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SundaY. October 20, 20112

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis. Ohio • Point Pleasant. WV

••

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..- :1••

........ aoss country previews, 11

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Melp County's Hometown Newspaper
·~' J r ;·n t•. • Mrn~rl.1y Orfofwr 11 JfJIJJ. • VHI \~ . N11 111

0

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Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

New Bald Eagle license plates show patriotism

_OCTOBER 24, 25 ·&amp; 26

•
BY CHARLEN. Ha.FUCH

News editor

Weather
High: 50s, Low: 40s

Details. Al

Deaths
Cind~
Cook &amp; Cashier

Office Mgr. &amp;

Night Shill Manager

Pauline J. Tillis, 78
Hilda McGirr, 78
Freda Carpenter, 76
Kenard Puntv

Rh~Od(~9re

ThomPson
Cashier

Coole fi 'C..hlar

Cook

·

Bookkeeper

Details. A3

Election letter
deadline

Debbie Michaels
Caahler. ,

Cook &amp;

~

~Iff

Coca Cola
Every Day Low Price

'--------..$299

·uus18f 1

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Gallon- United

· IIJTWUBST

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Octeller 25111
hm 11JM ·li'M
sreve Evans Sausage

$239

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BISCUit

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Comei•••,JIIiW~
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WIN I PRIZEII · ·

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281FIEEIII.I

t:1111s &amp; p1111

~2

Pack Can

of 2006 will sponsor a basket
bingo game at FeeneyBennett Post, American
Legion, Middleport. $20 will
purchase 21 games, with one
.llasket given away per game.
Those who wish to purchase
tickets in advance may do so
be seeing any freshmen or
calling the school at 9853329.
.

Thlltsllal
.~ oz. bag, 6 flavors

*799

Mr. ......

$499

16 oz. 6 pack

' ,• I

CJilpS

24 pk. cans

$999

12 pk. cans 8599

12-oz.

GEM:Beverages

Suitcase

Two Liter

Natural
Ligh· -·

Pepsi&amp;
....... to'

Mt. Dew
SJ09

Please see SHS. A3

Index
2 Section - 12 Paps

Calendar
· Classifieds
Comics
De1.1r Abby
Editor-ials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

:,
..

"1~·

29'

.

$979

~/Sij99 .

20 oz. bottle

2199'

Local model railroad enthusiasts set up displays, like this one reminiscent of Middleport, in
the old C&amp;O Freight Station during a Saturday festival to raise funds and .awareness for a
local committee's efforts to restore the train station. (Brian J. Reed)

RC Cola

2199~

GEM Beverages

.

· W.VA.
Daily 3: 3-2-4
Daily 4: 8-4·5·2
Cash 25: 3-4-13-14-23·25

Every Day Low Price
12 Pack Cans

SKI&amp;
Cream Soda

Budweiser
&amp;
·Bud Light
Old Milwaukee .
&amp; Old Milwaukee Light

• •),· •

2 Liter Bottle

12 Pack Can

' *829

' •., '&gt; '•.

While standing in front of
the
newer bleachers, Principal
Staff writer
Gordon
Fisher said, 'Two
'
·•
years ago I the "Front Row"
RACINE - Southern High (25 die hard fans that sit in the
School is geniilg new bleach- front row) was' sent crashing
ers for its gymnasium, and for to the floor during a basket- ,
Superintendent Bob Grueser • ball gall)e after the bleachers
it's about time.
collapsed under them.
There are currently bleach"Nobody was hurt thank
ers on both sides of the . goodness, but they could have
gym- wooden ones on the been."
west side that were installed
Grueser showed the sharp
in 1962 and were used from edges on the end of the
Ohio University's Grove bleacher sections. "It's amazCenter, and 20-year-old ing no one has run into them,"
bleachers on the other side.
Grueser said. "Someone can
Ike Spencer, head custodian really get hurt."
for the school , said that the
Another concern was the
older bleachers couldn't be movement. The bleachers
closed properly in olle section sway horizontally and verti·
because they won't lay flat cally, according io Grueser,
and then: are broken steps and when people walk on them.
There -are no ais les, no hand ·
seats. ·
"People have gotten splin- r&lt;1ils and there are 36 broken
ters on these," Grueser said ·support angles.
pointing to the west.
"When you step on one end
· But splinters are the least of
Grueser's worries.

ot'IIO
Pick 3: 9-5-4
Pick 4: 3·6· 3-6
Buckeye 5: 18·27·31-35-37
Pick 3 night: 2-3-4 .
Pick 4 night: 5-2·3-3 · ·

·'

Miller Lite

sa•• ·

I

'

Lotteries

Potato
..

Southem High
School to et
new bleac ers
BY KRIS DoTSON

MIDDLEPORT

IIIILYssc

!P epsi
Cube

Miller Lite

Festival promotes s.aving old depot

Eastern High School Cta,ss

~

Limit One

.

Bingo planned

TlchiSJ·
..'
; 'f'

•·

.

RACINE - The Village
of Ra9ine is applying for
. $375,000 through the Ohio
Public Works Commission
for its new water treatment
facility. The figure was
reported incorrectly. ·

, 'r·f ~.ac .

sausau•.··:

POMEROY -Two prominent symbols of America the flag and the eagle- have
been brought together in a
· redesign of the Bald Eagle
license plates which went on
sale last month. .
After the attack on the
World Trade Center, Rep.
Robert
Latta
(R-Wood
County) suggested to the
Ohio Bureau of Motor
. Vehicles a design change to
include both the eagle and the
American flag. Through his
. efforts , the BMV . and the
Department
of 'Natural
Resources, the change was
· made.
Last week Sue Maison,
deputy registrar, became the
first to purchase the new
plates from the Meigs BMV ·
office. ' ·
· Displaying her new red,
. white and blue plates which
are marked "1803 Ohio
Bicdntennial 2003" across the
top, Maison explained that

there has been Bald Eagle
plates since 1999, but without
the flag or mention of the
state's"200th bir!hday.
For the nine months of
1999 when the eagle license
plates were available to the
public 2,985 were sold. In
2000, 8,446 of the plates were
sold, and last year 11,548
Bald Eagle Plates were sold.
"Every time Bald Eagle
plates are sold," said Maison,
"a portion of the money ($15)
goes to support Bald Eagle
management programs, habitat restoration and acquisi tion.
"A ·standard issue Bald
Eagle plate costs ~ additional $25 annually. If the plate is
personalized, it costs $35, but
purchasers need to remember
that when they pay the extra .
cost. they are contributing-to
preservation of . the eagle
along with conservation practices."
She noted that over the past
several years the new eagle · Sue ·Maison, deputy registrar for Meigs County, puts a new Bald Eagle license plate on her vehl·
plates have brought in
cle. She was the first person to purchase the special plates from the Meigs License Bureau .
Part of the cost goes into preservation of the eagle . (Charlene Hoeflich)
Please see EaKle. Al

Coraeclion

.$J39

Oll199C

,

l

Orange Juice

2/·S
aEil. .. .!l:lf . ..

,

-s

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Half Gallon - United

October 25th Only!

. . . f'

The deadline for submitting letters regarding the
Nov. 5 general election is 5
p.m. Friday, Oct. 25. No
letters re~arding election
issues will be accepted
. after that date.
Letters must be 300
words or less and address
campaign issues, not personalities. Letters that
exceed the 300-word limit
will not be printed.
The last day that letters
regarding the election will
be printed in the paper is
Sun!lay, Nov. 3.

Caahlilr . ,;. .

Cashier

c·•.f

12 Pack Cans

www.myd.ulyu•ntuU"I .&lt;cun

AS
B3-S

B6

AS

A4
A3
A3
B 1-3
A2

0 :2002 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

••'J•

Beth Stivers of Middleport entertains the crowd with Duke Ellington's "Caravan" at a
Saturqay festival centering ilround the old C&amp;O Freight Depot. (Brian J. Reed)
.

Head custodian Ike Spencer attempts to close a broken sec.
tion of the bleachers at Southern High School. The bleachers
were purchased used in 1962. (Staff)

.

'

••

;., '

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�Tuesday, Ocl 22

l uanofillcl lw153' I •

•

•

() ---~-·~·
r......,
CI:Wy

-

Riio

flrllll

Snow

1co

Mostly dear weather . expected

,,.

• Weather Forecast
Toda:y... Mostly cloudy this
--lrnorning .. .Then
becoming
partly cloudy. Highs 55 to 58.
Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tonight...Mostly clear with .
patchy dense fog develop~ng
late. Lows near 40. Calm
winds.
Extended Forecast
Tuesday... Patchy dense fog
until
mid-morning ... Then
mostly sunny. Highs in the
lower 60s. North winds 5 to
10 mph.
Tuesday
night. .. Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 40s.
· Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s.

Monday, October 21, 2002

Moflcbly, Odabw :u, 1002

Obituaries

Issue 1.backers, opponents to start running TV ads

Ohio weather

Sumv Pt. Clol.&lt;!y

PageAl

-Ohio

-The Daily Sentinel

..

Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. A slight chance Of
rain late. Lows near , 40.
Chance of rain 20 percent:
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of rain. Highs
in the upper 50s.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
a chance of rain. Lows in the
lower 40s and highs in the
upper 50s.
Saturday... A slight chance
of showers during the
day... Otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s and
highs in the mid 50s.
Sunday:.. Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs in the mid 50s.

'Taking a spin

COLUMBUS (AP) · Backers of Issue I, who had
considered pulling the plug
on their cam{'aign, said they
will begin wring television
commercials this week promoting the drug-treatment
ballot initiative.
The decision means the
Ohio Campaign for New
Drug Policies, which is
behind · the Nov. 5 ballot
issue, won't run commercials that undercut Gov. Bob
Taft.
The . campaign threatened
to run "issue advocacyN ads
against Taft, a Republican
who it has accused of corrupting the ballot-initiative
process, after polls showed
support for the Issue I was
lacking. Taft's team has
denied that accusation.
His Democratic opponen~.

Tim Hagan, said last week jail to certain drug offenci_that he would not support ers, is supported by only
Issue I running ads in the about 30 percent of likely
governor's
race,
even voters.
though Hagan does not have
But Orlett said internal
enough money for his own polling shows that the race
TV commercials.
IS not lost. However, he
Ed Orlett, the Issue I cam- declined to disclose the
·paign director, said Saturday results of those polls.
.·
that TV airtime to promote
"Our campaign is still a
the initiative had been horse race," Orlett said.
reserved in Youngstown and
Ohioans Against Unsafe
commercials were to begin Drug Laws, the group led by
running there on Tuesday.
Taft to oppose Issue I, is
The campaign still is con- buying airtime in all major
sidering whether to run ads media markets across the
in other major media mar- state to air commercials
kets, he said, and could not beginning late this .week,
say how much money it will said Jenny Camper, a
spend .o n. ads.
spokeswoman for the group.
She wouldn't estimate
Two newspaper polls
show the proposed constitu- how much the group is
tiona! amendment, which spending on TV, but said
would require ·judges to · that the group is confident
offer treatment instead of Issue 1 will be defeated.

Pauline J. Tillis

"We're holding steady,"
said. "We've built a
coalition that is working
hard at a grass-roots level to
show that it's unsafe for the
community."
If Ohio voters approve
Issue I, jud$es would have
to give nonvtolent, first- and
second-time drug offenders
the option of treatment
instead of jail. People who
fail treatment then would be
limited to 90 days in jail.
The initiative would cost
taxpayers $247 million over
seven years, an average of
$35 million a year.
Issue I backers. say the
initiative would save about
$21 million a year because
treatment costs average ·
about $3,500 a year, com- ·
pared wi~ $23,000 a year to .
house an 10mate.
Cam~r

lished Monday.
.
tence, White ordered her to cannot'ignore."
Holmes County «;:ommon cooperate with ' federal,
Miller admitted using the
Pleas Judge Thomas D. state and local authorities drugs Dec. 17 on a mother
White sentenced Miller in on any follow-up investiga- in her care bleeding heavily
May to 360 days in jail, but lions.
after giving birth. Members
he suspended the· sentence
"If I give up the name of. of the Ohio Midwives
in favor of three years of a doctor, is any other doctor Alliance said Miller' s use·
probation. As a condition of going to help a ,midwife? of the drugs probably saved
her probation, Miller was · No, bec~use they d. be too the patient's life.
Lay midwives are not rectold to develop .a protocol scared,- I m alrea~y 10 .t roufor midwives and high-risk ble. I m not go!ng to get ognized by the state of
pregnancies.
som,7body ~lse 10 trouble, Ohio.
Miller pleaded guilty to too, she sat d.
K
J'
·d h 1 h
attempted
unauthorized
"From the start of this
now mg sat w a ap-.
practice of medicine and case, our primary objective pe_n s , next depends on
two counts of possession of was to find out where the Mtller.
came
from," . "!~e goal i~ not t? put her · _
dangerous drugs, all first- drugs
degree misdemeanors. She Assistant
County m Jail, but to get mformaStc;phen tion," Know ling said. "She
had been 'indicted in March . Prosecutor.
on three felony -charges, Knowling said. "Somebody holds the . key.. If she
which were reduced as part is distributing drugs in this · answers the questiOnS, she
of her agreement with pros- county to a person who's can go about her business.
. . .not suppo~ed to have them. If she doesn't a,n swer, there
ecutors,
As part of Miller's sen- That's a situation that we can be consequences."

Freda
Carpenter

PVH·sponsors
.,HaUoween events

DAYION (AP)- A private long haul."
By the end of the year, civil- him as recruiters ·will be reascompany is now handling U.S.
Luedeking said the U.S. ian recruiters will replace sijllled to other recruiting dis- ·
Army recruiting in this area of Congress last year mandated Army recruiters in the 10 Inca- tncts or to combat-related
southwest Ohio as part of ali that the military experiment lions, with MPRI covering fJ.ve duties.
A ceremony formally hand- ·
experinient to see if civilians with hiring private contractors and Resource Consultant Inc.
can be as effective in recruiting to take qver some support of Vienna, Va., handling the ing over the area recruiting staas traditional military person- work so active-duty personnel rest
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lions to MPRI will be held Oct ·
hel. .
could focus on combat-readiLuedeking said the military 28 at the Korean War
· The ·· active duty Army ness duties.
personnel who worked under Memorial in Dayton.
recruiters staffing the seven ,.------~-.;._-~----.;._--------------.

replaced last week by civil-

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1999.

Alexis -Middleton and Damien Marling take a' spin on the Ferris
wheel built for them in Kenton. An old lawn mower engine powers the ride, which includes a seat where Middleton·can watch
rns grandchildren as they_cheer and rotate above the ground in
his backyard . (AP)

"We'.ll be doing the 'same
things we've done all along,"
Jones said. "We're still look- .
ing for kids who are qualified
physically and morally to·
serve \):letr countty. The only
difference is we' If have more
of a chance to become fixtures in the commu=.

Pulse Oxymetry
Provided by
PVH Home Medical
&amp; Continuity of
Care

·- October is

·

· The Daily Sentinel

Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
Our main'.cqnQetf\ if1 ~n stories Is to be Published ·. every , afternoon,
accurate. If you know of an error in .a Monday through Friday, 111 Court ,

FLU SHOTS

Breast Cancer Bring your Medicare
Month .
or Medicaid card
Did you get your

mammogram?

story, call th~ n.WSroom at(740) 992- S1reet. Fooleroy. Ohio. Seoond·
2156.
·
class postage paid al Fooleroy.
·.
Member: The Associated Press

Ciur main number Ia
' (740) 1192-2158.
Department extensions are:

if you plan to get

a flu shot.

News

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 13
Reporter: Agn'es Hapka. Ext. 14
Sports: Derek Taylor, Ext. 14

