<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7588" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/7588?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-29T01:59:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="17999">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/e8d7287842750995671667ce1adfef2c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1ed4a1ea7eea4a11a401e6bb77b51b76</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24710">
                  <text>Pllge A 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Riverview Garden Club prepares for Chrisbnas, 2

Miami, Florida 1·1 in BCS standings
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Miami and Aorida moved
closer to playing lhe biggest
game yet in !heir long, ofien
bitter riwlry.
The Hurricanes and Garon
settled into first and second
place, respectively, in lhe Bowl
Championship ·Series standings released Monday.
·
And aU indications are that if
bolh win lhe rest of their
games, it's on to !he natiorul
championship game in the
Rose Bowl on Jan. 3.
Miami (1 0-0) and Aorida
(9-1) have met 50 times since
1!}38 - lhe series is tied 25aU - but never with the
national tille on the line for
bolh teams. Last year, Miami
beat Florida 37- 20 in the
Sugar Bowl, just a few days
after players from each team
duked it out in a Bourbon
Street brawl.
Wilh Nebraska and Oklahoma losing - the Huskers
were first, the Sooners third
entering the Thanksgiving
weekend - the latest BCS
standings underwent major
changes.
Texas (1 0- 1) jumped to
third place, with Nebraska
(11-1) fourth, Oregon (9- 1)
fifth and Tennessee (9-1) sixth.
Miami, ranked No. I in lhe
AP media poU the past seven
weeks, had 2.92 points in the
BCS standings. Florida had
6.95 points and Texas was next
at 8. 77 points. The next lhree
teams were wi~n 1.39 points
of each other - Nebraska at
10.48 points, Oregon at 10.87
and Tennessee at 11.87.
f
The BCS ratings, which
determine who plays in
Pasadena, are based on a formula that incorporates the AP
media and coaches' polls, eight
· computers, strength of schedule, won-lost record and
bonus points for big wins.
The final BCS standings will
be released Dec. 9.
"Miami and Florida are in
control, it's up to them," said
Jerry Palm, who operates a
Web site that ,closely monitors
the BCS standings. "If one
faDs, then Texas and Tennessee

are in the best position, but it
depends on who dse falls and
how hard."
Palm said Nebraska, despite
its b2-36loss to Colorado, and
Oregon, which plays Oregon
State on Saturday, are still in
the tide chase, "but would
need a series of upsets and
then hope the computer
works in 'their favor."
Miami pbys at Virginia Tech
(8-2) on Saturday, while Aorida plays host to Tennessee and,
with a win, moves to the SEC
rille game Dec. 8 against rhe
winner of Saturday's AuburnLSU game.
The Hurricanes' 2.92-poinr
breakdown was: 1 point for
poD average, I point for compurer average, 1.1 2 for
strength of schedule, 0 for
won-loss record and a .2
bonus point deduction for

•

beating 14th-rated Washington 65-7 on Saturday.
The bonus award - new
this season - is based on a
sliding scale from 1.5 points
for beating a first-place team
· down to .1 (or a win over the
151h-place team. The bonus is
awarded after the other elemonts are calculated.
Florida (6. 95) had 2 points
for poD average, 3.17 points
for computer average, .88 for
strength of schedule, 1 for
won-loss record and a .I point
bonus deduction for beating
15th-rated Georgia 24- 10 on
Oct. 27.
Texas (8.77), whicli plays
Colorado for the Big 12 tide
on Saturday, had 3 points for
poD average, 3.83 for computer average, 1.84 for strength of
schedule, 1 for won-loss
record and a .9 bonus deduc-

rion for beating seventh- rated
Colorado (9- 2) earlier this
season, 41 - 7.
Illinois was eighth in the
BCS ratings, followed by
Oklahyma, Stanford, Maryland, BYU, Washington State,
Washington and Georgia.
Last year, Miami missed !he
.national title game by .32
points. The Hurricanes finished third behind unbeaten
Oklahoma and Florida State,
which lost its only game to
Miami .
For !hose looking for a most
unusual finish lhe season, Palm
offers this: If Oregon State
beats Oregon, Tel(as loses,
Miami loses big, Aorida and
Tennessee both lose, "it could
end up. Colorado and Nebraska in the Rose Bowl."

