'
· them with each other. By
Exte1_1sion Agent
,
doing this, you are identifying
---'-----'---'---- the petty things that annoy
During this time of the .year you - you are getting it out of
your system, but you're not
many manied couples may be going to do anything about it
experiencing their first taste : to mar your relationship.
of "empty nest" as their chil- Once that is done, then you
dren leave home for college. can decide on the major disSome couples may look at this
h
eed
be
period in their lives as a time a~reements 1 at n
to
to be able to do all of the dtscussed.
d
Spouse.s should bring up
..
h
, bl
t hmgs I ey weren t a e to 0 these difficult issues in a poslwhile the children were at
home. They eagerly antici- tive way. They should explain
how the problem makes them
,pate revitalizing their mar- feel, without accusing the
riage
·and
friendship . other person. One example
However, many couples have might be: "I was hurt when
been so busy .reanng their you spent the afternoon with
children that they didn't spend friends." Avoid the accusatotime on developing their rela- ry question, ·"Why can't you
-tionship. They seem to· have ever stay home?" By explainlost touch w1th each other. ing how the problem makes
, · you feel, you will be better
The~ don ' t know how to co
mumcate anymore.
able to work together to find
·
To help couples reconnect,
,.,
'd ' f h . so1uttons.
h
I ey nee.,. tow• entl ¥ I_ elr
People need to forget past
gnevances.
hat ImtatiOnS arguments. Instead, move
seem to ~ave escalated over . forward. There are things
• the years · What ~t peeves about your partner that you
seem to have magnfed and are not gomg to change.
not been addressed· · Each Realize that, concentrate on
spouse should make a hst of the good things you've expeth~se unmet expectatiOns • rienced together, and move
!hmgs that have been bother- on. Forgive yourself and your
mg them about the other ~r- . spouse for past differences.
son. After the l!sts are made, Now is the t(me to enjoy your
tear them up Without shanng new freedom'and eac h other.
BY BECKY BAER

----------COUPON

~ 1 ~~be~~~~~~~rou!v~Frs 1
I~ TM

HEARING AID. CENTER I
'
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
I

I
1
224 Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
1
FRIDAY, OCT. 11,2002 • 9:00- Noon
I
I Call Toll Free
1-800-634-52651or an immediate appointment.
I The teste will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist. I
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
I
I conversation
Is lnvlted 'to have a FREE hearing test to see II
I this problem can be helpedl Bring this coupon with you lor I
FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
I
I UMWA •your
UAW' • ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
.L
.WALK-INS WELCOME ·
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..
•

---------------

Meigs County Recorder
Judy King reported the following transfers in real
estate:
Hollie E. Davis to Timothy
·A. Gilkey, Linda J. Gilkey,
deed. Salem.
Carl Chichester, Janet
Chichester,
to
Carla
Browning, Mary Catherine
Swain, Jill · Swain, deed,
Olive.
· Patricia F. ., Marcinko,
Thomas J. Marcinko, to
Melissa Jo Marcinko, deed,
Olive.
Anthony Land Co., Inc., to
Robert A. Wilcox, deed,
Olive.
Jelex Land Co. to Jeffrey .
H. Neal, Francine G. Neal,
deed, Scipio.
.
Pauy Ann Pickens, Ray R.
Pickens, to Ryan · E. Dill,
Amanda V. Dill, deed,
Chester.
Roger K. Stout to Dante
Oliveri, Cynthia Oliveri,
deed, Columbia.
Richard A. Young to
Marilyn J. Young, deed,

.

Page 81

Sutton.
Bruce D. Bumgardner, deed, . Curtis Ellsworth Balthaser
Jan M. Kostival, Taman L. Village of Pomeroy.
to Eugene C. Balthaser,
Eugene H. Green, Thelma Judith Lee Ringler, Patricia
Kostival, to John W. Tillis,
Patricia B. Tillis, ' deed, M. Gn:en, to .Ken T. Doty, A.
Garrett, certificate,
,' deed, Bedford.
Salem.
Scipio.
Grace Marie Holsinger,
Gary L. Duff to Buckeye
Patricia M. Jones, Jeff
deceased, to Alva Holsinger, Rural Electric Cooperative, Joseph Jones, to Jam~
Jr., deed, affidavit. Olive.
right of way, Salem.
Curtiss, deed, Columbia.
Chad
William
Dix,
Karen
Stacy
Ph
--- 1
Krista
Sinclair,
. I.
Ch I s· I .
. y11·IS L . Cadie, dec·easeo,
Sme
atr, to
ar es mc au, IWI to BREC, right of way, to William E. Cadle, affiChad Sinclair, deed, Orange. ·Scipio.
·
da · Viii
· f M'ddl
1
· Clarence E. Might, Jessie
Harlan A. Ball·_. Alta L.
vtt, 1 age 0
epon.
~...,
William E. Cadle to
M. MigbJ. to Evelyn E. Ballard, to Brian E. Hall, Patricia L : Silver, deed,
Might, d~.
·
Mary M. Hall, deed, Village of Middleport. ·
Donna J. -GrueseMr,liJarnesK Lebano~.
Robert James, Lena James,
R. Grueser, Sr., to e ssa .
Lorramc
I.
Wigal, to Garden Tree Financial
Grueser, deed, Village of deceased, to Ralph Wigal,
Se_rvices, deed, Village oJ
Syracuse.
certificate, Olive.,
David Allen Rudolph to
Denise L. Williams, Randy Mtddleport.
.
'
Fmanc~
Brian R. Swiger, Deborah J. Williams, to Helen Bailey,'-' C~n~eco
Swiger, deed, Orange.
Randy Williams, deed, S~rvtc•~g Co~., Green Tree
Dennis M. Lavender, Sutton.
Fmanctal Servtces, to Jo~ph
Samantha J. Lavender, to
Edward M. Turley to S. Tillis, Faye ~- Tillis,
Ohio,
Inc., Thomas M. Theiss, deed, deed, Village of Mtddleport.
Beneficial
Fred C. Beaver, Jr.,
Beneficial Mortgage Co.. Sutton.
Kethel Vivian D. Hatfield Rhonda Fish, to William
deed, 'Village of Racine.
Bryan K. Swann' to Brenda to Ted Hatfield, Jr., affidavit. Dillon,. Vanna Dillon, I deed,
G. Seagraves, Brenda G. Rutland.
Village of Pomeroy.
Swann, deed, Village of
Ryan D. Buckley to
Betty L. Hail to Toni L.
Middleport.
Horace Karr, Dorothy Karr, Givens, deed, Village of
Suzy Amber Green to ·deed, Chester.
Racine.

Wednesday, October 9, 1001

Sammy's oq a
roll at Mason
Lanes

.

.

(Author's note: I have it.
tinnitus symptoms .
In ing ringing. However, it is
had the pleasure of writing The incidence of tinnitus addition to his or her talent, quite important to avoid
the Family Medicine col- is the same in men and a hearing test is always exposure to more loud ·
umn since January .1988. women : It is often first required, and CT or MRI noises. This reduces the
For almost 15 years. I have noticed when the afflicted images are usually needed progression of the disorder
and its associated hearing
taken gre~t pride in person is trying to fall as well.
answering your questions asleep . This is because the The treatment of tinnitus loss . Often simply knowing
in print and have had a few buzzing or ringing - is dependent upon the the cause of tinnitus is
private chuckles over the which may be in one or cause, So without knowing reassurinl!. Those sufferers
questions that were so both ears ·7 becomes more the cause of your condition · who have difficulty falling
"wild" I couldn't publish apparent in a quiet bed- I can't give you specific asleep because of their ti.n them.
room or other environment r e c o m me n d at i o n s . nitus my do better by soft! y
. I hope you have found my· where there is little noise. 'However, I can give you playing a radio as backwork helpful and entertain- Tinnitus is a symptom some general expectations. ground sound. You, howing. With my retirement rather than a specific dis- About 25 percent of those ever, will need to talk to
from the Ohio University ease, and therefore, it can with tinnitus get substan- your ENT doctor for other
College of Osteopathic have several caus~s. The tial . improvement with recommendations for easMedicine, I now pass the most common one •s hear- treatment, about 50 percent ing y~r tinnitus symptoms
responsibility for writing ing loss that results from get some improvement, and based on the specific cause
this column -- as well as noise exposure. This can be the remaining 25 {lercent of your disorder.
the pleasure derived there- one very loud sound, like get no better desptte the
"Family Medicine" is a
from -- to my colleague an explosioll; or repeated best of care. Fortunately, weekly column: To submit
Martha Simpson, D. 0., exposure to moderately only a very few will have questions. write to Martha
M.B.A. I'm sure you will n01sy environments, as worsening of symptoms to A. Simpson, D.O., M.B.A .,
find her journalism and occurs in many factories. the point of being seriously Ohio University College of
medical information to be Ear damage may also result disabled by them.
·
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
of the highest caliber.)
from repeated exposure to
The most common cause Box 110, Athens, Ohio
loud music even though of tinnitus loud noise 45701. You can also email
Question: I've had peri-. xou_ ~.ouldn't call this exposure, h~s no treatment Dr. Simpson at simpods when I hear buzzing in no1se. Other causes of that eliminates the annoy- sonm@ohio.edu

COLUMBUS (AP)
Akron Hoban joined the elite
.group of No. I teams in the
state, beating out a neighbor
to barely take over the top
.spot in Division III of the
fifth weekly Associated Press
Ohio high school football
poll; released Tuesday.
Hoban, which came into
the week trailing No. !ranked Columbus DeSales by
56 points, holds a five-point
advantage
over
Akron
Buchtel in the balloting by a
statewide media panel.
DeSales dropped from No.
1 to No. 6 after losing 33-14
to rival Columbus Watterson.
The rest of the No. I teams
- Warren Harding (Division
I),
Dayton ChaminadeJulienne (II), Coldwater (IV),
Marion Pleasant (cV) and
Maria Stein Marion Local
(VI) - retained their spots.
Pleasant had the most
points (343), most first-place
votes (25) and the biggest
lead (75 points), with
Woodsfield Monroe Central
second in Division V.
Warren Harding's Division
I lead was cut in half- from
45 to 23 points -by No. 2
'Lakewood St. Edward. The
spot to
Eagles moved lip
take the ·place of Dublin
Coffman; ·which lost to
Pickerington 28- 14.
A .third Columbus-area
team also plummeted in the
rankings, with Columbus
Brookhaven - which led
Division II the first two
weeks - losing at Napoleon
35-34 to fall seven spots to
ninth.
Chaminade-Julienne was
followed by 'Louisville,
Toledo Central Catholic and
Canfield, while Hoban and
Buchtel ' s closest pursuers
were Newark Licking Valley
and Germantown Valley
View.
Coldwater holds a 38-point
edge on Portsmeuth . in
Division IV, with New
London moving up one slot
to get by Akron Manchester.
In Division VI, the top
eight teams held the same
spots they did a week ago.
Marion Local was trailed by
Danville, Columbus Grove,
StrasburgMogadore.
Frankl.in, Lowellville, Dola
Hardin
Northern
and
Covington.

. .....

a

FREE
Prostate Screening
sponsored by Holzer Medical
Center and Holzer Clinic
~

Subscribe today.

.

· Central Ohio
upsets shake up
fifth weekly poll

tinnitus include disorders ·
·
such as middle- or ;··;~;~;~fU:lll:lUltD[J:l::U.ZZZ~S,S,~WW&amp;E;y;yys,~e_:'~
ear infection, jaw problems
(e.g, TMJ disorder), tumors
of the acoustic nerve, hard2FREEncms
ening of the arteries or
other blood vessel abnerSPRIIIG UIIEY
malities, or even muscle
CIIEMAJ
spasm of the tiny muscle
that moves the bones of the ·
m1ddle ear.
As. you may have found
out, 11 usually requires the
sktll of an ear, nose and
throat (ENT) specialist to
track down the cause of tXlrnww:n:nn::a::a:rnrnw:n:n:n:nn::a:mmm:l ,

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
992-2156

STOP IN AT
PICKEN'S ·
HARDWARE AND
SAVE ON
GALVANIZED

BLACK

S'OVE PIPE
.AND DON7
·FORGET YOUR

FURNACE
nLTERS!

Remember, prostate cancer is the rrwst commonjonn of
cancer di(;rgnosed in American men. ·

To participate in this
screening, you must...

• Have no personal history of
prostate cancer.
• Have no prostate surgery
within one year.
• Be 50 years of age or older . .

QR if you are age 40 or older
with one of the following
risk factors: ·
• Family history of prostate
cancer.
• Aflican Amelican.
• Previous abnormal prostate
exam or PSA blood test.

U so, this prostate
screening could save your life.

To *h.edule your
.,;

J

•

ree SCreentng •••

Call Joyce Cochran in the
HMC Marketing Department at

.

(740) 446-5055

.

Monday through Friday
.
9 am- 4 'p m
.

-

Registration is limited to the .first
100 eligible men, so call today/
Registration bad line is 10/1 '1/02 at 4 pm.
'

For more information, caD
Bonnie McFarland at
(740) 446-5679
•

.

Prep Volleyball

Prep Golf

MASON,
W.Va.
Sammy's Construction dominated team play the past two
weeks in the Wednesday
~ixed Bowling League at
Mason Bowling Lanes.
Individually,
Terry
'Seidenable and Clyde Sayre
look top men's honors and
Margaret .Eynon and Dorrie
Will claimed the top spot on
.
the ladies' circuit.
The standings after week
foul"'were a~ follows: The
.King Pins ' 34-6. Pine Hills
Golf Course 26-14, Wally's
Warriors 22-18, Sammy's
Consnuction 16-24, Powell's
Super Value 16-24. Meigs
Industries 6-34.
The team high-game and
highcseries went to Sammy's
Construction 692-1946. In
~k five , . it was again ·
Sammy's Construction leading the way, but the standings
are as follows: The King Pins
"12-6, Pine Hills Golf Course
28-20,
Sammy's
Members of th~ Mei~~ High School volleyball team clinched their third strai~t Tri-Valley
Consnuction 22-26, Wally's
· Conference Oh10 DIVISion championshiP Tuesday w1th a home w1n over Vinton County.
Warrims 22-26; Powell's
Members of the tearg are, front. from left, Kayte ·Davis, Allison Williamson, Katie Jeffers,
Super Vallie 18-30, and .
Mindy Chancey and Maria Drenner; Back, from left, Head Coach Rick Ash. Samantha Pierce ,
Meigs Industries 12-36 . .
Samantha Cole. Chrissy Miller, Jaynee Davis and Nikki Butcher. {Derek Taylor) .
·.

Loud .noises, music common causes of 'ringin in the ears'

my head for the past 12
years. It occurs more often
' now, and it dlso · lasts
longer. What can I do when
I get rid of these spells?
l);nswer: · What you
describe is a condition we
doctors call tinnitus. It is
the hearing . of a sound -often a buzzing, ringing or
humming .-- in the absence
of a sound heard by others.
It is estimated that 40 million Americans have. experienced this phenomenon at
one time or another and
that ·up to 20 percent of
those 50 and over have it
relatively often. . Perhaps
one million have it with
sufficient frequency and
severity to be classified as
being disabled because of

·The Daily Sentinel

.,

.The Daily Sentinel/.
'

•

•

gs wtns
Ohio Division
BY

DEREK TAYLOR

Staff writer
ROCK SPRINGS
Vin\On County doesn't have
a bad volleyball tearrt.
Meigs is, however, good
enough to reduce a quality
squad to rubble, as · evi·
denced Tuesday night in
Pomeroy by the Marauders'
15-6, 15-4 domination of the
Vikings.
The Senior Night win gave
the I'r'osts their thlrd straight

Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division Championship, the
fourth in the ·last five years
for . the
school.
The
Marauders converted · on
each of their 51 serves on the
evening, refusing to give
rheir guests any extra.opportunities to make a viable contest out of the proceedings.
"I was telling ·their coach
(Steve Roach) after the game
.that they don't have a bad
team at all," Meigs head
coach Rick Ash said after the

Bv

GLOUSTER ·- Eastern
rolled to a win over Trimble
Tuesday, 15-10 and 15-8, to
capture
the
Tri-Valley
Conference .
Hocking
Division championship.
Eastern (15-3, 14-1 TVC)
wasted no time in establishing itself in either game,
however, Trimble put up a
good fight in keeping both
games close.
According to coach Howie
Caldwell, Eastern receivC!f
great floor games from set· ters Stacy Smith and Tiffeny
Bissell and also received
good passing and hitting
games from Kass Lodwick
and Katie Robertson.
Likewise, Caldwell said,
Alyssa Hplter· again had a

great all-around game with
good serving from Nicole
Phillips and Becky Taylor.
Caldwell said Eastern had
good efforts from its younger'
players coming off the
·
bench .
Eastern was led in scoring
by Holter with six points on
I 0-of-12 serving. She was 2for-2 setting, 28-of-30 P.assing and 11-for-14 sptking
with four kills. Phillips was
9-for-9 serving with five
points and 18-of-2 1 passing.
Smith was 9-forc 10 serving
witb five points, 41 -of-48
setting with 10 sets for kills
and four dinks.
· Lodwick was 16-for-22
spiking with four kills, 37of-39 passing and 6-for-7
serv.ing with two points.
Robertson was 9-for-10 serving with four points, 21-of27 passing, and 17-of-24

Torn~~does
SCOTT WOLFE
Sports correspondent . ·
BY

STEWART - Southern
switctied into high gear in
handily defeating Federal
Hocking 15-6 and 15-9
Tuesday
in
Tri-Valley
Conference volleyball action.
Senior Amy Lee and sophomore Brooke IGser scored ei~t
points apiece, whiie Emily Hi!I
scored five in helping Southern
to .the win. Junior Katie Sayre
had six kills overall, while Hill
added four, Lee three .and
Rachel Chapman three. ·
After Federal Hocking
went up 2-0 in the first game,
•
Kiser• estabhshed
the km.l for

I

'

•

win, which improved the
.Marauders' record to 17-Q.on
the season. "They were outhitting us at the start but we
dug a lot of stuff out tonight .
and kept the ball alive, and as
always, our serving was really good."
Tile Marauders are converting oJl!.% percent of their
serves for the year.
The Vikings' best attempt
at seizing control of the contest occurred early in the first
Ple•se see Meigs, 8:1

spiking with four kills and a
block. Bissell was 10-for-1 0
serving with four kills, 31for-35 setting with seven sets
for k1lls, and 4-of-4 passing.
Morgan Weber was 11 -of-12
passing and 14-for-26 spiking with seven kills.
Jennifer Hayman was 12for-14 passing. Casey Smith
4-of-4 passing and 5-for-8
spiking with four kills.
Krystal Baker 'was 4-for-5
passing. Taylor was 5-for-5
passing and 2-for-2 serving.
Brandy Bissell was 3-for-5
passmg.
East~rn
dropped
the
reserve game 7-15 and 12-

15.
Eastern plays at Waterford
on Thursday in the regular.
season finale.
. Tpe Eagles play in the sectional tournament Saturday,
Oct. 19.

