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'

Page Al~

The Daily Sentinel

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Playoff games moved to Bengals' stadiu"1

l$oWI Championship Series
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3.17
5.50
8.33
8.50
8.50
8.17
7.33
11.33
7.81
11 .17
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16.50
13.67

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2.88
0.76
0.24
1.60
1.00
1.8ol
1.48
1.80
0.08
0.04
0.88
4.38
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13.13
15.50
15.8ol
18.85
21.83
25.91
27.21
27.55
27.89
29.90
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2.82
5.51
7.83
12.74
13.113
14.80
15.84
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Poll A - - T h o - ol Tho • ...,.,..... Press . . - poll and USA Todoy-ESPN coaolles poll. Other&amp; r-.;ng vcteo are cal·
-lnorderi11Cr11vad.
.
COIIlp i1or A - - Tho o1 Andaroan &amp; Hester. Colley Malllx. Richard Billingsley, Kemetli Massey. David Rothman, Jeff
SOgortn, Sc:o_, lloword. and 11m Peter Wallo~ ranklngo. Tho axnputor"""""""' will be delormlnod by averag-

CINCINNATI (AP) - The four Division
I playoff teams from Cincinnati won't have to
travel to Dayton to play after all.
The Ohio High School Athletic Association has agreed to let St. Xavier play Princeton, and Colerain play Elder on Saturday in
Paul Brown Stadium.
"We want the games here - one game,
both games," said jeff Berding, Bengals director of sales and public affairs. "We initiated
the call in the first place."
Callers to radio sports talk shows had been
trashing the Bengals since the OHSAA last
week scheduled the games &gt;1t Welcome Stadiurn in Dayton. Callers assumed the Bengals
did not want rhe games in their !-year-old
stadium.
OHSAA Commissioner Clair Muscaro was
quoted inThe Cincinnati Enquirer on Monday as saying that the association had talked to
the Bengals about playing the games in Paul
Brown Stadium, "but the bid rhey submitted
was prohibitive."
The Ben gals swung into action Monday.
They put out releases saying they had. asked

last Thursday to have the games, and that th~
did not set the reported $90,000 cost of corytract services such as stadium clean-up.
•
"We didn't set the price," said Bengals p~ident Mike Brown. "It was set by the count~"
Hamilton Counry owns the stadium, wki.;h
can accommodate 28,388 people in the lowtr
bowl alone. Welcome Stadium's capaciry 3s
II ,000.
Berding noted that even if rhe OHS;t\1\ had ·
SIOO,OOO in eJ!penses, it could net $150,009,
based on $5 tickets times 25,000 fans a game
for two games, minus expenses. .
I
· The St. Xavier-Princeton game will beglh
at I p.m. One hour after that game is corn•
Pleted, Colerain-Elder will begin.
,.•
Tickets for the doubleheader are $10 tc, r
adults, S5 for students. Tickets will be sold &lt;~I
·the participating schools, and public sale ~f
tickets starts at the stadium at noon Satu~.
Colerain, St. Xavier and Elder are ranked 12-3 · in the state, respectively. All three are in
USA Today 's national Top 25: Colerain is N"J&gt;.
7, Elder No. 17 and St. Xavier No. 19.
.:.

'

Ing ... rarililngL Tho ~ and ... be ilaregarded.
lei" ot ilo - - Rlnll o1 -lllronglh _ , . . _,. o111er Divlllon ~A looms dMdad by 25. This ~ Is calculltod by
lho ~ rooarda ol ttio 1oam"a oppouent (88.8 porcont) and 1he cumulllivo W011IIo6s recordti ollhe team•a
.... - · · (33.3 poroonl) .
_
point for_, -'*&lt;ring lhe 111111800.
a...y Win C•-·•~- Tho qua1ty win ... ,... ,., wlft rowan110 vorylng dogroM teams thai defea1 owonents ranktd among
lio tap 15 In Ire-, 11onc1ngo. Tho boooo point oca1t ,.. Jrorn o high ol 1.5 polnll for a win over lhO 1&lt;ll&gt; ranked 1Nm to a
low of 0.1 foro W:tory """'lhe 15111-ronkod.BCS 1eam. Tho flnll BCS ~Widing~ will dotormlne flnll quallly win polniS. ff a team reg...,. o . - y - o _ , .... ttw&gt; onco during the ~~- quali1y win polntl will be awarded jus1 once. Ouallly win polnto
. . --Jrorn11i0 ........ ol
axnputor
and--

MarYs Tee Time ·Grill

n••rg
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poll-.

--rank

T. Glenn claims discrimination by NFL
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)Terry Glenn could soon be
adtling his name to yet another legal dispute.
..
The Patriots' wide receiver,
who has five arbitration hearings and a criminal case pending, was cleared on Monday to
sue rhe NFL on his charge
that the league failed to consider his chronic depression
when he was suspended four
games for violating its substance abuse policy.
In a charge filed wirh the
Equal Employment Opportuniry Commission in Buffalo,
rhe former Ohio State standout argued that he missed a
drug test because of the ailment, which is a fed~rally recognized disabiliry under the
Americans with Disabilities
Act.
Glenn's agent, James Gould,
said he received a "right to
sue"letter from the EEOC on
Monday. The EEOC procedure is designed to discourage
only the most frivolous lawsuits and does not take sides in
rhe case; it merely acknowledges that rhe claim, if true,
could be a violation of the law.
Glenn has 90 days to decide
whether to file a lawsuit,
Gould said.
"We're trying to work it out
with both the NFL and the
Patriots and find a peaceful
resolution," he said. "If we sue,
I am certain we would pre-

vail."
Neither the NFL nor the
Patriots would comment on
rhe complaint.
"1 can't speak_ to those
issues. As much as I, would like
to give you a lot of comments," ·New England coach
Bill Belichick said, cracking a

BCS

from Pip AS
which teams play in the
BCS' national tide game in
the Rose Bowl on Jan. 3. The
rankings are based on a formula that incorporates the AP
media and coaches' polls,
eight computers, strength of
schedule, won-lost record and
bonus points for big wins.
Miami, ranked No. I in the
AP media poll and the. USA
Today/ESPN coaches poll,
jumped past
Oklahoma
thanks to the computers and a
stronger schedule, which also
takes into account results of
·teams Miami has already
played.
For example, Miami defeated Florida State earlier this
season, and the Seminoles (62) improved to 14th in the
BCS standings after beating
Clemson on Saturday.
Tennessee (6-1) moved up
three places to fourth, with
Texas. (8--1) fifth. Rounding
out the BCS' top 10 were
Oregon (8-1), Florida (7-1),
Washington (7-1), Washington State (S-1) and Michigan

FLY YOU FLAG TO SUPPORT AMERICA'S TROOPS!

TUesdiiJ. Nov. .a..r a. 110l

smile, "I just can't."
Asked how Glenn's depression was involved in the
missed drug test, Gould
deferred to Gleim's lawyer,
Dane Butswinkas. Butswinkas
did not return a call seeking
comment.
Glenn has missed the last
two games with a hamstring
injury. He was not in the
Patriots' locker room on
Monday during the 40 min~
utes it was open to reporters,
though he was in the Foxboro
Statlium parking lot beforehand, wearing sweat pants and
a sweat shirt and sitting in a
securiry cart talking on a cell
phone.
The ADA, enacted in 1990,
is best known in sports as the
basis for Casey Martin's suecessful campaign to ride a cart
on• rhe professional golf tour.
More generally, it bans job discrimination against the disabled and requires employen
to offer reasonable accommodations to disabled people
who are otherwise qualified to
perform a job.
Glenn had been in the
NFI:s substance abuse program for rhree years after an
initial positive test. He never
failed a subsequent test, but
earlier this year he was
unavailable for a random test
- a violation of the policy and he was suspended four
games on Aug. 3.
Because of the suspension,
the team withheld most of
Glenn's $9 million signing
bonus. On rhe day the suspension was announced, Glenn
left the team without permis. sion and Belichick suspended
him for the remainder of the
season.
(6-2).
BYU (9-0), the only other
major college unbeaten team,
made the rankings for the fint
time, in 13th place.
Nebraska's
2.62-point
breakdown was: 2 points for
poll average, 1 point for computer average, 0. 92 for
strength of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a 1.3bonus point cjeduction for
beating Oklahoma on Oct.
27.
The bonus award - new
this season - is based on a
sliding scale from 1.5 · points
for beating a. first-place team
down to .1 for a win over the
15th-place team. The bonus is
awarded after the other elements .are calculated.
Miami (6.61) had I point
for poll average, 2.83 for
computer average, 2.88 for
strengrh of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a .!point deduction for beating
Florida State.
·
Oklahoma (7.83) had 3.5
for poll average, 3.67 for
computer average, 0. 76 for
strength of schedule, I for
won-loss record and a 1.1point' deduction for beating
Texas op Oct. 6.

That suspension was overturned by an arbitrator, and
Glenn returned in Week 5 to
catch seven passes for II 0
yards and a touchdown against
the San Diego Chargers. Five
other grievances - including
one seeking the return of his
signing bonus remain
unresolved.
"The (first) suspension was
kind of like the bad tl)!e that
gives off the poisonous fruit,"
Gould said. "Everything followed from it."
Glenn also faces charges of
assault and battery and intimidating a wimess in connection
with a dispute May 15 with
rhe mother of his son.

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Call today for canyout, banquet reservations, or more Information
304 773-5354
800 261·3031

Fall is one of the most wonderful times of the year in Alabama. So come
the crisp days and postcard sunsets on the RoBERT TRENT JONES
GoLF TRAIL. With eight sites and
378 championship holes across the
state, there's one' within driving
range of.wherever you ore.
And, now is ogreat time to plan
a trip to Alabama to s:ee the
new" GRAND HOTEL, port of the
Resort Division of the Trail. Now
undergoing a $30 million ·
renovation, The Grand Hotel is
becoming even grander.
Coli today for tee times
and hotel reservations. Fall is
a Grand time on the Trail.
11

•

.Tenn. man...

rs
•
•
Winners 1n
local races

testifies in
-Byrd case

Testimony claims
Byrd was passed
out in van
DAYTON (AP) - A
Tennessee man testified
that a man se)"ltenced to die
for the slaying of a clerk
during a 1983 robbery
near Cincinnati was passed
out in a van during a second robbery that same
night.
Public defenders called
Bobby . Pottinger Jr. of
Nashville to the stand
Tuesday,
an
apparent
attempt to show it was
unlikely John W Byrd Jr.
stabbed Monte Tewksbury
during the first robbery at
a convenience store.
In earlier appeals, the
Ohio Supreme Court
found that Byrd being the
knife-wielding robber in
the second robbery supported testimony that he
fatally stabbed Tewksbury.
However, Pottinger contradicted himself several
times Tuesday,
The testimony caine
during the second day of
hearings before U.S. Magistrate Michael Merz. The
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals delayed Byrd's
execution in Sei?tember to
allow for a h~aiing on his
claim of innocence.
If Merz recommends to
the appeals court that
Byrd's claim is legitimate
·and the panel agrees, Byrd
will be able to ~k the
judges to overturn his
death sentence.
U.S.
Also
Tuesday.
Supreme Court :Justice
john Paul Stevens denied
· the state's request to stop
tpe hearing while the full
court decides whether to
hear another request to
clarifY rhe magistrate's role.
· Stevens said allowing the
hearing to proceed would
have no effect on the status
of clarification request.
Pottinger, who testified
from Nashville via video. conferencing, also testified
it was he - not Byrd who along with John
Brewer robbed the second
convenience store. But
Pottinger at first testified
that Brewer had a knife
during the robbery, then
said he never saw a knife.

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

oters cast ballots in township, village and
school
board
races throughout Meigs County on Tuesday. Unofficial results from
the Meigs Counry Board of
Elections show that 5,745 of
Meigs Counry's 14,402 registered voters reported to the
polls, just under 40 percent.
Ruth Spaun and Larry
Wehrung, pictured here,
were among the voters at the
Pomeroy 2 precinct, which
votes at the Pomeroy Firehouse.
As they approached the

BY PAM WIWAMION
OVP NEWS STAFF

NEW HAVEN, WVa.
"We want this factory and
we're here to convince you of
that, and to allay any fears that
you may have that we're not
serious,'' Highlander Core
Industries Ltd. Industrial
Researcher Leighton Wolf said
at a town meeting Thes9&gt;y.
"We're here to spend a lot of
money to get this plant back
running and employ people
and have this plant running on
a long term basis."
Wolf, along with co-owner
of Highlander Ariel Ness,
spoke to more than 100 people garhered at the Bend Area
Communiry Center.
Highlander is just one of
two companies left in the bid~
ding process for the American
Alloys plant that closed its

Hlp: lOs
L-: JOS

Sentinel
2 Sections - 12 P11p1

Hotel
Clear

voting booths, voters in all
precincts were advised to
check their ballots for
"hanging chads," a term
which would have drawn
quizzical looks a year ago,
but drew understanding
smiles Tuesday; as residents
remembered the historic
2000 presidential election
and its suspenseful consequences. There was less
drama in this year's Meigs
County elections, and fu11
results are reported in today's
Sentinel.

Brian J. Reed photos

Bid8er hopes Alloys ,f~mt
will serve as foothol in U.S.

Todlly's

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

POMEROY- Township
trustees, village officials and
school board members were
.elected Tuesd~y in each of
Me1gs Counry s 27 precmcts.
Two trustees were elected
in each of the counry's 12
townships.
Unofficial results in township trustee races (with
write-in candidates noted)
were: Bedford: R.obert F.
Hawk,211, Ronald L.Wood,
140; Chester: Alan Holter,
383, Blair Windon, 335;
Columbia, DON CHEADLE 185 GRANVILLE C.
'
'
.
STOUT, 192, CurtiS A.
Johnson , 77; Lebanon:
KEITH E. FITCH, 164,
JOHN R. KRIDER, 94;
Lawrence H. Hayman, 41,
Charles R. Lawrence, 87,
Timothy D. Lawrence, 50, .
Lawrence Johnston, 12 (WI),
Woodrow Richard, 8 (WI);
Letart: David Graham, 77,
Bob Morris, 90; Olive:
WILLIAM R. OSBORNE,

Election Day

Plelln-Byrd,Al

'

Hometown News,.per

MelpCounty's

AS

Wolf explained that if they
acquire the plant they will
begin a ramping up period
immediately, taking from six
months to a year to bring the
plant back up to 'operational
capaciry and spending at least
$2.5 million in the process.
Or1ce the plant is operating,
Wolf said they would b'e looking at hiring at least 150 people, if not more, at an average
gross salary of$20 an hour and
operating all three furnaces
with the possible addition of a
fourth.
"The union has the right to
be a bargaining agent in this
bankruptcy. That's a given."
Wolf explained. "Under bankruptcy ·law in the United
States and under your union
contract, it says if you sell the

Pleese see Allur. Al

U

1

a 15 ury: . war
·
Durst, 888, B1U Spaun, 743;
Sc1p10: ROBERT BUTCHER 144 (WI) PHILIP L.
En;"IN SR ' 93 K .
"-w
.,
•
evm
Payne, 84, Robert L. Jewell,
72,BobbyW.Vance,57,Crug
Hanmng, 17; Sutton: KENNETH R. GUINTHER,
537, ROY f. VANMETER,
545: Grover Salser Jr., 427.
V1llage and school board
races were dec1ded as fol~
PluM- Vol-. AJ

Bond.issue~

Carleton levy
fail at polls
BY TONY M. LEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY Meigs
County voters in Tuesday's
election defeated the Carleton School/ Meigs Industries' 1.6-miU continuing
levy and the Meigs Local
School District's 2.67-mill
bond issue, and passed the
Meigs Counry Tuberculosis
Clinic's half-mill replacement
levy.
Carleton Sthool
/Meigs Industries levy
For a seventh time, ·voters
rejected an additional levy for
Carleton
School/Meigs
industries.
The levy went down by an
unofficial vote count of

3,541 to 1,941. Approval
would have allowed the
Meigs Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental Disabilities to expand
the current level of services at
the faciliry, move ahead with
capital construction projects,
and replace two buses and
two vans.
"It's a very disappointing
loss, however, the voters have
made their decision,'' said
Steve Beha, executive director
of
Carleton
School/Meigs Industries.
"The MR/DD Board will
meet next week to go over
the results and consider all of
our options," he said. "We are

Pleeu -

Polls. Al

Local 4-H .teens selected for state team

Details, A3

Lotteries

POMEROY - Meigs County has
t;,_,o new 4- H ambassadors.
Theresa Baker and Ashley Hager
were officially inducted into the State
4- H ambassador program during the
2001 Ohio 4-H Youth Expo at Ohio
State University in Columbus.
As a part of their service as ambas sadors, they will begin a year of active
service promoting 4- H and working

OHIO

B2-4 Pk:k 3: 6-7-6; Pk:k 4: S.Q-4-4
BS llucMve 5:7-17-27-30-31

A4 W.VA.
Dally 3: 5-2-3 Dollly 4:7-7-7-6
Cash
25: 17·19-2(}-22-24-25
B1.3.6

A3
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doors in january 2000, leaving
about 125 people unemployed.
The other Spanish based
company is Ferro Atlantica.
Today, a judge will hear final
bids and agreements before
making a decision as early as
next week as to which of the
companies will be the new
owner.
Highlander held the town
meeting to educate the communiry about the company
and their intentions to operate
the faciliry.
"We are definitely going to
invest here in the people and
definitely going to invest in
the faciliry," Ness said. "I can't
say definitely how many years,
but we have taw materials for
over 100 years. For su.re, we're
talking at least a decade.
Hopefully many decades."

211, JACKIE L. WEST·
FALL, 168, Brian Keith Bailey, 129, Garry Bowman, Jr.,
87, Michael Haynun, 127,
Jerry L. Larkins, 122, Paul
Life, 31 (WI), William Ayres,
3 (WI); Orange: John A ..
Rankin 122 Roger Ritchie
160; R~tland: CHARLES
BARRETT JR
358
STEVE LAMBERT J34•
Charles Williamson' 185:
Salem: H. DANNIE 'LAM~
BERT 138 CECIL STACY.
12 9 {iii) , J~ckL. Ervin, 111:
K .hH
46
es1t . b ypes, E;d
d W

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

with elected county officials.
Baker and Hager have also been
selected to represent teens from across
the state on the State 4- H Working
with Teens Team.
The state;.,ide group includes Ohio
4-H professionals, volunteer; , teens
and program partners who will be
working over the next three years to
strengthen and expand Ohio 4-H teen

programs.
Theresa is the· daughter of Rick
Baker and Sherrie Baker of Reedsville
and has been an active member in the
Meigs Counry Shepherds 4-H Club
. for eight years. Her major project
interesJs include lambs, first aid, physical fitness, dothmg apd food and was
also ~ Fash10n Board member.
P I - IH THill, Al

Look lor the Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wellness Department at the

7th Annual Health Fair ancl Flu Shot Clinic
sponsored by the Meigs County Council on Aging, Inc., and

POINT CLEAR

C?jllo!nd ~tetA\arrtott.
800.949.4444
www. rtjgolf. com

the HMC Community Health and Wellness Department

Friday, November 9
9 • 11· AM and 1 • 3 PM
Melg• Multlpurpo18 Senior Center In Pomeroy

RESORT &amp;
GOLF CLUB

800.544.9933

'

www. marriotgrand. com

.

Public invited! For more information, call
-.
992·2161
'I

••

•

•·

'·

.

,.

I'
,i\

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
www .holzer.org

�•
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

P8ge A 2 • The Dlllly Sentinel

Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2001

w.ctneeday, Nov. 7, 2001

in 1986 and for building it to
the largest rural chapter in the
United States.
He was presented with the
S.A.R. Silver Good Citizeruhip
Award for his achievements as
an SAR member as well as his
service in the community.
Aho ~cognized was William
Diles, a past president, for his
contributioru to the chapter.
Honored guests included
Robert Farling and Martin
Whetstone, past presidents of
the Ohio Society S.A.R; Terry
Whetstone, first vice president
of the Ohio Society S.A.R;
Rick Abel, mayor of Athens;
Mary Abel, past state representa· tives; Edward Robe, Athens
County judge; Michael Ward,
Athens County judge; John
Sauer, president of the Pt. Pleasant Chapter S.A.R .; Abbie
Stratton, regent of the Return
Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter
D.A.R.; Tom McGuire, Ohio
University R.O.T.C. instructor;
and Beverly Schumacher, S.E.
District Chairman of the Ohio
Society DAR.
Michael Struble, chapter

Hester Adams

'

ANNIVERSARY SPEAKER -

Sen. Mike Shoemaker was
speaker at the 65th anniversary Obfervance of Ewings Chap- of the chapter based on his
ter, Sons of the American Revolution. (Contributed photo)
Revolutionary ancestor, Jacob
Roush. Jack Kaulf of Pt. Pleasmember and director of the was named fur U.S. Senator ant wa5 recognized as receiving
Athens County Museum, Thomas Ewing and hiS father,
approved supplemental ancesshowed a copy of a newspaper George Ewing, a Revolutionary tors, George Roush Sr. and John
story about the first meeting of soldier who came to Athens
AdamRowh.
the chapter. Athens, Meigs, and County. Alvin Wagner founded
Pbns we~ made for paiticiVinton Counties have rotated the chapter with 22 charter
SAR meetings for many years. members.
It was noted that the chapter
Farling spoke on the recent
September 11 tragedy but
pointed out that though any
death was too many, that an
amazing 93% of the potential
number of deaths survived the
attack.

l\lll€RCUlOSIS CliNIC
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CONllNIHNG lEVY

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.

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'john Sauer, president of Pt.
Pl~asant Chapter S.A.R, presented a battle streamer for
Ewings ChapterUs recent par. ticipation in Battle Days at Pt.
Pleasant to celebrate the first
battle of the A, ·rican Revolution.
Officers for the 2002 ·
were elected.They are Ashlc)
Pomeroy, president; Tad CucL cr
of Shade, first vice president;
Myron Jones of Oak Hill, second vice president; William
Beegle of Gallipolis, treasurer;
Gerald Crawford of Letart Falls,
secretary; Roy Holter of Five
Points, historian, \he Rev. James
Hanna of Oak Hill, chaplain.
Michael Worley ofN ew Marsh- ·
field as appointed web master.
Michael Swisher of Syracuse
was sworn in as a new member

r"/,

IIi

Sunday. .. Partly cloudy. Lows
in the mid 30s and highs in
the mid 60s.
Monday. .. Partly
cloudy.
Lows near 40 and highs in the

upper 50s.
Tuesday... A chance of showers, otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 40s and
highs near 60.

Clouds will spread across
the region on Thursday with
some scattered showers likely,
the National Weather Service
said. Highs mostly will be in
the 60s.
Skies will clear quickly over
. ·-flOSt of the . area Thursday
.
. Thursday, Nov. 8
night.
Dry and cool weather is AccuWeatheJ'O forecast for
forecast for the area on the
weekend. Highs will be in the
50s and lows in the 30s.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:23, and sunrise on Thursday
is at 7:08 a.m.
.
lwanoHold I43'JW I •
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Clear. Lows in the
mid 30s. Calm wind.
" ' .. .
Thursday... Partly cloudy. A
chance of rain showers late.
•I Columbua 144'/81 •
Highs in the upper 60s .
Southwest wind 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday
night ... Partly
cloudy. A chance of showers
through 3 am. Lows in the ·
lower 40s.
Extended forecast:
"' v·'ili!j~~
Friday... Mostly sunny. Highs C 2001 AocuWeather, Inc.
in the mid 50s.
Friday night ... Mostly clear.
,~
.oliilliil.. · ~ -~
Lows in the mid 30s.
. . . . . -~-· Jo \ \ '.'~ · . •,.•
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
Shower~ T·atorms
Rain
Flurrlet
Saturday... Mostly
clear.
Highs near 60.

