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                  <text>Hemlock Grange 25-year membe1s recognized, l

•

a1

Mt'l• Couldy"s

The New Shop-Vace
Contractor and

' .

Whafs Inside

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Increased·
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POWER

CORDS

With Help Like This, Who Needs Elves?
18 Gallon
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Council to re-enter
bidding process for 2002

After

Mlil·ln

Rlibate*

$67

$89

Southern beats Hannan, 5

BY 8Rwl J. REED

Gretta Thomas, 86
Wavelene Voris, 78

essica Rosier, left,
and Rhonda Wagner, Art 2 students
MeigS Local High
School, spent Friday
morning painting winter scenes on the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce's
front window as part of
a . class project geared .
toward educating students about window
painting
techniques
and careers in art.

Details, 3

FOUR YEAR
WARRANTY

Weather
Hlp: 50S, Low: tels

Details, 3

Lotteries
I.

OHIO
Pick J day: 2-2-o

.

W.VA.

Dally 3: 1-7-o

DailY 4: 1·9·6-9
Cash125: 5·12·13·15-16·18

Index

uxx··

HOSE SYSTEM

... e:?

'

Photos by
Tony
M. Leact.
'

'

I S.diH-10 .....

calel)diu
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries

2
6-8

9

2
4

3
3
5,7,8,10
3

Sports
Weather

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishi"' Co.

The ORIGINAL Wet/Dry Vac
days till
Christmas

PoWer cha•g~
II
·

COLUMBUS (AP) - Cheap
power sold in the southern twothirds of Ohio could prevent the
state from reaching its goals fqr
competition for some electric
utilities, the state's chief regulator
said Monday.
Ohio's electric restructuriqg.
law, which took effect Jan. 1 {'o
requires the state's publicly owned
utility companies to send 20 percent of their residential customers
to competitors by the end of a
market development period,
which is in 2005 for most of the
utilities .
In northern Ohio, where electric bills are ·the highest, many
customers are looking for new
power providers, figures from the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio showed. However, in the
southern two-thirds of the state,

BY TONY M. WCH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

'

Wet/DryVac
1159653

22 Galler.
6.25 Peak HP
Wet/DryVac

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12 Gallon
5.0Peak HP
Wet/DryVac

1159648

18 Gallon
6.25 Peak HP
BlowerVac
'
1159682

14 Gallon
5.5 Peak HP

PumpVac

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LOWI!'S'Is 1 10111.- trodemarli of LF Corporodon.
02001 ~... Home Ctn!M.Inc.
for the~·- you eoll 1-800-44-LOWES.

Prlcu may v•ry If thent •re
m.-ket vilrtetlons. .

SponiiOred by

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·If It Doesn't say ShOD•Vac,
Kaap Shopping!•

·~

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in southem Ohio

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'

The Legislature in 1999
restructured Ohio's $11
billion electric power
industry. Distribution and
transmission of electricity
remain regulated monopolies for the state's utilities.
movement Is slow'•or not occurring at all, the figures showed.
The number of residential custamers
switching to
new
providers ranged from is percent
in Ohio Edison's northeast Ohio
coverage area to a statistically
insignificmt amount ,among Dayton Power &amp; Light's customers.
The Legislature in 1999 restructured Ohio's S11 billion electric
power industry. Distribution and
transmission of electricity remain
t gulated monopolies for the

state's utilitie&lt;.
The numbers are simple economics, said PUCO Chairman
Alan Schriber. In areas where utilities offer cheap power, outside
energy providers are hard- pressed
to qffer lower prices, so customers
have little reason to switch,
Schriber said.
Consumer advocates, however,
placed some of the blame on federal regulators, who have yet to
approve plans to set up regional
transmission groups that can move
large amounts of power across
several states.
"You can't have a competitive
retail market if you don't have a
competitive wholesale market,"
said Dave Rinebolt, director of
Ohio Partners for Affordable
Energy, a coalition of consumer
groups.

Friends rally to back
Icenhower's litle shot

QSP Series

15 Gallc)n
6.25 Peak HP

.-~......

Pick 4 day: 9-8-3-&amp;-'·"'" • . ~ ....~ •.,.. ·•o~; •• - ,. ""'·
'kldlayetM: 13-17-23-24-29
Pick J nlpt: 2-4-9
Pick 4 nlpt: 8·1·3·8

.

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.
J

Deaths

16 Gallon
6.0 Peak HP
Wet/Dry Vac.
#159649

"'

12 Gallon
5.0 Peak HP
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#159648

•

POMEROY -Elvis Presley
once sang the bright lights of
Las Vegas can set one's soul on
fire.
However, as one local impersonator will learn, it can also
burn a hole in your pocket.
In ·an effort 'to help cover
elq)enses for Elvis tribute artist
Dwight Icenhower while , he

competes for the tide of
"World's Best Elvis" in Las
Vegas, Nev., next month, the
Friends of Dwight support
group will be holding a special
benefit on 1\1.1onday at . the
American Legion/ Feeney Bennett Post hall in Middleport.
Tided, "Viva Las Vegas," the
benefit will . capture · the

Plu..... 11de.J

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport residents
must wait at least two more weeks before
learning if refuse service rates will increase .
in the new year.
·
Meeting in regular session on Monday
evening, Middleport Village Council rejected a ·proposed increase in refuse, rate&lt; for
2002 md will now go through the. bidding
process for a second straight year.
Todd Rumpke of Rumpke of Wellston,
the village's current refuse service provider,
presented council with a second-year contract rate increase of S1 per customer - to
$8.50 per month, and $7.50 for senior citizens.
Rumpke is completing a one- year contract with the village for residential refuse
service, and that contract contains an option
to renew for another year. Last night,
Rumpke proposed increasing service fee&lt;,
because, Rumpke said, costs of doing business have signi6candy increased.
On the motion of Councilmm Bob
Robinson, council pitched a "compromise"
75-cent increase, and Rumpke later countered with an 85- cent hike, which council
rejected by a three-to-four vote, with._Council "" muahct• R:aget • p,f&amp;tdey, S~heri
Houchins and Kathy Scott voting in opposition.
"I understand that operating costs have
increased, but I can't believe they have
increased enough to justify a S1 increase,"
Houchins said.
Scott said she was concerned that an
increase would affect the customers, who
now pay $9 and $8 per month, respectively.
''I'm not voting for any increase until l
know what the customer is going to pay,"
Scott said.
·
Council will advertise for new bids for
2002 refuse service and will open those bids
at their Dec. 26 meeting, but Mayor Sandy
lannarelli said last night the re-bidding
process will likely result in a higher rate
increase than Rumpke proposed under the ·
current contract. Iannarelli also said Rumpke has also provided good service to Mid,
dleport's residential customers.
,
"They're doing a good job, and I'd hate to
lose them;• Iannarelli said last night. "But the
rates are probably going to be higher later
this month · than what was proposed
tonight."

Please see Hike, J ·

FRIENDS OF DWIGHT- The
Friends of Dwight Support Group
will be holding a benefit on Mon·
day to help cover expenses for
Elvis tribute artist Dwight lcer~­
hower while he competes for the
title of "Worid's Best Elvis" in
Las Vegas, Nev., next month.
Besides casino-style games and
an Elvis karaoke contest, assort·
ed crafts, Mary Kay cosmetics
and an autographed football
signed by various members of
the NFL's Philadelphia Eagles
will be auctioned off. Pictured
are left. Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce Director of Operations Courtney Butcher, Icenhower, and support group member
Julie Campbell . (Tony M. Leach)

Shop-V~ II 1 '"llllttfld trodemork of

Shop-VI&lt; Corporation.

'll'uen.c"' and LockOn'" ort tnidemlrkl of

Shop-VI&lt; Corporation.

• Rtllltt offer t"fflres12131/01
Hills ond tools not lnduded.

Holzer Medical Equlp111ent, .Inc.
•

Oxygen and Related Services.
Medical Equipment and Supplies.
2881 State Route. 160 • Gallipolis
I

Fbr more information, call
(740~

446·4095

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference
www.holzer.org

,,.

·II
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•'

�Tundey, Dec. 11, 2001

-=:.,By the Bend

PageAl

_The_o_any_Se_ntm_ei_ _

I

I

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
mistake.
Three guys pushed their way in,
threatened us with guns and said
they wanted money. They ·asked if it
was my house and if anyone else was
around. I was too scared to teD them
anything but the truth. Two of them
started tying up my girlfriends, the
other tied my wrists behind my back
with cord and led me from room to

room opening drawers, closets, cabinets and taking jewelry, cash and
other items. When we got back to
the living room, my friends were
lying face down on the carpet,
hogtied and gagged. I was then
bound up like a salami, gagged and
pushed to the floor. They told us not
to move for half an hour and left.
When we were sure they were
gone, we started struggling, but
couldn't get loose or communicate
with each other. My parents weren't
expected home until well after midnight, and I was not content waiting
three or four houn for help.
Since I had not been hogtied, I
was eventually able to get to my feet,
hop to the door, get it opened, and
hop across the lawn - falling three
or four times. Fortunately, our

TIME OUT FOR TIPS

I:

Emotional intelligence -refers to how people identify, understand, manage, and use
their feelings to make wise decisions. It also
involves how people deal with disappointments and rebtionships. Research shows that
children who learn to undentand and handle
their emotions are more likely to do better in
school and in life.
Psychologist Daniel Goleman recognizes
several clifferent skilli that lead· to emotional
intelligence:
1. Self awareness - Undentanding emotions and why people feel as they do.
2. Managing emotions - Showing feelings in socially appropriate ways.
3. Motivation Using emotions to
accomplish goals without giving in to
impulses .that could prevent the realization of
those goals; postponing play until work is
done.
4. Empathy- Understanding how others
feel by putting yourself in their place.
5. Social skills - H N people get along
with others.

BY VALREA THOMPSON .

Becky
Baer
ADVICE
Parents can help children develop their
emotional intelligence by encouraging them
to understand and face social challenges.
They can work with them to enhance the
qualities that will help them cope better in
•
today's world.
An example might be if a child is shy, parents can be supportive in social situations.
They can provide them with opportunities
that increase the children's confidence when
around others, rather than holding them
back from being with other people.

SOCIID SCRAPBOOK ·

UMWenjoys
Chrisbnas party

DEAR ABBY: The letter from
neighbor saw me. By the time she
untied me and we got back to the "Happy Mom in North Carolina"
house, my poor friends, still bound about her 6·- year-old son's reaction
on the carpet, were sure I had fallen ·to the "facts of life" reminded me of
into the shrubbt:ry and couldn't get my 6-year-old lt.iughter's reaction.
up.
She, too, prodded me for more
Luckily, aside from a few aches,
none of us was hurt. But I'm sure details about where and how babie;
we'll have nightmares for quite some were made, until I carefully and gen~
time. Meanwhile, I urge kids to obey tly explained the process.
When I finis\tid my speech, she
their parents. I wish I had. -TIED
UP ON SATURDAY NIGHT
wrinkled her litde nose and said,
EAR TIED UP: Your letter gave "Do you get to wear a blindfold or
me chills. You and your friends are something?"
MOM · IN
lucky you weren't beaten, raped or
AUBURN, N.Y.
mutdered. I'm printing your letter as
DEAR MOM: Your explanation
a warning for other young people.
Parents may seem overprotective must have been a real eye-opene~.
much of the time - but they usual- .
Dear Abby is written by Pa.. line
ly have good reasons for setting the
Phillips and dal4ghrer Jeanne Phillips.
rules they do.

Receiving membership certificates were
Doris Ewing, Janice Weber and Charles Cald-

well,

State contest winners were announced and
include Helen Quivey, Class B quilts, first
place; Rosalie Story, crib quilts, fifth place,
and stuffed toy, honorable mention; and Nina
Craddock, plastic canvas, honorable mention.
Story reminded members that canned
goods to go into Christmas baskets must be
turned in this week.
Roy Grueser,legislative chairman, reported
on several proposals being considered by the
State Grange. The charter was draped in
honor of Daisy Blakeslee. Members reported
ill were Helen and Hilber Quivey and Pat
Holter.
It was announced that there will be a new
contest called wood carver in 2002 and tpat
there will also be changes in the art and photography contests. Lecturers of each Grange
will have the details.
An oyster stew and chili supper will be held
at 6:30 p.m. prececling the January meeting.
I
Rosalie Johnson presented a Christmas
program which included a reading, "The
Candy Cane." She gave candy canes to each
one present. Muriel Bradford read "T'was the
I POMEROY -1\venty-five year members Night ·Before Jesus Came," Jane Frymyer
P,ere recognized at the recent meeting of the read "Christmas Throughout the Year," and
Hemlock Grange held following a Christnus also conducted a contest. Group singing of
potluck held at the !;tall.
"Silent Night" dosed the meeting.

SYRACUSE The Asbury United
Methodist women met at the home of Mary
Lisle for their annual Christmas dinner.
The home was decorated extensively for
the celebration. All of the members brought a
toy which will go to the Meigs Cooperative
Parish to be put in Christmas baskets for disadvantaged families.
After the dinner a short business meeting
was held with Ann Sauvage giving the treasurer's report. An offeriiJg was taken, and
secret pal names were revealed and new
names drawn.
Lisle presented the program with Ann
Sauvage giving readings. There was group
singing with Lisle at the piano, and a closing
prayer by Sauvage. Others attending were
Hope Moore,Jean Stout, Rqth Crouch, Elma
Louks and Marie Houdashelt.

SOCIAL SECURITY MANAGER
Most seniors are aware that
they can file for their Social
Security retirement and/or
spouse benefits either by
p h one or in person, b ut now
t h ere is at hi·rd way-o nline.1
. ~
·
1io access t h 1s
tree servtce
firom Soc1a
· 1 S ecunty,
· stmp
· 1y
10 g on to our we b ·Sl·1e,
www.ssa.gnv, enter the information requested and send us
the information over the
lnternet. Some of the information you will need
mcludes:
.
.
• Your Soctal Secunty
number. Your date and place
of btrth.
• The amount you earned
last year and the amount you
expect to earn this year.
• The name and address of
each employer for 'this year
and last year.
• Military service dates.
• The name, Social Security
number and date of birth of
your current and/or any
prior spouse, a_nd the d,al~
and place of each marriage
and, if appropriate, the date
and place the marriage

ended.
Then print, sign an,d mail
or take the paper application
to the address provided along
with the documents we need.
These may include:
• Your birth certificate or
other proof of age;
,
Your naturalization
papers;
, Your U.S. military discharge papers.
, Your W- 2 forms and/ or
self-employment tax returns
for last year.
.
With some exceptions (e.g.
evidence of wages and/ or
self-employed income) SSA
. accepts only original documents or copies certified by
the office that keeps the
record.
So, why delay? If you h;IVe
been thinlting about retiring,
check out www.ssa.gov and
apply for your benefits
d
tl
irec y on 1ine. For addition1 · [I
a m ormation, you may also .
call toll free 1- 800- 7721213
or visit your local Social
Security office. .
.,
Social Security facts
• In just 7 years, the first

baby-boomer will be eligible
for Social Security retirement
benefits .. . and from that
point forward, more than
10,000 of us will reach that
mi 1estone eac h and every d ay.
76 million baby boomers
are now in middle age, and
the number of older Ameri 7
cans will double in a lied•
'
more than a generation.
• At the turn of the 20th
century, only I in 25 Americans was 65 or older; in the
first year of the 21st century,
it's I in 8, and by the middle
of the century it will be I in
4.
.
• More Americans are old
than ever before ... and more
older Americans are very old.
Many people will spend a
fourth of their lives in retire,
ment, and some will follow a
th
40-year career wi a 40-year
retirement.
• The average Social Seenrity benefit for a retired
worker is about $10,000 a
..
'. I
year. :. or just erio"l'lgli to •keep
them above the national
poverty level of $8,600.
•

•

'l•

•

. POMEROY - Gretta Mae Brown Thomas, 86, Pomeroy,
d1td Sunday, Dec. 9, 2001, in Holzer Medical Centt!r.
Born Oct. 11, 1915, in Mint!nVillt!, daughtt!r of tht! late
. George and Mary EliJe Roush Brown, sht! was a homemakFr, and a me~r of Calvary Bib!" Church.
Surviving are a daughtt!r and son-in-law, Zona and Peter
Yakoubian of Grove City; a son and daughter-in-law, John E.
and Patty Thonus of Portsmouth; five grandchildren and six
great-grandchildren; a brother and sister-in-bw, Floyd and
Helen Jan" Brown of Middleport; and several nieces and
nepht!WS.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Edgar
Franklin Thomas; a sister, Carrie Hilewick; and brothen,
Elmer, Clyde, Raymond and Victor Brown.
. Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday in Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home Home, Pomeroy, with the Rev. Alan Blackwood officiating. Burial will oe in Beech Grove Cemett!ry. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 2~4 and 6-9 p.m . Wednesday.
.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Calvary
Bible Church, 32082 Side Hill Road, Rudand, Ohio 45775.

BREMEN -The family asks that no one grieve over the
passing ofWavelene Ruth Householder Voris, 78, but rejoice
with them knowing that she is with her Lotd in heaven to
await the time when we will all be again reunited.
Formerly of Lancaster, she entered into eternal rest at
Whetstone Care Center in Columbus on December 10,
2001.
Mrs.Voris was born November 27, 1923, in Crossenville, to
the late Rev. Perry Oliver and Martha Marlowe Householder.
She was a graduate of Rushcreek Memorial High School
Class of 1941, member of the Lancaster Church of the United Brethren in Christ, Sunrise Women's Missionary Fellowship and Women's Christian Temperance Union. She was also
a past member of the Logan VFW.
Surviving are her daughter, Patsy Barney-(Robert) Gerder
of Columbus; son, Tim (Bev) Voris of Rushville; grandchildren, Scott Gertler, Susan Hatfield, Lindsey McClellan and
Anna Marie Voris; great-grandchildren, Morgan and ·Ethan
Hatfield; and a host of nieces, l)ephews and other family and
friends.
Preceding her in death were her brother, Harley Householder; and sisters, Elsie Nutter, Mandie Householder and
Thelma Householder.
·
. A memorial to celebrate her life will be held Thursday,
December 13, ~001, at 10:30 a.m. at the Snyder-Sheridan
Funeral Home in Bremen. Interment will follow at Grandview Cemetery in Bremen.
Family will receive friends on Wednesday, December 12,
2001, from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m, at the funeral home, and an
hour prior to service on Thursday.
Memorial contributions may be made in memory of Mrs.
Voris to the Lancaster Church of the United Brethren in
Christ, 1125 Pleasantview Road, Lancaster, Ohio 43130.