Much

Jike

Southern,

Ple11se see GoH, 8:1

Local Golf

Riverside pro-am
·this weekend
Staff report

· Charleston, W.Va.
10:40 - Monte Chittum,
Charleston , W.Va.
MASON, W.Va. - The
10:50 - Doug !son Jr.,
annual Riverside Pro-am Ironton, Ohio
scramble will be Oct. 13 at
11
Mark Young,
RiversideGolfCiubin Mason. Parkersurg , W.Va.
The field will consist of 30, · 11 :10 - Tom Robinson,
four-ma11 teams competing for Ashland, Ky.
$14,000 in prizes. The teams
11:20 Dick Kea'dle,
consist of one pro and three Parkersburg, W.Va.
amateurs or four amateurs. Tee . ~ 1:30 - Tony . Bowles,
off is slated for 9 a.m.
Clearfork Valley C.C.
The defending champion is
11:40 Mike Ab~ott, · ·
Brad Westfall from Tygart Noblesville, Ind .
Lakes Golf Club in Grafton.
11:50 - Corky Withrow,
There will be several top pro- Ashland, Ky.
fessional and amateur play12 p.m. - Kenny Frye,
. ers competing in the lield.
Barboursville, W.Va. ·
Tee times filled at this
12:10 - Steve Koreski ,
time Include:
Woodridge Plantation
12:20 Rod Harris,
9 a.m. - Larry Starkey,
Madison, W.Va .
Marietta
9:10 . - Scott Fletcher,
12:30 - Bobby Kincaid,
Columbus, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio
9:20 Craig Burner,
12 :40 - Cory George,
Charleston. W.Va.
Lancaster, Ohio
.
·''
9:40 Jim Stemble,
12:50 - Scott DeMussev,
Lancaster, Ohio
·
Canton, Ohio
9:50 - Shay Armstrong, · 1"
Kelly · Shumate ,
Canton, Ohio
Ashland, Ky.
10 Scott [Javidson,
1:10
Jeff Harper,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Parkersburg
10:10 - Gene Weaver,
1:20 Brad Westfall,
Mason
Gratton, W.Va .
Mike Gillum,
1:30- Ty Roush, Mason
10:20. Charleston , W.Va.
1:40 - David Lawrence,
10:30 'Mike Good, Hurricane

All-TVC runners

topple Lancers

Southern at 6-2. Then after · Lee was I0-of- 11 serving
the Lancers fought back to 6- with three aces, 11 -of- 12 spik5, Lee put the game away ing with three kills and 16-forwith a series of serves. 21 passing with rwo blocks.
· Chapman was 6-for-6 serving
including game point ..
In the secmld game, with an ace, 11-for-11 spiking
Ch&lt;!pman broke a 5-5 dead- with three kills and 13-of- 19
loc111 with two key serving passing with three blocks:+
paints. After Federal Hocking Kiser was 11-for-11 serving
rallied to take a 9-8 advan- with five aces, .23-for-23 settage, Hill ended the game ting and 13-of-16 passing.
The Southern reserves
with six straight serves.
Sayre was 9-for-9 serving
"
with three aces, 16-of-17 also Won in two games, 15-9
passing and 21-for-25 spiki!lg and 16- 14. Nikki Riffle and
with six•kills. Hill was 10-for- Jordan Neigler led with
10 with an ace, 14-of- 18 spik- seven points each and
ing with four kills and 8-for- Kristina Williams had five .
II passing. Deana Pullins was
Southern (9-8) plays host
3-for-3 serving, 20-for-20 set- to Tdmble for senior night
ting and 29-of-33 passing.
Thursday.

------· ---------------·-- ·-

'

BY DEREK TAYLOR ·
Meigs was faced with a task
Staff writer
of playing for a runner-up
- - - - - - - - - - · spot in the conference tliis
year,
as
well,
said
There must have been
Marauders coach John
something in the air.
Kniwsczyn .
Both Meigs and Southem
. "Belpre by far was the
high schools recently combest team in the conferpleted each school's most
ence," Krawsczyn said.
successful golf season's to
" Early in _the season you
date,
with
both
the
could tell the other teams in
Marauders and Tornadoes
the conference were going
advancing to District play. to be ,playing for second."
Sou them, in fact, had one
However, the coach ·said
golfer -. senior Jordan Hill his team played to its poten- advance to the state tour- tial to finish second to the
nament which officially
Golden Eagles while still in
begins Friday in Columbus. his opinion being "a year
First-year coach Ike away" from actual conSpencer saw his Southern tention.
team finish third in the Tri'Tthink we played to our
Valley Conference ·Hocking potential," Krawsczyn said.
Division behind stalwarts "I told the kids before the
Waterford and Trimble, and sectional that we were going
credited his team's success to have to shoot 4 to 5 shots
to their professional attitude better than our averages to
toward the game.
make it out and they didjust
"I was impressed by their that."
'
overan attiude," Spencer
The Tornadoes,' who feasaid. "We'd just get on the tured a regular lineup of
team bus and go about our seniors Hill, Justin Connelly
business.
and Kirk Crouch along with
"I was very very pleased junior Ty Hill,, sophomore
with the way our team per- Craig Randolph and freshformed and handled them- man Brad Crouch, will, like
selves this season, and I'm Meigs, return a strong nuclelooking forward to next us to improve on their 2002

year."

Eagles claim Tri-Valley's
Hocking Division crown
ScoTT WoLFE
· Sports cOrrespondent

Meigs, Southem
enjoy banner
seasons • 2002

----

-

---

..

Three runners from Meigs High School earne&lt;tAII·Tri-Valley
Conference honors .in cross country this season. From
left, Shannon Soulsby, first team; Emily Story, second
team; Andrea Burdette, second team. (Contributed)

I .

'

�•

•
Wednesday, October 9, 2002

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

American League Championship Series

6

n

,

.._""-'=,...

For the first time · since
1990, l have no obvious
object of disdain as the
Major League Baseball playoffs reach the league championship series.
No Yankees. No Braves.
No Tomahawk Chop. N!l"'
Frank Sinatra singing , "New
York, New York''.
TAYLOR-MADE
· Who do I want to lose
now? Who is going to carry
the mantle of "Tfie Man" into it comes to baseball history.
the World Series for all St. Louis, meanwhile, has
underdogs to rally against? won more World Series titles
than any organization save
Who is the bad guy now?
for the Yankees themselves.
What ever shall we do?
Uh-oh. Potential bad guy
The strike-shortened year
sitting
there.
.
of 1994 notwithstanding, it's
been 12 years ·since baseball
However, the Cardinals are
fans haven't had the Braves doing all they've done this
to deai with at this point of year without Mark McGwire,
the season. The last time the to begin with. Little, if anyYankees · weren't in the thing, has been said about his
ALCS was 1995, when the absence from this team. Tino
Indians bested the Mariners Martinez has filled in
for the American League admirably at first base for
crown.
Bi~ Mac, who, of course,
While we don 't"·have the rellred at the end of last seamonoliths of Atlanta and son.
New York to watcli, fans are · They're also doing it in the
left with a pair of highly- wake of the sudden and traginteresting matchups, which ic death of pitcher · Darryl
began last evening with the Kile, a mainstay of the club
Twins and Angels going at it and a force in the clubhouse
-for the American League which it was thought would
title.
be sorely missed, and I am
The Twins? The Angels?
sure it is.
Astounding. It doesn't
But above anything else,
National
need repeated yet again that the
League
the Twins were almost elimi- Championship Series is a
nated by Bud Selig's con- matchup of two of ~e best
traction plan announced last mana~ers in the game in St.
winter. Every day that fran~ I.ouis Tony LaRussa and the
chise breathes air it does so Giants • Dusty Baker, and
with a justified spite against while everyone seems to
the commissioner of the have a laundry list of comsport. You can't exactly root laints about Barry Bonds,
against the Twins with a 'm still of the opinion that
good conscience if you're a the 'man has never done anything but tell the truth about
fan of the underdog.
Then again, the Angels, his own abilities.
since their inception at the
Yes, he's flagged in the
beginning of the 1960s as the postseason in the past, but
Los Angeles Angels, have at the same time, yes, he's
been .the most snake-bitten one ·of the greatest players
franchise perhaps in all of lite game has ever seen, and
t.he majors, and just won he hit .292 with tbree
their first-ever playoff series homers in the division
in-dispatching the Yankees.
series against Atlanta. It
This franchise has seen wouldn 'I be such a painful
trasedy after mishap occur to thing to see Bonds silence
it, Its players and their fami- some of his critics with a
lies, all in the shadow of the World Series title.
media mighty L.A. Dodgers.
As far as I can see there's
It's about time SOII)ething something positive in the
good happened for the potential story lines of all
four -contestants winning it
Angels.
In the National League, on all. There's not much negathe other hand, are two of the tivity to be found.
classic MLB franchises in St.
What is happening? Can
Louis and San Francisco.
baseball actually become
Of course, the Giants go . fun again within a span of
back to New York and three weeks?
We · shall see. But at least
Christy Matthewson and Carl
HubbelL They're not exactly it appears to be well worth
new kids on the block when watching this time around.

Derek

Taylor

gives them the reward."
Mays, who struck out three
and walked none, came out
after the eighth inning. He
retired his final 13 batters but
tightened up a little after the
. eighth and told his manager
he wouldn't mind if Eddie
Guardado finished .
"I would have given him
the balL He had the option to
go back out there in the
ninth," Gardenhire said.
Guardado struck out Daiin
Erstad leading off the ninth,
then walked Tim Salmon.
After Garret Anderson flied
out, Guardado threw a called
third strike to Troy · Glaus,
who glared at plate umpire
Ed Montague.
"I asked him if it was
down. He said 'No, it was a
good pitch.' I came back and
looked at it on the film, and it
was a good pitch," Glaus
said. "He was right."
Anaheim, whose .282 regular-season batting average

Minnesota Twins closer Eddie Guardado reacts as he strikes ~e~ ~~i~:~~r~~=~~~;s~~~d~~
out Anaheim Angels hitter Tfoy Glaus _for the final out of the and hit .1 29 (4 -for-3 l). Last
~am~ 1 of the Am~ncan League Championship Series, Tuesday week, the Angels batted .361
In Minneapolis. Minnesota defeated the Angels 2-1. (AP)
against the Yankees with
two-strike counts. They were
0-for-14
with twa· strikes
ager Mike Sciascia said. "They
Series.
against
the
Twins.
This was another tight one, looked like they were reacting
with Anaheim's Kevin Appier to every pitch. I thought it was · "Everything was on the
black," said Adam ·Kennedy,
almost matching Mays. The a great atmosphere."
who
scored Anaheim's only
Anaheim, too, is a surprise,
Twins got just five hits and
the Angels four, and the seeking its first World Series run. "We just didn't pressure
crowd was on its feet shouting appearance since joining the them."
Appier, winless in four
during key points and major leagues in 1961.
appearances,
Mays, hit hard by Oakland postseason
throughout the mnth inning.
..This is the game we play in Game 2 of the five-game gave up only two runs and
against Anaheim every division series, shut down a five hits in five innings, but it
time," Pierzynski said. "One team that hit .376 in their wasn't enough.
.
run, one way or the . other, four-game victory over the
Minnesota went ahead in
one pitch decides it. It's four-time defending AL the second when Hunter douexciting baseball. You can't champion Yankees - the bled, advanced mi a wild
ask for much more as a fan or highest average by a club in pitch and came home on
as a player."
any postseason series. ·
Pierzynski's sacrifice fly.
Baseball owners tried to
"He had everything,"
Anaheim tied it in the third
manager
Ron on si11gles by Kennedy and
fold the 1\vins along with the Twins
Montreal Expos last offsea- Gardenhire said.
Da'!!id Eckslein, and the error
Mays allowed only four by Guzman on a grounder by
son, but were blocked by the
Minnesota courts. Since hits and aq unearned run Erstad that stayed down on
then, the Twins have seemed caused by an error by short- the slick artificial surface.
intent on banging the gavel stop Cristian Guzman. Mays,
Corey Koskie drove in the
on all of baseball, wanting to who threw 68 of 98 pitches go-ahead run in the fifth with
force Seli~ to hand them the for strikes, called it "the a double off a hangin~ splitWorld Senes trophy.
game of my career" and ter that landed just ins1de the
"Contract-ula-tions Twins described the atmosphere as right-field line. It came after
for a superb season/Air the "overwhelming."
Luis Rivas walked and
"Just so much energy, so Guzman singled.
way for Bud's sake" read one
sign behind home plate.
much enthusiasm in the
"This," Koskie said, "is a
"I think the place had a lot of crowd," he· said. "To go out pretty. big win. But we've
electricity in it. Obviously, the there and give them a good still got to win three more
fans were into it," Angels man- game to watch -1 think that ball games."

r

Sorl- ....3

Baseball

Arlzona ........... 3

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP
SERIES
American League
TUe1day, Oct B
Minnesota 2 , Anaheim 1, Minnesota
leads senes 1-o " ~
Wedne1d1y, Oct. 8
Anaheim {Orhz 15·9) at Minnesota
(Reed 15-7), 8.19 p.m. (Fox or Fo11 Sports
Net)
Friday, Oct. 11
. Mcnnesota (Radke 9·5 ) at Anaheim

(Fox)
Saturday, Oct. 12

(Washburn 18·6), 8·19 p.m

Minnesota (Melton 1 3~9) at Anahecm
(Lackey 9-4). 7:50p.m. (Fox)
Sunday, Oct. 13
Minnesota at Anah91m. 4:50 p .m.. 11
necessary (Fox)
Tuesday, Oct. 15
Anaheim at Mmnesota, 8;20 p.m., 1f
~necessary (Fox)
·
Wedneeday, Oct. 16
Anaheim at Minnesota, 8:20 p.m., 1f
necessary (Fox)
National Leagua

Wedneaday, Oct. 9
San Francisco (Rueter 14-8) at St. LOUIS
...{Morns 17-9). 8:19p.m. (Fox or Fox Sports
Net)
Thu roday, Oct: 10
San Francisco (Schmidt 13·8) at St.
'LoUIS (Williams 9-4) , 8:19p.m (Fox)
· Saturday, Oct. 12
St. Louis (Finley 11·15) at Sen
·Francisco (Orllz 14·10). 4·20 p m. (Fox)
Su~ay, Oct. 13
St Louis (Benes 5-4) at San Franc1sco

L

(Hernandez 12-16), 7-50 p.m. (Fox)
Monday, Oct. 14
St. Louis at San _Francisco, 8:20 p.m., if

ilecessary (Fox)

•

Wednesday, Oct. 18

. : San Francisco at St. louis, 4:20 p.m., if
.necessary (Fox)

Thuradoy, Oct.17
San Francisco at St. Louis, 8:20 p.m., it
' necessary (Fox)

:Bowling
Mason Lanes ·
Wedneactay Mixed League

·
Week Four
Team h&amp;gh game and high urlaa
:Sammy's CoQstruction ...... 666 -1 ,945
Men's high game
198
'Terry Seidenable
Sam Sm1th . . .. . .. ... . .
192
loren Coleman . .. .... . .. .. . . ... 178
Men's high serlea
... .. .. 509
.Terry Seidenable .
Sam Smith ... ... .... .... . .... .... ..... .. .. 495
byde Sayre ............................... 486

Women's high game
'Margaret Eynon ................................ 214
Dottie Will ........................................ 194

Debbie Sayre .. ................................. 160

·

Women's high aeries
Margaret Eynon ......... ...................... 569
Dottie Will ... :. .................. .......... ..... 523
Debbie Sayre ................................. .456
Week Five
~en't high game
Clyde Sayre ..
L .. ..
...184
...179
Terry Se1denalel .
Chuck Burton ........
...178 ·
Men's h1gh series
. Clyde Sayre.. .. .......................... 522
Chuck Burton ............. ...... .............. 522
-Terry Se1denabel .................. .........473
.
Women's high game
Dottle Will ................... ................ 218
Shirthy Simmons ........... ...... , .......... 182
Margaret Eynon ............................. 176
Women's high teriea
Dottie Will.. .................. ..... .... ......... 541
.. .492
Margaret Eynon ............... .
Shirley Simmons ..... ... . ..... .461

Pro Football
National Football League
"

AFC

Me1gs
•

from Page 81
game. After Meigs went uf.
1-0 on a Jaynee Davis kil ,
Vinton's Holly Pridemore
helped Kayla Hewitfs serves
produce a couple early points
before a Trish Hewitt ace put
the guests up, 3- L
However. Mindy Chancey
helped Meigs pull ahead to •
stay shortly after that: gelling a
kill from Davis to tie the game
at three before a couple
unfon;ed Vinton County errors
put the Marauders up, 5-3.
From there, it was the
Kayte Davis ,show and
Chrissy Milller show.
The elder of the Davis sis.ters took the ball and
unleashed a string of hard to

handle serves which soon saw
the hosts up 13-3 before a
side out would return the ball
to Vinton County. Davis finished the night with 10 service points. and a pair of kills.
When Vmton County was
able to return the ball with
any intensity, Miller came up
strong on the front line. The
junior finished with a gamehigh 5 blocks for Meigs.
"I was reallY. impressed
with Chrissy M11ler tonight,"
Ash said. "Her play' up front
was just excellent tonight."
In the second game, Meigs
went up 7-0 before the
Vikings could dent the scoreboard, and the guests never
threatened. The conference
title was clinched when
Chancey served and Viking
Beth Allen's return found
nothing but net
Ash said that while win-

WLTPctPFPA
M1aml ..... -:1 ... .4 1 0 .800 156 98
-Eng"'&lt;! ... 3 2 0 .600 142 106
Buffalo ........ .2 3 0 .4.00 163 180
NY. Jets ...... .1 4 a .200 75 162

ning
championships
is
becoming second nature to
the program, it's anything but
bonng.
· "It's still a lot of fun," Ash
said. "This is a great bunch of
kids who are good athletes,
they are good students and
just a pleasure to coach.
·"We've got six players who
are three-year starters and
have been here for each of
the conference championships and that makes it
really special. we've a great
bunch of parents and grandparents who are really supportive of u ~ and we reallr,
have a great following l).ere. '
The Marauders return to
action Thursday night at
Nelsonville-York
before
beginning sectional play Oct
19 at Alexander. Meigs will
take on River Valley in first. round action.