·very appreciative of those
' who supported the levy and
the ef(orts put forth by both
the staff and families of stu~
; Jdents currently being served
; at the school."
: The levy, if passed, would
: have generated an additional
: $380,665 a year in local tax
I dollars for the MR/DD pro1grams. The program currently
receives $7 42,000 a year from
county tax revenues and the
passage of the levy would have
brought the total to around
$1,122,000 in local tax
money.
"Needs for both children
and adults with developmen1 tal disabilities will not just dis' appear, and-as long as those
l needs exist, we will continue
'' to provide our services to the.
i community," said Beha.
~ Thberc:ulosis clinic levy
J
Voters approved the Meigs
· " County Tuberculosis Clinic's
l half-mill, five year replacel ment levy by a vote of 3,458
l to 2,024.
1 •) 'he five-year levy•will generate $118,958 per year.
1 "The levy worked out bet' ter than we thought it would;'
l said Connie Cotterill, pro- gram director.
.• "We were ~oncerned that
·' 'voters would vote. against our
'. levy because they were upset
•: :about the health department's
'- .county-wide ·smoking ban,
; :although we worked very
·hard to inform voters that we
. ··.were not affuiated with the
·&gt;health department.
• : "Services through the TB
' clinic will continue and we
:'would like to thank all the
~:people for their support and·
· ·all our volunteers for their
~jhelp;' she added.
, Meigs Local bond issue
. Voters in the Meigs Local
~':School District rejected a 20,year, 2.67-miU bond issue
::which would have generated
•:J4.2 million for construction
, ..of an all-sports facility at
' '·Meigs High School.
• : The levy would have also
&lt;provided $250,000 for con'$truction of a new bus garage
;:.behind the new elementary
'school.
; , Unofficial results from the
·.Board of Elections showed
,-;that the bond issue was
'-·.defeated 2,053.votes to 666.

Send to: military personnel, friends, or family.
Let them experience "home" through
~_J!~~~~ of beautiful

ehFt:f(lf(Q~ &amp;t~a~I(ZQ

Ohio weather

'

I

,

•

Middleport Department Store
Office Service &amp; Supply ·
Ohio River Baar Co.
Quality Furnltura Plus
r
Quality Print Shop
Rita Aid
Rlvarbend Crafts Mall
Sue's Selectable&amp;
Swisher &amp; Lohse
The Fabric Shop
The Wicker Buggy
VIdeo Touch
Weaving Stitches
Wheels &amp; Deals

To be eligible you must make a purchase of $20 or more at 14
participating stores.

W. VA.

After you have made your 14 purchases~ fill out the back of
card and return to any listed merchant (card will be Issued after
1st purcha11e).

,,...

.' Reader Services
,.
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Correction Polley
Our main concern In all storie_s Is

to be accurate. If yO&lt;J know of an

error In a story, call the newsroom
al (740)_992-2156.

.•

~-

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News Departments
The main number Is 992-2158.
Oepar1ment extentions are:
General manager

Ext. 12.

News

Ext. 13

or

Ext. 14

Other services

.

Purchases must be made between November 2, 2001 and
December 15,2001.

Advertising

Ext. 3

Circulation

Ext. 4

Classified Ada

Ext. 5

newsOmydailySentlnel.com

On the Web
www.mydaitysentinel.com

·· , ,

SncM

•

· "In terms of the building
projects now under construction, I think the new sports
facilities would have been a
great way to finish up, but the
voters have spoken very .defi. nitely that this is not what
they want at this point in
time:' said Superintendent Bill
Buckley.
"People are very conservative now, and with the mines
going out, people are taking a
wait and see attitude about
everything now and I think
·that is reflected in this election;• he said. ·
"We're dis.~pointed, but
the voters were very definite
in what they had to say. So we
have to take that into consideration and see if we want to
modifY the plans and try it
again. In the next few months
we should know what the situation at the mines is and how
that will affect the schools and
then maybe go back to the

voters."
Other local levy results are
as folloWJ:
• Pomeroy Village, one mill
for maintenance and operation of cemeteries for five
yeats, passed 192 to 17 5;
•
Middleport Village,
renewal of three mills for current expenses for five years,
passed 260 to 214;
,
• Racine Village, replacement of two mills for current
expenses for five years, passed;
171 to 64;
• Rutland Village, renewal of
two mills for current expenses
for five years, passed 97 to 49;
• Syracuse Village, replacement of one mill for current,
expenses for five years, passed'
157 to 86;
• Letart Township, renewal
of one mill for cemetery '
maintenance and operation
for five years, passed 116 to 9;
• Olive Township, renewal
of one mill for cemetery .
maintenance and operation
for five years, passed 321 to
177;
•
Rutland
Township, ·
replacement of one mill for
cemetery maintenance and
operation for five years, passed
304 to 242;
• Sutton Towruhip, replacement of .4 mills for cemetery
maintenance and operation
for five · years, passed 484 to
219.
The date for the Board of
Elections' official count has
not been determined and will
be announced later.

The paily Sentinel

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To send e-mail

a ·

"

16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29

Drawing to take place Monday. December 17. 2001

0

·

Always &amp; Forever Gift Shoppe
Artisan• Shoppa
Candy's Crafts
Carpenter General Stora
Chapman Shoes
Chaetar Landmark
Clark's Jewelry
County Candle Shop
9 DAN's
10 Fruth Pharmacy
11 Hartwell House
12 Hearts Aglow Candles &amp; Glft1
13 Herbal Saga Tea Co.
14 K&amp;C Jewlers
15 Locker219

Polls
ftwnPageA1

Chance for rain late Thursday

o

AmTed

General

Floak:bb •• -

sac

38.21

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Ohio Velley Publlehlng Co.

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PubNshed avery aftBrll&lt;IOn, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Seoond·claas
poolage paid at Porntii'O)'.

The Aaoclated Press and

ltle Olllo Now1paper Association.
Pottmlater: send addrasa correctionllo The Dally Sentinel, 111 CO\Jrt.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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RIIH ouiii&lt;IO Molgo CO\Jnty
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FedeFIII Moaul- ••
E'-olrio

38:10
GKNLY- 4.10
Hatley OaYidlon 411.14
Krnart-8.14
Krogar- 24.10
lando End- 36.74
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EMS log calls

PNmiet- 8.150
1-t

Rocky llaall- 5.75
110 SNI-l!O.olli

. Slerl-44.75
8llor ooy'l - .27

Will MM

54.114

=-21.11
IQbi-13
Dilly the 4

raporfa ...
J.m.
Qloslng
quoiH
... prMJua

~ hnldonl. proby

llmith Part·

nera atAt!vftt tnc.

.

Wilbur Rowley

...

pation in the Veterans' Day
parade in l)thens. The n~xt
meeting of the chapter wlll be
held on Nov. 15 at the Meigs
County Museum in Pomeroy.
The Athens MenUs Barbershop Chorus prOvided entertainment.

J

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

o.m.ct...:.. 815.150

PecpiH
18.2o
l'lpeico- 411.74

AT&amp;T- 18.15

;;, . POMEROY -Wilbur Rowley, 86, Pomeroy, died Tuesday,
-.. Nov. 6, 2001, at St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
'·. Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
_ ,Home.

!fe[p Ooii.I(C, !fU"C!Mift.r

V.UAEI. CUf1'

USB-IUS

Al/lllnd Inc. - 41 .eo

.

....
..

HONORED - Keith Ashley who is credited with revitalizing
Ewings Chapter Into the largest rural chapter in the United
States, was presented the SAR S!lver Good Citizenship Medal
at the 65th anniversary celebration of the chapter. Presenting
the award from the left, were James Lochary, president (Ashley), Robert Farling, National SAR trustee from Ohio,_and Terry
Whetstone, first vice presi(lent of the Ohio Soc1ety. (Con·
trlbuted photo)

Precinct by precinct results
PRECINCT

'AEP- 44.01
Arch Colli- 22.11
Alczo-41.117

: COLUMBUS -Word has been received here of the death a.nk One - 35.41
: of Hester M . Adams, 77, Columbus, formerly of Meig1 Coun- BU-7.83
Bob Evtnt- 20.34
: ty, on Monday, Oct. 1, 2001, a! Mount Carmel East Hospital.
Bolg--44.70
: Surv1vmg are her sister, Pauline Davis of Dexter; her daugh- ~-2 .40
Charming Shope ; ter, Kathy Adams; two sisters, Betty Jacks and Charlotte Good; . 4.82
~:two brothers, Gene and Lloyd Nelson; a g~ndson; and many City ,Holding - 8.85
Col-14.37
: :nieces and nephews.
00-15.10
:: She was preceded in death by her husband, Woodrow W. DuP'lnt- 43.03
!:Adams; a son, Fred Adams; her mother and stepfather, Mary and
.-;Elwood Nelson ; her father, Marvin Washington· a sister Mar. ~vel; an~ brother, Eugene Washington.
, . Serv1ces were conducted by Evans Funeral Home in Colum""bus. Burial was in Forest Lawn Cemetery.

,

LOCA-L BRIEFS

LOCAL STOCKS

Deaths

SAR Chapter celebrates 65th anniversary
POMEROY -- The 65th
anniversary of Ewings Chapter,
Sons of the American Revolution, of Pomeroy was celebrated
at a banquet at the Ohio Univenity Inn in Athens.
Athens Mayor Rick Abel presented a proclamation to
Ewings Chapter for its long service in the community. A similar certificate was given to the
chapter by the Ohio Senate
through the efforts of Sen.
Michael Shoemaker, who wzi
speaker at the celebration.
Shoemaker talked about the
funding crisis of Ohio public
schools attributing it to both
political parties. He advocated
adequate funding for all public
schools rather than equal fundmg.
Also presenting a certificate of
achievement to the chapter was
the George Rogers Clark
Chapter S.A.R. of Springfield.
James Lochary. president, was
master of ceremonies for the
event which featured special
recognition of past president
Keith Ashley who was honored
as having revitalized the chapter

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

$29.2&amp;
$58.66
$109.72

Voters

Syracuse Board of Public
.Affairs, two seats: no candi-

faumPtlpA1

Alexander Local Board of
Education, three members:
MABEL R. BURTON, 115,
KEITH C. ANDREWS, 123,
FRED DAVIS, 115, Stephen
W. Thomas, 108, Charle! H .
Mansfield, 89, C. Dale Sin- .
clalr, 84.
Eastern
Local
School
Board,
two
members:
HOWARD CALDWELL,
652, J. GREG BAILEY, 638,
Roger Willford, 622.
Meig.. Local School Board,
two
members:
RON
N
OT
LOGA ' 1•345 • SC
T
WALTON, 857,James. Soulsby, 832, Cathy Morris, 745,
Wayne E. Davis, 728.
Southern Local School

lows:
Middlepprt Village Council, four seats: Roger L. Manley, Sr., 263, Robert M. Pooler, 250, Kathy Scott, 232. .
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs, one seat; no candidate.
Pomeroy Village Council,
four seats: GEORGE L.
WRIGHT, 235, JACKIE R.
WELKER, 214 •. LARRY
WEHRUNG, 211, TODD
NORTON, 151, Donald
Todd Smith, 137.
Racine Board of . Public
Affairs, one seat: LeeS. Layne,

da!~.

137·
Racine Village Council,
four seats: CHARLOTTE L.
WAMSLEY, 155, HENRYW. Board, three members: Don P.
BENTZ, 144, ROBERT E. Smith, 662, T. Ron CammaraBEEGLE, 136, JOSEPH L. ta, 649, Richard B. Hill, 112
EVANS, 128, Davip H. (WI).
•
Athens/Meigs Educational
Spencer, 85.
Rutland Village Council, Service Center Board: John
four seats: Danny Davis, 100, Depoy, at-large member,
Ralph Bale!, 81, Ralph_ E. 2,823, Michael T. Struble, repSearls, 85, Marie L. Birchfield, resenting Southern L9cal,
64.
864.
Rutland Mayor: Richard
All results of'The1day's elecFetty, 15 (WI).
· tion results are unofficial,
Syracuse Village Council: pending an official count
EBER PICKENS JR., 161, which will be scheduled later
ERIC D. CUNNINGHAM, this week, said Board of Elec133, DONNA PETERSON, tions Director Rita Smith.
133, MICHAEL R . VAN- More than 200 provisional
METER, 129, Jeffrey L. and overseas ballots remain
Bable, 84.
. uncounted.

.Alloy
fawnPIIpA1
contract, it says if you sell the
plant you must recognize the
union as a bargaining entity."
And that is what Highlander intends to do, he said,
Wolf explained that if
H · hi d
.
h
1g an er acqutres t e
company,
workers
would
.
"-. be
hsred back uum the umon at
· ·
'· .. h .
sen1onty 1evell!, .,ut t at ISsues
such as back pay and medical
coverage are still issues be'1ng
settled in bankruptcy cour t.
Wolf also answered the
audience's questions concerning job classifications
which they would change
from 15 tp five, the rehiring
of management, details about
the restoration of the facility,
and their intentions to run
the plant themselves.
"We want to run this factory as a Ferro alloy plant, however, we have a different

·Byrd

from Pip AI
Pottinger had signed two
affidavits saying Byrd was
passed out in the van after a
request from Kim Hamer,
Byrd's sister.
Prosecutors played a telephone' conversation taperecorded in August in which
Pottinger said It would be
untrue to say he was passed
out because Byrd wam't
unconscious the entire time. ·
!iamer taped the conversation in which she is heard
sobbing and begging Pottinger to sign the affidavits.
"Johnny's going to die;"

POMEROY Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered six calls for assistance on Tuesday. Units
responded as follows :
CENTRAL DISPATCH
2:59 a.m ., Overbrook
Nursing Center, Mary Harris,
Holzer Medical Center;
9:35 a.m ., Willow Creek,
John Nels&lt;&gt;n: treated;
12:39 p.m., Ohio 124,
Orpha Rouse, HMC;
5:22 p.m., Pomeroy, Becky
Snowden, Pleasant Valley
Hospital;
Mulberry
7:25
p.m.,
Avenue, Tristah Gaines, treated.
RACINE
6:03 p.m ., Rowe Road,
brush fire, Don Johnson 'property, no injuries.

Fund-raiser set
POMEROY - As a final
fund-raiser for the Coats for
Kids project, Peoples Bank in
Pomeroy will serve a soup and
chili luncheon Friday from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m.
Money is still needed for
the project so that the needs
of all children for whom coats
have been requested can be
filled, a bank spokeswoman
said.

day at 7:30 p.m. Officers wi ll
be elected. Refreshments w1ll
be served.

Plan dinner
Ra cine
RACINE
Grange will sponsor its annual
community
potluck
Thanksgiving dinner at 6:30
p.m. on Saturday at the hall in
Oak Grove, located 1 .6 miles
from Racii\oe on Oak Grove
Road.
Grange will provide the
turkey, and attendees are asked
to bring a covered di sh.
Guests are welcome. After the
dinner, the annual pig ·in a
.poke auction will be held
with Dan Smith, auctioneer.
Proceeds will be used for
Grange community activities.
Reservations are not nec~­
sary and non-members are
encouraged to attend.

Plan reunion

RUTLAND - A special
reunion has been organized
for Rutland High School
Class of 1960, on Saturday,
beginning at I 0 a.m. The
reunion will be held in the
fellowship hall of the Fr~ewill
Baptist Church on Salem
Street.
AU members of the class
and their schoolmates from
other classes are invited to
bring a covered dish and beverage. Tableware will be furTUPPERS PLAINS
nished. Thqse attending are
VFW 9053 will meet at 7:30
also asked to bring memorap.m. Thursday at the hall.
bilia.
Dinner will be served at 6:30
Questions may be directed
p.m.
to John Brogan or Patty
Clark, 742-1007 (evenings);
Jerry and L&lt;?uise Eads, 992POMEROY Leading 9401; Harold Darst, 742- ·
Creek Conservancy District 2129; Linda Haley. 992-7535;
has lified a boil advisory for Linda Boyles, 992-2417; or
custo,ners on Happy Hollow Carlos McKnight, 742-2495.
Road, and Kingsbury Road
from Ohio 143, including
Horner Hill and White Oak
POMEROY - Girl Scouts
roads.
will be having a food drive
Saturday.
Drop-off point is village
LONG BOTTOM - A hall (the Old Pomeroy high
hymn sing will be held Friday school) from 2 to 4:30 p.m.
at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full April Smith, 992-3483, is in
Gospel Church, Long Bot- charge.
tom. The Praise Team and
CORE Drama Team from
Bethel Worship Center will
RACINE - Bethany Dorbe there. Fellowship will folcas
Sonshine Circle will meet
low.
Thursday at 7 p.m. in the
church annex. Members are
.asked to take canned/nonCHESTER- Shade River perishable items for the CoLodge 453 will have its regu- op Parish in lieu of an offerlar stated meeting on Thurs- ing.

Post meets

Advisory lifted

Food drive

product and that product is
based on a raw material
which is Manganese · ore,"
Wolf explained.
Highl~nder, a global company and owner of two manganese mines in Africa, would
operate the Alloys facility
producing Ferro manganese

Hymn sing set

Soilshine Circle

apd silicon manganese. Ness
explained that Highlander
has been looking for a
~roo th o ld 10
. thc U mte
. d States
d h
h
ld l'k
--.1t!,D tn3} t ey wou 1 e to
belitrriha
..
.h h
eg
t posltl~n Wit . t e
purchase of Amencan Alloys.
"We believe with the
acquiSition of American
Alloys, we will be able to
operate for many, ·many
years," Ness said. "We own
the raw materials, we own
f•wnPipAl
the Ferro alloys and we feel
we can beoume a strong playAshley, an active member
er, and secure to many, many. of the Alfred Livestock 4- H
people here, j~bs, and
become part of something
really great and really incredible."

Lodge meets

Team

Hamer said. "How are you
going to live with that the rest
of your life?"
Pottinger abo admitted he
signed the affid:lvits shortly
after he had sex with Hamer
and another .,voman, but said
'he was not promised sex iti
exchange for signing the documents.
Byrd, 37, has said he has
chosen to be electrocuted to
illustrate the brutality of capital punishment. He would be
the first inmate to die in
Ohio's electric chair in 38
years and the third. to be executed since Ohio reinstated
the death penalty in '1981.
Ohio's other form of execution is by injection .

Club fo.r 10 years, is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Hager of Coolville.
Her major project interests
include beef, lambs and
food.

·

4-H AMBASSADORS- Tere- State University 4-H Youth
sa Baker, center, and Ashley Development Program.
Hager are Meigs County's new
4-H Ambassadors. They will
be working with Jeff King,
assistant director of the Ohio

**

$1 0,000 Reward offered for the
'
arrest and conviction of the
person or persons responsible for
the death of Michael "Sig" Sigler
Contad the Sigler Family
at742-2279

**1:25
m
!!7:1' t:15,
IEXIIIIIIItitliR
9:45
IIOI5Ili5,IK;

'~~' '7~

IHEM .~B 1 10 .,. ,.l,

IMDITS

1 -~·

7:50,9'.50
6:45, 9;25
9:30

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

VJ1dnJid-,. 11411 an'• 7. 2001 -

Man hopes former office friend can remain ftiend

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St., Pomltoy, Ohio
no 112·2158 • Fa: 11101187

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Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

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R. Shawn Lftll
MeMglng Editor
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NATIONAL VIEW
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Shambles
the current state of
Afghanistan, and we can fix it
That~

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The Daily Sentiriei

For trial laUJ}'ers, litigation comes rather naturally

Ever hear the tale about the scorpion
uniqueness of the current war that, almost before the bomband the turtle? It goes something like
this:
ing ofAfghanistan began, we were already discussing how to
A scorpion needs to crosS a river. But
. rebuild the country.
it
cannot
swim. So it asks a turtle to ferry
We've already figured out that it won't be an easy task.
it acrois.To which the turtle replies, "No
Mghanistan is in shambles with almost no infrastructure, a
·
way. You'll sting me. I won't be able to
nearly nonexistent health care system with J:3II!pant malaria
swim.lmd then I'll drown:'
and starvation, and no real political system.
·
But the scorpion assures the turtle it
There's no opposition to the Taliban that would not be
has nothing to worry about. "It wouldequally oppressive and mwderous. The Northern Alliance is
n't make sense for me to sting you," it
largely composed of Small groups of foreigners - ethnic
says. "For if you were to drown, I would
Tajiks, Uzbeks, Shiites from Iran, and others - who live in
drown as well."
Mghanistan and vicinity. While these mujahedeen (who
The turtle is persuaded: And it agrees
once included ·Osama bin Laden) have had · a ron1arttic
to cilriy the scorpion across the river.
image in this country due to their unyielding struggle
Alas, halfway across, the scorpion stings
the turtle in the neck. To which the paragainst the Soviet Union, they
alyied
turtle exClaims, "Why did you do
If the United States opts out and fails to ituist that
that?"
Mghanistan be allowed to elect its own leaders, we will be
And the scorpion replies, "I don't
guilty of the worst sort of betrayal- not only of the Mghan
I guess it's jttst my nature."
.
know.
people, whose country we are being forced to bomb in purThis tale comes to mind amid the
suit of foreign terrorists, but also of our own principles.
public relations blitr by the nation's trial
We say we support liberty and democracy. The Mglians
lawyers in the aftermath of the Sept. U
should have a chance to decide whether they'd like to try
terror attacks on N.;w York City and
them or not.
Washington, D.C. The plaintiffS bar has
promised not to profit from the hijackini!S of the four commercial jetliners on
that dark and terrible day. Not to enrith
·itself &amp;om the tragic deaths at the World
Trade Center and the - Pentagon and
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
western Pennsylvania.
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 7, the 311th day of 2001. There
Leo Boyle, president of the Association
are 54 days left in the year.
of Trial Lawyers of America, took the
Today's Highlight in History:
lead
the day after the terror attacks, urgOne year ago, on Nov. 7, 2000,Americans went to t)l.e polls
. ing "a moratorium on civil lawsuits that
for an election that would result in indedsio.n for George W.
.
might atlse out of these horrendous
Bush and AI .Gore, with. Florida's disputed electoral votes ·
. events:"
emerging as critical. Hillary Rodhani Clinton became the
A month later, Boyle's association
first first lady to win public office, defeating Republican
established a spin-off organization under
Rick Lazio for a U.S. Senate seat frpm New York.
the name Trial Lawyers Care (TLC). The
On this date:
new outfit promises to provide "fr~e ·
In 1893, the state of Colorado granted its women the right
legal
· services" to terror victims who
to vote.
make claims under the federal SeptemIn 1916, Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana
ber 11 Victims' Compensation Fund.
became the first woman elected to Congress.
The law, which President Bush signed
In 1917, Russia's Bolshevik Revolution took place as
11 days after the terror attacks, entitles
forces led by Vladimir llyich Lenin overthrew the provisional government of Alexander Kerensky.
·
In 1929, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City
opened to the public.
In 1940, the middle section of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge
in Washington state collapsed ·during a windstorm.
In 1944, President Roosevelt won an unprecedented
fourth term in office, defeating Thomas E. Dewey.
In 1962, Richard M. Nixon, having lost California's gubernatorial race, held what he called his "last press conference,"
telling reporters, "You won't have Nixon to kick around anyBY RED GREEN
more."
I remember as a kid going to visit my
In 1972, President Nixon was re-elected in a landslide over
grandparents and noticing that they had
Democrat George McGovern.
plastit slipcovers on most of their furni-.
In 1973, Congress overrode President Nixon's veto of the
cure. I'm just now starting to realize the
War Powers Act, which liinits a chief' executive's power to
implications of that practice. Putting plaswage war without congressional approval. ·
·tic seat covers on ·new furniture says so
In 1989, L. Douglas Wilder won the governor's race .in Virmuch. It says that neither you nor any of
ginia, becoming the first elected black governor in U.S. hisyour friends are worthy of sitting on this
tory; David N. Dinkins was elected New York City's first
stuff. It also teUs any furniture salesman
.
black tru~yor.
~at you are not planning to make any
Ten years ago: Basketball star Magic Johnson stunned the
purchases in the foreseeable future. It teUs
country as he announced that he had tested positive for the
your children that you care enough about
AIDS virus, and was retiring. Pro- and anti-Communist ralthem to keep your estate in showroom
lies took place in Moscow on ~he 74th anniversary of the
condition. It tells the medical world that
Bolshevik Revolution.
you plan on outliving any furniture that
Five years ago: The U.S. liquor industry voted to drop its
doesn't have plastic seat covers. ·
decades"old voluntary ban on broadcast advertising. Thou(Or it conld be telling the medical
sands of Communists marched through Moscow to .mark the
world that you have some control prob79th anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution. A Nigerian
lenu.) It tells your business partners that
Boeing 727 jetliner crashed en route to Lagos, killing 142
you are a frugal person . who spends
people. NASA's Mars Global Surveyor blasted off from Cape
money wisely and protects your investCanaveral, Fla., on a mission to ·map the surfa(e of the Red
ments. Mainly, it says "Hey, when 1. buy
Planet. (It went into orbit around Mars the following year.)
stuff like furnicure, I don't want to spend
Today's Birthdays: Evangelist Billy Graham is 83. Opera
any more pf tny disposable income than
singer Dame Joan Sutherland is 75. Singer Mary Travers Is
absolutely necessary. Not as long as we
64. Actor Barry Newman is 63. Singer Johnny Rivers is 59.
Jive in a world with trucks and boats and
fi..V's." That's why only grandparents have
Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. is 58. Singer Nick Gilder is
plastic seat covers. It's the kind of wisdom
50. Actor Christopher Knight ("The Brady Bunch") is 44.
that comes with age.
·
Actor Christopher Daniel Barnes is 29. Actors Jeremy and
'I'Ilking solo
Jason London are 29.
·
Thought for Today: "History is simply a piece of paper
Men have trouble communicating.
They say we don' talk much. Some of
covered with print; the main thing is still to make history, not
to write it." - Otto von Bismarck, German 'tatesrnan
you older BUY! know what I mean.
Remember when you asked your wife to
(1815-1898).