I

We want your photos! .

f

j

fNIIIPigel
In other business, Iannarelli
read a letter of resig~Jation
tiom Myron Duffield, mem~er of Middleport's Boatd of
Public Alfain. Duffield will
)eave his elected post as of
Dec. 31, or when _the village's
current sewer improvement
project is completed.
. D\.ffield cited ''personal
reasons" as his reason for
resigning.
"This is the wont thing that
could happen to the Boatd of
Public Affairs;' lannarelli said.
"{Duffield)) has put more into
it than anyone else would

ever do."
· "It's a big loss for the village;' said Don Stiven, another member of the BPA.
Duffield's
resignation
comes as council begins discussing eliminating the BPA
In favor of a village administrator, and as the village complett!s a $1 millioiJ lift station
improvement project for the
village's sewer system.
· The BPA was reinstituted
in 1998, when Council dismissed Village Administrator ·
~ill Browning. At that time,
..the EPA began to enforce
mandated water and sewer
improvements and Council
learned that one of the village's water wells was contapUnated by a volatile organic
•

•

Sports inside today:

t

See Page 5

soar again!

•
•
•

•
•

•

LOCAL STOCKS

•

•

-'EP--42.15
}Inn Coal- 19.!12

Dunaee aouble reclining sota
with arop aown table ana
massage ana matching
r'oclcer recliner.

s1ooo

· • Color photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus and have good contrast. Negative!; .
also are accepted; however, please Include a print along with the negative.
• Black·anGwhlte photographs are accepted, provided they are In focus and have good contras}
Negatives also are accepted; however, please include a print along with the negative.
• Standard-size slides are accepted, provided they are In focus and have good contrast.
• Submitted photos should be no smaller than standard wallet size and no larger than 8 x 10.1
• Polariod-type photos are discouraged since they do not reproduce well on newsprint.
• When submitting digital photos. be sure the Images are saved as high-resolution, high-quality
JPEG flies.
.
· • Advantlx·type photographs are dlsoouraged due to their unique sizes, which do not translate
well to newspaper columns. Advantlx·type negatives are not accepted.
. • Laserwrlter prints of digital Images are discouraged since they do not reproduce well on
newsprint.
• Please be sure all subjects In photographs are cleMy Identified on the back of the photograph
or on an attached sheet of paper.

Vaughan- Bassett Sleigh Bea
leather panels, maltchlltg
triple aresser w/lanascape
mirror, 5 arawer chest·

a

°/o,INTEREST

0

FOR ONE YEAR

N&lt;zt&gt;-45

. ~Tac:I&gt;'SI!C-37.91
~Inc. -43.52
AT&amp;T -16.90
Jirl&lt; Ole- 38.91
ll.l-9.74
~Evln!-23.78

-

49.12

~-2.52

I:hlmtlg Sllopo- 5.09

ay Hact1g- 10.Eil
td-18.85

pG-13.37

p.Pall-43.20

Fedllrall.tvJ-1.01

f'lanior- 8.61

Halley DIMdaan- 51 .Q4

Shanoy's- Z1

Kmail-6.06
Kroger- 23.30

WaJ.Mart-54ZI
Wtnt(s-28.72

Acx:kwal-17.34
Glmoll-9122
Rocl&lt;yBOOa-6.45
Ger.- Eloclrlc- 36.90 · AD Shell- &lt;111.11
GKN.Y -4.10
. Seala- 45.36
USB-20.04

l.nlsEnq-44.11
W-13.93 ·

'•VCrtiiQbii-14.40

0\/B- 23

pr8lllous day's flllnSaetiona, prM:Iod by ·Srnlh
Partners
Inc. cJ

BBT- 34.80

f'ooPo8 -18.Eil
Pepaico-46.98

'I
I

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port Llierary Club, 2 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - VFW
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
9053 Thursday, 7:30 p.m. al the
Ubrary wllh Jtanne Bowen as
hoa!eu. mar'lha Hoover Ia hall. Dinner at 6:30 P·!"·
review RThe TontineS by
TUESDAY
FRIDAY
Thomas
B. Coataln.
RACINE - Racine Board ol
MIDDLEPORT- Wldowe Fe~
Public Affalra, Tu11day, 7 p.m. at
POMEROY - Bloodmobllt, 1 lowllhlp, Friday noon, Middleport
the Raclna Municipal Building.
to 6 p.m. Senior Cltlztnl Cenler. Church of Chrlet. Mtmbara to
take $1 gilt for exchange. Finger
POMEROY - Joe Brockman,
locde for lunch.
, Title Ill attomey, will be · at the ~ THURSDAY

&lt;'..a'V"s

Choir to sin1

Trustees
to meet
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees will met
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the town
hall.

OES meetin1
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville OES ;!55 wil
meet Tuesday, 7:30 p.ln. There
wil be a potluck dinner at
6:30 p.m. Merr!bers are to
take an unwrapped new toy
to be given to a needy child.

Dinner planned
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will have
a Christmas dinner party at
Morgan's Rest, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday. . Members are to
take items for Serenity House.

Meetin1set
CHESTER - , Chester
Township Board of Trustees
will hold its regular monthly
meeting Tuesday at the
Chester Town HaD, 7 p.m.

POMEROY Eighth
gradt choir of Meigs Middlt
School will give a Christnus
concert at II a.m. on Dec. 18
at the Senior Citi~ens Center.

Toy contest
POMEROY - A handmade wooden toy contest will
be held Saturday at Farmen
Bank.
Entries are being accepted
anytime and will be displayed
in the bank lobby until the
judging which takes place following the bank's closing Saturday.
Prizes will be awatded for
first, second and thitd pbces
in the contest. Tammi Zirkle
is chairman of the contest
sponsored by th~ Pomeroy
Merchants Association. 1

Open door
POMEROY - State Rep.
John Carey, R-Wellston, will
meet with constituents on
Wednesday from 1:30 p.m. to
2:30 p.m. at the Meigs County Courthouse to discuss ideas
and concerns about ~tate government.

VALLEY 'W EATHER

Showers likely on Wednesday

Tdle
ftom Page 1·
ambiance

ren.owned

of

the

world

casino Mecca,

while at' the same time, pay
tribute to the late musical
entertainer.
Casino-style games, such as
blackjack and roulette, will
be available, as well as Elvis
trivia games, a split-the-pot
drawing, and an Elvis
karaoke contest.
. For every $5, guests will be
given $5,000 in "Dwight
Dd)lars," non-legal tender
emblazoned with lceiJhower's face, to play casino games
from 6-9 p.m.
games,
Following the
atte~tdees can spend their
winnings in an auction that
will feature many donated
items, including a football
sigoefl by various members
of· the NFL's Philadelphia
Eagles.
Icenhower recently won
the title of Eastern United
States' Best Elvis Impersonator during the Fo_othills Fall
Festival in Marysville, TeniJ.
He "qualified for the competition after taking top honors
in the "Search for Elvis" contest, staged in September at
the Sternwheel Regatta in
CharlesroiJ, W.Va .
For
his
efforts
in
Marysville,
Icenhower
received a cash prize, a $400
gift certificate toward a
jumpsuit from the · clothing
company, where Elvis had his
outfits made, and a paid hotel

room in Las Vegas during the
world competition.
"We are very proud to
have Dwight represent the
Big Bend area and our support group has rallied to
make this a memorable and
worry-free trip for him," said
member Mary Gilmore.
"Dwight has used his talent
to help numerous civic clubs
and organizations in our area
and we feel like giving something back to him for all of
the kindness and generosity
he has displayed over the
years," she said. ,
·
Money collected from the
benefit will specifically go
toward the payment of Icenhower's airfare, costume apd
miscellaneous
expenses,
added Gilmore.
''I'm very grateful that so
many people are helping out
and recog~Jizing what I'm
doing," said Icenhower. "The
people of Meigs County
have · always been supportive
in ;ny endeavor and I hope
that I can represent . them
well during the competition."
\
Icenhower will perform
this Wednesday from 7-9
p.m. at the performing arts
center located on the main
campus of the Univenity of
Rio Grande.

BY THE ASSOCI~TED PRESS

The National Weather Service says a developing low
pressure system will move out
of the southern Plains late
Tuesday night and push into
the mid-Mississippi valley by
Wednesday afternoon, bringing rain tothe region.
Rain wiD spread late
Wednesday and continue
Wednesday night as the low
moves into the Great Lakes.
Temperatures will climb into
the 50s.
A cold front will .move in
Thursday. Morning highs will
reach into the 50s, then temperatures will fall into the 40s

as cooler air filters into the
state. Dry weather is expected
into the weekend, with seasonabla temperatures.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:06. Sunrise Wednesday will
be at 7:44a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
with fog developing late this
evening. Lows in the mid 40s.
Light southeast wind.
· Wednesday... Fog until midmorning, then considerably
cloudy with a chance of
showers late. Highs in the
upper 50s. South wiiJd 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 30 percCnti· -_
..

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Individual as you.

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LOCAL HAPPENINGS
ROCKSPRINGS Rock·
springs Belter Health Club to
meet at noon, Thursday, lor
Chrislmas dinner at Rocksprings
Uniled Methodist Church·. Cookie
trays lor shut·lns to be made following the dinner.

LOCAL BRIEFS

NSC-18.90
Daily AXk repor10 nllle
Oak HI Fm1dal-15.50 4 p.m. clooi1g ~ Qlllle

The main number ls 992·2156.

Senior C"izens CenlerTuesday
10 answer legal questions for
seniors regarding living wills,
p;ower of attomey, and esla1e
planning.

The Dally Sentinel• Page A 3

An Farmers Bank locations will be ho1ding a holi-

•

. Community Calendar Ia publlahed as a free nrvlc:e to nonprofit groupa · wlahlng to
announce mHilnga and apeclal eventa. The calendar Ia not
llealgnecl to promote nlea or
fund·ralaera of any type. ltema
are printed only •• 11p1ce per·
mlta and cannot be guaranteed
to be printed 1 apeclflc numblr
of daya.

compound, traces of which
can no longer be found. '
lannarelli discussed recent
vandalism
at
Riverview
Cemetery, and said the village
plans to fully prosecute anyone discovered at the cemetery during closed houn.
A headstone at the cemetery was recendy extensively
damaged, lannarelli s~id, and
the Police Department is
investigating a number of
leads. ·
Council reviewed cost estimates for th'e repair of the
roof of the village garage, and
referred them to a committee
for final action. Bids were
received from Sam's Quality
Construction, Middleport,
$3,473.75;Young's Carpenter
Service, Pomeroy. $6,925; and
Sunset Home Construction,
Pomeroy. $3,360.
Council also:
• Approved a mutual fire aid
contract with Village of
Cheshire and Township of
Cheshire;
• Authorized Police Chief
Bruce Swift to hire a parttime dispatcher;
• Approved payment of bills
in the amount of $31,202. 92;
• Approved the mayor's
report of fines and fees collected in the amount of
$4,238.50 for the month of
November;
Also present were Council
members Rae Gwiazdowsky
and Bob Pooler and Clerk
Bryan Swann.

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recognized

The Sentinel welcomes your photographs. Here are a few guidelines for subtnisslons:

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Applyingfor Social Security ben9its

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Obituaries

Tuesday, Deculber 11, 2001

Teens home alone learn hard lesson about obeying parents
DEAR ABBY: I'm 16, normally
a good kid. but I made a major goof.
Otdinarily I'd be punished, but my
parents think I've suffered enough.
They suggested I write to you as a
way of reminding other kids about
the importance of obeying their parents.
Last Saturday, my parents had a
dinner engagement and said I could
have two girlfriends over for the
night. They gave me three rules: no
mess, no boys and don't open the
door to strangen. My parents left at
7. My girlfriends and I made popcorn and put on some CDs. We
flopped in the living room and.started · munching. About 8 p.m. the ·
doorbell rang. Gbncing out the
window I thought it was a guy I am
dating and opened the door. Big

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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day celebration on Dec. 14th from 10:30 am-12:30 pm,
complete with prizes, refreshments and appearances by
Santa Claus at the Pomeroy location.
Come in to any Farmers Bank location by Dec. the lith
and ent~r to ~in the Farmers
·
Bank $1 ,000 Rate Changer
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CD. If you're the lucky
winner, tile Prize

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Patrol van ~ill be
coming to your door.
The. $1,000 Rate Changer
CD will be awarded
during a live radio
broadcast on Dec. 14th.~--""~

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�Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

..

PapA4
'lftldtly. DIC

'•11, 2001

'l'uesUy, D•ce•ber 11. 2001
•

••
•
•

•

ClulrleaVt.Govey

R. Shawn L.ewla

Publlaher

Managing Editor

Clwlene Hoelllch

DIMM Kay Hill

o.n-1 MIINI!IW

Controller'

;, HIGHLIGHTS
I
Ptwp llaakelball
Glrl8
I
Meigl 48, Miller 25
! Eallem 51, South Gallia 15
: Soulhem 65, Hannan 15
• .'(lahema 81, Poca 50
: Gdla Academy 70, Logan 31
: Pt. Pleasant 49, River Valley .

I""

· 11111'.,.,.,., ..,_,M
hilt

Ca." ~...,.., uJ,m ~,...

•Jonlan Times, Amman, on suicide attacks in Israel:
The right of people to liberate theinselves fiom occupation
' is a historic reality which has attained popular recognition and
internationallegitimacy.Yet, there has been no declared official
· ·. acceptance that justifies the most violence as a mearu to a
.' .' rightful end for liberation movements. .
The Palestinian struggle is no exception. There is mounting
. ·, sympathy worldwide, even solid support for the Palestinians'
: legitimate fight for independence and freedom fi:om the
; longest and harshest occupation in recent history.
.
, ·. But restoring to suicide attacks that have mainly targeted
· civilians has been harmful to the cause i~elf by feeding an
:. already active and hostile propaganda campaign linking the
' . Palestinian struggle to the very brand of international terror.• ism which the whole world stands united to fight
The latest suicide bomb attacks represent a serious setback
. · to the ongoing efforts of U.S. envoys Williani Burns and
· ' Anthony Zinni to forge and try to consolidate a ceasefire.
' ... Israel on its side should also heed international pressure to
break the cycle of violence instead of encouraging extremists
: to spill more Israeli blood and take the whole region hostage.

. Symmes Valley 65, ave 21
Athens 48, Jackson 27
Ft. Frye 66, Shenandoah 46
VInton County 56, Waterford
38
Nelsonville-York 66, Fed.
Hock. 58
Qak Hill 91, Wheelersburg 46
P0118m0uth 54, Fairland 51
S. Webster 53, Lucasville Vallay27
South Point 53, Ironton 40
Warren 53, Marietta 50, OT
NCAA Men'a Ble~ll

R)STCARQ FROM FLORII'A
KONDRACKE'S VIEW

Arafot just won't take (last chance'

Mondey'eolona 75, C&amp;nisius 65
.Loyola, Md. 60, St. Peter's 59
Maine 67, Sacred Heart in

1

·, . • Le Monde, Paris, on the Palestinian suicide bombers andYass-

. _er Ar'!fot:
We must state thing; simply. The blood bath carried out in
Israel on Saturday and Sunday by terrorists of the Palestinian
movement Hamas was barbaric...
' · Israeli authorities have placed responsibility for the attacks
. onVasser Arafat's Palestinian Authority; they accuse him of trying to sabotage the United States' latest attempt at mediation.
. That accusation is arguable ... The weekend blood bath further
. weakens the Fatah chief The attacks further undermine his
' authority, which has been precarious for 18 months - since
he refused to follow up on Eh~d Barak's proposals for peace,
: since he launched an intifada that he is incapable of stopping...
· For Arafat, the moment of truth has arrived. He can no
, longet c\aim .t o lead the Palestini;m movement if he does not
. . take action against Hamas.

• At-Abram, Cairo, Egypt, on Irnzeli-Palestinian violence:
For the past 14 months, hundreds ofPalestiniaru fell martyrs
: and thousands wounded in their great uprising for freedom
and independence as they live under the suppression of the
. : Israeli occupier which resorts to unjustified violence, subjuga·i tion and tyranny as well as the explicit terrorism of assassination.
Under such circumstances, the occupation forces and the
.
, : extremist Israeli leadership left no way oqt for the Palestinians
but to continw struggling with stones to confiont an army
i using the most advanced weapons or sacrificing themselves to
,. inflict a big harm on the state oflsrael.
,
Civilians should be out of the drarnati£ effects of this dispute.
: Yet Israel always kills civilian Palestiniaru and thus it justifies the
· ! Palestinian explosions, similar to that which recently hit Israel.
, These events should stop the Israeli leadership, to reread
: them wisely instead of resorting to empty threats of violent ·
• retaliation. If it does so, it will rtialize that its attitude, full of
' . arrogance to subjugate another people, is the main reason
behind all the catastrophes in the region.

This really needs to be Palestinian
leader Vasser Arafat's final "last chance" to
curb terrorism against Israel -- but the
Bush administration needs to prepare for
the likelihood that Arafat will blow it once
agam.
Ever since the ~t Bush admirristration,
Arafat has been importuned and cajoled
to arrest agents of Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad who organize suicide
bombings against Israeli civilians.
Occasionally, he's responded to the pressure by rounding up "usual suspects;'
sometimes by the dozens. But they've
always returned to the streets before long,
and terrorist incidents have quickly
reswned.
The latest horrific bombings in
Jerusalem and Haifa again force botb
Americans and Israelis to confiont the
questions: "Does Arafat lack tbe power or
the will to control terrorism?" and "Does
it nutter?"
In both countries, there's a growing
consensus on the , politi~al right that it
doesn't matter, that Arafat is an obstacle to
peace, and that he ought to be foroibly
ousted from power and driven back into
exile.
The chairman of the Bush admirristration's advisory Defense Policy Board,
Richard Perle, said Monday on National
Public Radio's "Diane Rehm Show" that
"it's time for Arafat to go.
"He can't bring peace to the region;' he
continued. "He's had multiple 'last
chances.' We've irtdulged · his administration for far too long. His schools and
media spew out hatred of the most
extreme sort. His regime is corrupt and
ineffective. Let's take a chance on his sue-

'

,. ciendy clear signals, the Israeli missile attack on Vasser Arafat's
headquarters in R.alnallah yesterday made Ariel Sharon's
: intentions evident. Mr.Arafat is a virtually stranded figure, both
: physically and politically; and his freedom of movement
· depends entirely on the charity of the Israeli Prime Minister.
; The complex demands of coalition politics in Jerusalem,
.. notably his preference for retaining the Labour Party in his
: Cabinet, may mean that Mr Sharon stops short of otdering the ·
: targeted killing of Mr. Arafat and does not declare the peace
·, process to be dead and buried indefinitely. But he would riot
. weep if Mr Arafat w~nt into exile. Mr. Sharon would be wise
· to exercise this element Of caution. His spokesmen have said
; that it is not his policy to kill Mr.Arafat, although Israel plain·. ly could if it so aspired, and he should not abandon that
,. promise. The death of Mr. Arafat would not of itself resolve
: Israel's security dilemma and it would, understandably, be the
' cause of enormous trouble.

Morton
Kond&amp;icke
COWMNIST

shooting at Israeli troops.
Ar:ifat has engaged in negotiations with
the terrorist groups that he's supposed to
be suppressing, Hamas and PI], and has
visited with and praised the families of
suicide bombers.
According to Robert Sadoff, director of
the Washington Institute on Near East
Policy, Arafat's police force of 30,000 defirritely could arrest Harnas' and PIJ's estimated 3,000 fighters if he wanted them
to.