Melp County's

What's inside

Our Speolal page(a)

Poll

AP

con.,
U.£

I. llloml

I

2. Florida

2
3

I
2
3

8

8

~

5

5

~

9
8

10
9
11
12
7.l;
7.5

3. Texas
4. NlbriiShll
5. Orogon

e.,...,

38

7, Colonldo
8. lllnoia
9. Oklahoma
10.S1anlonl
11. t.laJylond
12. Brigham Young
13. Wuhlngton St
1~ . Wuhlnglon
15. Gaotgla

11
12
7
10
13
19
18

AH
1

1.2. Florida

~

3. T....

5.o._,

B. Ttn,.....
7. Colonldo
8. llllnoll
9. Ol&lt;lal1omo
10.S1an1onl

8

8

8
10
9
13
12
11
14
20

10 .

8

11 . Maryland
12. Brigham Young
13. Wuhlng1011 St.
14. Wallhlngfen
15. Gaotgla

15
11
12
13
18

Poll A - - T11e IY011100 of 1llo

1.00
3.17
3.83
3.50

~ .5
~.5

~.87

8.75
13.5
19.5
17.5

Rl

. Cll
I

2

1.0
2.0
3.0
8.0

12£&gt;

20
19

7

8
3
5

4.-

Avg.

9.5
8.5
11 .0
12.0

1~

5
7
2
4
3

-- Avg.

I

4

5
2
3
7
11

Str '
21
22
46
17
25
18
4
32

5.83
7.50
9.87
8.50
9.00
13.00
12.50
10.67

1.12
0.88

I.a.

0.88
1.00

o.a.

0.18
1.28
1.48

..,
8
84

0. 2~

3.38
4.24
1.88
0.72
0.80

108

C!

1~.00

18
20

18.83

DR
'I

KM
I
3
4

JS

8

811
I
2
3

2
4
8
7
6
11

1
2
3
4
5
8
7.
11

4
5
8
7
9

3

5
2
7

L
0
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
2
1
0
2
3
3

8

10
12

5

6

6

12

6

10
13

13
14
8

1~

11

17

16

9
13
12
10
23
19

10

6

9
12

9

1~

10
15
13

1~

12
11
18
19

-

,..

Will be pub1Jf5hed
Friday, Deoember 21
In the

·II

TOIII
3.U

OWin
.0.2

7.05
9.67
11 .18
11.17
. 11 .97
19.18
20.45
22.98
23.24
24.81
25.49

.0.1
.0.9
.().7

•-o.3

27.115
'01.22
38.13

.0.1
·1.1
.().0
·1.3
·1.2
.0.0
.0.0
.0.8
.0.9
·1.0

TOL

8.n
10.46
10.87
11 .87 '
18.08
20.45
21.88

Du.ke and Illinois stayed 1-2
in lhe AP college basketball
poll Monday, while three teams
dial reached championship
games of preseason tournaments moved into the·rankings
for !he first time this season.
The Blue Devils (4-0), who
opened defense of their
national championship last
week by winning lhe Maui
Invitational and beating Portland, stayed No. I wilh 67 tintplace votes and 1,747 points
from the national media panel.
The Fighting lllini (5-0).
who won four games last week
in taking lhe Las Vegas Invitational, stayed second, receiving
the other three No. 1 votes and
1,672 points.
The three new reams in the
rankings were BaD State, which
came in at No. 16 after its
impressive run in the Maui
Invitational; Marquette, which
moved in as No. 23 after winning the
Great . Alaska
Shootout; · and Wake Forest,
which held ·the 25th spot after
reaching the finals of lhe Pre,
season NIT.
Missouri, which won the
inaugural Guardians Classic,
moved up .rwo spots to No. 3,
while Arizona, which didn't
play last week, moved from
eighth to No. 4.
Maryland and Aorida each
moved up one place to fifih
and sixth, while Iowa, Kansas,
Virginia and UCLA rounded
out the Top Ten.
Stanford was 11th, followed
in the Second Ten by Syracuse,
Kentucky, Oklahoma State,
Boston College, Ball State,
Western Kentucky, Georgetown, Saint Jo~ph's and Memphis.
The bst five ranked teams
were Abbarna, Michigan State,
Marquette, Fresno State and
Wake Forest.
BaD State, which was last
ranked in !he 1988-89 season,
opened lhe Maui Invitational
wilh a win over then-No. 4

