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                  <text>Page 86

The Daily Sentinel

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E&gt;pllnollon Key
Poll A - - The av1111g0 of The Associaled Pross media poll an&lt;t USA Today-ESPN coachea poll. 01hers racolving VOiaa are
colculo1edln Older racalvod.
CGmputor ~~--The """"'00
&amp;· Colley Matrix, Rlchald Billingalay, Kennolh Massey, David Rothman, Jell
Sagarin, Matthews Scilppe Howard, aOO the Pater Wotfe computer rankings. The~ component will be detennined by aver·
oglng oiJc ranklngo. The ~ and will be disregarded.of
llnlngth compared to other Divl8ion 1-A 1eams divtdeO by 2S. This ...,_tis calculated by
n•;ng tho cumu~a~~v~-.- ,_altho loam's opj)Of1eflt (66.6 pe&lt;eent) and lfle cumulalive WOI1I1ooa I1ICOI1Is altho
_ , •• &lt;&gt;PIJOOiiiila' - · · (33.3 peiCOilt).
l..oaM.,. One point kif -.~ooa eluting tho aeuoo.
.
COo-ooui The quaiiy win ...,... IOI,t will reward to val}'i'lg deQree8 teama that deteat OJlll(lf18i1ls lllllked lllllilng
1101011 15 In tho ~ -.go. Tho bonus polni ocale wit renge fn&gt;m a hlgli of I:S polnto for a win over lfle '"'' ranked loam 1o a
"""of 0.1 kif a YiciOfy over tho ISih-lllllked BCS Iaam. Tho- BCS atand&lt;ngs will dot8mitne Ilnal quality win poonla.lla t.. m revllfella vieby aver a taam """" Ihlin once during tho regular 11a1011 quality win polnla will be awanled jUot once. Cualily win
polnis are -.cied fn&gt;m tho taam's
ol poll averaga, CO&lt;rli&gt;Uier avetage, oeheclule rank and losses.

-..?e

1

-,Win

-1

Steelers look like a playoff team
PITI'SBURGH (AP) -The
Pittsburgh Steeler; can only
hope the second half of the season is as good as the fir&gt;t half
w.u md that w.u much,
much better than even th~
could have expected
Throughout training camp, a
sqbstantial number of Steeler;
said their ~I closing run of a
season ago wasn't an anomaly.
but rather an indicator they had
turned the corner and were
close to being a good team

again.
Their self-confidence didn't
sag during a season-opening
21-3 loss in Jacksonville that
seemed a replay of all the bad
moments of the previous three
seasons combined, or when since they ended a run of three
they didn't play again for three AFC tide game appearances in
weeks because · of the terrorist four years in 1997:
attacks and a bye week.
- The defense has played as
Since then, the Steeler; (6-2) consistendy over a half-season as.
have gone 6-1, winning four in any since the Steel Curtain of
a row on the road while losing the 1970s. The Steeler; have
only to Baltimore when their allowed only 90 points - every
usually reliable kicker, Kris other team has yielded at least
Brown, inexplicably missed four 115 points - by combining an
field goals in a game they dom- aggressive pass rush with strong
inated statistically.
cornerback play and a muchThey lead the AFC Central improved defensive line.
with five home games still to
In Sunday's 15-12 overtime
play, including Sunday against victory at Cleveland, for examJacksonville (3-5). So, as the hoi- pie, Browns quarterback Tim
idays approach, the postseason Couch ·had some success
that proved so elusive to them throwing early. Steeler; defenin the recent past is but a few sive coordinator Tim Lewis
more victories aw~ from adjusted by playing cornerbacks
becoming a reality.
· Dewayne Washington and Chad
All this from a team that was Scott closer to the ~ne of scrim22-26 while missing the playoffS mage in single coverage, meanthe last three seasons and had ing Couch had to wait longer
only one Pro Bowl player in the for his receiver; to get open.
last tiM:&gt; seasons combined.
With the Browns unable to
And, for a few very dis- run the ball well enough to
cernible reasons, it would seem force the corner; of£ the line of
to be the best Steeler; team scrimmage, they were held to

Ravens
fi'CNII Pap 81
six in this series. They
couldn't feel any better
about themselves with five of
their final seven games at
home.
"(Winning) on the road in
an environment like this has
got to mean something,"
Baltimore coach Brian Billick said. "I don't know

holding the ball for more
than 35 minutes.
But the Titans' special
teams botched two field
goals. Joe Nedney missed a
48-yarder wide left, then a
holding penalty erased a 24yarder, and a bad snap 'led to
a turnover.
The defense also allowed

RESURGENCE- Jerome llet-

tls (with ball) and the running
attack are a big reason the
Steelers are playoff bound.
(AP)

58 y:mls in the second half, and
Couch was sacked seven times.
- Jerome Bettis has been as
good as ever. Bettis, the NFL's
leading rusher over the last five
seasons despite several knee
injuries, has stayed healthy, with
predictable results. His \63 yards
Sunday represented his fifth
100-yard game in eight games,
and he is on pace for one of [he
best seasons ever by a Steeler;
running back.
·
"He's the best back we've
seen this year;' Browns linebacker Brant Boyer said.
An offensive line that
replaced longtime All-Pro Dermontti Dawson has stayed
injury-free and played remarkably consistently for new line
coach Russ Grimm. "'

Elvis Grbac, who had a 57yard TD to Qadry Ismail in
the third, to drive the
Ravens down for Matt
Stover's third field goal, a 30yarder with 3:06 to go.
"This is a rypical finish for
us with the Titans," Baltimore tight end Shannon
Sharpe said.

Browns hot about Ward's hit
BEREA (AP) - Earl Little remembers
seeing only black and not feeling his arms or
legs.
Lying on the ground unconscious, Little
had no idea that Pittsburgh wideout Hines
Ward taunted him following a knockout
block in the Steelers' 15-12 overtime win on
Sunday.
Little knows now, and on Monday the
Cleveland Browns safety cracked back himself.
"That's cowardly," said Little, who sustained
a concussion on Ward's hit. "Hey, I like hitting
people, too. But you don't stand over the top
of somebody on the ground not moving.
"I could have passed away. I could have
been paralyzed. You don't have to go out
there and act like a jerk."
Just before the two-minute warning of the
first half, Pittsburgh quarterback Kardell
Stewart completed a short pass to running
back Amos Zereoue in the left flat.
As Litde attempted to get into the play,
Ward came back up field and flattened the
strong safety, who bounced into linebacker
Dwayne Rudd before crumbling to the
ground.
With Little down, Ward stood over him for
:r moment and appeared to flex his muscles
and gloat about the knockout.
Ward's actions incensed the Browns, who
were still hot about it on Monday.
"You don't do that," said linebacker Jamir
Miller. "You had a clean hit. Let it be. You
don't have to rub it i~. That's what he did ."
"l.don't feel good about that," said Browns
rookie defensive tackle Gerard Warren, who
was fined S35,0QO.earlier this season for a hit
on Jacksonville QB Mark Brunell. "Everybody talks about my hit on Brunell. Well, I
didn't get up celebrating."
Little said he avoided a similar shot earlier
in the game from Ward, who nailed Baltimore
safety Rod Woodson last week on a play
where he peeled back to make his block.
Browns coach Butch Davis said the team
will send a tape of the play to the NFL offices
in New York for review. The Browns thought
Ward's hit was illegal because Stewart's pass
· was still in the air when Little got belted.
The Steelers were given the day off on
Monday and were unavailable for comment.
•Pittsburgh coach Bill Cowher doesn't meet

"I Jon 't fetl good about that.
Everybody talks about my hit on
Brunell. J.JHI, I did11't get up celebrating."

the media until Tuesday.
Cowher got dragged into the Little-Ward
episode when he got into a shouting match
with Browns cornerback Corey Fuller during
and after the game.
· Fuller immediately confronted Ward and
drew a 15-yard penalty for taunting Little.
Moments later, Fuller walked toward the
Pittsburgh sideline when Cowher stepped in
and began swearing at him.
"He (Cowher) comes up and starts talking
this and that," Fuller said."! know I talk a lot.
But he's an ex-player. He should know sam(
of the emotions that are out thete. He was
talking like a player, telling. me to shut up."
Following the game, Fuller and Cowher
crossed paths again. This time, Fuller said
Cowher used profanity.
"That shows a lot of immaturity;' Miller
said. "I don't want to judge anybody, but
coming from the head coach? We're all professionals here. We have mutual respect for
each other. For him to go off and ~a that on
the field, especially the head coach. Hey, that
says a lot."
Davis said he didn't think it was approprjate behavior for a coach to swear at a player.
Little said Ward's hit knocked him unconscious for 30 seconds. He remained down for
several minutes, and as he got his senses back
he immediately thought about things other
than football.
"The fir&gt;t thing I thought about was my
daughter; and my family watching the game,"
he said. "I've never been carried off the football field before. For a while, I didn't know if
I could move my arms or legs. It was pret~
scary!'
·
So, too, will be the second meeting
between the AFC Central rivals on Jan. 6 at
Heinz Field.
"When I have an opportunity to get him
(Ward) next time within the rules, I will," said
Litde. "If I have to wait until next year, that's
OK, too."

NFL Week'10
~ •che~ule
Sunday, Nov. 18
N.Y. Jets at Miami
Seattle at Buffalo
Atlanta at Green Bay
Philadelphia at Dallas
Cleveland at Baltimore
Tennessee at Cincinnati
San Francisco at Carolina
Indianapolis
at
New
Orleans
San Diego at Oakland
Jacksonville at Pittsburgh
Detroit at Arizona
Washington at Denver

Hours

lor
Deer Season
Wewdlopen
/o4B~

cd 5:00 a.~n.

d/-04 ~ee.t SeaJ.&lt;Jn

Chicago at Tampa Bay
St. Louis at New England
Open: Kansas City
Monday, Nov. 19
N.Y. Giants at Minnesota

URSDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2001

~usin,esses ~e

Sure &amp;
• Meigs Marauders
~e fl Part Of 'This Year's
• Southern Tornadoes Special f3asketba/l
Preview Edition'

Mllp County"s

Court

slates
final
hearing

6

Hailed as
~tatewide leader'
in ~!fare rifonn
BY BRIM J. R&amp;D
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

BY MiNDY KEARNs
OVP NEWS STAff

NEWHAVEN,W.Va.Nov. 27 was set as the final
hearing date in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the
Southern District of West
:Virginia ON the American
Alloys plant m New
.Haven.
: The date was set during
!I bid hearing held Tuesday.
Bids were received for
lhe assets of the plant from
bbth West Virginia Alloy
'
.
afl,d H1ghlander Core
fndustries Limited on
1\lesday.
' ~ A court
offici;ll said the
.
union from American
Alloys, as well as creditors,
bave until Friday to file
9bjections on either of the
f&gt;ids. If no objections are
~ed by friday, a final hearlog will not be held Nov.
27, but a final order will be
~ntered by the court on its
decision.
Americm Alloys closed
unexpectedly in january
2000, leaving about 125
workers
unemployed.
Many of the workers had
been employed there for
25 to 30 year;, and the
average pay for the plant
Was about $14 per hour.
'The plant opened in
1952 and has gone thrOugh
s~veral owners. American
Alloys purchased the plant
in \988, after Foote Mineral Co. clased it in 1996. For
the two years in between,
state officials wo&lt;ked to
keep the plant open with
an employee-ownership
deal.
Representatives
from
Highlander came to Mason
County_ on Nov. 6, and
explained their intentions
at a town meeting held in
New Haven.
"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," Leighton

..

PI••• -

Local merchants are joining their shopping mall co~nterparts by hanging the evergreen and red
bows to encourage the early-bird Christmas shopper. Holiday ftags and evergreen boughs adorn
the Victorian lampposts in Pomeroy, and shop owners are decorating their windows. stocking
their shelves and planning their holiday promotions in hopes of a good holiday season. Nellie
Wright and Dale Riffle, Pomeroy Village employee, put the finishing touches on decorations at
the corner of Main and Court streets on Tuesday. Christmas parades aren't far away: Pomeroy
plans Its annual parade and merchants' open house for ·Nov. 25, and Middleport merchants
have set their open house for Nov. 25, and parade for Dec. 1, at 6 p.m. (Brian J. R~ed photo)

BY TONY M. I.EActt
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - Students in
Eastern Local School District and
employees of a local business were evacuated Tuesday following two bomb
threats.
Officials believe the two incidents
may be related.
Deputy Scott Trussell said students at

Sentinel

Sports

Weather

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IF Tflll 16M 'T ~

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IN fUSTORYI

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Good times come and go..,

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but the nlld for GOOD
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diately evacuated to the school's football
field and transported home by bus.
A section of Ohio 7, which runs parallel to the school, was temporarily
closd while a search for the reported
bomb was conducted.
After a search, officials found no evidence of a bomb.
"The evacuation was very smooth

and professional and no injuries were
reported," said Trussell. "The school did
an excellent job of evacuating the students il) a timely fashion and succe&lt;sfully avoided ~ potential life threatening
incident."
In a matter which officials believe may
be related, employees at Millennium

Please He Threats. AJ

Cl2001 Ollio Valley Publishina Co.

POMEROY - · For the first time ever
Meigs County will join in the global celebration of "Tellabration!;' the highlight of
National Storytelling Week being observed
this week.
A gathering of storyteller; has been
planned for Saturday at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building auditorium at 7 p.m.
"At the same time we're sharing stories

here in Pomeroy, people all over the globe
will be telling and listening to their own
tales;' said Donna Greene, who has orgJnized the event.
"It's exhilarating to know that we'll be a
part of a worldwide event right here in our
own conununity.
"For people who have never experienced
a storytelling performance, this will be a
great opportunity. We have a terrific lineup
of storytellers who are donating their out-

standing talents in support of this event."
She said that she wiU be joined by 1:)1-.
Rich Greenlee, Ri ck Duff and Linda
Cochran to bring an exciting program of
humorous tales, folklore, stories that touch
the heart, and mu ch more.
Greenlee grew up in coal mining towns
in rural Appalachia and has lived the stories
he tells of coal miners and their families

Please see Story. AJ

American Smokeout
is Thunclay, November 1 5

The Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition of Gallia and Jackson
Counties encourage you to be smoke-free on Thursday!

TJ'le Daily Sentinel

Dave at Ext. 15 or Debbie Ext. 16
For More Information

SOOINEL NEWS STAFF

84-6 Pld! 3: 5·8-3; Pick 4: 4-&amp;7-9
B7

Ea&lt;tern Elementary· and Ea1tern High
School were evacuated around 9:45
a.m. after . school officials received a
\'hone call infonning them of a bomb
located inside the buildings.
· As fire department&lt; from around the
county, and State Highway Patrol and
Meigs County Sheriff's Office responded to the incident, students wen: imme-

BY CtfARUNE HIIEFucH

Lotteries

Advertising Deadline·. Friday, November 23rd, 2001
Call 992-2155

ro help people on our programs become self-sufficient,
not only by assisting the unemployed in finding jobs, but by
-wrking with our young children, to encourage them to stay
in school and to help them
succeed by putting supporting
services in the community."
During his 22 years at the
Meigs County office, which
has since been fanned from
three different agencies, the
staff has grown from 12
employees with a $500,000
budget to a staff of53 year; and
a S9 million budget, providing
public assistance, child support
and children's services.
The agency also provides
services once offered through
the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
Swisher has also encouraged
the U niver&gt;ity of Rio G=de
to locate the Meigs Center
here, Varnadoe said, and has
worked to obtain a new Geographic Information System
for Meigs County, to be used
in future economic development projects.
"Mike ha1 also been a strong
supporter of the construction

.Storytellers to participate in global 'Tellabration!'

L-:JOs

Details, A2

The

CLY'Ilt t &amp;A'Oit

Michael Swisher

Bomb threat spurs school evacuation

Court. AJ

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

MiDDLEPORT
Michael Swisher of Syracuse
has been named Mei!lo' County's Per;on of the Year, and will
be honored at the Southeastern
Ohio Regional Council's Person .of the Year banquet in Rio
Gr.lllde on Thursday.
A Gallia County native,
Swisher is director of the
Mei!lo' County Department of
Job and Family Services, and
was selected for the honor
because of his conuninnent to
economic development for
Meigs County, said Economic
Development Director Perry
V..rnadoe.
Swisher helped the Mei!lo'
County commissioners in
developing an economic
development ptogr.llll using
funds through the Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families
program in 1997
Meigs County was the fir&gt;t
in Ohio to use these welfareto-work funds to fuster eco.nomic dev,eJopmenl and job
Greation, and other counties
have since followed the county's lead in doing so.
"Mike has been i leader
statewide in changing welfate
as we know it to an employment-based program;' Varnadoe said. "Some say that he
brought the state kicking and
screaming along the way."
"Public assistance is no
longer a way of life, but a
bridge to transition 10meone
into ajob;'Swishersaid:"l have
tried to be a catalyst for change
0

Tod.(s

Ron Logan

Swisher gets
Person m·
the Year'

American
:Alloys date set
for Nov. 27 ·

• Eastern Eagles

To everyone in the
Meigs Local School District
who supported and voted for me.

Ho1Mtown Newspaper

DECK THE

25KIIou-11Paps

what."
The Titans (3-5) find
themselves in serious danger ·
of missing the playoff's after
winning an NFL-high 13
games last season. They only
have themselves to blame.
Similar to their playoff loss
last January, the Titans outplayed Baltimore but came
up short on the scoreboard.
The Titans limited the
Ravens to 55 yards total
offense in the first half, and
piled up 318 yards total
offense against the NFL's
second-rated defense, compared to 238 yards for the
Ravens.
Tennessee played its preferred style of keepaway,

•

CLEVELAND NOTEBOOK

Bowl Championship Series
...

KER'S DOZEN FEATURED IN ALL-DISTRICT. Bl

lUesd.y. Nov...ber 13. 2001

,,

For more information on tobacco use prevention or cessation, call

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 446-5940.
'

•

•'

,.

•

�Ohio

The Daily Sentinel
Thursdlly, Nov. 15
Ao:uWeathefe fonlcut for

COLUMBUS (AP) Pollutanu
from a chicken farm near a woman's
northeast Ohio home have kept her
grandchildren from visiting because of
worries about their health, the woman
told federal environmentaf regulators

Tuesday.
Mary Gibson, 66, of Louisville, said the
stench and airborne debris aggravates
her own asthma and the allergies of her
children and grandchildren.
"They're not allowed to visit Grammy," she said.
Complaints to the Ohio Environmental Protection Ageiley brought no relief,
she said.
Gibson spoke at a U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency hearing on the
~gency's review of the state EPA. She

.I Columll Ul 147"JII• I

w....
KY.

was followed by people complaining
about slow responses over landfills and
toxic discharges.
Many of the 200 spectators ·applauded
calls to revoke · state authority and
laughed at aruwers from federal representatives.
"We're hearing from a group of people who were summoned specifically to
complain a\&gt;out the Ohio EPA, SQ we're
not surprised to hear that tone;' state
EPA spokeswoman Carol Hester said.
"We don't think those situations are representative of . .. what the majority of
Ohioans have experienced."
The federal agency's most extensive
audit on a state counterpart started in
1997 when four Ohio environmental
groups asked the agency to revoke the

Pl Ooudr

Ooudr

-

T.......

Alii

-

Smw

loo

Best buddies

Warm daytime highs continue
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The sunshine the area has
been enjoying will begin to
mix with some clouds the
next - few days. But the
National Weather Service said
that warm temperatures will
continue throughout the
week.
A weak cold front will drop
across the region· on Thursday.
StiU, temperatures will
remain well above normal
right into the weekend. High
temperatures will reach the
60s each afternqon. Low temperatures will be mainly in the
30s.

I

Thursday... Mostly sunny.
Highs 68 to 73. West wind 5
to 10 mph.
.
Thursday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s.

Extended forecast:

Alanis Garcia, 4, of Lorain, Ohio, hugs on her U.S. Navy bear,
that was given to her by her aunt. Tracy Taylor, left,.after she
got out of basic training In the Navy. This trio were at the
CINCINNATI (AP) - Award-winning teacher Judy
Lorain Public Library, for a story time activity on bears. (AP
Gerwe knows what it's like to be considered a slow student.
Photo/The Morning Journal, Paul M. W&amp;lsh)
She waJ always the first to be eliminated in spelling bees, and
some teachers considered her lucky just to be allowed to
attend school.
.
state's highest court Wednesday.
·
"I found it very hard to go to school;' said Gerwe. 53. "I
Lamar, 32, was already serving 15 years to life for murder
struggled with reading, writing and listening in clan. The only and thefi: when he participated in the riot in April 1993 at the
thing I could do wu math. In the 1950s, nobody kn~rn~ what Southern Ohio Co.r rectional Facility. One prison guard,
a learning disability was."
Robert Vallandingham, 40, and nine inmates were killed durGerwe has attention deficit disorder, a learning disability ing the 11-day standoff.
marked by ·inattention, impulsiveness and, in many cases,
hyperactivity. She wasn't diagnosed until she was in her early
40s; now she takes daily medication.
"I never realized what it was like to be able to sit and con- CANTON (AP) -A man was arrested Tuesday on a theft
centrate on things," Gerwe said. "Before, I did not know what
by deception charge linked to money raised for the child of a
was wrong with me - I just knew I was 'dumb."'
woman said to be killed in the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the

Alleged deceiver arrested

I

I

I
I

Deputies hunt motorist
DAYTON (AP) - A deputy sheriff who was trying to
arrest a woman was dragged about 500 yards by her car outside Meadowdale High School, police said.
Deputy Kent Saunders, assigned to the high school, was
undergoing tests at a hospital, Sheriff Dave Vore said Tuesday.
The woman believed to be driving the car,Yolanda McCny,
34, of Dayton, was being sought, officials said.
Ben Kirby, the school district's safety director, said Saunders
was dealing with some non-students on school property when ·
he recognized McCray, the mother of one of those people, as
·the subject of an arrest warrant.

Joe the Boss' indidecl

1

DAYTON (AP) - A man known as 'Joe the Boss" has
been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges he ·c onspired
to distribute large quantities of cocaine, crack cocaine and
heroin.
Joe LWright was ordered held without bond on Tuesday by
U.S. Magistrate Michael R. Mer&gt;. Wright faces a mandatory
10 years and a maximum life prison sentence if convicted.
In a sworn statement, FBI Special Agent Robert A. Brawner said Dayton police reported Wright also is a suspect in the
April 14 fatal shooting of Roderick T. Garrett.
Brawner states confidential sources have identified Wright
as the owner of more than 100 pounds of cocaine stolen from
a Trotwood home on April 6.

World Trade Center.
Canton Police ChiefThomas w Wyatt said Ronald Davis,
49, of Canton, turned himself in at the city's police headquarters. The theft by deception charge is a fifth degree felony.
which could inean up to a year in jail if he is convicted. Davis
was to appear in Canton Municipal Court on Wednesday.
Canton police Detective Capt. James W Myers said the
divorced father of one admitted to the deception. Police
investigated after a Davis co-worker at Hoover Co. in North
Canton became suspicious of a Davis claim that his sister had
been killed in the terrorist attack and that he now had to raise
her 7-year-old daughter. ·
Members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers Local 1985 collected money and staged fund-raisers
for Davis. The union gave Davis $1,100. Police said co-workers also gave money directly to Davis, along with. toys and
clothing for the child they had never met.

Judge orders busing hearing

DAYTON (AP) -A federal judge on Tuesday decided to
re-inject himself into a dispute over whether to end busing
for racial balance in the city's public schools.
Dayton is the only school district in Ohio .still ~mder a
desegregation order. The city began busing students m 1976
in response to a court order resulting from a lawsuit filed by
the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People.
'
In July, U.S. District Judge Walter Rice set a deadline of
Tuesday for the state, Dayton schools and the NAACP to
strike a deal to end busing or face c~urt hearings to decide the
matter. Rice said he would order all sides into court if the
deadline was not met.
SPRINGFIELD (AP) -Work has been halted on a backAfter speaking with attorneys Tuesday, Rice did just that,
yard project while authorities investigate a headstone that was setting a hearing for Dec. 3.
uncovered.
Jesus Hernandez said he unearthed a headstone, bones and
syringes while digging an 11;1-inch trench to extend electrical
wiring from his house to a garage.
CINCINNATI (AP) -The government said Tuesday that
"He first thought it was a big rock, but after digging around 400,000 cubic yards of contaminated soil and debris tllal had
it, we discovered it was a headstone," said his wife, Diana.
been contaminating underground water was removed from
The headstone reads: Bryan Kenney 1855-1907.
the Fernald plant, a Cold-War era uranium processing facility.

Discovery halts projed

Cleanup reaches milestone

Inmate appeals death sentence
COLUMBUS (AP) -A prisoner conyicted of killing five
fellow inmates during the 1993 prison riot near Lucasville
wants the Ohio Supreme Court to throw out his murder convictions and death sentences.
Keith Lamar says his convictions should be invalidated for
20 reasons, including that he was denied a fair trial, the trial
cou.rt violated his due process rights and his· convictions were
based on insufficient evidence.
Attorneys for Lamar planned to argue their case before the

•

Groups demand justice
in deaths of black
men in police custody,

custody.

Teacher aids ADD students

II

state's authority to run federal programs.
Gibson say. she complained to the
Ohio EPA about air quality at Park
Farms several times, only to be referred
to a local hwth boanl.
"I find it amusing what !he 01!-io EPA
goes through to not do their job;' she
said.
Laura Duncan, 5.(), asked when the
federal government would take over lhe
investigation of toxic solvents draining
from a Middlefield rubber factory.
Duncan\; &amp;.mily looked into pollution
rumors alter her husband, Ron Duncan,
46, was diagnosed with a degenentive
nerve disorder.
The Ohio EPA in July reported it
could not pin down the source of perchloroethene and similar solvents.

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
coalition of citi&gt;en groups
issued a list of demands Tuesday that they say are necessary
to bring justice to a city tom
by racial division over the
deaths of black men in police

Friday... Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Friday night...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 40s.
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Sunday... Mostly clear. Lows
in the upper 30s and highs 60
to 65.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s and
highs in the lower 60s.
Weather forecast:
Tuesday... Mostly
cloudy
Tonight ... Ciear with areas with a chance of showers.
of smoke. Lows 39.to 44. Near Lows in the mid 40s and highs
in the mid 50s.
calm wind.

I

h• If. 2001

Ire.

oa·-· ~••••

s..nn,

W dutld"f, Now

.
'

w.dl nday, Nov. 14,2001

.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

.

Residents complain .of slow response to pollution

Ohio weather

02001

PageAl

Government officials said the removal was a milestone in its
ongoing cleanup of the 1,050-acre site. The government is
spending at least $3.7 billion to clean up and decontaminate
the site.
The U.S. Department of Energy hopes to complete the
cleanup by Dec. 31, 2006, barring major problems or action
by Congress to reduce funding for the project.
Energy Department officials said its cleanup contractor,
Fluor Fernald Inc., had finished removing the contaminated
dirt from a 26-acre plot of land. The tainted dirt had been
contaminating un~erground water.

.,

that Roach, along with Jorg
and officer Patrick Caton, be
disciplined by the police
department for allegedly using
excessive fofce. Caton was
acquitted Nov. 2 of a misdemeanor assault charge in
Owensby's death.
The coalition also w.mis all
parties involved in a racial profiling lawsuit to sign an agreement that would implement
U.S. Department of Justice
recommendations for improving police accountability ·and
would be federally enfol)'ed.
Another demand is that the
Justice Department reverse a
decision not to prosecute
police accused of shooting
beanbags into a crowd of
unarmed protester.. .
Sheila Adams, president of
Cincinnati's Urban League.
said she met in May with US.
Attorney
~eneral
John
Ashcroft and National Utban
League officiais.
"He (Ashcroft) assured us
that when the Justice Department came to our city that
the!ll was going to be quick
and expeditious justice, and we
can see that has not happened:' she said, adding that
she would lllquest another
meeting with Ashcroft. ·

"We believe that civil liberties have been diminished and
that lives have been taken
unjustifiably:' the Rev. Damon
Lynch III, president of the
Cincinnati Black United
· Front, said at a news conference Tuesday.
Lynch · and leaders of !he
Urban League of Greater
Cincinnati. the Cincinnati
chapter of the NAACP and
.other groups gathered in front
of the Hamilton County
Courthouse to issue their
demands.
The groups are demanding
that Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen retry police
officer Robert Jorg. whose
trial on a charge of involuntary
manslaughter in the death of
Roser OWensby resulted in a
hung jury and that tl).e courts
expedite civil rights lawruits
filed by the families of Owensby and Timothy Thomas.
Thomu, 19, was shot to
death April 19 by officer
Stephen Roach, who was
acqllitted Sept. 26 of charges
of negligent homicide and
obstructing official business in
the death. ·That shooting
sparked three days of racial
riots in Cincinnati.
Owensby, 29, died Nov. 7,
2000, of asphyxiation while in
police c_ustody. Jorg was
acquitted·Oct. 30 of a misdemeanor assault charge, but a
jury couldn't agree on the
involuntary
manslaughter
charge. Allen said last week
that there was no additional
evidence to merit retrying the
case.
"In the case of a hung jury,
if it were us (black people),
we'd be prosecuted," said
Norma Holt-Davis, president
of the Cincinnati branch of
the National Association . for 1}--------..;,
the Advancement of Colored
People.
The coalition wants Allen to
appoint a special prosecutor to
retry the case but that will not
happen, said Allen spokesman
Jon Esther.
The coalition also is asking

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MASON, W.VA.

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Quality Print Shop
2SS Mill Street • Pomeroy

992-3345

LOCAL STOCKS
f'ea!*o
.......,._
...
....
Gannett-

AE.P-44.48
An:h Cool~ 23.17
Alczo- 42.33

Guy Bing
MIDDLEPORT- Guy Bing. 85, Middleport. died Tuesday.
Nov. 13, 2001, at Holzer Medical Center.
Hr was born onApril24, 1916,son of the late Mount Adam
and Florencr Epple Bing. He was a retired strc!lwodter with
Foote Minrral, and a veteran of the U.S. Army during World
War II.
He was a member of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion, and the United Steelworkers.
Surviving are two sons and daughters-in-law, Guy Eugene
and Linda Bing of Middleport, and Ernie and Judy Bing of
Racine; two daughters and sons-in-law, Roberta and Lee
Wukelich of Belle Valley, and Joyce and Jamie Ash of Pomeroy;
19 grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren; three stepchildren, Bobby Kennedy, Brenda Jeffers and Jim Oosephine)
Kennedy; a stepson- in-law, Harold Taylor; several stepgrandchildren and step-great-grandchildren; and nieces and
nephews.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Freda Mae Bing;
three brother.. Milford, Joseph and Mount Vernon Bing; a halfsister, Martha Ash; a stepdaughter, Linda Taylor; and a ltepdaughter-in-law, Downie Kennedy.
. Services will be I p.m. Friday in Fisher-Acree · Funeral
: ··. Home, Middleport, with the Rev. Father Walter Heim officiating. Burial will be in Middleport Hill Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home on Thur.day from _6-8 p.m.

Richard L Cedric' Lewis
1

AmTIOChSBC- 37.~
AlhiMcllnC.- 42.20

AT&amp;T-16.48
Bonk One- 38.13
BU -9.10
Bob e...,.- 20.eo
BotgWimlr- 44.611
~-2.43

Chllrmlng Shops -

5.20
City Holding - 8.99
Col- 15.20
OG -14.70

DuPont- 43.39

F - Mogul- 1.33
USB-18.20
67.40

General Eleclric
40.56
GKNLY-4
Harley

Davidson

48.49
Kmert-6.11
Kroger- 24.23
Lands End - 46.83
Lld.-13.88
NSC-18.42
0a1t Hin Financial 15.07

OVB-23.50
BBT-34.28

.Court

ftomPapAI

Wolf. Highlander's industrial
researcher, told the standingroom-only crowd.
If Highlander wins the bids
in bankruptcy court, Wolf said
its intentions will l&gt;e to produce manganese alloys, high
carbon ferro manganese and
ferro silicon manganese. Mang~nese alloy markets and
prices have remained relatively strong in comparison to
ferro silicon, which was produced at the American Alloys
Inc., works prior to its clo-

LETART. WVa. - Richard L. "Cedric" Lewis, 69, Letart,
· died Tuesday, Nov. 13,2001, at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
,· He was born Aug. 31, 1932, in Letart Falls, son of the late
. -Harry and Lola Mary Fisher Lewis. He was a retired employee sure.
. !of the Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek Plant after 35
years.
He was a veteran of the U.S. Army during the Korean Conflict.
· Surviving are his wife, Susannah Roush Lewis; three daughters and two soru-in-law, Cheryl Land Fred Kaylor of Letart,
PapAl
. Mary Jane and Todd Kitchen of Mason, WVa., and Anna M:
. Lewis of Point Pleasant, WVa.; four grandchildren; and a sister
Teleservices, East Main Street,
and brother-in-law, Sheila ]. and Willie Henry of Gallipolis
Pomeroy, were briefly evacuatFerry,WVa.
ed
around I p.m. Tuesday after
He was. also preceded in death by his brothers, Virgil L. Lewis
a bomb threat ·was called into ·
. and John N . Lewis.
tht offici.
. Services will be I p.m. Friday in Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark
Home, Mason, with the Rev! Bobby Woods officiating. Burial
Proffitt
said Angela Crouch,
· :will be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens, Point Pleasant. Friends
assistant administrator, received
may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Thursday.
a phone call which advised her
that "everyone should get out
of the building because a bomb

lbreats
flam

Story

fnNnPqeA1
interspersed with his music of
hard times and poverty.