PARTICIPATING AGENCIES

Bureau of Services for the Vi$ually Impaired
Holzer Medical Center Community Health &amp; Welrness Department
Kinship Navigtor Pro•ram
•
P.
Me1gs County ncer Initiative
.
Meigs County Health Department'
Pharmacia/Upjolin ·
~~~ e~~~~~~g1~'f~eaJ:
PVH Home Medical Continui~ of Care
most of us will be here for the ~--._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _R_S_VP
__
- _H_o_m_e_la_n;,;.d:...:.S.:.ec:.;u:;:r:.;Jty:!.....___________.

Circulation
D!dlcl Mgr.: Mike Jooklns, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

·''

OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
• FREE POPCORN
• FREE COTTON CANDY

Refreshments to Mildred
Hart, Mabel Brace, Linda
Russell, Lois Sterrett,
Kathryn Hart. Janel Theiss.
Blondena Rainer; Edna
Knopp, Thelma Walton ,
Evelyn Foreman, Bernice
Theiss, Hazel McKelvey,
Teaford,
Julie
Mattie
Campbell, Sheila Theis s,
Proffitt,
Lillian
Betty
Hayman, Ruth Simpson,
Martha Lou Beegle, Letha
Proffitt,
and
Shirl ey
Beegle .
Next meeting will be on
Nov. 14 at the church with
Kathryn Hart presenting
the program and Edna
Knopp and Lois Sterrett
having refreshments. · All
area women are invited .

Grange
holds
.meeting
SALEM CENTER
October was the theme for
the program presented by
Lecturer Vicki Smith at the
recent meeting of Star
Grange #778.
Reading s
included
"October Clock" by Opal
Dyer; "Enthusias m" by
Larry
Montgomery ;·
"Ladder of Achievement"
by. Rick Macomber and "A
Prayer for Today" by
Smith. The origin of
Halloween was explained
by Smith and a skit
"Missing Husband " . was
performed by Maxine Dyer
and Janis Macomber. A cat
quiz was enjoyed by everyone.
Master Patty Dyer conducted the meeting with
Janet Morris, women's .
activities chairman' thank - ·
ing thos.e who helped with
the ABC quilts.
··
Janis Macomber, community service chairman,
announced
Make
a
Difference Day in October.
Items will be collected at
State Grange session at the
Kings Island Inn nea,l'
Cincinnati to be given to a
food pantry in Warren
County.

•

the

Ohio ·

Newspaper

Association.
.
Poalmaster: Send address correc·
lions to The . Daily Sentinel, 111
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769.

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Subscrlpllon Rates
By carrier or motor route

E-nwll:
newsOmydailysentinel.com

Gwinnie White, Holzer.
POMEROY
2:09 p.m., West main St.,
Opal Morris, treated.
:
REEDSVILLE
.
12:11 a.m., Number Nine:
Rd., Richard Smith, treated.
TUPPERS PLAINS
2:14 p.m., Eastern High
School, . · Yoga Mactreger.·
O'Bleness
Memoria[
Hospital.

JCPenney
catalog

IIERDWIT STOU HJt-J
338 2nd AYenue
Gallipolis,. DH 4563 1

(740) 446-!515
Mett-Sat IH

Eagle ·
from PapAl
$492,900 with that money
being used to restore and purchase bald eagle habitats.
According to Sam Speck,
Ohio
director · of the
Department
of Natural
Resources, Ohio's eagle population has reached record

numbers. He attributes this in
part to the contributions from
the sale of the license plates
· which have given the ODNR
additional money for conservation programs. ·
The plates can be pur· chased al the Meigs County
License Bureau on Main
Street in Pomeroy or they can
be ordered on-line or by telephone,
1-888-PLATES3,
from the office of the .
Registrar of Motor Vehicles
Frank Caltrider in Columbus.

Mall Subacrlptlon
Inside Meigs County
· 13 Weeks .. .. . . ... ....'30.15
26 Weel&lt;s .. ...........'60.00
52 Weeks ...••... .. ..'118.80

Rat• Outalde Meigs County
13 Weel&lt;s ... , .........'50.05
26 Weel&lt;s ...•. . .. .. ..'1 00.10
52 Weel&lt;s ..••....... .'200.20

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
§ubscribe today. ...
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Subscribers should remit iq
Outolde S.!ea: Jessica Evans, Ext. 16 advance direct to The Dally
Clllu.JC!rc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
Sentinel. No subscription by mail
C1101.1Ctrc. : Cynthia Swisher, Ext. 11 ·permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

_.

PRE-TRICK OR TREAT CELEBRATION

sonshine
Circle plans
holiday trip

Ambulance calls

Community Information and Wellness Day

of I0 locations nationwide
participatlna In the five-year
experijnent.
Capt. Thnothy Luedek:inA
said be and his staff of 50
active-duty recruiters last
week turned over control of
recruiting stations to Military
Professional Resources Inc., a
private company based in .
Alexandria, Va.
Exeept for wearing civilian
Provided by
clothing instead of military
Holzer Medical Center
uniforms, the recruiters probCommunity Health
ably won't operate much differently than they have in the
and Wellness
• past.
"The transition has . been
going very smoothly," said
Ernest li!Zlder, MPRI's manager for the Dayton area.
GET THE LATEST
"We~ve got one former Navy
INFORMATION ON:
recruiter, one Marine and two
Air Force, but most of the • West Nile Virus
people working for us have • Cardiovascular Health
been Army recruiters in the
• Arthritis-Information
past."
Robert Jones, MPRI's company training manager for the
Dayton area, was an Army
recruiter before retiring in

Hilda McGirr

Local Briefs

Kenard Punty

U.S. Army turns recruiting over to p-rivate company

t"~'\h~ ::"'!!

Police hunting for the
sniper sutTOund·white
van
. in Virginia

Deaths

The Dally Sentinel• Page-A3

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
RUTLAND Pauline
June Tillis, 78. of Rutland, - Hilda Irene McGirr, 78,
passed away Friday, Oct. 18, diep Saturday. Oct. 19, 2002
2002, at her residence in ·at her home in Huntington,
W.Va.
Rutland, Ohio.
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) Monday, keeping more than
RACINE_ A tour of the
.
She
was
born
Aug.
l
,
. Born Dec. 13, · 1923. at
Authorities searchinjl for the 200,000 public students out holiday lights in Wheeling
Rutland, she was a daughter 1924 in Huntington. daugh- Washi~on-area
. ht smper
lored sur- of class "based on the volume was planned when · the
of the · late William .and ter pf the late John E. and round
van of parent and community Sonshtne Circle met at
a Itg -co
Nellie Mae Thomas McGirr. Moriday in the suburbs west concern."
Madge (Romine) Haley.
Dorcas Bethany Church
Services will be held at I Of here.
She was a homemaker and
In Ashland, · Randolph- recently.
member of the Hysell Run p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 23,
Police in Hanover
College
also
Those In
· tereste d 10
· gomg
·
·h ·County,k Macon
Holiness Church in Pomeroy. 2002 at Fogel song-Tucker w h ere the Iatest s ootiOg too ·announced it would cancel are . asked to contact Lois
She is survived by six sons Funeral . Home in Mason place, told reporters that the classes on Monday. The Sterrett at 949-0032. The
van had been stopped along
and daughters-in-law, John W.Va., with Rev. Greg Broad
St. a major conunercial school, with 1, 100 students, is deadline for reservations is
Collins
officiating.
Burial
and . Donna
Tillis
of
aboui a mile from the latest Nov. 12.
,
Middleport, Danny and · will follow at Gravel Hill Street.
h
A
.
The van was at a service s noting.
· repon was gtven on t he
S~u.ndra and Jeff and Debby Cemetery in Cheshire.
In other developments:
recent trip to the Amis.h
Friends may call at the station, parked next to an out·Ttlhs, all of Rutland, Tini and
door
phone.
France
has
alerted
country.
It was noted that
Dennis
Tillis both of funeral home from 6 to 8
· "It was specific enough to Interpol about a French army the bake sale held in
·
Pomeroy, and MichaeJ Tillis p.m. on Tuesday.
be
a suspect vehicle in all the deserter who is known as a September brought · in
of Langsville; two d;mghter
cases,"
said Lt. Doug marksman and is missing in $1 , 161 which is being
and sons~in-law, Peggy and
Goodman
of the Hanover North America. A Defense added to the treasury for
Earl DeWees of Mason,
the group's project work.
SYRACUSE Kenard County SherifFs Del:artment. Ministry spokesm.a n said The
W.Va., and Susie and ' Bob
Circle also won $50
I
Th
d
e eve opment ppened there was speculation of a for first place float in
Roush of New Haven, W.Va.; Punty, Syracuse, died at his
d
a f ter link to the sniper inves.tiga- Racine's Fall Festival.
a twin sister, Kathleen Tillis residence on Sunday, Oct. I ess I·h·an · two
ed alcs
·
th
au
ontles
tssu
a
p
ea
to
·
of Rutland; 15· gtl!Ddchildren 20, 2002. Arrangements are ·
,A · the
th tion.
It was voted to purchase a
h
I
ft
- Matthew M. · Dowdy, divider screen for the social
under the direction of Fisher. person w o e a no... at e
and 11 great :grandchildren.
k d hooting who was accused of lyt'ng to
f
In addition to her parents, Funeral Home and will be ·scene
·ts'd o a pweed en s
room an d to purchase a unirestaupolice· by descn'bm
' g a cream- &amp;.orm f or s outhern High
she was preceded in death by announced when completed. on 1· e Aa hi ond erosa
&amp;
mil
a daughter. Denise Tillis; two
rant
10 s an • a ,ew
es
colored
van
with
a
burned-out Sc hoo1 B an d· . A constgn·
north of Richmond.
sisters, Bernice Nelson and
In a brief but dramatic news taillight at the scene of last ment sale to be held by the
Dorothy Archer; three brothconference late Sunday, week's shooting in Falls · Methodist
men
was
ers, William (Lafe), Marvin
police urged whoever left the Church, was denied baildur- announced for Nov. 2.
and Lawrence (Dink) Haley;
note . at the scene of ing a hearing Monday.
Anyone wishing to consign
STIVERSVILLE -- Freda
and foUl' grandchildren,
Saturday's shooting to call
Surgeons
succeeded items to the sale are asked
Panny Mathew, · Justin, M. Carpenter, 76, of them. The attack critically Sunday night in removing the to contact Dick Sterrett.
Stiversville
community,
""Cynthia and Zachary Tillis.
wounded a man.
bullet from the 37-yeiu--old
Numerous cards were
Services are 11 a.m, died Friday, Oct. 18, 2002 at
'"We do want to talk to man shot in Ashland and sent to the ill, discouraged
Monday at Hysell Run her residence.
you,"
said Charles Moose, turned it over to investigators and bereaved in the comMemorial services will be
Holiness Church m Pomeroy
police
chief of Maryland's for testing.
. ..
munity.
Lois Sterrett
with Pastor Mark Michael conducted at a later date.
Montgomery
County
.
a
nd
a
The
victim,
~whose
name
opened
the
meeting with
There are no calling hours.
officiating.
Burial will be at Miles Burial will be at Stiversville leader in the sniper investiga- was not released, remained in ·· scripture from · Psalm 24: 1tion.
·
critical
condition
early 2 and I Samuel 2:7. She
Cemetery.
Cemetery in Rutland.
The message left at the Monday after six hours of also read an article of a
Funeral arrangements are
Friends may call from 2 ro
- the ·
th
gentle reminder "What It
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. today under the direction of the scene was ano r stgn at surgery. Doctors were cau- Means to Be Poor."
was related to tiously optimistic about his
at Birchfield Funeral Home Cremeens Funeral Home in the shooting
·
tta ks · 11
The group received thank
the smper
RaCine.
peorecovery
but
s•;d·
he
would
a
c
on
in Rutland.
1
·
f tall
·
h
~
you card s and donations
10
pte, mne a
Y• Oct.t 2e need more. surgery.
f rm:p I h e Doug c·trc 1e
- Paid notiee
Wiashingt
· A · · th on area
smce
·
'""'hese
are
very
sen
'ous
F
·
h ·
'
ariu'I y
and
Shunted
·s 10 e prevtous s ootmgs, injuries and he will have a Cunningham Carpenter. A
. ~~t~ictim was felled by one bumpy road, but in the end, I thank you card was read
A law enforcement source think he wiU come through," from Marvin and Eleanor
dose to the investi~on told Dr. Rao lvatury, director of Mckelvey.
The Associated
ss that trauma at MCV ·Hospitals,
Ann Boso and Peggy Hill
investigators believe the per- said Monday. He: said doctors presented the program.
son who left the message is ..had to remove his spleen and Peggy read "Legend of
probably the sni{'Crparts of his pancreas and Johnny Appleseed." Ann
'
POINT PLEASANT
popcorn. Local radio station, CSchool offictals in the stomach, adding that the bul- read on the versatility of
Pleasant Valley . Hospital, in 98 'The Bull" will also be pre- · Ashland and Richmond areas Jet "almost ripped his stom- apples and each member
conjunctiof.l. .with .. the .Pleasant sent with 11 live remote. For of Vu-ginia d~ided to close ach apart."
·
was given articles on the
nutrient content of im apple
Valley Hospital Auxiliary, will more information about this
and a list on the variety of
be sponsonng two collliiiWiity event call 304-372-7424.
apples
and their uses.
pre-Halloween events in New
The second -event will &lt;iccur
They
.
allow
for
handiHaven aiKI Ripley..
on Thursday, October 31, .from
capped seating, corrie with a
'This is an ppportunity for 5:30 to 7 p.m at the office of
scorer's table and will be colseveral of our Sjlteflite offices to Walter E. Dial; MD, a family
ored purple and gold. They
frumPapA1
be more involved in communi- pmctitioner. The address of the
will have handrails in the
ty activities/' said Amy J. .office is 138 Main Street in
Leach, director of madreting ....... Ha
Gifts
and public relatio'ns at 1'1easaht . ''"w
ven..
and treats of the bleacher," h~ said, "the aisles as well as on the sides
and the seats are made of
Valley Hospilal. "We wish will . also be provi~ to the o~er end g?Cs up..
POMEROY - Units of
everyone a safe Halloween and pub~ and WBYG Btg ~untry
One senous ~nJury ~ou!d polyethylene plastic and are
Meigs
Emergency Services
contoured.
When
they
are
.
hope the public enjoys getting 99 -:vm be ~ For infor~cry costly wtth the liabilto meet the fe8ni menibers of · mauon about this event call , tty tssue, but more of a con- folded it will say "SHS", the answered the following calls
for assistance on Sunday:
these offices." . · . . ;
304-~82-3134.
i cern is the. possibility of school's signature logo.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
The
manufacturer
is
The first event \Vill tal(e ~ · ?-dul18 and children are someone gettin~ hurt.. I mean
12:53 a.m., T.R. 147,
on Wednesday,• October 30, . encouragedtowearcos~at , .. how could we: livewtth our- Hussey Ble~her Company
Darslt. Pleasant
Samson
from 5 to 7 p.m. at !1\!l Southern both events. In recogrutiOQ of selves knowmg that they and Farnham :Equipment
Valley
Hospital;
Jackson Councy RehaDilitation '. Breast · Cancer . Awareness were unsafe and. we could Company will install them.
7 p:m., Holzer Meigs
Center, 628· South Church Month, all women attending have .d?,ne somethmg to pre"The new bleachers will
Mary Francis, Holzer
Clinic,
Street (across from Hardman's either event will have the vent 11.
.
cost $59,000 and will be
Center; •
Medical
Po-It ~). The public can ·~ty to register to win a
Grueser satd that th~nks ~o funded through the remain"
7:06 p.m., Maple St.,
visit the facility .with their chi!- · ·free · mammogram, compli- the ~chool board passmg hts ing construction funds,"
dren and get free reflective trick ments of Pleasant Valley mot10n to purchase new Grueser said.
J)I' treat bags. cottQII candy and . ·Hospital Radiology Senices.
bleachers; the safety _factor
"We are scheduled to have
'
would no longer be an tssue.
The new bleachers are them delivered between Nov,
called electric telescopic 18-22 and hope to have the
bleachers, meaning· you no project completed by Dec. 2 longer have to hand-pull - before the fJ.rst home basReader Services · .. . (USPS 213-960)
ketball game."
them in and out.

Convicted midwife asked to supply drugs' source
MILLERSBURG (AP) A lay midwife convicted
about five months ago of
. practicing ll)edicine without
a license and possessing
dangerous
drugs
has
refused to disclose the
source of the drugs.
Frieda Miller, 47, of
Berlin Township, is due
back in Holmes County
Common Pleas Court on
Wednesday and risks being
jailed for refusing to tell
who gave her the prescription drugs Pitocin and
Methergine, which she illegally administered De~ . 17
to try to halt a mother's
bleeding after childbirth.
Before giving up the
name, "I will go to jail,"
Miller told The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer in a story pub-

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

• FREE REFLECTIVE HALLOWEEN BAGS
I LIVE REMOTE WITH "BIG COUNTRY 99.5"

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PLEASANT
VALLEY,
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The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinel

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___
Th_eD_ail....;;....y_se_ntin_ei_ ____;B~f

Page A4-·
Monday, October 21 ; 2002 -

Family's nurturing
love allows nephew to ·
grow fat and lazy

- ~-"-~---~-~----------~

·
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX. (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
_.,
Den Dickerson
Publisher .
BeHe Pearce
Managing Editor

... . .•

l

Charlene HoefUch
Editor

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Lerrers ro the editor are welcvme. They Jhould be less than
300 words. All lerters are subject to editing and must be
signed and include addre,-s and telephone number. No
unsigned lerters will be published. Lerters should be in good
taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below are the consenJus of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co. s editorial board.

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unless otherwise n01ed.

NATIONAL -VIEW

More than

enough

TODAY IN HISTORY

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IRAQ

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PERKIN'S VIEW

0

Meeting with the enemy

'

Jim McDermott, D11vid · Bonior and
· Mike Thompson returned this week
from an excellent adventure in
Baghdad, where the three Democratic
lawmakers were all-too-pliant guests of
Saddam Hussein's governmept.
Reps. ,McDermott, D-Wa., Bonior, DMich., and Thompson, D-Calif., dared
• The Times Herald-Record, Middletown, N.Y., on ·
not insult their host by asking him, say,
smallpox vaccination: The Unjted States has more than
why he continues to develop chemical,
enough smallpox vaccine to protect every man, woman and
biological and ""clear weapons. Or
child in the country in the event of a terrorist attack.
why the Iraqi despot pays $25,000 to
That 's becau.se of 86 million doses, which had been .stored
the relatives of Palestinian suicide
(and alrhost forgotten) in a walk-in freezer in a Pennsylvania
bombers.
Instead, they concentrated their critimountainside since the 1970s. The government says tests have
shown these' doses can be diluted in a 5-to-1 ratio and still be
cism on President Bush, whom they
effective. That would provide more than 400 million dgses to' · accused . of provoking war with Iraq
go with 75 million already on hand - a healthy supply.
despite Saddam's gracious assurances
.The questions about whether anyone would actually use
that his regime is hapPy to welcome the
smallpox as· a weapon and how efficiently vaccines could be
return of United Nations weapons
. provided to the general population in the event of an attack are
inspectors.
important because the smallpox vaccine is not a benign agent.
While enjoying Saddam's hospitality,
Advance preparation and the development of millions more
McDermott charged that "the president
smallpox doses for immediate use are prudent· and laudable.
would mislead the American people" to
build support for military action against
Smallpox is one of history's most horrible diseases. Offering
a vaccine to health-care and emergency workers who warit it
Iraq.
makes sense. But if the government wants to offer it to all280
Bonior blamed the United States for
million Americans before any attack, it needs to make sure .
"trying to push and dictate" the terms of
everyone understands the ri sks entailed in receiving the vacIraq's disarmament. He suggested that
cine as compared to the risk of actually being attacked. That
the Bush administration, rather than
will allow people to make informed decisions in consultation
Saddam's government,. represented the
with doctors.
rogue regime.
The borderline traitorous conduct by
McDermott and Bonior precipitated
•
much sound and fury on Capitol Hill.
But no lawmaker was more furious than
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who is no
toady for the Bush White House, no
knee-jerk ~epublican partisan.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS·
"If Congressman McDermott and
Today is Sunday, Oct. 20, the 293rd day of 2002. There are
Congressman Bonior wanted to go to
72 days left in the year.
· . t
the floor of the House and question the
Today's Highlight in History :
president's credibility," said McCain,
On Oct. 20, 1973, in the so-called "Saturday Night
"go right ahead and do it."
Massac re," special Waterg'ate prosecutor Archibald Cox was
But, he added, "don't go to Ba~hdad
dismissed and Attorney General Elliot L. Richardson and
and
do it. You are helping the lraqt govDeputy Attorney General William B. Ruckelshaus .resigned.
On this date:
·
In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.
In 1892, the city of Chicago dedicated the World's
Columbian Exposition.
In 1903, a joint commission ruled in favor of the United
States in a boundary dispute between the District of Alaska
·
·
and Canada.
In 1944, ® ring WWII, Gen. Douglas MacArthur stepped
ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, 2 1/2 years after he'd said,
"I shall return."
·
.
By Joan Ryan
In 1947, the House Un-American Activities Committee
When
Marisa
Mariposa Garcia was
opened he'!rings into alleged Communist influence and infilbooked on murder charges into Marin
·
. tration within the American motion picture industry. . ·
Jail last month, her 3-year-old
County
In 1964, the 31st president of the United States, Herbert
lay .in the coroner's office, dead
daughter
Hoover, died in New York at age 90.
·
·
from
asphyxiation.
In 1967. seven men were convicted in Meridian, Miss., of
Garcia was, by all accounts, a loving
violating the civi·l rights of three civil rights workers who were
trying to cope with her mental illmother
murdered.
·
ness.
She
had checked herself into a Sill~
In 1968, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy married
Francisco hospital in the early morning
Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.
hours of April 9 and told doctors she had
In 1977, three members of the rock group Lynyrd Skynyrd
killed
her daughter. Police found the
were killed in the crash of a ch,utered plane near McComb,
girl's
body
at the Acqua Hotel in Mill
Miss.
Valley.
In 198 1, three members of the radical Weather Underground
Authorities aren't saying yet what
were arrested followin g a bungled armored truck robbery in
drove
Garcia to kill her 3-year-old that
~oc~N . Y
.
day.
But
no one is denying she is a sick,
Ten years ago: The host Toronto Blue Jays defeated the
distraught, suicidal woman who needs
Atlanta Braves.• 3-2 in game three of the Wo~ld Series, taking
acute psychiatric care as she awaits trial.
a 2- 1 lead. (Thts was the first World Series game to be played
So why is she languishing in the counoutside the United States. During the pre-game ceret:nony, a
ty jail, which is not equipped to treat
. Marine color guard presented the Canadian flag correctly, two
someone as apparently seriously ill as
days after another guard held the banner upside-down before
she is? Why was she, early on in her stay,
game two.)
relegated to a padded cell during the day
Five years ago: Hungarian-born U.S. financier and philanand sent to sleep in a regular cell at night
thropist George Soros announced he would donate as much as
when even the county medical staff
$500 million in aid to Russia over the next three years. Mir
acknowledges she clearly needed, and
· cosmonauts performed history 's first "internal spacewalk"
still needs, to be in a mental health facil(because of the· need for spacesuits) to restore power to the
ity?
·• tla maged Spektr module of the space station .·
Because for the past four months,
. One year ago: During a visit to 'Shanghai, China, .President
Bush. challenged Asian leaders to help ~·s ave the civilized
Marin County - .like Sonoma, Napa.
Mendocino, Lake and Solano counues
world" by joining his war against terrorism. ·Officials
- has had no place to send its psychiannounced that anthrax had bee n discovered in a House postal
a~c inmates.
facility on Capi tol Hill.
1\ll stx counties had contrl)Cts with
Today 's Birthdays: Dancer Fayard Nicholas is 88.
Glenn Dyer Detentfon Facility in
Columnist Art Buchwald is 77. Actor William Christopher is
70. Actor Jerry Orbach is 67 . Country singer Wanda Jackson
· Oakland. But new state regulations is 65. Actor Earl Hindman is 60. Singer Tom Petty is 52.
ironically intended to improve inmate
Actress Melanie Mayron is 50. Baseball All-Star Keith
care - forced the closure of the faciliHernandez is 49. Actor Viggo Mo11ensen is 44. Rock musician
ty's psychiatric ward in January.
Jim Sonefeld (Hootie &amp; The Blowfish) is 38. Rock musician
Alameda County made a deal with John
David Ryan (The Lemon heads) is 38. Rock musician Doug
George Psychiatric Pavilion in San
Eldridge (Oleander) is 35. Rapper Snoop
Dogg
is
3
1.
Leand ro, but the hospital couldn ' t
.
I

Will anyone really ·use smallpox
as a weapon if mass destruction?

i

•'I

.

Jose.J?h
Perkins
COLUMNIST
•

ing danger."
:..,
That's not to say that lawll)a)&lt;ers of ;;
eith~r party are prepared to gtve tlle,q
prestdent a blank check to wage war on-.0
Saddam's regime.
-~
Indeed, even as Congress slouches. ;:
toward adjournment, Senate and House,,,.
leaders are trying to draft language for a ~ :
war rl:!solution that is not only satisfac-',1,
to.ry to the White House, but that also._ 1; ·
engenders broad bipartisan support.
. •~
Meanwhile, ·the Bush admmistration· ~
continues to work diplomatic channel S:~ , ,
af the United Nations. It seeks a tough;'
new resolution along the lines President" ''
Bush enunciated during his speech to.. 11
the General Assembly last month: tha( ':
Iraq "immediately and unconditionally 11
forswear, disclose and .remove or. . ;
destroy all weapons of mass destruc-;,.
tion, long-range
missiles and all related;&lt;
. I,
)..
matena ;
.?
The president also wants · the U.N ..~,
Security Council to authorize the use of. :
force in the even~ .that Sa~dam f\IU,~ t9;;;
adhere to the new resol utton, m·uch as .1.
he ignored 16 previous U.N: resolu-:J"'
lions.
.
·
McDermott and Bonior may nQt want -1
the United States to go to w~r against' !;
Iraq. The congressmen may 'not think: .:
President Bush 'has. · made ·a credible: ::
enough case against Baghdad ".to war-;~
rant congressional and U.N. authoriza-, ~
tion qf military action against Saddam's~~
regime. They .haye every ri ght to.
express those points of view.
"
But they crossed the red, white and' ' '
blue line when they chqse to do so as
the guests of the sworn enemy of the American people.
,.

ernment sell to the Iraqi people their
hatred of the United States of America."
·In an interview broadcast on CNN,
McCain recounted that he had traveled
throughout the world · during Bill
Clinton's stay in the Oval Office. And
while he disagreed with the Democratic
president on a number of issues, "I
never disagreed publicly overseas."
It's an accepted protocol for members
of Congress, McCain explained. "We
don't go to a foreign country" and disparage the president. "Parttcularly an
enemy of the ·United St&amp;tes of
America"'
·
McCain didn 't go so far as to refer to
McDermott and Bonior as "useful
idiots," the term Stalin used to characterize Western pacifists· who unwittingly served his megalomaniacal purposes.
But, clearly, Saddam could have hardly
asked for more support than he received
from the two blame-America-first lawmakers. .
·
Fortunately, McDermott and Bonior
represent the extreme minority viewpoint on Capitol Hill, even among coil' ,,
~ressional Democrats. For lawmakers
(Joseph Perkihs is ti cohm'inist for'""
m both houses and. in both parties agree The San Diego Union- Tribune and can- ·
with President Bush · that Saddam's be
reached
at
regime represents a "grave and gather- Joseph.PerkinsU11ionTrib.com.)

1..

'

Community Calendar

:1·

Public Meetings

'•

When jail plays psychiatrist
accommodate the other five counties.
· (Even Alameda County's inmates have
taken a hit with the new arrangement.
About a third as many inmates receive
acute care now that the jllil has to send
them to an outside facility. "It's the law
of unintended consequences," said
Alameda ·County Health Services
Director Dave Kears.)
So Marin and the other counties have
been scrambling, without success, to find
alternatives. In the meantime, the jails'
small medical staffs are struggling to
manage the best they can.
"It's a real problem right now," .said
Marin Counl)' Public Defender Debra
Leyva, who is representing Garcia.
"When (Garcia) was first arrested, she
would have beep sent to a psychiatric
hospital if there had been a place to send
her to."
Though Garcia is still under 24-hour
suicide watch, Leyva said, "I don't think
she can be cared for appropriately in a
jail setting."
Marin is· not dragging its feet in finding an alternatiye to Glenn Dyer's psychiatric ward. It has been looking for
more than year, But there are 'few choices - for Marin and every other county
in California..(It's no surprise that psychiatrists have dubbed the Los Angeles
County jail system the largest "menial
institution" in the country, with more
than 5,000 mentally ill inmates.)
"Looking at the budget' deficit facing
the state, and seeing how these hospitals
are so expensive, it's not a problem that's
going to go away," said Denni s
Scheuller, commander of the detention
and corrections division in Alameda
County. "It's a real failing in the state to
provide these faciliti(lll ."

I

Dear
Abby

'

j. ·..

RYAN'S VIEW

DEAR ABBY: I read your
column faithfully, and I
respect and trust your
advice. My concern is for a
nephew living with my sister in another state. "Bret" is
19. He lives at home. rarely
leaves the house; and spends
his days in front of the television or· at the computer.
ADVICE
Hi$. weight currently tops
300 pounds. (He's about 5
foot 10.)
·
Cyrus ·someday. However,
Brei dropped out of school these comments have made
at 16 and eventually earned me wonder if he is the right
his G.E.D. He cannot or will person for me. I am not a
not get a job and refuses to spoiled or snobbish person·
go to classes or counseling . who will marry only for