Highlandu has
committed to reforbish
the pl1mt and to bring
it into opuation by
July 1, 2002.

pay a total purchase price of mitred to refurbish lhe plant
$2 million, with $1 million to and to bring it into operation
be paid at closing, and the by July 1, 2002.
remaining $1 million to be
The company said it intends
paid one year from the clos- .. to commit a minimum future
ing.
compensation of S15 million
A $1 million earnest money over five years to the former
deposit was paid when lhe bargaining unit employees and
signed the order approving the offer was accepted on Nov. 16 has entered into negotiations
sale Tuesday.
and is to be applied against !he with the USWA. In the asset
· Under the terms of the purchase price at dosing.
agreement, Highlander will
A!la,.. s
Highlander has also com-

r;.•- ...

Deaths

Morarity takes
reins as Southern
board president

Katherine
Gardner Johnson
Clair Might
Fred Willet, 77

22.04
24.81
25.49
27.25
38.32
37.13

Details, 3

PW
I

BY TONY M. LocH

3
2
4

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Actual Size

6
5
7
11

8
9
13
15
10
12

Weather
HJah: JO, 1.8w: SO

1~

.

E.lplo-~

to-

Details, 3 ·

"'"''"*"""

wlri""""""'"'

Tes5a Paige WiU
Merry Ou'Jstmasl
Mommy &amp;. Daddy

Kansas. The Cardinajs (2-1)
then beat then-No. 3 UCLA
before losing 83-71 to Duke in
the title game.
Marquette (5-0) beat Tennessee, Indiana and Gonzaga in
winning the Grear Alaska
Shootout and moved into the
Top 25 for the first time since
a three-week run in 1997-98.
Wake Forest (4-1) beat Fresno State in the Preseason NIT
semifinals, then lost 74-67 to
Syracuse in the rille game. The
Demon Deacons were ranked
aU ofbst season, getting as high
as No.4.
Indiana (3-1) was the only
team that played last week to
fall out of the rankings. The
Hoosiers, who were 20th last
week, sandwiched wins over
Alaska-Anchorage and Texas
around the · Great Alaska
Shootour semifinal loss to
Marquette. ·

_

OHIO

SJitly:ti-5.0
• Plclj.-.. -8-4-2.0
Buclwye j; 1(1.11·13·29-37

Please enclose a self-addressed
envelope with your entry to return your
photo. Only one subject per ad please.
All ads must be prepaid.

Dlllly :S: 3·5-9
Dally 4: 4-9-6-3
C.sfi 15:4-5-13-16-18-19

Index

:r give my pennisslon to publish the enclosed
I

:prepaid plctutlsl and Information In The
'•'-'"...)' Sentinel's "Santa's Little Helpers".
·:signature: ___________
:Relationship to Child: _ _ _ _ _~-

2
6-8
9
2
4
3
3
5,7,10
3

Sports

C&gt; 2001 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Roc~priii(IS
ltEIIABIUTA110N CENTER

!Please 11mlt to 1'2 words): _ __:._ _ _ _ _ __

CaU todily for 11 persot~~~l tour.

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Weather

Child's Name:------"----:Son, daughter, or grandchild: _ _ __
1
Parent's or Grandparent's Name(s):

Mau t1w right clwi'ce.

BY BRIAN

• FREE Gift To All Donors
Mail or Bring in this entry form to:

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospiral
Auxiliary

The Daily Sentinel
"Santa's Helper"
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

&amp;

American Red Cross
I

For more lnformalion, contact Debbie or Dave
·
at lhe Dally Senllnal- 992-2155.

J. REED

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

.

LliJ Holzer

~Clinic
88 E. Memorial Dr.