TODAY IN HISTORY

Josepn

PerKins

COLUMNIST

..

every injured victim ·a nd the family of
every deceased victim to recover full
economic damages and unrestricted
damages for noneconomic pain and suffering.
·
1
· There are no caps on the money paid
out And the claimants need .not prove
negligence, duty or causation. That
means there is no need for any victim of
the terror attacks (or the family of any of
\he victims) to lile :i laws_uit. And no
need for lawyers to girt up legal fees.
Yet, you just know that some, avaric
cious trial lawyer or another will eventually break .the moratorium on terrorrelated lawsuits. And tnat the one terrorrelated lawsuit will lead to a rash of similar litigation. And that the trial lawyers
will ultimately reap milliom of dollars in
legal fees stemming &amp;om the events in
September.
Jndeed,just this past June, trial lawyers
representing Holocaust-era slave laborers
divided up more than $52 million in
legal fees among themselves. The biggest
share of the award went to Melvyn
Weiss, a partner in the New York law
firm Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes &amp;
Lerach.
.
His whopping $p.4 million payday is
more than 850 times larger than the
Ooseph Perkins is a co/nmnisrforThe San~
biggest check 'my one of the Nazi vic- Diego Union· Tribune and can be reached at}
tims will receive. Yet, Weiss and his fellow Joseph.PerkinsUnionTrib.com.)
)

FRIEND?

DEAR JUST A WORK
FRIEND: I'm sure Lauren doesn't
like you any less; but it's time to face
the fact that your friend's circumstances and priorities have changed.
She has a husband and child who
must come first. Instead of dwelling
on the status of this relationship, it is
time to move on and cultivate new
friends.
DEAR ABBY: I adore the letters

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Community Calendar Ia pub·
llshed aa a free nrvlce to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting• and special eventa. The calendar Is
not designed to prO!"Ote
sales or tund·rallere of any
type. ltem1 are printed only
a1 space permit• and cannot
· be guaranteed to be printed a
1peclflc number of day1.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Ministerial Association,
Wednesday, 8:30a.m. at Over·
brook Canter.
MIDDLEPORT- Revival ser·
vices, Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, through Saturday, 7
p.m.; on Sunday, 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Rev. Pat McGue of
Hurricane, W.Va. evangelist;
Rev and Mrs. Jerry Boggs,
song evangelists.

ship Center will be there. Fellowship will follow.
SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - Buriingham
Modem Woodmen, Sat, 5 p.m.,
potluck meal. Camp lo furnish
turkey, ham, rolls and beverages. Bring covered dish.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Power Team
member Mitch Hodge In ser·
vices at First Southam Baptist
Church 41872 Pomeroy Pike at
8:15a.m. and 10:45 a.m. on
Sunday and ·7 p.m. on Sunday
through Wednesday. Perform·
lng teats of strengths sharing
his testimony. Public Invited.

Dragon Internet
As low as $11.95 per Mo."
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'llllllh6niiDn CH. Mae.rthur. PorMroy, Hti..,.IUt, Logwt, Point
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MoCc nnee.vw.., •ncl J'I\IONI •
Flnd.uaon the web lit www.dNfOitbbf.oom.

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THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs SWCD
annual planning meeting, followed by board meeting, Thursday, 10 a.m., Pomeroy Library.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
9053 meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the hall. Dinner at 6:30
p.m.

MarYs Tee Time Grill

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KATHY DUD WAITING FOI A HEAIT,

J

.

- ·· · at RIVerside Golf CourseRR 1Box 35 Mason, WV 25260
"We're Hot Just For Golfers Anym!)re"
Open to the public
Dally Lunch Specials Monday-friday
Restaurant~ Conrerence and Banquet Room ~Catered RecepUon and Meetln,cllltles
Watch Monday NiQht
.25¢ 'Wiift Nlfld
Football on the Sill
··.
-"! 'ki.Jnr•Ja'l
Screen Food· Drinks"!l:j .
N&lt;t;I&lt;J
Drawings at the end of the
:;___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,
1st quarter and Half-time
Call today for carryout, banquet reservations, or more lnfprm!lllon

304 773-5354

hie, and shows a concern for
her community," said a
spokesperson for the Meigs
Retired Teachers.
Christy will graduate from
the University of Rio Grande
in May.

with

LONG BOTIOM - Hymn sing,
Friday, 7 p.m., Faith Full ·
Gospel Church, Long Bottom.
Praise Team and C.O.RE.
Dram11 Team from Bethel Wor·

......

Dear Abby is · writte11 by Pauline
Phillips and daughter ]eannt Phillips.

grams with children, and she
has held several work positions
to supplement her college
expenses ..
"Christy is a good example
of our younger generation
who is hard working, responsi-

·~·'&gt;I It~ • .

Emily Ashley and Ca11on Yost

DEAR ABBY: My parents
recently retired and moved mto a
condo. While in the process of helping them move out of their house of
3~ years, I was given some items. In
one of the cartons, I discovered some
steamy love letters written to my dad
fiom another woman in 1981.
How should I handle this with my
fath er? It was hurtful and embarrassing to find something like this after
all this time. - UNSURE SON IN
UTAH
DEAR l.JNSURE ~ON: Place
the letters in a manila envelope or a
sturdy box and seal it securell" Give
it to your father privately and tell
him the contents belong to him and
were taken by mistake. Period. End
of conversation.

Make the Change, Keep the Change!

LOCAL EVENTS

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Board of Public Aftairs,
rescheduled meeting, 1 p.m.
Friday.

when we give life (~e old slipcover :J
'
~
marry you 20 years
ago? She's been wait- Pleasures for middle-aged guys like me: ~
ing for an interesting follow-up question
• Sleeping through the entire night. ~
ever since. "Are you going to finish that
• Staying awake the entire day.
sandwich?" doesn't count
• Not having to explain why you're
I find that as men get older they actu- wearing a bandage.
ally talk more than they did when they
• : Finding out your brother-in-law's
were young. The only difference is, sitar concert has been canceled.
~
they're talking to themselves. You've all
• Being with a woman who orders ~
.done it.Wandeting around the house try- nachos.
· ~
mg .to find Y?ur wallet and pretty soon
• Being complimented on how you ~
you re m. uttermg awa~ like that wend ~y . look in your favorite jogging pants.
·
m the p~rk who thinks your dOg IS a
• Being left home alone with a satellite
commumst: Sure, someomes. ~ cover It dish and extra batteries for the remote. ~
up by talkmg to the televmon or the
Boxed in
~
radio, but deep down we ~now the peoIt was pointed out to me the other day ~
ple selling deodorant cant actually hear . th t &amp;1·
t
h
· all
· ~
us making suggestions for what we think
atmre tgerathorsdnow have a sm cobm- !
·h· N
h
par en m e oorw ereyouput utth ey sh ou lddo wtt 11. ow t e way 1 see t t ke . ft Th. · d
· h. 1· ~
·1t, talki ng to yourseIf 1s
· no chi ng t o be er ho ep It so
. IS. IS .one Wit a 11- •~
.f
ashamed of. You have some things that t1e eater. So ~ you nnagme a cold day, ~
need to be said, but you don't want to what we have IS a btg box that we liv~ m ~
offend anyone. Saying them to yourself to keep us warm and mstde ~hat box " .• ~
when you're alone is saving your job and smaller. b~x ~hat we put f?od m to keep 1t il
your trulrriage. So when you ladies see us cold and mstde that box 1s an even small- ~
talking to ourselves, just leave us alone. er box to keep butter ~rm. I ca~'t ;
You'll know when we're ready to have a believe the government JSn t mvolved m :
conversation with you, because we'll stop thts somehow.
:
talking.
· Quote of the Day: "People who know ~·
Forbidden pleasures
where they're going don't need to b,urry." ;
I was at a video store last week. As I - Ked Green
~
walked past the adult section, I saw a
(Red Green is tlae star of "The Red Green ~
movie called Fot'bidden Pleasures, which Show," a television series seen in rhe U.S. on :
~de me think of how much that phrase PBS and in Canada .on tht CBC Netu.&gt;rk, :
can change in meaning as we get a little ' and the author of"The Red Gll?en Book" and•
older. Here's a revamped list of Forbidden "Red Gll?en Tallu Cars: A Love Story.")
~

have meant anything to me, as I
don't even know what year he was
born .
When I got home, I showed my
family the necklace I had kept hidden all these years. Even my husband
was touched. What are the chances
that the penny would have the same
date, the only date I would associate
with my brother&gt;
I am not religious and never
thought this could happen to me. I
am still shocked. My mother is
astounded. Now she knows her son
is where she hoped he would be. I
absolutely believe it is a " penny from
heaven." - LISA ANGILANO,
BEREA, OHIO
DEAR USA: So do I. And since
that penny had the power to rein force your mother's faith and restore
yours, I'd say that penny was heavensent- wouldn't you?

POMERQY Christy
and clothing
Drake, Racine, has been
projects for
awarded the second annual
many years
Meigs County Retired Teachand
has
taken leaders' scholarship.
.
ership roles
Drake is a senior attending
in fair board
the University of Rio Grande
activities.
where she is majoring in Early
Childhood Education. (K-3)
Her other
activities
She has been involved in 4H activities including animal have included working in pro-

FRIDAY
POMEROY- Fun, Food and
Fellowship at God's NET In
Pomeroy, 6 to 10:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday. Nutritional
meals, non·vlolent video
games, computer programs,
board games, pool tables, lor
teens.

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about "pennies from heaven." After
reading the last one, I thought about
it aU day and said to myself: That
could never happen to me. I don't
know anyone in heaven who ca~
about me - except maybe my
brother who was killed in a car crash
when I was 13, but he's probably
forgotten all about me. I'm almost
38 now.
·
Three days later, after my husband
and I were leaving a restaurant and
walking to our car, I looked down
on the filthy sidewalk and spqtted a
penny. I laughed and told him, "I
found a penny from heaven!" I
turned the penny over to check the
date. I couldn't believe my eyes the date was 1974! Abby, I have only
one keepsake that belonged to my
deceased brother - a high school
class necklace with the inscription:
" Senior 1974." No other date would

Drake awarded retired teachers' scholarship

POMEROY -The Meigs County Pomona Grange has
_r;elected its royalty for the 2001-2002 year.
They are Emily Ashley, daughter of Keith and Emtru1 Ashley of Rocksprings, and Carson Yost, son of Chuck and
Anita Yost. Both are members of Racine Subordinate
Grange.
Emily is a freshman at Meigs High School and a fourth
generation member of Racine Grange. She became a member of the Grange at age five, was an officer in Star Jr.
Grange No. 878, obtained her Super JG. status and was the
mantle orator of her graduating class into subordin.ate
grange.
She is a past winner of the Ohio State Grange talent contest in vocal solo, has been a member of the West Virginia
State Grange installation team, and is a past state officer of
the. Ohio State Jr. Grange.
She is now a member of the Meigs County Grange Youth,
lady assistant steward of Racine Grange, a member of her
grange's July 4 float and fair booth .committees. This is her
third consecutive year as Meigs County Grange princess
l Besides her Grange activities, she is active in track at
Meigs High, is a member of the Meigs County Pioneer &amp;
Historical Society, Society of Civil War Families in Ohio, the
Mary Gardner Owen Society Children of the American
Revolution, John S. Townsend Auxiliary to the Sons of
Union Veterans of the Civil War, the Mrs. Tecumseh Shermltn Tent Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War, and
a charter member of the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle No.
104 Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic.
She is also a state officer in the Ohio Department Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War and a national officer and has been a member of he Meigs County Jr. Fair
Board. She is a member of Hope Baptist Church of Middleport.
Carson Yost is home schooled. He serves as assistant steward of Racine Grange, is a member of the Meigs County 4H Dairy Club, and attends the Gallipolis Nazarene Church. ·
This is his first year serving as Meigs County Grange prince.
Both will compete in the state finals at Hudson. Rick and
Jan McComber are the Meigs County Youth Chairman, and
Patry and Opal Dyer are the Meigs County Grange deputy
masters. All will attend the state convention.

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ADVICE

Meigs County Grange
chooses royalty

trial lawyers do not think they were par• "
ticularly well compensated for their ,,
work on behalf of Hider's slave laborers. ;
Then there's the mother of all legal \
windfalls, the landmark settlement
between the tobacco industry and 46 "
states. Just last month, trial lawyers repre- ··
senting New York were awarded a stag- '
gering $625 million in fees by the so- · .
called Tobacco Fee Arbitration Panel. ·•
That bring. to $12.4 billion the amount
' awarded by the panel to lawyers repre- .,.
senting 18 states.
..
And what of the millions of patients, ,;
suffering from smoking-related illnesses,
in whose naine the tobacco settlement .
was struck? Not one of them will •
receive a compensatory check as a result ;
of the settlement.
And the stat~s that entered into . an i
unholy alliance with the trial lawyers to · .
shake down ·the tobacco industry have ,:
spent only a paltcy 5 percent of their se~- ~
clement money on smoking prevention ;
and cessation programs, according to. 1
recent reports.
.
,
And that's precisely the kind. of legal .l
bait-aM-switch we can expect when the
trial lawyers break their moratorium on ,
terror-related lawsuits, when the courts .
are suddenly inundated with claims .&lt;
stemming from the horrendous events of •;.
Sept 11.
The trial lawyers will profess to be B
IJlOtivated not by lust for contingency ;
fees, but by selfless compassion for the ;·
victims of the attacks.
Yet, when all the terror- related claims .:
are settled, economic and other damages 1
awarded, the trial lawyers will reap yet ",
another multimillion (or billion) dollar~
windfall.
~
They simply cannot help themselves.;E
It's just their nature.
.
~.

RED GREEN'S VIEW

It~ a time

Abigail
Van
Buren

SOCIETY NEWS

PERKINS' VIEW

• The Findlay, Ohio, Courier: It's another sign of the

DEAR ABBY: I worked with
this great gal, " Lauren," for about
four years. Sho is very attr.tctivo. We
would see each other about once a
month outside of work. We never
went out as a couple - always with
other co-workers. We didn't see each
other as often after she got married,
but we maintained our friendship.
Two years ago, Lauren quit work
and she, her husband and child
moved away. Within a year, they
moved back to our city. I now talk to
her on the phone once every three
months. Whenever we talk, she says
we will get together "soon" - but
we never do.
I know Lauren is married and I
am single, but I would enjoy having
lunch with her or going for a walk
once in a while. Abby, my question
is, do you think Lauren and I are still
friends? JUST A WORK

800 261-3031

,. &lt; .

�Pllge A6 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy/Middleport, Ohio

SOCIETY
SCRAPBOOK
Membe:s hear review
of He11:ingway book
MIDDLEPORT -A review of"The Old Man and the
Sea" by Ernest Hemingway was given by Maxine Gaskill at
last week's meeting of Middleport Literary Club at the
Pomeroy Library.
Gaskill said the American author served in World War I in
France; wrote" A Farewell to Arms," which was published in
1929, a tragic story of war and love; and later served as a
reporter in the Spanish Civil War which game him material
for "For Whom the Bell Tolls."
Hemingway later moved to Cuba, which was the setting
for the novel he considered his best, "The Old Man and the
Sea," which was later made into a movie staring Spencer
Tracy. ·
·
Gaskill said the tide tells the theme of ihe story - an .old
Cuban fisherman named Santiago and his heart-breaking
experience at sea.
Other than Santiago, there is only one other Important
character, a young boy named Manolin, who loves and
admires the old man, and volunteers to leave his "lucky
boat" to help Santiago. Rejecting his offer the old man rows
far out into the Gulf Stream atier 84 days without bringing
in a fish.
When he feels a tug on his line, h~ realizes he has caught
a huge fish which Is actually towing his boat. After a night
and a day he finally gets the fish close enough to his boat
to harpoon it, but he loses the battle to the sharks who consumed the carcass of the big fish. He lived to tell of his experience, learn of the Coast Guard's search for him, and to
plan to fish again with Manolin.
In concluding her review, Gaskill said that, on reading the
story one soon discovers the reason for the popularity of this
...Jnovel because the old man is not just a fisherman battling
for his success, but symbolizes all mankind In the sea oflife.
"Each man has his owri goal, his own tools, and his own
so-called 'sharks,' " she said, "and while he doesn't always
reach his goal and sometimes is beaten down with the struggle, when all is said and done, life holds many good things,
and the struggle is worthwhile."
The club members answered roll call by telling of memorable Halloween experiences. Bernice Carpenter was hostess. Leah Ord, president, spoke to the group on the Seniors
in School program where older volunteers teach one day a
week third-graders about interesting event in Meigs County history.
The next meeting will be. at the home of Pauline Horton,
with Betsy Parsons as the reviewer.

Racine Grange addresses legislative concemSI
RACINE - Several items
of legislative concern presented by Keith Ashley, legislative
chairman, were discuss~d
recently by Racine Grange.
He reported on the North
Atlantic Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) which, he said, will
allow Mexican trucks to enter
anywhere in the U.S. on January 1. 2002.
These trucks, he said, will
not have to comply with U.S.
law regarding safety and poilution as American trucks do
giving
unfair competitive
advantage to Mexican trucks
as well as endangering
motorists and increasing pollution. The members voted to
ask for federal legislation eliminating this exemption.
Also discussed was the
recent proposal to pay reparations to descendants of American slaves with it being noted
that not all blacks in the United States prior to 1865 were in
slavery, and not aU blacks today
are descendants of people pre~
sent here prior to 1865, no
one living today was enslaved
in the United States, other
groups such as Indians and
women were also mistreated,
that laws exist today to punish
racial discrimination, and that
it is impossible to determine
who is eligible for such payments.
This situation was compared
to reparations recently paid to
Asian Americans interned in
camps during World War II
that are still living today and

RACINE - Candidates for king and queen and prince
"lmd princess at the Harvest Carnival Saturday at Southern
Elementary School have been announced.
The canclidates for prince and princes~ for kindergarten
through fourth grades are Michael Stobart and Haileigh
Bush, kindergarten; Austin Reitmire and Destiny Doucet!,
first; Brady Delong and Miranda Hawley, second; Nathan
P,.ob~rts and Tiffany Cundiff, third; and Jess Ritchie and
Megan Gray, fourth.
Candidates for king and queen for grades fitih through
eighth are Chelsey Imboden and Bryan Harris, fifth; Ashlie
Robie and Bryce Laudermilt, sixth; Darin Teaford and Summer Wickersham, seventh, and Erin Wise and Tim Sands,
eighth.
Serving at the soup clinner begins at 5 p.m. and the carnival will start at 6 and continue until 10 p.m. There will be
cake walks, door prizes, refreshments, baked goods, games, an
auction, and a country store.

CANDIDATES- King and queen candidates for Southern's
· Harvest Festival set Saturday are from the left, front, Jesse
Ritchie, Megan Gray, Nathan Roberts, Tiffany Cundiff, Brady
Delong, Miranda Hawley, Austin Reltmire, Destiny Doucett,
Michael Stobart and Hafleigh Bush; and !)rince and
princess, Erin Wise, Tim Sands, Darin Teaford, Summer
Wickersham, Ashlle Robie, Bryce Laudermilt, Chelsey Imboden, and Bryan Harris.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

received reparations. The
members voted to oppose any
reparations for slavery.
Information on the current
massive debt of the U.S. Postal
Service was reviewed by the
grange members.
With the recent terrorist
' actions from anthrax in the
·mail, increased costs are resulting for the U.S. Postal Service.
Currendy, only a few postal
locations have equipment to
deal with anthrax, it was
noted.
The members then voted to
ask for federal funding to pay
for the cost of preventing terrorism in the mail and for the
loss of income incurred from
the September 1 I clisaster.
A cliscussion of the current
funding problem in Ohio was
of interest. The current use of
the "rainy day" fund in the
state is only a one-year answer
to the current problem. With
prisons dosing and hiring
freezes occurring, there will
have to be ways to come up
with new taX revenue. Also, a
discussion on the two-day
moratorium on sales taX in
January was added to the
topic.
Members were informed of
the recent fraudulent use of
Social Security numbers by
the terrorists to obtain false
identities is going to bring
new rounds of legislation to
attempt to prevent this problem. Members were cautioned
to beware of any attempts at
national l.D. cards.