South

WLTPclPFPA
lndlanapolis .... 3 1 a .750 92 70
Japksonville .... 3
Houston ......... 1
Tennessee .... .1

1 0 7$0 104 72
3 0 250 42 92
4 0 200 107 159
North

WLTPctPFPA
2 0 500 67
79

Baltimore ... 2
Cleveland .. . 2

3

0 .400 124 117

. 1

3

0 .250

76 105

01nclnnal1 .... 0

5

0 .000

44 147

Pittsburgh

West

WLTPclPFPA
Oakland ........ 4 0 01.000 162 90
Denvar ......... ..4 I· 0 .800 124 96
San Diego .... ..4 1 0 .800 111 64
Kansas City .... 3 2 a .600 171 158
NFC

Eut
WLTPctPFPA
N.Y. Giants .... 3 2 o .600 76 a1
Philadelphia ... 3 2 a 600 't 65 92
Washington ... 2 2 · 0 .500 79 94
Dallas.. .... . .... 2· 3 p .400 74 107
South
WLTPciPFPA
..4 1 0 .800 f43 118
Tampa Bay ..... 4 1 0 .800 1211 &amp;3
Carollna .... ...... 3 2 0 .800 80 81
Atlanta.. ...., ..,., 1 3 0 .2&amp;0 83 74
North
WLTPotPFPA
GrHn Say ...... 4 1 0 .800 145 135
Chlcago .......... 2 3 0 .400 112 132
Cttrc~ ......... .... 1 3
.250 a5 138
Mlnnoeota ....... O 4
.000 99 141
Wilt

-Ot1olnl ..

they were, that was no surprise, but we return some
~ strong players next year and ~
ex peel us to make a run at it."
from Page 81
Meigs will bring back a
core of current juniors Jeremy
showing. In fact, Spencer Banks and Josh Ray, as well
expects his team to contend as a trio of fresh~•J - Jake
for the TVC crown in 2003.
Venoy, Cody Hysell and Josh
"I think we have a good Venoy - from its starting
shot at winning the thing next lineup in 2002 for next year.
"I think the potential is there
year," he said. "This /ear
most . of the coacbes tal me for us to have a very good team
that Waterford was going to . next year, too," ~wczyn said.
While Southern's leading
be the strongest team and

Golf

senior is playing this week in
Columbus, the lone senior at
Meigs, Ben Bookmatt. is ~y to
hit the .links. for post-graduate
pla)l, though Krawsczyn was
quick to point out his affect on the
Maruaders' success this season.
"He didn't personally reach
his scoring goals for the season," the coach said, "but his
experience as a leader and a
~ood solid golfer was very
1mportant for a really young
grour, of players for us this
year.'

a
o

W . ~TPctPFPA

,I
''
,. ' ·''

I

Seattle ............ 1
StLouis ..... ...0

I
2
3
5

0
0
0
0

.750 a7 60
.600 99 87
.250 ' 84 87
.000 74 1l5

Sunch1y'a O.mes
N.Y. Giants21 , Dallas 17
Oakland 49, Buffalo 31
Tampa Bay 20, Atlanta B
Arizona f6, caro~na 13
Washington 31 , Tennessee 14
Indianapolis 28 , Cincinnati 21
Miami 26 , New England 13
New Orleans 32. P1nsburgh 29
Kansas City 29. N.Y. Jets 25
Denver 26. San Diego 9
Jacksonville 28, Philadelphia 25
San Ffanc1sco 37, St Louis 13
Baltimore 26, Cleveland 21
Open· Seattle , De1rolt, Minnesota ,
Houston
Monday'• Game

..

Green Bay 34. Chicago 21
Sunday, Oct. 13
'Buffalo at Houston , 1 p.m
Carolina at Dallas, 1 p.m .
A11anta at N.Y. Giants, 1 p.m.
Baltimore at Indianapolis, 1 p.m.
New Orleans at Washington, 1 p.m .
Green Bay at New England, 1 p m.
Detrol1 at Minnesota, 1 p m.
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 1 p m.
Oakland at St. Louis, 4:15p.m.
Jacksonville at Tennessee , 4:15p.m .
Kansas City at San Diego, 4:15p.m.
Miami at Denver, 8:30 p.m.
Open. N.Y. Jets, Arizona, Philadelphia,

Chicago

Purdue ... ... 1 1 500
.Wisconstn ... 0 1 000

3
5

Indiana ....... 0 1 .000

2

N'western .... 0
lllinots .... .. ..0

2

2 000
2 000

1

Regk&gt;n 1()-1 . Oak Harbor (7-0) 19.7785.
2 Akron Hoban (7-0) 1B.2428 . 3. Akron

3 .500
1 833
3 .400
4 .333
5 .187

Buchtel (7.0) 17.2714. 4. Willard (6-1)
16.4214. 5. Napoleon (6·1) 12.9714. 6.
Canal Fulton N.W. (6-1) 12.1642. 7.
Wooster Tnwoy (6·1) t 1.8357. 8 Medina
Buckeye (6-1) 11.7500. 9 . Norton (5·2)
11.4857: 1a. Clyde (5-2) 11 2000
Region 11-1 Cols. DeSaJes (6· 1)

Mid-American Conferenee
Conf,
WLPct
Marshall ....... 2 0 1.00
Miami (OH) ... 2 0 1.00
Ohio ........ ..... ! I .500
UCF .... ..........0 1 .000
Buffalo .... .. .... o 2 .000
Kent St ........ 0 3 .000
Akron .~. ........ 0 3 .000

OW.rtll
WLPcl
' 3 I .750
4 2 · .687
I 5 .167
1 3 .250
1 5 .167
2 4 .333
0 6 .000

N . lllinOis ...... 2
lloM'g Gmen.t
C. Michigan .. 1
Toledo........-... 1
w. Michigan .. I
E. Michigan .. 1
Ball St. .... ... 0

0 1.00
0 1.00

a
0
0
1
1

100
1.00
1.00
.500
.000

3

3 .500

4
3
3

0 1.00
2 600
2 .600

2

3 .400

3
2

3 .500
3 .400

17.0700 2 Newalil: Licking Valley (7-D)

10.4142. 10. Thorn~Jil le Sheridan (5-2)

OW.rtll

W L Pel

W

So. Miss ........ 2
E. Carolina ... 2
Louisville ...... 1
Clnclnnatl .. ... 1
UAB ............ 1
TCU . ............ 1
Tu lane ........... !
Memphis ......1

o

1.00
0 1.00
0 1.00
a 1.00
0 1.00
I .500
2 .333
2 .333

4
2
3
2
2
4
3
2

3
2
3
3
1
3
3

Houston ....... 0

2 .000

2
0

3 .400
5 .000

San ~ranclsco at Seattle, 9 p.m.

L Ppt.

.500

.400
.400

.800
.500
.400

Big Eaet Conference

AFC Individual Leadere

Cont.

WHkS

W L Pel

W

Miami ........... 2 0 1.00
Plt1Sburgh... .. 2 0 1.00
Va. TeciL ... O 0 .000
West Va . .....0 a .000
Soslon CoLO
.000

5
5
5
3
3

Rutgers ........0 1 .000
Syracuse ......o 1 .000
Temple... .. o 1 000

1

4 .250
4 .250

1

4 .250

Quarterbacks
Att Com Yde TD lnt
Gannon, Oak: ... 169 114 1355 10 ~3
Holcomb, Cle...... 92
57 704 7 12

Bruneii, Jac.... .. 110
Bledsoe. BuL. 21a
Green, K.C..... 152

70 918 5
148 1762 12
99 124B 12

1
5
6

Rue hers
Al1 Ydo
Holmes , KC..... 120 590
R 'MiemJ, !.fa ... 118 565
T""*""" Sll ... 115 554
Dillon, Cln... .. ... 93 407
Taylor, Jac.....JM86 387
·
•
Rac0)varo
No Ydl
Moulds, But. .,... ..41 525
P. Price. But ...... 35 493
Harrison, Ind ....... 32

Branch. N.E........ 32
Brown. N E........ 31

AVIJ LG TO
4.9 27 8
4.8 531 4
4.6 581 . 5
44 67t 2
4.5 631 3
LG TD
52 3
54 4
69 3
491 2
38 I

NFC Individual Leadere
auartort&gt;ackl
An Com Ydo
Favre. G.B... .... 192 125 1470
VIck. AIL ............ .89
52 586
McNabb. Phi..... 20l 120 12a0
a..I:ITID\TB. .... 176 111 1226
Miller, Chi . ........ 1n 104 1217
Ruo~ers ·
Att Ydo Avg
McAiisler,N.O .104 461
44
Green, G.B .... 88 416
47
L Smith, Car.....114 413 3.6
Thomas , Chi. ... 110 333
3.0
T. Jones, Arlz... ... 69 310 4.5
Recelvent
No Ydo Avg
Faulk, StL ........ 38 258 68
Booker, Chi... ...... 37 566 153
Holt, SI.L ...... 35 462 13 2

TO lnl
11
4
11
7
10

3
0
3
3
6

LG TD
62 5
43 0
26 6

1
0
2
1

.000
1.00
.000
.750

Prep Football
Regional Computer Ratings
weekly fOotball compu1er ratings from the
Ohio f:llgh School A1hlellc Association.

Rat&lt;ngs are by dNision and region with
record and average bj..level points per
game (top eight teams · m each region
advance to regional quarterfinals):

DIVISION I
Region 1-1. Solon (7·0) 20.3642 2.
Warren Harding (7·0) 19.9584. 3.
Lakewood St Edward (7·0) 16.5801 4.
Mentor (6·1) 14.8428. 5. Lakeside (5·2)
14.7242. a. Strongsville (5-2) 12.2928 7
North Olmsted (5-2) 12.2500. 8 Young.
Boardman (5·2f 12.1071 . 9. Cleve. St
Ignatius (5·21 11.7392. 10. Young
Austintown·Fitch (4·3) 11 6642.
Region 2-1 . Brunswick (7·0) 16.1867 2
Findley (6-1) 14.4928. 3. Hudson (7-&lt;J)
12.8928 4. Wadswonh (5·2) 12.0285. 5.

Spring South (5-:1,) 11.8357. 6. Tot St

24

2

John's (4--3) 11.6391 . 7 . Marion Harding (6-

581

1

1) 11.6142. 8 Wooster (4·3) 10.3357. 9.
Manotleld (5·2) 8.6857. 10. Cuyahoga Falls
(3-4) 8.5500.
Region 3-1 Dublin Collman (6-1)

LG TO
23 0
54 3
36 0
Horn , N.O....... 32 427 13.3 40
Galloway, Dal . · 30 363 121 38t

College Football

17.9571.

2 . Gahanna

Lincoln

(7·0)

17 6857. 3. Dublin Scioto (7·0) 16.0071 . 4
N. Canton Hoover (5·2) 15.1714. 5. Mass
Washington (6·1) 13.2714. 6 . Pickerington
(6-1 ) t30000. 7. Mass. Perry (6-1)
12 8857. 8 Grove City (6-1) 11.7285.

9.

Upper Arlington (5·2) 11.1642. 10.
Galloway Westland (4-3) 10.3428.

Associated Prass Top 25

Region
The Top Twenty Five teams 1n The
Associated Press college football pofl , with
hrst-place · votes m parentheses, records
thrOugh Oct. 6, total points basad on 25
pomts for a first place vote through one
point for a 25th place vote and previous
ranking

Points Pvo
1,849
1
1.707
3
2 . Oklahoma ............. 5·0
2
3 Texas (1) ............... 5-0 1,698
1. Miami (73) ... .... ...... 5·0

Virgmia Tech .......... 5·0
OhiO St... . .. ...... 6.()
Georg1a ........ ,.... 5·0
Oregon ... . . ... .. .5·0
8 Notre· Dame ...... 5-0
9 . Florida St.. .. . ... 5- 1
10. Tennessee .......... 4· 1
11 . 1owaSt.. .............. 5· 1
12 . Washington St.. ... 5·1
13 Michigan .... .. ..... .4· 1

L Pc1.
0 1.00

COLUMBUS (AP)- Here are the fourth

Avg
12.8
14.1
433 13.5
370 11 .6
292 '9.4

4
5
6
7

OW.rell

4-1.

Cln.

Anderson

(7-0)

19.4071. 2. Cln . Elder (6-1) 18.4530. 3.
Huber Hts. Wayne (5·2) 16.1642. 4. Cln.

Prlncelon (6·1) 15.842a. 5. Cin . St Xavier
(5-2) 14.a375. 6. Clayton Norlhmonl (5-2)
13 942B. 7 Miamisburg (5·2) 13.8357. 8.
Cin. Colerain (6· 1)13.3428. 9. Harrison (6·
1)12.7785. 10. Lebanon (6· 1) 12 4714.
DIVISION II
Region &amp;'--1 . Louisville (7.0) 19.3571 2.
Canlletd (7-&lt;J) 14.5357 3. Uniontown Lake
(5-2) 14 5214 4. Madison (6-1) 13.2928. 5.

1,632
l ,552

4
5

Warren Howland (5·2) 12.8430. 6. Garfield
Heights (6·1) 12.1071 . 7 . Olmsted Falls (5 -

1,485
1,390
1•349

7

2) 12.0765. 8. Bedford (6-1) 11.2571. 9.
Willoughby South (6-1) 10.0841..10. Young.
Chaney (4·3) 9.7000.

6
9

1,182

11

Region 6-1. Cols. Brookhaven {6·1)

1,132
1,000
998

10
15
17

14.6571. 2. To!. OeSales (6-1) 144928 3.
Cols' Sl. Chartes (6·1) 14.2452. 4. Tot
Cent Cath . (7·0) 12 9285. 5. Tiffin