His mother, her boyfriend morley.
·
and two brothers are classic
Should I ask Cyrus to conenablers. They provide him sider finding a part-time
with everything he needs. job? Should I tell ev~ryone
They are literally killing to mind their own business?
him with kindne.ss. .
What should I do? · I am very worried about WILLING IN WHEEL·
Bret and at a loss as to what lNG, W.VA.
I can do, if anything. · Any
DEAR WILLING: Make
· suggestions would be appre- it your business to research
ciated. - FRUSTRATED all the information you can
ON THE WEST COAST
about your boyfriend's conDEAR FRUSTRATED: dition and . how it may
You' re right;' Bret's family impact your future - emojs doing him no favor by tionally and financially.
enabling him.
Love can conquer all; how"
Your nephew needs a ever, it's best to fully underfriend . Make an effort to get stand what to expe,ct before
closer to him, one-on-one, If making a lifetime commit·
it's difficult to visit him in ment.
person., start talking to him
DEAR ABBY: I am 11
online and invite him to years old, Almost every time
come to visit you. If he I go to the store to buy
accepts , try, without being something, someone bugs
pushy, to show him some of me because Tm a kid. A
the possibilities that are couple of weeks ago I was in
availabl~ to him outside his a store and a rude lady
home environment and away decided to get · in front of
from the computer. If you me. She pushed me right out
know people his age, intra- of line . After waiting 15
duce him. It's a start in the minutes, I left. I went home
right direction.
so mad I couldn't believe it.
· DEAR ABBY: I am a 20- If it happens again, whal
year-old college student. I should I do? - A.J.M. IN
have been dating a wonder- AUBURN, N.Y.
·
-ful man I'll call Cyrus for
DEAR A,J.M.: You have
two years. He is sweet, good two choices . One, you can
to me, and I am deeply in defer .to the rude adult and
love with him. Cyrus has chalk it up to the person's
seizures that prevent him lack of manners, or two,
from driving a car or work- speak up and in a loud voice
ing full time. He lives with proclaim_, "Exc~se me!~ was
his· mother and stepfather here
ID
hoe · ftrst."
and receives a monthly dis- 'Sometimes asserting oneself
ability check from the state . can shame the offender into
Wh I 11
1 bo backing off.
.
en te peo.P e a ut
Dear Abby is written by
my relationship wtth Cyrus, Abigail Van Buren,· also
. the first thing out of their
mouths is, "What does he do · known as Jeanne Phillips,
for a livin$7" When 1 and was founded by. her
explain the situation, some mother. Pauline Phillips.
of them turn up their noses Write
Dear Abby at
and say, ."Well, that doesn't www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
soun&lt;l like a very good Box 69440, Los Angeles; CA
90069·
excuse."
Abby, I want to marry

,.. '

.
.

,

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The crunch in the Bay Area· and
California is repeated a hundred times
throughout the United States - and is. •:
getting worse. More state psychiatric' •
hospitals have clqsed in the 1990s than · ~
in the ' 70s and '80s combined. Between
1970 and 1990, there was a decrease of,
14 mental-health hospitals across the, ;,
cbuntry - from 277 to 263. Between,. ,
1990 and 1999,44 state hospitals closed. ··
It's difficult enough for non-criminals·•'&gt;
to .get a bed at a mental-health facility.
Inmates from county jails are not exactly , r
at the top of anybody's list as desirable '
patients.
. . ·
·:
But the need among inmates is partie-" ,
ularly acute. Thirteen percent of i.ncarcerated people in the United States suffer t
from serious mental illnesses compared
to 2 percent in the general population, · '
according to a 2002 report by the "i
Western Interstate Commission on ·:·
Higher Education. Suicide is the leading
cause ofdeath in U.S. jails, and 95 per-)
cent .occur among inmates who have a
treatable mental illness.
Suicide has been extremely· rare in the
Marin County jail. ln the old jail, there · ~
were so few that no one can even
remember them. Since the new jail
opened seven years ago, there had been-, .
JUSt one.
...
~1
On Feb. 28, less than t'wo months after ..~
Marin County ' lost .its contract with
Glenn Dyer Detention, a 36:year-oldi
mother of two named Renee Oatman
was arrested on. a nonviolent otfense and
booked into the county jail. Three days
later, she hung herself in her cell. ·
-''
'

(Joan Ryan is a columnist fo r. tire San r.-.
Francisco Chro?ide. Send comme11ts to-~i
her m care of thzs newspaperor sen{/ her
e-mail at joanryansfgate.com.).•
•

.J

Monday, Oct. 11
LETART - Letan Township
Trustees, 4 p.m. at the office
• building.
Thesday, Oct. ll .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Board of Public Affairs, 5:30 p.m.
at 390 Ash Street. Meeting open to
public.

RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, regular session, tO
a.m. at Racine Vitage Municipal
building.

Thesday, Od. ll
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Area
Holiness Association October

POMEROY
Judge Steven W. · Cooper, Old Au stin
G.
Lawson, ure to control. $20 and
Steven L. Story processed Fields, W.Va., speed, $30 Albany, speed , $30 and costs;
Michael
D.
following
cases and costs; Eddie R. Noel. costs;
Matthew
R . McClain, Nelsonville, seat
the
recently in Meigs County Morgantown,
W.Va ., McPhail,
Lancaster, belt violation, $20 and
Court:
speed, $30 and costs; speed . $30 and costs;' costs; James D. Flinn,
Keven R . Whobrey, Peter P.
Senchyshak, Monte J. Riffle, Pomeroy, Vienna, w.Va., seat belt
Pomeroy, DUI , $850 and' Parkersburg,
W.Va.. stop sign violation, $20 .
.
$
d
costs, three days in jail, speed, $30 and costs; and costs; Joshua A. vw 1atwn, 30 an costs ;
six month license suspen- Kelly
N.
Wakeman ; Hager, Coolville, . speed, Robin L. Kitchen, We st
sion, one year probation , Lancaster, speed, $30 and $30 and costs; Christopher Chester, speed, $30 and
jail and $500 suspended costs; Lewis K. Taylor, E. . Lance, Pomeroy, seat costs, seat belt violation,
upon completion of RTP Pomeroy, speed, $30 and . belt violation, $30 and $30 and. costs.
Matthew D. Keaton.
school, failure to control, costs; ..Tiwothy S. Jackson, costs; Steven H. Cluxton,
$25 and costs; Richard W. Portland, seat belt. viola- ~as hi ngton Courth ouse, Coolville, speed, $30 and
Sandyville, lion, $30 and costs; seat belt violation , $30 costs; Monica M. LondoWithrow,
W.Va:, seat belt violation; Steven
P.
Hoover, and costs; Shelli S. Braxton, Columbia, Md ., ·
$30 and costs; Harley E. Pomeroy, speed, $50 and Hefner, Oak Hill, W.Va., speed, $30 and costs; Paul
Nutt, Logan, speed, $26 costs ; Teresa L. Thornhill , speed, $30 and costs; D. Clay, Syracuse, speed,
J.
Connolly, $30 and costs; Brandon D.
and costs; Mtchael A. Woodstock, failure to con- Glenda
McC loskey,
Gallipolis, trol, $20 and costs; Joseph Syracuse, stop sign violaspeed, costs only; Kevin A. Roberts , Pomeroy, seat tion , $30 and costs; Bohlen ,
Nelsonville,
D. Thoma, Rutland, : no belt violation, $30 and Darrell
L.
Lincoln, speed , $50 . and costs;
· operator's license, $200 costs .
.
Marietta, improper pass- Jeffrey E. Brown, Tuppers
Poling, ing, $20 and costs; Scott Plains, seat belt violation.
and costs, three days in
Willi am . R.
. jail, suspended to one year Gallipolis, seat belt viola- A. Craig, Washington , Pa., $30 and costs; Gordon E.
probation, seat belt viola- tion , $30 and costs; Tara speed, $50.and costs.
Roth, Gallipolis , speed,
tion, $30 and costs; Brad L.
Hawley, Pomeroy,
Faye 0. Westmoreland , $30 and costs; Gary W.
Haggy, Pomeroy, over ~ speed, $30 and costs; Ripley, W.Va., speed, $30 Martin , Charleston, W.Va.,
load , $250 and costs; Clinton · B . He ndricks, and costs, seat belt viola- speed, $30 and costs, seat
Teresa
J.
Russell, Rutland, seat belt viola- tion, $30 and costs; belt violation, 430 and
Gallipolis, DUI, $850 and tion , $30 and costs; ·zachary C. Williams , costs; John R. Young,
W.
Phillips , Pomeroy, speed, $30 and Chester, seat belt violacosts, 90 days in jail, .sus- . Steven
pended to 10, one year Rockbridge, speed, $30 costs; Sean C. Dolby, Sr., .
$
d
30 an
license suspe[\sion, two and costs; Robert E. Day; Newton Falls, seat belt liOn ,
costs;
years probation, driving Pomeroy, speed, $30 and violation, $20 and cost s; Dwayne
A.
Hertzog,
under FRA suspension, costs;
Christina
L. David J.
Pennington, Morgantown,
W.Va.,
$100 and costs, 90 days in Caldwell, Racine, speed, Guysville, speed, unsafe assures! clear distance
jail, suspended to 10, two $30 and costs, seat belt for conditions, $30 and ahead , $20 and costs:
years probation, disorder- violation, $30 and costs; costs; Elisha Amos, Little Leela
M.
Troom ,
ly conduct, costs only, two Brandon C. Lawrence, Hocking, seat belt viola- Middleport, seat belt viadays in jail suspended, New Haven, W.Va., speed, tion , $30 and costs ; lation; $30 and cqsts;
l.)r~O years probation.
$30 and costs; Frederick Jennifer
L.
Skaggs, Jason
Arix,
Chester,
Victor L. Chevalier, Jr., L. . Paine, Jr:, Medina, Gallipolis, speed, $30 and speed, $30 and costs ;
Reedsville, DUI; $750 and speed, $30 and costs; Don costs ; Colin Capshaw, Tammy L. Fryar, Racine,
costs, 10 days in jail, one A. Rice III, Wayne, W.Va, Toledo, equipment viola- failure to display valid
year license suspension, speed, $30 and costs; lion, $25 and costs, failure
one year probation, seat David
B.
Hoffman, to have commercial regis- registration, $20 and
belt violation, $30 and Glenwood, W.Va., speed, tration , $25 and costs; costs.
costs, ! aihtre to display $30 and costs; Harold D. Michael R. Sobieski , Long
Eric M. Runyon, Albany,
rear hght; costs only; Freeman, Westfield, N.Y., Bottoni, DUI, $300 and seat belt violat ion, $30
· Howard E. Hutson, Jr., seat belt violation, $30 costs, 30 days in jail, sus- and costs; Brian T. Taylor,
Parkersburg, W.Va., open and costs; Timothy E. pended to seven, six Pomeroy, stop sign violacontainer, $100 and costs; Walker, Larue, seat , belt months license sus pen- tion, $20 and costs;
Audrey
Hare n~erg, violation, $30 and costs; sion, twp years probation, Regina
L.
Simpson,
Pomeroy, no operator's William
H.
Putnam, seat belt violation , $30 · Middleport·, speed, $30
license, $100 and costs, Boyds; Md., speed, $50 arid costs, reckless opera- and costs ; Debra D.
one year probation ; Victor and costs.
. tion, costs only; Mary L. Hysell, Rutland, speed,
J. Coates, Long Bottom,
Kenton
Williamson, Slack, Parkersburg, W.Va., $ 30
d
Ch · K
an cos 1s; · ns
·
seat · belt violation, $30 Rutland, speed, $30 and seat belt violation, $20
and costs; Shawn D. · costs; Kenneth R. Stutler, and costs.
Wetzel, Vincent, speed,
· , S out h
p omt,
· · Lost cree k , w.va., spee d , c osmtro
· . AI tamuame
·
· , $30 and costs; David R.
M arlin
spee d , $30 an d cos I s; $30 an d cos t s, sea t b e It· R avenswoo d , w. va ., no Sims, Mineral Wells.
Clifford W. Baker, Grove violation, $30 and costs; operator's lice'nse, costs, W.Va., speed, $30 and
Thomas, 30 days in jail, suspended, costs ; Bradley W. Vance,
City, seat belt violation, Marlene
E.
$30 and costs; Darin P. Akron, speed, $30 and two
years probation; Cheshire, seat belt violaLogan, Middleport, speed, costs; Darrin A. Paymer, Remo
R.
Palumbo, tion, $30 and costs;
$30 and costs ; William E. West Chester, speed, $30 Pomeroy, no operator's Stephen M. Muenchn.e ,
Chevalier,
Middleport, and costs ; Meryl F. license, $100 and costs, Okeana, seat belt ;.-iotaspeed, $30 and costs.
· H:oudashelt,
Radcliffe, three days in jail, sus- tion, $30 and costs; Teresa
Thomas H. Collier, seat belt violation, $30. pended, one year · proba- Simpson, Pomeroy, speed,
Radcliff, speed, $30 and and · costs; . David J. tion; Shawn D. Gilmore, $30 and costs; Daniel L.
costs; Bruce D. Pickens, Sonnenberg, Holt, Mich., Racine, two counts of
Portland, seat belt viola- speed, $30 and costs; domestic violence, $100 Perry,
Barboursville,
tion; $30 and costs; Denzil ' Danny E. . Heg:aedahl, and costs on each, 30 days W.Va ., speed, $30 and
E. Lilly, Shade, speed, $30 Floodwood, Minn., speed, in jail, suspended to three costs ; William A. Reeves,
and costs; Susan D. $30 and costs; Rachel L. concurrent, two years pro- Albany, no taillights on
McCombs, Nelsonville, Newell, Mason, W.Va., bation, 1restraining order; vehicle in tow, $20 and
speed, $30 a.n~ costS; speed, $30 and costs; Juanita Green, Shade, fail- cost5.

Support Group, ? p.m. Athens Church
of Christ, 783 West Union St., Athens.
For additional -infor~~~ation call 5_937414.

· Thursday, Oct. l4
CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Baptist Church near Carpenter.
revival services, 6:30p.m.
Thursday through Saturday. Rev.
Mark Morrow evangelist; singers,
Earthen Vessels, Thursday; Rev.
and Mrs. Steve Llttie, Friday, and
local specials, !iaturday. The
Gabriels will be in concert at the
church. at 6:30p.m. Sunday. Rev.
David Wiseman invites public.

Clubs and
Organizations

·Seniors Groups

_,.diiJ, CktOber 21. 2002

Court news

rally. Middleport Church of the
Naurene, 7 p.m. Speaker will be
the Rev. Herb Grate. President
Rev. Allen Midcap invites public.

Saturday; Oct. l6
RUTLAND - Special meeting
CLIFTON - Clifton
of Rutland Village Council. 6:30 Tabernacle gospel sing, 7 p.m.
p.m.• to discuss community crime featuring Detivere4.
watch, delinquent w_ater and sewer
accounts and land slippage behind
DEXTER - Old Dexter
the Grueser property.
Church, old-fashioned wiener
roast, 6:30 p.m. Fellowship and
l RACINE Racine Area singing around the fire.
Community Organization (RACO)
will meet a.t 6:30 p.m: at Star Milt
Park. Potluck dinner will be.
served. New members welcome ..
Tuesday, Od. 22
POMEROY - Meigs County
Wednesday, Oct. l3
Senior Citizens Center to participate in
MIDDLEPORT -- Middleport "Make"a-Diffe.,mce Day" with emphaVillage Council finance meetin~, 2 sis on providing (:hristmas for seniors
p,m. in council chambers. Meeu~g who live alone and have little or no
open to the ·pubhc.
family and are on a limited income.
Proceeds and donations to go into that
fund.

Church services

the Bend

Page AS

Monday, Oct. 21
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of Eastern
Star, 6:15 p.m. potluck dinner;
7:30p.m. meeting with election of
officers.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Right to Life, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Library.
Thursday, Oct. 24
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053 7 p.m. al the hall in Tuppers ·
Plains.

Other event-s .
Thesday, Oct. 22
. POMEROY - Meigs County
Health Department childhood immunization clinic, tO to noon and I to 3
p.m. Take children's shot re&lt;ords.
Must be accompanied by parent or
legal guardian. $5 fee per child per
visit for immunization. No one w.ill be
denied services because of inability to
pay.

Support Groups
Thursday, Oct. l4 .
ATHENS - Survivors of suifide

People in the news .
Robert Redford
ASHEVILLE, N.C. (AP)Actor Robert Redford wants
more ·debate on the issues in
North Carolina's Senate race.
"What I think the people
fl j

deserVe. and are· not getting,
whether it's the state of North
Carolina or preny much anywhere else in the country, we
are entitled to forthright and
forthcoming information and I
think we are entitled to a
debate on a particular issue,"
. •I

Redford said in an interview
with The Asheville CitizenTimes published Sunday.
Redford was reacting to an
Oct. 13 column by the newspaper urging Democratic candidate Erskine Bowles and
Republican Elizabeth Dole.

'

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I

Inside:

Monday, October 21, 2002

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page A&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

week:
Ill

Mond.y, October 11' 1001

· Wonderful Wiggly
Walruses

••••••••••••••

Soonen gain
ground

Write an alliteration. a sentence
where all of the words start with
the same letter. Example:

Walruses wiggle when wading.
•

Send your $tory to:

Camarena,
known as Kiki to his
friends, made it his
life's work to stop
the selling of illegal
drugs. A lot of the kids
he knew growing up
started taking dnigs,
got in trouf.&gt;le and
ended up in jail ·
or worse.
.

Fighting against drugs
is dangerous 'fOrk.
When ~e was a drug
enforcement agent for
the U.S. government,
he was killed. He
gave his life trying
to help others.

~

£

'

Den Dicke!500

Red Ribbon Week is a Week to
say NO to Tobacco, Too!

~

l§allipolii mail!' 'Qt:ribune
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
Please include your sdlool and grade.

YOIJfll! nectnle who start using drugs, start with tobacco.
.-----:S;:_om.etimes kids don't know how ·
badly tobacco can hurt their
bodies. But they can see how
it hurts the environment.

~

g

~
~

~

g

So, this Red Ribbon Week, remember that
tobacco is bad for kids and for the planet!

"'
~E

~through the

newspaper for an
-that uses good
health as a sales
pitx:b. Mliie up ·
. ..a product tb'at
.is JoOd for~
envin)nment's

health. Use ihC
' ' gOoc;l health
pitch as the . tbe1rne I
for an' 8d for•
your

:!
~
~

~
~

~
ell

~

Gro~1inl!

Deadly Trash

tobacco and
.
·
mak:ing Cigarettes causes
destruction Of millions Of
trees each year. Use the code to find
out more!
A machine that makes cigarettes uses&lt; miles
·
of paper per hour to ro and package cigarettes.
On average, it takes
tree to make............
· arettes. The average smoker will "smoke"
tree in (weeks.
·
Farmers bum forests to plant tobacco because
tobacco cannot be grown in tl;le same soil year
after.yearrlt so when field~&gt; are moved to fresh
ground, . Ore treeS are &amp;te.11ed•
.
· Tobacco must bt;: dried, or "cured" in hot air ·
before it can be made into cigarettes. In poor
COUntrieS, the fuel USed for CUring is USUiilly WOod.
p.,,,.r,; a.cre of tobacco may need another acre of
trees to be cut down and bu~d for _curing.
In the rain forest, about
out of~
_rrc!es is used for tobacco.

~

You can help! Clean up the stream
by crossing out every cigarette butt!

29

•

26.

31

•

32
•

25•

•

15•

14•

.....................t........
Gallipolis. 0~
Sponsors of: Mrs. Perry's 3rd srade dass
Rio Grande Elementary
Rio Grande. 0~

\•

~·
•

9

"12

Gallipolis, OH
SponSOfS of' Shena ....... 3rd grade das5

Middleport Elementooy

.

MiddleJX!rt. OH

j.;.Hol...
-. :..;a~,nk--------"'--'
callipotis, OH

Sponsors of: Mrs. Ours' 3rd arade dass
Washington Eler:nent.ary

j.;.Ga__:llipo-tis,_o_H_ _ ___:__:_
Holaer Clinic
Gallipolis, oH

•5 .

·13

•6

In the United States alone, all of the cigarette butts
thrown away in one year weigh about the same as
30,800 large ·
s. Connect the dots ·
to find out what goes in the blank.
Standards Link: Reading Comprehension. Follow simple written directions.

CA-MARENA
·TOBACCO
RffiBONS
DRUGS
HURT
HEALTH
JAIL
REMEMBER
PLANET
BURN
PLANT
ACRE ·
WORSE
BUTT
STOP.

Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week's Kid Scoop
stories and activities ..
R E B M E M E R D T

0 A N U S T P I 0 R
D N H G T 0 L B T U
D E U E R T A B N H

N R .U B A C N 0 A E
D A U P C L E N L S
G M S 0 R I T S P R
0 A R T E A S H M 0
0 C K S E J C I G W
Stlndardo Link: Letter sequenclng.'Aecognlzing Identical
words. Skim and.scan reading. Recall spelling pattems.

Cause and 'Effect
Choose a photd or an ad from the
newspaper. Write about what happene~
before the photo was taken and what •
happened after the photo was taken.
Standards Link: Writing Applications: Wrne a narrative that develops
plot and setting and presents an appropriate point of vie\¥.

a

For more information on becoming a classroom sponsor, contact Den Dickerson at (140) 446-2342
•

NEW YORK (AP)
Oklahoma gained ground on
No. I Miami, picking up four
first-place votes in The
Associated Press Top 25.
The
second-ranked
Sooners (7-0) beat Iowa State
. 49-3 Saturday, while the
Hurricanes (6-0) were idle. .
The Hurricanes got 61 firstplace votes to the Sooners'
13. Miami's margin over
Oklahoma decreased 15
points to 1.837-to-1, 787.
Four other undefeated.
teams followed: Virginia
Tech (7-0), Ohio State (8-0),
Georgia (7-0); and Notre
Dame {7-0). The Irish moved
up one spot from No. 7,
because Oregon (6-1) slipped
from sixth to 14th after a 4542 loss to Arizona State.
Notre Dame's ranking is its
highest since the opening
game of Lou Holtz's final
season in 1996.
Iowa State's defeat also
dropped it eight places, to
No. 17.
The , first
Bowl
Championship Series standings will ·be released today.
That's a compilation of the
AP's media poll, the coaches'
poll, seven computer rankmgs, strength of schedule and
won-loss records. The BCS
standings determine which
teams will • play . for the
national championship,

Dolphins
to meet
with carter

Hoi... alnk

•

_.__ _

~:;:,~~~~=~~~ovlittl•'• &gt;•d s•od• doss
Point Pleasaru, wv ·

......,••.•••OH.......,......

MIAMI (AP) - Miami
coach Dave Wannstedc will
meet with Cris Carter today.
and jf the NFL's second alltime leading receiver passes a
physical, the Dolphins are
expected to bring him out of
retirement and sign him for
the remainder of the seasorr.

Middl~port,

Spon......r, Sandy Need•' 3rd a•ode ct ...

Lions' Millen
apologizes

Eastern Elementary

Middleport oH

......,.•., •••_.....,.

DET~OJT (AP) -Detroit
Lions, president Matt Millen
apologized for calling one of
· hts olayers· a "devout coward.'1
·
.
Millen, speaking after
Detroit beat the Chicago ·
Bears 23-20 in overtime, said
he was. "completely wrong"
for making the comments
about an unidentified . player
Thursday on Mike Ditka's
Chicago radio show.

Middleport. OH ·

Sponsors of' M,., Struble's 3rd srode doss

:_:::~:;,~:~e•••ov
aosaroods c;....,h..,... .

~~:~s:~~~o Holle(s 3rd s•ade class
South•m ' 1•m•"'""

Middleport, OH

Adv•nced HNitiiJ C.nter
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Sandra Mock's 3rd grade dass
Ohio Valley Christian School
Callipolis, OH
Dr• • Mrs. G•r•ld Shu..
Gallipoli5, Ohio
Sponsors of: Jerry Howell's 3rd grade class
Green Elementary
Callipolis, OH

,

·Unitas statue
unveiled.

Jividen's Power Equlpm•nt
Callipolis, Ohio
Spomor:s of: Mr:s. Davenport's 3rd Srade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

BALTIMORE (AP) -· A
13-foot statue of Johnny
Unitas was unveiled at the
main entrance of the
Baltimore Ravens' stadium.
and he was inducted into the
team's Ring of Honor. The
Hall of Fame quarterback
died at 69 on Sept II.

Jividen's PoWer Equlpm•nt
Callipolis, Ohio
;;;..::~:;:L.;:::;,:,:::lj Sponsors of: Mrs. l9ve's 3rd srade class
Roosevel~ Elementary
Point Pleasant WV

30

•

"23 "'

-·_....

Strangled Streams .

16•
19• "21
"22

I

Rio Grande. OH
Sponsors ~: Phyllis Brandenberry's 3rd srade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis. OH

Standards Link: Life Science: Students know living things cause changes
in the environmen~; some of these changes are detrimental to organisms.

. ;.a

...,.._. Gilvin

~n Eledrk:
Plllnt
Cheshire. OH
Sponsors of: Ms. Crum's 3rd arade d~
Addaville Elementary
Addison, OH , •

auctceye Rural Electrk .:o-op
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Becky Woodyard's 3rd crade dass
Southwestern Elementary
Rio Grande, OH

It takes about 25 years for one cigarette butt to
decompose or tum back into dirt, like a poison
·
that an unsuspecting animal could eat.

17
•18

Nonie NlltloiMI
-·
Raane.
OH
Sponsors of: M~. McNickle's 3rd arade class .
Southem Elementary
Radne. OH

Skyline L.-na

Each year, millions of
cigarette butts end up being
washed down storm drains
·and into streams, rivers,
lakes and the ocean.
Seabirds, fish and other
animals mistake them for
food. Their bodies have
.
. no way to digest
cigarette butts and they can die.

24"

l'fSOMMwtlle
sa... hnn lnsur~MK~e
Point Pleasant. wv
Sponsors of: MIS. Doeffinser's 3rd srade das.s
North Point ElementaJY
Point Pleasant. WV

Gallipolis, OH
spOnsors of: sandra Walke(s 3rd grade dass
Pomeroy Elefnenbliy
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

To honor Kiki, his
f~ly and friends
wore red ribbons. ~
As his stoiy spread ~
across the country, ~
others began to wear ~
ribbo~ too..Now, ·
· · ,. ·
of

Page Bl

Jeff Schinkel,

Deadline: Nov. 17, 2002
.
Published: Week of Dec. 15, 2002

~DJnq,Je

the Daily Sentinel

MLS: LA. wins the cup, Page 82
Scoreboard, Page 82
NFL roundup, Page 83
Bums wins Disney Classic, Page 83
Quigley takes SBC title, Page 83

II....._ICIIIJ,_.. _PIIJII

C 2002 by Vicki WMing, Editor

..

Edw•rd Jones lnv••trn•nts
Gallipolis, Ohio
Sponsors of: Mrs. Sara Spurtock's 3rd grade class
Vinton l:lementary
'
Vinton, OH

.

oval. " I've slruggled every
time I qualify and every time
we race, we have positive
·
outcomes.''
Busch's other victory came
in Bristol, Tenn.• NASCAR's
second-shortest track, on
March 24. In that race, he
also battled late with Benson.
This duel at the end. with
Benson charging hard in
search of his frrst career victory in 224 starts, left Busch
totally drained. and elated.
"Nobody can be. hungrier
than I am," he said. "This is
sweet. This is racing with the

World ·Series

Let.rt Corporation
ll!!tart, OH
Spo11sors of: A 3rd arade c:l.ss
Be211e Elementary
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

Wom•n's llesbtb.ll t.am
Unlv•ralty of ltlo Gr•ntle
Rio Grande, OH
Sponsors of: Mr-5. Price's Jrd crade class
Washington Elementary
Gallipolis, Ot-1

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP)
All week long, Tim
Salmon kept delivering the
sam~ message to Francisco
Rodriguez and his Anaheim
te·ammates.
"I tell these young guys,
' Just appreciate it, man.
Make )he most of it,"' he
said. "That's the biggest
thing, that's been my motto.
Be loose, let it fly, be
aggressive."
..
Good thing he listened to
his own advice.
Salmon hit second homer
of the game, a tiebreaking,
two-run drive with two outs
··in the eighth inning that sent
the Angels over the San
Francisco Giants 11·10
Sunday night and evened the
.
World Series at 1-1.
"We knew there was
going to be· a hero in the
dugout," Salmon said, "and
tonight it was.me."
Barry Bonds homered · for
the second straight day, hitting a 485-foot shot. The
solo homer came . in the
ninth off Troy Percival.
But like the rest of the
Giants, Bonds couldn't get
on base against Rodriguez

as' he grounded out.
Rodriguez pitched three
perfect innings, relieving in
the sixth inning when the
Giants led 9-S. The 20-yearold sensation became the
youngest pitcher to win a
Series game. At 5-0, he tied
Randy Johnson 's record for
wins in a postseason set last
year.
"I never got oeryous," he
said after the longest' outing
of his big league career.
Salmon went. 4-for-4 with
a walk, driving in four runs
ahd scoring three. He
capped his performance
with a shot into the Anaheim
bullpen in left field that left
· Bonds hanging over the top
of the fence.
The homer off Felix
Rodriguez
capped
the
Angels' comeback from a 97 deficit. They led 5-0 after
the first inning before
homers rallied the Giants.
Pacific Bell Park will host
the World Series for the first ,
time in Game ~ Tuesday
night. Livan Hernandez, 6-0
lifetime in the postseason,
starts for the Giants against

·Please see Angels, B:Z

Browns 34, Texans 17

MEMPHIS. Tenn. (AP) Scott Wimmer held off Ron
Hornaday on a restart with
seven laps left and won the
rain-delayed Busch Sam's
Town 250 at Memphis
Motorsports Park for his second victory in four races,

Ohio Valley T.ch Prep
Gallipolis, Ot-1
Sponsors-of: Mrs. short's 3rd grade class
Addaville Elementary
AddaVille, OH

Ohio V•ll•y Tech PNp
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: lou Ann Shawver's 3rd srade class..
Green Elementary
Gallipolis, OH

Harder dies
at93

llel"' County Ec;onomlc Development Office
Pomeroy, OH
' Sponsors of: Marge Gibbs' 3rd grade·class
Salisbury Elementary
Pomeroy, OH

•

CLEVELAND (A P)
Mel Harder, who won 223
games during a 20-year
career with the Cleveland
Indians and pitched against
such greats as Babe Ruth and
Joe DiMaggio, died. He was
93.
I

enth for Roush Racing. and a
bonus for owner Jack Roush
in his own remarkable year.
"TheSe are all extra days
for me," said Roush, who
was pulled unconscious from
a lake after crashing his ·small
plane in Alabama in April. "I
may have taken myself a littie too serious for a while.
I'm much more relaxed than I
was and just going with it and
·
having a good time.''
Busch first look the lead .on
the 3S91h of)()(} laps and lost
it for only one lap - the
409th · - despite Benson 's

desperate efforts to pass.
· ".1 bumped him once or
twice," Benson, .a former
Rou sh driver, said. "I didn't
want to spin the guy out. 1
just wanted to get him out of
shape, but when I did I just
didn' t have quite enough to
get underneath him."
And Busch had just enough
to hang on .
"(Crew chief) Jimmy
Fennig radioed and said, 'Ten
to go, ' and things were great.
Things were running smooth .

Pluse see NASCAR. B:Z

e1m
iesto
•
•
e senes·

Wimmer wins
at Memphis

Ohio VOlley T - PNp
Gallipolis, OH
Sponsors of: Mrs. Saunders' 3rd grade class
Bidwell Elementary
Bidwell, OH

best of the best. ... It was a .
great ride for us."
Busch seemed in total control when he beat the field out
ofthe pits after a 15.3-second
stop with 91 .laps to go. A
breakaway on a restart with
70 laps left seemed to all but
guarantee that be would win
going away.
·
Benson made him earn it at
the end. losing by just 0.46
seconds.
"I know how hungry he is,"
Busch said. "But we'n; starving too."
The victory was the sev- ·

•

VIRGINIA
WATER,
England (AP) - Ernie Els
· won his fourth World Match
Play title, beating Sergio
Garcia 2 and I.
It was Els' first .victory in
the event since 1996 when he
became the only player to
win it three years in a row.
Gary Player and
Ballesteros each have
five.

Jividen's Power Equipment
Gallipolis, oh(O
Sponsors of: Juila Vaushan's 3rd grade das!li
Rutland Elementary
Rutland, OH

.''

MARTINSVILLE.
Va ..
(AP)- Kurt Busch is as sur.prised as anyone that his first
two Winston Cup victories
have come on tracks shorter
than a mile.
Busch held off a spirited
challenge by· Johnny Benson
over the final 10 laps to win
the . Old Dominion 500 on
Sunday
at
Martinsville
Speedway, the shortest track
in Winston Cup. .
"It's still one of those
places where you never feel
like you can conquer 'it,"
Busch said of the 0.526-mile

Els wins Match
Play crown

J R Morrbon 6 A..od.e.•
Gallipolis, Ohio
.
Sponsors Of: Mrs. Fellure's 3rd grade class
Hannan Tracl!! Elementary
Mercerville, OH

