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                  <text>MARSHALL, OHIO TO BAnLE SATURDAY, 81

•

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Melp County's

n.omton: Deputy layoff ~probably' prevented

2001FORD

2001 MERCURY
2000 FOitD FGRAND MARQUIS ' 150SC4X4
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2 lochooM from otanlno at

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support transferring funds from the
commissioners' budget in order to
make deputy payroll.
"We haven't received a certification from the budget commission,
but I think we'll have enough to
make it through the year," Thornton
said. "It's looking good, and if we can
make it through the end of the year,
we're going to be OK."
While Commissioner Mick Davenport said he remains willing to discuss possible remedies to the ongoing
financial crunch in the department,
Thornton and Commissioner Jim

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143081

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$3,550

. $2,950

Sheets voiced their unwillingness to
impose a half- percent sales tax hike
to finance law enforcement, but said
they would support a ballot initiative
on the issue so voters can decide.
''I've been talking to the public,
and people want thi s on the ballot,"
Thornto~ said.
Deputies, meanwhile. say more
than l, 700 signatures gathered in the
past 10 days show . overwhelming
support of the tax increase, and that
the commissioners should impose it
immediately.
·

Please see Deputlu, A3

Meigs Board

$18,9.95 $22,995

.2ooi ibR.o

Auto, At:,I'W.L, Cn1IM, Tilt

POMEROY - As Meigs County
sheritf's deputies picketed in front of
the Meigs County Courthouse
Thursday morl)ing, county commissioners tried to assure other deputies
that their jobs were probably safe.
Members of the Ohio Pattolmen 's
Benevolent Association began an
informational picket which they plan

At the commissioners' regular
meeting, Commissioner Jeff Thornton told OPBA Local President Bill
Gilkey and other deputies that the
budget crunch will "probably" be
solved, and layoffi "should be" averted through the end of the year.
Trussell lacks an estimated $16,500
in order to make the final payroll of
the year, and Thornton said the
county will likely be able to scrape
up the additional funds from proceeds on personal property and sales
taX revenue.
If necessary, Thornton said, he will

V8, Auto, Moon Rool,

143050

1

TAURUS ·

Bv BRIAN J. REED
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

to continue until they are positively
assured of job security through the
end of the year.
Sheriff Ralph Trussell, who has
been away from his office due to
minor surgery, issued layoff notices
earlier this month to deputies and
other staff members after the commissioners informed hlm that his
payroll fund was depleted.
.
Last week, Trussell extended the
layoff notice through Dec. 7 aft~r the
commissioners approved funds transfcrs from other line items into
Trussell's salaries budget.

2001 •
2001FORD
MERCURY
WJNDSTARLX MOUNTAINEER
Only ONE left!

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Auto, V6, AC;

Auto, AC, AM/FM ' Auto, AM/FM!Cast

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.

Auto, ·V8, PW&amp;L,
Cruise, nit

$13,995

1998CHEVV
METRO
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1999

www.mydaily~entinel.com

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

s.o cenb • Novemb"r 16, 2001 ·Vol. 52, No 66

1997FORD
MUSTANG

Hometown Newspaper

approves hirings

~.J

.

y.11.\"'"

FROM STAFF REPORTS

•

(.'0\)•1' ~t.
•t.~o~, 'f$f'

'

POMEROY
The
Meigs Local Board of Education
hired
personnel
including coaches and substitutes during Thursday
evening's regular meeting.
Greg McCall was approved
by the board to begin work
as a tutor for a health handicapped student at a rate of
$15 per hour, not to exceed
five hours per week and Troy
Bauer was hired as head varsity wrestlfng ·coach and
Danny Davis as assistant
wrestling coach for the
2001-02 school year pending
the comP,Ietion of all :idmin-

'~
·
-.v.o ' "'"

Turnpike has Qreat employment
.oppc)rtunltles for hiQhly
motivated Individuals In
~SALES &amp; SERVICE
P~t Hill or Brian Ross Today!

~

DON T Gl1'

Ul D 0 FF
SIUll TOU

eputies from the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department and members of the Ohio
Patrolmen's Benevolent Association gathered in front of the Meigs County Courthous~ Thursday during the first day of a continuing
informational picket. The ongoing picket is being
held to inform the public about a payroll shortage in
the sheriff's department and to encourage support for
·a 1/2 percent sales tax increase for law enforcement
purposes.

un

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'

'1195

•
aDIItJZI"'"
•
'FASTWBE

• Se.vlce lncl
s up to 5 quarts of Motorcraft oil artd new
Motorcran oil filter • Perfonn Multi-Point Vehicle Inspection
• Lube • Check Ent fill necessary fluids • Allin 29 minutes
or less • Diesel vehicles

•••
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at

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WIPER BLADES
Starting
at

SPLASH GUARDS

•so~

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FORD FAC I ORY
BUG SHIELD
Starting
at

$8150

Installed

BED RAILS

Todlly's

Hlp: IGI .

Sentinel

Details, A2

2 Sections - 12 hps

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

L-:401

Lotteries

A5
OHIO
82-4 Pick 3: 2·6-6; Pick 4: 6-0-3-6

'85 Butl18je 5: 3-20-3(&gt;-33·34
A4 W.VA.

A3 DilDy 3: 9-2..() Daily 4: 1-4-6-5
B!.H,6 ·cash 25: 4-H)·11·21·22·23

A2

istrative requirements.
The board approved the
following as substitutes for
the 2001-02 school year
effective immediately: John
Gaus, bus driver; Mark Cor,
bitt, custodian
The board also accepted
the resignation of Janice
Haynes as junior class advisor.
In other matters, a contract
with Enron Energy Service,
Inc. for gas transportation
November
2001
from
through October 2004 was
approved and sealed bids for
three used sch.o ol buses, one

....

Pin•• -

Mlllp, AJ

Informational picket

-~1 · 1 MIll LS

u

.

.

C :2.001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

·Tony M. Leach photos

Michael Swisher, director of Meigs County Department of
Jobs and Family Services, spoke after receiving a plaque
recognizing him as Southeastern Ohio Regional Council's
Man of the Year for Meigs County during a Thursday banquet
at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community Col·
lege. Swisher was honored for innovative initiatives with wei·
· fare to work funds and in economic development. Swisher
was introduced by Meigs County Commissioner Mlck Oav·
enport. (Kevin Kelly photo)

SCHOOL FUNDING

Report: Court will soon order mediation
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Ohio
Supreme Court' will soon order mediation in the state's school finance lawsuit, hoping a neutral party can break
the 11 - year-old impasse over Ohio's
method of paying for public schools. ,
The order, which could come as early

as Friday, signals the court's retreat from
its September ruling that would have
forced the state to spend an additional
$1.2 billion each . year on public
schools. Some of the justices who voted
for the order said they believed the
remedy 'would cost much less.

Rather than appoint a specific medi- .
·ator, the court \Vill -offer a list of" highprofile, highly qualified people they can
chose from," a court source not identified told The Plain Dealer.
The four justices who support medi-

Pie8Se see Fundlnc. AJ

Nove1111ber 1 I· 1 7 Is

PerlopeNiive (OR)
Nurse Week
HOURS: ,
Mon- M9-7; '
Sat.9..5

-

'··

Holzer Medical Center salutes our
Surgical Nurses during
this special week.

•

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

•

•

�•10

The Daily Sentinel

Public defender plans to stay despite criticism

Ohio weather
Saturday, Nov. 17
MICH.

•

I T - I:17'111' I
•

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NEWARK (AP) -The Ohio public
defender said that he will not resign
despite criticism of how his office has
handled the death penalty appeal of a
convicted killer who is trying to prove
he's i•nocent.
The state attorrley general has asked
that Public Defender David Bodiker be
fired after his office failed to disclose
earlier several sworn statements in the
case ofJ!&gt;hn W. Byrd Jr.
In a letter to the Public Defender
Commission, the attorney general
accused Bodiker of unethical conduct
that she said harmed the integrity of the

judicial system.
" Fr.ankly, it is the best endorsement I
could get that she doesn't like me,"
David Bodik.er said of Attorney G~neral
Betty Montgomery.
The nine-member commission met
in ~xei:utive session Thursday and
decided to refer Montgomery's complaints to the Ohio Supreme Court's
disciplinary council, which investigates
allegations of improper conduct by
lawyers.
"The attorney general has no business
whatsoever telling the Public Defender
Commission who the. public defender

libido frustrated legitimacy on Attorney Genecal Betty Montgomery's official Web site.
A mouse click transported the user into the bawdy, eye-popping
world ofpornography instead of a site dealing with lofty leg:d issues.
Somehow the link was switched from laws to lewd
A series of revealing Web sites on the former legal link displayed
everything from bestiality to cartoon and group sex.
Alerted to the problem Thursday morning, Montgomery$ office
severed the connection.

Dry, warm through weekend
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A weak cold front was to
make the weekend only
slightly cooler .than the
unseasonable
week,
the
National Weather Service
reported. Conditions will
remain dry across the region.
Saturday temperatures will
be in the 60s.
Above-normal temperatures will continue through
Sunday, but showers are possible Sunday night as another
cold front moves through.
Temperatures then are
expected to dip below normal through Thanksgiving.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:15, and sunrise on Saturday
is at 7:19a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the mid 40s. West
wind 5 mph becoming north.
Saturday... Mostly sunny.

Highs in the lower 60s. Light
north wind.
Saturday
night ... Clear.
Lows in the lower 30s.
Extended forecast:
Sunday... Mosdy
sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s. .
Sunday
night...Pardy
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Lows in the mid
40s.
Monday... A chance . of
showers during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. Highs in
the mid 50s.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow or rain
showers. Lows 27 to 32 and
highs in the lower 40s.
Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow or rain
showers. Lows 25 to 30 and
highs in the lower 40s.
Thanksgiving.:.Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s
and highs in the upper 40s.

Raid yields five anesli
CLEvELAND (AP) - Police made five arrests and seize4 slot
machines, cash and records from three charity gaming stores.
The five people arrested Thursday at stores in Cleveland and
Lakewood are facing misdemeanor charges of gambling and operating a gambling house.
The three parlors searched were Madison Avenue Bingo and
World of Instants, both in Lakewood, and Instant Bingo in Cleveland.
Elyria police and Lorain sheriff's deputies also seized items at a
World oflnstants bwilless there.

· lndkbt£all issued in death
COLUMBUS (AP) -A Franklin County grand jury has indicted a Westerville man fur aggravated vehicular homicide in the death
of a state' trooper earlier this month.
David Dye, 33, is accuseil of killing Trooper Frank Vazquez, 26, of
Marysville, who was walking towanl another motorist he had
pulled over on Interstate 270 west of Columbus the night of Nov.

5.
Dye, who had four drunken-driving convictions, also was
charged with a misdeme:inorccount of driving under the influence.
If convicted, he could be sentenced to up to eight years in prison.

AG site blinp pom show
COLUMBUS (AP) -

Prurience trumped jurisprudence and

should be,'' said James Owen, the commission chairman and a Columbus
lawyer. "If anything, the letter should
serve as the Bodik.er protection act."
Montgomery spokesm"n Joe Case
s"id the attorney general's office
thought the commission's decision "wa&lt;
a good first step." There are "issues here
that beg for an independent probe of
the public defender's office," he said.
The public defender's office wa s
"deliberately withholding information
from the court that's trying to determine whether to put a man to death.
Does that seem appropriate?" Case said.

AEP-42.95
ArohCoal - 21 .15

Alczo- -44
AmTechSBC -39
Alhlenclirc. - 41 .82
AT&amp;T-18.98

Bani&lt; One- 311.68

BI.J- 9.51
8ab e..... -22.ee
Borgw.r-- 48.80
~-2.55

-channing Shops 5.55
Ci1y Holding - 9.90
Col- 15.10
DG-14.81
DuPonl - -44.11

Gannetl-68

General Eloctric
41 .55
GKNI.V - 4.40
Harley 0.\lidlon
48.31

Rock d-14.85
Rocky llooll- 5.95

1&lt;mert- 5.35

WltJ Mart - 56
w..d(a-30

RO Sloel- 47.50
Sews - 45.59
Shoney'a - 27

o.ll!l----

~-24.75

Wolf'ij.,..., - 14.35

IMldl End - 48.48
Lid. -14.38

... 4 p.on. e1o11ng
quolea cl . . Pill tall•
day'l IJaiiiiCIIonl. provided by Smilh Plot·

NSC-19.30
Oak Hill F"ononcill -

15.05

OVB-23.50
BBT-34.23

oo~B

·

.

neraat-lnc.

9,872.39

Delores '1ane" Kovacic, who filed the suit, lost her husband, Clifford, and her son, William. She and her daughter, Elizabeth, both :Of
Spencer in Medina County, were among those critically injured by
scalding water and shrapnel.

+0.50

9,903.04

.._
9,808.25

Record high: 11 ,722.98
. Jan. 1•. 2000

COLUMBUS (AP) -Jack Q Evans, former director. of the
Ohio State Univer.ity marching ~d and founder of the Activities
Band, has died. He was 86.
Evans, director of the marching band liom 1952 to 1964, died
Wednesday night of a blood infection, relatives said.
"He was a fum taskmaster but a gentleman. He commanded and
commanded and got respect,'~ said Paul Droste, who played the baritone horn in the band under Evans' direction. Droste later also
served as a director of the marching band
Evans grew up in Cleveland and earned bachelor's and master's
degrees in music liom Western Reserve Univemty.

CLEVELAND (AP) -The Cleveland Clinic Foundation next
year will open a women's health center with the help of a S2 million gift liom the Avon Products Foundation.
The facility will be an addition to the Oeveland Clinic Breast
Center,
Itwill be named for Stanley Gault and his wife, Ao. Gault is a former Ohio business executive and a member of the board of Av0n
.Produ~ Inc., a New York-based beauty products manufacturer. :

AUG.

SEPT.

OCT.

NOV.

+0.09

.._

1,146.46

1,135.06

Record high: 1,527.48

·'

NOV.

AUG.

Man:ll2• •2000

~============~
3,500

Victi11a's wife files suit

3,000

MEDINA (AP) -An antique steam engine that blew up at the
Medina County Fairgrounds had lieen inspected and deemed safe,
according to a lawsuit the widow of the operator filed against a
boiler repairman.
,
The lawsuit alleged that John Schrock was lUred two years earlier to examine and repair components of the steam engine and told
operator Clifford Kovacic the n .chine was safe.

2,500

1,900.57

The gift of gab for life.

HIF,

price--

OCT.

.
· Deputies
'

fi'Ofll Page A1

into effect right away, the
sheriff will have no trouble
making it through the end of
next year,'' Sheets said.
In other business, the com-

"I don't know who you're missioners:
: talking to," Deputy Kevin
• Approved appropriations
· Dugan told Thornton. "I have adjustments for the TB office,
•
·been talking to people for a EMS, Commissioners and
• ;week, and I haven't had one Juvenile Court budgets;
person tell me it should go on
• Approved the payment of
the ballot. You should put the
bills in the amount of
. iax on and let the people vote S\,368,130.21;
: it off if they don't like it."
• Approved a mutual ai&lt;!
: "We can't keep putting this
: off or we'll be in the same sit- 'EMS contract with Vinton
County commissioners;
.uation nex~ year."
• Set their next meeting' for
: Sheets said there is no need
Wednesday at 10 a.m., due to
· .to rush into a tax increase.
"If the voters approve a the Thanksgiving Day holi: sales tax in May, and it goes day.

•

USED

8.99%

RM

APR

upto

48 mos.

9.55%*

up

60 mos. 10.45%**
36 mos. 11.44%***

lo.-......1

9.99%
9.99%

'

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom

., (740) 992·2156.

lo.-...... 1

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upto

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The main number Is 992·2156.

48 mos. 12.11 %****

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••

•·

Lodll meets

File divorces

TUPPERS PLAINS T uppen Plains Regional
Sewer District will hold a
special meeting on Monday at
5:30 p.m. to discuss possible
litigation.

Plan dink
POMEROY Meigs
County Health Department
will offer a childhood imrnunization clinic on Tuesday
from 1 to 7 p.m. at 112 E.
Memorial Dr. Shot records
mtHt be provided and child
must be accompanied by parent or legal guardian.
Au v::accine will continue to
be administer·ed to Meigs
County residents aged 65 or
older and to those with
chronic illnesses and disabilities during the clinic. Those
requesting a shot should bring
Medicare or Medicaid cards if
applicable, or the $10 fee.
Questions about eligibility
should be directed to the
health department at 9926626.

, Lawmakers will try to combine 2 vastly different budget bills

NOV.

Meigs

NEW

(740) 594-7979

. SEPT.

additional seeding on the
slopes at the new elementary
school;
ffth11 Pap AI
• approved the. Cafeteria
R"}:'ort as submitted by Marused van, one used pick-up il~ Meier, food service
truck, one used 1-ton "trash"
supervisor;
truck, and several modular
• approved the Construcclassrooms at Salem Center
tion
Project
Financial
. Elementary were authorized
Report;
:for sale.
• approved the financial
The board also:
• approved a Change Order report for October and the
in the amount of S34,000 for payment of the bills.

RATE

•-J

5:36 a.m., Storys Run, gas . POMEROY
Civil
LONG BO'ITOM _The
wen fire, no injuries.
actions have been filed in ' Long
Bottom
united
POMEROY
Meigs County Common Methodist Church will be
4:44 p.m., Hog Hollow, Pleas Court as follows:
holding a hymn sing on Sunassisted by Syracuse, Joyce
• Corueco Finance Servic- day at 7 p.m. Those aaending
ing Corp., Tempe, Ariz., are asked to bring a can of
Grady, HMC.
SYRAC1.1SE
against Patrick A . . Carroll, . food for the Cooperative
I :47 p.m., State Route 124, Reedsville, and othm, alleg- Parish's food banlt. The date .
Norma Jean Grueser, treated ing default on a mortgage · of the event has been incoragreement in the amount of rectly reported in The Daily
1Jsuecll~ln51f . $80,414.67;
·Sentinel.
• Motorist Mutual lnsurPOMEROY -- Marriage ance Co., Columbus, and oth••e•
lic.enses have been issued in m, apinsc Charles W. WhitLETART FALLS - Letart
Meigs County Probate Court tington, Pomeroy, seekinS
to Jimmy Lee Aora, 24, and $33,548 in damages ·from a · Township Trwtees will meet
Barbara Donise Salyers, 18, motor vehicle accident;
on Monday at S p.m., rather
• l.aSalle National Bank, than 6:30 p.m.
both of Pomeroy, and to
ShaWn Amos Marcinko, 21, Orangeburg. N.Y., against Lee
Coolville, and Sarah R : Dai- A. Boggs, Shade, and oth~n,
alleging default on a mortley. 18, Pomeroy.
gage agreement in the
POMEROY Pomeroy
amount of$59,391.72;
·OrderofEasternStar 186 will
• LaSalle National ·Bank: .have their regular meeting on
POMEROY -Actions for against Doris Taylor, Pomerqy, Monday at 7:30 p.m. at the
dissolution of marriage have and others, alleging default on Chester Masonic Building.
been filed in Meigs County a mortgage agreement in the 25-year pins will be pment-

Spedalltleeling

1,000
AUG.

(er.dlt ct.ck, IICIMilon fN, and 111e1 tax apply)

Farmers Bank is offering
incredibly low rates on
financing the purchase
• of a new or used ATVI
Get the ATV Y~J:I'Ve
always wanted at a low monthly payment that you can afford! .

5u...1..,

POMEROY Community Thanksgiving Service
sponsored by the Meigs
County Ministerial Association will be held at the First
Baptist Church 9n Main
Street in Pomeroy on Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. The public is .
invited.

1.500

Marcil 10, 2000

COLUMBUS (AP) - An
angry gambling opponent said
it was "outrageous" that the
Ohio Lottery Commission
urged its 9,200 sales agents to
lobby two key lawmakers in
favor of joining a multistate
lottery.
"Even if it's legal, it's unethical to use a public agency to
promote a political purpose,"
said the Rev. John Edgar of the
United Methodist Church.
"They . said they were getting a lot of calls in favor," said
Tom Smith of the Ohio
Council of Churches. "Now
we know why."
The proposal to join a multistate lottery was included in a
budget-repair bill approved by
the Ohio Senate on Thursday.

...=;.~l;.;;.1 51 o w. Union Street
Medica) Athens, Ohio

.._

Record high: 5,048.82

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to .lobby
for multistate
game .

Eric Hasemeier, D.O.

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Common Pleas Court by amount of 133,516.04.
Judgmena have been issued
X&amp;11i Renee BelliS. Middleand
Batrholomew to LaSalle National Bank
POMEROY Unia of port
SteYen
Botlgs,
Rutland; and from Donnie R. Hoffinan,
the M~ Emergency Service
answered eight calls for assis- by Howard L. Batber and and othen; Altegra Credit
tance on Thursday. Units &amp;rban. J. Barber, both of Co., _againsc Larry E. Klein,
and othen; and Farmen Bank
Reedsville.
responded as follows:
A diwrce hal been filed by and Savings Co. againsc DonCENTRAL DISPATCH
2:45 a.m., Main StRet, GiQger · Stake, Pomeroy, ald R. Folmer, and othen.
Mark Tillis, Holzer Medical apinst Ted . R . Stake, Long
Bottom.
Center·•
Diwn:es have been granted
8:30 a.m., Rocksprings
to
Mayrne Thomas Call
Rehabilitation Centor, Virginia Edgington, Pleasant Val- against H. Edward Call, and to
POMEROY
The
John T. "Jack" Williams liom
ley Hosiptal;
Meigs County Right to Life
12:52 p.m., Ogdin Road, Judith A. "Judy" WiUiams.
will hold a meeting at 7:30
A dissolution has been
Everette Hutton, PVH;
p.m. on Monday inside the
4:15 p.m., HMC Clinic, granted to . Michelle Will and Pomeroy Libnry. The public
Paul E.Will, Jr.
Michelle Stahl, HMC;
is welcome to attend.
8:42 p.m ., HMC Clinic,
ClDoris Wilt, HMC.