1UI
_

F'rwoMI - 8.38
Rocltwell- 13.80
Roc:i&lt;y-- 5.75
RO Shell- 52.24
- - 4 4.88
Shoooey'a- .27
'I.Lt.lll r..rt 5!
Wendy'a- 27.117
Wool•ijjb• -14
Daily ...,..,. ...
1he 4 p.m. ao.1ng
~ of 1111 pniOIIoua
day's...........,., pro.
vidocl by Smi1ll Pari""'W at Adolelllnc.

Highlander owns and operates two manganese mines in
Africa. Its mining reserves can
meet the requirements of its
Polish smelter and other
acquired ferro alloy works for
many years to come, said
Wolf.
He added that an integrated
operation controlling both
the raw material and smelting
production should give Highlander products with considerable market and price
advantages.
Highlander is a privately
owned Israeli company with
affiliated offices in Netherlands, Belgium, Hong Kong,
Singapore, Poland, South
Africa, Mali, Namibia and the

us.

dispatched to the scene and
Verizon Select Services was
contacted to help identifY the
last calls that came into the
office.
A 24-hour evacuation waS
recommended by local law
enforcement officials, but represen~tives from Millennium
Teleservices' corporate office
said the facility would not shut
down and that it would remain
open.
"The bomb threat is still
being investigated and could

LOCAL BRIEFS
EMS ftlns
POMEROY - Units of
the Meigs Emergency Service
answered six calls for assistance on Tuesday. Units
responded as follows:

CENTRAL DISPATCH
I :04 p.m., Meigs Senior
Center, Susan White, treated;
8:45 p.m., Apple Grove,
Betty Eynos, Holzer Medical
Center.
POMEROY
9:35 p.m., Village Manor,
MicheUe Snyder, HMC.
RACINE
7:15a.m ., Rowe Road , hay
bale fi re, Don Johnson property. no injuries;
1:17 p.m., Ohio 124, brush
fire, Sharon Johnson residen ce, no injuri es.
RUTLAND
8:03 a.m. , Overbrook
Nursing Center, Gordon
Collins, Pleasant Valley Hospi tal.

Bake sale
RACINE- Sonshine Circle will hold a bake sale at the
Dorcas Church on Saturday,
starting at 8 a.m. and'continuing until all items are sold. For
information, contact Lois
S~errett 949-0032 or Kathryn
Hart at 949-2656.

Agency to meet
POMEROY
Area
Agency on Aging will be
conducting public forums to
discuss service needs for older
Americans and to develop · a
plan to meet those needs.
All concerned citizens are
encouraged to attend. The
forum will be held in Meigs

County Nov. 30 at 10 a.m . at
the Senior Citiz.ens Center.

Giveaway

•

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
First Church of God will have
its food and clothing give
away for families in need-Saturday, II a.m. to I p.m . The
door will not open until II
a.m. and items will be given
out tint come, first served.

Set activities
POMEROY - Area teens
are invited to " Friday's Fun,
Food and Fellowshi?" at
God's N eighborhood Escape
for Te ens from 6-10:30 p.m .
Nutritional meals are available at no cost. and teens can
play
no n-violent
video
games. co nlp ute r boam es and
board ga mes, and pool at th e
cente r on Main Street.

calendar
completion
POMEROY
Meigs
County Touri sm Office is
cc;&gt;mpleting· its master Ga lendar of events fo r 2002. Those
with eve nts to list in th e 2002
visitor's glllde arc asked to
contact Betsy Hera ld Ni codemus at 992- 2239 no la te r than
Dec. 10.

Clarification
RACINE Sarah El Dabaja, sixth grade student at
Southern Elem entar y. was
named to the recent All- A's
honor rolL
EI-Dabajas name had been
omitted from the list, which
was published last week.

J.~:b~:~==~~ ~ isr~~~0n~;~~nnel were :;::~~~t~!:.~:~h;~~~

Flannery touts election
reforms l~n VI.SI•t
:~~~~~the ~~~d ~ ~f Chamber
learns
about
c
a·a
fi
I
.
.
.
.
an l ate or
e ectriC serviCe chOICe Secretary·0( State
..
1988 by storyteller,J.G. "Paw-

Paw" Pinkerton. He saw the
event as a means of building

.

. Duff worked as a farmer and
Smce Its beginning m SIX
, carpenter in Athens County
locations across the state of .
· and is interested in keeping tra- Co!lllecticut,"Tellabratlon!"has
. ditional tales alive as they per- . grow,n mto an mternattonal
· tain to the value of the culture e~t produced by Iocal_organiBY TONY M. LEACH
and traditions of area people.
zatlons such as schools, libranes,
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
Cochran was an intinerant colleges, museums, performing
MIDDLEPORT - Helphouse painter, apple_picker and arts centers, community groups ing both residential and comwaitress, and is now a children's and storytelling guilds.
mercia( consumers choose an
librarian in Athens County
Tickets are $5 each and are electrical supplier topped thr
- • where she shares her love of aVailable at Clark's Jewelry, agenda of Tuesday's Meigs
telling stories.
Spencer Music and " Meigs County Chamber of ComGreene, retired from Ohio Chamber of Commerce, or merce meeting.
University. became involved in · may be purchased at the door.
Jon Buck, community serstorytelling only a few yean Proceeds from Saturday's event vices manager for American
agn. Her gnal is to share her love will be used to establish a story- Electric Power, discussed
of storytelling by organiring a tellers guild in the community.
Ohio Electric Choice, a proguild to bring together other.
For more information about gram allowing consumers the
to promote home-grown sto- the program, residents may call option of choosing which
ries of the Bend area.
Greene at 992-7830.
electric company &lt;upplies
their electricity.
I
"Your local electric utility
and as president of the Meigs has always provided all parts of
County Family and Children y.our electric service. This service included the generation
Fir.~ Council.
from
A1
He is a member of Cheshire of the electricity · and the
· Baptist Church, Siloam Lodge delivery to your home or
of U.S. Route 33, believing that 456 of Cheshire, and Sons of the office," said Buck.
the development of a modern
"As new supplit;,rs begin to
American Revolution Ewings
highway system will bring jobs
offer their services in your
Chapter, Pomeroy.
·
to the area:'Varnadoe said.
area, you will be able to
A graduate of Kyger Creek
Swisher is a member of the
choose the company that supMeigs County Conununity High School and Morehead plies the generation of your
Improvement Corporation and State University, he began his electricity," he said.
the Meigs County Health Care career at Ohio Valley Bank. He
Buck added 'if a new electric
Steering Committee. He serves and his wife, Cynthia, have two supplier is chosen, local decas chairman of the Performance daughters and two granddaugh- tric utilities will still ~ontinue
Committee of the Ohio DJFS, ters.
ta deliver the electricity while
maintaining and repairing the
poles and wire.
"Consumers can stay witl!
their current electric utility if
they choose because it is ille(USPS 213-IHIO)
gal to be switched to a new
Ohio Volley Publlthl"'l Co.
. supplier without permission,"
PubUshed every affemoon; • Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St.,
he said.
Correction Polley
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
"However, if you shop for a
Our main concern in all stories is postage paid at Pomeroy.
to be 'accurate. If you know of an Member: The Associated Press and
supplier,
you need to know
.· error in a story, call the newsroom the Ohio Newspaper Associallon.
the price you should compare
Postm1ster: Send address correc·
al (740) 992-2158.
tlons to The DaUy ·senunel, 111 Court.
to
a supplier's offer to find out
St. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
•
News Departments
if you will save· money," said
Subscription rates
The main number is 992·2156.
B4ck. "This is called the price
By carrier or motor route
Department extentions are :
Oneweek
$2
to compare and will be on
One month
$8.70
your
bill. You should use this
One year
$1 04
Dally
50 cents
price when you shop for elecSu!:&gt;Seribers not desiring to pay the
tric suppliers."
carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel. Credit will be given
Buck said one of the
carrier each week. No subscription by
options
a consumer should
mall permlned In areas where hOme
carrier service ia available.
consider when electric choice
becomes available is becoming
Mail subscription
part of a group that buys elecInside Meigs County
13 Weeks
!27.30
tricity
for its members.
26 Weeks
S53.82
52 Weeks
$105.56
"One type &lt;Jf electric supis an aggregator, which is
plier
Rstea outtJde Melga County
13 Weeks
$29.25
a person or organi&gt;ation that
26 Weeks
sse 68
creates large groups of con52 Weeks
$109.72
, suniers, called buying groups,"

Swisher
P!Jge

·rhe.Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

The Deily Sentinel • hge A 3

J

said Buck.
"These
groups may
be able to
get a better
price
for
the group
members
than they
can get on
Buck
their own.
This 'buying power' allows
aggregators to . negotiate for
additional benefits for the
group's members such as consolidated billing, energy management services and energy
use analysis," he added.
Following Buck's presentation, R-oger and Mary
Gilmore of Aardvark Sound
and Video, informed those in
attendance of several new projects they have been collaborating on with the chamber
and Meigs County Tourism
Board.
The couple presented a
three-volume video set titled,
"A Year'in the Life of Meigs
County," which takes a
chronological look at special
events and various locations
from within the county, all set
to original music.
"These 'feel good' videos
capture the beauty' of Meigs
County on film and makes
one proud to be living in this
area," said Mary Gilmore.
The Gilmores also discussecl
the success of a recent patriotic music video that was made
for Make a Difference Day on
Oct. 28.
About 100 people, many
wearing red, white and blue
while carrying flags. participated in th e video project at
Dob Roberts Field, said Roger
Gilmore .Local Elvis impersonator
Dwight Icenhower sang "One
Coui1try : America," a song
written by Roger, as balloons
were launched into the sky.
Patriotic scenes were later
added to the video, he said. ·
Proceeds from the videos
will go toward relief efforts for
the victims of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

visits Pomem'\1J
~

BY IRIAN J. Rim
SENnNEL NEWS STAFF
POMEROY - A Cleveland-area Democrat includes
Meigs County and southeasiern Ohio as a pivotal part of
his campaign for Secretary_ of
Rep. Bryan Flannery
State.
Ohio Rep. Bryan Flannery,
threw out more ballots last
D-Lakewood, attended a
year.
Democratic Party function in
"Poll workers should eduhis honor here last week.
cate voters on the proper way
Flannery said last year's presto mark a b:illot and to check
idential election and problems
for overvoteS.11
experienced with voting
Flannery said the state must
equipment in Florida h~s shed
take responsibility for financ light on needed election
ing needed reforms, and not
· reforms.
rely on lo cal governments to "Elections systems are deftfoot the bill.
nitely gning to be an issue in
"The Ohio Leg i s latL~re has
the ~002 elections," Flannery
cut funding for local ~ove rn ­
said. "Our Secretary of State
ments twice th is yea r, and
0- Kenneth Blackwell) has said 1ocal
governments cannot
that Florida has a 'great systern; and people here arc puz- afford to implement th e
reforms that are ne ede d,"
zled. especially when we realFlannery said . " Any upgrade'
ize Ohio's system is as bad as
Inust l·o me from the state, and ·
Florida's.''
t~at's not happening now."
Replacing Ohio's punchFlannery said he will concard system must he a priority,
centrate a lot of his rime in
Flannery said, and the secresoutheastern Ohio as his cam- .
tary of state must consider a
paign gets under way.
number of options, including
" If you don't pay attention
electronic balloting.
to Southeaste rn Ohio, you
"There were 90,000 votes
can't win a state wide ele c- .
in Ohio during the last presi. tion," Flannery said. "People
dential race which were not
have neglected this area , and
counted," Flannery said.
that's their mistake. You have
"These were overvotes, ballots
to win along the river,
where the vote couldn't be
whether you're a R epublican
read or determined, and that's
or a Democ rat."
the fault of our elections systern."
Only Florida and Illinois

�PageA4

Opinion

•

The Dail
. y Sentinel

Weclnesd.y, November 14, 1001

Sisters' co

The Daily Sentinel

DEAR ABBY: I will soon be 81.
My daughters are nunes. They
would like !o create an anti-smoking
poster to hang in every junior and
senior high school in the country.
On one side would be a photograph of me on a ladder, painting my
house. On the other side would be a
picture of my oldest sister, who is 90,
boarding a plane in Texas to visit
friends ancl family in New England.
In the center would be a photo of
our middle sister sitting in a wheelchair in her nursing home, hooked
up to her 24-hour oxygen supply.
having returned frcm yet another
visit to the hospital with pneumonia
and congestive heart failure.
Across the bottom of the' poster in
large letters would be: GUESS
WHICH SISTER SMOKED FOR
40YEARS?- GLAD I DIDN'T
IN MASSACHUSETI'S

111 Court 81., Pomeroy, Ohio
740 1112-21M • Fu: 11112-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Ch8r!M W. Govey

Publisher

R. Shewn Lewta
Managing Editor ,

Clwlene Hoeflich

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JUST'
SAY
I&gt;UH

flllurwU• - -

.OUR VIEW

'I

I

'.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESs

the Bend

Wednesdlly, November 14,1001

ting lives are testament to smoking's effect
Dear
Abby
ADVICE

.

.

DEAR GLAD: I can think of no
more powerful anti-smoking message. Read on:
DEAR ABBY: I ·began smoking
when I joined the military at 17. It
was the cool thing to do. Movie stars,
athletes and even doctors endorsed
smoking in ·advel'tUements. Over the
next 25 yean, I tried to stop but didn't have the will power.
In 1977, my town sponsored a
.health fair. I went and took a breath-

ing screening. I was told to blow into
a tube. The attendant asked me to
please blow harder because I was
barely able to move the needle. Then
she said, "I notice you have a pack of
cigarettes in your shirt pocket." I was
ofl'ended. I felt it was none of her
business - but a seed was planted.
Three weeks later, the American
Cancer Society sponsored its first
Great American Smokeout, encouraging smoken to quit for at least one
day. I didn't smoke all day.That night,
I threW the rest of my cigarettes away
- and I haven't smoked since. Quitting cold turkey was the hardest
thing I ever did, Abby. This year I'm
proud to say I have enjoyed 25 yean
of smoke-free living. - ENJOY-

ING A HEALTHY RETIREMENT .IN FLORIDA
DEAR ENJOYING: Thank you
for your timely letter. Tomorrow,

Nov. 15, the American Cancer Society's Great American Smokeout will
mark its 25th year. It grew out of a
1971 event in Randolph, Mass., in
which Arthur P. Mullaney asked people to give up cigarettes for just one
day and donate the money they
saved to a high school scholarship
fund.
In 1974, Lynn R. Smith, editor of
the Monticello Times in Minnesota,
spearheaded the state's first D-Day, or
Don't S!fioke Day. The idea caught
on. On Nov. 18, 1976, the California
Division of the American Cancer
Society succeeded in getting nearly 1
million smokers to quit for the day.
Over the past 25 yean, there have
been dramatic changes in the way
society views tobacco promotion
and tobacco use. Smoking is now
forbidden in airplanes, most public
buildings and restaurants- Unfortu-

Injections qften not a help for ailing knees

:
lifilr on terror requires
~sustained national spirit
Some ~peaken at local Veterans Day observances drove home
a point worth remembering in the cpming montlu, and perhaps, yean: If we are to win this war against terrorism, we must .
keep the spirit of patriotism we've seen in this country si'!ce 911 alive, and above all, believe in what we want to achieve.
It's a concept worth pondering. Veteram Day saw explosions
of American flags and national spirit throughPut the country as
we remembered the contributions of those men and women
who fought for our freedom and security.
But in six months, will we be as enthusiastic as we are now?
Seerru like a moot question, right?
Perhaps, but as the cycles ofVeteram Day and Memorial Day
observances have told us, we seem to get excited abPut these
sacrifices in a time .of crisis. But if we have peace within our
borden and the international situation is calm, it seerru our
enthusiasm lags.
That's a situation we can't afford to have in our national conICiousness now or in the future.
Everyone in Washington, from President Bush on down, has
advised us that if we are to squelch terror networks, it's a task
that won't be resolved in more than a month. It~ very likely
this wiD be an ongoing endeavor, because the expera have told
us if we cut off the head of one of these organizatioos, another wiD arise to take its place.
Era$ing terror's threat is ~ goal that can't be achieved in a
brief time. The difficulties of tracing these organizations is
immense.
·
·
If we are to see any success, our government and military
need citizen support. That's not to say dissent should be dis-·
couraged. If it is, then one our basic freedoms has been lost. In
·a time of war, we can't forget what we're fightipg for in the fint
place - democracy and peace of mind about being lafe.
· If we've learned anything since 9-11, it's that patriotism has
not gone out of fashion in this country. Far from it. We must
ensure that this uniting movement fuels our effort, and that the
home fires are kept burning.

_The_D_aily_Se_ntin~·e_I- - · ·
=-By

Page AS

RUSHER'S VIEW

US; vs. ·China: The battle for the 21st -century
Peering into the mists of the 21st century - an era I am' not destined to see
- I concluded some time ago that its
defining political and" military characteristic will be a struggle for world leader. ship between the United States -and
China. .
· Every century had its identifying
impulse. The 19th, lapped in the long
peace that lasted from the Congress of
Vienna (1814) to the outbreak of the
COLUMNIST
First World War exactly 100 years later,
saw politias subordinated to the progress
of technology. The 20th, while achieving
But the events of Sept. 11 have focused
. even more in technological terms, wit- our attention on another r.roblem nessed three ferocious battles for control one so vast that it may well su'persede the
of the . modern worJd: the two World Chinese challenge as the major characWan, and the 40-ye~r Cold War. When teristic of the century. And that is the
·the century ended, what we call Western problem of Islam.
civilization, dedicated to the twin princi~
It has been masked, hitherto, because it
pies of political and economic freedom, has no great national vector, of the sort
bestrode the globe, and the United States that the Soviet Union supplied to Comwas its unchallenged leader.
munism. The world's Muslims (1 billion
. Ordy China among the world's major · and growing fa~t) are scattered among a
powers, seemed likely to pose a long- score of nations, almost all of them Third
term threat to America's supremacy. World countries. But together - and we
Before it can do so, it must complete its cannot afford · the luxury of assuming
belated transition into a truly modern they will not unite - they could present
nation, at home with the technology that a major obstacle co the power and prosalone can make it formidable. It must perity of the Western world.
Many Muslims, of course, are peacefulalso rid itself of the remaining traces of
Communism that shackle it economical- ly inclined. But, as we saw on Sept. 11, a
ly. But once these steps are taken, and fanatical minority is bent on waging war
assuming (as seems likely) that its leaders against the West, and above all on the
are able to preserve its authoritarian United States. It lacks the power to wage
characteristics and resist the pressures for that war in conventional terms, but the
democracy, China will, by the middle of very technology that is the West's hallthe 21st century, be both ready and mark affords a few determined men the
inclined to challenge America for leader- means of inflicting serious damage on a
highly developed first-world country. ·
ship of the world.

William
Rusher

Today is Wednesday; Nov. 14th, the 31Sth day o£2001. There
are 47 days left in the year.
Today's l-fighlight in History:
One hutldred fifty yean ago, on Nov. 14th, 1851; Herman
Melville's _novel "Moby-Dick" was published.
On this/date:
In 1881, Chark'S J Guiteau we11t on trial for assassil]ating
Presic\ent Garfield. (Guiteau was convicted and hanged the fol.lowing year.)
In 1900, Composer Aaron Copland was born in New York
City.
: In 1922, the British Broadcasting Corporation began its
' domestic radio service.
In 1935, President Franklin Roosevelt proclaimed the Philippil)-e Islands a free commonwealth.
·
In 1940, during World War II, German planes destroyed most
df the English town of Coventry.
·
BY RED GREEN
a few guys. One works for the phone
/ lp 1943, an American torpedo was mistakenly fired at the
· I think I'm a pretty""average person, company. One of them is really, really
1
. U.S. battleship Iowa, which was carrying President Roosevelt
friendly and relatively easy to get along old. So ·the phone company guy starts
and his joint chiefs to the Tehran conference; the torpedo
with. But once in a while, the world talking about all the innovations that arc
exploded harmlessly in the Iowa's wake.
•
sends me a dangerous message. Like, for taking place in the telephone world: call
· In 1944, Tommy Dorsey and Orchestra recorded "Opus No.
example, last week when 1 had to deal answering, call waiting, caller J.D. and
1" for RCA Victor.
·
with a company that wasn't giving me Ident-I-Cal!. Personally, I'm looking for
In 1969,Apollo. 12 blasted off for the moon.
good service. The nicer and more rea- Caller Buzz Off, which is a feature that
Ih 1972, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dosed above the
sonable. I was with them, the more .cav- hangs up automatically when anyone
1,000 level for the first time, ending the day at 1,003.16.
alier and dismissive they were with me. calls. But the old guy asks him what
In 1973, Britain's Princess Anne married Capt. Mark Phillips
When I finally had enough and started ldcm-1-Call" is. The phone guy explains
in Westminster Abbey. (They divorced in 1992, and Anne reranting about my dissatisfaction and that it's a way of identifYing that the•
married.)
threatening to cancel my business, all of phone call is for your wife or your kids
Ten yean ago: U.S. and British authorities announced indicta sudden they began treating me with so you don't have to bother answering it.
ments against two Libyan intelligence officials in connection
supreme deference. Once they complied !verybody has his or her own ring. The
. with the bombing of Pan Am ·Flight 103. Cambodian Prince
with all my demands, I hung uJl with the old guy says, "Oh, you mean a party line?
Norodom Sihapouk returned to his homeland after 13 yean of
impression that you don't get your way Surely they're not charging extra for a
exile.
by being thoughtful and reasonable. You party line." The phone guy moves on,
Five years ago: Cardinal Joseph "Bernardin, the senior Roman
get you~ way by being stubborn and bel- telling us about all the features that are
Catholic prelate in the United States and leader of Chicago's · . ligerent. Well, I'm here to tell you that coming in the future. He says, "Pretty
2.3 minion Catholics, died at his home at age 68 .. ·
although that may work in a business soon you won't even have to dial. You'll
One year ago: Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris
relationship, it's not the way to deal with just pick up the pHon~ and say the name
certified George W. Bush's fragile 300-vote lead over AI Gore,
personal' disagreements. ' I've really of the person you want to call." To
learned a lot this week . I've learned that which the old guy respo nds, "Big deai .houn after a judge refused to lift a 5 p.m. deadline; however,
the judge gave Harris the authority to accept or reject followalthougb you need to be firm and We had that 75 years ago."
up manual recount totals. Pioneering CBS . Radio newsman
aggressive with your suppliers, you need
Speed vs. accuracy
to be charming and persuasive with your
Robert Trout died in New York at age 91.
.
These days a lo t of emphasis is' pu t on
· Today's Birthdays: Former U.N. Secretary-General Boutros
significant ot her. I've also learned that it 's doing thinb" quickly. Do n't be l(•okd
Boutros-Ghali is 79.1\ctress Kathleen Hughes is 73.Ja:zz musialmost impossible to sleep on a sectional Here is a Jist of situations \Vherc aCC ll ;:lcian Ellis Marsalis is 67. Actor Don Stewart is 66. Blues singer
couch.
cy is far more important than speed:
The phone phuture
Carey Bell is 65. Pop singer Freddie Garrity (Freddie &amp; the
• Eating fondue.
• Pulling into a garage.
Dreamers) is 61. Writer P.J. O'Rourke is 54. Zydeco singerI was having lunch the other day with
musician Uuckwheat Zydeco is 54.
• Performing a vasccton.1y.

We must, therefore, prepare to confrcnt this new threat with the seriousness
that the situation demands. President
Bush has pledged to wipe out the inter~
national terrorism rings that have grow!J
up in recent years, and to punish th~
regimes that harbor them. These are reasonable goals, and we hope they wiD be
achieved in the not-too-distant future. '
But thM will fall far short of solving
the problem presented by Islam. If more
· predominantly Muslim countries fall
into the hands · of demagogic dictator.s
like Saddam Hussein (Egypt and Sau&lt;!i
Arabia come to mind as possibilities), the
flow of oil frcm the Middle East, whicb ·
is vital co world commerce, might stop
altogether. And while the United States
·could survive such a disaster, the situation
of both Europe and Japan would be des-·
perate.
Perhaps a military alliance of the Uniied States, the European nations and Japan
could impose its will on the Muslim
countries in the matter of oil. But ultimately the whole Islamic world must be
brought into accord with the trends that
dominate the globe today: the trends
toward democracy and free markets.
Only then will it know the prosperity
that the Western world enjoynoday, and
be able to resist the voices of envy and
resentment. If th e 21st century can succeed in reconciling Islam and the West,
that may well be its characterizing
achievement.

(William Rusher is a Distingl4ished Fellow
r!f the Clareuwnt brstittae for the Stl4dy '!f
Stateswausl1ip ami Political PIIIJ,osop/ry.)

RED GREEN'S VIEW

A time when you're too nice for your own good
• Getting into a hammock.
• Testifying .
• Zipping up your fly.
Exposure of the rich
A lot of peopl e dream about winning
the lottery and what they'd do with the
money, but there's a downside to suddenly being rich. When you don't have
money, you can keep your priorities to
yourself. It's a secret. Nobody really
knows what you like and what you don't
like. You haw a lot of privacy. Hut once
you have a fortune, all of that is gone.
·whenever I hear about a lottery winner
spray paintitig " Up Yours" on his boss's
ho use and runnin g off 'with a swimsuit
model in a new Hummer, well, that

sends a message. I think you can learn
everything there is to know about someone just by watching what he /she does
with his/ her money. It seems to me that
the less mon ey you have, the more mysterious yo u art·. Sadly, every woman I've
met is com pletely unimrigued by this
mystery.
Quote· of the Day: " Th inking is good
hut dun'r ,; \·· :·dn 1t." - ·· Red Green

(Red Grcc11 i3 rln· Slilt l~(;• r/J c Red Green
Slw1v," a telcttisioll series see11 i11 the U.S. on
PBS &lt;
!lid iu Canada 0 11 tl~e CBC Network,
mul tlw rwrlwr t~( 11 TII e Red C n'l'll Book,
and "l? 1•d (;lt'!lr7:,JJ..·.~ C.us: A Lol'c Story.")
•

•

. Question: I have been having a problem with OsgoodSchlatter disease since I played
football in high school. My two
brothers and I all have this
problem. Along .with this, two
of us have sutrered fractured
kneecaps.
Altho!lgh they have healed,
we sometimes continue to
experience pain in our knees
after exercising or even just
from ·squatting. I recently heard
of a treatment in which sugar is
injected into the knees to heal
Osgood-Schlatter, nd I wonder js this is safe and if it woulc
be efl'ective on the knee pain&gt; I
have now?
- Answer: Let me briefly go
through a primer on knee
structure and function before I
talk about treatment for your
· .Osgood-Schlatter. disorder.
Four major bones - the upper
leg bone (the femur), the lower
leg bones (the tibia and fibula),
~nd the kneecap (pateUa) form
the knee joint. The knee is
straightened mairdy by the puU
of a group of four powerful
muscles that are arranged on
the front surface of the upper
leg.
These muscles, the quadriceps femoris or "quads'·' for
short, straighten the knee joint
by the puU exerted on the ten.don that attaches to the tibia
.just below the kneecap. Actual-

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendar ,. publlahed •• • free eervlce to
non-proiH group• wlahlngto
announce IIIMIInga and apeclelevanta.

disorder. Perhapl this is what
you and your brothers are
experiencing. You may also be
experiencing discomfort frcm
chronic cartilage damage or
arthritic chan~ in the knee.
These problems could result
from the trauma that broke
::....
your kneecap or from other
John C. Wolf, D.O.
A&amp;sociote Professor
:;.Mo~ot!
recent or more remote knee
1
of Family Medicine
....:,.. · injuries you received - per_ _....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. haps even· those tiom long ago
ly, the tendon doesn't directly
attach there.
'
Instead, it attaches to the
kneecap, which acts as a protec·ive and stabilizing part of the
ee joint. T acre is then a
&gt;hvrt cen...on that connects the
p•tella with the tibia. Actually,
you can accurately picture the
kneecap as a bony "bump" that
develops at this partic:ular point
along this quad tendon.
A powerful contraction of
the quads produces a great
mechanical stress at the point
where the patellar tendon
·attaches to the tibia. In about 13
percent of adolescents, this
place becomes tender and
inflamed. Slightly more common in boys, Osgood-Schlatter
disease develops most often in
the adolescent yean of rapid
growth, typically 11 to 18 in
males and· a year younger in
females.
This problem is more common in those individuals who

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Lnerary Club, 2 p.m. Wednes·
day at lhe home of Pauline
Horton. Betsy Horky will review
"The Crossing" by Winston
Churchill.
TUPPERS PLAINS- Eastern
Local Schools to dismiss at
1:05 p.m. on Wednesday, due
to teacher In-service-

are engaged in activities involv- while pbying football.
ing repeated running or jumpThere have been attempts 10
ing. Your development of the improve a number of ligament
condition while playing high or tendon disorders by injecting
school football is qUite typical. the . area with sugars, salts or
The attachment point of the other chemicals that cause ~
patellar tendon onto the tibia mild . scarring
rea~tion. ·
becomes tender and it often Depending upon the particular
becomes enlarged, thereby problem · b_eing treated, the
forming a knot .instead of the · results of ~s type of treatm~t
usual small bump. The condi- can be satisfactory. However, tt
tion is treated by relative rest; often isn't aU that great. It
that is, by avoiding vigorous would have no benefit ~or
activity for a while and by the healed Chgood-Schlatter disapplication of ice.
e_ase ~~ ordy produces cecaUsually the condition sub- stonal discomfort.
sides within a few weeks and
I'd suggest that )'OU see an .
the person can return to athlet- orthopedic surgeon to figure
ic endeavon. Healing produces out why your knee hurts. Then
a strong union between the you can talk about the benefits
patellar tendon and the tibia, and risks of each possible treatbut the enlarged bump of ment.
Osgood-Schlatter disease is a
(Family Mtdicine is a wtekly
permanent feature.
column. To submit qutstions, writt
Though. the condition is to John C. Wolf, D. 0., at P.O. &amp;x
healed and stable, up to 50 per- 110, Athens, Ohio 45701. Past
cent of adults stiU complain of columns are a~t~ilablt onlint at
occasional knee pain from the www.jhradio. org ljm.)

POMEROY- Rocksprings
Bener Health Club, Wednes·
day 1 p.m. at lha home of
Frances Goagle\n.
THURSDAY
POMEROY- Meigs Local
School Dlltrtct annual Tllle I
parant maellng, Salisbury Ele·
mentary, Thumay, 8 to 8 p.m.
Wendy Halar, aaslelant super·
lnlancfenl, IO diiCUSI Tllle I
programs, pullout, In-class
model and replacemant class·
ea. New standards for lan·
guage arll and math will also
be d\ICUased.
POMEROY - Entertainment
by Junior and Rita While and
Ralph Cooke will nollake
place Thuraday evening allhe
Senior Clllzana Center as ear·
liar announced. II has been
1'88Cheduled for Nov: 29 at
5:30p.m.
REEDSVILLE -Riverview
Garden Club, Thursday, 7:30
p.m. Program by Michelle Gar·
retson on painting tote bags.
Each members to lake own
bag. Reedsville Church of
Chrtsl. Take gifts for nursing
home, finger foods, and money
for dues.

Sonshine Circle makes its holiday plans
- RACINE - Holiday plans Hayman, and cards of sympawere made at Thursday's thy were signed for Gary
meeting of the Sonshine Cir- Wolfe, Naomi Stobart, Chris
de of Dorcas Bethany Church Wolfe, Sharon Cottrill, Edna
held at the church annex.
Knapp and Mrs. Jamie Wolfe.
Vice President Evelyn ForeCards of encouragement
man had charge of the meet- were signed for Lester
.ing, where in lieu of an offer- · Manuel, Mary Cleek, Valerie
ing, each member donated Neigler, Emma Jane Robinfood items for the Meigs son, Virginia Rees, Etta Mae
Cooperative Food Bank.
Hill, Ethel Orr, Ellen Arnott,
Plans were made for prepar- Maria
Delgato,
Chary
ing fruit baskets and sponsor- Cordero,
Audrey
Ours,
ing a family during the holi- Ronald Hart, BiD Rice, Douday season.
glas Circle, Edison Brace, Sue
Prayer opened the meeting and Harold Hager, Harlan ~nd
and the group enjoyed refresh- Alta Ballard, Naomt Neville,
ments served by Mildred Hart Martha Stutler, Vicki Boso,
and Mabel Brace. Edna Knapp June Turner, Glenn and Anna
-won the door prize.
Lee Tucker, Lizzie Carpenter,
· Officers' rep'orts were given Ruth Smith, Janet Theiss,
·by Kathryn Hart and Lillian Herb Pugh, Evelyn Brady,

Larry Hubbard, Robert Hart,
Lizzie Wood, Esther West,
George
Linda
Lambert,
Stumpand Hazel McKelvey.
Thank you notes were read
from Serenity House and Evelyn Brady.
It was noted that all cookbooks have been sold.
Blondena Rainer and Edie
Hubbard had the program for
the evening. Rainer used
scripture from Philippians
4:19 and Matthew 6:31-34.
She read a story "Those Fish"
from "His Mysterious Ways"
by Norman Vincent Peale, and
gave a list of things that we
should be thankful _for. Edie
read an article, ·~$10.00 is
$10.00."
Attending were Evelyn

Foreman, Kathryn Hart, Ann
Boso, Peggy Hill, Bernice
Theiss, Jo Lee, Mattie Teaford,
Shirley Beegle, Blondena
Rainer, Edie Hubbard, Lillian
Hayman, Gladys Sterrett, Edn'a
Knapp, Thelma Walton, Mabel
Brace, Mildred Hart, Martha
Lou Beegle, . Melissa Smith,
Letha Proffitt, Julie Campbell,
and guests Wyatt Hill and
Rose Grindstaff.
Next meeting will be Dec.
10 with a Christmas Party.
Those who do not have a
secret sister should bring a $5
·gift for the gift exchange if
they want pa~ticipate. Kathryn
Hart and Julte Campbell wiD :
have the program and Lillian
Hayman will serve refreshments.