According to lndyk, Sharon is relying
cessor, because-it's clear he is never going on a combination of violence and "masto make peace.''
sive international pressure" orchestrated
l.n Israel, former Prime Minister by Bush to force Arafat to finally bring
Binyamin Netanyahu, who aspires to Hamas and PI] under control.
replace Prime Minister Ariel Sharon,
Bush has demanded that Arafat do so,
advocates demqlishing Arafat's Palestinian pointedly not urged Sharon to show
Authority, banishing Arafat and reoccupy- restraint, and put Hamas on the list of tering territory in Gaza and the West Bank rorist groups subject to U.S. attack.
ceded to Arafat during peace talks over
Also, some administration officials have
·the past &lt;1ecadet
· said that Arafa(s days as a k;lder IJljl}h be
There is much merit to the right-wing . nwnbered if he doesn't get terrorism
case against Arafat, though neither Sharon under co~trol. But, so far, there has been
nor President Bush is ready right now to no Bush ultimatum to arrest the evil ones
conclude that he must go.
or else.
Arafat proved conclusively last year that
The "or else" op~ons could include the
no Israeli. peace offer, no matter how gen- cessation of all U.S. contacts witl1 Arafat, a
erous, would be acceptable to him. He campaign to persuade U.S. allies to cut off
rejected a proposal by former Prime Min- his financial support, a U.S. declaration
ister Ehud Barak for 97 percent of the that he "harbors terrorism" or even "spanWest Bank, partial governance of sors" it -- or a "green light" to ISrael to
.
.
Jerusalem and recognition of Palestine as a expel him.
country.
Arafat has to be made to fear that he
And he not only rejected the offer as will truly lose everything he has and has
insufficient, he responded with violence worked for if he doesn't control the perthat continues to this day. The official petrators of violence. And if he simply
Palestinian Authority police and pararnili- can't do this, what good is he?
tary forces thatArafut directly controls, the
(Morton KondrtUke is executive ·editor '?f
Tanzim and Force 17, have participated in Roll Call, the newspaper cif Capitol Hill.)

WASHINGTON TODAY

;i

• The Times, London, on the Israeli missile attacks on Yasser
; Ar'!fot~ headquartm:
, If the assault on his helicopter facilities in Gaza City and the
. enforced closure of the sole Palestinian airport were insuffi-

HEMLOCK -- The Meigs Lady
Maraduer basketball team ran its
record to 3-1 with a 48-25 win at
Miller Monday rright. The Marauders
who played without the services of
Jurrior Kayte Davis (out with a knee
injury) and Mindy Chancey (out due
to illness) placed 10 playen in the
· scoring column, led by Jaynee Davis

with 16 markers:
Lindsay Bolin got the scoring started with a put-back at the 5:36 !Tl2rk
of the first quarter. The Lady Falcons
struck back as Ashley Hinkle hit a
three-pointer to give the Falcons their
only lead of the rri~t 3-2 with 5:07
left. Two Davis hoops, a Samantha
Pierce trifecta, and a lay-up by Shan- '
non Soulsby pushed Meigs in fi:ont
11-3.The Marauders took a 13-Slead

into the second period.
Davis, taking a perfect pass fi:om Ali·
cia Werry gave Meigs a double-digit
lead early in the second stanza. Afier a
Hinkle two with 6:21 to go play got
sloppy and neither team was able to
light up the scoreboard again until
Davis hit a short jumper in the lane
with the assist going to Soulsby at the
3:52 mark. The half ended with Meigs
on top 19-9.

The Falcons could only llWlage
two free throws in the first 3:30 of the
third quarter, as Meigs scored I 0
points in the span led by Bolin's five
points. A Samantha Pierce trey and
back to back goals by Katie Jeffers
gave Meigs a 20-point advantage at
33-13. Easy baskets by Davis and
Werry due to some crisp passing by

..... -

11dp. 7

· 26

Hannful
Suidde attacks hurt
chance of Mideast peace

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

•'

,...,. Aldw..,.,. wlcolw. 1'fwJ s....U M las ,._ JDO . . .. All ~nUn
... ~ .. - . . - ...... lipMI ......... -..._,,.,,._ ........
N. • ........, - . , ....,. .k , . . , _ ldus sltt:NIM H ill P*l ruu, ...,...,,.,
....., ..,,_. 'We.
ill4t' tWuu Hlow.,.. dw CMUtMIU of liM OIW W.U.,

lady Marauders ground Miller, 48-25
BY JIM 5ouueY

I

·'----------------------------------------------WORLD VIEWS

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• IJK4l bowling, Page 8
Hoops roundup, Page 10

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Mayors' races qffer important lessons about Hispanic vote
BY WILL LEsTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
WASHINGTON ~ Democrats

and
Republicans got a remlnder this year in
mayors' races in New York, Houston and
Los Angeles that Hisparric voters are a
fast-growing and crucial swing vote tied
more closely to ethpic than party loyalty.
That dynamic of ethnic loyalty, which
played out in very ilifferent ways in the
three cities' mayoral races, could . be
important in many races next year.
"Elections for mayor in several of
America's biggest cities have confirmed
the fact that the Hispanic electorate has
became a crucial swing vote;' said pollster Sergio Bendixen of Miami. "If
they're offended or mishandled, they'll
cross party lines."

Former California Gov. Pete Wilson
took a strong anti-immigrant stance in
the mid-1990s that seriously damaged
Republicans' image with Hisparrics for
years. Hispanics have voted more ofien
against Republicans than for Democrats,
po!iti(al analysts say.
Led by President Bush, the GOP is
aggressively courting Hispanics, the
fastest-growing segment of the population. Democrats are feeling the growing
pains of the Hispanic population boom.
These are this year's elections that
highlighted the increasingly tricky landscape:
--In New York, a nasty feud within
the Democratic Party took on racial
overtones, and Republican 'Michael
Bloomberg scored an upset win last

month. He was aided by a split of the ·
Hispanic vote in the heavily Democratic
city.
--In Houston, black Democratic
incumbent Lee Brown held onto his job
last Saturday but had to run a'tough campaign questiorring the competence and
judgment of conservative Republican
Orlando Sanchez. Sanchez came very
close to winning and won over a majority of Hisparrics.
--In Los Angeles, Democrat James
Hahn angered many Hisparric supporters
of Democratic opponent ·Antonio Villaraigosa by running an ad with images
of a crack pipe and a razor blade cutting
cocaine. Hahn, who won the June .:leelion, was attacking Villaraigosa for writing a letter on behalf of a drug dealer
whose sentence was later commuted. No
Republican was competing in the
runoff, so it was impossible to judge if
the campaign split Democrats.
Republicans seized on the win in New
York as the bright spot in a generally dismal 2001 election season that saw them
lose two governors' races. They cautioned the faithful the party must work
hard to prevent more losses like the one
in Houston .
"Republicans are neophytes · about
·inner-city campaigning," said AI Cardenas, chairman of the Florida Republican
Party, who advises the national party's
efforts to bring Hispanic voters into the
fold. "We're great at suburban campaigning, but we need more on-the-ground
training when it comes to inner-dry

campaigning.''
Democrats still claim an advantage of
2-to-1 or more over Republicans among
Hisparrics in many parts of the country,
but they face a challenge in holding that
edge.
"I think the Democratic Party is struggling right now in being able to say
they're the party that best represents Latino interests," said Arturo Vargas, eJ«;cutive
director at the National Association of
Latino Elected and Appointed Officials.
"They're struggling with how t? bring
Latinos into leadership roles, on redistricting to give Latinos a fair opportunity to elect candidates of their choice.''
"There's no question that we have to
fight for the Hisparric vote," said Michael
Meehan, senior counselor for the Democratic National Committee. "They're not
an automatic part of the base vote.
They're more a swing vote."
The Democratic attacks on Sanchez
also may carry a price in Houston, said
Republican Cardenas.
"I think Democrats are entering a very
risky environment as we recruit more
minority candidates," Cardenas said.
Democratic spokeswoman Maria Cardona said the "racist tactic" used. in New
York will be extremely unwelcome in
future party primaries. ,
"We don't need it, and we can't alford
it," she said. "The Democratic Party
comes from a tradition of coalition
building and diversity."

(Will Lester covers politics and polling for
The Associated Press.)

,.

Marlst eo, Rider 69
Georgia 95, Georgia Tech 82
Louisiana-Lafayette 84, Blnnlngham-Southem 72
Maryland 79, Detroit 54
S. C&amp;rollna St 89, Coastal

carolina 81
Drake 85,1ndlana St. 71
Illinois St. 72, Cent Michigan
·• 83
NBA
·Monday'• o-e
., 107, ·Dallas P:..
A Glippers 100, Orlando 92 .
NFL

Monday'• Galllft
Miami 41 , Indianapolis 6

Wahama erases
Poca. 61·50
MASON, W.Va - Strong
"·team defense, a big scoring'
night by CJ. Blessing, and an
excellent bench helped propel .
the Lady Falcons to a huge
61-50 win Over a good Poca
team.
Blessed with blazing speed,
'· the host Lady Dots jumped to
an early lead before the
Wahamans clawed back to a
· slim one-point half-time lead,
then used depth and strategy
'.. to pull away for the impressive
·- win.
Blessing, still hampered by a
balky knee, showed little loss
, of offensive punch by it, piled
' ' up a huge game-high 33 tallies to lead all scores, and drew
ever closer to that 1,000 point
mark.

11ger Woods
finishes on top
LONDON (AP) -- Tiger
Woods ended the year at No.
1 in the world ranking for the
·...,fourth consecutive. season,
· while John Daly tmproved
- 456 spots to No. 51 -- one
place short of earning an invitation to the Masters.
Woods had a substantial
lead over Phil Mickelson, and
likely will remain No. I
through at least the first half
of next year.
Lee Westwood, Colin
M~ntgomerie, Hal Sutton
and Tom Lehman all fell out
of the top 10 this year,
replaced by Sergio Garcia,
' PGA champion David Toms,
U.S. Open champion Retief
Goosen and Darren Clarke.

lsringhausen
now a cardinal
ST. LOUIS (AP) - This
time, it didn't matter that the
St. Louis Cardinals were outbid for their free-agent target.
Jason Isringhausen signed a
$27 million, four-year con"
tract with St. Louis, opting to
play for a winner close to
home rather than the biggest
contract.
lsringhausen turned down
an offer from the Texas
Rangers for nearly $30 mil-

Southem declaws Wildcats
BY Scon WIILR
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

· RACINE -- Behind
another unselfish effort
that saw all eleven players
get in the scoring column,
the Southern Tornadoes
rolled to a 65-15 nonleague triumph over the
Hannan Wildcats Monday
rright during the first varsity contest ever played in
the new Southern Elementary gymnasium.
Southern, 4-0, 1-0,
remained undefeated in
four starts while Hannan
drops to 0.2.
Southern's
defense
caused
34
Hannan
turnovers and squeezed the
Wildcat shooting to a
freezing cold 5-of-45 overall, while hitting 5-of-11 at
the line. Southern, meanwhile, hit 18-of-43 fi:om
the field and hammered 5of-10 three's, whi)e connecting on 4-of-9 fi:om the
line.
Southern was led by
junior Rachel Chapman,
who led the senior-less
team with 14 points and
eight rebounds, while
Btigette Barnes · and Amy
Lee each hit double figures
with ten points each. Lee
led the team with seven
steals and six assists, while
Barnes contributed again
with a five assist effort and
six rebounds.
A trio of freshmen,
Joanne Pickens, Brooke
Kiser, and Ashley Roush
each added six, five and five
points respectively. Katie

, . _ ... Soellltern. •

Eastern
tears

Rebels
BY JON WILL
SENT1NB. CORRESPONDENT

After dropping their first
game to Belpre, the Lady
Eagles · have won four
straight, with their fourth
against at the expense of
the South Gallia Rebels.
Stacie Watson went out
early in the game, but
proved her yvorth when
she came back in the second quarter and went on
to score a team-high 20
points. She also managed
to pull down 14 rebounds,
as the Eagles were all over
the Rebels 51-15.
The Eagle defense was
outstanding, allowing only
one point fi:om the Rebels
in the first quarter. Watson
gave the crowd a scare
when she went down with
an ankle injury late in the
first.
"Anytime you have a key
player like Stacie go down,
it's scary. I· was really worried at first, but thankfully
she was all right, and even
able to return to the
game," said head coach
. Paul Brannon.
With Watson out of the

I'VE GOT IT -The Lady Tornados' Rachel Chapman, center, battles for the rebound with Lady
'Cats Jessica Bias (#35) and Amber Adkins (#42) during hardcourt action at Southern High
School Monday night. (Dan Adkins)

'Fin's blast Colts, 41-6.
MIAMI (AP) -- Peyton playoffs, especially with an 0- Dolphins notched their most
Manning trudged fO the side- 4 record against division foes lopsided victory since a 52line, shaking his head .while Miami and New England.
PluM - MN~, 7
trying to explain his third .. "In the football world,
interception. Seconds later, these are tough times," ManJay Fiedler raced off the field, ning said.
celebrating his third touchJhe Dolphins (9-3) have
down pass with coaches and won three in a row and
teammates.
extended their AFC East lead
The night belonged to the to 1 1/2 games over the
quarterbacks.
.
Patriots and two games over
Manning didn't throw a the Jets. And they did it by
touchdown pass for the first scoring six offensive touchtime this season and raised his downs and a season-high in
interceptions total to a points.
league-high 20.
.
Fiedler, who had 15 interFiedler, meanwhile, played ceptions and three fumbles in
mistake-free football for the Miami's first nine games, has
third consecutiye game, seven touchdown passes in
throwing three TD passes and his last thre.e games without
running for another score as · an interception or a ~mble.
the Miami Dolphins over- He was 18-of-26 for 191
whelmed the Indianapolis yards Monday and improved
Colts 41-6 on Monday night. to I 0-0 with the Dolphins
The Celts (4-8}, who had when he doesn't throw an
not lost this badly since a 44- interception. The team is 9-7
6 defeat against the New York when he gets picked off.
Jets on Sept. 20, 1998,
Fiedler threw two TD passdropped th~ir fifth straight es to rookie Chris Chambers,
game. And they probably can one to Oronde Gadsden and
forget about making the ran for a 9-yard score as the

----~~~~~
GOOD INSURANCE
~'fM:l ~ ahouldn't 'tilt' your budget ...
ICIKf.T... .
IH ua for AFFORDABLE
. INSURANCE!

.....- - - • CLYilE. t IIAOI£

111E. IUIUUCU11

Downing Childs Insurance Agency
(740)
-3381
198 E18t Second St. • Pomeroy

'·

'I
I

!'

�•

Middleport, Ohio

T!unlfl!y, Dec. 11, 21100

t!trthune - Sentinel -·

~.,t___;;Aulofi;,;SA;;.u:;;;._.l ~.,r__:; ;~ Wil ;._.1
l~
11

CLASSIFIED

M-................
_....,...,..,_
.......,....·
--·

We Cove·"'-..,
Meigs, Galllar
And Mason
Counties Like
No One

•

()ff!ee, 11o~~

ijp&amp;

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

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

All DISplay: 12 Noon 2
Dl'tS PMor To

1

i
•
'

Private Party Ads Under $100

.

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

HOW IQ WRITE

Ali AD,

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

:r"'-------oJ~
~ 1
lr·
ENEoiWeotVI~Io\\\cH \(I \II \I"

HniWANrm

Wlf1 wait? Stan meeting
' OhiO 1ing1e1 toniQhl, call lOll
' !l-ee 1·8()0.766-2623 ext
1621.

r

I

ANNouNct1.a!Nil

1,- - - - - - ·

taking apptlcatlono for pocil·
aging deport....., pay rata
Is $7.25/llr. - · taking liP'
pllcallons for machine opor·
atoro, etanlng pay Is
$7.SM&gt;r, malmenanca dept
(mocllank:al oreloclrk:al ox·
perlonco required) pay
-.rbuodon_....,..

=

Trim your 18xM whlle help- ~~ ~
1ng olhol8 thle hOliday .... coo that wll Ira-·~
"""· Donate to AeUM In- ply in poroon or eond ,.
duetrlts.
AJbany/Athina """"' to ENE o1 Weal Vir·

E
-

C· 115 Joel&lt; Burll=
I /"'HMillwood~ 2 •
• ttn. uman

00)69!HI200

.---

GivEAWAY

1'081.

A-In-- F- • ·no.
•- - ~
COVENANT
TRANSPORTATION
Is ~ngla&lt;
--.,
No c-loncal

urge Chrislmaa Tree, 10'·
15'1811. Very Nice, live, Wll
Cut Phone (740)446-4999
•
MIXed lll8ed Puppite, SoY·
en weeks old, Hueky/She)l&amp;RI8aagle (304)576-334&lt;1
·

•

•

l'rllnlng A\181- by

l '

992

t

I

Virginia, 304·773-5785 Or No Expertenee Neoeuary,

304-773-5447,

r

Training Provided, FT/PT,
Computer Required Up to
160 000/yr I·S00.99s-7094
exi 6001
·

WANrm
· roJiuy

MCO

01 a A

~uta Top Dollar: U.S. Rio Grande Area, Compati· ..,.u

lliivor,

Gold Coina, Prool· 11ve Wagoe &amp; Benall Pack·
"~s, Dlamonda Gold ago Pleue Speak with Ill·
lngs, u.s, c~rrenc:y.• ana' or Ruth at (740f448· .T.S. COin Shop, 151 Sec- •1.-e
"'ln:l Avenue, Gallipolis, 740~2842.
Own a computar? Eam
$450-$1500/mo, PT, $20()0.
l\ll'ltn\ll\1
$4500 fulltlmo, call 1.8()0.
-,I II\ I! I -.,
379·1152 or vial!
~:-_ _....;..;;;;;;;~ BUCUII400.oom

111 10

1

I

lltn

T I ret~, bu -ho nd
ry ng o
Ya
me a
banks.,. rtfectlng you due
to bad clllli1 hlalory? We
can help you. we provkfo

Now Hiring STNA's In the mortgages

..

New/ Ueed l11i1118diata Pooseslon, No pay.
,._until Fob, 2002 · Proquallly by phone. (700~·
3218 ·
Newly constructed single
story 1800 aq fool home
Localed 10 ,;lnutes lro.;
Holzer Hoopltal, 20 mlnulos
lrom Ploeeanl Valley Hospl·
tal, oft SR 160 on a prlvalo

·

bual;_.

AnentiOnl

Eam22ndnd, joblncomeuptowHhout home, 8am·tpm, $5.50 per
hour, (700)387.(1302
$25,·$75./hr, Pt.fl.
• · 1.8()0.2111-7543
SUbway now hiring lor cloawww ~ey-Dreama.com lng ahllt, apply within.

l

'::'::=.,......,.---.,.--

I

I

SOmeone to care for my
mother In my Cheshire

•

.

151 2nd Ave.. Gal-

URGENTLY

NEEDED-

~VONI AI_Areas! To Buy or plasma donors, eam $50 to

llell. Sh1riay Spoa,., 304· $60 par lor 2 a&lt; 3
875-1429.
houra weekly. C.ll Sera·
CHILD CAAE WORKERS
,..