EMSioJmk

Markets roundup

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It is the first. bwsuit filed in connection with the explosion that
killed five and injured 48 others at the Medina County Fairgrounds

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COLUMBUS (AP)
On Wednesday, Taft said
Finan said there was no way
Lawmakers mast find com- Senate Jawmak.en were fiscal- the Senate will agree to a plan
promises in two wstly differ- ly irresponsible and lacked chat includes a taX increase.
ent budget deficit fixes after political courage to enact tar"If we do that, then we've
the Senate approved its. ver- . geted taX increases on busi- just wasted everyching we've
• sion of the budget bill and the nesses. Finan lasheli back ~- done here;' Finan said. "My
" House refused to accept the ' ing lawrnalten, not Taft, had caucus was adamant that they
changes.
the guts to stand up for taX· wanted to stand up for the
taxpayen ... so we found alter"There's just a difFerence of payen. .
opinion on how to handle . When asked Thursday nate ways to fund the situathis" said House Speaker whether the governor would tion."
Householder, a Repub- be in~lved i~ the c?~~e
The House plan raises S344
lican from Glenford. "I thillk dlscuu1om, Fman md, · We 11 million in targeted business
it's good for everyone ·10 sit see." Householder. said Taft's taX increases.
down and work through thia." office should be . ~~~;volved . Oclier issues that will be
senate President Richard because the respon11bility of a discuued include whether a
' .Finan, a Republican from balanced budget ultimately multistate lottery will be uied
.Evendale, said the Senate falls to the executive branch., to raise 141 million, as well as
'believes that "virtually every- · Joe
_An~rews,
Taft I .how much money should be
thing" in the Senate's bill must spoke~n,md the go~rn~r'l borrowed from the state's
o.. k t
d·
egot" bl office anteluls to work wath share of the national tobacco
.,.eA ep anfi ss no11-n
~a e. the committee.
settlement and used from the
con erence comrmttee,
made up of 'members from
both Republican-controlled
get gap.
chambers, is expected to meet
• The Supreme Court has
twice declared the state's
within the next few weeks to
system for funding schools
reoolve the differences. Lawunconstitutional. The lawmakers want the bill completed by Dec. 4.
ation are the same ones who suit was filed . on behalf of
The budget proposals fol- ordered the 11.2 billion then Perry County pupil
lowed Gov. Bob Taft's remedy: Chief Justice Tom Nathan DeRolph. Both rulannoun.::ement last month Moyer and Justices Andy ings said the system created
that the slumping economy Douglas, Paul Pfeifer and disparities between rich and
and the financial impact of the Eve Lundberg Stratton•. the
terrorist ·attacks would lead to newspaper reported. Those
a $1.5 billion budget deficit who oppose the mediation
are Justices Francis Sweeney,
by the end of next year.
Allee Robie Resnick and
Deborah Cook.
Any resolution to the case
is expected to be complicated by the nate's current
budget crisis. House and
S,enate leaders are debating
competing proposals to 'plug
a projected $1.5 billion bud- ·

,Lar;y

Funding
hmPIIpA1

***0*
$

POMEROY $

*

MERCHANTS~
CHRISTMAS~

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*
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Sunday,
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November 25 $
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w-

All Eodrys
99:1-7141 or

state's rainy day fund.
The Senate's bill includes
raising $4.1 million by joining
a multistate lottery, which the
House had stripped from Taft's
plan.
It also includes borrowing
$309 million in tobacco
money, while the House proposes S240 million and Taft
$100 million.
"The good tiring about that
is we will continue to get
tobacco money, but when you
spend even one penny of that
rainy day fund, it's gone," said
Sen. Bill Harris, a Republican
from Ashland. "Is this easy to
do? Absolutely not. But there's
a need and responsibility to
do something. It helps this
state survive another day."
poor districts by relying too
much on local property
taxes.
In the court's third major
ruling on Sept. 6 the justices
ruled that the state needed
to spend more money on
the current system to make
·
it constitutional.

00SP£LSINO
.J.

rJ

•

Saturday, Nov.17, 2001
with

ula Bussell
of Knoxville, Tenn

Middleport Church
of the Nazarene
General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, OH

PUBLIC WELCOME!

~
.II
~

f,S

�--·-.·'\

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

NM1rtar 1

2M1

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
&lt;&gt;

Publisher

R. II'-' LAwta
ll8nlglng Editor

'*"-!Car . .

ChMene Hoeftlch

._.. . .-..-. n.,.-t.----.. Genenllllaneger

:.._

Controller

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NATIONAL VIEW

Too strid?
(Three strikes' laws should
be made to fit the crime
• Los Angeles Times, on three strikes dtdsion:

Sho~ld

a middle-age man spend 50 years or more in prison for
stealing nine videotapes from Kmart?
Since passage of California's "three strikes and you're
out" law in 1994, district attorneys statewide have, one
by one, concluded that putting people away for life for
minor crimes is grossly unfair and a waste of taxpayer
dollars even when the criminals are, as the law
requires, repeat offenders. One after another, the district
attorneys have quietly stopped prosecuting many nonviolent crimes ·as third-strike offenses ....
Last week, a federal appeals court panel ... said 43year-old Leandro Andrade's 50-year sentence for
shoplifting videotapes was so ." grossly disproportionate"
to his crime as to constitute cruel and unusual punishment, a violation of the Constitution's 8th Amendment.
(Ninth U.S. Circuit Court) Judge Richard A. Paez, the
author of the ruling, pointed out that only first-degree
murderers and a few other kinds of violent criminals
can draw a longer sentence than Andrade ....
Petty thefts are generally misdemeanor crimes ... . But
a quirk in California's three-strikes law transforms petty
thefts by repeat offenders into felonies punishable by
life terrns . ... In California, 350 of the 6, 700 people
serving life terms for third strikes were convicted of
petty thefts, according to Andrade's lawyer....
Prosecutors need the legal clout to lock repeat violent
predators away for as long as possible. But justice must
not only be swift and certain; it needs to fit the crime.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Friday, Nov. 16th, the 320th day of 2001. There are
45 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: '
On Nov. 16th,1864, Union Gen.WilliamT. Sherman and his
troops began their "March to the Sea" during the Civil War.
On this date:
In 1776, British troops captured Fort Washington during the
American Revolution.
In 1885, Canadian rebel Louis Riel was executed for high
treason.
In 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state of the union.
In 1933, the United States and the Soviet Union established
diplomatic relations. ·
·
In 1959, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical"The Sound
of Music" opened on Broadway.
·
In 1961, House Speaker Samuel T. Rayburn died in Bonham,
Texas, having served as speaker since 1940 except for two
terms.
In 1966, Dr. Samuel H. Sheppard was acquitted in his second
trial of charges he'd murdered his pregnant wife, Marilyn, in
1954.
In 1973, Skylab 3, carrying a crew of three astronauts, was
launched fium Cape Canaveral, Fla., on an 84-day mission.
In 1973, President Nixon signed the Alaska Pipeline measure
into law.
In 1981 , actor William Holden was found dead in his apartment in Santa Monica, Calif.; he was 63.
·
Ten years ago: Former Louisiana Gov. Edwin Edwards won a
landslide victory in his bid to return to office, defeating state
representative David Duke, a former Ku Klux Klan leader.
Five years ago: President Clinton spent the first full day of a
shortened vacation in Hawaii that preceded a trip to Australia,
Thailand and the Philippines.
One year ago: AI Gore won a legal fight to expand manual
recounts as he struggled to trim George W. Bush's 300...vote
lead in Florida's presidential race. President Clinton began a
visit to Vietnam. Civil rights activist Hosea Williams died in
Atlanta at age 74.
·
Today's Birthdays: Actor Clu Gulager is 73. Blues musician
Hubert Sumlin is 70. Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 66. Blues·
musician W.C. Clark is 62. Actress Joanna Pettet is 57 . Actor
Steve Railsback is 56. Actor David Leisure is 51 . Actress Marg
Helgenberger is 43~ Rock musician Mani (The Stone Ro!es) is
.l9. Tennis player Zina Garrison is 38. Baseball player Dwight
Gooden is 37.Jazz singer Diana Krall is 37.Actress Lisa Bonet
is 34. Actress Tammy Lauren is 33; Rhythm-and-bl.ues singer
Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd) is 32. Actress Martha Plimpt&lt;Jn is 31. Olympic gold medal figure skater Oksana Oaiul is 24.
Pop singer Trevor Penick is 22. Actress Kimberly J. Brown is 17.
Thoftght for Today: "No matter how dull, or how mean, or
how wise a man is, he feels that happiness is his indisputable
right." - Helen Keller, American author and lecturer (18801968).

PLAGENZ'S VIEW

Never underestimate the power of hop~ and its ejfed
When we were children, we used to
say a bedtime prayer that began "Now I
lay me down to sleep." The third line
contained the rather frightening thought
""If! should die before I wake ..."
Most of us, however, skipped quickly
· over that part. We went to sleep in the
happy confidence that we would indeed
wake up in the morning.
'
Nowadays, we aren't so confident. The
most we are prepared to say is we hope
W.: will. It is that hope which will have
to sustain most of us the rest of our live..
All because of something that went terribly wrong over the skies of New York
City on Sept. I 1, 2001.
But never underestimate the power of
hope.
Not all the things we hope for do we
get. but some we do. That is because, as
hopeful people, our eyes are open to
hopeful possibilities all around us.
But it is more than that. There is an
old saying, ""Where there is life, there is
hope." The converse of that is equally
true: "Where there is hope, there is life."
Alexis Carrel, the scientist-philosopher who wrote "Man, the Unknown,"
said "Hope generates action, even with~
in the cells of the body." Hope is, therefore, good for our health. and staying
healthy will be one of our major responsibilities if we are to emerge victors in
the strife.
All of us would say that we have
hopes. But often they are just wishes. You
can tell a hopeful person by the way he

George
Plagenz
COLUMNIST

letter to a friend who was in the throes
of despair. He wrote, "Hope is the thing
that is left to us in a bad time. I shall go
tp bed tonight and wind the clock as a
contribution to. order and steadfastness.
"As long as there is one upright man,
as long as there is one compassionate
woman, the contagion may spread and
the scene is not desolate.
"Sailors have an expression about the
weather. They say, 'The weather is a great
bluffer.' I guess the same is true of our
human society. Tl]ings can look dark,
then a break shows in the clouds and all
is changed - sometimes rather suddenly.
"Hang on to your hat. Hang on to
your hope. And wind the clock, for
tomorrow is another day."
That's good advice for all of us. Let's
hang on to our .hats and hang on to our
hopes- and wmd ·the alarm clock each
mght as a symbol of o':'r ho]'e that,
whatever the uncertam future brmgs, we
shall be awake for all. of lt.
Who knows? Mar_an Luther may have
been on to sorn~thing when h~ ~te
the words . of his gre~t hym?. And
though thts world With devils . filled
should threaten to undo us, we Will not
fear for God hath ,';"illed his truth to triumph ~hrough u.s.
ThaB somethmg that can put us to
sleep Without fear of what the mormng
will bring.

says, "I hope so.'' It has a rising inflection.
Some people can say "I hope so" in the
most despairing way.
Hopeful people act as though there is
a good chance that their hopes will be
realized. Hope is being 100 years old and
taking out a rwo-year subscription to a
magazine.
Sometimes when our hopes are too ·
long deferred, it is because we need a
new set of hopes.
. A wise old lady in my parish in Boston
had a saying: "When everything is
against you, just quit." She didn't mean
that we should give up. She meant that
we should go on to something else something that offers more hope of suecess.
·
When one set of hopes fails, we can
remember the line of Pococurante in
Voltaire's"Candide":"I shall have anether garden laid out tomorrow upon a
(George R. Plagenz is a columnist for
nobler plan.'' Another garden of hopes.
E.B. White, the essayist, once wrote a Newspaper Enterprise Association.)

WEST'S VIEW

War finds Hollywood still trying to difine its mission
BY DIANA WElT

During World War II, Hollywood
heavyweights went to war. They fought
it, like dreamboau Clark Gable, Robert
Montgomery and Robert Taylor; they
made training films, like our nearsighted future president Ronald Reagan; and they sold war bonds, like
l11minous Carole Lombard, who died at
age 34 in a plane crash while selling
bonds on tour.
Or they filmed it. Director George
Stevens shot the liberation of Dachau's
prisoners and the capture of Hitler's
Berchtesgaden aerie. Director William
Wyler made the documentary "Memphis Belle;• the last mission of a Flying
Fortress over Germany. Writer-director
John Huston was awarded the Legion
of Merit for his courageous wo.rk filming such documentaries as "The Battle
of San Pietro" under battle conditions
in both the Pacific and Europeal). theaters.
·As war comes to America, contemporary Hollywood is still trying to find
its 111ission. This past weekend, Washington offered a few simple .suggestions
- seven, to be ptecise - the White
House would like to see incorporated
into movies or public service
announcements by the motion picture
industry. These include messages of
support for national servic~ and our
troops, and the notion that we're fighting terrorism, and not Islam, as White
House senior advisor Karl Rove told a
meeting of the moguls including Par~­
mount's Sherry Lansing, Viaconi's
Sumner . Redstone, CBS's Leslie
Moonves, and Dreamworks' Jeffrey
Katzenberg. Presumably, Dreamworks'
Steven Spielberg, a big pal of Bill Clinton's who did not attend, had more
pressing plans.
Also absent were a couple of Holly-

DROP US ALINE.

wood heavies - er,' heavyweights basing their film on anything "fringy,"
once quite familiar in Washington: having passed on the works of such
television producer Harry Thomason vast-right-wing-conspirators
as
and his producer-wife Linda Blood- Michael
Isiiloff of Newsweek
worth-thomason ("Evening Shade" ("Uncovering Clinton" (Three Rivers
and "Designing Women"). Not that the Press, 2000)), David Schippers, former
Thomasons needed a White House pep Democratic prosecutor and Chief
talk to get themselves going on the war Investigative Counsel of the House
effort. Indeed, you might say they have Judiciary Committee ("Sell-Out"
already blazed the way. With emotions (Regnery Publishing, 2000)), Richard
running red, white and blue, with the Posner, Chief Judge, U.S. Court of
nation strug~ling to make .sense of the Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ("An
tumultuous press of news, the Thoma- Affair of State" (Ha!Vard University
sons have already begun to do their bit Press, 2000)}, as well as the work of
to focus Americans on what really mat- Susan Schmidt ofThe Washington Post
ters most.
and Michael Weisskopf of Time magaAnd what's that you wonder? It's the zine ("Truth at Ahy Cost" (HarperClintons (but I promise I won't say Collins, 2000)). They won't be using
"stupid"). Yankee doodle do or die, the "The Starr Report," either.
Instead, the ThomaS&lt;ms chose, in the
Thomasons recently inked a deal, as
they say in the Hollywood press, to words of the film's distributor, Regent
make a documentary for theatrical Entertainment's Paul Colichman,
release about the scandal-riddled, scan- "something really creative" - Joe
dal-addled, scandal-paralyzed presiden- Conason and Gene Lyons' book "The
cy of George W. Bush's predecessor.
Hunting of the President: The Ten-Year
At first, the prospect of a documen- , Campaign to Destroy Bill and Hillary
tary on the life and times of Bill and . Clinton" (St. Martin's Press, 2000) For
Hillary Clinton sounds like a joke. For anyone who has already hocked his
one thing, as the nation teeters on ter- Clintoniana to make room for more
ror alert, "legacy" -building is just not enduring works, this particular title was
the priority it once was ia 1600 Penn- the fantasmagorical compilation of
sylvania Ave., back when the Thoma- everything ·you ever wanted to forget
sons had the run of the place. But some abo'!_t Bill and Hillary Clinton, from
things, as they say, never change. The the Little Rock governor's mansion to
nation may be girding itself for an the White House.
entirely new kind of war, ,but the Clin"Hunting" is supposed to ·begin
tonistas are still fighting the old one -- shooting soon, although no word as yet
over Bill Clinton. "This is not a film on whether it will pause for Ramadan.
about Republicans and Democrats," Meanwhile, maybe we should salute
Mr. Thomason recently told the Holly- the Thomasons after all. In time of war,
wood Reporter. "Rather, it's an there's nothing like a little comic relief.
insightful story that looks at the fringe
·
elements in our society and their effect
(Diana West is a columnist a11d editorial
on the modern political process." (FYI: writer for Tire Washi11gton Times. She cat~
He doesn't mean militant lslamists.)
be contacted via dia,www(ats(~ll}attglobNaturally, the Thomasons won't be al.tlet.)

121 Third Ave., Qalllpolle, Ot'llo
74o-44&amp;-2342

111 Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio
740-992&gt;2156

200 Main 'st., Point Pleuant, W.Va.

30H76-1333

the Bend

Petite blonde worries that she~ selling herself short
DEAR ABBY: I have been
dating the same guy for a little
over a yeu. We get along well,
laugh a lot, have the same outlook, si milar goals. He says I'm
his best friend .
My problem? I'm not his
"type." I'm a petite blonde. He
prefers chunkier women with
dark hair. He says if there was
one thing he could change about
me, it would be for me to gain
about 20 pounds. (l"m 5 feet tall
and weigh I 05.)
He has become "confused" a
few times during the relationship, and the last time he said he
needed to decide which was
more important, someone he"s·
connected with or someone who
is his type. The sex is good but
not earth-shattering, .b ecause my

111 Court St., Polneroy, Ohio
740-992-2158 • Fu: 1182-2157

Chllrtes W. Govey

_The_D_aily_Se_ntin_
· e_I_ ____,;B;;;.;,_y

Page AS

and leave. He's 37; I'm 33. What
shou ld I do?- BETWIXT AND
BETWEEN IN NEW JERSEY
DEAR BAND B: Loving him
isn't enough. Not once in your
letter did you indicate that he says
HE loves YOU. You say he 's critical of your appearance and strays
when the spirit moves him . You
ADVICE
are indeed selling yourself short.
.,
physical attributes don't do it fpr For a lifetime partner, you
him. He doesn't want to rip off deserve better.
DEAR ABBY: Your "'pennies
my clothes each time he sees me,
and I thrive on that kind of lust. from heaven " stories have been
He keeps coming back .. and I delightful. I have one that does
feel like a jerk for allowing him not involve money, but the result
to stay each time. I love him, but was just as heartwarming.
The year was· 1945. I was a
I'm unclear whether I'm selling
member
of General Patton's army,
myself short and if I deserve
someone who loves me the way I fighting our way across Europe.
am . I'm afraid if he stays with me, Infantry combat is pure hell, so
eventually he will · want his . type when there was a rare lull in the

Dear
Abby

fighting, an orchestra from our
division band was brought in to
cheer us up. In a wooded glade
somewhere in France, they played
all the favoriles of the day, and we
were reminded again of what we
were fighting for.
A soldier with a clear, sweet
voice began singing uPennies
From Heaven." However, it wasn't
the familiar version. These satirical lyri cs told the story of a Gl
coming home to his wife after
serving oyerseas, and being met
by his beloved holding a brandnew baby girl named "Penny."
The refrain of that song I'll
never forget. "Every time he
asked, she'd say, 'Penny 's from
heaven.'" There were many verses,
and the soldier sang each one
with a straight face. At another

time uader different circumsta nces, we probably would have
found the song mildly amusing.
That day it was the funniest song
my buddies and I had ever heard.
No money changed hands that
day, but the laughter was a gift
from God at a time when we had
very little to laugh about. WALLACE HARMON, DALLAS
DEAR
WALLACE:
No
amount of money could equal the
enjoyment you fighting men got
from the slightly naughty versio n
of 'Pennies From Heaven."
Laughter is a great unifier. People who laugh together become
one, if only for a little while.
6

Dear Abby is written by Paulin&lt;
Phillip s and daughter Jeanne
Phillips.