POMEROY
Mjtch
Hodge, a part of the Power
Team which conducted services in the Bend Area last
year, is returning to Meigs
County for special services at
First
Southern
Baptist
Church, 4 I 872 Pomeroy Pike
next weei,.
A licensed m1mster and
caUed evangelist will be at the
church Nov. 11-14. The Sunday services will be at 8:45
and 10:45 a.m. and 7 p.m. as
well as on Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Hodge is a former champion bodybuilder winning
many titles incll'ding Mr.
Idaho, Mr. Northwestern aod
Mr. Western USA. He was a
finalist in twQ consecutive Mr.
America contests. He travels
with the Power Team which
has preached the gospel to
millions of people and continues as well to reach thousands
of young people each year
with what has been determined the "number one
school assembly program in
America."
He travels under the name
"Code Red." Using feats of
strength and his ability to captivate an audience with his
testimony of restoration and
reconciliation, the Power
Team member is said to leave
audiences entrenched m
thought and reflection.
In his own unique style and
gifting Mitch lives and breaths

Members were reminded to
send in their application for a
free subscription to the Ohio
Grange Monthly. All the contests are in the September
ISSUe.

County Grange will be hotd7
jng its annual planning meeting at Star Grange. Officers ate
urged to attend.
•.
Emma Ashley, lecturer, pn!sented a program on "Wh=
was God on September 1 I?"
Members presented information on five major disasters in
U.S. history, They were ~
San Francisco earthquake it!il
fire of 1906, the wreck of~
Santana in 1865, the Jolul,.
stown flood of 1889, the N.W
York draft riots of 1863, alii~
the destruction of Galveston
in 1900 by hurricane witf,
20,000 killed. Then statistit;_S
were given on the recent Sept.
11 disaster showing that 87
percent of those that cou~
have died were spared.
~

Emma Ashley, youth chairman, presented the Meigs
County Grange prince and
princess, who both are members of Racine Grange. Carson
Yost, prince, reported on his
trip to the state session where
he received the Degree of
Aora. Emily Ashley also gave a
report as princess. Both were
the youngest competitors in
the contest.
Jean Alkire, secretary. reported sending in $50 donation to
the New York Firemen's and
Policeman's Fund. A schedule
of the year's meetings and
activities was distributed to
The Latest Ad\ancemenl
the members.
In 100' Digital
The members chose their
Hearing Aid Technology.
2002 winner of the Grange
-Community Service Contest.
This winner will be honored next spring. Janet Theiss
and Kevin Shepherd were
reported iU
The plans for the annual
"pig-in-a-poke" . auction and
Thanksgiving dinner were
completed. Some special invitations to non-members from Jane Ann Kerr Aa'nestad, M.A., CCC-.(,'
the local community will be
Sarah E. Kuhn, M.A., CCC-A
Ro11nne Gmff, M.A.
sent. Dan Smith will be the
auctioneer. The grange funds
community activities from this
auction.
Alh&lt;ns, Olllo
The youth committee are (740) 594-6333
planning a winter bo":ling trip
for youth members. Meigs .__...:1;...·8:;,.0;:,;0:...·..:4.;;.5.;;.1...;·9..:8;.;:()6...;;_-:-1

"

499 Richland Ave.

or:
...·'

COrvlPETITIVE RATES

Power Team member visits
Pomeroy for special
service
'
.

Royalty canciJdates announced

Wednesday, November 7, 2001

Home is Where the Savings
are.
•

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Let us show you how we may be able 10 save you
money while offering. protection for your home,
belongings,
plus liability coverage.
Call me ... Stop by... il's your
choice!

The Sunda}' services
will be at 8:45 and
10:45 a.m; and 7 p.m.
as well as on Monday,
Tr1esday and
Wednt.sday at 7 p.m.

C

to see the gospel · of Jesus
brought tO a desperate generation, accorcling tQ the Rev.
Lamar O'Bryant, pastor.

NlllonwkM'

Insurance !&lt;
Financl1i Strvices
~IIQollllw».-

Kick off
the
Holiday Seaso
Your Business

in the

Daily)Sentinel
Holiday Gift Guide
Wednesday, November 21

•
•

'
•

Steelers' kicker Brown is down, Page B6
Williams leads All-America team,.Aige B6

WEDNFSDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
ScoREBOARD
NBA
lllelday'e Gmnee
Sacramento 115, Cleveland 99
Indiana 87, Philadelphia 77
Miami 87, Seattle 85. OT
San Antonio 104, Orlando 89
Minnesota 104, New York 94
Houston 99, Denver 93
Dallas 110, Chartone 92
Phoenix 113, Memphis 101
Portland 101, Utah 83

&amp;
American Red Cross
•'

I

RiJo opts for
f:'ee agency
CINCINNATI (AP) Cincinnati Reds pitcher Jose
Rijo, who returned to the
major leagues in August after
five elbow surgeries and a sixyear absence, became a free
agent Tuesday.
Right-hander Pete Harnisch , who lost most of his
season with elbow ailments
and surgery, and right-hander
Joey Hamilton also filed for
free agency. Harnisch opted
- for free agency atier the Reds
reinstated him from the 60day disabled list.
The Reds bought the contracts of outfielder Austin
Kearns and first baseman Ben
Broussard, who both spent last
season with Double-A Chattanooga.
Rijo was the Reds' most
valuable player in their 1990
World Series sweep of Oakland. He returned to the big
leagues Aug. 17 and had no
record with a 2.12 ERA in 13
relief appearances.
Harnisch went 1-3· with a
6.37 ERA in seven starts this
season. He underwent arthroscopic surgery Aug. 9 ~n his
right elbow to remove bone
chips and to repair a lorn
flexor muscle.
Hamilton began the s:ason
with Toronto arld went S-8
with a 5.89 ERA in 22 starts
before being . was released
Aug. 3. The Reds signed him
to a minor league contract
two weeks later. He joined
the Reds on Sept. 10 and
went 1-2 with a 6.23 ERA in
four starts.
Broussard hit a Southern
League-high .320 with 23
home runs and 69 RBI for
Chattanooga.
Kearns was limited to 59
games with Chattanooga
because of a thumb injury. He
batted .268 with six homers
and 36 RBI. He hit .306 with
27 homers and 104 RBI in
136 games in 2000.

'

J

"

discussed earlier this
year.
"lt makes no sense
for major league
baseball to be in markets that generate
insufficient local revenues to justifY the
investment in the
franch~se," commisSellC
sioner Bud Selig said
after a 3 1/2-hour
meeting. "The teams to be contracted
have a long record offailing to generate enough revenues to operate a
viable major league franchise."

Baseball's decision reverses nearly a
half-century of expansion during
which the major leagues grew from
16 teams in 1960 to 30 since 1998,
when Arizona and Tampa Bay were
added .
The amount of money that would
be paid to the eliminated teams was
not discussed.
This would be the first contraction
by major league baseball since the
National League shrank from 12
teams to eight following the 1899 season. No major league team has moved
smce the Washington Senators
became the Texas Rangers in 1972.

The action by the owners came two
dliys atier the World Series cul~nated
in Arizona's thrilling Game 7 Victory
over the New York Yankees, baseball's
most-watched game in 10 years.
. The p)ayers' association called the
decision "most imprudent and unfortunate."
''Over this last season, and, especially, over the last several weeks, we ha~e
been reminded, vividly, of the spec1al
place baseball holds in Ame~ica;•
union head Donald Fehr sa1d. This
makes it all the more unfortunate that
the clubs would ~hoose this moment

Plellse -

OWIIan,_BS

Kings bury Cavs
with fire from
way outside

College Football
Toledo 41, W. Michigan 35

CLEVELAND (AP) Left"hander Scott Radinsky
and catcher Tim Laker signed
one-year contracts Tuesday
with the Cleveland lnclians.
Radinsky, who was eligible
for free agency but elected
not to file, signed for
$600,000. He spent most of'
last season · in the minors
recovering
from
elbow
surgery.
The Indians also ~igned
outfielder Todd . Dunwoody
and catcher Chris Coste to
minor league contracts and
invited them to spring training.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxilia1y

ROSEMONt IU. (AP) - Baseball
owners decided to fold two teams
before the start of next season but
they don't want to start a labor war by.
locking out players when their labor
agreement expires Wednesday night.
Owners voted 28-2 Tuesday in
favor of eliminating two teams, with
the Minnesota Twins and Montreal
Expos opposing contraction, a person
familiar with the meetings said on the
condition he not be identified.
Montreal, Minnesota and the .florida Marlins recently have been mentioned as the likeliest candidates,
while Oakland and Tampa Bay were

llleeclay'a GarMs

PVH Wellness Center
Thursday, November 29, 200 I
Noon to 6 p.m.

Sponsored By:

MLB owners want contraction

Boston 1, Edmonton 0, OT
Vancouver 3, Columbus 2
N.Y. Rangers 3, Minnesota 1
N.Y. Islanders 3, Tampa Bay 0
Pittsburgh 2, Carolina 2, tie
Colorado 1, Montreal 1, tie
Toronto 4, Washington 2
Sen Jose 4, St. Louis 1
Chicago 2, Philadelphia 1

·Blood Drive
. Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 19th
12:00 Noon
Call Debbie or Dave
at 992-2155

Page Bl

NHL

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e FREE Gift To All Donors

The Daily Sentinel

Inside:

CLEVELAND (AI') -The half, Sacramento used a 3next step for the Sacramento Pointer to pull away.
.
"We know what type of
Kings is to prove they're road
team we
said Bobby Jackworthy.
On the first stop of a four- son, who added 17 points and
city East Coast trip, the Kings eight rebounds. "And if ~
passed their road test.
move the ball, we'll get open
Predrag Stojakovic scored 32 shots all night. We've just got to
points, Mike Bibby 18 and the knock them down."
Kings made 14 3s to defeat the
Vlade Divac and Stojakovic
Cleveland Cavaliers 11 5-99 each added 10 rebounds for the
Tuesday night and remam Kings, who outrebounded the
unbeaten.
Cavs 14-7 on the offensive end.
Stojakovic and Bibby each
Missing
Chris Webber
made four 3s and Doug (sprained ankle), the King:; figChristie made three in the third ured the best way to beat the
quarter for Sacramento (4-0), Cavs was to take control early.
which is off tc:i its best start
They did just that with a 3 7since the 1995-96 team opened point second quarter and led by
the season with five straight 18 points at halftime.
wms.
Lamond Murray scored 22
"This is a big win for us at
points and Andre MiUer had a
the start of a trip," King; coach
career-high 17 assists and 19
Rick Adelman said. "We talked
points for Cleveland, which
about how this was important
dropped to 0-3 at home under
.for us to get off to a good start."
new coach John Lucas.
Sacramento won a franchise
The Cavs' three home losses
record 22 road games last seahave been by 17, 30 and 16
son, an eight-game improvement over 1999-00. But to points.
.'
The Cavaliers managed to
.
become one of the league's
elite teams, the Kings know get within eight points early in
they need to win away from the fourth quarter, but it clidn't
take long for the Kings to finish
Area Arena more often.
If they shoot like this, that them off.
,.
Bibby's 3-pointer with 4:24
won't be a problem.
remaining
made it 99-87, and
The Kings made seven of
their first nine 3-pointers in Stojakovic scored eight straight
building a 21-point lead before points - including two 3s - .
halftime, and every time the as the King; opened a 107-89 :
BIG GUN_ sacramento Kings forward Peja Stojakovic (16) drives the baseline on Cleveland Cavs got close in the second lead.
·
cavaliers forward La111ond Murray during the first quarter Tuesday. (AP)

are:'

.

\

....

Tressel: Defense is
giving up too much
COLUMBUS (AP) -All year long, Ohio State quarterback Steve Bellisari has been the target of boos and
catcalls from the Buckeyes' fickle fans.
Letters to the editor and callers on spom talk shows
have sounded like a Greek chorus in lambasting the
senior left-bander while lamenting, "With the defense we
·have, we should 'be unbeaten." ·
,
.
Yet as the Buckeyes (5-3, 3-2 Big Ten) enter thw final
three games of the season, there are doubts about the
defense.
"At the beginning of the year, you'd
have people say no one would ever get a
first down against us and we nught never
get a first down," Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel said Tuesday.
That's certainly not the case any
longer. ln last week's 31-28 victory at
Minnesota, it was the offense that played
well - never ending a drive with a .
Tra.sel
punt, piling up first downs and losing
the ball just once on a turnover.
With Purdue (S-2, 3-2) and its "basketball on grass"
offense coming to Ohio Stadium on Saturday, the focus
now lies with getting the defense to hold.up its end.
"Defensively, 28 is too many," Tressel sa1d of Mmncsota's point production. "Most of the time if you give up 28
points against a goo~ football team, you may not wm.
That's something were certa1nly gomg to work to make
sure it doesn't happen anymore."
.
Ohio State made plenty of mistakes on the defensive
side but Tressel said he could only pinpoint two or three
offensive plays that were problematic.
.
Linebacker and defensive captain Joe Cooper sard the

Please ... Defense. BJ

HEADING FOR A
GUNFIGHTMarshall quarterback Byron
Leftwich ( 7)
looks for an
open receiver In
last Saturday's
game against
Kent State. (AP)

MU-Miami a QB showdown
HUNTINGTON. WVa.
(AP) Strong. Athletic.
Poised. The way Marshall
coach Bob Pruett described
the quarterback, it appeared
he was talking about his own
Byron Leftwi ch. ·
Yet he was referring to
Miami of Ohio's Ben Roethlisberger, th e best · redshirt
freshman passer in MidAmerican Conference history.
Miami \1-2, 4-0 MAC East)
and Marshall (7- I , 4-0) both

are riding severi-game winning streaks headed into their
contest Sa!urday in Oxford,
Ohio. The winner will capture
the East Division tide. For
Marshall, it would be its fifth
straight since rejoining the
conference in 1997.
While Leftwich recently
had three straight 400-yard
passing games and ranks
fourth in Division 1-A in passmg yards, Roethli sberger has
been the reason Miami is playI,

ing for a title.
With three regular-season
g~mes . remaining, Roethlisberger's 2,205 yards and 21
TD passes are the most in
league history for a freshman.
He's tprown just 11 interceptions.
" He's playing above his
years. He's playing like a
junior,'' Pruett said. uHe's staying within himself.

Plea••-QB's,BJ

�WediiHday, Nov. 7, 2001

Wednnday, Nov. 7, 2001

r~~~~~~~rJ~,[I __
ANnoiD

C LA S .S IF IE D

We Cove

Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

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233 2nd Avo. Convonlent 1&lt;&gt; lor Single Peroon. ............
~•.
Llmii~ 'Or No c-? n-. Downtown. 2 Bedrooms, 1 Coli (740)446·3829 alter
-IBankFI'-" o;;"~y' 1/2Batlt,Kitchon-Stovo 6jlm.
omman
nonce
and Rot~gerator. 1490/ ~;;;,.~---...,-At OakWOOd In Barbours- month plua deposit and Ref· Tara Townl'loult Apartllille, WV 304-738-3409.
erencos. No Pet1L (740)446- menta, Very Spacioua, 2
Novo LhrOif 1 llcdolowlde? 41126
Bod1110111s, 2 Floors, CA. 1
Only
o'
!
ttve,.
10 your 3 -~·-·m, 1 1/2 bath, !',!!u.aaPoolth, &amp;F~~~CPaoolrpa,tPIHI•'
tot
L
p
to
~~
~ "
_,
'
ow
ayrnen · basement, large family Uo, Start $365/Mo, No Pets,
1-600-691 ..m
room, tOcaiOif In Pl. Pleas- L.oooo PIUI Socurity Dapoalt
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedfoom. ant, W.va. {740)446.()924
Required, Days: 740-448Only $19,850. Free Delivery
Bed
E 3481 ; Evenings: 740-3873
1110111· Route 160 . v· 0502.740-448-0101 .
&amp;581 Up. 1·888·928-24211
·
trgrHO. $3761 month plus
New 14x70, 3 bedloom, 2 dtpotll. (740)448-6189 or Furnished Apt. 3 rooms and
bath. Only 5995 down &amp; (740)446 6865.
bath plus showar, Down$1&amp;9.62/monlh, can Cheryl,
nd I
stairs, Clean. Reference
5 ooonta a argo oto•age. and Dopooil Required. No
7&gt;1().365-7671 .
New bathroom. Upgraded Peta or smokers. (740)448New Doubla Wide. $195 carpel through· oul. $3501 1519
Per Monlhl 3 Bldooom 2 month. Deposit Required . .:.:.:.:...._______
Bath. Free Del"·~,.., &amp; 5e1' • (140)451·2591
Gracious living. 1 and 2
'"'' 1
~
IJi
•n.
1-888-928-3426
Buy
•
I
$
-room
apartment&amp;
at ~-r
,lUI,_, rom 199/mo., tage Manor
ancl Riverside
Nice 28~~:80 Double Wide Foreclosures, 4% down, 30 Apartments: In Middleport.
utllng on rented lot In years at 8.5% APR. For list· From $278-$346. Call 7o!OPoint Pleasant area. 2x6 lngs 1-800·319·3323 ext. 992·5064. Equal Housing
walla, thermal pane win· 1709.
Opportunltill.
-s. priced to aale. Cal
(304)675-3888 ask for For Rent· 5 room house, 2 Nloa 1br. All Electric. Near
Aotemll)'.
.
. bedrooms, Gas Heat. high school. $300 month· +
. .
(740}446-1370
Deposit.
(304)675-3100
Single Paref11 Program .
u~nn ~ u~~ Daytime, (304,675-5509
Easy Financing Available.
n.auuu..r..n._':"u:.o:ao Evenings.
(3041755-7181
FOR......,,
N
Ice 2br.
2 bedroom mobile horne In
II
llu&lt;iiNEs&lt;!
Middleport,
no
pets,
740·
~;~JI
AND llunlliNGs
992-5039

W,asbington

tala:
of Rocthlisbe...,.r's
-.,-

98N·

tit

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condition,

F.u:.cnucuJ
REF111GERA110N

Delense
a
...._ 81
fiOin ,. •••

floME
JMI'IIOVEMI!M'S

available. Located just out- ot Huntsville, N (2561
~~:.:.:a!.;g!"~ 776-9435 www.maynardeIASEIIIHT
qulpment.com
WATERPROOANG
S20; Crosley 23" Conoot TV, ii!r;;,;;;;,;;,;,;___""'
$40; f'or1oble RCA 11" TV
Urcondl,_ IKetfma guar$20. (740)992-2529
LlvlsmcK
onleo. Locol r w ! - lur·
rolohod. Eatabllohod tD75.
EvefY'hlng In Ihe garogo, ~
Call 24 Hro (740) 4411sroo. Won't last- tst can 16 month clO Reg. ~lng 0870,
t-a00·287-1157a.
takes all. (740)446-0196
stock. Polnt FHiy wltlt Sonny Rogero Walaqlooolhog.
o aa Lao Sanman • nd ------...,.,-~
Fireplace lnaon or Free oe r,
Ben . Ch•ll Br-'lng. St200.
Stenolng. !7401446-7859.
(740)388·1591
C&amp;C General Homo Matntenonce- Painting, llin~ toldf
S
Ia
S
160
Firewood or a ·
per 7 yeao old Gilding. Kid lng, carpentry, elDOra, w1n40
441
9476
truck l.Dad. (7 1 '
Broi&lt;e, $800. {740)44Hl868 - s. boths, mobile home
Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
repair and mora. For trH
Repairs. Problems? Need AC!HA and APHA ~orses lor estimate call Chet, 740-992·
~? Call The Plano Do. sale, also yaarlmgs and 6323
T..~weanllngs, SAYRE FARMS,
·
die In

h

"*"·

Over 10,000 Transrnlulona.
Tranafor Caoea. 740-2ol5- 5677. Call: 3311-3785.

(304)895-3319 or (304)675. Handmade doll or baby era- 3498

·o-

film

I

740-44(1·4525

Independent .Herballfe Cistrb.ltor, Call For Product Of
Oppo~unRy. (740)441-1982
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
StocM:. Call Ron Evans, 1·
1100-537·9526.

big plays and putting them in
position."
fn Bt'g""en p)av Ohio State's

=________,__

this

old, good one..5811 or lrado
for bull of 8QUII quality alto
a few reglotartd415yr. old
Llmousln cows. {7401696·
2765.
saarnen billy goat. 1 112

Public Notice --·' · __P_u_b_H_o_Not...;_l.;,ce.;__

s~-1'111' e-1

·~

1R 1

~;;.: o ~

The St.t• of Ohio,
·~

or lrade lor 4·wtleeler. and IHHL

www.orvb.comtbennett $600. 1987 Oldl Clera,

Trailer 14ft. Utility tandem $450. 1992 Mercury Topaz.
•..18 $tt00. water Hea•e• $800. t98D Oldo Calais,
LP Gas 40 gal. $150. $600. 1984 Oodg&lt;&gt; Clplo{so4)e75 _. 2tl8
mat, $400. 1994 Plymoutlt
!.:::.:!.::,:-==--::--:-- Voyage•. 51800. t984
--wanted to lease Coal prop- Oodga B-250 Van, $600.
'"ertv for small coal mine, , 992 Ocxtga Ram 250 Van,
1
or underground, to $1000. 1917 Fol'd EconoUne
' strrp
make lump and stroker. Van, $1200. 1988 CMvy G·
{740)387-7891
alter 20 van, srooo. 11188 Ford
' 8:00pm.
Mu91eng, $1200. t190 Chi·
:,.:.~:-::--:-::-::;:--:::::; vy Lumina, $800. 11188 Ford
· Wale~lne Special: 31~ 200 .Escort, $400. Call (740)388·
. PSI 521 .95 Per 1001: 0~: 2~ 9303
. ~~ssS~~~r:.:ron FIMings 65 EICamino SS. Int. &amp; ext.
In Stock.
Jn good conditiOn, drivtS,
·. RON EVANS ENTERPRIS.. runs, but needs work,
• ES Jackson. Ohio. •·SOO· $2500: 93 cavalier, auto, .
537·9528
locks good, run.• good,
$t500, !7401992-6566 ·
BtnUlr.«:
65 Pontiac Bonneville,
S1J1~u~:;
30,000 actual miles. EKcel·
lent condlllon. v.e. auto. Blr,
Block, brick, sewer pipes, {740)256-1 41 7 or (7401256'
:wfndowe, lintels, etc. Claude 6226.
•Wlnllfl, RIO Grande, OH 91 ChrysleJ l.eBiron con•Coll740-245·5121.
vartlble. $2,000. {740)387•
0650 (740)387-7272.
1999 Neon. 2 door, Auto,
Air. 47.000. miles. $4500
080. {740)256-1233

in total

Tressel said there are several
"'
h as
reasons w hy t h e d e.ense
f:"te-d.
ill ••
"Th
h
b
ere ave
een some
offepses that have made some
plays. We have missed some
tackles
d
a·
t
- an we •• gomg 0
have to tackle better to be a
good enough defense. And
we've had some mt'ssed
·
auo~ontnents" he ••'d "When
-.,... ,.
•
·

h

h

f h

you Pill t e · t tee 0 t ose
thin"" • to...,ther. you're not
oogoing to be pla}'l· ng as well as
you'd like to play.We"ve got to
eli~'nate two of the th-e." .
uu

....