SOCIEIY SCRAPBOOK
Maples
residents party
POMEROY -An evening
of fun, food and !ellowship
was enjoyed when the residents ofThe Maples met for a
·Halloween party.
Games were pl:iyed -with
prizes going to Gil Tucker,
Betty Spencer, Jerry Pullen,
Jackie Hildebrand, and David
·Lawson. Mabel Waddell won
the door prize.

Community
Organization
will have its November food
drive on Nov. 24 from 8 a.m . .
until noon .
All items wiD be given to
the Meigs Cooperative Food
Bank. Accepted will be
money, non-perishable food
items, paper products, so:ip;
laundry detergents, and toothpaste. Contacts may be made
with Ann Zirkle at 949-2031
or Kathryn Hart at 949-2656
Racine Area f&lt;Jr pickup.

Others attending were Barb
Tatterson, Jane Teaford, Rita
Buckley,
Carol
Dennis,
Richard Warner, Sara Truitt,
Peggy Douglas, Gladys Hubbard, Oris Hubbard, Reta
Ord, Ted VanCooney, Betty
Wills, ·Sampson Hall, Carol
HaD and Janice Zwilling.

Food drive

underway

RACINE -

E-MAIL YOUR COMMUNITY NEWS
·news@mydailysentinel.com

nately, an estimated 47 million adults
in the United States currently
smoke, and because of it, approximately half of them wiD die prematurely.
Lung cancer is the leading cause of
cancer death, and this year alone,
there will be approximately 169,500
new cases diagnosed. More than 80
percent of lung cancers are thought
to result from smokingSo, Dear R eaders, if you're hooked
on tobacco and have been saying,
"One of these .days I've go no quit;'
take my advice - join the Great
American Smokeout and quit today!
For more information about the
Great American Smokeout, call your
local office of the American Cancer
Society o~ (800) 227-2345, or visit
the Web site: www.cancer org.
Dear Abby is written by Pa,./ine
Phillips a•uJ daughter Jeimne Phillips.

FRIDAY
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange will host a CPR
course, 7 to 9 p.m. at the hall.
For more Information call Janis
McComber, 742·2163.
APPLE GROVE - Round and
square dance at Ihe Red Bam,
81o 11 p.m. line dsnclng, clog·
glng, wllh live music.

SATURDAY
POMEROY - Harry Potter
Party Saturday, noon to 2 p.m
at the Pomeroy Ubrary.
Games, refresltments and
prizes. Muggles of all ages
invited.
HARRISONVILLE - Reunion
of Waller "Squibb" Gilmore
family Saturday al noon at the
Harrisonville/Scipio firehouse.
Every welcome.
MIDDLEPORT- Gospel sing,
Saturday, Middleport Church of
the Nazarene, 7 p.m. Hoy and
Trula Bussell of Tennessee will
be lhe singers.
POMEROY- Annual Meigs
County Christmas flower show
to be held Saturday and Sun·
day at the Senior Citizens
Center. Open for public view·
lng both days, 1 to 4 p.m.
RACINE - Red Brush Church
of Chrlsl aezvlce Saturday at 7
p.m. and Sunday, 10 a.m. and
6 p.m. Danver Hill to speak.
SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Long Bol·
tom United Methodist Church
will be holding a hymn sing on
Saturday at 7 p.m. Thoee
attending are asked to bring a
can of food for the Cooperative
Pariah's food bank.
MONDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County
Agricultural Society, Monday,
7:30 p.m. In the Coon Hunters
Building on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds. Election of offl·
cers will be held.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Brooks·
Grant Camp Sons of Union
Veterans of lhe Civil War and
the Maj. Daniel McCook Circle
Ladles of lhe Grand Army of
the Republic, meetings, Tues·
day, Middleport Arts Council
building. Potluck Thanksgiving
dinner 6:30 p.m. in honor of
President Lincoln's first decla·
ration of Thanksgiving. Meal
lumlshed. Guests welcome.
Election of SUV officers. Pro·
gram will be on 'The Battle of
Camlfe&lt; Ferry, W.Va.; by
Capt Michael Sheets of the
36th Virginia Infantry of Hunt·
inglon, W.Va.

********************
*~ BJNq'S II'Jrf~ R.CPIIJR. *

*
*
:

**
**

Ill qooJ.u.;,'411uliJ. $al.J.

ike Bing • Owner • 27 years experience
Randy Bing- Technician- 5 years experience
Jim Bing, Technician • 12 year experience
Mike, Randy, and Jim
Formerly of Ford Garage in Middleport

:

·

:,r;~~~~***'fl~~;;~!

Mitch Hodge • Power Team Member

_Sunday· Wednesday
November ll ·.l4
atthe

.

First Southern Baptist Chu"ch
41872 Pomeroy Pike • Pomeroy, Ohio
Come experience Mitch's feats of strength as well as his unbelievable testimony.
His heart is lo see our country and this nation's youth return to moral values and
absolutes. Rev. Lamar O'Bryant invites all youth and adults.

Sunday morning at 8:15a.m. and 10:45 a.m. and Sunday
through Wednesday evening at 7:00p.m. nightly.

�.The Daily Sentinel

Nation • World

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Bush signed a biU to cut
spending aimed at keeping Russian nuclear weapons and expertise fiom unfriendly nations or terrorists and banning for two
years new oil and gas driUing under the Great Lakes.
The measure also increases money for many water projects and
renewable energy programs.
The provisions were part of a $25 biUion· measure to finance
federal energy and water programs in 2002 that Bush signed on
Monday along with two other spending biDs. The White House
announced the signings on Tuesday after Bush met with Russian
President Vladimir Putin.
The Great Lakes provision would prevent fede1'21 agencies fiom
issuing permil&lt; for new drilling through September 2003 to give
time for the government to complete a study on environmental
·
effects that drilljng might have.

Experts: stop lead pqisonlnc
WASHINGTON (AP) - A national strategy for reducing
lead poisoning should focus on prevention, not screening children after they've been exposed, experts told a Senate subcommittee Tuesdav.
"The only moral and' effective WoiY to deal with childhood lead
poisoning is to prevem children fiom being exposed to lead in
the fint place;· said Nick Farr, executive director of the Maryland-based National Center for Lead-Safe Housing, a research
group.
Currendy, some public health officials urge parents to get their
children routinely screened for exposure to lead, which can cause
lowered inteUigence, retarded growth and impaired hearing.
But the government - and the paint industry - need to put
more money into programs to.reduce lead hazards in homes and
to educate parents about reducing their children's exposure, said
witnesses at a hearing of the Senate subcommittee on housing
and transportation.

l

NEW YORK (AP) - The cockpit
voice recorder from American Flight
587 indicates the pilots struggled to
control the jetliner after a rattling was
heard less than two minutes into takeoff. investigators reported Tuesday.
George Black Jr. of the National
Transportation Safety Board said investigators do not yet know what caused
the "airframe rattling noise," but witne"~ses describe a remarkably similar
story.
"They saw the aircraft wobble ... and
saw pieces come from it and then it
went into a steep spiral and dived into
the ground," Black said at an evening
news conference.
The pilots on Flight 587 also spoke
of encountering wake turbulence,

•

Nov••..., 14, 2001

which is believed to have contributed
to other deadly airline crashe"~. Black
said a Japan Airlines jumbo jet took off
two minutes and 20 seconds before
Aight 587 - a full 20 seconds longer
than the normal separation time
between takeoffi.
Black said it was too early to say if
there was any relationship between the
noises or the turbulence and Monday's
crash. AU 260 people aboard were
killed when the plane broke •part and
plunged into a Queens neighborhood
after leaving nearby Kennedy Airport.
Five ·more people were missing and
feared dead Ofl the ground.
Investigators say there is no evidence
of sabotage so far and all signs point to
a catastrophic mechaflical problem.

"We're not ruling anything out until
we have got our information more
fully developed than we do. But every·
thing says so far we're looking at an
accident site," NTSB chairwoman
Marion Blakey said.
The first portion of the flight to the
Dominican Republic appeared normal, ·
with the co-pilot at the controls. But
107 seconds after the plane started ·its
takeoff roll, a rattling was heard; 14 seconds later, there is a second rattle, lllack
said.
Twenty-three seconds later - after
"several comments suggesting loss of
control"- the cockpit voice recording
ends, he said. From takeoff to the end
of the tape lasts less than 2 minutes, 24
seconds.

sented the Miami relatives of Elian Gonzalez, defeated a former
six-term mayor in a runoffTuesday to lead the city for the next
four yean.
With all precincts reporting, Diaz had 28,051 votes, or 55.3
percent, to po~tical veteran Maurice Ferre's 22,718 votes, or 44.7
pereent. Voter turnout was estimated at 35 percent.
Ferre and· Diaz competed in a runoff afier no candidate captured a majority in a l 0-candidate election Nov. 6.
In last week's election, Fe\'fC, a Puerto Rican, took 8 percent
more Votes than Diaz, a Cuban-American. Both had hoped to
draw fiom the Cuban-American voters who backed Mayor Joe
Carollo, voted out of office after finishing third. He endorsed
Diaz.
·

CHESTER, Pa. (AP) -About 30 FBI agents supported by a
hazardous materials team searched two houses Tuesday, including
one owned by a city health commissioner who also teaches at
Johns Hopkins University.
The agents seized several items, which FBI spokeswoman
Linda Vizi refused to identify. The FBI would not say why the
houses were searched, and federal court documents used to
obtain search warrants were sealed.
Agents entered a house owned by Dr. lrshad Shaikh, who has
been the city health commissioner since 1994. He and his brother, Masood Shaikh, who works in Chester's lead abatement program and lives with Shaikh, were interviewed by the FBI.
"They were here, they asked some quptions, they left. I fuUy
cooperated fiom this side and they left," Shaikh said. He declined
NEW YORK (AP) - An appeals court has ordered record to say what the FBI asked.
producer Phil Spector to pay about S3 million to the Ronettes,
a 1960s "girl group" trio he discovered, managed and allegedly
cheated.
·
The trio -which included his wife - was paid next to nothNICHOLASVILLE, Ky. (AP) -A man opened fire Tuesday
ing while Spector earned millions at their expense, the State on sheriff's deputies trying to serve a warrant, killing one of them
Supreme Court's Appellate Division ruled Tuesday.
and wounding two others, officials said.
The decision upheld a lower court ruling that Spector had vioThe gunman, identified by police as PhiUip Walker, was kiUed
lated his 1963 contract with the trio.
by the deputies as they returned fire.
Justice Paula Omansky ruled after a trial in 1998 that the conThe deputies had gone to Walker's home with a warrant for
tract concerned only royalties on record sales, but Spector sold terroristic threatening, a misdemeanor. No other information
the recordings for use as background music in movies, videocas.about the warrant was released.
sette recordings and advertising.
Jessamine County Sheriff's Deputy Billy Walls, 28, died at a
hospital shordy after the shooting. One deputy was hospitalized
in critical wndition, and the other was in fair condition.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Amid a world oil glut and declin- .
ing prices, the United States is moving for the fint time to 6U its
emergency petroleum reserve to its fuU 700 million-barrel capacity over the next few years.
President Bush on Tuesday directed that the reserve be 6Ued
"in a deliberate and cost-effective manner," beginning as soon as
possible, to protect against oil supply disruptions.
The shipments to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, a series of
Gulf Coast salt domes in Louisiana and Texas, are expected to
begin next April and continue into 2003 at up to 130,000 barrels a day, according to the Interior Department.
Administration officials stressed there was no imminent threat
of an oil supply interruption and denied the announcement was
related to the war on terrorism o~ growing Middle East tensions.

Hanis feels vindicated.
I

wdusdll'f,

PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Secretary of State Katherine
Harris, criticized by Democrats for her handling of the 2000
presidential election recount, said Thesday she felt vindicated by
a news media review of Florida's uncounted ballots.
The media-sponsored review of 175,000 untaUied ballots
found George W. Bush would have prevailed even ifAI Gore had
won the · partial recounts he sought in court. Gore wanted
recounts of all votes in four predominandy Democratic counties,
or a sta.tewide recount of undervotes.
Harris, a Republican, certified Bush the winner in Florida by
537 votes, although Gore continued to contest the election.
"I felt vindicated by knowing I foUowed the law (from) day
one," Harris said after a speech to the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association 's annual meeting. ''l'tn grateful that the study
confirmed it."

Court upholds Ronettes n~linc

Deputy, pnman slain

Bush and
Russia agrees
to slash old
war arsenals
WASHINGON (AP)
President Bush and Russian
President Vladimir Putin both
pledged Tuesday to slash Cold
War-era nuclear anenals by
two-thirds, to levels unseen in
decades, but remained at odds
over American plans to develop a missile defense shield.
"Together, we're making
history as we make progress;•
Bush said after three hours of
summitry at the White
House. "We're transforming
our relationship fiom one of
hostility and suspicion to one
based on cooperation and
trust."
"We no longer have to
intimidate each other to reach
agreements," Putin said a few
hours later. "Security is created not by piles of metal or
weapons. It is created by
political will of people, nation
states and their leaders."

29,2001 .

t31Asinesses (Je Sure &amp;
• Meigs Marauders
tJe li Part Of 'Chis Year's
(Jasketba/1
• Southern Tornadoes Special
Preview Edition!

• Eastera Eagles

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -Doctors for the first recipient of a
self-contained artificial heart say their patient has suffered a
"major setback."
In a statement fiom Jewish Hospital, doctors said Tuesday that
Robert Tools' setback "began with the onset of weakness in the
right side of his body."The hospital would not provide any other
.
details.
'
Dr. Laman Gray. told The New York Times that Tools suffered ·
a stroke. Gray did not return telephone calls seeking comment.
Gray and Dr. Robert Dowling, the surgeons who implanted
the plastic-and-titanium AbioCor on July 2, planned to give
more information about Tools' condition at a news conference
Wednesday.

1Jpstarf nets mayoral ftlnoff
MIAMI (AP) -

Manny Diaz, a political upstart who repre-

The Daily Sentinel '

"~

5
•

~

..'·t
:·
:
'
•·
~

WASHINGTON (AP) InvestJgators are knocking on
the doors of Middle Eastern
visitors in fhe United States
and looking through the files
offoreign students as part of a
widening terrorism inquiry,
sparking complainu about
racial profiling.
State and federal agentl are
questioning 5,000 male for.
eigners from Middle Ea~tern
and other countries, and
investigators have contacted
more than 200 colleges and
universities seeking information about foreign students
from Arab and Muslim
nations.
Authorities say those sought
fqr questioning are not sus-

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Local Caring·

Bush order would allow terrorist
trials by military commission

,.

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush signed an
order Tuesday that would
allow the government to try
people accused of terrorism
in front of a special military
commission instead of in
civilian cou rt.
The order, signed ·by Bush
before he left for Crawford,
Texas, gives the administration ano ther avenue to bring
.xhe Sept. 11 terrorists to justice, White House counsel
Albert Gonzales told The
Associated Press.
"This is a new tool to use
against terrorism," Gonzaie·s
said in a telephone interview.
He said the;e were precedents in World War II and the
Civil War.
The ;'W'hite House was to
release the order late Tuesday.
Gonzales, a former Texas
Supreme Court judge who is
the president's top lawyei',
said a military commission
could have seve ral advantages
over a civi1ian court. It is easier to protect the sources and
methods of investigators in
military proceedings, for
example, and a military trial
can be held overseas.
Gonz~les said there may be
times when prosecutors feel a
trial m America wou ld be

unsafe.
name
who· should be
"There may not be a need exposed to military justice,"
for this and the president Gonzales said. "It just promay make a determination vides the framework · that,
that he does not want to use should the president have
this tool, but he felt it appro-· findings in the future , he
priate that he have this tool could" order Secretary of
available to him," the lawyer Defense Donald H . Rumssaid.
feld to establish such a comThe order is · the latest mission.
Gonzales said there is
effort by the administration
to toughen the nation's laws precedent for such panels.
against terrorists.
President Franklin RooAfter the Sept. II attacks, sevelt had World War II sabathe administration pushed teurs tried by military comthrough Congress an anti- mission, as did President Linterrorism bill that Bush said coln during the Civil War,
was vital but civil liberties the lawyer said. Indeed, Lingroups said weni to_far, via- coin assassination plotters
lating Americans' constitu- were tried and co nvicted by
tional rights. It expands the military court, he said.
FBI's wiretapping and elec"This is a global war. To
tronic surveillance authority · have successful pfosecutions,
and imposes stronger penal- we might have to give up
ties for harboring or financ - sources and methods" in a
ing terrorists. The measure civilian court. " We don't
also increases the number of want to have to do that."
crimes considered terrorist
Gonzalez said: "Any indiacts and toughens the pun- vidual subject to the order
ishments for committing would be given a full and fair
them.
trial, pursuant to the secre.U nder the new order, Bush tary of defense."
could establish a military
The administration has
commission in the future 'by been cons idering both miliasking the secretary of ta~y and civil ion trial options.
defense to establish the rules In either scenario, any susfor one.
pect would retain rights to. a
"This does n~t identify by lawyer and to a trial by jury.
J

we're inciting them to attack
us isjust utter nonsense. It's
kind oflike feeding an alligator, hoping it eats you last;' he
said.
US.
bombs
fell
in
Mgbanistan for a 38th day,
and Rumsfeld said that in the
aftermath of the Taliban 's collapse in the north, the United
States has two short-term
goals besides hunting down
the terrorists. They are opening a "land bridge" to Uzbekistan in the north and repairing airports near Mazar-eSharif and north of Kabul, so
that more humanitarian aid
can be brought in.
Rumsfeld raised the possibility that leaders of the Taliban or the al-Qaida terrorist
network might flee across the
Afghan border into Iran to
the west or Pakistan to the
south and east.

The United Nations is diacussing a post-Taliban government In Afghanistan that
of the various elhnic groiJpS involved in lhe conflict.

ter, Abdullah, invited all
Mghan factions - except the
Taliban - to come to Kabul
to negotiate on the country's
future. The top U.N. envoy for
Afghanistan outlined a plan
for a two-year transitional
government with a multinatioRal security force.

pects but are wanted for'~1~ ' th~ basit privaey . 'righti of
untary interviews · bec~se people from particular ethnic
investigators believe they g10ups.
might" have information that "We have serious concerns
will help police find those about what appears to be a
who plamied the Sept. , 11 dragnet app10ach rather than a
attacks and others planmng targeted Investigation," said
new attacks.
.
Lucas Guttentag, head of the
They are bemg t.arg~ted American Civil Liberties
because they fit th~ cntena of Union's immigration rights
people who mtght have
. t
knowledge of foreign-based proJec ·
terrorists and not because of
Only those who traveled
their nationaliry, according to from nallons that have. be~n
a Justice Department memo.
way statt~ns for · ~rrorllts . m
None will be forced to sub- Os~ma bm Laden s al-Qatda
mit to interviews; those who network were · placed on the
choose to speak to investiga- list, said Justice Department
tors can have lawyers present. · .spokeswoman Mindy Tucker,
Civil rights groups say 1 who declined to specify which
investigators are threatening countries were targeted.
'

rorist network is almost over.
He said U.S. officials don't
know where bin Laden is
hiding.
"We're stiU such a good
distance fiom where we've·
got to get," Rumsfeld said.
"It's a difficult country.
There are lots of &lt;:aves. There
are lots of tunnels, lots of
mountains. It is not an easy
task. We said that at the outset. We've been hard at it, and
progress is being made, but it
is not something that is done
until it's done, and it is going
to take a lot of effort fiom
here on."
A reporter asked Rumsfeld
if he feared Osama bin Laden
would launch a new terrorist
attack out o( de'lperation.
"The idea that we could
appease them by stopping
doing· what we're doing, or
some implication that

Sorting out tile INders

-Omor

: FONign minister

An ethnic
Paahtun and

! of 1118 Rabbanl

reclusll!e -

! Emergad aa a

i govamment.

a..-_,,

AniMI!nlcUwarlord with
hliltO&lt;Y or bad
plood with many
OOI1hem alltal1c:e

An ethnic Tajlk
and head of the

-thai- -to

commanders.

durt1g the 19801 ' the and, In the
! millllry
proceoa, lot! an i commandor
tye when ht
: killed tllor1ly
wu - . -. i beforll tht Sept.
Ht ancfhltlillto i 11 - -

Army loft In
11188. In axile In
Ti.lrt&lt;ly;

' key apoketman

u.,......

!Oml!d the
'
'l'liiilin
In 1114. ·j
•

Don.Doelum

-fiveyeano ! attlance. Was
ago. Fought
!
Ahmad
Soviet QOCIIPierl ; Shah

Investigation of Middle Eastem
visitors in the United States begins

~

~

HOLZER

),

~

l

Dave at Ext. 15 or Debbie Ext. 16
For More Information

WASHINGTON (AP) American special forces
slipped into the Mghan capital to offer "advice and counsel" to triumphant opposition
forces, and small numbers of
U.S. troops are operating
against the Taliban in southern Afghanistan, Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld said Tuesday.
At .his first Pentagon news
conference since the fall of
Kabul, Rumsfeld was careful
not to boast about the string
of northern alliance military
successes · in
northern
Mghanistan against the Taliban, a stern Islamic militia
that has ruled most of the
country for five years.
Rumsfeld
cautioned
against concluding that the
Tali ban's retreat from the
north means the hunt for
Osama bjn Laden and his ter-

i for lht northern

..
~
~
,

Advertising Deadline· Friday, November 23rd, 2001
The Daily Sentinel
Call992-2155

forces slip into .
Afghan capital to offer adVIce

CLOSER TO VICTORY?- Two Northern Alliance fighters hold
guns in Kabul, Afghanistan, after they moved into the capital
without major fighting. Taliban military forces deserted Kabul
at dawn Tuesday after a series of stunning military victories by
opposition forces over the past four days. (AP Photo/Amir
Shah)

ethnic group.
The alliance leaders said
they had deployed 3,000 security troops across Kabul to
bring order - not to occupy
it - and insisted they were
committed to a broad-based
goverment.
The aUiance foreign minis-

Wednetdll'f, .._....,... 14,2001

Ame~can

of the Tallban

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Do you have a family history of diabetes?
Have you had unexplained weight loss?
Have you delivered a baby that weighed more than nine pounds?
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~bbie BGrCus

Roy F. VanMeter

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP)
Afghans brought their
radios out of hiding and
played music in the streets,
savoring the end of five years
of harsh Taliban rule as the
northern alliance marched triumphandy into Mghanistan's
capital Tuesday. Diplomats .
sought U.N. help in fashioning a goverrunenc for the shattered country.
American jets stiU prowled
the skies in the south, seeking
out convoys offaliban fighters
retreating toward Kandahar,
the Islamic mi~tants' last major
stronghold. Strikes also targeted. caves where members of
terror suspect C&gt;sama bin
Laden's ai-Qaida network
were thought to be hiding
Alliance troops celebrated
the capture of the prize they
had been fighting for since
they were driv~n out by the
Tali ban in 1996. A smaU number of U.S. troops were on
hand to advise them.
The dizzying cascade of
events in Afghanistan turned
the opposition into the country's chief power overnight and brought to the forefront
the issue of ensuring that it
shares power. The United
States and its allies want a government that includes groups
'.
the ethnic minorities that
make up the alliance and the
., . Pashtuns, the country's largest

PageA7

America .at War

Alliance cements
control over·Kabul

~
·~

Recipient suffers •setback'

I

-

Pilots of flight 587 struggled to control plarie

WASHINGTON (AP) - fe&lt;k1'21 R~rw Chairman Abn
Greenspan said Tuesday the best energy policy · for the United
Stat"' would rely on the operation of free markets to detennine
price'l and spur .development of new energy source"~.
Greenspan said he believed all current forms of energy. including oil, natu1'21 gas, coal and nuclear power, would play major
role"~ in supplying the country's energy needs in corning yean. He
also endorsed development of reneWolble energy sources and
continued research into such exotic forms of energy as nuclear
fusion.
In all of these activitie'l, Greenspan stressed it is crucial that policy-maken allow markets to operate freely with as few government constraints as possible so the correct pricing signals would
be sent.
"We must remember that the same price signals that are so
critical for balancing energy supply and demand in the short run
also signal profit opportunities for long-term supply expansion;·
Greenspan said."Moreover, they stimulate the research and development that will unlock new approaches to energy production
and use that we can now only scarcely envision."

I

Page A&amp;

l

lltiiDkl.

·'

Ge&lt;lerafln the

comm1&gt;11at army
that ruled

~-

the Sovioll' Rod

'*""*'

toprumtnanao
whenhlttraopo
ioltscllnto

.government

raoognlzed as
Afghanistan's
legitimate
leadership.
Became the
nominal-of
the group knowi1
u tna northem
alliance In 1996.
SUII holdl U1a
OOIWIIry'a Mit It
the U.N.

Muar+BIIattf.

-

may include leaders

Homld

Ziller Shih

Klrul

A Pashtun and
87-year-old
exiled monarch
who hopes to
serve as a
neutral figure
uniting the
Afghan people.
Ruled for40
years. but has
lived In Rome
since he was
ouotod In t9731n
a palace ooUI).

E)(lled Pashtun
leader who has
been trying to
lure members of
his tribe to back

an alternative to
the Taliban.
Came under
attaclcbyTaliban
whenheant&amp;nld
the country to
persuade
Afghans to
aupporta .
government
u~rdlpoUd

king; tiCIPid
with tl1t llelp of
u.s. forcu.

A'

Kick off
the
Holida~ Seaso
Your Business
'
in the

Daily Sentinel
·Holiday Gift Guide
Wednesday, November 21

.,

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

�·Inside:

POIMI oy, Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Taans Will debut in Canton, Page B5
No rttum of the Mac, Page B6

Page 81
Wednu8y, Nonlllller 14, 2001

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Baker's dozen named AII-Distrid
COLUMBUS (AP) Eastern,
Southern, and Meigs aU placed players on the Associated Press Southeast All-District high ochool football
teams announced Tuesday.
Eastern was represented in Division VI by first-teamers Garren Karr,
RJ Gibbs, and Chris Lyons. Southern placed Tyler Liule and Matt Ash
on the first team.
Receiving special mention for
Eastern were Jon Will and Ben
Holter.
Southern's Anthony Callinan,
Aaron Ohlinger, Justin Allen and B.J.
Marnhout were all given Special
Mention nods.

Jeremy Roush and Tyson Lee of
Meigs received special mention in
Division Ill.
Washington Court House, which
put together a 10-0 season, swept the
awards in Division IlL on the Running back Stephen Jackson was
tabbed as the offensive player of the

ye.ar, 6-foot- 5, 270-pound lineman
Mark Bihl took the defensive honors
and John Enochs was selected as the
coach of the year.
Washington Court House finished
.fourth in the final regular-season AP .
poU.
Division IV poll champion Ironton took two individual awards.
Joining Jackson as the top oftensive stars on the team are: Dan Doebereiner ofWaterford in Division VI;
Richmond Dale Southeastern's
Brian Netter (V); Portsmouth's
Joseph Parker (IV); Jackson's David
Swisher (II); and Derek Harden of
Logan (1).

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. Nashville 4, Bullalo 1
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•

OLATHE, Kan. The
University of Rio Grande
men's soccer team will be the
fourth seed in the upcoming
NAJA National Soccer Tournament in Bowling Green,
J{entucky.
.
•
·· Rio Grande (21-0-1) erul~d
up No. 4 in the final NAJA
Top 25 poll. The Redmen will
face. the No. 13 seed, University of Mary (ND) Marauders
on Thursday night at 8 p.m.
CST.
Freshman forward Simon
Carey (Preston, England)
enters the nationals in a scoring slump after leading the
.team in goals scored for the
~ar (36). Juniors Maurice
Muteti (Nairobi, Kenya), Jon
teonard (Belfast, No. Ireland)
apd Tom Whittaker (Euxton,
England) all picked up the
slack in leading the Redmen
to the America.n Mideast
Conference/NAIA Region
"!!urnament championship.
' Sophomore
goalkeeper
pliver Sanders (Colchester,
~ngland) has played stellar all
s~ason in the net for Rio
Grande. Sanders has recorded
to shutouts and yielded only
oix goals all season in 1423
minutes. ·
Mary (18-4-1) is led by a
trio of players, freshman for. ward Graeme Jaap, junior forward Todd Huber and junior
forward
Shelby
Sanchez.Junior David Widdison minds the net for the
Marauders.
Mary is a member of the
Dakota Athletic Conference
and like Rio Grande is making its' first appearance in the
national tournament.
: The Marauders soccer team
1s in its seventh year pf existence and coached by Bill

,Ashby.
; . If the Redmen win, they
;would advance to the quarterfinal round to be played on
Saturday. The semifinals are
Monday and the National
.Championship game will be
played November 20 at ,7 p.m.
CST.
·. · Lindsey Wilson (KY) is the
top seed in the field with
Auburn-Montgomery seeded
second and William Carey
(MS) is the third seed.

Listed along with Bihl as the
defensive players qf the year are:
Glouster Trimble's Kyle Andrews
(VI); Boyd Bailey of Wheelersburg
(V); Ironton 's Chad Parker (IV);
Marietta's Tony Huffinan (II); and
Logan's Matt Mong (1) .
Bob Lutz, who guided Ironton to ·
its perfect 10-0 mark and No. 1
ranking, was picked as the coach of
the year in Division l'V:
Rounding out the list of coaching
honorees are: Glouster Trimble's Phil
Faires (VI); Daron Myers of Chillicothe Zane Trace (\'1; Marieua'sTim
Hale (II); and Dale Amyx of Logan
(1).

NEW YORK (AP)
dream was fulfilled."
Randy Johnson won his third
Since Arizona beat the New
straight National league Cy York Yankees in Game 7 of
Young Award on Tuesday, eas- the World Series on Nov. 4,
ily beating Arizona Diamond. PIHse-Unlt.IIS
backs
teammate
Curt
Schilling.
The Big Unit received 30 of
32 first-place votes and two Four real
seconds for 156 point&lt; from a
Randy Johnson became lhe loorlh
pitcher in history to win four
panel of the Baseball Writers'
Cy Young .Awards, easily beating
Association
of America.
teammate Curt Schilling.
·Schilling, the co.MVP of the
Johnson Is the
World Series along with John"
second pltcher to
son, got two firsts, 29 seconds win three con·
secutive Cy
and one third for 98 points.
Young awards.
"I definitely thought he had
Greg Maddux
a chance," Johnson said. ':Just a woo four In
pleasant surpris~. I know
row from
Goort's happy for me. l talked
1992·95.
him earlier today. He was
calling me today to thank me
for getting him to this next
IP
249.2
level where's he at . .I thought
W·L 21-6
that was the most flattering
co
.3
comment I've received to this
SHO
2
point in my career."
BB
71
It was the fourth Cy Young
so
372
Award for Johnson, who won
ERA
2.49
the AL honor while pitching
for Seatde in 1995. The only Voting tor the Nationall.eague
other pitchers with four or Cy Young Award, wilh pitchers
receiving five points tor each firstmore Cy Youngs are Roger place vote, three points for second ·
Clemens, a favorite to win his and one point ror third.
sixth on Thursday when the
Player
111 ~d 3rd Tot.
AL voting is announced, and
Randy Johnson, Art 30 2 • 156
Steve Carlton and. Greg Maddux, who won four each.
"This has been a dream season," Johnson said, "not
Roy Oswalt, Hou.
• 1
because of the Cy Young
AP
Award but . because another SOURCE: ABSOO&amp;ttBd PffJIJIJ

to

FOURTH nME AROUND- Arizona Diamondbacks ace Randy Johnson delivers a pitch in the
file photo. Johnson won his third straight National League Cy Young Award Tuesday. (AP)

Two Red men to OSU wins .another exhibition
run in NAIA Meet
BY MARK WILLIAMS
RIO GRANDE SID

OLATHE, Kan. - The University of Rio Grande
men's cross country squad will have two representatives at
the 46th Annual .Men,s NAJA National Cross Country
Championships this Saturday .in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Sophomore Matt Boyles (Tuppers Plain, OH) and
junior Marc Littrell (Baltimore, OH) will be a part of the
field that will compete in the men,s .race.
Boyles and Littrell have been Rio's 12 punch all season, with one or the other
finishing as the top Rio runner,in every
race. Boyles won two races and both
earned All-American Mideast Conference honors for their 6th and 7th place
finishes, respectively at the AMC Meet.
It is the first trip to the national cross
country meet for both runners. Boyles
competed in the NAIA outdoor track
and field championships .last spring in
Boyles
British Columbia, Canada.
Both runners will need to run well to
gain NAIA All~ American status. The top 30 finishers earn
the honors and the two Redmen harriers will face stiff
competition.
Boyles' and Littrell's strong seasons had the Redmen
challenging the opposition for the top spot in nearly
every meet. Twice the Redmen cracked the top 25
behind this dynamic duo. Had injuries not cropped up to
some other key runners, Boyles and Littrell could be at
the meet with their teammates,
There will be 28 teams competing as well as 55 individual runners in the men's race which begins at 11:45
a.m. on Saturday.