Military news

New album is retum to fonn for George Strait
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ·George Strait's new album, "The
Road Less Traveled," was released
· Tuesday, just a week before the highly
·anticipated comeback album by Garth
Brooks. ·
Concerned about the competition,
· .George?
Strait laughs.
"This is news to me, right now," he
says of the heavily publicized Nov. 13
"·release of uScarecrow," Brooks' new
' album. "I didn't even know that."
Strait, 49, a bit more gray and much
.m ore talkative than his public persona, doesn't keep up with the business side of country music.
"Why should I?" he says.
Then he laughs - for a long time.
Strait's albums - he releases one
·each year - spawn· hits and seD well.
He 's done a tour of stadiuti_IS for four
years. It added up to 16 days of work
this year.
The rest of the time?
" I rope," says the native Texan. "I
stay at my ranch a l9t. I love to deepsea fish, and we do that a lot."
· He does pay attention to the music.'
He believes his new album is his best
in years, though he's not sure why

did that," Strait said. "I really didn't
things came together so weD.
"I always have the intention of care for it at first .... He kept easing it
making a better album when I go in," off and easing it off. I kind of like it
he said. "It just doesn't always work now.
Strait's never been the musical
out that way. I'm sure that every artist
purist that "Murder on Music Row"
feels that way."
"The Road Less Traveled" is indeed suggests. He appreciates great singers
a return to form for Strait, who's sold and doesn't adhere to a particular style
more than 50 million albums and or genre. He loves the work of Sinatra
scored such enduring hits as "Amaril- as much as he does that of Haggard.
"When . I listened to 'Murder on
lo by Morning."
The first hit single, "Run," is an Music Row' the first time, I laughed,"
effective change of pace; a moody, Strait said. "I thought it was funny
reflective song fium a singer known because people are always worried
about the traditional country music,
for straight-ahead country.
"My Life's Been Grand," a Merle which happens to be my personal
Haggard song, is an elegiac nod wor- favorite.
"I cer.tainly didn't mean it as a slap
thy of Frank Sinatrn nne of Strait's
in the face. It was just poking fun at
idols.
·
the people that were having the same
But the reahhocker on first listc
conversatio ll ~ (about country mu sic)
Rodney Crowell's. "Stars on
Water." Effects have been added ,, for 20 yc.1 rs."
In "The Real Thing': by Chip TayStrait's voice to give it a robotic feel ,
like Cher's on the dance hit "Believe." lo r Strait criticizes music that strives
This from th.e guy who complained too hard for crossover appeal. Early
with duet partner Alan Jackson on th e rock 'n' roll acts Pat Boone and The
hit .. Murder on Music Row" that tra- Crew Cuts ("Sh-boom") are singled
ditional country music was losing out out.
""I don't want you under my
to pop sounds.
•
roof/With
your 86 pro?f/watered
He laughs even longer this time. .
"ReaDy, my producer Tony Brown down 'til it tastes like tea/If you're

..

gonna pull my string/Make it the real
thing for me," Strait sings.
Again, he anticipates some fans will
take the words too literally.
"It's just a fun song," he said. "I like
some of the lines in it. you know?
They kind of ring true."
Strait was heralded as the great hope
of traditional ·country in the early
1980s when he became a star. He was
signed to MCA in 1981. "Unwound"
that year started a streak of hits that
continues to this day.
Though Brooks is credited with
influencing a generation of country
singers in cowboy hats, print shirts
and jeans, it's often overlooked that
Strait was Brooks' early model.
Strait says he doesn't spend time
worrying about who gets credit for
what.
"I'm just going along and enjoying
every minute of it, hoping that it
keeps on," he said. "It's going to be
over someday. And when it is, I'm not
going to like it, but I'm going to
accept it.
''I've had a good career. But I'm
going to ride it as long as I can.''
Then he lets out that satisfied laugh
again.

LOCAL HAPPENINGS
Community Calendar II
published as a free ~~~n~lce to
non-profit groups wlahlng to
announce meeting• and special events. The calepdar Ia
not designed to promote
sales or fund-rallllrl of any
type. Items are printed only
as space permits and cannot
be guaranteed to be printed a
specific number of days.

Those attending are asked to
bring a can of food for lha . TUPPERS PLAINS - EastCooperative Parish's food ern Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 7 p.m. Monbank.
day, high school media center.
TUPPERS PLAiNS - VFW
Posl 9053 Thanksgiving dinner
TUESDAY
for all post members and
MIDDLEPORT - Brooks·
spouses Sunday 1 p.m.
Grant Camp Sons of Union Vet'
'
·. erans of the Civil War and the
TUPPERS PLAINS - Fall ' Maj. Daniel McCook Circle
sports banquet, Sunday, 2 p.m. Ladies of lhe Grand Army of the
Easlern High School. Each Republic, meelings, Tuesday,
family bring vegetable, dessert.
Athlelic Boosters to provide
meat, drinks, table service.

FRIDAY
. LONG BOTIOM - An informational meeting will be held
on Friday 6 p.m. at lhe Long
Bottom Community Building to
POMEROY ~ Meigs County
discuss fuiUre plans for lhe
Humane
Society, 2 p.m.- Sun· Portland Elementary School.
day, Pomeroy Public Libraty.
SALEM CENTER - Star Public welcome.
- Gr.ange will host a CPR course,
MIDDLEPORT- Communi·
. 7'to 9 p.m. at the hall. For mo~e
- Information
call
Jams ty Thanksgiving Worship sponsored by Middleport Ministerial
.. McComber, 742-2163.
Association, Heath United
' . APPLE GROVE - Round Methodist Church, Sunday, 7
·and square dance at the Red p.m. Teresa Davis to speak.
-Barn, 8 to 11 p.m. line dancing.
. ·clogging, wilh live music.
MONDAY
POMEROY- Meigs County
SATURDAY
.
Agricultural Society, Monday,
POMEROY - Harty Potter 7:30 p.m. in the Coon Hunters
Party Saturday, noon lo 2 p.m Building on lhe Rock Springs
at the Pomeroy Library. Fairgrour1ds. Eleclion of officers
· Games. refreshments and
. prizes. Children of all ages
.invited.

Middleport Arts Councikl build·
ing. Potluck Thanksgiving dinner 6:30 p.m. In honor of Presidenl Lincoln's first declaration
of Thanksgiving. Meat furnished~ Guests welcome. Election of SUV officers. Program
will be on "The Batllll of
Carnifax Farry. W.Va.; by Capt.
Michael Sheets of the 36th Virginia Infantry of Huntington,
W.Va.

RUTLAND M/Sgt .
Robert D. Spires has been
deployed to the Middle East
after being stationed at
Robins Air Force Base in
Georgia with J Stars aircr~ft.
Spires is a native of Rutland and attended Meigs
High School. He is the son
of Abe and Sue Gr·ueser of
Rutland and is married to
the former Jodie Wells of
Pomeroy.
He is the father of two
sons, Ryan and Dylan.

Cookie • Candy Contest
People~

Bank, Pomeroy
December 8, zoot,
bePftn1n1 at 9100 a.m.

Judllnl alter bank
eiOiinl on Dec. 8th.

Wooden Toy Contest
Farmer• Bank

THANK YOU
Voters of Meigs County

December 1S, :1001,
Toya·may be dbplayed ••
early a1 Dec. 11t
In bank lobby,
.rudglnJ after bank cloaln&amp;

on Dec. 15th.

For

Support of the TB Levy
-TB OfficePaid rur by Rottr Hy.ell, T'rfuurtr, P.O. 8o1 447, Pomtre)', OH 4516P

Hours

HARRISONVILLE
' Reunion of Walter "Squibb"
· Gilmore family Salurday at
· · noon at the Harrisonville/Scipio
'firehouse. Every welcome.

lor
Deer Season

MIDDLEPORT Gospel
sing, Saturday, Middleport
. Church of the Nazarene, 7 p.m.
Hoy and Trula Bussell of Ten. nessee will be the singers.

is accepting patienrs at his following offices:
Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

2410

675-.7100

RACINE Red Brush
Church of Christ service Saturday at 7 p.m. and Sunday', tO
a.m. and 6 p.m. Denver Hill lo
speak.

~ ~ee..t.

e (Thursdays &amp; Fridays)
·'

·l

138 Main Street
New Haven, WV

882-3134

.'JIJe wdl. open
jo48~
ai 5:00 a.m.

e (Monda.ys &amp; Thesdays)

POMEROY - Annual Meigs
Counly Chrislmas flower show
· to be held Saturday and Sunday at the Senior Citizens Center. Open for public viewing
both days; 1 to 4 p.m.

SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM
Long
Botlom
Uniled Methodist ·
Church will be holding a hymn
sing on Saturday al 7 p.m.

Robert 0. Spires

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

Sea4oH-

�,
Ptgt A 6 • The Daily Sentinel
Momtng v.·onfllp II

.._,Bob IWWiph

Rinr\'allt,
Apostolic Wotship Cmtt:r
813 S Jn:l Avt., Mtdi.llepurt

Krvin Kootle. Pas1or
Sunday, 10 a.m. and fl 00 p m.
W~y. 7:30p.m.: Youlh Fri. 7:30p.m.
Oilllrdi (1{ J - Clrid
AposiOiic Fa1th

Evcml\ll • 7 pm
7 p.m.

Sunday School and Wonbip- 10 a.m.

Sundly School· 10:30a.m.

1m

Wcdoelida~

a-do II .1.- Clorlot A Vaabndr. and Wud Rd.
Plslor. James Mllltr
Sunday School - 10: ~ 1.m
Evenin1 - 7:30pm.

~wLunaRW

,__

( ·at holir

~efGodotPrms'

Cloontl
161MuJbtrry
Avt-.CadMik
Pomeroy,
~J2-S898
Pastor: Rev. Waher E." Heinz
~- Coo. 4:4S-5: 15p.m., Mau- 5:30 p.m
Sun. Con. -11:45-9.15 a.m.•
Sum- Mast - 9:30a.m.
Oatley Mass · 8;30 un.

s,r

SOlidly School · 9:30 a..m.
Wonhip - 10:)() a.m.

1

Warship-9:30a.m.
Suodly Scbool - 1{);30 a.m.
F'1111 Swtday of MMih -7:00 p.m.. ~

1'riolly Ooordo

Wortih1p • 9:30 1.m.

c-..a-

Wonhip • II

Rev. lame~ 8emacki, Rev. Kalharin Foster

Puur. J&lt;.ith .......

Sunday School and

Sunday School • 10 un .
Wonhip ~ 9 a.m.

Suhday School • 10;00 a.m.

Morning Service II :00 a.m.
Evening ~rvitt - 6:00 p.m.
Wcdne:sday St-rvicc: - 7:30 p m.
Hope Baptist Church (Southem)

570 Gram St., Middleport
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Worship- l I a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sen·itt - 1 p.m.

33226 ChiWren's Hoo-.c Rd.

Pomeroy Ftnt Bapli!lt
East Main St.
Sunday Sehoul - 9:30a.m.

ftnt SGuthern Bapdtl
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamat O'Bryant
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
-Worship- 10:4.5 a.m .. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
Flnt Baptltt Chu~h
Pastor; Mart Murrow
6th and Palmer Sr.• Middlepon
Sunday School • 9:15 11.111.
Worship - 10: IS a.m.• 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:00 p.m.

Racine Flnt lblplkt
Pastor: Rick Rule
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
Silver Run Baptlsl
Pn!llor: John Swanson
Sunday School- IOa.m.
Worship- II a.m., 7:00p.m
Wed~~t:sday Services-7:00p.m.
Mt. Union B1pUst
Pastor: David Wiseman
Sunday School-9:4.5 a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Scrvitts - 6:30p.m
Bedftbem 81pdst Church
Great Bend, Roule 124, Racine, OH

Pastor : Daniel Mecca
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Bible S1udy - 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will B1pllst Clurth
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening- 1;()() p.m.
Thursday Services -7:00
Hillside B11pliAt Church
St. Rt. 143justotTRt. 7
Pastor: Rey. lames R. Acn::e, Sr.
Sunday Unified Service
Wol'hhip- I 0:30a.m.. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Vldory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport
Pasror: James E. Keesee
Worship- lOa.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Main Street, Rolland

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship.- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Selvict"s. 1 p.m.

Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School- !0:30a.m.
Pastor-Jelfuy Wallace
1st and 3rd Sunday
Pa.stor.Terry Stewar1
Sunday Scbool -9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

lJon Cbun:b of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt 143)
PaStor: Roger Watson
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m:, 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services - ·1 p.m.
lUppen Plaia Churth ol Christ
lnsri'umental
Worship Service - 9 a.m.
Communion . 10 a.m.
Sunday School- 10:15 a.m.
Youth- .5:30pm Sunday
Bible Study Wednesday 1 pm

Bl'lldbury Chun-h or Christ
Pastor: Jim Eaton
39.5.'!8 Bradbury Road, Middleport
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- I0:30 a.m.
Rutl11nd Chun::h of Chrl~t
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wmihip- 10:30 a.m .. 1 p.m.

Hradrolll Chun:h ot Christ
Comer of Sr. R1 . 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd.
Minister: Doug Shllmblin
Youth Miniscc:r: Bill Amberger
Sunday School • 9:)() a.m.
Wur.;hip ·8:00a.m.. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m
Wednesday ~rvices -7:00p.m.
Hkkory Hills Chun::h e1 Christ
Evangelist Mike Moore
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wocship • 10 a.m .. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servkes -7 p.m.
Umpvllle Chrisdan Cllmrclt
Pastor: Roben Musser
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wol'llhip • 10:30 a. m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Reedsville Cbun::h of Christ
Pastor. Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Service: '10:30 a.m.
· Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.
De.:ter Cbun:h of Christ
Pastor: Nathan Robin~
Sunday school9:30 a.m.
Nonnan Will, superintendent
Sunday worship - 10:30 a. m.

DanVille Hollom Church

ry-

Railroad St.. Mason

Suoduy School - I0 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

~

Jo'orat Run Baptist
Pasmr : Arius Hun
Sunday Sehoul • I0 a.m.
WoBhip- I I a.m.

Church of Clnisl
Intersection 7 and 124 W
E\·angcliM: Dennis Sargent
Sunday Bible Study-9:30a.m.
Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study- 7 p.m.

( 'hri~tian I niorr

Chapel

Fint Church or God

RACINE PLANING MILL K&amp; C JEWELERS
Mill Work
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992·3785

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc.
Full line of
Insurance
·
Products+
Financial
ENCIES Inc. SetVices •

White Funeral
Since 18S8
9 fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740·667·3110

Sunday School- to a.m.
Worship- 9 a.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

-

James Anderson

'Directors

Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
, Putor: Allen Midc:ap
ReednWe Fellowship
Church of the Namrene
Pastor: Teresa Waldeck

Sunday School -9:30a.m.

hol.lilllor·Dir59il EAst.. . S""t • ,_,,, OH 45769

"-• R•.lcroe, Jr.· DiroctDI'

INSURANCE
SERVICES

EWING FUNERAL
HOME .
Dignity and Service Always
Eatablfahad 1913

992·2121

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.

fll:rrilool'iUe Pftsbyterl1n Church
Worship- 9 a.m.
_Sunday School - 9:4.5 a.m.

Middleport Presbyterian
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship · 10 a.m.

1'\l'lllh- 11,1\ \d\l ' llti .. t

Unlled Faith Chureh
RL 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wol1lhip- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Full Goopel Llplll3304.5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy
Pastor. Roy Hunter
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening 7:30p.m.
Tueaday &amp; Th~y- 7:30p.m.

y '
'
'
Mulberry HI$. Rd., Pomeroy
Pll$l0r; Roy Lawinsky
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School - 2 p.m.
Worship - 3 p.m.

I nill'd Brl'lhn·rr
Mt. Hermon Unital Brdbrtn

In Cllrilt Church
Ttxu Community off CR 82

Pa$tor: Rubert Sanders
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneRday Services-7:30p.m.
Eden Unlbd Bmhru In Christ

2 lf2 miles north of Reedsville
on State Route I 24
Pastor. Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School - II a.m.
Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
Wednesday Youth Service - 7:30p.m.

ScNtb Bethtl New 'lt:stamenl

~roul!l Family Restaurant

7411-992-5141

Pomeroy

(304) 882-8200

Pastor: Allen Midcap

lleru .1untrai

992·5130

Lundy Brown

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Evenif18 - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 7 p.m.

264 Soorlo S..ooUvt. • Mljltp I, 01145760

214 E. Main

"We accept Preneed Transfers"

Ton:h Cliturdl

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.

..

Pentecostal ARRmbly
St. Rt. 124, Racine ·
Pastor. William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenin11 - 7 p.m.
:' Wednt!lda)" Se~ces - 7 p.m.

'

ML 011Ye Comm•nlty Church
Putor. Lawrence Bush

Middleport Church oftht Naq~ne

Chesler
Pastor: Jane Beattie
Worship- 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday SerJices - 7 p.m.

Dysrille Commu.nlty Church
Sunday School -9:30a. m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Wednesday Service•- 8 p.m.

:\at&lt;ll'l'lll'

PI!.Stor: lane Beanie
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· II a.m .. 6:30p.m.

216 E. Second Pomeroy

FUNERAL HOME

a.m.

Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
w, h' 1030

Alf~

Off Rl. 124
Putor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-' 9:30 am.
Worahip- 10:30 11.m .• 7:30p.m.

Faith Goopel Churcll
, Long Bottom
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesdlly 1:30 p.m.

Mt. OIIYe United Methodist

Mdp Coopentl~ Parllh
Northeast Cluster

Salem Community ChUrch
Lieving Road. Welt Columbia, W.Va.
Pasror. Clyde Fenell
Sunday School 9:30am
Sunday evenina service 6 pm
Wednesday JOervice 7 pm

Synnue Mhllon

Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Wor.ibip- II a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

HockJngport Charth
Grand Street
Sunday School - 10 a. m.

Off 124 behind Wilkesville
PllStor: Rev. Ralph Spire~,
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
WonJtip - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Thursday Services- 7 p.m.

God'• Temple of Prme
3166.'! McQuire Rd. Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor: Wayne Balcolm
Service•: Thurs. Niles HIO pm
New church No Sunday ~~en-ice
established.

Pastor: Rev.. Kriuna Robinson

Mune O.pel Churdl

Bethfl Churft
Township Rd. 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

worship - 11

Sen-ices: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Syratllll: Jlnt Unital Pnsby~rian

Huel Community Chun:h

Coalville Ualkd Mttbodilt Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline
Coolville Churth
Main &amp; Fifth S1.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 9 p.m.
Tuesday Services- 7 p.m.

I nited \h·tlrodi'l

s..r.r

Rt.338. Antiquity
Pastor: Jesse Morris

Bailey Run Road
Paswr: Rev. Emmell Rawson
Sunday Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service • 1 p.m.
1411 8ridgc:ffi8!1 St., Syracuse
Rev, Mike Thompson,Pastor
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evoning - 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School- .10 a.m.
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Sunday School. 9:4.5 a.m.
Worship - I I a.m.

fUll Goopel Chureh ot the U""'

Fallb V.ntynabenuide .Cburch

EosiLetort
Pastor: Brian Harlrnesa

St. hut Lutheran Chui"th
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., ~eroy

Pastor: Bill Staten

Sundly Services - 10 a.m. &amp;.' 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 7 p.m.

.57!5 Pearl SL, Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30p.m.

Mornin1 Star
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler
Sunday School· II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Pastor: David Russell
Sunday School~ !O:OOa.m.
Worship- It a.m.

JTI3 Georges C~ Road, Gtllipoli~, OH

Middleport Community Church

Oar SnioiU' Lutheran Churdt

Brogan-Warner

ANDERSON

Racine, Ohio

W.Va.

New Ll'e Yldery Ctnter

Harritonrille Conu.ualty CbuKb
Pastor: 1beron Dwham
Sunday-9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Pasr:or. Deyrayne Stuller
Sunday School- 9:30a.m.

Walnut and Heruy Sts., Ravenswood ,

'artaforb
·1\eal ~state

Bill

C.nael-8utton
Carmel &amp; Basban Rds.

Worship- 9:00 a.m.
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.

740·99H444

' 992·3978

Worship- 9 a.m.

St. John Lutheran Cllurch
Pine Grove

Cllftoa 'nlbenaacle Cburcll
Clifton, w.Va.
SWJday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

The Bellnen' FtUoWihlp Minilllry
New Lime Rd., Rutland
Pastoc: Rev, Margaret J. Robinson
Service1: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

l .ulhl'ran

Hanford, W.Va.
Paslor:Jim Hughes
Sunday School - II a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Senoices- 7:30p.m.

Syrant~e

Bethaay
Pastor; ~wayne Stuller
Sunday School - IOa.m.

""""

Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:4.5 a.m.

Second Baptbt Cllurdt
Ravenswood, WV
Putor: David W. McClain

SnotniDe
Sunday School- JO a.m.
Wn!1lhip- 9 a.m.

Sacrament Service 9-10~ 1.5a.m.
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs. - 7 p.m.

Appt IJte Ctn~r
"Full-Gospel Chun:h"
Pasion John &amp; Patty Wade
603 Second Ave. Mason
773-5017
Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

10;00 am
Wednesdly Servites • 7 p.m.
Worshi~

F•llh Full Goopel Chwdo
Lona: Bonom
Pastor: Steve Reed
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
•Worship- 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednc:sday- 7 p.m.
Friday - fellowahlp 8ei'Vice 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10: lh.m.

· Christ of Litter-Day Salnls
Sl. Rt. 160.446-6247 or446-7486
Sunday School \0:20-11 a.m.
Relief Sooiety/Prie~~thood I I :OS-12:00

Pascor: Mike Foreman
Pasror. Emeritus Ll~ Foreman

923 S. Third Sl., Middleport
Pastor TeRS&amp; Davis
Sunday service, I 0 a.m.
Wednesday service, 1 p.m.

Salem Ceatft'
Pastor: Ron Fierce

The Cburth of Je.us

C..ry Bible O.urdl
.Pomeroy Pitt: , Co. Rd.
PaR«: Rev. Blackwood
Sundlly School - 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedoclday Service: - 7:30p.m.

Abundant Cr.ee R.F. L

Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- !0:30a.m.
Thut5day Services- 1 p.m.

Worship - 10:45 a.m. ·
Bible Study Wed. 7:00p.m• •

GtlhiBI United Melllodilt

Rudand Cburth of God
Pastor: Ron Heath
SundayWorship - IOa.m.,6 p.m.
WedneWay Services- 7 p. m.