····-----------------·----···

UTLAND - The dictionary
defines a hero as one admired
"for great and noble deeds."
'By anyone's definition, Donald E. Yost
Jr,, was a hero.
Yost, the son of Donald and Peggy Yost
ofRudand, died last year at the age of21,
while attempting to save a child from a
burning house. For his act of heroism, he
has been honored posthumously by the
Carnegie Hero Fund Commission.
The Carnegie Fund was established 97
years ago by industrialist a11d philanthropist Andrew Carnegie. ' Sin{:e that
time, nearly $25 million in grant funds,
scholarship aid, death benefits and other
assistance have been awarded in the

RECEIVE GRANT - A $3,500 grant from
the Carnegie Fund wtll be used as seed
money for the purchase of a therr!]al
Imaging camera In m'e.mory of Donald E.
Yost Jr. Yost's parents, Peggy and Don
Yost, are pictured center, presenting the
funds to Rutland Fire Chief Dave Davis,
Assistant Chief Ray Willford and Pres~
dent Henry Cade.

Carnegie Medal in their son's honor. The
medal is given to those who risk their
lives to an extraordinary degree while

PleiN -Yo1t.J

RACINE
Marty
Morarity was appointed
Southern Local Board of
Education president during
the organization's regular
meeting.
Morarity was recently
nominated by board members to fill the unexpired
position vacated by former
President Bob Collins.
Collins' resignation as both
president and board member
was accepted during the
board's last meeting because
Q( rinu; cwurraints induced
by Collins' work schedule.
Mor:irity, whose term wiD
end Dec. 31, 2003, took the
oath of office and began presiding over the meeting.
After discussing personnel
iss)les, the board approved the
following substitute teachers
for the 2001-02 school year
on an as needed basis: Ann
Barr, .John . Chilmonik,
Amanda Pratt and Courtney
Roush.
A supplemental contract
was approved by the board
for Scott Cleland as the
freshman boys basketball
coach for the 2001 - 02 school
year. Cleland was a volunteer
assistant in basketball last year
and football this year.
In business matters, a contract between the board and
the Southern Local Education Association was accepted, pending approval by the
Southern Local Finance
Commission. The contract
will be in effect from July 1,
2001, through June 30, 2002.
Five Star Driver Training

.Mi~dleport secures water supply in
~aoreclby

PVH Wcllness Center
Thursday, November 29, 2001
Noon to6 p.m.

J. REED

Yost's parents have received a bronze

Your Name:____________
:Address:.____..:________
1
City I State/ Zip:-- -- - - - -

Blood Drive

.
R

BY BRIAN

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

heroes' names .

1

AMOUNT ENCLOSED: $_ __
For
pictures at $10.00 EACH.

Yost memorialized
through Carnegie grant
I

1 Sedfon- 10 Pqft

looking for ICing-term c.,., you can
count on the team of healthcare professionals at
Rocksprings ~ilitation Center to create an
atmoephere of caring and compassion.
We're committed to helping our residents
enjoy life to the fullest.

local hero remembered

Pick :s nlafrt: 9-H ·

W.VA.

'~:¥hen you're

CARNEGIE HERO- Donald E. Yost Jr. has
been honored posthumously with the bronze Carnegie Medal for
his heroism In the April 2000 house fire which claimed his life and
" lhs~of · the .cJl,lld he attemp~ to :e~g~e. (Tony.M. Leach phOtos)

Pick 4 night: 5-2-1·5

Duke, Illinois atop AP Top 25
BY '!liE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
American Alloys will be
reopened by the end ol the
second quarter in 2002 by
Highlander Core Industries
Ltd., after an order and notice
approving the sale o( the
·plant's assets to Highlander
was filed in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern

District of West Virginia on
Tuesday.
American Alloys accepted
Highlander's auction bid on
Nov. 13 and entered into an
asset purchalie agreement on
Nov. 20.
Interested persons had until
5 p.m. Monday to· file any
objections to the sale, and
since non e were received,
Judge Ronald G. Pearson

-led Pre$8 media poll and USA Today·ESPN coaches poll. Olhenl raceMng vo1os are

....-11ve

Cui''""'""'

