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er_o~~-M-Id_d_le~po~rt~·~O-hl~o--------------------------~T=u•=ed~~~·~J•~n~u~·~~30~.~--1 :.
..•
PREP · HOOPS POLLS
;;:
....

•

s Scoreboard Triway, Asher Cath :~~:
back on top boys sL,1te
•

Richmond Htl. 60, C~ . Hts Lutnlran
East
RIJNy ~. Manchester 32
5 Chatlel:ton Soulhellstem!it , llfbana-44
Sardy Valley 48, Kidron Christian 43
Seaman N. Adams 46, W. Union 41
Springboro 53. Day. Co•oll20
St Clairsville 61 , Belmont Union Local 57
Steubenvitle Big Red 60. Weir 59
Sylvania Northview 65, Tot Bowsher .t6
Sytventa Southview 61 , Tol. Rogers -49
T1pp City 40, CadeNille 26
Tol. Ottawa Hlllt 52, Tol. Chlittlan 47
Tol. waite 56. Holland Springfletd .CO
Toronto 39, Wintersvih Indian Creek 36
Trenlon Edgewood 32, Franklin 29
VermiMon 38, Norwalk 28
Vincent Warren 45. Pt. Pleasant (W.Va.) 31
W. Chester lakota W. 58, Liberty Lakota E.
39
Warren JFK 42, Girard 36
Wellston 81 . Hemlock M ill~ 26
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 66, Tol. Libbey
41
Windham 44, Mogadore Field 41
Xenia 54, Huber H!S. Wayne 53
Young. Boardman 96, RaveiYI&amp; 46
Young. Mooney 51 , E. li~rpool 33
Zanesville Rosecrans 51 , Crooksville 44

.e

Eastern
· 22 24 24 14 - 84
Soull1 Gonia
2 ,8 8
6 - 24
Eattem - KIU LOdwiCk 1 0.0 2, \Nhltnay
Kon 2 1-4 5. Oanlelle $por1&lt;or 1o 2-2 22. Jui
Bolloy 3 ~ 11, Sara Mansfield 1 Q.O 2. ..,_
Baker 5 4·4 15, Janel Calaway 2 1·2 5, Kystal
Biker 1 1·2 3; Slllcy 'Nation 1 ().() 2, Katie
AOboftlon 0 N 2. T01als 21!16-24 84 ..
SOu4h Gallla - Stophanlo Evanld\ 2 0.1 4.
~ Hamson 1 1-2 3. Staoy 'M;te 1 4-6 7.
Athlev Cardwel2 0-0 4, Trac.y Cheney 1 0-Q 2,
Cl\rlety Cremeans 0 1·2 1, Sara~ INI1ght 1 1· 2

3. Totals! 7·1324.
RebOunds-Eastern 40 (\Natson. Karr 7}.
Sourh GatUa 19 (Cremeans . Cheney 4).
Aaaisls - Eastern 19 (Baker 11), SouthGal11a 5
(Harrison 2). Steals-Eastern 15 {Powell 3) .
Soultl Gattis 5 (Cardwell, Wright 2) .

Turnovars-Easlem 10. SoutnGattia 24
JV~Eastem 36, So ~.tth Gallia 22.

•I

(Iaiiie Acac:t.my 8il, Marietta 49
Marietta
7 10 19 13 Gallla Acactemy 21 t7 16 1~ -

49
69

Marietta (13-.4 , SEOAL 8·3) - Jen Gwln 10
3·6 25, Karrie Lauer 1 1·2 3. Chelsea Thompson 1 o-o 2, Courtney Williams 0 0.0 0. Anna
Bowers 4 1·2 11 , Kasla Berentz 2 0·0 6 , Sommer Kephart 1 0·2 2. Totals 19 5· 10 49.
·
Gallia Academy (10.7, SEOAL 7·5) - Jessi·
Ca Boc:timer 5 0.(1 10, Brianna Johnson 6 2-2
16, Eva Lyon 1 0·0 2, Marissa Dey 6 0·0 12·.
Sarart Russell 2 Q.O 4, Brittany F~alin 0 2-2 2,
MeredithAI1dington 11 1· 1 23. Tolat 31 5·569.
3-polnt goals- Marietta 6 {
, Bowers,
Berentz 2), Gallla Academy 2 (8. (Johnson 2).
RebOunds - Marietta 29 (Gwin 6). Gama Acad·
emy 31 (Addington, B. Johnson. Dey 7).
Assists-Marietta 6 (Gwin. 4), Gama Academy
11 .(Bodlmer 6. B. Johnson 4). Blocked shotsMarietta O..Gatlia Academy 3 (Dey 2. Addington
1). Steals-Marietta 5 (Gwin, Bowers 2). Gallla
Academy 5. Turno~ers - Mariella 14, G'allia

'

Acadamy 15
JII-Gallit Academy 32. Marietta 31 .
Athena 73, River Y1Uey 60
Athens
16 14 t5 28 73
River Valley
'to 21 9 20 - 69
Athens (9-6 , SEOAL 7·5) - Caiti 1 1·2 3,
Cristy C8rbone 0 0.0 0, Liz Howarth 6 6·7 18,
Mary Vanity 6 8-10 · 24, Tris!\a Tyo 0 3·4 3,
Chelse&amp; Monroe 2 2·2 6. Lindsey McDaniel 1 o0 2, Jerw~a Kostival 0 0-0 0, Lindsey Marx 6 3·
8 15, Marisa Mowery 0 2·2 2 . Totals 22 25-33

7:!.

R~or Valk&gt;y (4-12, SEOAL2·9), SEOAL 7-5)
- Kari Ta~ 1 1-2 3, Julia MollOhan 2 0-0 5,
Anne Roesslger 0 0.0 0, Cynthia Ward 5 1-i
12, CMsten Baird 21-1 5, Nicole Walkins 7 55 21, Ctlelsea DeGarmo 3 0-0 6, lindsay Nida
0 o-o 0, Brittany Mcoacla 4 o-o 8. Totals 324 8960.
3-polnt goals-Atl\ens 4 (Vanity 4), AV 4
(Watkins 2. Mollohan. Watd) . ReboundsAthens 39 (Howorth 9), RV 20 (OoGarrno 6).
Asalsts-Athens 16 (Howarth 7), RV 12 (Ward
5). Steals-Athens tO (Howarth 3, MMroe 3).
RV 10 (DeGarmo 4). Turnovers-Athens 18,
RV 16.
JV-Atllons 34, River Valily 33 .

Ohio High Sc:hool Olrlo Bookotboll
Monday'a AMulte
Akron Buchta! 58, Akron Etlet 46
Akron Eut 50, Akron Firestone 37

,I

I

Akron Garfield 51, Akron Central-Hower 48 .
Akron Kenmore 37. Akron North 36
Alexander 68, Watlfford 23 ,
Amelll. 50, Walnut Hills 49
Andrews 28, Comerllona Chr. 27
Arington 52. Ridgeway Rl&lt;lg...- 26
·
A.htabula Sts. John a. Paul40, Aahtabl:lla 24
Alhens 73, Cheshire River Valley 60
BamesvHie 54, Blldgep0rt 50
Beallsville 86. Monroe Cent. 37
Bellaire 61, Rayland BUCkeye Local 31
Bellaire St. John 57, Shadyside 53
Bellefontaine 59, Spring. Shawnee 34
Berlin Center 64, Jackson-Milton 44
Broc*11eld 48, Leavittsburg LaBrse 33
Brookville 47, New Madison Tri-VIIIage 40
Bucyrus Wayatde Christian 41, E\langel
Christian 39
Cadiz Harrison Cent. 49, Old Wast11ngton
Buckeye Trall39
Cambridge 60. Claymont 51
Campbotl 59. Young. Wison 30
Canl:on Cent. Cath. 56. Cuyahoga Falls
Watah Jesuit 33
Can10n Tlmken 51 , Alliance Marlington 50
Chesapeake 62, Ironton Rock Hill 49
Chillicothe Zane Trace 72. Wheelersburg 66
Cin. Counlry Day 52. Cin. Landmaft( Chr. 30
Cin. Glen Eate 60, Kings Mills 57, 2 OT
C!n. Lockland 47, New Miami 36
Cln. N. College Hill 64, Cin. Summit Country
Oey37
' Cin. Seven Hills 71, Cin. St. Barnard 30
Circleville 63, Washington Courthouse
Miami Trace 43
··
Cola\ Hartley 5( BaKley 36
Columbus Gro11e 54, Gory-Rawson 43
Danbury 47, Emmanuel Baptist43
Day. Oakwood 30, Waynesville 26
DeGralf Riverside 71, Mechanicsburg 46
E. Liverpoo133, Young. Mooney 51
Elyria FBCS 56, Oberlin Firelands 30 .
. Felldty·Fran~li'l 57, Tipp City Bethel-Tate
Fenwick o48, OXford Talawancta 44
Ft. Jennings 44, 81ut1ton 33
Gallipolis G&amp;tlia 69, Marietta 49
Georgetown 70, 'MIIIamabwg 25
·
Grace Ha11en 68, Grova City Christian 39
Granville 62, Heath 61, OT
Granville Grace Haven 68, Grove City Chris·
tlan 39
Hlnrllbal Alvar 56, Broolc (W.Va)43
Hamson Cent. 49, Buctc.eye Trail 39
• Hutlbard 55, Wanen Champion 33
Johf1 Morsllan (W.Val 81, Martins Ferry 33
Johrtltown Northrldgo 63. Nowart&lt; Cath. 58
Klnlman Badgor41, Cortland Lokavllw 37
lAGrange Keystone 33, Sullivan Black Rivet

so

22

Latham Western 38, Peebles 37
lellonla 77, Saline11111e Southern 37
Lomo&lt;&gt;-Monroo 57, Day. Stebblno 37
Ll&gt;lrty Contar 71, Shykor 59
Lime C.nt Cath. 48, Allen E. 47
Lltbon SO. Columbiana 38
Lcgon 84, Jackoon 59
·Madison 87, Geneva 53
Magnolia Sanoy Vall. 48, Kidron Cenl. Coth.
43 '
Mllvem 53, Boweraton Conotton VaiL 40
Maeaffion 85, Me1allon Tuslaw 57
MaaaiHon Washington 65, Wooster Triway
57
.
Maurnoo Valley 51 , Orag(,n SUIICh 27
Mtddletown Maelaon 42, Miami Val. 20
Minlntl Aldgo 55. McOoNk13U
MogadOre 85, StreetlbOro 35
, MOunt Drab Western &amp;own 66, New RICh·
moncl49
·
N. Adams
w. Unkln 41
N. Lima South Ringe 67, Mathews 41
Nttoonvltlt-Vorl&lt; 69. Trimble 49
Kn"""llto 515, Lima Porry 38
Nlw Llbanon Dt~~:il 59, Oay. ~ffll'aon 49
MlcldltiOwn Spring. 81, Lowel~llle 41
Ntwcomtratown 38, Coshocton 33
Nowtcn Falls SO. Young. Llbarty 37
Norttutdgo 63. Nowark Coti\OIIc 58
Dlk Hill 74, Mlnlora 43
·
O.kGien (W.Va.) .67, Ll&amp;bon Belver Local

•e,

40
Pentneut1 WoOdridge 51, Mantua Crest·

""""'3e

Por11mouth 51. S. Woblttr 48
Ponamouth Notre Dame 45 , WUiow WoOd
Symmes VIII. 42
Portlmouth W. 57, Franklin Fumace Grten
35
Powell VIllage Academy 45, Mad'oon Ct.lstlan 29
~roctorvllle Fairland 68, COlt Grove Dawson
Bryant I!&amp;
Ravenna Souct1east 48. Aootetown 34
R-~lle E-m 84, South Galllo 24

AP Ohio Boyl Baaketball Polla
COLUMBlJS. Ohio (AP) - How a state
panel ol sports writers and broadcasters rates
Ohio high schOOl boys basketball teams in the
fourth of seven weekly regular-season 2000·
2001 polls tor The Associated Press (records
through games ot Jan. 26):
DIVISION I
W·L

I' ~IJ~1
The AP Men'a Top 25

The top 25 teams In The Associated Press'
men's college basketball poll, with llrst·place
votes In parentheses. records through Jan. 28,
total points based on 25 polnls for a first-place
vote through one point lor a 25th·place vote
and previous ranking:
W-L Pte. Pve.
1. StBr110rd (65) ................... 19·0 1,745
1
2. Dul&lt;o (5) ........................... 19-1 1,1383
2
3. Kansas ............................ 17·1 1,598 · 4
4. North Carolina ................ 17-2 1,529
5
5. Michigan St .............., .... 16-2 1,464
3
6 . Illinois ..... . ............... ,....... 16-4 1,393
7
7. Arizona ......... .. ................. 14-5 1,284 12
8. Tennessee ...................... 17-3 1,196
6
9. Maryland .......................... 14-5 1,160
6
10. Wisconsin ........................ 13·4 915 15
11 . Virginla ................ ............ 14·4 894 13
12. Syracuse ....................... 16-3 857
11
13. Florlcsa ............... .. ............ t3-4 813 14
14. Goorgotown .. ............... 17-2 608 10
15. Iowa St... ..... ................... 17-3 757 17
16. Wake FOI'HI.. .................. 14·5 7o47
g

17. ~llbama ......................... .16-S
18. Iowa ....... ................... ....16-4
19.FreanoSt ................ :... 17-2
20. BosiOn Collage ........... ... 14-2

683 18
599 21
510 , 22
454 23

21. Southern Cal .... :.............. 15-4 288 25
22. Saton Hal ............., ..... .. 12-6 258 16
23. Nooro Oema .................... 13·5 238
24. OklaltOma ....................... 15-4 207
25. Gaorgla .......................... 13-7 186
01h8fl receiving voles: Mlaallalppl 120,
Xavier 91, TeKaa-46, Clnclf'll\ltl.O, Utah St. 39,
Connacticut 36. UCLA 26, St. &lt;Joaaph'a 20
Oklahoma St. 17, KentuckY 14, Gonz8ga 11:
Purdue 9, California 6, Mlsallllppl St 4, Provl·
danco '· Georgia Tech 3, SOu4ham Mlsa. 3,
\Aiyomlng 3, Coli. ot Charleston 2, Minnesota 2.
~aaouri 2, Georgia St. 1, New MeKICO 1, Ohio
St. 1, Pepperdlne 1.
·

Men'• College Bllketball
Monclay'a seo...

EAST

Canisiua 78, St. Peter's 65
Falr1tlgh DICidnaon 83, Wagnor ·74
Harvard 80, Hartford 78
Long lalar)d U. 78, Qulnnlploc 71
Monmoultl, N.J. e·1. Sacred Hun 58
P'rlncaton 69, College of N.J. 59
St. Francis, NY 80, Cent. Connecticut St. 68
St. Francia, Pa . 58, Mount St. Mary'• · Md. ss
Stony Broo« 91, Cornell 84
Syracuae 70, Georgetown 63
UMBC 87, Robert Morris 77
Vtrmont
Dartmouth 76
SOUTH
ApPalachian St. 81, The Citadet74, OT
Btlmont 57. Fisk 43
S.lhune·Cookman 76~ Norfolk St. 64
.cnarteston Southern 56 , Birmingham·
Southern 55
Coli. ol Charleston 86, Coaatal Carolina 53
Delaware St. 72, Morgan St. 66
E. Kentucky 74, SE Missouri 69
Furman e7, W. Carolina 47
Georgia Southern 65, Wofford 60
Georgia 51. 79, Troy St. 15
Grambling St. 107, MVSU 84
Hamplon 71, Florida A&amp;M 64
Jackson St. 76. Ark.·Pine Blutr 53
JaCksonville 74, UCF 65
Marshall 72, Toledo 57
Mercer Be, Campbell 62
N. CarOlina AAT 75, Howarct70

n.

'
\

Pla

1. Cleve. Sl.lgnalius (26)[ ...... 13·0
318
2. Cots. Brookhaven (2) ...... .14-p
280
3. Cin. Winton Woods ... ./.. .. ... 14-0
212
4. Tol. libbey .. . ............. ..... ... 13-1
176
5. Cin. Sl. Xavier (1) ..
.14-2
171
6. Mansfield Sr. (1) ..
.. .13·1
150
7. Springfield South .............. 10-2
104
8. Masstuon Perry .. .............. . 12· 1
74
9. Tot. St. John's..................... 13-2
58
10. E Liverpool. .... .... ... .. ........12·2
~
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11
OubliO Coffman 37. 12. Mentor 27. 13_ lan·
caster 26. 14. Akron Centrai·Hower (1) 24. 15.
Warren Harding 21 . 18. Logan 12.
DIVISION II
1. Wooster Triway (10) ........... 14-0
265
2. Wllord (5) ... .... ....... ..
.. 14·0
255
3. Kenering Alter (9} ............. 13-1
227
4. Tallmadge (2) .............. ... 13·0
216
5. onawa-Glandorf... ............. 13·1
180
6. Wasl'llngton Court House ... 13·1
127
7. WarrenS\IiUe Heights (2) ..... 11·1
108
8. Conneaut... ......................... 12·1
68
9. Paln8S\Iille Harvey ............. 13·1
63
10. Cols. DeSales (2) ..... ......... 15-1
52
Ottlers receiving 12 or more points: 11.
LouisviUe (3) 44. 12. Cambridge 38. 13. Ravenna Southeast 30. 14. Greenfield McClain 23.
15, Philo 15. 16. (tie) Akron Hoban, Hunting
Valley University School14.
DIVISION Ill
1. Akron SV-SM (2B) ..... .. ....... 12-1
321
2. Findlay Uberty-Benton (1) .. 14-0
226
3. Cllaaapeake (1) ................ 15.()
209
4. Mooal Rldgadeoo ................ wo
196
5. Jeromesville Hillsdale ... ..... 14·0
157
6. Casstown Miami Ea.st. ....... 13·1
138
7. Tontogany Otsego ........ ..... .13·0
124
8. HavilandWayneTrace ....... 12·1
96 .
9. Wlckliffe .............................. 12-1
40
10. ""'""leroiJUOg (1) .............. 11·1
36
011'18111 receiving 12 or rilore points: 11.
Ontario 35. 12. Now Middle1own Springtk&gt;ld 33.
13. (tit) llotpro, Cln. Madeira 29. 15. 810001carron 27. 18. Sarahsville Shenandoah (1) 22.
H . Cola. Ready 19.
DIVISION tV
1. Lancaster FlsherC81h. (19)14-1
293
2. Maria Stein Marion lac. (8)1~-1
274
·3. Minster{2) ........................ 13·1
224
4 . Cin. HillsChr. Acad . (2) .... 13· 1
209
5. Cedarville (1) ..................... 14·1
169
6. S. Charleston SE ............... 13·1
168
7. BristolviUe Bristol (1) .
.. .. 11-1
124
8. Cln. Country Day ... .. ......... 12·1
100
9. CenterbUrg ....... ....
... 12-2
75
10. Tlpp City Bethel ................ 12-3
27
Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 .
Beallsville 26. 12. Berlin Hiland 21 . 13. Worthington Christian 18. 14. Cardington-Lincoln
16. 15. Sabring McKinley 15. 16. Holgato13 .

l

S CaroOna

n.

Womon'o Collogo Batkllbtll

llonday'o SCoroo
EAST
Ak:letson-Broaddus 83, Concord 70
Alvernla 68. Cedar Creal 43
Binghamton 105. Colgate 64
Cabrini 86, Neumann 75
Colby 77, New England 54
Elizabelhtown 58, Muhlenberg 55
Falidan 60. Goldey ~acom 44
Fredonia St. 72, Hilbert 41
Glenville St. 68, W. 1/ir:ginia Tech 58
Gwynedd Mercy 69, Marywood 44
Harvard 68, Albany, N.Y. 55
Immaculata 64, Aosemont61
Johns Hoplcins 86, Bryn Mawr 12
Messiah 80, Dickinson 49
Misericordia 71 , Eastern 57
·Montclair St. 69, Manh8Hanv~j3]
NYU 80, Hunter 27
llf"
Nichols 79, Mass. College 72.
Ramapo 151 . Brooklyn 40
Richmond 72, American U. 68
Salem St. 78, Fairmont St. 70
Staten Island 84, Mount St. Vincent 63
Stony Brook 77, Princeton 55
W. Va. Wesleyan 6a, Cnarteston, W.va. 54
Washington &amp; Jefferson 131 , Penn St.·
Altooni 57
West Chester 56, Holy F&amp;mily 54
West Uberty 78, Wheeling Jesuit 72
York, N.Y. 57, NY City Tectl 38
SOUTH
1\ndoroon, S.C. 75, Cokor 59 ·
Barton 88, Mount Olive 77
Birmlngham·Southem 72, Centenary 57
Oillara B5. Loyola, NO 63
'
E. Kentucky 89, SE Missourl82
Ferrum 66, Greensboro 63
Florida A&amp;M 88, Hampton 75
Ga. Southwestern 78, Emmanuel 72
Georgia SOutham 79, coananooga 72
Grambling'~!. 93, MVSU 60
Howard 112, N. CarolinaA&amp;T 10
Jackson St. 83, Ark.·Pine Sluff 71
LaGrange 67, Atlanta Christian 60
Umoslona 78, Bolmont AbiJoy 73
Unooln Memorial 84. West Alabama 76
Longwood 82, L.... McRao 66
Mara Hil 76, Gardner-Webb 66
Maryville, Tonn . 110, Stillman 40
Maradlth 60. N.C. wesleyan 56
· Miles 60, Lana 54
Morgan St. 78. Delaware St. 71
N.C. Steto 65, Aorida St. 86
Norlolk St. 83, Bethune-Gookman 70
OuaChita 60, Christian Brothers 55
OU1Br11 Coli. 66, Et1klno 51
S. Caroline St. 55, Md.·Eallem Shore 51
Savannah St.
Fort Valley St. 74, 'OT
Spring Hill 58. William Corey 57
TUSkegee 70, le~-owen 66
W. Kentucky 74, $W Mtoool61 St. 69

basketBall polls ·

COLUMBUS (AP) - Woostby Marion Local and Minster.
er Triway and Lancaster Fisher
St. Vincent-St. Mary; whi~: ·
This Wlek's Poll Lt1ders
Catholic moved back into familwon both the poll , and
iar surroundin~ as they joined
seaspr!f
championships
last
D-1:-Sllpatlus
Cleveland .St. Ignatius and Akron
matched St. Ignatius for the
D-11-'Mwly
St. Vincent-St. Mary atop the
fint-place votes .in the poll
fourth weekly Associated Press D-Ill - Sl Vlncent·Sl Miry and bettered the Wildcats
boys high school basketball ·polls
D-IY - Fisher c.tholk
three points oveiall with 321 .
released Tuesday.
After beating Alter, St. Xa1vi!'C:
Triway, last year's poll champi- moving back into the No. I spot - ranked No. 3 in Division I
on, started the se:tSon at No. 3 and and Willard taking over at No. 2.
week - turned around and
had been stuck behind Kettering .
Fisher Catholic topped the 53-50 to St. Bernard
Alter in second ' place in the Division IV rankin~ the lint two Bacon and also &lt;!ropped two
media balloting for the last two . weeks but fell two points behind in its division.
w eeks in Division II.
Minster in last week's poll. With
The poll continues for
But Alter's landslide loss to Minster losing to Maria Stein more weeks' until chanipion~
5=incinnati St. Xavier dropped the Marion Local; Fisher Catholic crowned Feb. 19 at the end of
Knights to third, with Triway climbed back to No. 1 followed . regular season.

Eastern
from Pap81
some of our reserves might
have to even sit out a few games
just to finish out the season. ' ·
"Danielle put up some awesome numbers again tonight in
the scoring column.Amber Baker
was able to put up 15 points, as

well as dish off II assists. We are
almfst unstoppable when we play
like a team."
·
" We will really need to play
well when we rematch Mei~ on
Wednesday. We played with them
the first half down there, but fell
apart' the second. I think it will~
a different story this time if we
· play like we have been lately,"
said Brannon.
The Eagles were led by Spencer

on offense •with 22 points,
lowed by .Baker who scored
points and had II assists.
Leading the way for the Re:b&lt;J~
was Stacy White with
points.
In the reserve contest,
Eagles defeated the Rebels,
22. The Eagle reserve team
moves to a 9-3 record on the
ron. Kass Lodwick, leading sco:~
for the Eagles, had eight po1tnts;,~

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FO_. . . . .
The Daily Sentinel

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. today • 992-2156
.

n.

ra

MIDWEST
Benedictina,Kan. S2, Cent. Mtlhodlst 70
Chicago St. 48, Valparaiso 47
Concordia, Ill. 73, Texas-Pan American 48
Evaf91l 73, Mld·Am Nazarene 55
Findlay 68. lncliana Tach 61
Hannibal-LaGrange 74, Mount St Clare 65
N. Michigan 68, lake S~rlor St. 63
Oakland, MictJ. 87, lnd.·Pur.-lndpls. 71
W. Illinois 82, Youngstown St. s·o
SOUTHWEST .
Alabama St. 75, TeKas Soultlern 66
Ark.-Monticello 81. S. Arkansas 69
Arkansas Tech 57, Harding 41 .
Cent. Arkansas 63, Henderson Sl. 55
Houston Baptist102, SW Adventist 27
Oklahoma Baptist 71. Oklahoma Science 52
Oral Roberts 59, Belmont 53
Prairie View 67 . Alabama A&amp;M 60
•
TeK&amp;s A&amp;M·Corpus Chrlstl88, Sam Houston
St. 61
FAR WEST
Malter's 119, Life 26
Montana St·Northem 89, Rocky Mountain
76
S. utah 75, UMKC 50
uc Riverside 74, Cat St.·Fullerton 71. OT .

BASEBALL

.
Amartcan League
ANAHEIM ANGELS-Agreed to terms wlln
·AHP Allevtne on a one-uyear contract.
DETROIT TIGERS-Agreed to torms with
lHP C.J. Nilkowaki on a one-year contract.
SEATTLE MARINERS-Agreed to torms
with AHP Paul Abbott on a one-year contract.
TAMPA BAY DEVIL R~VS-Namod Don ·
Moeller groundskeeptr.

-

........

NEW YORK METS'-Asoigned INF Dasl
Ralafora OUUight to NorrOik o1 tho International

league.

.

PHILADELPHIA PHILLtES-Agroad to
terma with RHP Paul Byrd on a mAnor league

contt:act.

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Agreed to torms
with C Rick 'Miklns on a minor league contract

IAIKETIALL

.

-naii-IIA. BOSTON CELTICS-A•alg""" G Min Palacio lor thl rtmalncler of the sea80f1.
CLEVELAND CAVAliERS-Signed F
Chuctty BroWn 10 a 10.day contract.
DENVER NUGGETS-Placed 0 Calbart
Che.anay on tho lnjurad !lat.
F Anthony

Living Room Groups... ~... W£ 6oT ITff
Home Appll'!nces..... .. . . W£ 6oT 1Tff
Bedding Se~············~· .. JP£ boT ITff
Dining Room Groups....... JP£ boT ITff
Bedroom S~ltes •••.••.••..•. W£ 6o:r ITff
Recliners ............... ·•. . W£ 6oT trff
Accessories ............ WE. 6oT ITff

9""·,_· ~ '4IUt
"'"'"*"4/IJff 4~fl"''
~ ww ~'"· ..
-

9-

"1tM

GOldwire 1o a 1O.dlly oontract. Waived C Gatlh
Jooopll.
LOS ANGELES CLtPPERS-Piocact G Eart
Boyklna on tlla l~urod lilt. Ac1lvalad F Corey

Maooette from thllnJII'td lilt.
.
ORLANDO MAGIC-Signed G Cory Alexander to a 1.0-day contract.
SE~TTLE SUPERSONICS-Activate~ F
Ruben Wo•owyikl lrcm the Injured !lat.
HOCKEY
N - Hcocltay Ltag~

NHl.-$uspend8d Plttsburgt'l Penguins F
Billy Tibblttl for four garn.s for punching
Atlanta Thrllh8fl F Darcy HOrdlctJuk during a
Jan. 27 oame. ,
'
CALGARY FLAMES-Recalled 0 Olllal
Eaklnolrorn Cltlcogo 01 tlla IHL.
CAROLINA HURRICANES-RoualgnO&lt;I
RW Craig Adami to Clncfnnall Of lhiiHL.
CHICAGO BLACKH~WKS~AIIIgne~ 0
Nolan Baumgartner to Norfolk of lht AHL.
DALLAS STARS-Placed 0 Gerald Olduck
on lnjurlcl rtHI\Ie. Recal'-d 0 Mark Wonon
and LW Slt11e Gainey from Utah otthe tHL.
FLORIDA PANTHERS-Aialg""" D Joey
Tataranko to Louisville oJ the AHL,
PHOENIX COVOTES-Rtcalled C Wyatt
Smith from Sprlngllald ollhe AHL.
W~SHINGTON CAPITALS-Aoctlll&lt;l F
Matt Pettinger from Portland of tne AHl..
Alllgned F Mall Herr 10 Ponland ..

Ut,

(

4141re/('

Me

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•
l;ifii'l

IMAYrAGI

llember tf tile lrend Sturce Retwork of Dealers IIIIth tiler $4
lllllltn ~oilers tfbuglat 11111er.
.

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son Furnitu
.

"

Value
Selection ·
Free Dellve,Y Setup and Removal
www.maeon.homeappllancea.com '

St.

.. ..

0

773-5592

January 31,1001
~

•

-lam St. 71, SE Louloiana 63

St. &amp;&amp;, Md.·EoiiiBm Shora 59,
OT
Stataort ~. Florida Atllnlk: 80
Tonn.·Morlin 112, St. Mary's, Mid\. 64
UNC-Greenetloro
ETSU &amp;7
IIIDWI!ST
Cincinnatlt05, Tulane 57
Detroit 67, G801Q8 Mason 54
~~ - St. 86. Wlcnlta St. 61
Missouri 75, Kanau66
valparaiso 77, W. IHinois 89, OT
SOllllfWEST
Alabama A&amp;M 74, Prairie View 72
Alabama St. 75. Te~~:as Southern 57
Sam Houston St. 64, Stephen F.AusUn 53
TeKas-Artington 79, Lamar 59
FAR WEST
Air FOI'ce 46. CoiOfadO St. 45
evu 69. Utah 61
Washington St. 71. Te)(as-Pan American 63
Wyoming 82 , New MeKioo 78

Wednesday

Community news and notes, As·
Marauders capture first victory, 11

~

Melp ·COUnty's

Hometown News,.per

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volum " 5 1. Numbe r 112

Victims'
identities
•
rema1ns
unknown

Funding. fiX
ideas fail
to ch8er
Shoemaker
'

Officials yet
to notify
next of kin

BY KEviN K£u.y
0'11' NEWS EDITOR

BY TONY M. WeN
SENTINE~ NEWS STAFF

PAGEVILLE -The names
of four people who perished
in a mobile home fire early
Monday are yet to be released.
Meigs County Sheriff
Ralph Trussell said the names
of the victims will not be
released until a lengthy notification process is complete.
"The four individuals were
not from this area and have
not been
"The four
identified
at
this
individuals
point
in
were not from the investi:this area and gation:'
have not been said
. Trussell.
identified
"From my
at !his
under..:
point in the
standing,
investigainvutigatlon, "
tors ate still
lllljlll1n.IMII' " trying to
·, deterll)in~
the ·victitns'
identity as well as contacting
their next of kin."
Meigs County Coroner
Douglas Hunter said in the
Columbus Dispatch Monday
that the bodies disco;vered
. inside the remnants of the
mobile home wen: those of a
woman, her daughter and twO
grandchildren.
. The deadly fire occurred
around 6:45 ·a.m. at a ttiiler
located on Goose C~k Road
ncar Pageville.
Firefighters from three
departments arrived on· the
scene to find the' trailer
engu!kd in flames.
After extinguishing the fire,
investigators discovered the
four bodies lying qn mattresses in the tniler's living room.
They also found a wood stove,
a kerose.ne heater and a space
heater inside the home.
Cawe of the fire is believed
to have originated near a heating source inside the tniler,
but has 'yet to be · officially
determined, The incident is
still being investigated by the
'
itate fire marshal.
'
The bodies of the four dead
were sent to the Franklin
County Coroner's Office in
Columbus for autopsies.

BENEFITS ALL - All students who particlpate in Eastern Elementary School's Buddy Reading program benefit, both educationally and socially. Courtrwy Thomas and Brenna Holter, dressed for the school's Spirit..Week actlvitles, think Carrie
. Mayle Is a great •reading buddy.'
·

Even the cool kids are excited'

1

'·l Primary,.junior high
parthership a ccess
av a,rAN J. R!
SENTINEL NEWS ST

UPPERS PLAINS - Whe primary students and junior
high students at Eastern Elementary School get together .
to read, gbod things happen. Sitting together Tuesday
morning ·library tables and huddled in groups in the
library's story area, members of Carly Hayes' eighth grade
language arts classes and first- and second-graders in classes taught by
Marty Baum, Ruthie White, Lorre Hill and Brian Dowen were reading
togeth~r, . proving that older students can help their younger counterparts, and enjoy themselves while they do it.
Hayes has developed the "buddy reading" program, which teams the
two groups together for 1,a monthly reading hour. The students read
books of their own choosing. Sometimes, the younger child reads to the
teenager, and sometimes, it's the other way around. ·
.
Either yny, the program 'offers both educational and social benefits for

at

Pl1111 -

'ReiiCIInt. Pap AJ

STORY TIME - For Bobby Rael and Tyler Winebrenner, the story pit of the Eastern Public
Ubrary, s~uated Jn 'Eastern Elementary School,
is the perfect place to read together. Winebrenner Is an elghtJ1.irade volunteer who works with
flrst- and second-grade students In tha school's
Buddy Reading program. (Brian J. Reed photos)

POMEROY - Previous attempts to fix Ohio's
school funding imbalance haven't plea.&lt;ed State
Sen. Michael Shoemaker, and the latest round of
proposals aren 'c earning any enthusiasm from the
Bourneville Democrat. ,
"The problem 1see is that the Legislature refuses to accept the severity of the crisis;' said Shoemaker, whose 17th District includes Gallia and
Mei~ counties.
"The real crux of che matter is, we haven't
defined what we want from
·
the schools, and until that
"The real
happens, there won't be a
crux of the
solution;' he added.
The Legislature is ponder-. matter is, we
ing separate proposals from
ha r1en 't
within the Senate and
diftn ed u;hat Republican Gov. Bob Taft
after the state Supreme we want from
Court upheld the 1994
the schools,
Perry County lower court and until that
ruling that found Ohio's
funding method for public happens, there
won 't be a
school education unconstitutional.
sol.ution ."
Shoemaker said his concerns have gone beyond pol- Stole Sen. Michael
itics as a minority member
Shoemaker
of the Senate. The former
state representative, appointed to fill the remainder of Jan Michael Long's
term in the upper chamber in 1997, has long spoken out on educ~tional need in southern Ohio.
"I've been very noisy about it and people don 't
like it, but I'm sorry," he said.
One suggestion pitched to legislator. has been
to study what's been done in Ohio's top 120
school districts, Shoemaker said. Although he ruefully noted none of those districts are "south of
Licking County," Shoemaker said he agrees with
the idea's basic principle.
But lawmaker. have to decide if programs like
all-day, every-day kindergarten and teacher inservices are important enough to be funded, and if
the state budget is adequate to the task, he said. .
Taft presented a low-growth, two-year budget
of S44. 9 billion to lawmakers on Monday.
"The governor's budget is about half of what's
needed," Shoemaker said. "I can accept any

PI81H 181 Schools, Pllp A:S

Southem ·Local Board appl'f)veJ transition day
BY TONY M. WCN
SENTINE~ NEWS STAFF

RACINE -

A day to analyze the
transition process into the new elementary school was dis,cussed and personnel
matters we~e · decid~d during Saturday's
meeting of the Southern Local .Board of
Education.
The board approved Feb. 8 as a Waver
Day, pending approval by t~e Ohio
Department of Education (ODE). The

The K-8 staff will spend the day workirrg otl the tra rrsitiorr process for
· the new elementary school while tlze high school staff will work otr
assessment and technology.
K-8 staff will spend the day

information to the ·office they
POMEROY Smith &amp; · have patronized in the past.
Associates and DanTax Inc., · "Both.DanTax Inc., and Smith
Pomeroy, have entered into a &amp; Associates accounting are confranchise agreement providing fident that this merger will offer
for their offices to merge and to their clients a broader range o(
operate under the name of Dan tax and accounting services," said
Tax· Inc.
a repmentative of the combined
Cathy Crow, who for many agency. ·
years has been doing busil!ess as
"It will specifically enhance
Smith &amp; Associates with offices the client's opp9rtunity for elecat 109W. Second St., and Debbie troliic filing. This is particularly .
Watson, account executive of important sinc.e the internal revDanTax .Inc., and Claudette en11e service has been strongly
Huggins as president of Dan Tax encouraging taxpayers to file
Inc: with offices at 33105 Hiland their returns electronically.
Road, Pomeroy, announced the
"The new association of Smith
merger Monday.
&amp; Associates and DanTax Inc. is
It was reported that income a positive development that will
tax and other accounting ser- .immensely benefit the clients Of
'ilices may be obtained at either both organizations by offering
office location. Existing clients enhanced and expanded servic
may continue io deliver their .t ax at two convenient locations."

wo~king

the classified staff that are not involved in
these projects.
In personnel matters, Abigail Cauthorn, Abbie Stratton and Kyle Wickline
were approved as substitute teachers for
the remainder of the 2000-01 school

on
the transition process for the new elementary school w bile the high school
staff will work .on assessment and technology.
Programs are also being planned for

Local businesses plan to merge
FROM STAFF REPORTS

$0 Cents

Sentinel
Pia-

l SadiiNII- 12

Clllladal

A5
D~-~

Co~is;a

D5

Ediladala

M

Clzitu1m

A.3

IU.3.§

S&amp;Ulltl
We1ther

A.3

Lotteries
OIUQ

.