986

14

877

16

Columbian (6-1) 12 5285. 6. Cots. Watnul

R&lt;dge (6·1) 12.1168 7 Oregon Clay (8·1)
113714. 8 Cola. Mifflin (4·3)11.3000. 9.
15 Penn St. ............... .4· 1
~~~ 2 ~
Sylvania Southvlaw (5-2) 11.1214. 10.
16 Florida ................. ..4·2
Wapakoneta (5-2) 10.7214.
. 24
171
· owa ................ .... 51582
• •
.
Region 7- 1. Green (6·11 15.7000. 2.
21
18. LSU ................ ....4·1
569
Grafton Mldvlew (7-&lt;J) 15.3857. 3. A'IQn
19. Kansas St. ........... .4·1
435
13
Lake (6·1) 14.1~7. 4. Macedonia
20. Southern Cal. ........ 3-2
301
1a
Nordonla (7·0) 14.'1428. 5. Marietta (6-1)
21 Air Force .............. 5-0
29a
·10.2241. 8. Easl Liverpool (4-3) 9.5502. 7.
22 Washlnglon .. ......... 3-2
293
12
Athens (5·2) a.6071. B. Amherst Steele (5·
223
19
2)7 9357. 9 Rlchlleld Revere (3-4) 7.9071.
23 Wlsconsln ........... ... 5-1
24 Auburn ............... ..4·1
222
10. Mans. Madison (4·3) 7.5000.
25 Mlss1Salpp1. .......... ..4·1
173
Region 6-1 Day. Cham-Julienne (7·0)
Others rocolv1ng votoo: Aiabama 150. 17.4785. 2. Trotwood·Madlaon (7-0)
UCLA 123, Colorado 97. Calltornla 80, · 17.2714. 3. Kings Mills Klngo (7·0)
Texas Tach 50, Kentucky 43. Bowling 16.B701 . 4. Lovelond (7.0) 15.8030. 5.
Groan 39. Marshall 39, Loulovlllo 23, Vandalia Buller (8·1) 14.2571 . e. Ttenlon
Plttoburgh 21. Arklnuo 15, Nobruka 9, • Edgewood (8·1) 13.0785. 7. Day. Carroll (5•
Booton Colloge 7, Colorado St 7, Orogon 2) 10.8214, 8. Cln . MoNicholat • (4·3)
Si. 8, Michigan Sl. 4, Toxaa A&amp;M 3, 10.0214. 8. Oln. Woodward (8•1) ;.2;&amp;&amp;.
Cltmton 2, BoiH St. 1, Southarn Mill. 1.
10. Cln. Clltn Etta (4-3) 8.0518.
• DIVISION Ill
Big Ten Conference
Region t-1. CM. Stntdlcllno (8-1)
Conf.
Overall
18.44211 2. Llobon SHvtr (e·1) 14.1407. 3.
W ~ Pol.
W L Pot.
Hubblrcl (7·0) 14.7214. 4. Staubenvlllo (8·
1) ia427. 5 Richmond Edleon (8·1)
Ohio St.. ...... 2
1.00.
5
1.00
13.2247. e. Hunt Vollay Unlv. Sohool (8-2)
lowa .............. 2 0 1.00
1 .833
13.01118. 7. Warranavlllt Hto. (5·2) 11.588-4.
Mlchlgan ....... t
1.00
4 1 .800
B. Chaotarlond W. Gaauga (1-2) 10.700&amp;.
Michigan St. .1 o 1.00 '
3 a .800
Poland Blmlnory (H) 9.8214 , 10.
Mlnntooll .... t 1 .eoo
&amp;
.833
Penn 81 ... ..... 1
.800
4
.800 Parma Hto. Holy Nome (4·3) 8.8857.
14 N.C. Slate .............. 6-0

o
o

e

o

e.

_ __ __ ___
__:_

__:_

305

282
261

DIVISION U
1. Day. Cham.-Jullenne (22) .. . 7·0
2. Louisville (8) ...................... 7-0
3. Toi. Cent Caltl (1) .. ...... .. ... 7·0
4. Canfield..,..................... .... 7-0
5. Kings Mills K1ngs (1) ...... 7-0

320
2a1
215
205
178
150
128
128
98

6. Tol. St Francis (2) .. .
.. . 6·1
7 Trotwood-Madiso n (1)
7-0
Loveland
.. 7-Q
9 Gals Brookhaven .
6-1
10 Macedoma Nordonia ....... 7·0
44
Others receiving 12 or more points:
11 . Willoughby South 42. 12. Grafton
Midv1ew 26. 13, Vandalia Butler 20. 14 ,
Uniontown Lake 18. 15, Madison 17. 16,
Green 15.

. Region 13-1 . Akron Manchester {7-Q)
14.1420 . 2 . Sullivan Black River (6· 1)

.800
.400

1. Warren Hard1ng (20) ... .... . .. 7·0

2. Lak""ood St. Edward (7) . 1·0
3. Solon (4) .
. . .. .... .. . 7•0

4. Cin Elder (2) .....:.. ... . . 6·1
t9o'
Dublin Scioto (1 ).... .... . . 7-0
190
6 Massillon Washin gton . .. . 6-1
115
7 Brunswtck ... ................ ..... 7-0
111
8 Gahanna Lincoln .... ·.......... . 7-0
103
9 Dublin Coffman . ............... 6-1
74
10. Cm. Anderson .. .... .
.. 7-0
58
Othere receiving 12 or more points :·
11 , Youngs. Boardman 33. 12, Cle. St
lgnal tus 29 13, Find lay 23 14, Hudson 19
15, Cm. Colerain" 1&amp; 16, MS:sslllon Perry
16 17, Mentor 13

9.6428.
Region 12-1 . Urllana (7-&lt;l) 14.5500 2
Germantown Valley View (7-0) 13.6142. 3.
Tlpp City Tippecanoe (6-1)13.6071 . 4. Oay.
Ounbar (6·1) 11 .3130. 5. Bellbrook (5-2)
10.6857. 6. Naw Richmond (6-1) 10.6142
7. St. Paris Graham (5·2) 9 2000. B. Cln .
Wyoming (4·3) a.9357. 9. Bellelonlalne (5·
2) a.5714. 10. Washington CH (4-3)
8.4714 .
DIVISION IV

Conferenee USA
Coni.

weekly Associated Press poll of 2002. b)'
OHSAA div1s1ons, w1th won-lost record and
total potnts (f1rs1-place votes in parenth eses):
DIVISION I
W·L
Plo

15 6428 3. COts. Beechcroff (6-1) 12.9857.
4. Cots WaHereon (4·3) 12.6714. 5. Cots.
Hamilton lWp. (5-2)'12.4142 6. Circtevi11e
(6-1) 12.1428. 7. Gall Clallia Acad. (6·1)
11.8162. a. Whlteha11·Yearling (6 ·1)
t 1.4928. 9. Sunbury Big Walnut (5·21

WHI

Arrrry ............ 0 3 .000

. Monday, Oct. 14

w-L

East

•

' . W"

Scoreboard

No Yankees, no
Braves, no bad guy
in baseball playoffs

s'
ner

•

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) There were 55,000 fans
screaming in.the Metrodome,
waving their Horner Hankies.
Just 11 months ago, baseball wanted all of this to go
away.
Well, it didn't.
The Minnesota Twins are
here, and they're three wins
from the World Series after
grounding the high-flying
Anaheim Angels, the team
that bro~e all those offensive
records last week against the
New 'X:9rk._ YaJ}kees.
"Jus{ so, much energy, so
much enthusiasm," Joe Mays
said after limiting Anaheim
to four singles in ei~ht
·innings
and
leadmg
Minnesota to a 2-1 victory
Tuesday night in the opener
of this Improbable AL championship series.
''Wow, that was just
wow!"
catcher
A.J.
•
Pierzynski said.
The team that wasn '.t supposed to make it to opening
day isn' t a su'J'rise anymore.
Even Bud Sehg knows that.
After trying to kill off the
team, the baseball commissioner showed up and
watched from a luxury suite
behind home plate.
"!' m glad he came out to
give us some support," Twins
outfielder Torii Hunter said.
I "We won't fault him for all of
that that hai?pened. Bud was
just doing h1s job."
Signaling the time has
come to forget the Yankees,
Braves and other· big
spenders who have dominated the playoffs in recent
years, th~ Twins showed just
how dominant they are in the
Metrodome, improving to
13-2 there in po~tseason play.
Game 2 is in the dome
Wednesday night, with Rick
Reed pitching for the Twins
against Ramon Ortiz.
"I was tired of seeing the
Yankees in it every year,"
Twins first baseman Doug
MientkiewiCz said. "It's good
to know that there' II be a new
team in the World Series this
year."
,
The Metrodome was festive and loud for its biggest
baseball game since Oct 27,
1991, when Jack Morris' 10inning shutout beat Atlanta
1-0 in Game 7 of the World

Wednesday, October 9, 2002

•

·on

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1t.B928. 3. Girard (6-1) 11 8765. 4. Cleve.
VA·St Joseph (5-2) 11.5000. 5. Chagrin
Falls (6-1) 10.5741. 6. Perry (5-2) 10.1357.
7. Young. Uroullne (4-3) 9.2944. a. Young.
Mooney (4·3) 9.1142. 9. Easl Palestine (6·
1) 8.4357. 10. Akron St Vincent·SI.Mary
.
. (4-3) 7.9928.
Region 14-1. Archbold (7-&lt;J) 14 4285. 2.
Rossford (6·1 ) 14.1714 3 Kenton (5·2)
13 3857. 4. Ottawa-Giardort (7-&lt;J) 12.92a5.
5 Upper Sandusky (6·1 ) 12.8571 . 6.

5 Day. Cham.-Julienne ..... 16-3

6 Beii.BenLogan(1) ...... 19·1
7 . Mentor Lake Cath .. ..... 18·1
8 Canal Winchester .. .. . . .20-t
9 Tallm adge .................. 16· 1
10 Mansfield Madison . .... 15-2
DIVISION Ill

&lt;l

W·L
1 Pla1n C1ty A lder {25) ...... 19-0
2. Frankfort Aden a (3) ....... 19·1
3. Huron (4) ..................... 14-2
4. Zoarv~le 1\Jsc. Valley (4) .. 20·1
5. Whee lersburg .... ..... .... .. 17.0
6 Arc hbold .................. 16·3
7. G1rard (2) .... .. . . . .. 17·2
8. Bucyrus Wynford
t 5·2
9 SimeyletvnanCalh (1)
15·6
10 Rocky R1ver Luth W . 18·1"
.DIVISION IV
1. Norwalk St Paul (17) ..... 19-0
2 Maria
Loc l t4J.. 1s-t
3. Centerburg (1) ........... 16-1
4. St. Henry ....... .,...... . 16·2
5 Old Fort
16·1
6 Kidron Ce nt Chnsuan . 17-1
7 Mmster
14·4
8 Bea\ler Eastern .. . . .. 14·0
9 Fort Loramie . ... .... .. ... 15·5
· 10 Kal ida ........................ 14-2

sm-

222
184
164
159
121
91

P1B
367
2B1
275
235
179
127
114
100
87
76
296
291
230
179
178
147
100
99
50
40

Soccer
Major League Soccer
(Seeding In parentheses)
Quarter11nala
(Firs1 to five points. Three points
ror victory, one point for tie.)
Colorado (5) va. Dallas (4)
Wednesday, Sept. 25
Dallas 4, Coloraqo 2

DIVISION Ill
I. Akr Hoben (9) . .. . ... .. . 7.0
279
2. Akr Buchtel (7) . ...
7.0 274
3. Newark LICking V~lley (5) . 7.0
23 1
Saturclay, Sept. 28
Tonto!)Bny 01sego (6-1) 10.6142 7 Marlen
4. Germantown Vall. V1ew (4) . 7.0
222
Col orado 1. Dallas 0
River Valley (5-2) 10.2714. 8. Lima Bath (4- 5. Hubbard (1 ) ........... 7-0
156
Wednesday, Oct. 2
3) 9.31128. 9. Ontario (6-1 ) 9.0714. 10. 6. Cots DeSates (1.)........... 6-1
153
Colorado 1, Dallas 1, t1e, Colorado winS
Delta (6-1) 9.0071
7. Cle. BenediCtine (1) ........ 6-1
140
tiebreaker 1-0 a nd senes 7-4
Region 15-1. Portsmouth (7-0) t 9.a765. 8. Oak Harbor (4) ................ 7-&lt;l
129
2 . New Lex ington (7.0) 17.1500. 3. Ironton
9. Urbana ................ ........... 7.()
57
Kansas City (8) vs. Loa Angeles (1)
(6·1) 13.a217 4. Martins Ferry (7·0) 10. Steubenville {1) ................ 6-1
40
Wednesday, 5ept. 25
13.6714. 5 Portsmouth West (6·1) , Othera receiving 12 or more pointe:
Los Angeles 3, Kansas City 2, OT
13.3011 6. Lane. Fairfield Union (6-1) 11, Lisbon Beaver 34. 12, Willard 33 1;3 .
Saturday, Sep1. 28
13.1857 7 Coshocton (7-&lt;J) 13.1000. a. Canal Fulton NW 22 14, Napoleon 21 15,
KanS{IS C1ty 4. Los Angeles 1
Waverly (5·2) 11.1428. 9 . Wellston (5-2) Poland 20 16, Richmo nd Edison 14
Wednesday, Oct. 2
10.8142 10 Williamsport West1all (5·2)
DIVISION IV
Los Angeles 5, l&lt;ansas City 2, Los
9 6214.
1 Coldwater (19) .............7-0
319
Angeles wi ns series 6-3
Reg ion 16-1. Coldwater (7-&lt;l) 14.4071
2 Portsmouth (4) ................7.0
281
2. Reading (7-&lt;l) 14.2714. 3.'Archblshop
3 New Lexington (2) ............ .7-0
216
Columbus (6) va . Son Joao (3)
Attar (6-1) 14.2500. 4. Plain City Jonalhon 4. Akr. Manchester (3) ........ .7·0
213
Wednesday, Sept. 25 ·
Alder (6-1)12.4142. 5. Clarksville Clinton·
5 Coshocton ......................7-0
175
·Coll!mbu s 2 , San Jose 1
M$&amp;Bie (6·1) 10.8261 . 6. W. Mllton Milton·
154
6 Ottawa·Giandort (1) .......... 7-&lt;l
saturday, Sapt.,28
Union (5·2) 8.5142 . 7. Spnng Northeastern
7 Martins Ferry (3) .............. 7-0
105
Colufnbus 2 . San Jose 1. Columbus w1ns
(5-2) 8.1071. 8. Dayton Oakwood (5·2)
8 . Ketteri ng Alter (1) ......... ·.... 6-1
86
ser1es 6-0 .
9. Cln. Deer Peril: (3-4) 6 1000. 10
Archbold (1) ............. .... ...... 7·0
86
Cin. Mariemont (4-3) 5 5357.
10 Ironton ..................... 6-1
68
Chicago (7) vs. New England {2)
DIVISION v
Others receiving 12 or more pointe:
Thursday, Sept. 26
Region 17-t : Sm~hvllle (7·0) 132000
11 , Reading 48 12, Youngs. Ursulin e 28.
New England 2, Chicago 0
2. Mlddletleld Carclinal (7.0) 12 8142. 3 13 , Clarksville C1tnton-Mass1e 17 14 (lie),
Sunday, Sept. 29
Dalton.(7-&lt;l) 11 7714.4. Bedtorcl Chane! (5· East Palestine, Sullivan Black R1ver 16 16,
Ch1caQo 2, New England 1
2) 9.9071. 5. ROCky River Lultl . W. (6-1) Plam C1ty Jonathan Alder 15 17, Rossford
Wednesday, Oct. 2
8.9714. 6. New Middletown Springtleld (4- 14 18, Kenton 12
New Englan d 2 1 Chicago 0 New England
3) B.4357. 7. Lisbon David Anderso n (6·1) DIVISION V
w1ns serie s 6·3
8.3571 . 8. Gates Mills Gilmour Acad •(4·3)
1. Marion Pleasant (25) .......... 7·0
343
8.3142. 9. Newton Falls (5·2) 7.6285 . 10. 2. Woodsfield Monroe C (6) ... 7-&lt;l
268
Semifinals
Mineral Ridge (5·2) 6.7428.
3. Smithville (2) .................... 7-0
264
(Firs1 to live points)
Region 16-1. Delphos Sl John's (6·1)
4. Delphos Sl. John's (I) ...... . 6·1
206
Colorado (6) va. Loa Angeles (1)
11.92a1 . 2. DeL nnora (6·0) 10.8943. 3
5 . Dalton ............... . ............ 7-0
189
Saturday. Oct. 5
BucyrusWynlorc1(6·1)10.8357 4 Castalia . 6 Middlefield Card inal ( 1).. ... 7 ·0
167
Los Angeles 4 , Colorado 0, Los Angele s
Margaret1a (6·1) 10.5785. 5. Columbia
7 . Amanda·Ciearcreek. .. ...... 6·1
128
leads 3-0
Stalion COlumbia (6-1) tO 3714 6. Collins
8. Barnesville
.. 7.()
111
Wedneeday, Oct. 9
western ReservEJ (6-1) tO 1285. ,7.
9. Casljllla Margaretta .... .. 6·1
6o
los Angeles at Colorado, 9 p m
Delphos Je~erson (6-1) 9.7265. 8.- Lorain 10 C1n Hills Ch r Acad (1) .. 7-b
57
saturday, Oct. 12
Clearview' (6·1) 9.4712. 9. Hamler Patrick
Olhera receiving 12 or more points: 11
Colorado at Los Angeles 10 p.m . if necHenry (6-1) 9.0500. 10 Liberty Ctr (5-2) (l1e) , Defiance Tmora , Le es Cre ek E.
essary
6.6015.
t
Clinton 32. 13 , Hamler Patrick Henry 28.
Region 19-1 . Woodsfield Monroe 14, LlsbOn Dav1d Anderson 25. 15 (tie),
Columbus (6) va. New England (2)
Central (7·0) 12.8934. 2. Amanda· Toronto, Bainbridge Paint Valley 15.
Sunday, Oct. 6
Clea,rcreek (6-1) 12.3142 3.Barnesville (7DIVISION VI
Columbus 0 , New En gla nd 0, he, senes
O) 11.8571. 4 Johnstown-Monroe (5--2)
1. Maria S18n Marlon Loc. (23) ..... 6-1
315
lied 1-1
9.1000. 5. Whaelersburg (4-3) 8.8260 6
2. Oanville (6) ...................... 7.0 263 ·
Wednesday, Oct. 9
Lucasville Valley (5-2) 8 7151. 7 Steub.
3. Columbus Grove ( 1) ...... 7.() 246
New England al Columbus. 7·30 p m
Calh . Cent (6·1) 8 3031 8. Johnstown
4. Mogadore (3) ...............
6-1
198
Saturday, Oct. 12
Northridge (4·3) 8 2571 9. SerahSvrlle
5. Strasbutg·Franklin .
_;1 • 7-Q · 1BO
Col urpbus at New England. 4 p m
Shen.andoah (4·~) 8.2142 10 Crooksville
6. Lowellville
7-Q
157
(5·2) a 0071
7 Dola Hardin North9rn
7-Q
153
MLS Cup 2002
Region 20--1. Marion Pleasant (7-o)
8. Cov1ngton {1)
7-Q
133
Sunday, Oct. 20
11.6857. 2. Cin. Hil ls Christian Acad. (7.0) 9. Cary-Rawson (1)
. 7-0
92
At Foxboro, Mass.
11.5500. 3. Bainbridge Paint Valley (6-1 ) 10 Mechanicsbu rg . . •
... 7-Q
53
Sem1flnal \vinners. 1:30pm.
10.4071 . 4. Morral Ridgedale (6·1) 9 6928.
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11
5. Gahanna Cols. Acad. (6·1) 9.3428. 6. (tie), Northwood . Windham 17 . 13, .Cie.
Lees Creek E. Clinton (7·0) 9.1642. 7. Cuyahoga Hts 15 14 (tie), S. Charl eston
Versailles (5·2) 8.5642. 6. Cols. Reedy (5· SE. SycBmore Mohawk 13
BASEBALL
2) 8.0571. 9. Sidney Lehman (4·3) 7 5714
American League
10. St Henry (4-3) 7.4642.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Sent RHP
DIVISION VI
Lore
nzo Barcelo, RHP" Kyle Kane , RHP
Region 21-1 Mogadore {6-1) 12 9857
Vinton
Co
........................
6
4
Wylie and LHP Tho mas Jacquet= out·
Mitch
2. Lowellwllle (7-0) 11 .1571 3. East Canton
15 righ t to Charlotte of the IL
I
(5-2) 10.11357. 4. Cleve. Cuya. His. (5-21 Melgs ............................ 15
Meigs· Scoring - Kayte Oav1 s 1D. Katie
TORONTO Bl,.UE JAYS-Signed J.P
B.5641. 5. Monroeville (5-2) 7 4357 6.
Windham (6·1) 6.9840. 7. Kirtland (4-3) Jefters 6, Mana Drenner 5, Nikki Butcher 5, Riccia rdi, general manager and sen1or v1ce
president for baseball operations to a five6 .5185. 8. Fairport Harbor Harding (5·2) Mindy Chancey 3, Jaynee Davis 1; Kills 6.2444. 9. Norwalk St Paul (4-3) 6.0642. Jaynee Dav1s 5, Chnssv Miller ' 4, Mindy year contract.
National League
10. New Wash. Buckeye Cent (5-2) Chancey 3, Samantha Cole 2, Kayle Davi s
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS-Declined
2; ASSIStS Mindy Chancey 5, Kat ie
5.5504.
Regton ·22-1 . Columbus Grove (7·0) Jeffers 4; Bl ocks - Chrissy Miller 5, contract options on RHP R1ck Helling , RHP
. Ar mando Reynoso and RHP Mtke Morgan
11.8214. 2. Rawson Cory·Rawson (7-&lt;l) Jaynee Oav1s 1
NEW YORK METS - Exerc1sed the ir
Junior varsity: Meigs d V1nton County 1511 .5928. 3 . Edon (7-&lt;J) 10.6950 4. Trffrn
2003 opt1on on the contract ~ 28 Roberto
Calvert (5-2) to 8428 5 Norrhw"'ld (7-&lt;J) 1, 15-7
Freshmen: Meigs d. V1nton ·County 15·5, Alomar Wa1ved RHP Sa!oru Kom1yama.
10.0428. 6. Hopewell-Loudon (6· t) 8.6142.
PHILADELPHIA PHILU ES- Agreed to
14·
16, 15·5
7. Sycamore MohawK (6·1) 8.542a . 8.
terms w1th INF Tomas Perez on a two -ye,ar
McComb (5-2) 7.6214. 9 Antwerp (4-3)
contract. Named Scott Sheridan minor
OHSVCA State Polls
5.9178 10. LafayeHe Allen East (4-3)
league athle1 10 trainers coordinator
5.8357.
COLUMBUS
(AP)
The
lilth
weekly
PITTSBURGH PIRATES- Purcha sed
Region 23-1 Strasburg-Franklin (7-&lt;J)
10.2142 . . 2. Danville (7-0) 9.5222 3 O hio High School Volleyball Coaches the contract of 16 Carlos Rcvera from
Shadyside (5·2)8 .8142.4. Millersport (6·1 1 Association poll for 2002, w1th school, Altoona of the Eastern league and added
8.4571. 5. Willow Wood Symmes Valley (5· record and 'tota l points (f1rst-p1ace votes In him to the1r 40-man roster
BASKETBALL
2) a.5308. 8. SoallsvHia (5-2) 6 3428. 7. parentheses)
DIVISION
I
National
Basketball Allociation
Solotovlllt Community (5·2) 5.5841 B.
PHOEN IX SUNS - Waived G Mau nce
W·L
Pit
Walarlorcl (4-3) 5.1614. 9. Glouster Trimble
1. Cln. SL ursula (38) ...... .16·1
402
Baker and F Bobby Lazor.
(4·3) 4.9642. 10. Contorb!lrg (3-4) 4.7024.
FOOTBALL
2. Cln. Ursuline Acad ........ 18·2
353
Region 24--1. Marla Slain Morlan Local
National
Footb1ll Le1gue
3.
Tot
St.
Ursula
(1)
....
..
....
14·2
279
(8·1) 11.7571 , 2, Cola ~ardln Northern 17·
CAROLINA
PANTHERSSigned TE
4.
Vandalia
Butlsr.
..............
.
t6·4
181
O) 10.4214. 3. Covington (7·0)10 .1571 4.
Jermaln&amp; Wlgglne . Waived LB Brad .
174
Mtohanlcaburg (7·01 U28&amp; . 5. S. 5. Aoc&lt;y River Magnlllcat...IH
Jacka on
6. Elyria .............................. 17-3
188
Ohorlooton SE (5·1) 8.8071 . 8. Anna (5·2)
NEW YORK GIANTS-Signod CB
7.
Cln.
Mothor
of
Morey
......
18·4
138
8.1142. 7. Ti'oy CMIIIon (8·1) 7.881B . 8.
Reggie
Stephene Waived WR Jonathan
8.
Whltohouoo
Wayne
.........
1
H
a6
Cln. Country Cay (5·21 7.2297. &amp;. N.
Carter.
;
,
Lancallor
.....
........
.......
1a-2
Ltwloburg Triad (&amp;·2) 8.8000. 10. DoClroff
NEW YORK JETS- Place'! CB Jamie
10. Amhorot 811111 .... .. ... .18·2
B9
Rivero!~ (8-1) 5.711!4.
Henderson on Injured reserve .
DIVISION II
PHILADELPH IA EAClLES-Re·olgned
W·L
Pta
AIIOOllttd Prell State Polle
Q8 A.J. Feeley from the practice aquad.
1. Cin. RogerBacon(35) .. 18·1
404
Aeleaaed S Julian Jones.
2. Hubbercl (7) ........ .. ...... 20-&lt;l
349
COLUMBUS (API - How a alate pariol
TAMPA SAY SUCCANEERS- Aeloaoed
3. Mllltro.burg W. Holm11 .... 17-&lt;l
308
of oporlt wrlttra and brcadoaottra 11111
DE
Marcus Jones off Injured reaer've
4
Ktnorlng
Altar
.................
15·3
234
Ohio high tohool toolbolltoama In tha llfth

e.eooo.

Transactions

Prep Volleyball ,

a•

....

-;--~---~~

~-~--

"

�Page B 4 • Ttte Dally Sentlllel

www.mvdailysentinel.com

October 9, 2002

r

ter

\~tribune

- Sentinel - .l\e
CLASSIFIED

We Cover
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason .
Counties Like
No ' one
Else Can!

'

WINTER STORAGE
MeJgl County
Falrgro&lt;~ndo

Arrlvll: Dct 5 • Dct. 19
lom·12prn
Relllue April:!e, 2003
A lw oll20 will bo •
chargee far Olfty orrtv•.. late antval, early
remov•, tale removal,
t990 Dodge Ram Charger.
4 - 1 drive. 3t 8 Engine,

auto. Body In ExceNent con·

In one week·with us

dillon. $3700. (304)937·
3348 .

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ·ONLINE

m:rtbune

To Place

Your Ad,

•

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Call TOday...

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

675-5234

or Fax To (740) 992·2157

.

Monday thru Friday
a.m. to 5 : 0 0 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE

AN AQ.

Successful Ads
S hould Include These Items
To Help Get Response ... .

n

\\\111\1 I W\l'i

t

'--oiiGiiiAiiiiUiiiiliJI'OiiiLIS
.......

I

1

L00 k"1ng
f
. b?
Qr 8 )0

r:.

s

I

•

We offer:

bonus
U I $7/h
p

p a1

our
ra1n1ng

Paid vacation

Sla your neW
Ob today!

14

of the taw. If anyone knows
Who 1., responst.ble tor all
this. it would save us ··au a
lot of trouble if you would re·
port them to me or the Ma~
son County Sherif!.
Keith A. Shirley
C-1 Beer Carry Out permit
lor _sale, Chester Township,
Me 1g
. s County, send. lette.rs
oI 1 ~ I ares I Io: Th8 D81 IY
Sen t me I· Po. Box 729 -20 •
Pomeroy.
Ohio 45769.

r

Free puppies, (740)992·

"-~~----.....,
-

.
Recove red· lost air tank at
Mid
Hilt
b01tC?m 0 1
disport . '
10-4-02. call Was Gtlkey
740 992·3966

YARD SALE
:';::;;:::;:::~
YARD SALE-

.

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver, Gold Coins. Proalsets,
Diamonds,
Gold
Rings.
U.S.
Currency.
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 sec'·
ond A\l~nue, Gallipolis~ 740·
446·2842.
·
·

2 family yard sale·. Furniture , antiques, clothing , decorative itoms. Thursday, Frlday &amp; Slllurday. 9am · 7 7
High Stfeet, across 'rom
Baptist Church in Vinton .
5 family· bc tober 11-12th.
Route 160 North, beside
C&amp;M Auto Parts. Girls cloth-