Buckeye basketball, 5

Daily Sentinel

2.112
8.95

calctllaledln on1e&lt; . . . . -.
Cc&gt;lnpoMr A - -Tho 8\181000 of Andolwor1 &amp; Hestar, Colley Malrlx, Rlchanl Billingsley, Kenneth Maaaey, David Rothman, Jell
Sagarln, Mal1hows Sctippo-Howard, and the Polar WoHa compulef ranklngs. The computar campanen1 will be dotennlned by &amp;\18f·
aging ah&lt; ...ndngs. The hlghoot I01d - w i l l be dlonoganfed.
Schodulo - - Rank of - u l e a1T8nglh """1J8nod
DMsiOn 1-A loama clvlded by 25. This
Is 1181ctlla1ad by
deiBfminlng 1he
-vlou """"""of 1he 1aam'a owonent (66.6 peroon1) and 1he cumulal!ve -vlou racorda of the
team'a
--·
(33.3 ...-o).
~ - One pol,. lor each lou during lhe aeaooo.
,
Cluoltty Win
The quality
will raward 10 val)'l"'l !lolli8es1oama 1ha1 dafea1 oppon- illnkad among
1he top 151n U.. ~ atandlnga. Tho bonus point scale win fiJIIQil from a high of 1.5 points lor a win over 1he lop oankad 1aam Ia a
low of 0.1 lor a victory over the l51tN.,kad BCS lollm. Tho final 8CS standings will delsmllne nnal quality win points. If alaam 11111'
la1oni a victory over alaam mora than once during tho rogular.....,. quality win points win be awarded just onca. Quality win
points ore daduelad fRim 1he t..m'a1Dial ol poll._, compuler average, achadulo 10nk lind ID888s.

"""""""Ia

OVP NEWS STAFF

(16 y~are of age or you~~r)

-

BY MINDY KEAR,.

•for Chlltiren OnV

JICiwl Championship
Series
__ ........,_.25
~

HoMetown N. .spaper

:

Pomeroy
;.;, 992-oo&amp;O

MIDDLEPORT - Public
works officials in Middleport
have taken precautionary steps
to protect the public water
supply in light of the Sept. 11
terrorist atta cks.
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs has enac ted a security
plan designed to protect the

water supply f~om terrorist
attacks or other attempts at
contamination, said Myron
Duffield, BPA President.
The plan , Duffield said, is
part of an overall emergency
water plan which also addresses contingency plans for flood s
and other possible contamination events.
The water emergency plan

was adopted prior to the Sept.
11 terrorist attacks on New
York City and Washington,
and addresses general threats
to the water supply, while the
security plan addresses specific
terrorist- related
threats,
Duffield said.
Security measures included
in the security plan include
additional steps to prevent

A supplemental
contract was appro~~ed
by the board for Scott
Cleland as the
freshman bl1}'s
basketball coach for
the 2001-02
school year.
School of Gallipolis was
granted permission to use a
Southern High School classroom for driver education
classes. The driver's school
would be responsible for any
dama ~l . th~t might o ~nn
and classes would be open to
Southern Local students
only.
An increase of$.03/$1,000
on the life insurance coverage the board has with CoreSource on all employees of
the district was approved and
will be in effect Jan. 1, 2002 .
Currently, the district is paying $.21/$1,000.
The board also;
• approved nmnil)ations for
the position of Southern
Local Board of Education
vice president. Ron Cammarata, current vice president, will finish out the current year;
• granted Patricia Circle
leave without pay for April
11-19, 2002. Circle's husband
is making a trip to Florida for
job training and she will be
accompanying him;
• approved pick-up and
discharge points for 2001 -02
students as worked out by the
superintendent, transportation supervisor and bus drivers.

light of attacks

intentional ·contamination.
Vent&lt; and access hatches on
the village's water towers have
been rebolted and secured, and
a metal ladder which allowed
easier access to the main tank's
lid has been re1poved.
The village has also installed
additional lighting around
tanks and other facilities, and
will consider beefing up the

lighting system even more
with a 360- degree lij!hting
system.
In Middleport, water is
treated at the well and stored
in metal tanks. Contamination
of the water supply by outside
forces is unlikely, Duffield said,
and the sheer volume of any
contantinant required to~

....... -w.... :s

To !.£Am MoRE or to schedu!e an appointment,
cal! one of our customerservice representatives
to!! free at (866) 821-4541