Pick 3: ;&gt;.:8-3; Pick 4: 2-2-0-4
Bud re 5: 7-S-22-2&gt;-33
·

J:VA,

..

Plein -llolrd, '-P A:s

Tax-cut push buoyed by surplus estimates

Today's

~llllliiildl

year on an as-needed basis. The teachers
will be hired pending approval by the
ODE.
Redenith Mills, custodian, Beverly
Allen, custodian, and Kelley Lawson, custodian/ cook, were all approved as -classified substitutes for the remainder of the
school year pending background checks.
The resignation of Ryan Lentley as

.

Dolly 3: 7-1-8 Deily 4: 2-0-5-4
C 2001 Ohio Valley Publilhing Co. ,

WASHINGTON (AP) -Buoyed by new projections for an enormous $3.12 trillion surplus
over the coming decade, President Bush and top
congressional Republicans hope to push a big tax
cut through Congress by July 4.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office
planned to disclose its new surp~projections
formally on Wednesday to the Senate Budget
Committee. Details of the huge estimates
emerged on Tuesday, giving added momentum to
Bush's plan for a $1.6 trillion, 10-year tax cut.
"We are interested in success," Bush said Tuesday after discussing strategy with House and Senate GOP leaders at the White House.
Democrats, who mostly prefer a smaller tax
reduction than Bush's, argued that the huge surplus projections could prove overly optimistic if
the economy's recent sluggish performance
becomes a long-term problem .
They also said the costs of Bush's tax cut and
expected spending boosts for defense, prescription dru~. education and other programs could
erase the surplus and push the budget back into

'

Initially, the l;louse is likely ro brea li
tl1e tax cuts into .several snwlla bills,
starting with an across-tire-board
red1tction i11 iuco.ine-tax rates.
deficit.
':It doesn't leave room for much of anything
else," Rep. John Spratt of. South Carolina, ranking
Democrat on the House Budget Committee, told
reporters about Bush's tax-cutting plans.
Even so, eager to cash in on the tax-cutting
momentum, Senate Maj;rity Leader Trent Lott,
R-Miss., said he believes lawmakers can ship a
final tax package to Bush by Congtess' Independence Day recess.
Initially, the House is likely to break the tax
cuts into several smaller bills, starting with an
across-the-board reduction in income-tax rates,'
said House Majority Leader Dick Armey, RTexas. A cut in income-tox rates has been the key.
stone of Bush's plan .

�'

Wedneaday, January 31, 2001

Pege A 2 • The Deily Ientine! .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Acddentll fire kills man
LORAIN (AP) -A 25-year-old man died after he accidentally set himself on fire, fire officials said.
William Panons of Lorain died of complications of burns to
about 90 percent of his body Monday night in MetroHealth
Medical Center in Cleveland.
Assinant fire ChiefTim Dore said a family member told him
that Parsons, who was mentally retarded, was probably playing
with fire while the family was asleep.
"It was just a terrible accident. A tragic, terri~le accident,"
Dore said.
.•
Panons apparently turned on a burner on the gas stove about
4 a.m. Monday. Flames spread to Panons' bpdy and he screamed
for help, but his family said his body was consumed by the fire
and they could do little to help him.
Family members told authorities that Parsons had been burned
about four yean ago at an auto repair shop owned by his father.
The family said he was putting paper towels in a kerosene heater
when he caught his pants on fire, Dore said.
Dore said he found two small charred pieces of paper towel
lying on the floor in front of the stove where Parsons was
burned.
·

Day-care provider accused
CLEVELAND (AP) -A day-care ,provider faces up to 10
years in prison if convicted of all charges in the death of a 17momh-old girl in her care.
Karen Zemba, 42, of suburban Independence, was charged
Tuesday with involuntary manslaughter and child endangering.
Prosecutors said Zemba placed the girl, Allison Kuczmarslci, in
a portable crib Aug. 24 after giving her the allergy medicine
Benadryl. ,
The crib contained eight blankets and three nylon bags. The
girl died of asphyxiation after she became entangled in the blankets or crawled into one of the bags, said assistant · Cuyahoga
County Prosecutor Thomas Cahill.
County Coroner Elizabeth Balraj said the Benadryl was a factor in the child's death because it sedated her.
The Benadryl given to Allison has a label warning that It
shouldn't be given to children under 6 )'l'ar&amp; old without lint
consulting a physician. Zemba consulted neither a doctor nor
Allison's parents before giving the. child the medicine, Cahill
said.

Cities, counties, public libraries and other
local government entities are taking another look
at their budgets in ~Pte wake of Tali\ plan tn
tieeze state funding for local gowoemmenu as part .
ofhis two-}'elf, S45 billion budget.
Taft proposed freezing tluee funds used rn
assist local governments to ,....., about $220 million over two Y"'ff· Taft called his budget the
lightest in a decade.
Taft's budget director Tom .Johnson said his
office didn't propose the &amp;eeze lightly and is trying to make it as painlas as possible.The tieeze
came as the result ofnft's goal not to raise taJu:s
and to ask local gmoernmenm to share in the

state's belt tightening. Johnson said.
"Ohio lw the best library system and the
best-funded library sysmn in the country," John~
son said 1\Jesday. "At the.end of this. we will co11- ,
tinue to have one of the best, and best·fundeQ,
library systems in the country."
.
The three funds .eceive percen~ of state
revenue 6om a ~ety of state tun. .
The Library and Local Government Suppon
Fund provided about $507 million statewide this·
fiscal Y""'· The fund's proposed freeze also;
includes a $15 million cut to fund the Omo·
Public Library Information N!.twork, said Lynda
Murray of the Ohio Library CoUncil.
'

Slowing economy, tight budget Heart patients die more
make incofr"e.tax cuts unlikely frequently at VA hospitals
COLUMBUS (AP) -A slowing economy and a tight state budget mean Ohioans probably won't
see an across-the-board iricome tax
cut within the next two years, sate
legislative leaders said Thesday.
"I do not see it happening;' Senate President Richard Finan said.
Senate Finance · Committee
Chairman Doug White and two
Democratic lawmakers agreed. The·
lawmakers were · discussing Gov.
Bob 'Ildi's two-)'l'ar, $45 billion
. state budget proposal and their legislative plans at a forum sponsored
by The Aoociated Press.
Ohio law mjuires unspent state
money to be put into an )n,ome
nx Reduction Fund. which 1w
been used every )'I'll since 1996 to
bring down the tax rate below il&gt;
permanent level. Officials call each
year's .eduction a tax cut even if the

rate in effect is higher than the previous,year~.

State income tax returns due in
April will retlect a 6.9 percent cut
•announced in July and made possible by a $610 millipn revenue sur~
plus.
The lawmalcers said increasing
education funding. escalating Medicaid cos!&gt; and slowing revenue
gmwtli will limit the money available to the Income nx Reduction
Fund.
The state Offi,e of Budget and
Management projec!S that $~7 million will be in the fund by June 30,
the end of the 'urrent budget }'elf.
The fund must have enough
money in it to reduce permanent
rates by .35 percent or taJu:s 'WOn't
be cut until enough is accuri!ulated, said Tim Keen, assistant state
budget director.
1

'CLEVELAND (AP)
Patients who undergo heart
sur~ry at veterans hospitals die
more freqqendy than heart
patients in private and public
hospitals, a newspaper report. '
ed .
Excessive patient deaths and
other problems have prompted
Veterans _A,ff'airs officials to
close several programs around
the nation; The Plain Dealer
reported Wednesday as part of a
series 9n VA hospitals. Today, 42
veterans hospitals offer heart
surgery, down from 51.
.
In 1999, more than 7,200
heart surgeries - most of
them bypass - were performed at VA hospitals and the
average death rate was 4.8 percent, the newspaper reported.
ln comparison, the average

death · rate for bypass surgery
that year was about 3:percent at '
the more than 500 hospitals
that participated in a Society:
for Thoracic Surgeoi\S survey. ·
The Plain Dealer investigo,~
tion also found that: ·
- M9re dian one-third of.
the 42 veterans hospitals per-·
forming heart surgery don't do:'
at least 150 heart. surgeries· ·a:
year, the minimum the VA
requires and experts recom-.
mend.
·
- Each year for the last five
years, one-quarter to one-third
of the hospitals had death rates
above what the VA says they
should have, considering the ·
ages of the patients and seve&lt;i-..
ty of their illnesses.

Juvenile held ln slaying
1

Tha Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS .

18ft propose~ze of iocal govemment funding
COLUMBUS (AP)- Library director Mary
Pat Essnwt is ttyirig to balance excitement over
her syuan\ recoril circulation in January with
disappointment .,_ a tieeze in library funding
proposed by Gov. Bob nfi.
One branch of the Lane Public Library in
Butler County saw.a 16 percent increase in circulation, Essman said Tuesday.
"If any business had this kind of increase,
wouldn\ }'OU be ecstatic?" said Emnan. whose "
system includes a maiD library in Hamilton, three
branches and two bookmobiles. "But knowing .
that on the horizon we're 1ooking at Jl budget
tieeze and cut, it make. ~ stop and think."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

. Wedn..day, January 31, 2001

Reading

•

To 11eeet

F*lkNird

from Pip AI

POMEROY - Bedford TownPOMEROY - Meigs County
Agricultural Society will meet Feb. ship Trusrees will meet Thesday, 7 both grade levels, according to
their teachers.
COLUMBUS - Carrie 0 . Babic, 83, Columbus, formerly of Mid- 7 at 7:30 at the board office. Com- p.m. at town hall.
"It helps develop imaginatio~.
dleport, died Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2001 in Columbus.
mittee meeting. will be held prior
because
the students want to
·Su~virig are her daughters and a son-in-law, Shirley and Max Boring to the regular meeting .at 6:'30 p.m.
discuss their stories after they
ofRacme, and Wanda Johnson of Columbus; 14 grandchildren and seven.! great-grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Yolanda Bass; and several nieces
KANAUGA - Public pro- get back to the classroom," said
and nephews.
grams at the AMVETS Lodge in Baum.
"The younger students get
. Services .will be 10 a.m. Friday in Potters House Chuich of God, 32w 1 POMEROY -The Meigs Soil Kanauga will include Country
Lowell Dnve, Columbus, with Pastor Mark Reed officiating. Burial will and Water Conservation Distriet is Grass, Feb. 3; Old Milwaukee, Feb. excited about reading, and that
~ 10 Mount Olive Cemetery, .Long Bottom. Friends may call at the continuing an annual tradition by 10; Sound of Bluegrass, Feb. 17; excitement is contagious,"
clum:h on Thursday fiom 2-4 and 7~9 p.m.
·
.
Hayes said. "The eighth graders
and Country Grass, Feb. 24.
selling tree packets to the public.
pick up on that excitement, and
· · ..c\rrangemenl! are by Egan-Ryan Funeral Home, 403 E. Broad St.,
A variety of tree packets are
Columbus.
it
encourages them to read,
available including conifers, hard. Memorial contributions may be made to the Potters House Church of woods, and ground cover planm.
also."
God.
·
It is, of course, natural for a
POMEROY-Applications
are
For sale are individual packe~&gt; of
white pine, Scotch pine, Colorado now available for the Ten Star All first or second grader to idolize
blue spruce or Norway spruce, 25. Star Basketball Camp programs an older student, especially
.
for $11 and a wildlife/hardwood and may be received by calling when they work so closely
together. But it's not ego build·COOL:VILLE -:-Wilford Walraven, 59, Coolville, died Monday, Jan. · packet including two each of sugar 704-568"6801 .
The camps are for boys, ages 8 to ing which motivates the eighth
. 2~, 2001 10 Coo.lville.
, maple, sweet guin, Chinese chestHe was born m Frost onOct. 2,1941,son of the late Paul and Betty nut, river birch, and Zumi crabap- 19, and girls, ages 10 to 19. The grade volunteers.
:'My students have learned
Guess w.lraven. He was a fo.eman for the Asphalt Co., and a ..,reran of pie for $11.
·~
locations iriclude North Canton,
that
there's a world beyond the
Redlands,
Calif.;
Thousind
Oaks,
tlie U.S. Army. . .
.
·
In addition, ground COVe{ pack~':""vmg are his wife, Karen Gorrell Walraven; three sons and a daugh- els of crown vetch or periwinkle Calif.; Sackville, N,B., Canada; eighth grade classroom,Hayes
Babson Park, Aa.; Gainesville, Ga.; said. "Working with younger
t~r-10-law, Trm Walraven ofTorch, Lee Walraven of Little Hocking, and are available, 25 for $1 1.
Scott_ and She.nandoah w.lraven of Elizabe~, Tenn.; two daughten ~d
The MeiS' SWCD also has tree Hillsdale, Mich.; Fort Worth, Texas; students foa;ers a feeling of
sons-m-law, Tma.and Barry Deeter. of Lottndse. and Regma and. Ctaig planting accessories for sale.or rent' Blacksburg, Va.; Midway, Ky.; and community, and the older kids
Adams of Coolville; seven grandchildren and several stepgrandchildren; including marking flags and planter Rochester, N.Y. Scholarships are like knowing that they're actualfive brothers and sisters-in-law, Tom and Shirley Walraven of Jonesboro, ban.
available for players who have been ly helping another student learn
Ga., Paul and Frances Walraven ofAshville, Steve and Nina Walraven, and
For more information or to named to The All-American Team. to read."
The program also builds selfGreg and Joan Walraven, all of Athens, and Harold and Anita Weed of receive an order form, call the
esteem, according to Baum and
Millfield; a sister and brother-in-law, jennifer and Mark VanDyke ofTbe Meigs SWCD at 992-4282. Trees
Hayes, and just like a love for
P.lains; and several nieces and nephews.
mwt be orde.ed by March 19 and
reading, self-confidence is con~
·He was also p.eceded in death by his brother, David Walraven.
sh 0 uld b
· db A riJ 10
~ervices will be '! p.m. Thursday in White Funeral Home, Coolville,
e .ece•ve Y P
·
POMEROY ·- A dissolution
With John Longfellow officiating. Burial will be in Torch Cemetery.
has
been granted in Meigs County
Friends may call at the funeral home 6om 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.
Common Pleas Court to Billie Jo
LETART - Chris Wolfe was Butcher-Hire and Michael Dean
elected president of the Letart Hire.
, ~IG BEAVER, Pa.- David E. Tritt, 62, of Big Beaver, died Monday, Township trustees at the recent
A divorce has been granted to
from PapAl
organizational meeting. Dave Gra- Debbie L. Cremeans from William
Jap, 29,2001 at the Medical Center in Beaver.
.
.
He was born in Rochester, Pa., on Oct. 4, 1938, son of the late David ham was named vice p.esident.
]. C.emeans Sr.
reserve high school boys baseThe third member of the board
A. andThehruj CilrrierTritt. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army and was
ball coach for the 2000-01
if Bob Morris. Joyce White is the
a retired screw machine operator fiom Weslinghowc/Cuder-Hammer.
school year was accepted by the
He was a member of the Monaca United Methodist Church.
clerl&lt;.
board and Rebecca Evans was
· • Surviving are his wife, Eileen Wolfe Tritt; a sister and brother-in-law,
POMEROY-A civil case filed -approved as reserve softball
Betty and Tom Schenk o( B.emerton, Wash.; seven brothers-in-laW and
·
in Meigs County Common Pleas coach.
sisters-in-law, Howard and Ruth Wolfe of Delaware, Carl E. Wolfe of
Court by Conseco Bank Inc.,
Evans has completed a fint
MARIETTA - A round and against Melody R. R=sburg, and aid course and CPR training for
rrtiddleport, Gene and Gail Wolfe of Beaver Falls, P~.• Merlin and Emily
Wolfe, .Bobby and Ruth Graham, Benny and Robin Wolfe and Penny square dance will be held Friday at others, has been di.uirissed.
· the position.
~ Gene Powell, ill of Ohio; and an uncle and several nieces and Marietta's American Legioh hall.
In financial matters, the
Prior to the dance afish dinner
l).!phews.
.
.
board approved a contract with
' : In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother, will be served fiom 6:30-7:30 p.m.
. SiteScan lric.,located in Mariet. .fatnes F. Tritt.
.
. Swinging Country will provide
POMEROY - Uni1&gt; of the ta, to complete the tri-yearly
~: Services will be 11 a.m. Sa~ in Lutton Chippewa Funeral Home, the music to begin at 8 p.m., with · Meigs
Emergency
Service review of asbestos levels in the
t 17 Blackhawk Road, Big Beaver, with the R.ev. George Dran officiat- guest violinist Doc Lemon. J.B. answered seven calls for assistance district'• school buildings. Cost
Olg: Burial will follow at Grandview Cemetery in Big Beaver. Full mili- Wilson will be the caller.
on'Ibesday. ~nits responded u fol- of the project will total $1,900
~ services will be conducted by the Beaver County Special U~t.
lows:
·
·
and is considered to reduce liae:friends may call at the funeral home on·Fridayfrom·1-4 10d 1J p.m.
CENTRAL
DISPA'rdl
bility when · vacating · th~ disllllat .
•: Memorial contributions may be made to the Beaver County Cancer
3:04: a.m., Third Street, Elma
~ Heart 'Assodation, 3582 Brodhead Road, Suite 104, Mo~a, -Pa.
·SYRACUSE - Syracuse Vil- Weese, Holzer Medical Cemer;
b061, or the American Cancer Society, 493 Adanu St., Rochester, Pa. lage Council will meet at 7 p.m
.
6:29 a.m., Blliley Run, Wilbur
Thursday at village hall.
1'074.
Riley, treated;
10:08 a.m., Holzer Medical
• •
Center Clinic, Robert Riftle,
HMC;
SYRACUSE ,Syracuse
Subscribe today.
9:38 p.m., Rainbow Ridge, VirBosard of Public Affairs will meet ginia Evans, Pleasant Valley Hospi992·2156
at 7 p.m Monday at vijlage hall.
tal.
'

.

Plan paopams

Applkations ready

Wlh&amp;VIJII

Dissolution

granted

.Ofliceas elected ·

..

Board

David E. Ditt

case dismissed

Dance slated

CINCINNATI (AP) - Police arrested a 16-year-old boy
Tuesday in the death of a 13-)'l'ar-old girl whose body was found
in a vacant building.
The suspect is charged with murder and kidnapping in the
slaying of Mary Hall, police said. He was not identified because
he is a juvenile. Police said he was acquaimed with the girl.
Hall's family reported her missing about 12:30 p.m. Sunday
after she had been gone overnight. She was supposed to be headed to a friend's howe when family members last saw her about
7:30 p.m. Sarurday, police Sgt. Anthony Carter said.
"She was supposed to be gone for an hour," said Carter.
The girl's body wai found about 2 p.m. .Sunday in the vacant
building. Workers renovating the building found the body and
called police.
.
· The girl lived with her mother, also named Mary Hall, and her
mother\ boyfriend about three blocks from the building where
her body was found.
·
Police on Tuesday would not release any more details on how
the girl died. An autopsy was to be performed by the Hamilton
County cazoner's office.

EMS runs

Coi&amp;ndl to

Din• on tap

TOLEDO (AP)- A plc111n at'Je•w Chrilt that II in a northwest Ohio eaurthau11 violate• the collldtudonal rilqulzement oC
1eparatian at' church ancl state, the American Civil Liberties
Union said Tuesdaj.
,
The ACLU said it woulclfile a lawsuit Wednesday apimt Defl·
ance County in U.S. Diltrict Court in Toledo.
,
The picrure in the county courthouae depicaJe•w knocking
at a garden pte. .
"The Supreme Court and other federal courts have made it
very clear- devotional images have no place in America's public buildings;• said Jillian Davis, a lawyer for the ACLU.
· ~ ~essage requesting comment was left with the county comnumonen.
'
·The lawsuit will ask that the picture be removed and that the
county be stopped from displaying any other religious images in
public buildings.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion, Post 602, will have ; fried
chicken and noodle dinner Sunday
with serving to begin at 11 a.m.
The price is $5 and the public is
invited.

when it comes to 3dolescenrs.

that's nor an easy task.
Students in K-6 go to the
library during scheduled visits,
but the older kids must make
time in their own schedule to
visit the library, and often don't.
Now that they're involved in
the reading program, these
eighth graders are good library
patrons.
"I think it has developed a
great interest in reading and in
using the library," Elliott said.
The monthly "buddy reading"
periods are a highlight of the
school schedule for both
groups.
"They really look forward to
it," Baum said. And as for the
eighth graders, their teacher says
that "even the cool kids are
excited."

trict's elementary buildings.
The board also approved the
five-year forecast as prepared by
Dennie Hill, Pam Carter and
Nancy Burbacher, and the
appropriations resolutions for
·2001, as well as the amended
certificate, both submitted by
Hill.
In other action, the board:
• Learned the Finance Commission has approved proceeding with filling the position of
technology coordinator;
• HB 383 grants school
boards, effective, Feb. 13, the
right to change the cut-off' date
for
entering
kindergarten
·a nd/ or first grade from Sept. 30
to Aug. 1;
• Approved various policy
revisions, replacements .and
additions.
·
·· ·
'

·MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Sets session

Picture may spur ACLU suit

tagious.
Young ones who might struggle with reading find it easier to
read one-on-one with an empa~hetic mentor, Hayes said, and
for those eighth graders who
also struggle, reading with, or to,
a younger student helps build
their confidence, as well.
Cathy Elliott, Ellie Blaettnar
and Diane Hawley, librarians in
the building, had high praise for
Hayes a':'d her "buddy reading"
program, for obvio·us reasons.
The P.rogram has encouraged
students to visit the library, and

RACINE
8:08 p.m., Apple Grove, Bernice
Roush, treated.
.
SYRACUSE
5:55 p.m., Rocksprings Road,
·James Brumfield, PVH.
TUPPERS PLAINS .
· · 4:08 p.m., Chester, June Ridenour, Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital.

We Rent

·Blue ,
Luster
Carpet ·

Cleaners
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

Judge·won't drop case
CINCINNATI (AP) -A federal judge on Thesday refused to
dismiss a lawsuit against th~ village of Blanchester, which is
accused of bungling the -investigation into the 1996 disappearance of a woman now presumed dead.
U.S. District judge S. Arthur Spiegel ruled that the casc'should
lie decided by the eight-member jury which has been hearing
~vidence since the trial began Jan. 22 ..
Jurors a.re to hear the laW)'I'n' closing arguments Wednesday.
The village's lawyer, Lawrence Barbiere, argued that Blanchester police did nothing that would have prevented the family of
Clarissa Ann "Carrie'' Culberson from finding her body. The
remains of the Blanchester woman, 22 when she disappeared in
Aupt 1996, have never been found.
"There was no duty that was violated on behalf of the village
of Blanchester," Barbiere told the judge.
·
But the Culbenon family's lawyer, Alphonse Gerhardstein, said
there was testimony that Blanchester police knew that ofVincent ·
Doan's history of violence against his gi~lfriend, Carrie Culberson.
1
. Gerhardstein argued that court testimony also indicated that
former Blanc!testcr police Chief Richard Payton could have auspee ted that Culberson 'a body had been dumped in a pond but
that Payton flliled to order the location secured for investigation.
· Police later searched the pond and found no evidence of Cul•
benon 's remains there. Her family, which is siting Blanchester for
unspecified m'!ney damages, says the temaim could have been in
the pond arid then removed before police later secured the area.
· . Doan, also of Blanchester, was convicted, in 1997 of kidn~p­
ping and killing Culberson. He has refused to say what happened
to her 'body.
/
Doan is serving a life sentence in prison but is appealing his .
, convictions.
The family's claims apiQK Doan, Payton and two other •Origirial defendants in the lawsuit have been dismissed. .
·

..

StanJing Proud
When it romes ,to phy•ical therapy. you expeCt a.knowledgeable, skilled arid exj,erienced
physical therapy team. You'll find that team at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. Ohio University
The~apy ~ia~es manages and staffs O'Bleness' ~h&gt;:'ical therapy department with therapists
specially rramed 1n musculoskdetaltreatment', genattJC asseSsments, wound·and skin Ciie, .
balance assessment, 11roke rehabilitation and much more. We'll have you standing proud.

The Daily Sentinel
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Wedneaday, January 31, 2001

Pege A 2 • The Deily Ientine! .

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
Acddentll fire kills man
LORAIN (AP) -A 25-year-old man died after he accidentally set himself on fire, fire officials said.
William Panons of Lorain died of complications of burns to
about 90 percent of his body Monday night in MetroHealth
Medical Center in Cleveland.
Assinant fire ChiefTim Dore said a family member told him
that Parsons, who was mentally retarded, was probably playing
with fire while the family was asleep.
"It was just a terrible accident. A tragic, terri~le accident,"
Dore said.
.•
Panons apparently turned on a burner on the gas stove about
4 a.m. Monday. Flames spread to Panons' bpdy and he screamed
for help, but his family said his body was consumed by the fire
and they could do little to help him.
Family members told authorities that Parsons had been burned
about four yean ago at an auto repair shop owned by his father.
The family said he was putting paper towels in a kerosene heater
when he caught his pants on fire, Dore said.
Dore said he found two small charred pieces of paper towel
lying on the floor in front of the stove where Parsons was
burned.
·

Day-care provider accused
CLEVELAND (AP) -A day-care ,provider faces up to 10
years in prison if convicted of all charges in the death of a 17momh-old girl in her care.
Karen Zemba, 42, of suburban Independence, was charged
Tuesday with involuntary manslaughter and child endangering.
Prosecutors said Zemba placed the girl, Allison Kuczmarslci, in
a portable crib Aug. 24 after giving her the allergy medicine
Benadryl. ,
The crib contained eight blankets and three nylon bags. The
girl died of asphyxiation after she became entangled in the blankets or crawled into one of the bags, said assistant · Cuyahoga
County Prosecutor Thomas Cahill.
County Coroner Elizabeth Balraj said the Benadryl was a factor in the child's death because it sedated her.
The Benadryl given to Allison has a label warning that It
shouldn't be given to children under 6 )'l'ar&amp; old without lint
consulting a physician. Zemba consulted neither a doctor nor
Allison's parents before giving the. child the medicine, Cahill
said.

Cities, counties, public libraries and other
local government entities are taking another look
at their budgets in ~Pte wake of Tali\ plan tn
tieeze state funding for local gowoemmenu as part .
ofhis two-}'elf, S45 billion budget.
Taft proposed freezing tluee funds used rn
assist local governments to ,....., about $220 million over two Y"'ff· Taft called his budget the
lightest in a decade.
Taft's budget director Tom .Johnson said his
office didn't propose the &amp;eeze lightly and is trying to make it as painlas as possible.The tieeze
came as the result ofnft's goal not to raise taJu:s
and to ask local gmoernmenm to share in the

state's belt tightening. Johnson said.
"Ohio lw the best library system and the
best-funded library sysmn in the country," John~
son said 1\Jesday. "At the.end of this. we will co11- ,
tinue to have one of the best, and best·fundeQ,
library systems in the country."
.
The three funds .eceive percen~ of state
revenue 6om a ~ety of state tun. .
The Library and Local Government Suppon
Fund provided about $507 million statewide this·
fiscal Y""'· The fund's proposed freeze also;
includes a $15 million cut to fund the Omo·
Public Library Information N!.twork, said Lynda
Murray of the Ohio Library CoUncil.
'

Slowing economy, tight budget Heart patients die more
make incofr"e.tax cuts unlikely frequently at VA hospitals
COLUMBUS (AP) -A slowing economy and a tight state budget mean Ohioans probably won't
see an across-the-board iricome tax
cut within the next two years, sate
legislative leaders said Thesday.
"I do not see it happening;' Senate President Richard Finan said.
Senate Finance · Committee
Chairman Doug White and two
Democratic lawmakers agreed. The·
lawmakers were · discussing Gov.
Bob 'Ildi's two-)'l'ar, $45 billion
. state budget proposal and their legislative plans at a forum sponsored
by The Aoociated Press.
Ohio law mjuires unspent state
money to be put into an )n,ome
nx Reduction Fund. which 1w
been used every )'I'll since 1996 to
bring down the tax rate below il&gt;
permanent level. Officials call each
year's .eduction a tax cut even if the

rate in effect is higher than the previous,year~.

State income tax returns due in
April will retlect a 6.9 percent cut
•announced in July and made possible by a $610 millipn revenue sur~
plus.
The lawmalcers said increasing
education funding. escalating Medicaid cos!&gt; and slowing revenue
gmwtli will limit the money available to the Income nx Reduction
Fund.
The state Offi,e of Budget and
Management projec!S that $~7 million will be in the fund by June 30,
the end of the 'urrent budget }'elf.
The fund must have enough
money in it to reduce permanent
rates by .35 percent or taJu:s 'WOn't
be cut until enough is accuri!ulated, said Tim Keen, assistant state
budget director.
1

'CLEVELAND (AP)
Patients who undergo heart
sur~ry at veterans hospitals die
more freqqendy than heart
patients in private and public
hospitals, a newspaper report. '
ed .
Excessive patient deaths and
other problems have prompted
Veterans _A,ff'airs officials to
close several programs around
the nation; The Plain Dealer
reported Wednesday as part of a
series 9n VA hospitals. Today, 42
veterans hospitals offer heart
surgery, down from 51.
.
In 1999, more than 7,200
heart surgeries - most of
them bypass - were performed at VA hospitals and the
average death rate was 4.8 percent, the newspaper reported.
ln comparison, the average

death · rate for bypass surgery
that year was about 3:percent at '
the more than 500 hospitals
that participated in a Society:
for Thoracic Surgeoi\S survey. ·
The Plain Dealer investigo,~
tion also found that: ·
- M9re dian one-third of.
the 42 veterans hospitals per-·
forming heart surgery don't do:'
at least 150 heart. surgeries· ·a:
year, the minimum the VA
requires and experts recom-.
mend.
·
- Each year for the last five
years, one-quarter to one-third
of the hospitals had death rates
above what the VA says they
should have, considering the ·
ages of the patients and seve&lt;i-..
ty of their illnesses.

Juvenile held ln slaying
1

Tha Dally Sentinel • Page A 3

LOCAL BRIEFS .

18ft propose~ze of iocal govemment funding
COLUMBUS (AP)- Library director Mary
Pat Essnwt is ttyirig to balance excitement over
her syuan\ recoril circulation in January with
disappointment .,_ a tieeze in library funding
proposed by Gov. Bob nfi.
One branch of the Lane Public Library in
Butler County saw.a 16 percent increase in circulation, Essman said Tuesday.
"If any business had this kind of increase,
wouldn\ }'OU be ecstatic?" said Emnan. whose "
system includes a maiD library in Hamilton, three
branches and two bookmobiles. "But knowing .
that on the horizon we're 1ooking at Jl budget
tieeze and cut, it make. ~ stop and think."

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio ·

. Wedn..day, January 31, 2001

Reading

•

To 11eeet

F*lkNird

from Pip AI

POMEROY - Bedford TownPOMEROY - Meigs County
Agricultural Society will meet Feb. ship Trusrees will meet Thesday, 7 both grade levels, according to
their teachers.
COLUMBUS - Carrie 0 . Babic, 83, Columbus, formerly of Mid- 7 at 7:30 at the board office. Com- p.m. at town hall.
"It helps develop imaginatio~.
dleport, died Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2001 in Columbus.
mittee meeting. will be held prior
because
the students want to
·Su~virig are her daughters and a son-in-law, Shirley and Max Boring to the regular meeting .at 6:'30 p.m.
discuss their stories after they
ofRacme, and Wanda Johnson of Columbus; 14 grandchildren and seven.! great-grandchildren; a sister-in-law, Yolanda Bass; and several nieces
KANAUGA - Public pro- get back to the classroom," said
and nephews.
grams at the AMVETS Lodge in Baum.
"The younger students get
. Services .will be 10 a.m. Friday in Potters House Chuich of God, 32w 1 POMEROY -The Meigs Soil Kanauga will include Country
Lowell Dnve, Columbus, with Pastor Mark Reed officiating. Burial will and Water Conservation Distriet is Grass, Feb. 3; Old Milwaukee, Feb. excited about reading, and that
~ 10 Mount Olive Cemetery, .Long Bottom. Friends may call at the continuing an annual tradition by 10; Sound of Bluegrass, Feb. 17; excitement is contagious,"
clum:h on Thursday fiom 2-4 and 7~9 p.m.
·
.
Hayes said. "The eighth graders
and Country Grass, Feb. 24.
selling tree packets to the public.
pick up on that excitement, and
· · ..c\rrangemenl! are by Egan-Ryan Funeral Home, 403 E. Broad St.,
A variety of tree packets are
Columbus.
it
encourages them to read,
available including conifers, hard. Memorial contributions may be made to the Potters House Church of woods, and ground cover planm.
also."
God.
·
It is, of course, natural for a
POMEROY-Applications
are
For sale are individual packe~&gt; of
white pine, Scotch pine, Colorado now available for the Ten Star All first or second grader to idolize
blue spruce or Norway spruce, 25. Star Basketball Camp programs an older student, especially
.
for $11 and a wildlife/hardwood and may be received by calling when they work so closely
together. But it's not ego build·COOL:VILLE -:-Wilford Walraven, 59, Coolville, died Monday, Jan. · packet including two each of sugar 704-568"6801 .
The camps are for boys, ages 8 to ing which motivates the eighth
. 2~, 2001 10 Coo.lville.
, maple, sweet guin, Chinese chestHe was born m Frost onOct. 2,1941,son of the late Paul and Betty nut, river birch, and Zumi crabap- 19, and girls, ages 10 to 19. The grade volunteers.
:'My students have learned
Guess w.lraven. He was a fo.eman for the Asphalt Co., and a ..,reran of pie for $11.
·~
locations iriclude North Canton,
that
there's a world beyond the
Redlands,
Calif.;
Thousind
Oaks,
tlie U.S. Army. . .
.
·
In addition, ground COVe{ pack~':""vmg are his wife, Karen Gorrell Walraven; three sons and a daugh- els of crown vetch or periwinkle Calif.; Sackville, N,B., Canada; eighth grade classroom,Hayes
Babson Park, Aa.; Gainesville, Ga.; said. "Working with younger
t~r-10-law, Trm Walraven ofTorch, Lee Walraven of Little Hocking, and are available, 25 for $1 1.
Scott_ and She.nandoah w.lraven of Elizabe~, Tenn.; two daughten ~d
The MeiS' SWCD also has tree Hillsdale, Mich.; Fort Worth, Texas; students foa;ers a feeling of
sons-m-law, Tma.and Barry Deeter. of Lottndse. and Regma and. Ctaig planting accessories for sale.or rent' Blacksburg, Va.; Midway, Ky.; and community, and the older kids
Adams of Coolville; seven grandchildren and several stepgrandchildren; including marking flags and planter Rochester, N.Y. Scholarships are like knowing that they're actualfive brothers and sisters-in-law, Tom and Shirley Walraven of Jonesboro, ban.
available for players who have been ly helping another student learn
Ga., Paul and Frances Walraven ofAshville, Steve and Nina Walraven, and
For more information or to named to The All-American Team. to read."
The program also builds selfGreg and Joan Walraven, all of Athens, and Harold and Anita Weed of receive an order form, call the
esteem, according to Baum and
Millfield; a sister and brother-in-law, jennifer and Mark VanDyke ofTbe Meigs SWCD at 992-4282. Trees
Hayes, and just like a love for
P.lains; and several nieces and nephews.
mwt be orde.ed by March 19 and
reading, self-confidence is con~
·He was also p.eceded in death by his brother, David Walraven.
sh 0 uld b
· db A riJ 10
~ervices will be '! p.m. Thursday in White Funeral Home, Coolville,
e .ece•ve Y P
·
POMEROY ·- A dissolution
With John Longfellow officiating. Burial will be in Torch Cemetery.
has
been granted in Meigs County
Friends may call at the funeral home 6om 2-4 and 6-8 p.m. today.
Common Pleas Court to Billie Jo
LETART - Chris Wolfe was Butcher-Hire and Michael Dean
elected president of the Letart Hire.
, ~IG BEAVER, Pa.- David E. Tritt, 62, of Big Beaver, died Monday, Township trustees at the recent
A divorce has been granted to
from PapAl
organizational meeting. Dave Gra- Debbie L. Cremeans from William
Jap, 29,2001 at the Medical Center in Beaver.
.
.
He was born in Rochester, Pa., on Oct. 4, 1938, son of the late David ham was named vice p.esident.
]. C.emeans Sr.
reserve high school boys baseThe third member of the board
A. andThehruj CilrrierTritt. He was a veteran of the U.S. Army and was
ball coach for the 2000-01
if Bob Morris. Joyce White is the
a retired screw machine operator fiom Weslinghowc/Cuder-Hammer.
school year was accepted by the
He was a member of the Monaca United Methodist Church.
clerl&lt;.
board and Rebecca Evans was
· • Surviving are his wife, Eileen Wolfe Tritt; a sister and brother-in-law,
POMEROY-A civil case filed -approved as reserve softball
Betty and Tom Schenk o( B.emerton, Wash.; seven brothers-in-laW and
·
in Meigs County Common Pleas coach.
sisters-in-law, Howard and Ruth Wolfe of Delaware, Carl E. Wolfe of
Court by Conseco Bank Inc.,
Evans has completed a fint
MARIETTA - A round and against Melody R. R=sburg, and aid course and CPR training for
rrtiddleport, Gene and Gail Wolfe of Beaver Falls, P~.• Merlin and Emily
Wolfe, .Bobby and Ruth Graham, Benny and Robin Wolfe and Penny square dance will be held Friday at others, has been di.uirissed.
· the position.
~ Gene Powell, ill of Ohio; and an uncle and several nieces and Marietta's American Legioh hall.
In financial matters, the
Prior to the dance afish dinner
l).!phews.
.
.
board approved a contract with
' : In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brother, will be served fiom 6:30-7:30 p.m.
. SiteScan lric.,located in Mariet. .fatnes F. Tritt.
.
. Swinging Country will provide
POMEROY - Uni1&gt; of the ta, to complete the tri-yearly
~: Services will be 11 a.m. Sa~ in Lutton Chippewa Funeral Home, the music to begin at 8 p.m., with · Meigs
Emergency
Service review of asbestos levels in the
t 17 Blackhawk Road, Big Beaver, with the R.ev. George Dran officiat- guest violinist Doc Lemon. J.B. answered seven calls for assistance district'• school buildings. Cost
Olg: Burial will follow at Grandview Cemetery in Big Beaver. Full mili- Wilson will be the caller.
on'Ibesday. ~nits responded u fol- of the project will total $1,900
~ services will be conducted by the Beaver County Special U~t.
lows:
·
·
and is considered to reduce liae:friends may call at the funeral home on·Fridayfrom·1-4 10d 1J p.m.
CENTRAL
DISPA'rdl
bility when · vacating · th~ disllllat .
•: Memorial contributions may be made to the Beaver County Cancer
3:04: a.m., Third Street, Elma
~ Heart 'Assodation, 3582 Brodhead Road, Suite 104, Mo~a, -Pa.
·SYRACUSE - Syracuse Vil- Weese, Holzer Medical Cemer;
b061, or the American Cancer Society, 493 Adanu St., Rochester, Pa. lage Council will meet at 7 p.m
.
6:29 a.m., Blliley Run, Wilbur
Thursday at village hall.
1'074.
Riley, treated;
10:08 a.m., Holzer Medical
• •
Center Clinic, Robert Riftle,
HMC;
SYRACUSE ,Syracuse
Subscribe today.
9:38 p.m., Rainbow Ridge, VirBosard of Public Affairs will meet ginia Evans, Pleasant Valley Hospi992·2156
at 7 p.m Monday at vijlage hall.
tal.
'

.