Ru-

l .alh·r-l&gt;a\ Sairrh

Worship· 9:30a.m. (In &amp; 2nd Sun).
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Rutland Ffft Will Baptl!lt
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
Evening . 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.

Rod!Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School- 9:1!1 Lm.
Worship· 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowtihip. Sunday- 6 p.m.

Laurel CUlt' Free Methodist Cburth
Pastor: Donald Balis
Sullday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

FollhF........ C......rer.rc.r~ot
Putor. Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Fridly, 7 p.m.

47439 Rcihcl Rd.,"""""
Paston: Rev. Mary and Harold Cook
Sunday Service~: 10 am. .t: 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Worship- 9;30 LID.
Sunday School- Jt):JS a.m.

HJRII R•n Holhw• Church
Rev. Mart Michael
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

Flimew Bible Cluud •
l.ewt, W.Va. Rt. I
l'ulocBriaoMay
Sunday School - 9!30 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:00 p.m.
Wedoetdoy Bille SIUdy - HlO p.m.

-o.u-IIMI-

..

Waleyan Bible HoUDtlllli Cbun-h
15 Pearl St., Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Doug Qlx
Sunday Wonbip - 9:30p.m., 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday Service- 7:30 p.m.

Sunday SchooJ • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - !0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdoelday Scrvicef - 7 p.m.

Stiven.-llle C0111111unll)' Cbun::b
Pastor: w.~ R. Jewtll
~ 8anet Chllfth
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m.&amp;. 7:00p.m.
Ash St, Middleport- Pastor: GlenD Rowe
ThUrsday . 7:00p.m.
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Sunday Service· 6:00p.m.
RtJoldor Llle Churdl
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.
.500 N. 2nd Ave .• ~iddleport

Pastor: Rod Brower

Pine Grove Bible JloUnea Cllun::li
112 mile off RL 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Christiu Unktn

MI. Moriah Chun!h of God
Mile Hill Rd., Racine
Pastor: James Salterfield
Sunday School· 9:4.5 a.m.
Evening· 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.

Coolville Road
hNor: ~- ~illip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m.
Worship-JO:JOa.m.
Wednedy Sc:lvice - 7 p.m.

Pulor: Micloacl Dull!
Sundly School- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m.
Wodladly Ser..-ices -7:00p.m.

.- ,

RClllle of Sharon HoUMU a.rch
Leading Creek Rd .. Rulland
PDStor. Rev. Dewey King
Sunday school-9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -7 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Hartford Church of Cllrlst in

( 'hurl'h ul' ( ;od

Wlolte~Qopo!W-oo

Portland-~ine Rd.

"-'Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m.

,Mt. Moriah lllptiat
Fourth &amp; Main Sl., Middleport

Andquity Baprisl
Sub!iay School -9:30a.m.
Wqnhip - 10:4!1 a.m.
Sunday Evening • 6:00p.m.
Pastor: Mark McComas

Won!Up-7 p.a1.

Com••talty ol&lt;luill

MIB&lt;n.W.
Pastor: Bob Robinson
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worship - I0 a.m.

Harrisunville Rood
Pasur. Cl\arlcs McKenzie
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
Worship · II a.m ., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday ~rvice - 7:00p.m.

Faith Baptist Churth

s..day Scftool. 9:30a.m.

( llhl'r I h11n hl''

Hr.oth (Middltport)
Putor: Rob Brower
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship- II :00 a.m.

31057 State Route 32.5, l.an&amp;svlle
Paslor: Gary Jackson
Sunday &amp;Chool - 9:30 a.m.
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
W~y prayer se~ice - 1 p.m.

c.r..

-

..... Hrriloo1 Gnle
Sway Scboo'. 9:30 I.QI.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wedi!Ndly Senia:s - 7 p.m.
-

Sunday Service· 6 :30p.m.

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Sunday Servict-7 p.m.

Pas1or: Al Hutson
Youth Mini ster: Bill Frazier

Bakt Kaob. on Co. Rd. J I

"-"Rev. RopWUifanl

Sundly Scbooi-10:00Lm.

Folftll: Ru
Ptilor: Bob Robin1011

Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m.

5th and Main

Bearwdow RidKe Cla•rdl of Christ

Warship- 10:30 a.m

COIIUDulty Churdl
Pastor: Rev. Amoli Tillis

Middlrport Church olCh~

Keao Churrh f!IChrilt

Rutland Flrtt Bapdd CbuKh
Sun&amp;Say School - 9:30a.m:
Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.

lloli111'"

Sunday School - II a.m.

WOlslup - IUa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

,_G-.1_

Suaday Sdlool ~ 9:30 UIL
Wonhip . 10:30 ...... - 6 p.a

Momint: Worship - 10:45 a.m.

Putar. Keith Rader
Sunday School • 10 a..m.
WOC'Ship • II a.m.

!po4'*"' 4. ~ Sctu
~

z.,,.., --t• At«. ..

1551 NYE AVE

Pomeroy, OH 45789

(740) !1!12··21481

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955 · Pomeroy

Ingel's Carpet
169 N 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992·7028

"FIUiturlng Kentuclly Fried
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W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

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106 BUITERNUT AVE.
POMEROY, OH 992-6454
"Flowers for all occasions"

FriAy, Novelllber 16, 2001

Wonhtp Setvioe JO:JO Lm.

Nos-toy ... -yNjplScmca

Pcwtlallll flnl Cluud elU. N...-..
Paor-: W'tlliam Juais

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

Holy Eucharisl II :00 Lm.

Pomtro7 Wesbidr D•rch ol Cluist
Llnle Cl'ftk Baptill Ourth
Price Hollow Rd., Rutland
Paswr. John Swan§CIII

Ea-

Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

G..,. Eplocopol Chunh
326 £. Main SL, Pomt:roy

Minisler: Anthony_Morris
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship-- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday ~rvices - 7 p.m.

15iiit

PIAOr: Jto Lavaadcr

PMtor: Rn. Samuel W. Buye

a.m.

Page Bl

PaQor: Robm Vana

_Olordl, ... _

""""" Bob RobWoo

I

Local boWling, Page 83
NBA Roundup, Page 84
Stringer toxicology report, Page 86

Suaday School - 9:30 LID.

AIIIury (Syn&lt;UO&lt;)

Sunday School - 9:4$ a.m..
hmHoy ChuR'h of Christ
212W. Mai.nSt.

~a..rdlflldleP ,

a.w-a.n::. fll6e ?'

Tuesday SeMces - 7:30p.m.

Cnmnwnity olChr•~&gt;~

Ubmy Asaatbl)' ul God
P.O. &amp;11. 467, Dudding Lane
Mason, W.\Ia.
Pastor. Neil Tenna.Dl
Sunday Services- 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m.

.,.......,.

~Y~ · 7p~

Paaor. Jaae Beattie
s~ Scbool - 9 a.m.
Wtnhip- 10 a.m.

Seoood A Lynn. """""Y
Pastor- Rev. Cr..a Ci'OPman
WORhip J0:2j a.m.
Sunday School9: 15 a.m.

Bible Study 1 p m.

._.Millo

- - IO,lOLOL.6p.m.

r_.,-s..r.o

Sunda)l School. - 10:30 a.m.

Sua. WorWp · IO:IOL&amp;L.6p•
~y Stnice - 7 p.m.
Certdle ...... I
I 'I
Qetda

R I ••

Wcnbi.p • II a.m.
Wcdnndly Scn·ices - 7 p.m.

( lwrd1 ul ( hri,t

$wlday Sdoool - 9 .....

OlordloltlleAdtioo
Sunday Sebool- 9:30 ......

~Y~ · 1p~

OJ. White Rd. off St. RL 160
Pulor: pJ . Chapman
SWJdayScbooi - IOa.m.

The Daily Sentinel

,.._ ......

10:4~ a.m..

7 p.a.
WcdDcadly Scrrices - 1 p.m.
lNontUp.

Wanhip - 9:)0 a.m.

Evuuna Services-6:30p.m.
Wedneiday Sc:rvic"es - 6:30 p.m.

Ht.IDc:k Crow Cllrlltian Cbu~
Pastor: Rtct.d Nease

Sunda). \0 a.m. and 7:.10 p.m.
Wedne-sday. 7:30p.m.

----....

Friday, NoV, 16. 2001

Pomeroy. Middleport. Ohio
.......... Semod Su.
PHor. Rev. David Ruuc II

Sunda) SchooiiO.,.._

County i Olde!t Flori.sf
Main
Pomeroy, Oh
•ut uc cahd yout tOollaflt• wlfh ~ktl ~~~·

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992·1161

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992·6376

FRIDAY'S

Clemens
•

HIGHLIGHTS

WinS

another
CyYoung

ScoREBOARD
NBA
ThurDy'a Gamea
New YOII&lt; 83, Miarri 74
Detroit 115, Dalas 89
POI1Iand 101, Memphis 85
Orlando 101' Denver 82

NEW YORK (AP) Roger Clemens won his
record sixth Cy Young Award
on Thursday, receiving 21 of
28 first-place votes for the
American League honor.
The Rocket, who led the
New York Yankees to their
fourth straight AL pennant,
also received five secondplace votes and two thirds for
122 point' from a panel of the
Baseball Writers' Association

LA. Lakers 98, Houston 97, OT

NHL
ThurDy'a Gamea
Boston 5, New Jersey 4, OT
Carolina 1, Ollawa 1, tie
Toronro 3, Tampa Bay 2
Philadelphia 5, Washi1glon 0.
Phoenix 5, San Jose 3
Chicago 2, Calgary 2, tie'
Vancouwr 2, St. Louis
1
.
'
Dallas 4, Los Angeles 3

of America.

Clemens, 20-3 with a 3.51
ERA and 2 t 3 strikeouts, is
the only pitcher to win more
th;lh four Cy Youngs. Arizona's Randy Johnson won
his fourth on Tuesday, matching Steve Carlton and Greg
Maddux.

NCAA Men'a BD~ lblrtt
Thurwcl8y'a pr-.
' long Beach St. 71, W. Michigan
64
.
Oregon 92, AlabBma St. 52
BCActaatc
Firat Round
Cainomia 70, Princeton 58

E. Washington 68, Saint
Joseph's 67
BP Top of the World Cl111lc
Firat Round
Washington 82, Alaska-Fairbanks 70
Black CoecM&amp;
AaiOCiatlon lnvltlltlon
Semlftnala
. · East Carolina 71, Northwestem
68
N.C. Stale 78, San Jose St. 56

ConaolatkafBrackat
Prairie Vtew 77, Fairleigh Dick-

inson 58
Va. Commonwealth 71, Rutgers
58
NABCCiaulc
Firat Round
George Wuhlngton 69, Mar·
ahal164
W. Kentucky 64, Kentucky 52
PrHea10n NIT
.Quartarflnals
Fresno St. 65, Southam Cal 58

Colonials rip
Herd, 69-64
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) - .
Chris Monroe scored 26
points and Tamal Forchion
added 14 as George Washington opened its season with a
69-64 victory over Marshall in
the first round of the t:JABC
Classic on Thursday night.
The Thundering Herd (0-1)
led by 18 at halftime but hit
only two field goals in the second half.
Jaason Smith added 12
points and 14 rebounds for
George Washington, which
will play Western Kentucky in
Friday night's championship
'game. The Hilltoppers upset
No. 4 Kentucky 64-52 in
Thursday night's second
game.
Tamar Slay scored 22 point&lt;,
:J.R.VanHoose had 14, Ronny
Dawn 11 and Latece Williams
10 points and 11 rebounds for
Marshall, which shot 7 perc
cent in the second half and 33
percent for the game.
Slay was 3-.of-6 from 3point range as Marshall took a
38-32 lead with 5:17 to play
in the first half. The Thundering Herd outscored George
Washington 15-3 over the
final five minutes to push the
lead to 53-35 at halftime.
: Marshall hit only 2-of-28
shots in the second half, allowing George Washington to
climb back into the game.
The Colonials pulled to 58il8 on Forchion's rebound and
dunk with 14:30 to play.
Monroe's long 3-pointer with
11: 14 remaining cut the mar- '
gin to 60-53, forcing a. Marshall timeout.
Smith's jump hook in the
lane gave the Colonials their
first lead, 63-62, at the eightminute mark. Leading 67-64,
Monroe's two free throws
with five seconds to play
sealed the win.

Please -

OUNNIN' FOR THE BOBCATS- Marshall quarterback Byron Leftwich leads the hlgh-Pc&gt;wered No. 24 Herd offense against
Ohio Saturday. Last season, the Bobcats stunned the Herd in a 38-28 upset. (AP)

Herd will not let down
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Marshall learned the hard way last year
about relaxing against Ohio after reeling in a trophy.
After clinching a berth in the MidAmerican Conference championship
_ . - -...·::.game, the Thundering
~
Herd went to
Athens,
Ohio,
and
watched the
five ·
score
rushing touchdowns in a 38-28 victory.
On Saturday, Ohio (1-8, 0-5 MAC
East) comes to Huntington to play No.
24 Marshall (8-1, 5-0) one week after
the Herd earned at least a share of its
fifth straight division crown.
"We owe Ohio," said Marshall linebacker Max Yates. "We went in there a
little light last year knowing we had the

East Division clinched. This year it's
going to be a whole 'nether story.
There's a lot at stake.
"Last year, we had to share. We were
co-champions. We're not having that
this year. We want to win it all-out."
Marshall is assured of playing in the
MAC championship game Nov. 30 at
the home of the West Division winner,
which is still undetermined.
The Herd entered the top 25 this.
week for just the second time in school
history and will need a lopsided effort
in its final two games to move up in the
polls.
Besides struggling Ohio, Marshall
will play Division 1-AA Youngstown
State at home on Nov. 24. That game
was added to the schedule after a game
Sept. 25 at Texas Christian was canceled
due to the terrorist attacks.
Marshall also has to finish strong to
ensure it has a bowl to play in if it loses

in the MAC tide game. MAC teams
that don't qualify for the Motor City
Bowl in Pontiac, Mich., have been left
out of the postseason picture.
"We're not worried about the bowls.
We 're not worried about the polls.
We're worried about ourselves;' said
quarterback Byron Leftwich. "We don't
like to lose. We want to play great every
Saturday."
Leftwich hasn 't disappointed. He's
needs just 706 yards to surpass Chad
Pennington's school-record 3,799 yards
passing in 1999.
Leftwich let out · a nervous laugh
when asked abgut the record.
"Do I have to get 700 in two games
or three?" he said.
The MAC champ"ionship game
counts toward regular season records,
meaning he has three games in which

Please SH Bell, BJ

Clemens, B:S

Rocket tops
the list
Rogel Clemens won his record
sixth Cy Young Award , easily
cuidistancing
Oakland's
Mark Mulder.
Clemens, who
became the
lirsl pitcher
ever to start a
·season 20-1.
also is lhe only
pitcher to win more
than tour Cy Youngs.
Regulsr·stMeon
statistics

IP

220. t

W-L

20-3

OS
BB

33
'

so
ERA

72

2t3
3.5t

VoHng fOf the American League
Cy Young Award, wllh pltcllers
receiving five points lor each first·
place vote, three poinls for second
and one point tor third.

Ployor

1112nd 3rd Tot.

SOURCE: AssoolatBd Pmss

AP

Doss hit hangs over Ohio
State-Illinois match-up
Kittner and quarterback Steve BeUisari of
COLUMBUS (AP) - It was a hit that
shook Illinois almost as much as it did quar- _No. 25 Ohio Sfate figure to be the focal
terback Kurt Kittner.
points Saturday when the losing team plumMichael Doss' hel~et-to-helmet hit on a mets from the Big Ten race and the winner
sliding Kittner at the Ohio State 2 was the moves on to play an even bigger showdown
deciding play a year ago as Kittner was helped next week.
off the field and the IUini were eventually
Illinois trailed 18- t 4 when Kittner was levhelped out of the bowl picture with a 24-21 eled while leading his team to the go-ahead
loss at home.
touchdown midway through the second half.
The 12th-ranked lllini (8-1, 5-1 Big Ten) He lay on the turf at Memorial Stadium for
have not forgotten .
almost 10 minutes before walking off the
"That was kind of a bad thing to see, what field and was taken to a hospital for an examhe did to Kurt;• Illinois running back Rocky ' ination.
Ha~vey said. "Most people will remember
Two plays later, the Illini scored on a pass
that, especially (Kittner). That will probably from replacement Dustin Ward - but withgive us a spark, will probably give us a little
HIT SQUAD- Buckeye defenders Courtland Bullard (58) and Joe
edge."
Ple•ia IH Hit. BJ
Cooper (10) will try to contain the Illinois offense Saturday. (AP)

Temple giving West Virginia trouble of late
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - When it comes to
playing West Virginia, Temple
has tossed' aside its image as a
Big East doormat.
L:ately, the Owls have been
tough against the Mountaineers. Their last two meeting; have been decided by a
combined eight points, both
West Virginia wins.
Two years ago in Morganlawn, West Virginia went 70
yards on its final drive and won
20- t 7 on Jay Taylor's 22-yard

field goal.
Last year, West Virginia got a
1-yard 1D run from Cooper
Rego with five minutes left for
a 29-24 victory in Philadelphia:
West Virginia (3-6, 1-4 Big
East) takes a 10-game winning
streak against Temple (2-7,1-5)
into their meeting Saturday at
Mountaineer Field.
"West Virginia seems to be
getting better as the year goes
on, especially on defense;· said
Temple coach Bobby Wallace.
"It's going to be a tough place

to go into. .
hurt," said West Virginia coach
:'Last year we were more Rich Rodriguez. "We've got a
competitive, but we still feel battle up fumt with their intelike we have that potential. l rior linemen."
hope our kids will come hard
Temple ranks third in the Big
to work this week."
East in rushing defense, aUow. The game could be decided ing just 132 yards per game.
on the line. Three offensive · Temple freshman quarterguards for West Virginia are back Mike McGann, suffering
hurt and may not play. Temple, "' from a chest infection, was
meanwhile, has two of the !Jig pulled from last week's game
East's top defensive linemen in against Virginia Tech after jus.t
Dan Klecka and Ru" New- one quarter but will start Sarurman.
day.
"It's a bad time to get guards
Rodriguez plans to wait until

Saturday to name his starting
quarterback.
Brad Lewis hasn't exceeded
200 yards passing since a 279yard effort against Maryland, a
span of five games.
Backup Rasheed Marshall
returned two games ago after
missing most of the season with
a broken bone in his ·wrist.
He played the second half of
a blowout win over Rutgers
and scored West Virginia's only
touchdown on a_l 0-yard run in
a loss at Syracuse.

�m:ribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

Frld8y, Nov. 16, 2001

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free 1·800-766·2623 &amp;Kt lent cartar advancemtnt
1621 .
oppoltunitJes. For interview ~lure's Aeataurant now
conslderallon send a cover hlnng au 3 locations, ful or
~
letter telling us why you are ~n-lime, pick up appllcathe peraon we are loofdng uon at location &amp; bring back
L,
for along will your resume between
9:30am
&amp;
Crafts &amp; Bake Sa~ 8.t ~Hap- to Paul Bartwr, Circulation 1?da008m, MondaV thru 8at·
py Tracks. ,6 Highland l?lrector at Ohio Valley Putr u 'i·
1
Avenue. Nov. 17
N&amp;hlng CO.. 825 Third Ave.,
Mechllnk:al Engineer
- - - - - - - - Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
Versatile in Plumbing and
Oisne'i Vacation. 7 days, 6 ·
HVAC. Benefits: package of·
nights C Ramada. Good for Domino'a Pizza ol Point farad. Send resume to:
1 year. Sacrifice $199.00 Pleasant now hiring Full·
PO Box 867
(614)898·2730
Time
Part·Tlme sale
Jackson, CJiol 45640.
ers .. &amp;
Competitive
Paydriv·
&amp;
Middle Agt Pro1esslonal Fle~~:ible Schedute. Apply in Need experienCed pan·llme
DWM looking tor Professio. person 420 Viand Street. Pt. office htlp, must have comnal WF, 30-50. Respond PI
puter knowledge in excel
with letter and picture to ·
word, etc., call Mallsaa at
EB7 200 Main Street. Point FAIT GROWING BUll· (740)843--1249
Pleasant, wv 25550
NESS NEEDS CASHIERS
HUNTING
I COOKS, PART TIME, RNsA.PNs·PRN-you choose
No
FULL TlME ALL SHFTS
on Clarence Oshell's Farm SEND Rl!siJME TO·
the ~ys you wish to worX.
or Kim &amp; Keny Wandlings DAILY SENTINEL PO Med1-Home Health Agency
without a written
BOX 21-01 POMEROY !&amp; aggressively growing and
7
·
•
• 1n need of fitld staff. Apply
po -,·ssoon
'"'
.
OH 45711.
to Pete Sommer, 430 2nd
aATTENTlON$

~

•

•C.....,.,... C8Jd ......_ • AI,......., sdu•a

accepta ontr hllp ...-cl . . ....nng EOE ............. Mllllfl

From Home. eam up
to 11500-$7000/ month.
Pan Timet Full Time.
(800)329-4498 lor froo
boolclot.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18111
No Fee Unlaa We Wlnl
t.aaa-582-3345
Flint Flnlnclal hoi lleon
providing amall business
toans for 13 Y"!.~~~ we&amp;
spectalize In pe,~ -. car
debt consolidation. We
guarantH quality service

lrf?Rl 8 trusted na~ Call
Flmt Financial Services, appllcatlons holllno (8n)268·
1294
Need Financial Help? Risk
tree opportunity, look no fur·
ther, our financial Institution
provides you with aaaistance &amp; Information, Free
consultation, call now at
en-304·3011 .

r----"'!'"""_,J.I

THE

'~~~~'-------,

r

YARD SALE

GROWING BUSINESS
NEEDS HELPI

1

Mitii~:.!J~~ b::;erca

$ 522+1 week PT. .
.$40001 week FT
$1000
www.lncredlblerewards.com
_ _ ..J::(800:::::!):::41:.::8.::
·8:::50:::1_ _
704
Second
Avenue, Help wanted caring for the
~
G
Home
9:30am till 3pm. Thursda\', •-·,, 0 ""'' roup
•
Friday &amp; Saturday.
now paylng mInlmum wage,
v
new shifts: 7am-3pm, 7am-1ARD ALE5pm, 3pm~11pm, l1pm·
PoMFJloyJPdmoLE • 7am, call 740-902-5023.

r

;
r

s-

I

Yard lila itlfTI8, bulk sale,
call (740)992-7637

i

A'~AND ·1
........ IVl..