Public Notice

Public Notice

In Memory

Ml.... •~rt OH 417eo
County Deed llecord8: oornor of Lot 212 · ol __,... '
Volume 284, Papl13; the uld V.I. HOrton
laid
Premlau
thence North " AddHion to the Yllllge .GLooatedl Hatrtl 113
degreu tO' oo• Weat, ·
.
antra
a nger
11.24 IHI alonft the ol Mlddleport,a::.~· Pltrllway, Middleport,
South Hna of .Jd Lc!t County Plat R
I OH 41710
2U and along the Wlume 2, Page 12; laid
Praml•u
Nor1h Una ol the U1cf tllanoa Iouth 11 A P P relaId
II
Chllda Lot to an Iron _
degreu 10'
Eut, ....000.00 and cannot
pin ut on the !alt 20.00 leal to a point; ~ eold tor lila than
nne oflhe uld 20 , _ tllanoa Iouth 2 two·thlrdl of that
wide allay· thence daiNM 00' DO" WMI, amount
North 2 ~~eireaa 00' 74:00 1Mt to 1 pol"t' nRMB OF SAL&amp;:
00" Elll, 74.00 feat thanoa North
10% of appralaad
•- I!
I1111 01 ......... 10, DO" W
varu. - n .......ndar
along t.. aat
;oo fl
,.._
'
20 llfWiofalonlclg 1111 =pnh~:..~·
the aathld 20 lolot allay! 21!!:_.
to
e po nt 0
- · 111
u
Lot
Iff.
f M
beginning, containing 281 to Ilia point of Colhar OHo
alga
0.101 acraa, mora or beGinning, oonlltlnlng
unty,
laaa, . excepting all 14(0 Sq. ""'· - o r Lauranoa 8. Landon
.legal ellemanle and 1111, axoap.l lng 111 (IOOUIM)
•right 01 way. hltringa 111111 aaaamant• end Attomay for Plaintiff
are taken from tha rtghtaofway.
171 8. Third ltraal,
iMalge County Tax lllrlnp are taken 8ufW 1100
Map I
an actual from the 11e1p County CCIIumbul, Ohio 43211
au,.Y on October 21. 'llll MaJNI, lilfldcleport (114) 228-71721 Ext.
1114 b• Robart R. Ylllaga Reference 110
E·
Ohl p 9 N p
' 20
T 1
1 a1on,
0 · · . o. · age
•
h I
7003.
•
daeOrlpllo~ le baud
Tntct H.
on I pNttloue aurvar
20 Foot Wide Strip: In 1tiM b~ Robart R.
Situated In tha VIllage Ea1on, Ohio P.l. No.
&gt;

rL.------·

,Play statiOn 1wltlt 2 games, (3041675-4075 call evo.5 montlts old. Asking $55. ningo.
(740)446-6861
t992 Pontiac Sunbln:t. Good
Polyester remnants more tim, good conditiOn. S1 ,500
'lhan 75 yards. 56" wide, FIRM. (304)882·2052
:,$25, (740)965--t409.
LiVely's Auto Salu- 1967
Reoldonllol Homo Ownors Ponllae Grand- Am, $400.
·Tappan HI efficiency 90 ptu; 1983 Mercury Lyn• sw.
gas lumaces Including o• $800 1985 Bulok SomarMI,
,and . electric gas lurna·s 4 oo~ 1993 Gao Tracker,
ceo. HI Efllclency Hea•51 ()00 1985 Olds Cutlall
Pumps, leaturlng Tappam Supreine, $800. 1992 Eagle
Free lncrodlblo warrant; Premier $800. 1988 Ford
·package.
crown VlctOJia, SSOO. 1980
. .BENNETT'S . HEATING &amp; Fonl Mualang, $4oo. 1989
COOLING (740 ..4&amp;·9418 Olds CullaS8 Suprema,
or 1-800-872-5967. ·
$800. t968 Buick Regal,

fifth -

......... 81

-========-::::::::::::::::-::::::;:::::::::-:::::~:::::::::-----:--~-----------:::::::=

';,l

•

b

ueen too ong ago, ut · is
no otdinary kid. Already his
1 kin
him
teammates ate oo . g at
as a vocaJ.leader.As the season
L.
he's slowly
1n~s progre!Sed,
d
hru
.
off th "
earne to s
g
e Jitters
that normally would eat away
at a young pla.,.r.

Owners

negotiate with the players,
apparently without any serious consideration of other
options, including relocation, and seemingly with litto dash the hopes of so tle conc.,rn for the interests
many of its fans.
of the fans.
"And. of course, this is the
"We coruider this action
worst manner in which to to be inconsistent with lhe
begin the process of negoti- law, our contract, and perating a new collective bar- haps most important. the
gaining agreement. We had long-term welfare of the
hoped that we were in a spon," he said.
new era, one that would see
Montreal, which joined
a much better relationship the NL in 1969, is considbetween players and owners. ered the front-runner to be
Today's announcement is a cut. The Expos averaged just
severe blow to such hopesc'
7,648 fans per game at
In addition to not locking Olympic Stadium this year
out playen, ownen said they
and have locally generated
wouldn't freeze player signrevenue of about $16 milings when the labor pact lion- 8 percent of the Yanexpires Wednesday. TWo
kees· total of nearly S200
teams advocated an inunedim illion. No progress has
ate lockout. the person
been made toward a new
familiar with the meeting
ballpark in Montreal and the
said, but Selig told teams he
team's owner, Jeffrey Loria, is
would not support a stopa New York art dealer with ·
page.
few ties to Quebec.
Baseball has undergone
Minnesota and Florida
eight work stoppages since
have failed to generate gov1972, including a · 232-day
ernment support for new
strike that wiped out the
ballparks, and 1\vins owner
1994 World Series, and some
Carll'ohlad has p11shed Selig
owners are pressing for conto eliminate his team in
cessions from the players'
exchange for a large conassociation, which could
traction payment, according
trigger another stoppage.
· The union could become to other ownen, who spoke
ali obstacle by fighting to on condition they would
protect the 80 majo r league not be identified.
Pohlad and Expos execuroster spots on the two
tive
vice president bavid
teams and the hundreds
more in each minor league Samson attended the meet. ing but didn't make any subsystem.
comments
to
Owners said they have the stantive
right to eliminate teams reponers.
One of Pohlad's sons
without the union but conceded they must negotiate asked owners during the
the specifics of how to dis- meeting about alternatives
perse the players on elimi- to contmction and prospects
nated teams. to the remain- of relieffor small· markets in
ing 28 major league clubs. the next labor agreement
Selig declined to say if there with the players, the person
was a chance ieams wouldn' t familiar with the meeting
be eliminated b e fore the said. In addition, one of the
new season starts.
owners' lawyers said during
"We have every intention the meeting that moving
of doing it," he said.
ahead with contraction
But Fe.hr said: "This deci- might make it more difficult
sion has been made unilater- to reach an agreement with
ally, without any attempt to the union.

I

year old. $60. tO white pi- North,_A~riCcouonnty
geons
$2.00
each.
.._
(30416~5-1926
MortgsgaCOmJNiny
Lots Boys winter clothes,
IIAV &amp;
Plalnlllf
· ,·
~ze 12• $35 all or will sepaGRAIN
VI.
rate, Sto bed liner, 125
Martin J. Chapman, et
~~:'(=•~~~ $100 Buck a bole sale, square ~fendlnte.
bales $1.00 other hay up to
Lovely 58t Miniatures. $2.00. round bales $15.00 Ca• No. OO.CV·120
Soma antiques, antique each 304·675-4869
In puttuanca of an
. printers, Doawer, approx. ,---,.--.,.-::c,-,-:- AUae Order of S.le In
roo pieces. (740~256-6445 c
s 7
1 the above entitled
$90.
s::.~in ca~}...::.; action, I will offer for
old, (7401985-3810
eala at public auction,
Metel shel•es, StO: Wook
11 the Melfte County
benches $50; New '"ogular Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie C
h •
jeans, $2.00: Door casing Straw. Year 'Round Cellvory
0 U rt 0 UI I
In
$3.00; Coffee Bunn Boewer, &amp; Volume Dlacount Avalla· Middleport, _Ohio, In,
$30. (7401992-2529
bit.
Hetltage
Farm. the above nama If
MOBILE HOME OWNER&amp; {3041675-5724·
County, on 3 rd day_ of
Jnteotherm &amp; COleman gas,
Januery, 2002• al 10•00
&lt;Jil &amp; electric fumaces Ina .m., the following
~luding hi elliciency heat ~tO
Auros
- ~ deecrlbed 1111 ealallt,
pump systems. We caory a
eltuatllf In the County
complete line of Mobile ·
fOR SALE
of Malge and State ol
home parts &amp; accessories.
Ohio and In th• Cit
·BENNETT'S HEATING &amp; 1979 Honda Cx500 Cus· of Middleport to wh: r·
COOLING (740)448-&amp;418 rom. tO,OOO miles. Drive
Legal Deacrlpll
or 1-800-812-5967
shalt, headers. Excellent
E. hlbll "A" on
www.orvb.com/bonniill
Condition. Needs a 'T,Iate T1'11C1 1."Slluatllf In tho
~!:-cE'sN~o~s;fLeru:; (f.~;~~e-t~83 run. 450. Vlllap· of Middleport,
Install, Free Esllmat&amp;s. If
County of Melga and
'you doni Call us We both 198? Chevy. Nova t.8 Iller, Stall of Ohio: Being
'Loose I (740I44B-630&amp; 1- 4 cyl .. auto, olr, 4 dr., new Lot No; 282 In the V.B.
800-29Hl098.
'
tires. AINFM&amp; CD 113,000 Horton e AdditiOn to
- - - - = - - = - - - miles, very dependable 304- the
Vlll1ga
of
~:~~~.:.·~.!'&amp;~:: 882-3922 leave moaaga. Mlddlaport. Sub)act to
;uon. (3041882·2457
1991 Chevy Lumina for oale all iegll -manto
1

1

L-

better defense.

tra1ned, 12 yrs. old. 18 Residential or cornmarcfal
J.~
''
----,..--..,..,---- .month old gelding. Friendly, wirtng new seno1ce or ,.;. offense 'has scored 15 touchHanly Mums S3.00 each 4 halter booke. Both AQHA pairs. 't.~asta• Llcenood elac- downs and the defe
has
for$ tO. Open Sat. fl.-5pm. &amp; reg1stered, _
sell both for trlckln. Ridenour Electn6aJ,
nse
evenings. Dewhurst Green- $2,300 neg., 740-742·1243, WV000306 304-675·1786.

(304)895-3789
3740
leave message. or ::.ar.:e~~eb=·

play

seventh in the conference in
total offense . and J. ust slightly

·

I

must ses. $100. (740)446- Bay quarter horse mara well

MI. Alto. (30411195- 7&gt;1().742-8327.

other ball pme when you

Manhall:'

given up 13.The B11ckeyes are

b
kd
. rea ~ seem to result
m long gamers.
"The big thing we need to
work on is to stop giving up
th b' pi
"Co
'd "A
e tg_ ays,
oper sat ·
lot of times when we giVe up
points they were on big-play
drives. I haven't seen too
d
many teams come own and
drive the ball down and get
.
h
· d
Lo ts o f
lttto t e en zone.
tt'
· ·
mes we end up gtvmg
up

0196

-

t--'

P-1'-u Manhall yet, so ~·ll
see how .he &amp;res. It"s a whol"

t8111 Artie Cot400-. advanta""
• 4lt4, ltiQio low rongo. Nm
.,.
- · 12011 m110o. r:-ttont youth.
Condition. (304)176-71511 · ~'We just want to get presHortoy O.vldoon Cyclo Hoi·
n him d kind f ttl
HIIIOV C)'Cio COller. sure o
an
o ra e
,Black T Bog, ltonot Llko him;" Woshington said. "He~
"I start to relu a lot earli~:·
_ , _ . . , Buylil Call not really that mobile He's not he said "You start to "'"t into
(740)245-8042
·
.,.
elusive like the guy we played the ftow of the pme quicker.
last week. Hopefully this week That's something that's imporwe can get a good rush, con- tant because you can't be
ludgolAll,
_ ••
tain
him
uptight
aiOM
Types,
Accelll
To _
__
_ _and
_ _collapse
_ _ _ _the
...
. __
_ _ _all
_game:•
_...;.._ _ _ __

'-"""........,'

j

_
RIDUCI!D
All Doublo Wldo 011p1ay1

i

1'

j

Flwm&amp;

..__ttiivoiroliarniiiii'iii•ii!!li
...,

2529

r·«&lt;

IIIJU

r

18111 300EX. 13.200 OBO.
Good CGidllon w11n 1tw n·
~-· (7ol0)3l'N2&amp;8

chest ot drawers, $50; Iron· Also, new 4' finish mower, 11
lng board, $5.00. (7&lt;10)992· still in cntle. SB50. Shlpfllng riO

Pltot Program, Ranters TWin River Tower~ now IC·
capllng appllcatlena tor
· 304·736-7295.
1BR. HUD tuboldlzod llfll.
Why rent? govomment tor oldtlty lnd diloblod.
bockOif loana from 1490
EOti.
down. (740)448-3093
13041675-6879.

Saoo.

I

r

r

I'

hinL""
linebacker
Mu:
Yates
knows that may not work.
"H ' L
·
b'
u ~en m some rg
tpmel, so he probably knows
how to handle the pressure:'
Yates said. "But he hasn't

ManL-"'s
de~en•e
''""t
_
IUU
11 •u
among the league's best, giving
·
b
up 25 •5 pomts ~r pme. ut
school Reor:d with five ID. its oft'erue is. Roethlisberger
passes
in a 36-24 victory over
will L . p-·d to ke"" up
Ohio.
"" ..~~
with the Herd's 38-point averA w"ek earlier against
hi h
th
Akron, in only 1.:. sixth .,.mP, age, w ·c leads e league.
''I"'
..-·-He savon the challenge.
h" went 2J-of-40 for 399
"To know that it comes
yards, completing a Hail Mary down this
pass as time .,...,;red fOr the
to · game, thiJ is what
. •
-r .
"" pt-. "'
this · L ·t
wmrung score.
,_u -1 .or,
IS wruo you
"He's a -~-L'~ "-·hman?" drean) about as a kid:' he said.
I=&gt;IIU&lt; 1m'
Th
~L ....
asked MarsL-n defi-•"- lineose uu;;ams may not 011v.:

Cash Finn. tails
l~l~l\.ol...a
lliLU
........ ,.....
dod&lt;ad motho&lt; &amp; , _ on ' - - - - - - . . . . man Orlando Washington after
promlaoo. (304)743-33CMI
watching Roethlisbe..-r on

CCncreta statues &amp; fountain YANMAR YM t!OO Tractor,
with pump, $too: Large diose!, 3 point hitch, $2,150. ~~;;;;;~;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;..,

~

r

UKC Rat Tent• pupa. ["' ••;_._.,._ _

$250, asking $125.
1740)2!!8-6445

r

r

11-.