Plan paopams

Applkations ready

Wlh&amp;VIJII

Dissolution

granted

.Ofliceas elected ·

..

Board

David E. Ditt

case dismissed

Dance slated

CINCINNATI (AP) - Police arrested a 16-year-old boy
Tuesday in the death of a 13-)'l'ar-old girl whose body was found
in a vacant building.
The suspect is charged with murder and kidnapping in the
slaying of Mary Hall, police said. He was not identified because
he is a juvenile. Police said he was acquaimed with the girl.
Hall's family reported her missing about 12:30 p.m. Sunday
after she had been gone overnight. She was supposed to be headed to a friend's howe when family members last saw her about
7:30 p.m. Sarurday, police Sgt. Anthony Carter said.
"She was supposed to be gone for an hour," said Carter.
The girl's body wai found about 2 p.m. .Sunday in the vacant
building. Workers renovating the building found the body and
called police.
.
· The girl lived with her mother, also named Mary Hall, and her
mother\ boyfriend about three blocks from the building where
her body was found.
·
Police on Tuesday would not release any more details on how
the girl died. An autopsy was to be performed by the Hamilton
County cazoner's office.

EMS runs

Coi&amp;ndl to

Din• on tap

TOLEDO (AP)- A plc111n at'Je•w Chrilt that II in a northwest Ohio eaurthau11 violate• the collldtudonal rilqulzement oC
1eparatian at' church ancl state, the American Civil Liberties
Union said Tuesdaj.
,
The ACLU said it woulclfile a lawsuit Wednesday apimt Defl·
ance County in U.S. Diltrict Court in Toledo.
,
The picrure in the county courthouae depicaJe•w knocking
at a garden pte. .
"The Supreme Court and other federal courts have made it
very clear- devotional images have no place in America's public buildings;• said Jillian Davis, a lawyer for the ACLU.
· ~ ~essage requesting comment was left with the county comnumonen.
'
·The lawsuit will ask that the picture be removed and that the
county be stopped from displaying any other religious images in
public buildings.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion, Post 602, will have ; fried
chicken and noodle dinner Sunday
with serving to begin at 11 a.m.
The price is $5 and the public is
invited.

when it comes to 3dolescenrs.

that's nor an easy task.
Students in K-6 go to the
library during scheduled visits,
but the older kids must make
time in their own schedule to
visit the library, and often don't.
Now that they're involved in
the reading program, these
eighth graders are good library
patrons.
"I think it has developed a
great interest in reading and in
using the library," Elliott said.
The monthly "buddy reading"
periods are a highlight of the
school schedule for both
groups.
"They really look forward to
it," Baum said. And as for the
eighth graders, their teacher says
that "even the cool kids are
excited."

trict's elementary buildings.
The board also approved the
five-year forecast as prepared by
Dennie Hill, Pam Carter and
Nancy Burbacher, and the
appropriations resolutions for
·2001, as well as the amended
certificate, both submitted by
Hill.
In other action, the board:
• Learned the Finance Commission has approved proceeding with filling the position of
technology coordinator;
• HB 383 grants school
boards, effective, Feb. 13, the
right to change the cut-off' date
for
entering
kindergarten
·a nd/ or first grade from Sept. 30
to Aug. 1;
• Approved various policy
revisions, replacements .and
additions.
·
·· ·
'

·MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Sets session

Picture may spur ACLU suit

tagious.
Young ones who might struggle with reading find it easier to
read one-on-one with an empa~hetic mentor, Hayes said, and
for those eighth graders who
also struggle, reading with, or to,
a younger student helps build
their confidence, as well.
Cathy Elliott, Ellie Blaettnar
and Diane Hawley, librarians in
the building, had high praise for
Hayes a':'d her "buddy reading"
program, for obvio·us reasons.
The P.rogram has encouraged
students to visit the library, and

RACINE
8:08 p.m., Apple Grove, Bernice
Roush, treated.
.
SYRACUSE
5:55 p.m., Rocksprings Road,
·James Brumfield, PVH.
TUPPERS PLAINS .
· · 4:08 p.m., Chester, June Ridenour, Camden-Clark Memorial
Hospital.

We Rent

·Blue ,
Luster
Carpet ·

Cleaners
PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,
W.VA.

Judge·won't drop case
CINCINNATI (AP) -A federal judge on Thesday refused to
dismiss a lawsuit against th~ village of Blanchester, which is
accused of bungling the -investigation into the 1996 disappearance of a woman now presumed dead.
U.S. District judge S. Arthur Spiegel ruled that the casc'should
lie decided by the eight-member jury which has been hearing
~vidence since the trial began Jan. 22 ..
Jurors a.re to hear the laW)'I'n' closing arguments Wednesday.
The village's lawyer, Lawrence Barbiere, argued that Blanchester police did nothing that would have prevented the family of
Clarissa Ann "Carrie'' Culberson from finding her body. The
remains of the Blanchester woman, 22 when she disappeared in
Aupt 1996, have never been found.
"There was no duty that was violated on behalf of the village
of Blanchester," Barbiere told the judge.
·
But the Culbenon family's lawyer, Alphonse Gerhardstein, said
there was testimony that Blanchester police knew that ofVincent ·
Doan's history of violence against his gi~lfriend, Carrie Culberson.
1
. Gerhardstein argued that court testimony also indicated that
former Blanc!testcr police Chief Richard Payton could have auspee ted that Culberson 'a body had been dumped in a pond but
that Payton flliled to order the location secured for investigation.
· Police later searched the pond and found no evidence of Cul•
benon 's remains there. Her family, which is siting Blanchester for
unspecified m'!ney damages, says the temaim could have been in
the pond arid then removed before police later secured the area.
· . Doan, also of Blanchester, was convicted, in 1997 of kidn~p­
ping and killing Culberson. He has refused to say what happened
to her 'body.
/
Doan is serving a life sentence in prison but is appealing his .
, convictions.
The family's claims apiQK Doan, Payton and two other •Origirial defendants in the lawsuit have been dismissed. .
·

..

StanJing Proud
When it romes ,to phy•ical therapy. you expeCt a.knowledgeable, skilled arid exj,erienced
physical therapy team. You'll find that team at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital. Ohio University
The~apy ~ia~es manages and staffs O'Bleness' ~h&gt;:'ical therapy department with therapists
specially rramed 1n musculoskdetaltreatment', genattJC asseSsments, wound·and skin Ciie, .
balance assessment, 11roke rehabilitation and much more. We'll have you standing proud.

The Daily Sentinel
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w ......,.........., :S1. 100,..

_rh_e_D_ai..::..Iy_Se_n_tin_e_I____________

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 99;!·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
~aiManager

Larry Boyer
Director

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

Question: My annpits and groin
are "sticky" and red. They hurt, too.

'

I bathe regularly and use baby oil
on them, bur I am still unconlfort-

Lilkrlto til• Nilor tut w1ktNu. TheJ should be ~ss tiUJn 3tJO wonh. AU kn11n an Sll~l
to'edJJI,., •nd m1ul' 1M rigr~ed 1lffll inc:IINI1 IUidrru tutd ukphoM 11umbfr. No·u,slfnlld ktt11n wiU
h publbfred. IAttfrJ rhotdJ IH in tood uur~, llddnulrrt inu11J, IWf ~orudilier,
Tl•• op;nimu ex,tvuul ill 11111 colulflll below,,.. tiN t:OJISII11srtr o[th11 Ohio Y.uty PMbllrlli"'
Co. ' 1 HiloriiJ boGrrl, 11nlen Dlhtrwlsl ntKH.

able. My doctor doesn't have any
suggestions. What is causing 'this and
what can I do to clear it up?

L-

: Answer: Skin is the largest

· OUR VIEW

..

organ of the body and consequent-

Hurried
Clean air rnles demand swift
action from industry
.;

PERKINS' VIEW
American Electric Powers plans to introduce nitrogen oxide
emission reduction technology at two nearby West Virginia power
plants - the Mountaineer at New Haven and John Amos near
:Winfield - is good news for both the company and those folks
concerned about the environmental impact the facilities have hat!
on the region.
' Both will use the urea, or dry ammonia, process now being
installed at the Gavin Plant. Fears surrounding use of pure ammo~ia in the process have been calmed. The dialogue between AEP;
9avin and the Cheshire community, while contentious, produced a
)"Orkable solution over ammonia use that will be replicated at .
1',1ountaineer and John Amos.
; "It is unfortunate that federal regulations .do not allow time for
t)le development, commercialization and installation of il).novative
multi-pollutant emission reduction technologies," said John F. Norris, AEP's senior vice president of operations and technical services.
: "They have the potential to deliver superior environmental results
it a lower cost of compliance," he added .."Nonetheless,,we will continue to explore those new technologies as we work with the U.S.
£PA and our states to seek flexible implementation rules that might
ilelp us achi~ve those objectives."
' Norris is referring to the fact clean air regulations demand emission reduction by 2003. ln Gavin's case, selective catalytic reduction
Will' gn on liile by late spring . ., . .. .. . -· ... '"
• .... The deadline set has put on pressure that bears out Norris' contention that there isn't enough time to finp alternative means of cutting emissions.
We are all in favor of clean air, but we are led to wonder if the
rush to implement regulations has put the industry, which is 'trying
to comply, in a bind and missing out on improved technology.
When Gavin officials began planning to install SCR, urea was not
a proven "::ethod. But by December oflast year, additional usage had
proven it presented significantly less risk to the plant and nearby
communities than pure ammonia: This resulted in a revision of
G;lvih's plans and a' crunch in meeting the deadline. ,
Perhaps, this is the price that has to be paid for clean air at this
time, but one wonders if the government should have been more
willing for advancements in the technolog:y to take root at less cost
to the utility, and ultimately, to the consumer.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CalifOrnia has only itself ,to blame for dark ages.:
"
The dark ages have arrived in California .. r---::
•
And the state has only itself to blame because
lawmakers in Sacramento allowed state energy policy to be hijacked by special interests.
In 1996, the Oemocratic-controlled legislature' enacted a misnamed electricity "dereg··. :
.. . ,,•.
ulation" law that actually required the state's t..
' . ";'1
utilities to divest themselves of many of their 1!
'
. electricity-generating power plants.
'
\
y
They became, in.effect, 'energy brokers .buying electricity fi-9m out~of-state uti~ties
NE'A COLUMNIST
and selling it to California businesses and residences.
1
Until utilities' stranded costs were recov- than they are allowed to charge at the re~
ered - San Diego ·Gas &amp; Electric has done level.
'
'
this, and the state's other two major utilities
And even. with the retail price caps, Caliwould have recovered ·these costs sometime fornia businesses and residents paid $10.9 billater this year - price controls on the retail lion more for electricity last sununer than the
level .remained in place.Whathappened,.how- year before:And they face even higher energy
ever, ":~ .that wholesale. prtces skyro&lt;:)&lt;~~: .. , bills t\)iJ.)Le~r ~ ~.~ ... "·· .-.;.: .~ .• :;.
The utilincs h~d to pay higher pnces for efe~California's buck-passing Democratic govtnclly, but they c~uld not pass al9ng this ernor, Gray Davis, sa~ that our~cif-state utilimcrease to the states •.n.ergy consumers.
ties are responsible for Californifs electriCity
. Meanwhile, the utilines were forced to sell crisis. And his spokespeople suggest that the
off most of thetr power-generanng plants: The Bush administration is somehow obliged 'to
environmentalist left congratulated Itself bail out the Golden State.
because, th~ugh ~o-called deregulation, it
"Never again can we all.ii our-of-state
ma~ged to nd C~orrua of control of those profiteers . to hold Califor!lla ostage;• said
fosstl-fuel-consunun~ power plants. .
· Davis in his recent State of th tate speeeh.'
And th~ consum~mt left patted ttself on "Never again will we allow Ol!t-of-state genthe back because, under the gu1se of deregu- · t
t th t t. tu
ff ' lights 'th
d h
· Califc . , 1
eraors o reaen o rno our
WI
·
·
Ianon,
1t manage to em 111
orrua s e ec" th fli f h ·
·
h" ·
· ·
tricity re-sellers with government-mandated
eF dp 0 1t e1gulrsW!tc ·h
.. hi k d ( h . )
price controls.
e e.ra.. re ators ave · s r e
t e1r
So now the ill-conceived plan has come resp~l1Slbllity to protect ~tepayers from this ,
·
legalized h1ghway robbery, IIA·a!ided.
· home to roost.
California businesses and residences ' face
And with that, Califo;hia's governor
the omnipresent threat of "rolling blackquts" beseech~d the Bush adrninislf"tion to ?r4&lt;t
as electricity demand far exceeds available the Federal En~rgy RegulatQr'y Comnumon
supply.
to impose caps on wholesale electricity prices
California utilities are $11 billion in debt, in the West to compel those mean old out-ofteetering on the brink of bankruptcy as they state utilities to s~ll cheap energy to ,Califorare forced to pay twice as much (sometimes . nia utilities.
more) for electricity at the wholesale level
But the prevailing sentiment in Washing-

r,~
.....· ,
~·-·
...

~

.. _,_

Joser.h
PerKins

ton, both at the White House and on Capitol '
Hill, is that the onus is on California, not th~ ;
federal government, to work its way out of its•
electricity crisis.
·'
"It is not up to the federal government to '
bail out California for a series ·of bad decrc '
sions," said Sen. ·Frank Murkowski, the Alash '
Republican who chairs the Senate Energy·;
Committ~. He wants the state "to make .a;
good faith effort" to correCt the failings of ics , .
state energy policy before seeking federal aid,
Toward that end, Sacramento must make it-;
easier to build new electricity-generating J
plants in California so that the state can meet·
its !!OOwing demand for energy. Because the •
Democratic governor and· Democratic-con7 •
trolled legislature have been so beholden tq ,
environmentalists, no new power plants hav~ ,
been built ill California over the past 10 years, ·
·&lt;Weil.'31-eleclrieity dernand~hu· grovo\n•~
percent.
1:
. 'Tiien the state has to phase out its contro~l
-on retail electricity prices. As it is, even witn:
Pacific Gas &amp; Electric and Southern Califor~!
nia Edison staring at bankruptcy, the state willl
not allow the utilities to charge businesses
residences prices that' reflect the actual cost of
the energy consumed. .~
Z
Until California rolls back its dtaconiaql
environmental restrictions on construction ofi
electricity-generating plants, until Californi:t•
utilities are ,permitted to .charge their cus{j
tomers the market price for electricity, th&lt;;
White House and CongrC::ss shbuld remain ort
the sidelines. For by intervening now in Cal.&gt;!
ifornla's electricity crisis, the federal governl l
· ment would allow Davis and the Legislature~
to delay or altogether avoid the 1tructurai'
reforms in energy policy that' California mus(

make.

GREEN'S VIEW

Fonvard all responses to Mr. S.ml:zrtypants

1

.

•

skin is warm, wet and mildly irrita~­

ed. This is particularly a problem fot
those with diabetes . Do you have
diabetes?
Your do ctor can often diagnosis
a yeast infection simply by the
appearance of the rash, but at other
times a sample must be painlessly

underarm deodorant product is not

skin problem is a condition called

likely to be the cause.
· You report getting no relief with
the use of baby oil. This tells me

associated with allcrgies, particularly to the house dust mite. There is

that the condition is not the conse-

quence of dry skin. Actually, that
is,n't a surprise. Baby oil, petroleum
jelly, body lotion and similar products principally help hold extra
mOisture in the skin. They are very
helpful for .preventing dry skin at
dU.s time of year. However, the
undcrarrits and groin are areas of

the body that rarely become dry. So
all the baby oil has done is lubricate
'tbe skin so that it slides by with less
djsco~ort. It hasn't addressed the
ut~derlying disorder.
. · Unfortunately, I can't tell exacdy
'"!hat is causing your inflamed skin

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Ball
Association,
organizational
meeting, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
at the Chester Firehouse.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 1 p.m Wednes·
day, home of Ada Titus, Water
St.. Syracuse.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW, Ladies AuxilIary, regular meeting, Thursday,
7 p.m. at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES; 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Past Grand · Patron . Homer
Williams, merger and consolidation . committee, will speak.
Potluck dinner 6 p.m.; take cov·
ered dish.

ma in those with the disorder.
Since your family doctor wasn't
able to l,)~er you an exPlanation for

the cause of your discomfort - let
alone a satisfactory treatmet:at, I'd
suggest that you see a deriljatolo-

gist. I'm sure that your family doctor can rcco~cnd one jn your
area.

''Family- Medicine" is a wccldjt column. To sub~ it qutstions1 write to John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University Col·

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs PERl,
1 p.m. Friday, Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior · Center.
Representative of Meigs EMS to
speak. Lunch at noon.

are dvailable online til
"

LETART - Letart Township
trustees, Friday, 12 noon at the

legc of Osteopathic Mcdidnc, r:;ro1venor
Hall, Athcn•, Ohio 45701. Post

without examining you, but I can

columns

wwwjhrodio. org lfm.

ers at whatever station in life they were and
was more understanding of those who were
struggling. ·
Owen ended her review with a quote by
the author "Over the years I have come to
realize that those things we must do always
take precedence over those things we may
want to do. This time crunch is felt by all
folks who are passionate about their work.
While it may be true rhai: I live fa~ from
where I grew up, the things I learned there
still ·fund my every move."
Members answered roll call with an
Appalachian custom or phrase. Jeanne
Bowen was co-hostess. Next meeting will
be held Feb. 7 with Bernice Carpenter as
the reviewer.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

also an incre:tsed incidence of asth-

give you a short list of possibilities.

· census, which listed two local counties of
. Martin and Magoffin as having the lowest
per capita income of any all-white population in the United States. Owen noted that
the author's father worked in the coal
mines and raised most of the family's food
on a couple of acres.Their home was without electricity or indoor plumbing during
most of her childhood.
The reviewer said the author of the book
credited her liard-working father and her
intelligent mother who read a lot for her
success. She said that "book-learning was
not very credible to most people on the
creek." She ·benefited from good teachers
who saw her potential and helped her find
a way to go to college. She said that when
she became a teacher she encouraged oth•

atopic dermatitis. This disorder is

office building.

er. Located. on Reibel Road,
Chester.

POMEROY- Area teens are
invitad to join the Friday's fun,
food and fellowship project at
God's Neighborhood Escape for
Teens. Nutritional meals are .provided free of charge while teens
are at the center. Teens can play
non-violent video games, com·
puler programs and board
games free of charge in the center's game room which is locat·
ed on Main Street in Pomeroy.
Pool tables are also available for
teens to us. God's NET opens at
6 p.m. and closes at 10:30 p.m.
on Friday and Saturday nights.
SATURDAY
RACINE- Soulhem Charge,
United Methodist Men, breakfast
at Bethany-Dorcas Church, Saturday, 8 a.m. All membar of the
community invited.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411, Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Tam·
pia. Refreshments.

The Community Calendar 11
publlahed a1 a fl'll MrviCI to
non-profit groupe wlahlng to
announce mtlltlnga and 1pe-

clal eventl. The calender 11
not dealgned to promote
111M or fund I'IIMI'8 of any
type. ltema are printed only ••
ap- parmlta and ·cannot bl
guaranteecl to be printed a
apecHic number or claya. ,

All locations of

THE FARMERS BANK
will be clQsed between
lOam to 12pm

on
Thursday February 1, 2001
duetothefuneralof
Director Emeritus

Paul G. Eich

~

HOLZER
CIJ~IC

Get In &amp;hepe for Baseball, SOftball, Golf, Temlsl Football, soccer,

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• Bedding Sets ......... ·•••••
ning Room Groups.......
Bedroom Suites ••••• ••• .... ••
Recliners •••••• ••••••• · ••••
Accessories ........... .

Volleyball, cross country

.,

tl

n, " ··

A yeast 'infection may be tbe cause
of your discomfort. Yeail - a type
of fungus - can thrive whcre the

ly, my dermatologist friends argue
that it is also the most important
one. Of course all organs are impor- scraped from the surface of the skin.
tant, but the skin does perform vital · The ~ample is then . treated with
j~bs in regulating the body temperpotassium hydroxide and subseature and protecting us from such quently studied ·under the microthings as chemicals, infectioUs scope for signs of this type of infecgerms (including viruses and bact.etion.
ria) and pansites. In short, the skin
Anod1er possible cause of your
does a good job of generally keepcondition is psoriasis. This condi11
ing the Stuff".on the imide on the
tion usually begins as an elbow r.tsh
ii\side :.md the ..stuff" on the outside
with heavy, silveor scales over a
out.
raised 'red base, but in my years of
- Si!1ce your condition produces
practice I've learned that not everythe same skin reaction at both the
one
reads the rule book before they
underarm and groin areas, it is reacon1e down with an illness. Occasonable to •ssume that both problems are caused by the .same disor- sionally, a person with psoriasis first
der. Cons~quendy; something sili&gt;- reports symptoms like yours .
ple like an allergic reaction to an . Another possible cause .for 'your

· :l

.

·'

MIDDLEPORT "Creeker - A
Woman's Journey" was reviewed by Sar;&gt;.
Owen at a recent meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held at the home of
Betsy Parsons.
Written by Linda DeRosier, it is an .
autobiography of her life, a humorous and
poignant memoir of coming of age in
Appalachia. DeRosier is now a professor of
psychology at Rocky Mountain College in
·Billings, Montana.
·
·
-In her review, Owen quoted the author
- "Mine was not the Kentucky of bluegrass, mint juleps and cotillions: the Kentucky of my youth was one of coal banks,
crawdads, and country music." She said the
standard of living in the mountains of eastern Kentucky was reflected in the 1960

ancll

Today is Wednosday, Jan. 31, the 31st day of 2001. There 'Ore 334
(Josepk Perkins is a columnisl for The San Diegd:1
days left in the year.
Union· Tiibune and con be reoched ot~
Today's Highlight in History:
joseph.perkinsuniontrib.com.)
::
On Jan. 31 ·, 1950, President Truman announced he hall ordered
••
••
development of the hydrogen bomb.
------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------~~---J.
.,
On this date:
:I
In 1606, Guy Fawkes, convicted for his part in the "Gunpowder
R~D
•I
• I .
Plot" against the English Parliament and Kirig James I, was exe.,ut••
ed.
•
••
In 1797, composer Franz Schubert was born in Vienna, Austria.
In 1865, Genet:al Robert E. Lee was named general-in-chief of
.,
all the Confederate armies.
.,
ln 1917, Germany served notice it was beginning a policy of
••
BY RED GRUN
pal.·Then for the crowni"li touch, #ter six making thieve.s think you have a gun in youtl l
unrestricted submarine warfare.
·
Have you ever noticed that some people months of product sabo~ge 'through rumor home. Even if you dop't. Here are a feW.
In 1934, President Franklin Roosevelt devalued the dollar in relafeel· a need to· show you how success- and innuendo, look up the make and model things you can do to make the bad guys:!'
really
tion to gold.
ful they are? Especiajly if they 'sense that you on e-bay and see how much the price has ' thihlc. they shoUld move on to a neighbor'S'
In 1944, duting World War ll, U.S. forces began invading kwamay be falling behind in that area,
·
dropped. Don't just forward that message to hquse:
.,
jalein'Atoll and other parts of the Japanese-held Marshall Islands: .
always
talking
I
know
a
guy
like
that.
He's
·
your
buddy.
Print
it
off
and
slip
it
into
a
sym• Hang a car engine from a tree in. you~ l
In 1949, the first TV daytime soap opera, "These Are My Chilnew
boat
or
showing
up
in
a
fancy
pathy
card.
•.
.
.
about
his
front
yard.
·
:I
dren;• was broadcast from the NBC station in Chicag6.
··
new
car
or
planning
an
exotic
vacation
Stop thinkinc
'• Have a welcome mat that says "God Ble~
In 1958, the United States entered the Space Age with its first
somewhere
for
himself
and
the
first
cheerLooking
at
old
plctul'f;s
of
younelf
can
be
the
NRA."
'
successful launch of a satellite into orbit, Elqllorer 1..
.
leader who answers the ad. These people are very depressing. The trim body, the clear
• Have an empty holster
dangling
, In 1971, astronauts Alan B. Shepard Jr., Edgar D.' Mitchell and
,
. .from ther
d
knb
always
hard
'to
avoid
and
impossible
to
even
the
complexion
.are
all
gone
now.
o,
o
r
o
.
.
·
,
eyes,
Stuart A. Roosa blasted off aboard Apollo 14 on a mission to the
ignore. And since physical assault is frowned The only smooth skin you have left is where
• Have a few powder burns around th.;
moon.
on
and
can
sometimes
backfire,
I've
come
up
·peephole.
·
'
your
hair
used
to
be.
.
In 1990, McDonald's Corp. opened its first fa:.t-food restaurant in
with a cutting edge high-tech way to get
The problem comes from your perception
Moscow.
·
• Sprinkle the sidewalk with empty sheU: j
casings.
·
:t
back at these pompous blowhards.
of ajJing as a linear process. At one point
Ten years ago: During the Gulf War, Army Sp~cialists Melissa
Let's say this guy buys a $10,000 top-of- many years ago,' you were at the peak of your
• Have a small headstone on your fran~ j
Rathbun-Nealy and David Lockett were captured 'by Iraqi forces
'the-line garden tractor with a double bagger abilities, and you've been depreciating ever lawn that sa¥s "for Sparky, with regret."
near the Kuwaiti-S~udi border; both were eventually released.Allled
and a hydraulic blade. In privacy, you go on since. That's becaus,e you think of yourself as '
Ready for lome football? · .
forces claimed victory against Iraqi attackers at Khafji, Saudi Arabia.
the Internet aod get all the information you ;. human being. · f 1
l \m a football fan.'I don't !Uve ;uty favorite'
Five years ago: In one of the worst attacks in Sd Lanka's civil war,
can on that p\IIticular make and ,model. Find
Instead, I suggest )'Pu think. of yourself as ream or even players.'! ~f\ioy the game an¢l
a truck packed with explosives ranuned into the central bank and
it
and
ask
if
anybody
has
the
chat
group
for
a
revene
insect. Y~ itart out as a beautiful good plays b:y either side..Mainly I watch tbe;l
exploded, killing 88 people and wounding 1,400 others ..the l~st
had any problems with theirs. Forward all the butterfly, Oying hiah, and doing all the things refS. These guys have !JO padding, they're;~
Cubans held in refugee camps at Guantanamo Bay Naval ,Base
responses to Mr. Smartypants. If you're not that beautiful buttetaies do, and then you never off the field, they run on every play.:
boatded a plane for Florida.
getting enough bad news, try starting an evolve into 'another form. Tell people you're and here's the best part: they're . about five
One year ago: An Alaska &amp;rlines jet plununeted into the Pacific
anonymous
rumor on the Web site bulletin not an old worn-out butterfly, you're a years older than me. I don't know how tha~~
Ocean, killing all 88 people aboard. Atlanta Braves pitcher John
board. Something like "I find my tractor brand-new caterpillar. It would be foolish to happens, but I'm really looking forward to it.: j
Rocker. was suspend~d by baseball commissioner Bud Selig for dis~
panging foreigners, homosexuals and minorities in a Sports IUusimpossible.to start, and it leaks oil and gas. It's continue trying t~ be a butterfly. Your job
Quote o;&gt;f the Day: "Live by the sword, diC:
trated interView. Pro Bowllinebac.ker Ray Lewis was charged with
also top-heavy and often tips over in the now i1 to be a ~at caterj&gt;illar. And that by the sword. Live by the disiillery, die by thC:!
murder in the deaths of two people outside an · Atlanta nightclub
wind. I'm worried ~bout my dog. Has any- bulge ~round yourmiddle is just the remains weekend."-- Red Green
.
:J
houn alter the Super Bowl. (Lewis ended his trial early by pleading
body else had problems?"
(Red Green is the star of "The Red Greentl
of your cocoon.
•
guilty to obstruction of justice; two codefendants were acquitted.)
You'll be amazed at how people will sud' ~8C:tWe U . . of JUDI
Show," o television seri&lt;J seen in the U.S. on PBS'~
••
Today's Birthdays: Actor john Agar is 80. Author Norman Mailer
'denly find things wrong with their tractor.
There's a lot of contTOVIiny about people and in Conada on the CBC Network, and thl!' •
is 78. Actress jean Sinunons is 72. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Ernie · lt'slike listing side effects on a medicine bot- owning guns, arl&lt;ll don't really want to get author of '"The Red Green Booi." ond "Rei i
'"'f '
Pj
Banks is 70. Composer Philip Glass is 64.
tle. Forward all those messages on to rour into .that, but l do feel there's an advabtage to Green Tal/es'Cars: A Love Story.")
!i

·,

Middleport Literary Club reviews book

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Profeaaor
of Family Medidne

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Advertlsl~g

..... 11.1001

amilp
edicine

'E.ItiiSilslid illl.M8

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Publisher

Page .AS

The Daily Sentinel

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Wher,t: Will Power Tumbling Gymnasium ',.
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$5.00 each session

Cost

!

•

Classes are taught by Will Power staff in conjunction wtth Dr.
Kelly Roush, Chiropractic and Sports.lnjury Physician ri Holzer
· Clinic. The classes will begin on Saturday, February 101h.
'

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_rh_e_D_ai..::..Iy_Se_n_tin_e_I____________

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992·2156 • Fax: 99;!·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Charlene Hoeflich
~aiManager

Larry Boyer
Director

Diana Kay Hill
Controller

Question: My annpits and groin
are "sticky" and red. They hurt, too.

'

I bathe regularly and use baby oil
on them, bur I am still unconlfort-

Lilkrlto til• Nilor tut w1ktNu. TheJ should be ~ss tiUJn 3tJO wonh. AU kn11n an Sll~l
to'edJJI,., •nd m1ul' 1M rigr~ed 1lffll inc:IINI1 IUidrru tutd ukphoM 11umbfr. No·u,slfnlld ktt11n wiU
h publbfred. IAttfrJ rhotdJ IH in tood uur~, llddnulrrt inu11J, IWf ~orudilier,
Tl•• op;nimu ex,tvuul ill 11111 colulflll below,,.. tiN t:OJISII11srtr o[th11 Ohio Y.uty PMbllrlli"'
Co. ' 1 HiloriiJ boGrrl, 11nlen Dlhtrwlsl ntKH.

able. My doctor doesn't have any
suggestions. What is causing 'this and
what can I do to clear it up?

L-

: Answer: Skin is the largest

· OUR VIEW

..

organ of the body and consequent-

Hurried
Clean air rnles demand swift
action from industry
.;

PERKINS' VIEW
American Electric Powers plans to introduce nitrogen oxide
emission reduction technology at two nearby West Virginia power
plants - the Mountaineer at New Haven and John Amos near
:Winfield - is good news for both the company and those folks
concerned about the environmental impact the facilities have hat!
on the region.
' Both will use the urea, or dry ammonia, process now being
installed at the Gavin Plant. Fears surrounding use of pure ammo~ia in the process have been calmed. The dialogue between AEP;
9avin and the Cheshire community, while contentious, produced a
)"Orkable solution over ammonia use that will be replicated at .
1',1ountaineer and John Amos.
; "It is unfortunate that federal regulations .do not allow time for
t)le development, commercialization and installation of il).novative
multi-pollutant emission reduction technologies," said John F. Norris, AEP's senior vice president of operations and technical services.
: "They have the potential to deliver superior environmental results
it a lower cost of compliance," he added .."Nonetheless,,we will continue to explore those new technologies as we work with the U.S.
£PA and our states to seek flexible implementation rules that might
ilelp us achi~ve those objectives."
' Norris is referring to the fact clean air regulations demand emission reduction by 2003. ln Gavin's case, selective catalytic reduction
Will' gn on liile by late spring . ., . .. .. . -· ... '"
• .... The deadline set has put on pressure that bears out Norris' contention that there isn't enough time to finp alternative means of cutting emissions.
We are all in favor of clean air, but we are led to wonder if the
rush to implement regulations has put the industry, which is 'trying
to comply, in a bind and missing out on improved technology.
When Gavin officials began planning to install SCR, urea was not
a proven "::ethod. But by December oflast year, additional usage had
proven it presented significantly less risk to the plant and nearby
communities than pure ammonia: This resulted in a revision of
G;lvih's plans and a' crunch in meeting the deadline. ,
Perhaps, this is the price that has to be paid for clean air at this
time, but one wonders if the government should have been more
willing for advancements in the technolog:y to take root at less cost
to the utility, and ultimately, to the consumer.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CalifOrnia has only itself ,to blame for dark ages.:
"
The dark ages have arrived in California .. r---::
•
And the state has only itself to blame because
lawmakers in Sacramento allowed state energy policy to be hijacked by special interests.
In 1996, the Oemocratic-controlled legislature' enacted a misnamed electricity "dereg··. :
.. . ,,•.
ulation" law that actually required the state's t..
' . ";'1
utilities to divest themselves of many of their 1!
'
. electricity-generating power plants.
'
\
y
They became, in.effect, 'energy brokers .buying electricity fi-9m out~of-state uti~ties
NE'A COLUMNIST
and selling it to California businesses and residences.
1
Until utilities' stranded costs were recov- than they are allowed to charge at the re~
ered - San Diego ·Gas &amp; Electric has done level.
'
'
this, and the state's other two major utilities
And even. with the retail price caps, Caliwould have recovered ·these costs sometime fornia businesses and residents paid $10.9 billater this year - price controls on the retail lion more for electricity last sununer than the
level .remained in place.Whathappened,.how- year before:And they face even higher energy
ever, ":~ .that wholesale. prtces skyro&lt;:)&lt;~~: .. , bills t\)iJ.)Le~r ~ ~.~ ... "·· .-.;.: .~ .• :;.
The utilincs h~d to pay higher pnces for efe~California's buck-passing Democratic govtnclly, but they c~uld not pass al9ng this ernor, Gray Davis, sa~ that our~cif-state utilimcrease to the states •.n.ergy consumers.
ties are responsible for Californifs electriCity
. Meanwhile, the utilines were forced to sell crisis. And his spokespeople suggest that the
off most of thetr power-generanng plants: The Bush administration is somehow obliged 'to
environmentalist left congratulated Itself bail out the Golden State.
because, th~ugh ~o-called deregulation, it
"Never again can we all.ii our-of-state
ma~ged to nd C~orrua of control of those profiteers . to hold Califor!lla ostage;• said
fosstl-fuel-consunun~ power plants. .
· Davis in his recent State of th tate speeeh.'
And th~ consum~mt left patted ttself on "Never again will we allow Ol!t-of-state genthe back because, under the gu1se of deregu- · t
t th t t. tu
ff ' lights 'th
d h
· Califc . , 1
eraors o reaen o rno our
WI
·
·
Ianon,
1t manage to em 111
orrua s e ec" th fli f h ·
·
h" ·
· ·
tricity re-sellers with government-mandated
eF dp 0 1t e1gulrsW!tc ·h
.. hi k d ( h . )
price controls.
e e.ra.. re ators ave · s r e
t e1r
So now the ill-conceived plan has come resp~l1Slbllity to protect ~tepayers from this ,
·
legalized h1ghway robbery, IIA·a!ided.
· home to roost.
California businesses and residences ' face
And with that, Califo;hia's governor
the omnipresent threat of "rolling blackquts" beseech~d the Bush adrninislf"tion to ?r4&lt;t
as electricity demand far exceeds available the Federal En~rgy RegulatQr'y Comnumon
supply.
to impose caps on wholesale electricity prices
California utilities are $11 billion in debt, in the West to compel those mean old out-ofteetering on the brink of bankruptcy as they state utilities to s~ll cheap energy to ,Califorare forced to pay twice as much (sometimes . nia utilities.
more) for electricity at the wholesale level
But the prevailing sentiment in Washing-

r,~
.....· ,
~·-·
...