F'l.FAMARKET

...._
Rick Pearson Auction Com·
pany, full time auctioneer,
complete auction service.
Llcehsed t6B,Ohlo &amp; West
Virginia.. 304·nl--5785 Or
304·nJ.5447.

r

LPN'al AN's needed lot Pedlatrlc home care cases in
tho Southeast VInton COun·
t'j, Pomtroy and Racine
Areas. Immediate Em~·
ment Available. LPN'a $18
per hour, AN's $17 per
hour. Shift/ Weekend Shift
DUterenllal Offered. Pleaae
Cell Primary Care Nursing
Strvlce at (800)518-2273.
Ask f Phylll
or
s.
Make money for Christmas
so 11 Avon. Call (740)446~
3358

WANJID

I

10 BUY

AN Supervisor (FT), ooordl·
natlon-supervlslor) of patient
care. Licensed In 01-1 and
wv. Must have P.P.S. experlence and familiar with
medicare and JCAHO
guldellnas tor home health
Management experience. 0 j
llnical taff
Co
1
wanted to Buy: Propane 0
a must.
n·
Gas COOk Stove. (740)256- tact Pete Sommer, Medl
Home Health, 430 . 2nd.
6692
Ave., P.O. 987, GBihpolls
OH 45831 800 481 6334
I \ ll'lln \ II '\ I
·
· ·
*Full benefit package lnclud" I 1{ \ IC I ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ing health insurance and
110
401 (k) Included.

Absolute Top OollBr: U.S.·
Silver, Gold Coins, Proalsets, Diamonds,
Gold
U.S. Currency,·
Rings,
M.T.S. Coin Shop, 161 Sec·
ond Avenue, Gallipolis, 7-40·
446·2842.

1

1,

!ATTENTION I
WORK AROUND YOUR
SCHEDULE
$25- $751 hour, PT/ FT
All training provided
www.aetweahhyandwlse .com
orCatl
1·600·846·8492

CIStore Manager IuII tIme,

Hnd resume to The Dan"#

hntlnel, PO lox 72t-8,
Pomeroy, Oh 45788

-:-::-=-::====--

100 WORKERS NEEDED
AssembM cratta, wOOd
Items. Material provided.
To ..... ,. wk.
...,.,.
Free ~~~~~:'-~15 24 Hr.
Allentlonl
Earn 2~. Income without
tnl1 job up to
$25.-$75./hr. Pt·FI.
t-1100·218·7543
www.Money·Dreams.com
AVON! AU Areas! To Buy or
Selt Shirley Spears, 304·
675-1429

•

6334

Salesperson for Ohio Valley
Memory Garden, full or part
time, we train and lumlah
leads, Call (740)446·9228
fOrBPPI. Tonya.
Sa
F
ltsperson: u11 ·t1me, ben·
e1·•·
rolall
exporlo
!,.,
nee re1er·
red Apply at Ufest'jle Fuml
tur8. No phone calla. ~
3rd A
1
856
OH
~ue.
• ·

G.;·

The SOutham Local School
Dlslriclls accopflng appllca·
ttons for aubllitute bua drlv·
era. Drivera must have a
COLIIcenaewithabusdrlv·
er's enclor8ement. Training
can be arranged. Phone
(740) 949-2869 lor further
Information.
Please send Inquires to
Jamea Lawrence, Superln·
tendenl, Southern Local
~~~5 ~~ ~L~DR~~1 ':)
. Em""",.
n~.....
EquaI n.....•
~,un.ly
;:;"':·:.._ _:.
· _____

7

URGENTLY
NEEDED·
plasma donOra, eam $45 to
$60 lor 2 or 3 houra weekly.
Call Sera·Ttc, 740·592·
8851.

Will Haul Away, Clean Out,
Clean Up or Move Almost
Anvthing. Taking Consign· riO
menta. Call (740)446·7604

riO

HOMFS
FOR C'H...
~

110.5 ~~es with 1999 Fleetwood r~~odular H~me Near
. Gallipolis. Excellent Condi·
tlon. Private, Count"! Set·
dng. Stocked Pend. Add!·
OHIO vi~~J~CE~UBLISH· tional 7.5 Acres Available.
lNG CO. recommends thai Call Janoll Call al Cantu"!
21 Homes &amp; Land (Cellular
you do business with people " (304)634-2596 or Oflica
youknow,andNOTtosend 1-800-731·9011).
money through the mail until
you have investigated the 3 Bedroom en Route 2.
oftering.
(304)675-5332
Do you need a mortgage or
new car? Are ycur bills
backed up? We can help.
We ofler last reliable serv·
Ice, and our professional
staff
on toll
hand
help.
Pleaseis call
free.to -866.
·'4*':..:..c·B80=7' - - - -1- _
Start Your Business To·
da
Prl
Shoppi cen
tel\~pac:eAvalla~gAt At:
fordable Rate. Spring Vallev
Plaza, Call 740·446.0101.

j

3 bedroom, 1 bath with
large livlngroom, new gas
appliances and ale, upstairs
complellly
renovated,
$37,500 (740)992·4485 .
3br. Home Fully Remod·
eled . Ready to Mo"e in!
$39,000. 211 7th St. NH.
(304)882-3n2

....._.to._,._,..'*~

~ I

I

r ~~ Ir:

•s.

bath, save $5,155, delivered
&amp; set up on your lot includ·
ing skirting &amp; Fiberglass
steps, Coles Mobile Helmes,
U.S. 50 East, Athens, Oh,
740-~·1972. ·
End of the ffiodet year sate!
All 2001 must go, to make
room
for 2002. Special low
financing program available.
Only at Fla.atwood Homes
o1 p oc1
11 ~1011 F
1

L.------_.1

I

57~

I

2 bedroom, Middleport,
S325 per month plus ctepoa..
It, (740)992.0175.
2 BR, 1 112 Bath on 112
acre of Prcpon•. $3501
'
month. lmmedille Avallablll~
ty. (614)471-4265. Near
Buckeye HillS Career Cen·
1
er.
3 Bedroom 2 Bath, Stove,
aaa.~:o~:,;·
ree . Refrigeralor, Very Nice,
$450/ mo'nth. Reference
Final Days Nationwide In· and Deposit Required.
t
'
R d 11 1 (740)3118-8371
van °"1
e uc on
(304)736-3409
3 bedroom house, $500
Umitod Or No Cred~? Gov· month • depo~t. No polS.
emment Bank Finance Only (711W)446-0924
At Oakwood In Barbour&amp;Ill Wl/304-736·3409
3 BR house in Middleport.
v e,
·
Call (740)446-0855 be·
Never Uved in Doublewide? tween Sam and 4pm.
Only $5011 Delivers 10 your 5 rooms and large ston~nA,
lot
Low
Payments. N
b th
u ·-dod1·800·691-6777
ew a room. pgra
carpel through-- out. $3501
New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. month. Oepcsit Aequlred.
Only $19,850. Free Delivery (703)451 ·2591
&amp; Set Up. 1-88&amp;-92Q-2426
Buy homes from 11 99/mo.,
1
4~
New 14:~e70, 3 bedroom, 2 Forecosures,
-" 'down, 30
bath . Onl'i $995 down &amp; years at 8 .5% APR. Fer list·
$189.62/month. Call Cheryl, lngs 1·800·319-3323 ext.
740·385-7671 .
1709.

I

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I

r

'f

I

r

CLASSIFIEDSJ

I

~~ 1
:·.:

•r;;;.-.;;..

MENTS AT BUDGET PAtCES AT JACKSON ES.
TATES, 52 Wntwood Drive
from
to $383. Walk to
shoP. &amp; movlts. Call 740·
446·2568. Equal Housing
Opponun&amp;tu7
" '

$297

Christy's Family Living,
33140 New Uma Rei., Rut·
land, Ohio, 7•"742·7•~.
~and trailer
•··•-L homo
..,.....,_,
rentals. Commercial storefronts available for lease .
Vacandel now.
Gracious living. 1 and 2
bedroom apartments at VII·
lage Manor and Rlver8kle
Apartmenta In Middleport.
F(OOl $278·$348. Call 740·
992·5084. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

I

r:

4782

l!'11!"-------,

~ ·

AN'I1Ql6

~-------,J
·
B
11 A' rl
uy or sa · IVa ne Anliques, 1124 East Main Or)
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992·2526. Russ Moore,
owner.
-------~
Sue's Seiectables on the ·r .
In Middleport. Dolls, glass: ·
ware, Aladdin mantels, and .
more. (740)992.0298

r

jj;=~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;.;:._..,

~

---

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

==

.

.M.....

17 17

~.N"':"o'e.~' ~lie!

==·

c '

ro~:her angered Neal

Air,

last September

by

r•

44

:==---,.---8

6

8' pool table, 1n slate, slicks r
balls, rack, etc . Excellent .
condition.
$800
Call ..·
(740)446- 2661
·
Affordabl'e • Convenient
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Low Monthly Investments
Home Delivery
•
FREE Color Catalog
Call Toda" 1·8D0-71Hl15S,
__ www:.:.:;.::;·;;:nP::·"'='a:::n::
.co::m::..__
N
EW AND USED FUR· ~
NANCES FOR SALE! We
Install, Free Estimates, If
you dont Call us, We bolh .
Loose! (740) 446·6306, 1·
800-29 1·0098.
:::~.:.::::::::::..__ _....:
Propane Heater 5 Plagu~
$30. 2 P235 15 tires, S30. ·
(740l3EI 7•7729
Refrigerator &amp; gas range ·
$ 125 740 742 2757
·( l ·
·
·
Waterline Special: 314 200
PSI $21 .95 Per 100; 1" 200
PSI $37.00 Per 100: All
Brass Compression Fittings
In Stock.
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
ES Jackson , Ohio, 1·BDO·
537·9528

.,
'

I

deo. ·

2

sug-

i

*'· -·

=..,.

he walked into that locker room. No question,

1· think sometimes you miss those thin"" and

wish were able to work thing~

that extra push. He's going to. be fine, though."

.
.
.
,
r1,

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

For
used 1011. ga· 89 &lt;leo Tracker. 4 cyl.. 5
ra~Sale:
doors.2(740J
448 9485
-

I

speed, 4x4, Rune Great
$11!00. t740J2S&amp;-1457

~---~--A'U!--,J. 91 u.-, Towncar and 111

2 Red HNior Pupa, S125
each, Blacl&lt; 1.11118, Gentle,
2.5 yrs. old. Saddle Broluo,
SBOO. (740)258-8034
A.KC Golden Retriever
Pups, Parents on premises.
Ready Now. $250·$300. No
Sunday calls. (740)245·
5358

a t&gt;eautvl Air rldtl. auto llghl
dimmer. (740l446- 9523 or
(740)446-1443
91 Mitsublshi Eclipse as,
auto, transmission be~.
(740)448-4241
95 Bu~k Skylark, pw, pdl,
cruise, ale, amlfm caaaette,
'""'good condition, S4000
OBO, (740)992-7851

AI&lt;C Registered Gold Re· 98 Pontiac Flroblrd (Red'
triovers, $225. (740)366· standartl 5 speed, CD ptay·
8972
er. tinted windows. new lire•
=:-::-c,---..,.-- 82K miles $8500. OBO call
AKC Registered Miniature 304-675·3628
Pinsher. 9 mcnths old and .:.:_..;,.:.·
up to date on all shots. 97 Chev'j Monte Carlo,
(740)44H244
koytese stan &amp; ont"f, power
everything, SOK miles,
AKC Yorkshire Puppies. $9,500 OBO, (740)992·
Shots &amp; Wormed . Vet 0215
Checked. $400. &amp; up.
(304f895-3926
97 Forti Thunderbird, loaded, (740)448-4241
Pomporlan Puppleo, M or F, . . .;....;:..;,;.;,;;;,;,;.._ _.,
$250 each. (740)388·6842
TRllCiai

==-----

=· =-------

r

Puppies, 1/2 chow, 1/2 Lab·
rador, 6 weeks old, $50.
(740)446.()614 or (740)446·
9382
.
Reg. Aal Ternar Puppies.
Tri·
colored,
5100 .
(740)532·2677

r

~~~

70

••.

~

FOR SAL£

1982 GMC plck·up, V-8, po,
pb, auto, ale, new palnl,
new wheels &amp; tires, new di·
amond plate toolbOx, k)oks
good. runs great, asking
$3,000, (740)949·2621 .

11995 Chevy S:10 $5,000.

r ,..,_

.............., &amp;
~ Moroll. lbl!s
~

.:C,...-:--.,.--:-c----

Virgil's Berry Patch, East of
Syracuse on Aou1e 124 has
lumips &amp; purple asparagus
roots, (740,992·7449.
\l l\ 1 S\ 1'1'1 II S
,'\,II\ I•.Sif)( I'

I

rlr,o...,lllii.iiiiiiii"".,l
.ARM

foJC, PW, PL. CD (740)446·
F..Qu1PMFNr
. 4241
98 GMC Sonoma, Air, Auto,
Allis Chalmers 50/50 with Tilt &amp; Cruise, 51 M Miles,
front Bfld loafler and rear Original Owner $6900.
blade. (304)682·2637
(740)446·2957
iO

Lohg 510, MFSO, Mower, For sale· 1987 Ford F·150,
rake, MF12 baler, 3 wag· asking $500, (740)742·
ons, tog splitter, disc., bush 2220.
hog, etc. (304)6754889
MaBSey Ferguson 135, Ole·
sal. New Rubber, Paint, E:~~·
cel1ent Condition. $5500.
(740)245·0777

j

VANS &amp;
4-WDs
~~-------,J

~:!::..::..::.:..:.c.____

1985 S·1 0 Blazer 4WD,
YANMAA YM 1500 Tractor, 43,000 miles on rebulh en·
diesel, 3 point hitch, $2,150. gine. AT/PS. Many new
AlSo, new 4' finish roower, parts: Ntw ahtmator, atart,
still In crate, $850. Shipping er, front axle, Wheel cylln·
available. Located jus! out· ders, brakes, bantry. Good
side of Huntsville, AI (256) rubber. $1800. OBO Phone.
n6·9435 www.maynarde· (304)675-6504 leave MIS·
qulpment.com
sage.
l.JVfSIOCK
~-1-'98'-5-S·_1_0_B_Ia_z_e-r,-,-a-ho-0
. Package. 4:~~4, Runs Good.
~------- Driven682Everyday.
$1500.
:tyr. Old Mule. Been rode a , (304) ' 2938
little. Real G,onlle. (304)578· 1967 Dodge Van , Fully
3289
Loaded. Make Offer or
Trade for nice car.
AOHA end APHA horses for (740)245·9384
sate, also yeartlnga and
weanllngo, SAYRE FARMS, 1991 Plymouth Voyager.
(304)895·3319 or (304)875· &amp;dillon, ve"f good condMion.
3498
Loaded,
Please
Call
(740)446·2738.

r

"E

r

HAv&amp;
GRAIN

1 1993 Ford Aerottar XL, 4.0

L,~-------,.1. lilte, 7 passenger. Excel-

lent Condition. (7.0)446·
4&gt;5 Round Balli ol Hay. 2974, (740)448·3892.
$10 each. (740 )381-0166
1994 Chevv S10 Blazer Ta·
squa re bales was S2.00 hoell.T, Laalher, Fully Load·
now $1 .50. Round Ba les ed, Garage Kepi, 78,000
was $15. now $10. t mile miles. E:~ecellent Condlllon.
$8900. (740)379-2746
on Rt. 2 N. (304675·4889
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tie
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery
&amp; Volume Discount Avalla·
ble.
Heritage
Farm.
(304)875·5724.

1895 Chevy Suburban,
White. Grey Cloth. 4x4,
Front/Rear Air, Heat, Thlrct
Seat .
89,000
miles . ·
$14,500. (740)387-7893

n;,u

we had

tunate."

three

· On television and on radio call-in
shows, .il seems everyone in Columbus is

Bullard said. "Last week W1IS the lint

talking about how Ohio State "controls

step.n

its own dt:!tiny."To do that, however, the

If IUinois wins, it would play host to
Northwt:!tern fot a shot at no wone

Buckeyes will have to win their last four

than a share of its fint Big Ten title since

There is little margin for error, partic-

Neither the lllini nor

the Buckey&lt;! are

tion by the opposing defense.

loss (45- 20 at .Michig:tn) and Ohio State

ing 1he ball over," Tressel sa.id.

I

HoME

,, ~

·

L,_oti.......,iiiiliilii~iiilil.i-,.1

The last time the teams met at Ohio

"We have to play a lot better than

Stadium, the IUini pounded the Buckeyes

lf we're even going to have

46-20. Just like Illinois' players and the

win the ballgame:' Turner

hit on Kittner, many Ohio State players
haven't forgotten that humiliating loss.

we've played

a chance· to

s:lid. The Jllini escaped with a 33-28 win
owr Penn • State l:Ut week on Harvey's
13-yard touchdown run with 1:19 to go.
Ohio Statci.lost four fumbles in its most
recent game, but still beat up on Purdue

to

~ Walerproollng.

r ~~ I

In tha Court of
Common PINI, Melge
County, Ohio, Call
Number 01·CVo0411,
l!rlc J. Teylor ••·
Lucinda Dawson, et al.
Defendant Luolnde 8.
Dlwaon, WhOM lui
pleca of raoldenca II
known •• 3rd Stnet,
Aportmant 12, llaolne,
Ohio 45771·H07, but
who.. praeent plooo

Anawar to . thll - - - - - - - Compl ltL
Publla Notloe
111)2, 1,11, 21,:10 (11)'
7
NOTIOIO
'

And have aternel
life.
Sadly mleud by
friend• and fatmlly

Ohio has struggled this year
under first-year coach· Brian
Knorr,

Public

LI!OAL NOTICI
A vlewlni or l,ll ...l
Wood ROad , 0 • Hill
lloed and '·Fox Hill
Circle all 1-tad In
Laur1i Wood · " :~kn~~~d•;
r e ta~: Tllwn•htp)
htitae (8•n•llurv
'
hae bean
Notlca on March 14• aohadulod for 1:00
2001., Eric J. Teylor a.m.
Mondey,
Diad hi• Complotlnt In Novomllat 11 et the
CliO number 01..CV· 11111 after Which 1
048, In the Court of hMrlna will ba holclat
Common PIH11Melge 'to:OD a.m. 11 tho
County, Ohio, alleging Commlulonaro' olllca
lha1 Luolnde 8. during their regular
D1w1on nagllgontly -lng. The purpou
oporotad hor motor of the vlawlng and
vehicle caualng a heartngla to dedlciote
oolllalon, ro1u111ng In theu roads ae
Injuries and damagn town• hlp rOad a.
to Plelntlll lirlo J. Anyclnl lnteraetad 11
Taylor. Defendan1 W11lcomti to etllnd

11

· •hall
teke8.notice
Daw•on
1hat
Gloria Kl_, Clerk
'
Luclndo
oho hll twenty-eight
Melge County
... lonera
(28) deya 10 fila an .(111 11,Oomml
11

it.

Wake

who

replaced Jim

400 yards in three games this

I get that record and we don't

.

'*"'

~l:::i!r orvtrtua
or •
the

Bobcats

straight.
A day before a 17-0 loss to
Bowling Green last week,
athletic

director

Thoma 1

an

Boeh backed Knorr in

win the MAC championship,
it's for nothing.
· "You look at the year Chad

open letter to Ohio fans.
"We haven't been able t o

broke the record, they won
the
MAC
championship.
That's the Important part. If

lhlreholdare, agreoc:l
to . llliaolva and
-r,latoly wind up 111
lila ra, ond lhlt a we win the MAC champi·
oartlfl01to to that onship, I might like it then . If
ellact w11 flied on we don't, it means nolhing."
Octobat 81, 1001,
Since 1997, Ohio and Marthe offlo• ol the
laciretary ol 1tete at . shall have played the Baitlc of
Columbus, Ohio.
Phil Harrtaon, the Bell, which has been
Prtlldlnt inscribed each year with the
(11) 11,11
winner's name and the final

put two halv~s together '"
four weeks now," Knorr Sil' '
"Offensively, we're nol ab l

,'

pJss

establish some sort of

game and not being able to
make big plays."