~ew

71104
Brick Ranch, ~ent conTherapy poolllon wanted. 1 would Ilk 10 oft wlln !Ito dillon. No ou- matnt•
Poalll ... onorgetlc, punctual old rly 1 tt!,1 home Phone nonce, 2 Bedrooms cJ ,.,..
po,_ needt&lt;l to wook In (~ 167 ~78'1
·
~blo 3n! In partially tlnlontd
Doctors oWico. Apply In porbaSement, Largo Allachod 1
oon Cornplete Care Chlro·
car garag&lt;&gt; cJ
wook
Burger King·
praetlc "·hind
~
area. $80,000 alllpolll
F.ory. wv. (~·~
URGENTLY
NEEDED- rlO
-·-75-2747
plaamadoroors.eam$45to
~-·
Newly con1itrucled, alnglo
$60 lor 2 or 3 hours weekly.
·, unuuu"'" 1 story t600 "'· toot home.
Call Sera-Tee, 740-592·
Located 10 mlnutea. from
6651 .
tN011CEI
Holzer Hospital, 20 mln11188
RETIRED LONGABERGER Agency Mlldng onorgotlc,
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- from Pleasant Veley Hoap1Reaoonable prices. Aftor· 81
organized Individual to act
WANTED: E • Perle n c • d lNG CO. raoommends !hot tal, off SR 160 on a private
noona (3041675-4172 No
community and phyllelan
Roo(lng &amp; Coope~ler Fore- you do buoinooo with peop1a 1-1/2 acre lot. 3 bedroom,
anewer leave t.
educator. Home Health/
man a, valid driver a llconae, you know and NOT to send 2•112 baths big kitchen
Medical experlenco a plul,
hand tools, ...tlable !reno- money ~ough the mall until wloa~ ca~l~ets, OR, LA
Single white male Heks not required. Agency will
~Uon , ~ ~rar:-;:es rt you haVe Investigated the w1gas log fireplace, central
temalel 25-45 tor fun times 3084
train. Apply In person at
qlent · 1 lo 1 rt ht' axce offering.
air, laundry room, tront
and more, Reply to P.O.
ST RT t60 Galipolla,
pay r . g pemon,
porch &amp; 2-112 car garag&lt;&gt;.
Box 83, VInton, OH 45686. or phone at (740,....1·1471 .
omJ181, ~acation. Apply at Do .,...., need a morttHina or Immediate ~sslon. .a......
ChrlsHan s Construction
,..,..
"""'..,....Altantlonl
·
' new car? Are your bl11s praised at 125,500. Make
GJVF.,4.WAY
Earn 2nd. lncoma without
~· t403 7Eastem Avenue,
backed up? We can help. offer. Call (740)446·4514
4514
L~-------"'1
2nd job up to
llpollo, ( &lt;10)
We offer tast reNeble
from 8-5pm, M-F, or
~
$25.·S75Jhr. Pt·Ft.
wA.NTI!D: Full· time posl- Ice, and our professional ('140~4-t6-3248 after Spm.
$Tum )'OUr rummage &amp; S ...,-:=',.-800-,-,-2-18--:-:7543::-:-tlons. available at a com- staff Is on hand IO help~ Rio Grande •--. 2 Badily
toom r
l'toase call toll free 1 B6e~led I
I cash .
unwan
tams nto
' AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
mleun llhgroup
e, odor~ 496-8607
· .
rooms, 1 112 Bath, L.A.,
740-992·9734 or 740-742· Sell. Shl,_,• "-•-, -....
P w men181 rear UU(I
~
Kitchen, Larga Level Lot.
1'""
In Bidwell
- ·
875-1429. ""' ...-• ~
.
· t) t2· 9pm Frt : Esta..bllshad Specialty Store Immediate
Possession,
day, Sam- 4Pm Saturday, for Sale. Call alter !5:00pm. $27,900. (740)446-2801
2 Cats, Male, 3 yea ... neuCOME GROW
Bam- 6jlm Sunday, 12 -9pm (7&lt;101446-6148
tar1Kl, aho1a up to date. FeWITH US!
Monday. 2) 4- 11 pm Sun- '-:-c:'-:,.-,...,.,-,---::--'-- For taJa by owner: Ntca bl·
male, 1 112 years, spayed, Weartexpandlngoorclrcu-day; 3:3Q.. 11 :30pm Mon· lhdl011l Ce.lmaiiiUng level home on 1 acre near
-.o up ID data. (7401388- lalioo stan to bettor serve
day/ Tuesday, 3:30- 10:30 No Exp. Needed, FTIPT
Chestor. Throo bedroom,
8201
ourcuatomera. Weare look·
We;dnesday/ Thursday. Re- Da·
two baths, one-car garage,
F ... ..w... ~........ ... lng ror 1 per100 that hal
quiramenta:-High School Di· ta Entry For Local DoctorB, family room with fireplace,
rae""'~' m....u, cu.,., hlghenergvtevet Mlf·motlplomal GED, valld driver's FuiiTralnlng&amp;Certlflcatlon· sunroom. Newcentralheatready to go, (740~·9229. vated and enJoYs working
lk:ense and good driving re- Provided, Computer Re·
!ng &amp; ale aystem. One mil..o!lr AND
with people. Mutt have decord. Excellent benefit pack- quire, 1-100-511-9321
nute off Aoule 7, but still prl·
.,
pondablt tranlfM)rtallon, ba·
eg&lt;&gt;. Salary: $6.001 hour. Dept.
vate. {740)965·3981
___
rOVND
sic computer knowledge.
Send resume to: Buckeye 531.
Thla It I ruu time lllarled tlon IOdey.
Community Services, PO Stan Your Business To·
Loot- 4 yr. clO temato rod poalllon and oltero al oomPART· TIME
Box 604 · Jackson, OH
O.Chlhund on Brlltet Rd., pany benefits lncluQing
4~640. Deadline: 1119101 . day... Prima Shopping Cen·
Coolvlle Frtda Nov 2nd hooltlt 1
ion
OFFICE P08ITIOH
Equal Opponunily Employer ter Space Available At Af·
fordable Rate. Spring Valle~
• ,__~audaraynceo, 'and'vaca~ 1 K We have a pan-time posl·
(740)667.(J6()8.Y ·
Olllca building, Mlne,.vlne.
,........_._
tion open at oor Sentlnet of. Warahousal Delivery par· Plaza, Coll740-446-o101 .
600 sq. h., ale, covered
- - . , - - - - - - plan. We are pa~ of • large t1co In Pomeroy. This pos1- oon. Full-time, benefits, ApAllrool--..g parking, $275/mo; trailer
Lotot: Reward! Choc:olale company that ofter1 excel- tlon requ~,.. computer and pty at Lifestyle Fumlture. No
MONEV
In this MWSpllpet 11
.,..,.. $120/mo, 8t4-878Ub named t-taMy. 4 years tent career advancement math lkllla, must ·enjoy phone calls. Apply on per·
HbfeciiO the Federal
TO loAN
1661 .
old. White around the opportunltlte. For lnteMaw working with people, be son, 856 3rd Avenue, Gal·
Mobile Home lot tor rant In
Fair Housing Act of 1911
2 Bedroom, 5 min. trom Middleport $125 per month
moutlt.
{740)446-6356 conlkfarallon Hnd a oover to organize your work ..ll,pol=l•::.·.::OH:..::_
· ----Lmli&amp;
whkh
maket
ft
ll'-9af
to
CREDIT
PROBLEMS,
Hav·
,(740,446 oesa.
leltlf IMIIng u1 why you are and be available for ached- town, 52751 month, $250 (7&lt;10)9112-3194
IKfvertiH.,Inf
ACREAGE
the ptfiOO we are looking
1 Your Choice!!
Choose ing Financial problems? Is
deposit. AbSOlutely No Pets. --..,.,---,---,-0
pm.r.nce,
limitation
ar
u
for along with your resume ullng between the hours
from; 2 w!( COL training, Bad credit, no credit, or
(740)446-9342
Mobile Home Site tor rant,
dlacrfmfnltlon bMecl on 2.7 acres. uneven terrain, In
VAliD SAu:
to Paul Berklir, Clrculatloo &amp;:DOom and 5:oopm. Man- d'-' mechanic training or bankruptcy the root of your
2br.
Trailer.
Muorl,
All
utllit·
Sandhill
Rd. behind Fox's
rae~~, color, religiOn, MX
lervlew
oonalde1allon
::;;;:;:~· OiractO&lt; at Ohio Valley Pub- day
lhrough
Foklay. Forsend
ln- learn - ID dnve bulldoz- problems? Call us today:
Wt~htown, $2700. pl..,. tes paid. Furnlahed, $300 Pizza. (3041875-7566
flmlllll 1'-tUI Of nationlf cell (660)583·3753, uavo
lllhlng Co.. 825 Third Ave., your reeume and cover let· era, trackhoes and back· PREMIER CREDIT REPerson, 2 People min. Nice lots, quiet country set·
orfgln, or anr !mention kl name and number
~
YARDSAJB.
Galllpofla,Ohio451131 .
terO&lt;AitenlionofOianoHIII, hoeol Coil TOCAYit-800- SOURCES, "All the finan·
$200. Deposit (304)773· ling, will accommodate
makeanyauch
cial
help
you
neec:t•,
1-868·
GAUJI'QU'l
Ohio Valley PUblishing cc.. ;::.958-r2,;,;353~.: - - - - . . ,
18x80, $100 per month, call
257-5445, Speclall~ng In:
PNtwenoe..llmtt.tfDn or 3 Pa~lals ot land. (304)576· 5268
Coolopot
II
hl~ng
lor
luel
=62-5::-Tltl=n:t-:A
BUSIIDi
personal, consolidation,
dllllrtmlnatlon."'
3 bedroom mobUe home In Ed at Country Homes, 74()..
9929
caahler &amp; dell help, Ohio
451131.,.-""-,."-G-:a-11-:lpol-:-1-a.
business, monga.ges, auto.
4 Family Flnll Time Solo. ....., be able to work all
1'RAINtNG
'
Middleport,
no
pals, 992·2187. ·
Indian Creek Eatates, 3-6 (7401992-5858.
Rodney CO&lt;nmunlly Canlar. ohlfta, aloo 4 to 12 cook, Pan- lime Sales help- Muat ·--oiiiiiiiiiiii;,.,J
Tblt. newapaper will not
\ II HI I I \\. I 11..., 1
· acre· lots, west of Rio
knowingly ecc:ept
November 9- 10. Nice ,..., be able to work till ba dependable and a•olla- Galllpofll ea- COli- Loan A""llablel All 1ypee cl
Grande,
from
$25,900.
credl1
welcome.
No
fees
Clothing. All slzea. Toys, midnight, otop by for on ap- ble Immediately. Call {Careen1 CloH To Home)
ldvertiHfM'nll for I'Mf
Small Trailer close to gro(740)245-5747
cary slora and downtown
Hot9?Hot.D
•tate which Ia in
Colnforlen1, Shoeo· mioc:. 9 pllcollon, RT. 50 Coolville, ~(7_40_)_44::1--9-:-340-=:-:---- Call TOdayl 740-446-4367, up front. CALL TOLL FREE
1-866-207-5028.
Gooos
·
vklladon of the law. OUr
Looking To Buy A New Gallipolis. References and
ll,.l'-41"·-~-~--., ;::Ott.:.;·:__ _ _ _ _-,Project T,.lner
1·600·214-()452,
Home?
Don'l
Have
land?
LOANSI
LOANSt
.LOANS!
deposit. (740)448-1158
·------··
~ .._~~-I Dental Hygenllll Nooded The Appalachian Center loo -.rR;::~:~~.;•.:;oo;:;-o::;s-:;t::27i:.4:::B:;._, Problem Paying Bills? In
lnlonned thai all
We Colli HU"Y Only 10 Loll
APAK1111&amp;"1'
1
'
S
Appliances: Recondhlonad
rvmo.aum•........., Pan Time. (7&lt;10)448-2409. Econom~ Nelwarko- a
ctwelllnga
ICfVertiM&lt;IIn
Left, 304-736-7295.
Debt? Good, Bad, or no
,.---,--'--'----,- goal-oriented peraon to train
M.14iJO:UANEOU5
FOR RENr
Waaha111, Dryers, Ranges,
thla ntWSPII*' are
Domino's now taking appll- displaced or unemployed •
. credit. Bankruptcy Wei·
Rafrlgratora, Up To 90 Days
Nice 4 acre tract noo•
tvallabfe on an equal
729 Oliver St., MlddtepQrt, cations lot safe driver~, Gal- workera in a computer and
come. Call Toll· FrH 1·
Guaranteed! We SeN New
terms.
Galli
poll•·
eaav
opportunity
buea.
Henderson's
reaklanca, llpolll and Pomeroy loca- life skills training course. All of your home r~lra, ad- 666-496-9486.
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Maytag Appliances, French
(7401446·3583
•Thu~";;.·.;::&amp;~Sa;:t;;:··..;'.;::Q-~3;.
. - - , tiona only. Apply In par1011. Trainer is reaponsibee for Qltiona &amp; remodeling. 24hr MONEY TO LOAN, AUTO,
menta, fumlshed and untur· City Maytag, 740-446-7795.
~~-~
EASY WORK! EXCEU.ENT lmplementallon of training emergency service. senior DEBT CONSOUDATION
MOBD.E Hmmi
Nice Alver and Creek Front- ~=,' ~::u:s~e~~~:
Complete Living Room Furra..e..'\. 1.,.~ 1
PAY! Allemblt' producla at cour_se, aaaistlng COL:J"Iy )Db citizens discount. 22yrs.
CALL (401)HCH410 •
FOR SALE
• Loti, PubliC Water and 2218 _
home CAll Toll Free
serviCe agencies with em· exp. (304)576-3008
24 HOUR RESPONSE
--sewer, survey map a~alla· - - - - - - - - niture. $400. (304)675-6996
1 otv\ ..... 7. ,. , .... ~...
ployment development and
ble. call for details. HOme· 1 d 2 B d
A ~ C h &amp; hal dl
Com- ~ .....,.._, ~~. 12170 aiSilling wilh customer skUI Good or Bad Credit Even
l'lloFrs9oNAL 114x65 Shultz2 bedroom. All stead
Bend
Broker
an
e room P8 • ouc
c r, nette sa1•
70
=·P=r'fme~Hr, www.hOmejobl.comt12t . assessments, and proper Bankruptcy, Call Toll Free
SmVJCD
appliances, dishwasher, (304}882·2405 '
~n~~~· ~rot A~p~:~: ~!:a~~·. 0~~!~~~~~
cornpJete auction service. FAIT GROWING lUll· rnalr')tenance anct manage- 24 hrs., 1-888-o426-8393.
-• WfO, 8x16 covered porch.
(740)441- 1519
wave, drop leaf table.
L - l66 Ohio &amp; WHI NESS NIEDI CA8HtERt mont ot training ~te, lnclud·
$7,500. (3041675-6295
( '") ,._
7 4 9742
111
5785
•
0
coov•
-RT
nilE
ing
minor
troubleshOOting
ol
WANm&gt;
TURNED
DOWN
ON
~==~;;:::;;=;
2
Apartm
I
A
II
bl
2b
~ ~
VIrginia. 304·773r .FUU n~IIE' ALL~ .........• ~- •-~ as -asa"'O Do
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? 16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
ens •a a e, r. ::--'-::-':-'-::._---:-c~
3()4.773-S447
- - •9J .................. ·,
••
,
2217 North Main Street. For Sale: Rec:ondlt!onad
.
llND REaUME TO: THE ry.
No Fee Unless We Win I Month, 8.99% FIKed lnt~t
flollsl8
$275/month, $100/Deposit. wuhers, drvers and relrlgWANil'll
DAILY lltmNEL PO Applicant&amp; should have e•· All K
lcko I tal
1-6Bil-~·3345
Rate With Air And UnFOR R£Hr
1 No Pets. Utltlllea notlnclud- orators. Tho._.,. Appll·
m IJuy
eox
~ POMERO~' ,.....
iC8 with dlv.... ....,. led' erooane,. lorcadw ,""ka •
derplnnlng
ed. (3041675-4900
once. 3407 Jack&amp;on AveOtt .tl7tl
puler toftwera apptlcatlona,
, repa ung
a r r, t-686·926:3426 ~
.
Including word procaufng OHne heaters; lawn mow1970 Hillcrest, 2 l;ledroom, t 5 cOurt St!Mt. 2 Bed· 2 Bedroom, wuherl dryer nue, (304)675-7386.
Ablolute ToP Dolar. u.s.
TIMI RN P011110N. and apreadaheetl and data· trs; amall eng inti. Mlkt
HOMfS
new appliances &amp; carpet, rooms, 1 1f2 batha, Kltchtn hookup. 7 miles fn:m Hoapl· Freutr, $45; dinette HI,
Sltvor. C3olo:l Colno. Prool· Sconlc .Hilla Nulling Conlar buol. Experience toaclolng (740I448-7604
~
FOR SAu:
. ~ood .\'8'l:.~?io8'' 3 · 000 with llovo on&lt;l ror~gorotor. tal. (7oi0)441-Q117
$25; dining table (Hall 81
oata. Olamondo,_ Gokl lo - " ' o oppllcaliona for or training ofharo In lnforma- Family
Mon/Hanclyman
og .. (7 I
Ot1 Street Parking, CioN to Acoma and Beth. o4tl Olivo with 4 ~hllro, $100. call
Ringo, u.s, C.rrency,· o lullllino AN. 7 to 3 oncl 3 lion
oomputor proaouro woohlng, yon! 1M Aeros with 1889 FIHI· 1985 Skytln4 14K70, 3 bl1l- Schooll and Cowntown 3SlrHI. Ullllllos Paid. Stovo (7&lt;10)1182 2472
1
11
M.T.S. Coin Sliop, f5 Beoo to&gt;
lhlfto. Groot - · - ~ roqul '
malnlono,.,. clean up wood MOdular Home
1110111. Good COndlllon. Cal Aroo. 15151 month ptUI '1:" and Rofng&lt;t(Otor No Polo. ~lohan Corpot, 2Q2 Clart&lt;
ond Avonut, Gallpolla. 740- I!KpollwiCO Poy, and ,... Thlo polltlen roqulrH oct
Froo Eotlmato~ Galllpolla Exetlllnt CCndl· Harold, 7o!0-3B5-9848.
pollt and Roforonco. 0 "'75 ~us ....... it. •·loren·
R-·•, Porter, Ohio.
44e-2842.
than oompoiHlvo Wageal lontlfhy auto toovol. Thlo ill (so:i.)i'7 3 55e&lt;l Ask for Don 1IOn
·
Sat
Pill. {7ol01446-412a
...
...,... ~
Coli
Soonlc
Hills
ol
part•tlmo
pooltlon
wllh
1
•
·
Prlvato.
Country
•
te94
14x70
Oakwood,
2
eos
oqulro&lt;l.
(74014&gt;4tl·
(7
14&gt;4tl-7444
1-877·830·
I \I I ' I I &gt; '\ , II "\ I
(7401448-71110
or
ltOP
f&gt;V
oampatltlvo
Ml&amp;ry
and
aoorgoo
Portable
sawmill,
ling.
Stocked
POnd.
A~lBedroom,
2
lull
botlt,
3
ton
2
bedroom
homo
close
10
3945
01112.
Frwt
Eallmatas,
Eooy
', I I!\ H I ·
'ii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij and t• out lind appllcallon. ooma llox Umo. PI- Mnd donl haul your ~· to tho ~~~ "t;'~·.~~!~~~ hht pump, 1tovo, (7401387· town, boHment. River vlow. IIAUT.,UL
APAIIT• flna~~o!Jl ~tyo u~o:
ii116
FuUmt W - NtodOif rHumo and lhrH roferon· mill jull call :!04-ef5•1157. 21 Homo &amp; Land (Cellular OD07
14251 month: 3 bed1110111 In MINTI AT IUDGIT PRI· ~~~.. I llltlll :.:e•rllot" .
u--"'
' -bvNovoml&gt;orltl11oLH
M 1304 ,..,. 2 ge
Otllo
town, f·tl2bolhi.Cloodlo- Cll AT JACKION II·
"
·
1 ......,. n'ANIU&gt; "PPPY In PortOn. Holiday Wood, ACEMt, 114 C..um·
Hllll Ml PLIAIII
.1
,...,.. a or
• 111 time buyore• aovem• cation. 1500/ month. Refer· TATII, 82
or~~~~· Now Ronyoon 5D tl4wte7t
731
600
11
• • ·D0 l·
..__ _ _ _ _ _,J Inn- Gallpolla.
buo Road, Athont, Oh R..ocatOif horo from CT
monl loano- bulo toano 1 oncoo and dopoalt roqulrod. from 11207 10 1313 Walk to t/2L do bl
d 1)1
Al Ptll't Stay 0 Homo DoGIIOWINO IUIIN.. 48701 . No phone calls dut 10 mantagUioolllng 122 Kl.- OM..,. 3 or 4 - ~ ~~:~i.r 13 Qak· (7401He3844.
lhop I movloo. Catl 7of0. window ~ltltea:~awo~ vi~
portunltyl A•orogo StOOO. NIIDI Hl~l
piHH. EOE.
~~~~- ~~.. bedroom , full baaomont,
2 BR, 1 t/2 Beth on 112 446-2aea. Equal Houolng nyt 188. Good Folding Slrot18000/mo. Flox Sehodulo,
· WOrit lrorn homo.
Beloapa,_ for Ohio Valloy 1100 CO&lt;n 10 Rolall Buo many now IHiurot. Cioeo 28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On- aoro 01 Property. 13501 Opportunity.
ilr 18. 30' white otorrn door,
Eliminate . Commuting &amp; Mall· O&lt;dM/ E· Commorca Mornctfy Garden, full or pan Owner
Chiropractic · to ichoota and oltopplng. ~ool~·~ 1~~~ 1M,f;,:O month. Immediate AvallobiM· Chnlty'l Family Living, l2bl5,kl load of ha"'i~C:
O.ycaoo. PakiV-Uon, Bo1822-olweekPT.
amo, welrain an&lt;l fumllh OlfkltMana r 5 ,.
184.500. Call (740)448· ·
• noreo
• ty. (51.)471 ·4285. Near S3tol0 Now Lima Ad Rut- oo ng 11 moro,
·
631001(740)4411·2425
t-888-D28·3428
Buokeyo Hlllt Ca- Con· iartd, Ohio, 7&lt;10·742:7&lt;103. (7o101 441-CIII25
nuui/Tralnlng Programo. _, S1000."'=--FT 1-. Call (7401448·0228 EXCELLENr..Jm.iooot
Eotablllhod lnfl Coopora· www.trteltdl
llll.oorn lor oppt, Tanya.
raloronon, Honoot, Codl· 3 Bedroom on Route 2, Amulng Floot nmo Homo tor.
Apartment, home and trailer
I
I
a
n
(BOO.. tH50t
.
catod , Han:twooklng, :Myr.
(300.., 5332
Buyoro.
Govommont
ronlalo. CCmmo!Oial oto,..
ANnQut!s
www.Goalo2Suoco•.oom
MoCiuro'o -rant ,_ Beloapa,_, FuM~Imo, ben- old Fornalow~h Upbeal
'"' 5'
. Beokild loono. No credit O.k Hill, OH. 3 Bedroom front• avollablo lor • -· ~-------pi
7
IIN- 54-8430.
hiring 111 3 tocallonl, lull 01 lftil, ratall ,~..,.. - · Poalll"" AH~uda. Alwoyo A 3 bedroom, In Mlddloporl, needed. (304)7a5-58e Um· brick Capo Cod. IIIHmanl. 1/ooanoloo now.
part limo pick p appiloa rod. Apply II :t:e Fum• Smllo. Available ANY TIME 0111 Tom Andoroon olttr llld Otltr.
' $4751 month. Refartnoo
Bulltr'l Antlquoo Now
Holp wantad caMng for lhO uon'll soCallon: l&gt;rt boCk lurt. No pltono ca Ia. Apply lor lnlarvltw. (740)441·9BDO 5pm (7401DD2·3:M8.
Raqulrod. (740)384•5862 or North 3n:t, MlddiOI)Ort, 1 Open. Antlquell Amish Fur·
-rly, O.rot Group Homo, botWHn
'
Aloumlblo toano· Many (7&lt;10)245-1382
bedroom furnloltod apa~· nlluro 202 4th st-. {Be1 , 301 ~g 6 In go,_, 11511 3nl Avonuo, Loavo Volotmall·
now fMiylng minimum wago, tO:OOOm. Monday Utru Bel· Galllpoill, OH.
lypal avallablo. Call for d•
mont, no Ptta. dtpoottl rof· hind CMmlnal Rocordol Wo ·
now Thill&amp;: 7om-3pm, 7IU!I· urday.
tal~. (740I445·35e3.
oroncoa, (740)192·0155.
Buy &amp;Solll (304)875-1245
Spm, 3pm·11 pm, 11 pm·
7om, etll7o!0-11112·11023.
l
I

• •

Gold

"If you watched his progma
from the beginning of the )'eat
to now. he's a"---ced qu·J··- 2
uno
~
lot. He's doing more. That's
why lh..v're moving the ball

r

oEIIton
Allan Octagon Mirror. =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~··35" Pertecl Condition. llrid
FARM

HlrLP WANtU&gt;

ACEntt (Appalocttlon Contor for Economic Nelwoikal
$SO rowan! for lilt rttum of II rocrultlng a VISTA volunpig (yard ornomontl. IHr to http coordlnote our
black &amp; w1t11e ftbfrVIIU pig community computer labs
~ 3' tall &amp; 4' tocatld In Molga County.
tong. _ , out c1 yard 1n Require a team player wl\o
~. hU a lot or-- oniOYI -.ng ocnoro.
....., VIIUO ~ 10 fa·
oxportoroco
tho&lt; wt10 rocontry ~coordinating paoplo and
· - · wyou any tnfor· projtcta. E'xporltnco wltlt
mallon
call cornpu1tiO roqulrod. Volun(740)1182-5023 or 740-1182· IHrt -rvetralnlng, a 1113324.
pond of approKimltoly $716
==-~-,..--::---::--:-:- por month, hooltlt inauranca
SWF - . , Sugar Ooddy and a
mono35+ p11o10 and lnfor- tary "' educational awan!.
mallon 10 P08 100. Longe- Poaltlon atarto Wltlt orientaville, DH 45741 .
11oo In Chicago. A one-year
:7:':.:..:;"'::-:-:-'-:'----::- commitment Is required.
Why wall? Slort moellng Pleaoo Mncf reeume and
Ohio 111:,10nlgiW. call toll two rolerenceo ~ Friday,
frH 1'
766-,"823 IJtt Novemb41r 9th, "'to Lee
1621 .
Wood, ACEnet. 94 Colurnbu. R..d Alh.ns Ohio
~ 45701 · EDE.
~
. Aggr&amp;estve Home Heahh

N&amp;•••...,

r

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

l'aiKJN.wi

Rudy

»-= ...._ 81
•-n
,. ....

U.IIOO.
(304)175-8857
homo, (300)I75-2e88111111 a...y ~- .,.,
-,
7k . _ oeo. now. Their ofl'ense has devel1304177U367.
oped as.uo.
he's ~loped." -&lt;
VANS"
Roeuuisberger grrw up Iast.
4-WII&amp;
Three weeks ago. he tied a

vtrgll'o Sorry Patch, Eaot d
~on Route t24 ttu
MISIEI..ANDlUi ltumtpo 1 purple uparagu~
~ MF:RoiANDrsE • roots, 1740)11112· 7448.

HOW IQ WRITE At! AQ.

i

an

$150.

•17&lt;10~

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

Pot-

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

pocket on

1~

· Good " " ' - ' · """'· ""'·
,...--·, ' · ~r, eo.ooo miiM,

• Atfordlblt•Convenltnt

Afumlnum Sto"" Win"'"""' ,, J2x87
,.,. 32&gt;&lt;81. sr oo "''all. can
1JI

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tlckets/Pu reb r-ed Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • l.lmlt 3 Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

lloldon ond -

&gt;t&gt;umporo,

~

•-

875-5234

Pups. -

ta.12!1025 · No Sondoy callo.
(740)24S-S358
AKC rwgiiCI 001 m f'lncho&lt; fMOI&gt;PiOO, &amp;
tan 8 Old, 12110
(7.0)742.()310.
•
··~-'-- 51• • d
- - - pupo, • - - - - - - •
NSOR. Curron1 hoollh ,.
OO!dl, 170, (7&lt;1011148-21:18 t • FO&lt;d Rongor, 4 w.d.,
~ m• go
Y.. lfl(llfte, tong bed.
SHIOO, (7401148-2241.
c.ct&lt;or Spaniol Puppiool -:-:.,....;,.;.,-"-::-:-:-:-~:-:Full · Paront on 11110 Dodge 314 taro, u4,
Prom' no . S1SO. (7401448- e.r. Cob. -..,.,
2988
Bod ....,, Tow pockago,
Pur&gt;f&gt;l', malt. 11 551&lt;,
EC, 1111100' (740)44t ·
011113
monlhO old, dog box. c1111r.
c:coor. fOOd. Hu
tiH 1 F·2SO. 4114. ROlf,
tiono. $1!i0 080. No P• 123,000 miiH. Ch,....
petl. (7ol0)441-otl50 (O.vtl. - . T1rH. ·
(740)441-1165e (E-.gol (74013118-9055

1

(304) 675-1333

AKC

Iu

; 10.1o.t Konnol $1111.85
!Point Plio. (304)875-40114

l\egister

QB's

Aums
IUI&amp;u:

~=-::-::---'-~-:-

,

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Ir

diliiiii'Shiiuiii'--'

11uy "' 101. w.
1!1-. 1124 Eaot I.Wn on AKC COIIo fM'I'fi'M,
•SA 124 e. .....,• .,. 7o10- - · · oloo wNtoo
,Hl!-25211. Ruos Mooro, e&gt;&lt;lpodigo•. ""'"'"' - .
,$-100 up, (740)III6-t085.

;r

In one week With us

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.EXCEPTING nd
raaervlng
unlo
g1'11nton, Ito helra and
llllgna forever, the
following portion of
the abova dllcrlbed
pro-rty
to wit·
....- '
'
Situated In the Ylllege
of Middleport, Countr
of Melgl and Stele of
Ohio, and baing In
Section 28, Town 1
North, Rana• 13 Wtlt
of
the
~hlo
Compeny'e Purchlll
and baing the Weel
51•24 flit of Lot 282 of
the
V.I. Horton
Addlllon to the VIllage
of Middleport and
baing deocrlbad u
followo: Baglnnlng et
an Iron pin 11t at •he
NorthWIIt corner of
uld Lot 282, aid Iron

1-~"'-9

~~

Donna
Smith

oo·

Who left us on
November7,
I year ago today
From the m41ment
the sun rises to the
Jut beam or'day•s
light, you are In
our hearts and f

ei

~ ==~e::·::~n:.

=·

thoughts till we 'n
together again.

.1-c...t-r,.._ ,
~ u..r. :It&lt;-

... ~ _j

Buy Sell

ti·00047.ooo

I

or Traae

OhiO and baing a part 11-00027 000 ·
of lrOadway Straet 11 Add1'11aei 113 0.1111'111 .
re~ordad In the Malgl Hartlnpr Parkwa~
COunty Pill ReOOrdl
Section 21 Town i ...;..
· - --- - - - - --------------:---North, r~nge 13 w111
Help W.ilted
01
the
0 h 1o

Company'a Puroh11•

lnd baing dllorlbad
11 IOIIOWI: llaglnnlng
et tha Northeut
------u-lp Wen~~
,..
...,

;=======:,
NOW
H Rl NG
1
$6 • $8

p er Hour
FuJVPart

Time

OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
1-888-974-JOBS

in the C/assifieas!

-=======::;

r'

WANTEP

Slug Shoot

Experienced
worken,

experleneed

areenhouse
manaaen•od
worken needed.
Pay blled on
~xperlence.

'IBklnil
applications
Mon-Frl.

Call
(740) 84J.ll49
ONLY ·QUALini!D

PEOPLE NEitD
APPLYI

LOC-'TED AT: JACKSON CO.
FAIRGROUNDS, WELLSTON, OHIO
(4-H EXHIBIT BUILDING)
'TAKE RT. 83 TO SOUTH EDGE OF
WELLSTON GO EAST ON DRIVING
PARK RD., TURN LEFT AT CEMENT
PLANT TO FAIRGROUNDS.
Jack Goodbar ouctlonl&amp;r has beea commltsloaed
to ..U a.. r 10,000 A~ C.ILI, Clopoy, llooo ond
Sholr prqo door HCtlono In Mvonlobtl&amp; Ill hp
Gtala lllld CGNmtrdol prqo door apene.._
Approx. 100 pro.. doon will bt orrerec1 In this
aucllan, one aided atoe1 ond 1-lated doo.._
•vonllnoalalod doon I t1aa topo, lntlc, oprtnp,
trim, 300' h1Inlln1 metalond door hardwan. 8x7,
h'l, l'x7, IOtcl, tO.IO, 12 I ll, 14'16', 18' wide
commercial lllld olhtr llle doon a..llable. For a
dltrenot sill ar ol)'la door to bt odded to this
aucllaa call1-'1ol437_.710.
DON'T MISS THIS SAL):
BRING A TRUCK OR TRAILER
OPEN FOR PREVIEW 2 HRS. BEFORE
AUCTION ALL SALES FINAL 1c SOLD "AS IS"
Tenrui cuh, chorae &lt;ardo and dteck with S. S.
nambtr J.D. 10' buyen pnmlum will lot
c~arpd. Ttox will bt &lt;harwect unleu you have
vndon number. AU doon mwt be remo•ed 2
h... after compltdon auction.

pin baing on tile South
right of way llna of
Ganaral Hartinger
Parkway and on the
Eaat una of a 20 loot
wide alley; thence
8
gs Omtn~D
South 88 diQrHI 10'
00" E11t, 58.24 feat
1!0
1!0
along the South right
Of way line of llld
Developer workl with poltntlll bome buyen,
General Hartlnter state and rtdonll'undlnl oou.-, and ooitlnl&lt;tor
Parkway to an Iron pin In sln1le family bomt bulldlna project. Mach,
s&amp;ti thence South 2 computer, aad ora:anlutlonl!ll 1klll• llt!CIIIIrJ.
dagrtlea 00' 00" Weet. Rt!•l Estate alld sotlll 1ervlces backaround
74.00 ftel 10 an Iron holprul. W~lln1 to tnlo ..,.rtl•e, tftthuola•dc
pin aot on lhe South nodldole, Salary .....,._,.,. with experlonct.
llnl of llld Lot 282, Rt~ume with work hJtlol')' 11d experience flut 3
uld Iron pin baing on "''"nca con bt mailed to Houalbt Developer,
OWNER: SHOFF·DOOR CO.
I he North Una of Community Acdon, Bexl7l, Cltoohlft, OK 45620
AUCTIONEER:
JACK GOODBAR
Chlldo
Lot, I I by 11/19/0t. IWE
de~crlbed In the Melgo t...,;;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.J L - - -.....

G Ill M 1 C
it
a
e
.Y
Action is seeklno a Housina
Program Developer

Run
Sportsman Club
Every Sunday at noon until
Forked

nialntenence

or

------'-------1

Annual Soccer meeting
Thursday, Novembsr 8
7pm
at Rutland Civic Center
Board member elections .

PART TIME BANKING
OPPORTUNITY
The Gallipolis Office
Peoples Bank NA Is in need
a flexible tBam·playeo:,:ruf:~~o~r ~;;[.?
pat1·tlme position of ~,.;
Service
Representatl
(Teller). Must be available ,,.,_,, __ '"'

1

~ hrslweek Mon-Fri . beiiiVeenJ

· 8 a . m. and 6 p.m . and Sat.
Ag . ...-. to Noon . Competi ·

and benefits . Suu''""
resume and cover letter to
at 349 Third StrEiet.l
~JG.alllpolis, OH 45631, or em!tlll
it to careersCpebo.com.

j

•

�Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio .

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 5

ALLEYOOP

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRJDGII:

PHILLIP
. ALDER

ACROSS 40......_,•
lltlt
1fllpr-.cl41lltl.

WICd

I Gl•a•rfa •

ILWLDIGad

DCAVA!INO

I' t .tUft , 4
. . •lind •Tiploli
.... Dirt . . .

....

If

COIIIUaOIS, INC.
...... Olllo 41'771

'740-18Wt48

COIIOIJ'tiiUKX/111(1
• F - . Wollo, Slopo •
l'IIIWorlc,
lltp'l ~ UlltDtl. • Wtlkl

llld.Drlv11•S...U ·
Cnco Froo ~~~~--

Ser,mla a.1o ud w.v.

·-

-~

RlmaCIRIO

·-~
a
.-..a-.
·••• ' 1011

PlUmbing

• Vlnyllkllntl. Pelfttlng

•PIIIollld-Frae Estlmatea

V. C. YOUNO Ill

-ONo
992-6215

filii t i sterl
6:38

Remodtllng
Stop&amp;Compirt
FREE miMATES
7411-882·1171 .

l'npsluehp
lUsdlys

l'l1lre* Calerlll

-

.........

IIISIIJdQ$

1cmTI'

f~,

TMroplat

213 N. 2nd Ava .
Middleport, OH 4S780
ComelnMdook
about IJIICiall
Qllt Cer11flOIMI
Available

I Kandl

l!qulpmenl Parts
Fadory Authorized
Case-IH Parts
Dealers

Disc Jockey
Senplce

,Country, Dance a
Flock Mualc

740-742-not
'Fieuonlble FlatH
All Occaalona

• FREE INSTALLATION

• FREE IN HOME &amp;STIMATE
• FULLY WELDED
0 50 YEAR WARRANTY

WINDOW

24'120'

1~121111lE Will

PLASne

I:Vt~TI&lt;'

992-4119 1-800-291-5600

FlaTCIIE.
RRSTSEIVED

Visit Our Showroom O.n Sa.te Route 33
'Miles North Of Pomcrvy, Ohio, AI County Rolid 18

.ALUIIL

Jeff Warner Ins.
992'-5479

'm _.;. ; ; ;,;,; ;·,;

:.n:.';:!:.'l:,':'.

,

:g.t '). .
MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

10'x201

(740) 992-3194

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

BUPPET TO GO lLunch •• 'UI)
BUFFET TO GO (Dinner •• 1.11)

!'1:\.

Of.:::-:"·

r--------------,
Ad ,•.

Herbollfe
Independent

ver 158 your
bUSiness'