~~~e.A~~1!fr ~~~!ho~ic~~
Y

,PI..:.ia_n_ce..:.s.:.,d'-i'-sh..:.•:c•· - -- _
Big Yard Sale- Clay Townhouse on t overs Lane,
Wednesday 9th. Ffiday 11th
and Satu rday 12th.

=:...::.:==~=---

Rummage Sale- Debbie
Drive .Acliv•ty building. ·t _7
miles out State Route 141,
October 11 ·112ofi,October
12· $2.00 a bag, IQ-4pm.

STNA
Would you like to join our
dedicated team of care-givers? It you are a nurse aide,
and would like an opportuni~
ty to work at the area's premiere Alzheimer's care fa·
cility, please call Scenic
Hills Nursing Center today
at (740)446-7150 and ask
for Jayne Darling. Or stop
by In person and pick up an
application. We. are located
1 G ttl tl
(b hi d th8
Sn 1 a Vpol s,c · • n) ·
pr n'g at ey merna

~~bii~nj1 ~:g a:~·=~~~~~

Truck Drlvera, Immediate
mlith skills . .Apply 31 Acquis· hire, class A COL required,
Ilions. 151 ~d Avenu e, e)Ccellent pay, e)Cperience
Gallipolis. No phone calls requtred. Earnupto$1 ,000.
piMse.
per week.Call 304-675·4005

HoMES
FUR SALE

Top to Bottom Cleaning
Service, professional, resldential, office cleanjng, also
yard &amp; gutter, at an aHorda.·
ble price. {740)992·2979
Will pressure wash houses,
trailerS, and decks . Call
441·4238 ask lor Ron or
leave message.
.
W1U work for elderly nights,
weekends. Exp.. and reter·
(304)6 75 798 t
ences.
•

'"jiO

Driverwanted , IocaI company seeks deliVery driver.
Must be .familiar with sur·
•rounding counties. 1;.0.perience preferred, but not required~ Non· COL. Hours
Monday• Friday 8•5pm ·
$end resumes to Sparkle
Supply Company, P.O. Box
278 • Gallipolis, OH 45631
Gallipolis loc8ted home
health agency seeking a
qualified · Individual to perform chart audits. Apply at
3084 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, or phone toll free

B~

n.-....

t.,_....;UI'I'U-.iiiiiiUI.JNITYilitiliii;,;,_.l
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG ro. recommends that
you do business with people
k
nd NOT t0 nd
you now, a
se
money through the mail until
ypu, have investigated the
_o«_e_n_ng_._ _ _ _ _ _
Start
· Your Business ,.. To·
day... Prime Shopping "en·
A 'I "' A AI

s

~~~:~at:.a~aM:e ~xec:

1 -866-441 ~1393.

utive Offices. Newly Re~
modeled. Spring Vall.w Pia·
Help
for
-~.
td 1wanted
D 1 caring
G
H the za. Call {740)446·3481
e er y, ars
roup orne,
now paylngtmlnlmum wage,
PR~IONAL
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7amSERVICFS
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm· ·--.iliiiioiiiiiiioo-rl·
7am, call 740·992·5023.
'
TURNED DowN ON
McClure's Restaurant now SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
hiring all 3 locations, full or
No Fee Untess We Win!
part-time, · Pick up applica, _888 _582 _3345
lion at location &amp; bring back
betWeen
9:30am
&amp;
10:00am, Monday thrU Saturday
·
·MIS TECHNICIAN
P -'
~...
.
e••orm trOUUI&amp;Shoohng,
ml!intenance. and enhanceAll real est••• advertlalng
ment of a point ol sale regIn thll neweJ)Iper II
ister and Inventory svc.tem
aublecttotheFederal
in central office and ,multiple
retail store locations. Work·
Fair Houalng Ac:t at 1t68
ing knowledge involving
.whk:h makes lllllegll to
Windows NFT: and DOS.
• o·~t
...... ae " any
Good organization skills
preference, limitation ~;~r
needed. Will work directly
dlacrtmlnauon baaed on
for head ol corporate operarace, color, religion, MX
lions. ·eased In Point Pleasfamlll•t•t•tua or n1Uon•t
ant, wv. Send resume and
Origin, or 1ny Intention to
salary requirements to:
m•k• any auch
Fruth. Inc., P.O Box 332,
preflre~,llmltatlon or
Point Pleasant, WV 25550.
cllac:rlmlnatlon.''
Attn: Human Resources
Dept
'
Thl
111 1
-''-------'newapaper w no
knowlngtyKctpl
VAN DRIVER
8dvertlsementa lot real
Full~time position required
ear.lewhlchllln
transporting consumers to
violation of the law. Our
and from medical appoint·
reacllra.,. hereby
ments In the ~son CoUnty,
Informed that all
wv area. Must be able to dwelling• advertiMd In
maintain accurale reports,
tntlntWIPIPir" lrt
"' to ass1sl
· con·
and be a..,.e
ave11abt• on an --u•t
fl
d
rt It ~--.,
sumers o an on van as
oppo un Y ""''11 ·
needed . Requlred .HS diploma or GED, saIe drIvIng re·
cord and knowledge of local
routes. Apply In person. or ~r.l'l:1011""-""!'Ho::""IIIES"""~-.,
mail to:
PRESTEAA CENTER
FOR SALE
•
HR/Maaon Van Driver
P.O. Sox 8069
$69,000, 3 bedroom, 1·112
' Huntington, WV 25705
EOEIAA
bath, 2 car. garage, 10 ml·
1
Qhlo.
nu tes 1rom Hozera,
11'40
BlJSINiiS'i
(304)875·2384

r:

Country 1-iome with 11-l /2
acres. 314br. 2ba .. 2 CarGarage, abo...a ground pool,
Handcrafted kitchen . cabi~
nets. Off Leon Baden Rd.
(304)458·1580
-..':....,.------Land Contac\· deposit requlred. 3 bedroom, 2·1/2
bath, farm house- in Patriot
Asking $79 900 _(:740)379~
'
·
9887

LOTs&amp;

41 4 *'f·Ar*r"n. ~&amp; S "'"1
SeouL Swain

CCHIII ftrat•rve.

Gallipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015

7 40·367 ·0 161
Ronald "Niick" Haning
Christina "Chris" Haning
740·992..0780
Cell# 740·591·0919
·
Cell: 591 · 6393

ACREAGE

30
acres,
(740)37S..9257

It

'

FORRF.Nr

3?4 llzl Violin In wooden
caoe, $t 50; lull iolze Violin In
caoe, St
(740)446-0893

n
$55,000. 3 bedroom apartment, $375 Like new washer &amp; dryei~

so.

---------w

i

I \ll\1..._,1

1'1'111 . .,

,\ I I' I ..., I ( H h

·

r

t 990 Sytvan 25 'toct Crulo·
er, loaded, Ask lor Paul
(740)448-9177

tA~I
Rotor lor t 990 Dodge Dakota· Now lor $20, W no an·
leave
message.

Attn: camper, workers, hunt·
oro. 2t" ShaSia Pull behind
camper. . Excellant Coildl·
tlon. 2 Full beds,
lrldge,
morel

l

::...:.:=.:..-=.:..____

~ GUN SHOOT
Sunday; October 13
Rutland Gun Club
3 Money Matches
Pattern Slug x $100.00
on each match. Plus all
regular matches.
Everyone welcome.

98 Clayton 4br. 16x80 on
rented lot in Gallipolis Ferry
304·675~3689 . cNice14x60
2b 1 c
·t Oh'
r. Wn rowdn lo 1 y, hl 10
area. e tra e r anyt ng
ol value. (740)256-931 5
Gocd used t995 t 4•70. , 2
"
br., •"lnyt siding/shingle rool,
call Harold 740-385-9948

No pots, water paid,
f $550

.Sn•CE
rn.
FOR RENT

Business Services

1

11 1

1

I

r.

IriO

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(lO'xlD' &amp;10'x20')

[740) 992-3194

992·6635

c:::!:..:::..::=··===c.. . :-

I

··' I •

'

304-773-5800

PBDDIB •law Things

New Chefs Taste ·
DeliCIOUS Food

1::11~·""'::""'"....,...,.-:"-,

• Heating

A

• Air Conditioners

$~

eA~a'll

CONSTRUCTION
•New Hames
•Garlgll '
•Ca14:i L RIRetiTtkltWiiDIIelhfllll

• Servl~ On All Bntnda
• ReaiiMntlll &amp; Llghi Commercial
• 10 yr. parll &amp; Lllbor
• Healing &amp; Air Conditioning

Stop &amp;Compare

www.anwrlcanotandordalr.com

••sALES AND SERVICE"

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING

FREE ESTIMATES
74~992·1671
7122/TfN

SEAL IT
CONS"I:RUCTION
Roollna. Sldlna

Polntlna. Gatlin, Decb,

mEIGS mHSSIIGE
THERHPY
' 213 n. Second Rue.

FrwEotimollsl

(740) 992-1189
(Affordable Prices)

' middleport, OH

LongabergeriOresden
Bus Trip
Sat., November 30, 2002
$65 .00· Space Limited
Deadline: Oct. 20, 2002
Everyone receives a

basket!I! Call:

DeuHW
New&amp;: Used
475 South Church St.

J6S flfCTRIC 6
PLUmBinG

Ripley, WV 25271

1-800-822·0417
"W.V's I I Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds
Van Dealer"

DEPOYSAG

Hill 's Self
Storage

PUTS ·
AU Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipment Parts
Factory Aulhorized
Case·IH PartS .

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
45771

740-849-2217

Cellular
Jeff.Warner Ins.
992-5479

Dealer.;

1000 St. Rt. 7Sourh
Coolville, 0/f 45723

740-667-0363

TFN

YOUNG'S

1966 Lincoln Continental, 4
door, project car, $900.
(t40)446·t240
.

•NewOarage1
•
•
•
•

f1190 OLDS Touring Sad·
den Loaded.
992·0822

in this
space
· for

t995 Chevy t 500 V-1! Vor·
ttc. new tires, nice rims, bedralls. $4,500. (304)875·
7973 aHer 5pm.

$75
per
month ·

t 998 Neon, 85,000 miles,
tilt, S2350. oao..
(740)266· t875

PJC,

200t Mllsublahl Eclipse AS
t 8k mi., alloy whig, then
rae,. Sspd, cd/tllt. (304)773·
5~35 Of (304)675·0226

77 Chevy 4x4; 66 Dodge
Ram van, 360 motor, tinted
windows, $750 OBO; 89
Dodge Dynasty, $ t 500
QIO. (740)258-1!333

pol~

r

w·

l'th a
Dailv

1,, 85 Chovrolol Blazer, •

5
,

,eoo.

'992·2155

87 rCitOYrolll r Ton dump
t!UCI&lt;, $t500. Gall Howard .__ _ _ _ ___.
(740)246·9358

'·

Coomlt ftai;~iaa ood ...,..!

740-742-8015
(m-353-lOU)
Calllirmm in!«J lh:c cstillllle
WYUtlll

NOll' DOING:

~~~

High&amp; Dry
SeU-Storage
33795 Hiland Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232

Call jeanie
and ask how.
740-992·7996
Herballlelndopendllf\t
Distributor

BISS.f ll .