In

:;~~~~~;~
In

Forest. The

at

have been shut oul in their

. C-:
·
Nottoa 11
liven
that linger Con•
1tructlon Company
Ina.
1ft
Ohio

~or
TO W1iom It May
.

coach

last two games and lost four

~

11o11oe

·

do

He may not need that
many. He's thrown for at least
season. •
"It's possible, but I don't
·worry about that," he said. "If

Ohio has played the second
half of the season withoul
leading rusher Chad Brinker,
A

cyst

was .

discovered

between his skull and ,brain

score. The bell is a symbol of

during an

the Ohio River, which sepa·
rates West Virginia and Ohio.

early October.

examination

in

Brinker ran for 156 yards
and three scores in Ohio's

It's as close to a rivalry as

win over Manhall last year.

Marshall has since re-entering

Clemens

nHr ·

more

1he MAC in 1997.

Grobe, now the

Coli 24 Hra. (740) 44&amp;0670,
1-1100-287.0576.

and dear to ua,
Though God
called
you away.
I often sit and
lhlnk of you,
And •peak of how
you died,
To think you could
not uy good·
bye
Before you cloHd
your eye•.
Your weary houra
and days of
pain,
Your troubled
nlghla are peat.
And In my aching
heart I know
Youhavaaweet
•••t allalt.
But•omaa-t
day we'll meat
again
Beyond thl• toll
and atrlfa.
We'll claep each
other'• hand once

' table and the best man will win ."

fnMnPIIpB1

1117~.

softly guarding
A quiet and 111ent
grave;
For In It Ilea a
precious one
Welovodbut
could not uve.
The thing• you
alwaya did lor u•,
I think of every
day.
They keep you

to lose;' he said. "We've got winning in
our blood. You've got to bring it to the

Bell

,.,...ICII fur·

•

playing their final home g:tme, stopped
just short of predicting an Ohio State
victory. ·
"I wouldn't guarantee you we're going

Uncondltlonol llletlmo guar·

C&amp;CGeneral Home Malntenenc&amp;- Painting, vinyl sl&amp;
lng, carpenl"f, doors, wfndows, batha, mobile home
repair and more. For free
estimate call Chat, 740-992·
6323.
ii;;;~~--~....,

Bullard, one of 12 Buckeyes' seniors

35-9.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

antee. LOcal
nlalted. Ellabllhocl

..There is no way we can survive turn-

has won its last two and !hree offour.

State coach Jim Tressel said. "No matter
how they happen, no matter how unfor-

r1o

ularly those errors that lead to a celebra-

exactly coasting along. even though IJJi.
noil has won five in a row since its only

_Buckeyes finish against the two teams
h d f th
• h B' 1l
h
11
jimi;;;;;;;::=;;;;;;;;::; .il ea o em 1h t e tg en - t e I i•

regular-season games something they
haven't done in 19. yean.

1990.·

"We can't have fumbles, period:' Ohio

93 F·t50 XLT, klngcab, aft
In Memory
bed, 84,000 mOes. All Pow· -;;::;;;;;;;;;;~;;~
er, Excellent Condition .
$7,000 OBO. (740)245·
0.77
·.::...
7- - - - - - In Memorr of
96 Aanger, 4cyl, 5 speed,
CD Player. Custom Wheels.
Unda Lou
Tonneau Cover, Runs
Stewart
Great, Sharp Truck, $4200
Nov. 16
or make offer. (740)448·
4998
The angels are
97 F·150 XLT, Extended

float and he leads an offense 'that seems
to move in fits and starts, but the Buckeyes still are upright and bowl-bound.
The season rests on the fj-·' two

(7-2, S-1) .

games for Ohio State (6-3, 4-2). The

5pm

=:.::

=m~;;;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;; Cab, 8' bed, V·8, auto, PS,

own or ess.

great-looking slats but not .~n."
BeUisari's hatdest hits have come from
Ohio State's own fans. His passn may

:;For-=:Sa:...le::...:or:;T~,_-:--.

I

Ric;hards Brothers Fruit
Farm.
APPLES
AND
MUCH MDRE. 24 miles
Nonh of Gallipolis en County Road 46. 1740)286-4584 ,

a

I

-u.

"'

take," linebacker Courtland

lllini back

by

.,••

•

steps to

"He's played great at clutch time:·
coach R on 'Iiurner sat'd . "I'd mu( h rat h er
h
d
h
th
h
all th
• ave a guy D t at
an ave
ese

For sale: Martin Guitar 0. 1998 To';018 Tacoma, 4x4, Atlidantlal or commercial
45V, (740)949-2485
Loaded, V-8, Needs Bod)' :~g,~
Work. Panlally Repaired . lrlcla, A~·
E'~-•
Ji'Runs &amp;
$8500 OBO. (740,....1.()950
n. ~nour - - ·
.
VEGF:rABLEll
or (740,....1·985e after 5pm. , WV000306, 304-875-1788.

i

toUC

·

rival

IUinois is 3-0 in gam&lt;! decided
hd
I

:n

=

has led the

•

nl and then
Michigan
"Coach. told Ul last week

from second-half deficits.

1990 Gullllream, ft. 480
Ford. 411&lt;. 1996 Pull Car,
4
40
5752
71&lt;::-:,~(7:--:~=::45-.:...:.;..:::.,.-.,97 Flair 32', 454 Vortech,
aula, lola of
(740)446-4241
84:..-:-:Che-::vvmotoBurshorne
. Bee. n.~lenf
~-~o
~
_,.,..
dMion. 1304)458-1541 otter

L.,~-·'-'"""iliwiiiOI•=-."•_.1. ;.(304_;.,8_;75-6;.::.:986:.;__ _ _ ~

I

son. Four times he

J'.':i

u

back. I think I just helped him out. We worked
auf togtther and would do some extra thing~.

score again .
Kittner has had an efficient and productive if not aWe-inspiring senior sea-

sao;

two

respect than I do for Lorenzo Neal," Fisher
said. "I knew what he was going to do the day

out Kittner in the lineup they didn't

tie Will claimed the win in both
tht High Game and High Series,
202/544. Will defeated Shirley
Sinunons and, Margaret Eynon lo
post the win .

(or 100 yards in a

yet ·1o rush

Be went over I ,000 yards before I was
there:' Nw said. "He's always been a '""at

f1omPipB1

740-m-

has

"You're going to have to look hard around
the league to find somebody who~ got more

I

In women's cpmpetition, Dot-

when ·the teams play Sunday at P:aul Brown
Stadium, Nw aid, "1 didn't know that he felt
that ..,.,, but I won't talk to him about it. No
-~ ···•;,
neo:u to.
•
•
The Tttam could we Neal nght about now.
Th '
'
If 16• 10 Joss to B-'
.
eyre commg 0 a
... ttmore
M day .gh
h MN '
d
on
ofn
ru t, w en
c ur was stoppe
short o the goal line on the g:tme's final play.
Th T'
• _..,_
.
' ddl"~
'th . . •
e tlant uu~nse I! f1
o:u Wl
IDJUfles

a problem.
N-··
' •
k
di ~ G
' I
" ' wont ta e . ere t ,or eorge s ast
Pro Bowl seasons m Tennessee.

when his renurks were brought up during a
conference call.

a1:

I·- ·

10 block the right penon."
Asked whether he would look for Fisher

game. The lack af a blocking fuUback remains

..

Hit

BENNETT'S HEADNG lo 19911 Chevy Malbu, - · 2000 Hooley Davleort 1200
COOUNG (740~18 130,000 mlloo, $8000 cuotorn 1 000 rnlteo, . - .
or 1~-=-- (740,....1-4041 .
Stt,aoti. (740,38N375
7
-·
1998 Ford Contour, Dllk ~ter=:::::pm-·~:-:-:~-::-~
BIJiJDNG
LOoks Good. 78.000 2000 . - Hallay Davlctrnllos, S5000 OBO. c.u son Hetlfago ao11 1a11 8500
Si.ftouEs
(740 "'*2824
miiH. $15.000,
1999 Mustang,
2670, 740-992-6520.
38' storm door, complele $11,500, toadocl. 30.000
Four 54'11htJttors, $tO; miles, (740)992-31136
t•• porch railing with spindles, $25. Call (740)448- 1999 Oldsmobile Allero, Ex·
4186
cellent condl110n. Loaded.
=--:-:-:----- $8,500. 1304"'75-6406
Butlgal , _ 11.,.,..
"":'~.:'::
78 Buick Lasabar, Runs, a1ona All T - To
Needs Work, $200. Cal Over 10,1100 Transmlallono,
Wlnl trs, ' AIo G'rande, OH (740)
992•2092 or {740)002· Transfer Cuee, ·740-245Col 740-245-5121 ·
3452.
ii56il77~,COI::;I~:3311-3~~785~.~..,

where he stepped out of.,;';;;;.b. That's what!
took personally, when he said l W3S not going

and George

but tried to smooth thin"" out Wednesday

we miss him.

game honon and Tc:un High
series with a 694 and 1981
respectivley.
Chuck Burton continued his
hot streak with a High Game
win over Sam Smith, 188 to 179.
Burton claimed the High Series
over Steve Burton 533 to SOL

"I don't think that you come after someone's
character;' Nw s:lid Wedn-"'~ "I think that's

: ·:::"·:!.too:x'
(740~ =.

u;.,.-.:;.-;-,;:; : '

In the Early Morning Wednesday bow~ng league, Pine Hills
Golf Cou..., came home the

winner OYer WI week's c h&gt;mpt·
released Neal Jut March to help on Little John's of Pomeroy,
than get under the aabry cap. Neal hasn't for- , 68/ 28 10 65/ 31. Pine Hills
Fish
r=&gt;rded both the Team High
goW!n . ers mrwb about his blocking.

day

c· .

BOWUNG RESUUS

out."
The Titans

,"1:'

080

tfli5 Plymouth Noon, 4 A -. (740)44&amp;-2092
Cludlng hi ofllclenqr heat cloor, 5 ........ foir, IJI.!11P - ·· we cany a 118,000 miloa. 12650 080,
M:JIOMCY!US
qoptete 11ne of MotMta (740' 256-6877 . (740)2S&amp;- ~
•
home part&amp; &amp; &amp;C:BIIO Its. 8467•
'
BINNETT'S HEAnNG a 1997 Dodgo Neon S!oOrt.· 1978 Halley DlvltlaQn FLH
Cl!OUNG (740,....11411 2DR. Sunrool,-. or-r, all orlglltll, 1100
or. 1 ~
melle Air 82000 mHos mlloo on newly- rno(740J ~ fl&gt;r, S!ISOO. 740-1112·2070,
54100
7
RealdoorUallloma 0wnora aan, (740)2511-&amp;167.
40-1112~.
19113
T - " Hl-w:y 90 plus 1997 Jeop Grand CheroGoldwlng AaiJ.
gas 1u......,. Including 011 kee Fully Loedocl LAoatl1a&lt; Loolca Hke Now. U,OOO
and "!octrlc gas fuma· 561(, Amethyll cOior. 0.0 (304~76-3259
ces. Hi Etrlclency Heat Owner E)ICIII&amp;nt Condition 1998 Honda 300 F
Pumps, foatunng Tappans $13 otio Cal (740)44i
-·
Free Incredible warranty e702 ·
4x4,
Good CDnclidon,
package.
.
$3400. (740)446-2715

1·

MERrnAND.!SE

•
• .
~·. .
12 by 24 building to give·
away to tear down or leave
as it. (304)675-8872
)
NolargePot2s,BR(74Ap
t.
V~_,~
N
i.ce.
2
0 446
1h
'VU
spaces at e Memory
·
Gardens (Wcman at the ·
Nice 1br. All Electric. Near Well), $375. Call (7401446· ,
high school. $300 month + . 2893
"
Deposit.
(304)675.-3100
~::::i~!~. (304)675·5509 ~~ ~mpkl~~~~~c h~~~nu~:•
-:"'-::..~-.,.----:---:
white, $90; small metal
Nice 2br. Apanments, large w11rdrobe, $30; (740)992·
rooms, fully equiped kltch· 5503.
en, central Heatln()'Cooling, - - -- - - - Washer &amp; Dryer hookup. 5 Boxes of what·knots, bab'i ·-·,
(304)882·2523
bed, high chair, car seat.
' - - ' - - - - - - - (304)675·2801
North 3rd, Middleport, 1 .:..._..:___:__:..:._ _ __;· ..
bedroom furnished apa'n- 6x10 Trailer new Hitch &amp; ·
ment, no pets, deposit &amp; ref· Jack. Licensed &amp; titled.
erences, (740)992·0165.
$250,. 2 Handmade gun
cabinets 1 red oak holds 1~·
Now Taking Applications- guns matching locks. 1 ··
35 Wtst 2 Bedroom Town· B
lrch Holds 12 guns malch· ·•
house Apar1ments, Includes lng locks, both are made ..
Water
Sewage, Trash, from four-Quarter grade 1 ..
$35M.4o., 740-446..()()06.
lumber.
$250
Each..
- - - - ' - - - ' - ' - " ' - (304)675•1165

5 roon;i house Pclnt Pleas· · New 2002 14 wide cniy House ·For Rent 2br. $275.
ant, w1th lot. 2 car garag.e , $799 down &amp; $155.38/mo, $200
Oepcsit.
Call
1 1/2 bath. $43,000. Famoly Call Nikki, (740,385-7871 .
(304)675·6872
Relocating. (304)875-n41
!~~~~~~InJnac•···
M
New Double Wide. $195 Hoose for Rent, 2 Bedroom
'"'"' .......,,,._.,,
,_, ,
.·
ONEY
81f3 Main Street, PI: Pl. Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2 Deposit and Refafence. No
In need of two outside
ro LoAN
Completely Refurbished. 2 .Bath. Free Delivery &amp; Set· Pets. (740)448·1279
salespersons. Must have - story, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bed· up. 1·886·928·3426
tllperlence and have an
L
Kl h
New Haven· 3BR house In
outgoing porsonallru Call CREDIT PROBLEMS Hav· rooms.
arge
tc en, N'•e 28x60 Dou"le Wide lo
I I
odoled
·
.,.
lng Financial problem~? Is Ltrge Utility Room, LA1 DR/ "'
u
wn, us rem
· new
(740)288-0113 or 1·686· Bad credit, no creel!!, or
Fanuy Am. New carpet setting On rer\~ lot In carpet, paint, nice yard and
840-4026 tor an lnteNiew · bankruptcy the root ot your throughout FfA &amp; AIC, Point Pleasant area. 2x6 one car detached garage.
appointment.
problems? Call us lodau:
579 ,900 . (740)445.9585 or walla, thermal pane win· No Pets, would consider a
PREMIER CREDIT RE:
(740)448·2205 or (740)446· dows, priced to sale. Call Lease to own. $375. per
W.AooAN1nTEgD&amp;: Ec'arpeponrllere nFco"re-d SOURCES, *All the finan·
2683.
(304)675·3689 ask lor month, $350 Securlt'j Dt·
1
Aosomarv
pct&amp;lt. (304)882·2241
Pomeroy, Naytors Run, 2 or
PART· TlME
man's, valid driver's license, cial
help you
need', ,·866·
For 88 1e ...vY owner: Nice bi·
.,.
3 br. apanment' w/d. hu , sir'
257·5445,
Specializing
In:
W
OFFICE POSITION
hand tools, reliable transJavel home on 1 acre near
OAKWOOD HOMES
hy rant? government securit'j deposit, reterences,
We have a part-time posl· portallon and references re· personal, consolidation,
Chester. Three bedroom,
SUPER CENTER.
backed loans from $490 call (740)992-6886.
tion open at our SenUnel of· quired. Local work, excel· business, mortgages, auto. · two baths, one-car garanA, Over .40 homes to chose
down. (740)446-3093
flee In p omei'O'j. Thl I po11 • 1tnt p&amp;'J for ng
· hI person, LOANS! LOANSI LOANS! family room with fireplace,
•· 1rom. onve
· a liHie save a
River. Bend Place now ac·
tion requires computer and onuses, vacatiOn. Appty at
sun room. New central heal· loll Oakwood Home a of
cepting ,applications for 1 br.
math skill&amp;, must enjoy Christian's Construction, Problem Pa';lng Bills? In lng &amp; ale a'jstem. One ml- Nitro. (304)755·5885
Hud SUbsidize Apt. lor the
working with people , be Inc., 1403 Eastem Avenue, Debt? Good, Bad, or no nute off Route 7, but still pri- :;;::.:::...:::..:.!.::::::::::::_....,...
MOBILE~ letderly &amp; disabled. EOH.
able to organize your work Gallipolis, (740)448-4514
credit. Bankruptcy Wei- vale. (740)985·3981
REDUCED
L--•FO:,::R:,;RilNr:::;~-..J (304)S82•3121
and be available for ached·
come. Call Tall· Fr.. 1- :-"'-'-:....=.:....:..:..=:._ _ Alt Double Wide Dlspla'js
ullng between the hours ol
866·496·9486.
Newlu constructed, single mlJst go. Only $995 down.
Tara Townhouse Apart·
OOam nd OOprn u
'teoo
ho
Onl"1 at Oakwood Homes of 2 bedroom mobile home, no ments, Very Spacicua, 2
1
1
1
00
8d : th • h Frld
5:
·F mon-~140
B~
McQ..-.ftr
1
._... a Atsoclatea sL ory t d 10 sq. !n te fme. Nitro. (304)755·5885
pets. $240/mo. $100 depo.a. Bed rooms, 2 Fbora, CA, 1
ay mug
ay. or n•
....................
Trying to buy a home and oca e
m u s rom
11. Includes water. (740)448. 1/2 Bath, Ful.ly Carpeted,
tlfVIew consideration send
aJUUI'UJ'IU
banks are re.lac11ng 'iOU due Helzer Hospital, 20 mlnules Single Parent Program. 3617
.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
your resume and oover let·
to bad credit history? we from Pleasant Valley Hoapi· Easy Financing Available.
tlo, Start Sa65JMo. No Pets,
ttr or Attention of Diane Hill, Qelllpollt C•rHr College can help you We provlda tal , ofl SA 160 on a private (304)755·719\
Lease Ptue security Depoal1
Ohio Valley Publishing Co., (Careers Close To Heme) mortgages, personal and Hf2 acre lot. 3 bedroom,
2br. 2 bath, Mobile Hom&amp; Required, Days: 740·448·
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis. Call Todayl740-44&amp;4387 smaU buslneBB loans with 2"112 batl1a, big kitchen
Bl.ISINESS
for rent. . Saasafrao Ad 3481 E I
1 0
Ohio 45831 .
.
•
,. ,
' ..........A or bad credit. Appro. val w/oak cabinets , OR, LA
.
; van ngs: 4 ·387·
1 800 214~ 62
.-llhl 48 h
(888)882 w/gas log flreplaot, central
AND Bun.niNGS
$300. monthly plus Deposit. .:.050=2': 7c..40.:.·-'44-"6-'-0"1..:0.::1·- · 158n
Part·tlme Van Driver need·
Rep t90..05- 1274B·
rs.
· air, laundl)' room, front ~~--iiiOOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio.,l. (304)882' 2537
Twin AlverTowersi'IOW ac·
ed to deliver homa·dellv- ~176
porch &amp; 2· 112 car garage. Office building In Mlntra· Animal lovers wanttd, 2
cepting applfcallcns for
ertd .~ondaeals, 4 hours per
~
MONEY TO LOAN, AUTO, Immediate possession. Ap-- ville, 600 sq. H., ale, Cf.'N· bedroom, 14x70 mobtle 1BR. HUO subsidized apt.
day, m
'i through Fr1· •
. DEBT CONSOLIDATION, ·praised at $125,500. Make ered parking , ceiling fan, home on 10 acres, 15 mln. lor eldelty and dlsab)ed.
day. Mull have a good dnv·
CALL (408)810-7480
offer. Call (740)446·4514 $275/mo .. 614-878·1681.
north o1 Pomeroy, 5425 mo.
EOH.
lng record, , clean, neal and Good or Bad Credil Even
2' HOUR RESPONSE
from 8·5pm, M·F, or
plua deposit &amp; utilities, Tu·
(304)675·6879.
dtpendabll.
Minimum Bankruptcy, Call Toll Free
(740)448·3248 after Spm.
l.nrs &amp;
ner Realty 740-992·2886.
1
wage. Pleooe apply: Mason :.24:.:h:.:rs:::··:...t..:
·B88.:..:..·4_2_6_
·83:.9:.:3_
.Buu,
Sell
or
Trade
ACREAGE
,.,--.,..----- County Action Group, Inc.,
1~
Well· Maintained Brick ·----~:;.,_.!' Beautiful River View ldaal Vel)' nice. 2·3 bedroom
101 Sancond Street, Point Mtlgs Memory Gardens, 2
In the
Aaron, 3 Bedrooms, 2 112
For 1 Or 2 People. Aeferen· apanment, In town, large
Pleasant, WV 25550. Iota. in Chrlstus section at
Baths In quiet neighbor· Nice 4 $:rB tract near ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos· kitchen, LA, $500/mo. Ref·
(304)67S.2369. MCAG Is an base of statue, $450,
hood. (740)446-0203 to Gallipolis· easy terms, ter Trailer Paflol, 740·441 · erences &amp; deposit required.
EOE, NA, M1F
(740)992·7887.
- ·
(740)448·3583
Ot61 .
(740)448·3644

j

Act ot , - . •lhla

WID

I

B·v.x~-,K:&amp;D
OrPoinuNrrY

111 ..

r

I

-------rl·
liELP WANm&gt;

Ave., P.D Bo• 987, Gallipolis, OH 46831 . 800·48t·

•

I .... _.,. _, codUaM4In vloiiiiOn OIIM flw.