•

-n8

:;:u~~~~ H~rJk~
u':.QI : : :~~:~~:::,..~
4 1• 20
IALIITIMS
lloiiJIY,

:,:..
1111 envelope and
aubmlllldto·
Dabble • Wlllon,
SlcNIIry, ' Malga
County AgrlcuHural
Socllly, 42481. Woodl
Aoed, CooiYIIII, OH
. 41728 by lha dlldllna
llllld ilbova, '••ld
blda WILL NOT 111
ocoeplld
Tile Melga County
Agrlcullurel leolety
ranrvn the rlgltt 10

UNIT47
JAtoN IMITH
llcrlllrlat claek, lllp
back oupbolrd, quilt,
(2) Slota quarlar
collacllon
( 31
quarlera), (5) new
dollar oolna, 1104
1llvar clolllf, 1810
IHvar IIOIIIf, (2) 2000
lllvar IIOIIara, bulfllo
nlokll, wllaal penny,
1m1ll lntlqua oottH

Goagllllt
Rd.,
'-toy, Olllo on
Novlrnbar 1&amp;,2001..

.

':".:-'~;:",::'1\·

on Ih•IS page
for QftlrlV month
for aS
Iow as $25
Phone 9·92•2155
.

THE BORN LOSER

$200.00 PER JOINT

~Otl"-! M'&lt; V&amp;'t OWI\I ~II'(."q

REIIliRlY
$321.00 PO JDINT

.

f'~ OY~TE:R':l roc.K£fEu.a!

•

I

,.

rue ,.
ru.

SIMler:

41-tuncl
51
..,_
55 ......

11111

sa IIOIIkllr

21 Chlrt

reparation
56 Trickery
57 Coodo

ohope

27 Mil. offlctr
28 Aller

....

·-

Ellt

Pau

30 Grocelul

Obi.
Pau

......s.

DOWN
1 Spanloh
hlroE1-

cook
(2 well.)
2 Gardin tool 24 Puto cut

3 Sslud at

31 Loolc

Distributor

Thundlys

Prelresslft ·
CIUeflll on SUndayS

13 Vlgot
4'2 llarah
11 -IntO I
griUtt
movie
43 Mandate
20 TV odjunct 45 Adorn 111d
22 Old not
Eve'o

aanltn

47 Billet
rnarko
llllc.ndll 41 lnlormol
25 Olear
paranl

4 RlokY
5 Outlloldlr
nomln... 48 Jecqu.'
Slaughlot' 21 SINh
v~e~tlcn
glance
tlrne
33C.o- 8 Have • .,...
lmptfttlcn 27 Fortune- 50 King, In
dramotlc
35 Kyoto ullh 7 Olug.....
lllltr
Fronce
obleluk
37 Deblteolcla
28 Hlda
52 Writer
38 Nawacalltr I Bulruoh
2D "Rabbi
Tollloy
I PCmlktr
Jonnlngt
Ben-·
53 Hall c l 10 Tavtrn fare 34 Informing 154 Saull31CoH"
11 Limb
moktr
38 collao
Morle, Mich.
clcMiy

Nikki Giovanni, a
U.S. poet, wrote:
Mistakes arc a fact
of life
It is the response to
error that counts.
At the bridge table,
though, counting
greatly reduces error.
The more counting
you do -- points,
tricks, winner:s, losers
-- the better you wiU
play. In this deal, you
are in four •pades.
West leads the club
six: eight, . ace, two.
East shifts to the diamond jack. You win
·:~
with the king, draw
trumps (East has one),
ruff the club jack in
~fL&amp;;.O, I'IATIONAL
the dunuuy, and exit
GiOG,AP~IG. S'OGiiTY7
with the ace and another diamond. Irri~ ~A\It ICf/tSON TO
tatingly, West wins
BEL.ItVf IIGFOOT
with the queen and
shifts to the hean I 0.
IS 1.1\IING IN T~f
CELEBRITY CIPHER
What would you do?
by LUll Campol
APAICTMEHT AIOVf
c.-1y Clpllor Cfi/Ptooromt oro crootod from quotatlono by,_
North's three-club
people, pllt 1nd preunt. &amp;ch letter In the cipher 1t1ndl ro; another.
response showed a
Today'5 ctu.: B squsls H
limit raise ·- 10-12
. support points -- with
"OHH
LPPA
ZFEGEXL
El
four or more spades.
IZEVVEXL
MXASF
ZOGIF
(I think North was
planning to bid four
OXA
BPHitEXL
RPMF
spades anyway, but
wanted to limit his
'
JFSOQB.'0. · 1WPGO
point-count first.)
This allowed East to
DE Q C L·S F 0 H A
meak in a lenjllh- and
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "All governments art like
strength-showong
wheelbarrows useful Instruments, but they need to be
pushed.~- Bishop of Sheffield
double.
..
'
The deal ·occurred
during a match between Israel and Italy
at the 1999 World
WOlP
Junior
Team
ChamGAME
ctu• .
~
, piooship in Fott Lauu
no
ou . derdale, Fla.
Raorrangt lettera of the
I
01' o
four acramblwd words be·
East's
winning
with
I WH
low to form four slrnpl• words.
the club ace denied
d "
TPI
the king. (When playI D0 T DV
ing the highest card ~-,.,-,.,,~r-r-r--,rl
yet contributed to a .
.
.
.
.
"
trick, third hand puts ~======::--up the bottom of
K R E M A .,
equivalent cards.) If
12 j j§
West had the king- ·
.
.
.
.
queen of clubs, he
would have led the
N A K L V
,'
I
TlliNK
I
WELL,IlE ATE A LOT
king,
not
a
low
one.
Many things can't be fixed . In·
llAPPIED HIM
OF COOKIES AND
So, East was marked ~.==·==·====~stead of coming up with new
TO TloiE VET..
'I'ESTERDAI{,
with the ace-queen of ,..
things I think we should be able
T 0 Cy E 0
c1u b s. H e a1so h ad t h e .
. to fix the things we . --- - - - have.
diamond jack. If he
€
7
Complete ohe chuc~le quoled
had the heart ace as
_ . . .
.
by filling in the missing words
'--'-"'"""'-..0......0-..0..-' you davelop from step No. 3 below.
well, he probably
PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS I
would have opened
IN THESE SQUARES
the bidding. So, the
Italian declarer, Andrea Mallardi, called
for dummy's heart
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
king and made his
Emblem - Merge • Knell • Venous - NEVER BE£N
contract.
While describing my .s tay a.! a fabulous theme park,
Which
country_ my youngest mece exclaimed, Thafs my favorite place
won the gold medal?
lhal I've NEVER BEEN!"
Italy.

..

Shade River AG Service

•

"Ahead In Service"

"
35537 St. Rt. 7 North ~· Pomeroy, Oh457:W I '
. 740·985·3831
••'•

12% Economy 8looll Fllld.......... $8.5111100
12% Equine 12
(Formirty Wellam Pride) ........... $5.00150
21% Hunlerl Prkll Dog FOOd .......$8.75150
Lick Dltr Blooka ..~ .......,,•.,.,. $8.75

Whole Com ••••....•..••••••••••.•••.••...••. $5.251100
Cracked Corn ...............................$1.2511 00

"' .
''

.'
~

I
I

"

-,.l

-..."'..•,·
,, t

r---.....;,--------. .,
\

Advertise in !•
this space for ;:
s100 per· :..1,,
·month
"

PEANUTS
lr'5 OUR NEW SCHOOL
PRINCIPAL •. HE 5A'I'5
COME BACK

____

....... ~

....._

Sunset Home
Construction
New Home1, Room Addltlone,
Garage1, Pole Bulldlnge, Roofs, :
Siding, Deck1, Kitchen•. Drywall :
iMore
·

1 1

I

:=======~~
If.,,-1.-:'
,.....,lr--.--.-+

II

I I I

I
I 0

8

IWEDNESDAY

. Bryan Reeves

...

O

..

,

NOVEMBER 71

FREE ESTIMATES!

740-742·3411

Awatd! IV..) ICC)

CONSTRUCTION .
PROJECT?-WE CAN HELP

Tlnmday. Nov . 8, 2(XJI
Concenmne Ofl improving .

you put a lid on &lt;'Xtrava~~nt
~pending today. Even nickels

-- If an · ummtn:ipated diffi culty arises today that calh for

and completing all c.•ndeavors ·
you begin in the ·ycar ahead

and dim&lt;:s can ai.ld up to a
helty su m.

your time and attent ion, your

. AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Fc b.

might not be \IP to de ali ng
with it. Shdvc it if possible.

and you '11 do better both ilt
work and at home. It'll be
worth it, even if i[ to\kes some
p('neverance.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- A . f.a111ily me1nber
might be- the source for yom
disappointment tod.1.y. Just
when you need him or h~r
the: most, this loved one cuuld

G~

Icc you down . Know where
to look for remanet and
you'll tind it. Thr Astra-

Graph Ma'tc:lunak.tr in1tantly
reve-lilh which siglb arc ro-

Jaanle Howell

mantically perfrct for you.
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker,
clu thil neMpaper, P.O. lJox

740-992·7038

)67, Wickliffe, OH 440V2-

011&gt;7.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23flec . 21) •• You know what
happens when an hnmovabte

.•

P.O. lex 73
SvracUII OH4a77t
;ropettoj. (UIII
•
UNITII
IDIARVIIII
Aluminum , 4 Wltltl
.
,
toadltll rempa, box ct ~-------------..1
lrophlu, · !'IUtlo -

object meeu an irreailtible
force, 10 ker:p your temper in

cbeck or you 'II find younelf
up agalmt an eqUally feisty
penon .
CAI'RICOitN (l&gt;c&lt; . 22·
jan. 19} •• Conlidr:t your ncar
future n&lt;'cdt and it might help

'
I

Kt I

~

17 Fllgltl
cllr.
11
( -.
11 Malia
21 "Norma-·
23Ciaar - -

Mf.

Cellular ·

°

.AQ ISU

\VHt

44 Poe'o

32 Clumoy

Publlo Notice
Public Notice
Public Notlae
Public Notice
1000 Sf, Rt, 7 ""'"'
• No Dealen cw Contractors Please
Vita I Maaten:ard
Coolvm.,
OH
um
NOTICI Ql' ....,___ aoO.,I t IIJIDI any grinder, . .
0 I II
Ohlldl
WV1102J477
Thl Malga county~or all blda, lo pllonograpll; .· ·IOih
MDIIf.-1
Agrlcullural loolaty waive lnfonnalllllt or Annlvaraary Naeoar
will _,a 111c1a unlit 10 aooept 1ny bid 1hat larbla doll, old
4:\10 p.m., Prlday, Ia daamall moal W8111bolnl, a caelltotl
NOnmber 11, 2001 10 favorable lo lha lrona, (a) I gallon
111 apsned 11 a. Mil loalaly.
cro¢kll, old apur, old
Regi!WIIIIIillgtlfllll (10)a4,S1,(11)71TC horu bll, old matal ,
1
above
Ia alsly lor llnllellon,
lpoonlbottle opa,ar, deeorlbed property '"!AR n
11'1111 COIItlollon 1nd
Public Notlcl
1110'•
H o Y will lllldvertloed for"' 7
lot Lewn llllntanallblalwoodan binder, all and will 111 aold
for 1111 aaoa Malga The VIllage ot whitt gtanlla oottH by auction, unlne all
CounlyFalr.
Middleport
11 pot, Unlvaraol bowl, !lfalma by Harlwall
(3) cigar lloxee, loy llol'ligli all allelled.
Till lolllge County '*114111"11
Agrlcullural Sootily applloatlona and lndlln drum, old tin, II, no
.per eon
WIIIIIIIO - l o r r11u11111
tor 1 lunoh llox, toy lin. purOIIIIIe
the
lhl eervlcae llalld walllofllw111r oan, (2) oanntng property at aucllon,
- a n d 1111 ganeral IUJIIrlntllldlnl.
11r1, pockal knlll, the peraonel property
Houra
apecllluUon ara aa ADDIIoailt mull hiYII wood box 1nd m1y biiOid It prlvile
lollcwa:
Clli11 I Wallr and iaeort.ed oolna, lrealy ·or daelroyed. 7:00 AM ~ 8:00 PM
Sanitation:
The Wtttllewallr TNallnlnl WOOdin box wltocla, 'l'he •Ia WUI 111 hlklot
contraclor 111111 I" Iani
Oparalor OOrn llu....r,
1111 Hartwill 8toraga
Larga apaakar, laolllty,
414 20
provide 11o111 Ngo(ar Llo1n11. Individual
and llandloaJipld ahlll Ill raaponelbla llwnldplttUI'II,(I)and Qoagllen
Rd.,
accualble porta• for the aomplell tablea, (2) VIlli . . _ , , Ohio on
lcllne, lland willing operation
end w/a.rtlllolal llowari, Novarntiar11,i0o1.
atetlone and l'llatld malnllnance of 1111 aullcua, DanburY {10) a (11)1
III'VIollltl 1o 1111 aorne Wlagl'e Walar and Mini modal oara: 111'7
lmlllld=u:ot and Wlallw•r TIN- ChiVY tlragatar, tHI
Publlo NOlle.
1066 2nd Street • Mason, WV
11t11ga Ptanle ·Including bul ~onvtr'ltb1 1114, 1 1
~;:.:;during !Ill
Counly Fair.
not lllllllld 10 1111 ~
L1AD AND COPi'lll
(1000 ft from the bridge)
'll'llh Collacllon: tlallng, grit · and· Chevy, 1810 Mercury,
TAPMOH
Till contractor 1.U.u eoraenlng, pumping, 1112 Corvella, 1.170 VIOLATION~~~~:ac
Tel: (304) 773-5800
PfOvkll lor lralh pick· hllullkuplng,
Olda 442, box family
NOtJc
up on the groun'd l ol ground• kllplng, albume, wood gl111
I!
IIIIMIIIICountrFalr record keeping, · oa..,piCI-Irlma.
p bll 0
Hours: Sun • Thor llam • 10 pm
111-tlwlcl par lily rapcrta, m1ln11nanoo,
Thl
allov1
u
woler
'·
durllltl ttw fal~ PfOPif depa-1 ·
deacrlbld proparly • Y - era Nlllllrad
Frl &amp; Salll.; am • llpm
dlapoal ct lha lruh budgallng,
and will Ill .advarlllld tor b)ll'ldlral and IIIII
r···- BUFFET SPECIAL
ae dlriCIId by the IHIIIIftCI Wllh long Ula and Will Ill eold .::::a'::dlo
loclely, ond relotad ranga planning tor by auction, unlale all radutad trl·annual
I
Hrvt- 11 raquealld faclllllae. AppllcaiiOna clalmo by Hartwell
rl
by tbllaalety.
and delllled llat of Storage ara Hllallad. mon 11 ng 1n order
I WNCH•4.H •DINNIR'I.II
l
I
Lawn Maintenance: .....,.nllbiHtlal can ba II
no
pareon 10 enaure lhal IIIII
.
.....,...
h
walar le baing
1 ·ll:30am - 2:00pm 1 5100 pm • 7:30pm
· Thl ccnlractor allall plokod •UP al the pure au a
t 11 • auppllad
10 1111
I
I
provlcll mowing and Publlo Workll Ollloa property 11 auollon,
14 yrs &amp; under FREE '4 yrs &amp; under FREE
trimming aervlcae 237 11101 Btraal, 1111 peraonal propllt'ly -;:""'·RACINE,
5-8 yrs- '2,99 : 5-8 yrs- 13.99
"lnllda 1111 fanaa" and Middleport, Ohio. may llllold II privati VILLAGE Ol' Wlllr
In 1111 "Spring oraa" Appllolllona mutt Ill lraaty Ot dlllt:r:d, IYitlm filii"' to
9-12 yrs -'3,99
9-12 yrs ·'4.99
on an H lltldad bula nllutllld on or batore Till Nil will Ill
II
"
'
0
IIIHCI upon weather Novamlllr 18, 2001 11 lhl Hortwall ltoraga P erf r m
t h Ia
'
oondlllona for 1111 4:00 p.m. Tile VRia11 laolllty,
41 4 a 0
1111 (10'x10' &amp;
growing 111aon from riiii'YII lha rlghl to Goagllan
lid., too 1
oil Pomeroy, Ohio on
aampllng
lpproxlmately April reJaot and
1
through llptembar apr,llootloni and 10 Novetnblr ts,2001. ·
pe:::· ' !!ACINI!,
21102.
wa VI lfi'IIIUiarlll• In
OWner/Occupante
VIL' •QI
H2~6635
The abovo Ia 10 lhl appllutlon llld to
Llftctalrown/Jene'
'"" 0, wl11 lakll
provide only I ganaral I C 0 I p I
a nd
KMn
1111 MIGIHiry lllpl
oulllna · of 1111 application, which In 3'1771 Mlnei'IIVIIIa lid. 10 an aura lhal
11111
requl.....,.lla.
1111 opinion ol the . Racine, OH 41'771
.,;.';'.:::'':: .
HowardL.
Spaclllc Nqu!l'llmenll Middleport Icard ol
Property: (Lilt)
llll flllllra. ,
are available from till Public Aflolre may Ill
UNIT!!,,.
Por addlllonal
Wrltesel
~nglndlvkluale: 111011 ldvanll~
UNDA 111(1,....,1!NI
SANITATION • Kenny (11)2, 4, 7, 1,-, 11
KlAN
lnformlllon contacl
Roofing • Home
lucidly (112-S2113)
· ·
Window
air John
Holman,
TAAIH COLLECTIONPublic Notice . oondlll-r, apart 111'11, Operator 11 14..820
MaintenanceVIrgil Windon (115·
(3) wood 1111111111
a48)
LIEN IIALI
ball, Molorola pllone,
011111
Gutters- Down
LAWN MAINTENANCE
Hartwallltol'llll
Colemon
IMIIm, lnformallon Ia elao
Spout
41420 Qcagllen Rd. racllo-ccntro11ed
4- avallallla tram tha
• Ed Hollar (112-&amp;111)
II
le
I hi
Pomlroy,OH41788 whlll loy, aquarium, U.l. EPA lata ·
FTH Ettlmllfl
l'llponalblllty of 11c11
The
following gcll clubo and bag, Dllnklng
Wlllr
949·1405
bidder lo view the paraonal property ,w.,r
oooler, Holllna (1·100-421· 750 East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
ground• and to llam1
will
be miCI'OWIIva,
' 1m11l 41111·
.
·
Athens, Ohio
591-5011
conlacl the above auctioned lor aa11 II ralrlgeratcr,loya,
7
n1mad pereon with till abova addra11 on TIll
• b o v 1 ~!1 • 8, I, 2001
any
queallone Novembar 11, 2D011o daacrlbed proparty
. Pomeroy fOlies
l'lglrdlng any and all H1t11 1111 Lien rlghla will Ill odvart!HCI tor
upacla of the ot Harlwall Slcraga ule and will Ill eold
Bln&amp;o2171 '
apeclllcallona Tile par HOllon Q22,., c1 by auot1on, un ...• Ill
futllllhunMy
auoc•alul blddar 11 1111 Olllo Aavloed clalma by 'Harlwell
.
alao ra1pcnolbl1 tor Coda.
lloraga 11'11 Hllallld.
&amp;5uldly
arr1nglng
work
OW../Oooupanll: If
no
paraon
Doan0!1el14:30
IOhldUIII wllh 1111 . . _ lmllh
purellllll
I hi
above named plf'IOn. altll lradbury Rd •. property 11 auotton,
flrtu birds start
Call for Products
All blda 111 10 111 MlddllpOrt, OH 41710 thl peraonll property
·
·.
6:30
·or Opportunity
llllld and clearly
Properly: (Lilt ..... .. ..., ... acid at privata
Proaresslue top Une
marluld with . "2002
lrHty or deatrot.ed·

=::.

JIOiJ

Openlnsle•cl: • I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

111 Knll"'• IMinnod llighllo 1'a1ur IIIHI•r, I

t

S..lll

4•

T

l'uhll&lt; Nutl•-e.• In Ne•w•p•ul"'"'·l
Ki~hl

......
t

;-"Jl

..,.

Your

... ...

PAU

Oe11fr: Ea1t

DDOYI.

PUBLIC
NOTICES

" 11

Vulner1ble: Both

M!'dicarc Supplement; Life lnaurancc;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 I K Rollovcn;
Monaage; Major Medical
• Nuning Home

740-992-1705

t I

6 1(1011

'I'

f)hlo i',l(,r)

:rnr.

•

!io""l"'
A AKQ114

f1ox 11\q

Tonia Relber
t.lolnoed Mauage

' II

t QI 4

••

• kv H llllpfl l\q4 nt

r•,1iddh•p!ltl

•

ROB01'MAN

MONUMENTAL UFE INSURANCE CO.

NOW OPEN

CARPENTER Meigs Massage
SERVICE
TheratJV

•Room•JnUotw6

&amp;sn..
o.no,e.o

•NiwHomel
•OII'Igll
•Complltt I

WVfii317U

YOUNG'S

fllles 11160 2171
fuellln.sdly

K J 111

....., • •

{740) 992~~7

IOIIIIIISSILL
·COISIIICYIOII

.

•

ending

14 Facllllole
15 Clturcll
olllclat

·
• ,. Spica,.... .. M. day

• J t7 2

a;· •

P/1

ne6ghbor

12 T.42 111p lbbr.
-=ntln 43 ,_lnlnl

'I

19) ··Don't let anyone make
a dcci~ion for you today th:u
you should br: making for
. yourself, no mmer how good
they've bern at advi~in~ you
previou5ly. You, alone under~
ltand your n~etk
PISCES (Feb. 20-Mmh 20)
... Hiding a goof-up tod=-y
could turn sc.unethin~ insignificant into a mort' serious
problem. All of us arc impcr(a:ct mortals: 10 don't be afraid
to own up to yuur mhukc .
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
•• How you cunduct yourself
around friends today can either enhance your rcput&lt;~tion
or make you look b:~d . Don't
IQt any unexpected happeninp:
throw you off guml.
TAURUS (April 20-May
2tl) ... Nfithcr you nor yum
mate Jhould attempt to coerce
the! other into a conmdf:mcnt
that woyfdn 't be palatablr to
r:hher of you . Quiet n:sentmcnt could turn into a ~udden
rage.

GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)

pa tience and

t~· mpcramcnt

CANCER Uun&lt; 21-July
22) - Leave &lt;~!! gamblin~ out
of your fin01m:: ial affairs to,\ay,
be t hey commercial or betting
with friends .' Things will not
tum out the way you wager.

LEO Ouly 23-llug. 22) •• If

tho~e

with whont you havr:
dealings today insin upon
havi nK thl•ir way, you're not
likely to take too kuuily to it.
Te mpers COldd fbre on :all

counu.

vw.&lt;;o (Au~ . 23 -Sopt . 22)
•• Don't look for ony bed o(
rosts at work ' todoy, it'~ not
goinM to happen . tnuead you
cou ld rnc:otmtcr nt(tlrct. mil·
ukes ;md dereliction of ttmy
all aro lmd you . Take:: it in
1tdde.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) •

• Banking too h~11vily on favon from friend~ today rnuld
le-ad hl dis&lt;'ppointmt-nt . Yum
b~amiful

bubble will buut
whr:n you realize th.,·y'rc uot
~roing to c om ~· throu~h fm
you.

I

f

�Page B 6 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Duke's Jason
choice as a
BY THE ASSOCIATf PRESS

I

Jason Williams who led
Duke to the national championship last season, was a unanimous selection Tuesday to The
Associated Press preseason AllAmerica team, the first player
on every ballot since I 996.
· The junior guard was joined
on the team by Stanford's
Casey Jacobsen, like Williams a
returning first-team All-American; Missouri's Kareem Rush;
Frank Williams of Illinois; and
Kentucky's Tayshaun Prince,
the lone senior selected.
Jason Williams was on each
of the 72 ballots from the
national media panel that
selects the weekly college basketball poll, becoming the first
unanimous preseason pick
since Tim Duncan of Wake
Forest five years ago.
Williams averaged 21.6
points last season - the first
Blue Devil to lead the Atlantic
Coast Conference in scoring
since Danny Ferry in I 989 3.3 rebounds and 6.1 assists.
He was the only player to rank
jn the lop 20 nationaUy in
scoring (15th) and assists
(19th) as Duke won its third
national championship.
The top-ranked Blue Devils

J. Williams

Ru1h

iams a unanimous
All-America

lost national player of the year NBA draft to return for his
Shane Battier and fifth-year senior season with the Wildforward Nate James, but cats. The 6-9 . ·ince belied his
Williams, who averaged 25.7 thin frame by p~aying at power
points in the NCAA tourna- forward last season and wound
ment, will lead the way as they up a second-team All-Ameritry to become the first team to can after averaging 16.9 points
repeat since Duke did it in and 6.5 rebounds.
1992.
Jacobsen is going to draw a
Rush, the preseason Big 12
lot of attention ti-om opposing
player of the year, Wolf' the sec- defenses this season as the only
ond-leading vote-getter with
returning starter for the Cardi47, one more than Prince and
nal. The 6-6 swingman avertwo more than Jacobsen.
aged 18.1 points in a balanced
The 6-foot-6 Rush led the
offense as he became Stanford's
conference in scoring last seafirst-ever All-American. He'll
son with a 21.1 average. His
run at national postseason look for his shot more and
honors was hurt when he that's not a bad thing considermissed seven games with a ing he hit 5 I percent from the
thumb injury on. his sh~oting field, including 47 percent
from 3-point range.
Qeft) hand.
Frank Williams returns to
Rush, an honorable -mention pick last season, sc~red 29 the Fighting lllini after being
points in the Tigers' 94-81 loss selected Dig Ten player of the
to Duke in the second round year and a third-team AllAmerican. The 6-3 guard, who
of the NCAA tournament.
"Even though people are averaged 14.9 points, 3.7
talking about him the way rebounds and 4.4 assists,
they are now, he should still get already has said he will enter
better. And he can," Missouri the NBA draft after this seacoach Quin Snyder said. son. last season ended on a
"There is a lot more there."
sour note when he went 3Prince, the Southeastern for- 15 from the field in the
Conference player of the year, 87-81 loss to Arizona in the
withdrew his name from the regional final.

Prince

F. Williams

Wednesday, Nov. 7, 2001

Cowher to Brown:-Take out your .
frustrations out at Heinz Field ~=
PITTSBURGH (AP)
exhibition games when the
The way Pittsburgh Steelers weather was much different,
coach Bill Cowher sees it, before going wilie right on
kicking a footbaU is like riding three of his four misses.
a bicycle. And Kris Brown
Still, Cowher doesn't think
needs to get back on his bike an unfamiliarity with the
as soon as possible.
, wind currents that blow off
Brown, who had on~ of the the city's three rivers through
worst days ever by a Steelers Heinz Field's open end had
kicker in missing four of five any effect on Brown's misses.
field goal attempts in a 13-10 I') Three Rivers Stadium was
loss Sunday to Baltimore, got a enclosed on all sides and,
vote of confidence Tuesday while it could be windy, the
ti-om his coach - and sorrie grandstands cut down some of
advice.
the wind. At Heinz, the wind
Cowher suggested that, after blows directly into the stadipractice ends Wednesday, um through the open end
Brown should go back to where the scoreboard sits.
Heinz Field and kick at the
Brown, who kicked a
windy end of the · stadium career-long 55-yarder earlier
where he missed two critical this season and was 11-of-13
kicks in the fourth quarter.
until Sunday, was told by
"He should go over there in Cowher that his role has not
an empty stadium, about the changed despite the misses.
same time (that he kicked
"If we get the ball to their
Sunday), and get back on the 30, that's a minimum of three
bike, so to speak," Cowher points in my mind," Cowher
said Tuesday. "He should go said. "Outside that, you have
back over there, at the 'same to take into consideration the
spot on the field, and go lcick." conditions, the scenario of the
Unlike Three Rivers Stadi- game and the wind. But, to
urn, wbere the Steelers were
based from 1970-99 and also
practiced, they now have a
practice facility and offices on
the opposite side of town and
don't work out in Heinz
Field.
As a result, Brown had only
two games of Heinz Field
experience, plus a couple of

me, ti-om 48 yards and in, that's
three points with our guy."
Cowher, a former spe~al
learns coach, joked that, 'l
coached those guys for tWo
years, and that's why I moved
on."
"It's a lonely position, and it
really require~ mentally
tough, focused individual."
Cowher said. "You can sim~
late everything you want, bjit
there's nothi11g like ~ing Ql!l
there by yourself. You can simulate it all you want, but Y!:&gt;~
still have to do it."
&lt;
Wide receiver Hines W:i~
said Brown was distraugtl~
when he reported Monda!
Numerous teammates putted
him aside and told Browi!
they weren't blaming him fi&gt;t
their first loss in six week.&lt;. .:.
"His head was down a little
bit, but you can't fault Kri.;!'
Ward 'said. "lie's going :to
make some big kicks for us.:So
let's get ready, for Cleveland.
He's feeling pretty bad now,
but what's t~e sense of hatg;
ing on it?"
•

THE NEW GOAT - Stealers
kicker Kris Jackson reacts
after missing a potential
game-tying field goal against
the Jaguars Sunday. (AP)

EASTERN.VOLLEYBALL BANQUET

~~Ctl!d Hl!~tt Church B~z~~t
Thursday, Nov. 8 starting at 4:30

'
SPECIAL AWARDS - Special Awards at the Eastem
volleyball
banquet went to, front, 1-r, Whitney Karr, Best Spiking Percentage; Janet Calaway, Best Serving Percentage and Most Points
Scored; Tammy Bissell, Best Spiking Percentage; Back-Kass
Lodwick, Best Defensive Player; Tiffany Spencer, Don Jackson
Sportsmanship Award; Janet Ridenour and Tiffany Hensley,
Most Improved; and Ashley Hager, Coach's Award.
SENIOR AWARDS - Senior awards were presented to these
nine girts at the Eastem volleyball banquet. Pictured are,
front, 1-r, Ashley Hager, Janet Ridenour, and Tiffany Hensley.
Back-Amanda Yeager, Tiffany Spencer, Whitney Karr, Tiffany
Bissell, and Janet Calaway.
·

Mulberry Ave.

$25 drawing every half hour
Adult Dinners $6.00
Children under 12 • $3.00

'
MMN: e.eawtrJ 8"'-1 l1hc,.,.
- .11-

.llawtmle,raU.. Mt»'serJ ,..atalo.d &amp; ,.a.,
sn ••-. &amp;1. 4ku, 40/J 1. leu..t

a division of Peoples Insurance

is moving!

Peoples Bank has strengthened our insurance
division through our partnership with the
LaQibert Agency of Pomeroy. The new
headquarters will be in the Middleport office of
Peoples Bank which allows us to offer a wider
variety of services.

HOLIDAY TREASURES

Novem

.0o p.m.
'{bursday,
6
from 4:30 to .

FALL CRAFT SHOW

For additional information or to simply find
what this relationship can offer you, contact the
Middleport office ofPeoples Bank, 97 North Second St.,
Middleport, Ohio or call:

NOVEMBER 10, 2001

740-992-6661 or 740-992-6641

2312 Jackson Ave, Point Pleasant, WV
Sponsored by;
Mason County Community Educational Outreach ServicE
Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Club

Melp County's

SMOKING

Peoples

Bank

Hometown

News,.,.,

dosing
aimed at
saving costs

MOVING ALONG

BAN
Bowling
Green
approves
regulation

Trnssell
anticipates
making next
two payrolls

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BOWLING GREENResidents in Bowling
Green on Tuesday passed
Ohio's first ballot initiative
regulating smoking in public places,
The northwest Ohio
town approved a Clean
Indoor Air Act with a vote
of 62 to 38 percent.
The ordinance prohibits
smoking in most indoor
places, including aU retail
stores, dining areas and
waiting areas. Bars are
exempt from the regulation and smoking in
restaurants will be permitted in special ventilated
rooms.
The baUot initiative was
begun by an asthmatic resident who formed a citizens' coalition and collected 1,200 signatures to get
the issue on the baUot.
"Seventy-five percent of
Bowling Green residents
are non-smokers who want
to protect their health,"
Andrew Schuman said.
"They don't want to
breathe
second"hand
· smoke. This ordinance
allows families, the elderly,
employees and asthina sufferers to enjo}' clean indoor
air when they're in public."
The ordinance ·will go
into effect five days after
the Wood County Bo;ml of
Elections certifies . the
results of the election. It
provi&lt;les for a graduated
system of penalties.
Meig&lt; County's smoking
ban, approved in September, goes into effect on
Nov. 12, although the
Lucas County ban after
which it was modeled has
been halted by a court
injunction, until the Ohio
Supreme Court rules on its
constitutionality.
A bill which would
require approval from
elected officials before any
smoking ban could be
implemented was passed in
the House ofRepresentatiaves last week, and awaits
action from Gov. Bob Taft,
who has pledged to veto it.

BY BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

SETllNd BEAMS - Work on the second phase of the Ravenswood Connector project continues as .worl\ers prepare to set beams and finish earth moving efforts. When completed, theconnectorwHl be a two-lane, limited access highway on a four-lane right of way, connecting U.S.
33 with the Ritchie Bridge and 1-77 in Ravenswood, W.Va. (Tony M. Leach photo)

Construction moving on schedule
BY TONY M. lEACH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