NEEDED

Tee, 740-592-6651.
Work From Horne.

Free

. Do you have a desire to Booklet. 1-8()()-653-7293.

\nake a

difference In a
bhlld'a life? The Prestara
Canter Is looldng for parttime (loss think 19 hro par

~

lA)

I'RuoElHONAL

SmMa;s

joring behavior. Must have

HS diploma/ GEO

be

er home, 3 bedroom, 2 lui
balha, cen1rat air, heat
pump, gas heat, 8x8 deck &amp;
uOO.rptnnlng, like new, very
clean vacant ready to
move' (740)?•2-2247
Bedroom on ROU1e 2,
'
·
(304)675-5332
2 bedrOOm, stove &amp; refrtgar-

lsi Time Home Buyers/
FHA/ Government Loanal
SINie Parent Program
Loans
Avallabte. Call
(740)448-3093

·13583.
• 816 M I

St Ht Pt

PI

(304)736·3315

driver's license and
will: Jng to transport children. Good Of Bad Credit
'May also include an occa- ~. Cal TaU Free ~mslnlllty A~m LRI
room for 2002. Spec1al low
'"•Ional saturday pl'ftnram 24 hrs., 1-888-:428-8393.
F rua R
N • C
IIMrtelng program available.
11
am 'I m. ew arpet Only at Fleetwood Homes

OAi

,

·-• , 1M
'~':,".:::'~sr~"~r •=~ 1
at www.prostero.org lor ap. ·

'fo~

evenlnge Hud Sublldlze Apt. for the

I

It==:

1938
Tul1dshgood
Very
AERATION MOTORS.
Bayonet
Repolrod,
RIIIKill In
Bmm

JET

too.

Good COtldldon.
a Scabbonl
New a
- 7ll roondl &amp; ammo on ~ Call Ron e..,._ 1·
-...
$100. IICJ0.537·9528.
(30418~2352

Wlnchoolor 97 16 gougo, ~ - E OWNERS
$450 Remington 513
lntor111onn&amp;Colomongu,
fdalci,..--3x9Sim- all &amp; liocl!tc "'"-It&gt;
morro Scope, $375 JC Hlg. ~~~~
gano by Marlin 22 Magnum .....,.,,, llno of felablla
~ action, 2x7 power home porto &amp;
leo.
ecope, $350. Cell (7401388- BENNETT'S ~·~NO ,

rR

~..

89341oa118
moesago.

-

COOLING (740)44$-MII
or 1 _ _ _ ,
piJ
ANnQul;s
www.orvb 1: nlbennel
~~-------'1NEW -...f t UIED
FURNANCES FOR SALEI
Buy or 11011. Rlvertne Ami- Wa 11111811, Free EIIIquos 1124 Eul Main on II you doni Cell us We both
' E p
~
SR 124 . ~. 740- Looul (700)
306, 1·
992·2526. Ruaa Moore, IIIJ0.29HJ098.
ownar.
Froozer Beef 400 to BOO
5ue'a5aleclablosonthe"T" lbo. hanging W8ighl SUO
In Middleport. Dolls, gtaao. ::. =6-~1:::::

(814)501-83311.
elderly &amp; dioabled. EOH,
New 38R In (304)882-3121
10wf1, juol r • • - MW C
,
carpor, paint. nice )IW&lt;f and Moly a Family Uvlng,
33100 - Limo Rd., Rut·
~ P':.
~ land, Ohio, 740-742-7403.
Lluo to own. $375. par Apanmeno, home and monlh $350 Security 0. terUis. COmrnetolal ...,..
polili304J882·22•1
~-for leuo.
Now 3 BR 2 Baths
._.
In ~. month. Fumlehed Eftlclency, All
~~:"· end 9pm.'Depoolt Roqui&lt;.a.
for Older ooupio, No Uflllllorr Paki, Balh:
·
...... Call (700J448-~
~:'~394/19 2ricf Ave., ·rl2'":~":ll'!CI!I---,----.I ~ ~~
·
·_.,
Pilot Program, Renllnr
MEIIc::HANJJI5E
na. ....,, Florol C1lllr wl1h
Needed, 304-731FI~,
Tara Townhouoe Apan·
MatcNng Ottoman, $50.
menta Very Spacious 2 .
Col (740)25f!.1529
.
MollnBHoMrs
2 Floora, cA. 1 t.5 d,._ cheet.pl, ~
.
FOR RENT
112 Balh, Fully Carpeled, ~
NEw AND USED STEEL
1~;.!!,~~
,
Adull Pool a Baby Pool, Pa· drawero
light color Staol Beams, Pipe Rebar
"J&lt;311'X44• $50 (740)992: For Concrele, Angle, Chan14x70 2br, plus den. LGca1- tlo, Silt~ $365/Mo, No Ptta,
ed bahlnd Fax's Pizza In Lease Plua Security Depoell 18
• •
nal, Flat Bar, Sttol Grating
2529
Point PiOeunl $435 per Required, Daye: 74Q.440For Draine, Driveways &amp;
monlh which lni:tudoo ;,..., 34111; Evenings: 740-367· 10X 10x8 Dog Kemol Ueed WalkWays. New 65 Gallon
end .._, Call (304)676- 0602, 7~101.
1 yea• 1150 Phone· Drul!IO With Ud &amp; Ring,
3W
lWinRI'NTowers,_ac- (740)44i70;!5aHer6pm. · =~~~Y~
. ':y'·
ceptlng appllcatlone fa&lt;
...,...,
'
'
2 Bedroom Tnrlor, All-. tB~. HUD MJbaldlzed apt. 3 Dale Eamhirdl pillows WedneedaY &amp; Friday, 8aJn.
tr1c, $300/mo, $200 depoolt, lor~ and wllh 13 car on thorn 120 •.30pm. Closed l'huloday,
(7&lt;0)367.Q&amp;47.
EOH.
. each, (700)992-7335 .
•Saturday &amp;
Sunday.
(304)675-6679
(700)4411-7300
Baoullful River View ldoal
.
3 Dillbltrd Scootar.
Fa&lt; 1 Or 2 People, Rof_,.
Very Good Condition. Nor&lt;ilc Tll!Ck Manual traedcoe, ~. No Pota, Foe- Very nice, 2·3 bedroom 11100. (740)3811-7501
mil, Like New. $100., 20"
tar Trailer Parte 7i0-441 · apa~mon1 In town lar
Bicycle SIS., 3 N 1 Fl8lltr
'
kl1chon, LR, ~. R~ Amazing
Matabollam Price game table. $30,
0181 .
orences &amp; depoalt'roqulred. -ktltroughll
(304)675. 1431
Trailer In Rlllland, tor (700f448-3644
Loeo 10 pounds· 200 Old
roller ekatas $2(1·
1-3 1)801)1a, good location,
pounde eaay, quick, Faet new ~Ia llnoleu 8'x20•'
(7&lt;0)742·2681
SPACE
Dramatic Fltratllta. 100% $35· Fl:.ck II m lect";
n-Natural, Or. Recommended .
•
we
e
'""
.
FOR.....,,
.Ask about FREE Sample" hedgacutter, $10. baverago
(700)0;11·1982 .
cooler, $5, (740)992·2529
""""'""""'"
Mobile home 101 for rent In
,
JORib:Nr
Mld*tort s125
mo Army &amp; Hunlers Camou- RMidentliiiHamiiOwnerw
~
• i-'::itM
par
., llage Clolhlng, USA flaOO, Tappan Hltlllcleucy 90 plus
S&amp;ltllle S&amp;lea Setvlce In- gas fumacea Including oil
t &amp; 2 BR Economical Gao Nloa lolir quiet oou,.ry 881· slallallon S9 a monlh 100 end ·-..to gas tuma·
: " '· w:, 5~k:1s ~r tlng, win accommadota channala. at sam Somar· ~· Hl1 Efficiency Heat
zer,
.
•r 18x80 $100 par month call vile's MSGT USAF retired umpa, eaturing Tappa.na
month, Plul Utilities, LtaM Ed at 'Country Homes, '740- beside Sandyville, WV Post Free Incredible warranty
and Depoall Roqulrod, 992·2187
0111ce. (304)27:J.5855
packago.
(7&lt;0f448-2957
,
IENNETT'I HEATING I
Trailer llp8CII for rent, $120 Baby bod Cherry Wood COOLING (740)448-Mte
1 and 2 bedroom apa"· par mo1rth, In Minersville; ~ $75. Coeco Ploy- or 140Q.t72$17,
ments, fumllhed and unfur- 800 aq It office bulktlng aJc pen S20. Coaco Radlnlng www.orvb.~nett
nlehed, aecurfly dopoall ro- &amp; ceiling ian, $275 'pet Highchair, $40. (740)992·
qulred, no pata, 700·992· month (814)676-! 651
34521oavem....go.
Solid Btaae and Wrought

=-

j

=

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=

jllecr..;..,,

$25 000
' ·

Wanl to Buy amall fann or
ac:reogO In Ma1011 County
eultable lor my retirement

I

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I

I

I

hom1. Peaceful ecenlc rural 2218.
location not on a primary
highway. Deforrod posaee- 1 badlllQm _.mom, utllll·

'

lion acc:eptable. call 270- lea Included, $325 month

365-9827

riO

0
1t:V","sS:; "(~.,t~:ss~~;

· (740)4411-2205 or (740)446·
"""· ion ........ 1
,.......! • ....,..., n person, or All "•k K
H 1 2883.
een:l aPJi resume to:
,.... e erosene ea trs
PRESTERA CENTER
and Fon:ed Air -tera Re- Owner Must Sell to Some
Kerl Har1&gt;1son,
paired. Small Engine Re- Eatata. 1 acre, mtl, Jackson
Employment Spaclalitt
pair. Free Plck·UP end CJe. Lako, 2 Bedroom, Kitchen,
~.
3375 At. eo·e.
livery Available . OVer 20 Bath, L.lving Room, FlO
,I Huntington, WV 25705
yea,. Expariance. Call Mike Heat. Central Air. Phone
EOEI AA
(700)448-7604
(740)448-3038 alter 6pm

ol ProctONille. Toll Free 1·
6B6.s65.(JI 67
umned Or No Credit? Gov·
ammant Bank Finance Only
At Oakwood In Barbours·
viHe wv 304-738-340&amp;
'
·
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
On~ $19,850. Free Delivery
&amp; Set Up. 1·888-926·2426

·

(740)446-3945

Iron Fireplace Set ~~~ In
Banquet tables, $25 each; Box, Make a nice Gilt. Cost
muon jars 5 lor $1: proo- $49,95 will ""' lor $25,00
lUre cooker, $25; 2 heavy . (740)985-4409 ·
duty wort&lt; tables, 540 each; T mpdl
575. dog

,

I

area. (740)256·1332

5356

posll, $250. a month. At 4 bedroom apanment, $450
1410 uwls Sl. (30-t)727· per month lncludea water,
3318
sewer, lraah, $200 deposit,
(740)£M9-2025
2 bedroom, 1 bath, atove &amp; BEAUTIFUL
APARITrelrigeralor fumlahed, In MENTI AT BUDGET PRI--

For Sale: Reconditioned
wuhe11, dryert end refrlg·
erators. Thompsons Appli·
ance. 3407 Jackson Avtnue, (304)675-7388.

Fiberglas Truck Topper lor
8 ft. Ford Bed, $250 .

Pomeroy, 740·992-3322 CEI AT JACKSON El·
aak lor Bath,
TATES 52 Westwood Drive
'
2 badroom, 2 bath, In Mid· ltOm S2V?Io $363. Walk to
dlepo~. 740·992·3322 aek shop &amp; movlea. C&amp;ll 740-

Mollohan Corpat, 202 Cleric

1br. Sman House $200. De-

lor Beth.

2 bedrooms, Mlddlepon,
$325/mo. plua deposit, Gracious living. 1 and 2
(740)992-0175
bedroom apartments a1 VIIlage ManoJ and Riverside
4 Rooms &amp; Bath, $300/ Apartments In Middleport.
month. 62 Olive Slreet. From $278-$348. Call 740(740)448-3945
992-SOM. Equal Housing
Opportunltlel. ·
4 roorr. and Bath 90 Pine

~ 1Galllpola.

(740)446· Mlddlopon· Nor1h 4th Ave,,
9
4 room lumlehed apartment,
.
dopoolt
&amp; raferenc.ee, no
5 room Coitago at 2404 112 Pol8 (700)99
2.o 165·
Monroe Ave New Paint
'
Carpal, Vinyl. (304) 875: Modem 1 Bedroom Apart·
3757
en1 (740)448.(1390
m ,
·
House for Rent In City Urn- New apartment for renl,
118. Depoell and Reference. Middleport, (740)&amp;92·5304
(740)~1079
or 74().448.2267,

".....

·

(740)379-9381
Firewood,

.
New and Used Fumlt\Jre
SIOre below Holiday Inn Kanauga, Ohio. Used mdrHB
sets, dressers, chests,
beds, couches, bookbedl,
baby beds, entertainment
cenlera, desks, dlnetlu. 1·

7~-4782

(740)898-

go,

Cia~

Winters, Rio Grande, OH

Ce117o40-245-5121 .

lr-----....,
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(7&lt;0)0;11~3

.

$600'

OBO

Two

ofiGm ..._ 5

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::O."::!.":;t.=
lllfiOOI,_- theMaraudersgavethevisitoxs
running boordo, ch,.,.. olOnoAIITypao.-To a 37-14Jead heading into the

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........u........................... rnaea. looka nlcl, runt ··- 8323.
-~

r

• Ananclng u Low .. 3,5% 9701
on 5000 and 6000 Serltrs

Tract0f1. AJao •• LoW ..
4...% on Used Tractor~ wtth
Jchn Delre Clllli1 Appro, val.
1988

$2.000. (740)388·

WI!
VAN! &amp;

1

ilriiP-~--""!"..,
Fux:nuc.W

ilEfluGFRA110N

1 Residential

4-

CASE NUMBER
CONSECO BANK;
INC.

Como Set Our Largo Oil· 1"'=',..-.,....,...,...-----"""'----..,-"'~-.

Plolntlll

'Old _,,

.=:~ =-;:. r1t~~:tWe';cli~~itie~;,
llpollo' Ohio,
J (740)4411-2412
- Plko, Gal-

8 ton Lowboy, 24' Long,
Beaver Tail and Rampe,
1991 ClMC Jimmy, 4x4,
Good Condlllon, $3000
eoch OBO. (740)448 8044

;,.,;,•..,.l:l'·-.;:;;;·:...::.·.;.
. .;,;,.:...:.;,~

w·:....L.....:.·...-·-..;._~
.