~

.. _,_

Joser.h
PerKins

ton, both at the White House and on Capitol '
Hill, is that the onus is on California, not th~ ;
federal government, to work its way out of its•
electricity crisis.
·'
"It is not up to the federal government to '
bail out California for a series ·of bad decrc '
sions," said Sen. ·Frank Murkowski, the Alash '
Republican who chairs the Senate Energy·;
Committ~. He wants the state "to make .a;
good faith effort" to correCt the failings of ics , .
state energy policy before seeking federal aid,
Toward that end, Sacramento must make it-;
easier to build new electricity-generating J
plants in California so that the state can meet·
its !!OOwing demand for energy. Because the •
Democratic governor and· Democratic-con7 •
trolled legislature have been so beholden tq ,
environmentalists, no new power plants hav~ ,
been built ill California over the past 10 years, ·
·&lt;Weil.'31-eleclrieity dernand~hu· grovo\n•~
percent.
1:
. 'Tiien the state has to phase out its contro~l
-on retail electricity prices. As it is, even witn:
Pacific Gas &amp; Electric and Southern Califor~!
nia Edison staring at bankruptcy, the state willl
not allow the utilities to charge businesses
residences prices that' reflect the actual cost of
the energy consumed. .~
Z
Until California rolls back its dtaconiaql
environmental restrictions on construction ofi
electricity-generating plants, until Californi:t•
utilities are ,permitted to .charge their cus{j
tomers the market price for electricity, th&lt;;
White House and CongrC::ss shbuld remain ort
the sidelines. For by intervening now in Cal.&gt;!
ifornla's electricity crisis, the federal governl l
· ment would allow Davis and the Legislature~
to delay or altogether avoid the 1tructurai'
reforms in energy policy that' California mus(

make.

GREEN'S VIEW

Fonvard all responses to Mr. S.ml:zrtypants

1

.

•

skin is warm, wet and mildly irrita~­

ed. This is particularly a problem fot
those with diabetes . Do you have
diabetes?
Your do ctor can often diagnosis
a yeast infection simply by the
appearance of the rash, but at other
times a sample must be painlessly

underarm deodorant product is not

skin problem is a condition called

likely to be the cause.
· You report getting no relief with
the use of baby oil. This tells me

associated with allcrgies, particularly to the house dust mite. There is

that the condition is not the conse-

quence of dry skin. Actually, that
is,n't a surprise. Baby oil, petroleum
jelly, body lotion and similar products principally help hold extra
mOisture in the skin. They are very
helpful for .preventing dry skin at
dU.s time of year. However, the
undcrarrits and groin are areas of

the body that rarely become dry. So
all the baby oil has done is lubricate
'tbe skin so that it slides by with less
djsco~ort. It hasn't addressed the
ut~derlying disorder.
. · Unfortunately, I can't tell exacdy
'"!hat is causing your inflamed skin

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Ball
Association,
organizational
meeting, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.
at the Chester Firehouse.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 1 p.m Wednes·
day, home of Ada Titus, Water
St.. Syracuse.
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains VFW, Ladies AuxilIary, regular meeting, Thursday,
7 p.m. at the hall.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES; 7:30 p.m.
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Past Grand · Patron . Homer
Williams, merger and consolidation . committee, will speak.
Potluck dinner 6 p.m.; take cov·
ered dish.

ma in those with the disorder.
Since your family doctor wasn't
able to l,)~er you an exPlanation for

the cause of your discomfort - let
alone a satisfactory treatmet:at, I'd
suggest that you see a deriljatolo-

gist. I'm sure that your family doctor can rcco~cnd one jn your
area.

''Family- Medicine" is a wccldjt column. To sub~ it qutstions1 write to John
C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University Col·

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs PERl,
1 p.m. Friday, Meigs County
Multipurpose Senior · Center.
Representative of Meigs EMS to
speak. Lunch at noon.

are dvailable online til
"

LETART - Letart Township
trustees, Friday, 12 noon at the

legc of Osteopathic Mcdidnc, r:;ro1venor
Hall, Athcn•, Ohio 45701. Post

without examining you, but I can

columns

wwwjhrodio. org lfm.

ers at whatever station in life they were and
was more understanding of those who were
struggling. ·
Owen ended her review with a quote by
the author "Over the years I have come to
realize that those things we must do always
take precedence over those things we may
want to do. This time crunch is felt by all
folks who are passionate about their work.
While it may be true rhai: I live fa~ from
where I grew up, the things I learned there
still ·fund my every move."
Members answered roll call with an
Appalachian custom or phrase. Jeanne
Bowen was co-hostess. Next meeting will
be held Feb. 7 with Bernice Carpenter as
the reviewer.

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

also an incre:tsed incidence of asth-

give you a short list of possibilities.

· census, which listed two local counties of
. Martin and Magoffin as having the lowest
per capita income of any all-white population in the United States. Owen noted that
the author's father worked in the coal
mines and raised most of the family's food
on a couple of acres.Their home was without electricity or indoor plumbing during
most of her childhood.
The reviewer said the author of the book
credited her liard-working father and her
intelligent mother who read a lot for her
success. She said that "book-learning was
not very credible to most people on the
creek." She ·benefited from good teachers
who saw her potential and helped her find
a way to go to college. She said that when
she became a teacher she encouraged oth•

atopic dermatitis. This disorder is

office building.

er. Located. on Reibel Road,
Chester.

POMEROY- Area teens are
invitad to join the Friday's fun,
food and fellowship project at
God's Neighborhood Escape for
Teens. Nutritional meals are .provided free of charge while teens
are at the center. Teens can play
non-violent video games, com·
puler programs and board
games free of charge in the center's game room which is locat·
ed on Main Street in Pomeroy.
Pool tables are also available for
teens to us. God's NET opens at
6 p.m. and closes at 10:30 p.m.
on Friday and Saturday nights.
SATURDAY
RACINE- Soulhem Charge,
United Methodist Men, breakfast
at Bethany-Dorcas Church, Saturday, 8 a.m. All membar of the
community invited.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Lodge 411, Saturday,
7:30 p.m. at the Masonic Tam·
pia. Refreshments.

The Community Calendar 11
publlahed a1 a fl'll MrviCI to
non-profit groupe wlahlng to
announce mtlltlnga and 1pe-

clal eventl. The calender 11
not dealgned to promote
111M or fund I'IIMI'8 of any
type. ltema are printed only ••
ap- parmlta and ·cannot bl
guaranteecl to be printed a
apecHic number or claya. ,

All locations of

THE FARMERS BANK
will be clQsed between
lOam to 12pm

on
Thursday February 1, 2001
duetothefuneralof
Director Emeritus

Paul G. Eich

~

HOLZER
CIJ~IC

Get In &amp;hepe for Baseball, SOftball, Golf, Temlsl Football, soccer,

I

Improve your overall st"ength

I

• Improve your running speed

...•

•

.,:

Living Room Groups~······
Home Appliances ... ~.....
• Bedding Sets ......... ·•••••
ning Room Groups.......
Bedroom Suites ••••• ••• .... ••
Recliners •••••• ••••••• · ••••
Accessories ........... .

Volleyball, cross country

.,

tl

n, " ··

A yeast 'infection may be tbe cause
of your discomfort. Yeail - a type
of fungus - can thrive whcre the

ly, my dermatologist friends argue
that it is also the most important
one. Of course all organs are impor- scraped from the surface of the skin.
tant, but the skin does perform vital · The ~ample is then . treated with
j~bs in regulating the body temperpotassium hydroxide and subseature and protecting us from such quently studied ·under the microthings as chemicals, infectioUs scope for signs of this type of infecgerms (including viruses and bact.etion.
ria) and pansites. In short, the skin
Anod1er possible cause of your
does a good job of generally keepcondition is psoriasis. This condi11
ing the Stuff".on the imide on the
tion usually begins as an elbow r.tsh
ii\side :.md the ..stuff" on the outside
with heavy, silveor scales over a
out.
raised 'red base, but in my years of
- Si!1ce your condition produces
practice I've learned that not everythe same skin reaction at both the
one
reads the rule book before they
underarm and groin areas, it is reacon1e down with an illness. Occasonable to •ssume that both problems are caused by the .same disor- sionally, a person with psoriasis first
der. Cons~quendy; something sili&gt;- reports symptoms like yours .
ple like an allergic reaction to an . Another possible cause .for 'your

· :l

.

·'

MIDDLEPORT "Creeker - A
Woman's Journey" was reviewed by Sar;&gt;.
Owen at a recent meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held at the home of
Betsy Parsons.
Written by Linda DeRosier, it is an .
autobiography of her life, a humorous and
poignant memoir of coming of age in
Appalachia. DeRosier is now a professor of
psychology at Rocky Mountain College in
·Billings, Montana.
·
·
-In her review, Owen quoted the author
- "Mine was not the Kentucky of bluegrass, mint juleps and cotillions: the Kentucky of my youth was one of coal banks,
crawdads, and country music." She said the
standard of living in the mountains of eastern Kentucky was reflected in the 1960

ancll

Today is Wednosday, Jan. 31, the 31st day of 2001. There 'Ore 334
(Josepk Perkins is a columnisl for The San Diegd:1
days left in the year.
Union· Tiibune and con be reoched ot~
Today's Highlight in History:
joseph.perkinsuniontrib.com.)
::
On Jan. 31 ·, 1950, President Truman announced he hall ordered
••
••
development of the hydrogen bomb.
------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------~~---J.
.,
On this date:
:I
In 1606, Guy Fawkes, convicted for his part in the "Gunpowder
R~D
•I
• I .
Plot" against the English Parliament and Kirig James I, was exe.,ut••
ed.
•
••
In 1797, composer Franz Schubert was born in Vienna, Austria.
In 1865, Genet:al Robert E. Lee was named general-in-chief of
.,
all the Confederate armies.
.,
ln 1917, Germany served notice it was beginning a policy of
••
BY RED GRUN
pal.·Then for the crowni"li touch, #ter six making thieve.s think you have a gun in youtl l
unrestricted submarine warfare.
·
Have you ever noticed that some people months of product sabo~ge 'through rumor home. Even if you dop't. Here are a feW.
In 1934, President Franklin Roosevelt devalued the dollar in relafeel· a need to· show you how success- and innuendo, look up the make and model things you can do to make the bad guys:!'
really
tion to gold.
ful they are? Especiajly if they 'sense that you on e-bay and see how much the price has ' thihlc. they shoUld move on to a neighbor'S'
In 1944, duting World War ll, U.S. forces began invading kwamay be falling behind in that area,
·
dropped. Don't just forward that message to hquse:
.,
jalein'Atoll and other parts of the Japanese-held Marshall Islands: .
always
talking
I
know
a
guy
like
that.
He's
·
your
buddy.
Print
it
off
and
slip
it
into
a
sym• Hang a car engine from a tree in. you~ l
In 1949, the first TV daytime soap opera, "These Are My Chilnew
boat
or
showing
up
in
a
fancy
pathy
card.
•.
.
.
about
his
front
yard.
·
:I
dren;• was broadcast from the NBC station in Chicag6.
··
new
car
or
planning
an
exotic
vacation
Stop thinkinc
'• Have a welcome mat that says "God Ble~
In 1958, the United States entered the Space Age with its first
somewhere
for
himself
and
the
first
cheerLooking
at
old
plctul'f;s
of
younelf
can
be
the
NRA."
'
successful launch of a satellite into orbit, Elqllorer 1..
.
leader who answers the ad. These people are very depressing. The trim body, the clear
• Have an empty holster
dangling
, In 1971, astronauts Alan B. Shepard Jr., Edgar D.' Mitchell and
,
. .from ther
d
knb
always
hard
'to
avoid
and
impossible
to
even
the
complexion
.are
all
gone
now.
o,
o
r
o
.
.
·
,
eyes,
Stuart A. Roosa blasted off aboard Apollo 14 on a mission to the
ignore. And since physical assault is frowned The only smooth skin you have left is where
• Have a few powder burns around th.;
moon.
on
and
can
sometimes
backfire,
I've
come
up
·peephole.
·
'
your
hair
used
to
be.
.
In 1990, McDonald's Corp. opened its first fa:.t-food restaurant in
with a cutting edge high-tech way to get
The problem comes from your perception
Moscow.
·
• Sprinkle the sidewalk with empty sheU: j
casings.
·
:t
back at these pompous blowhards.
of ajJing as a linear process. At one point
Ten years ago: During the Gulf War, Army Sp~cialists Melissa
Let's say this guy buys a $10,000 top-of- many years ago,' you were at the peak of your
• Have a small headstone on your fran~ j
Rathbun-Nealy and David Lockett were captured 'by Iraqi forces
'the-line garden tractor with a double bagger abilities, and you've been depreciating ever lawn that sa¥s "for Sparky, with regret."
near the Kuwaiti-S~udi border; both were eventually released.Allled
and a hydraulic blade. In privacy, you go on since. That's becaus,e you think of yourself as '
Ready for lome football? · .
forces claimed victory against Iraqi attackers at Khafji, Saudi Arabia.
the Internet aod get all the information you ;. human being. · f 1
l \m a football fan.'I don't !Uve ;uty favorite'
Five years ago: In one of the worst attacks in Sd Lanka's civil war,
can on that p\IIticular make and ,model. Find
Instead, I suggest )'Pu think. of yourself as ream or even players.'! ~f\ioy the game an¢l
a truck packed with explosives ranuned into the central bank and
it
and
ask
if
anybody
has
the
chat
group
for
a
revene
insect. Y~ itart out as a beautiful good plays b:y either side..Mainly I watch tbe;l
exploded, killing 88 people and wounding 1,400 others ..the l~st
had any problems with theirs. Forward all the butterfly, Oying hiah, and doing all the things refS. These guys have !JO padding, they're;~
Cubans held in refugee camps at Guantanamo Bay Naval ,Base
responses to Mr. Smartypants. If you're not that beautiful buttetaies do, and then you never off the field, they run on every play.:
boatded a plane for Florida.
getting enough bad news, try starting an evolve into 'another form. Tell people you're and here's the best part: they're . about five
One year ago: An Alaska &amp;rlines jet plununeted into the Pacific
anonymous
rumor on the Web site bulletin not an old worn-out butterfly, you're a years older than me. I don't know how tha~~
Ocean, killing all 88 people aboard. Atlanta Braves pitcher John
board. Something like "I find my tractor brand-new caterpillar. It would be foolish to happens, but I'm really looking forward to it.: j
Rocker. was suspend~d by baseball commissioner Bud Selig for dis~
panging foreigners, homosexuals and minorities in a Sports IUusimpossible.to start, and it leaks oil and gas. It's continue trying t~ be a butterfly. Your job
Quote o;&gt;f the Day: "Live by the sword, diC:
trated interView. Pro Bowllinebac.ker Ray Lewis was charged with
also top-heavy and often tips over in the now i1 to be a ~at caterj&gt;illar. And that by the sword. Live by the disiillery, die by thC:!
murder in the deaths of two people outside an · Atlanta nightclub
wind. I'm worried ~bout my dog. Has any- bulge ~round yourmiddle is just the remains weekend."-- Red Green
.
:J
houn alter the Super Bowl. (Lewis ended his trial early by pleading
body else had problems?"
(Red Green is the star of "The Red Greentl
of your cocoon.
•
guilty to obstruction of justice; two codefendants were acquitted.)
You'll be amazed at how people will sud' ~8C:tWe U . . of JUDI
Show," o television seri&lt;J seen in the U.S. on PBS'~
••
Today's Birthdays: Actor john Agar is 80. Author Norman Mailer
'denly find things wrong with their tractor.
There's a lot of contTOVIiny about people and in Conada on the CBC Network, and thl!' •
is 78. Actress jean Sinunons is 72. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Ernie · lt'slike listing side effects on a medicine bot- owning guns, arl&lt;ll don't really want to get author of '"The Red Green Booi." ond "Rei i
'"'f '
Pj
Banks is 70. Composer Philip Glass is 64.
tle. Forward all those messages on to rour into .that, but l do feel there's an advabtage to Green Tal/es'Cars: A Love Story.")
!i

·,

Middleport Literary Club reviews book

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Profeaaor
of Family Medidne

R. Shawn Lewis
Managing Editor

Advertlsl~g

..... 11.1001

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Pege A e • The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednellday, January 31, ~1 :

The Daily S~ntinel

Inside:

••

Today~

Jerrv

Scortboard, Pagt 86

Page 81
WednHd.y, January 31,2001

ca

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops

· 481 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH

'W~.

992-2196

Ea·stern
··Easles·· -Bovs

1-877·322-6720
WNW.jerrybibbee.com

D~c.

29

Jan. s
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Jan. 16
Jan • .19 .
. Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
feb. 2
· feb. 3
feb. 9
feb. I o
feb. 13

Plus
Good Luck

This Season!
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, OH.

667-7388

Southern
··rornados·· - Bovs
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 12
Jan. 13 ·.
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
feb. 2
feb. 9
feb. 13

UINTON COUNTY
SOUTHERN
MEIGS
at Waterford
at Wahama
TRIMBLE
at· Miller
at Wellston
at South Gallia
fEDERAL. HOCKING
CHESAPEAKE
at· Southern
WAHAMA
at Meies

So.uth·ern
··rornados~ - Girls

1-800-200-4005

Good Luck To
All Area Teams!
We recogniZe your r
.· efforts to be the beat
. •yoli cen be, and wleh
· you
thle•
eaaaonl
1

'

the.,_

."""

Middleport

Ohio
uThe area~a beat ulec:tlon of
Athletic footwear"

219 N. Second Ave.
Middleport

IN GEL'S
ELECTRONICS
Radio Shack Deale,.

106 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-2635

Eastern
··Easles··- Girls

'.

Jan. 8

Jan .. 11
Jan... 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Jan. 29
JafJ. 31'
feb. I
feb. I
F.eb. 5
feb. 8

WATERfORD
at Trimble
at Mellis ..
·•
MILLER
at Fede:ral Hockina
SOUTH. GAL.L.IA
MEIGS
O.U.C. (Uarsit, OhiYJ
WAHAMA (Reserve on·lyJ
at. South Galli a
SOUTHERN
..! •.

~~·

Meiss
··Marauders••. BoYs
'

•

Meiss
"Marauders" • Girls
Jan. 6

8
)a'n. II
Jan. IS

at River UalleY
at Wellston
at BelPre
EASTERN

Jan. 18

NE~$0NUILL.E-VORK

~an.

..

. Crow's F,,a mily
Featuring
Kentucky
llrled ChlckeQ
.

228 Main St..
'

{

.

Pomeroy,. Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

,· 992-5432

'

Jan~ 25

Jan. 31
• . Feb. I
Feb. s
feb, 8 L. I

UI'N10N COUNTY
at Eastern
WATERFORD
TRIMBLE
at Alexander·.

.

•

...

SVMMS UALLEV
TRIMBLE
at Miller
WAHAMA
·•
at Federal Hockina
· ME·IGS ......
WATERFORD
at WeUa14an
at BeiPr*
,
at Eastern

,· ·~

Dec. 29-30
Dec. 29
Dec. 30
Jan. 3
Jan. 8
Jan. 13
Jan. I 'l
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 2l
Jan. 31
feb. 3
feb. l
feb. I 0
feb. 14
feb. I 'l
feb. 21
feb. 24
feb. 26
feb. 28
Mar. 5

169 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

Ohio

Belpre
Nelsonville· York
Alexander
Vinton County
Wellllton .

992-7028

Meigs

TYC

ALL

8-0 13·2
4-2 HI •
4-3 7 .a
3-4 4-10
2-8 6-8
1·7 1-13

at ASU fHolida, ClassicJ
Arizona State
Consolat.ion/ChamPionshiP
at Ball State
KEN·T STATE
MIAMI
at Central Michiaan
AKRON
NORTHERN ILLINOIS
at Buffalo
at Toledo
MARSHALL
BOWLING GREEN
EAST.ERN MICHIGAN
at Akron
at Marshall
BUFFALO .
at Kent State
CENTRAL MICHIGAN
at M.iaml · ·
MAC ChamP. fiSt RopndJ

JoN WILL

EAST MEIGS - Senior Chad Nelson
of E..tern lit up the nets for yet another
Eagle victory last night against South Gallia Rebels.
· The .Eagles greatest adversity on the
night was actually being able to play the
game.
The game, which was originally sched. uled to be at South Gallia, was not played
in Mercerville. A miscommunication sent

the Eagles to MErcerville, and the Rebels
traveled to Eastern.
The Eagles ended up returning to East.·
ern to play the game. The long bus trip did
not seem to faze the Eagles much as they
defeated the Rebels, 82•41.
Nelson opened ·things up for the Eagles
with a little kiss off the glass for the first
score of the evening. Shane Stevenson and
Josh Waugh gave the Rebels an early 4-2
lead.
The Rebels were able to retain their

lead throughout the remainder of the
quarter, and the Eagles trailed 16-15 going
into the second quarter.
Joe Brown returned to his usual form
Tuesday. Brown hit a shot from inside the
paint to give rhe Eagles the lead early in
the second. Brown was fouled on the next
trip up the floor, and hit 1-of-2 from the
line, which gave the Eagles a 2-point lead.
From then on, it was all Eastern.
Eastern opened up the flobdgates of
Shade River as they went on a 24-4 streak

that lasted the entire second quarter. The
Eagles built a defensive fortress in the
paint. The Rebels entrenched around the
defensive fortress, but only penetrated for
a quick four points in the second quarter.
Eastern continued its blitzkrieg of scot·
ing in the secoqd half. Eastern scored 22
points in the third quarter, and allowed the
Rebels only seven points. Combined, the
second and third quarter scores for the

TYC

tp
3rd Street, Racine

949-221 o .· ;.;:;J;
Syracuse

992-6333

Norris=
·Northu
D
•
···ln,c .
•

252 Upper River Ro:ad';::r:
Gallipolis, OH

"You'll Uke Our

Way

.

1

we

....,..._

Call Toll Free
1-800-521-0084

Turley nets
29 as Rio
tops Mt.
Vernon
Bv

SEOAL
HO

..

ALL

Warren
11·0 11-4
Logan .
10.1 11·3
Marietta
7-4 9-5
Athena
5-6 6-7
GaiDa Academy 5-6 7-8
River V&amp;lley
3-8 7-9
Point Pleuanl 3-8 3-12
Jaokeon
0·10 2·11
lUMiiiY'e G Marletta 63, ~allla ~Y 47
Athena 50, River Valley 33
Warren 55, Point PIU11r1137
··
FrlclaY'e.Gamel '
Jaoklon 81 Qallla Academy
Marietta at River Valley
Athena 81 Point PI-nt
Logan at Warr.n
lleluntey .. Gemee
· River Valley al Meigs
. Parkersburg at M-'Aihens 81 Neleonvllfe.York
Jackeon at Wheele~rg
·A rM non-taque
Boy1 ·

' Ohio Valley Chrilllan 10-4
Hannan
7·5
South GaHia
3·11
Wahama
2·11
Tueeday'e GaOhlo VdeyChrlatlan 73, Parkllf&amp;o
burg Chrl811an 42
·
Wood County Chrlatlan 56,
Wahama47
.
Eutem 82, South Gallla 41 ·
Frlclay'e Gamal
Ohio Valley Chrllllan at Wood
County Chriatlan
Parkersburg
Chrlatlan
at
Wahama
Hannan at Teaye Valley Chriatlan
South Gallla at ironton St, Joe
Saturday'• o.me
Hannan at Wlrt County
Glrll
TVC
Today'e Gamal
Meigs at Eaatem
Federal Hocking at Neleonvllfe..
Vorl&lt;
Southern at Weiiii!Oil
· Thul'tCIIY'I Gamet
Alexander at Trimble
Southema!Beklre
Ohio Valley Chrilllan at Eutem
Vlnlllrl County at F.ederal Hocking
Waterford at ~~
. Neleonvllfe..York at South GaiN a
Frlclay'l Glmet
Athena 81 Alexander
Belpre 81 Dublin Scioto
Mlllnport 81 Miller
SI!OAL '
Thullday'l Gamet
Gallla AOidemy at Jllcklon

CELEBRATE GOOD TIMES - Meigs players .and fans celebrate In
the waning moments of the Marauders 71-60 victory over Wellston

'

BY DAVE HARRII
. OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS All season
Meigshas played in spurts, playing well for a
while, then playing bad.'
Bur Tuesday evening the Marauders pur it
· all tOgether defeating Wellston by a convincing 71-60 score.
For the second game in a row the
Marauder fans were a big plus for Meigs,
and when the final buzzer sounded the
entire student section swarmed the floor in
celebration.
Meigs placed three players in double figures, led by Derrick Johnson's 21 in picking
up their first Wiri of the ·season.
On defense Meigs scrapped the entire
game, coming up with the loose. ball and
keeping the ball alive on the boards.
The twO reams traded buckers to start the
game, Nick: Bolin gave the Marauders a 1110 lead when he drained a ldng 3-pointer at
the 2:52 mark of the first period.
Bur the Rockets came back and took a
15-13 lead after the first period when Dusty
Fultz hit a three at the 48 second mark.

llllwday'a o.me
Athenl 81 Alexander

Southern·

tian 38

Buflalo at Hn~an, ppd. ·

Thullday'e Q 1,-..,
Ohio Valley Chrllllan 81 Eaelem
w.twna II Eutem

-=

Haman at
Vlll8y Chrlatlln
Neleonvllfe..
II South Gda
Prlcley'e ellaOhio Valley Chrlatlan 81 Wood

County Chrllllln
. Wlrl County 81 Hlnnan

'A Tel Thacker three to start the second
period gave the Rockets their biggest lead
of the night at 18-13. Bur the Marauders
caine back and tied the game at 18-all on a
three point play by J. P. Staats at· the 5:44
mark.
. Meigs took the a 20- 18 lead at the 5:38
mark when Johnson came up with a big
steal and lay-in. Wellston came back to tie
the game at 20-all on a bucket by Thacker.
The Marauders then built a 26-20 lead
when Bolin nailed another three with 3:35
left. But the Running Rockets battled· back
and pulled to within 30-29 when Brant
Derrow hit a pair of free throws with three
seconds left.
Wellston came our in the second half and
took a quick 36-32 lead when Fultz drained
a three, bur Meigs came right back .and
retook the lead when Johnson made another three off a Wellston turnover.
The Rockets rook a lead at the 3:27 mark
when Thacker made 1-of-2 from the line.
The Marauders tied the game at 41-all on a
Bolin bucket with 1:06 left. Derrow made a

pair from the line with 50 seconds after a
Meigs technical to give WeUston a 43-41
lead heading into the final period.
Meigs tied the score at 43 when Staats
scored on a tip at the 7:50 mark. Johnson
followed with another three and a pair of
Matt WillianlSon free throws put Meigs on
top 48-43 with 6:22 left.
But the Rockets climbed back into it
when Thacker nailed a three pointer and
was fouled. His free throw pulled the Rockets to within 48-47 with 5:44 left.
Meigs went otl an 8-2 run behind Staats
who scored six point in the run to take a
56-49 lead. Derrow hit one of two from the ·
line with 3:10 left to pull Wellston to within 56-51.
But two straight baskets by Johnson gave
Meigs a 60~51 lead with 1:40 left. Meigs
w:is able to hold the Rockets off the rest of
the way, making 12-of-19 free throws in the
fourth quarter to help the cause.
Staats !cored 11 · points in the period for
the Marauders and Johnson added 10.

,..... -

BY Icon W0111
0VP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Holding Southern to just six lirst .quarter ·
pointS, stare-ranked Belpre hammered out hard-fQught 55-49
win Tuesday night.
Home National Bank in
Racine sponsored the game,
bringing in the biggest crowd of
the year' and allowing fans a
chance at over $300 in prize
money.
Belpre (1~·2), rated ninth in
the Division III state · ranki
was ·c&lt;,ming otf an upset lois
against Hocking division foe
Waterford last friday.

a

j,

Melp. Pap 8J .

MARK WILUAMS
URG SID

MOUNT VERNON, OhioThe University of Rio Grand.e
Redwomcn basketball team
avenged an early season defeat tO:
Mount Vernon Nazarene Tuesday
night, downing the Cougars on:
their home court, 92-83.
Junior Renee · Turley torched
the Mount Vernon defense for 29
points.
Turley grabbed eight rebounds
and swiped two steals.
Emily Cooper added 23
points, including sinking 11of-1'2
,free
throws down
the stretch ro
cinch the victory.
The Hamilton,
Ohio
Turley
native dished
out six assists.
Mindy Pope posted 16 points and
15 rebounds.
.Karley Mohler hauled in eight
boards:
Rio Grande (17-9, AMC 8-5)
jumped out quickly en route to a
50-34 halftime lead.
MountVernon Nazarene (16-6,
AMC 7-5) was led by Angie
Trainer with 26 points.
LeAnn. Mallern ee added IS
points. Susan Ai:lams scored 14 off
the bench and Deanila Kilpatrick
chipped in 12.
Rio shot a blistering 52 percent
(33-of-64) from the floor and
dominated the glass (54-27) . .
Mount Vernon Nazarene was
'plagued by foul trouble as Kil~
patrick and Monica Mohler
fouled out.
The Redwomen have won four
straight games and host a tough
Seton Hill on Saturday. Game
time is set for 2 p.m. at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio is trying .to position itself
for a run at the NAIA National
Tournament. Their. final five
games of the regular season are at
home.

Dashin' for Cash

Bel~re

holas off

AIM non llague
1\leedly'e ca..
Wahama 52, Wood County Chri•

Tuesday night. It was the Marauders first win of the 200CJ.01 season. (Dave Harris photo)

M8ra,.ders capture first victory

RIWr Valley at MaMI!a
Point Pleaant at Athenl
W~all.ogan

·

Please see Eastem, Pap 86

ALL

Trimble
6-1 9·4
Ea81em
4-3 11·3
Southam
4-3 10.5
Waterford
3-4 · 6-8
Federal Hocking 2·5 6-7
Miller
2·5 6-9
llleldly'e Gemet ·
Meigs 71, Wellston 80
Ea81em 82, South Gallla 41
· Belpre 55, ~ern 49
. Neleonvflle· York 80, Federal
Hocking 46
'
Waterford 57. Alexander 54
Frlay'e GlmM .
Federal Hocking 81 Eaatem
Meigs at Vinton County
Southem 81 Waterford
Belpre at Alexander ·
Miller at Trimble
Wellston al Neleonvtlle-York
Sllturdly'e Gemee
Chesepeake at Ea81em
River lllllley at Melge
Athens at Neleonvllle-York

ALL

,.

BY

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Hocldng Dlvhtlon

446-0842 or
Toll-Free

.

··so beats••

Mon, Tuea, Wed, Frl 9-5

Thura 9-12, Sat 9·2:30

Jan. 6
Jan. 8
Jan. II
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
~ · Jan·. 22"·
Jan. 25
Jan. 31
feb. I
feb. 8

'

Dec. 29 at GalliPolis
Jan. 5
at Alexander
Jan. 9 · . at Eastern
.,_,a,n. 16 at Trimble
Jan. 19 BELPRE
Jan. 23 at Nelsonville-York
Jan. 2'l IRONTON
Jan. 30 WELLSTON
feb. 2
at Uinton CountY
feb.~
RIUER UALLEY
·feb. 6
at Waterford
feb. 9
AL.E,XANDER
feb. 13 EASTERN .

ALEXANDER
at Eastern
at Trimble
SYMMES ·UALLEY
MILLER
WAHAMA
fEDERAL. HOCKING
at South Gallia
BELPRE
at Waterford
EASTERN
at SYmmes UalleY

OhloDtvlllon

Eagles cruise.past South Gallia

TAMilNG

A STAND - SOuthern's Brandon Hill (10) defends against
Belpre's Kyle Hoi rt. (Scott Wolfe photo)
Southern

Cn

) came off a 12,
Nolan with 10.
weekend last week
Chad Hubbard led Southern
ad won three in a row.
with 13 points, Garret Kiser had
Belpre placed three players in 10, Brandon Hill eight and Jeredouble figures pace by Nick my fisher seven.
PI 171 - loutllam. .... IIJ
Morey with 14, Par Klein with

two-

�•

•

.."''•••...'

4 .,

. ....
~

.

.• '•
f

Pege A e • The Dally Sentinel

I

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Wednellday, January 31, ~1 :

The Daily S~ntinel

Inside:

••

Today~

Jerrv

Scortboard, Pagt 86

Page 81
WednHd.y, January 31,2001

ca

WEDNESDAY'S

HIGHLIGHTS
Prep Hoops

· 481 S. Third Ave.
Middleport, OH

'W~.

992-2196

Ea·stern
··Easles·· -Bovs

1-877·322-6720
WNW.jerrybibbee.com

D~c.

29

Jan. s
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Jan. 16
Jan • .19 .
. Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
feb. 2
· feb. 3
feb. 9
feb. I o
feb. 13

Plus
Good Luck

This Season!
St. Rt. 7
Tuppers Plains, OH.

667-7388

Southern
··rornados·· - Bovs
Dec. 29
Jan. 5
Jan. 12
Jan. 13 ·.
Jan. 19
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 30
feb. 2
feb. 9
feb. 13

UINTON COUNTY
SOUTHERN
MEIGS
at Waterford
at Wahama
TRIMBLE
at· Miller
at Wellston
at South Gallia
fEDERAL. HOCKING
CHESAPEAKE
at· Southern
WAHAMA
at Meies

So.uth·ern
··rornados~ - Girls

1-800-200-4005

Good Luck To
All Area Teams!
We recogniZe your r
.· efforts to be the beat
. •yoli cen be, and wleh
· you
thle•
eaaaonl
1

'

the.,_

."""

Middleport

Ohio
uThe area~a beat ulec:tlon of
Athletic footwear"

219 N. Second Ave.
Middleport

IN GEL'S
ELECTRONICS
Radio Shack Deale,.

106 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-2635

Eastern
··Easles··- Girls

'.

Jan. 8

Jan .. 11
Jan... 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Jan. 29
JafJ. 31'
feb. I
feb. I
F.eb. 5
feb. 8

WATERfORD
at Trimble
at Mellis ..
·•
MILLER
at Fede:ral Hockina
SOUTH. GAL.L.IA
MEIGS
O.U.C. (Uarsit, OhiYJ
WAHAMA (Reserve on·lyJ
at. South Galli a
SOUTHERN
..! •.

~~·

Meiss
··Marauders••. BoYs
'

•

Meiss
"Marauders" • Girls
Jan. 6

8
)a'n. II
Jan. IS

at River UalleY
at Wellston
at BelPre
EASTERN

Jan. 18

NE~$0NUILL.E-VORK

~an.

..

. Crow's F,,a mily
Featuring
Kentucky
llrled ChlckeQ
.

228 Main St..
'

{

.

Pomeroy,. Ohio
Drive-Thru Window

,· 992-5432

'

Jan~ 25

Jan. 31
• . Feb. I
Feb. s
feb, 8 L. I

UI'N10N COUNTY
at Eastern
WATERFORD
TRIMBLE
at Alexander·.

.

•

...

SVMMS UALLEV
TRIMBLE
at Miller
WAHAMA
·•
at Federal Hockina
· ME·IGS ......
WATERFORD
at WeUa14an
at BeiPr*
,
at Eastern

,· ·~

Dec. 29-30
Dec. 29
Dec. 30
Jan. 3
Jan. 8
Jan. 13
Jan. I 'l
Jan. 20
Jan. 23
Jan. 2l
Jan. 31
feb. 3
feb. l
feb. I 0
feb. 14
feb. I 'l
feb. 21
feb. 24
feb. 26
feb. 28
Mar. 5

169 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

Ohio

Belpre
Nelsonville· York
Alexander
Vinton County
Wellllton .

992-7028

Meigs

TYC

ALL

8-0 13·2
4-2 HI •
4-3 7 .a
3-4 4-10
2-8 6-8
1·7 1-13

at ASU fHolida, ClassicJ
Arizona State
Consolat.ion/ChamPionshiP
at Ball State
KEN·T STATE
MIAMI
at Central Michiaan
AKRON
NORTHERN ILLINOIS
at Buffalo
at Toledo
MARSHALL
BOWLING GREEN
EAST.ERN MICHIGAN
at Akron
at Marshall
BUFFALO .
at Kent State
CENTRAL MICHIGAN
at M.iaml · ·
MAC ChamP. fiSt RopndJ

JoN WILL

EAST MEIGS - Senior Chad Nelson
of E..tern lit up the nets for yet another
Eagle victory last night against South Gallia Rebels.
· The .Eagles greatest adversity on the
night was actually being able to play the
game.
The game, which was originally sched. uled to be at South Gallia, was not played
in Mercerville. A miscommunication sent

the Eagles to MErcerville, and the Rebels
traveled to Eastern.
The Eagles ended up returning to East.·
ern to play the game. The long bus trip did
not seem to faze the Eagles much as they
defeated the Rebels, 82•41.
Nelson opened ·things up for the Eagles
with a little kiss off the glass for the first
score of the evening. Shane Stevenson and
Josh Waugh gave the Rebels an early 4-2
lead.
The Rebels were able to retain their

lead throughout the remainder of the
quarter, and the Eagles trailed 16-15 going
into the second quarter.
Joe Brown returned to his usual form
Tuesday. Brown hit a shot from inside the
paint to give rhe Eagles the lead early in
the second. Brown was fouled on the next
trip up the floor, and hit 1-of-2 from the
line, which gave the Eagles a 2-point lead.
From then on, it was all Eastern.
Eastern opened up the flobdgates of
Shade River as they went on a 24-4 streak

that lasted the entire second quarter. The
Eagles built a defensive fortress in the
paint. The Rebels entrenched around the
defensive fortress, but only penetrated for
a quick four points in the second quarter.
Eastern continued its blitzkrieg of scot·
ing in the secoqd half. Eastern scored 22
points in the third quarter, and allowed the
Rebels only seven points. Combined, the
second and third quarter scores for the

TYC

tp
3rd Street, Racine

949-221 o .· ;.;:;J;
Syracuse

992-6333

Norris=
·Northu
D
•
···ln,c .
•

252 Upper River Ro:ad';::r:
Gallipolis, OH

"You'll Uke Our

Way

.