~~~~~~~· IVE POINTS

Bridge
beams
are
b ·
et~g
_set,
dramage ptpts
iqstalled and exit ramps '
are taking shape as work
on Phase II of the
Ravenswood Connector
continues on
Proiect
J
schedule.
Greg
Huffman,
Ohio
Department ofTransportation
(ODOT) project engineer for
Phase II, said Wednesday

WASHINGTON (AP) -Welfareto-work programs that combine job
searching with education may offer the
best approach for keeping people off
the roDs and earning more, a government-funded study says.
The study followed 40,000 single
parents for five years ·starting in the
early 1990s as they moved from welfare to work in six states. The Department of Health and Human Services
issued a summary of the finding&lt; on
Wedne&amp;day, several weeks before it
plans to release a report.
Some welfare recipients were randomly assigned to programs that

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progress on the second of
three segments of highway
geared toward connecting
U.S. 33 with the Ritchie
Bridge · and
I-77
at
Ravenswood is "moving along
as scheduled" and no significant problems have been
detected.
"We're currently setting
beams for the westbound
bridge that spans State Route
7 and are preparing to set
beams for the eastbound
bridge," said Huflinan.
"More than half of our dirt
work is finished and twothirds of drainage pipe has
been laid," he added. "Progress

is moving along quite nicely
and there is nothing unusual
to report."
Huffman
add~d
that
motorists should expect possible delays today and Friday
because of the setting of
bridge beams over top Ohio
7. Work on the beams is
expected tQ · take place
between noon and 5:30 p.m.
Phase II will encompass
about four miles of highway
beginning at the end of7 near
Five Points and ending .20
miles east of a Sutton Township road in the Morning.tar
area: The scheduled date for

PIMM-PhiMII,AJ

a

H!p:SII
Low:th
Details, A3

Lotteries

AS

OHIO
82-4 Pk:k :S: 3-7·2; Pk:k4: 9-7·3-9

85

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ICid!r. 9-2-6-7·5-9

A3 W.VA.

81,3-4 l'oouerbal: 2-4-6-17·25 (31)

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POMEROY Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell
hopes that dosing the Meigs
County jail, at least temporarily, can help aUeviate a budget
crisis within his department.
Trussell said Wednesday he
expects to make all but one
payroll between now and
year's end, by closing the jail
and by transferring aU remaining money into his payroll
line.
his
Trussell
provided
employees with two-week
layoff notices on Monday, following a letter from Meig&lt;
County commissioners advising him that he would be
unable to meet the last three
payrolls of the year.
· Trussell and his deputies
have maintained that the sheriff's budget was under-appropriated by more than
$110,000 at the beginning of
the year, but Trussell hopes
that the closing of the jail an~
the layoffS of jail staff might
help him make payroll
through the year.
"I dosed the jail temporarily on· Friday as a budgetary
measure," Trussell
said
Wednesday."! don't know if it

will be permanent. Last year,
Sheriff James Soulsby spent
$723,000 on the operation of
his department. 1bis year, the
commissioners appropriated
$610,000."
"I hope that I can save costs
by laying off the part-time jail
cook and eliminating other
expenses related to operating
the local jail at least through
.
..
1h1s year.
Trussell's full-time jail cook
is now on paid vacation, he
said, while the jail is closed.
The jail housed 10 prisoners, · mostly misdemeanor
offenders serving short Sentences or awaiting co_u rt
appearan&lt;&gt;es. .
The county has a contract
with Noble County commissioners for reserved beds in
their jail, and 10 prisoners are
now being housed there, in
the smaU Middleport jail, Gallia .County and other area
facilities.

,.,... _ ..U.AJ

helps people off welfare

Mixing.education and

, 2s.cti1RI-12 .....

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"This might be the most
t1fective program as opposed
to one Joiused solely on
employment search or solely
on pushing people into
education. "
Goyle HemiKon, INd author of the ltudy
conducted by lhl M111power Demonelnllon
R-chCorp.
emphasized immediate job searching,
interviewing skills and resume writing.
Others entered programs that provided
longer term skills and education such

as help getting a high school diploma.
Some were placed in a mixed program
or none at all.
·
Without a program, about threequarters of the welfare recipients
found jobs and more than halfleft welfare during the five years, the study
found.
The 11 programs studied did little to
improve on this rate of new employment, but nearly all h'elped people get
jobs faster and earn more from work
over time.
During the five years, the increase in
earning&lt; over those not in the programs r~nged ti-om about $1,500 in

Grand Rapids, Mich., to about $2,500
in Atlanta.
A program in Portland, Ore., had the
best results: Those in the program kept
their jobs longer and earned about
$5,000 more for a total five-year
income of about $26,000.
The Portland progr.un mixed shortterm education with job searching.
Counselors also encouraged job seekers to wait for good jobs rather than · ·
taking the first offer.
"This might be the most effective
program as opposed to one focused

....... -

Welfare, AJ

Magistrate erupts over non-disclosure of affidavits
happened .
Byrd, 37, faces electrocution in the
1983 slaying of Cincinnati-area convenience store clerk Monte Tewksbury. A
federal appeals court postponed Byrd's
execution in September to aUow for an
investigation of his claims of innocence
by U.S.. Magistrate Michael Merz.
. John Brewer, who was with Byrd at the
store, confessed to the slaying in affidavits
in 1989 and in January. Byrd's attorneys

. DAYTON (AI') -A federal magistrate
exploded in anger Wednesday when he
learned that a man· who says he committed the crime for which another man sits
on death row had given two more affi.·
davits that were never disclosed.
The ·disclosure sent the hearing on the
merits of John W Byrd Jr.'s innocence
claim in a new direction. The-magistrate
called Ohio Public Defender David
Bodiker to the sta~d to explain what

didn't disclose the 1989 document until
this year.
During Wednesday's hearing, attorney
Lawrence Greger, who is representing .
Bodiker, told Merz there are two more
affidavits from llrewer that were never
disclosed.
That prompted Merz to take aim at
Bodiker.

, ..... -

'~yr~~, AJ

National Radiologic
TeChnology
Is ~Nov••• 4 • 1·0
Hdzer Medical C~ter salutes our
Radiology Department during
this special week:
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MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

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•

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