In Memory
~~~~~~;~

Allis Chalmero WD lncnraeed Bore Slotv:l:r Pia-

New271-FO'IfUIOrl
Tr.it.ctor 2001 Model, One

NOW

HIRING

Traclor. Price 122,600. Call
Jake Somorvllla (304!876-

$6-$8

3030

YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor,
- · 3 pol..1 hl1clt, $2,150,
Alao, ntw • 1lnllh mower,

Per Hour
Fui11P1rt Time

811111n cralo, $850. Shipping
available. Localed jus! out·

OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT
1 888 974-JOBS

-

ol Hunta.tfle, AJ (256)
778-9435 www.maynardequlpmant.corn

auo~er

·v•

DONALD MARTIN, II
aL

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

11D Help Wanted

OWf')ar; WOuld like trade and
ltlo would Finance lha

IJO.CV-1138

Dalendlnta

-end Ringo. Good nros,
:;:r
New Porta, (304)882·

rlmmla

was battling
injuries and the ftu bug. "Severo!
of the girl&lt; played sick tonigh~
and did a nice job; Mindy
Chan
didn
cey · 't make the lrip.
"Miller is struggling this}='
but Coach Axline is a good
coach and they gave a good
effort,'" he added "We have a
tougll game coming up atVinton
County Thursday; """ have to

play L-."
DeW:'[

PUBLIC
"NOTI,CES

or conwnercial
wl:tng, ,_ """""' or ,..
7 pas. palro, Maeter l.lcenoed alec·
-·-···-··-·-···-···--·· ........, fTIInl van. &lt;&gt;ne ()wn.. trician. Ridenour Electrical,
or. $1000. (304)675-7782 WV000306. 304-876-1768.

pltal on

In pur~uonco of an
Order ol Sell to mo
dlroctod lrorn oold
Court In the above
onlllled octlon, I will
oxpoao 10 alii It
public oucllon on the
'f ront llopa ol tho
Molge County Court
houoo on Thurodoy,
December 27 , 2001
lit 10:30 A.M. of Uld
dlty,
tho _
following
dllcrtbod
,_,
llluotod In lho
County of. Melga, In
the sua or Ohio ond
tho
Vlllogo ol
Pornoroy
ond

boundld
ltld doocrlbod ••
lollowo;
Bolng In 100 oc,. ·
lot no. 303, In Town 2
and Range No. 13
boglnnlng 11 Tho
northweil cOiner of 1
'lot formerly owned
by Mlchool WltqoM;
thonao South 5 dog.
hll 313 foot; thence
South 85 dig. Will
104 112 foot: thence
North 5 dig. WHI.
313 foal; thonco
North .Ill dog. Eoot
104 1/2 foot to the
plaao of beginning,
being the oamo loi
conveyed to ttonoy
Schololn by .V.I.
Horton and S.W.
Pomeroy by doad
doted April 11th,
3885. Floforanca
Deod: Volume 148,
Poga 124, Doed
Recorda,
Melg1
County, Ohio.
Tho
following
dllcrtblcl real ~~elluotad In tho
County ol Melgo, In
the City ol Pomoroy,
boundad
ond
dlacrtbod oalollowe:

AKC Booton Terrio,., 3 fe.
males, 1 mala. 6 wefta.
Shota· wormed, $400. Cell
(740)446.(1495
:..;;;.:....::..:..:.:_ _ __
AKC Boxer Pup. Fawn with
Slack Mask, 8 weeks old.
$250. (740)388.a803

'.

5a:f Bolin added 9. Pien:e
eight.

Meig. was 17-of-47 fiom
I'M&gt;-pointrangeand2-of-8fiom
three-point range for 19-of-55
fcor 34 percent. The MaraUden
were s.or-16 fiom the fuulline.
MMIIQa
1er
11

Ground ear com. $90.00
ton, your sackl. soybean
111811 available, Long 801.· ·
.torn, Oh (700)985-35111

auailty h&amp;y lor oalo, $1,50
bale: (740)985·3810
Round bares of hay for sale,

(740)949·3089 .

Square balaa was $2.00
now $1 .50 •. 1 m!le on At. 2

N. (304)676-o4869
Hay &amp; Bnght Wire Tie
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery

Bolng 1111 &amp;II half of
Lot No. 480 ond
beginning ot tho
Southuot corner of'
Lot No. 410; thonco
We1lllong 1111 South
llno of . . ld Lot 10
footi lhonco North
parollol wHh tho hot
Uno 10 fell; thonco
Eaot 80 loll to tho
l!a•t nne of oold lot;
lhonco South 10 feot
to tho piece ol ,
beginning. Alao, a
ploco
of
land
beginning 80 loet
Wool
ol
tho
Southooot comer ol
Lot 410; lhonco Will
beginning 24 112 1eot
along lilt! South line
of 11ld lot; ·lhonco
North 10 feot pollllel
wllh tho Eoet line of
eald lot; thonco Eaot
24 1/2 foot; lhonco
South 10 foot to tho
ploco of beginning.
M. The pramlooe
Intended to bo,
conveyed heroin
being the promleao
lfllded by Michael
Wllzgall to Henry
Pllrlclt
November 17, 1877,

by--

end Docombor 31,
1171, .nd ....,ordld In
Vola. 47 ol Pqe 3111
end Vol. 11 11 P~ge.
171 of the Recordlol
Doodo of Molgo
County, Ohio.
Aleo, tho following
doocrlbed promlooo
IIIU81ad In tho City ol
P~,
Molgo
County, Ohio ond
bounded
and
-rlblcl ootollowe,
to-wit: Beginning on
tho South oldo ol
Welzll'!ll SIIWI II 1111
Norlh-11 comer of
Ellulleth
Sch-leln'o
lot:
1111nco South to lho
Northout corner of
Clinton Stohl'o lol:
lht!nco Wa11 to tho
hll llrt41 ol Win. F.
Schoenloln'o
lot';
lhlftCI North IO tho
Southwnt corner of
John Rogon'1 lol;
lhonco Eool lo tho
Southeoot cornor ol
11ld R1g1n'• lot;
lhonco North , to tho
Northlilll comer of •
llld Rogon'o lot and
1o . uld Wotzoon
llrMI; thence hot to

Pleuant Valley Hospital Is currendy
acceplinlreBUmes for a RN • Crldcal
Care Coordinator (ICU &amp; ECC). BSN
preferred. Previous management
experience preferred.
MaKing OOr S&amp;lao B:ochureal
Free Suppllll, Poataget
Stan lmmedlatalyl

Excellent Salary and Benents.
Send resume to Human Resourci!S,

Genuine Opportunity!
·For Free Information,

Ple11111nt Valley Hospital, 2520 Valley Dr.
Call Toll FtM:
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax (304) 67 5-6975
ISEIOO.tlO WEEKLY INCOME
AAIEOE

&amp; VOlume Oiacount Avalla·
ble.
Heritage
Farm.

;

point hlldi, $2,150. Aloo, now 4' finloh

~;~1:8 18~.S~15~·lt6~3;5·~~~~.~~~•ltiH;Ifn;et;o~to;,$650~~·.,~'l'i"'ll '""ion
-·

LocaiOd outolde ol Hunrsvillo

(258) 7711-11435

\I HI\

Coun~

Bank,

DE (FDIC), Equol
1995 PonUac Grand Am

GT, 2 Door· Whitt, Auto,
PW, PL. CD, ioa&lt;fed, Looka
and Runs Gnral. (700f4483945 altar 5pm
1983 Old&amp; Della, 88 Automatic Power windows and
doors,

Great

work

car.

(700)992·7889, $300 .

01

EquaiTrodo.

1988 Urw:oln Cont.. •1200,
(700f446.(1274
94 Niaaan Maxlum, Sharp.
(304)675-6132

'·

MEIGS

3 ,... II:

U..Uy -

by 1 0.0 2; -

lltwww 0 1-4•1;

~ Do&gt;iw eo.o 18; Chttoay Millor (o.
0 2; Marta lltwwwO 1.Z 1 : - · o H 1; Allclo Wony 21Hl 4. TOTALS~8
B-t6o48.
MILLER-SioraTotli 11 -23;EmlfyWinnonburg 1 3-4 5; BrlaMo Hl:iltiO o 2-4 2:
MandySparar20.04: -AIIIor11·
33:AihloyHirikfo30.08.
TOTAl..S67·13
25.

ru.......,.-

Big Bend Cloggers
Hall Basket winner was
Jeff and Lynn Withem
Amesville, Ohio

tho
ploco
ol
beginning. Ror.Dood Vol. 150, Page
244, Dood Recorda,
Milo• County, Oltlo.
Excepting tho
following dllcrlbod,
ruln-oHU81adln
tho State of Ohio,
County ol Molga,
Vllloga of Pomeroy,
Townohlp Two (2)
North;
Aonoo
Thlrtlln (13) Will;
and a part of Lot 410;
being
moro
partlculorly
-rlblcl ulollowa:
Commencing at tho
Northoool corrt41r of
a1!d Lot 480 ••
dollnoatod In Plot
Book 2, Poll'! 17 of
tho Molga County
Plat Rocordo; oald
point oleo bolng the
South llno of Wetzpll
SlrMI. 1henco South
11 dig. Waot olong
tho South !Ina of
Watzgall Stroot 1
dlallnco of 140. eo
to on Iron pin 11
tho true ploco of
bogfnnlng for the
parco!
horaln
lnlondod to bo '
convoyed: thonco
IIOivlng tho South llrt41
of Wal&amp;gell Stroot, .
- h I dog. 30' Eoot, ,
a dletanco ol 32.00
felt to an Iron pin;
thlnco South 88 dog,
11' Will 1 dlotanco ol
17.117 fllllo 1n Iron
pin 111 In 1 otono
woll; thonce Nortll I
dog. 30' Wut· a
dllllnco of 31.00 1eot
to an Iron pin on tho
South nne of Wotzoa•
I~; thence North
II dog. E1at, along
tho · South llno ol
Wotzg111 Straat, a
dlollnco of 18.00to tho place of
blglnnlnJi,
containing lhlrtoon
thoueandlhe (0.0 13)
of an acrtl, more or
1o 1
~he
1 b O·V 1
de1crlbod rul oalllll
1, 1878 and wao

N~~~~~~ ~lekon
OUI of I Auguat
lorgor
waa aurvoyed

liicoonood,

parco! ol' real oallll
~~~!!t:~rn!!!,!!1!!!/l!,22!!L..I moro fully do ecrlblcl
In Volume 271, Pqe
""CONSOLIDATE BUSr"'
2115; Molgo County
lnloreot
D11d llocorde. 11 lo
lII!![~:::~~ ~H::':•hbo&lt;:omlng
Dtbl
Intended to convoy
Simple Mo•nn·lll:~~:=~
of tho ,.malnlng
:Pro8rorn lor "•nrsro or
roo! ootoll to tho
for a Free Consultation. 1
grant111 tortnerly
.oxt 201. Brighton
owned by Gina
Monchlnl
and
Clomonto
Monahlnl
not
ho,.loforo convoyed
by tho aold Gino
Monchlnl
ond
Clomonto Monahlnl
or lilt! grantor·
herein. Referenae1:
Volume 275, Page
285 and Valumo 274,
P111.0 153, Molgo
County
Daod
Rocorda.
Furthor
Exaopllng
and
Roaorvlng to tho
Gr•ntHa, their h•lra
H

.

(304)675-5724.

1\~\\-.. l '(fl( l

4

.•

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

Pleasant Valley Hospital

1944

o

Holly._21·35,MoganSpaar01·21,
T-""""'01.Zt T-56-1715°
~~.:::::·•e.~· ~- 14, '•
_ _, ~ •·-·
SloaJo Euttm 13(-41
•o 1 t Eat It n 2(Holler 2)

Th&lt;M:jlot 1t goa1a _ Malga 2 (Pitrtoo 2);
Miler 2 (A. 2); Raundl- Molga
34 (Davis 8, L. Bolin 8). Mlllfr 23:
Malga 18; Miler 26.

o11111or
llolgo 41,11111tr 26
13 8 18 11 - o48
s • 5 11 - 25

9608.

4x5 Round Baleo, (740)256-

ideo Mannon 1 0.1 2,
Gwifll 1-21,- Fllllure 1 o 1·:1 1,

I

Ashley Hinkle led Miller with

1;:1:0::.:H:•:I:p:W::::I::n::ted=------.

by

30pm.

Davis led Meig. with 16, Lind-

5 yr. old Thoroughbred ·
Gelding wl1h papers. 1750.
(700)3811-8319 or (700)388·

r

~-~·· r=,~:

•· co

TtJt'fKNetl E11:t1m 1•

10' Ouarler Old
,..._ __::
HolM Golding. Haw. Sed·
die, Used Twloit. $1500 lor
all, (740)44Hl866

~

:;:~•&amp;, 1 !~~S: (740)2511-

Byallowingonlysevenpoints
in the second half, Eastern
was able to sub freely for
h f h ,
h
• d
muc o t e 10urt perio .
When the horn sounded at
the end of the fourth, the

-••·--"
t 1 3 4 1
21 9 9 12 -1 5
EASTERN - Kryotal 0.0 2.
Aly.--30.08, Sa:ttlioo- D2 2, 1l1flanyo 1-21 , Ka1lo
..,
2·2 4, ~ooioU
1·1 7,
oa011fon21-2&amp;,
Wa-7 ...

s.-

n-.

I

Comtlchaol'o tarrn &amp; uwn
2 mllel- of Holzer ._

game, the Eagle offensive
attack was slowed, but not
stupped.
Freshman Terri
Wolfe and sophomores Alyssa
Holter and Katie Robertson
picked up the slack for the
Eagles offensively.
"l thought Katie, Alyssa, and
Terri all played great games
.
Th
b
'
agam .
ey are
econung
quite consistent," said Brannon .
The Rebels got thing.
under control, however, and
gave the Eagles some trouble
in the second. Heather Temd'
p 1e score rourslnlghtforthe
Rebels, but was held scoreless
for the
t f th
res 0
e game.
Eastern dominated the second half, much like the first.

meneed that his

•

• .........: - . .
LTX A/S ov.r 10,000 T . . - .
(740)2~~•. 58~
·~ -··-·•- -w1 1 oooo~
740-245-5077, final&amp;.une.Thefinalstanzawas
Soiu-,
Sunday,
Allor_,
• .. _,
5:00pm llanday.f-r.
~~.:c;40=118~...,
an 11-11 Slandoff as M~ came
Films&amp;
1 26127 MPG II8ClMC sono. iliir;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;; out of the long end of the 48-25
VfJGEilUIU!ll
.... ~·OWner, Air, ,...
win.
~
•
..,_
Coach Dave Wii!~ comto, 'lilt Cn:lot, &amp;1M Long
IM1'IIovlrt.DNr
-~..
Rlchanllr FNH Bed, (740f448-2817 or "'-a.,;iiiiiilililiiiiiiliriiorl
Farm. APPLI!S AND (740)448-17114
· IIAIII!III!HI'
=Hoi :::... ~
72 Chowy Plciltup, ~4 Ton,
WAliiiPAOllPIIIQ
v.a. Auto, PS and PB, ur--101 guor·
"·. . . . M,OOO
mllea. 3110 V8 ontao. Local -11-!ur·
I \1,\1..,1 1'1• II-....
(7..,.:rnJe.l2500.
Eotabllahed 1975.
,\ I I\ I -.II I I,
Cll 24 Hro. (700) 446ilijp;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. Chevy S.10, 5 agood, 0870,
1.8Q0·287.0576.
lO
FAIIM
:"grMn'4'4~~ Rogarl W&amp;lalflloof•IQ·
I!.QIJDrMBNT
_ _ _•• - · lltarp. $3.000. - - - - - L,_ _
(740)379-27-48
C&amp;C General Home Malnle0% Financing on New John QS ClMC 2 - dr. 5 op., 6 .....,.. Palnllng. vinl'f aldDeore Round and Square cyl. 12 ,000 mllao lng, carpantry, doors, winBal.,. end Condi· $6500. oeo 304-e75-6278 :lows, baths, mobile home
-·
~r and mora, For !rae
F-160, 300· 8 cyl 136,000 -caiChel, 740-1192·'

r

fttMIPIIp5

Rebels were sent to the bUs
with a disappointing 51-15
loss.
"South Gallia is an expll&gt;sive team, tlut Haner girl ~
be an outsunding pla)tr
when she wants to, so we had
to make sure we shut her
down early," said Brannon .
South Gallia was withouo a
~serve team, so the La~y
Eagles scheduled the Atheru
Bulldog's freshman team tOr
the reserve contest. T•e
Eagles were victorious' 47-12
Morgm Weber led the youag
Eagles with twelve points. :
Eastern will travel to Ste'f'
art on Thursday to battle ~e
Federal Hocking Lancers. I

c:= 17:2!!!~~-~~ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------~·~
Melcrc
•
ream
~
~
8.
=:..!.~~~.:!..a:::

s...:· ~

.Pim:

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; 2 Fiest, Squlnel Dogs. Well
Aepafrl Problems? Need Started.
$200.
Each.
Tuned? .Call The Plano Dr. {304)875-6132
?oW-446--4525
Adorable Chihuahua pupHardy Mums $3.00 MCh 4 pl... Woukt make the per·
tor $10. Open Sat 8-Spm. &amp; feet Christmas gift lor to~Mevenings. Dewhurst Green- one special. Not registered.
house Mt Alto (304}695- 1st lhota, wormed, potty

Round Oak T~ 18, LMI, 3740 leave me...ge, or
4 Chala and A-liner (30:4)696-3789
r
· kidopondont Holballfe Oil·
(740~711
tributor, C.ll For Product Or
Vented Gaa -tor, Neariy Oppor1unlly. (700)441-1982
New, Brown Enamaled. 3050,000 BTU, $250. - · Super Nlntondo with Two
bit. 3- 8 ft Counler taPa, Controllers, an&lt;l Eleven
New Pale Gold. (700)0;11· Gamet. $150 OBQ, 11 no
0625
answer, leave meuago.

-··-·-· .. - - · ··-··· ,.! '

8uPf1..JEs
...__llliiiiiiiiiiioo-,.1

Dump windOws, llntlta, etc.

$150

:u~ ~~=·
'

8unJxNG

Block brlck sewer ~

Chopal Rood, Porter, Ohio. Great CMstmaa Gift Je"
(740)-'46-74-«' 1-877-830- Gordon '2 4' J ckat 'N
9t62. Free Ea~matea, Eaey Never open.: M·ed1,:•
llnanclng 90 ctayo oame 11
·
•
Drive- B· Nttle 88'18 alot

i

.....

Truck Load. (74Q)319-2758

446·2568. Equal Housing cash. Vr'N.! Master Card.

Opportunity.

'

good.....,....-·-·-· ' · ·
..

=·~S::.:

r

comple~e~ R~furbl&amp;h&amp;d 2
~
Y
·
End of the model year sale!
Efln . story, 2 F~ Bath.K~~- All 2001 must go, to. make

valid

1.ors &amp;
ACREAGE

Grande trom
(7&lt;0)245·5747

rent,

~

452S

Tuned

!:;!

3b

JTIJSlEJ ANF.OUS

It

:

$100 dopoell, (740)387·
0847.
HOUSI!HOIJ)
(740)992·2529
1~8x6 11oo· 'Igloo :;;
1 Bedroom Apartments,
Gooos
Computer for Sola· Prlnllf houoa ' $25' 'vcR stand
$289 month, Depooi1 &amp; Rof·
AvaRable. IBM 200 MHZ w/glau docir, $25; noor
erence. HUD Approved.
.
Pentium I $295. Compaq model 25' lV, $50; swing, '
lher, our flnanclallnatiMIOn Harold, 74CJ.385·9948.
rto
floll;1ts
(740)441-1519
Appliances, RocondHioned 266 MHZ Pentium II $350 $25' call (740)992·5015 al·
provides you with &amp;Ills- - n-....
Walhlra, Dryers, Ranges, wllh 14" MontlOrl eOtll I . t ~
tance &amp; Information, Free 1987 14~70, 3 br.l2blh,
•~ """''
1 Bedroom Apt Gallipolis. Ralrlgrot0f1, Up To 90 Days
'
,. :.:":-.,.."':-:"'-'-:--:--:-=conautlellon, call now at $4995. Will help with dellv- .
·
Water Paid. $275 month Guaranteed! We Sell New temet· Ready. Terms Avalf. W.tet'ine Special· ~· 200
&amp;n-304-3011 .
ary. Call Kavena, 740-385· 112 House, 1 Bedroom, plus deposit No Fleta, Maytag Appliances, French .able with Down Pafrmenl PSI $21.95 Per 100: 1" 200
9948,
Lower 4111, Galljlolls, $300 (7&lt;0)446-4043 after 6:00pm Cltf Maytag, 74Q.441H795,
~~"'(::in~~= PSI $37.00 Per ioo; All
TURNED DOWN ON
1991 Manalon 14K70 8 per 1 month. (740)446-88TI
·
Brt11 Comprt~~lon Aftklga
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881? bedroom excellent condl- or (740)258·1972
1 Room Efficiency Apar1- Bedroom Suit, Color T.V., Computarlz«t Treadmill In SIOCk.
Nof1"!.~n5821eoo~.Winl lion, call Ka"""' (700)365·
:
menlncludodl
ShorS200edBe,! Umonllllllaslh DlneHo Sal, Enllrtalnment $75. Stanmatter, $25 and RON EVANs ENTERP~
·~
9948.
.
15 Court Stroot 2 Bed· (
•
~
· Center, Hldtbad, COUoe Like· New Fltnoaa Flyer. ES Jackson, Ohio. 1.8QO.
·
rooms, 1 1/2 balha, Kitchen 700)44a.ll677 or (7&lt;0)256- and End Tables, Dog cage, Leave
Me81age
11 537-11528 '
1994 16x80 Mobile Homo with stove and rolngorator. 1972.
Baby Bed, (740)448·9742 (740)0;11.()839
::;;..:::=,.==--on Acre lot. With 24x32 De· Off Street Parking, CloBB to
WHITE'S MET~
10
HoMEs
ltaohed Garage. (304)675· Schools and Downtown 2 BA Apt. Newly RelllOd-- Double
Oven,
Electric Empire LP Oaa Heater
OETECTOAI
FOR SAul
79.'!7
•
Area. $59!1 month pius de- aled, Stove, Retrlgorator Range, Avocado, New 65,000 BTU, $150. Chair Ron Allison, 588 Watson
....,
•
posit and Reference. No Fumlshed. All Utilities Paid. Bumera, Works Great, with Ottoman, $30. Chest ot Road, Bidwell, Ohio 45814.
1999 16x80 FleetwOod troll· Pets (700)448·4926
48 011'18 St. $4751 mo. $100. Will Oollver within Drawers $20 (304)675· (700)446 43311
·

§:nged

t

Call &lt;0 245·5747

I

ator, new wlndowa &amp;carpal,
bah Nice
• ,-)child care wortcorolor
hoodr.2 PI I
Neighbor· $4,995, 740-992·2167
·flo" after school program for Oalllpoua Clrter College
o nt
Pleasant
· emotional~ or behavioral~ (Ca110r1 Close To Home). (304)676-7711
26x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Ori·
children In Ma· Call Tocla 174Q.446.4367
ly $345.00 Per Monlh
:
County, WV. Some du1-8~214-0452, ' Don't Own Land? We Col 8.99% Fixed Interest Rate,
' los Include particlpailng In
R t90.0S.1274B
unci/ Home packages 1.e88·928·3426
•1
tlonal activities build·
:
·
Available . Call (740)446·
,
• ojng. aoclal skills, anr:i moni-111D ••• ._......... •• ·~· ....
5 Aepo s Save Up to 50%
,

Owner financing available.

porch &amp; 2-112 car garage.
'Immediate pos!IMSion. AP- lndlan Creek Eatatas, U
pralled at $125,500. Make 8Cfa lo16, weal of Rio

13

B~

1'RAINING

4,600 oq fool Commert:lal
Building with 10 to 200
ecrea. f!io Clrando, Ohio.

within 46 h,., (866)982· w/gas log flrop-. conllal Lima
Rd.,
Rutland,
1150
air, laundry room, front (7-40)742·2803 alter Spm.

r

~

....__

• Chrlatmaa Spacial, Baby Kopt,
(740)38'1·7&amp;35
; Grand Plano. Uko - · 1998 Dodgo 1600 l.aramla'
::00~~~l~: SLT ve, 4x4, T/ wllaal,

I

loans with 2·112 balha, big kitchen 2 Kree with oewer oat·up

L

Bring Retume. Acqullttions

lk&amp;NI!ss
AND BululiNGs

good or bad CNdlf. Approval w/oak cablnote, DR, LR on Cromeane Ref. oft New

,.