122 KIMOO Orive. 3 or 4 4 ..,.., 1 milo on At 7 on 2 bedroom, now carpon, NicO loll quiet counlly set'
bodroom. full basement, Eagle Ridge R~.. uUIItlel ~ polio, wid -.p, ling, win accommodate
many new features. Ctoaa avalebll and driveway no pats. (7~)992-2187.
J6x80 $100 per month call
to schoola and llhopj&gt;ng. ttoore. $20,000 Firm, call
Ed 11 Count"! Homos. 740$64,500. Call (740,446· (740)992·5620 altor tlpm.
Coro Mill Rood: 4844 - r 992·2167
8310or(740)446-2425
Coro,2BRMobllo. l4x70,2
· 11 \'\ llh l
\ li lt(
.
4 Cemofary Lola for Sale- Porchls, LAogo Yard, $350.
2Ba~men4brt· La~ firGoplacaara...; Moond H~ Cemotary, 1325 Ref. Req. (814~
~_;;;_;;;_;;;_;;;~~
......
•
·•- 8ICh or a1 4 for $1,000.
10
~
•.
on 5th Street, In Now Hawn (740)388-91114
AllumltJoMs
Gooos
2937
$50,000. (~)882·
FOR RtNr
.
9 ecres of Land between
u~-- u~.p
N
n.IUIIU..ol!. DI.JI\IIU'
atriol
end
onhup,
Appliances: Reconditioned
FOR SuE
$20,000. (740)379-9257
~&amp; 2
Economical Gal Washers, Dryers, Ranges,
Indian Creek Estalea a.e eat,
Hookup, Near Rafrigrators, Up To 90 Days
79
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per acre Iota weat of' Rio monthHolzor, P!$295Utitol1..a~ L Per Guaranteed! We Sell New
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest G nd8 't
$25 900
' us
' - · eue Maytag Appliances, French
Rate With Air And Un· ra )2 '
• · end Deposit Required. Clly' Maytag 74Q-446.-n95
derpinnlng 1.888428-3421 {7.40
(7.t0)44&amp;-2957
'
·
l.arga comer building lot
For Sale: Reconditioned ·
1970 Champion 12 xeo 2 with 205' Ohio River front-- 1 and 2 bedroom apart· washers, dryers and retrlg-bedrooms $a 000 OBO age. elevation ehot, sur· menta, fumllhld and unfur· erat0n1. Thompsons Appli-·- ·
Call (304)8 7s-.2.(70
· veyed, apprailed, serious nllhed, security~~ ,.. ance. 34Q7 Jackson Ave-- :
Inquiries only, $40,000 qulled, no pota, 740-992· nue, (304"'75-7388.
2218
·
1985 Skyline 14•7.0, 3 bed· (304)882·:m8 bolore Spm.
GE Washer, $75. Tappan
room. Good Cond1Uon. Call Looking To Buy A Ntw 1 Bedroom Apartmenta, Elryer, $65. Bol:h White AI·
Harold, 740-385--9948.
.Horne? Don't Have Land? S289 month. Deposit &amp; Rtf· mond GE Dryer, $65. Call .
We Datil Hurry Only' 10 Lots arence. HUO Approved. after 8:00.1740)446-9066
1991 Mansion 14x70, 3 Left, 3().4..736--7295 .
(740}44 1_1510
bedroom excellent condi·
Hot point washer, ss5.
lion, call Kavena, (740)385- Nice Lot ror Sale. 2 mites 1 br. Very Clean, Available Whlrtpoof Dryer, $95. GE
9948 ·
from City Umfts, $15,000.' Dec. 1st. Now taking Appil· Refrigerator, $95. Hot point
1st time buyers· Govtrn· (740)441H788
cations. (304)675-4975
Elect. Range, $95. Whirl·
ment loans· bU)' loans &amp;
2 SA Apt. Newt)' Remocl· pool Ae11igertltor, Uke ~ew.
aale· (740)446-3093 Qak·
eled. Stove. Rtfrigerator $175. Freezer, ~pr1ght,
wood Supereenter
Fumllhed All Utlltiea Paid $ 125. Skaggs Appltancas,
4
7
48 Olive' 51. $475/ mo: 76 VIne ST. (7 0)446· 398
2exeo 3 Or 4 Bedroom, On·
ly s345 .oo Per Month
HOUSilS
(7..0~3846
Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clam
FOR RllNr
c
p
8.99% Fixed lntertst Rate,
2 br. 4 1 br. apt. In Point hapel Road. orter, Ohio.
1-88&amp;-928-3426
Pleaaant
dap required "~446·7444 1·877·830·
Pilot Program, Renters 740--446-2200 ·
~ · Pree l!aUmat••· l!!a.y
Amazing Arst Time Home Needed 304·738-7295
. financing, 90 days same as
Buyers.
Government
'
·
. Fumllhed Apt. 3 rooms and cash. Visa/ Master Card.
Backed loans. No credit 15 Court Street. 2 Bed· bath pfua showtr, Down· Drive-- a· little save alot.
needed.
(304)755·5566 rooms, 1 112 baths. Kitchen stairs, Clean. Reference ------~~
Limited Offer.
with stove and refrigerator. end Oaposlt Required. No New and Used Furniture
Oft Street Parking, Close to Pets Of smolc:ers. (740)~
Assumabl.e loan~- Many Schools and Downtown 1519
Store below Holiday Inn,
twes ava11abfe. Call for de· Area. $5S5I month ptua de- _ _ _..._____ Kanauga. We Sell grave
tails. (740)446·3583.
posh and Reference. No
monuments and vases.
Hours: Monda" 1hru Satur·
7
Big 16' wide, 3 bedroom 2 Pets. ( 40)446-492S
BEAUnFUL
APART· day 11am-3p~. (740)446-

rib

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

t

0:

~::
~ CI~CINNATI (AP)- Ed4ie Ge_orge isn~
14.1100 - . lli800 080. runmng so weD and th" Tennes- Ttt:ans h2ve
1740l 146 C805
a losing record balfw:ly through a season that
tflllll Dodgo Carwvan S!oOrt. started with c . - Bowl ocnirati
....1100- am•t......
.
""'!"'
7
om.
- . Udntl $9500, 241
Could tt be: that thq mm Lormzo Neal?
LkD*1 St., ..
t
Titans coach Jeff Fisher conceded Wednes-

.so0:

.-.orvb..--

. . . . _ . ... ,.,....anhftnt

Tl'lbulw-le:a•n a·
Wllbla rt R' wno .... ._ . . _.flf ... ..-.'7":' ,..,. .....,._....,..,. ... .._...
..,..,. • .....,_.,..,....tn:.mu.vrr , .,...._.,.,. ...,.,,
A. Cc4 r ........... .,. ... ......,..

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

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

_..,~,__.IMrtghllll..._,..., ...... .., . . . _,..._

r.;.., S8000.

LOCAL

liitans miss Neal;.Bencals love him

IIOIIILE HOME DWNEIIS 12650 080. (740)2S&amp;-1233 . _ 11an and 11u1c1c Part&lt; gesting he sometime! blocked the wrong guy,

Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631 ·
POUCIES:ONo

-

(740,. M5S

::::-z-n-:.:=-~

Private Party Ads Under' $100
20 words 7_Days • each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals

6

-

The Dilly Sentinel • Page B 3

NFL

that the Titans (3-S) aren't the wne with1991 Olds Caloia. 10•1100 - - . - . Cd &amp; out their blocking fuUback dearing theW%'{ for
&lt;=js,~ ~
~0:. George and keeping the locker room focused.
t993
(740)446-1352
George has b«n slowed by leg injuries and
ed, E"::.:"rf~.:::!' 11111 c~oavy Z71 , •x•. has run for only 4:44 yards, a 2.8-yard average
Asking S6500.
that's way below his norm. An offense tint's
2715
•
, • Condlilon.
eel
. di .
li
(740,is
acc
ustom
to
gnn
ng
11
out
now
re
es on
114
~~:..~~,..': 1740,.... 1. - 7-ll!ili5 '"' quarterback Steve McNair.
~
While 1lennessee teeten, the mttnn.atl 1&gt;.
- · S3200. (740,....2125 1 - ~ n~ ~ 1
ocn.,::, ~1. (4-4) are having their best ·-"D in II .
(llayaJ. (740"'*2782 ( ""~~~~'
pi • ......._
.,...
si1,.:::z-080,.. ., ~. ~: yean. Co....., Dillon is on pace for 1 300
19114 Grind Prb1. - ••!
.
.
'·
,__
wil-a I CD 7200
and Neal I! getttng credit for operung holes
!&gt;layer, 114.1100. (740)992· 1 ~~~t Zll2 81 o, 4114, and for chanaing the attitude in the locker
2209, 74Q.992·247ll.
60000 ~·- Fully ··...
'
" -· Cll ftu~

=;
r.

I

F·250 ••• ....,
123.000 ...... Ctworne

~. Turbo Engine, S500. Cal 5-9pm. (740f"88 111141
, 989 Gland 11a1qu1a. ~.-.
0&lt;1. Excallo ~ ~.

=~~~~ ~~~45-~ S2500

Sentinel

r~

r ~~ I,_

:Od lor _
S25 ....
- . - .... fir•
tor St5 • 1881 CJI.....,, ~fl.
-.w1or- &amp; - - boljjlaa body, 30Uip00d.
(740)1118 01105
$5000 080, (740,....1·
F11-lorSala. $tsopor 4041 .
.,. a.-. (7401441 ·11476 1988 Clwyller ~ 2
Flo

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

m;ribune

r

t~l.

In one Week With us

TO Place

Pomeroy, Mldcllport, Ohio

months when he won the
1978 NL Cy Young for the
San Diego Padres ,

fromPIIpBl

Clemens is the first player
to win a BBWAA. award on

· Oakland's

Mulder

In LD-Mr M111111ty

three teams. He )'VOn the Cy

(21•8,3.64) was second in the

of

balloting with two first-place

Young for Boston in 1986,
1987 and 1991 , then won it

Helen Jeffers
Circle
Bake Sale
Dorcas Church
11/17/01 8 am

!':nr'\e.hin..

CLIFFSIDE GOLF ·
Winter Rates
$20 w/cart
EAGLES #2171
Dance November 16th
Band· Route 33
8 pm • 12 Midnight

on INr '!Bilt blttlultiy,
N~m..btrl6.

W, lllllrttl bj
H111btuul Bob

votes, 13
thirds for

Mark

seconds and 11
points. Seattle's

ever to start a season 20·1

was next, with

before losing his final

four firsts,

eight seconds and 11 thirds

(20-6,

3.43) got the . other lint-place

the fint round of the playoffs,
he rebounded to pitch well in

vote and was fourth with 12

the , league

points, followed by Mike
Mussina of the Yankees (17-

series againsl Seattle and was

ll, 3. 15) with

pi1eher in the World Series
against Arizona. He won

Tim Hudson of the Athletics

$6·$8
Per Hour

Clemens became the lhird·
oldest ·cy Young winner.

1rl88s874s.IOBS

two

decisions. After injuring a
hamstring and struggling in

for 55 points.

NOW
HIRING
OFFICE
ENVIRONMI!NT

He became the first pitcher

Freddy Garcia (18-6, 3 .05),

Seattle's Jamie Moyer

FuiUP1rt Time

for Toronto in 1997 and 1998.

60

lhe Yankees' most consiSient

two points, and

Game 3 and allowed just one
run in New York's 3-2 loss in

(18-9, 3.37) with one.
At 39 years,

3

1/:Z months,

Early Wynn was 39 yean,

championship

Game 7.
Clemens, / a

I0

six- time

20-

the

game winner, had the secondhighest ERA for an AL Cy
Young winner, below only

Chicago White Sox, and Gaylord Perry was 40 years, two

LaMarr Hoyt's 3.66 for the
Chicago White Sox in 1983.

months when he won the
1959

AL

honor

for

'·

�-------

-

.. _ _ •

-

•

• .... _

Friday, Nov. 16, 2001

Y'

_P_~
__a_4__
·~---0.~IIy~~----------------------------~p~~·M~~Oh~

Fridlly, Nov. 11, 2001

The Dally ~lnel • Page B 5

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

•..-.·
' . ALLEY OOP

aama11:
PHILLIP
ALDER

NBA

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ton."

·

·

the Trail Blazers to their second victory
in six road games.
"They'H win one soon enough," Trail
Blazers coach Maurice Cheeks said of
the Grizzlies. "I just didn't want it to be
against w ...
The Grizzlies' losing streak and the·
frustration of coach Sidney Lowe are
climbing at the same pace - rapidly.
" It's very tough and disappointing;'
Lowe said." I am m6st disappointed with
some personal things, and in individuals
stepping on the court not ready to play.
We are playing too hard to keep coming
up short."
·
Shane -Battier had 30 points, and
Lorenzen Wright added 12 points and
10 rebounds for Memphis.
· Mapc 101, Nuggets 82
Gr.mt Hill scored 12 of his 23 points
in the fourth quarter and Tracy
McGrady added 20 points in three periods as visiting Orlalldo snapped Denver's
three-gam~ winning streak.
DarreU Armstrong and Pat Garrity
each had 12 points for the Magic, who
beat the Nuggets for the ninth straight
time.
··
· Re•erve Ryan Bowen scored 14
points for Denver.

P11tom

11~,

Mawriclu 89

In Auburn Hills, Mich., Jerry Stackhouse had 28 points and eight rebou"nds,
and Cliff l.l.obinson added 24 points in
Detroit's win over Dallas, the Pistons'
fifth victory in six games.
Ben WaUace had 10 points, 12
rebounds and five blocked shots for the
Pistons, and rookie ~eljko Rebraca
added a career-high 16 points in a
reserve role.
Michael Finley led the Mavericks with
19 points. Dirk Nowitzki shot 3Cfor-14
and scored 10 points, 12 under his average.

The Lakers welcomed the challenge.
"Their team didn't give l.tp and it
turned out to be a better game," said
Bryant, who hit two free throws with 25
seconds left in regulation. "I'm not surprise,d . They generally play w pretty
well. They arc; a team that opens up the
Ooor and kicks it outside if you sink in
on them."
Steve Francis an&lt;! Cuttino Mobley
each scored 26 points for Houston.
Francis also had 12 rebounds, hi• fifth
Kniclu 83, Heat 74
double-double of the season .
Allan Houston scored 17 points,
Francis and Mobley also each hit a pair
of free throws in the final seconds of reg- LatreU Sprewell added 16 and host New
ulation to tie it 87-all and force over" York blew a big early lead before shutting down undermanned Miami in the
time.
"We should have won this one," Mob- fourth quarter.
Kurt Thomas, making his second
ley said.
straight
start at c~nter, had 13 points and
The Rockets nearly did, but Kevin
Willis' shot at the buzzer in overtime 13 rebounds for the Knicks.
Eddie Jone• scored 22 points for the
Ooated into O'Neal's hands.
In Memphis, Derek Anderson scored Heat, who lost their fourth straight.
10 of his 18 points in the final 3:30,
The Heat were without starters Alonincluding seven in a 90-second span, and zo Mourning (food poisoning) and
Rasheed Wallace added 27 points to lead Brian Grant (bruised fciot) .

]o~

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Sweet Uck Deer Blockl...................... $1.75
WhOle Com .•.•....••.•••••., •••••• "'''''''' $5.251100
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74CH42·n09

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V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-8215

'herao,

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Licensed Massage
Therapist

7411-992·1105
213 N. 2nd Ave .
Mlddlepon, OH 45760
Coma In and aek
abouupocllll
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A..lllllll

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MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Rocky R llii pp.llrwn l
Box I H~
M1dd lcporl Oh1o ·1'• 760

Local 843-5284
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• Nursing Home •
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and.Drlvt~ • Sleadl
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QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

992-4119 1-800..291-5600
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vtu I Mutercard
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fiiiT IERVEI
8201.00 PEl JOINT
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V'

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.-.

Cellular
Jeff Warner Ins.

992•5479

omeqy les
110602171
Euel'lllbnllly

J&amp;D
Bllli.HRDS
1'41tiiM,OMo
IIHIIable to rent
for parties
lllseDJ.MJ

&amp;SUM~~

Pngresstue tep llle
1llundlys
Pl'lgressiM
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:Sat~).
MANlEVS
I WICH ..... 1DIINII .....
I
SELF STORAGE : 11:30am ·2:00pm :I 5:00pm. 7:30pm
I

•

I
1

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&amp; under FREE 1 4 yrs &amp; under FREE
5·8 yrs ~ '2.99 I 5·8 YfS- 13.99
9-12 yrs -'3.99
9-12 yrs ~'4.99

$50 per ,.; Jeanie Howell
740-992·7036
'
month. ~.tXm

--------------------·

IUFFIT TO GO fLuneh ·• '4.111
BUFFET TO GO fDinMr .. '1.111 ~~~

IOIIRT BISSELL
COIISTIUCTION

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

7.W-992-5232
OPED

. 949·1405
591-5011 .

'

Advertise business
. · . on
P.age
for on.emonth for as:
.low·as 525 /
Phone 992•2155

IT'S NOT NICE, SIR,TO
MAKE DI5PARA61N6
REMARKS ABOUT WIIAT
SOMEONE IS EATIN6!

•I

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lEftGUES

'-ltm·l-IUIIII

i!

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DEER
CUT&amp;
WRAPPED
maplewood Lake
st.Rt 124
Recine, Ohio

949-2734
U/1 un ,,,_,
SUIIIIJIIr Sl,

., '.

I FRIDAY

r

'•••
•

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•'••.
'

'·..'.,

}' .
~

•••

::

..

nsad
11DO U114
14 ........
15 Hunllr'l

bini
u..-....

~Oiler's

Advertise
in this space
for $100 per
month
'

NOVEMBER 16 I ·

r-

NwU1
I NT

''

(partner· signaling
with the seven, "high
from a doubleton).
Now you have two
choices: Duck, win
the next diamond
cheaply, and .lead a
·
se cond spade; or win
immediately and play
a spade. In the latter
case, you must duck
the second diamond.
Declarer is left with
only eight tricks:
three spades, three
h earts, one diamond
and one club .

S.lturda y, No v. I I, 200 I
Se\•eral p rojc.•cts. you've d!.'·
velop rd over rh e hut couple
of years could 1.1ke 011 greatr r
signific mct" in the year ahead.
Thc ~ e i n v olv e menr~ could
prmh1'e a step to ward large r ·

'

SCO RPI O (Oc t. 24- No v.

imo gear ro d ;:~y. Yo u'll kee p
your eye sq\1a rdy on the ta rget ;, ml will p ut fo rth the effo rt necessary to :lchieve your
O' i1m. Kno w where to lonk for
r l'lli 3 11 L'C , anJ yo u'll find it.
Th e A~tr o- Gra p h Mat chm ak er inst:mtl y rc\•eal ~ which
signs are rum OJ nti c.,Jl y perftct
for you. M ail S2.75 to Match 111 &lt;l k.t r, c/o this u e w ~p a per .
P .O . Uox 167, Wickliffe, OH
440'J2-01 67.
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 231)eL". 21) -- Whnt m ake~ yo u
such a ~oo d ~ales pcrson todily
is tb Jt yma take the time to
tell you r ~tory in a fasci natin g
and orderly manner-. Th mc
yo u :\rc t ryi ng tu ~ell to will
be enchanreJ .
C APRI CO RN (/l ee . 22Jom. I')) -- Although tl ai ~ may
be a d :~y o fl" (o r yo u, chances

-

GIGtlll
..Mt'ltal
I IS "llr.

=polnla

10~

~~-·
-

II -Pkg.
dlllverlr

DOWN

30 To'•
CffDIIII
31T-

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I z'lbW
2 Cllanout,

32 "'tl'Wd
34PIIIIol
Wluoul
m hct

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. alhip

-

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25 Rocky lodgt 45 ........,.
21nr.
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dal
4V-

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5 Counlly

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21 ondSparta

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nolgltbor

21 EIC8VD!a

35 PC IIIII

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~

u.-·

,

='

2311ott

F.ut
4.11 .,_.

are two
p enden tly publ ished
bridge magazines in
th~ antipodes. Fi r.a ,
the monthly Au mali an Bridge, whic h
contains 3&amp; large
pages. Despite Australia's being part of the
Briti sh Co mmon wealth , Aw l isn' t the
r uling system. Fiveca rd majors and
strong no -trumps are
in the majority. The
content, though, is
aimed at tournament
players, probably because this is what the
editor, Stephen Lester , understands. (If
fitting into this category, would you buy
a nugazinc purely for
social playcn?)
Here is "an excellent
defensive deal from
Paul Marston, the
pu,.blishcr. Against
three no-trump, panncr leads the club
queen. Sitting East,
after winning with
the ace, how would
you continue?
When defending,
first count the highcard points. You have
12. there are nine in
the dummy, and. declarer has shown 1517 (or 16-18). That
leaves 2-4 (or 1-3) for
partner, and you already know from his
lead that he has the
qu een-jack of clubs .
So, forget about help
in hearts. Also, returning a club is useless. Declarer will win
with the king and establish dummy's diamonds. Instead, y6u
must shift to a spade,
removing one of
dummy's entries to
the diamonds.
Declarer crosses to
hand with a heart and
runs the diamond jack

22) -- T here is nothi11g slow
ab o ut yo ur roc u~ O r gNti ng

... _ -

20~111

--·Q
Wnt

10~
...
~

:...llopo

&lt;4 1

ad VJ II Cl' lllCiltS.

742·2076
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LUNCH, MARCIE ..