BUILDERS IRC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages
• Replacement

oyllndor.
st.550.

~';~~~

Qw/lty

~

~· I Sent~~el
e
ClaSSified
&amp;WJ~~Ad!
tle3 Ford tso.

oacme Con1edion, L

.You

'"6·8237, 675-7!:116 or 1-800-730-4!535
Sand.~ . 5tOM. cutver'f 4 ~lan ~~..

111111:1
740.992·2222 or
740.446-1018

-=..

llatl71be.
udldrn•
lizella
31 ...,..

66 Chevy tmpeta Gonvertl·
ble. Machank:ally excellent.
Complete car. Great driver.
Good to restore. $5,000
(l40)266·8938

Cart lrom $500.
lm·
poundo lor ulol For llsllng
t,-8Q0.7t&amp;-300t oxt. 390t

Your

111111111111
Ce••IIIIJ Acllll

•"1/

992·6215

Advertise

JtiiDil
111111111111 CAll

Local843-5264
Medicare Supplement; LICe Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses;
·cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
~Nursing Home

EIICtriCIII &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutt~r~
VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
P:.;a:,;tlo:::.:•:::•;d.::PO!or:_:c:::h~Doc=k!
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1.994 Black C&amp;valler RS,
V·G, excellent condition,
93K, $3495; 199t Jeep
Comanche' Truck, 4.0 liter
Ho·, auto, A/C, tt3K,
$2t96; t997 Ranger XLT,
auto, A/C, 7t K, $4295.
t994 5-tO, t988 SIM!rado
4M4, 1998 Achleva, t998
Malibu, t 995 Grand Am GT;
Two trade-lne t988 Escort,
~; t988 Ccugar, $595.
tO others In stock. COOK
MOTORS (740)446.Qt03

(~)895·3882

•m•••te
....

Remodeling

t988 Chrysler 5th. A110nue

99 Arel&gt;rd, oliVer, V·8, 5speed, Ultlcrulse, Air, CD,
PS, ABS·brakes, dual air·
bags, 40k mllea. 2 years loll
on extended warranty. New
80,000 M. radtala. St 2,000.

Yllc•MIIII...
ltllllr fBU IIIII

• Room Addltlona &amp;

ll&gt;aded.

I

lreJIUlald lftll

CARPENTER
SERVICE

t 984 Moroedes t 90E, 94KI
miles,
good · condition,
$2,800.
Negotiable.
(140)387-7491·

740 258

..

ROBERT
BISSELL

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDmONING &amp; HEATING

FORSAU:

..-!.

I

1066 Second Street

Auros

Independent Herbalife Ois,-l·
trt'butor, Call For Product Or,
Opportunity. (740)441 - 198.(
_.
JET
~ ..
AERATION MOTORS ~u
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt 11'1,.
Stocf&lt; Call Ron Evane t "
• · .
.
· ' .· • ·
800 537 9528

I

Monday-Friday 11-SPP.'I • Saturday B-2pm

(740) 9!12-1705
Tonla Reiber

Residential or commercial
Blcellenl corn silage Stand· wiring, new service or re~
ing, delivered or stored. pairs. Master Licensed elec·
trician. ·Ridenou( Electrical,
(740)379-2t8t
WV000396, 304-875· t 786.
II{ \ \"1'1 •I ~ I \ lit 1\

Gru bb's ·Piano- Tuning • ·.
Repairs. Problems? Nee't
Tuned? Call The Plano 0~
740-446·4525
':

New 2003 14x70, 3 br/2bth. ~fo~~~~IT~' &amp; re erence
.
Only $995 down &amp; ·only
Maytag washer, sss; Up·...
$195.65 per month. Cal! House at 512 4th Avenue,
t .
lot $
th ' right freezer, $50. Wood~
Karena 74o-685·7671 .
$550 month &amp; deposit. no 2
pi sra• 1• rtles"t· 125
) ~to0 "ts dining room table with ~~
pets, (740 )441 . 151 9
u u
,
. chairs and 2 leaves, $20Cl~
New Manager's special,
Older maple cabinet -·'~
n&amp;" t8•80, 3 bed
" room, 2 •aklng
applications, small t Mobile home lot, takes 12·
_.,., 1.....
1
u..."
machine S35· 2 Kerosene
'
bath
reduced to only bedroom home Middleport, 14·16 wides. $100 deposit.
•
'
.
·
'
·
$27,900
delivered
and set rererences &amp; deposit re- $ ,25 month. (740)446-0175 heaters • $10 each · Olde,..
,
up. You save over $6,000 qulred, $300 par month,
etactrlc .range, $20; BulldV:
Including underpinning an (740)992 6154
Trombone $ 125 ; Barbll·
2 bedrccm, 1 belh, t car
'
·
•
•'llr-...,~-----.
.
house, Jeep, car, 525 for a~;
gara~ Fenced ba"" ya.... Chors, vapor barrier, 1 set fi•
B
I
80I8 • s5 ~.
•;;
••.
shaded
~
Icc~~:
berglass
steps,
20'
ol
utility
j42D
MOBn.E
HOMES
HOUSEHOW
t;f'"o)n367• 06
••P
0001
67•r
ed at t07 Beatlanl Drive. lines under home, all ,Instal·
FOR RENr
Gooos
.
.
··;
Caii ·(740)44S.Qt2J
lod, One only, Colen Mo·
· NEW AND USED STEEL;
:-:'::-"-=..:..;.;;..;:.;=---:bite Homea, u.s..so East, 2 bedroom all electric mo- Appliances ·. Aecon· dltloned Steel Beams, Pipe Rail~·",
3 Bedrccm newly romod·· Atheno, Ohio 4570t
F C
C
led 1 Mlddl
n
llli
bile home. Spring Valley Washers, Dryers, Ranges, or oncrete, Angle, ha :
08
e ' n
epo •·
om Mull Sell· factor'y mistake Area, $350 rent, $250 de-- ~efrlgratora, Up To 90 Days nel, Flat Bar, Steel GratlnQ:
Anderaon after 5 p.m.
2002 3 BR· 2 BA. Will aacrl: potlt. No pets. (740)441· ·Guaranteed! We Sell New · For Drains, Driveways &amp;~
992·3348
lice, many axtras, very nice. 6954 (304)675·2900
Maytag •"pllancea. French Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap M"""
......,
1 0
M ....
1i d
3 Bidroom with garage on Save $8,900.00. (304)736· - - - - - - - - - City Maytag, 740·446·7795. as pen o. ~ay, ues ·~
approximately 1 acre On 3888, 1·888-736·3332.
2 bedroom mobile home
Wednesday &amp; Frlday, . 8am··
A
2 G 111 11 F
and 2 acre lot. Very, very Electric .glass top cook 4:30pm . Closed Thurada"fl.'
oute675 , a po a erry. We have approximatety ,o nice no peta localed In stove, Table &amp; 4 chairs. Saturday
&amp;
Sund&amp;YJ ~
304
2
5
(
)
· 33
used homos lor under Rodney,
'
(740)446-7300
OH.' (740)448· {740)256-6251
,- \
3 bedroom, 2 bath, ranch $21000, call1·800·837·3238 1409
style, open fioor houae plan, lor Info.
...c.:.:.._ _ __ _ _ _ For Sale: Aeconditlone!1 Waterline Special : 314 20C)1'
covered front porch. Side
.,.
Mason- 2 bedroom trailer. washers, dryers and relrig· PSI $21.00 Par 100: 1" 2001
sundeck, appro)C, mile from rmlr""-':B~•,~---., $275. + $275. Deposit. eratora. Thompsons Appll·. PSI $35.00 Par 100; Ad!
town on st8 te Route 588.
~,~:~
PhOne (304)675·1911 alter ance. 3407 Jackson Ave· Brass cOmpression Fitti~
4pm.
•
nua, (304)675-7388.
In Stock.
.,
BuIll In t 998 0n t.·2 acres.
AND BUILDINGS
(740)983·0730 or &lt;740)446· 1,~-------·
~·
~~
Gocd Used Appliances, Ae· RON EVf&lt;NS ENTERPRI-:-;
6t6t
=~,,.~,.~
ES Jackson. Ohio, 1·801¥.,
___
. - - - - - - - Bulldllng
FOR RENT
~ conditiOned and Guaran~ 537·9528
. . __ _iliiiiiiito-rl· teed .
Washers. Drye rs, ---::-~-"":'--~"
,.. BR
·
Ranges, and Refrigerators,
ttJ
For sate by owner c:
., liv1 and 2 bedroom apart· Some start at $95. Skaggs 1987 Grand Am, 198&amp;r
lbna~hrooa;~t~:tty'·, dpain~~l ~c:"~
menta, lumlahed and unfur- Appliances, 76 Vine St., Dodge Arias lor parts, canJ
ment, petlo and front porch,
nlshed, security deposit reo (740)446-7398
here run; Whirlpool washef~
qulrecl, no pets, 740·992·
(740)446·7556 after"6:00. ~ ,.,
1
little over 12 acre, 3 car oa·
2218.
,
rage, in Bashan close to
4 pleoe bedroom suite, gun•
new highway going in, 112 acre lOt on Tycoon Lake 1 br apt lor rent $100 5
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark_ cabinet, (740)742-1800 .
$38,000.00
w/12x60Traller$16,500.00
d &amp;s 300
· ~· Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740) 949·2252 call ev·e- now $13,500.00
l,:~ded si:J4~fs~~l utll. (740)446·7444 1-877·830~ 6500 BTU LP gas heatln~
"1
nin"gs or lea·- message.
(740) 247·1100 ~
9162 . Free Estimates, Easy · stove, warms5 rooms, $295
-:::2 bedroom, water &amp; trash financinQ. 90 days same as (740)247.3373
·
·
•
For Sale By OWner Ranch 112 acre lot on Tycoon Lake · included. Deposit $275· cash . Vtsal Master Card. Blackbelry syrup, S3 plnr: r
Style Home 3 BR 1.5 Baths w/t 2x60 Trailer $16,500.00 rent $275. (740)441 ·0583; Drive- a- little save alot
(l0 4)895 _3408 (a04) 89 ~
Ex c e II en t ·L o c 8 t I 0 n · now $1"3,500.00
(740)446 7620 after
7
3079
$69,900.00
(740) 247· 1100
•
Used fu rniture store, 130
.
·t
{7 40) 446·7825
Saturday· Sunday.
Bulaville Pike. We sell mat· COOL DOWN, Central /Ur .
F
_ ed SW
2E &amp; 5 alcres homSce sites, 2 BR garage, stcwe/ relrig- tresses, bunk' beds,. dreSs· Conditioners and He~
oreclos
· on 2 acre astern ocal
hool Dis- . erator; Central Air. No pets. ers, couches, apphances, Pumps. If you don't call u~ ;
tracl. $500 down to QUalified trict, utilities available, ap-- Reference/ Deposit re - much more. Grave monu- we both los..e. Free esti...
buye.rs. Call (740)446-3570 proved road, sorry no trail- qulred. (740)446·43361eave ments. (740)446-4782 Gal~ mates. (740)446-6308 ai""ICP
lor a quick sate.
ers, (740) 985·3595
·
message.
lipolls, OH
t ·B00-291 ·0098.

(740) 446-1044 .

Call now for gaur
appt

r':_
~~ tt -~~ I
!-------·

new . parts, $150 firm, call(740)949·4000
''
GE Cabinet Stereo S 5 Q.~
loldlng e)Cercise bike. $~ ~
Phone (304)882-2755
.:-.

i,

4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

lire you stressed1

632 3

grown. (304)875-Jt 17

3

it, runt includes water. sew- for , br, all utilities paid
er &amp; trash, &lt;740&gt;992 -0175
HUO -assisted, carpetedabr. House located in Ma- apartment. rent is 30% of
son, WV. $495. + Utilities. ~g~~S;~.J-~~~ ~~~~=n c~~ No Pets. (304)n3~588,
4:30pm weekdays.EHO
4 BR unfurnished, free gas C:!"-"':':'-----,
to heat and cook with. 4
.FI.JRNisHEn
miles from Rio Grande on
Cora Mill Road. $400 month
ROOMS
plu s $400 depOsit In ad·
vance. Must have releren(740)245 Shirley Smith
ces and no pets.
• 74D-992·5989
5622
= - - - - - - - - Congreiuletlon•l You have
5 rooms &amp; bath, SO Olive St, won 2 free movie tickets to
$325 mo (740)446 •3945
the Spring Valley 7 Gallipo· ·
·
lis. Call the Sentinel for de·
7 rooms, 2 bath, Gallipolis. Ia 11 s. 740 992•2155

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

Ucensed by the Ohio
Slat' llledical Board
Fair calves· A·l sired, Heat
BASEMENT
. Seeker plus Who Made
WATERPRODFINO
Who, black &amp; halter broken, Unconditional lifetime guar·
antee. Local references fur·
(740)687 ••37
nlshed. Established t 975.
Registered Angus Bulls, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 448·
0870, Rogers Basement
(740)288·t460
'-:..:..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ Waterprocllng.
Several Nanny goats. Prob·
ably bred, $40 each.
(740)258· t399
C&amp;C General Home MalntaTWo Weanling colts, by nence- Painting, vinyl sid·
APHA etud. Sunny'a Calk:o tng, carpentry, dccrs, win·
Bar, foaled Apri l 2002: dows, baths, mobile home
$450 E
$800
repair and more. For. lree
1/ery. ·nic:C!n~~rmatio·n~~i estimate cal~ Chat, 740-992~

Owner:

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

I mo.

·

f::

W

28th. Appliances, Porches,
Skirting, like new, must go
5 19,995.00, 740·992 .0078

ISA Certified Arborist
· 1-86 ·4DR·TREE

Owner:
Terry Lamm
(740) 992.0739

riO

Home, 2 lull baths, catherial
ceilings 8x1 2 Deck, Nice
Home, New Fur nan c e .
$8,500. 985 -9831
· :3SR
2000 14 X 70 Clayton
·

Foreman: Larry

Specializing In:
Roofing, Decks,
' Remodeling,
Siding, &amp;nd
i\dditions

I

3588~IDiiSI

r~

APA!miENTS

·r

I

M&amp;M Pressure Washing 1$
Painting. Decks, Trailers,
Houses. Boa"ls, Lots, Etc.
Call
lor
Estimates.
(7,40)388·1532