1

we

....,..._

Call Toll Free
1-800-521-0084

Turley nets
29 as Rio
tops Mt.
Vernon
Bv

SEOAL
HO

..

ALL

Warren
11·0 11-4
Logan .
10.1 11·3
Marietta
7-4 9-5
Athena
5-6 6-7
GaiDa Academy 5-6 7-8
River V&amp;lley
3-8 7-9
Point Pleuanl 3-8 3-12
Jaokeon
0·10 2·11
lUMiiiY'e G Marletta 63, ~allla ~Y 47
Athena 50, River Valley 33
Warren 55, Point PIU11r1137
··
FrlclaY'e.Gamel '
Jaoklon 81 Qallla Academy
Marietta at River Valley
Athena 81 Point PI-nt
Logan at Warr.n
lleluntey .. Gemee
· River Valley al Meigs
. Parkersburg at M-'Aihens 81 Neleonvllfe.York
Jackeon at Wheele~rg
·A rM non-taque
Boy1 ·

' Ohio Valley Chrilllan 10-4
Hannan
7·5
South GaHia
3·11
Wahama
2·11
Tueeday'e GaOhlo VdeyChrlatlan 73, Parkllf&amp;o
burg Chrl811an 42
·
Wood County Chrlatlan 56,
Wahama47
.
Eutem 82, South Gallla 41 ·
Frlclay'e Gamal
Ohio Valley Chrllllan at Wood
County Chriatlan
Parkersburg
Chrlatlan
at
Wahama
Hannan at Teaye Valley Chriatlan
South Gallla at ironton St, Joe
Saturday'• o.me
Hannan at Wlrt County
Glrll
TVC
Today'e Gamal
Meigs at Eaatem
Federal Hocking at Neleonvllfe..
Vorl&lt;
Southern at Weiiii!Oil
· Thul'tCIIY'I Gamet
Alexander at Trimble
Southema!Beklre
Ohio Valley Chrilllan at Eutem
Vlnlllrl County at F.ederal Hocking
Waterford at ~~
. Neleonvllfe..York at South GaiN a
Frlclay'l Glmet
Athena 81 Alexander
Belpre 81 Dublin Scioto
Mlllnport 81 Miller
SI!OAL '
Thullday'l Gamet
Gallla AOidemy at Jllcklon

CELEBRATE GOOD TIMES - Meigs players .and fans celebrate In
the waning moments of the Marauders 71-60 victory over Wellston

'

BY DAVE HARRII
. OVP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS All season
Meigshas played in spurts, playing well for a
while, then playing bad.'
Bur Tuesday evening the Marauders pur it
· all tOgether defeating Wellston by a convincing 71-60 score.
For the second game in a row the
Marauder fans were a big plus for Meigs,
and when the final buzzer sounded the
entire student section swarmed the floor in
celebration.
Meigs placed three players in double figures, led by Derrick Johnson's 21 in picking
up their first Wiri of the ·season.
On defense Meigs scrapped the entire
game, coming up with the loose. ball and
keeping the ball alive on the boards.
The twO reams traded buckers to start the
game, Nick: Bolin gave the Marauders a 1110 lead when he drained a ldng 3-pointer at
the 2:52 mark of the first period.
Bur the Rockets came back and took a
15-13 lead after the first period when Dusty
Fultz hit a three at the 48 second mark.

llllwday'a o.me
Athenl 81 Alexander

Southern·

tian 38

Buflalo at Hn~an, ppd. ·

Thullday'e Q 1,-..,
Ohio Valley Chrllllan 81 Eaelem
w.twna II Eutem

-=

Haman at
Vlll8y Chrlatlln
Neleonvllfe..
II South Gda
Prlcley'e ellaOhio Valley Chrlatlan 81 Wood

County Chrllllln
. Wlrl County 81 Hlnnan

'A Tel Thacker three to start the second
period gave the Rockets their biggest lead
of the night at 18-13. Bur the Marauders
caine back and tied the game at 18-all on a
three point play by J. P. Staats at· the 5:44
mark.
. Meigs took the a 20- 18 lead at the 5:38
mark when Johnson came up with a big
steal and lay-in. Wellston came back to tie
the game at 20-all on a bucket by Thacker.
The Marauders then built a 26-20 lead
when Bolin nailed another three with 3:35
left. But the Running Rockets battled· back
and pulled to within 30-29 when Brant
Derrow hit a pair of free throws with three
seconds left.
Wellston came our in the second half and
took a quick 36-32 lead when Fultz drained
a three, bur Meigs came right back .and
retook the lead when Johnson made another three off a Wellston turnover.
The Rockets rook a lead at the 3:27 mark
when Thacker made 1-of-2 from the line.
The Marauders tied the game at 41-all on a
Bolin bucket with 1:06 left. Derrow made a

pair from the line with 50 seconds after a
Meigs technical to give WeUston a 43-41
lead heading into the final period.
Meigs tied the score at 43 when Staats
scored on a tip at the 7:50 mark. Johnson
followed with another three and a pair of
Matt WillianlSon free throws put Meigs on
top 48-43 with 6:22 left.
But the Rockets climbed back into it
when Thacker nailed a three pointer and
was fouled. His free throw pulled the Rockets to within 48-47 with 5:44 left.
Meigs went otl an 8-2 run behind Staats
who scored six point in the run to take a
56-49 lead. Derrow hit one of two from the ·
line with 3:10 left to pull Wellston to within 56-51.
But two straight baskets by Johnson gave
Meigs a 60~51 lead with 1:40 left. Meigs
w:is able to hold the Rockets off the rest of
the way, making 12-of-19 free throws in the
fourth quarter to help the cause.
Staats !cored 11 · points in the period for
the Marauders and Johnson added 10.

,..... -

BY Icon W0111
0VP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Holding Southern to just six lirst .quarter ·
pointS, stare-ranked Belpre hammered out hard-fQught 55-49
win Tuesday night.
Home National Bank in
Racine sponsored the game,
bringing in the biggest crowd of
the year' and allowing fans a
chance at over $300 in prize
money.
Belpre (1~·2), rated ninth in
the Division III state · ranki
was ·c&lt;,ming otf an upset lois
against Hocking division foe
Waterford last friday.

a

j,

Melp. Pap 8J .

MARK WILUAMS
URG SID

MOUNT VERNON, OhioThe University of Rio Grand.e
Redwomcn basketball team
avenged an early season defeat tO:
Mount Vernon Nazarene Tuesday
night, downing the Cougars on:
their home court, 92-83.
Junior Renee · Turley torched
the Mount Vernon defense for 29
points.
Turley grabbed eight rebounds
and swiped two steals.
Emily Cooper added 23
points, including sinking 11of-1'2
,free
throws down
the stretch ro
cinch the victory.
The Hamilton,
Ohio
Turley
native dished
out six assists.
Mindy Pope posted 16 points and
15 rebounds.
.Karley Mohler hauled in eight
boards:
Rio Grande (17-9, AMC 8-5)
jumped out quickly en route to a
50-34 halftime lead.
MountVernon Nazarene (16-6,
AMC 7-5) was led by Angie
Trainer with 26 points.
LeAnn. Mallern ee added IS
points. Susan Ai:lams scored 14 off
the bench and Deanila Kilpatrick
chipped in 12.
Rio shot a blistering 52 percent
(33-of-64) from the floor and
dominated the glass (54-27) . .
Mount Vernon Nazarene was
'plagued by foul trouble as Kil~
patrick and Monica Mohler
fouled out.
The Redwomen have won four
straight games and host a tough
Seton Hill on Saturday. Game
time is set for 2 p.m. at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio is trying .to position itself
for a run at the NAIA National
Tournament. Their. final five
games of the regular season are at
home.

Dashin' for Cash

Bel~re

holas off

AIM non llague
1\leedly'e ca..
Wahama 52, Wood County Chri•

Tuesday night. It was the Marauders first win of the 200CJ.01 season. (Dave Harris photo)

M8ra,.ders capture first victory

RIWr Valley at MaMI!a
Point Pleaant at Athenl
W~all.ogan

·

Please see Eastem, Pap 86

ALL

Trimble
6-1 9·4
Ea81em
4-3 11·3
Southam
4-3 10.5
Waterford
3-4 · 6-8
Federal Hocking 2·5 6-7
Miller
2·5 6-9
llleldly'e Gemet ·
Meigs 71, Wellston 80
Ea81em 82, South Gallla 41
· Belpre 55, ~ern 49
. Neleonvflle· York 80, Federal
Hocking 46
'
Waterford 57. Alexander 54
Frlay'e GlmM .
Federal Hocking 81 Eaatem
Meigs at Vinton County
Southem 81 Waterford
Belpre at Alexander ·
Miller at Trimble
Wellston al Neleonvtlle-York
Sllturdly'e Gemee
Chesepeake at Ea81em
River lllllley at Melge
Athens at Neleonvllle-York

ALL

,.

BY

OVP CORRESPONDENT

Hocldng Dlvhtlon

446-0842 or
Toll-Free

.

··so beats••

Mon, Tuea, Wed, Frl 9-5

Thura 9-12, Sat 9·2:30

Jan. 6
Jan. 8
Jan. II
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
~ · Jan·. 22"·
Jan. 25
Jan. 31
feb. I
feb. 8

'

Dec. 29 at GalliPolis
Jan. 5
at Alexander
Jan. 9 · . at Eastern
.,_,a,n. 16 at Trimble
Jan. 19 BELPRE
Jan. 23 at Nelsonville-York
Jan. 2'l IRONTON
Jan. 30 WELLSTON
feb. 2
at Uinton CountY
feb.~
RIUER UALLEY
·feb. 6
at Waterford
feb. 9
AL.E,XANDER
feb. 13 EASTERN .

ALEXANDER
at Eastern
at Trimble
SYMMES ·UALLEY
MILLER
WAHAMA
fEDERAL. HOCKING
at South Gallia
BELPRE
at Waterford
EASTERN
at SYmmes UalleY

OhloDtvlllon

Eagles cruise.past South Gallia

TAMilNG

A STAND - SOuthern's Brandon Hill (10) defends against
Belpre's Kyle Hoi rt. (Scott Wolfe photo)
Southern

Cn

) came off a 12,
Nolan with 10.
weekend last week
Chad Hubbard led Southern
ad won three in a row.
with 13 points, Garret Kiser had
Belpre placed three players in 10, Brandon Hill eight and Jeredouble figures pace by Nick my fisher seven.
PI 171 - loutllam. .... IIJ
Morey with 14, Par Klein with

two-

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Pllge I 2 • The Dilly Sentinel

.: ;Publla Notloe

Publlo Notloe

L

~~~e..-auLI

MAL UTATE
lflt,u NUIIIIEIIIICV111

•

:ten~&lt; OM

M.A. 1kl lanl&lt;
OM Wts'IMI .. N.A.

.........

&lt;C/o- One 1.-.
•
PLAINTIFF
110

Help Wanted

110

Waned
Homo &amp; Garuon Party Deslgnefs
Hand Made Pottlry; Umque Ac
eeuorle&amp; CRIU Garden

1101 WEEKLY OUAftlNTilD

WO~K NCI FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PER ENCE ~E
OU RED 800 748 17 8 Ex
' 01
1121 WEEKLY Mlkt Monay

Wlllfl DlliOM&lt; Qua

men Aeunds FeeOea a 24

ICO Cltd mttiiQI

44~5E•

ty

440

VI
Cora liM lmlth 1111

540 Mlscellaneoue
Merchandise

Apartmenll
lor Rent

DEFENDANTS
COURT 01' COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNl'( 01110

Pictures

No Dtlivtr't No nveoiOry No
Quotas Se Youf OWn Hout1
Htgh Commission Ask About
Your Po en Ia ly Free Starte K
PUIS Added Bonus Ca Fo 0e

Ht p ng Ptop t Fltte vt Gove n
h

320 Mobile Hornet
lor Sale

Help Wanted

18 I 740)888 999
939

800

5700

II\ pu,.uance ol 1n Order
of Sale to me dlractod from
aal~ Court In 1ht ebove
on1111td ac11on 1 wtll
oxpo11 to •••• at public
auction It the Courthouaa
on March g 2001 at 10 oo
a m ol nld day the
1ollowlng d11crlbed re11

740 3

......

81tultld In the VIllage or
Pomeroy County ol Melga
anct ltate ol Ohio boundld
and.-..bld aalol owa
Iaing 1111y (50) lilt
broadby One hundrld (100)
IHI dror, oil ol the South
tide of ot number (10) In
Nlll!lare Run Addition 1o 1111
aali VIllage of Pomeroy
Ohio . . thatllmt more or
1111 but aubloot to all legal
hiG.....ya
Prior
lnatrument
rolerencee Volume 311
PtQIIS03
Property addreu 3
flaher Street Pomeroy
Ohlg4571t
Apprallld II $10 000 00

MJNOliNCEMENTS

005

Pereonele
ABSOLUTELY FREE NFO
nterna User&amp; Wanted
$2001).$!1000/mo

www

•commblz,..

FREE OEBT CONSOL OAT ON

App ca o w se
paymen s 0

340 Bualneas ar\d

ce Reduce

65~

Buildings

CASH N

CENT VE
www deb c so g Ca

Ta a Townhouse Apa men s

Ve 'J Spa&lt;J ous 2 Bed oome 2
FoorsCA
2BahFuyca
pe ed Adu Poo a Baby Poo
Pa o S a S36S Mo No Pe s

OFFER

soo ;328

85 O.K 29

•

Lla&amp;t P Ul Stcuflty Oepo' At
qu ed

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV ISS 1

DayS

40

448-00

No Fee Unless We W n

BH-582 3345
Twin R verTowers now accep ng

••

Cu YOUR Groc.ry B 1 20 30 40
Even 50% ra E11y To F nd Out

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
0 n Ha e Land? We Do Hu !)'
On~
Loll Lift 304 736-7295

How Send Name Add eu To
C-J Ente priHI PO Box 60 Gal

ipoja

o

ono~a

360

Now To 'ltKJ Till ~ Sl1oppo
9Wia s lmlon Alhtlll
7&lt;10-582 142

Qua y co h no.and houuho d
ama $ co baa 11 • • • 'I
Thu lday Mond~Y th U: Sa urday
9 00.8 30

Havo Loin NH&lt;I Ste UOid Home
n Country On

All roalntale odver1111ng n
thll newapape It eubject to
tho Fednl Fair Houllng Act
ot Hlwlllchm-~ logal
o adYenlle any plfllera
Imitation or dlacrlmlnatlon
baMd on race colO religiOn
sex tam Ia 8tlluS or national
origin O&lt;lrty 10
"""" lrty ouch

40 992

Btl Bonded P oflu ona Re

70

Repa ed New &amp; Reb In S ock
Col Ron E a s ~OQ-537 9529

For Leaae

Few Ropalrs 7&lt;0)4-46-23 1

RENTALS

Po~
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Buemenr 11 • Feb uary 3 a
9am 2pm F om Rae ne CA 28
jus be o 1 Baehan G.• ne Rd
111f houll Bib)' . . . ap~rlmln

No EastCou
No touc11 olgh

75'11 drop/hook
800 200 2623 Accep ng ANY

wtahe COftlPull dllk compute
prlmor lOti oll&gt;lrgollll

yea tractora

60

needa I'll p w h Ma o de E
comm1 c1 $500 $7000 mo PT
FT om home Fu an no Free

NTERNAT ONAL

Auction
and Flea Market

book e

COMPANY

210

Bualneae
Opportunity

Stparltl -ltd BIDS lor
the OOOT Water Llno
Aelocauana DMtlon A 1
ATII 33 4a 811 In Melge
County Ohio will be
received by thl Tuppere
Plalna c;haater Wallr
Dla1rlct 38!181 lor 30 Road
Andovllle Ohio 45772
until 1a 00 a m local time
February 20 2001 and then
at aald office publicly
opanld and road llaud
Work under thla proloot
lncludea lnallllatlon of 1 5
mllea of eight Inch and
thro..lnoh potable water
INIIn camplate with vtlvea
hydranu
urvlce
connection•
and
mi001II01110UI
------,.--·

,..r.""'"'

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e

W HCHANDISE

510

North

llllrMelyal8tH

IOh llaltd propOIII
envelope mutt lndloa1e 11M
11Ua 01 tiM projaqt and tiM
bidder a name and lddreea
Each lldder muol lnaure
thai all employ••• and
epplloantl lor employment
are not dlecrlmlnatod
agalnet becau11 of race
color religion ... or
nltlonal origin
Tho Contractor ehall pay
wagee to aach laborer and
machenlc a1 a rate nct leaa
than the min mum wagaa
epeollltd In the current
wage determination ••
publlahld by tho Stale or
Ohio
Bureau
of
Employment larvtoea
The Owner re11rv11 1ho
rtght to aocept or rtjoot eny
or all prapaaalo to waive
any lrregularltl.. or
lniOmNIIIUH In tho blddlllll
and 10 enter lnlo a oontnot
with the bidder who In 11a
conolderallon ollara 1hll
loWell end bHl propo1111
ly order of the TUppere
Plalna Cheater Water
Dll1rlct Board ol Dfreotore

Broad S1reet Lanoaater
Ohlo43130
lulldare Exchange/~ W
Dodge Aeporta 1175 Dublin
Road Columbua Ohio
43215
f W Dodge Report• 2
Playoro Club Drive
WV25311
Coplel of the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS may be
obtained at the olllce of
81ECO Ina 1a8 Horth
8r011d &amp;trill ~ 0 lox 807
Lanoaater Ohio 4313a
upon payment of 1150 tor
..ah Ill none of which Ia
relundabll Make ohtcka
payable to 81ECO lno
Each propoael ahell be
algned by lhllu I name and
buelneea eddreu of aach

c-

erlon

r.nterea11d

or

comp•ny

In 1~e aame
ehall be aooompanlld bY, a
eurety bond by a bond ng
company authorlzld to do
bualneaa In tho Slate of
Ohio or by oe1'11flld check
oaehler 1 ohack or letter of
oredl1 from eome eolvent
bank The bid guaranty
bond ahall be 1ar the lull
amount of the bid and 11M (1) 31
oertlllad oheok caahler a 11c
ohack or leHer of credit
ehall bl equal to 1a percent
Public Notice
(10%) of the amoun1 ol 11M
aubml1tld propoaal The
ORDINANCE NO 111
An ORDINANCI! to maka
eure1y bond certified
appraprlat1an1 lor Current
ltHer 111
ouhler
oredlta check
ehall be
or Expenaea and o1her
payable to tha Tuppera Expenditure• of tho VIIIIISII
Plalna Ch,ater Water of Pomeroy Stall of Ohio
Dlatrlct ae 1 gaurantH 1hal during the llaoal yaer
lithe propoullt a_,ted ending December 31 2001
-on1 IE
IT
a contract w II be entered
Into and Ita perlarmanoe RESOLVED by the Council
properly aocurad by 1 of tho Vlll•g• ol Pomeroy
eatltfactary bond In 1ho State of Ohio 1hlt to
emount of one hundred provide lor th~ current
percent (1 aa%) ol the expen~~a and other llacal
contract prloa
All yeor ending Daoamblr 31
provlalona of the Ohio 21101 lltlollowlng aumo bl
Aevlaed Coda •• It relttll and ttley are hereby all
to
bid guarant111 aeldt and approprtalld aa
conditione llabllltl.. and lollowa viii
Sac11an 2 That there will
withdrawal ol 1 bid' atuoll bl
adherld to by 1ht be appraprlatod from 1hl
Contractor No bidder .,.y GENERAL FUND
PROGRAM I SECURITY
withdraw hla propoaal
PI!ASONS
AND
wl1hln al)lly (80) deya afllr OF
the actual dati ol 1ht PAOPEIIT\(
PollOI Law Enforcement
Help Wamed

Work to Pay
olf Holiday &amp;ills?

Mob e Home Supp y 740 441!1
lM www OfVb comlbenntn

Houllhold
Goode

110

temporary workers to
flU thr.Q Shilts dally
Casual environment
hands on training
excellent benefits &amp;

For we eetabl shed
Local Co

look ng lor extra
money P ck up lhe
phona now to set up
you r Personal
lntarvlew
We are waiting to hire

• Musl have good
Commun cat on sk Us
• Must have good

d v ng record &amp; P ovlde
own transportation
• Must have abl 1y 1o
be a TEAM playa

""-9""&amp; 53
1-..
_ . . ...,. 7
Te oservlces

825ThlrdAvenue
Gall polls Oh o 45631

CALL TODAY.

...

SERVING THE

TRI COUNTY AREA

Send Resume 10
Gal pollsDalyT bune
AE Adverts ng
Sales Rep

VOUI

RESIDENT AL HOME OWNERS

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

310 Homes lor Sal a
$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FOREC OSURES HUD
VA FHA LOW OR NO MONEY
DOWN OK CFIED T FOR L ST
NGs CA
800 339 0020 a•

Clv o Davlloprilent
G oup/mllonnum

New &amp; Used Fu nl u e
New 2 Pit e
ngroom Su es

1ume to De y Sent nt PO BoK
729-1111 l'rlcr4roy on 48789

$399 Buy Sal T!ade

570

Musical
lnatrumante

710

Autoe for Sale

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

61.0 F11rm Equipment
NH 4 5 D sc 9 ne Uaecl Leu
han 200 Ac 11 S 000
3.04),37 3435 Cays 304 562
.57.47 -=:ven1ngs
995 Chevy Du y 4114 Loaded
Cond I on S 3 000

E.liCI en

EXCELLENT OPPOIITUNIT E8

790

7ol0)2-

AVAII.AII.E NOW1

Campers &amp;
Motor Home•

Eom 111&gt; To I?IH• And
WeNif8onUMI

• $2200

•Fun Btneft •
•Wiele~ PaycMdc

$451).$ 000 WEEKLY Ma Nng t
e 1 t om oome No ••P!Iflnce
nec1111 'I FT PT HI p nttdtd
mmedia II)' C1 I Sundenoe D 1
bUIO I
100 lit 3&lt;148 EX

TENSION 22 (24hto)

AI Ploplt Worlc lrom hOmo FuH
T I n 'ng, F II VICI ona PIT

·---...,,~
18000
111C&gt;C11N1&lt; 1-107 61 M
APPL CATION AND EXAM N
FO"MATIO!I l'ol 1 Jobs
• 115 ~
I ~·· 721 1013
xl101 r-7pm CIT
AIHMiiLY AT IIOMIU C lhl
Toy• Jowttry Wood lowrng
~ .. ,OfNI

:,cHVICES

•Pild V-=-tton
•Holiday....,

•RttlromtntPian

810

•Profolllooal A1cn0aplltr1
CIH

lnloCIIIoniiO-nt
C-11on
TODAY l'or An l -

Home
lmprov1menta
IAIIIIENT
WATIAPI'IOOF1NQ

Uncond ona

lolllo4711o722111L 1101

tltmt gu• an 11

Looa 1 1 enc11 u nlahtd E1
Ill! llhtd 971 C1 24 Hrs 7.0
446 0810 800 287 0178 ~og
'" WOttrprooflng

Pay CALL I 100

1ii-01101r!HOI (-)
Alln11on- Wllfll l'nlcn Hom1 Up
to lit tTJih I'T n ln11 nov
1111 OoiW Ml . . II I
DIWHICCI iAUIIcom

AniNTION OWN a oompu1tt'!
Work from h - M1 I a d1 I
~- IIOG0-17000 ,T'f
, . . lnhlrMMion www llrldral
........ 0010

IIU.

,~...

100 141

Al1tnt Oft Work Prom Hollie
1100- tiiOO Mo ,, 1 T ''"
tiOOO )7100 + Mo Pol T mt
1'1111 'JaQa1101 .. (tN)U2-710

ldTN

-.ov fooolll IIOIIIOnt

~

ctrrltrll 10r1111 No axp

reqillrod lolltft11 l'o ..... ••

ary and 1H11ng Into m11 on

01

· · 11143 l1d 716 ..... .,.,
7dlr;l.

IIAUT 'UL A,AIITIIINTI AT
IUOOIT Pll Cll AT JACK
ION IITATII 82 Wts wood
D 1\'0 om Ull o 1370 Wlk o
shop &amp; mov tl C1 740 441
2!88 Equll Housing Oppo&lt;1CI11ty

-

I 111\N'oi'Clf!TII T Ifni

AKC ma 1 Pomt an an td 7
montt11 S 50 740-948 2413

Southem
fromPapBI
Hungry for the v n Belpre set
the early ten po star ng w th a 3
po
goal by Kyle Holbert to
open the gan e Na e Martin Ia d
n a tw st ng dr ve fo a 3 2 tal y
but N ck Morey went back door
for a 5 2 Belpre advant&gt;ge
Garret Kiser the 1 sa v dayl ght
and z pped a short u nper for a
5 4 score but that was as close as
Southern came
In a game that Southern never
led both teams played tourna
ment style basketball Most of the
game w.1s deliberate pushed that
way by Southern s offens ve
scheme and tenac ous defense
Southern became a I ttle
overzealous n the latter moments
of the first per od taking hast}\
II adv sed shots Belpre cap tal
zed and zoomed to the 13 6
advantage
The rest of the way Southern
outscored Belpre 43 42 South
ern cut the lead to four n the

21 a Paraonal Strvloea
211 Salarln/ wag11
$215 OCIO oo 212 Employll
lenellll 88 ooo oo 240
Suppllll end Materlala
40 OCIO 00 Total Pollee Law
EniOICimtnl 1323.000 oo
B - Ugl1tlng
240 luppiiH &amp; Ma18rlala
$23 ooo oo Total street
Llahllng U3 OCIO oo
tot.l Program I Bacurlty
or Ptr~ona and Property
$348 000 00
PROGRAM V BASIC
UTIUTY SERVICES
llactrto UUIIty
240 Suppll.. and
Materlalt $4 300 00 Tot.l
Electrto Utility $4.300 00
Gu Utility
240 Suppllaa and
Mttorlala $3 000 00 Total
Gao U111~ 13,0CIO oo Total
Program v Baelo Utility
s.m- 17 300 oo
PROGRAM
VII
GENERAL GOVERNMENT
Mayor and Admlnletre11ve
Olftoea
210 Paraonal 8orvlo11
211 Salarloe
Wag..,

Bonelltt 17 750 00 220
~~~~~~~~T~~~~~~~~~~;::~~~~~=~~~:;:=~=;==~I20
000 00 Trtlltpor11111on
212 EmployH
Travel
~

&amp; 1!0%

mtehllnlc lor lOci dealefsh p pay
baud on axpa ance send e

Th s s a great WID for the
kids Marauder coach Carl Wolfe
sa d after the game We could see
they were getang better the last
few games But to come out and
score 71 po niS and shoot the ball
they way they did showed how
far they have come I m really
happy for the semors they have
played hard and they deserve t
Johnson led all scorers With 21
po nts S aats added 19 to go
along w th 12 rebounds N ck

Public Notice

•

-'
sanIOr~ or anyone

..............

2

ALL STEEL BU LD NGB -

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

up
oSO%o Peengntttdw h
p ana •o.:eox o wa• e eoo
now Sii&amp;O &amp;01t OOx 41 waa
135 aoo now s 1 ~ 10•12b 4
Wll $1 100 now 134 000 .IOQ-

s

CU.SSIFIEDSI

$400 oo 240 Suppllll and

Materlale $14 :!GO oo TIK
Aelunde 15 000.00 Total
Mayor and AdmlnlotraUve
Ollie• $17 3150 00
Leglalatlve Aotlvltlta
(Council)
21 o Peraonal Sorvlcae
211 Salarlll
Wagea
15 450 00
Benell1a
15150 00 Total Leglola11ve
Aotlvltt.. $11.000.00
Mayor a Court
230 Con1nlotual Strvloee
II 000 00 Total Mayoro
CCHirl $II 000 00
Clerk Trlleurer
210 Poraonal aervlo••
211 lllarlll/ Wagoa $111100
212 lenelltl 11 450 oa
Tiltal Clark Tr..aurer
$11150 00
Landa and llllldlnge
210 Debt Servloaa
$12,500 00 Total Landa and
lulldlnga, $12,1100 00
Board a IIIII Commlatlona
County Auditor •
a
TrHaurer o , _ 13 000 00
Tiltal County AuditOr e lc
Treaaurer al'-113 000 00
IOIIaltor
230 Contraotuel larvtoea
$4 1100 00 Ta1al lolloltor
$41100.00
Other
Ganer•l
Governmtlll
230 Cantreotu•l 1erv101a
(PrtaoMra) II 000 00 TDIIII
Other General Govemm•nt
p,ooo 00
Tiltal Program VII
Ganar•l Government
$487 100.00
Othlr U- ol ~unda
a7 1
T ranat«a
8111 000 00 Total Other
u - of !'uncle $111 OCIO oo
lactlon :t Thet lhlre bl
appropriated tram tha
GINIRAL ~UND
lor
oontlngenoiH lor purpoua
not o1herwiH pnwldld lor
to ba upended In
aooordanoe with the
provlalona of Station
570140 A C the tum of
GRAND TOTAL GINIRAL
~UN D
APPAOPRIA110N
..12,100 00
lootlon 4 That thlfl bl
tpproprlatad !rom tht
following
IPICIAL
AIVI!NUE I'UNDI ltrlll

2-4e-1111&lt;0

1

Bol n added 16
Me1gs hit 24-of. 52 from the
floor ncluding 4-of. 9 from 3
po nt range Me1gs h11 ].9 of. 33
free throws
The
Marauders
had
30
rebounds w th Suats grabb ng 12
and Bolin s x Josh had three of
the Marauders e ght steals and
Buzzy Fackler had five of his
team s e gh ass sts
Thacker had 14 po nts to lead
Wellston Derrow and Jo~h DaVI
ch pped n w th II each and
Fultz added I 0
Wellston h t 22 of. 62 from the
floor nclud ng 6 of. 17 3 po nt
ers The Rockets were II of. 20

from the line
Wellston pulled down 37
rebounds w rh DaVIS grabb ng
rune and they turned the ball over
15 runes
The Marauder JUniOr vars ty
ream also p1cked up IS first Win
of the season With a 55 45 wm
Ryan Hannan led the way w th
15 Dan el Lambert added 12 and
Bubby Haye I 0 TraVIs Downard
led Wellston w rh I 0
Me gs (I 14 TVC 1 7) w II
travel to V nron County on F11
day
Wellston (6 7 TVC 2 5) ravel
to Nelsonville York

second per od bu two turnove
and two hasty shots were co
ver ed o Belp e scores and a 19
9 tally
Southern fought back bur Be)
pre aanaged to coast to the ?2
15 haifa e lead
I the second half Southern
cut the lead to 24 21 on consec
ut ve dr ves by Mart n and Hub
bard then Southern can e back
to ?7 24 on a Chad Hubbard
steal and lay n Each t me Belp e
ans vered and Southern lost t
n on entum as the Eagles aga n
crept to a 10 po n advantagt'
At the end of th ee per ods
Jason Eakle and N ck Morey led
Belpre to a 37 28 lead w th five
and four po nts respecavely
In the final quarter Belpre once
led 49 28 IS b ggt'st lead but
Southern wasn t dead yet Chad
Hubbard hit a 3 pomter after a
Brandon Hill two then Jonathan
Evans na1led a trey to cut the lead
to 49 42
As arne sl pped away Garret
Kiser made t 49 47 With JUSt
over a rrunute left but Pat Kle n
answered w th a 2 pomter from

the pa nt to make the score 51 47
Belpre
A pa r of Kle
free
throws pushed the score to 53
47
Kle n grabbed a s eal fo Bel
pre last sco e and Bra do n H II
h a basd ne d ve v t five sec
onds lefl as Belpre cia med the
huge
n
Sou the h '0 of ) 7 fi on the
field vas 4 for 15 fron
hree
pom ange and h t 5 of. 7 a the
ne Sou he n had ?4 ebounds
(F she 6 H II 6 Kise 7) had five
aSSIS s (Evans 4) 12 tu novers 11
teals (Ki er 3) and 13 fouls
Be p e h t 19 of. 43 overall hit
5 of. 17 treys and was 2 for 18
at the I ne
Belpre had 31
rebounds ( Morey 8 Nolan 8)
had s x ass siS 15 turnovers n ne
steals and 15 fouls
Belpre won the reserve game
67 46 led by Bryan Adams w th
14 and Justm Cline With nne
Southern wa led by Jordan Hill
WI h 15 and Justin &lt;::onnolly wtth

Halp Wllnted

Our office Is currently
seeking 1/1 p/1 and

REAL ESTATE

98

Meigs

1111mettd

N~

OnVny Sk ng Coos Wnd
OW&amp; AnchO s Wa a Hill I 6
Pumbno &amp; Eec Cl Pa 1 Fu
nacas &amp; Hea PUmps Benne a

Tappan l"t El c en y 90 ~ Gat
Fu naces 0 Fu na aa 2 Sea
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng.
Sys ems F ee e Yea Wa an y
Benne a Hea no &amp; Coo ng
800.872 59e7 www o vb COmlbtll

pt110n

'I'Upptl'l Pllln..Chlater
-er Dlatrlct
311581 Bar 30 AOIICI
R-1111 Ohio 45772

Cjlmmunlty end ,..,..,.,.1 akllll to •n Individual with
mental retardation Aoqulremento High echool
dlplomaJQED valid drtwr a lloen• 1hrt1 yore good
driving axperleno• and odequa1e automobile
lnau,.nce coverage Starting Ciliary 18.00/h• Send
reaumo to auotceya community S.rvlcea P 0 Box
JM14 Jeokton 011 45840 Doadllna lor appllcanta
2/1101 pleaae epaclfy poaltlon of lntereat Equal
Qpportunlty Employar

920 92• a.oo

Needed 8011 dota

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS

TIM prapoaal mua1 bl
made an tha forma
project Ia 8130 OCIO u ., provided ~· lrl the
.........,. 21 21101
bid clocu- or a copy
The liD DOCUMENTI lhlreol • price QUOIM
.,.y bl exaMined a1 Ill far 1hl wort&lt;, lhe price ol
labor and mallrlalo to bl
Th 1

i~i,;;i;;;;;i;;;~1~1~0~~~W~a~n~t~ed~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~lohack

Huge n en orv 0 scoun P cea

www ACI\IMDmma com

El,ll'l (JYI,11 NT
"d: HVIC t 11

Public Notice

apenlug.,__.

lppl trliel.n DII

management
opportunrtles make lh s
an exc ling chOIC8 for
students housewives

FINANC IAL

H-CUBE EXPRESS
Owne Opera ors
Home Ewry WHklnd &amp; mo e

3lc

__ ....

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Public Notice

Publlo Notice

110

.,.. avalable on an equal
opponunlty ball

doubltdOeiK8klne com

Yard Bale

JET

AERAT ON MOTORS

e Acres Need ng

Th s na .. spapar wiR not
knowinglyacoepl
advertlatmants lot real-1e
wl1lch ~ n Ylola1lon ol tho
low OcJ . . hereby
n - hole clweH ngo
advenlatd n h a net:Jtpeper

abe ca a an nos 740 256
3 o
eea 78 24 2 ema

Chrlttlna M Utpold 011
Sup C o u r t .........
hmpaon
lc
Aothfute
120 E Fourth S1rHt lth
Floor
Clnclnettl Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
(1) 24 31 (2) 7

l) 33 hre 10 fllll thru ...., Mon al_.,ver roqulrld

lm11a11on or dlocrlm notion

Qua '/ hOUII C &amp;an MQI the

" - M laullbv
11111'111 lhlge County

2) 25 hre ll....,.m Bat/Sun Dullea Include tllohlng

460 Space lor Rant
490

CUll

Needed In Meigs County

appllco1ionslo BR
HUO sllbeldlzed ap o elderly
anddublld EOH 304 6 5
669

Raal Eiillte
Wanted

T'""" ol -

WANTED: COMMUNITY
SKILLS INSTRUCTORS

740 ·4.46 348

E en nga 740 36 0502

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Wednaaday January 31 2001

Wedneadlly January 31 2001

I

Public Notice
Cona1ructlon Malntenanoe
andAapalrfund
Street Mtlntenanoo and

Atp~lr

210 Peraonal Sorvlcee
211 Salarlu
W~gta
1101 ooo oo 212 Bonetlta
121 1100 oa 240 SIIPI!IIII
1nd Mat1r1a1a 138 121 02
Total Stree1 Maintenance
and A_,...r 1177 12t 02
8 - Clunlng Snow a lot
Removal
240 Supplln and
Matertala 13 1100 00 Total
street Cleaning snow and
1o1 Removal 13.1100 oo
To1al
tor
Street
Conotruc11on Maintenance
and
Repair
fund
1111121 02
PROGRAM
VI
TRANSPORTATION
Stet• lllghway and
lmpi'OYimtnt Fundi
240 Supplln and
Ma1arltle 17125118 Total
Street Maln1ananct 1c
Atp~lr $7125 118
Tctal lor S1tto Highway
Improvement
Fund
Program fY Traneportlltlon
CEMETERY I'UND
$7125118
PROGRAM II
PUBLIC
IIEALTH SERVICES
Ctmtllry
210 Poraonal S.rvloll
211 Salarlaa
W~gH
$7 TOO 00 212 Employ11
loneltte $1 300 00 240
Suppllll ond Mattrlala
$4332 18 Toll I Cemttory
$13 332 18 To1al lor
Cemetery fund Program II
Public Hnlth Sarvlcoa
113,332 18
PA R K 8
AND
RECREATION FUND
PROGRAM Ill LEISURE
TIME ACTIYITIE8
Recreation Program
240 luppllea and
Mahorlale $4 171 37 Total
Aeoreatlon Program
14171 37 Total tor Parke
and Aaaroatlon Fund
Program Ill Lalaure Time
AollvttiH $4,1171.37
STATE GRANT FUND
PROGRAM OVERTIME
210 Pertonal Service a
211_,, Salarlaa
Wagn
13 .,4 42 Total State Grant
jOvertlme) 12141 42 Total
or Stale Grant fund
(Owrtlmel
0 THE II
8 P I CIA L
RI!YINUIFUNDI
PROGRAM I'IRE a UTIUTY
l'lra
210 Peraonal lervlllla
211
lalarltl/ Willi"
•5 100 oo 212 lenellta
••• 00 210 Cantrutual
lervlaea •~ 1100 00 240
8uppllae and Ma1arlala
117,121118 Total Plre ~unci
... 14UI
UUIItY
230 Contnotual lervl1700 00 240 Supplloa lnd
lllatarlala, an42 71 Total
Utility ~und 821 042 T2