COLUMBUS (AP) Brent Darby scored 15
points, including three. 3pointers, to help lead Ohio
State to a I 02-86 exhibition
victory over the Nike Elite
team Tuesday.
The Buckeyes had balanced scoring, with three
players getting 15 points
each. Besides Darby, Brian
Brown and Bohan Savovic
were the other two.
Ohio State, which led 4835 at halftime, shot 59 percent from the field in the
second half. Savovic went 6for-9 from the field, including three 3-pointers.
Nike Elite was led by
Antwon Hall, who scored 23
points, including three 3pointers. Nike shot nearly
47 percent from the field for
the game, .and made 6-of-11
3-pointers in the second
half.
·
Ohio State never trailed
and built a 25-point lead
early in the second half.
BIG MAN ON THE MOVE -

Ohio State's Will Dudley (43)
drives between Nlke Elite's
Richard Shaw, left, and Cole·
co Bui"e at the Value City
Arena in Columbus, Ohio
Tuesday. (AP)

�Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Page B 2 • The Dally Sentinel

NANCY PARKER CAMPBELL
MEIGS COUNTY AUDITOR

DELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE
The lands, lots and parts of lots returned delinquent by the County

I

Treasurer of Me1gs County, wtlh the taxes, assessments, Interest
and penalties charges thereupon agreeable to law, are contained
and descnbed tn the following hst
(NerM,
Deocrlpllon, Key, S1Z.13 Beg 11 NW OS..00312 001, Reooo, 2011., $9,3,f149
Acree, T - Texeo, Cor ol 512 500' a BredleyJ&amp;/orWrlghl 08·0020000, Harper,

A IIIIIIIMinto

cao SUne, Secl11
·3• NW Cor I 5011.,
$,f0.31.
OI..QOI64 000, Pooler,
1 1 - E 1/or Lola G,
C/ 0
Crel g
end
- c e Sllne, Sec111
·31, SW Cor S ot Ad
b
1 2SA
75A ,
$227.11
cn.DIOSS 000, Pulmln,
Wlloon, II, C/0 Wilton
Putmon, S11 · 24, SW
oiNW 114&amp; NWoiNE
1/4 1 ot31A out ol
72.0U5
1 Ot31,
$111.t7
OI.QIOSI.OOO, Putmlll,
Wlloon Junior &amp;
Frenceo Lucille, Sect
24 T.. R11, NW Cor ol
75.01A AlonglWp Ad
3131.3011., ~ 11
Ol.o1127.000, Ritchie
Elton A &amp; Jorco Ann,
Sect. 31 NW ol NW 114
27.70A, sz.e II
ot.o08IIO 000, Rucker,
Gory Weyno &amp;lor
Towene J, Sect 30 W
Prl oi2A E Prl ol12
t/4 A Mid on N Line
1 5011., $519
ot..ooa02 000, Rucker,
Gory Warne &amp;lor
l
J Sect 24 N
owen•
pr1
oi15A• Sol W 112
2A, $7 43
Ot..ooa03000, Rucker,
Gory Wayne &amp;/or
Towana J, Sect II ·2•
In E 112 Mid Bet Ad 2A,
$7.43
Ot..ooa04000, Rucker,
Gary Weyne &amp;lor
Tawene J Sect 11 ·24
N ol S 20A W 112
1 SOA, $5 71.
Ot..ooa05 000, Rucker,
aery Weyne &amp;tor
Towona J, Sect 11-24
S ot Mid ot W 1/2
210A, 111 ,f2.
OI.Q1110 002,
OI.Q1415.001,
Speelman, Marion D
&amp;/or Cella A, Lot t13,
Wolf Subdlvlolon IOOA
L 1 12 •
1 00 •
v
~.
•••
72
51
'""" •
ot.o0119
S
r1 k000,
G
E ••
pu oc ' ary ..or
Debra L, Sect 38 .81A
of 1477A,
81A,
78 77•
OI.0002S OOO, Smith,
Herold E Jr, Sect 11 •
31 Mid on W Uno Bet.
Rd IIA, $11.t II
OI.Ot 278 OOO, Smith,

400'117110'WX400' N to Chlryl, Secl 2 Tl AIS Angell etel, Sect 11
...,._,
NW &amp;lOA, $105 01
W 112 ol SE 114 7.845A (640) 1/56A out oi14A
BEDFOROTWP
03.ool1t001, Hyaoll , outof25137A,7645A NE
Cor. 1 58A ,
IIEIGS LSD
au. . Leo, Free 33, $112 DO.
$529 94
01-110011.000,
T3N R12W, 29.50A Out OS.OOZSO 000,
08.Q0141 000,
llln1lold, Tim, Sect. 31 ol 510011. 21 SOA Ex Seundore, Jemu 08..00397 000, Meldeu
24 ....
NE
Pert 1 3IIA 132A 21 002A, Wee lor &amp;/or Kethr lllchoel &amp;lor Betty,
24 NIA, $13 32
$111.13
Jeen, C/0 Loon &amp; Sect. 11· 2 (150) 4A ol
01.00S10D07, lloggo, 03.Q04711103,
Tholme Woodrum, 27A E ol Ad .til.,
Lie A IJor Derle J, Johnaon, Cherlea F, Sect. 23 N ol NW 1/4 $7801
Sect 30 1':3 R13 W 1/2 FA 12 T 3 R 12 E 112 ol 2 7SA, $253.11.
08..00508 000, Pierce,
ofNW1/45110AOutol W 112 11118A, out ol OS.00251.000,
Shennan, Sect 5 (252)
2580A,SOOA,$13311 MilA
I U18A, Soundero, Jemu SW prlex 1111. W Ex
01oOCIOIII.002, Bunon, $412 M
Weller &amp;JorL Koth&amp;r .217A8.333A, $121 5I
lllrk 0, Sect 18 T3N 03..Q0110.000. lllrcum, Joen, C10
eon
08..00262 000) Rooae,
Rl3 s 112 ol tho NW lllcheol W
a/or Thelma Woodrum, Wllllem D &amp;/or Deloria
114 11.37A Out ol ConniiJ Sect18T.3 Sect 2.tS of SW 114 G Lott2 B rna Add
'
u
•
3114A1837A,$7311 N R 12W Part ol the .25•~. S5 -Aft
$1735
01.Q0231.000, Coger, sw 1/4 2A out al OS.Q0031 002,
08-00263 000, Reese,
Tortcle L, Sect 13-20 4138A, $1137
Sperlcor,
Curt, William D &amp;/or Deloria
Out o1 18 SOA 1 25A, 03-01322.11114, llercum, Froctlon 7 TIN R15W G, Lot 11 Burna Add,
$204.12
lllc- w&amp;/or Connie 5 OOA out ol 7t.83A, S33 45
01.00Z31.000, Coger, J, Secl18 T3N R12W SA, $597.37
08-00.36 000, RIHie,
Tlricla L, Secl 13 211. Out of ,f2 3911. 05-00223.000, Volger, Dele &amp;/or Lutz Pam,
(212)-20 Strtp N a 2.DOA,$1,08110
Roneld LH Etel C/0 Sect 8 (100-222) W
Strtp Thru Mid 125A, 03-00871 000, lloro, Ron Vogler, Secl :,NE End prl ol 42 85A on N
$19.21.
George, Lot FR 35 Corner 23A, $788 •
Une 1 SOA, $281 58
01.Q02M 000, Gruooer, "J:3N R 12W, 1 005A, 05.0022,f 000, Volger,
llllhlw Plul, Sect. 30 $504.87
Roneld LH Elll C/0
OLIVE TWP
3.108A out ol 4511., 03-01388 001, II oro, Ron Vogler, Secl I NE
EASTERN LSD
3501A,$556.29
George K, Freet 35 pert ex 21A NE OI.Q1211.D04,
OI..Q0351.001,
T3N R12W, SIIIA out 35 7511.,$17115.
Ahlolold, Rebecca,
Hullman, Gr.gory E, ol 10 83A 5 118A, OS..00102 000,
Sect 14 Freet 32 T4
Sect 31 T:3N R13W $II T3
Wllllamo, David D, R11 1 OOA out of
Trect I Plrcoi11133A 03-01111.000, Sorden, Sect. I SE pen ol NE 25 2511.1 OOA, $41.14
Out o1 9115A 1133A, Mork, Sect. 18 (640) on 1/,f 21 8IA, $913AO
01-00128.000, Arnott,
$30 7'S Side ol Rd 21A, OS..OO.a2.000, Zeigler, Thomeo A &amp; Carol A,
01.QOII7 000,
$21015
Timothy J &amp;/or Krletln Sect 30N Part ol SW
Llng\1111, J111111, Lot 03.01200 000, Sorden, C, Sect. 15-4 2 50A out 11• 30A, $MI.23
lOCI s pL ol1 50A NW llerk, Sect II (840) of 102.0411. 2 5011., OI.Q1319.000,
• S3
Ol.oo387 ooo, Blaooll,
Cor. ol SW 11• .50A, SE Corner 28 ~~lix
$2ZU1
SM 02.
NON TWP
Roger l/or Shorr!,
01..00111000, Lydic, 03.Q1201 000, Sorden,
EASTERN LSD
Sect. 2,f NE part 2A,
M rk Sect. 12 16 (640) 011-00013 000
G-. C &amp; /or lllry B, :. 'E P1 E • 30 • S
w•d L
$13 71
Sect.35W.perto1SE 1..,
x
~
Hamrick, en I
&amp; OI..Q0311.000,Bialell,
11' Ex lOA SA, $17.11 18A, $11.01
Glonn C, Secl 11·22 S Roger &amp;lor Shorr!,
01..QOIIO.OOO, L.aweon, 03.Q1202.000, Sorden, pert Ex. FHchle Wlleya Sect 24 SE ol NE 1/4
Mlrk F &amp;/or Amende, llerk, Sect. 12-15 (640) 11 3111.,$31 08
Ex Noland SA, $12.21
Lot Sect 11 on N llno Mid on N Line of SE OII.Q0064 000,
OI..Q0170 ooo, Bolton,
Hamrick, Wenda L a Dele Allen, Sect 17·18
01 •-~ 18 7.t 75A Ex. 1/4 45.70A, $11317.
.....,
18.011A
1.6565A, 03..Q0120 000,
Glenn C, Sect 11·22 8E pt 1 5011. N PI
$120.25
Whltlltch, Timothy II SE Corner Above 31.75A SE pt Ex SOA
01..Q0811 000, Llwoon, &amp;/or Bholle A, Sect 5 Dewllto Run Ex. 111. - • $U1
Timmy &amp;/or Peullne,
4
• ...,
Sect 1 SE pert ol NE
lllrk F &amp;/or Allllndl, (640) E Pari ol NE 11 8 85A, $18 48
OI..Q0111.000, Booton, 114 Ex Lola E lA,
Lot Secl·17 on S Llno Ex 30A E 2.379A, DII-OD055 000,
Dele Allen, Sect 35 T4 $2 50,
ol Sect 7513A Ex S77 11
Hamrick, Wende L &amp; 1111 Mid ol S pt ol SW 09_014,. 000 , Wello,
21.101A • 13.721A, 03..QOI31 000, Welker, Glenn C Secl 11-22 E 114 o130.565.A 5 019A, Devld l/or Shirley,
$1,037.27.
Bonnie S, Sect 27·28 of Long Bottom &amp; $34510.
Sect 24 N 01 Pom
01..Q0812.000, Llwoon (282) 1 lOA out of Huel Pert of 8A ISA, OI..Q0171.000, Booton, Rlldlvlllo Rd I.I8A,
lllrk F &amp;/or Amandl, 81 35A 1.10 A, $131.ot Sf 97
Dele Allen, Sect 17 $229 30
Lot Secl·13 ·17 W pr1 03 00021 000, Zuepen, 01-00001001, Powoll, TR In W End SE ol ORANGE TWP
•
of 7711. on S Llno of Wllllem, Todd &amp;/or Ellherla M, Soct 27 Rd. 2 77A, $17.21
EASTERN LOS
Sec. 50A, S7 01.
Darla, Lot 5 Beum'e T:3N RIIW I.OOA out of OI.Q0358 000,
- - - - - --01.Q0883 000, Llwoon, let Sub 42 33' pluo 2tz5A 1 0011 M ZA
Buchanan, Gregory E, 10.Q0440 000,
lllrk F &amp;/or Amancll, 10.52' x 183.26'x LEBANON TWP
sect 38 lA out of Barringer, Mitchell D
Lot Secl ·1711111 Lot W 11213'x205.34,
SOUTHERN LSD
11 21A out ol SE Cor &amp;/OR Drlgge Llaa R,
pr1 o18 112 ol SW 1/4 M17,91,
07..00417.000, Burna, o1 Sect lA, $443 04
lot ooct 15 NE PART
.lOA, $151
CHESTER TWP
Donne FKA Rill 01.Q06110 000,
OF 30 IC N pari ot S
01.ootl7000, Lyclc,
IIEIGS LSD
DonM, sect It Mid on Buahong Jan\ea R tOQ aq, 1 4741,
Owen C &amp;Jor Mery B, 04-00057 000, Lowlo, W line NW 114 20.87A &amp;lor Sharon B, Sect 19 $718 94
Sect. 35 12011. out ot David A, Sect 10 Free (to match deod) 9A out ol 88A part 10.00105.000, Burke,
&amp;lOA ex tA 580A, Michael, T, Sect27 S
158A120A,$45032.
.t T2N A 13W SE $2,241.72.
01.00188.000, Lydic, Corner 2A out ol 07..00100 000, Conger, $171 94
End Ex 17 23A,
Owen C &amp;lor llary B, 15 25AC 2A, $295 97
"cornellue,
C/0 OI..Q0100 000, Cochran 56 5811., Ex 55 48A,
Sect. 31 SE pen of 04-00015.000, Morrlo, Clorence Conger, Sect Jennifer Lynn, Sect 18 1 11 A, $1 &amp;7
B k
SW 1/4 4 8811., $414 50 Elolee, Soc! 12-16 22·11 ·21 SW Old Town T4 R 11 90 ol 9.85A 10•001 09 0 00 , ur e,
(lllp Aud'a Ole) 90A, Michael T, Lot Sect-18
01.00111.000, Lydic, (282) S Part of 9A CR 1 5011., $.t211
Owen C &amp;/or Mory B, Percei34A,$511
07.00104.000, Congo, $75.62.
IIISW1/41.50A,S158.
Sect. 35 E pori ol N 112 04.00088.000, Morrlo, Ruby, Secl2,fl 24A of 01·0'0275 000, Cole 10·001 06 000, Burke,
ol NW 114 .t2 37A, Eloloe, Sect 16E pert I 50A SW prl oliO 75A Williams Sect 38 out "'lchaol T, Lot Sect·24
ol Frac 4 81511., In W prl oUOA 1.25A, oi90118A 48A$9541 NE part 28 82A,
$11133
01.o0415.000, IIIIer, $421.44
II M
ot.o03511 000,
$5242.
Eugene &amp;/or Dorothy,
07•00714 001, Gray, Delocruz Domingo o 10·00986 000, Cole
Sect. 11 W 113 ol 81A
COLUMEllA TWP
Vlncont D, 10QA Lot &amp;/or Angela M, Sect William S, Royally
ol NW 114 20 33A,
ALEXANDER LSD
200 Eaot End 7 0095A 23 NW Cor olE pari of lnter11t Carl E Smllh
$72.01
05.00488.000, Adamo, outoi2725A,70095A SSAIA $59848
Petroleumlnc,$1421
01.Q0411 000, Meier, John R &amp;/or lllraha k, $129.18
01•004 ; 0 000 , Driggs, 10·00185 000, Colo,
Eugene &amp;Jor Dorothy, Soct 9·10 Fr 12 NE 07·013,f2.000, Groy, Lawrence L
&amp; William S &amp;/or Ellen
Sect. II NW Cor ol part ex 61 70A N lOA VIncent D, 70A Lot198 Ervonne, On E line N Evane Cole, lot (5)
SW 11' 2.A, $14108.
Out ol 73 47A, 10A, .173SA out ol 70A Lot 0 Recine Ad 36 A SSA N of E 1/4 Ex 1/4
01..Q022,fOOO,Moler,J $37.80
188.1738A,$114
'NRta12 SSA,$74449
17514
Eugene &amp; Dorothy J, 05.00832 001, Adomo, 07..00U2 000, Plckono, 09.004Sl OOO, Faoano, 10·00186 000, Cole,
Sect. 11 SW Corner o1 John R &amp;/or lllrehe k, Eber 1, Soct 22·28 Jooeph M, Sect 8 Noer Wllllem S &amp;/or Ellen
SW 114 21 50A, $78.26 Fr 4 Tl R 15 1231 A out (1 00-201) on N Line NW 114 w ol Ad 8A Evano Cole, lot sect 01-ooM3000,Mow,.y, ol 13726A 1231A, NRMidNotfld Ea. 54937
IBN ol NE 5550A,
Michell, Lot I NE $1317
Coei13.50A, $50.80
01.00454.000, Faoano, $300 9;!
Corner 8 65311. out ol 05.00362.003, Bruner 07..00M3 000 Plckono Jooeph M, Sect 8 NW 10·00187 000, Colo,
12.773A
8.12A, Land Company Inc • Eber I Se~l 22·2B Corner IBA, $131.85
William S &amp;/or Ellen
$20165
C/0 John &amp; Joan (100.201) Mid Ex SA S ot-oo•ss 000, Faoano, Evon• Colo, Lot Sect01..Q0815 000, Sinclair, Cha-r, Soct 7 T9 21A, Sit 01
Jooeph M, Sect IS prl 16 NW of NE 1/4 &amp;SA,
Lyle &amp;/or Joyce, Sect. R15 Parcel 3 11 271A 07..00544 000 Plckono ol NE l/2 near mid on $882 89
17 N of SW 114 N ol out ot 132 044A Eber 1 C/0 'Eber w' N line ol 31 34A 10.00378 000, Hendrix,
Nayu W of Rd lA, 11 271A, $10175.
Plckena, Sect. 22·28 15 87A ex 8.299A, Loroy &amp;/or Judy E.
S23!,~7; 000
Sect 17 R 12 1: • NE
05·00627 001, Dancy (100·201) Mid pi ol E $10.75
01 ......1
•
Joe &amp;/or Suoen, 112 Ex Coal SA, 09 •01484 006 Fl k 114 4.32BA ol 70A
cRemATWP
Fraction 25 n 111511170
.
•
n '4328A, $17276
EASTERN LSD
.30350A out
ol 07-00756000, Sellero Charles &amp;/or Sherrie, 10.00123000 Hendrix
03-01011000, Bauer, 168.DOA 43.0350A, Darrell Leo, oocl 22 ~:~• ~~~:t· ~~~·~~Leroy &amp;/orJ~dy E, Loi
R-ry Mlcheel &amp;/or $18211
(70.110) Ex lA NW Ex 94 36A 1 IIA 573 87 a (14) w ol Martlnevllle
Clrrll A, Sect 32 (640) 05-00022 000, Dunbar, All mlnoralo, $510 73
ot..ooait ooo' G II Ex Loll 120 x 430'
SE PI of NE 1/Ut.OOA Jun Claro &amp;/or VIvian, 07-00181 001, Sellero K I All
~~ 1 SOA, $1,079.51
Ex 9 3148A 31 61MA, Free 12 1:9 R15 SE R-n &amp;/or Trio, Sect
ev n, v n,
1o.oo435 000
$113 32
Cor 5 88A out ol 30 T2N R11W NE Cor 22 T4, Rlt NW CorE Lambert, Vl~let, C/0
1 2 SA, Thereea Ouoon Sect
03..QOOI6002, BHrhl 134711.5.8811.,$187.13. ol SW 1/4 100017A End Ex
Ryen N &amp;/or Deborah 05.00727 000, Dunbar, out ol 29.2511. Ex lA 1924 29
12 R12 T4 B94A
9..00750 OOO , Greene, $18117
A Sect 31 T3N R12W Jean·Ciaro &amp; VIvien, 9 0017A, $111.11
'
t.2s A out ol 41 442A Sect •lo R 12 T 2 RIS 07·01071 000, Swan Lindsay &amp;/or Waller, 10.00728 000 Nowell
SE Cor 5.0511. of Harry &amp; Ethel, C/0 Sect 9 T4 N RIIW S Prt Jeffrey D &amp;/Or Pa11111i
125A $17 33
000 Curtlo 57 711A 5.05A $793.59. Mervin G Swen, Sect ol NE 112 Near Mid N L, Lot Sect 6 89A Out
67A, • 223 38
Glry N · &amp; '1\manclo: 05.00119 oot', Hamon, SE pert M3A, $712.
Llnots
ol 2 83A out ol the
751
Sect. 4 12 R13 111A Randy A, Sect 23 T9 LE••RTTW
Ol-0°
OOO, Groene, NWpl 69A, $1,411 22
Out of NW Cor ol R13 113684A Out ol
•~
p
Lindsey a/or Walter, 10.00553 000, Rllchle,
9 (100-II&amp;&amp;) E EllonA &amp; Joyce Ann
tt-••A
SOUTHERN
LSD
Sect
465A
2
1
01 s 1' 2A, 12 A, lot sect a onE line oi
~!~~.~ 11
A,
~vo
!.
s
773
07,
'
OB·00421
ooo,
Barr,
Part
000
.............,
' - ••• 05-00018000
Howard David&amp;/
$6 581
NE
1/4
5 OOA
Jeck
0
Elll
Sect
15
'
,
or
09·01320 000, Heady, $1,422 96
•
(2l2) NE co'r 41 A SE Herdman, Timmie C Michelle Eileen, Sect 6 CNI h S L0I 24 4A
•
SE
•
A
Sect18N
pt
ol1-8
SOA
(223)
W
End
ol
35A
E
c
en
•
'
10.00211
000
Prl .X 1
2 25
ol 10 70A Ex Robl nson, N' ora Eta,
1
$50!4 • ~
'MldoiWt/•&amp;Eofrd prloI W l/2 ex.9.209A Out
170A 4A 54389
o3-Ci04&amp;4ooo DevoN 543A IX 1 Sl.t/1., 5711A,$751.t
Ot..ooa41
Sect16
T4
R12190A,
004
JICk o. Elll: Secl15 $10174
08-00.22 000, Barr, M C d
R ld $11198
w Prt oft t/2 A 01 sw 05.00383
Hudnall, Howard David &amp;/or c~.;~:· &amp;/or ~~~lnla RUTLAND TWP
cor ot 3I30A N Prl o1 Rogor &amp;/or Sharon, Michelle Eileen, Sect 6 R 1
528 A In SOA MEIGS LSD
Sect 35W pert ol SW E pert ol W 1121ot222 L: ~:lo &amp; 47:!A In 30A 11·00425 001 , Borloy,
70A 50A $1.50
03..oo'l5'000 DevoN 1/45.75A$143.75
S.MA$10403
lot121 T3, R11, 1 OOA, Donna Faye, llct 36
Jeck 0 Etet' 5ec1
06·00433000, Jorden, 08·00.t23 000, Birr, 15776
T&amp; R14 E pori OF NE
That pr1 o1 :itA N ond Din L &amp; Kim, Sect. 27 Howard, Devld &amp;/or 0
h II' I 811 out OF 6 001
000
of Jim Werner Hill Rd FR 32 Tl, R15 SW Cor Michelle EIIHn, Out ol ~~~~~~or c!"~r. ~: 1 lla, 5655.25
• '
ZOA $21t 32
5 173 out ol 171A SW prl ol 73 M W 112 S3l NW Cor s al Ad 11.00etl 000 , Barritt,
I IT3A, $105 58
Lol223 3101A $41 58 Ex Coel NE 114 NE 11• Kollh w &amp;/or Noncy
2
Hewlhorne 'limothy D 05.00432 000, Jorden, 01-00199.000, BaHan, 2 30A out ot Npt 2 30A, Morleno Soot 28
FA 31 n ,j12 ! End 0 j Don L, Sect 28 Town Donne J, Boot 11·31 $458.80
Joining Mill Lot on S
8 112 11431A out ol IN R11W 5 711 out ol ~00·218) Ell. 2A on 01.001172.000, Palmer, Ex u
Vein coal
21 3MA•
li':IIA 71A 5 711A, $16415
aolend 2A, $54.14.
Connie J, Sect28 NW IIIlA, $22013
S7•o 17 •
•
' 08.00271.002,
OB.o0414.00hl'' A ld Prt ol NE t/4 3310A, 11·001•1 ooo, Bluer,
NI2SOOO
Lomooter Angell 8 Blenkene p, rno
$478.45
Deboroh s
&amp;/or
Hewtho,.;., Timothy D, F&amp;r/oocrtlonR3o2bTelrt Rt~' 21J2o0r ~ora~'r· ~D01 ARift' 01·00173 ooo Pel mer Bhomblln Gary L Lot
Froo •t T4N R12W
'
'
'"a
I
Connlo J, SeCt 30
Sect... lA, $10ii4
1 OIA "ot 2tA 1 OIA t .•14A, out ol 31 •53 A .IIIZA OOOIA or 1 Prl ol NW 114 6 30A, 11·00150 000, Bluor,
SIZ1 29
' 1 4MA, 11,122 20.
Ioiii oil OOA,$73.10. S2Z.a..
Deborah S a/or
• '
OS..Q02711104,
01·0070,f 000, Davie, 01 •00882 000 , Pooler, Bhemblln Qory L, Sect.
03•00804.000, Hunt, Llmllltr, Robert A Morlan &amp;/or Candle, Mlcheel E &amp;/or Loll G, I 31A out ol BIA 31A,
Eerl Richerd &amp;/or &amp;/or Angole B, Fr 32 Lol17 (10D-2Q) 72' x C/O
Craig
and $2BUI
Glende Key, 8t2, T3, T8 Rll 347A out ol 128' Mid ol W End Rebecca Stine, SE Prl 11 -a 0151 000, Blazor,
1112 SW 1/,f lx. 1 lA, 28 343A 3,f7A, $42 31 20A, $35 32
ol 28 l/2 B E Prl ol 8 Deborah S &amp;/or
I • • 1 71A NE C
o•~eot 011
Lowe A•--2•• 000
"' o;l, •
or """'
•
• ...,...... ..,
•
112 Ex 1112 A, 810 A, Shamblin Gory L, Lot
Ex 7011. Ex 20A 1.21A, Amoe ! &amp;/or Lolo J, Gloecknor,
Devld 544 •17
Seat .. out ol 3215 A
$72 401
Sect 28 Tl R15 Bulin Erwin &amp;/or Bolly S.c1 09 •00883 000 , Pooler, Near s Sldo NE 114
03·00101 000, Hunt, Addition Loll 2114A, 35 (220) R 11 T 1 W Mlchlll E &amp;/or Lola G, lOA, 557 42
Eerl Richerd &amp; Glenda $31183.
pert olell E SeyN Llno C/0
Craig
end 11•00785 000, Bobb,
-

°

ss

lI

s

Sect

:

°

113-00252

ooo,

IIJ

s

Mil tio

SW

'