HOLZER
For af~r&lt; brochu~t on weighii~K&lt; "''U'Y. «dl (866) 821·4541

�WednHd8y, Nov. 28, 2001

_The_o_any_Se_ntin_ei_ _

_,;;;;;;;_By

the Bend

PageiU

Parents won't welcome son~ widow~ new man
DEAR ABBY: Last year,
my brother "Devon" died
after a long illness. He is survived by his wife, "Clarisse,"
and my twO nephews. Devon
and I were as close as a brother and sister could be. My ·
husband w:as close to him,
too.
Seven months after Devon's
passing, Clarisse began dating
"Tim." No one was overjoyed
by this, but we khew that
Clarisse had loved my brother
and mourned deeply. We
understood it was time for her
to move on. We put our feelings aside.
The problem is, my daugh•
ter's birthday party is coming
up soon. We are hosting a
_ family party and inviting
everyone, including Clarisse,
Ti~ and the boys. My parents
have expressed disappointment that Clarisse's boyfriend
is being included and have
informed us that they will not
attend ifTim is there.
What should I do? Should 1
invite everyone, as my husband su~ests, and· let the ·
chips fall where they may? Or
should I respect the wishes of
iny parents and ask Clarisse

LOCAL
HAPPENINGS
Community c.tendlr .. pub-

a.tled - • free ..vice 10 nonprvflt ~ wlehlng to
- - .....,... and ..,..
ct.1 hllol8. The calendar • not
. .lg!led to promote uiM or
fund.nllv . • oleny type. Items
•nt printed only • IPIICII Jl8l"
mila and cannot be gua111nlllld
to be prlnl8d 1 apeclllc number
ol 118ys.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday,
Porneloy Ubrary. Ollta Helghron
as hoslass. Frankie Hunnet will
I8View RAhabUs WileS by Sena
Jeter Naslund. BOok el!Change.
RACINE - Special meattng of
Southam Local Board of Education, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday,
Southern High School.

THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
TuppeiS Plains Adult Basic &amp; Utetrll:'f Edll!l!!tion program (ABLE)
will,hold.an open house on Thursday from 9 a.m. until 2::;10 p.m. al
1he center, located In the former
Tuppers Plains Elementary
School. Information Is available
by calling 1he center at667.o441.
POMEROY- Junior and Rita'
Whit. and Ralph Cooke to per·
fonn a musical program at Senior
~. 5:30p.m. Thursday. Pu~
lie Invited.
POMEROY - AlzhelmarUs
candlelight vigil,
Senior Citizens Canter, Thursday,
7p.m.
Awareness

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Heritage
Quartet from GodUs Bible School
to perfonn at Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church In Middleport,
Friday, 7 p.m.
·
POMEROY
Pomeroy
Church of Christ, free RsecondchenceS Thanksgiving dinner Friday, 5:30 to 7 p.m. P\Jbllc Invited.

brothers. I can't see myself
with any other person .
Our school has a policy that
allows seniors to use the loudspeaker system to dedicate
birthday greetings to , other
students. My birthday was last
week, and Corey got on the
microphone. Instead of sayADVICE
ing, "Happy birthday, sweetheart," he said: "To my girlnot to bring Tim? -IN THE friend, my best friend, my
MIDDLE IN THE MIO- skateboard buddy. I love you.
You're 18, so no more waitWEST
DEAR IN THE MID- ing. What I really want to say,
OLE: If your parents object honey, is - will you marry
to Tim's presence only me?" I told him I needed a
because they have difficulty week to think about it.
accepting that Clarisse has
The week is up. After asking
moved on, then I see no rea- opinions of my family and
son to exclude him. While friends - who all have given
they have my deepest sympa- me a "thumbs up"- I am
thy for the loss of their son, still undecided. I know that I
they have no right to dictate love Corey and we are a perwho should or should not be feet couple, but I need just
on your guest list or part of one more push in either
Clarisse's life.
..
direction so I can give him a
DEAR ABBY: I am a high definite answer. Help! school senior. My boyfriend, HOPEFUL AND HELP"Corey," and I have been dat- LESS IN MISSISSIPPI
ing since ninth grade. I love
P.S. Corey said that if I say
him mare than anything on no, we'll still go out and
Earth. Corey is like another evetything will go back to
son to my parents, and I feel normal.
close to his mother and eight
DEAR HOPEFUL: A