...-w

IN~OACIMENT

TIIUSTFUND
PROGRAM I 81CURITV
0~
PI! AI 0 N8
AND
PROPI!ATY
Polloi Law Entor111mtnt
240 lupplln and
Mallrlalt 113 HI 31 Tot.l
PDIIoa Low lnlorcement
.1S HI 31
Pollet Penalon
21 D Ptreonal Sorvl01a
212 l!mployae lanellta
111,31343 230 Contractual
lervlooa .241 00 Total

13
Southe n goes to Waterford
Fr day and plays host to Wahama
Saturday

- - $25,1118.31
GRAND
TOTAL
01her Security of Poraone ENTERPRISE FUNDS
APPROPRIATION
and Property $15521 43
$41081044
Saltty
GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL
PROGRAM I SECURITY
ASSESSMENT
FUNDS
OF
PERSONS
AND
APPROPRIATION
PROPERTY
TOTAL
A1..L
Polloi Law En1orcemant
APPROPRIATIONS
240 Suppl!tJ tnel Mallrlala
17 1121.24 Total Pallet Law S111D 001 58
And 1111 VIllage Clerk It
Enkwcamen~l7taa24
Motor Vahlclo Uoanto Till hereby aulhorlzld 10 drew
warrant• on tho VIllage
Fund
Tre11urer lor paymon1o
PROGRAM
VI
from ony ol tho foregoing
TRANSPORTATION
upon
Strea1 Conetruotlon and approprla11ona
r-Iving
prior
certlllcatn
Aeconatructlon 250 Dob1
Service $11 883 a1 Totll 1nd voucher• therefor
81rell Cona1ructfon and approved by tho boerd o1
o11toera authorlzld by lew
ll._,etruotlon $11 ,H3 01
epprovo tho ume or an
GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL 1o
ordinanDI
or ratolutlon of
REVENUE
FUND council to
make the
APPROPRIATION
8Kplndl1urla
provldld
1IUII
$31013511
no
warranto
atMII
bl
drawn
SI011on I Tha11haro bl
approprlalld from the or paid lor nlarlll or
except to peraan•
following
CAPITAL w1ge1
employed by eu1horlty o1
PROJECTS FUNDI
and In accordance with law
Conatruc1lon Fund
or
ordinance
Provided
PROGRAM WATEAUNE
lur1her
that
lho
25a Cepltal Outlay approprle11ont
$.134 851 03 Total lor oontlngenolll oan onlylor
bl
Conetructlon
~und
expended
upon
•PPIII
of
Wtterllno Appropriation
two-1hlrda
vo1o
o1
Council
11348&amp;103
lor 11ema ol expenao
~aderll Grent Fund Sti'Hl
conetl1utlng
a legal
lmpi'Ovemenll
obligation
agalne1
the
PROGRAM STREET village and lor purpo11o
IMPROVEMENTS
covered br
21a Capl1al Outlay o1hlr 1111n lhoaeapeclllc
1112 000 00 ToiiiiOr Fldlral other
hlrlln '"""'
Grant
Fund
Street approprlatlona
SECTION
12
Thla
lmproverMiilt
tlkt
allac1
reeolutlon
ehlll
Approprllllon $82.000 00
GRAND TOTAL CAPITAL 'it the ..rllllt period
PROJECTS
FUND ··-bylaw
Ptalld January 3 21101
APPROPRIATION
John ~ Muaaar Prelldlnt
1225t!l803
S.c11on 7 That ttlere be of Council
appropriated from tht AHta1 Kll1hy llyHII Clerk
following INTEAPAISE of Council
CERTIFICATE
FUN DB
Section 5705 39 A C
-Fund
No appropriation '"""""'"
011101
tiUIII lllac1lve unUI
210 Pereonal Servloae
1ho county auditor IIIII wllh
111
Salarloa
appropriating
1137 000 00 212 Employ~~ 1ho
authority
a cortllloall 11U11
lenollll 138 000 00: 240
the total appropriation•
Suppllll and Matorlalt
from ••ch fund t1ken
$87.55114 Total Olllaa
1ogether
with 11\ other
$283115114
autltandlng epproprlo11ona,
Pumlllna
240. Suppllll and do not excHd euoh olllolel
Materlala 111 000 00 Totti eaUrnetl or amend rnendld
olllolal eetl...te Wilen 1h1
Pumping 111000 00
appropriation
doea no1
Mallre
24a Suppllaa and exoead euch olllolal
Matlrlele II OCIO 00 Total H11mal8 1hl county auditor
eh'll give auoh ClrtiiiOIIIt
Mallre $II 000 00
torawlth upon receiving
01hlr Wattr ~und
from tho apprc!Prlallng
210 Debt lervloe
tel 000 DO Total Other authority a oertlllld oopy o1
the
app roprlatlon
Water l'und tit 000 oo
Tiltal tor Water l'und m-ure
The IIIli ol Ohio Melga
Appropriation Program v
8talo Utility lerlloaa Countyaa
1 Kllthy Hyaell Clerk or
8343... 14
tho Ylllaga ol Pomeroy In
..niUiry llwar ~unci
PROGRAM V IAIIC Nld Count\~ and In who•
ouatody of tho ~Ilea
UTILITY IIRYICII
Journalt end Recorda are
Olllcl
roqulrld by tiM Lawa of tiM
uo luU,~~;• and Stela ol Ohio to be kept do
Material• 11
88 Total
haraby oartlly thai the
Olllci8101,4U"
Annuli
Other Sanitary ltwer foregoing
ApprOpriation Ordlnonce Ia
l'und
110 Debt 8ervloe
teken and ooplld !rom tha
II ooa DO Total Other original Ordinance now on
Sanitary 8ewer fund 1111 wl1h aald Yllllll' the1
1he loregolnt Ordlnonoe
$1.000.00
Total lor laniUiry lewar had bHn oomparld by me
, und
Appropriation with thl Hid original and
Progr~m V . .alo Utility lhallhl aeme Ia 1 true and
__. copy thlraol
14Mnt~····117~tl
Wltnaaa my algnaturo
UUI- a-1111 ~unci
PROGRAM V• 8A81C 1hla 3rd day of January
2001
UTIUTV IIRYICI8
Kl1hy llyH11 Clerk of the
Depoalla Refunded
Ylllat•
ol Pomeroy Mllga
$21,118.31 Tot.llor UUIIUU
Fu n d
Appropriation County Ohio
Program
11110 Utility 11) 311TC

Public Notice

w.,..

�Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Pllge I 2 • The Dilly Sentinel

.: ;Publla Notloe

Publlo Notloe

L

~~~e..-auLI

MAL UTATE
lflt,u NUIIIIEIIIICV111

•

:ten~&lt; OM

M.A. 1kl lanl&lt;
OM Wts'IMI .. N.A.

.........

&lt;C/o- One 1.-.
•
PLAINTIFF
110

Help Wanted

110

Waned
Homo &amp; Garuon Party Deslgnefs
Hand Made Pottlry; Umque Ac
eeuorle&amp; CRIU Garden

1101 WEEKLY OUAftlNTilD

WO~K NCI FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART
T ME NO EX PER ENCE ~E
OU RED 800 748 17 8 Ex
' 01
1121 WEEKLY Mlkt Monay

Wlllfl DlliOM&lt; Qua

men Aeunds FeeOea a 24

ICO Cltd mttiiQI

44~5E•

ty

440

VI
Cora liM lmlth 1111

540 Mlscellaneoue
Merchandise

Apartmenll
lor Rent

DEFENDANTS
COURT 01' COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNl'( 01110

Pictures

No Dtlivtr't No nveoiOry No
Quotas Se Youf OWn Hout1
Htgh Commission Ask About
Your Po en Ia ly Free Starte K
PUIS Added Bonus Ca Fo 0e

Ht p ng Ptop t Fltte vt Gove n
h

320 Mobile Hornet
lor Sale

Help Wanted

18 I 740)888 999
939

800

5700

II\ pu,.uance ol 1n Order
of Sale to me dlractod from
aal~ Court In 1ht ebove
on1111td ac11on 1 wtll
oxpo11 to •••• at public
auction It the Courthouaa
on March g 2001 at 10 oo
a m ol nld day the
1ollowlng d11crlbed re11

740 3

......

81tultld In the VIllage or
Pomeroy County ol Melga
anct ltate ol Ohio boundld
and.-..bld aalol owa
Iaing 1111y (50) lilt
broadby One hundrld (100)
IHI dror, oil ol the South
tide of ot number (10) In
Nlll!lare Run Addition 1o 1111
aali VIllage of Pomeroy
Ohio . . thatllmt more or
1111 but aubloot to all legal
hiG.....ya
Prior
lnatrument
rolerencee Volume 311
PtQIIS03
Property addreu 3
flaher Street Pomeroy
Ohlg4571t
Apprallld II $10 000 00

MJNOliNCEMENTS

005

Pereonele
ABSOLUTELY FREE NFO
nterna User&amp; Wanted
$2001).$!1000/mo

www

•commblz,..

FREE OEBT CONSOL OAT ON

App ca o w se
paymen s 0

340 Bualneas ar\d

ce Reduce

65~

Buildings

CASH N

CENT VE
www deb c so g Ca

Ta a Townhouse Apa men s

Ve 'J Spa&lt;J ous 2 Bed oome 2
FoorsCA
2BahFuyca
pe ed Adu Poo a Baby Poo
Pa o S a S36S Mo No Pe s

OFFER

soo ;328

85 O.K 29

•

Lla&amp;t P Ul Stcuflty Oepo' At
qu ed

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC AL SECUR TV ISS 1

DayS

40

448-00

No Fee Unless We W n

BH-582 3345
Twin R verTowers now accep ng

••

Cu YOUR Groc.ry B 1 20 30 40
Even 50% ra E11y To F nd Out

Look ng To Buy A New Home?
0 n Ha e Land? We Do Hu !)'
On~
Loll Lift 304 736-7295

How Send Name Add eu To
C-J Ente priHI PO Box 60 Gal

ipoja

o

ono~a

360

Now To 'ltKJ Till ~ Sl1oppo
9Wia s lmlon Alhtlll
7&lt;10-582 142

Qua y co h no.and houuho d
ama $ co baa 11 • • • 'I
Thu lday Mond~Y th U: Sa urday
9 00.8 30

Havo Loin NH&lt;I Ste UOid Home
n Country On

All roalntale odver1111ng n
thll newapape It eubject to
tho Fednl Fair Houllng Act
ot Hlwlllchm-~ logal
o adYenlle any plfllera
Imitation or dlacrlmlnatlon
baMd on race colO religiOn
sex tam Ia 8tlluS or national
origin O&lt;lrty 10
"""" lrty ouch

40 992

Btl Bonded P oflu ona Re

70

Repa ed New &amp; Reb In S ock
Col Ron E a s ~OQ-537 9529

For Leaae

Few Ropalrs 7&lt;0)4-46-23 1

RENTALS

Po~
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
Buemenr 11 • Feb uary 3 a
9am 2pm F om Rae ne CA 28
jus be o 1 Baehan G.• ne Rd
111f houll Bib)' . . . ap~rlmln

No EastCou
No touc11 olgh

75'11 drop/hook
800 200 2623 Accep ng ANY

wtahe COftlPull dllk compute
prlmor lOti oll&gt;lrgollll

yea tractora

60

needa I'll p w h Ma o de E
comm1 c1 $500 $7000 mo PT
FT om home Fu an no Free

NTERNAT ONAL

Auction
and Flea Market

book e

COMPANY

210

Bualneae
Opportunity

Stparltl -ltd BIDS lor
the OOOT Water Llno
Aelocauana DMtlon A 1
ATII 33 4a 811 In Melge
County Ohio will be
received by thl Tuppere
Plalna c;haater Wallr
Dla1rlct 38!181 lor 30 Road
Andovllle Ohio 45772
until 1a 00 a m local time
February 20 2001 and then
at aald office publicly
opanld and road llaud
Work under thla proloot
lncludea lnallllatlon of 1 5
mllea of eight Inch and
thro..lnoh potable water
INIIn camplate with vtlvea
hydranu
urvlce
connection•
and
mi001II01110UI
------,.--·

,..r.""'"'

~~ ~~:-~~~~ot

e

W HCHANDISE

510

North

llllrMelyal8tH

IOh llaltd propOIII
envelope mutt lndloa1e 11M
11Ua 01 tiM projaqt and tiM
bidder a name and lddreea
Each lldder muol lnaure
thai all employ••• and
epplloantl lor employment
are not dlecrlmlnatod
agalnet becau11 of race
color religion ... or
nltlonal origin
Tho Contractor ehall pay
wagee to aach laborer and
machenlc a1 a rate nct leaa
than the min mum wagaa
epeollltd In the current
wage determination ••
publlahld by tho Stale or
Ohio
Bureau
of
Employment larvtoea
The Owner re11rv11 1ho
rtght to aocept or rtjoot eny
or all prapaaalo to waive
any lrregularltl.. or
lniOmNIIIUH In tho blddlllll
and 10 enter lnlo a oontnot
with the bidder who In 11a
conolderallon ollara 1hll
loWell end bHl propo1111
ly order of the TUppere
Plalna Cheater Water
Dll1rlct Board ol Dfreotore

Broad S1reet Lanoaater
Ohlo43130
lulldare Exchange/~ W
Dodge Aeporta 1175 Dublin
Road Columbua Ohio
43215
f W Dodge Report• 2
Playoro Club Drive
WV25311
Coplel of the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS may be
obtained at the olllce of
81ECO Ina 1a8 Horth
8r011d &amp;trill ~ 0 lox 807
Lanoaater Ohio 4313a
upon payment of 1150 tor
..ah Ill none of which Ia
relundabll Make ohtcka
payable to 81ECO lno
Each propoael ahell be
algned by lhllu I name and
buelneea eddreu of aach

c-

erlon

r.nterea11d

or

comp•ny

In 1~e aame
ehall be aooompanlld bY, a
eurety bond by a bond ng
company authorlzld to do
bualneaa In tho Slate of
Ohio or by oe1'11flld check
oaehler 1 ohack or letter of
oredl1 from eome eolvent
bank The bid guaranty
bond ahall be 1ar the lull
amount of the bid and 11M (1) 31
oertlllad oheok caahler a 11c
ohack or leHer of credit
ehall bl equal to 1a percent
Public Notice
(10%) of the amoun1 ol 11M
aubml1tld propoaal The
ORDINANCE NO 111
An ORDINANCI! to maka
eure1y bond certified
appraprlat1an1 lor Current
ltHer 111
ouhler
oredlta check
ehall be
or Expenaea and o1her
payable to tha Tuppera Expenditure• of tho VIIIIISII
Plalna Ch,ater Water of Pomeroy Stall of Ohio
Dlatrlct ae 1 gaurantH 1hal during the llaoal yaer
lithe propoullt a_,ted ending December 31 2001
-on1 IE
IT
a contract w II be entered
Into and Ita perlarmanoe RESOLVED by the Council
properly aocurad by 1 of tho Vlll•g• ol Pomeroy
eatltfactary bond In 1ho State of Ohio 1hlt to
emount of one hundred provide lor th~ current
percent (1 aa%) ol the expen~~a and other llacal
contract prloa
All yeor ending Daoamblr 31
provlalona of the Ohio 21101 lltlollowlng aumo bl
Aevlaed Coda •• It relttll and ttley are hereby all
to
bid guarant111 aeldt and approprtalld aa
conditione llabllltl.. and lollowa viii
Sac11an 2 That there will
withdrawal ol 1 bid' atuoll bl
adherld to by 1ht be appraprlatod from 1hl
Contractor No bidder .,.y GENERAL FUND
PROGRAM I SECURITY
withdraw hla propoaal
PI!ASONS
AND
wl1hln al)lly (80) deya afllr OF
the actual dati ol 1ht PAOPEIIT\(
PollOI Law Enforcement
Help Wamed

Work to Pay
olf Holiday &amp;ills?

Mob e Home Supp y 740 441!1
lM www OfVb comlbenntn

Houllhold
Goode

110

temporary workers to
flU thr.Q Shilts dally
Casual environment
hands on training
excellent benefits &amp;

For we eetabl shed
Local Co

look ng lor extra
money P ck up lhe
phona now to set up
you r Personal
lntarvlew
We are waiting to hire

• Musl have good
Commun cat on sk Us
• Must have good

d v ng record &amp; P ovlde
own transportation
• Must have abl 1y 1o
be a TEAM playa

""-9""&amp; 53
1-..
_ . . ...,. 7
Te oservlces

825ThlrdAvenue
Gall polls Oh o 45631

CALL TODAY.

...

SERVING THE

TRI COUNTY AREA

Send Resume 10
Gal pollsDalyT bune
AE Adverts ng
Sales Rep

VOUI

RESIDENT AL HOME OWNERS

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

310 Homes lor Sal a
$0 DOWN HOMES GOV T &amp;
BANK FOREC OSURES HUD
VA FHA LOW OR NO MONEY
DOWN OK CFIED T FOR L ST
NGs CA
800 339 0020 a•

Clv o Davlloprilent
G oup/mllonnum

New &amp; Used Fu nl u e
New 2 Pit e
ngroom Su es

1ume to De y Sent nt PO BoK
729-1111 l'rlcr4roy on 48789

$399 Buy Sal T!ade

570

Musical
lnatrumante

710

Autoe for Sale

750 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

61.0 F11rm Equipment
NH 4 5 D sc 9 ne Uaecl Leu
han 200 Ac 11 S 000
3.04),37 3435 Cays 304 562
.57.47 -=:ven1ngs
995 Chevy Du y 4114 Loaded
Cond I on S 3 000

E.liCI en

EXCELLENT OPPOIITUNIT E8

790

7ol0)2-

AVAII.AII.E NOW1

Campers &amp;
Motor Home•

Eom 111&gt; To I?IH• And
WeNif8onUMI

• $2200

•Fun Btneft •
•Wiele~ PaycMdc

$451).$ 000 WEEKLY Ma Nng t
e 1 t om oome No ••P!Iflnce
nec1111 'I FT PT HI p nttdtd
mmedia II)' C1 I Sundenoe D 1
bUIO I
100 lit 3&lt;148 EX

TENSION 22 (24hto)

AI Ploplt Worlc lrom hOmo FuH
T I n 'ng, F II VICI ona PIT

·---...,,~
18000
111C&gt;C11N1&lt; 1-107 61 M
APPL CATION AND EXAM N
FO"MATIO!I l'ol 1 Jobs
• 115 ~
I ~·· 721 1013
xl101 r-7pm CIT
AIHMiiLY AT IIOMIU C lhl
Toy• Jowttry Wood lowrng
~ .. ,OfNI

:,cHVICES

•Pild V-=-tton
•Holiday....,

•RttlromtntPian

810

•Profolllooal A1cn0aplltr1
CIH

lnloCIIIoniiO-nt
C-11on
TODAY l'or An l -

Home
lmprov1menta
IAIIIIENT
WATIAPI'IOOF1NQ

Uncond ona

lolllo4711o722111L 1101

tltmt gu• an 11

Looa 1 1 enc11 u nlahtd E1
Ill! llhtd 971 C1 24 Hrs 7.0
446 0810 800 287 0178 ~og
'" WOttrprooflng

Pay CALL I 100

1ii-01101r!HOI (-)
Alln11on- Wllfll l'nlcn Hom1 Up
to lit tTJih I'T n ln11 nov
1111 OoiW Ml . . II I
DIWHICCI iAUIIcom

AniNTION OWN a oompu1tt'!
Work from h - M1 I a d1 I
~- IIOG0-17000 ,T'f
, . . lnhlrMMion www llrldral
........ 0010

IIU.

,~...

100 141

Al1tnt Oft Work Prom Hollie
1100- tiiOO Mo ,, 1 T ''"
tiOOO )7100 + Mo Pol T mt
1'1111 'JaQa1101 .. (tN)U2-710

ldTN

-.ov fooolll IIOIIIOnt

~

ctrrltrll 10r1111 No axp

reqillrod lolltft11 l'o ..... ••

ary and 1H11ng Into m11 on

01

· · 11143 l1d 716 ..... .,.,
7dlr;l.

IIAUT 'UL A,AIITIIINTI AT
IUOOIT Pll Cll AT JACK
ION IITATII 82 Wts wood
D 1\'0 om Ull o 1370 Wlk o
shop &amp; mov tl C1 740 441
2!88 Equll Housing Oppo&lt;1CI11ty

-

I 111\N'oi'Clf!TII T Ifni

AKC ma 1 Pomt an an td 7
montt11 S 50 740-948 2413

Southem
fromPapBI
Hungry for the v n Belpre set
the early ten po star ng w th a 3
po
goal by Kyle Holbert to
open the gan e Na e Martin Ia d
n a tw st ng dr ve fo a 3 2 tal y
but N ck Morey went back door
for a 5 2 Belpre advant&gt;ge
Garret Kiser the 1 sa v dayl ght
and z pped a short u nper for a
5 4 score but that was as close as
Southern came
In a game that Southern never
led both teams played tourna
ment style basketball Most of the
game w.1s deliberate pushed that
way by Southern s offens ve
scheme and tenac ous defense
Southern became a I ttle
overzealous n the latter moments
of the first per od taking hast}\
II adv sed shots Belpre cap tal
zed and zoomed to the 13 6
advantage
The rest of the way Southern
outscored Belpre 43 42 South
ern cut the lead to four n the

21 a Paraonal Strvloea
211 Salarln/ wag11
$215 OCIO oo 212 Employll
lenellll 88 ooo oo 240
Suppllll end Materlala
40 OCIO 00 Total Pollee Law
EniOICimtnl 1323.000 oo
B - Ugl1tlng
240 luppiiH &amp; Ma18rlala
$23 ooo oo Total street
Llahllng U3 OCIO oo
tot.l Program I Bacurlty
or Ptr~ona and Property
$348 000 00
PROGRAM V BASIC
UTIUTY SERVICES
llactrto UUIIty
240 Suppll.. and
Materlalt $4 300 00 Tot.l
Electrto Utility $4.300 00
Gu Utility
240 Suppllaa and
Mttorlala $3 000 00 Total
Gao U111~ 13,0CIO oo Total
Program v Baelo Utility
s.m- 17 300 oo
PROGRAM
VII
GENERAL GOVERNMENT
Mayor and Admlnletre11ve
Olftoea
210 Paraonal 8orvlo11
211 Salarloe
Wag..,

Bonelltt 17 750 00 220
~~~~~~~~T~~~~~~~~~~;::~~~~~=~~~:;:=~=;==~I20
000 00 Trtlltpor11111on
212 EmployH
Travel
~

&amp; 1!0%

mtehllnlc lor lOci dealefsh p pay
baud on axpa ance send e

Th s s a great WID for the
kids Marauder coach Carl Wolfe
sa d after the game We could see
they were getang better the last
few games But to come out and
score 71 po niS and shoot the ball
they way they did showed how
far they have come I m really
happy for the semors they have
played hard and they deserve t
Johnson led all scorers With 21
po nts S aats added 19 to go
along w th 12 rebounds N ck

Public Notice

•

-'
sanIOr~ or anyone

..............

2

ALL STEEL BU LD NGB -

CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

up
oSO%o Peengntttdw h
p ana •o.:eox o wa• e eoo
now Sii&amp;O &amp;01t OOx 41 waa
135 aoo now s 1 ~ 10•12b 4
Wll $1 100 now 134 000 .IOQ-

s

CU.SSIFIEDSI

$400 oo 240 Suppllll and

Materlale $14 :!GO oo TIK
Aelunde 15 000.00 Total
Mayor and AdmlnlotraUve
Ollie• $17 3150 00
Leglalatlve Aotlvltlta
(Council)
21 o Peraonal Sorvlcae
211 Salarlll
Wagea
15 450 00
Benell1a
15150 00 Total Leglola11ve
Aotlvltt.. $11.000.00
Mayor a Court
230 Con1nlotual Strvloee
II 000 00 Total Mayoro
CCHirl $II 000 00
Clerk Trlleurer
210 Poraonal aervlo••
211 lllarlll/ Wagoa $111100
212 lenelltl 11 450 oa
Tiltal Clark Tr..aurer
$11150 00
Landa and llllldlnge
210 Debt Servloaa
$12,500 00 Total Landa and
lulldlnga, $12,1100 00
Board a IIIII Commlatlona
County Auditor •
a
TrHaurer o , _ 13 000 00
Tiltal County AuditOr e lc
Treaaurer al'-113 000 00
IOIIaltor
230 Contraotuel larvtoea
$4 1100 00 Ta1al lolloltor
$41100.00
Other
Ganer•l
Governmtlll
230 Cantreotu•l 1erv101a
(PrtaoMra) II 000 00 TDIIII
Other General Govemm•nt
p,ooo 00
Tiltal Program VII
Ganar•l Government
$487 100.00
Othlr U- ol ~unda
a7 1
T ranat«a
8111 000 00 Total Other
u - of !'uncle $111 OCIO oo
lactlon :t Thet lhlre bl
appropriated tram tha
GINIRAL ~UND
lor
oontlngenoiH lor purpoua
not o1herwiH pnwldld lor
to ba upended In
aooordanoe with the
provlalona of Station
570140 A C the tum of
GRAND TOTAL GINIRAL
~UN D
APPAOPRIA110N
..12,100 00
lootlon 4 That thlfl bl
tpproprlatad !rom tht
following
IPICIAL
AIVI!NUE I'UNDI ltrlll

2-4e-1111&lt;0

1

Bol n added 16
Me1gs hit 24-of. 52 from the
floor ncluding 4-of. 9 from 3
po nt range Me1gs h11 ].9 of. 33
free throws
The
Marauders
had
30
rebounds w th Suats grabb ng 12
and Bolin s x Josh had three of
the Marauders e ght steals and
Buzzy Fackler had five of his
team s e gh ass sts
Thacker had 14 po nts to lead
Wellston Derrow and Jo~h DaVI
ch pped n w th II each and
Fultz added I 0
Wellston h t 22 of. 62 from the
floor nclud ng 6 of. 17 3 po nt
ers The Rockets were II of. 20

from the line
Wellston pulled down 37
rebounds w rh DaVIS grabb ng
rune and they turned the ball over
15 runes
The Marauder JUniOr vars ty
ream also p1cked up IS first Win
of the season With a 55 45 wm
Ryan Hannan led the way w th
15 Dan el Lambert added 12 and
Bubby Haye I 0 TraVIs Downard
led Wellston w rh I 0
Me gs (I 14 TVC 1 7) w II
travel to V nron County on F11
day
Wellston (6 7 TVC 2 5) ravel
to Nelsonville York

second per od bu two turnove
and two hasty shots were co
ver ed o Belp e scores and a 19
9 tally
Southern fought back bur Be)
pre aanaged to coast to the ?2
15 haifa e lead
I the second half Southern
cut the lead to 24 21 on consec
ut ve dr ves by Mart n and Hub
bard then Southern can e back
to ?7 24 on a Chad Hubbard
steal and lay n Each t me Belp e
ans vered and Southern lost t
n on entum as the Eagles aga n
crept to a 10 po n advantagt'
At the end of th ee per ods
Jason Eakle and N ck Morey led
Belpre to a 37 28 lead w th five
and four po nts respecavely
In the final quarter Belpre once
led 49 28 IS b ggt'st lead but
Southern wasn t dead yet Chad
Hubbard hit a 3 pomter after a
Brandon Hill two then Jonathan
Evans na1led a trey to cut the lead
to 49 42
As arne sl pped away Garret
Kiser made t 49 47 With JUSt
over a rrunute left but Pat Kle n
answered w th a 2 pomter from

the pa nt to make the score 51 47
Belpre
A pa r of Kle
free
throws pushed the score to 53
47
Kle n grabbed a s eal fo Bel
pre last sco e and Bra do n H II
h a basd ne d ve v t five sec
onds lefl as Belpre cia med the
huge
n
Sou the h '0 of ) 7 fi on the
field vas 4 for 15 fron
hree
pom ange and h t 5 of. 7 a the
ne Sou he n had ?4 ebounds
(F she 6 H II 6 Kise 7) had five
aSSIS s (Evans 4) 12 tu novers 11
teals (Ki er 3) and 13 fouls
Be p e h t 19 of. 43 overall hit
5 of. 17 treys and was 2 for 18
at the I ne
Belpre had 31
rebounds ( Morey 8 Nolan 8)
had s x ass siS 15 turnovers n ne
steals and 15 fouls
Belpre won the reserve game
67 46 led by Bryan Adams w th
14 and Justm Cline With nne
Southern wa led by Jordan Hill
WI h 15 and Justin &lt;::onnolly wtth

Halp Wllnted

Our office Is currently
seeking 1/1 p/1 and

REAL ESTATE

98

Meigs

1111mettd

N~

OnVny Sk ng Coos Wnd
OW&amp; AnchO s Wa a Hill I 6
Pumbno &amp; Eec Cl Pa 1 Fu
nacas &amp; Hea PUmps Benne a

Tappan l"t El c en y 90 ~ Gat
Fu naces 0 Fu na aa 2 Sea
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng.
Sys ems F ee e Yea Wa an y
Benne a Hea no &amp; Coo ng
800.872 59e7 www o vb COmlbtll

pt110n

'I'Upptl'l Pllln..Chlater
-er Dlatrlct
311581 Bar 30 AOIICI
R-1111 Ohio 45772

Cjlmmunlty end ,..,..,.,.1 akllll to •n Individual with
mental retardation Aoqulremento High echool
dlplomaJQED valid drtwr a lloen• 1hrt1 yore good
driving axperleno• and odequa1e automobile
lnau,.nce coverage Starting Ciliary 18.00/h• Send
reaumo to auotceya community S.rvlcea P 0 Box
JM14 Jeokton 011 45840 Doadllna lor appllcanta
2/1101 pleaae epaclfy poaltlon of lntereat Equal
Qpportunlty Employar

920 92• a.oo

Needed 8011 dota

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS

TIM prapoaal mua1 bl
made an tha forma
project Ia 8130 OCIO u ., provided ~· lrl the
.........,. 21 21101
bid clocu- or a copy
The liD DOCUMENTI lhlreol • price QUOIM
.,.y bl exaMined a1 Ill far 1hl wort&lt;, lhe price ol
labor and mallrlalo to bl
Th 1

i~i,;;i;;;;;i;;;~1~1~0~~~W~a~n~t~ed~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~lohack

Huge n en orv 0 scoun P cea

www ACI\IMDmma com

El,ll'l (JYI,11 NT
"d: HVIC t 11

Public Notice

apenlug.,__.

lppl trliel.n DII

management
opportunrtles make lh s
an exc ling chOIC8 for
students housewives

FINANC IAL

H-CUBE EXPRESS
Owne Opera ors
Home Ewry WHklnd &amp; mo e

3lc

__ ....

The Dally Sentinel • Page B 3

Public Notice

Publlo Notice

110

.,.. avalable on an equal
opponunlty ball

doubltdOeiK8klne com

Yard Bale

JET

AERAT ON MOTORS

e Acres Need ng

Th s na .. spapar wiR not
knowinglyacoepl
advertlatmants lot real-1e
wl1lch ~ n Ylola1lon ol tho
low OcJ . . hereby
n - hole clweH ngo
advenlatd n h a net:Jtpeper

abe ca a an nos 740 256
3 o
eea 78 24 2 ema

Chrlttlna M Utpold 011
Sup C o u r t .........
hmpaon
lc
Aothfute
120 E Fourth S1rHt lth
Floor
Clnclnettl Ohio 45202
(513) 241-3100
(1) 24 31 (2) 7

l) 33 hre 10 fllll thru ...., Mon al_.,ver roqulrld

lm11a11on or dlocrlm notion

Qua '/ hOUII C &amp;an MQI the

" - M laullbv
11111'111 lhlge County

2) 25 hre ll....,.m Bat/Sun Dullea Include tllohlng

460 Space lor Rant
490

CUll

Needed In Meigs County

appllco1ionslo BR
HUO sllbeldlzed ap o elderly
anddublld EOH 304 6 5
669

Raal Eiillte
Wanted

T'""" ol -

WANTED: COMMUNITY
SKILLS INSTRUCTORS

740 ·4.46 348

E en nga 740 36 0502

Pomeroy Middleport Ohio

Wednaaday January 31 2001

Wedneadlly January 31 2001

I

Public Notice
Cona1ructlon Malntenanoe
andAapalrfund
Street Mtlntenanoo and

Atp~lr

210 Peraonal Sorvlcee
211 Salarlu
W~gta
1101 ooo oo 212 Bonetlta
121 1100 oa 240 SIIPI!IIII
1nd Mat1r1a1a 138 121 02
Total Stree1 Maintenance
and A_,...r 1177 12t 02
8 - Clunlng Snow a lot
Removal
240 Supplln and
Matertala 13 1100 00 Total
street Cleaning snow and
1o1 Removal 13.1100 oo
To1al
tor
Street
Conotruc11on Maintenance
and
Repair
fund
1111121 02
PROGRAM
VI
TRANSPORTATION
Stet• lllghway and
lmpi'OYimtnt Fundi
240 Supplln and
Ma1arltle 17125118 Total
Street Maln1ananct 1c
Atp~lr $7125 118
Tctal lor S1tto Highway
Improvement
Fund
Program fY Traneportlltlon
CEMETERY I'UND
$7125118
PROGRAM II
PUBLIC
IIEALTH SERVICES
Ctmtllry
210 Poraonal S.rvloll
211 Salarlaa
W~gH
$7 TOO 00 212 Employ11
loneltte $1 300 00 240
Suppllll ond Mattrlala
$4332 18 Toll I Cemttory
$13 332 18 To1al lor
Cemetery fund Program II
Public Hnlth Sarvlcoa
113,332 18
PA R K 8
AND
RECREATION FUND
PROGRAM Ill LEISURE
TIME ACTIYITIE8
Recreation Program
240 luppllea and
Mahorlale $4 171 37 Total
Aeoreatlon Program
14171 37 Total tor Parke
and Aaaroatlon Fund
Program Ill Lalaure Time
AollvttiH $4,1171.37
STATE GRANT FUND
PROGRAM OVERTIME
210 Pertonal Service a
211_,, Salarlaa
Wagn
13 .,4 42 Total State Grant
jOvertlme) 12141 42 Total
or Stale Grant fund
(Owrtlmel
0 THE II
8 P I CIA L
RI!YINUIFUNDI
PROGRAM I'IRE a UTIUTY
l'lra
210 Peraonal lervlllla
211
lalarltl/ Willi"
•5 100 oo 212 lenellta
••• 00 210 Cantrutual
lervlaea •~ 1100 00 240
8uppllae and Ma1arlala
117,121118 Total Plre ~unci
... 14UI
UUIItY
230 Contnotual lervl1700 00 240 Supplloa lnd
lllatarlala, an42 71 Total
Utility ~und 821 042 T2

...-w

IN~OACIMENT

TIIUSTFUND
PROGRAM I 81CURITV
0~
PI! AI 0 N8
AND
PROPI!ATY
Polloi Law Entor111mtnt
240 lupplln and
Mallrlalt 113 HI 31 Tot.l
PDIIoa Low lnlorcement
.1S HI 31
Pollet Penalon
21 D Ptreonal Sorvl01a
212 l!mployae lanellta
111,31343 230 Contractual
lervlooa .241 00 Total

13
Southe n goes to Waterford
Fr day and plays host to Wahama
Saturday

- - $25,1118.31
GRAND
TOTAL
01her Security of Poraone ENTERPRISE FUNDS
APPROPRIATION
and Property $15521 43
$41081044
Saltty
GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL
PROGRAM I SECURITY
ASSESSMENT
FUNDS
OF
PERSONS
AND
APPROPRIATION
PROPERTY
TOTAL
A1..L
Polloi Law En1orcemant
APPROPRIATIONS
240 Suppl!tJ tnel Mallrlala
17 1121.24 Total Pallet Law S111D 001 58
And 1111 VIllage Clerk It
Enkwcamen~l7taa24
Motor Vahlclo Uoanto Till hereby aulhorlzld 10 drew
warrant• on tho VIllage
Fund
Tre11urer lor paymon1o
PROGRAM
VI
from ony ol tho foregoing
TRANSPORTATION
upon
Strea1 Conetruotlon and approprla11ona
r-Iving
prior
certlllcatn
Aeconatructlon 250 Dob1
Service $11 883 a1 Totll 1nd voucher• therefor
81rell Cona1ructfon and approved by tho boerd o1
o11toera authorlzld by lew
ll._,etruotlon $11 ,H3 01
epprovo tho ume or an
GRAND TOTAL SPECIAL 1o
ordinanDI
or ratolutlon of
REVENUE
FUND council to
make the
APPROPRIATION
8Kplndl1urla
provldld
1IUII
$31013511
no
warranto
atMII
bl
drawn
SI011on I Tha11haro bl
approprlalld from the or paid lor nlarlll or
except to peraan•
following
CAPITAL w1ge1
employed by eu1horlty o1
PROJECTS FUNDI
and In accordance with law
Conatruc1lon Fund
or
ordinance
Provided
PROGRAM WATEAUNE
lur1her
that
lho
25a Cepltal Outlay approprle11ont
$.134 851 03 Total lor oontlngenolll oan onlylor
bl
Conetructlon
~und
expended
upon
•PPIII
of
Wtterllno Appropriation
two-1hlrda
vo1o
o1
Council
11348&amp;103
lor 11ema ol expenao
~aderll Grent Fund Sti'Hl
conetl1utlng
a legal
lmpi'Ovemenll
obligation
agalne1
the
PROGRAM STREET village and lor purpo11o
IMPROVEMENTS
covered br
21a Capl1al Outlay o1hlr 1111n lhoaeapeclllc
1112 000 00 ToiiiiOr Fldlral other
hlrlln '"""'
Grant
Fund
Street approprlatlona
SECTION
12
Thla
lmproverMiilt
tlkt
allac1
reeolutlon
ehlll
Approprllllon $82.000 00
GRAND TOTAL CAPITAL 'it the ..rllllt period
PROJECTS
FUND ··-bylaw
Ptalld January 3 21101
APPROPRIATION
John ~ Muaaar Prelldlnt
1225t!l803
S.c11on 7 That ttlere be of Council
appropriated from tht AHta1 Kll1hy llyHII Clerk
following INTEAPAISE of Council
CERTIFICATE
FUN DB
Section 5705 39 A C
-Fund
No appropriation '"""""'"
011101
tiUIII lllac1lve unUI
210 Pereonal Servloae
1ho county auditor IIIII wllh
111
Salarloa
appropriating
1137 000 00 212 Employ~~ 1ho
authority
a cortllloall 11U11
lenollll 138 000 00: 240
the total appropriation•
Suppllll and Matorlalt
from ••ch fund t1ken
$87.55114 Total Olllaa
1ogether
with 11\ other
$283115114
autltandlng epproprlo11ona,
Pumlllna
240. Suppllll and do not excHd euoh olllolel
Materlala 111 000 00 Totti eaUrnetl or amend rnendld
olllolal eetl...te Wilen 1h1
Pumping 111000 00
appropriation
doea no1
Mallre
24a Suppllaa and exoead euch olllolal
Matlrlele II OCIO 00 Total H11mal8 1hl county auditor
eh'll give auoh ClrtiiiOIIIt
Mallre $II 000 00
torawlth upon receiving
01hlr Wattr ~und
from tho apprc!Prlallng
210 Debt lervloe
tel 000 DO Total Other authority a oertlllld oopy o1
the
app roprlatlon
Water l'und tit 000 oo
Tiltal tor Water l'und m-ure
The IIIli ol Ohio Melga
Appropriation Program v
8talo Utility lerlloaa Countyaa
1 Kllthy Hyaell Clerk or
8343... 14
tho Ylllaga ol Pomeroy In
..niUiry llwar ~unci
PROGRAM V IAIIC Nld Count\~ and In who•
ouatody of tho ~Ilea
UTILITY IIRYICII
Journalt end Recorda are
Olllcl
roqulrld by tiM Lawa of tiM
uo luU,~~;• and Stela ol Ohio to be kept do
Material• 11
88 Total
haraby oartlly thai the
Olllci8101,4U"
Annuli
Other Sanitary ltwer foregoing
ApprOpriation Ordlnonce Ia
l'und
110 Debt 8ervloe
teken and ooplld !rom tha
II ooa DO Total Other original Ordinance now on
Sanitary 8ewer fund 1111 wl1h aald Yllllll' the1
1he loregolnt Ordlnonoe
$1.000.00
Total lor laniUiry lewar had bHn oomparld by me
, und
Appropriation with thl Hid original and
Progr~m V . .alo Utility lhallhl aeme Ia 1 true and
__. copy thlraol
14Mnt~····117~tl
Wltnaaa my algnaturo
UUI- a-1111 ~unci
PROGRAM V• 8A81C 1hla 3rd day of January
2001
UTIUTV IIRYICI8
Kl1hy llyH11 Clerk of the
Depoalla Refunded
Ylllat•
ol Pomeroy Mllga
$21,118.31 Tot.llor UUIIUU
Fu n d
Appropriation County Ohio
Program
11110 Utility 11) 311TC

Public Notice

w.,..