Wednesday, Nov.1 4, 2001

John W &amp; Wllllll K, 1HI11140000, 1W&gt;get, 11.01110000,
13..QOI64002, OUnkle,
Lot Sect -31 Mid anN BnlncM &amp;/or Mcknight WMoalof, Somue l, Devld Jr &amp;/or Penny,
Une of S t/2 33 17A, Deborah llec:l. I U s.ct 11 Mid on S line Sect 23 Tl R15 SW
$1. . 12
R 1.t NMr NE Cor ot ex 7.t2A 7UIA Ex Cor of UI&amp;IA TriiCI
11.Q0503.000.
NE 1/,f 13 .00A , 207111A 53 . 471A , 7A out ot 17 1441A
Co•t t · , R - , Lo1 $1,.403.25
$1,113 50.
7 0011.,$81.13•
11Ct. ..... E Pert ol NE 1HI1041.000, Rlftllll, 11.01112.000, w._, 13..00515 000, Ervin,
1/4 I AOA, 11.31.
Bn1ncM 1Jor Mcknight Richerd N etel, Sect Jeck L, Sect 20 E Pert
11..Q0251 002, ~. Deborlh, Sect 1 T.l , 101 of mid W ol Ad ex lola N ex ' ' Vein
Jem . .
W
l/or R1.t,NEComerollhe 311., ... 50
Colt
111 SOA ,
S'lp._ G, Soc- 3 NE 1141.2111., $11.51. 11.01113.000, W._, $3,21156
TIN, R14W Z.OOA out~z 000, Rlllfll, R - N. Ellll, Sect I 13..00511.000, Ervin,
ol 11 21111., 2 OOA,
&amp;far -.ugh! NE Corner 4A, $37.72. Jeck l, Secl20 lllddlo
121110.
reh, Sect. 2 Tl 11.Q1111000, Werner, EK 14 Vein Cool
11..QO,f64 001 , Cline, II 14 W 1t.OIA I I - N elll, llec:1 I .e 50A, $11100
llerk A, Sect I TIN NW Cor E1 Colli, oil, Pert o11.2SA WEnd ol 13·00517.000, Ervin,
R1'W 1 3ot8A out ol a. lA, $1.11
12 37A 51A, $1.30.
Jeck L Secl13 SW ol
2150A
1 . 341 A , 11..Q0811 000, Rlggo, 11.01117 000, Werner, !'!_W 1/C,f ot Rd ~x El4
1
$11081.
R - &amp; / o r -, Lol Richerd N Elll, Sect - n
oo 1
~
x
1HIII233 000,
Sec1·1' ·30 W - of 14 -1 SW pert ol NE .235A .565A, $1 .13
Dellnello, Laure A. Side Hill Ad SE prl SE 3011. S ol Ad II A, 13-00518 000,• Ervin,
C/0 Lluro A DeWnt, 1142.76A,S1,07250.
$241.
JeckLSeci18EoiNE
Lot Sect. ·27 noor mid 11.00Z41.000, Romine, 11.0124.t 000,
114 Ex 114 Vein Coal
ol W 112 pert ol 1111. Robert H, Sect. -14 T.1 Wlllllllll, Betty J, Sect 1DO HA, SSB7 56
8 SSA, $518 01
R.14 NE pt llld Fr Ex. 3 S pert of NE 1/,f Ex 13-00519 000, Ervin,
11.00725 000,
3.3511. In SE Cor. Coel 33 37A Ea. SA Jeck L Seci20E ol W
O.llevelle, Leuro, lot ,f3.15A, $230.35.
21.3711. Ex 511. 23 3711., IIA Fr 25, Tl, RIS, Ex
Sect 27 - r llld ot w 11.00Z50.000, Romine, $313.22
14 Vein Coal 50 13A,
112 Pert oi18A Ex 112 R-rl H, Sect. 20-21 11-00211003, Wloo, $1$1"
mlnerelo • 7 UA, T.l R 140111 oi130.32A -~ Section 2 TIN 13·00710.002, Ervin ,
$12.11.
llld on Rd. 2A, R14W,88513A Out ol Jeck L 130611. out of
11..00721000,
$111"
31.72A , 8 8583A, 13DDIA,$161.81
O.IIIYIIII, Llure, Lot 11.01230 000, Shane, S1M. 14 • OOO, Wolfe, ~~~0[,9 :~o3~ ~r~1nS
Sect 27 Neer llld ol E Krlellne Lee, Sect 33 11 00 22 •
'"
112 pert ole 75A Ex 112 SE Cor ol N Breier'• Monte Rer &amp; Shirley SE pert 2 3 43A out of
Ill
1
2 8811.
11
8 Lot5Fr4 T..N R· 76A2343A,SS2I 44
nero •
• 211.
1A, $20.
13·00505 004, Ervin,
$10.35.
11•01231
ooo, Shane, I~W.
• Clelr·M•'r E-~tee
·11..00727 ooo,
Krlollne Leo, Sect 33 1.0011., $1,131.18
Jeck L, Sec113 T6 RIS
O.llovelle, Llure, Lot SEprtoiiiANEprtot 11·00225.000, Wolle, lOA out ot 5515A
Sect 27 Neer Mid ox SE 114 .25A, $300 81.
Monte Rey a Shirley lOA, $17 70
112 mlnerele s.&amp;OA, 11 ..00t3I.OOO, Steome, B, Lot&amp; FA -4 T.. N, R· 13·00589 000, Ervin,
$2115.
Cherleo J, Sect. 11 T.8 1.tW Clelr-Mar Eototoo Jack L, St 1 ,f 93 53A
11.00231000,
R.t• pi ol N l/.t Ex. 11191A,$15078
out oi9453A WEnd
Dellavalle, Leure A, 20AEIOA,$111.08
RUTLANDVILLAGE
=:~'sz~•.:; Coal
_
C/0 Lluro A Dewitt, 11..oo210.000, Stume, IIEIGS LSD
OOO, Ervin
13 00590
Sect 27 Mid 28131A Cholcle Combe FHA I2·00248 000, Atklno, Jack
L, Sect
NW
14 Coal
Vein
Ex 111.eA 1' IIIII., Cholcll
Combe Lor8tll, Sect, 8 , T&amp;, Cor Ex
14
$56.71.
Bmton Sect 18 llld a
11.00Z32 000,
SE pert of N 112 R 14, SW cor lot 117 .e 23A, $12197
Dellavalle, LluraAC/0 7I.85A,$74I8L
.•ItA ol 15 18A 13·00511 ooo, Ervin,
Leure A. Dewitt, Lot ti.Q021t 000, Stumo, .24MA, $5010
Jack L, Sect 33 T8,
ooct. 27 Mlr Mid o1 E Chelclo Combe FNA 12..Q0231.000,
R16, 33 63A out of
112 pt of 1.25A 3 57A, Chelclo
Co mba llcFerlend, Minnie, M 83A Ex t4 Vein
St3.17 •
Bratton, Sect. 1l In W C/0 Peul Hoyeo, Sect Coei3383A, $107 00
11.01! 41 001, Flohor, pert ot SE 114
7A, 8 (640) NW ol Grlmoe 13.00592 000, Ervin ,
Devld &amp;/or Cheryl Ann, $lll.4l
lot 8 ol Rd •.t5A, Jock L Sl Fr 25 E PI
Fraction .t TIN fll,fW 11 .aa212.ooo, Sturno, $24 07.
oi173.85A Ex 41A ex
2.1113A out of 48 34A Cholcle Combe FHA 12.Q0328.000, Seorloo, 14 Vein Cool 2 09A,
Ch 1 1
c b 1 Kenneth Rey &amp;/or $19 37
2 - · · Stos.••
1
...,,., ooo - Franklin B •tt c Sect. 18
om
R, Lot 4, 13~v
~260 000, Garnes,
11.oo645
N 112 ~mmy
••
'
'
' 18 on,
$317.01.
Walter Ill, Sect 31 SA
Eethar
Etal,Sect
C/0 ol
E Side ol SE 11• 12....,.
-307 000, Seorle, out of 55 as•~ SE Cor
Richerdllee
Warner
20•.UA
•"".29
'
~.
Plul R, Sect. 8 (640) N al NE 8A, $257 00
_
9 Mutchler Add II 11•00121.000, Ttlylor, pt •7111. E of Rd 10 Cr.
OOO, Goble,
13 00210
AZII.,$122
LlnyL&amp;/or.lovce,Lol
11.•u•
11-D0841 000, Franklin, Sect ·14 -33 E o1 Cr
AD • - 33.
Llrry W &amp;/or Cheryl D,
Eother Moe Elel, C/0 Uno o1 SE 1/4 12.2,fll., 12..Q0308 000, Searle, Sect 15 -36 W at NW
Richerd We
5ec1 - 31
Plut R, Sect 8 (640) E 14 Ex 14 Vein Coal Ex
'""'·
.... ·
ol
Ad to Cr Hotel Lot 7.UA 4 28A, $85.76
I Mutchler Add 15 11 ' 00213•000 • Ttlylor, 11. •oA N pi .35A, 13-00210 001, Goble,
42A, $112.29.
Llny L &amp;/or Jorce A, •••
11.01194.000, Franklin, Lot Sect. ·14 -33 SW pt .....,.S..
Llrry W &amp;/or Cheryl D,
Eltho 1111 Et1 1 C/0 ol8 20A 1 SW 114 1
Sect 31 T7N R15W
'
r
n
7.84A out ot 11 12A:
Richerd Wamor, Secll Cr. 5011., $111
No. Dele• .50A, $7.41. 11·00214.000, Taylor, SALEM TWP· MEIGS 7.64A, $2.S 01 ,
13.00405 000,
11 ..oo707 OOI, Hou-, Lony L &amp;/or Joyce A, LSD
Frenk w &amp;/or Terril L, Lot Sect. -33 In SE 114 13•00131 003, Bill, Goodman, Billy J a
Sect 18 TIN R14W of N of Cr. 4 0411., Daniel W &amp;/or Martha Antonio M, Sect 25,
~,74211. out ot ~ IIOA $70.43.
A, Frecllon 33 T8 R15 1:8, R 15 NW Cor ol
B.742A, $119 74
11·00215.000, Taylor, .SUA out ol 30.45A NE 1/4 3 061A ol 40A
tl.oolll 000, Howard, Llny L &amp;/or Joyce A., SMA, $312 71.
3.DI1A, $118 57.
Jerome K, Sect a T.8 Lotllec:l -1"43 N PI 13..00311 D03, Bruner t~OOO,
R.I. SE 1/,f o1 the SW oil ZA In BE t/.t N of Lind Company Inc , Goodman, Billy J &amp;
cor" 5311. alBA 4 53A, cr. 311A, $56 42.
Diane llector, oect 18 Antonia M, Sect 25,
11·00130.0110, Ttlylor, T7 Rll 17.183A out ol T.BN, R 15W, 2 SSA
$!31 17
11..Q0450 000 Holman, Llrry L &amp;/or Joyce A, 31.MSA
17 .113A, out of 30 678A 2 SSA,
Roser L &amp;/or' Selly lot Lot Sect -33 Mid o1 SE $111.12.
$3417
•
Sect I Fr.• T..N·, R• 1/4 50.3511.,$1,22512: 13-00217 000,
13-oo8118 000, Harmon,
14w Clolrmar Ealatea 11·00131.000, Taylor, Coahron, Dale a/or Candy Jo, &lt;Lot 25
1182A,S510TI.
Llny L &amp;/or .Ioyce A, . flomone, Sect u S , Longetreth
Add,
lt..OOOtO.OOO, Hyooll, Lot Sect -33 Near llld Port ol Ex,. Vein Coal $232.32
,
Jemoa F &amp;/or Hyaoll ol NE 114 2.7511., E of Rd. 37.58A, 13-oo&amp;ISOOO, Harmon,
Jamee
Gerald $1031
$17.03.
Candy Jo, Lot 24
Emeroon, lot 14•7 N 11-00132 000, Taylor, 13..Q0151.000, Denney, Longatreth Add s 1/2,
PL oi11.22A In E pert Llrry L &amp;/or Joyce A, Wolter L C/0 Kenneth $1113
01 NW 114 Ex. Coal Lot Sect -33 Known a1 Kopharl, Beet • 1011. 13·00888 000, Harold
4.5211., $42 87
Buckhorn School Lot. out oi104A NE pert ot Leo Ann St 13 NE prl
11•00011.000, Hyeell, 75A, $5 31
104A .10A,II44
o1 SE 1/4 Ex 5 30A Ex
Jameo F &amp;/or Hyeoll
•• Vein Coal 5099A,
J 1 m 11
Q 1 reid
11111 81
Emoraon, Sect 7 N
13-00669,000, Harold
Part olll-112 A In Mid
Lee Ann, Sect 7 NW
of w Line of NW 1/4
114 ol SW 114 Ex 14
5.13A, $207 511.
Vein
Coal 40A,
11·00500 000, Hyooll,
$342.62.
Jamoo F &amp;/or Hyllll
13·00283 000, Hart
Jamal
Gerald
DaleL&amp;/orSolly,Sect
Emeraon, Lot Sect. •
/.
8 (840) NE ol sw 114
·;
Ex 14 Vein Coal
14•7 1n NE P1 o1 Sec. a
NW PI of Sec 1 4 50A,
'I
72 75A, $51.58
13-00674l008 , Rile
S3Z9.eo
William
E &amp;/or
11 •00782002 , Klmll,
Todd M &amp;/or Roclndl
Christine G, Sect 11
K, Section 4 Tl Rt•
T8, R151ot•t4, s 835A
out of 27 1687 A
1 362A out 01 23 T:3A
t362A,$1987.
5.835A,$88389
11.ool59 000,
13-00616 000,
Luckadoo, fronceo E
Seymour, Russell J
&amp;/or Carl Clive, Lot
&amp;/or Cynthia K, Sect 5
Sect ·1 W 112 oi1A NE
SW Ex 1 IIOA W Ex 114
1/4 of Sella Line 5111.,
Voln Coal Ex 6 lOA
$18 01
.e 85A, $587 20
11·01248 000, Mertln,
13-oo817 000,
Chrlellno, Lol 411
Seymour, Russell J
Hutchlneon
&amp;Jar Cynthia K, Sects
Subdlvlolon &amp;4 84' x
on S line Bet Cr &amp; RR
11000' $177T3
Ex 114 Vain Coal lA ,
11.001JOOOO M Cuno
$1126
VIcky, C/0' S~anloy
13·00181 010, Walker,
Starcher, Lot sect -a
Debra A, s 112 ol sw
on E End AdJoining
1/4 Sect25 TIN RISW
Hoppy Hollow Rd
5 OOA out ol 12 OOA
62A $188 08
5 OOA, $384 22
11.00188001, Mitchell,
13-00565 001 Welch,
Edward L Fr 24 TIN
Tony L &amp;/or Gwenne,
R14W SW C 1 3137A
C/0 Gwenne Welch
Out ol 6 OO~r1 3t37A,
Sect 14 R1 TIN R15W
$181 54
3678A out ol 15 54A
1t-00Mo002
3678A, $182 35
McKinney, Donn Ia E,
13·00340 001, Wells
Frectlon 1 T&amp;N R l,fW
Bridgett s, Sect 25 T8
6
I.OOA Out ot 15 335A
\UI ~
lil:;ll
R15 E 1/2 of tho NW
I.OOA, $150 62
1/4 of NW 114 2 31A
11.00SIOOOO
out of 20SOA 231A,
Meadow"• kevin R
St5513
&amp;I D
' M Sell
~~
13-00240000, Wloe,
T 6orR1o4nnNaE o' I Jcooe
William Junior &amp;/or
Gordner Eat 1A ol
Stephanie Lynn, Sect
' 1
I
Lot 110
• $7278
1.7251K,
13 Jolnng
11.01593.000,
,
25A,$363
Meodowo, Richerd
13-00241000, Wise
&amp;/or Linde, C/O Llndl
a...UU~aH
William Junior &amp;/or
Hloslng, Slct 3 NE Cor
';:J:lJ
U C \UI
"-:;II
Stephanie Lynn Sect
E pari ol NE 114 Coal
13 NE 01110 Danville,
only 3000A,$2747
~entt'nel
IIA,$1267
11-01594000,
13-00242.000, Wloe,
Meadowo, Richerd
Wllllem Junior &amp;/or
&amp;/or Linda C/0 ~ln d:
Stephanie Lynn Lol s
Hlooong, Sect
Rl 325, $34123
Corner Coal only
13·002'3 000, Wloe,
7 SOA, $117
Wllllem Junior &amp;/or
11·00752 000, Morrie,
Stephanie Lynn, Lot 6
Roland E &amp;/or Shirley
22.5x132 N pt, $7 22
Ann, lot Soot .. NE prl
~j~:~·SJ~~:~r ~::;
57
42
42
o140 AIA, S
•
stophanlo Lynn, Pt of
, &amp;
t1.00117.001, Powe 11 ,
Lot
, x
110 11
105
Terri, Sect 1, T8, R14,
14.1' x 185' o~t ol82 5
Mid ol S 112 lA out ol
•
1 1115 ' 12333
85 25A 1 OOA, $140 52.
'
'
11.01131 000,
SALISBURY
TWP·
Remoburg, Richerd A
,
MEIGS LSQ
&amp;/or Carol J, Stct248
14·01214 001, Adamo,
Part of w 112 503A,
JonnloLFKAJonnleL
$1329
Ollen, C/0 Jim
11·01039 000, Rongol,
Ceruthoro, Soot 20 T2
B d 1 •• M0 Knl~ht
R13, 25A out of
ron .,or
113 74A, 2&amp;A~, $3112
Deborah, Soct 2 I
•
R 14 w Sldl o111 OIA
1•·01532 001, Adamo
NW Cor Ex Coel, oil,
Jennie L FKA Jennie L
Gao lA, $151
Continued On Pogo B3

80

u.,

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°

Th ursday
Fn•aay '
Sunday

11r'b "mat'{p
a..' ;,.Utt'nel

11r't'm&amp;t'i

5

classl"fl"eds

Call 992•2155

lio Place
'(!QU rs f

Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 8 3
1132.11
17-000,
koetlvel, Jen M &amp;/or
T - Lynn, Lot Sect
•23 (148) N pori of NE
11.t N of lid IIA ,
1142 01 .
17.QOII1 000,
Koollvel, Jln Michael
&amp; Talllllfl Lynn, llec:1
17 (I~) NW Cor
M.I1A, ~ 4t.
17.00 • 000,
kalllvel, Jln IIIDIIMI
&amp; r-re Lynn, loci
17 (II) W ol lid N! ol
Sl! 114 IIIII ol IW 114
11.21A,$77.32
17-GOOI7 000•
Koatt¥111, Jon D a ...n
II, Sec 17 UN II UW
NW 114 Olt71A al
1!.34A 0517111. SZ.IO
17-DOM3 002, IIIIard,
Rermond, L Sect 12
T7111U3021A,outot
t2.0IA
Z3.028A ,

132107

17..00543 003, IIIIard,
Raymond L, Sect 12
T7, R14 • 17811. out of
4 . 878A,
11.01211.
$1150
17..00&amp;44 OOO, IIIIard,
Raymond L Sec 125 7
R 14 NE Cor ••35A of
17 1 7
• A ! 31A. *1 ~.eo

1 7 00 5• 5.000' .., 111 ...

llory K C/0 Robert C
Miller, Sec 30 21.383A
ol 3• •05A 21 383A,
$1•1.01
17-00845 001, Price ,
Albert H &amp;/or Phllllpo
Eugene Jr, E prl ol Lot
12 55'xl32' out allot
12, S15.23
17·00582 001, Qulvoy,
Jooeph c Jr, C/0 Joo
Qulvoy, Sect 9-10 Fr
12 T7 RU N al Rd
&amp;lOA out ol 34 41A
6 704A New aurvey,

18..00723 000, llolko,
ROOIA, Lol1,$17.t7.
11..0072' 000, Slelko,
ROll, A. Lot 2, $17.21
1H1211 000, StoblrL
Donno, Sect I S pt s
o1 fld Ex Coel 2 IT3A
out of 25 17A 2 873A,
111.21,.
!I.Q0421 001, Wllllon,
Cherloe D Jr 1/or
Ponti Wll- L, 1DOA
Lot 212 T2 1112
1.D701A out of 2.211311.
1 O?O!A. W.!!.
RACINI VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LID
ti..001"&amp;.000, Amott,
Tllomee A &amp;/or Carol
A Sect 11 (640) s ol6
WoN 12, E of Porn Rd
.21A IIIO 17
11-00145 000 Amott,
Thomao A &amp;J~r Carol
A, IICL 18 (640) W of
WoiiRun ttA, $110
11..Q0159 000, S.tlloff,
Berblnl,lt , $2135
II..Q0111 000 Bettloff
lorbere i 7 ,. 7 '
$53 11 '
•
11o00439 002 , Cleek,
Vlrglnlo L, Sect16 T:2N
R12W B833A out of
3 3II3A
613 3 A
37 .a
t..OOIIo ooo, Dettloff,
Bll'lllrl, 62, 1348 94
11-00051 000, Eddy,
lllrvln N Jr &amp;/or Edna
G Sect 18 (140} s of S
Wolle e ol Pom Rd
.01A, S3 83
19· 00460 000 , Hill
John R a Bobble J
Sect 16 (640) 119' x

se

1 u • 13 w ot lot •o
Wo11Add .3411ASurvey, $M115
11-00105 000, Jorden,
Glry, 10, $5185
11·00035 000, Lone,
Tommy Nolen Sr &amp;/or
BlrbiN Elllrl, Secl 16
(271-1 00) lot 150 x 75'
SE c - r 1.4tA NW
of W .2IA, 1114 32
11..Q0174 0110,
t.evender, Dennlo II
&amp;/Of....,.,_ J, Sect
11 (148) Mid 13 E of
Yo- 17A, $427 50
!t-oool• 0011,
Lernalter, C.rtte D. 23
11/2, S37 17
11·00151 000, Seleor,
Mark A, Sect. 11 II' x
110' oH W 112 3611.,
$15.21
11-000H 000, Thllll,
Betty L, 23 H Add,
$1150
11..Q0411 000, Welker,
Ricky Allen, 11 ttl,
112 73
11·00149 000, Young,
John &amp; Loanna, Sect
16 (8~) W Ex H W ol
Wolf Run &amp; E of RR
1 05A, $577 94
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
SOUTHERN LSD
20·00585 000, Borkar,
Jameo &amp; Debora Lot
291 e x w s o· teA,
$877 65
20 001 51 000, Dav is ,
William D J r, Lot 2
Hlghlawn Subdivision,

$423 02
20 001 52 000, Devil,
William D Jr lot 3
Hlghla wn Subdivision,
$55 88
Con11nued on 84

saz2•
17-00582 000, Qulvoy,

Jooeph C Jr Elol, Sect
•to (212) All lend N ol
Rd Ex 8 lOA 21 882A
New Survey, ~5 45
17..00152 001, Seorteo,
Menln L &amp;Jor Tine F, Fr
1 T7 RU 1 ISlA out of
20 81A 1 lilA, $13 M
17.00703.000, Shultz,
Rlchord J
•/or
Cleudla, Sect. 29 (MD)
Mid N ol s 112 out of
1313A30A, $2,115 31
17..00131 000,
Wlllllllll, David D, Lot
ooat •31 NW prl NW
1/,f 30 85A
Ex.
21 3071A, I 3U4A,
$7445
17.001~

000,

Wlllllma, David D, Lot
oect31 S prl of32.47A
w prt ol Sec. 18 15A,
$50 ..
17·00152.000, WIH,
Ken &amp;//or Kimberly,
Lo1 eect 14 15 W of
Mid 20 IIA Ex 1 ISlA
11.1:1-411., 1112...
17-0ot11 000, Wsnt,
lllltrOd C Jr &amp;/or
P, Sl 30 .12A ol33 75
W Slda of NW 1/,f &amp;
NW pt of IW 1/4 12A,
$317.01
IUTTONTWP
SOUTHERN LSD
18.00004 005, Adamo,
llelenle, 180A Lot
1201 T2N R12W
.t 324.tA
out
ol
1,f 313111.
4 3244A,
181 ...
11-oo403 000, Amott,
Thomea. A &amp;/or Coral
A, $10111 Prl ot340A
E ol Wolf Run 2 13A,
$15.23
18·01401 000, Bekor,
llergerot S l While
Dorothy s, Stet 22
C0111117A,$41.11
11..Q0131.000,
ISurkhllmer, Ronnie E
a/or Candy K, Lot so
30' x •o• to Church,
$373.57.
11.Q0131 000,
Bvrkhemor, Ronnie E
&amp;/or Candy K, Lot 51
SubAal,$175
11.oo137.000,

Burkharnar, Ronnl• E
&amp;/or Cindy K, Lot 57
SubB,II81
18.00138 000,
Burkhamer, Ronnie E
l/or Con~y K Lot 53
Sub B,$611
111-00131000,
Burkhamer, Ronnie E
&amp;/or Condy K, Lot 301
St Paul Evangelical
Church Property,
$688
18.01157 001 ,
Cunningham, Robert
R &amp;/or P•m•l• K, Sect
7 T3 R12 2 004A out ol
8400A
2 004A,
$1,02100
18·00148 003, Davia
William D Jr, 100A Lot
283 5 5429A out ol
81 838A, 5 5429A,
$7178
18·00949 004, Davlo
William D Jr, 100 Acre
Lot 283 1 6345A out ol
74 8951A 1 6345A,
$23 46
18·00950 003 , Davia,
William D'Jr, tOOA Lot
284 2 355a out of
69 37A 2 355A, $341 5
18 00572 000, Hawley,
Thomas E &amp;/or Sandi
J, Soc 2 NE PI of
7904A SE PI S of Rd
Ex Iota 3 16A, $935 63
18·00808 001, Jac ks
Charloo V &amp;/or
Vanoua K, Secl 6 T2
R12 160A lot 111971A
out ol8 &amp;lA, $14 41
18·00513 000, Klaln,
Larry E, Lot 98 Sub A,
$731
18.01150 001, Prollltl,
Michael L, Lot 4 Soct
18 T2 Rt2 718A out of
2 DOll. 716A, $352 91
16.00571.000,
Rinehart, Michael E
&amp;Jar Sharon S, Sect 17

In SE Cor N ol Rd
8 15A, $505 87
18..Q0813004,
Rllchhart, Brian C ,
IOOA lot218 T2 1112 N
end of Ad 838A out ot
427A 831A, $58 ~

needeverv

dav.

rib a

call:

992-2155

�Weclnnd8y, Nov. 14, 2001
VAI'ti&amp;

4-WJ&gt;s

: Artoid II •C.;. . . .It

CLASSIPIED

• LQIM........,In lltillltltl

Homo
DaiMIY
fiiR
Cota&lt; Coto1og
·
CIITodo)'I·IOII-711-1)1511
www.np.Mtln.com
·~
3
•
_.._ ~ color
""" ..- ·-·
'
ii&lt;O
- - (740)887Coot
StOll- tai&lt;a-1125.

We Cover
. Meigs, Gallia,

1&lt;.-,.-

And Mason

Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

~ tar $25 fOt
mil!Od oltuckload. plno litowood lor 115 a ltuckload, t9e6 Chevy Nova II SS
ctJtcOUnt for t8f1kn &amp; veter· Coupe. New Crate MotOf:
. ano, (740)1MV-tl805.
350, Au10 an floor, about
• FireWOOd for Solo. $150 1181 300 mllol. 350 turbo tans.
' lruck Lllod. (740)«1-9478 A1ot of Now Parta. $7600.
•
(304)895-3078
GarnobOY
- Nlnlonda
with I
..
_ $100.
14 tiel CJ7 Jeep
F&gt;
wllh . 1 - · · S125. bt&lt;lillll body, :io4~.
(740)2-4~5887
ssooo oao, · (740)«1Hardy Mumt $300 _ , 4 404t.
for $10. 0pon sei.Hpm. &amp; t9e9 Chryoler ltBiron 2
· ovoningl. DtwfU* ~ Door, Tumo NIOCio N.w
:ML Alto. (304)8t5- Enc;na, S500. Call • 3740~::,., . _ , or &amp;-9pm. (740)388·8841
(304,.......11189 Grond Marqull !.Dad~--• Horbdfo Die- od Excollonl ~lion
totbUIOf, CtH For Pnoducl Or 74:101 mila. S25DD OBd
Opportunity. (740)«1-1982 (740)2-411-11408
JET
11191lBulckS rtc
AERATibN MOToRS
mllto. st
~;,~
Repolrod, Now &amp; Rabulft In 7878
· Sloclc. Call Ron Evono, I·
: 800-53'7·0628.
1991 Plymouth 1/Qyagor, u:
odlllon, VO"i =COndition,
: KlndiiiWOod WOod a coal ~ 1taoo Call
·
· stove, St25. (740)247·290 1
1894 Ford Eocon w1gon

l\.egiilter
(304) 675-1333

j

,gg7 Jeep Grand Chorokeo

l.lredo 4x4. new tires, pw,

pi, ktylen enlry, red,
$1t,igg OBO, (740)7427200
:-:
=:-:::-:--:::::.,---,:.,-19911 Red ZR2 510 4•4
" •
~· 000 mlln. Fully ·Autorooorvlng
unto
(7:h~2~· co, Alf. grontora, HI Mira ond
ooolgno forever, lhe
l'daroltc¥
following· pot1lon of
aD
tho obovo dtoocrlbod
PfCII*IY, to wit:
1979 Hartly Davidson FlH Slluolld In lho Vllllfll
Drnoer. all original, 1!00 of Middleport, County
miiH an Mwl)' flbuH&lt;I mo- of Mtllgo ond Slate ol
lor, $9600, 740'992-2870, Ohio, ond being In
740-VV2-6520.
Section 28, Town 1
Hondo
Cx600
CusNorth, Ronge 13 WMI
18711
tom. 10,000 miles. Drive of
lh,•
Ohl.o
ohoft, hllildora, Excollont Compony I Purchooo
Condlllan. Noods • rogullto ond being tho Well
rociUior lo run. $450. 51.24-ofLo1212of
(740)258-1283
tho
V.B, Horton
Honda
Goldwlt111
"""
Addition
to tho Vllllfll
1993
Laokl like Now. S9,ooO ol Middleport ond
(304)578-3259
bolng doacrlbod 11
lollowo:
Beginning ot
1
89,900 mllao. Good Cond~ S~~=~~-~Bayou, an Iron pin HI II tho
Uon. $3200. (740)«8-2125
·
Northwoot corner of
(Gayo), (740)4411-2782 (ovo- 19911 Honda TRX 450ES, oald Lol 282, Hid Iron
ningo)
$4,250. 1887 Honda TAX pin bolng on tho Soulh
1894 Grand Pnx, whlto ;~ St~~- ~ 998
rlghl of woy line of
w.nlnted wlndowo &amp; co (741ll2.:2~'kno,
, . Gonoral Hortlnger
piOyor, $4,000, (740)992·
Porkwoy ond on the
2209,740-8112-2476.
2000 Ha~oy oavllon 1200 Eolt line 01 1 20 fool
1998 Grand- Am 2 Door v- cuotom, t,ooo miln. orctraa, wldo olloy; thence
8, Auto, $.2895. 1994 ca~a- Stt,600. &lt;7401385-8375 al- South 88 dlfiJIII 10'
llor, 2 cloOr, au10, $2495. 1" 7P'"·
00" Eaot, 51.24 fool
1997 lumlno, laaded, 2000 modal Harley David· along lhl South right
$4295 . 1993 Cavalier, 4 son Hartlage soft 1a11, 9500 of way line ol oold
door, S2t95.
COOK MO. 2870,
mlln, 740-992-6520.
· $15,000, 740-992· Genorel
·TORI.
(740)«8-0100
Porkwly to Hortlngor
on Iron pin

r•

I

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Ads

Display

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

411 Display: 12 Noon 2

Business oars Prior To
Publication

Sund1y Display: 1:00
Svnd•~•

Thursday for

• Start Your Adt With A Keyword • Include complete

r•••••••-'1
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. , rwwonl let lw roiUm of
IIIOion pig (ya"' .......,.),
&amp;flborgluo pig
~ 3' tall &amp; ~
IDng, IIIOion out of YMf In
hM • kJI: of ..,U.

~=-~

_ . value

biiDnG to

fa.

..,., who reoenltv paMd
IIWIIII)', If you hfil ·&amp;ny lnfor·
rnldon
p6eUI
call
(1.0)882-5023 or 74Q..ot23324.
.

Roommate w.ntod 10 lho,.
- - · Nloo holpo ~ In-

plouo Send ohort
blo ond ,.,.,.,.,.., •moll

1 avo- 10 PO

-

llo• 502, Choohl,., OH

4M2()

_;;;;::;;._ _ _ _ _ _
SWF - . Sugar Daddy
35+ llr1d photo and lnformatiOn to P08 103, Langs·
villi, 0H 45741 .
.

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GROWINCIIUSINIU

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A1 PI/FI Stay 0 tjamo Ot&gt;MI'IT; 111111 .
portunltyl Average 81000.
OfiiiiCIItOIITION
teoOO/mo. PIP Sdlodulo, Wo how plllotlmt pollEllmlnall Commuting &amp; lion- at o u r - ol·
Dlyooro. Paid Vlaallon, Bo- fico In _ . , . pool......rlralnlng Programo. lion roqulrM ......., ond
Elllbl!thod lnl'l ~- math oklllo, must ,..,
t
I
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n
. working with people, bt
www.Gol.lt2Suoceu.oom ab1e1 to OIQ&amp;n!a your work
W.7M-5430.
and be Mllable for IChedulng bltwMn the houtl or
Areldla Nurllng c.nter 8:0Cllm lind 5:00pm. ManIa now accepting apollcll· day through Frldly. ~or IntloN for Ful ttme AN'i and teMew coneldnelon lind
LP~• for Midnight lhffl and yout I'HIJmt and CQYir Itt·
STNA'I aft.,_, pooillonl, tor or Allonllon of Dllnt Hll,
Fulloncll'on ~me. We offer Qllo Valley Publlohlnll Co.,
oxcallonl bonofllo lhol In- 825 Thl"' AW.. OliflpOIIt.
elude Health lnouronoe, Qllo 45831.
40,K, lifo lnouiii/ICI, ...,.
po1111vo ,..~ onc1 oj&gt;poitu- Plouont V.lloy Hoopilol 1o
nllloo lor idvoncornont. 11 ou-IICOipdngyou ,,.. • teen\ player who lor 1 rufl·tlme 9pHch Pathonjoyo .........., wilh tho old- Clloglst. Mutt 1 doarty appty in penon be- grea from an approved
twMn -. .. or call t&lt;athrytl IChool for epe:.M:h language
Somorvlllo o·o N
palhologlol ~In tho
Atcadla Nur.tnQ Center Btate Df WV. Contact Debra
. EUI Mil" Strwt
LDng at Pleasant Valley
· 1Coolvlle Oh.
' Holpltal, (304)675-4340,
1~7-3158
ext. 1381, MIEOE
EOE
'

Alllnllonl
• .Eam 2nd. Income wllhout
2nd Job up to
S2&amp;.·S15.1hr.
PI·Ft.
DilniY Vacation, 7 doyo, B
1-100-21&amp;-7543
..,..ORamoda.Goodfor WWW.Mol:'ttr-DI'IIn'tl.com
1 year. Sacr~lce $189.00
(814)888-2730
Dionoy \localion
do..
AVONI All Arolll To lluy 01'
~ O llomoda.7oac:.if.r8 Stll. Shlo11Y Spoart. 304·
I yoor. ·Sacrifice $189.00 675-1-ln.
(114)8111-2730
CllloN .._full Umt,

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Colt T~ 740 446 4367.
I
214-0452,
R:f!0005.1274B.

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~

~Tn•JJ~AJ~.£.

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CALL (401)180-7410
24110UR REIPONBE

1wo

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loa"':

I

NIIIIHI HILPI
wort1: from hOme.

Mall· order/ E· COi-nmetc.
$522+/ week PT.
S1000. .14000t' Wttk FT
www.lncrwdlbf..-.warda.oom
(800)418-8501
.

Plouonl V.lloy Hoopltol lo
cu"ontly ecaepllng._moo
lor a !ul-timo Occupational

or formal edi.ICI11on and

r

(304)755-7191

81.51NFH!
B

I

AND IJilDINGS

Office building In Minersville, 600 sq. n., aJc, cov·
ered parking, ceiling 'tan,
$275/mo .. 614-87&amp;-1661 .

j

~

LoTs &amp;

ACRF.AGE

dogrM or equiYilonl 1n occupallonal ihlnllll' from an
ICCrodllad lnatftullon. Cowrant wv tlconoe. Contact
Debra Long 11 Aeau.nt VIIley ~141. (30of}816-4340,
txt 1381 . ANEOe.

VITVIli\JRU

:.:;ua::::.ru~'"::
. ~ 8a1o- Fltdoy, Nov. -atOhlo\lllloyPi.lb- RNIILPNa-PRNoyouclooolo

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HOM&amp;Ii

!UK SALE

Ml~dleport, Opportuniliao.
.
Large 2 BR Apt. Very N1ce.