Dear
Abby

REEDSVILLE - Tote hags were painted
with pictures of snowmen and Christmas trees
at a recent meeting of the Riverview Garde'}
Club.
·
Michelle Garretson of Pomeroy was instructor for the art class held at the Reedsville
Church of Christ social room. A gift was presented to her.
Prior to the workshop, fingers foods were
served and turkey favors made by Mary Alice
Bise and her granddaughter were given to the
members.
Devotions were given by Maxine Whitehead. Plans were made for the annual Christmas tree lighting at the Belleville locks park on,
Dec. 3 at 6:30p.m. Gifts were brought for nursing home patients and dues were collected.
The December Christmas party will be held
at the Whitehead home on Dec. 18 at 7 p.m.
Each one is to take a S10 gift for the exchange.
Attending were Margaret Cauthorn, Delores
Frank, Marlene Putman, Frances Reed, Gladys
Thomas, Nancy Wachter and Sara, Maxine
Whitehead, Nola Young and grandson, Pauline
Myers, Mary Alice Bise, Margaret Grossnickle,
and Ruth Anne Balderson.

Nurses hired
ATHENS -A new nurse manager and two
new assistant nurse managers to 011ersee the
nursing operations of the O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital's emergency department have been
appointed.
Karen Robinson, R.N., C.E.N., S.A.N.E., an
Athens resident and O'Bieness Memorial Hospiral employee of more than 21 years, was
named new nurse manager of O'Bieness' emergency department. As nurse manager, Robinson will be responsible for maintaining nurse
staffing, hiring and orienting new nurses and
presenting new procedures and equipment to
the nursing staff. She will also keep abreast of
changes in emergency nursing and Joint Commission on Accreditation of H.:althcare Organization requirements, assist emergency department nurses with fulfilling their conti~uing

Alloys

•

froml'llp1

MIDDLEPORT - Clair Might, Middleport, died Tuesday, .
Nov. 27, 2001, at !tis residence.
Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home.
·
•
•

FtedWilet

CLIFTON, W.Va. -- Fred William Willet, 77, Clifton, died
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 2001, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born Nov. 26, 1924, in Point Pleasant, WVa., son of
the late Charles William and Oakley Belle Willet. He was a
laborer with the West Virginia Department of Highways and
attended Hillside Baptist Church in Pomeroy.
He is survived by his wife, Eutha Cunningham Willet; a
daughter and son-in-law, Elizabeth and Donald Saxon of
Clifton; four sisters, Mary Ann Stewart of Lakin, WVa., and
Evelyn D. Lane, Freda May Roach and Velma Kay Wood, all of
Hartford, W.Va.; seven brothers, Ray Dale Willet and Robert
Roosevelt Willet, both of Hartford, Raymoud Lewis Willet and
Charles Michael Willet, both of New Haven, W.Va., Clifford
Otis Willet of Gallipolis,Virgil Earl Willet of Grimms Landing,
W.Va., and Larry Eugene Willet of Point Pleasant; and several
nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by his brother, Carl Edward
Willet.
.Services will be 11 a.m. Friday in Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home, Mason, WVa., with the Rev. Charles Willet and Dr.
James R. Acree officiating. Burial will be in Craig Cemetery,
·
Grimms Lan,ding.
A graveside service will be held at 1:30 p.m.
Friends may call at the funeral home on Friday from 9 a.m.
until the time of services.

Our SpeoJal page(6)

'For Children Only"
(16 y68te of age or youl1(3er)
Will ve puvll(;hea ·.·
Arla~,Deoemver2j

In the

Daily Sentinel
'

education needs and assure quality nursing care
for all emergency department patients. Prior to
her current position, Robinson served as assistant nurse manager of the emergency department.
Barb Lanier-Jones, R.N., B.S.N., S.A.N.E.,
and Anita Brooks, R.N., B.S.N., S.A.N.E., have
been named assistant nurse managers of the
emergency department.
Lanier-Jones, a Wellston resident and O'Bleness employee of more than seven years, will be
responsible for orienting new emergency
department. nurses and clerks, completing per- ·
formance , evaluations for the emergency
department nursing staff, ordering equipment
and supplies and overseeing some quality assurance procedures. Before she was named assistant n).lfse 111anager, Lanier-Jones served as a
staff nurse in the emergency department. ''1
Brooks, a Belpre resident and O'Bieness
employee of more than six years, will be
responsible for scheduling the emergency
department nursing staff, completing yeorly
competencies for the eme,rgency department
nursing staff and monitoring some quality
assurance procedures. Brooks worked as a staff
nurse in the emergency department prior to
her recent appointment.
Robinson, l..:inier-Jones and Brooks are all
trained sexual · assault nurse examiners
(S.A.N.E).