�'

i

\..

•
•
P~eroy,

•

Middleport, Ohio

I

.Wed11MC1_11y, Januery 31, 2001

..

'' .

Wednelday, January 31, 2001

-·

-

' CLUB BANQUET
.Thursday, Feb. 15th, 2001
American Legion Post 23
-Point Pleasant, VW
,1G1uest Speaker· Coach Bob Pruett
~••l&lt;l Social Hour 6 :00
Dinner 7:00
$16.00 per person
Reservations contact
jim Wilson 675-4519
Bill Wallace 675-7214
Don Waldie 675-21 so -

UP TO 70o/c OFF

45781 until 10:00 a.m..

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise in
this space for·
s1oo ·per
.... h.

Public Notice
INTERESTED IN THE
E$TAT E
0 F GEORGIA
EMILY SMITH, OF C/0
Rockoprlnp Rohobllltallon,
38751 Rockoprlngo Rood,
Pomeroy, OH 45711, Molgo
County Probate Co.urt, CoM
No. 31030. An oppllcatlon
hu been lllod liking to 1111
Mra. SmHh'o raol 111111 ot
prlvoto ulo, ooylng thot
11ld 1111 11 ,..._ry to
pay tho luot dobte ol tho
w.rd. Afurther cleec~ptlon

992-6524
SPECIALS
:FA-Ii~~~~~~~O§!N.~~!os
TWO FOR TWOSD&amp;Y

2 CHEEHIUIIQERI

~emodallng

$top &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-1192·1871

FOR THE PllfCf OF ONE

.25¢ WINGS "''

............
,..... .
•llowt-n
·_ :··~""""
=: uorl:=!"'' I
· CARPENTER SERVICE
•lloctrlatl PI 111

7fD/TFN

FISH-- FRIDAY

+AJ

caa sa

e.Qs
Weal

lv! ltmMQ friH t

SHIN '

'

•

'

I

of eald real eatate Ia 11
-heel.

PomeroyJ2hlo·
22 Y'"·

a_l

Fobrulry 15, 2001, end then
Ahoartng will be
11 11:00 e.m. It Mid omco hold Wodnndoy, Flbruery
opened end reid eloud lor 14, 2001 11 1:30 o'clock A&amp;DAuto
·Plus,
tho folloWing:
p.m. P1110111 knowing ony
' Tho purchooo ond .-.-n why tho oppllcotlon
Rutland,' Ohio
,clellvoryoflloo (2) Now Ceb ohould not bo grentod Truck Seats, car seats, headUnen, tntck. ta1rps,l
-- end Chooolo Trucko to tho ohould oppaer ond Inform
· Molgo County Council on I~ Court. Tho Court 11
convertible &amp; 'vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
Aging. Trucks to moot tho · loceted on tho Second
, motorcycle ·seats, boat coven, carpets, etc.
'lpoclflcollono •• provided . Floor ol the Molgo County
by tho bid pockot. Stoto Courthouoo on second
Mon. Frl 8:30 - 5:00
llkldora .,. welcome.
Stroot In Pomeroy, Ohio.
Spoclllcotlono, encl bid · llelngo part ol Froctlonel
Over 40 yrs experience
lormo moy be oocu.-.d ot Soctlon 28, Town ~. Rengo
tho olflco ol Molgo County 11, Ohio Compony'o
(740) 742-8888
· CommiNionlll,
Purchaoe.
Courthoun, Pomeroy,' Ohio
Boglnnlng ot o oteko ·4
1-888-521·0916
45788 • Phone (740) 882· rode above tho mouth ol
-211111. AdopoiH ol o doNo,. Tom'o Run, on the. benk ol
will be .-.qulrod lor oech HI the Ohio River, following up
o1 plana Ond epoclllcltlone, Tom'• . Run with tho
chock medo payable to mundori"'J8 ol 1111 erNie,
:::m-:::1·. Tho lull emount 70 rod• to 1 otono In tho
Will returnod wHhln thirty comer ol llld c-'&lt; ....,. 1 (30) daYI ottor rocolpt ol- Booch Tr11 ebovo 24
bide.
lnchoo; lhOQCI In o
Eech bid mull be , equlherly dlr-on 70,.
eccomponlod by lither 1 ·=etako on whet Wll
.
.
.
'
bid bond In on emount ol
Huaon•o IlPPI• Nne
100% ol tho bid emount _, 1 wolnut 121nchoa end
with • IU.-.ty ..Uolectory to about 4 loot oouth from
the lloNeold Molgo County llld cornor; thonco olong
Comnl!oolonoro or by llld llno 41w roda to 1
ctrtlllld chock, cnhloro atono on tho Ohio River
chock, or Iotter of crodlt Benk: lllonco up lho Ohio
'
upon 1 tolveni bank In tho 'River bank, 31 rode to tho
amount o1 not 1111 than ploco of ' beginning,
10% ol tho bid iii10Unt In contalnlllg 22'" oi:roo, more fr--,----fllvor ot tho lloriNicl Molgo or 1-.
Slop_In And See
County Comml11lonoro.
Excepting from the lbovo ·
lid bonda 1h1ll be troct, tht following olx
Steve Riffle
eocomponlod by Proof ol convoyencee, to-wit:
Alllhot1ty ol tho olllclel or 11/100 ol' on ecro
Sales Repre-sentative
...,t olgnlng tho bond.
conveyocl 10 Clyde H. Smith
lidO' ohell be -loci end to Thomoo Clork end
Larry $che,y
mllrked 11 lid lor lltlgo Cherlot Bwotzol, by dood
County Council on Aging dote 3-24-41, . rocordod In
1-!olo; ......
1l!wo Truck Chllole llcl, end Volume 183, Page 2, Molgo
..,....., or clellvwod 10:
County Oood llocordo.
llolgo
county
1.110 ocrH conveyed by
CommiNID.,.,.
Clydt H. Smith to Plaid 150 East St!lle Streei'-'~ Phone t-1A.n\
CourthouN
Cempbell, by dNcl datocl 5Pomoroy, Ohio 4571t
7·52, rtcor40&lt;1 In Volume [Aihens, Ohio 45?()1
Attention ol blddoro 11 170, P11111 53, Melge County ·
coiled to 111 of the Oood Rocordo.
requlromente contolnod In
2 ocroe end I ecroo
thlo bid peokot, pertloulerty convoyed to Clyde H. Smith
to tho _Fodertl Lebar _to Cherl11 ond Aano•
Advertise In
llltenderdo Provlolono end Layno, by dood rocordod In
MOlLOHAN CARPET

·-- . Celluiar ·
Jeff Warner Ins.
·'

992~5479

OF

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

28870 BHhln Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740848 2217
SIZH 5'x 101
to 10' x 30'

.

Wesl Norlb
Pus 3•
Pass Pass

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

THAR'S NOT
INU, TO GO
AROUND

. Call Ua Firat Or We Both u'i.e1
Aak Jl'or Mr. JI'Orcl
Year

...
PO()i:. 1\\lr-16- AAVII&gt;IC:o TO

...

I "'"'~ 11'1 TI'oE. (.OLD :lOt,OOC:o,

WfoJ.K ~ T_f'.(. i'JJ!I
JoJ€:1\T~!

...

t TI-IIN~ t'I/E C.OT

I

rol' 11'11\\t~ em~

~

WHY
ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In ..vice"
•11 .6% Protein Uveatock/cattle Feed ~.50/1 oo
· ·21%.Huntn Pride Dog Food $8.7-5150 ,_.
. . ·12% Western pride hors8 feed $5.85/50 :
$1 ;00 o1l Coupon makes next purchase $4.,86/51&gt;
.LayeJ: Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M Salt BloCks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
31637 81. Rt. 7 North

Frm.ZU. ~t«!

·l' '

•

't" .

Davla-Becon

varloue

WegH,

lnlur•nc:e

roquka'"'"'· verlouo oquel
opporunlty provlolono, lnd
tho roqulromont lor •
PIYmtnt bond end
paifoomlnco bond lor 100%
olthe corilnict prt...
No blclclor mey withdrew
thlo bid within thirty (30)
diYIIfttr"" ICiuol dllo ol
the opening thereat, to
rejocllny or oN bldo.

Volume 170. Plge 415,

Melga

County

Deed

this space for
·$25 per
month.

llocordo.
14/100 of In ocro
convoyed by Clyde H.
Smith to F.A. Swetzol end
Che;loo Bw.tzol, by d- . -....- - - - - .
rocordod In Vol. 171, Pego 421, Molge County Oeod
Yf
Rocofdo.
50/100 .... ccinveyod by
Clydo H. Smith to Field
, 5
C1mpbell, by dltd
IICOrdtd In Val. 171, Page
Jlltl Thornton, Proolclont
425, llelge County D11d
Melgo
County R - .
.·
Cilmml,.to.,.,.
'
1.28 ecroo convoyed by
Clydo H. Bmlth to Ch1rl11
·· (1) 24, 31, (2) 7
end Agnoo Loyno, by doocl
31c
recorded In Volumo 183,
Pogo 475, Melgo County
OoodRICorde.
Pvbllc Notice
Subject .to rlght•Of•wey
grenttd by Clyde Smith to
PROIIATI COURT OF
Columbue Southern Ohio
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Ellctrlc Company, rocordod
IN THI MATTER 0~ THE In Vol, 170, Pogo 7, Molge
County Deed AI a Grdl.
OUAIIDIANIHIP 01'
· 8ubltct t,o 111 ltgll · HflaUrtCI
OIOIIGIA IIIILY IIIlTH,
hlllhwlyl,
AN INCOMPITINT
Auditor'• P1101l No.: oePilliON
EXCfiVATINCI
DOeN.ooo
DHd 11........., Vol. 242,
Hauhng e UmesiOM •
CAll NO. 31030
Plgo 113, Mtlp County
DOCKET
Ginel• Sand eTopsale
DHd Rocordo.
PAGE
PuBLICATION OF NOTICE Judith R. B1110n, Clerk
(1) 28, 31, (2)7
TO ALL PIR80N8

sa

e
Tr·uckind

•

us1ness

Quelq_C irpdetl.l'rlces
•Free estimates with
apRQintments at your
convenience
• FinanCing available, 90
· days 118111e as cash • ,
• We except VIsa or
MasterCard.
Give ua 1 call It
, 740 441 7444 or
1-877-830-11112 or

. NO, I-llS ScARF IS CAU6HT ON TI-lE BACK
01= ~ 15 CHAIR ..

FAMOUS WORLD Li!A.R I FLVIN6
ACE 7 l-IE !&lt;AS A VEIN
· PAINED El(PRE SSION ...

..,.__
_

III~Fllm-

DOWN

lrul

1 Orthodontllt'l

Papular

·--by 7=

33Coki-

2

J~ll" encl

,,_

3 "llollod" ftnltll

llbllllofl
37=.~n ·~­

I

I K!IZ)'-

10 "Of*"llnloll

BllnciN -~

11--

ttFirodolty

01~ who lived
111111-

22 Pxc11oft8
23 Ito city
24Doubll-~

zs=. .
(be·rtaN

Eut

Pus
PIS8

!ram 1111

Union

27llll'nollln,tor
thor!
32 "'EUNical•

: To get a current weather
report, check the,
. - · ........ •

t1 lllmDY
13
Rwtiol .. ""'

20

.Sentinel

34-

·-_.. _

:MWUIIttDr
H HliYing line

•

IWEDNESDAY

43~--

(otuoll)

45AI47._

41Eltl-

41--

50 Comlc Alltloll
12 Acb ••
.JIIIIIn

113-nwk
MCUIWW

I

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Clmpoa
Ceiobrliy Cl.... r~.,. C!Ni0df10tn- b y - poop1t put ltld
-Eoclt .. tho dphw- foiiitiOCiio&lt;,
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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If you went PIIC6, of mind, resign
manager of lhe u...,.,...• ~ WeUer Uppmenn

&amp;I

genorel

':!::~' SCC~4llA-4i.~s· :::
14h4

~ClAY

L P01W4 ....;;..._ __

O four
RoorJOftgl ton.ro ol tho
ocramblod wards . below

I

1c lorm lour ....,.._ -.lo.

LAYDED

I
· · My-classmate slepl through the
professors lecture. I guess he
-thinks a leclurer is someone who
talks while he ._•• •• •_
G C-lolw
floe Cfluclclo quofod
by fllllno .. floe ......., _ .
vo• clewelcp 1.... """ No. 3 below.

I• I I" I I I t
MESSTY

•

PRINT NUMIERED ·lETTElS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE LETTEIS
TO GEr ANSWER

I' -I' I' I" I'
III

rI

SCRAM Lm ANSWIRS
Supply· 'Newsy· Motor· Joyful · ·YOUR STEP ,

Granny to youngster, "If you are lazy you can't do
·too much wrong, but if you are busy doing something,
wljlch YOUR STEP.: .

JANUARY31I

"'AAr -....,...._ _ _ _....;...._
'Bitthday

vtllt Ul II
:Z02 Clark Cluipel RANid,

I

'·Thursday, Feb. I, 2001
By first laying a solid founda·
can reap the types of
fnau~al rewards in the year ahead
·which you're hoping. With a
base,
prospects look

Porter, Ohio.
Monday thru Friday
e:!ID-I:oo

interests at the expe~Jse of others, 1 could be a trifle distorted today,
it won't be worth it. By protect· you're going to have to be more
ing your associates, you· d be pro· on your toes in tending to that
which is most urgent. Don't get
-tecting yourself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) side~cked.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Play
Your ego could cloud your judg·
(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) menl today if you allow it to get for the fun of things today and not
In~::: of delegating an important the upper hand. Unfortunately, it for who is better at what. If you
ir
to individuals who are not would severely lessen your make winning all important, it
could damage your social standfamiliar with the situation as chances for success,
y_ou are, do it yourself. It's too - GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ing among your peers.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
jisky today to leave things in the Be carefult~ay to n?l let a fast
~ands of others. Knoo,v where to· talker mesrnenu you mto accept· Without continuity of purpose
Jriok for romance and you'll fi!ld ing a ,faulty premise. An idea today, you're not likely to finalize
The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker could sound good oil the surface , too much of anything, let alone a
1nstantly reveals which signs are but may leave a lot to be desired _project you've been wanting to
complele. Keep your eye on one
romantically perfect for you. Mail in application.
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
CANCER (Jun~ 21-July 22) thing at a time,
SAOmARIUS (Nov, 23·Dec.
newspaper, P.O. Box 17!18, Mur· Financial involvement$ with
ray Hill Station, New Yor~ NY friends are always a chancy mat· 2 I) The more simple you keep a
101 !16.
'
ter, and today they could be espe- presentation you're milking today,
·: PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) cially tricky. You could lose more the more effective yo11: 11 be ,
C~lex swernents or stories
Timing and method are extteme· than money if thin11 10 aiVfY.
ly important today in pttin1
LEO (July 23-Aul. 22) 1t may will confuse your listeners and
thin1s done. If you are too be extremely importlllt to you ' IOtiiiY lose their interest.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan,
•saertive, you could push so hard today that yOII win the aood will
19)
Operate along tnditionalljnes
that you'll erid up.trippiRJ over ofyourcontemporuies, but don't
think it'll be panted lfllls. You're Jodly when it ~omes to making
your own feet. Be systematic.
; ARIES '(March 21-April 19) IOinJtohavetoeamtheirrespect• money.lf you're inclined to gam·
e!ven thOUJh you might aet the
VIROO (Alii· 23-Sept. 22) ble or play a tong shot, you could
chance today to advance your Becaullfl your sense of priorities lose all too easily,

1t

Advertise in
this space for
s100 -per

one

•
'•

.\

31

BladltdiOo'll

38Putlne-

Queensland enjoys at least one
thing in common with Florida.
Any guesses?
Sunday, Sept. I 0, Jennifer All·
frey, Margot Girle and I left
lnverell early for the two-hour dri·
ve thro11gh parched plains to
Goondiwindi. (Aren't Aboriginal
names great?) This town lies just
over the New South Wales border
inside Queensland. When we
arrived, we learned there was an
unwelcome reprise of the previous day. I had been told I was
doing one class for 28, but the 15
present were expecting me to do
a pair of lessons. I covered suit
establishment and honor signals,
When you play bridge, you
never miss a card, but is your part·
ner so observant? For example, if
you drop the heart six before the
heart five, will partner always
spot the high-low and draw the
appropriate conclusion? Or will
_he note only that you played two
low hearts •• or, even worse, that
you contributed two red cards?
However, if you play •llll·unex,
peeled honor-card. even the most
inallentive o( partners will sit up
and take notice.
Against four spades, I asked
the Wests to lead the spade king.
What should East discard?
Agreed, West might weii\Jead
a heart at trick one. And even if he
selects a minor-suit card, declarer will probably assume trumps
are 1-1 , Yet if he guesses they are
2·0, he will play four rounds of
diamonds, discarding a heart los·
er on the last and making the con·
tract.
·The right :discard is the heart
ace. It is hoiiorable to wake up
partner with an honor-card signal t
Both Queensland and Florida
· are called th~ Sunshine State .

14 :

FiNDiri•,Mukh •
Bulldozer SerVices
992-3470

'

\Al~AT IS WRON6 WITH THE

'

=.:::r......., : =:::r

Vldl 014 I type 51 Tormlnlllcl

BY PHIU.JP ALDER

~-

,

11 Colllao 11111'1
n.lglibar

- .

. Making a return

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

•

41 Adulli . .

Opening lead: • lC

'

I .

h·· · - -

" -411111.-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

.•

Advertise in
thi·s space for,
•100 _per

.A K J 10 6
+7Bt
• J 10 8 6 2

+K Q9
•AK

_ "W
Can
.e
Help"·~
.

·-

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a 1.11111 flllt
............

21 lh·lc• mrzlry
211 Wide- oiU

30

I

IIDIIIIL-aW

28~--

6Q87532
• 8 2

0

GALLIPOLIS

23

South

•1oo·per·

Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
'
992·6215 ,
'
I

HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

I0 I

Eaal

• t 7. 3
• 5 3 2
• 97. 3

Advertise in ..
this space·for

ALL DAY "AIL YOU CAN EM"

'

.

•Complete

~~

• Q 5

'1

..u. ~
I

41Cnp

, 13D... o'*

BlUM LUMia

•NewHomea

40

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14 .....
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18 ~
No
01-:1 1.01
_,
• J 1o 9 s 4
17 tjoc

f:~~~~~~lrl·s, legal papers, lnvestmenr records; photo
cameras, household Inventory
senflmental llems will be aale. ,
For more lnformavon call

ROBERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCTION

1 ,_..t•Ofltk

"*

7HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
)'(ltlr guns, family hel~ooms, coin and card

ft. I'P. 141 ·

....

7.... 12 Dull In nt

I Prcnect

• Qaragea

WICDD

YOUNG'S

..aUIUii.·

,.

Pomeroy, Ohw

ACR081

ALDER

•AK

Thurs. Feb. 1 Karaoke
'Fri &amp;Sat Feb. 2 &amp;3
Uve music by
"Villain"
9 pm to 1 am

SHied proj&gt;o1111 lor the
Purchon ond Dollvory of
'TWo (2) Now Cob ond
Chuolo Trucko for uoo by
tho Melga County Council
on Aging Hot Mill Program
In -Molgo County, Ohio, will .
be rooolvod by the Melgo
County Commloolonere It
,. tholr ofllco ot the
.CourthouN, Pome.Oy, Ohio

33795 HiU&amp;nd Rd.

FAEi ESTIMATES'

e

144 Third Ave.
Tollfrtt 1·814·745-1847

GOOD TIMES THIS WEEK

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Self·Storage

COMMEICW..WI!SIDq

MJnis e Etc
GaiiiDols 446·4995

• Vertical. • Wood

..

High 8/. Dry

____N_E_A_C_r_o...;•..;.•...;*;.,:o,.;,r.:d;..:P:_u::z::z::l:=•_ _ _ ,

PHU,I,TP

~.,

, . New Homu • Vinyl
Skjlng • New Garagee
• Replacement Wlndoww
• Room Addftlone• Roofing

(Fecto.y O,utlet)
All vertical blind&amp; are made to order at
our, location .

BRIDOJ:

,._ eu.,

IISSIU. HILIIIS
IIC. •

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

\

'

'·

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.

'

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•'

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•!
'

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'

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•
•
P~eroy,

•

Middleport, Ohio

I

.Wed11MC1_11y, Januery 31, 2001

..

'' .

Wednelday, January 31, 2001

-·

-

' CLUB BANQUET
.Thursday, Feb. 15th, 2001
American Legion Post 23
-Point Pleasant, VW
,1G1uest Speaker· Coach Bob Pruett
~••l&lt;l Social Hour 6 :00
Dinner 7:00
$16.00 per person
Reservations contact
jim Wilson 675-4519
Bill Wallace 675-7214
Don Waldie 675-21 so -

UP TO 70o/c OFF

45781 until 10:00 a.m..

740·992·7599

740-992-5232

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Advertise in
this space for·
s1oo ·per
.... h.

Public Notice
INTERESTED IN THE
E$TAT E
0 F GEORGIA
EMILY SMITH, OF C/0
Rockoprlnp Rohobllltallon,
38751 Rockoprlngo Rood,
Pomeroy, OH 45711, Molgo
County Probate Co.urt, CoM
No. 31030. An oppllcatlon
hu been lllod liking to 1111
Mra. SmHh'o raol 111111 ot
prlvoto ulo, ooylng thot
11ld 1111 11 ,..._ry to
pay tho luot dobte ol tho
w.rd. Afurther cleec~ptlon

992-6524
SPECIALS
:FA-Ii~~~~~~~O§!N.~~!os
TWO FOR TWOSD&amp;Y

2 CHEEHIUIIQERI

~emodallng

$top &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-1192·1871

FOR THE PllfCf OF ONE

.25¢ WINGS "''

............
,..... .
•llowt-n
·_ :··~""""
=: uorl:=!"'' I
· CARPENTER SERVICE
•lloctrlatl PI 111

7fD/TFN

FISH-- FRIDAY

+AJ

caa sa

e.Qs
Weal

lv! ltmMQ friH t

SHIN '

'

•

'

I

of eald real eatate Ia 11
-heel.

PomeroyJ2hlo·
22 Y'"·

a_l

Fobrulry 15, 2001, end then
Ahoartng will be
11 11:00 e.m. It Mid omco hold Wodnndoy, Flbruery
opened end reid eloud lor 14, 2001 11 1:30 o'clock A&amp;DAuto
·Plus,
tho folloWing:
p.m. P1110111 knowing ony
' Tho purchooo ond .-.-n why tho oppllcotlon
Rutland,' Ohio
,clellvoryoflloo (2) Now Ceb ohould not bo grentod Truck Seats, car seats, headUnen, tntck. ta1rps,l
-- end Chooolo Trucko to tho ohould oppaer ond Inform
· Molgo County Council on I~ Court. Tho Court 11
convertible &amp; 'vinyl tops, Four wheeler seats,
Aging. Trucks to moot tho · loceted on tho Second
, motorcycle ·seats, boat coven, carpets, etc.
'lpoclflcollono •• provided . Floor ol the Molgo County
by tho bid pockot. Stoto Courthouoo on second
Mon. Frl 8:30 - 5:00
llkldora .,. welcome.
Stroot In Pomeroy, Ohio.
Spoclllcotlono, encl bid · llelngo part ol Froctlonel
Over 40 yrs experience
lormo moy be oocu.-.d ot Soctlon 28, Town ~. Rengo
tho olflco ol Molgo County 11, Ohio Compony'o
(740) 742-8888
· CommiNionlll,
Purchaoe.
Courthoun, Pomeroy,' Ohio
Boglnnlng ot o oteko ·4
1-888-521·0916
45788 • Phone (740) 882· rode above tho mouth ol
-211111. AdopoiH ol o doNo,. Tom'o Run, on the. benk ol
will be .-.qulrod lor oech HI the Ohio River, following up
o1 plana Ond epoclllcltlone, Tom'• . Run with tho
chock medo payable to mundori"'J8 ol 1111 erNie,
:::m-:::1·. Tho lull emount 70 rod• to 1 otono In tho
Will returnod wHhln thirty comer ol llld c-'&lt; ....,. 1 (30) daYI ottor rocolpt ol- Booch Tr11 ebovo 24
bide.
lnchoo; lhOQCI In o
Eech bid mull be , equlherly dlr-on 70,.
eccomponlod by lither 1 ·=etako on whet Wll
.
.
.
'
bid bond In on emount ol
Huaon•o IlPPI• Nne
100% ol tho bid emount _, 1 wolnut 121nchoa end
with • IU.-.ty ..Uolectory to about 4 loot oouth from
the lloNeold Molgo County llld cornor; thonco olong
Comnl!oolonoro or by llld llno 41w roda to 1
ctrtlllld chock, cnhloro atono on tho Ohio River
chock, or Iotter of crodlt Benk: lllonco up lho Ohio
'
upon 1 tolveni bank In tho 'River bank, 31 rode to tho
amount o1 not 1111 than ploco of ' beginning,
10% ol tho bid iii10Unt In contalnlllg 22'" oi:roo, more fr--,----fllvor ot tho lloriNicl Molgo or 1-.
Slop_In And See
County Comml11lonoro.
Excepting from the lbovo ·
lid bonda 1h1ll be troct, tht following olx
Steve Riffle
eocomponlod by Proof ol convoyencee, to-wit:
Alllhot1ty ol tho olllclel or 11/100 ol' on ecro
Sales Repre-sentative
...,t olgnlng tho bond.
conveyocl 10 Clyde H. Smith
lidO' ohell be -loci end to Thomoo Clork end
Larry $che,y
mllrked 11 lid lor lltlgo Cherlot Bwotzol, by dood
County Council on Aging dote 3-24-41, . rocordod In
1-!olo; ......
1l!wo Truck Chllole llcl, end Volume 183, Page 2, Molgo
..,....., or clellvwod 10:
County Oood llocordo.
llolgo
county
1.110 ocrH conveyed by
CommiNID.,.,.
Clydt H. Smith to Plaid 150 East St!lle Streei'-'~ Phone t-1A.n\
CourthouN
Cempbell, by dNcl datocl 5Pomoroy, Ohio 4571t
7·52, rtcor40&lt;1 In Volume [Aihens, Ohio 45?()1
Attention ol blddoro 11 170, P11111 53, Melge County ·
coiled to 111 of the Oood Rocordo.
requlromente contolnod In
2 ocroe end I ecroo
thlo bid peokot, pertloulerty convoyed to Clyde H. Smith
to tho _Fodertl Lebar _to Cherl11 ond Aano•
Advertise In
llltenderdo Provlolono end Layno, by dood rocordod In
MOlLOHAN CARPET

·-- . Celluiar ·
Jeff Warner Ins.
·'

992~5479

OF

Special Finance Department
Bankruptcy? Credit Problems?

28870 BHhln Road
Racine, Ohio
45n1
740848 2217
SIZH 5'x 101
to 10' x 30'

.

Wesl Norlb
Pus 3•
Pass Pass

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

THAR'S NOT
INU, TO GO
AROUND

. Call Ua Firat Or We Both u'i.e1
Aak Jl'or Mr. JI'Orcl
Year

...
PO()i:. 1\\lr-16- AAVII&gt;IC:o TO

...

I "'"'~ 11'1 TI'oE. (.OLD :lOt,OOC:o,

WfoJ.K ~ T_f'.(. i'JJ!I
JoJ€:1\T~!

...

t TI-IIN~ t'I/E C.OT

I

rol' 11'11\\t~ em~

~

WHY
ELSE?
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
"Ahead In ..vice"
•11 .6% Protein Uveatock/cattle Feed ~.50/1 oo
· ·21%.Huntn Pride Dog Food $8.7-5150 ,_.
. . ·12% Western pride hors8 feed $5.85/50 :
$1 ;00 o1l Coupon makes next purchase $4.,86/51&gt;
.LayeJ: Crumbles $5.99/50
T.M Salt BloCks $4.75/50 lb.
SHADE RIVER AG. SERVICE
31637 81. Rt. 7 North

Frm.ZU. ~t«!

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•

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Davla-Becon

varloue

WegH,

lnlur•nc:e

roquka'"'"'· verlouo oquel
opporunlty provlolono, lnd
tho roqulromont lor •
PIYmtnt bond end
paifoomlnco bond lor 100%
olthe corilnict prt...
No blclclor mey withdrew
thlo bid within thirty (30)
diYIIfttr"" ICiuol dllo ol
the opening thereat, to
rejocllny or oN bldo.

Volume 170. Plge 415,

Melga

County

Deed

this space for
·$25 per
month.

llocordo.
14/100 of In ocro
convoyed by Clyde H.
Smith to F.A. Swetzol end
Che;loo Bw.tzol, by d- . -....- - - - - .
rocordod In Vol. 171, Pego 421, Molge County Oeod
Yf
Rocofdo.
50/100 .... ccinveyod by
Clydo H. Smith to Field
, 5
C1mpbell, by dltd
IICOrdtd In Val. 171, Page
Jlltl Thornton, Proolclont
425, llelge County D11d
Melgo
County R - .
.·
Cilmml,.to.,.,.
'
1.28 ecroo convoyed by
Clydo H. Bmlth to Ch1rl11
·· (1) 24, 31, (2) 7
end Agnoo Loyno, by doocl
31c
recorded In Volumo 183,
Pogo 475, Melgo County
OoodRICorde.
Pvbllc Notice
Subject .to rlght•Of•wey
grenttd by Clyde Smith to
PROIIATI COURT OF
Columbue Southern Ohio
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Ellctrlc Company, rocordod
IN THI MATTER 0~ THE In Vol, 170, Pogo 7, Molge
County Deed AI a Grdl.
OUAIIDIANIHIP 01'
· 8ubltct t,o 111 ltgll · HflaUrtCI
OIOIIGIA IIIILY IIIlTH,
hlllhwlyl,
AN INCOMPITINT
Auditor'• P1101l No.: oePilliON
EXCfiVATINCI
DOeN.ooo
DHd 11........., Vol. 242,
Hauhng e UmesiOM •
CAll NO. 31030
Plgo 113, Mtlp County
DOCKET
Ginel• Sand eTopsale
DHd Rocordo.
PAGE
PuBLICATION OF NOTICE Judith R. B1110n, Clerk
(1) 28, 31, (2)7
TO ALL PIR80N8

sa

e
Tr·uckind

•

us1ness

Quelq_C irpdetl.l'rlces
•Free estimates with
apRQintments at your
convenience
• FinanCing available, 90
· days 118111e as cash • ,
• We except VIsa or
MasterCard.
Give ua 1 call It
, 740 441 7444 or
1-877-830-11112 or

. NO, I-llS ScARF IS CAU6HT ON TI-lE BACK
01= ~ 15 CHAIR ..

FAMOUS WORLD Li!A.R I FLVIN6
ACE 7 l-IE !&lt;AS A VEIN
· PAINED El(PRE SSION ...

..,.__
_

III~Fllm-

DOWN

lrul

1 Orthodontllt'l

Papular

·--by 7=

33Coki-

2

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3 "llollod" ftnltll

llbllllofl
37=.~n ·~­

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10 "Of*"llnloll

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01~ who lived
111111-

22 Pxc11oft8
23 Ito city
24Doubll-~

zs=. .
(be·rtaN

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Pus
PIS8

!ram 1111

Union

27llll'nollln,tor
thor!
32 "'EUNical•

: To get a current weather
report, check the,
. - · ........ •

t1 lllmDY
13
Rwtiol .. ""'

20

.Sentinel

34-

·-_.. _

:MWUIIttDr
H HliYing line

•

IWEDNESDAY

43~--

(otuoll)

45AI47._

41Eltl-

41--

50 Comlc Alltloll
12 Acb ••
.JIIIIIn

113-nwk
MCUIWW

I

I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Clmpoa
Ceiobrliy Cl.... r~.,. C!Ni0df10tn- b y - poop1t put ltld
-Eoclt .. tho dphw- foiiitiOCiio&lt;,
'

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PFJWLHY
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "If you went PIIC6, of mind, resign
manager of lhe u...,.,...• ~ WeUer Uppmenn

&amp;I

genorel

':!::~' SCC~4llA-4i.~s· :::
14h4

~ClAY

L P01W4 ....;;..._ __

O four
RoorJOftgl ton.ro ol tho
ocramblod wards . below

I

1c lorm lour ....,.._ -.lo.

LAYDED

I
· · My-classmate slepl through the
professors lecture. I guess he
-thinks a leclurer is someone who
talks while he ._•• •• •_
G C-lolw
floe Cfluclclo quofod
by fllllno .. floe ......., _ .
vo• clewelcp 1.... """ No. 3 below.

I• I I" I I I t
MESSTY

•

PRINT NUMIERED ·lETTElS IN
THESE SQUARES

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE LETTEIS
TO GEr ANSWER

I' -I' I' I" I'
III

rI

SCRAM Lm ANSWIRS
Supply· 'Newsy· Motor· Joyful · ·YOUR STEP ,

Granny to youngster, "If you are lazy you can't do
·too much wrong, but if you are busy doing something,
wljlch YOUR STEP.: .