~~~ .. R•ads
Callipolis, OH
Sponsors of:
Juila Vaughan's 3rd grade
Mindy Young's 3rd grade
Marce -Gibbs' 3rd grade
Plus 9 additional
3rd grade classes

Busch wins Old Dominion 500

fi
Cleveland Browns quarterback Tim Couch celebrates a 2yard touchdown by running back Jamel White in the fourth
quarter of the Browns 34-17 win over the Houston Texans,
Sunday in Cleveland. (AP)

I

'

..

..
Anaheim 's Tim Salmon celebrates his two-run home run against the San Francisco Giants in
the 8th Inning of Game 2 of the World Series Sunday in Anaheim, Calif. (AP)

Couch _hears boos
in Cleveland victory

�Major League Soccer

Scoreboard

Galaxy's Carlos Ruiz
golden in MlS Cup final

Baseball

FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)
- Lea~ue MVI' Carlos Ruiz
scored in the 23rd minute of
overtime Sunday to give the
Los Angeles Galalty their
first Major League Soccer
title with a 1-0 victory over
the
New
England
Revolution.
'
The Gala1ty had lost their
three previous visits to the
MLS Cup, New .England
was playing in its first, but it
had the advantage of playing
in its home stadium m front
of . a championship gamerecord crowd of61~316.
After 112 scoreless minutes, a breakaway 'ended
Revolution ~oalkeeper Adin
Brown's b1d for a fifth
shutout in seven playoff
games. Tyrone Marshall
brought the ball downfield
with Ruiz on his left and
only one defender, Rusty
Pierce. to beat. Marshall
crossed to Ruiz, who leftc
footed a shot over Brown's
outstretched legs and into
the far 'side· of the net. · ·
. .J .The game was seven minutes from . heading to ·a
shootout.
·
Ruiz, the league's leading

' .

NASCAR
from Page Bl

and we were passin~ lapped
cars," Busch said. Then I
looked up and Johnny B.
was there."
.
Busch, who started 36th,
won from deeper in the field
than anyone in the history of
Martmsvtlle Speedway. The
_previous best was Lee Petty,
who won from 24th in 1959.
The race tightened the
points chase with four races
remammg.
· Series leader Tony. Stewart
rallied to finish 11th after
starting 31st. but his margin
over No, 2 Jimmie Johnson
closed from 97 points to 82.
Mark Martin finished lOth
and remained third in points,
123 back.
''We were pretty competi-

Angels
from Page Bl

-~

Ramon Ortiz.
Until this year, no active
player in , the majors had
gone longer than Salmon without
1,388 games reaching the postseason. But
that wasn't a well-known
fac1 because Bonds has been
.Jthe center of attention, especially since this is his first
Series.
But Salmon put Jhe spotli!lht squarely on himself on
this night by homering to
give the Angels their firstever World Series win.
"!.think I made the most of
my op portunities. It was
awesome," Salmon said.
"The way the ·game went
back-and-forth was unbelievable."
Rodriguez's locker in the
Anaheim clubhouse is right
next to Salmon, who made
his major league debut with
the California Angels 'in
1992.
:This is something he's never
! been in, either, so I'm sure he's
got to respect the magnitude of
it all," Salmon said.
:
He does.
"Something incredible,
especially when las.t year I
was with my mom and dad
and my brothers back home
watching the World Series,"
ti1e Venezutilan native said . .
Salmon hung on the
dugout railing and admired
as Bonds' homer that landed
halfway up the bleachers in
· right field.

Browns
fromPageB1
kicker Kris. Brown and leapt
into C leveland 's Dawg
Pound after putting the
BrowflS ahead 17-14.
Brown 's 47-yard field
goa l tied it 17-all.
.
Couch ti1en went 5-for-5 on

goal•scorer in the regularseason, was selected MVP
of the longest title game in
league history.
Los Angeles goalie Kevin
Hartil)an was rarely tested.
Two of the Galuy's three
MLS Cup losses were in
Foltboro, tncluding the inaugural event in 1996, when
D .C. United won 3-2 in
overtime; they also lost in
'99 and 2001.
Ruiz had several chances
to win Sunday's · game,
including a couple in overtime as the teams belatedly
offered a flurry of offense
just before the ~arne-winner.
In !be 12t~ minute. of OT,
he tned a btcycle .kick that
bounced off Brown's head.
Ruiz took a pass from
Peter Vagenas at the peQalty
spot in the 20th minute of
overtime, but Brown dove to
his left to get a hand on it
and knock it away, New
England's Winston Griffiths
followed with a .deflected
shot that went off the crossbar in the 22nd minute. Soon
after, Ruiz ended it.
.
The teams played to a
scoreless tie after a half-

the fii'SI time that's happened
in the MLS Cup's sevenyear history.
Los Angeles threatened
when Mauricio Cienfuegos
crossed to Ruiz in the 17th
minute, but he couldn't get
to the ball before he was
stuclc behind the left post
and had no angle on .-the
goal.
In the 26th minute, Joe
Franchino sent one into the
bolt for Taylor Twellman,
who tried to flick it with his
head to Steve R11lston by the
far post, but Ralston could.
.n't get to it.
Tweliman finished second
to Ruiz in goals and MVP
voting.
.
Ruiz and New England's
Carlos Ll~~mosa got tangled
up near the end of the first
half. Ruiz . walked to the
sideline but then immediately returned for the last two
minutes of the half.
Ruiz scored a league~lead­
ing 24 goals in the regular
season, one better than
Twellman, Wll&lt;&gt;' returned to
the lineup after missing the
Revolution's previous g~~me
with a knee injury.

tive over the last half of the tailed out of the second turn,
race," said Martin, who creating openings that
never contended to win~ Benson failed to fill.
"Long runs were our
"I think if I was in front of
friend."
him, we'd have been a little
. Virginia Qative Ricky bit better," · Benson said.
Rudd was third in a Ford., "But with him in front, he
followed by Dale Earnhardt was pretty j!ood. too.''
·
Jr. in a Chevrolet and
Mike Bhss, driving Chip
Virginian Ward Burton's . Ganassi's Dodge after rook- ·
Dodge. The next five were ie Jamie McMurray won in
Johnson, defending race it at Charlotte last week, finchampion Ricky Craven, ished 14th. McMurrar was
Dale Jarrett, Rusty Wallace unable to drive it agam this
iveek because he had a ·
and Martin.
The race looked like an . Busch race in Memphis,
easy victory for Busch when Tenn.
The race was another
he pulled away from Craven
on. a restart with 70 laps to . tough one for Jeff Gordon.
The four-time series chamgo and built a wide lead.
But Benson got by Craven pion ran up front in the early
on the 445th lap and took going, then cut a tire at
advantage of lapped traffic · about the mide&lt;&gt;in_t, had a
to slowly eliminate a 1-sec. hard time rrlaking it to pit
ond lead, setting up the fin- road and fell several laps
down. He finished 36th two
ish.
Several times over the last races after placing 42nd in
few laps, Busch's car fish~ Talladega, Ala.
''That was the farthest ball Lackey and·Ben Weber for a
I've . ever seen hit in this 9-7 lead. Game l star l T.
ba.llpark, for sure," Salmon Snow hit a tying, two-run
satd.
· single, then hustled to avoid
Bonds. making his first being forced to give David
Series appearance in his Bell a go-ahead infield hit
17th maJor league season, with two . outs: Shawon
went 1-for-2 · with · three Dunston, playing in his first
Series game at age 39, added
walks.
Bonds.had plenty,of praise ·· a sharp RBI single.
Scott Spiezio 's sacrifice
for Salmon, whose htt the
go-ahead homer off Felilt fly off Chad Zerbe pulled
Rodriguez.
the Angels within a run in
"It was tcio
much the fifth.
Salmo11," Bonds said. "It's
The Rally Monkey made
phenomenal. He did every- its fii'SI appearance on the
thing any player could do m scoreboard m the sixth. And
one game except steal . for the second straight night,
home."
the Angels promptly scored,
The Angels did that, too. with Garret Anderson's sin•
Brad Fullmer sneaked home ~le off Aaron Fultz making
to cap Anaheim's big first II 9-all.
inning against Russ Ortiz.
Given an early lead, Kevin
This was the highest-scor- Appier began to give it right
ing game in the Series since back. Working too carefully,
Cleveland beat · Florida 14- he walked Bonds on a clo~e
11 in 1997.
3·2 pitch to begin the sec"You could tell it was ond. Snow singled with one
going to be an offensive out and Reggie Sanders hit a.
night," Giants manager three-run homer. ··
Dusty Baker said. ''The ball
Bell followed with a shot to
was carrying.
straightawar center, closing
"It was one of the best the Giants gap to 5-4. It
games I've ever been in."
marked the 13th set of bilckA day after both bullpens to-back homers in Series play, ·
pitched 3 1-3 hitless innmgs, with Tony Gwynn and Greg
most of the relievers had a Vaucltn doing it most recently
lot more trouble getting for San Diego in 1998.
outs.
By then, as the bullpen got'•
· All except Rodriguez. He busy, it was apparent the
struck out four, all on three Angels could _not count on
the pitcher they fondly caB
pitches.
"He stepr.ed up," Angels "Ape." Instead, they would
manager Mtke Sctoscia said. have to warm up the Rally
"We don't get that ~arne set- Monkey, too.
Salmon's two-run horner
tled down, there s not a
whole Jot to come back gave the Angels a 7-41ead in
from."
the second. Jeff Kent homeThe Giants scored four red to lead off the Giants
times in the fifth off John third.
Cleveland's next drive, hitting under fire from Browns fans
Morgan by the front left pylon who have been waiting for
to make it 24-17 with 2: 15 left him to bust out.
·
in the third.quarter. ·
He finally ·got his first
Cleveland's Mark Word ' NFL touchdown in the secsacked Carr late in the ond qullf(er but only after an
.fo'U rth, and White put it a11parent fumble on the preaway with a 2-yard run with v1ous play was . whistled
I :56 left.
·
down.
Carr dido 't need long to
Green came in averaging
just 2.3 yards per carry, and bring the .Texans back, hit- .
the first-round pick from ting Bradford on a 37-yard
Boston College had come · pass to tie it 7-7.
·

'

Monday, October 21, ~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

•

WORLD SERIES

_...,OCt. 11
San FfwiCioco 4, Anlholm 3
Sundoy, OCt. 20
Anaheim 11, San fm1cioo:&gt; 10, -

tied 1-1

·

T!:.'"!l"l', OCt. 22
Anaheim (Ra.Or11Z 15-9) al Son

ETSU 31 , Elon 15
Florida 30, AIJIJum 23, or
Florida A&amp;M 36. N. Clltolna A&amp;T 28
Furmon 37. Tho ~ 1
a.orgia 48, V a - , 7
a.org;a Soulh8m 36, Appalad1ian St. 20
G~ 51. 54, Art&lt;.-Pine Bluff 15
HampiOn 31, NQrfoll&lt; St 14
LSU 38, South Garollna 14
LiJorty 31 , Charleston Soulh8m 17 .
Maino 33, Fla. l""'""'tional7
Manhal.u . TrovSt 1

o

2. Nowart&lt; Licking Valley (e.()) beat
- -'t'oarllng 35-0.
:
3. _ _ , YI/Mif Vlaw {11-0) - .
-ook38-14.
4. Hubbard (8-1) loi!IO tllronf %7·7.
5. oak (8-1) loll 10 CUio1la

Maflllllllta 14-0.