I

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8 30

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ftAodssuDffmaoblr.• loans- "any 2 bedroom,
M
S325 per month plus deposlypas available. Call for de- II, (740)ll92-tlt 75.
talls.(740)«6-3583.
2 BRHou&amp;e,SoulhonStRI
Big 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2 7. Ref. Required . Call
balh,savo$5,155.~ellvered 17401441-1 917
&amp; 181 up on your l011ncludlng skirting &amp; fiberglass 2 BA, 1 112 ~th on 112
steps, Coin Mobile HomGs, acre of Property. $3501
U.S. 50 East, Athens, Oh, . month. Immediate Availabili740·592·1972.
ty. (614)471·4265. Near
Bl.d&lt;oye Hills Career Can·
End of lhe model year sate! ter.
All 2001 muSI go 10 make
room tor 2002. sPecial low 3 BR house In Middleport.
financing program 8't'8llable. Call (740)446·0855 ba·
Only at Fteetwood Homes tween Bam and 4pm.
of Proctorvlllo. Toll Froa_1· 5 rooms and lar e slora
888-565..0167
New bathroom. g Upgrad~
Final Days, Nationwkle In- carpet through- o t 53501
u· .
ventory
Reduction! month. Deposit Required.
(304)738-3409
(703)451-2591
Limited Or No Credit? Go~ Buy homes from $199/mo.,
emment Bank Finance Only Foreclosures, 4% down, 30
At Oakwood In Barboura- years at 8.5% APR. For list·
vlll8', WV 304-736-3409.
lngs 1·800·319·3323 ext.
1709.
Newr Uved In Doublewide?
Only $500. Delivers 10 your House For Rent 2br. $275.
lot
Low
Payments . $200
Deposit .
Call
(304)6lS·8872
1.800-691 _8177

iiiijp;;;:=:=:=:;:;;::;::::;

.

j

I

I

"VQQ"

I

on 10 acms, 15 min. kltcllen, LR, $500/mo. Ref-

plus deposll &amp; ummes, Tu: (740)«6-3644
R 1 740 992 2886
ner ealy · ·
·
.Beautiful River View Ideal
~PA~
For 1 Or 2 People, Releren- L,~-------.,1
ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fostor Trailer Park, 740-441- Nice lots, quiet country set0181 .
ling, wlll accommodate
.
16M:80, $100 per month, call
Cora M1U Road. 4844 Near Ed at COuntry Homes 740Cora, 2 BR Mobile. 14x70, 2 992·2167
Porches, Large Yard, $350.
·
\IIIH II\\PI'-11
Ref. Req. (614l878-5532
.
jj;;:=~====;;;;
AP.FORI\R'l'MRENrENTS
I.L'o
HOUSEHOUJ

10.5 Acres wflh 1999 FleetINOTICII ,
wood Modular Homo Noor
1.... 'I to 5, lop Df Choolor ·llllllnO Co., 825 Third Avo., tht doyo you wllh ta .-'&lt;. OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- GalllpoNa. Excollonl Condl·
Hll3nl-anl0ft,glno&amp; Glllpollo,Oflio45831.
Mod•Momo HNIIh AglnQy 'lNG CO
lion. Pnvato, Counlry SalbDyo billy -11111. maltmlIt oggrtlaiV8iy growing and
do bioolrocom~s ~~~~ ling. Stocked Pond. Addl·
&amp;
clothing, Domlno'a tllzza of Point~= =tll'3o~ ;know,a':'NOr~~ lionel 7.5 Acres Available.
etc.
.Pitalant now hiring Full· AIM P.O Box 117 CliiU
money through tnt mall unUI Call Janell Call at Century
AND
nm. I Part-nme safe drhl· Ill 'OR 45831 iDC)o.4:r. you have lnvti11Qifed the 21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular
era. Competitive Pay &amp; 0334·
•
oHtrtng.
II {304)634-251MS or Office
Floxlblt -·Apply In
.
t-80Q-731·9011) .
pet'IOn 420 Vland St... Pt Oaa--.
.
·
PI
· · __.roon: F.-.umo,
Do )'Oil noed • mortgage or 122 Klneon Drlvo 3 or 4
Ai:lk P..,-.on Auction Com- ·
efttl, rttail e~ l'lftr· ntw car? Are your bills bedroom, full b~sement,
~~ =~uc::=: ~ lllillgl• :..~~
e:':er"f~twr!na~~ =~~ many new features. Close
L.Ja.nMd 1M ONo &amp; w.t
SIICIIhiSI
In PlfiOtl 858 3fd A'ltnUI I
to schools and shopping.
lflrtlfrN. 31lt77H741 Or AaEaoyiii\IIC12W... Golilpoiii.'OH.
' ':it~ our profal81onal $84,500. Cell (740)4463CMa773-1447'.
COL Ti'llntngo Gl'lllfil'ay
:.._.H•
.:~.o 1 .t;:~ 8310 or (740)448-2426
And Benefllt. Ttalnlng anO
4~7
2 Storu 4br, with fir-..aca.
WAN11D
~~Tho Southorn Loaol llohaol
·•
..,.
.
No Experiancl Nic . tte
Dlllriat II. Boolpl:lng appikla· Stlrt Your Buelness To- Basement, L.arge Garage
TOBIJY
•
CALLNOWI
"' llonlloraubstltutabuodrlv· do p~ Shoppl C
on51hSiraol,lnNowHaven
1-888-201oQ111
1r1. Drtwrs must have 1 tel'Spac.""Avallabl;gA.1 ~~: S50,000. (304)8S2·2937
Abloluta Tbp 0911ar. U.S. ·
•tt Outllltd
CoL lloenM wtlh 1 bUe drfv. fordable Rate. Spring Va11ay 3 Bedroom on Route 2,
snv.r, Bold CcHrw. Pmof· 1
er's tndorlemenl. Training fltaza, Cll740-446..0101 . (304)675·5332
llta, Dllmondl, Gold
can be arranged. Phone
3 bedr
I "I dl
Rinal. U.S. Currency,· Holn
..... ....., .... ...__ (740) 848·.2888 for further
oom, n md oport,
M.T.s: Coin Shop 151 Sac- "' wan-.! ca ... 'lll '""' • • tntonnetlon.
MoNEv
call Tom Anderson after
ortd'Adnue, GattiJ,olia, 740- 'nowlderty, ~~~~Home, PleaH 18nd lnqulr.. 1o
fu loAN
5pm, (740)992·3346.
448-2842.
pa,. .. "' m mmum waat. JlfMI l.awr.nca Supartn.
.
- - - - - - - - now shlftto: 7am-3pm, 7am- ltnclont Sotrtrn;m locol
3br. Home Fully Ramod·
Wantld to Buy: Propane Spm, 3pm-11pm, Upm- Schrx:Me' Box 178 Raclna CREDIT PROBLEMS, Hav- elect. Ready to Move In!
0.. Cook Stove. (7410)256- 7am, catl140-992·5023.
Ohio ..&amp;771. slSo Ia 1 ~ lng Financial problema? ts $39,000. 211 7th St. NH. New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. House for Rent, 2 Bedroom
eetlll
LPN'II RN'o -~• f- Pe- E-··• ...._..unl1y Employ· Bad crtdll, no credit, or . (304)682-3n2
Onty $19,850. Free Delivery Deposit and Reference. No
· - ...
..- ..........,,
.........~.
&amp; StU
1 ••• 928 2428 p
(740)
9
dll.tric
home
care
ca~e~ln
er.
~o?Ctlhe
rooltodaolyour
4
Bedroom,
2
Bath
Ranch
p.
ets. · 446"1279
I \ll'lli~\1! \ I
1
tht Solltneul VInton Coun- URGENTLY
NEEDED· PREMIER CRE~~T RE~:
S1yle. 1 acre m/1, whirlpool, New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2 Oak Hill, OH. 3 Bedroom
"I II\ It I '..
ty, Pomeroy and Raolna f)lllmll danofl, earn $4IS 10 SOURCES, .,.,11 the finan·
partial basement, vinyl tid- bath. Only S995 down &amp; brick Cape Cod . Basement.
fI
Artie. lmm.dlate Employ· sao for 2 013 hOuri WMidy c111 help you need', 1_868_ Jng, wrap around deck, $,89.62/month. Call Cheryl, $4751 month. Reference
llt!1J'WAN11D Imont Avallllblo. LPN'o $18 tall Bofa:r.o 740-5, 2: 257-e-445, •~·Hzl~
In:
Eloclrlc and gao hlal. 740-385-7871.
Required. (740)384-5662 or
'
...• • • • • • - ' por hour, AN'I 117 por ... 1
pertOnal ..,...... ·~
Counly 5ehoolo, 12 miles
(740)245-9362
..,
hour. Shift/ Wetklnd Shift .._, ·
.
bualntll' ~tdallon,
from Gallipolis. l'atrloUrea. New Double Wide. $195 :.::====-==---· Offftrtntlai otttrtd. pt....
ntll, mortglgn,auto. Paved Road. Appraised at Per Monthl 3 Bedroom, 2 Pilot Program, Rente1s
,AIT DIIOW1NG lUll· calt Prlmlf'/ ca.. Nurllng
Loa A -•I-~ I A11
$82,000 Aoklng $55,000. Bath. F"' Deliva"! &amp; Sol· Needed, 304-736-7295.
NUl
NIIDI CAIHII!III •---~
1 (800"'1"·""73
won~loloopo-n
n· v•weloome.
.....,,
types,_
ot For lnro.· (740)'M8-8715
up· t ·888 ·928"oJ"too:
•••a
.
_,""''
a
~W
..-•
~-:-·---·orldit
No
Why rent? governmonl
A COOKI, PART 'I:IMI, Aak for -..,1,
Now .....,,pony In J PULL n111. ALL· .....,...
r " 7"
In nltd of two outaldl up front. CALL TOLL FAEE 5 room houae Point Pleat· . Nice 28x60 Double Wide backed loans from $490
. . . RIIUMI TO: THE
....~-no. "uol tr.- .... 1·188·207-6028.
ant, with lot. 2 car gara,., setting on rented lot In down . (740~46-3093
M
,,._
""
p tnt PI
1
26
aaaan area. ' 42ll
DAI LJ .I NnNIL, PO Mako """'"Y lor Chrlstrnaa oocponon.. ·and hiVI an LOAHif LOANS! LOANSI 1 112 balh. $43,000. Family o
IO~•f111'21-01, POMEROY, oell Avon. Call (740114441: ouiQOI"11 poroonallty. tall Problom Paying Billa? In Ralocallng. (304)675-n41 walls, lhormal pane win·MOBILE HOMES
.
3351
(740)288-0113 01' 1-888· Dtbl? GOOd, Bid, or no
dows, priced to sale. Call
FQR RENr
.
~ for an lnttMtw crtdlt. Bankruptcy Wef· ~~;-~ ~rret, Pt. PI (304)675-3889 . ask for
IATTIHl'lON*
McCiu,.·o Raolloirllnt now ~ntmont.
eamo. Call Toll· FrM 1·
2 FY II :~rblshad3.~.~ Rosoma"'
2br. 2 ·balh, Mobile Home
-lD F"""
Homo; Eam
up hln~
o! 3..w...
-llono
full
••••
slof'/,
u ~lh Kitchen,
soo.
month.
pa~:Ttme,
u ~......J~
WANTED: EXJ)Itlenced lllle-4~
.v-~.
rooms. .largo
OAKWOOD H()U~S
lor rent. Sassalras Ad.
Part11 nme117000
Full 11me. tlon •at 1ocai;;' &amp; ~beck ROofing &amp; Carpenter Fore- McGrtgOr &amp; AIIOCillel L.arge Utility Room, LRI DRI
SUPER CENTER.
$300. monthly plus DepOSit.
~~J:e-44118 for free belwoen
. -;;;;,~ &amp; man1o, valid drlvofl llconlo, Trying 10 buy 8 home and Family Rm. New Carpel Ove• 40 hom•.• lo chose (304)882·2537
.
Monda
Sal hlr'KI tooll reliable trln.. blnkllra rejecting ou d
throughout . FIA &amp; AJC, from. Drive a httte save a
10'008m,
'
'I thru
• porlltldn ar!.d
,._to bed crectil Nst/ 1. ~e $79,900. (740)446·9585 or loll Oakwood Homes ol
3 br. 12x60 $200 a montl), +
100 WORKIAt NUDID Ul'dly.
qulfld, Local work, excel· Oln help you. We ~~ , (740)448-2205 or (740)446- Nitro. (304)755·5885
Oeposll, utilities. No Pets.
.... lrnbll orafta, 'NOOd
&amp;aluptrtOO for 0No valley lent PQ' for right pereon, mortg.gel, pei'Mnll lnd 2683.
REDUCED
Gallipolis Ferl)' Area.
ltoml. Molorlol provldod. Memory Gllllon, full or port anuo., ....IJco!o. . Apply II ornall buolnoa loaOJ wllh
All Dou~e Wldo OlspiOys :_:I304::::;i;::87:..:5-4:::::088:::::-:c:-::-'TD $480+ wk.
time, we train end tumlttl Chrtstl1n'1 .Oonttruotlon, good or bid credit. AJ)Jiroval For Sale: Crown City, 3 mutt go Only $995 down 3br. 2ba. 16x80 Nice Coun·
FrH lnfolm •tan PQ, 24 Hr. t.da, Cit! (740)~-8228 Inc., 1.a3 E..,eem Awnue, wllhln 48 hra. (866)862· Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Only at Oakwocxt Homes 01 try Lot near Town Qf New
1-801·284-882S
lor oppt, Tonyo.
GolllpCJIII, (7~)446-4614 1181
(740)266·1744
Nllro. (304)755-5885
Ha,an (304)862-3534

J:.

www.

nonh of Pomeroy, $425 mo. erences &amp; deposit required.

2 spaces al the Memo"!
Gardens (Woman at the
Well), S375. Call (740)4482893
"---iiiiiliiiiiii;,._.l
-,------4 Cemetery Lots lor Sala- 1 &amp; 2 BA Economical Gas
Mound Hill Cemelef'/, $325 Heat, WID Hookup, Near
$295 ~~. $379 Per
aach or all 4 lor S1,000. Holzer,
month,
Plu.s
Utilities, lease
(740)388·9194
and Deposit Required.
9 acres ol Land belwBGn (740)446-2957 ·
Patriot
and
Northup,
S20,000.( 740l379·9 257
1 and 2 ~edroom apanIndian Create Estates, 3-6 ft!8nts, fumls~ed and unturacre Iota, west of Rio ."'shed, seeumy deposit re. Ap- Grande, lrom $ 25 ,900 _ quired. no pets, 740-992(i'40)2 4s-5747
2218.
Large corner bu!lding lot 1 Bedroom Apa!"ments,
with 205' Ohio River front· :~:~c~on~U~e~sp'1p~:,Od1 age, elevation shot, sur· 740 441
·
·
veyad, appraised, serious ( ) - 1519
Inquiries only, $40,000
.(304l882·3736 before 5pm. BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET. PRI·
Looking To, Buy A Now CES AT JACKSON ESHomo? Doni Have Land? TATES 52 Weslwood D•lve
We Dolll Hur"' Only to LoiS from $297 lo $383. Walk lo
Leff,304'736' 7295 ·
shop &amp; movies. Call 740·
Nice 4 acre tract near 4&lt;46-2568. Equal Housing
G•IHpall•·
t.rma, Opportunity.
(740)4-48-3563
.,.-------~::!:::::..:=::-,-,..-.,-- Chrisly's Family Living,
NICe Lot for Sale. 2 miles 33140 New Lima Rd .. Rul·
from Clly Umll&amp;, $15,000. land, Ohio, 740·742-7403.
(7401446· 4766
Apartment, home and trait9f
rentals. Commercial storefronts available tor lease.
~;=~;;:::::~ Vacancies now.
Furnished Apt. 3 rooms and
10
Houm
bath plus shOwer, DownFOR RENT
stairs, Clean . Reference
. and Deposit Require~. No
C
S
Pels or smokers. (740)448·
15
ourt
lreel
.
2
Bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, Kitchen 1519
·
wnh stove and refrigerator. GracioUs living. 1 and 2
Off Street Parking, Close to bedroom apartments at VII·
Amazing First lime Home Schools and Downtown lage Manor and Riverside
Buyers.
Government ArGa . $5951 month plus de- Apartments in Middleport
Backed loans. No credit posit and RefGrence. No From $278·$348. Call 7.40·
needed. (304)755-556 u.m· Pets. (740)446-4926
992·5064. Equal Housing

r

=r'"'

~~ ~~ ~ ::·:.=~·-- I"". r'o ~-·

.

home

Goons

~,_______.!
-

Appliances: RecOnditioned
Washers Dryers Ranges
RefrlgratO.rs, Up To 90 DayS
Guaranteed! we Sell New
Maytag Appliances, French
Cily Mayoag, 740-446-1795.

For sale· sing!G bed heacf..
board (brass finish), $75,
(740)992-2642

:_.:==.;::..::..__ __

For Sale: Racondllloned
washers, dryGrs ana retng.
erators. Thompsons. Appfianca. 3407 Jackson Ave.
nue (304)675·7388
GE' W h $ · ~1
as er, 75. appan
Df'/er, $65. Bolh· While AImond GE Dryer, $65. Call
after 6:00.(740)446·9068
Hot. point Washer, $95 .
Whirlpool Dryer, $95. GE
Refrigerator, $95. Hot point
Elect Range, $95. Whirlpool Refrigerator, Uke New,
$175. FreezGr, UPJight,·
$125. Skaggs Appliances,
76 Vine ST. (740l44e-7398
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.
(740)446-7444 t-877-8309162. Free Estimates, Easy
llnanclng, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Drive-- a- lima save alot.

r .

SI'OR'IING

Gooos

1,--...iililiilii:..-,J
Model 19'tA Turkish Mauaar
..,.
8mm Rifle wfth Bayonet and
Scabbard, 70 Round&amp; 8mm
ammo on Bandoleer~. $100.
F304)875-2352
-

I

ANI1QUE5

.

No Pels. 17401446' 3644 · Buy or soli. Rivanne Anll·
North 3rd, Middleport, 1 ques, 1124 East Main 011
bedroom lurmohe~ . apart· SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- ,
monl; nopels,depos~&amp;rel- 992-2526. Russ Moore,
·,
arances, (740)992·0165.
owner.
Now Taking Applications- Sue'sSalectableaontha"T"
35 West 2 Bedroom Town· . M' I
house Apartments, Includes In ~~~=~- Dolls,, 8gla~
8
Water
Sewage Trash ware, (7401 ~ 2~~= •
53501M 740 446•0008 ' iim!io~re~.~~;;.;::;;;:;_~
o..
. .
.
Mlsr»J ANEOl.ti
2
Po~THtroy, Naylors Run, or
MER~

r

I

::~ri~d~:~~:· ~~~-~~:;: ~--iiiiiiiiiiiiillllilil;.,..

call (740)992·6866
.
.
.
R1ver Bend Place now acceptlng applications for 1 br.
Hud Subs•dlzo Apt. for lhe
elderly &amp; disabled . EOH .
(304)882-3121

.Tara Townhouse Aparl·2
ments, Very Spacious.
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, ,
112 Bath, Fully Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Batly Pool. Pa·
tio, Start $365/Mo. No Pets
Lease Plus Security Deposit
Required , Days: 740·446·
3481; Evenings: 740·367·
0502, 740-446-0101 .

=

pump~- Wo carry 1
· compteto llno of Mobllt
porto &amp; - ·
:. BENNETT'S HEAnNG &amp;
· COOUNG (740)441-11411
1:'~

:at

r '%~

•••Y ·

blchtlorlmu&amp;lf of ICience

I

...._Y_~~--1
r
·---~llo;i;;;J

any~~~~~~~~@~~~~;~~§~~

~ I MO::s~~ It _M%~i!rr~ I

6

Chaster. Three bedroom,
balha, one-car garage,
3
family mom with fireplace
1116 MI!K»J.ANmlli
l'koml!iloNAL
IOJn room New cenlral heal'
SI!IMa:s
' lng &amp; syatam. Ono ml:
•
. -• nute off Route 7, but still J)ri·
Flint Fln~~nclal has been vate. (740}985-398l
OOod or Bid Credit Even
Bankruptoy Call Tol F
providing small buslneae LoC::aied In Crown City but
24 hra t-iea-428·8393."'"
lfr 13 year~. Now M very private, 14x65 Special
''
spec al ze 1n peraonal, car &amp; Built Mobile HomG. Seta on
,_
debt consolidation. We 75x150 Beauutut L.and&amp;capWANIED
y,uarantaa quality sarvlce Gd fenced in lot. 24x38 Ga·
To Do
rom a lrualod nama. Call rage. 8x12 Utlllly Bull~l"11.
1
·
Flint Financial S81'11cea, ap- Why pay rent when you can
AE Co at ctl
pllca~ons holllne (888)222· own? (740l256-1222 lor lull
. ---~1 n fi'!' obanlh
8t9t
dotells
•••- "11· roo "11·
·
roomo, drywal, lnlatlor
Nood Flnanolal Help? Alok Nowly conotruclad. olngiO
painting, 111m doors, wilfroe opportunlly, look no fur- sto"' 1600 sq. foot home.
dowl:. Free Estlmalas.
ther, our financial lnstJtution Locaied 10 mlnutet rrom
(304)875-7738
provides you with a..la- Holzor Hospllal, 20 minutes
tance &amp; Information, Free from Pleasant Valley Hoapl·
All Make Kerosene Heaters consullatiDn, call now at 181, off SA 160 on a private
and f&lt;Heod Air Heelers Re- 817-304-3011.
1·112 acre lot. ·3 bedroom,
paired. Small Engine Re·
2·112 baths, big kilchen
pair. Free PICk..lJp and DG· SOC
. TUI~LNESDECDDURWITYN 0/SNII? w/oak cabinets, OR, LA
livery Available. Over .20 NoF~eUnfei8WeWinl w/gatlog fireplace, central
~Experience. Cell Mike
1-aaa·582·3345
air, laundry room, front
(7~..-.?e04
"QQQ
porch l 2 1/2 car garage.

RN Suparvioor (FT), COOI'&lt;IInatiOn·SuptNIIIOn of patltnt
care. UCtnMd in OH and
~ Must have P.P.S. IX•
- - """ famllllr modlcare ancl JCAHO
tho'liO
114hoollh.
of
ell
- - kplt 101
_, • rnuot 'Con1101 Pete Sommer, Midi Anything. lk ng COnalgn
,contp~~ny thai offtl8 ~ Home HHith, 430 2nd. l'nlntl. CAll ( ,....
740
7804
~
YARDSAI.B
lent career advaricement Ave., P.O. 887, Ga»IPGNI
~:::;:::::::~· oppcwtunffiel For Vrttr'Mw Ott 45831 , ~1-6334
~b lerd a DDYif •Full benefM PKkiOt irDIJd..

C,

MOilLE HOII~I!II8

~~::":.~ furnocos~
eluding hi off~loncy hoot

Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third

llllifpaiiCirW Colltgt MONEY TO LOAN, AUTO, For oale by oWner: Nice bl- Single Parenl Program. Animal lovers wanled, 2 Ve"' nice, . 2-3 bedroom
(c.r..r. C1oM To Home)
DEIT CONSOUDATION, level home on 1 acre near Easy Financing Available. bedroom, 14x70 mobile apartment, h1 town, large

- -·lo-m.DIIty ~. Fourtaftvoyuro

·DWM 1 AQI 0t'ProfPIIIIOnlrol--u..! a.ntlntl, 110 IOI 1»i,
Jooldng 1
__,... Pol
Oh 417M
-not WF,
»50. Roopond , · - ·
..., ltlter ond plctu,. to
COM! iAOW
&amp;7 200
Point
WITH USI
Plouonl. WV 25a5D
w.""'--"naourcloou1.orr
llatlon Iliff to better arve
~
rl'-~
our customer~. We are kJok.
-- :
K"Ullftll
, lng tot a petiOI'I that haa
high enefZ' 18'41, eetf· mot1LaM. bi41Ck onc1 white Slbon• vatod onil onloYO -"11
an Hulky, blue eyes, blind, with people. Mutt hi.• dt·
loll on Leon Baden road. ~ tlanlpoltaUon; be·
451-1781 or leave 71 "QI sic computer knowltdge.
I) 11811 3122
.
It I lull flma illlflrlod
.
poailfQio and Gftolo aH 110Mloa!· In tho Roc~r~
blnoflla Including
.,... twa ~ (7 ) •
ln..trance, VMidan,
111311
poraonll doyo, ancl 401K
plan. We .,.. part of a ,,._

738

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

tny

,_.from

DIICrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abllrevlatlons
Number And Addt111 When Needed
• 4dt Should Run 1 D•v•

\ '' II ·, \

Private Party Ads Under $100.
20 Words 7. Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • L.lmlt 3 Per Person

Includes Free Yard Sale Sign I If!
·
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
~~
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

1'rtl:lur.-lscoU.:el
A &amp;I tPl..._t*tfi'MIPVN
wtH be~
forrlgMtoMit,
• men U.n
the cotl
of IMIIIPK'I
occ~,~pled
wror
the flrstln....Uon.
POUCIII: ottlo V...,
.._
NJ1ct,
otaanotf
ld at
any 1oM or...,_ thlt
U.. Plolblloltlon or omleslon of.,. Mfwrt~Mment. Con.:Uon will be mede In thl Hr•t•valfabfe Mfdon, • Bo•
.,. • .,, oonndlullll. • Current r1tt card WIM. • AH rt111 Ntfl.. Mlvwtl...,..,ll .,.. •ubfect ta ttle Ftdefll F•r Hauling: Act of 1HI. • Thla
MICIIple onty help WMtlel.tlrnMUntl EOE .... Mill eM. We wfll not knowlnflly ttcc.ptlny ..tverflalng In vlollltlon Of tl'le lew.
•

• tncluda Phone

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CIASSIFIEDS!

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.3652

CollY c....nty, OH

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

4d Round ol Hoy. 18114 F-250. 4x4, Rod,
ltD-· (740)367~186 123,000 miloa. Chromo
Now Tifoo, 18000.
Hay &amp; Bl1glit Wire roo (740)3118-9055
~=OeiMiy tgsj5 Chivy SUI&gt;tuban,
ble.
Heritage
AF~- Whitt, Gre.l., ClOth, •x•.
(304)475-6724.
· FIOni/Rear · - 1· TlW&lt;I
Soal.
89,000
mlleo.
$14,500. (740)367-JUI
iii~;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; t995 Dodgo Cmvan. 3
Auros
door, Good Condhlon.
tult SAUl
84,000 mHos. 55900 OBO.
,
• (740)446-tl805

.. WOI.ffTAM.IGMDI

10 cUps &amp; saucers Pfaltzgraff Blue Yorktown: $3 sel
also sugar and creamer with
lids. SS lor bOth. (740)687'"52
.:'""~-·- - - - - 12 by 24 bulkllng 10 glveaway to tear down or !Gave

:a•:.l::.:1.~(3::04,;;1::6:..:75:.88=72=---

2 ankle length cloth coats,
10to,2greenandnany,$5
a piece. (740)667·3652

40 Cement Blocks (New).
11 112"x15 1/2", $25. t- 3/4
size copy Antonius VIolin
Stradivarius,
$200.
(740)446-0893
Twin River Towers nOw acceptinga~plicationsfor 6)(10 Trailer new Hitch &amp;
1BR. HUD subsidized apt. Jack. Licensed &amp; tilled.
for elderly and disabled. $250., 2 Handmade gun
EOH.
cabil"lets 1 red oak holds 13
(304)675-6679.
guns malchlng locks. 1
Birch Hol~s 12 guns nu~lch·
- - -- - - - - lng locks, bolh are made
tram lour-Quarter grade 1
1 Bedroom o••u•e Apl
klmber. $250 Each.
~ • unfur~
Carpot
througn-out,
· hod C
Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
"' 8 • entrai Heat, 011 Repairs. Problems? Need
Street Parking, All Utilities TunGd? Call The Plano Or.
Furnfshed except electric.
(740)446-2602
7.4:::0:.:-4:::4::_8·:::45:::2:::6~--1br. Very Clean, Available Propane Heat&amp;~ £ Plague,
Dec . lst. Now taking Appli- $30. 2 P235 15 tires, $30.
calloris. (304)675-4975
~17_4::.:01::.36::.:7..;.·7:.:7::.29:..__ __
Resldentlal Home Ownerl
3 Rooma and Blth. 46 Olive =
Street Um,tiAII Paid. Stove Tappan HI efficiency 90 plus
and Relrlgoraoo• No Peos . gas lumar.es inclu~ing oil
$4 75 plus dopomt. Roforon- n.nd
electric gas ruma·
cas Aeqwed (740)446- ~as Hi EHiciency Heat
3945
Pumps, featuring Tappans
'-N-.,.e1-br-.-Al-l-E-Ie-Ci-,lc-.-N-o-ar :~:arde~fedlble Warranty
high school. $300 monlh + BENNETT'S HEATING &amp;
Deposit. (304)675-31 00 COOLINQ (740)441-9418
Daytime , 1304 )675-5509 or 1·800-872·5117.
E'Mings
www.onob.co...,.nnelt

NEW AND USED FUR·
NANCE8 FOR SALE! We
lnotan, F- Estlmataa, If
you
doni(740l448-6308.
Cal us, Wo bolh
Loooel
1-

,895 Plymouth Noon, 4
door, 5 opeed, Air, Green,
118,000 mlloo. $2850 oeo,
(740)258-8877, (740)258·
15487
~~~
Compraufon Rttlnga
RON EVANS I!NTERPAI&amp;- 1895 Ponliac Grand Prix.
ES Joci&lt;IOn Ohio 1-800- Runs Groal, High Mlloo,
'
Many Now Parta, Mirror
537_9528 '
Rlo!\1 Side
Damage, $1300
Ol!o.
(740)388-0438,
a.
!.~.
tllpm.
~--ol""iiiii"""""liiiiiii-orl 1997 Dodge Noon Sport,
2oR, Black, Sunrool, AOJIO.
38" storm door, cbmplete malic, Air, 62,000 mlleo.
$80: Four 54" ohuttara, StD: S4tOO 080. (740)256t4' porch ralll~ with opln- 8877, 1740)258-6487.
dies, $25. Ca (740)«6- 19i 7 Jeep Grand Chero4188
koo, Fully Loodod, Leather,
Block, brick, ' sewer pipes, 56K, Amolhyst Color, One
wlndows,Dnlals,etc.Ciauda Owner. Ex~loniCondlllon.
WlnloOB, Rio Grande, OH St3,ooo. Call (7401«8Call740o245-5121.
8702 afllr 5pm.
·1 t998 Chevy Malibu, while,
""""'
130,000 miles, $6000
'"--,.;rottiiiiiiiii'lf.uEiiiii.oaorl- (740)«1-4041 .
,
·
1998 F ., Coni
0 k
our, ar
2 Rod Healer Pupa $.25
each, Black Mare, Genlle, G;:"'n·~~~i:/8·~
2.5 yra. old. Saddle Bouka, ~:')446. 2824
· a
$800. (740)258-6034
1999 Oldsmofllle ANero, ExAKC Reglslerad GoK1 Re- cellonl condlllon. Loaded.
tBn9o7v2ers, $225. (740)388- $8.500. (304)675-8406
..;_.:..__ _ _ _ _ _ 76 Buick La..ber, Runs,
AKC Reglslered Minialuro Neods Work, $200. Call
Plnoher, 9 monlhs old and 1740l992-2092 or (740)892up to date
on an shots. :::;:::;_
3452. _ _ _ _ _
(7
401441 •12«
':'-'~'-=--:-:-- 69 Goo Trockar, 4 cyl., 5
AKC Yorkshire Puppies. speed, 4x4, Rune Great
~~~kod&amp; =ed&amp; ~~ St800. (740)258-1457
91 Unooln Towncar and llo
13041695, 3926
~==='-,-,-- a baaulyl Air ride, au10 Nght
Full . blooded Auslralian dimmer. (740)448-9523 or
Shephard, no papars, 9 mo. (740)448-1«3
old, black &amp; white, $75,
(740)892-0260
95 Bu~k Skylartc. pw, pdl,
cnllse, ole, aonlfm 08180tte,
Pomperlan Puppies, Mor F, vGry good cooelltion, $4000
S250 each. (740l388·8842 OBO, (740)892-7651
.
Reg. Rat Torner Puppies. 97 Chevy Monlo Cano,
Trl·
COlored,
5100 . keyless stan &amp; anlry, power
(7401532·2677
ovof'/lhlng, 60~ miles,
s e. soo OBO, (740)992·
Ji'Rlii'IS &amp;
02 15
VEGETAIILFS

j

600-2VI-tl098.
Wlllrtlno Special: 314 200
PSI $.21.95 Por 100: ,. 200
PSI S37.00 Por too: All

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Rk:hordo Brothers Fruit
Farm. APPLES AND
MUCH MORE. 24 mlleo
North of Gallipolis on Counly Raad 46. (740l288-4584.
-'----'--'---VIrgil's Ber"' Palch, Eaat of
Syracuoe on Roule t24 has
lumlpo &amp; purplt asparaguo
roolo, &lt;7401992-7""9·
1 \lnl..., t l'l 'llt "
o\1\\I...,IIJCh
a=!jir;;:=;;::;;==~
•
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to
FARM

1'lllxxs

RlR SAUl

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1982 GMC pk:k-up, V-8, po,
aulo, ale, now polnl,
new whoalo &amp;Urao. now dl·
amond ptaiO toolboK, looks
good, runs groat. oat&lt;lng
S3,000, (740)94tl-262t.
pb,

Ij

3yr. Old Mule. Been 'ode a
little. Real Genllo.(304I57a3259
-------AOHAonciAPHAhoiB8sfor
· sale, also yearlings and
weanllngo, SAYRE FARMS,
~)895-3319 oir (304)875·
:. ie \
· Male Lama,ootK1 white, n~o
. llvoslock guardian $.200.00
304-675-4882
Reglsterld purebred black
potlod Umoulln bull, 4yro.
old, good ono. Sail or trade
fof bull of oquot quotlty alao
a tow reglstOred 4 &amp; 5yr. old
: ~';:ualn cows. (740lB98-

a:r--":':"..:.:.--,

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H.w &amp;

1985 S-10 Bfazar, Tahoe
Package. 4x4, Runa Good.
Driven Everyday. $1500:
(304)882-293&amp;
1987 Qodgo van, Fully
Loodod. Mako OHor or

Trado. tor nice car.
&lt;7401245-93114
1993 Ford Aorostar XL, 4.0

I ~~7· Jo~~1111 i~.~~~~:

' "'--oiGiiRiii'dN--r'·
•

4-WJ&gt;s

~
1985 S·IO Blazer 4WD,
43,000 mlleo on rebuilt ..,.
gino . ATIPS. Many new
parte: New anemalor, atorter, fronl axlo, whoel cylln·
de,., brokn, battaf'/. Good
rubber. 51800. OBO PhOne.
=·875-6504 Loavo Me•·.