JANUARY31I

"'AAr -....,...._ _ _ _....;...._
'Bitthday

vtllt Ul II
:Z02 Clark Cluipel RANid,

I

'·Thursday, Feb. I, 2001
By first laying a solid founda·
can reap the types of
fnau~al rewards in the year ahead
·which you're hoping. With a
base,
prospects look

Porter, Ohio.
Monday thru Friday
e:!ID-I:oo

interests at the expe~Jse of others, 1 could be a trifle distorted today,
it won't be worth it. By protect· you're going to have to be more
ing your associates, you· d be pro· on your toes in tending to that
which is most urgent. Don't get
-tecting yourself.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) side~cked.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 23) Play
Your ego could cloud your judg·
(Jan. 20-Feb. 19) menl today if you allow it to get for the fun of things today and not
In~::: of delegating an important the upper hand. Unfortunately, it for who is better at what. If you
ir
to individuals who are not would severely lessen your make winning all important, it
could damage your social standfamiliar with the situation as chances for success,
y_ou are, do it yourself. It's too - GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ing among your peers.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
jisky today to leave things in the Be carefult~ay to n?l let a fast
~ands of others. Knoo,v where to· talker mesrnenu you mto accept· Without continuity of purpose
Jriok for romance and you'll fi!ld ing a ,faulty premise. An idea today, you're not likely to finalize
The Aslro-Graph Matchmaker could sound good oil the surface , too much of anything, let alone a
1nstantly reveals which signs are but may leave a lot to be desired _project you've been wanting to
complele. Keep your eye on one
romantically perfect for you. Mail in application.
$2.75 to Matchmaker, c/o this
CANCER (Jun~ 21-July 22) thing at a time,
SAOmARIUS (Nov, 23·Dec.
newspaper, P.O. Box 17!18, Mur· Financial involvement$ with
ray Hill Station, New Yor~ NY friends are always a chancy mat· 2 I) The more simple you keep a
101 !16.
'
ter, and today they could be espe- presentation you're milking today,
·: PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) cially tricky. You could lose more the more effective yo11: 11 be ,
C~lex swernents or stories
Timing and method are extteme· than money if thin11 10 aiVfY.
ly important today in pttin1
LEO (July 23-Aul. 22) 1t may will confuse your listeners and
thin1s done. If you are too be extremely importlllt to you ' IOtiiiY lose their interest.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan,
•saertive, you could push so hard today that yOII win the aood will
19)
Operate along tnditionalljnes
that you'll erid up.trippiRJ over ofyourcontemporuies, but don't
think it'll be panted lfllls. You're Jodly when it ~omes to making
your own feet. Be systematic.
; ARIES '(March 21-April 19) IOinJtohavetoeamtheirrespect• money.lf you're inclined to gam·
e!ven thOUJh you might aet the
VIROO (Alii· 23-Sept. 22) ble or play a tong shot, you could
chance today to advance your Becaullfl your sense of priorities lose all too easily,

1t

Advertise in
this space for
s100 -per

one

•
'•

.\

31

BladltdiOo'll

38Putlne-

Queensland enjoys at least one
thing in common with Florida.
Any guesses?
Sunday, Sept. I 0, Jennifer All·
frey, Margot Girle and I left
lnverell early for the two-hour dri·
ve thro11gh parched plains to
Goondiwindi. (Aren't Aboriginal
names great?) This town lies just
over the New South Wales border
inside Queensland. When we
arrived, we learned there was an
unwelcome reprise of the previous day. I had been told I was
doing one class for 28, but the 15
present were expecting me to do
a pair of lessons. I covered suit
establishment and honor signals,
When you play bridge, you
never miss a card, but is your part·
ner so observant? For example, if
you drop the heart six before the
heart five, will partner always
spot the high-low and draw the
appropriate conclusion? Or will
_he note only that you played two
low hearts •• or, even worse, that
you contributed two red cards?
However, if you play •llll·unex,
peeled honor-card. even the most
inallentive o( partners will sit up
and take notice.
Against four spades, I asked
the Wests to lead the spade king.
What should East discard?
Agreed, West might weii\Jead
a heart at trick one. And even if he
selects a minor-suit card, declarer will probably assume trumps
are 1-1 , Yet if he guesses they are
2·0, he will play four rounds of
diamonds, discarding a heart los·
er on the last and making the con·
tract.
·The right :discard is the heart
ace. It is hoiiorable to wake up
partner with an honor-card signal t
Both Queensland and Florida
· are called th~ Sunshine State .

14 :

FiNDiri•,Mukh •
Bulldozer SerVices
992-3470

'

\Al~AT IS WRON6 WITH THE

'

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Vldl 014 I type 51 Tormlnlllcl

BY PHIU.JP ALDER

~-

,

11 Colllao 11111'1
n.lglibar

- .

. Making a return

SUNSET HOME
CONSTRUCTION

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Opening lead: • lC

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h·· · - -

" -411111.-

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

.•

Advertise in
thi·s space for,
•100 _per

.A K J 10 6
+7Bt
• J 10 8 6 2

+K Q9
•AK

_ "W
Can
.e
Help"·~
.

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pt.

a 1.11111 flllt
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21 lh·lc• mrzlry
211 Wide- oiU

30

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28~--

6Q87532
• 8 2

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GALLIPOLIS

23

South

•1oo·per·

Free Estimates

V.C. YOUNG Ill
'
992·6215 ,
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HILL'S
SELF STORAGE

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Eaal

• t 7. 3
• 5 3 2
• 97. 3

Advertise in ..
this space·for

ALL DAY "AIL YOU CAN EM"

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•Complete

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• Q 5

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..u. ~
I

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BlUM LUMia

•NewHomea

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14 .....
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18 ~
No
01-:1 1.01
_,
• J 1o 9 s 4
17 tjoc

f:~~~~~~lrl·s, legal papers, lnvestmenr records; photo
cameras, household Inventory
senflmental llems will be aale. ,
For more lnformavon call

ROBERT IISSEU
CONSTRUCTION

1 ,_..t•Ofltk

"*

7HE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN SECURITY"
)'(ltlr guns, family hel~ooms, coin and card

ft. I'P. 141 ·

....

7.... 12 Dull In nt

I Prcnect

• Qaragea

WICDD

YOUNG'S

..aUIUii.·

,.

Pomeroy, Ohw

ACR081

ALDER

•AK

Thurs. Feb. 1 Karaoke
'Fri &amp;Sat Feb. 2 &amp;3
Uve music by
"Villain"
9 pm to 1 am

SHied proj&gt;o1111 lor the
Purchon ond Dollvory of
'TWo (2) Now Cob ond
Chuolo Trucko for uoo by
tho Melga County Council
on Aging Hot Mill Program
In -Molgo County, Ohio, will .
be rooolvod by the Melgo
County Commloolonere It
,. tholr ofllco ot the
.CourthouN, Pome.Oy, Ohio

33795 HiU&amp;nd Rd.

FAEi ESTIMATES'

e

144 Third Ave.
Tollfrtt 1·814·745-1847

GOOD TIMES THIS WEEK

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Self·Storage

COMMEICW..WI!SIDq

MJnis e Etc
GaiiiDols 446·4995

• Vertical. • Wood

..

High 8/. Dry

____N_E_A_C_r_o...;•..;.•...;*;.,:o,.;,r.:d;..:P:_u::z::z::l:=•_ _ _ ,

PHU,I,TP

~.,

, . New Homu • Vinyl
Skjlng • New Garagee
• Replacement Wlndoww
• Room Addftlone• Roofing

(Fecto.y O,utlet)
All vertical blind&amp; are made to order at
our, location .

BRIDOJ:

,._ eu.,

IISSIU. HILIIIS
IIC. •

The CRAFTY, BLIND SPOT

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

. ..... B I• The Dally Sentinel

-a.--··

e.

E. Uvtrp0o172, ""''titrG (W. Ill.) Park 69
Enon GtMnon 44. Spmg. NW 3?
Fairport Horbor Hordi~ ?3 , Thompson

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Eastem
ltamPIIp81

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Eagles tallied over half their
points, and · throughout both
quarters, the Eagles · held the
Rebels to 11 points.
The Eagles substituted freely
throughout the· second half, and
put a full reserve squad in to play
·in the final period. Br~nt Buckley
served as the leader. of th~ young
players and scored six fourth
quarter points. ·
Chad Nelson shared the scoring duties for the Eagles with,
both whom scored 16 points
apiece. Chris Lyons followed with

Tllomat Worlhinglon 67, Grove~ 44
Tol Maumee Valley 88, Strilch 72
Trlnily (Ky.) 98, New RICilmOnd

n'

Fuehl Mizrachl 45, Menlor Ctlr, .t3
Olhlnna 41, G.,_, 42
a ward 13, Nowlon Falil58, or
GrarMIIo 63, Ll&gt;tr1y Union 49
HaMibll Rlv« 87. t8w Mltamorat Frontier

Tro1wood·Madioon 101, Spring. N.

TroY Christian 52 . Jefferson 51
Upper Arlington 87, GallOway Wes'*'&lt;l 60
Urbano.66, Spmg. !&lt;aniOn Ridge 85
Van W"" 80, EdQ""on 56

39

Heath 87, Summit Btallon LICking Hts. 35
Hutmard 52, Uberty j44
Hubar HIS wayno 65. Day. MaadowOalo 59
Hudeon 69, Moytlald 54
Hunting ,.Valley University School 82, Cle
Cant. Cath. 73
•
lndependlnce 70, Aurora 81
Jacksort-Mihon 59, Berlin Center Westem
Ra88f'YI!I &lt;415 •
Kenl Aooeevoll60. Nordonlo 55 ·
lakewood St. Edward 78, Bedford 49
·Lancaster 58, OubMn Cottman 54
Lanca&amp;ler Fairliold Unloa 83, CI&lt;CIOYille 55
Lancaster Fisher Cath. 39, Millersport 36
l ewis Center Olentangv 75, Marion Harding

63

.

Llckln&amp; Counly Clv. Acad. 63. Liberly Clv.
.
Lima Bath 59, Lafayette Alief'! E. 57
Uttte Miami 64, Kings Muts 50
Loveland 85, lebanon 48
Madison 73, Geneva 52
Mlple Hts. 99, Garfield Hts. 61
Marla Stein Marion local 7t, Convoy
Crestview 63
Marlena 53, Gallipolis GaKia 47
Mason County (Ky.) 64, Ripley Ripley·
Unlort-Lewis-Hunllnglon 50
Maysville 55, Thornville Sheridan 48
Mechanicsburg 5e , Lewistown Indian lake
59

39

Medina Chr. ~ .Cornerstone Ctlr. 43
Mentor 86. l.lkewood 69
Mentor Lake Cath. 71, Eastlake N. 54
· Metamora Evergreen 49, Hilltop 40
Miami Valley 84, Spring Valley 78
Miamisburg 68, Franklin 58
Middletown Fenwick 71 , Cariisl&amp;39
Mineral Ridge 59, McDonald 50
Mlrwuva77, Salem 74
Minford 51 , Franklin Furnace Green 46
Monroe C8flt. 62, McMechen (W. Va .) Bish·
op Donahue 53
Morgan 88, River View 77
Morral Ridgedale 74, Marion Cath. 63
Mount Vernon Academy 69, Torah Academy

48
N. Lima s . RanQO 87. Vienna Ma111ew1 83
N. Rovatton 72, Brecksville 64
Nelsonville-York 57. Albany Alexander 54
New Middletown Spring. 70, Lowellville 42
New Philadelphia 68, Gnadenhutten Indian
Valley 61
Newcomeratown 62, M81vam 48
Northside Christian 78, Herllage Chrls~ian
58
.
Northwood 36, N. Baltimore 35
onawa Hills 5&amp;, TOI. CMa11an 42
Palneovllle Riverside 73, AsiTiabula Harbor ·
55
Parma Normandy 53, Parma 33
Penlr\8&lt;&amp;1 Lake Rldga 47, E~rla FBCS 42
Perr)'lburg 81 , Roooford 50
·
Pomerov Meigs 71, Weltaton 60
.FleediYIII Easlem 82, Crown Ctly S. Gallia

41
Rlehmond tfts. 68, Norlh Coaat Chr. 48
Rodty RNar 79, Rodty River Lu111eran W. 54
S. Point 72r Ironton Rock Hi1145
Seaman N. Adams 68, Peebles 62
Shodyslde 64, llellolro St John'• 52 ·
Shaker Hill. $4, Parma HIS. Valley Forge 46
Southington Chalker &amp;8. lordatown 63
Spring. Shawnee 69, New Carlisle TecumaeH53
St. Clairsville 74, Indian Creek 53
St. Paris Grahllm 79, Pit.bu':V Franklin-Monroe 84
Steubenville Calh. Cenl. 87, Bowaraton
Cononon Valli!' 60
Stow 81, Kenston 47
Slralburg-Franklln 48, W. Lafayette FUdgewooci3S
Strongsville 51, Medina SO
Sugar Grove 'Berne Union 65, New Albany
50
.
Sugaraeek Garaway 71, Toronto 44

.12 points, and Buckley hit double
"I was also pleased with the fact
that our everyone·received extenfigures as well with 10 points,
The Rebels leading scorer on sive playing time tonight; ' Coldthe night was josh Waugh with 14 well added." All 13 players scored,
points, followed by jason Merrick and that makes everyone happy
.
on the team."
with 10.
"It was a very difficult situation
Eastern will play host to Federfor us tonight," Ea~tern head al Hocking Friday, and entertains
coach Howie Caldwell said. "W~ Chesapeake on Saturday. Tip-off
were headed one way and they time for both ga~1es is 6:30 p.m.
[South Gallia) were headed
The ~eserve game scheduled
another. The long bus ride took with South Gallia was reschedits toll
our players and it uled for Monday, Feb. 5.
showed in the fitst quarter. South
The Trimble-Eastern game,
Gallia out hustled us and just beat which was canceled ~ue to snow,
us up and down the · court. I ,am has been rescheduled for Feb. 17 ·
veiy pleased to see that we goi . at Eastern.
things under control and took ·
South Gallia plays at Ironton St.
care of business in the .second joe ·Friday.
quarter.

on

Swon1on 58, Mlil&gt;ury Laka 45
Sylvania Norlhvlow ffl . Holand SprjnQ. 26

L--33

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Wednesday, January 31, 2'" c

Prep Hoops Scoreboard

Alheltl- T,..,or Garlkl oo-o o, Wee» Mar·
11n 1 4.. Brl&lt;1 Hlr1lly o-o Kurt Cloni&lt;tl' 2
-11 • 7 14 - 41
2-2 e. T.- Klnoloy 0 o-o 0, Joson Spo.15 20 22 1&amp; - 12
1 0.0 2, lllkt Dade 1 0.0 2, B. A. Rilly 1 0.0 2,
-----10.02,Kyto
BrWI 110g1 2 o-o 4, Las C11lmplln e 2·5 14.
Moonoy 2 0.0 4, Jolt&gt; Wough 7 0.0 14, Shone
T...lo: 19 10.14 50.
1-3 7, JUon Mlfrlck !5 Q.O 10:
31)0inl goa~ - RV 2 (Nolon. 2), Athons 2
~..-20.24. TOIIII20 1-541 .
- JCIIh KoN 2 0.0 4, G - Kerr 2 (Perez 2). Rebounde:-RV 26, Athens 26
2-21. Chrio ~yono 5 0.0 12, Joe !!tOWn 14-6 . (Champlin Iii). Allilts-RV 3, Athlf't 10 (Perez
. 11. Aloo Sime&gt;oon 1 0.0 2, Bnld BraMon2 o-2 4). SINia-RV 1. Alhtno 8 (Ma•ln 2) .
5, _ , Klmol2
4, Bror\1 llucidoy 5
10, TUI'I'IOVtri- RV 9, Athena 9.
.N: Athen8 55, River Valley 51 . RV: Jessie
Mil 8imC&gt;oon 1
2. Chod No11or1 7 2-2 18,
......,_1 1·23,Jetemy-10.02. ·ware 15.
ll&gt;lolo 35 9-14112.
3.poin1 goo~-SG none, Ellllfn 3 (lyons
Olllo H l t h - Boyt ittkttbtll
TUMday'a RNuett
2. 8raMOn). Reboundi - South , Gallla
Alcr. Cenlrai·Hower 85. Akr. e. 10
22(Snono
onoon , 7), Eallam 32 (Man
Akr. Coventry 56, Zoarvtlle Tuscarawes Val·
111n'4&gt;10" 7). Aaaii11-SOW1 Galllo 15 (Kyle
ley 49
Mooney 8, trevor Sha11er 11. Elolam 22 (Brad
Akl. Flres10ne 69, Akr. KenrT'IOI"6 52
- 4 , . - KeN 4J.
GaiOa
Amanda.Ciearcreek 59, Cola. Hamlhon Twp.
1 (Silane S1eveNOI1 3), Eao1am 18 (Man SimP'
49
oan 3, CIVil Lyona 3, Jo&lt;erny Shonka 3).
Amelia 68, Cln. Harrison 55
T~-South Gatlia 2!i, Eastern 15.
Apple Creek Waynedale 68, Manetleld Temple 41
Melgl 71, WOI1110nl0'
Alherw 50, Cheshire River Valley 33
15 14 14 16 - 60
Austintown Fitch 65, WarrertJF.K 55
....
13 17 11 30 71
Barnesville 70, Union Local 62
w.ll.wn - Brant Derrow 3 5-B 11 , Ousty
BeachwOOd 74, StreetSboro 68
Fultz 4 0-0 10, Eric Downard 2 0.0 4, Eric SnyBeallsville 53, Brldgeporl 39
der 3 1·2 7 , Tel ThaCker 4 4-7 14, Chuck MulSeavlf Eastern 66, Portsmouth E. 65
lbn o 0.0 o, Roman Brandau 0 0. 1 0. Josh
, S.IIbrook 69, W. Carrollton 56
o.v!t 5 1-2 11 , Jason Bremer 1 0-0 2. Totals
Bellelontalne 59, Spring. NE 48 .
22 11·20 60.
Belpre 55, Racine SOuthern 49
Metgs - J.P. Staats a 3·5 19, Adam But ling.
Bern 67, N.,Aidaeville60
10~ 1 1·3 3, Matt Williamson 0 4-4 4, Derek
Bertin Hiland 50, Tuscarawas Cenl. Cath . 33
J0hn8on 0 0.(1 0. Travis Siders 1
2, Jason
Bowling Green 47, Sylvania Southview .f3
Knighl 0 ().() o, Nick Bolin 3 B-12 16, Buzzy
BrlstoMUe Bristol 69, Cortland Maplewood
FICkler 0 0.0 0, Oertlc:k JOhnson e 3·5 21 , Jol'ln
56
.
Wltherell2 0.4 4, Matt Lewis 1 0.0 2. Totals 24
Brooklyn 68, Oberlin 63
19-33 71 .
Brunswictc 56, Middleburg Hts. Midparll 40
3·point goals - Wellston 4 (Fu11z 2, Thacker
Cambridge o48, Uhrichsvi~e Claymont 45
2). Meigs 4 (Bolin 2, Dornek Johnson 2).
CarJ1)Dell69, Niles 59
Can. Tlmken 64, Louls\fllle St. Thomas
Belpre 16, Southern 48
Aquinas 34
'
Belpra
13
9 15 18 55
Canal Wlnchealer 64, Bloom·C8rroll 49
SOU1hom
a. 9 13 21 - 49
Canfield 67, Beloit w. Brancn 45
SOuthern - Nathart Mar1in 2 0.0 4, Brandon
Hll4 0-o 8, Chad Hubbard 6 0·113, MattWamCldorville 65, Nor11Vidge 52
Chagrin Falls 77, Gates MiUs Gilmour 46
• 0 2·2 2, Jeremy Fisher 3 0-1 7, Matt Ash 1
Chesapeake 69, Proctorville Fairlaml 34
0.0.2. Garrat Kiser 3 3-3 10, Jonathan Evins 1
Chesterland W. Guuga 63, Mantua Crest·
0.0 3. 'ro1a1S 20 5·7 49.
Belpre - Taylor N1110r 0 2-3 2, Kyle Holben
wood41
Chilllcoltte Huntington Rosa 70, Williamsport
30.19, PatKieln50·012,AaronNolan 4 2·
Westta1158
2 10, Nick Morey 5 4·7 14, Jason Eakle 2 4-5 8
Cln. Anderson 53, Cln. Glen Esta 32
Totals 19 12·18 55.
3-polnt goala-SOuthem 4 (Hubbard, Fisher.
Cin. Country Dav 57, Cln. Seven Hills 41 ,
Cin. Finneytown 79, Batavia 56
KIMr. Evans). Belpre 5 (Holbert 3, Klein 2).
Cin. Hilla Chr. Acad. 84, Cln. Lockland 38
Martetla 53, 011111 Academy 47
Cin. Moellel 64, Day. Chllminade·JuUenne
Galllo A.-ny 13
9 11 14 - 47
52
Cln. MI. Healthy 69, Aiken 66
Marietta
7 11
9 25 53
Ckt Northwest 68, Cin. Turpin 5(1
GaUia Academy (7-8,' SEOAL 5-6) - Andre
Geiger 3 o-o 7, Travla McKinnlss 0 0.0 0, Nick
Cit Reading 64, Georgetown 39
Oreuel 3 0·0 8, Donnie Johnson q O.Q n,
Cln. Roger Bacon 59, Cln. McNicholas 56
Cit Rosa 64, Goshen 58, OT
Dustin Deckard 8 2·3 18. T.J. HI 11).() 2. Cody
Cin. St. Bernard 61. Cin. Summit CoLI'Itry
CP:Mel 2 Q.O 4, David Finney 3 0.0 8, Allen
Day 57
Skinner 0 ().() O.•Totals 20 2·3 47.
· Cln. Tan 65, Gin. Walnut Hills 63
Marlella (ll-5, SEOAL H ) - Braden Amigo
Cin. Winton Woodt 69, Mason 55
1 2.. 4, Aaron SuHon o 1·2 1, Brandon B&lt;JI1&lt;e 1 .
Circleville logan Elm 64,·Ashvlile Teays Val·
7, S18phtn Rose 1 8-6 8, Darren Swartz 0
ley40
0-0 0, Kevin Breaux 11 -2 4, Jotln Farr7 5-tl 19,
Tyler Lough j 0.0 3, CIYio Fennell 2 Q-0 5,
Cle. E. 66, Cle. JFK 53
Cia. Eu1 Tech
Cia. John Marsholl 74
Bryan~ 11).()~ . Toials16 2o-26 53.
Cle. Glenville 99, Cle. John Hay 81
3-polnt QOO~-Gollia Aca&lt;lerny 5 (Drassol,
Cle. Heritage 65, Grand River &amp;t
Finney 2. Gotgor 1),Marle11a 3 (Breaux, Lough,
Cia. Hts. Lutheran E. 64, Ashtabula Sts.
Fennell 1}. Reboundi - Gallla Academy 24
\
(Oed&lt;afll 8, F01nay 5), Marlena 26 (Farr 11). Jol'ln &amp; Paul 37
Cle. S. 66, J.F. Rliodes 55
Allllts-Gallla Academy 12 (Finnev 4,
lloclrord 3), Marlena 8 (Amigo, Sutlon 2).
Ckl. VASJ 66, Pony 53
818011-Galla Academy 8 (lloclrord 3), Marie!·
Cols. Beechcrott 78, Cols. East 55
COlo. Brlgga 75, COlo. S. 58
11 1. Blocked shoiS-Gallia Acade~ 2. Marlat·
18 8 (Farr 6). Tumovers-Gda Academy 9,
COla. Brookhoven 104, COil. Cenlonnlal35
Cola. Eaolmoor 64. COlo. Ylalnu1 Ridge 46
Marlo11114.
JV-Gallla Academy 48, Marietta 45.
Colo. Independence 91 , COlo. W. 76
Glllia A&lt;:ldamy-Ryan - . , 20, Cole
Cola. Linden 65, Cole. Mifflin 61
Hlggany 13. 1.11r11111·-Kovin \\lilrff 14, Chris
COil. NotU\Iand 74, C&lt;;s. WhaiS1DnO 70
Cola. f1tady 54, Nowal1&lt; Ce1h. 2Q
Pal-11.
·
'
Colt. Wellii)Qton 72, COis. World HaNes! 55
C()lumblllna 63, UsOOn ao
A1hlnal0, AI- Vlllty S3
ConUnontal64, COiumbua Grove 58
Rlvlr Vlt1oy
11' 2 12
33
COrUiod Lakeview 67, leavittsburg laBrae
15 12 11 12 - 50
Alver Valley - Craig Payne 1 0..3 2, Eric
57, 20T
Nolan 5 2-2 14, Jon Mollohan 0 0.0 0, Blake
Cory·Rawson 80, 11Mf1on 49
Marcum 1 Q.O 2, D,J. Frazee 3 1·1 7, Scott
Cuyahoga Falls 84, Twinsburg 35
Payne 0 Q.O 0, Clatk Welker 0 2-2 2, Tlm
Day. Chrllt~n 95, Day. Belmont 92
RlchardiOn 2 o-o 4, Jeramy Pl&lt;ic 1 o-o 2.
Day. ColOnel Whke 70, Spri~. s . 69
Tolail: 13 5-8 33.
Dover49.Co~n30

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Bucktyt Trail 28

Cny 12. 11orlon Pillllrw51

Cillgrln Fait 64, Wicklllo 43
Cr.terllnd W. Geeug~ 62, Orange 42
Cl1iMicOII1e Zllll Tracal4, Plk- 55

C01. Colerain 65, Cln. l'lloiCIIOn 61
Ci'l. Finneylown 82, Cln. Dear Park 5?
.c in. Hln'ilon 56, Cin. Aou 36
Cit Hlltl Chr. Acid. 51 , Cin. Seven Hill&amp; 34

Cin. u.dtn49, Ckl, tndian Hill 37
Cin. Marilmont 75, On. Adding 25

v

Hflh: :SOl; Law~=

.

Community news and notes, As
Meigs tops Eastern, Southern wins, 11

Details, A3

W Lil&gt;orly·Salem 59, Ridgeway Rldgamont
40

warren Cha~lon 64 , Kinsman Badger 58
Warrensvlll78, E. Cle. Shaw '75
W&amp;ynesflek;f.Goshen 80, N. lswi&amp;burg Triad
31
.
WtUaville 78, Cadiz Harrison Cent. 44
'Mlealersburg 70, lronlon 48
Whitetlaii·Yearling 87, London 62
1Nhiteh01fl8 MthOny wayne 43, MIUmH 38
Willougllb) S. 61 , A8trtabula EdgeWO\ld 58
Willow Wood Symmes Valk!y 73, GlenWood
NeW Boston 63
·
Wilmington 51, Oin. Norwood 43
Yellow Spriroa 88, Mid. Christian 54
!.
Youngs. Chaney 53; Youngs. Rayan 49
Youngs. Chrll~an 82. VlctOfY Christian 30
Zanesville 84, MYiersburg 'VI!· Holmes 50

Melcs County's

Ohio Hlilh SChool Ol~o Boakotboll

'l'u..ct•r'• Rleultl

Archbold 54 , Pettisville 52
Bainbridge Paint \'allay 73, WilliamSport
Westfall 35
'
'
Beltsville 57, Fremont Temple Christian 16 .
BLKton Berltshira 31 , Newbury 28
Byesville Meadowbrook 55. Old Wastmgton

IIIIIIIIUI··I·B

CllfiidiZEIImiiiiiB EI,ECTIIIIC
Will IEfiiRII I 111111 If lAYS II
DEPEII.II II TIE CIMCEI Yll ID.IE
IICIIE TU Ill 111111 II liE I.IT c•ICE -

February 1,1001

a1.

MeA.

Cln. MI. Notre Dame 54, Cin.
Cln. Ook Hill 52, Lak... E. 35
•Cln. SCPA 13, Cln. Woodward 1!0. ~
Cin. St. Urei.tla 55, Cln. lksi.Mna 42 , .......
Cln. \'VyornH1g 60, N. Sand TaylOr 31

lET IIITU

Thursday

•

.....-

Cin. lo1dlclioloa82, Kolllring Al1er 34 =
Cln. 1Atn:v 53 , Cin. Solon 41

Vermilkln 79, Welllnglon 74, OT
Vincent Warren 55, Point Pleasant (W. VI.)

37

•

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh1·o

Volume 51 . Numb e • I 7l

Fire·safety
matter
·of life
and death

Training session

'

Local deaths
bring scifety issues
close to home
POMEROY -The misuse
of wood stoves, portable space
heaters aod kerosene heaters
cause as many as, 300 deaths a
year, and the risk of fire deaths
and injuries from those heat~ng

sources is greater in rural
-areas than anywhere else in the

:u.s.

: Monday's death of four
:Pageville. residents, whose
:bodies were found on matress-

:es in a mobile home next to a

I

. ·- Electric tpace beaten •
• When purcbasing elechic
space heaters, ,I consumers ·

. .................... .lUI

Representatives of Ohio SchooiNet taught a professional development training course on Tuesday in the Eastern High
School computer lab. Mike·Edwards, pictured here with teachers from Trimble, Belpre and Eastern, and Carol VanDeest, discussed the integration of technology into the classroom and the school curriculum. It is one of a number of training sessions that the two have conducted throughout southern Ohio. Ohio SchooiNet is a state-affiliated commission charged with ·
Implementing technology into the local schools. (Brian J. Reed photo)

M&amp;G wiU participate·in··recycling·development·
BY MICHELE CARTER

PET i~ a plastic most
widely used worldwide for the
manufacture of beverage bottles.
Bowen said PET is currently
being recycled, but it is
very costly.

The evaluation of the technology is
scheduled to begin at the beginning of
APPLE GROVE. W.Va.- M&amp;G
the third quarter of 2001 . Petrecycl e
has announced it has entered into a
developed the new processes to fully
joint development agreement with
incorporate colored bottles, and PET
Petrecycll! Pty Ltd. to construct, opere
containing other barrier materials,
ate, test .and evaluate patented techinto the recycling process.
nology for PET recycling.
The relationship between M&amp;G
The technology 'Iivas developed by
and Petrecycle will add to and compli" If the project is viable, this will be ment M&amp;G's present recycling facili Petrecyde, a portfolio company of
the best technology in the world for ties which indudes .the limited comVital Capital Pty. Ltd.
M&amp;G Plant Manager · Robert recycling PET," Bowen said. "There is mercial produc tion .of Cleartuf
B.o wen said right now, the addition of a lot of potential for this process."
Repete 16, a PET grade containing
PET is a plastic most widely used around I 0 percent post consumer
the recycling operations will have a
worldwide for the· manufacture of recycled PET, suitable for use in packminor impact on, current operations.
However, if the process proves to be beverage bottles. Bowen said PET is aging carbonated and other beverages,
viable, possibly a greater impact would currently being recycled, but it is very
be seen down tpe road.
costly.
OVP NEWS STAFF

WASHINGTON (AP) - Making his
case before a host of believers, President
Bush is appealing to law~akers , foreign
heads of state and spiritual leaders for
support as he tries to expand religious
groups' roles in hdping the needy.
The president, who was .to address the
National ·Prayer Breakfast on Thursday,
also was emphasizing the significance of
faith In society.
"Faith is important to the civility of
our coqntry," Bush said in remarks pre-

~

an

•i.l

,

POMEROY - O hi o Secretary of State J
Kenneth 13l ac kwe ll will b e the !.Ill est speak,er
at 1th e M eigs Coun t y . R epub lican, Par ty's
annu al Lin coln Day Din ner on Feb. 12.
T he dinpcr, main fu nd-ra ise r of the yea r fol' _
the part y, will take placc ·.at:
M eigs Hi gh Sc h oo l at - 6:
p.m . T ickets are $12.
Bla ck we ll
was
first
appointed, and subse que ntly
elec ted , to state\vide o ffi ce
in 199 4 when he ass umed .
th e O hio treas urer's offi ce.
In hi s fi ve years as t rea~ ur-.
e r, Bla ckwe ll institu tion al - ·
Blackwell
ized a conse r va tive inves tme nt po licy to safegu ard
p ubli c investm ents and left a
lasting legacy as the architect of O hi o's inves tm ent refo rm legislati on.
Blac kwell also created the treas ury's Center·
for Publi c Investment M anagemen t, a natip nally- recognized prog ram that admin isters :the
stat e's co ntiriui ng invest m en t edu cation P,rO:
gram.
· In 1991 , Presid e nt Geo rge Bush appointed
him as amb assad or to th e Un ited Nations:·
Commiss ion on Hum an Ri ghts . H e ·represe nted th e U. S. o n missions '(h ro u gho ~ t :tl'teworld to assess hum an ri ghts conditi o ns·,·
includin g monito rin g si tua tio ns in th e Middle
East foll owi ng th e Persia n GulfWar, as well as
in Bosn ia an J othn Easter n Euro p ea ~ co un tri es .
In 1993, Bl ackwe ll received th e U. S. Sta-t e
Department 's Sup erior H ono r Award for lead- '
ership in th e fi ciJ of hum an ri g hts. His inter- :
national ac ti viti es have tak en him to 53 coun .. :
tri es and strength ened his un derstan ding of :
e me rging' inter nati o nal m ar h :ts and th e,:
growth of demo c racy wo rldwide.
Blackwell was also co- chairm an of the U. S.
' Census Monitoring Board, a nll'mb er of the
U. S. Departm ent of Labor Adviso ry Co un cil '
on Employee Welfare and Pensio n Bent fJ!
Plans (ERISA), Nation al Co mm issio n o n
Economi c Grow th and Ta x R efor m , and
mayor o f C in ci nn ati.

..

Please see GOP, Page Al

.

aampaip

COLUMBUS . (AP) - . Gov.
Bob Taft1 who hit ' the campalgn
trail hard last
year for legislative candidates
and
environmental bond'
issue, picked up
million for
hit own reelecrion while
he was at ic;
campaign
finance reports
6Ied WednesdAy showed.
·
No bemocrat emerged . as a
challenger ro 1Ift during the early
fund-raising 'season, according to
the reports 6Ied with Ohio Secretary Of Sta.., Kenneth Blackwell.

NEWS STAFF

President pushes faith-based initiative at prayer breakfad·
.
The National Prayer Breakfast is an annual gatlrerlng ofmembers of
Congress, Cabinet members, clergy and lay people.
pared for the breakfast. Vice President annual gathering of members of C onDick Cheney also was .addressing t\le gress, Cabinet members, clergy and lay
group.
people. It is a ritual' dating back to 1952
Bush, capping a week 'in which he has when a group of lawmakers gathered to
focused on less-fortunate members of pray for newly elected President Eisensociety, was to propose new federal help hower and his government.
for disabled Americans.
Presidents traditionally attend and
The National Prayer Breakfast is an speak.

18ft raises S1:l million ··~

for ·

Secretary
of State
to speak at·
GOP dinner
SE NTI N E ~

NEWS STAFF

;wood stove, space heater and a
:kerosene heater, brinj!S the
·importance of safe operation
of residential heating systems .
close to home,
The use of these types of
heating sources is considered
the most rapidly-increasing
&lt;:ause of house fires in the
U.S., according to a website
devoted to home fire satety.
With the increase in home
"heating com and ·particularly
cold ·temperatures of thiBJanuary, many families have turned
to alternate heating sources
such as ~ood burners and
space heaters to help warm
their homes and reduce heating costs.
Specific safety measures are
important for each type of
home heating.
Wood stoves
• Fire officials estimate that
· 6,500 house fires a year are the
direct result of wood-burning
stoves and their misuse. Safety
experts advise that, when
shopping for a new wood
.stove, consumers carefully
inspect for solid construction,
with, no cracks around hinges,
legs and door seals.
• Only seasoned wood
should be used as fuel in
wobd:-bUrning St\)ves. Green
wood, paper and trash should
never be used, even as a starter.
For safety's sake, artificial logs
are also discouraged.
.
• Pipes and chimneys
should be carefii)ly inspected
each year.
• Combustible materials
should be kept at least three
feet away from the fire.

(Pnh

BY TONY M. LEACH

BY BRIAN J. REED

SENnNE~

~0

And Republicans ,Jim Pe~to~d
Joseph Deters raised a combllled
$1.2 million in 2000 in ~~t
could become a ·sp.irited race. fOr
attorney general.
·•'
The reports were the first ~t
were required to be.fi.led ele.c tron·
ically, and BlackweU's office ha,cl all
the cabdidarea' numbeJil online by
the end o(clu!day,~cwide c'llo
didares who raised or spcMt
money last ~ar were required II

file,
Taft

"

not
fo~rnally
announce&lt;\ a campaign but is
expected to seek re-election next
}'ear. His total on hand as of Dec,:
31 was $1.7 million. His campaign
also toOk in-kind contributions

has

worth $173,078.

Car audio store opens in Middleport

Toclay's

Sentinel

2 S•r:tl•- 11 P'llps
AS

Calegdar
CJauified1

B4.-6
B7
A4

Comic•
Editorial•'

A3

Sgorq

At least 4,000 peopl e were expeC:red
fo r th e event at a Washington ho't el,
includin g th e leaders of Congo, R wanda,
Macedoni a an d M on te negro.
Earli er th is wee k, Bush unveil ed :a
series o f initiatives to allow 'reli g io Os
institutions to co mp ete for a share Of.
social-se rvi ces m o ney that th e govern- ·
me nt distributes. H e also wo uld provid~
tax breaks to en co urage charitable give
mg.

81.3-4.6

.

A3

Lotteries
OHIO

J!ldl3: 7-8-4; l'ldt •• 3-5-8-2
5upw
6-I(}.2AJ..34..43.o45
n ' '8-1-8-2-5-3
EVA.
Dolly 3:3-4-3 Dolly •• 2-8-1-1

a-

C 2001 OIUo Valley Publi1hina: Co.

.

Bassheadz is also
DARE booster
FROM STAFF REPORTS

MIDDLEPORT - 'With the
addition of Bassheadz to Middleport's downtown , local car
audio buffs have a convenient
and affordable outlet for sales
and service.
Mark Haley and David, Neutzling have opened the retail
store at 213 N. Second Ave., and
will hold a three-day grand
opening beginning at noon
Thursday. The event will continue through Saturday at 9 p.m .
Haley and Neutzling are both
veterans of the audio installation

P11a11 ... New, Pap AJ

.

.

NEW AUDI(I
STOREMark and ;·
Kim Haley,
David Neut·
zling and
Leona BelbjJerof
· ~
Bassheadr.·
are preparing
for a threeday open
house at ~e:
new car ·
audio store,
located In •
downtown .
Middleport.
The event
will begin at :
noon on · Thursday.
(Brian J.
Reed photo)

...

I

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