6. Clo. Boteclctlue (8-1) beat Cor*'&lt;~ .
Coni. Calh. 24-7.
1. lMiana (11-0) boalllcllolofltUio 38-7. •
8. ~- Hoban (8-11 teat Nt.r. Coeniry;
35-13.
.
9. StcM&gt;onvillo (8-1 ) beat Ballimoro MI. .
St. Joseph 34-21 .
10. Colo. DoSaJoo (7-2) boa!lronlon 2114.
DIYlSlON IV
1; COidwatM (11-0)- Fort~ ....

Pro Football

I

-

o

o

o
o

o

W~PetPFPA

CovinGton

Pro Basketball

Prep ·Football

,:

College Football

aa..

aa..

Mljor College .Football

...

•WIN•
2DEEDCIDI

SPIUIIIU"D
Clll-7
FIND YOUR NAME IN
TODAY'S CLASSIFIED
SECTION AND WIN I

EAST

Al&gt;llnv. N.Y. 44, canlslus 14
Boslon C&lt;;Iege 48, Navy 21
C. Connoctlcut Sl. 10. Monmouth, N.J. 9
Colgale &lt;12, Cornell13
Dartmoulh 44. Holy Crou 36
Duqueant 63, St. John's, NY 7
lona 30, La Salle 23 ·
Lafayette 35, GoorgelOwn,. O.C. 17
Lehigh 14, Yale 7
Massachueena 17, VIllanova 16
Miami (Ohk&gt;) 49, Buffak&gt; o
Northeastern 17, Harvard 14
Penn 44, Columbia 10 •
l'llnn Sl. 49. Norlhwestem 0
Princeton 16, Brown 14

Rhode .Island 17. Dolawaral4, 20T
Slant 38, Fairfield 20
St Petei'8 ·38. Marist 24
Slony Brook 24, Soared Heart 14
Temple 38, Comeclloul 24
Towaon 20, Buctcnoll14
Wagner 7, St. Francis, Pa. o
Wesl Virginia 34, Syrawso 7
William &amp; Mary 34, New Hampshire 27

,

SOUTH

Alabama 42, Mlsalsalppl 7
Alabama A&amp;M 24, MVSU 13
Austin Peay 23, Kentucky Wesleyan 21
Salhuno·Ccokman 21. S. Carolina St. 6
'Clemson 31, Wake Forest 23
E. Kantucky 31 , Murray St. 7

www.mydallysentinel.com

National Football League

Frarclsco (!Wnandez 12-16).-8:27 p.m. ·
-.-.,.OCt. 23
-51.28.-51.20
Anaheim (l.acloor ~) at Son fm1cioo:&gt;
Middle Tenneuee 48, Louisiana·
(Rueter 14-ll), 8:35p.m.
·
l.ai8)'0tl8 35
l1londly, OCt. 24·
Mi" 188jppi St. 29, MenlJhia 17
Anaheim at Son Fnincisco. 8:22 p.m.
s.tunloy, OCt. 21
St 48, Jacklonville 14
San F1anciooo at Anaheim, 7:58 p.m., H
Morgan Sl38. Howard 20
necessary
3.
N.C. Stale 24. llul&lt;e 22 .
SUndoy; OCt. %1
2. Now L.oxlnglon (9.0) beat DreDn lit-North:Jeatem St 38, SW Oldahoma 0
San Francisco at Anaheim, 8:02 p.m., H
Valley &lt;12-8.
Rlctunond 28, James Madson 0
neceuary
3. ~. Manchelter (11-0) boat NIYiml
Samford 34, AJtom St. 25
FairlesS 48-0.
.
.
.
Savannoll St. 21 , Monls Brown 20
4 . CoohoCIOn (9.0) boat Now_
South Florida 48, East Can:&gt;lina 30
Philadelphia 20-0.
.
Soulhom Miss. 23, Cinc*lnati 14
.5. Ottawa-Giandolf (8-1) lost 10 1&lt;en1ot&gt;
Stillman 35. Texas Soulhorn 28
National Footblll League
33,32.
TCU 45, Loulhitle 31
.
AFC
6. Martino FelTy (9.0) beat Whiling
Tolodo27,UCF24
Eat
(W.Ya.)·Unsly 31-7.
.
1Utano 35, uAe 14
7. Fortsmoulh (8-1) beat Minford 52-1.3.
W L T Pet PF 1'1\
VMI 35, Cholton00gl31
Miami ......, ...... .s 2 o .714 190 143
VIrginia 37, North Coroina 27
8. Kotlering Aller (8-1) Clarklbur!l .
Buffalo ............. 4 3 0 .571 217 214
(W.Va.) Byfd 41.0.
Vorginla loch 35, Rutgers 14
New England .. 3 3 0 .500 152 134
9. lronlon (8-2) lost 10 Coli. OoSIIII 21·
Wofford 31 w. carolina 24
N.Y. Jets ........ .2 4 0 ..333 95 169
14.
MIDWEST
South
10. Reading (9.0) boa! N. Bondlltyi0r&lt;l2·
Ball St &lt;12, E. Michigan 17 · .
W L T Pet PF 1'1\
21.
Bowling Green 48, W. Michigan 45, 0T
Indianapolis .... 4 1 o .800 114 90
DIVISIONV
Davfdson 48, Valparaillo 32
JacklonYille .... 3 3 o .500 128 112
1. Marion Pleaoant (11-0) boat MorroJ
Dayton 35, Orai&lt;O 7
T""""'"" ...... 2 4 0 .333 130 173
RidQodalo 35-3.
.
HoUBion .......... l 5 o .167 83 157
E. Illinois 44, SE Ml"""n 27
2. Woodsfield Mon100 Cont. (8-0) boat
North
Illinois Sl 35, S. lllinois 14
Now Matamoras Frontier 40.().
W L T Pel PF 1'1\
Iowa 24, Indiana 8
BaltimonL ...... 3 3 o .500 104 111
3. Smllhvflle (9.0) boa! Apple Cleek
Michigan 23, Punllo 21
Cleloetand ....... 3 4 0 .429 161 151 .
Waynedale 35-21 .
Minnesota 28, -Michlgan St. 7
Piltsburgh ....... 2 3 0 .400 110 112
4. Middlefield Cordlnal (11-0) beat Orwe1t .
N. llinois 411, COnt. Michigan 0
Cincinnati ....... 0 6 o .000 51 181
Grand Valley 49-6.
N. Iowa .22, 'll&gt;ungstown St. 7
. s. Amanda-Clearcreek (8·2) loot to
Ohio 50, KOnl St. ()
W L T Pet PF 1',\
.Cirdevllle I 3-8.
Olio St. I 9. Wisconsin 14
San Oiego .... .. 6 I 0 .857 173 II 9
6. Cln. HiRs (11-0) boat l.oCktand 44-7.
$an Diego 35, Butler 28
OorNer .......... .. 5 2 · .714 t83 154
1 . Delpl1os St. John's (7·2) blot Now
Texas 11. Kansas St. 14
Qakland ........ .. 4 2 0 .1!67 196 145
Bremen 16-8.
Texas A&amp;M 47. Kansas 22
Kansas City .. ,.3 •
.429 239 230
8 . Dallon (6· I) boat Joromoovllle
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
.
W. Illinois 52, Indiana St 21 .
Eat
.
. w.Kontud&lt;y 31. sw Misaourl 51; 7
Hillsdale 37-8.
W •· L T Pet PF PA
9. Sameaville (8-1) boat St. Clairsville 21 ,
SOUTHWEST .
Phlladelphla ....4 .2 0 .667 , 85 . , 02
7.
.
liouston 56, Army &lt;12
N.YGiani$ .....3 3 0 ·.500 86 98
10.
Dotiance
Tlnora
(&amp;O)
boal
An-.,
Kentucky 29; Arkansas 17
Dallas .... ......... 3 4 o .429 94 129
26.().
..
Nicholls St. 24, SW TeKaS 21
Washington .... 2 4 0 .333 115 167
DIVISION
VI
North
TelliS
13,
Arkansas
St.
10
South
1. Maria Stein Marion LDcal (8-1) boal
Oklahoma 411, IOWI 51. 3
W L T Pet PF 1'1\
Oklahoma St. 24, Nebrallkll 21
Sidney Lehman Colh. ~-32.
Now Orleans .. a .,
.857 221 172
· 2. Darwille (8-1) lost to Utica 33-25.
Prairie VIew 22, Paul Quinn 20
Tampa Bay ..... 5 2 o .714 153 78
3. Columbus G.,.. (9.0) boal Paulding
SMU 37, LOuisiana Tocll '34
All.inla ............3 3 0 .500 130 84
•
Carollna .......'... 3 4
.429 102 105
Sam Houston St. 10, Stephen F.Austin 7 42.0.
No1111
.
TOKas Tocll 52, Mi110url 38
4. Slrasburg.franlclln (11-0) boat Magnollll
WLTPciPFPA
UT.EP 38, Rice 35
Saricly Valley 35-0.
GreonSay ...... 8 1 0 .857 203 154
6. Mogadore (8-1) boat RIYOnna SE 17·
FAR WEST
Chicago ...... .... 2 4 0 .333 132 155
Arizona St. 45, Oregon &lt;12
7.
Dolrott... .......... 2 4 0 .333 132 189
6. LOWOIIYIIIo (9-b) boat Be~ln Clr:·
Collfomla 17, UCLA 12
Mlnnuoto....... 1 5
.187 137 185
. Wlltltam ReSOMI 42.0.
Colorado 34. Saylor 0
7.·Dola Ha&lt;!lln Northern (9.0) boat C9r)'o
Colorido St. 28, utah 20
'
Rawaon 24-17.
Arlzona ........... 4 2 0 .687 108 93 . ·e. Washington 41, N. Arizana 29
Hawall37, 1\lloa 14
8.
(9.0) boat Lewisburg fri.
Son Fnincisco 4 2 o .887 1-42 116
County North 21-7.
Montana 68, s. Utah 45
St. Louls ..... .... 2 5 0 .288 139 158
So- ............ 1 5 0 .167 125 152
·Montana 51. 44. Wal!Or St. I 0
9. Cory-Rawaon (8-!) loot 10 Dola Hardin
IIUndoly'o Oomu
Nevada 52, Son Jose St 24
Northern 24-17.
Detroit 23, Chicago 20, OT
10. Moehanicobufg (9.()) boll Jamaatown
New Mo&gt;cloo St. 34, LOulllana·Monroe 21
Buffalo 23, Mlarrn , o
Notre Dame 21, Atr Force 14
Groenoviow 44-0.
Allanll 30, Carolina 0
Portland Sl. 34, Sacramento St. 20
N.Y. Jets 20, Mlnnooota 7
san
01ogo st. 24, Wyoming 20
Sl. Louis 37, Saaltlo 20
Southern Cal41, Washington 21
r,-"i
Denver 37, Kanaas City 34, OT
Sl. Mary'&amp;, Col. 35, Col Foly-SLO 17
.Now Orleans 35. Son Fninclsoo 27
NBA
Stoilford 16, Arlzana 8
Baltimore 17. JacicBOI)YIIIil I 0
UNLV 24, BYU 3
ete..land 34, Houslon 17
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Utsh.51. 45, Now Moxloo 44. or
Son Diego ZT. Qaldand 21, OT
AtlanUc Dl¥lolon
.Arlzana 9, Dallas 8, OT
W L Pel.
Cll
Oreen Say 30, WashlngiOn 9
NewJeroey .......... s
.o 1.000
Philadelphia 20, lllmpa Say 10
Washington .........4
I .800
1
Open: New England, Cincinnati, N.Y.
Now Yor1&lt; ............. 4
2 .887
1.5
Giants, Tennesaee
A
I
led
P
Stat
Poll
..oc a
rna . e . •
Boston .................3
3 .500 · 2.5 .
Mandoy'l 0111111
.
· MlamL ................2
4 .333
3.5
Indianapolis at Pittsburgh, 9 p.m.
liowThoy FaN&lt;!
Orlando ............... 2
4 .333
3.5
Sunday, Oct. 27
COLUMBUS (AP) - How lho lOp toama Phlladelp!1ia ......... l
4 .200
4
Sealtlo al Dallas. 1 p.m.
In lho -kly Aasociatod PR188 stale high
Central Dtvfolon
Delrolt'al Buffalo, 1 p.m
school foolball did this weekend:
·
W
L
Pet
01 CieYoland al N.Y. Jets, I p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
DIVISION I
DolroL .... ,..... .. ...6
0 1.000
- ·
Tampo Bay at Carolina, 1 p.m.
1. Warren Harding (9·0) boat Massllk&gt;n Indiana.. ...............4
2 .887
2
All.inlla1 New Orleans, 1 p.m.
3
Washington 31·27.
MilWaukee .... .. .....2
2 .500
Tennessee at Cii'M:innati, 1 p.m.
3.5
2 Solon (9.0) beal Macedonia Nord9nla AUanta .................2
3 .400
Chicago al Mlnne-. 1 p.m.
4
21 -7.
Chicago ...............2
4 .333
Piltsburgh a1 SaltitnQre, 1 p.m.
4
3. Oublin Sciolo (9.0) , boat Upper Now Orleans ....... 2
4 .333
Arizona at san Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
4 '
Arlington 35·12.
Toronto ................2
4 .333
Denver al f'jew England. 4:15p.m.
3 .250
4 .:
4. Cln. Elder (8·1) boal Indianapolis C-and .... .... ..... l
Houston at Jadcaorwille, 4:15 p.m.
'"30.
WESTERN .CONFERENCE
Calhedral ~
Indianapolis at Washington, 8:30 p.m . .
M-Il Olvlalon ·
5. Brunswick (9·0) boat Brocicovlllew L Pel 01
Open: Miami. San Diego, Green Bay, St.
Broadview Hts. 20-7.
· 4
LOuis ·
Hollaton ...............
I .800
Mondoy, Oct. 28
6. Massillon Washington (7 ·2) lost to Mlnnaaota .. ...... .... 3
2 .800
N.Y. Giants at Philadlilphla. 9 p.m.
Warren Harding 31 ·27.
Dallas ..................3
3 .500
1.5 .
7; Cle. st. ·;gnallus (8·3) loot to Cln. St. Son Anlonlo ...... ... 3
3 .500
1.5 •
'
Xavier 19·17.
Memphll .... ...... .... 3
4 .429
2
8. Cln. Anderson (9.0) boat Cln. 1\lrpln Utili .................... 2
4 .333
2.5 .
48·7.
Donvor .................1
4 .200
3
9. Dublin Coffman (8·1) boll Gahanna·
PicNic nlvlllon
Associated Pre" Top 25
Uncoln 13·7.
.
W
L
Pel
OB
10. lakowood St. Edwald (8-1) boalTol. Fortland ............... 5
I .833
The Top Twenly Five tOII!IS In .The
1.5
PhoaniK ...............3
2 .800
Assoclall!d PreS. college foolball poll~ wilh Whitmer 68·14.
1.5 .
DIVISION 11
SacrameniO ...... .. .3
2 .800
tirsH&gt;Iace votes in parentheses, records
2.5
through Oct. 19, IOial points based on 25
I . Dai Chamlnado.Jullonne (9.0) boat L.A. Cllppare ........ 3
4 .429
'2.5 .
· points tor a first place vote ttwough one Blenheim, Canada 43-20.
Golden Slata ....... 2
3 .400
2.5
point for a 25th placa vote and previous
2. Louisville (9.0) boal AUiance L.A.llllakore .......... 2
3 .400
.
Sea o ....... .......... 2
5 .268
3.5 • .
ranking:
Marlington 35-3.
Sundoy'o
o
W-1. Polnta PVII
3. Tol. Cant. Calh. (8·1) lost to Tol. St. · Dotroll85. Miami SO, OT
1. Miami (61 )..............6.0 1,837
1
Francia 15·3.
Toronto 84, Boston 73
2. Oklahoma (13) ..... .. 7.0 I ,787
2
4.
l&lt;ings
Mils
Kings
(9.0)
baa!
Lowland
Houslon 101, Orlando 96 ,
3. Vlrgina Tech ........ .1-o 1,675
3
28·13.
.
.
SaCI"amanto 91, Seattle 90
4. Ohio St.. .............. .'.. 8.0 I ;804
4
5. Canfield (9.0) beat Foland Seminary
Monclay'a Gamel
5. Georgia .................7.0 I ,584
5
20-15.
Mlnne- al Chicago. 8:30p.m.
6, Noire Dame ...........7.0 1,479
7
6. Tol. Sl. Francis (8-1) boal Tol.. Cenlral
WashlnglOn .at DoiM!r, 9 p.m.
7. Texas .......... ............6-1 · f,325
8
Calhollc 15-3.
Tuooday'a
a
.
8. Michigan ................ 6·1 1,217 11
7. Loveland (8-1) lostlO l&lt;inga MH~ Kings
New Jeroey vs. Philadelphia at Trenton;
9. Washington St.. ...... 8·1 I ,211
10
N.J., 7 p.m.
10. LSU ...... ................ .6·1 1,110 14 '
28·13.
· Memphis at Orlando, 7 p.m.
12
II . Florida St, ............. 5·2 1,I 05
Detroit at Miami, 7:30p.m.
8. Cola. Brookllavon (8-1) boal Cola.
12. N.C. Stalo.............. 8.0. 1,028 13
Briggs 35-14.
Ulah at New York, 7:30p.m.
13. lowa ...... :.............. .7·1
an 15 . 9. Macedonia Nordonla (8·1) lost lo Atlanta at New Orleans, 8 p.m.
14. Oreg6n .......... ........6·1
986
6
Solon 21·7.
Phoenix vs. Seallle at Ca-. Wyo., 9 ·
15. Southam Cal. ........ 5·2·
751
19
10. llolwood·Madlson (7-2) loot lo 1loy p.m.
16. Tennesaeo .............4·2
681
16
28·14.
Goklen StaiB va. Toronto a1 8 Paso, :
11. Iowa 51 ..................6·2
826
9
DIVISION Ill
Texas, 9:30p.m.
16. Penn 51................. 5-2
81• 20
A B
.0) be1t Ale Ce
1
Portland at Sacramento, 10 r.m.
r.
nlra •
Cleveland vs. L.A
. . Lakers a Son 0'--,
1. kr. uchlel (9
19. Alabama ................5·2
41;9 24
Hower
49·22.
"""'
10:30 p.m.
20. 1&lt;ansas St .. ......... .5·2
426 17
21 . Colorado .............. .5·2
419 23
. 22. Air Force .............. .6·1
360 18
23. Arizona 51... .......... 6·2
169
.24. Bowling Green ...... 6.0
167 25
25. Mlnneaota .............7-1
118 . Othore lilcelvlng voteo: Florida 85,
Marshall ee. COlorado 5I. 38, Washington
27, California 28, Texas Tech 21, Virginia
21, Mlulsalppi 17, Boise St. 13, Bolton
College 12. r.... A&amp;M 10. Kantud&lt;y 1.
Maryland 6, Pittsburgh 3, TCIJ · 2,
Wisconsin 1.
. ,

. .