100WDAKEABNEEDED S&amp;lse Poalllon Immediate
A8seriJia a'Bfta, wood
""-I
.a~ I P
IIams, Malarial provided ..,.... ng. ~• n ....,,

r

personal and 1-112 acre lot. 3 bedroom,

Ho;pWANJl!ll
.__ _ _ _ _ _•• private duty home care cas- debt coneolldatlon . We ......_
•
·
ea. Flexible echedule and guarantee quality service
$ATTENTIONS
.,c:ellant pay. Fll out appll· from a bU8f8d nama. Call t6 Vllde. Only $195.00 Per
Wof1t From Home. Earn up cation at Plaaaanl Valley Flint Financial Services, ~ Month, 8.W% Fixed lntereat
to $1501).$7000/ month. Homo Health Semceo, pllcatlona holllne (1· Rala With Air And Un·
Pa~ nmel Full nme. 1011 Viand Sf. Pt. Plaaeanl, 888)388.(1895,
derplnnlng 1-888·9211-3426
(800)329-4498 lor !roe WV 26550 · or cal (304J675·
7400 "' H!00·748.007Bior Need Ananclal Help? Riel&lt; 1985 Skyline 14• 70 • 3 booklll.
-,.,,-,==:-::---- more lnfonnatlon. AAIEOE free opportunity, look no fur- room. Good Condition. Call
To 14801- ~.

ub

I

offer, Call (740)~4514
.
trom &amp;.5pm, M·F, or
Alfll AnanciOI hu boon (700)446-3246 after Spm.
providing small bu11neaa
loans Ia&lt; 13 Y'IO'"· Now we p2D MOBILE HDM!S
PorDitmLPNa-for apac:lallzeinpeiiOnal,car&amp;
FORSAIE

Free lnlormatlon pkg. 24 Hr. ~ewelry,
_ _c1...:.8Q.':.1;..-421H=...:7...:50::__ lijlclo.

month

385-7671 .

l::.C,

I

McCiuro'e R - now
hiring all 3 locallonl. lu! or
FlEA
MARKET
pan·time. pick "" appllce·
.__iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioo. lion
atlocalion &amp; bring back
~
barween
9:30am
a Look No Further We ptOVIdt
H~k Poaroon Aucllon Com- 10·ooam Monday lhru Sat· top &lt;luallti Ananclng Allie\&gt;any, full time auctioneer, urday. '
tanceendHelp, Start aNew
tomplota aucllon IMIIVk:e.
·
Credit tor New Yoar. 1- .
lJcoiioed 1166,0hlo &amp; MEDICAL BILLING
322·3894
AUCI10N AND

•

.ltr

. . .Ic.=c::=:=:::c:===-- r

r~----

Ir

-aeti199918Jdi0Gnm B u y - frum $ 1 - . Nice 2 br, opl,lg rooms.\
lulty oqulpad kit, central
heating/ cooling. WUiter/
room, 2 fuli baths, $211,000 lngo 1-80().31&amp;.3323 ut. drytr -.p -·2523
OBO, (740)ee9-9972,
1709,
Now Taking ~lcatiOnoNew 14x71l, 3 bodtoom. 2 Elegant 2 or 3 bedroom 35 2 BedrCMn Townbalh. Only $995 &amp; - · 2911 -.y, Porn- ~. 1nc100.
$1811.62/monlh.Cll~. lfoy, no polO, (740)Q92· Water sewoge, Trash,
741).385-7871 .
.
5858.
S3501Mo.,7004460008.
N..,. 2002 1• wide on~ 2 BA, IWr G•lllpolle, City - : Pilot Pro$799 &amp; $165.38hno, School Dlettlct, $3501 gqm. Own your own home.
CllNkkl, (7&lt;0)38S-7&amp;71. montr. Relonrnooo Ro- Llflll or no CNdll OKI Coli
~ ,
IJIIred. (740)2156-4702
(740) 448 3384,
New ~ ~~ wide. Only
$899 Down &amp; $1!15.38 par 3 badroom houM 1n amonth, Call' Harold, 740· tar, leaN. dopoolt &amp; firet =ng~':"1~

W
I
NllW Do le ldt. 195
Per Monlhl 3 Badroom, 2
Balh, Free DeiiYory &amp; Set·
·~.1-.9211-3426
~
Amazing Aret Tlmo Home
Buyefl. . Oovernment
llaclced loans. No crwdil
yard~·~ - · (304)755-5566
,_ roo!, 2 liar a11tlehed go: Umlled Ofle&lt;.
BuiiN&amp;\1s
rage, $1-48,000. Coli OakwOOd - · of Bar·
OrPolmiNrrY
(700J448-2311
bouiiVIIIa, WV, The on~
lllNfl'Y
For sale by owner. Nice bj. (~·)7~ uy-a-waya.
level home on 1 acre near
INO'IICEI
Chelle&lt; Three badroom
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· two baffur ..,._ garago' WI- lprlng
lNG CO recommends lhat I lly
' wilh fir,pl , Taking Orders oow fa&lt; dellv·
youdo~al-wl1hpaoplo a':.':::"Newcanrilf!:: ery in Febnrory, Mali:h &amp;
you know, and NOT to eond lng &amp; ale. oyatam. One ml· ~ ~
money lhrnugh the mall u,.l nuto off Route 7, but 81111 pri· On 4-20111 eectlonol ~
you have 111V0111galed the vata, (7&lt;0)985-3981
&amp; S.2002 __.,1 d""'"
oflering,
.. ...,.... on ....-Y
Houoe wllh furniture located ~~ 6 ~ 18 wide i1orMs
Sta~ Your Buslntll To· at 443 Hedgawood Dtlvt, ..,.:,..:· .
day, .. Prime Sho!lPing can. Gallipolis, Pan &lt;&gt;1 Lots 11· yolA' now home at raduood
~-~}_vo~t'_.~ ~j1 1 ~· 3ca~"""!'!: p&lt;ao.
~~ ~~ . ...,...,. ·-•
' .,...• .,... Colo'a -~~Plaza, 007~101. praleed at 34·500 · Mull 15298 US 50 East
hivo atleall 213 of _.ts- Athens Oh 45701
MoNEY
ad value. Call (7&lt;0)446· 740-592·1972
TO LoAN·
. 3801 "'(7-40)44&amp;.(J603,

r'o

~

MaJqua mobllo home, 2ll8 Forocloou!w, 4% - · 30
walls, ohlnulocf tool, 3 bed- )'811'" at8.5% APR. For lot·

.,•t..v.

NO 'Piiiiin.eMu

I

F·

It ~:;-I rid

~

Ba the 111 Family In this
New home. No Malnlenan:e, Vinyl Siding. Baoull·
ful Carpet nled Kitchen
oxp. (304)578-2065
end En!Jy, 3 BR, 1 Balh. AI·
tached ' " " -· Flat 1 1&gt;ao
Georgesdon
. . . . .Sowmll. Lot wl1h Smd Pond. Coon·
, · - your ioglto the try Surrounding, $69,900.
miU)uolcaii~7!H957. (700f448-2801
Top To Bottom Cleaners, l!rtckCottaga 2BR-"
pullmla Ill, and bly 3. SUotnOnt. G.... Loblo, - · - · - · calion, 1 block from City
conerructlonand romodellng ·Parte.
(7&lt;0)0;1Hl3M.
cleaning. (740)992·1391 or $47 500
(7&lt;0)992·2979
Cornar ol p rtt 81 and Rlv·
TRI.COUNTY CONSTRUC· ervlew 0 ,"1n Mlddlapon.
TION.
New Selling thoulandl below ap.
Conatructlon/RemadollnQ. praioal value (700)992·
'Siding 'Rooling. 'Drywall
'
Eel. :a.w..674.0155/aa.: 7933
674-3865
Dlvon:e Fon:eo Solei 3 Bed·
room/ 2 a~ on '""'ate
lot
Will Ha 11wf
Clean 0u1
_,
,....
Clean ~p
AJmoai call (700f448-3570.
,
Anything. Taking ConsiGn- 4 BR 3.5 llatll ranch wllh
ments. Coil (7&lt;0)4411-7804
· 3000
ft 1
•

1

•=._ ..,_.to the,......

Allolyourhome,_n,.m.
dlllore &amp; ramodollng, 24hr
&amp;me~gaoocy - · senior
citizens discount 22ytO,

I

.......,,.,

I

Calflng1-11511101
~:::16~r!:.' ~~2~:
CDL Clll .
•399
uoo 8!18 2353.
Help wanted eating fa&lt; the
Lo6r AND
elderly, Denrt Grnup Home,
FOVND
• now paying minimum wage,
!'---riliiiiiiiioo-rl now shlfta: 7sm·3pm 7....
'11 pm'
5 m 3pm·1 1
FOUnd: Beoutllul Gnry car.
11740-aG';.S023
--·Call (740)446· am,ca
·
!045 "
HorMworkora
N[oS'I Ladias Black Leather $635 Weekly Processing
,
\304)773-56S 1
Mall. Euyl No Exparl!:081·
once
Needed. Call 1·
Lost· male Dal-.n, 2 yra, 800·~·6729 , Ext. 2070,
old, o11 At 33 C1 Ad 20. 24HII.
.....,;ng purple eollsr &amp; II· Looking tor exparfenced
l&gt;iosAtagrw'a~cale~(7t~."lom- Carpet Layers, Contact
fny,
•u •
' - - al Topes Fumltu18
151 2ndA'18, Galllpolle
'

r.

Ira

'fu~

116

1

7 :::,_.,.. . . ,.... .................... .., • • .., .... rm.. ................... ...
'Trllunllaa.. n
..
.... . . . . . . . . . ., . . . , . . . . ,, ,.,. . . ..., ... ...,,. ... ......_
_,,.._.,...,.... ... ._...._..
or
ofMed'o• . .
Cote • ,_.bll .... lnttwllnl . . . . . . ~ •
. . ....,. mC' " ' •eun.t n11111 a.d ....... •AI Nt11 ...... 4idootlw::M* . .
Fllr Houlintl Aol o11-. •TMI
....... .................................. WI-MilO
I ZIJ . . . . . _,iliiCIIuu.... 41n ............ ..._
. , . .

• St1rt Your Ad's With A Keyword • Include Complete
DetCrfl)tlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Ders

-·

=:;-rn.

•,

Eastem

rece 5

r . I
rC "'-· 52500 ::;

.-.til.
-tlftlnQ. -

j

:

20 words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Person
Hall To : Ohio Volley Publishing, 825 Third

=

%:,

~

l\egi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 ·(304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
OrFu

Sentinel

Terrence wilkins . safety

W-.,.,

':"a:;".::'
••ad••
.i.!..;.
•'

Dlso!ay Ads

1113 Toyalor lii1g cab. 4itA
(740)4*lll26 4cy1. 11op., NC, llOOdTIUdi.(304)671-43t1

-

••

t!trihune

MNF

Boo•••...

1111 •100. -

:.

Brock Marion cut in front
of Wilkins, intercepted the
•
II
In.. -lpm
dull
pass and returned it 37
1
111 ~
2000Chnd~t.or..
yards to set up a first-and_..
e
, 111Chnd
ea. ru- •.· aov.t.I..Dedld.
tSt. e.-.
No-. NC, -How 1o1t1 cooidltlo r. (300)8'1$.
14 win over the Jets on goal at the 8 .
11111
' (740)24SII46i ::~::=------ Sept. 3, 1995. Cham ben
Manning's second inter1113 Fonl- Gl. •·
III.OOO mlloo, has
seven
touchdown ception came otT a ddlec"'"-'· 121100. lir, ..-_ . . PW, ~
(7~211 ¥'8
C1 11. 1/tr receptions
this
season, tion at the line of scrim1111 Chowy S.to $3100 bagl. AilS. -(7 7· llo breaking Miami's rookie mage. Tim Bowens swatted
0801eoo
1117~ . . . . , . record of five set by Andre the ball with his right
...
080. (300)675. 2134-ml go,
Brown in 1989.
hand, directing it into the
'IIllo ewe 1 1 . . .,.
:e~a':'!.,~~
MrniKl'C.I'li
"I say it every week: He's arms of defensive end Jason
'" •.., -1 .
~-. • a special talent," Fiedler Taylor.
·
1_.,_ - · tour ·
...,. . . . .,.,.,.. ~ 8
- •
_ _ .,,.
M Ford Eacort ~ . d:IVI, goraga 1cap1. uid. "His confidence level .
Then in the fourth, Man_ . , . , . ... ,.. 11000 . - Clood C..
bouittt - . is sky high right now. ning threw behind an open
~:~::.:::(:::;;!Ill:
There's no doubting the Marcus Pollard, and MariJ
tin
ability that he has on the on grabbed his second
.~rae
~,.!
~
2IIDII- CR 125. Now football field and he keeps interception .
_.....,_
Clulcti c:e~o,
S2300. I4&gt;1Big-Kll. Too- makt'ng plays week t·n and
"I'
h.
k
-======~ (700f448-7311
to 111. (740)44&amp;-7311
t
s
so
met
mg
you
wor
d
h
d h
Week Out."
•~-. 4 -... 20011113 H i r l e y on an preac ,an ten we
__
Pim:
••r
.....
·~
·
•
d
M
•
k
h
d
~
lndlf•
onioo, - · - ~- ~
on
anmng
eeps go out t ere an give t h em
L,--oiiiiiiloll:;;;ii..,l pow.
115 - . wilh for. throwing interceptions.
the football," ' said Colts
Int. 113.-. - . 55•000· won! c-all, Aaldng
ATTENTION. Taking (740)37N7o48
tll00. (740)742-45011
He has 11 in the last five coach Jim Mora, whose
no.-oPupploa onforRegiChriet:nau
ad Laba.
~-------.
,.........,
games, and his 20 INTs are team didn't score an ofTen$250. (700)4480080
IICaSAu
YAII'NA. "II" XH60 eight shy of his career high sive touchdown for the
Bled- Blua Quaker Hand
Thumpw Road and Trail set in 1998, his rookie sea• first time since the last
Tame
and
Talking. 1M1 Chevy 8-10, 4 cyl., ::,~-::.":..,-~
(304)67H787
t400. (740)446- Good. Aura Wall, 1900. son .
game of the 1999 regular
Wolf~......_(-).·-.
,.40)3880511 •-- ·~
In the second quarter, season. "We can't turn the
.........- -~ ~
''
-~180dyDec.101r,wllholdii1M1ClMC-4li4Eid-.
David Bowens hit Manning ball over like that against
~···~
TIC
4
a
v
Dec · 24111.
J' ust as he released a pass ,
· th'15 I
d
......, (700)742·2118
e. 'Rlppor, Ldl - · 1341&lt;
anyone 10
eague an
•:-""'!!~--- MUM. Sharp. ~causing it to float toward expect to win."

.Else CanJ

TO Place

The Dlilly Sentinel • Page A '7

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

1"11

I'

ond uolgno ·~
,.corded In VolurM
271, Pl(le 171 of ~
Dead, Recorda ol
Melgo County, Ohloj
tho right of lng,.ei
end ogroao to tho
pnrgoiOCIIH i1n tho
O.D13 ocro ,ol roo!
11toto da~crlbod
heroin. Subjoct to Ill
logol hlghwoyo onrl
IIMIMflta of riDGnl-'
Raloronca Dood:·
Volume 311, pogli
2t3, lilolgo Counij
Dood
Rocordo.
Current Ownoro
Homo: Donald Illand Chrllly lllrlln. •
Ptoporty Add-1
301 Wlllgon SlrMt,
'
- · hlo"""
Permanent
Parcel '
Number; 11·00432',
I 1-00433, 11-00434 &amp; ·
ING431
APPRAISED AT:
..,000.00
I
TERMS OF SALE: '
Caoh. Cannot be
for loll than 213rdo
ol tho oppralood
VIIUI. $1,000.00
down on
of ~.
caoh or cartlflail
chock, balonoo on
confl1'1111110n of 1110..
RALPHE.
TIIUSS!LL, Sherllr
Molge County, Ohio 1
DENNIS REIMER CO~
L.P.A.
I
By: Donnlo Rolrnor
(Rog.I00311011)
Jant11 c. Wrontmor.
(flog.~)
'
Attcimey1 lor
I
lubllltuted Plllnllff,
Con-oFinolervlclng Corp. fltl
G...,. ,._ l'lnonclll
Sorvlolng
Corponrdon
P.O.Boxiii,HOI '
Rov.nnoRd.
Twlrtlburg, OK~
(330) 425-4201

MHr

dar

I

(11) 21, 2001

(12) 4, 11,2001
l!ubllc Notice
NOTICE OF PUILIC
HEARING ON THE
TAXIUDGIT
Two ooploe ol tho
tax budget for the
Southern Dlolrlot "'
f!oclna, In Molgo
County, Ohio, .,. on
fifo In the offtco of tho
Tr'Mounor, Donnlo E.
Hill of Hid dlotrtct. '
,...... lnl lor public
lnopactlon; a pub!Jc
hoorlng on aold
budgll Will be hold II
tho Southern Loailll
School Dlolltct,
Board of Eduaotlon
offlco on the day 01
Janu1oy 2, 2002, 11
7:30 p.m. at tlio
Ol'fllnl2lllonll
mooting.

,.,..._
Donnie

E.

Hill,

(12) 10, 11, )2. 13, 14,
17, 11, 18, 20, 21,
2001

�•

•

=p~·~!A~I~•~The~~DII~Iy~Se~nti~II~-~-------------!P~OIMioy, Mld!JIIpDtt, Ohio

\

Tullday, Dec. 11, 2001

LOCAL BOWUNG

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page A 9

7

ALLEYOOP
NEA Cro81word Puzzle

In what is the closest competition of the year. Pine Hills Golf Coune defeated
Littlejohn's of Pomeroy 84/36 to 81/39. Powell's SuperValu made ita close three
I"My nee but conceded to third at the finish with a 78/42.
: The team higb,game Was won by Powell's with a 735, while Pine Hilh took the
~team high series with an 1851 score. The men's high game was bowled by Loren
Coleman with a 194 owr Steve Burton and Chuck BurtOn, who claimed the men's
'high series 011er Coleman 515-494.
' Joyce Cline bowled a double-double by claiming the Women's hiP pme and
'women's high series. Cline claimed the high game 011er Shirley Simmons 18(),165,
while taking the series 508-463 mer Dottie Will.