MoroRCVUEl

'flat Tarrier puppys Swks old 2002 . Kawasaki ' Pralrlp V·
:i;llls docked wormed, . 650 4M4. t 200 miles, Ex·
tended warranty until 4·
;ji_too. (304)875·7946
2005. 2000!b warn winch af·
&lt;flcttwoller puppies, born ter marke:t tires S7,500. new
·!Pit 1/CY,I, 100% purabred will sell lor $5,900. Call
iiiot riQistered) lalt docked, (304)882·3622 or (304)874·
~ewclaws
removed,
·~rmed. excellent tempera:irient 3 males, StOO·St50,

month, appliances furnish~ set. Delivery option. $390:
ed- Centenary Rol\(t. Call (304)674-0711
Must sale Immediately 35 (740)446·9442
acres on Sandhill Rd call
Whirlpool wash1Jf, $95; ~
c304~·8::.;9:..:5-.::380:..:.:.7_ _~-- 3 Bedroom Appartment,No more dryer, $95; ~ni"((I
Pets992·5858
electric range, $95; Calor
Wendy Holley
BEA IF
PART gas range, white, $1
Congratu 1atlons! ¥iou _hkeave MEN¥~ A~LBUDG:T PRI: Kenmore frost free •. whire,
1 uc ts
won 2 1rae move
refrigerator. $150; upright\
to the Spring_Valley 7 In CES AT JACKSON ES- freezer,
$125; MaytaC
Gallipolis. Call the Tribune TATES, 52 Westwood Drive
S
for details. (740)446- 2342
from $297 to $383. Walk to washer/ dryer set, 275..~
L d h
k
N
shop &amp; movies Gall 740 Sofa, $75: Dresser wlt~ 1
an
orne pac ages. 0
~ mirror, $75 ·, Nice solid wood·
payments while under conRFAL
·I· Opportunity.
446~2568. Equal· ~ousii"!Q bedside
stands
wit6·.
structlon.
Little
or no ,
w.·.., ..FsrAlE
~
~"~
...:..c...._..:__ _ _ _"" drawers, $40 each. Skaggs.
down
required
Furnts
. hed 2 Rooms ana" Apptances.
I.
76 VI ne StraeI._,
(740 )446payment
•3218
. . .
Will pay top dollar for prime Bath, Upslairs, Clean, Ref· (740)446-7398
·,,
New 2000 sq ft hcmle, 10 land. New home builder. erences and Deposit Re~
ANI1QuES
minutes lrom H· ospital. (740)446~3093
quired. No Pets. (740)446·
Complete abcw
. e ground
1519
.:.:;.c:__ _ _ _ __ _
pool with porch, ~riveway
G 1
t
d 2
11 .
and
foundation
rae ous apartments
Vlng.
an
p 1 garage
b
. .
bedroom
at Vii· Buy or sell. Riverine Antt.rr ce
elow appra1sal.
lage Manor and Riverside ques, ~ 124 East Main on.
.
(740)446 3384
u~~
•
·
~ ·
Apartments in Middleport. SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740:..
PRICE REDUCED. 3 bed·
FOR RENT
From $278-$348. Call 740- 992~2526. Russ Moors;-&lt;
room, 2 bath Brick Ranch "--....iiiiiiitiiii--,.1 992· 5064. Equal Housing owner.
.
~
on~ .5 llat acres, newer car- 1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed Opponunities.
~
pet, doors an appliances, Homes From $t99/Mo., 4el .
u-~·~= · ·.
"' Modern 1 BR apartment.
1.,.J..I'.A....•at1-Lu...-x.
lull basement (partially fin- Down, 30 vears at 8.5%
''
(740)446·0390
lshed), 2 car garage, Rt 33 APR. For Listings. 80Q-319abova
New
Haven. 3323 Ed. 1709.
North 3rd Ave .• Middleport, 1 stoker stove, $500; 1 peb,l
:.:1304.::..cl:.:882=·.::38::.:9c..7.,.-......,,-- ------.,..-...,-- 1 bedroom furnished apart~ let stove, $700, plus 6 bagfl
tedl Good 1edi
234 S.Snders. 3 , BR, fire· ment, no pets, depoSit &amp; ref- of pelletS, , pipe &amp; P8f1,...
8'1
c t new
cus- pace,
I
$550 per mont h. Ret• ere.nces, (740)992 ·0165
(740)379'9380
tom9rs
to purchase
·
erences &amp; deposit required.
-..C..-::---::-.:..,.---';
horne w/land. $0 down to Call (740)446-3644
Now Taking Applications- 11740 Case Skid Loader/
quallfied customers. 1-5
35 West 2 Bedroom Town- $3500. (740)643-0508
·
acre
.tracts
available. 2br. Reterences &amp; Deposit. house Apartments, Includes
'-(7'1:40r)~44:-:6:-·-30.;9_3~:"'"....., No Pets. (304)675·5162
Water
Sewage, Trash, DIRECTV, $0 two TV !lOCk-~
il%
H
$350/Mo., 740-446·0008.
up, order here and earrt..
MOBILE · OM~
3
bed
b
·
k
h
·
~
room nc ouse on.
SIS, 800·263·2640.
::•
FOR SALE
Mercerville Road . $500 One Bedroom Apartment in
month. {740)256~1417 or Pt. PleaSant. Furnished. Electric cook stove excelle~
(740)256·6228
Ve.ry clean and niGe. No condition. Sears sewing m12)C24ft. add on room for
...'-:='-'-=:'-:-.,..----:Pets. PhOne (304)675-1386 chine w/cablnet.dining rocm l
Mobile Home. Carpeted,
b d
b lck
t
paneled
Must
move. b e rootm r It, tcarpodr,. Tara •ownho se Apart suite, table wlleal &amp; 5 chairr
asemen, exce en con I· •·
•'
u
- &amp; china hut..h, 2 sets of odd_
$3.000 . (304)675 -8714
1·ton, recen tt y ramo de1ed. mens,
t Very Spactous,
·
2 chairs, knlck-nack
~·
set[,"·
1092 Sunset Drive, Gallipo- Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
·1
,2x60 3 bedroom w/c/ a, ;· OH $550 $550 d
1/2 Bath, N-"ty Carpeted, small ice maker, reg. queel1:1
IS,
.
+·
epos- Adult Pool &amp;•Ba"by Pool, .Pa· size high poster bed. 1~ :
washer &amp; dryer, stov~ . it. (740)446-4116
- h"
I bed (304)67~
..
$5,495, 740·992-2167
- ' - - - ' - - - - - - - tlo,. Start $375/Mo. No Pets .. w 1\e meta
.
- - - - - - - - - 3 bed room home, M.tners-- Lease Plus Security Deposit 7274
·
-11 Oh. ·
·
1
1
IO, rver
VIew, no Aeq~o~lred, Days; 740·446· Fl·sher Pr 1
·ce fjar.ley Motor·,
14x50 1994 Fairmont, 2 VIe,
petS. references
required,
t
E
.
348 ; vemngs: 740 · 367 • cycle, good condition, only'
bedroom, smoOth top range,
side-by-side
refrigerator, $450 month, call (740)992~ 050;2:."
$75,
battery
Include~ ..
- - - - - - - - - Please call {740)256~6407 .
w/d, cia. small front porch &amp; 6777 aller Spm.
deck, $6500, (740)696-0.1 05 :Twin Rivers ToWer ror eld· tea:ve message.
''
3 -:-b-e~dr-o-om-,th~M:-id:-:d:-le-p""or-t,
1
$ 375
d
erlyJ disabled.
1
1984 two Bedroom Mobile
per mon Pus epos· Now accepting applications Freezer· 22 cu, ft. Sears, a~;

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=

'I'IwNlNGtiiiiilllilili-.-1

It

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C!lr""-"'!"'--~--.

Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is currently accept· "S lor a part
l·ng app· tlcat10
~·
•
time (8 hours a week) Activ·
ity Assistant. Applications
my be picked up at 333
Page Street, Midd~port , On
~.,_ _ _
45760 or phone Mike Crites,
Activity Director at (740)
992·6472 lor more lnlorma· Qolltpolll Co~ COitogo'
-,:----;;;;;;;;~ tlon.
(Careers Cloao To Home)
~110 Um W.
---::::::=:::::::::::-:-:::-:::::-C&amp;lllt0d
·8"1001·27t440·-4404562·4, 387,
PSYCHI4TRIC AIDES
• u;+-P ANTFD
Prestera Center Is ( lookl'ng
Reg 1190 OS 12748
for an upbeat Individual to
· • · ·
work one -on-one with al170 lt..t_;......,........,.,.,.Apply at County • Corner
I I
d
I
,.....,._........,..""""'
Ca!e in Letart 9-1pm. Serl· spec a nee s consumer n
the Mason County area.
ous Inquires -Only.
Some of the respontlbllltias
·
include helping the consum- Doug M1J1In
ATTN: Point Pleasant.
er with dally ;,·.. ·,ng sk,·tts. ac ·.· Congratulations! You have
• doctor vis· won 2 free movie tickets to
Pc sa
I I posIt·1ons.· Ct erkslcar· companying on
riers/ sorters. No exp. re- Its, and helping the consum· the Spring Valley 7 In Gal·
qulred. Benefits. For exam, er to be' more independent. llpolls. Call lhe Register tosalary, and testing intorma- High school diploma or day lor detalls.(304}67!5·
t1on call (~30)393·3032 Ext GED and a valid drivers
. II- ·1333
782 8am 8pm 7 days.
cense are requ ired. 11 _you n'lll"-~~---~
4
would like the opportunity to 1180
WANtm
Community Act ion le seek· have a positive effect on
To Do
ing temporary Intake Clerk someo·ne's life, visit our ..__ _.,;iiiioiiiO."'!'rl
.AidS to woril with Emergen- website
at
\r
cy Programs. Ondanizatlon~ WNW.prestera.org for an apA&amp;E COnatructlon
at skills, computer experl· plication or mall resume/ ap- Rool'ing, concrete, siding,
ence. and ability to deal with plication to :
,remodeling, decks, painting,
persons of Various socioe~
PRESTERA CENTER
dry wall.metal buildings,
conomic backgrounds._Valid
HA/Mason Psych Aide
pole barns&amp; looters .
Drivers license, high school
P.O. Box 8069
(304)874·0118
graduate or equivale'll.
Charleston, WV 25705
'::-..':..--::----:--::----:::Send resume with three (3)
EOE!AA
Georges Portable Sawmill,
don't haul your logs to the
~~~~=~:~gstoc~l~A~~~~~~ PT Tax preparers need!Kf mill just call304·615·1957.
lor busy tax office, Pomerov.
,
State Route by
7, Cheshire,
OH
O/fB/0
location.
We
will
train;
comHousecleaning,
reliable,
,
1
45620
2
GMCAA is EOE .
puler skills required. Send hohest and have references
=:.:::..'-'-::.==...:..-:::==- .resume to : The Daily Sen· with 20 years of 8)Cperience.
Jewelry Salesperson' FT/PT. !inei. P.O. Box 729-13 Pom~ Call alter 5:00pm. (740)446Mus! be dependable, ouJgo- era;, OhiO 45769
~506
,

I

GAU.IPOLIS
~.w-..,;iiiiiiiiiiiiii--rl

.c-

ANll'DBUY
10

I

Need manager for womens
F1·1ness Center, must be
physica lly f1t &amp; work well
with people, honest &amp; willing
to work ,any hours. Send
Resume too 3004 Meadowbwrovok Dnve Pt Pleasant,

I

GIVEAWAY

r

AUCTION
.
. ,
~6 :30 Ang1e s
Every Fnday ""
c 1 333 M ha 1
Fl ea Marl\e
ec n c
Street PomerOy. Ohto Call
For InIorma I10n 992 ~ 9734

r \'\:

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign!
Up To .). 5 Words, 3 Days
Ove.r 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

~40)992.Q932

WANll'D
To Do

PERSONAl.'&gt;

r •.

~

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Pr:lor To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p .m.
Thursday ror Sundays

liio

Garage Sale- 583 Georges Community Actions seek!ng
Creek Rd. Thursday· Friday temporary Intake Clerk Atde
Froggy4418 Call Travis @ Rain or shine. antiques. to work with Emergency
(304)674-05781or smiles.
jars, milk bottles, 78 re- Pr~grams. Organlza~lonal
cords, Silver Bridge News· sktlls, computer .e)Cpenence
Why wai t? Start meeting paper, misc.
. and ability t~ deal wi~h perOhio singles ton ight, call toll .:..:c.....:c.....:..,...--:-:c--:- sons of vanous ~~o-eco·
'i ree 1·800-766-2623 e)Ct Garage Sale- 79 Brook nomic backgrounds. Valid
1621.
Drive in Rodney just before Drivers Hcense, high school
Cora Mill. watch lor signs. graduate oi equivalent. Re""'UN'CEMF".. ~
Computer desks, weight sume with three (3) referen~f'ollJ
:.r~ . ..,
.
&amp;
G ·
bench wl weights, g1r 1s
cas to Mrs. Edwards, allis
boys' clothing up to 4T. Lots Meigs C.A.A.. 8010 N. State
of Misses Fall &amp; Winter RoUte 7, Cheshire, Ohio,
Ane nlion ATV Riders. II you
ride on the Keith Shirley clothing. 96 Ford Escort &amp; 45620 by 10/18102. GMCAA
lots more. October 10th &amp; is EOE.
Farm and
between
Shirley
. ot sh·ne
c ..;_ _ _ _...,._ _ _
Road'
TomblesOn
Run 1 tth , 9-5pm, ra1n
1
•
Domino's Now Hiring all lo·
Road, tho ride may be over. 4866 State RoUte 850, Oc· cations Pt. .Pleasant, GalllpSince 1994 . I h ~ve built Iober
t0.11 ,t29am·5pm.
· ·.:::::..:.:::..:..::.:~=='-- olis. Eleanor. Safe drivers.
trails, built a for
log ,'.t;:abin
1 ·In-person
campground
anyoneand
to Huge
Multi-family yard sale- must be t8 · APPY
b·y
ask,·ng
me
llrst.
Friday
&amp;
Saturday,
October
at
location~.
·ust
Us•.
.I have' kept a supply of fire- 11 &amp; 12. Sam-dark, 3810 r - - - - - - - - ,
St 1 AD 1 775 2 .1
.
h
wood under the p tCOIC s e.
.a e . u e
mt es
ter tree lor anyone to use. 1 pajt Mcintyre Park. Natural
have kept the trails up by gas ~pace heater &amp; dehuculling fallen tr ees. if!ting midilier, used 6 months; hu·
and draining holes. I've put midilier, girls clothes sizes
out buckets and trash cans 8-12 , building materials.
· many miSC
· . 1tems
·
for you to put your trash 1n.
The only thing I have asked,
is that you stay in the trails
YARD ALE·
and out ol the fields. That 1
_ ·PoMEROYIMIDDLE.
you not scatter cans along
0 $5QQ."sl'gn on
the tra ils. That you respect Garage Sale:
..
another mans property. A
couple yearS ago I had to Friday October 11 • 8 acm.•
put a -lance around the 5 p.m. SA 248 Top of has·
campground,
because ter Hill 3rd House on Lef1
some were riding through . Men·s, Women 's. Maternity, •
0 .
&amp; Bedding Lots
th 9 ml·ddle 0 1 1·t and dot·ng Infants
Morel
'd
.
1 ' ·
d
h t S
tt
o
oug nu s. avera 1mes a
,
year I lind tracks through
·
the hay fields, a lew cans H
M . Sal 0 I tO •
here and there. l"ve · not uge ov 1ng
e: c · •
12 9· s· 1124 College Ad
'
liked it but. I just say. It's · ' ·· ·
of 4th &amp; College Syrt·ust a few that do these Corner
·•
15 t I It It
d .d9
Sl
thl·ngs and have no respect ac ...•.se, F e. a er. roa tyk
rl .
.
The majority of the riders. Par.... urnl1ure, 11111 e
es
~ople. ! cant let a toys , kitchen -wares, kids
are good •·
loth &amp; Ad It ( It . e )
few ruin it for everyone. And c es
u s a slz s .
,.
have let it 'go. Saturday, Oc· Many coltectlpn new toys,
· aII very r9 ason Iober 5, 2002 . I went to the muc h mtsc.
· ed
farm to find that sometime .abtY pnc
between Wednesday eve- Rummage Sale:
Call"
!'ling and Saturday after· Heath U.M. Church Frldf)y
noon. Someone had done •Oct. 11. 9 to 3, Saturday
1-87 7-463 -6247
doughnuts In my yard, ·not Oct. 12- g to 1, S2.00 a
20 feet from my hOus~. Had Bag.
ext 2454
thrown beer cans and beer
• -.
carton4 on the roof of the Yard sale- Tves.- Fri ., 181
house-. Several tracks, and Beech St., Middleport,.
. beer cans through tho ~76 . . YARD SAtE·
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or
tields.
~j~: ~~irley Spears, 304If you are the ones respon- ~ow;.,.;Prioii.,;,i'l,;;.EASANT;;;oliiiiito.-l
sible, feel proud of the fact •
URGENTLY
NEEDE D·
that you have forced me to 2 F
I G
I
make this decision. II I find
am• Y arage sa e at plasma donors, earn $50 to
one more beer can , one 2 ~ 16 • &amp; 2923 Maple Ave. S60 per week for 2 or 3
more spin out, one more
11 &amp; 12. Good hours: weekly. Call Bio Life
path in my fields i ·w[ll Post r:~~~~~~~J Plasma Service,. 740-592~
my property and NOBODY
6_6_5_1_.- - - , - - - - ·t I ·;t
·tl .d
W I 11 e on 1 ·
WI prose~
Need 7 ladies· to sell Avon.
cute anyone caught on my .
(740)446 •3356
·property to the fullest extent

/

Dally In · Column: 1 : 00 p . m .
Monday·Frlday for.. Insertion
Jn Next Day's Paper
sunday In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
For Sundays Paper

wanted to fairground&amp;
olhllr than lilted datos.
Bulkllng •-lallrot

e.., t'st'' ,

CllmiCTIII

f.!l•

Display Ads .

Your Trees._,

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!Maltese pups· Pu(ebred,
'AKC registered. Available
4ilctober t8. 3 males. Makes
2000 400EX. runs great,
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;(740)446·7454 ·leave mes· locks great. $3500 OBO.
(740)44H7t6
uge.

• S t t~rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviat ions
· • Include Phone Number And Address When Needed _,
• Ads Should Run 7 oavs

YARIJ SAtE-

r41

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Oearl/1itU'
Word Ads

~

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l\egister

Sentinel

()j Sueir.- tVt..
~e Care For

Roofing, Siding, ftdd-Dns, flectrlca~
Plllllblng, Decks, Remodeling,
Drywal~ Painting

Haning's Construction

loolde Storago: $4.0MI
Open Span: $2.0MI
ln&amp;lde Fonce: UI0/11

2000. Ford Ranger exlend··
KC Bassett Hound pup· ed cab, 4·WD.. V-1!. o11 read
as. Vet ch8cked. Tri. col- package, stt~P-Side, At, AC,
miles. Pay-off
r. $200. each. (304)576· 32,300
$17,500 . Will sell lor
f!t28
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c Blue Tick Beagle pup86 CheVy 4x4 , 305 V-8, au·
's and started dog's, Oia· to,
air, 3 inch lift, $6000.
nd bloodline; eMcellent
304·895-3364
or 304·895n dOgs, Stoo to $175, 344t.
40)742·2728
92 Dodge Converskln Van,
""b Puppys AKC Chocolate 1 owner, lots of new parts
il Black Excellent Hunting $2,500.304-1!75-8893
~ock $250.00 (740) 643·

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Gallipolis 446-4995

BACKHOE • DOZING • END LOADER5
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',

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11

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MIIIU
I

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Toll Free 1·888-745-8847

(740) 992·5822

Pomeroy Eagles
BING02171
Every Thursday
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Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
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All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy$5.00
Bonanza Get
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POMEROY
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200 E. Main St.

Painting, Power
Washing, Mowing,

Open 9am·6pm
Mon lhru Sat.

Phone 8112-4515
Washers, dryers
Like New
Freezer, Electric

Ranges, Dishwashers
Refrigerators, and
much mDI'e

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""1 ......toW

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Top ; Removal ; Tril!)
• Stump 6rlndi~

• Bucket Truck

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me.

\yeedeatlng

You Need It
Done, we 'II Do 11
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or
(740) 591-9239

has openings, 15 yr.
experience, Certified
in Meigs, Athens and
Washington counties,
Open 24 hours.

•

7 Days per week.
St. Rt. 7 Tuppers

Plains, OH
CALL 667·6329

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Construction
Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room AddiHons,
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i More .

'

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411
·,

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallyHntlnel.com

Wednesday, October 9, 2002

•

ALLEY OOP

1

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BRIDGE

ACROSS

PHILLIP

ALDER

1 Plen
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12 aw.11ow up

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35

Here is another deal
from the Cavendish
Teams piayed in Las
Vega!i,last May . What
would you expect the
result to be in four
· 's pades? Would you .
prefer to be in four

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

abbr.
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21 Tiny apact se Roc~ or

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Vulnerable: Both

Mel1s County's Hometown Newspaper
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8

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47 Rocky

cLVINE't' SEZ TO
LOWEEZ'f ...

THE BORN LOSER
P"

l'O LIKE 1\
QUICJ\E:J

5YLLABLES OF SHEE.Rc

POETRY!

0

I

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I I I ·1 I I !are! J I

·

SELONGeP

TO'?

Thursday, Oct. 10, 2002
By BERNICE BEDE OsOL

I.

NATURE HOL.175
MANY 17ANCifP:5

ESF"I!CIA\..l.Y
1'HE51! PAY5

0

0

0
0

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0

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. I

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----1

qualities are very pronounced
today so don't hesitate to use
them. especially in a critical
situation where a command

In the year ahead a substan- .
tial financial opportunity may
decision becomes necessary.
come your way in a round
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jun.
about ·fashion. It may have to
19) .. There ·.s a possibility
dn with something that anthat something of stgnificance
other has tried and abancould occur today, causing
doned, but you'll make it
you to alter an objective rework.
garding a personal ambition.
LIBRA (Se pt. 23-0ct. 23) ·
· It' II be a good move.
· Matters that have been influAQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb.
enced more by others than
19) .. Even though the plaY.yourself may now start to
ers and the setting may be dif· switch over to your control.
ferent today, you still will be
New heights can be reached
able to draw upon past experionce thin gs are sec urely in
ences to see that you don' t reyour hands. Know where to
peat any past mis1akes.
look for romance mid you' II
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
find it. 'The Aslro-Graph
20) .. If you c.ome off as an
. Matchmaker instantly reveals
oasy mark today, someone
which sign s are romantically
may try to take advantage of
. perfecl for you. Mai l $2.75 to
you. Strive to be realistic and
Matthmakcr, clo rhi s ncwspa.
hard-shelled when it comes to
per. P.O. Box ].67, Wickliffe,
'business or money.
OH 44092.
.
•
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
SCORPIO (OcL 24-Nov.
.. Face issues squarel:,: t":lay,
22) .. Starting tod:ty you will
esp}'cially if you have 1o eal
be able lo spend more time
witH some difficult problems.
and ef1'01t on a special ambiThe more realisti c you are,
tion you've been contemplatthe clearer and better the soluing. Your chances for fulfill·
tions will be.
ment look excellent.
TAURUS (April 20-May
SAGI:n:ARIUS (Nov : 2320) .. When dealing in areas
Dec. 2 1) .. Your leadersh1p
where there are malcri al con-

GAJlFIELD

"

I '

High: 60s, Low: sos

Details. A2

·

BY BRIAN J. REED
Staff writer
.
.
POMEROY - Budget disputes like
that between Meigs County commissioners and Sheriff Ralph Trussell are
increasingly common across Ohio,
according to Larry Long, executive
director of the Ohio County
"Commissioners Association.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell , who laid off
most of his deputy and jail staff last
week due to a lack of funds in his
.

Geraldine Rayburn, 61

After South rebid
two no- trump. North
:had an interesting
problem. He might
. have jumped to four
hearts, gomg with his
· excellent suit. (Four
hearts can be made on
any lead, but it reqUires careful play.)
However, continuing
with three spades, offering a choice of the
majors, was reasonable.
• .
Four spades looks
hopeless with trumps
. 5-0 and the heart fi.
nesse wrong. But two
declarers , Bart BramCELEBRITY CIPHER
ley and John Mohan,
by Luis Campos
found lhe winning
Celebrity Cipher cryptog,.,. are ,...ted hom quotations by lamooa
people, pur and preaenl. Eacllllllter In \he cl(lhtr stands IO&lt; another.
. line after West led a
Today's clue: t equals U
low club. (Any red"FO
Y
MYHHA
YYZZFVBP,
card lead beats the
contnict.)
FX
FN
XMP
UFTP
UMW
South won with the
club jack, cashed the
HZWCFEPN
XMP
GRFYVXP,
diamond ace, ruffed a
diamond in the
XMP
MINSVOE
XMP
dummy, returned to
hand with a club, and
RVOENGVHP."
ruffed another diamond. Declarer disBPZVRE
SZPOVO
carded his low heart
PREVIOUS SOLUTION ...,-"Man Is an Imagining being.•
on the club ace,
Guion Bachelard
played a heart to his
"The Imagination Ia man's power over natura. •
ace, and ruffed his
· - Wallace Stevens
last diamond in the
dummy. When the
ft\IIUI
·~~~;;';;' ~(.g\-\,~j"N\--'-G b~"'® OAMI
heart q.ueen was led
_:.~:..:.;__,;,__ EoUod by CU. Y R. POU.i.N
.. -- ....
from the dummy,
"SHE IS A MONSTER :
AND '
East ruffed .with the
l&lt;earronge letters cf the
SHE'S ~
6LO'I'TED OSSCE.NI'TY.~'.
four scrambled words be·
eighl, an'll South overRIGHT ; . - - low to form four simple word.,.
5EH1Nt&gt; ' NO.
ruffed with the jack,
YOU . '/'THAT'S
his ninth trick. South.
P S NL
down to 7-6-4-2 of
spades, led the seven.
East, with the A- 109-3 left, couldn' 1 stop
declarer from scoring
LUCGH
one more trump trick
for his contract.
How did Bramley
and Mohan find this
line? .Perhaps because
~ast thought about .
doubling the final
contract, and ·what
else could that suggest but a trump
stack?
Finally, al a third
table, A. N. Other
. played the first nine
tricks perfectly. but .
then he exited with
L~~~~=:::~::J the spade two, so East
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
claimed the last four
Forage· Blind- Fence · Pickle- FILLING
tricks!
A friend of mine is a.dentist. He also has a gre;;~t sense
of
humor.
He hung a sign in his office that read: "Wel1 LOVE 1\!EM !
A SO!leeRe:SS/
1 WONDER WHO
come
To
My
FILLING statio'n."
MAD STIIANGI.c~~

~eY

Weather
Deaths

..

LISTEN TO T+iiS 1
IT'$ SEVEN'TEE.N

Long: Counties
in litigation over ·
budget issues

'.

•-

heart~?

BARNEY

'.

It

.

•

•

'

•• •

•

45 RlnM off

1ool
...
24 Lay brother 41 L..gal
25111da
collee
49 -Rollo lor
21 Dnlary
.lllldonna
27 Alan or
50 Hara'a
Cheryl
1*1Mr
21 PUll
52 Clamor
vart.ty
53 Meal up
21 Fllkl or
54 flddr.

34 Clumally
38 Rellah-tray

'

Meigs not alone.in finandal crunch ·

10 Word !rom
ltema
Ulu
42 ..,_!dent
11 Night
.n.r
13 Play
Harrlaon
18 Commotion 43 Dt opped •
20 Had polaon
liM
22 Klichln

• -

sidcrations, you're motivational ur11es will come to the
fore, givmg you an advantage
over competitors or combatants.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
.. Bonds of friendship can be
forged today wilh lwo associates who have much in common with you. Do your part
to cement the relalionships
and they'll follow suit .'
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
.. The possibilities tu increase
your material worth will be
amplified today, · 'so it behooves you to take advantage
of what's at hand. What tran'
spires could even change your
lifeSiyle.
q::o (July 23-Aug. 22) ..
An important new interest
may capture your fancy to·
day . Once engaged ir1 it, it
could actually alter your des'
tiny . II may have something
to do wit~ your field. of endeavor.
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
··You are now entering a cycle where you'll have chances
for making some financial improvemem~. The possibilities
could have to do with old
ventures as well as new ones .
•

•

Details, Al

Car seat

inspection
Saturday·

'

salary line, has asked Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to appoint
Herman A. Carson of Athens as special counsel, at acost of $15.0 an hour,
to consider litigation and other legal
measures to secure additional funds
for the operation of his department.
A.heanng on the matter will be held
next week.
County
commissioners
in
Columbiana and Seneca counties
were recently sued by their Veterans
Service Office and Board of
Elections, respectively. for addilional
budget appropriations, Long said.
Seneca County commissioners was
recently ordered by the common pleas
court there to increase appropriations
for their ·election board. In Athens
County, lhe board of elections is seeking an additional $25 ,000 for opera-

· . POMEROY - A child
restraint inspection site will
be conducted at Don Tate
Motors, East Main Street in
Pomeroy, from 10 a.m. ·
until 2 p.m. Saturday.
The event will be con_ducted by the Gallia-Meigs
and Athens posts of the
State Highway Patrol,
along with volunteers from
. the Meigs and Ross counties ' health departments .
: National
Highway
Transportation
Safety
Administration · certified
ihspectors will condul)t
\l;oluntary inspections on
infant restraint ·seats, toddler restraints and booster
seats for all who attend.
Personnel will be available
for· questions or concerns
about proper ins!alla!ion.
age requirements and
weight requirements.
· Troopers will be on hand
with free literature on these

issqeS. ·

·

Lotteries
'
PHIO
Pick 3: 1-5-7
Pick 4: 3-6-8-9
Supell..otlo: 1-6-10..25·36-44
Bonus Ball: 41
KJcker:S-2·5·3-2-4
Buckeye 5: 12-2D-25·3Q-31
Pick 3 night: 4·2-0
pick 4 night: 7-9-6·4 ·
W.VA.

Dally 3:.4-6~ 1
Dally 4: 5-2-Q-4

~

~-!~:9"1Q-~2-43

(5)

:

2 s.dlons

. .

6
.

.

-

Calendar
Classifieds

to make her a pennanent
Arrives just in time and
part of the post office family,
to promote · employees pitched in to have
her spayed, through the
.. spaying, neutering cooperation
of the Meigs

Comics

bear Abby
Editorials
Movies ..
Obituaries
Sports ..

Weather
· C&gt; 2002 Ohio Valley

84-5
B6

AS

A4
A3
A3
81-3
A2
Publishing Co.

Veterinary Clinic.
Now, Zippy is right at
home among the mailbags
and sorting racks at t~e post
office, and according to
Postmaster Charlie Grim,
she's home to stay:
Most strays are not so
lucky; An estimated 70,000
cats and dogs are born each
day in the United States.
Eight to 10.million a year are
taken in by shelters, but freeroaming dogs and feral cats
are estimated in the tens of
millions.·
T])e fate for most ·of those
animals is death, although

BY BRIAN J. REED
StaH writer
POMEROY - Zippy was
a "special delivery" at the
Pomeroy Post Office. and
her arrival couldn't have
been more timely.
The stray kitten came to
visit the postal workers two
weeks ago, the same day the
U.S. Postal Service unveiled
a special .c ommemorative
stamp promoting the spaying
and neutering of dogs and
·cats.
To celebrate her arrjval,

·Local gas prices jump over 6 cents

12 Pllps

AS

POMEROY Pomeroy
merchants will participate in
a Bend Area holiday decorating contest, proposed as a ·
way of attractmg visitors and
increasing business at local
shops.
.
Point
Pleasant
and
Tom .Dooley, right, member of the Meigs County .Humane
Middleport also are particiSociety, visits "Zippy," Pomeroy Postmaster Charlie Grim
pating tn the CQIItest, which
and Mindy Brinker, postal employee. The cat arrived at the
will include judging of indipost office just in time to promote a new commemorative
vidual stores and recot~nition
~ sfamp·ifeslgne'd tlri!"l\'cimfil'ge-pet owners to spay orne'i'Jter- ~-·rofThe' besf decorated tn each
their animals. (Brian J. Reed)
. of the three communities.
·At Wednesday's meeting of
the Pomeroy Merchants
Association at Peoples Bank,
the contesl, along with otller
holiday activities and promotions,
were
planned.
Merchants
were
asked
to
the Meigs County Humane between paying the electric
·
begin
planning
how
they
will
Society aggressively encour- . bill or spaying or neutering.
dress up their businesses.
ages responsible pet owner- they're going to pay their
The annual Christmas
ship and even provides some electric bill, and we underparade
will be held at 2 p.m.
financial assistance for stand that. "
Dec.
21.
Stores will be open
needy families who wish 10
"That's why we have pro·
all
afiernoon.
Some will be .
make a good home for a grams which are incomeserving refreshments and givstray dog or cat.
· based, . desi~ned to help
ing favors. Santa will visit
Vicky Peckham, presidenl responstble pel owners have
with the children in the min,iof the Meigs County · the1r pets spayed or neutered.
park after lhe parade which
Humane Society, sait;l the We have programs wh1ch
again this year is chaired by
issue of spaying or neutering meet the .ret owner halfway
Toney Dingess, Meigs High
a new pet is often a financial tn meetmg the cost of
School band director.
decision in poorer communi- surgery, and next summer.
A vacation give-away pro. ties.
we'll work again with RAM
motion on I radio
at a cost of
.
"It is a •big problem, espe- · to host another ~ee~.end­
$1 ,000 was approved. John
cially in 1his area. because long spay/neuler chmc.
Musser, president, said the
many people can't afford 10
The. wtslful-eyed puppy
association hopes to recoup
have their pets spayed or and ktlten featured _on the
some of the cost with contrt·
neutered, even though they new 37-cent postage stamp
butions from merchants.
care about them," Peckham ~epresent were pholographed
Signup boxes will be
said.
m a ConnectiCut anrmal shelplaced . m the participating
businesses and the drawing
"lf il' s a difference
Please see Zippy. A3
will take place a couple of
weeks before Christmas. The
Middleport Association is
also domg a similar vacation
promotion.
Betsy Nicodemus, Meigs
· County tourism chairman,
..
said some of the advertising
Other area prices listep by increased price of crude oil
expense for promoting the
AAA
included
Logan, in the past · few weeks, in
give-aways in the two vil$1.42; · Jack so n, $1.47; addition to production and
lages can be paid through the
chamber of commerce.
Chillicothe, Portsmouth and shipping ,d elays caused by
Adding a tree · ornament
Steubenville,
$1.48; two Gulf Coast hurricanes.
picturing
!he new Pomeroy· Hillsboro , $l.49; Athens,
"The disruptions these
Mason bridge, which will go
·Marietta and Waverly, storms caused to industry
under conslruction in early
$1.50; and Ironton, $1.51.
operations were of short
2003, to bulbs showing hisNationally. AAA found the · duration and will not have a
toric buildings now being
average price for a gallon of lasting effect on ·gasoline
· sold by the association. was
gas is $1.45 this week.
prices in the weeks ahead,"
suggesled.
Higher
prices
were said Bevi Norri s, AAA repexpected due to
the resentative in Pittsburgh.
Please see Contest. AJ

Zippy' finds new home at post office

Staff report

'

.

Please see Mt~lp. AJ

BY CHARLENE HoEFLictt
Staff writer

.

Index

missioners will back down and kick in
the money they want, but in most of
these cases, there is no additional
money to appropriate," Long said.
In August, Trussell asked the commissioners for an additional appropriation of $244,488 to cover salaries for
the ·remainder of the year, housing,
food and medical costs for prisoners,
auto · maintenance and repair, and
·
office supplies.
Meigs County commtsstoners
appropriated $596,000 for Trussell 's
operations in January, and insist they
have no additional funds to appropriate this year.
"The commissiontrs' job is to keep
all county offices open at an appropriate level as best they can afford,"

Merchants
will join
decorating
contest

·v-

"This is a great opportunity for anyone with a
small child to ·ensure their
car seats are installed properly," said Lt. Richard
Grau. commander ·of the
pptrol's G- M Post. "With
eo;er-increasing
traffic
crashes and traffic fatalities
io Meigs County, it pays to
ensure your infant or toddler is given every chance
to avoid being injured or
worse in the event of a traffic crash."

lions through year's end.
"We're having a lot of problems
with balancing county budgets," Long
said . "The sheriff's department seems
to be of particular concern in many
counties because it tends to get a bigger share of the county's budget than
any other department lo begin with."
"In many cases," Long said, "sheriffs know early on thai they will experience budget problems before the end
of the ye!lr. but they .don't take pru~ent management action to try to prevent the problem.
"The sheriffs can usually projeCt
income and expenditures for the year,
btit in many cases, are forced al the
end of the year to take drastic . cuts
which mi~ht, in the end, threaten public safety; ' he added.
"The sheriffs often think their com-

GALLIPOLIS
Southern Ohio motorists are
digging · deeper into their
pockets this week when they
pull into local gas stations
for a fill-up .
AAA of South Cs:ntral
Ohio reports the average
price of regular. unleaded
self-serve gas increased
agam, with this week's

.

change amounting lo 6.5
cents.
The current average price
of a gallon of gas is $1.46.
The average price last week
was $1.40.
The lowest price in AAA's
survey of regional cities
could
be
found
at
Washington Court House
with $1.34 per gallon.
Gallipolis came in second at
$1.39.
·

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Located · west of Holzer.Medical Center

SENIOR CARE
Discover the Holzer Difference
wwW' .hqlzer.org

.

Jackson Pike
(

·?

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