Monday, October 21 , 2002

NOTICE
Edwards Moving and Rigging, Inc., · has
been contracted to move generators, tur- .
hines and transfonners into the Rolling Hills
Power Plant in Willcesville. Roads will be .
shut down along the following route for the
duration of each move. We will be starting
at the Meigs Rail Siding 'in Rutland proceeding to Hwy ·124 going west. At
Wilkesville we will be taking Hwy 160
north to the Power Plant. We would appreciate your patience and cooperation. Move
dates : October 21 &amp; 22, 2002.
•J

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83
•

Favre sprains left knee .in Packers' vidory
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP)- left in overtime, giving San
New
Orleans'
Deuce
The Green Bay Packers Diego . the AFC West lead. McAllister had 139 yards on
breathed a sigh of relief when Tomlinson. carried 39 times 21 carries.
.they le~~med that Brett Favre for 153 yards.
Terrell Owens caught only
probably . will be around to
San Diego coach Marty four passes for 61 yards for
help them build oil their 6-1 Schottenheimer, in his · first San Francisco (4-2), includstart.
year with the Chargers, has ing a 4-yard TD pass from .
Favre sprained his left knee won five straight against the Jeff Garcia.
·
Sunday in the third quarter of Raiders, and 20 out of 25
the Packers' 30-9. victory over since l 985. ·
Blu.s 23, DolPHINS io
Washington, but so far it
At
Miami, Nate Clements
Oakland's Jon Ritchie
appears .he won' t miss any scored the tying TD on a 7• tied a Buffalo record with
games.
yard catch from Rich Gannon three interceptions, returning
"Fortunately, it's not as bad with I :21 left in :regulation.
·
one for a touchdown.
as it may have looked or felt,"
Drew Bledsoe was 15-forThe Chargers (6-1) have a
the star quarterback said.
one-game lead over Denver 31 for 182 yards, iocluding a
· Favre, who started his !64th and a. 1 l/2-g~~me edge over 70-y 8.rd TD pass to Eric
consecutive game, got sand- the Raiders (4-2) in the divi- Moulds. Buffalo (4-3) lost its
wiched
between
LaVar sion.
previous four g~~mCS against ·
Arrington and Jeremiah
Miami (5-2).
Trotte:r. Favre hobbled off the B.RONCOS 37, CHIEFS 34, OT
field and received a standing
At Kansas City, Mo.,
CARDINALS 9,
ovation from the Uimbeau Sharmon Sharpe caught 12
CoWBOYS 6, OT
Field crowd when he was passes for 214 yards - a
At · Tempe, Ariz., Bill ·
earted from the sideline.
record for NFL tight ends Grarnatica kicked a 40-yard
. The in'jury was to a liga- and Jason Eiam kicked a 25- .field ·goal with 3:10 left in
inent in Favre's left knee.. yard field goal with 12:03 left overtime, making up for two·
He 'II have an MlU on • in overtime for Denver (5-2). misses in the final3:24 of regMonday.
Sharpe caught two TD pass- uladon.
The Cardinals are tied with
' 'There.was a.lot of concern es, including an 82-yarder in
by us on t)le sideline, but it the third quaner. Sharpe's San Francisco for the NFC
appears he'll be fine," Packers yardage toll!! was a franchise West lead at 4-2, their best
coach Mike Sherman said.
. record, and broke the NFL start since 1988.
.J After winning five ~traight tight ends record of 212 set by
Quincy Carter threw four
games, the Packers have . a . Jackie Smith with the St. interceptions, two in the end
zone, for the Cowboys (3-4).
week off before facing Miami Louis Cardinals in 1~63.
The Chiefs are 3-4.
Dallas' Emmitt Smith ran for
at home Nov. 4.
Rams 37, Seahawks 20
82 yards, leaving him 92
Ahman ·Green scored on
runs of 24, 2 and . 8 yards for
At St. Louis, Marshall yards shy of Walter Payton's
the first three-TD perfor- Faulk ran for 183 yards. and career rushing mark.
mance of his career.
becam.e the 15th ·player to ·
.
.
.
· Favre finished 11-for-14 for reach 10,000.
FALCONS 30, PANTHERS 0
Green Bay Packers running back Ahman Green (30) celebrates with teammate Bubba Franks
89 yards and left with Green
Faulk caught a 6-yard TD
At Atl'anta, Michael Vick (BB) after rushing for a touchdown in the second quarter against the Washington Redskins
Bay ahead 17-6. · Backup pass from Marc Bulger and had 297 yards running 8Qd Sunday in Green Bay, Wis. Green rushed for three touchdowns as the Packers won 30-9. (AP)
Doug Pederson was 9-of- I$ added three short scoring runs throwing to lead the Falcons
as. the Eagles (4-2) beat who threw three intercep- have losi 13 straight road
for 78 yards, leading the for his fifth career four- TD (3-3) past Carolina (3-4). .
. PackerS to two field goals and game, helping the Rams (2-5)
Vick, who missed the previ- Tampa Bay . (5-2) for the lions. Fred Taylor ran for !51 games •
a touchdown in five series.
win their second straight.
ous game with a shoulder fourth straight time.
yards for the Jaguars (3-3).
LIONS 23, BEARS 20, OT
· In his second career start for
Seattle (1-5) is off to its injury, had all sorts of plays
At Detroit, Jason Hanson's
Jm 20, VIKINGS 7
Washington (2-4 ), Patrick worst start since 1992, when worthy of the highlight reel;
RAVENS .1 7, JAGUARS 10
At East Rutherford, N.J., 48-yard field goal with 10:18
. Ramsey was 10-of-24 for 135 the Seahawks opened l-10 capped by a 44-yard TD run
At
Baltimore,
Chris
yards and was · sacked six · and finished 2-14.
when he broke a taclde and Redman threw two touch- Chad Pennington completed left in overtime lifted Detroi I
times.
tiptoed down the sideline.
down passes to Todd Heap, 24 of 29 passes for 324 yards past Chicago.
James Stewart ran for a
1
SAINTS 35, 49ERS 27
and Baltimore's defense did and a TD as New York (2-4)
CIIAR~ERS 27,
At New Orleans, Aaron EAGLES 20, BuccANEERS 10 the rest, without injured line- won for the first time since career-high 172 yards and two
the opener.
'"·
. touchdowns for Detroit (2-4 ),
RAiDERS ·21, OT
Brooks threw three touchAt Philadelphia, Donovan • backer Ray Lewis.
At
Oakland,
Calif., down passes and had a 1-yard McNabb threw for a .tou.chThe Ravens (3c3) repeated- . Minnesota's Randy Moss which matched its win total
LaDainian Tomlinson scored scoring run with 1:56 left for doWn and ran for another, and ly frustrated Jacksonville was held to four catches for from last season. Chicago (2on a 19-yaro run with 11 :22 the Saints (6-l).
Duce Staley ran for 152 yards quarterback Mark Brunell, 86 yards. The Vikings (1-5) 4) has lost four straight.
• .

• ! ....

Golf

.
.
P
GA
tor.Bums ln
.
.

·

.
·

.

·
B·UENA
.
VISTA,
what
it's
ail
about
out
here."
said.
"Good
for him."
.
LAKE
Fla. (AP). 'Bob Bums kept
ForWoods,itwasthesecond
Burns later said the 17th
'hearing pockets of roars dur• time in
at Di.sney. tee shot was ·critical to him
injl the final round of the thathefinis
at23-under265 winning. Theshotmustcarry
· Dtsney World Golf Classic, and only had athinl-place fin- water and a small row of
and figured they were for ish to show for it.
trees, stopping short of the
Tiger Woods. .
He was trying to stage his bunker on the dogleg left.
· When ·· the ' cheering greatest final-round come"A lot could happen,"
.Jstopped, and Bums finally back on the PGA Tour and Bums said. "But I p1p¢ it .
allowed himself a glimpse at made up the silt-stroke down the middle. From
the leaderboard, he had noth- deficit in 10 holes. Still, he tbere, I felt like I could .do
to worry about. .
. missed a 6-foot birdie putt on pretty good."
I' ncr
0
Bums h11d a two-stroke the final hole, slapping the
I( was his first victory
lead with four holes to play. head of his putter m disgust since the 1998 Buy.com Tour
Woods · was done with his as he knew that was his last Championship,
which
lowest final ·round in relation hope,
allowed him to win player of
to pat, a .9-under.63 that'was"He just ran out of holes," the year on the developmen· n't good enough to keep Bums said Bums, who was six tal tour.
.
Jd
h
from becomin~ the 16th first. · groups behind Woods on the · And II cou
not ave
.
Magnolia ·Course .. "I figured come at a better time.
ti'me winner this year.
"Once ·he was posted, we ifl played my game, I wasn ' t
Bums was 118I h 00 the
lfuew where he was at- and going to back off. He was PGA Tour money list, in danh~ couldn't ,get any better," .never really a .factor unless ger oflosing his card for next
Bums said Sunday afterclos- he ·got to 25."
.
year if he fell out of the lop
ing with a 7~under 65.
·
Still, Woods' presence in · 125. He is recently m~ed
:Burns took care of the rest the field- and on the leader- and ready to start a fanuly.
~ith the . poise of a tested board was not lost on
"I knew I had to play well
c~ampion.
.
Bums.
atthe ·end of the year," Bums
He was asked if years from said. ·
1 . He finished with four pars
. for a 25-und,er 263 total, and now, when he reflects on his
Even so, he had a feeling
wound up witli a bronze tro- first PGA Tour victory, this might be his week. He
pj:ly of Mickey Mouse an~ a would ~e brag that Woods . was tw~ s'!Okes out of the
t1Vo-year elt-emption for wm- shot hts best round on lead gomg mto a final round
nl.,ng at Qispey. : ..
. s~~y and ...
.
that was sure to shape up as a
, Burns added- to the PGA
And I ·took h1m down? shootout, but made a deal
T,our record of 16 players Yes I will," Burns s.aid with a with his caddie not to look at
who have won for the first laugh.
·
the ieaderboard until he got
t•me, althqugh )te distin- . Woods was flaying six to 24 under.
guished himself in one sig- groups ahead o Bums,: ~!I'd
By then, it was as good as
nificant way.
went to the ABC. televtston over.
.
. :None of the other first- booth for an interview and to
Woods kept ~~ging ·
!W"ters had to worry about watch Bums make par on the alon~, tied for the le after
'Yoods. · . .
.
.15th hole.
.
his irdie on the lOth, and
. "When his name is below
He went to the practice another birdie on the par-S
mine, that's PI'CIIY cool," . green to watch the r.est of the 14th to reach 23 under.
tourn~~ment on a .bt" sc_reen
Bums took the outright
Bums SIIJ'd.
"'
~
"ird'
: Chris DiMareo the 54· TV, trying to fi~ure out 1f he lead with a 15-aoot "' te
bole lead, was - th~ last glly n~e~ed to sttck . .aro
. und. putt on No. 13, then a 30who had· a ~hance to catch Sttt~ng on a plasuc lawn footer on the 14th that tnade
Burns. DiMarco missed an chatr, Woods watched Burns everyone else try to catch up.
8'-foot birdie plit(on the. 17th tee oft: on. No. I 7. . .
Woods couldn't - he was
hole and hls birdie on the
"Thts ts the tournament out of holes. DiMarco didn't.
last hole was only good for here," W~s said.
.
"I felt like if I can, get to 10
· second place, a difference of
Just !~king at the swmg, under forth~ day, I ~have a
$;74 ,000.
and watching B.urns confident- prett~. gO&lt;?&lt;l chance, _Woods
, "My hat's off to him," Jy snatch up his ~ from the sa1d. As 11 en~ed up, 11 prob. DiMarco said. "He came out furf, Woods knew 11 was over. ably wouldn I have been
and,beat.il\eloday, and .that's
"Oh, he pured it," Woods " good enough."

threehJ:ears

L'

J

'.

-,,.

Qui~ley, . move~

Dana Quigley told .himself son.-ending event is limited
into conbefore the fma_l rou.nd of to the tour's top 31 money te.ntton with stx consecu. the. SBC Champtonshtp that wmners.
tive birdies starting on No.
he was going to keep his
Gilder,
who
started 3
eyes off the leaderboard .
·
Easier said than done.
. . "I watched it all day. I'm
·
JUSt
so nosy, 1 can , t stan d
· Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
it," Quigley said after
days prior to t~e date
shooting a 2-under 69 on
. ~~~:;"'.~~- ~~~~~ set
for healing.
Sunday 10 hold off Bob
~~~sc~u~~
Account ol Tabitha
Gilder by a stroke in the · PROBATE DIVISION McDade, Guardian ol (10) 21' 2002
Senior PGA Tour event.
MEIGS couNTY,
the person and estate
Quigley watched Gilder,
OHIO
=~ ~:,e:~:te';;t.Titus, 110
.
liELP WAI'lfEI&gt;
. a four-time winner this 1~ THE MATTER OF
Unless exceptions 1
year, charge into the mix by
SETTLEMENT
are·flied thereto, said
OF ACCOUNTS,
account will be silt SEMI· DRIVER
making silt straight birdies
lor hearing before
on the front nine to pull
PROBATE COURT
said coun on the 21
NEEDED
within two shots at 9 under.
MEIGS COUNTY,
st day ol November.
Seeking local &amp;
Gilder, who· finished with
OHIO
·1
2002,. at which time
experienced
Semia 7-under 64, said his move Accou nta and ~~~dsl~~~:n:n:l~~~~~
Tractor Trailer ·
came a little too late. "I voucher~ ol the lol- tlnued from day to
driver.
Excellent
w 1'sh I got a bit closer a bit lowing named llducl· day until llnaii.Y disary, has .,..., flied In
Pay. Experienced .
sooner to put some pressure the Probate court, posed ol.
Drivers Only.
Melg·1 county, Ohio
Any per~on lnt.er·
00 him," he said .
1
esttid
may
file
written
Quigley admitted he was or apprpval and exception to said ' '140-682-7773.
a little nervous as he stood oettl....,t.
account or to matters
or
on the 18th tee with a one- - - - - - -- pertaining to the axeBOO·
523-0804
shot lead over Gilder.
In Memory
~~~101~ 1~1 :~:n tr~~~
His mind drifted back to
In Loving Memory
when he ·was a teena~er in
of my Husband
Rhode Island playing m the
Chas.
R. Mash;
state par-3 championship.
That day, more than three
Jr.
decades ago, he. needed
Who passed away
only to two-putt on the last
Oct. 21. 1982
hole to win. He ended up
If 1 had the world 10
three-putting.
. give,
He managed to harness
I'd give II yes and
his nerves, dropping his fee
more,
shot about 12 feet from the To htar your voice.
pin on the 198-yard, par-3
To see your s~rile
SACRED H
CHURCH
18th and later tapping in a
and greet you at.the
BAZAAR
1-foot putt for par and the
door.
Mulberry Avenue
Pomeroy
victory at 12-under 201.
God saw that you
October 31,
It was Quigley's secopd
·wm weary, .
win on tour this year, and So he did whal he
Beginning at 4:30 pm
l;iis seventh overall. He · thought best
Baked goods, crafts, games,
.·e arned $217,500 to jump Ht came and stood
Religious articles and more.
from eighth to sfltth on the · beside you, and
Atte~dance prize ·$25 every
money list with $1,538,639
whispered. come
half hr. Beginning at 6:30 pm .
in 34 events.
and res~, 11 broke
Raffle • 5 $1 oo prizes '
Argentina' s
Vicente
bur heam 10 lou
DINNER MENU
Fernandez (70) was third at
you,
Adults $6 ·Children $3
10-under 203 on the Oak But you dldn ,1 go
·· Creamed Baked Chicken Or
Hills Country Club course.
alone ,for part of us
Tom Watson (70) followed
went with you,
Ham, Noodles, Mashed ·
at 8 under, and Gil Morgan the day God called
Potatoes &amp; Gravy, Green
(71) was 7 under.
you home.
Beans, Cole Slaw, Rolls,
· Qljigley is r.ejalted headSadly mimd and
Coffee ; Dessert lncludect
ing into next we~k's Senior
loved
PGA Championship at
Wife Ann, Children.
Gaillardia
outside .._·....:r.llin~di~;:iiiilillo':.lill.--'
/

�Monday, October 21, 200~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Dally Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

m;rtllune- Sentinel - l\egtster
CLASSIFIED

~~ ... bile Nutl(:- ln Noi!w•p•pr"'.

Your Mlah' tu Know, Oellv~red Klaht tu Vuur nonr.

Public Notice

NOnCE OF
OF THE PROPOSED
ELEcnON ON TAX · ACTION. WRITTEN
LEVY IN EXCESS
COMMENTS,
OF THE TEN MILL REQUESTS FOR
UMITAnON
PUBLIC MEETINGS,
AND ADJUDICATION
HEARING REQUESTS
. ReviHd Code,
Revised Code,
sectiOn• 3501.11 (G), Slctton1 3501 .11 (G), MUST BE SENT TO:
HEARING CLERK,
: 5705.19, 5705.25 .
5705.19, 5705.25
OHIO
: I!IOTICE II hereby • NOnCE 11 hereby ENVIRONMENTAL
given .th1t In purau· given that In pureu· PROTECTION
)nee of a Reaotutlon ance ol a RHotutlon AGENCY, P.O. BOX
or ~lie Board or or the Boerd or 1049, COLUMBUS,
County
Town1hlp lhlllee• or OHIO 4321&amp;· 1049
Comml .. tonere ol the County . or (TELJ!PHONE: 114·
the County ol Melg1, Townohlp or Rutland, 844·2128). "FINAL
Pomeroy,
Ohio , Ohio, palled on the' ACTIONS: . ARE
paaeed on the 1at 111 day ol July, 2002, ACTIONS OF THE
d1y ol Auguat, 2002, there will be oubmlt· DIRECTOR WHICH
. EFFECTIVE
lhtra will be 1ubmlt· ted to • vote ol the ARE
UPON
ISSUANCE
OR
t.d to 1 vote ol the people or 11ld aubdl·
A
STATED
PeoPle Ollald lUbell· vlalon ai General
vlalon et Generel Election to be held In EFFECTIVE DATE.
Election hi be held tn tile Townlhlp or PURSUANT TO OHIO
CODE
the County ol Melgo, Rutlend, Ohio, at the REVISED
SECTION
3745.04,
A
Ohio, at the regular JIIIIUiar placea or vot·
FINAL
ACTION
MAY
placea or voting lng therein, on the
therein, on the 5th 5th day ol November, BE APPEALED TO
ilay ol November, 2002, the quHtlon ol THE
2002, the queatlon ol . levying 1 tax, In ENVIRONMENTAL
tevylng a tax, . In exc- olthe tan mill REVIEW APPEALS
exc•a ol the ten mill limitation, lor the COMMISSION (ERAC)
limitation, lor the benellt ol Rutlend (FORMERLY KNOWN
THE
benefit
ol Melga Townlhlp lor the pur· AS
ENVIRONMENTAL
County General" poll or maintaining
Hllllh Dtetrlcllor the and
operating BOARD OF REVIEW)
BY A PERSON WHO
purpoee or current cemeterl•.
expen-.
Slid tax being: a WAS A PARTY TO A
Said tax 'llelng: a renew11 ol 1 tax ol PROCEEDING
THE
...,racement or a tax 0.3 mill at • rete not BEFORE
or I mill at a rate not exceeding 0.3 milia DIRECTOR BY FILING
AN APPEAL WITHIN
•xceedlng 1 (one) lor uch one dollar ol 30 DAYS OF NOTICE
milia · for each one valuation, which
OF THE FINAL
(Ioiiar or valuation, 1mount1 to three ACTION, PURSUANT
whl~h amounta to ten
centa ($0.03) lor each
OHIO REVISED
centa ($0. tO) tor •ch one hundred dollare TO
CODE
SECTION
one hundred dollare ol valuation, lor live 3745.07, A FINAL
of Vllluatlon, lor nve (5) yeare.
. . ACTION ISSUING,
(5)
The Pone lor 1ald DENYING,
The Polla lor llld Election will open at MODIFYING,
Election will open at .6:30 o'clock a.m. and REVOKING,
OR
.8:30 o'clock 1.m. and remain open until RENEWING
A
remeln open until . 7:30 o'clock p.m. ol PERMIT, LICENSE,
7:30 o'clock p.m. ot •ld day..
·
•kldly.
By order olthe loard
. ly order olthl BHrd or Election• or Melg1
of EIICIIOnl ol Melgl County, Ohio
County, OhiO
.
John
N·
I hie,
Chll,.......;
John
N.
thle,
•
NOnCE OF
. ELECTION ON TAX
• LEVY IN EXCESS
: OF THE TEN MILL
LIMITAnON

C•lll• cn ..nt,., OH

In one week With us

REACH OVER 285,GOO .PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To

m:rtbune

Place

I

l\egtster

Sentinel

Yo.ur Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) .992-2156 (304) 675-1333
675-5234
i--C_a_.I_I_T_o_d_a_¥_··-·-~o:.:.r..:.F.;;;ax~To (740) 44s-3.oo..a,...-___o_rF_a_x_To_:_....:..9..:.9_2-_21_s_7--....

Offtee lforq-~

Word Ads

Monday th ru Friday
·, 8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.
HOW N

WRITE Ali AQ

r,o

__•I'E-"RSO-•N•A•LS-_.11

~t

Why wait? Start meeting
Ohio singles tonight. c~ll toll
tree 1·800·766·2623 ext
1621 .
.

r

ANNOt.Jl\'CEMENTS
_

----

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Middle ton Eslatos will be
h lrlng direct care staH. Applicanls musl have high
school diploma. valid drivers
license and p&amp;S;S a drug lest
and background check, Posltions we have open are:
Casual part time- $8.00 per
hour: regul ar part time with
shill differential. Interested
appll·canls should con1ac 1
Rhonda tiall at (740)4468 145.

r

•r10

V

ARD

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S

ALE

\vArvrm

,.,-=-----2 102.
Needed Respite Provider.
Individual needed to work
with 9 year old male in his
' Point Pleasant home. Hours
between 3pm-9pm. and
weekends wilt be flexible.
Pay rate S9.20hr. Con1act
Melissa at REM . Options.
(3o4)768·5575

I

L---lUtiiiittiiBiiiUY--_.1
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver. Gold Coins, Proof. sets,
Diamonds,
Gold
Rings.
U.S. Currency,·
T
M..S. Coin Shop, 151 Sec·
and A~enue · GallipoI'IS, 740 ·
446 2842
•
1· \11'1 0\ \II~ I

'i Ill I( I· S
.,l:""______
...,

n_O

Truck Drlvera, Immediate
hire, class A COL required,
exce~lent pay, expe rience
req u1red. E•rn
up to
$1,000, per week.Call 304·
675·4005
_ _c.:.:;..__ _ _ _
URGENTLY
NEEDED·
plasma donors , earn $50 to
$
60 per week for 2 or · 3
hours weekly, Call Bio Lila
Plasma Service. 740 . 592 •
_6_65_1_.- - - - - -