2974, (740)«8-3892.

Square belae wu $2.00 /!:_ft";llh~:~F;'!:.O~:
now $1 .50. Round Balas ad, Garage Kopt, 78.000
Wll S15. now S10. 1 mile miiM. E.aellenl Condition.
$8900. (740)379·2748
on AI. 2 N. C304675-9

01

282 to the polnl ol
boglnnlng, containing
1410 Sq. F-*1, mora or
looo, oxcopllng oil
logo
I oaoemonto
and
Jl""ta
01 woy.
a:'~rlnno are lokon
from tho• Melgo County
'liox Mapo, Middleport
Vllloge, Role ronco
Page
20.
Thla
d 01c 1 110 18 b
d
p n
ale
aurvoy
on 1 rprevlouo
In , 884 b• Robert R.
7
Eason, Ohio P.S. No.
7033
PPN' 15·00047 .000 I
15-110027 ooo ·
Addrooo; 913 General
Hartinger Parkwoy
Middleport OH 45780
Sold 'Promloto
Localod at 813
Go nero I Hortlnger
Parkwoy Middleport
OH 457
Said
Promlo
A p p rolo ed
:~ ·
$85 ,0GO.OO ond connol
~==H=•I:p:W::•n:l:ed::::, bo told lor 1111 thon
lwo-thlrdo 01 thol
amount.
TERMS OF SALE:
·
.
10% ol opprallod
v•lue dawn, remainder
upon tendtor ol deod.
Rolph E. Truooall
Shorlll of Mel go
•
County, OM
Laurence 8 , London
(N0034658)
Full/Part Time
Anorney lor Plalnlllf
175 S. Third Slroat,
OFFICE
SulteiOO
43
ENVIRONMENT ~~~~l~~~-~~~. :~~
1·8S8-974-JOBS 210

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Now

H1RING
$S $8

Per Hour

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1221.77.

Murray interviews in l
the Rock-n-roll City

za-oa2111.oao, Runyon,
Jerry A/or BObby, Lol
283 8 pert Of W line
3A, 112.47,
211-005111.000, Smllh,
CIJOI A. Lot 7, 847.41.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Eddie Murray, who got his 3,000th !
'20.00531,000, W-, career hit while play.ing for the Cleveland Indians in 1995, inter- ·
v•'ewed to be the club'• h•·m·ng coach.
•
Murray has been on Baltimore's coaching staff the past four
seasons, serving as the Orioles: first base coach the past two years.

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VANS &amp;

'"J

HOUSTON (AP) -The expansion Houston Texans will
make their debut against the New York Giants in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game in Canton, Ohio, on Aug 5.
"In tenns of introducing our team to America, I think tl:lis
will gain the Iargen audience and it gets us in the New York
market,"Texans owner Doh McNair said Tuesday.
"Also, the Giants are one of the oldest teams in t\le NFL and
it's good to have 1he old with the new."
After the preseason opener, the Texans will play at New
Orleans and Kansas City before playing 1heir first game in the
newly constructed Reliant Stadium against Miami. The Texans
then will play their final preseason games at New Orleans and
Tampa Bay.
The Tenru originally expected to play regional rival Dallas
in the preseason, but McNair thinks the two Texas teams will
meet in the regular season.
.
"It wouldn't nuke a lot of sense to play in preseason and then
play in the regular season," he said. "Hopefully it will work out
that we can open the regular season with them.
"It hasn't been announced but I believe that's the way it's
going to come down, I hope
The Texans can begin signing players Dec. 27. The NFL will
provide an expansion draft Feb. 18 to help fill the team and the
Texans will have the first pick in the NFL draft in April.

Public .._10 and Auction

I

lholo ab ove entitled
101 n, 1 will onor lor
ule 01 public ouctlon,
"ctoluh'rthMelgo Counlly
o u II
n
Middleport,
Ohio, In
tho obovo nomad
c ounty, on 3rd d ay o 1
Jonuary, 2002, 1110:00
lh f 11 1
o.pt.,
• o ow ng
doocl'fbed real ootote,
aHuoted In the County
ol Malgo and Slllo of
Ohio, and In the City
f Mlddl
eporllo wll:
Legel Dlocrlpllon
E•hlblt "A"
Trecl1: Situated In the
Vlllago of Middleport,
County of Molgo and
Stolt of Ohio: Baing
Lot No; 282 In tha V,B.
Hortona Addition to
tM
Vlllane
of
•
Middleport. Sub)oct lo
111 logal eaoamonll
ond 118181.
EXCEPTING end

lloncly 11 A 11-nHh,
281 N of Pomeroy,
lloclno llood W IIIII
11. perc.! 1 ol eric.
.IIA,
31,
20·00811.000, Millo,
lloncly II A 11-nlth,
282 N ol Pomoroy·
lloclne Rood 1.70A,
$12.57.
20.00117.000, Millo,
Roncly II l IIMenllh,
2t2 N ol Pomero~·
lloolne llood I! Side
.MA, 84.10.
za-oaaoa.oao,
P-raon. Andy L, Lol
21 Bullington Adll,

'l!xans wil debut in canton

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

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LivESTOCK

. From I'IIIJI N
ZlHI04H.OOO, Lowery
Alon Thomoo A/or
Deborlh A, Lot M 10'
on w l!nd ol Lol sa
Cerloton 2nd Add
118.71.
'
2G-G04H.OOO, L-ry.
Alon Tholltll A/or
Deborlh A, Lot Sf
Corlelon 2nd odd,
S1,U4.57.
20-G0487.oao, Lowery,
Alon Thomoe A/or
Doboroh A, Lol 11
Corlelone 2nd Add,
$41.57.
211-00475.000, Mlrtln,
ChJfoHne A, 2tiiW of
SE of McBJtdto 22.1A
20Jr117, 8411.01.
20.00115 000 Millo,

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t995 Chevy S-10 ss,ooo.
(31J41675-6988
1998 Toyola Tacoma, 4x4,
Loaded, V-6, Needs ·~·
•
Work. P •rt 1 •,1 1 ~.~~P1 a~ad
.
~
S8500 0 80 · 7_,... ~· 50
L,--iiilli-iiiiilooio_.l or (740l4&lt;11·9656 eflor 5pm.
Allis Cholmono 50150 with 93 F·150 XLT, klngcab, Bft
front oncl loader oncl roar bed 114 000 miiH. All Powblade. (304)882-2537
er, ' Eicollanl' Condition .
' Long 610, MF60, Mower, S7,000 080. (740)245·
rake, MF12 baler,l 3 wagbush om
opl
d
log
ona,
mer, sc.,
ge Ranger 4cy1 5 opeed
hog, 810 · &lt;30418754889
co Player, 'cuoiOm Whaels:
Maaaay Ferguson 135, Die- Tonneau Cover, Runs
sel. New Rubber, Palnl, Ex· Great, Sharp Truck, $4200
conent Condition, $6500. or make offor. (740)44&amp;·
45-0777
4998
174012
YANMAR YM 1500 Traclor, 98 GMC Sonoma, M
Air, Auto,
diesel, 3 polnl hlleh, S2. 150. TIR &amp; Cruise, 51 Milos,
Also, new 4' finish mower, Original Owner $6900.
sllllln craie, saso. Shipping (740)4411-2957
avallllblo. Looalod juel oolslda of HuniSviNe. AI (256) For sale- 1987 Ford F· 150 ·
778-9435 www.maynardo· aoklng $500. &lt;740 1742"
2220·
qulpment .com

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Public Notice
.._....

111; thenc~ S!'uth 2
dogreeo 00 . 00 Wo,r,
74.00 !tot to on Iron
pin oet on tho South
::~~ ~. =~ lln~d 1111d :;:~ 212,
Over to,ooo Trantml1181ona, 18 ron P n
ng on
Transfer ea... 740-245- the North Uno of
5677 1Call: 339-3786.
Chlldo
Lol,
II
dtoocrlboclln
Mllgl
CAMPERs &amp; . Coun.ty
Deod lho
Rocordto:
~ MOIDR JloM&amp;oi • Volume 284, Pogo 813;
thence North 88
1990 Gulf stream, 37ft. 460 dlfl~l 10' 00" Will,
Ford. 41K. 1996 Pull car, 59.24 feel along the
47K, 1740)245-5752
South llna of oald LOI
For Sale or Trade. 114 Chi- 282 end olong the
vy Bus. Bean Converted 10 North llno ot tho oold
motor homo. Excollent Con- Chllde Lot to on Iron
dillon. (304l458-1541 after pin oet on tho Eooi
6pm.
llnoollheuld201oot'
wldl· alloy; thence
North 2 dogrooo oo•
. 00" Eoal, 74.00 1111
r•o
HOME
along lhl Eesl line of
•·-·-the oold •o loot alley
IIMI"IW•~~. .a
•
to tho point of
BASEMENT
blfllnnlng, containing
WATERPROOFING
0 _101 acrAl, more or
Unconcllllonal IKa~ma guar- 1111 , excepting .111
ant... local references fur- logol eaoamonto ond
nlshed Ealabllohad 1975 1 ht of
8
1
Coli '24 Hra. 17401 446•· oro
r g tak•n
way.from
ear ngo
tho
0870,
t-BOQ-287-0576. Meigs •County Tox
Rogers Walerproollng.
Mapa, 1n oclull
ourvoy on October 28,
C&amp;~ General Homo MalniO- 1184 by Robert 11.
nonco- Palnllt1Q, vinyl old- Eaton, Ohio P.S. No.
11111. c.orponlry, doOr&amp;. win- 7003dow&amp;, balhl, mo11i10 hOmO
Tract II: ·
~~ S 20 Foot Wide Slrlp:
8323.
llultld In the Vllllfll
'
ol Middleport, County
EulcrRlcAIJ
of Mtllgo ond Stoll of
REnuGERATION · Ohio, ond bolng a port
·
0 1 Broa dway Sl reot 11
Rasldonllal or convnen:lal recorded In lhe Melgo
wiring, new service or rel County Pill Recorda,
palra. MaSier llconaod alec- Section 29, Town I
lr~lan. Rldan011r Eleclrlcal, North, ronge 13 Woot
WV000308, 304-675·1788. ,of
the
Ohio
Compony'e Purchooe
and .b olng deocrlbod
11 lollowo: Beginning
Public Notice
11 I he Northooot
corner of Lot 282 ol
the oald V.B. Horton
ShonH'o Sell c;r 'Reol Addition lo the Vlllogo
Eollte
Tho Bille of Ohio,
of Middleport, Melgl
County Pial llecordo:
Melgo County
Volume 2, Page 12 ;
North Amorlcan
thence South 88
Mortgogo Company
dtogrllo IO' OO" Eoa~
Plolnlllf
20.00 feot to 1 point;
va.
thence south 2
Mortln J . Chapman, et dtogre11 00' 00" Well,
el
74 ·00 leot too point·
·Defendants,
the' nee North 88'
Cloa No. OG-CV·I20
dtogreoo 101 00" Weol,
In purouance of on 20 DO feet ton lh
Allal Order of Sole In Eo'ot llno • 111gd Lo"t

AI!IO PAII'Ili &amp;
ACC1!SSORII!S

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l'o1hlk' NuU,~·MI ~""I••I"~•.J
\'uur ~i~hllu' ~IW".IMhm.'t1 Hl~lu tu ""'"

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The Dally Sentinel• P9 B 5

Pomeroy, Mlddleport,·Ohlo

PUBLIC AlJCnON

Saturday, November 17 I 0:00a.m.
Rt. 681, AlbOny, OH

He has been offered a position with Baltimore for next year on
Mike Hargtove's staff.
But the Indians have been looking for a hitting instructor after
Clarence Jones was fired following the season along with pitching coach Dick Pole .
ke
B
S ·
'd M
M d
·h
Team spo sman art warn sat
urray met on on ay Wit
Indians general manager Mark Shapiro and manager Charlie
Manuel.
M
1
M
' h' · ·
h
th fu
H ll f
anue was urrays mmg mstructor w en e ture a o
farner played for Cleveland from 1994-96.
In '95 , M urr.ry b ecame o nl y th e second swttc
. h - h .ttter and the
20th player in baseball history to reach 3,000 hits when h e singled ar&gt;.&gt;in.&lt;t the Minnesota Twins. Murray J. oined Pete Rose, the
.,h
I
. I I.
career hits leader with 4,256, as t e on y sw1tc 1- 11tters to get
3,000.
During the '95 World Series, Murray hit an RBI single in the

Due to selling farm and movlng out of state
the following list will be offered at public
auction. DIRECTIONS: From Route 50/32
weal o1 A,thens, go to Albeny, tum at Hocking
Valley Bank, at alop sign tum fight on At.
681, go 2 miles paat Coe Road to long
driveway on lefl, waleh lor signa.
ADDEO TO AUCTION- Conn tenor
aaxophone with case &amp; axlras, Fender
electric guitar w/case, amp &amp; extras, Caslo
keyboard, 3·1ur coats (2-rabblt Bltort &amp; long,
1-faux long), Designer wedding gown wtvell
(original price $4000·2 yeara old).
1I th inning of Game 3 as the Indians beat the Aclanta Braves 7VEHICLES I BOAT· 1971 Mustang Mach ·r 6 for Cleveland's first Series win since 1948.
automatlc 351M w/everylhlng original,
M
1 d 21
· h
·
d 1h
h h
102,000 actual miles· Sold w/Reserve, 1987
urray P aye
seasons m t e maJOrs, an at oug
e was
Ford Eddie Bauer Bronco 4 x4-35 1 Wlnclsor, mosdy testy with the media, he was always one of che most popnew tires, 83,000 actual miles, fibergl888 uiar players in the clubhouse.
shell lor Dodge lull size Truck, asaofted tires,
H e was name d to et'gh t All- tar teams, me Iu d'mg seven w1t. h t he
tow bar lor front end of vehicle, 1997 Bass 0
1
ft d h
hird
d f h
d fi
Tracker 16 fl. Pro V. Boat wi&amp;S hp. Maroury
rio es, who dra e
im in the t · roun o t e 1973 rat.
motor&amp; 1998TraCkertraller.
majors in strikeouts for the
EQUIPNI!NT· Case 520 Tractor, 6 fl. Bush
Hog Squealer, 5 fl. Bush Hog, SwiBitar 12.5
eighth time, struck out 10 or
hp. 44" llnlah mower, Belco 158·3 pt.
more 23 times for the third
rotot111 er, box bl a d e, swivel blade, post hole
19"
&amp;
12"
M
F
3
Bal
straight
season, matching the
auger w
, assey erguson
er,
Allis Chalmers pull type rake, Mlnnaapolll
record Ryan set with the Cal-Molina manura· spreader, load hog, Trac Vao,
Johnson has had litde time ifornia Angels in I 973.
Toro electric l'flka &amp;vac, Yardman 20 hp, 50"
Votes were cast before the
Hydrostalic Rldlng Mower, Gravely Mower to reflect.
w/Sulky, Murray &amp; MTD lawn mowara, Toro
·
start
of the postseason, when
"It's all been pretty surreal,"
weed eater, electric saws, edger, weed
he said. "Me and my wife had Johnson became the first
wacker, VICtor XUC OL trimmer, . RoloHoe
800, latge lawn roller, lawn seeder/fertilizer, a vacation planned. We put it pitcher to win three games in
AgriFab 2 wheel dump cart, Huakee 26T 8hp . off' a few days so we could a World Series since Detroit's
Log Splitter, 8 hp, Chipper, aluminum
-~enslon
ladders,
•••ort-A
tools, take part in the ticket-tape Mickey Lolich in 1968.
'''"
...
Schilling was 22-6 with a
·
miscellaneous hand &amp; gordon tooll, grinder parade."
w/molor, .12·metal galea, metal fence posts,
The only two voters who 2, 98 ERA and 293 strikeout'
"This should be ab01
didn't
pick Johnson first were
battary.chargera.
HORSE ITI!I\IS: Ove~and Coach Wagon (all Toni Ginnetti of the Chicago Randy winning it, not m
metal w/pol~ &amp; shafta·all wheel disc brakes,
losing it," Schilling t ol,
lndependent suspenslon), NEW· Wlntec Sun-Times and Joe Chris2000 all purpose and pro dressage saddles, tensen of The Press-Enter-. ESPN Radio. "I feel from 11
HorBB journals, wood saddle rack, metal prise in Riverside, Calif.
first start to my last, I was t'
folding saddle racks, wall racks, Muckbucket
This was just the third time most consistent pitche r
wheel cart, float stall automaflc waterer, feed
barrels, assorted grooming euppllelllbrushes, teammates finished first and base ball . . .. Was that
blankets, tack, 500+ bales of grass hay. .
second in the voting, follow- enough to win the Cy Y 1g?
ANTIQUES I COLLECTIBLES: Cherry
Not this year."
empire chest of drawera, old octagon lamp ing Don Newcombe and Sal
Matt Morris of 1he St.
Maglie of the I 956 Brooklyn
table, blanket chest, 3-hall trees, old 3
drawer dresser, aaaorted old chalra, set of · Dodgers, and Mike Marshall Louis Cardinals was third
Homer Laughlin EggBitell China, sel of and Andy Messersmith of the with 3 I points, followed by
French Saxon Co., Sebring China, few
Jon Lieber of the Chicago
I 97 4 Los Angeles Dodgers.
crockS, White ware pedeslal w/chast board
Johnson was 21-6 and led Cubs with two, and Houston
·lop, 4-swords, llghlad Pabst sign, old child's
wa·gon, Ice cream tablelchalra,
the major leagues with a 2:49 · Amos rookie Roy Oswalt
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHING: Panaaonic big ERA and 372 strikeouts, the with one.
screen 52" projection TV In cabinet (lndustrial
Johnson gets a $250,000
third most in a season behind
Sa
h
paris), large Unldan
telllle Dis w/all
components, Uke new 3 piece Italian leather Nolan Ryan's 383 in 1973 bonus won winning, Schilling
sola, loveseat &amp; chair (2 yrs old), glass top and Sandy Koufax's 382 in $150,000 for finishing second
oak end tables, French Provincial end tables,
and Morris $25,000 for fin1965.
2·Lazy Boy swivel rocker recliners, niCe
Johnson, who led the ishing third.
assortment of table lamps, French Provlnclal
p ecan long 01n lng 1ia ble w/4 extra Ieaves, 6
chalra &amp; matching china hutch, oak parquet
trestle table, 27" GE TV, RCA portable TV,
large computer desk/armoire, printer stand,
E
. I
Ill
Ill
bi t
I
pson pnn er, ro ng e ca ne' severa
bookBitelvea, lots of bookS, some framed
pictures, lots of knick knacke, maple chest of
drawers, sewing machine In cabinet,
miscellaneous beddin"•lnens, miscellaneous
"''
kitchen dishes, pots, pans, small kltchan
appliances, VitaMix 3600 Julcar, elllelrlc
roaster oven, Llnon microwave &amp; carts, 2·
chest freezers, Whlripool dryer, Maytag
washer,· full size Dirt Devll vacuum, Moranlz
stereo system w/speakers, metal conference
table, Iota of me\81 storage units and
shelving, and other miscellaneous Items.
MISCELLANEOUS: Vitra Spa Hot Tub· 5
Forked Run
years old, 12-oak beams, Radio/TV tower,
Bounty Hunter metal detector, Exercise
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fireplace screens, picnic table, wood patio
lumUure, Char-Broll gas grill, · coolera,
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�Pllge B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

~

McGwire says there's no

Wednesday, Nov. 14, 2001

The Daily Sentinel • Page B 7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

:ALLEYOOP
NEA Croeeword Puzzle

chance he11 play again

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.
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949-1405
591-5011

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or Opportunity
Jeanie Howell
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51 YIRI(abbt.)
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34 Shldo liMa 52 Cloud'o
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CELEBRITY CIPHER

-In

,

'f'E5; MAAM .. I LEARNED
A LOT TODAV .. JUST BEING
. • ~Eii:E WAS WORTfl T~E
:·· Pli:ICE OF ADMISSION ...

•

OF COURSE, I
DIDN'T PAV

AN't'Tfl1N6!

Hoffman,

1 1 1 1
_~.,_ _.._t.......J.t.......J.--'---'

I1

I

L.

ruffed, played a heart
GH E D E
to dUmmy's ace, f.--,;:;,....~..,;1:..,;r;..,:'"l-1
pitched his .two dia_ _ _ __
mond ' losers on the
king-queen of spades.,
0 l E C L ,__I,
finessed in trumps
Husband IO wife: "After spendthrough · East, and L.....J..._J_L......J.L......I____
1ng all afternoon watching soap
made his doubled . - - - - - - - - - , operas, llh ink the evemng news
could make me---- --- -."
d I
gransam.
LUFTE I
West should have I I I I I Ia
Comp lolo th o chuckle qvolod
by fiiUng in rne mining word:i
P assed out six no- L-L--L.._J_L....,.I.-.1.--- you develop
from step No. 3 below.
trump. If the oppo~ PR IN T NUMBERED
l
nents are in a stupid
~ lETTERS IN SQUARES
contract, be happy to
take the plus score.
And West should
have led a trump .
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
There was no hurry
Lax•ty - Henna - Kinky- Qouble- UNLIKE
to cash an ace.
When return ing home after a short lrip across the
Full details may be
border, an officer smiled , "Congratulations for looking
found
at
UNLIKE your photo."
www.bridgeplus.co.uk.

~AHAHA

1

I" I I

HAHAHA!

r· -

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St. Rl124
Racine, Ohio

949-2734
We crJn mrJ/te deer
summer srJusrJge

CONSTRUCTION
PROJECT?

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4~

11 Burrowing
~
onlmot
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tltlo
20 Ilion lou 4S 11n1ce or
Louraof
22 Motainor·
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46 Clny on 1

• LM!Uceond 23 Spr • MT of
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7 $olonionde&lt; 24 Polroro
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21 Como

One of the two independently produced
magazin es in Dritain is
Uritlgc Plus. In a
small-page format,
editor Elena Jeroni midi s
aiins
the
monthly at tl1c majority of social and tournament players, not at
experts. Uc advised
that bidding follows
Acol , with four-card
majors and weak (1214) no-trumps , but
declarer- play and defense are still declarerplay and defense.
This deal , played in
the St . John's Wood
Dridgc Club (which is
close · to
Lord's
Cricket Ground, the
Mecca of that sport),
was described by
Kitty Teltschcr, who

Martin

IWNI~.can

WE CAN HELP

•Garages

M~.dicare

Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
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• Nursing Home

Free Estimates

.._.

~1Jfif(t~ ace. The declarer,

,.

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

BUFFET TO GO !Lunch .. 14.111
BUFFET TO GO !Dinner .. 1&amp;.111

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12% Economy Stock Flld .......... $6.501100
12% Equine 12 · •
(FOIIIIII'Iy Weatom Pride) ...........$5.00150
21% Huntero Pride Dog Food ....... $6.75150
s-t Lick Deer Blocke ...................... $6.75
Whole Corn,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,., $5.251100
Cracked Com ............................... $8.251100

(1000 ft from ljle bridge)

I

..... un
r.. tNT
1*. .._
ow_

Hera

40 Wow bit
by bit
41 Prof.'a

12 Chlmd

DOWN

by Lui• Campo•·
ticles. Sitting West ,
~ Clphof Cl)piogl.,. ... - ' " " " quolltiOnt by fllrnOUI
what would you lead
pooplt, put and ,_,c. Eoch
lht cfl&gt;hOr llandltor . . - .
Tcdly'S diM: P eqw/s C
against seven clubs
doubled?
South's game-forc'TN
DJKHJNO
JZ
DGLC
KD
ing jump rebid is justified by playing
TN
JJ&lt;PIANO
JTN
JTOLC I
strength, but is much
JTKJ
PZRAOL'J
UN
OZLN,
weaker than nonnal
in high-card terms .
KLO
TN
000
OJ.'
North should have
rebid · a forcing two
NOCKH
K .
CRNDJ
no-trump; and on the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'A poem Is a meteor." - Wallace
next round, he clearly
St.,..,.,
expected South to
"A poem Slhould not moan I But be." - Archibald Maelaloh
have neater 19 points
than 13.
South was confiWOlD
dent West had two
e&amp;MI
a&lt;es for his double, and maybe l)e would
R:earrongr letters of the
four acrombled words belead the wrong one
law to form four sirnple ~rds.
against seven clubs.
As you can guess.,
A P WL 0 L
West led the spade
.......,,.1__;,.,.,.::...---l

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com ••MI

.KQJ Ut

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14 OlllcWa

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ST. LOUIS (AP) - Mark McGwire ond half of the 2000 season on the dissaid there's "zero" chance he'll be like abled list. He lasted six games in 2001
Michael Jordan and come out of retire- before going back on the Dl., and never
" m~gtU 1 w
.
ment.
felt right.
oCINwll•lenll~
In his fint interview since retiring
"The thought of rehabbing again and
.,. Dlllolluloll
'
Sunday, McGwire told ESPN that his going to spring training and hearing
. . .t
mind is made up.
Tony's 45-minute dissertation on ·bunt
"Michael Jordan can plays is not appealing whatsoever," control the game," McGwire said. "You sit back and think
_'2.1
McGwire 53id Tuesday. about this and you just go, 'I have no
-.JOt
"Give me the ball, I'll desire to do that.' I am so ready to move ' ~;:::;=;;;;;;;;~
do what I want with it. on with the second half of my life.''
' bllaiiii&amp;O 2171 ,-~----,.
When you're a power
McGwire knew something was wrong
hitter, you're not in in spring training when he was hitting
m.
...
control of anything. "lazy fly balls" instead of tape-measure
&amp; S...l!l
There's absolutely no home runs.
11Mna,ea4:31
McGwlre
way. Zero."
"After the work I did this winter, I
. flrty lllrds slllt
01 Jock
McGwire hit 583 couldn't believe it," McGwire said. "I sat
i:3l
SC
home runs, 17 short of becoming only back and I just said, 'How much more
Progresslw llf
the fourth player in major league histo- cai1 my body take?"'
Country, Dance &amp;
ry to hit 600. Although he ~aid his 400th
Only one thing about McGwire's final
n.tUys
Rock Music
and SOOth homers were special, he does- seasons makes him angry. the revelation
tGuerlll 74D-742-n09
n't want to chase numbers for numbers that he was taking androstenedione in
Ill ~...TF
Reasonable Rates
sake.
1998 - the year he hit a record 70
All Dcculons
" I am no! going to stick around the homers. McGwire stopped taking andro
game to climb up the ladder," McGwire in 1999.
·
said. "I've never been like that, I never
"What a waste of print, what a waste
will be like that."
of film," McGwire 53id. "It has absolute·
BUILDJ:IlS INC.
McGwire felt he was just taking up ly nothing to.do with hitting a baseball.
New u - • Vloyl
"Sidios
• New G._
roster space for the St. Louis Cardinals,
"It helped me get through workouts
VlmiEPIICEMUTWIIDOWS
1 ReplaC!IMil
the way his career wound down.
after a game. Believe me, 90 percent of
·lllr$Ill IIDU 611111Wlldows • Room
He missed most of the second half of 'athletes take something to help themAddldou • RooftDB
the 2000 season with an injured right selves out.''
CDIIMIICW.
IMIISIDIIIIW
knee and only batted :187 with 29
Cardinals chairman Bill DeWitt Jr.,
FREE
ESTIMATES
homm in his final year.
one of the team's primary ·owners, said
"Heck, the last y,e ar-and-a-half I basi- McGwire telephoned him Monday 740-992-7599
cally wasn't even in existence in base- night. DeWitt told the St. Louis Post- (NO SUNDAY CALLS)
• FREE INSTALLATION
ball," MeG wire said. "I feel like I've been Dispatch that he ~n't upset that MeG- · •
• FREE IN HOI&gt;fEE:sTJ!&gt;fATIE
hanging around.''
wire had informed ESPN first about his .---------~
• FULLY WELDED
That said, McGwire feels he'll be a retirement, adding that McGwire tried
• SO YEAR WAR.RANTY
first-ballot HaU ofFamer along with Cal to ca,ll him Sunday night but he wasn't
Rip ken and Tony Gwynn in five years. home.
"It's just something that comes after
"That was his prerogative," DeWitt
QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS
Equipment Parts
you have a fantastic career," McGwire told the Post-Dispatch, "I don't want to
992-4119 1-800-291-5600
Factory Authorized
said. " And if the writel1i vote me in the question how he handled it."
CAM-lliParts
first time with Cal and Tony, that would
The Cardinals are under no financial
VIsit Our Showroom On Stale Route 3J
6 Milts North Of Pomeroy, Ohio, At County Road 18
obligation to McGwire, although
be totally awesome.''
Dealers
MeGwire said a combination of tac- De Witt made it clear that he wanted
IDOIIIt. Rl. 7 Soullt
• No Dealen or ConlrKton PleaR
Vilo/ Mutm:ard
tors led to his decision to walk away McGwire to continue in some role with
Coolvm.. OH 45121
WVH23477
from a $30 million, two-year contract the club. DeWitt 53id McGwire could be
74Dl£1-llll
extension, including the injuries.
a spring training ,instructor tike Bob
"You can't say that it was the season, Gibson and Lou Brock, but doubted
can't say it was the injury, the McGwire would want to do that right
surgery," MeGwire said. "My mind and . away.
body are worn out from playing baseball
"I said I'll think about it, but I just
want to stay away," McGwire said. "I'm
since I was 12-yeal'li old.
''I'm done. I've always told myself I'm always going to love baseball and I'm
not going to hang around and just be going to miss it, but whb's not going to'
another player."
miss anything they've been doing since
McGwire had surgery to correct they were 12 years old?"
patella tendinitis after spending the s~c-

f

_.,..

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T hu m bv, Nov . IS, 20( n
Thcr~· i~ n111ch iudication .
ril:u :'1 m.1rkcd impmvcmem in
· yo ur fin ~n d;~l drc urmt:urcc s
r mdd bt• achieved in the ye:1r
a ht•;~ d . It is time ltJ st.ut thiuki n~ ri ch .111d dr:1w i n~ that pot
of ~o ld to you.

SCO llPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) -- You co uld b~ quite
lucky finMlt'ia lly toda y, but it
might no t be tor3lly e\'idcnt
tc, you t'arly in the day. As th1:

cloc:k tick5 un, hoWt'Yer. it
\vill becmne obviom to all.
Sc orpio, tre:~t yourself to a
birthday gift. Send for your
Astro- Gr:il&gt;h rr!!dictimu for
the ye;u a 1ca( by mailing S2
an~l SASE to Astru-Graph,
c/o thi5 ncw~paper, 11.0 . l3px .

I(,7. Wick liffe, OH '40920 167. Ue sur'c to state your
Zndiac ~ign.

SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23It bt:houve~ you
to be ;111 attentive listeMr tod... y in thC' presence or il prop:rcuive rlunkrr. Ym1 mi~h t
u~·C" . 21) --

su..:h :t bad ide~ . T hi~ pt·n~lll
might ha ve some ve ry good
s u~!otl'~ tmm !lbuut how

you

sholJlJ l.um..:h ym1r plans.
AQUI\I~I US Q'"· 2U-F,·b.
19) -- Th l' w 01y ynu lundk
yo ur~d f tod.!y could he d1e
to pic of conversation :mumg
~·our pt!ef$ to1norrow. Pllt 011
:t

~ot)d d i ~pby

ha nce

now :111d en-

rchu io nsh ip~ lat~ r .

PISCES (Feb. 2U-MJrch 211)
,--Something in which you 're
involved cuce r- wisc h;~s
greo~ter merit t h ~u
first
tho ugh t. Go over it with ,,
fine-tooth comb tod:1y 10 determine iu tt'\lc worth so you
t an re:\~l all in benefit~ .

ARIES (M.mh 21 -1\pril 19)
-- An asSOCHlte who thi nks
very hlg:hly of yo u may propos~

rhat you pnrticipn1e in

something he or ~he Ita~ cre :attd. Thu person may want

only you and no other.
TAUI\.US (April 20- Ma y
20) ·- D ~si re is the motivatintJ;

yom q.t-

f.11.:tor in your ability to KCI
what you want tod.~y. If there
il somC"thin~ ·you desire
!'.trongly enou~h , you'll figure
out way~ to gt't it.

rct'r uhjcctives tod:ly wi1h a
trmtt.•d M~&lt;'l'i•lte mi1tlu nt1 t be

-- Do n't :munu: th,Jt ot hl'~

learn somrlhint( rhat would he

of t rc.!menlio u~ hdp to you .

CAPRI CO RN (1)". 22-

J:m. It))

--Uiscm~intt

GEMINI (M'Y 21-jtll oc 2ll)

autonutio.: .11l y bl'hcvl' 1h.•r
yo u'l\ ](mk nur fm d !t'lf mtt:rcst~ if IIH.'Y lno k om for youn.
Let tl1cm klluw you'rt· \\l ll ltl).t
tu t:uopl'ratt' 111 any w,;l)' yo u
1.":'1 11 .

CANCEit
~-

22)

Kc t·p

21-Jtily

(IIIIIC

.1 po,lf i VC

mnloo k

on work-re\.lfl'Li h~uc..·~ rmb)\

· and

i~norc

.u1y

th at te ll yo u
good ,11titllde

t•.~rly

tmhcltors

ot h erwi~t' . A
gl· t~ the job

done
LEO (lt~ l y 23- AIIg. 22) -Cood rela.tions wuh yu m
friends t()U,,y ~oc~ .1 ion~ w%\y
tu":;trd hemg in\' Hcd to share

in

;'IUOti H.'T'S ~()(J,l[

.lCUVlties .