ALDER

Cellular
(740) 949-1521
FIDandna • ,.

Same AI &lt;:.11

o.,.
A•llllable

Llfr"'l,llllund • free l!et!WIM

Pol= 2 1
~
Every 'lllurlday

Uunclay ·
Doofl Open -4:30
Early blrdlilbt

6:30
P:ourulllve
top line
Thul'ldayt
. PIQgllllfve

CoVerall on

SUnclaya-·

Southem·

I Kllld L

;Jl:l

,........ ,.

992-5479

KQJI

Cou!11ry, Dlnce •
RackMu.lc

740-742-7709
RMIOI11bleR.All Oocaalona

..•
a•

I
'I

,.

'I

I
I

spac~

1066 2nd Street • Mason,

for $50

••

per
"Abeltllu Service"
35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomeroy, Ob 45721~ I

740-985-3831

12'llt Economy Stat!k Feed.......... $1.501100
12'llo Equine 12
(Fonnarty W..n Prtcle) ...........te.DO.'IO
21% HIIIMN P1k11 Dog Foocl .......se.7MIO
..... Lick Dllr 8loclcl ...................... $1.75
Wltolt Com .... -......-.................... $5.2!1100
Corn ''''''"'''''''''''''''''''''''$1.251100

construction

BryanReevea .

r····

·

New Homea, Room Addltlon1,
Garage~, Pole
Roofa,
Siding,

Hours: Sun • Ulur llam • 10 pm
Frl &amp; Sat ll am, tlpm

month,··

O.cka, Kitchen~, llNIIMllllt
lMore

FREE ESTIMATES!

MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

-~--

' t!.t.'lt
I"""
I
I

"'

I

WIICH ••••• 1t DIIIIIIR 't.U

11:30arn, 2:00pm t .5:00pm, 7:30pm
· I
14 yrs &amp; under FREE 14 yrs &amp; under FREE
: 5,8 yrs- '2.99 : 5-8 yrs- 13.99
1
9-12 yrs -'3.99
9-12 yrs -'4.99
1
I

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH

I

'

(748) 992-3194
992-6635

IUFFIT TO GO (Dinner .. 11.11t
WJWAIMS

JL@GGilNG
fiiEWI.

.........
FUIIIE

UITncklnd
$100 ..... TIICk

..

~.~

l148J 982-31148
11.'111-,.t

A It J

~·..

Pul
Pau

Hert.

I!Q

46

AD,_

at

•

••

•
•
'

•

MY
MY TteTt4,

.•

rtl&gt;! ....

RRITCIME. )
RRST SERIED ·
$200.00 PER JOINT· ·
REIUWLY .
$321.00 PER JOINT

•

omeng falles

J&amp;D
., BllllftRDS

811160 2171 .
fiii!Y Thlrsdi!l. .

lllltllnd, Obit
ftNIIble to fell ·

&amp;Sundly

Doors Open tlO
flrtg birds start

ferl*fles

ftlso DJ.III
request.
talllllnlr4
742-2572
Kip -742-7711!

&amp;:38
PI'OII esslve top 1M
1blndep

PIIII1SIM

CMrllllll Slndlp

57WI..

Sixth-.. ""'""'
54

Screen

st--gi111C41

80 HIYel
18 Do cllrttllft
flO II
9 Some
35 Ux1111l
21 Century
11 Rico wine
10 Actor Ri111r
mkltnl
unit
112 Tntlng o11o 13 a.co.,. 1 40 8 plo.
member
41 ' Merry
22 A.DOWN
empire
18 Slowo
~ Pilch
25 Prolllbh
gently
45 Hindu
20 Jokl wtlh
klngdom
21 Ottetwhelm
31 Vouchor
1 Baldwin or 23 Phono
41 Aclreoo
24 Co-o·
Gilbo
34 Woblddr.
Wo:c loul
35 P1rlolln
toolo
41 Becomea
2 Su
26 Bylaw
Joint
mloollbbr.) 3 Con I
38 Moroocode
21 WrHtr Horta 49 Flot plolo
olgnllo
4 R011111n
26 Monolour'a 50 Wild gueso
37 "AMI
lolando
51 Wloc. hro.
atlteaman
btl-"
5 Exllld
30 Wln1·1d
52 DoMI'O
Ro.....
lbbr.
"dono"
38 And
31 'PC media 53 Harbor
311 S.unMorle
I C'llngled 32 Bongs Into 55 Tetchtrl'
33 Roman
org.
40P10011
1 Cllln111
rold
for I live
12 Wdo.)
I Swoolroll

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MY

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Syracua, Ohio
1182-sns

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Now open for
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740-992-7038

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Many colors to

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Open Moa..S.t 18-4
CIOHd Sutlday

~
11

"-~~

. TilE WORLD WAR I FL'(IN6
ACE LOOKS LONELY ..

I

cpntinue with the ace
and another diamond,
but East wins with the
king and leads a sec,
ond heart. Now West
scores tricks with
both of his red,suit
ql,leens. Still, if East
can produce that level
of play, ask him to
partner you.

m.,~et~~eot~lllle

St. Rt. 124
Racine, 01110

_33795 Hilaiui Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

949-2734

740-992-5232

I

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LETTERS
•

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•

•

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UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWER

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

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•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Jerkin- Joust, Thine, Frisky, HONEST
"I don't believe itl" a man muttered while listening to
a political candidale. "He sounded sincere withoul be,
ing HONEST!"

1111211 mo .

OPEn BOWLin&amp; 6
LEHGUES
-7(1!1 7di,II1Wfllil
7

~Oiler's
'l'ollki/1 'IJII, 11 ail a-·

.busines·s

.!RJZJ,~I .

742~2076

Roc ky R. Hupp llgPnl
Box 1 R9

Mtdd lc port. Oh to -1 5760
Local 843:5284
Mr.dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;

Wedncsdny, IJe ~. 12. 2001
Yom socia l life could tum
our to be much rnorc exciting
and fulfilling than it has been
for quite some time, due in
great part to some new friends
you'll be making in the year
ahe~ d.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,
De-c. 21) --Surroundings free
from negative, outside intlut&gt;nces will offer you 'your best
c hance~ for accomplishment
today . Try to remove you1"5elf
frotn any du.5ing prcmncs.
Tryin~ to patch up a broken
rom:m ce? The Asrro-Graph
Marchrnakcr can help you understand what to do to make
the relationship work. Mail
$2.75 to Matchmaker, r:./o this
newspaper, P.O. llox 1758:
Murray Hill Sudon, New
York, NY 10156.
CAPRICOI~N (D•c. 22,
i~ an excellent

Jan. 19) -- This

da)' to. get together with a
ptrson \vhose relatiomhip
with you nnd to be ahortd

Denial, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 40 IK Rollovers;

up. You'll tind thl1 individual
very receptive todAy.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.

Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

19) ., Yuu m•y not d•liber,
atcly uek them out, b\lt competitive tituations could be

(

j

54

-

MULT T

Deer Shop

.,

~or Cl1

:::0·,

ne picture is
• worth a thousand
words. A peek is
worth two finesses .
Two cliches are as inaccurate as each
other. In this deal,
though, picture the
opposing cards in
your 111ind's eye and
... fAT
\lf;GfT AILf;$, r~tUS'tl
peek hard for the
&lt;.LfAN
~OOM,
most accurate line of
60 TO
.I'M TOO
play. Against your
four,spade contract,
/
YOVNG fOil
West leads the club
•J ...... .....,/.~II"'
1- A$~1NG!
king and another
club. After ruffing,
how would you continue?
South opened two
clubs, strong, artificial .
and forcing. Then, his
three-spade jump rebid guaranteed a solid
suit.
With nine top
tricks, it looks as
though declarer needs
the heart finesse to
succeed. So, perhaps
CELEBRITY CIPHER
you ruffed the second
by Lull Campos
C.llbrlly Clplltr crypcogromo ""'croolod from quototlono by lomouo
club, drew two
peapa., put and prt:Mnt. Each lttlar In lhe cipher atandl for anolfltr.
rounds of trumps,
Tod1y'1 cfut: H lqUIIII P
cashed the heart ace,
crossed to dummy
'CTPZTJ
p J L
TPXQC
JTZTX
'"I with a spade to the
J.\OW LOi'IG
p
10, and took the heart
PEXTTL
GR
W X PIT
1:&gt; !&gt;.. CI.Je&gt;IC.
finesse. Unlucky!
ITGQTX
HKPMT
WRX .1 P J ' N
Zll'mNIMOIG
However, there are
two chances. DiaCPIFGPGFRJ.'- ORCJ
monds might be 3,3,
N IF Q C
Immediately play the
RJ
MCTNPHTPeT
ace and another diaSPA
(110$)
mond. East will
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "In Des Moines, a man's eyes wlllllahl
prob.ably shift to a
up
altho mere menllon of the word 'corn .. • - Philip
heart. Win and play a
Hambut'ller
..
·
third diamond. Here,
the suit is 3,3, so you
win East's heart re,
turn, draw three
r PON'T KNOW WHAT
MKE5 HER TIC.K
rounds of trumps O Rearrange letten of the
BUT T KNOW WHAT
four acrambled words beending
in
the
TIC.i&lt;.S HER OFF,
low to lorm four simple wordt.
dummy, and discard
your heart jack on the
H URT 0 A
established diamond 1--,---,-,....,....,.,.--,--l
1 2
seven . .But if the dia,
.I 1
. 1
. 1
. .I
. monds split 4-2, you ~=~===~....1
know to try the heart
Ky E 0 L
finesse.
I-.,.,..,.---.~.,;,4,....:T"I-I
Did you notice that .
East missed his "::~::;:::;;::~~:::!·~
chance? If he had'r R A 0 A M 1:=,'
overtaken with his
s
"I need something blown up,'':
I'ERIIAPS ANOTIIER ROOT BEER
club ace at trick one
.
. . .
the reporter told lhe copy room.·
WOULD I.IELP TO CURE
and shifted to a heart, ,...L._-_.J_-_.J.---""_J,--_-_L_-.:_~,.,.The reply was, "I think you need
1-115 LONELINESS ...
you would have been
V I S
1
····.,"-lab.
in trouble. You win
1 a
1.11t
V' c om~l~te .the c~uckle quoted
with the ace, draw a _ _ _ . _ _ .
by flllmo •n tile mluing words
round of trumps, and
vou develop from step No. 3 below.

I

nrxtr &amp;10'1120') ---------------------J
IUF.U TO GO (LUnch .. ••.lit

AltQJtl

•

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54 ...............
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Tel: (304) 773-5800

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'

Disc Jockey
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478talil

.:;r.

I

eff Warner Ins

em led 38-10 at the intermission.
One thing can be said of Southern- · · . - - - - - - - . ,....- - - -...- - - - - - - - - .
The Tornadoes play hard and know no
l_lCTO
DIRECT
speed other than high gear. Southern
1\.
was praised for a great defensive eiFort IUILDIIItS INC,
PRICING
Sayre, who sar out much of the game and a good offensive passing game. In si:.::.~=·~~
because of an illness and Ashley Dunn the third period eight different Thrna• RtpiiCt~~et~t
11m llftiC.EIT Wll. . .
each had four points, while Tara Pickens does hit the scoring column, led by Lee
:wlntlowl' Room
• Mf
added three, Deana Pullins two, and who netted five points in the frame and
AddHion• • Roon111
Susan Brauer two. Tara Pickens led the made several of her team-leading assists. CMICW. i..J IESIDIWlW.
Tornadoes with eight rebounds 'in a After three rounds, Southern led 57-12. FREE ESTIMATES
great night at the post.
_ .
Going down the stretch the Southern 740-992·7599
Hannan was led by Jessica Bias who youngsters closecl out the game,
netted nine points. Rachel Littleton outscoring Hannan 8-3 for a 65-15 INO SUNDAY CALLS) ·
added three, Christy Mayes two, and finale.
Amber Adkins one. Bias had a good
Southern led in rebounding 53-30.
floor game for the Wildcats as well as The following girls led Southern in
leading the team in scoring.
rebounding -Pickens 9, Chapman 8,
Southern went up 1Q,Q early on lay- Pullins 7, Barnes 6, while Hannan had
QUALITY WINDOW
ups by Amy Lee, Ashley Dunn, Brigette 30 (Bias 7, Miles 5, Littleton 5). The • Equipment Parts
Barnes, and · Chapman, while Katie Tornadoes had 23 steals (Lee 7, Barnes FA&amp;ory Authorized
992-4119 1-800-291-56®
Sayre hit a ten foot baseline jumper. 4) and Hannan had 6 (Littleton 3, Mayes
Cut-IHI'arts
Vbtlt Our Sbowroom On Stale Roule 33
Rachel Littleton put Hannan on the ' 3). Southern had 17 assists (Lee 6,
6 Mllel North ot Pomeroy, Oblo, At County Road II
Dalen
board, then Chapman nailed a three Barnes 4),18 turnovers, and 19 fouls.
1000'St 1ft. 7 South
• No Dealers or Contndors PleiiBe
pointer and freshman Joanne Pickens Hannan had 6 steals, 34 turnovers, one
Vlso/Mutertanl
canned a short jumper.
assist, and 13 fouls.
11023477
The Tornadoes emptied their bench
Southern goes to Waterford Thursday
early as every player saw action early. for an important Tri-Valley Conference
The intense tempo resulted in 12 first game.
quarter Hannan turnovers. It was also
otlloclno
about this time that the Hannan shoot,116,
Hannan
4 llouUwn
8
2 -3 "
15
ing went south.
Sou1he(n t5
23
II
I
85
Southern's intensity was immense, SOUTHERN (+0) - Racflll ChOQman 8 f)-0 14,
even when its younger girls replaced the Brigoffll llamoo 5 o-o 10. Doono Puilna t I). I 2, Amf
t.oo • t·t 1o. 110111 sa~ 2 o-o 4, AoNoy DuM 2 o-o 4,
quickly improving veterans. Through, JoAnne Plcf&lt;eno 3 1).3 8. Toro Ptctceno 0 3-4 s. Alhfll'
out the line,up every Tornado did her Roulh 2 f)-0 6, 8rookt KINr 2 f)-0 5, SUoon- I 1).
-~~ 284-985
job. Southern was outrebounded early. 02.
H/oNNAN (1).2) - T~nlfy Slutgoon 0. RacflofUttlolon I
.1-3 3. Sliah- o. Jill Longo 1).1 o. Roclne Guo o,
but came on strong the second hal£
Mlet 0 1).2 0, CMOiy Moyoo 0 2·2 2, The Tornadoes exploded for 23 sec, lliP 4 1·1 1. Amber Adldns 0 1·21, f&lt;ayla Loomlo o 1·
2 1. TOiall 5 5-11 15.
ond quarter points, led by Chapman ThrOe
point gcoli - SOUthlm 5 (Chapman 2, t.oo,
with seven and Barnes with six. Amy Rouoll. KIM&lt;l&gt;ne·llcll) HeMin 0.
- SoutMm sa (Pick- e. Clllpman a.
Lee came up with several big steals and Rebounds
Pulllne 7, Bamoo 8). HIMS!l30 (BIU7.MIIoe 5, Lllffll.
connected with the open m:in on· the ton 5). Stoolo- Southlm 23 tiM 7, aomoo 4). HonSoutflom11.
scoring end of the break. Bias led Han- nanet~3.Moyoo3).TurnovtntHonnen 3 4 . - - SouiMm 17 (LM e. Bomoo 5).
nan with five points at the half as South- Hennon!

Shade River AG Service

44sma.U

4c-

1. Pine Hilrs Golf Course 84136; 2. ~John's of Pomeroy 81139; 3.
Powell's Super Value 78/42; 4. Syracuse Country Market 541e6; 5. Till's
Marathon 45/75; 6. Meigs Industries 18/102.
Team High Game - Powell's Super Value 735
Team High Series- Pine HiH's Golf Course 1851
Men's High Game- Loren Coleman 194, Steve Burton 190, Chuck
Burton 187
Men's High Series- Chuck Burton 515, Loren Coleman 494, Steve
Burton 493
Women's High Game- Joyce Cline 180, Shlrtey Simmons 165, Betty
McKinley 163
Women's High Series - Joyce Cline 508, Dottie Will 463, Shirley Slm,
mons456

t

un~~-aMo.

1TU.IIIom

Scoring IUmmllry:

•

ACROSS

PHILUP

somethin.~ for which you're

i

l

well suited today. Somehow,
they're apt to 6nd you.
PISCES (Feb. 2(),March 20) ·
· -- A positive and optimistic
attitude today rnablr5 you to
accomplish jun abour anyth~IIJ!: to which you put your
mmd. Believing in yourself is
your key to succrss.

ARIES (March 21-April19)
-- Take your involvemrntl

Llly. but take c01re not to overimlulge . Enjoy yoLirself in a
way that you don·r have to
worry about your waistline or
any afi:eretfecu.
LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22) .,
Yuu may not be the flnt one
out of th e st;;arting blocks to day, but once yo\1 get rolling,
you'll be full of detennination
to compete for the blue ribbon .

seriously today and your
probabilitirs for conducting
successful busincs5 tr:tnsactions
are good. Conversely. indifference leads to carelessness
and defeat.
. TAURUS (April 20-May

-- If as~ignmcnrs that require
rnusde power is not your cup
of tea today. it's OK to give
your strong back a rest and let
your mental faculties have the

20) -- Althm•gh you genwlly

workouc.

hke to work alone, you might
not be able to function as independently as you'd like today. Yet, you're preparC'd to
act in unison, so team effort
won't be painful..

GEMINI (May 21-Jun• 20)
.. I(you take care of all thole
liule neglected ta•k• today, it
will do 'Nonden (or your psycht. T~e •en~e or accon1plishment will mnke you feel very
good about younelf.
CANC~Il Qune 2 j,july
22)-- You're entitltd to have
1omr run And rtiaJCBIIDil ro-

"

VII~GO

(Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

Lilli~ (Sept: 23-0ct. 23) ,

- Put your focus Jn the arra
that looks the most encourOtging for you today, which
anrologically falls in the financial realms. Something could
develop that would prove

profitabl•.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24,Nov.
22) ·- M.men.that were once

controlled by you but have
been managed by_othcn lately

ran

in your

~iderably help your

1uccen

nuy once •tt:un

copable hondo. Thil will con,
Uyn;•nicl .

.