WORK FROM HOME
Potentlal $1500/molpl
$50001mollt. Free Info.
1·800·921-4412
AVON! All. Areas! To Buy or www.acuquirelreedom.com
~;~~,.f;"ley ~pears, 304· 1146
BI.ISINI'S'i

r

IJELp WANTED

Be Your Own Boss, Great

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TRAINING

"-•r"'u•R•NoiiEiiD.DOWNiiiiiiiiiO-N..,t
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888-582·3345

r,o

~~~

10

1

HFJ.P WAMw

C-1· Beer carry Ou t permit
lor sale, Chester Township,
Meigs CountY; send letters
of • ir'lteresl to : The Daily ----~--'-Sentinel. PO Box 729-20, Nursing Assisla'n t Classes,
evening
hours, beginning
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Oc
,
Iober 28, 2002. II you
enjoy elderly people and
want to become a member
GIVEA\\oi\V
_
ol our health care team, call
Judy Hart, Instructor at 740·
Adorab1e. kittens and mo th· 742-2370 or stop by Rocker cat 4 black &amp; 2 grey &amp; springs Rehabil ita tion Cen·
mother, black long hair. ter and fill out an applic:alion
(740)367-7152
lortheclasses . Extendicare
Health Services, Inc. Is an
Etd~rly couple can no ion- equal opportunitY employer
ger care for petite. two-year- that encourages workplace
old, spayed female cat. ·All diversity. M/F ON
shots up-to-date.
Color _ _.:__ _ _ _ _ _
white other than t~n &amp; gray Part time cleaners needed
calico face &amp; back Call 304- in Gallipolis area. Call Win773·5166
ans Services .. (304)697·
Friendly . puppies, tree to
IO~ing compassionate home
,they were dropped off call
c71'1401!-·,;,44;;;6~·7~4;2B,;,-_ _ __,

All Display: 12 N oo n 2
Busin ess Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Di sp la y: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

Includes
Up :ro
Over: 15
Ads

Free Yard Sale Sign!
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Won;!
Must Be Prepaid

• Start rour Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • A\lold Abb re., latlon s
• Inclu de Phon e 'Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Sho uld Ru n 7 Davs

Successful Ad s
Should Include These Items
To
Get

\'\\01 '\(I \II '\I"

Display Ads

Dally In -Col umn : 1:00 p.m .
Monday -Frldl!ly for Insertion
In Next Oay··s Paper
,SLmclay In-Column : 1 : 00 p .m .
For Sundays Paper

r~2.·1·/2-1o.012iiiiaiic~~Eril al li lotios•C•I,. Ity

1

I,S•ta•to-A•otit
u1ileii8oii9ii21iil'oilam•o•rf1/,.J,
15 miles to Pomeroy, 12
m11es to Athens, 5 acres,
pond, 3 bedroom, 1 .112
bath, 2 porches, central air,
2 car garage, $119,500.00;
(740)698-9855

water on Tribble Rd. Mason
Co. Prices starling at
$15,000. (304)54 1·0759

.

I

H ..... IFS
VI'

15 acres more or less. Located on Green val\ou
,

·-----·

Wanted! Good credit cus'tamers to purchase new
h
, d $O d
3 Bedroom newly .remod- om~ wnan ·
own to
elect, in Middteport, call Tom qualified custome rs . 1·5
Anderson after 5 p.m.
_
acre
tracts
available.
992-3348
(740)446·3093
-. - - - - - - - - 3 Bedropm WI'lh garage on Twok Story
, House, needs
approximately 1 acre On wor • pnme ·lot in Racine,
Route 2, Gallipolis Ferry. $1 2,000.00
·
(
)
•
.
949-2852
304 675 5332

1 ancl 2 bedroom apart· Village
Stoneware
by
~ants, furnished and unfur· . Pfaltzgraf, Dinnerware and
nished, security deposit re- large selection of unusual
qulre.d, no pets, 740~992· serving . pieces su'ch as:
2218 .
Soup Tureen, Punch Bowt
1 bedroom apartment in &amp; ~ups, Pedestal Cake
Middleport, {740)92 8-4941 Plate, Lazy Susan, Coffee
oil 1 f1 7
&amp;
Tea Pots and Lots
c ec a er · P.m.
more. Call (740) 446·2522·
BEAUTIFUL
APART- d8ytime;
(740)379·2789
-·eninn

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CES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
WL
~TE
!rom $297 to $383. Walk to
•~
1
n.t'II&amp;:.U'
shoP &amp; · moves.
aII 74"v446 · 2568 . Equa1 Hous1ng
·
Will pay top dollar for prime Opportunity.
land New h ·
build
·
·
(
·
_
orne
er. F.urnlshed. 1 BD ~n Middle7401 446 3093
port . Pnvate dn~e. refer3 Bedrooms, 1 bath, car·
MOBILE HOMEi
enc8/deposit required, No
Port. newer roof, storm win·
FOR SALE
~===~===:: Pets (740) 354-4084 or 992dows, 135 Kineon Dr. "---oiiliiiiiiliiiila-.,.1
5314
(740)446-2776
12~&lt;60 3 bedroom w/c/a,
HOUSIS
Furnished 2 Rooms and
4 br., lr. &amp; dr.', 2 baths, 112 washer &amp; dryer, stOve,
FOR RENr
Bath, Upstairs, Clean, Refbasement, lg. kitchen wllots $5,495, 740·992·2167
----,
• erences and Deposit Re·
of cupboards; alc·fan &amp; :-cc-=-:----qulred. No Pets. (740)4-46h~at, water softener, new 1 9 7 1 F 1am 1n g 0 M 0 b i l e 1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed 1519
windows, lg . front porch Home12K60 2 e8drooms, Homes Fmm $199!Mo., 4% GraciOus living. 1 and 2
overlooking river, will con· refrigator, stove, underpin· Down, 30 .Y~ars at 8 .5%
bedroom apartments at Viiskier trade, (740)992·9012 nlng, wheeison, ready to APR. For Listings, 800-319·
!age Manor a!ld Rivers.ide
move. $2,500.00
3323 E1&lt;t. 1709.
Apartments Iff -MfG dleport.
From 1278·$348. Call 740·
141 Second Avenue. Avail·
992·5064. Equal HOUSing
1988 mobile home, 14x56, able November 1st. 2 bed·
2 bedroom, 1 bath, $3900, rooms. basement, yard, Opportunities."
(740)992-4172 filter 6pm.
new heal/ AC. refererces, Now Taki'lg Applications,
deposit. can (740)446·1161 35 West. 2 Bedroom TownAll realeatltelldvertlllng
1994 Oakwood 14x70, 2 after October 20th. .
house Apartments, Includes
BA, 2 full baths, newly
Sewage, Trash ,
In lhta newlj)lper Ia
painted Interior. Newer LA 2 bedroom home, approxl· Water
subjeCt to the Federll
carpet. 3 ton NC, sll;lrting, mately 1 mile from Gallipolis S350/Mo., 740·446.000S.
FalrHoualngActoft968
Must
sell!
$15,000. on State Route 588. S400/
whleh makealt 11\egll to
(740)388-()436 after Spm, or month, $300/ deposit, refer·
advertise "any
leave message.
ences required. (740)4~6preference,llmlllltlan or
3413
diiCrimlnatlon .,aaed on
1995 Fleetwood, 14x70, 2 :.:.:::.._ _ _ _ _ __
race, color, rettglon, Hx
BR, 2 full bath, . Must see 2, 3, and 4 Bedrooms unites
tamlll.t at1h11 or national
home. Located 12 mites available. PQmeroy/Middlearigln, or any Intention ta south of Gallipolis on Teens port/Racine ~rea Immediate
makeanuauch
Run Ad, must sell! $18,000. occupancy. Hud approved
'
Call (304)736-7?68 Land immediate occupancu ~ts
preference, limitation or
1
"''"
contract possib1e.
allow, no deposit opllon.
dtacrlmtnlltan."
Clauton
,
br.
1·8Q0.340·8614
·
1996
14 60 2

REA F.sl:

c

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1

,~.

I

-··

:.:.:c..:==-==---

Thlanewapaperwlll not
knowingly accept
•dvenlnm~nta tor real
..tate which li In
violation of the llw. Our
rNdert are hereby
Informed thlt all
dwelllnga advertiHCIIn
1hl•--•re
avatllble an an equ81

ANTIQ
__UES
_ _.,J

D~~e , State Route 160, 5
mm~tes from Holzer. Will
Sellin part or whole. Call for
details. (740)446 •0118
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI- """ , . • ·

FOR SALE

, ·r

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MiscELLANEous
........... CHANDISE

L--~~~-.L,______.,J
.1999, Lincoln Townca r, Sig- '
nature Series, bright white, :\
sharp, loaded, one owner
(retired). Always maintained.::
on ti me. e:dra Clean. •
(740)446·1000. Leave mes-:
Tri-color Rabbi t Beagle pup- sage.
"
pies. 6wks. old . Parents on
Premises. (304)675-7462
2001 Dodge Stratus, 4 cyl·
inder, auto, 4 dOOr. cruise, ..,
till 818 miles $10 000 ·
Rpttweller male puppy, born
•
··
•
·
8111102, tail docked, clew- (740}44 1·0337.
claws removed &amp; first st:lots, 67 Camaro, . 327, 68,000
purebred but not registered, original miles. All original, • .
$250 ' (740)992 · 0932
very solid, interior excellent. .::
S10,500. Call alte r 5'pm.
Purebred Norwegian Elk (740)388·8972
,
Hound puppies, $75 each.
,
:;
Make good ramify pets for 92 Camaro cold a1r, good
children. 4 miles South ol heat, good stereo, V-6, 5
Rio Grande off 325 on speed, rally sport, runs
. Wolfe Run Ad ' tst place on good $2,000 .00 304-576· 1
nght at A&amp;A Woodcrafts
2999 ·

To a good home, part Walker, 8 weeks Old puppies.
2F/4M, wormed and well
cared for. Call after Spm,
(740)446·4706

I

JTtr.K

·
1 Barcalounger rocker &amp; re·
cllner.., 1 Wing back chair.
Like new. Appoi ntment.
(304)675-2045
.
2 LIUY·t;KlY recliners. Burgundy. L1ke New. (304}675·
1329 After 6pm.
55 gallon Aq uariu m with
cabl_net stand. Complete
with mter, fish &amp; nice 'deco·
rations. (740)367·7115

Rat/ Fox Terrier pups, 8
weeks old , $50; Beag le
mixed pups, Free l 8 weeks
otd. (7·40 }645-2599
f IIlii Sl 1'1'1 II S
,\11\ISIO(I\.
·~-----..;...;;.;;,

..
~

94 Corvette . Coupe, white __
with red leather, glass lop,
loaded, CD/ casselte radio,
$12,500 080, ' (740)882· ·
7512

. . .I

COOL DOWN, Central Air
Condilloners and Heat
Pumps. If you don't call us
FARM
~r=-----w:e ' both lose. Free esti· 1
l'R,t;~~
mates. (740)446·6308 and ..__ _.EQiiiUIPMENfiiiioiiiiiiiito_.i L_ _.,_. fii'OiiiRII.
1·800·291 ·0098. .
.
Firewood lor \sale, . $40 a J. ~. 450 C, 6 way blade.
load, (740)388·9143.
Wmch &amp; Canape .742·2880

riO

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SIIALiiiiE~·.',.J,

·

Floral shop closed all sup·
plies ·&amp; silk arrangements &amp;
coolers for sale call 304·
458-1049 or 30H74-0120.

ville, Ohio, river view, . no
pets, references ·required,
$450 monlh, call (740)99267n after Spm.

(740)446·01 18 Gall for de· 3br. House located in Matails.
son, WV. $495. + Utillties.
95 Century, 3 BR, 14x70, No Pels. (304)773·5881
excellent condition, $8,500 5 rooms &amp; bath 50 Olive St
opportunity biHa.
(740)256·1249
$325 mO. (740)446-3945 '
F
1
19 7
8 8
Country Home with 11·112 or
or Rent9 6 room &amp; bath central air 7
acres. 314br. 2ba., 2 Car· tr~Uer, 2 bedroom, 2 fu ll heat. W/0 hoOk-up, $400,
740
73
Garage. above ground pool. bath. Call (
1367 • 08
Kanauga, (740)367-7015
Handcrafted kitchen cabi- New 2003 14x70 3 Br I 26th · 7 rooms, 2 bath, Gallipolis.
nels. OH Leon Baden Ad. Only $995. t:lown and only No pets water paid 5550
(304)458· 1580
$189.86 par month. Call month deposit &amp; ref8rence
Nikki (740)385 7671
'
·
For Sale. By Ownar Ranch
'
:
·
(740)388-1100
Style Home 3 BA -1.5 Baths New Manage~'s . Special. House in country, big yard,
Excellent· location . new 16x80, 3 bedroom, 2 quiet neighborhood, refer·
$69,900.00
bath, redu~ed _to only ence . &amp; deposit. Phone
(740) 446-7825
$27,900 9e11vered and set (740 )379•2209 after Gpm.
FOreclosed SW on 2 acre ~P· You save o~r $6,000 :.:..=::.:.=:::..:::::::..:c::.:.::.
tract $500 d
l'f'ed Including underpinning, an· Large, two story, three bed1
0
bUve'rs. Call ~~ ° ~~~~~
chors. vapor barrier, 1 se~ _fi· room house ~t ~53 Seco n~
for a quick sate
~ergtass steps, 20' of ut1llty Avenue, Gall1poiJS (near U:=..:.::o=:.::::::..·-.,.-- lines under home, all Instal· brary) $800 per month with
Foreclosure! 4 bedroom 4 led, One only, Coles's Mo· $800 deposit required. No
Bath just $ 14,900. For tist· bile Homes, U.S. 50 East, pets. Water incl uded in rent
ing ca\11 -800-719-3001 E)(!. Athens, Ohio 45701
(no other uUIItles). Six
F144
months tease required .
We have approJ&lt;imately 10 (740)446·7323 (Library) for
Home on 2 112 acres of used homes for under mOre informatiOn
land,· lull basement, 3 br., $2,000, calll-800·837·3238
.
·
dining room , f~mity room lor lnfo.
Now leasing n~w home, 3
w/Hreplace, living room. 2
b_
edroom, ' liVIng
roo~ .
full baths, utility room, 2 car ·
FARMS
~ttchen, dining room, quail·
garage, heat pump, 20x20
FOR SALE
fled persons only. (740) 446·
outbuilding, 30' pool w/new
,28~0:.:1_ _ _ _ __ _
deck, Eastern School Dis· JUDY GRIFFITH
State. Route 141, large
trlct, on Flatwoods Rd., Congratulations! You haVe equipped kitchen, . large
Pomeroy, Oh (740)992· won 2 free movie ticl\ets to bedroom, den , bath, CO\'·
1641
the Spring ValiA\/ 7 In Gal· ered deck· front &amp; back, no
I'
"'I
Land home packages No 1polls. Call the Register to· pets, ready November 1,
payments white under 'con· day for detaila .(304)675· $475 month plul deposit.
etructlon.
Ullle
or no 1333
Phone (740)446·0205 days:
down pavment require.d.
B~
(740}446·4254 evenings.
(740)446·3218
AND BUIUliNGS
MOBilE HOML&lt;i

s

Income. Call Janet Jackson,
Home &amp; Garden Party, Oia· Gallipolis CarHr College
mond Designer. (740)886· · (Careers Close To Home)
6359
Call Todayl740·4464367,
1·800-214-0452
Reg •90·05·1 274ft
EMT's· Work for a great
organizationt!l!ll! Pinkerton.
Security is now hiring lor
the Buffalo, 'WV area. You 1
MlscFLI.ANF.O~S
musts have EMT·B qualifi·
•
\II HI 11\\1&gt;1'1
cations. Above average
.
·
,
wages plus paid insurance. Baby 1tems, hutch, · lull Size
Unilorms and training pro- bed, large dresser w/ mirror
~ided . Please apply be- 304·675·2801
tween the hours ot B : OOam-~1fK)
WANTED
11 :OOam and
1:OOpml Do
Appliances: Reconditioned
· 3:00pm, 1032 12th Street
0
•
Washers, Dryers, Ranges.
Wesl, Huntington , WV Chitdcare available in downAefrigrarors, Up To 90 Days
25704 or call 1·800·241· town Pomeroy, private pay
Ouaranteedl We Sell New
7454 EOEIM/F/DIF
only, providing 24 hr. servMaytag Appliances, French
Full-time RN
1ce. call (740)992-582 7 for
·
.
Clly May1aQ. 740-446·7795.
m
1
Scenic Hills Nursing Cen1er
ore 1n ormation .
is now accepting applica·
tions for · a lull time RN lor
Economy Con•tructlon
midnight shift. We are the All types of construction.
areas prem ier Alzheimer"s ·roofinl)lsiding, remOdeling,
care facility. We otter very gu~te_r cleaning, plumbing,
competitive pay and. excel· palntmg, conc rete .
len1 benelils If you would (304 l674 ·0t18 or (304)6744682
like to join o'ur dedicated
.
team ot caregi11ers, you may G9orges Portable Sawmill
apply in person at Scenic don't haul your logs to
Huts 'or can Diane ThomJr mill just call304·675·1957.
son tor more inlormation at
(740)446-7 1so. we are an M &amp; M cleaning' servi ce.
equal opportunity emplOyer. ·Residential &amp; Commercial
at 8 price you can afford.
Help wanted ee_~.rinQ lor the References Available. Call
elderly, Oars1 Group Homo, tor estimate. (740)446·IS3J
.oow paying minimum waQe, or (740144
. 1•9385 .
new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am·
New 2000 IQ fl home, 10
FOR R1&lt;Nr
5pm, 3pm· 11pm . 11pm- Will Do House cleaning. minutes
from Hospital. Auto PalntShoponSR 124
.
7am . ca\1140·992·502:3.
(304)675·6837
Complete above ground Reedsville good condition' 14
2 b d
·
pool with porch, dri"Veway real eetat8 only, call John cl~s C.ntral.al~o;'~cr::·
Home Health Agency seek- Will pressure wash houaes, and garage fou ndation. Athono Aoalty, 1800)536· 12K12 out building , $350
mg Full Time AN. Competi· trall.ers , and decks. Call Price below appralaal. 1146
month (740)379 2351
.
.
•
Uaed furniture store, 130
tlve wages with benefits. No 441·4238 ask for Ron or {740)446·3384.
home health experience leave message.
· New haven ·3 large bad· Building lor lllle with of 2 bedroom trailer, no pttl, Bulavllla Pike. wa eelt ·;nattreaaea, bunk beda, dressnecessary. Apply at 3084
room, 2 112 balh, large open without &amp;lock al 82 Olive water,paid, {740)446-9569
11 \ \'\,(l\1
ens, couches, appliances,
State Route 160, Oa.IUpotis
kitchen/dining area over· Street,
Gallipolis,
OH
.
2 bedroom. 1 bath, largo much more. Grave h'lonu·
or pt1one toll free at 1·866- ·r~n:,a~;;;.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; sized 2 car garage,• large 45631 ·
yard, no pete, rant $275 menlo. (740)446·4782 Gal·
441 · 1393.
BUSINESll
rear deck w/ 1 6~~:32 In Whitney's Restaurant real month+ utilities, $200 de· llpolla, OH .
0PPOR11JNITY
lawn Care Helper, must be •-""!~~~--,.1 ground poQI. 20x20 building, estate, bu~noaa and equip- posit. (740)256-6208
3 year&amp; old located on 4 112 mant goea with sale call ::.:.:::::.:'-.:::=::.:::::::___
dependable and hard -work· ·
INOTICEI
· John at Athens Aoaity 1· 3 BR, 2 Bth. wid, cia • exc.
ing (7~0)388·9416
OHIO VA~L EY PUBLISH· acraa 304·882·2072
PRICE REDUCED 3 bad· 800·S:J6.1 i46
condilion
Relerences re·
McClure's Restauran t now lNG CO. r~omm~nds that
. ·
qulred $400.00 I mth. wise·
hinng all 3 tocar 1ons, lull or you do busmess w1th people room, 2 bath Brido: Ranch
lms &amp;
curlty depoSit call (740) 992· Buy or sell. Riverine Anlipart-lime ,. pick up applica- you know, and NOT ro, sen~ on 1.5 flat acres, n~er car· ~ f..:
ACREAGE
4017 after 6 p.
ques, 1124 East Main on
.;._.Oiiiiiiillliiii;....,t
m.
tion at rocation &amp; bring ·back money through \h~ ma1l unt1l pet, doors an appliances, ~..,.
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
between
9:30am
&amp; you .have lnvesttgated the full basement {partially fin· -,
992·2526. Russ Moore,
ished), 2 car garage, At 33 1/2 acre lot on Tycoon Lake For Sale or Rent- 1997 owner.
' 1O:DOam, Monday thru Sat· olfenng.
.Haven. w/12x60Trailer$16,500.00
trailer, 2 bedroom, 2· fUll
urday.
- - - - - - - - - above :" New
Start You r Business To- (304)882·3897
now $13,500.00
bath. Call (740)36H308
Route Manager. 60-60 hour, day... Prime ShOpping Cen740 247• 1100
Two BR mobile home local·
NEWSPAPERS
5 day wor~ weelo;. lnsuran~e ter Space Available AI Af- Aenl . 3 Br house in Forner· 1 )
·oy,
4
sa
te
or
rent
$375:
pEn
100
acres more or less ed on Ok:l Burdette Lane
Cov
and
relirement
plan. forqable Rate. 2 Nice Exec u s deposit. (740) county water, l eon area: behind Fo11's Pizza In Point
Majo~~~bl
$35.000 1st year salary. ulive Offices. Newly Ae· month pl _
$125,000. 304. 458 . 151 9
P~asanl. $350./mo. Rater· L_....;;;__ _..,.....
_...J
Please leave message . modeled. Spri~ Valley Pta· 698·6783
ences
required .
Call
(740)286·7366.
za. Call (740)44~· 3481 .
' (304)675·3423

1'76

I

I

014

70

r

th9

r

r:

I

Hunter's Special· 200'!;1
Horne 24', loaded , like new,
used 1 time, $9999 Firm0
French City Homea. Inc ....
Gallipolis , Ohl9 •(740)446-'
9340
•
... 1 H\ II I ...

I

I

D1tlid September
October 7, 14~ 21, 21,

2002

.

ReviHd Code,
Section• 3501.11 (G),
5705.1 ~. 5705.25

The Polte lor 11ld
Election will open at
1:30 o'clock a.m. end
remain open until
· 7:30 o'clock p.m. ol
•kldly.
By order or the loard ·
of Electl0n1 ol Melge
County, OhiO
Smith ,

Dated September
11,2002.
October 7, 14, 21, 28,

2002
Public. NOtice
Melge SWCD tektng
aeated bide on a
Donahue trailer lll'lal
147!11:'1: Trailer 1otd
•• , .. Ia" condition.
tnlormatton call 740.
882-4212, mall bldoi hi:
Melga SWCD, 33101
H118nd Roell, Pomeroy,
OH 41711 to be
received by October
~3.
Mark envelope
"Trallll' Bid". llda wtll
be opened at 12 noon
Oatober 24. . Dlatrlcl
ranrvaa right hi n~Ject
any or all bldl.
(10) 14, 21 2TC

Ran terrier Puppies, 6wks Cars lrom $500, pollc~ t,m·
old. Full blooded. Paren ts pounds for sale! For l1slmg
on Pre mises. S75. Each. 1·800.719·3001 ext. 3901
(304)882·3340
.

\.

Smith,

Dated September
11,2002.

2002

. I

I

••

Cover AI !he

Motor SUbjecbl

7/fee t34te. s.~:aet4u

~Stall!'

roo

~

~

'

We Care For Your Trees~

&amp;·······

Roofing, Siding, Hdd-Ons, Electrical,
Plumbing, Declls, Remadellng,
Drywall, Painting

Haning's Construction

~"t'(
'/.rrl's•"'H ~
e..tw/

BMilding ovtr 30 ytars
Footers, Foundation.
Add-Ons, New Homes,

4r'e..hf A•trm:t,c ~lfr'9 I B'uet_,

Pole Barns, Conc~tc,
Electric, Plumbing

Scott L Swain
Gallipolis, Ohio • (740) 446-2015
ISA Certified Arborist
1·8 6·4DR·TRE

111JN11111fr \tbr.t fMIUdttJ

(740) 992·3320
Email: blade!.Ozaplink..com

'-....,....,::;;;;.....,J

Foreman: larry
Owner:
740·367·0181
Ronald "Mick" Haning
Christina "Chris" Haning
740·992-0780
Cell: 591·8393
Cell# 740·59 1·0919

OchCadeC &amp; Gravely
CIISTIIICDIN

Massey Ferguson
Parts &amp; Service

Specializing In:
· Roofing, Decks,
' Remodeling ,

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR
4359 St. Rt. 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Siding, ljnd
Additions

Owner: ,
Terry Lamm
·

(740) 446-1044

(740) 992·0739

Monday·Frlday 8-SPM • Saturday 8-2pm

1 mo.

MANlEYS
SElf STORAGE

AMERICAN STANDARD CENTRAL AIR
CONDITIONING &amp; HEATING
•Heating
~
• Air Conditioners
Sta.u~atut
• Slr'vlce On All Brands
• Residential &amp; Light Commercial
• 10 yr. parts &amp; Labor
• Heating &amp; Air Conditioning

97Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' 6 10'1120')

(740)992-3194
992-6635

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

. •NIMHomes
•Gaages
•Ca'~ I

I FI8111Cdelug

Stop &amp;Compare

www.amerlcanatandardalr.com

"SALES AND SERVICE"

WOLFE HEATING &amp; COOLING
949-1521 .

Hre you stressed?
cau now for your

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

appt.

mEIGS mHSSftGE
. THERHPY
'. 213 n. Second Rue.
' middleport, 1111

FREE ESTIMATES

74()..992·1671
7122/TfN

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION
Roonna, Sldlna

PIJnUna, Gulten, Dttks,
Fl'ft: Estimates!

(740) 992·1189
(AITordable Prices)

LARRY SCHEY

/cH,VRO,~T/

(740) 992-1785
Tonia Reiber
Ucensed 11!1 the Ohio
Staf mNkalllolrd

750 East State

(740)5!13-66711

Dean Hill
New&amp; Used

Longaberger/Dresden

475 South Chutch St.
Ripley, WV 25271

Bus Trip

law PBDIII e lew Things

New Cllars Taste
Dallclaus

Sat ., November 30. 2002
$65 .lfO. Space Limil&lt;d
Deadline: Oct, 20. 2002
Everyone receives a
basket!!! Call:

DIPOYSAG

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

J6S flfCTRIC 6

PLUmBinG

1-800-822-0417

Hill 's Self
Storage

PUTS

All Makes Tractor &amp;
Equipmenl Parts
factory Authorized
Case-iH Parts
Dealers
I000 St. Rt. 7 South
i
l Coolville, OH 45713

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771 .
740-949-2217

.All.tliL
Cellular

Jeff Warner Ins.

992-5479

..:;;=~;:;:;~;;;;~ 740-667-0363
YOUNG'S
Advertise CARPENTER

in this
space
for $50
per
month

at

the Best Price

.b llllf flEE 1111.
llnlll bacilli
Wlrll

RomOdellng
NewGaragn
Eloctr1..1 &amp; Plumbing
Rooftng &amp; Gunoro
VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
Patio end Porch Decka

Free Estimates
992-6215
Pomemy,Qhjo

Yea

I

llflllllllll Wl

liaiiii.IIIS
ce...IIIIJ 11c1111

IIIIICI

740.992-2222 or
740.446-1 018

~

Your
oacrete ConlHdlea, L
Qoi/lly

WVIll!li

Pctup

·------.1
(740) 446-1812

The CRAFTY,

~ ~e«titt9
High I Dry

740-992-5232
llasti7U..
.udlllr••

•••Ia
II clap.

Call jeanie
and ask how.
7 40-992-7996
Hernallte Independent
Distributor

AU vertical blindoare
made to order at
our location ·
• Verticals • Wood

• Mi!tis • Etc
144 Third Ave.
Gallipolis 446-4995

~. ~. Stona, cutvwT ~ Cetwti"UC'flon Suppllu

Bedliners • Nerf Bar

• Tonneue Cover •
Venl v isor • Bug

&amp; Full Line of
Other Accessories

Shield

• I •' "\ r•l

'•

11"

\)lddkllilll

POMEROY
APPLIANCE
STORE
200 E. Main St
Open 9am:6pm
Mon thru Sat
Phone 992-0515
Washers, dryers
like New
Freezer, Electric
Ranges, Dishwashers
Refrigerators, and
much 'more
FREE DELIVERY

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Bucket Truck

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL

SEPTIC 111U.IUCII-111111UU.
MillE

() flHI

. Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
1st Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon
Buy$5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

· New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

r.;:::~.~D~OZING
• END LOADIER~
TRUCKING • TRENCHING '

rh

(740) 992·5822

·• Replacement

446-8237. 67!1-7!116 or 1·800· 730· 4!13!1

SINCE 1964

Toll Free 1-888-745-8847

BUILDERS IRC.

YQ\.)

• • • • ISMA1LL OR LARGE J.OBSIII~

(Factory Outlet)

BISSEll

F

FREE ESTIMATES

BLIND SPOT

SeH·Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

A1ID abllllla, r... in tMml
Clll111 rw Ill yow cor,...._..

f

,.• • •1

Local 843-5264
.
Medicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial ilnd Final Expenses;
Cancer &amp; Dental,
Retirement, Pensloo &amp; 401K Rollovers·
ilf1 '
·Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home
W: ·

V. C. YOUNG Ill

{877.JS3-71W)
Clll for more inbJ fi'ct cstinwc
Open 9am-Spm

YH CHitlllllllll-

• Room Addition• a
. •
•
•
•
•

TfN

AnVIUlaldDIIP

SERVICE

c-nte flllbltilllod ....!
740-742-8015

REQUESTS
BE
SUBMITTEDMUST
WITHIN
30 DAYS OF ·NOnCE
OF THE DRAFT
ACTION.
"PR·
OPOSED ACTIONS"
ARE
WRITTEN
STATEMENTS O.F
THE DIRECTOR'S
INTENT
WITH
RESPECT TO THE
ISSUANCE, DENIAL, .
MODIFICAnON,
.REVOCATION, OR ·
RENEWAL OF A
PERMIT, LICENSE,
0R
VARIANCE.
WRITTEN
COMMENTS AND
REQUESTS FOR A
PUBLIC MEETING
REGARDING . A
PROPOSED ACTION
MAY BE SUBMITTED
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
NOTICE OF THE
PROPOSED ACTION •
AN ADJUDICAnON
HEARING MAY BE
HELD
ON
A
PROPOSED AcnON
A HEARING
IF
REQUEST
OR
OBJECTION
IS
RECEIVEb BY THE
OEPA WITHIN 30
DAYS OF ISSUANCE

NEWSPAPERS

304-n3-saoo

~

IIlli .
fllllY
CllmiCTIOI

(10) 21,' 2002

1066 Second Street

PUBLIC NOnCE
THE FOLLOWING
APPUCATIONS .
AND/OR VERIFIED
COMPLAINTS WERE
RECEIVED, AND THE
FOLLOWING DRAFT,
PROPOSED,
OR
FINAL
ACTIONS
WERE ISSUED, BY
THE
OHIO
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
AGENCY
(OEPA)
LAST
WEEK.
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE
T.H E
ADOPTION,
MODIFICATION, OR
REPEAL OF ORDERS
(OTHER
THAN
.EMERGENCY
ORDERS);
THE
ISSUANCE, DENIAL,
MODIFICATION OR
REVOCATION
OF
UCENSES, PERMITS,
LEASES,
VARIANCES, OR
CERTIFICATES; AND
THE APPROVAL OR
DISAPPROVAL 0 F
PLANS
AND
SPECIFICAnONS.
"DRAFT ACTIONS"
ARE
WRITTEN
STATEMENTS OF
THE DIRECTOR OF
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION'S
(DIRECTOR'S)
INTENT
WITH
RESPECT TO THE
ISSUANCE, DENIAL.
ETC. OF A PERMIT,
LICENSE, ORDER;
ETC. INTERESTED
PERSONS
MAY
SUBMIT WRITTEN
COMMENTS
OR
REQUEST A PUBLIC
MEETING
REGARDING DRAFT
AcnONS.
OR
COMMENTS
PUBLIC MEETING

DAYS AFTER FILING
THE APPEAL WITH
THE ERAC.
FINAL APPROVAL OF
PLANS
AND
SPECIFICATIONS
LEADING CREEK
CONSERVANCY
DISTRICT
34411
CORN
HOLLOWRD
RUTLAND OH
ISSUE
DATE
1010912002
FACILITY
DESCRIPTION:
COMMUNITY WATER
SYSTEM
THIS FINAL ACnON
NOT PRECEDED BY
PROPOSED ACTION
ANDIS
APPEALABLE TO
ERAC.
DETAIL
PLANS OF SA 143
WATERLINE
EXTENSION.

~lfCftft4

October 7, 14, 21, 21,

Public Notice
NonCE OF
ELECTION ON TAX
LEVY IN EXCESS
OF THE TEN MILL
LIMITAnON

VARIANCE
OR
WHICH IS NOT
PRECEDED BY A
PROPOSED ACnON,
MAY BE APPEALED
TO THE ERAC BY
FILING AN APPEAL
WITHIN. 30 DAYS OF
ISSUANCE OF THE
FINAL ACTION. ERAC
APPEALS MUST BE
FILED
WITH :
ENVIRONMENTAL
REVIEW APPEALS
COMMISSION, 238 .
EAST TOWN STREET,
ROOM
300,
COLUMBUS, OHIO
43215. A COPY OF
THE APPEAL MUST
BE SERVED ON THE
DIRECTOR WITHIN 3

Business Services
Jilf4ft

Public Notice

,.

r

i:

·smtth,

11,2002.

Rita D.
Director

eo

r:
·. ,

· Alii D.
Dlreator

v--.

I

D.
Director
Alii

NOTICE Ia hereby
given that In pureu·
ance of a R•olutlon
or the Board or
Town1htp Tni•IM• ot
the Town1hlp ol
Slllabury, Pomeroy,
Ohio, palled on the
8th day ol Auguet,
2002, there will be
1ubmttted to a vote
ol the people ol uld
lubdtvlaton
at
General Election to
be held In the
Townahlp
or
Slll1bury Ohio, at the
fliiiUiar placea of vot·
lng therein, on the
5th day ol November,
2002, the queatlon or
levying a tax, In
IXCHI olthe len mUI
llmlt1t1on, lor the
benelll
or
Unincorporated arua
of
Sall1bury
Townahlp, excluding
Middleport
and
Pomeroy Vlll•g• lor
the purpoae or oper·
atlng cem~WI• • .
Slid tax being: an
additional tax or 0.5
mill at a rate not
exceeding 0.5 mllll
lor •ch one dollar ol
vlluatlon, which
amounta to liVe centa
($0.05) lor each one
hundred dollar• or
veluatlon, lor live (5)

3 bedroom home, Mlners-

·with glamour bath, all elec!ric,
central
air. Call
(304)675·81 8o
2 trailer for sale on 1 acre
lot. $ 3S,OOO . Nice rental.

Yll'"·

Clutlrpe...on

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Nutlce

ODD JOBS

IOC

Connie's
Child CARE

•
Painting, Power
Washing, Mowing,
Weedeatlng

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

You Need It
Done, We'll Do It
(740) 949-4026
or

Sunset Home
Construction
Bryan Reeves
New liomes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
-&amp;More

FRFE ESTIMATES
30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

740:-992-7599
1.~

"'

J

(740) 591·9239 .• ~CA:L;:;;L:66~7·:63:2~9

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411
.

.'

�Monday, October 21, 2002

wiw.mydallysentlnel.com

Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel
ALLEYOOP

BRIDGE

NEA Crol8word Puzzle

PHILLIP
ALDER

ACROSS
1 Conoumer
protection

.....

6K U

. ....

*

1 LIIOt degree
10 Internet
oddr.
11 Wel~ltd
13 Murmur
14 Wut or
Clarke
15 Fuel carrier
16 Leotherworking
tool
17 Protocto
19 .SIIIy
21 Service
chariJII·

11•:1141

A.JI 7$ 4

•
6

" •• J
I 42

-

...
.....

.

•

Q ' l l2

•

A.

.•

s

l

A 'I~

-

. KI,IJIO~

t K

•

l,j 6 l
K 1.,1 Ll» .\

De11lc~ West

Vulnerable: E.ill:l't -West

8outll

•!

I"
4

Weat
t"au

N:Mth Eat.t
Pu• 'Pas•

Pall
Past

l•

22 u... 11

l'1151
Pus

I':LU

oource

4 Jllly

•

If I ' I 4 2
f J LD 1
• J 1I

O'll·

traverae
23 Fllm-ard
26 GeoloGIC
lornuoilon
30 Deborohol old films
31 ''My gal" ol

Oplinin,glcad: t J ·

Holidays near

38 Welles or
Bun
40 Prone to
41 •- h8d Rl"
42 Syrup
45 Worked
flint
48 Hl·ll
recorda
49 USPS rival
(hyph.)
51 Soggy
ground
53 Meadow
54 "-Marner"
55 Clinch a
deal (slang) 9 Burrow
56 N.Y. hours 11 More
peeved
57 DA'1
12 Tiny ahrlmp
degree
18 Remote
58 Map abbr.
20 Tht Big
Apple
DOWN
22 Mllny, In
·
comboa
1 Mooch
23 Kan.
2 Talk big
neighbor
3-chMse
. 24 Close
dreoslng
tightly .
4 Baseball
25 Gator kin
maneuver
26 Fluctuate
5 Ocean
'0 Pokercardl
dwellero
28 SEATO
6 Decent
counterpart
grede
29 Author7 "March
Wllller
madne11"
31 Mo. bill
grp.
35 Hike
8 VIllage

37 Fa!atllll'o
erlnce
38\ 'En garde"
weapons
39 Cameo
,....,..
41 Trofon War
atory
42 Fr. title
43 Prlmlttl
44 E11m lor .
HS Juniors
45 Long

I

song
With Chrislmas
hairpiece.
32 Crow cry
only two monlhs
48 Arab prince
33 --tzu
away. lhoughls turn
47 Pipe
.
(..Tao"
SO $1 ,000,000,
author)
10 gifts for loved ones
alanglly
34 Experiment
and
friends.
So,
over
.
52
Ruby or
35
Plerre'o
BARNEY
lhe nexl few weeks,
Sandra
head
·
36 Medieval .
lei's look at some
I MEAN BESibE&amp;
M CAAVIN' SUGAR,
"science"
suilable ilems for a,
MAW!! WE GOT
· '{OU AN' TATER
II
bridge player.
ENN'{TH IN' SWEET
David Bird 11nd
IN THIS HOUSE?!
Nikos Sarantakos
have written "Famous
Bridg.e "Records"
(Cassell). The book
contains 27 world-record deals, found afler the aulhors had
spent "Counlless
hours ... scouring
FRANK &amp; EARNE~T. .
world championship
books, tournament
bulletins and bridge
magazines
from
around the world." .
MOttE
This deal occurred
in
1he 1987 Venice
ANIMAL
· Cup world champion6ttAMMA((
ship. Judi Radin ,
playing South for the
AXOLITTI-·
gold-medal
U .S .
r1TTY
AXOLITL
team, rebid an imagiCELEBRITY CIPHER
nalive four hearls.
by Luis Campos
When 1he defenders
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each leUer In the cipher stands for another.
never
atlacked ·
THE BORN LOSER
Toclay's clue: C equals .U
spades, Radin used
~ ~
r
~
r
~
"YFB ' RBSEBY
ZV
OM
dummy's diamond
"11-\t. Cdi:M') l:i N...'~&lt;JI&gt;\Y:i &amp;~E.R
II'':&gt; I\ C.OMME.I{I"i\RY 01'-11-\0Mr..N
e:L.f\, t-IOW 11-\~1 t LOO~ fl...I II,
ace
and
diamond
11-\E. GAA~6 ~Y
.,.........01\l Tf\E. 0\f\E.i&lt;:.
t-11&gt;.TUR.E.- I
S K B W 0
RCSSBRR
OWR
eighl as entries to
c
------:&gt;I DE. OI'TI-\E:
. I:i Gll:E:f:!'&lt;£1&lt;: ON feD y
~ 7 . !'lOT MEN-11 TO J~l f
play twice loward her
W O _L
KHIHGU
w VWRY-DZIHOU '
FE.NC£."1~ i\ ,,., • /.r..
&amp;.
1/&gt;-K.E.i'l
r ;,. -'"'
. TI-\E. 01ta SlOE.
I
club
king-queen, los~'\"
1
u
OF MY FE.Nc.£ )
ing tric1cs only to
LITERJ\LLY ... f
-~
COMMON
':""
'
ZCYVHBKL
. "
,.....
......
East's 1wo aces.
'::&gt;1\'&lt;11'-lG ;_.•
THY SF BE·
'1
(Could the contracl
VWDB
zv
FWKK
have been defealed?)
UZDBX
AI lhe olher lable,
KBVYM
East . opened one
..
.•• l... ... -·'-- ' ·-'--: . "
. .. .. . . __ ,_ .., :.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "The human brain is a device to
·- .... . · ·- - -l. - • -: ·,- ...•. •• l,L -·
.
..... .
.. •"-'•
. ·;·.· .··..
- ··.·.
keep the ears from grallng on one another.•- Peter De Vrlea .
spade in lhird seat.
South made a takeout
BIG NATE
WOlD
THAT DAILY
E~ER"«JNE KNOWS YoU • r.:..:-:S~A,t;;it"(iD:-y:;:;;;~=:::-1 double, and North
GAM I
passed for penalties.
~UULIR
Cii.N· PREDICT SOME- '
THE
r'M wAT&lt;.HING ARTUR
BODY'S LEVEL OF
GOALIE
I GET DRE%ED FOPNol fancying that,
ATHL!=TIC 51&lt;.1LL BY
f WITH
1'!1.ACTI&lt;.E .
Easl redoubfed for O Rearrange letters of tMe
WATC.+IING THE WAY
HIS
four acrambled words be•
rescue. West ran lo low to form fovr simple words.
HE GETS DRESSED
SHO!I.T5
BEFOREHI'IND 1
ON
lwo · hearls, which
BA&lt;.~­
South happily dou- , . S L Y S U T
WARD. .

,,

AXOLOTL

T'\jj

f

_.

1

•

i

~

,~

"

•"

,;

•, •,

I