SAV AN'I'THIN6 AT ALL ... '

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•

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11130

F,.,, EltlmiiN

'740-192·1671

PEANUTS

Advertise • Herballfe
Independent
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space for Cell for Products

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Tel: (304) 773-5800

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ACROSS

wk111t

Lakers extend winning
• Grizzlies lose again
The Los Angeles Lakers worked overtime to keep their winning streak alive.
The Memphis Grizzlies' inability to pby
four good quarters proved costly once
agam.
Shaquille O ' Neal scored seven of his
30 points in overtime, leading the Lakers
to their seventh straight victory, 98-97
over Houston on T hursday night.
Los Angeles moved within four victories of its franchise-record start of 11
wins, set by the 1997-98 team.
The Grizzlies made franchise history,
.losing their eighth straight game to start
the season, 101-85 to visiting Portland.
Memphis surpassed the previous fr.lnchise' record of seven season-opening
·' losses set by Vancouver in the 1996-97
season.
.
The Lakers squandered a 15-point
lead, weathered a comeback by the
Rockets and relied on the play of
O'Neal, who added 13 rebounds, and
Kobe Bryant, who scored 31 points, to
remain the only unbeaten team in the
league.
"This is the only team we've played
over .500," Lakers coach Phil Jackson
said. "We're coasting on a pretty easy
schedule right now.We gave them life on
a couple of plays by missing foul shots. It
almost made for a long night in Hous-

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Apple
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quoWlono.,. famOUI
-In 1111 ciplllf- for-·

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Elch

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Today'sclue: H equals Y

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "HI limply Inhaled life. lllld wllln you
wilh him you brNthad bigger, too." - Deborah Borda. on
lhe death oiiiiiiC St1tn

WOlD
UMI

0 four
barrange ..tters of
scrambled word1

tha

below to form four slmplt words.

I

R U B E. G O

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DI F E T

!.
Life is like an oil well. Every so
_ .
. _
,often you find a gusher, but usu, . - - - - - - - - . , a l l y most of us go through life
M0 N H I G
meeting··- · ··· after another.

I1-.,,;.:...:;:,l,...::...,r,;....;:.,f',.::...f-1Ie

Complete tho chuckle quoted
by filling In tho mlosing wo, do

L-..1-....1'-..J...-'-"--' you dev•lop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS
Fresco · Gulch· Jetty· Unjust. SHORTCUT
"One of the greatest puzzles in life." the wife sighed
lo her husband . "is how to respond when someone says
'I know a SHORTCUT."
·

arc yo u' ll want to spend it by
yourself doing your own
thin~ . You may not be in the
mood for soc_ializing tgday.
AQUAltiUS Qan . 2!1- Fob.
19) - - Personal fr~ etlo m co do
what you want to do and t he
independence to enact )'our
plans will be impo rtant to
your overall ~U L"c c ss todil. )' ·
You need to be yo ur own

penon.
I'ISCES (Fob 20- M .~rc h 20)
As~ess critical matten from
a - ph il osophi c :~\ pcr.;pective tocby, and you will be able to
circu mvent some prelly hiKh
liurdles. · This mode o f thi n king make~ you form idable.
ARIES (March 2 1-April 19)
-- Somet hin g fo r which
you've had hj~h h o pe~ rn:~oy
~how itself to be fea ~iblc to. day. However, it will still take
iniriativ e on yo ur parr to
make ir 2 re:d ity.
TAURUS (Ap ril 20- May
2(1) -- It wo n't take much fi1r
yo u to !o!Ct in a wo rk mode

--

and put forth the neccuary d fo rt today to fulfill an ambitiuus o bjecti ve. Yo u're llp to
the ch:tllenge.
GEMINI (May 2 1-J une 20)
__. llecause you will he ab le to

m~im:tin a philom plma l ou tlook today, you' ll be able ro
dl"al with cvl"rl a s~'bcrin g development. I t '~ you r au ituJ e
that rnakl· ~ this a W1111li11g ~1 y.
C AN C ER
2 1-J uly
22) -- Perso nal ga in IS ltkd y
rod.1y; howeve r, it may COill C
throu ~ h areas n ot con~idt• red
L" usto111.1ry ch~r 111 c l \ of earn ings. Don 't be afraid to pl ay

U"'"

b:~ll

in ne w

a n "ll:IS .

LEO Qul y 23- A u~ . 22) • •
U dor~: llld k. inp; any ~ocial
pb ns to d.1y, it be hooves you
to disc uss the pm.o;Jbilities w ith
yo ur m ate or w ith th me Wit h
whom yo u pJ;tn to \pend tht!
day . They co uld h Jvc so me
goo d idc.ts.
VIR GO (Au ~. 2.1-Sopt. 22)
-- O nce you ctecide to tak e
on an impo rta nt objective todAy, yo ur ~ ppr e hcmio m will
begin to ·cnpora tc bcL":tllSC
each Sllcccn(ul ~tc p emboldem
you to take the next.
LIDllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2&gt;) •
- In orde r to adva nL"c sl'lf- interc-st today. you wi ll have to
me logu:al ;a nd crc:~tivc means.
Your o ptimism w ill work
woh dcrs for belie vi ng in yo ur
own ab ilitic,.

�hge B I• The Daily Sentinel

• MAJoR LEAGuE B ~ s E B A~L.

Twins,• baseball
await
deaston
•
•
•
cti
adion lft11Un
on
On CO.......
W•
'J
!I''

MIN NEAPOLb (AP) A Minnesota judge is considering an injunction that
.
b b II
cou ld d JSrupt ase a commi&lt;sioner Bud Selig's plan to
dump two reams before next
season.
After arguments Thursday
from lawyers from the Minnesota Twins. the team's landlord and the attorney general's office, Hennepin County
District Judge Harry Crump
said he would rule in "a couple of days." The injunction
would keep the Twins in
Minneapolis until a dispute
over their lease goes to trial.
The Metropolitan Sports
Facilities Cornntission, which
obtained
a
temporary
restraining order after baseball owners voted last week
to get rid of two unidentified
teams, expects the Twins to
play at the Metrodome in
2002.
Without
a temporary
injunction, the commission's
lawyers argued, the Twins
could be disbanded before
the conflict over the lease is
settled.
"Once the fi-anchi&lt;e takes
wing, we can't get the remedy we need," said Corey
Ayling, a lawyer for the Facilities Commission.
Montreal and Minnesota
are considered the leading
·c andidates for elimination,
with Florida, Oakland and
Tampa Bay also possibilities.
The team's lease requires it
to play in the Metrodome
through 2002. The judge
must consider whether the
Facilities Commission i&lt; likely to win a trial, whether it
would sustain irreparable
· harm if the injunction isn't
issued, whether the Twins
and baseball would be dam-·
aged, and whether the public

interest is served.
Roger Magnuson, the
lawyer who represented the
""w1' ns and Selt"g, argued that
1•
Crump would be overstepping his bounds to exten d
the order.
Acknowledging that his
own children were rooting
against him, Magnuson urged
Crump not to let emotional
arguments sway his decision.
''We all feel the hurt if the
Twins leave," Magnuson said.
But, he said, "You can't compel people to play ball."
The Twins began playing in
the Metrodome in 1982, but
haven 't been required to pay
rent for the regular season in
more than a decade.
. JSn
. ,t a d o IIar-or-cents
"ThiS
, A I"
"d dd"
h.
thing,' y mg sa1 , a mg t e
Twins are an object of civic
pride and community interest and bring national exposure to the state '
· the injuncIf Crump issues
tion, it might be impossible
to eliminate the Twins before
next year because it's unclear
when a trial would take
place. Selig wants to pick the
two teams to eliminate by the
end of November and wants
to complete the process by
Dec. 15.
The 30 ·courtroom se~ts
and the jury box w~re filled
with fans and media, and
another dozen or so people
clogged the aisles. Among
those attending were Mayor
Sharon Sayles Belton and
Clark Griffith, son of former
Twins owner Calvin Griffith.
Ayling was aided in court
by Alan Gilbert, chief deputy
of Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch, who has
threatened his own lawsuit
against baseball if the Twins
are eliminated or moved.
Ayling and Gilbert cited a

Brand New 2002 Pontiac
Grand Am GT Sedan

Friday, New. 16, 2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Brand New 2002 Buick
LISabre Custom Sedan

Stringer may have used dietary supplement
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP)- Korey Stringer, on A teallll1l2te told team officials he saw Stringer
the morning of hi&lt; last practice with the Min- take two of the copsules before the morning

rn~ents

:;;r

THANKS
For your support in the
Letart Cemetary Levy
- Letart Trustees -

lit (/ooJ,v..u.'&amp; llulo. Sa/M

ike Bing - Owner - 27 years experience
Randy Bing- Technician - 5 years experience
Jim Bing, Technician - 12 year experience

.

Mike, Randy. and Jim
Formerly of Ford Garage in Middleport

*
*
*
:

Where is
bin Laden? A7

Thanksgiving
meal deals Cl

White Falcons
reach final four 81

With Carlson Craf.,.

Quality Print Shop
255 Mill Street • Pomeroy

992-3345

Brand New 2002 Chevy

s.sertes ZR2 Ell Cab 4x4

821,95o~

• Power Seat, Wlndoin, Locka

• V-6 Power, AMIFM Stereo

• 4300 V-6, Air Conditioning

• Remote Keyless Entry
TIH Steering, Crulee Control

• Air Conditioning
• Tilt Steering, Crul11 Control

• Keyless Entry, CD System
• Totally

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Silverado Shorlbed 414

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Loaded!

•

tmts School board Ia

sJ.25

leader search

Gallia County
asks for assistance

education approving a resolution
asking Ohio School Boards Association to provide a list of candidates.
Board President Jon Thompson
BY KEviN KEW"
said names will be submitted to a
• TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF
committee led by board memGALLIPOLIS - The search be" John Payne and Mike Pol(or a new Gailia County Local cyn to focus on one who's right
Schools superintendent has for- for the job.
mally started with the board of
The action was taken in a spe-

cia! meeting Thursday.
"The main thing I wanted to
do in calling this meeting was to
get the superintendent search
going," Thompson said.
"OSBA will glean prospective
candidates down to a manageable
group and then have it further
strained down to one," he added.
"The candidate will be presented
to the GaUia- Vinton Educational

Service Center in hopes of ge ttin g a recommendation, and the
board will have to come back in
a meeting and act on tha t recommendation ..,
The board will make the decision on the candidate, Thompson
said. ESC, a facilitator agency for
area schools, is assisting the board
with recommendations.

• Air Cond., Locking ~~~=l
• Chrome Pkg., Till &amp;

•

BY

TONY M. lEACH
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

. RUTLAND - A Rutland man was arrested
by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department following a drug raid that netted more than 200
marij uana plants.
·
Sheriff R alph E. Trussell s.1id William "Noodles"' Hayes, 57 , was arrested Thursday after
deputies discovered a large indoor marijuana
growing operation in both an outbuilding and
a hidden room at Hayes' residence Ol) Beech
Grove Road.
. ~ ••' ~
Trussell said the raid was the result.\
t~af•I
fi e stop made earlier by the State Highway
Patrol. when an unidentified male and female
were charged with speeding, operating a motor
vehicle while intoxicated and seat belt violations.
Upon searching the suspects' vehicle, troopers found a large quantity of processed mari·
juana, Trussell said.
Both su~pects were from out of state.
Meigs coun~..deputies were dispatched to
\hCi '.lcene;'an9(1~~J:(lption received.
troin ~he two suspects, a search warrant~
• 'H;Iy!i"f -res!tlence was obtained. Pli·~·.,•
While se~rching· Hayes' home, Inore than 110

BY BRIAN J. REED .

oHn

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

· Pluse IH Anthrex. AI

200
se

'Common
sense' key
to defuse
situation
POMEROY "People
need to use· common sense"
when
concerned
about
~nthrax exposure, Meigs
County Health Commission' Norma Torres said.
er
; Meigs County Commissioners met Thursday with
'rorrest · Sanitarian
Don
Hodge, Meigs County Emergency Management Director
l3ob Byer, EMS Administrator
Oene Lyons,..VeteranS..Mell&gt;Q- ,.
~ia.l • Hospital Administrator
Bob Bowers, and Holzer
Clinic Director Diana jeff;;rs,
to d,iscuss the local protocol
for "biologic incidents" in
Meil!l' County.
·· Four Americans have died
tiQm anthrax-related· illnesses
since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, and 13 others have
been exposed to either the
iilhalation or cutaneous form
of the illness, Torres said.
The health department has
received umany calls" about
possible· anthrax, Torres said,
but is concerned that some
residents may over-react.
Some have called about possible anthrax in letters from
family, and in mass billing
mailings from credit card
companies, for example.
.
Deputy
Sheriff Scott
Trussell said Friday the sheriff's office has received similar
calls.
"That type of letter ·does
not fit the criteria for what
~he Ohio Department of

POT RAID

....... _Surch.A&amp;

ANTHRAX

Senion •••
Wh.y •ettle for the 1am.e announcementl 01 ewryone elu when
you can have your own peraonoliud invitation at an affordable
price? We have dosem ofannounc•menu arad acceuorie• to
clwo1e from. So bofo,., you pay 1hat tkpo•it and lock your.elf
into 'an onkr tlaot. you reaUy aren \ aure of. ltop in and compare
o~r price and •election. We think you'll bo slad you did/

:

q9,550* 821,950* qa,B50*

Stringer's wife, Kelci Stringer, and hi&lt; parent$
·last week said they planned to sue the Vikings
for negi_igence in hi&lt; death. They said ther.
would file the lawsuit after the NFL season
ends and seek $I 00 million in damages.
:
Asked for comment on the supplement mati
ter, James Goul d, a spo kesman ctor Ke Ict.
.
.
Press "Th
. I
Strmger, told the Pioneer
:
e tOXJco ogy report was dean and at _the end ofth_e day
that will be proven. The Vikinl!l' are graspmg at
straws and this shows how_ unsuppo
_ rtive the,Y..
tl will
be '
have been and eviden y
contmue to ..

Graduation
Celebration

*;:;~~~~***lfl~~;;~*

S.Serles Pickup

Autopsy and toxicology reports luven't been
released at the family 's request. Dr. David
Knowles, a Mankato doctor who supervises
the teams training camp, said in August they
ffi .
showed small traces of c:1 eme.
1
·d h
all supp)ements
Know es sat t en not
.
would be traceable but that the tests are com:
prehensive en~u~ to determine whether
there was any SJ~cant drug _use.
.
_
Ripped Fuels label says tt contains Ma
Huang extract (ephedn alkaloids) and guarana
extract, which produces caffeine. Caffeine can
.
act as a diuretic, meaning it increases urinabOJ!
and the loss -offluids.
•

Begin your

for by Joy.. Wbl1&lt;, C1eR. 2Jlll HW R...., RodDo, Oblo

********************
*\tit.
B1NQ'S 11'111~ RCPIIJR *

:

SPORIS

practice session on July 31, the team soun:es
that can mcteasr said.

!he

*** ·
*
*

TEMPO

Vik.i~l!l'· ~t ~ve takrn a di~ sup-

nesota
plement With

1977 rulinll involving the heart rate md blood pressure and contribute to
New York J· 1 and a 1983 dehydnnon, according to a published rq&gt;&lt;&gt;rt_case against ,\lew York VanSt: ~ul Ptoneer_Press reported tn 111
kces. When those teams tried Frtday edinons !hat the info~non came out
at an early October meenng between the
to play games outside their Vilci'
d .._
. al s-c
d
nl!l' an uoe 0 ccupatlon
a~ety an
I
regu ar
venues,
courts H a)-L D " . .
f th
•• D · - t f
·
e Ul lVlSIOO 0 . e Sta~
ep.u 1-Uaen 0
blocked t hem, saymg games Labor and Industry.
in other places would damAt the meeting, team officials said dietary
age the city's quality of life supplements were found in Stringer's locker on
and cost it money.
July 31 , OSHA spokesnun Jaines Honerman
Magnuson said those cases told the newspaper.
shouldn't apply because this
The information about the dietary suppledispute was over whether a
·
ment was unrelated to OSHA's in~tigation of
ptelaaymed.piayed, not where it Stringer's death, Honerman said. State investiki
di •
Magnuson said it was iron- gators ~ter con=ed the~i
"dnJulf ";~
ic that the public bodies were late sa ety stan
on J Y
or
Y· •
fighting to have the Twins when Strl~ger became ill.
.
deemed a public interest
The nanve of Warren, Ohio, and former
when the team has consis- Ohio State player collapsed at the team's traintently been denied taxpayer mg c_amdp. on July 31 aftertha~e andhedte~ltes
practice
m d"
temperatures
ow
sub s1"d"1es ctor a· new b aIIpark ""p
t k St . t reac
to Muoe
nkato
h
ds h . .
""'· arame ICS oo
rmgera
a
on t e. groun
t at It IS a hospital, where he died the next morning.
private business.
Team soun:es that asked to remain anony"AU of a sudden, what was mous told the Pioneer Press an empty bottle of
a private enterprise is now a a supplement called Ripped Fuel was found in
public trust," he said.
Stringer's locker at the Vikings training facility.

Paid

INSIDE

••

Pleese -

IN•THE SHADOWS - Areflghter Ron $tone
hot spots In the
of a wildfire
started Wedne.sday on Ft. Lewis Mountain near Roanoke, Va. (AP Photo/The Roanoke Times, Sam Dean) ·

Pot, AI

'

Smoke from Southern wildfires
drifting·into the tri-county region
•

I •

'

Authorities say
arson prime source
of spreading blazes

do,"Tennessee Agriculture Crime
Unit supervisor Max Thomas
said of arson ~uspects he has
interrogated. "There's not much
activity in these rural areas for
people."
More than 33,000 wildfires
FROM STAFF, WIRE RliPORTS •• .
have hit the South tllis year, the
ASHVILLE,
worst rash in nearly' a decade. In
Tenn. Ar~on
the past week alone, nearly
suspects ·
who 70,000 acres have burned in Tenstarted some l" of nessee, Kentucky, North Carolithe thousands•, of na, West Virginia, Virginia and
wildfires in the South this fall )~ll Georgia.
investigators nearly the same
The smoke from the most
story each time - they
w!t(e
recent
of these blazes has reached
.
the tri-county region, darkening
bored .
~~~
"Mosf say it's something ~ skies and making breathi11g a lit-

,,

de more difficult. The combination of the seasonal early morn"
ing fog above the Ohio River
and the smoke coming from the
south paint an eerie picture.
In tWo of the hardest-hit states
- Kentuc!&lt;y and Tennessee arson is blamed in nearly all the
bl:lli~S.

· ·

Nine people have been arrested on arson charges so far in Tennessee, where fires . this month
have burne.d 29,000 acres. killed
one firefighter and destroyed two ·
houses. Five have been.-charged in
Kentucky, which ha s seen

Plelllse see Fires. AI

MARIJUANA RAID -

Meigs County Deputy
Sheriff Scott Trussell stands beside several
marijuana plants and sections of a grow room
following a drug raid at the home of Willlal!l
Hayes in Rutland. (Tony M. Leach photo)

'

Hlp: 70s
LDW:' tos

iors advised to wakh out for Scrooges

Details, A:J

1
'

.

2001 Pontiac Sunflre ·
SE Sedan

2001 Chevy
Lumina Sedan

GL Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

LS Sedan

2001 Buick Regal
LS Sedan

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• Automatic
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1

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Automatic, Air Conditioning
CrulH Control, Tilt Steering

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1

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Calendars
. Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries

02-7

insert
A4
A6

_.s~p!.!.O!-';rt!;lSt__ _ _ _...Jo!B-:1-::y8

Woshlngton 01) olert, AT (AP photo)

&gt;I.S!!to.!!c~k~s'--------"Du.l

c 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing co.

on distracted, . stressed, and busy shop.pers," Frazier said. "Don't leave yo ur
purse in your cart and walk away, lock
your car doors, and don't leave packalles
in plain sight, put them in the trunk .
"Also, watch fat ice in the co minll
months. Se niors especiall y need to be
careful, because injuries may t;~k c longer
to heal;' he said.
'1
Frazier also brlefed•th grpup on th e
importance of keeping, ~r~c r ipt ion

&lt;2) Oldsmobile.
Ill II I IIIIIIIJIOOe'

Wednesclay, November 21
10AM·6PM
· HMC Eclucatlon &amp; Conference Center
Free t-shirt for all donors!
For more information, calll740) 446·51 ~1.

.

Please see Sefety. AI

sponJ~ed
. by the HMC Laboratory Department

CHIVROLIT

I

medications hidden and not dis cussing
them with anybody.
"Your prescription is your business, do
not tell anyon e about your prescriptions." he said. " This is especially true for
OxyContin. That drug is an epidemic in
this area. We have' had six £1tal overdoses
her·c in the last six months, five were
attributed to OxyContin.

· ·. Blood Drive

• Taxes, Tags, Tille Fees extra. Rebate Included in sale price o1 new vehicle isiOd where applica~e. "On approve&lt;! credit On selecte&lt;l ~s. Nol respoos~le lor typographicalerrora.
Prl&lt;es Good November 14th Tlwough November 18th.
'-

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LLIPOLIS Gallipolis Poli ce
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,er Greg Frazier met recently with
G
County Seniors and Law Enforce. Together (SALT) Council to stress
the • portance of being alert during the
holi ~ shopping ·season.
"P fase watch your purses and wallets.
At tW'i time of the year, it's important to
kee~eycs open because criminals prey

C4. 7
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BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

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MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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