�The Daily Sentinel

Dec:a•b• 11. 1001

Cincinnati, Xavier notch victories
CINCINNATI .. :\P) Jamaal Davis had 15 points
and 13 rebounds to lead
Cincinnati to a 68-55 victory
over Toledo on Monday night.
Leonard Stokes had 19
points and Immanuel McElroy
had 14 for Cincinnati (6-1),
which has
won six
straight
since
a
seasonopening loss to Oklahoma
State.
All six wins have been at
home in the Bearcats' longest
stretch of regular-season
games in the Shoemaker Center since the 1995-1996 season.
Terry Reynolds led Toledo
with 17 points as the Rockets
(3-4) lost to Cincinnati for the
first time in three games since
1973.
McElroy matched his season
high of I 0 points in the first
half, including six during a 131 run that left the Bearcats
with a 30-181ead with 1:14 to
go.
Cincinnati took control for
good by opening the second
half with a 14-3 run capped by
Steve Logan's 3-pointer- the
Bearcats' only 3-pointer in 11
tries - which gave them a
44-25lead with 15:191eft.
Center BJ. Grove, who was
reinstated as a walk-on earlier
in the day after leaving school
in September for personal reasons, was not on the Cincinnati bench. He was serving a
one-game Conference USA
suspension for throwing an
elbow at Alabama-Birmingham's LeAndrew Bass during
the conference tournament
last March.
Minnesota 75, Oregon
72
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Freshman Rick Rickert had
28 points and nine rebounds
Monday night to lead Minnesota to a 75-72 victory over
Oregon.
·
Rickert, a McDonald's AllAmerican
recruit
from

NCAA

I GOT GAMI! - Wisconsin
forward Freddie OWens (24)

scores against Xsvler center

Duluth, was 11-for-17 from
the field. He had 18 points in
the second half, including a
key dunk that capped a
Gophers rally.
Kerwin Aeming added 14
points for the Gophers (5-3},
who snapped a two-game
non-conference losing streak.
James Davis, Luke Ridnour,
Frederick Jones and Chris
Christoffersen each scored 11 do
points for . Oregon (4-3),
which lost its third straight.
Oregon ran of£ eight straight
points early in the second half
to take a 42-35 lead, but the points and Kevin Frey had 11
Gophers quickly rallied, tying for Xavier (5-2).
the ·game at 46-46 on a 3Freshman Devin Harris led
pointer by Rickert with 15:23 Wisconsin (3-6) with 10
left.
points. The · Badgers have
Ridnour scored five straight played seven of their pine
points to ignite a f2-3 run that games on the road. Their first
. put the Ducks ahead 58-49 five loSses were by a total of 16
with 10:56 left. Rickert again points.
led the Gophen back, scoring
Xavier used a 17-7 run to
five points in an 11-2 run, jump to a 10-point lead in the
including a dunk off a baseline first· six minutes. Wisconsin
drive that gave the Gophers a dosed to within five before.
60-59 lead with 7:20 to play. West took command with
Davis hit a 3-pointer to put four points in the last minute
the Ducks back in front, but of the half, and a 3-pointer by
Tavarus Bennett's three-poilu Chalmers. at the buzzer gave
play with 3:13 left put the Xavier a 33-21 lead at halfGophers ahead to stay at 63- time.
62. Rickert hit two . free
Xavier maintained a double
throws and Renting went 3- digit lead most of the second
for-4 from the line down the half until Wisconsin close;r to
stretch.
within eight with I :13 lefi.
Minnesota scored the fint
The Badgers, who rely on
.12 points of the game, with the 3-point shot, hit 3-of-8 in
two baskets by Rickert spark- the first half and were 4-of-15
ing the run. Oregon's' bench overall. Xavier, coming off a
led the Ducks back into the 108-57 victory over Long
game, and a driving leaner by Island, was held to its lowest
Davis gave the Ducks a 34-33 point total of the season.
halftime lead.
For Wisconsin, the loss
Xavier 57, Wuconsin 48 capped a long weekend in
CINCINNATI (AP) Ohio. The Badgen beat Ohio
David West, last week'sAdantic
10 player of the week, had 21
points to lead Xavier to a 5748 victory over Wisconsin on
Monday night.
Lionel Chalmers added 16

'

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

• Duke was a unanimous No. I , in the AP college basketball
poll for the second straight week Monday, while three teams
fell from the Top 25.
The Blue Devils (8-0), who beat Temple and Michigan last
week, re~eived all 72 first-place votes and 1,800 points from the
national media panel.
.
Missouri, Maryland and Kansas held
second through fourth and Florida
moved up one spot to round out the
first five.
Arizona and Virginia each moved up one place to sixth and
seventh, and were followed in the Top Ten by Oklahoma State,
Kentucky and Illinois.
.
Only one of the three newcomers to the rankings is in for
'the first time this season.
Gonzaga (7-2), which has been in the NCAA tournament
round of 16 each of the last three seasons, moved in at No. 25,
the Zags' first apl'earance in the poll since being ranked for the
first seven weeks of the 1999-2000 season.
Indiana (6-2), which was out of the poll the last two weeks
.after getting as high as No. 20, moved back in at No. 21, and
Oklahoma (5-1), which was 25th in the preseason poll then fell
out, returned to the rankings at 24th.

· NCAA

PREP SCOREBOARD
Ohkt Ngh lchaol a.tl 8

llondol"•-

'

111111

Akronlluclai68,Akron~ ..

Aleron Elo! 53, Akron l&lt;enn'oole «&gt;
Akron FIIMmo57,AAftlnGaltlold43

Brown

--·7.-29
CentM-N&lt;Joit N. 68, AAron E. 51

Ahno&lt;MI, ......... v

-

58
-

n, -Conlnol68

Bertin ..
Rlclgo

53,-

BIMI!Iyfl. Fryollll, - &lt; 1 6
Car6lld 44, Cortllnd L.at.avlaw 31
Colra 7 8 , - 35

Ci1. _ , 43, Cit ShrodOf 36
Ci1. 0111&lt; ""''' "57, C i 1 . - 36
Ci1. l..andmall&lt; 68, Now Mllm 19
Ci1. SCPA 58, llillllamflbufll35
Ci1. Sewn HIUo 58, Cin. CouniJy Dey 36
en Stu- 6 8 , - Bertin sa
ec.y.Ra- 64, - 2 4
CWin Sc**&gt; 88. COIB. Wlilehall 28
E.LM!!poo150, Wlrlemlle ,,_, ~ ..
E. P - 50, Seabring 32

Elyria FBCS 57, Comai ... te Cllr. 21
Fa~ 58. Fellclly :r7
Fi8llkln Furnace ~ 58. Beawr "-&gt;
Pll&lt;a 38
·~ Galla-.,y 70, l.qjan 31
.Gorfiold Hll. Tt1nlly 67, ·:rl
.
GlraJd 62, Kltilman Badge( eo
Rive&lt; 52, Now Mafan10IU Fronllor

.. .

.

~36,Ft1111&lt;1n15

I.JMn1 56, CoUnlllana 38
Lowolvell 71' McDonald :r7

-

-

&lt;12, ~'II Faltflold 34

Cl- 57, P8nlnlula Woodoi&lt;Vt
31
Maatillon 60, Cal11on s. &lt;16

I

,-d

McMtu'hUICounly56, ••
36
McCctrl! 63, Oefianca A~ 41
-Cattlnll53. ~41
MlnloRI55,_,_,W.36
Mogodoft 52,-51
MI. Otlb-.,
61, Amolla &lt;16 .
Noloiitoilla Yott&lt;88,_F_Hccldng

Malolllon Tuolaw 50, Magnolia Sandy Valley
43

Catttolc fil, Jol'o"""'" 53
-Falla51.-C
Ook Hll VI, - ' l l 4 1 l
Of1lo OooJ 37, Vlllago A&lt;:ademy 8
Of1lo Valoy Chtla1lt!n 21 ' Symtnlri VaJiay 55
"""- Malga 48, Hemlock -25
_,_,54, ProctoMie Fali1ancl51
Potlomou1h Clay 53. F'cf1lmou1li Noue

Utah Jazz are coming
together..:bout time
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Between Karl Malone's scoring
and Andrei Kirilenko's soaring, the once-struggling Utah Jazz are
coming together at last.
..
Malone scored 30 points and had 10 rebounds, Ki~enko had
16 points and six steals, and John Stockton had 21 pomts and 12
assists as the Jazz rallied in the fourth quarter to beat the Dallas
Ma~~ericks 107-98 Monday night.
. .
It was Utah'• fourth straight victory, coming after a frus!ranng
early season where the Jazz were off to their worst start in 19

David West (30) Monday. (AP)

Duke still No. ·1
•
·'

R

Mllp County's

Whafs inside

rtouts
lntemet use
·to chamber
Di

yean.

NBA

"We have some young guys and some very
old guys and the mix takes some time to learn,"
Stockton said. "We're getting a litde bit better
and at least it's something we can build off of."
They'll need to keep the momentum going this week. Still
ahead are home games against Minnesota and Portland and a road
trip to San Antonio. ·
"We lost five or six close games down the stretch but now guys
are coming back," Malone said. "You start to play to win, instead
of playing to lose. We've started to do that now:'
Univel.ity 77-71 on Saturday.
In the only other NBA game Monday night, it .was the Los
Bowling Gften IW,
Angeles Clippen 100, Orlando 92.
N.C.-Wllmington 83, OT
Utah faced a rematch of last year's first-round playoff series, but
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
this time the Jazz came from behind to win. Last spring. the. Mav(AP) - Keith McLeod scored
ericks outscored Utah 21-12 in the fourth quarter to wm the
16 points1. includin~~:.a 3-POin~­
decisive fifth game.
'
er With rour seconds to go m
Donyell Marshall scored 17, including seven in the final3 minovertime, as Bowling Green
utes and Malone had nine in the last 4 1 /2 minutes. Kirilenko
beat N.C.-Wilmington 84-83
also had a huge block against JuWan Howard.
Monday.
.
The Mavericks went ahead 97-89 with 4:53 to go when
McLeod was one of four
Eduardo Najera· took a feed from Steve Nash for a dunk that
Falcon players in double figcapped a 7-2 run. But that was the last Dallas field goal, as Utah
ures. Len Matela scored 18
finished with an 18-1 run over the final4:39.
poincs, Erik Crawford had 14
Dirk Nowitzki, back in the starting lineup after missing Saturand Brandon Pardon added 11
day's loss to Washington because of a sprained left ankle, had 27
points for Bowling Green (7points and 10 rebounds to lead the Mavericks. Nash scored 25,
1).
and Howard and Najera each scored 12.
McLeod made two free
Dallas seized the momentum early in the fourth behind
throws to put the Falcons up
Najera$ husde and Nowitzki's shooting. Throw in 3-pointers by
73-71 with 1:09 remaining 4n
Nash and Tim Hardaway, and the Mavericks seemed to have
regulation, but Ed Williams'
everything under control.
layup tied the game with 42
' But the Jazz stayed cool and with only 10 turnovers, way below
seconds left.
their average of !8, they were poised to win.
In overtime, Bowling Green
Clippers 100, Magic 92
went up 81-79 of£~ layup by
Corey
Maggette
scored
21 points and Los Angeles overcame a
Matela with 2: 11 remaining,'
but Craig Callahan 3-pointer 47-point' game by Tracy McGrady in a Victory over visiting
Orlando.
gave the Seahawk a 82-81 lead
Quentin Richardson scored nine of his 16 points in the fourth
with 1:50 left.
,
quarter
and the Clippers improved to 11-10, the first time that
Brett Blizzard made the second of two free throws with Los Angeles has had a winning record this late in a season since
March 5, 1993.
13 seconds left to · put WihnElton Brand, the Clippers' scoring leader, had a season-low six
. ington up 83-81, before{
points
and two rebounds in 26 minutes.
· '
McLeod hit the game winner,

s

FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT - The
importance of the Internet
and how it call enhance
one's business and personal
life was discussed during
the regular meeting of the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce.
Gina Pines, director of
the University of Rio
Grande Meigs County
Center, spoke to those in
attendance about better
understanding the Internet
and what role it can play in
improving better business
practices and one's quality
of life.
During a brief history lesson, Pines said the Internet
was created by the government in the 1960s so as to
facilitate bette~ communications in case of a possible
nuclear disaster.
As interest grew, major
universities, computer programers and select government officials began to realize the Internet's potential
for rapidly transmitting data
over large distances in a
timely fashion.

U.S. bombs Tora Bora, A6

Deaths
Trilby Hart, 94
Gretta Thomas, 86
Shirley Bell Wolfe; 55
Details, A:S

Weather
High: 80s, Low: 50S

Details, A2

Foil is one of the most wonderful times of the year in Alabama. So come
celebrate the crisp days and postcard sunsets ·On the ROBERT TRENT JoNES
GoLF TRAIL. With eight sites ond
378 championship holes across the
state, there's one within driving ·
range of wherever you or9.
And, now is ogreat time to plan
otrip to Alabama to see the
"new" GRAND HOTEL, part of the
Resort Division of the Trail. Now
undergoing o$30 million
renovation, The Grand Hotel is
becoming even grander.
Coli today for tee times
ond hotel reservations. Foil is
oGrand time on the Trail.

Soulhom 8 5 , - (W.Va.) 15
I olla _ , 61, c-t City S. GaJIIa

"Currently,
over
200,000,000 people worldwide use the Internet, with
a majority of that number
coming from the U.S. and
Canada," said Pines. "Statistically, e-commerce has
tripled in the past year and
will most likely . increase
due to rapid advances in
technology."
"A large proportion of
today's society is being positively affected by the
exp~nding influence of the
Internet," she added. "In
fact , the fastest growing
number of Internet users is
people 55 and older."
After explaining in detail
how the Internet works,
Pines concluded her presentation by handing out
pointers on effective e-mail
correspondence and tips on
how to productively search
the worldwide web.
In other matters, Judy
Williams, Hal Kne~n •. Mike
Kloes, · Susan Oliver and
Tom Reed were selected to
serve on the 2002 board of
directors for the chamber.

~HIO

~ ..P,ick,3.da~ !i:H.-,

Economists:·

Pick 4 day: 1-o-o-6
Buckeye 5: 2·12-22-28·30
Pick 3 night: 8·0-6
Pick 4 nliht: 5·0..0·9

o.n.. ...
-

Southem beats South Gallia, 11

Page 10

W.VA.
Daily 3: 2-6-4
DailY 4: 8·6+5
cash 25: 1·9·10·12·18-21&gt;

Index
1 Sec:llonl - 11 ......

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
82-4
85
AS
A4
A3
A:S
B1,4,6
A2

Recent Fed rate
cut will be last

Middleport's two new sewer lift stations are
now in operation. Myron Duffield, Don Stivers
and Bernard Gilkey, members of Middleport
Board of Public Affairs, were on hand with
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli, Councilman Roger
Manley, village employees and employees of
B&amp;L Construction of Ashland, Ky., all pictured
right, to "flip the switch" on the new facilities,
located at Art Lewis and Laurel Streets and
Gen!'ral Hartinger Parkway. But in the end, it
was up to Jeff Kesman, of Trombold Equip- .
ment, shown at the control panel aboye; to get
things rolling - so to speak. The new station!
are part of a S1 million sewer improyement
project which has been ongoing for most of
the summer, and which also includes repairs to
lift stations at Park and Pearl Streets and Mill
Street and South Second Avenue. The project is
expected to be completed by year's end. (Brian
). Reed photos)

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

·Middleport native one of 20
awarded Ohio Historical Marker
'

I

Sponsored by
r

.:

I

I

I I • r

' I

I

.

!IURNPIICE

8Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -Twenty significant Ohio people, places and
events have been selected to
receive Ohio Historical Markers
by the Ohio Bicentennial Commission.
The late General James V
Hartinger, a native of Middle-·
port, a four-star Air Force general who served as commander in
chief of the North American
Aerospace Defense Command
from 1980 to 1984, is one of
them.
General Hartinger's selection
came . through a nomination

made by the
Mei Countyl . ,. , ,
Bic
niai ·
Co
M
t
Par~ chairn; ·, Plans
call
r the
I
to be
place&amp;;
in Gen. Hartinger
Gen. Hartinger's hometown in
formav ceremonies sometime
next s9Jfuner.
The · ~t provided through
the Longaberger Legacy lnitiative in conjunction with the
Ohio Hjstorical Society will pay

!l

two-thirds of the cost of the
marker with the balance of the
cost to come through local contributions.
Geneml Hartinger, was born
and reared in Middleport, graduated . from Middleport High
School in 1943, and was drafted
into the U. S. Army that summer.
Corning up through the
· ranks, he was appointed to West
Point Academy, graduating in
1949 with a commission as a
second lieutenant in the Air
Force.
Please see Marker, A3

WASHINGTON (AP) rates by a half-Froint on
With the Federal three separate occasions
Reserve driving a key since Sept. 11, felt the need
interest rate to its ]owest this time around for only a
level since John F. Kennedy quarter-point reduction in
was president, many ana- the federal funds rate, pushlysts are beting it down
ting that the
to 1. 75 per"With
a
little
bit
central bank
cent.
has
finally
of luck, this will
Also, anareached the
said
probably be the last lysts
end of its
they detectrate cut the Fed will ed a more
aggressive
credit easing. have to implement in positive tone
The
fed this cycle. I think the in the Fed's
cut interest
brief. stateFed senses the
rates for an
ment
11th
time, economy is finding a announcmg
bottom and will
and signaled
its decision.
on Tuesday begin to turn upward
In its statethat it was
by early next year. " ment, the
prepared to
Fed said that
cut even fur"weakness in
Mark Zandl
ther if necesdemand
sary.
shows signs
"With a little bit of luck, of abating" although it cauthis will probably be the tioned that as of yet those
last rate cut the Fed will signs remained "prelimihave to implement in this nary and tentative."
cycle," said Mark Zandi,
Joel Naroff, chief econochief economist at Econo- mist of a Holland, Pa., conmy.com. "I think the Fed sulting · firm , said the Fed
senses the economy is find- seemed to be saying "if the
ing a bottom and will begin data that come out before
to turn upward by early the Jan. 29-30 me·ecing
next year."
continue to point to
Part of the reason for that demand rebounding, they
opinion is the fact that the will not have reason to cut
central bank, which had cut anymore." ·'.

----------------------------,
'

15

s. - 5 3 , l.ucaMio Valley v '
72.-36
Sou1l1 Pcln153, ltOm&gt;n «&gt;

--Brown

Spa'OIIVile 71, Lina Temple Chrislian 36
5I. - 5 5 , Cln. S...tntTit 46
5I. Malya 57, ~ St. John'a 38
Slel.I&gt;Orwilt Big Aeclll8, TOitl!'oiO 46
52. Tot Wille 411
Tal. Nolr8 00.. 90, Tal. Ot!awa Hill &lt;16
Tot. 68, Tal. Mau"*' Val1oy 41
111ncont W...., 53,....,_ 50, OT
Woiilf1 Cl\an'!liOn 35.
32
IVaYill1y 58, tm 36
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WMehoUal Arlhony Wllyno 112, Tot. Rogora
28
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Y"""!'. AuaiJri!Mn.F1tc 88, V0..V. ~
13
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Y"'-"11· L1&gt;o11y 44, Lotvllllburg LaBtoo 38
Yooog. ~ 41, SaJom 36
Rayon 59, ~ JFK 50

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