~~~~~ W~r~~:son (~~~

UHHUH ..

WATCHING
THE FISil
SWIM AAOIII-IP
611/ES VOO
A DIFFEReNT
FEELIN6.

DOESN'T IT?

llETTY
IT'S 'TIME TO
GE.TMCARI'f~

CLEANeD

1 I I 13 I

1

2

l
1

hearts and lhe club ~:;~:;:;~=::---l
ace) for minus 1,400.
G L. A N
In a way, the 5-0 fil 1-~;..:;.-,.;......:,--1
played eight tricks
1~ 5
.
better 1han 1he 5-3.
0
I
However, is lhis
U T B 0 D r.:
really a record?
cuts the state college had to
I
6
To defeat four ·
0
many courses. The students
.... . nate
hearls, West musl
held a rally and one student's oanlead lhe spade 10!
ner read : "Leave the class---- MA C 0 T I
This negales lhe
- - to - -!"
· power of dummy's ~-r,--,.--,,.--,,-::8-rl"'~--l
Complete !h.e chuckle ~uoted
1
.
.
.
_
.
~Y fill ing in the missing wards
spade jack (which is
you develop from step No. 3 below.
relevant if West leads
the spade king) and tft PRINT NUMBERED
•
allows lhe defenders '1::1' LETTERS
lo lap declarer to
death.
The book is $15.50
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
postpaid from Baron
Jackal - Rainy- Uncle- Outrun ~ CIRCULAR
Barclay Bridge Supplies. Call (800) 274.. ,My husband came back fromshopping and sighed,
2221 lo order.
Its a great feeling when that paper under your wind. shield Wiper turns out to be just an advertising CIRCULAR '
.

I

c

1

t

r

I 1 I I'

O

r
I I I I II I

---fi··~·----..;_
Advancement in yoUr chosen field of l o is a strong
possibility in t e

y~ar ah~ad,

because you w II now · put to
use
ch of what
you' v tc;.(ned in ..the past
borh from formal education

and experience.
LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 23)- Don't expect any free rides

in your material involvements
others today and you ' II
be more willing to get in volved and ante up n share.
The returns could be more
l!"yo~nticipote. Trying to

-.....~...--.with

patch u

n broken romance?

The Astr graph Matchmaker
can help you understand what
to do to make the relationship
work. Mail $2.75 to Match·maker. c/o this newspaper.

P.O. Bo• 167, Wickliffe. OH
44092.
"''
SCORPIO (Oct. 24, No v..
22)-- Be careful not to view
so me type of arrangeinent

~

&lt;
.
w
z
li

~

0

you're making with another
as a done deal. This person
could have second thought s
a d buck out without notice if
you fail to rene_gt;~tiate.
SAG ITT ARIU:S (Nov. 23Dec.2 1) -- Be mindful of your
limitations today so that you
don't pu~h yourself too far
out wirh no WtlY back. Opcr·
ate effectively and within

s

a

s

I
~

.

'

'

your parameters in mar'brsthat affect your cnreer.
· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
·19) -- Out of character today.
you could be inclined to take
gambles on things based upon
assumptions instead of facts.
_, Be your usually cau1ious self.
and don't trip oVer impulsive- .
n~s~.

AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Feb.

19) .. Don't co me home to-

day and take it out on )'{)U£
loved ones ir the outsidt:
world ·has been rough on you.
They could have hail a simi lar
day, and you each need to be
kind 10 one another.

PISCES (Feb . 20-March
20) -- Critical comments
made by yc&gt;U today could be
di storted when your listeners
repem them. Hold to the wise
advice, ''If you don't . have
something nice to say abou1
· someone, don ' t say anything
at all ."
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
-- You could be on the track
to doing something quttc foolish today concerning a commere ial arrangement, so don·t
turn a deaf e:.tr to those who

anempt 10 advise you.
_
TAURUS (April 20-May
20) -- Of course your self-interests arc important, but they
shuuld not be sn paramount

today that they affect your relattonshJps with others. In reality. cooperation could prove
beneficial .
, GEMINI (M~x 21-June 20)
-- Avotd the pitfalls o( being
so absorbed in your own
thoughts that you foil to overlook truly important relarion·
ships that are right before
your eyes . One associalion
'_ ·
could be a winner.
CANCER (June 21-July il)
•· Usually you know how to
regulate your acrivitie!' in

ways that do not jeopardize
funds allocated for hou&lt;ehold
needs. Today. however. yoU
could let your guard down. B ~
careful.
.
LEO (July 23-A ug . 22)-- If
you tak.e matters for granted
today in career sima~ions and
let your mind wunder, you
could make mistakes with
procedure• you usua lly do
with relative ease. Stay on
track.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
·~ Instead· of showing resentment today if yo~r compan ions do not respond favorably
to your plans, tiend o.ver backward to go along with the majority . There IS something
good in it for you.

I

Raising a flag at a recent Meigs football game was the .Cub Scout Pack 249
sponsored by the Pomeroy Methodist Church. Aaron Oliphant, standing to
the left of the flag pole, was recently appointed Junior Scout Leader. .
.

...

EASTERN, MEIGS, &amp; SOUTHERN SCHOOLS
DRUG FREE PROGRAMS OCTOBER 21-31, 20Q2

.

Supplement to

The Daily Sentinel
.....

'.

)

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