P cup\~

hkt· thoH' wlw are
w:~nn a.nU fl ·Jcnd \v.
VlitC.O (A"K·· 2J -So pt . 22)
-- Thi~ i~ an exct•llent tl.1y to
\vork 011 proj~cu &lt;~nHHHI tlte
hou~~ or in thm~ plan·s you
C"o ll ym1r persoml do111.1iu .
Yo\1 h:~vc .1 ~pcl'J.ll toud1 today for l&gt;t•a.tnltYi llg your 'urro und in!4~ ·

LIUitA (Sept. 2J-O&lt;t. 23) - Tin: rnam re.uu n )'uu .1n' \O
popul.1r WJth your pct·r~ tud.l)'
~~ bt•t·au~c

ym1 inulnL'IlVel)·

lo..&gt;k /for ~ nJ co n''-'ll tT.Jte on
thc1r \'lrtlll'~ r:tt\Jcr th.m lh\'lf
(;\t il[\

�PageB8

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 14. 1001

2001 SOU1HEAST AI.L-DISTRIO FOOl BALL TEAM
COLUMIIUS, Ohio (Af -

-.a.~oc~

Pmo SOutno

Tho 2001

om .u.oilllric:l

higllochool foaiJoll ...,. , , . - b y

a-

'

ponollnJm

Oftenae:

""'-=

OMSION 1
FirM TMm
Pn:U DIM

Harden,
~ . - 1 , 110 .... Joey
Dlvil, c::::na:::othe. 5-10. 190, jr. Quarterbock-Jimmy Skinner, Chillicolho, 6~.
180, sr. '--1nemen Colt Thomp10n,
LOgon, 1-1, 230, ..-. Klein A - Puhl,
Logon.
Defenso: U M - a l l liang,
L.,....., 1-1, teo, ar. LlnerMn TNnt
We da d, L - r.t, 111, or.: A.J.
Couoins,
6-3, 295, ;r.
onoo.... .,._ of 111o - . - . L...,._
'
Dwlo:- ployor al tho - . -

CNiicoll•.

David a-...., Galllpolte 00111o
Aad., S-11, 110, or : Booldoolue,
Tloomllilot SMrid&amp;n, ~- 195.....: JoNmy
Roulh, Pueeuow lilligl, s-10. ta, ~r.;
ty.an Lee, Pomel or Mrllp; a.t11e Bow·
man, Gteenfiekj McClain; .Jonaltwl Luct1,
Thornville Shefidon, Jo&lt;dan Rhodes,

ThomYille

Sheridan; Steve

Stviner,

Tl'oomville Sheridan: Ryan Cllapman, HiHs-

boro; Tony Ferguson, Hillsboro; Todd Farber, H~sboro : Br.ondon COWgill, Greonliold
M&lt;:Ciain: Matt Evans, w•iamtpon Wolf·
fall: Jared Cia,., William- WeolfaH:
Donnie Shoemaker, Wiliamsport Westfall;

w......_

MichaeiAngles.Willia.._t-ai: Nicl&lt;
Kelley.
wesllal: Naie Fur«.
~: Keillo oav~~. ~: Naie
MeG...,., C i - l.Dgan Elm: Btandon
Eveland, Cirdevillo l.Dgan Elm: Bobby

Mong. Logan.
'· Stevens, Circleville Logan Elm; Joah
CO.Ch Of the yetr: 01.. Amyx. Perry, G811fpoh Gil Ia. •c t'l my.
Logon.
Juo6n North, GaHipollo Galtla&amp;p.c:LIII mention
my; Jason Jordon, Greenfield McClain;
Dan Ccngrove, Chlllic:olhe: Oerlik Josh Farber, Greenfield Mcaaln: Chad

Adami, Ci&gt;llicolhe: Jaoon Dlcllon,
L-n: ......,, COOidof, L -.

Dlvlolon I

Howland. Greenfiel!l McClain: Krenlhaw
Chapman, Greenfield Mc:Ciai!l: Ben Gum,
Vlncint Warren; Bryan Jackson, Vinoefll

Warren: Dwayne Beverly, Washington CH:
Cameron Quigley, WashlnQIOn CH: Matt
Bowshier, Wastington Q-t; Nolan Martin,
washington CH: Rob Keler, Wuhington
CH; Matt Brinkman, Washington CH;
Jason Southwor1h, Washinglon CH; Sean
Dumford, Washlnglon CH: Trovlo Olloln,
Vlncent Wlrnn; Scoft AllOway, VJnctnt
WIITenf Justin Gum, 'Anoint Wenn;
Bmt Riff.,, Vlnc.nt Warr.n; J - S h n , - - : Dultin
Wash. CH Miami Trace; Travis Mc::Kinney,
Wash. CH Miami Trace; JoSh Rodden,
Wash. CH Miami Trace; Adam Faulkner,
Wash. CH Miami Trace.

f'or1ornOulll Welt: Seth Moootgomory,

Sciolo NorthwoSI; Mk:h.lel Locby,
Ponamouth Weer Shawn 8ail, Abany

' ·Albany

Ale...-; Joo H..
Aleunder,
Craig C.nkel, M ·Af ,d ; Zach Newlon.

wa-=

Zado

--Chad

Davll.

Pol1smooJII1 -

Brian McCormick,
Lowe,
Minford,
Jeremy
Mathis,
Portsmouth; Brild Poner, Portsmouth;
Brent Rollins, Porttmoulh West; Patrick
~leary, South Point; Ju• Ellches,
South Point, Adam WOolunan, Sj&gt;uth Point:
Chris Hardy, ProcloMIIe Fail1and: Trillan
ClaoO, Prodonlillo Faio1and: Tyler Whaley,
lronlon; Tyler Boggs,
Roci&lt; HI:
Jolh Futw, lronlon Rodt Hil; Bryan Cox,
Cloillicolhe Unioto: Shaun Hansel, Chilli·
COihe Unioto; Lance Phillips, Wetlaton;
Drew Mains, Ironton; Man White, Ironton.

I.,._

01-V
Aqtfeam
Ottenae: Ends-Dustin Winebrennet',
Wheelersburg, 6-1, 160, Sr; Wes
Romanelo, Lucasvile Valley, s-10, 170,
Scph.: Brian Netter, Richmond Dalo Southeastern, 5-11, 185, .-.; Chris Younge, Bainbridge Paint Valley, 6-6, 175, Jr. Trevor
Welsh, Crooksvlle, S-11, 170, jr. Linemen--Eric Meyers, Chesapeake, 6·1, 220,

ou

sr.; cun McNeil,
Hill, f-3, 250, 1r.;
Ryan Hld&lt;rnan. Wheeleo&gt;burg, 6-4, 220,
sr.; Ed Woolum, Frankfort Adena , 6-0,215,
sr.; Dave Henderson, BainiOOtil&amp; Painl
Valoy, 8-4, 285, jr.: Shane COOper, Balo&gt;
bridge Pain1 Valley, 6-5, 255, ir. QuarterDacka Uartt Workman, Balrbridge Paint
valley, 6-2, 195, sr.; Nidt Harris, Lucasville
Valey, 6-3, 190, or. Bl&lt;:l&lt;s-Chase Ellloll,
Netaonvllle-York, 5-11, 170, sr.; Zach
Mc:Cor, Lucasville Valley, 5-11, 195,- jr.;
Jeremiah .Reams, Belpre, 6-0, 185, sr. Alpurpose back-Guy Eaoley, Belpre, 6-2,
180, jr.; Kicker-Ross Mahaffey, Bain·
OIVISIONIV
bridge Paint Valley, 6-C, 190, or.
Fl..tTeam
Defitnse: Linemen-chris Karshner,
Offense: R8celvera-8radley Parker, Richmond Dale SoutheaS1ern, S.10, 170,
Portamouth. 5-8, 160, or.: O.J. carter, sr.; Josh Blevins, Chill. Zane Trace, 6.0,
Portamouth, 6-3, 180, ar., Creed Miller, 225, or.: Rocky Harldess, Nelsonvllle-Yor1&lt;.
Waveo1ir, 6-2, 180, jr.; Ben Martin, waverly, S.., 220, sr., Darren Pertuset, Lucasville
6-C, 185, sr., Oooald French, Fairfield Valley, 6-2, 250, Sf. linebackers Rick Dani·
Union, S- 10, 185, sr. Linemen-Nathan son, Crooksville, 6-2, 220, sr.; Jesse
Chevalier, New Le~nglon, 6-7, 270, sr., Ansell, Chesapeake, 6-o, 200, sr.; Slavs
Bruoe Kalb, Poo1101Mjth, S-10, 220, ar.: O'Brien, Piketon, 5-7, 165. sr.; Pat Diehl,
Tyler Toornbo, Waverfy, ~. 325, lt.: 5col1 Chill. Zane Trace, 6-0, 190, sr.; Boyd Bai·
Davis, Minfon:l, 5-10, ~. sr.; Roman Fry, ley, Wheeloroburg, 6-1, 225, sr.: Ryan
Ironton, 64, 11.; Matt Hollingshead, Well· Spriggs, Lucasville Valley, 6-0, 205, sr.
ston, 6-5, 330, Sr. Quarterbacks-Jay Badls-Jeremy Watts, Crooksllille, 5-11,
Guillon, Waverly, 6-1, 180, or.: Bryoon 160, sr.; Shaun Smith, Coal Grove DawWillilrns, POnsmouth WeS1, 5·10, 185, Jr. son-Bryant, 5-11, 153, ar.: Tom Triplett,
Backa--Joseph Parker, Portsmouth, 5·8, Dole Hill, S-9, 155,1f.: Wayfon Unger, Zane
183, sr.; Brad Young, Wellston, 6-1, 200, Trace, 5-10, 175, sr.; Josh Lewis, Rk:h- .
sr., Drew Canoon, 5-9, 190, Jr.; Zach Moo- mor.t Dale Southeastern. Punter-shane
tavon, Waverly, 5·5, 145, ar.; wm Merriman, Zane Trace, 6-1, 175, sr.
McCutcheon, Lane. Fairfield Union, sr.
Offensive pltyoer o1 the yur: Brlln
Kk:*:ers-Tommy Lutz, Ironton, 6-5, 195, Netter, Richmond Dale Soulhela!em.
sr.; Pllillip Osborne, Wellston, 5-11 , 180,
Dwlenolve plaw-r ol the yoar. Boyd
soph.
Balloy, -loraburv.
Defense: Unemen Ben Ouperow, New
COKh ·o1 111e yur. oa""' Mrora.
Lexington, 6-1, 250, sr.; CUrtis Deck, Wefl- ZlneTrac..
ston, 6-C, 210, sr.: Boyan Maggaoa, South
Spedll mention
PoinL 6-C, 200, ar.: Tyler Scior, Ironton, sNick Hamilton, Belpre; Jeremy Jones,
10, 170, Sr; Darin ThOmas. Proctorville Belpre; Brandon Busbey, Belpre; Brian
Fairland, 5-11, 208, sr.; Mike Lampkins, Adams, Belpre; Luke Gibson, Belpre; COdy
Portsmouth, 6-{), 255, sr. Unebackent- Carpenter, Chillicothe Huntington, 5·9,
Child Porlulr, lroniDn, 6-C, 220, sr., Zach 150, Jr.: Cllnl Sear1, Federal Hocking;
Harrla, Portamouth, 6·1, 245, sr.; Matt COdy BaR, Federal Hoc~ng: Sieve Brucio,
Slone, Miniard, S-11, 200, ar.: Thomas Coat Grove Dawson-Bryant; Nate Weaver,
· Mayes, Wellston, 5-11, 200, jf.; Eric Han- Wheelersburg;
Brandon
Fraah,
man, Lane. Fairfield Union, 5-9, 175, jr. CrookoviiO.; Jared Cl'larrllenln, WheelersBaeka-Antonlo Malone, Portamouth, 6-1, burg; Michael Hunt, Cheseapeake; Brady
182,sr. ;JeJemyFrazte, Mi~.5-10,180,
Mallow, Zane Trace; Pat Shea, Zane
sr., Hugh Donald Scott, Ironton, 6·1, 195, Trace; Justin vemon, Miller. Jay Eckles,
sr.; Andrew Miller, lane. Fairfield Unk&gt;n, 6- Nftlsonvilit·York.; Jason Meade, Nel0, 180, or.
aonvllle-Yor1&lt;; Adam VanDyke, Nelsorwilloonenlln pt•ayer of the year: Jouph Vork; Blake Kllne, Nelsonville-York; .
Partcar, POfiOmoutll.
Andrew Burieson, Wheelersburg; Z.ch
Dolanalwo player of tho w-at: Chad Llattr, Oek Hill; Michael Spencer,
Parker, Ironton.
Lueasvllo Valley. Bryan Veley, - . . .
Coach oft.. yoar. Bob LUIZ, Ironton. burg: Nale Weaver, Wheeleraborg: Alan
Spoclal onaft\lon
Potts, Wheelersburg; Kurt Metzler,
Nate Frazle, Minford. 5-1 o, 1ao, Sf.; Jim L.ucasvilla Valley; Aaron Robertson,
·Scott, Lane. Fairfield Union; Jason GfWb, Lucasville Valley; Ted Bullock, lucasville
Lane. Fairfield Union; Josh Peters, Lane. Valley; Ty..r Evene. Olk Hill; Jemee
Fairfield Union; C&amp;sey Ranier, Lane. Fair· Clulmbara, Oak Hill: Jon Hamin, Zane
field Union; Josh flelefs, 'Lane. Fairfield Trace; Josh lewis, Richmond Dale SOUihUnion; Andrew Miller, Lane. Fairfield eastern; Dave McGarvey, Richmond Oale
Union; Adam Bowman, Lane. Fairfield Southeastern; Jason Stauffer, Richmond
Union; Chad Lininger, Lane. Fairfield Dale Southeastern; Robert Detty, RichUnion; Ty1er Hammond, Portsmouth; Justin mond Dale Southeastern; Ell Henc:lerson,
cantreel, Portsmouth Wftt; Jeremiah Lena, Richmond Dale Southeastern; Josh lewis,
Portsmou1h West; Daniel Deaver, Rlcllmond Dale SOutheastem; Kyle Baxteo,

E-.

OMolon HI
Flrot 1Nm

Ottena: End&amp;-Oevln Smith, Wash.
CH Miami Trace, 5-10, 185, ar.; BaeDSlephen Jackson, Washington CH, 6-0,
175, ar.: llollby Jonoo, Galllpolll, S-10.
175, or.: Nale Vanld,., CircleVille Logan
Elm, 6-0,197, sr.; Tyler Kelch, 5-7, 150, sr.
Quarterbacks-Kyle Acldey, Washington
CH, 6·2, 165, ar.; Mal1c Hunter, Greenlield

MCClain, 6.0, 175, sr. .Unemen-Tyter
Spears, WDhlngton CH, 6-&amp;, 330, sr.;
.Kyle Forgey, Galllpoll• 0.11111 ACIId., 1-1,
·215. ....; Travis Fullerton, Cirdeville L.ogan
Elm, s-10, 205, ar.: """"' Burnott, Gal·
llpolll Gallla •ntamy, ~. 205, ar.;
Adam Love, Thornville Sheridan, 6-4, 230,
ar.: Tony Wood, Washington CH, 6-o, 23(),
ar.. loch Schaad, VI- w....... 1-1,
275, jr.; Graham BuUer, ThOmviikt Sheri·
dan, 5-10, 215, sr. All..purpaa
Chrta
Hind~.. VIncent W•rNn, 5--11, 170,
Of. Kicker- Ma.. CBudll, Wash1n$10n CH,
5-11, 110, ar.
Defenao: Uneonen--Ma,. Blhl, Wash.lngton CH, 6-6, 270, sr.; Natt.n Kl ..de,
Cielllpolla Ollila Aad.,l-3, 205, lf.j Nick
- . Galllpolll AciNI., H, 110,
er.; Jarrod Barrerra, Thornville Shet1dan,
6-1, 225, sr.; Trey Schllchtef, Wash. CH
Miami Trace, 6-2, 190, sr.; Tyktr Jenkins,
Circlevllt Logan Elm. 6-C, 200, Sr. Unebacl&lt;erl-8rad Burbage, WaShington CH,
S-10, 190, or.: Joey RaOdlfl, ClrCioYille, 61, 175, or., Ben Brfsker, ClrdeVile, 6-3,
215, ar.; Travla Howland, 5·9, 17&amp;, sr.;
Cl~lelcl McClain, Rolle~ Zugg, Hilsboro, S.10, 180, Sr. De~ Halthooc~ 6-3,
220, Jr. BacQ-Troy Brown, WaShlnQion
CH, 5·10, 170, Soptl., BUt Cullom, Greenfield McCIIIn, 5-11, 175, Jr.; Uran Coff~
maft, VIncent W.l'fWI, 5-10, 110, sr.
Oftenalve pi8Yer Of tht yur:
Stephen J..._., w..hlngton Court

Hou•.

Defensive pta~r of the )'Mr. Mlrtc ·
Blhl, WMhlngton Court HouM.
CoKh al tM v-r. John Enoche,
WMhlngtan Court Houa.

1

:Rodriguez on losing: 'I can't stand it'
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - Rich Rodriguez said. "That's what's frustrating
,Rodriguez's first. season at West Virginia has about this. We had higher expectations."
Rodriguez hasn't seen the. first-year success
:been his worst coaching experience in 12 sea:sons.
enjoyed by Ralph Friedgen at Maryland and
: It hasn't been this bad since a 1-7-1 record in Mark Richt at Georgia, who have taken their
his debut at Glenville State in 1990.
teams into the Top 25 .
West Virginia (3-6, 1-4 Big East) was assured
Rodriguez has put aside any suggestions that
of a losing record after a 24-13 setback Satur- the no-huddle, spread offense he first crafted at
day at Syracuse.
Glenville and still uses today was too complex
. Losses in their two final games .would give to learn in. one s~ason. It was a matter of hav:the Mountaineers their worst record since the ing the proper players in place.
1978 team went 2-9.
"Offensively, we would have had a lot of
In the 21 seasons of his predecessor, Don teaching to do no matter what our scheme
Nehlen, West Virginia went 4-7 in 1986, 1990 was," he said.
,.. .
and 1999.
"If I was a traditional !-back team this year,
· "It eats at you if you lose," Rodriguez said how good would we have been with four new
:Thesday. "You don't sleep well at night. The offensive lineman arid not a rrue fullback in the
:rood do.esn't taste good. You're not as person- program? And you wouldn't have had that 6-4
wideout to go throw the deep ball."
able as you'd like to be.
"I can't stand it."

He's certainly not accustomed to it.
Not since 1991 h~s Rodriguez been on a
team with a losing record.
He went to bowls the past three seasons as
offensive coordinator at Clemson and Tulane.
Mter that disastrous 1990 season, his Glenville
teams won or shared four West Virginia Conference championships.
One difference between now and his first
year at Glenville were how the teams fared the
year before.
· Last year, West Virginia went to a bowl game
and had some tale·nt coming back. At Glenville,
the Pioneers struggled.
"They were so bad the year before, getting a
first down was a major accomplishment. So
expectations weren't nearly as high,"

'

MARSHALL VS. OHIO:

Richmond Dale Soulheaolem: Jet&lt;Jtff1
Dolly, RChmond Dale Southoaslem: Blake
Lloyd, Sanrilgo Pm Valley, Rhott Starr,
ffrifart Adona: 8 - Hauswirl1, CN~ -­
GOiho Hunlinglon, Matt Gorman, - .
.1-. Bra-. Chesapeake: Tommy Hil,
Chosepeake: COdy Hum, Cllesopoal&lt;e:
J.J. Hunt, Coal Grove Da....n-1!&lt;yant,
Steve Bruce. Coal Grove Da-..on-&amp;yant.
01-YI
FIRIToarn
Oftense; End&amp;-Jarod L.ei'M:gnel, W~­
low Wood Symmes Valley, 6-1 , 180, Sr;
Jimmy Augustine, Portsmoulh Notre
Dame, S.1t , 185, sr.; Jeff Trace, Glouster
Trimble, 6-1, 190, w.; Travi&amp; Barth, Watefford, 6-1 ,158, JOPh. Uueruen Kent Shipl o y , - WOOd Symmes valley, 6-2, 220,
Sr; Jamb Yarnell, Franldin Furnace Green,
6-2, 215, sr.: Travis Noll. Gkluster Trimble.
6-1,270, at.; Adam Fain. Glous1er Trimb6e, 6.0, 205, Sr; Matthew Huck, Water·
lord, 6-3, 264, sr. ~
Ka{r. AeedawiU. Euttm, 5-10, 110, er.,
Bollby Traoe, Glouster Trimble, 6-1, 185,
Sf. Backs-Dan Doeberetrter. WaterfOrd,
5-10, 168, Jr; Brad Bainer, Franklin Furnace Green, 5 -10, 185, &amp;f.; David Blevins,
Po~s . SCiotoville COmmunity, 5-8, 162, " ·'
Bobby Yates, Ports. SCioiOYille COmrntmily,
6-6. Z20, Sr. R.J. Glbbl, Rultevtll EMf.
em, 6-1, 225, ar. All-purpoee blclcCiorlo Lyono, -vlllo e-m, 5-11,
190, ...

Defense:

Linemen: Frank Arnold,

waterton:t, 5--10, 160, sr.; BrandOn Pierce,

Racine Southern, 5-11, 190, sr.; Man
Meadows, Por1s. SCiotoville Communily, 61, 220, sr.; Tyler UtUe, Recine SOuthllm,
6-6, 225, jr. LinebaCkers--Bobby Yates,
Ports. Sdotoville Community, 6-6, 220, sr.;
Kyle Andoews, Glouster Trimble, 6·1, 2f5,
sr.; Matt Ash, Racine SOulhem, 5-11,
180, ar.; Joseph Pattet'son, .Willow Wood
Symmes Valley, 5-11,175, jr. Backs-Ale&gt;
StMJst, Glouster TrirOOie, S-9, 175, sr.; Bill
MCCirly, Willow Wood Symmes .Valley, S9, 165, sr.; Jimmy Moore, Franklin Furnace
Green, 6·1 , 155, jr. Punter-Joe Webb,
Portsmouth Notre Dame, 5--10, 152, sr.
Oftanalwl plapr of the yur: Dan
Doebl,..ner, Waterford.
Dwlen- ployor of tho r-: Kyla
And,..., Glouster Trimble.
COich ot lhe )'elr: PhH FIINI, Trimble.
1

Splclet mention

Alan Salyers, Franklin Furnace Green;
BranOOn VJOSon, Franklin Furnace Green;
Drew Hunt, Willow Wood Symmes Valley;·
Michael Roth, WPtow Wood Symmes Vatley; Nathan Pinkerton, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley; Jesse Brunton, Glouster
Trimble; A.J. Jenkins, Glouster Trimble;
Anthony Cotfmen, Recine Southern;
Aaron Ohlinger, Racine Southern':
Juatln Allen, Racine Southern: B.J.
Memhurt, Racine Soulham; S.n Haltar,
-ville Eaotom: Jon Will, RH&lt;IIvllle
Elllem; Jared Leffingwell, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley; Aaron ConeD, Portsmouth
Notre Dame; Jacob Bowman, Portsmouth
Notre Came; lack L•, .Crown City
SOUth Galllll: Todd M~. Waler·

B~i

ILE FOR THE BELL PREVIEW, 81

Billick lauds his team,
refs after narrow win
OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) - The ending w&gt;S extremely bizarre, the result rather satisfying for the Baltimore
R2vens.
Coach Brian Billick on Tuesday approved the manner in
which the officiating crew handled the hectic final seconds
of Monday night's game against Tennessee, and praised his
team's performance in the 16-10 victory.
The R.:.vens (6- 3) appeared to have lost on a Last-second
quarred&gt;ack sneak by Steve McNair. But referee Bernie
Kukar correcdy overruled the touchdown call because Baltimore linebacker Peter Boulware made contact with
McNair before setting up on defense.
Mter calling offiide, a dead ball foul , against the R.:.venswho were caught off-guard by' the quick spot of the ballKukar gave the Titan&lt; one more play. McNair was stuffed
short of the end zone as time expired.
"It was a strange sequence of events, but the bottom line
is the officials ultimately got it right in a roundabout. way,"
Billick said.
·
And the bottom line is the Ravens are riding a three-game
winning streak and stand a half-game out of first place in the
AFC Central after playing six of eight on the road.
With a little less good fortune, the Ravens could be in last
place with a 3-6 record. They tallied for a one-point.win at
hqme against Jacksonville, thetl beat Pittsburgh 13-10 when
Kris Brown missed four field goals. Monday night, the
Ravens might have lost if Boulware didn't touch McNair on ·
his way back to the line of scrimmage.
"What's the old saying, the better you are, the luckier you
get? Fate is going to play a hand in it one way or another;•
Billick said. "But Tennessee had the ball with a chance to
win the game. How much was luck that they got down
there, and how much was luck that we stopped them?"
The Ravens beat the Titans despite scoring only one
touchdown in a second straight game. Just like last year,
however, the defense was good enough to make up for the
shortcomings of a sputtering offense.
"I think our defense played magnificendy. Offensively, it
was rough and it was ragged, but we nude some plays when
we had to," Billick said.

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tal·
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Melp County"s

Hometown Newspaper

Budget
proposal
•
rece1ves
approval

•

COLUMBUS (AP) Two of the state's top elect. ed officials, both Republicans, clashed Wednesday
over proposals to balance a
$1.5 billion budget deficit.
Gov. Bob Taft said senate
lawmakers lacked political
courage to enact targeted

n

tax increases on businesses.

Senate President Richard
Finan said lawmakers, not
Taft, had the guts to stand
up for taxpayers.
A coalition of Ohio
churches,
meanwhile,
accused 13 senators of
brealdng a
campaign
pledge to oppose the state's
entry into a multistate lottery such as Powerball.
GOP-controlled
: The
Senate Finance Committee
Wednesday night approved
r!!e Senate budget plan by
:it\ 8-3 vote along party
lines.
: The plan includes raising ·
$41 million by joining a
multistate lottery, and $223
th.illion more in budget
~uts than Taft's own proposal. The full Senate will
fete on the plan Thursday.
~lfouse Speaker Larry
I'Jouseholder, a Glenford
Republican, has already
annoulll'e.d. hi~ ·opposiliDI'I ""
to the Senate plan. He said
a joint legislative committee will be needed to iron
out differences.
The finance committee
rejected proposals by Senate Democrats to restore
money to higher education
and fund additional biomedical research. Ohio will
continue to lag behind the
country
economically
without an educated work
force, said Sen. Eric Fingerhut of Cleveland,,the committee's
top-ranking
Democrat.
Earlier Wednesday, Taft
said -the Senate's plan was
fiscally irresponsible and
will jeopardize Ohioans'
health and safety.
Taft also said he was disappointed that the Senate
"couldn't muster the ·political courage" to enact even
one of.the tax increases he
proposed. The governor
refers to them as tax loopholes that need to be
closed to make the tax system more fair.

Todlly's

Sentinel
3 s.ctlons - 11 hps

Calendar
·ClaSsifieds
Comics
Editorials
. Obituaries
Sports
· Weather

AS

LEGIONNAIRE OF THE DECADE - Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, honored
Roscoe Fife of Middleport, center, as its Legionnaire of the Decade Wednesday evening. Post
Commander Delbert Smith and Past Commander Russell Mozingo made the presentation at the
Legion's Thanksgiving dinner. Fife served in the tl.S. Army during World War II. Not pictured is
Bob Holland, a veteran of the U.S. Army during the Vietnam era, who was honored as the post's
Legionnaire of the Year. (Brian J. Reed photos)

legionnaires honored
SPECIAL HONOR Henry Clatworthy of Middleport, left, was honored
for his adjutant service to
the Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion,
during Its annual Thanksgiving dinner on Wednesday. Clatworthy, a 49-year
member of the post, is a
veteran of the U.S. Army
during World War II,
W!lere he
in the
"Pacific Th~::!~tr~~~~~e~-~
Mozingo, past
der of the post, made the
presentation .

FROM STAFF REPORTS

"We are working with the commissioners on
continuing funding for the humane officer's position
next year," Uititt said. "The position is essential
· for the prevention of animal cruelty and abuse, and
to educate people who have not been taught to think
in humane terms. "

POMEROY "The Humane
Society is determined that the county's
financial hardships will not put .the
safety and welfare of the ·county's ani- Meigs County dog ward en.
mals at risk."
"This is an unprecedented move,"
Meigs County Humane Society Waitt said. "Bob .Hill of Racine offered
President Alden Waitt said Wednesday us th e truck .at a most generous disthe society's board of directors has sup- count once he learned what th e truck
plied the county with what members was to be used for."
consider necessities for the animal
Dog Warden Bill Dye\ last truck w&gt;S
control officer.
in poor condition and open to the eleWaitt said the group bought a 1984 ments, Waitt said.
Ford F250 with a cap for use by the
"Our board members work closely
•

Hlp: 60s
Low:40s

Details, A2

Lotteries
OHIO

84-6 Pick 3: 6-7.:0; Pick 4: 2·2-4-6

87

Suptr LDIID: 3-4-5-16-32-42
A4 Kldilr. 2·3-4-:H--3

81-2.5-6 Powelball: 4-17-28-30-40(3)
A2 C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

with Dye and know how essential it is
for him to have a dependable vehicle
that can protect dogs from the elements."

"From conversations with the Meigs

..

The society will retain ownership of
the truck, but the county will maintain, insure and operate it.
The society has also purchased a new
tranquilizing dart gun, which will be
used by Dye and Humane Officer
Carol Lemley.' Dye responds to calls
about dogs running at large, and Lemley about abuse, cruelty and neglect.
"We are working with the commissioners on continuing funding for the
humane officer's position next year,"
Waitt said. "'The position is essential for
the prevention of animal cruelty and
abuse, and to educate people who have
not been taught to think in humane

County . commissioners, it was dear
that funds are at a premium," Waitt
said, "and none of us wanted the ani- terms."

mal to suffer o.r Dye to be prevented
Waitt said that plans for a cat shelter
have been placed on hold.
from doing his JOb."

Area auto dealers hail record-breaking sales
son Chevrolet Oldsmobile. "We have an models left on the lot.
excess of excellent used cars right now.
According to used car manager Bryan
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - New cars are There are some real bargains out there." Ross ofTurnpike Ford, 80 used cars are
selling at a record pace, thanks, in part, to
"Right now is a great time to buy currently on their lot, and a promotional
inte,rest rates as low as 0 percent, res ulting· not only neW cars, but used cars as well,"
sale is currently underway. Greg Smith of
in a slight increase of used cars on local he said. "We have approximately 75 used
Smith-Buick Pontiac estimated 100 used
dealership lots.
cars on the lot and the interest rate has
" I think that lower in teres t rates have dropped dramatically in re cent months." cars on their lot.
"We have 238 new and used cars on
really pushed people forward to buy and
Record-breaking sales have been the
trade-in now instead of waiting until norm since the end of September for area the lot right now," explained Neal Peifer,
spring," said Gene Johnson of GeneJohn- dealers, leaving Johnson with no 2001
Please see Sales, Al
BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL
OVP NEWS STAFF

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WEIRD FIT - The Mountaineer's Avon
CoBournl! has had a good season, despite
playing in a less traditional offense. (AP file)

The commissioners are
authorized by law to impose
up to 1-1/2 percent in sales
Bv BRIAN J. REED
taxes without a public vote.
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF
A 1 percent tax is now on
POMEROY Meigs the books, and SheriffR.alph
County sheriff's deputies Trussell and his deputies
will present county commis- have asked the commissionsioners with petitions show- ers to inunediately impose
ing "overwhelming support" the additional half-mill for
for an increase in the local costs of law enforcement,
sales tax.
including operation of a new
Deputies will also begin a . jaiL
continuous informational
The county's antiquated
picket today to inform the jail was closed two weeks
public about a payroll short- ago as a cost-saving measure,
age and encourage support but will likely remain closed
of the tax hike.
indefinitely due to safety
Deputy William · Gilkey, concerns, said Jail Officer
president of the local Ohio Many Wood.
Patrolm en's .
Benevolent
Trussell said last week the
Association, said Wednesday additional revenue from a
the deputies ·have been in . sales tax hike could not only
front of local supermarkets pay salaries and other current
and convenience stores since expenses for J*. department,
Thesday;· colleciingti'gl!atures bur could also finance the
in support of the half-miD operation of a new jail while
sales tax . increase, and have providing relief to other
received
"overwhelming county offices through general fund savings.
support" in their effort.
The commissioners last
The deputies presented
more than 700 signatures to

Society buys buck fOr dog warden

Pickup will protect
.dogs, help warden

A3 W.VA.

tax .

.

Local

Cf.

the commissioners last week,
and Commissioner Jeff
Thornton asked deputies to
continue collecting signatures to gauge support of the

Petitions show
'ovenvhelming
support' of
tax hike ·

serving Gollio, Jockson and Meigs counties in Ohio
ond Mason

in Wesl ." r.~;n;,.,

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

'

I

I
i

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