IN CHARGE- Karen Robinson, R.N.,C.E.N.,
.S.A.N.E., left, has been named new nurse
manager of O'Bieness' emergency department. Anita Brooks, R.N., B.S.N .• S.A.:-l.E.
right, and Barb Lanier Jones, R.N ., B.S.N.,
S.A.N.E., seated, are the new assistant
nurse managers of the department.

••

ClairMigld

Dear Abby is written by
Pauline Phillips and daughter
Jeanne Phillips.

.

•

MIDDLEPORT - Katherine Gardner Jackson, formerly of
Middleport, died Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2001, at Adena Medical
Center, Chillicothe.
. Arrangements will be announced by Fisher-Acree Funeral
Home.

woman who is contemplating
a decision as serious as marriage should not need a
"push" in either direction. Tell
Corey that you will consider
his offer of marriage once you
both have college behind you.
Regardless of how much you
and Corey may love each
other, you shouldn't marry
until you're both self-supportmg.
.
CONFIDENTIAL
TO
"VIOLENT
AND
ASHAMED IN RICHMOND, IND.": You have
already taken the first step by
recognizing that your anger is
out of control and asking for
help. Please contact your
county department of mental
health. Tell them it is urgent
that you see a counselor
immediately and recount the
incidents you described to
me.You have begun the journey, and I wish you much success with treatment. It will
change the lives of every
'member of your family for
the better.

SOCIOY SCRAPBOOK

aub iliembers enl"'
Christmas
pa nts

Water
fnNnPIIgel
threaten the public safety is so

H Q LZ E R
C Ll N I C

Have you had unexplained weight loss?
· HaVe you elf, livered a baby that weighed more than nine pounds?~-~----·- - - 1
Do you complain of excessive thirst, hunger,
or frequent urination?

announcement imminent
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio' will announce within a
week which prison it will
dose to help deal with the
state's $1.5 billion b11dget
deficit, the governor's office
said Tuesday.
"There's no question given
the cuts, given the current
state of the budget, that they
have to close a facility," said
Brian Hicks, Gov. Bob Taft's
chief of staff.
House and Senate lawmakers are meeting this
week in hopes of reaching a
compromise on plans to bal, ance the state budget. House
Republicans support Taft's
plan for limited tax increases
on businesses, but disagree
with his proposal to join a
multistate lottery such as
Powerball.
Senate Republicans eliminated the tax increases from
their proposal and proposed
· further cuts for state agencies, but went along with the
multistate lottery.
The state also plans to
announce the closing of
parts of other prisons, Ohio
On the Net:
Department of RehabilitaOhio
Department of
tion and Correction spokeswomon Andrea Dean said Rehabilitation and Correction:
Tuesday.
The prison system must htrp:/ /www.drc.state.oh.us/

Tessa Paige
Merry Orrlstmasl
Mommy &amp;.. Daddy

Please enclose a self-addressed
envelope with your entry to return your
photo. Only one subject per ad please,
All ads must be prepaid.

: 1give my permission to publish the enclosed
:prepaid plcture(s) and Information in The
:Dally Sentinel's "Santa's Little Helpers".
:signature:___________
:Relationship to Child: _ _ __ __ -,'I
:INFORMAIJON FOR AD:
:child's Name:---------~
:Son, daughter, or grandchild: _ _ __
:Parent's or Grandparent's Name(s):
I

(Please limit to 12 words): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

: AMOUNT ENCLOSED: $_ __
'For
· pictures at $10.00 EACH. •

Correction Polley
Our mBin ooncem in all s1ories is
1o be accurate. If you know of an
error In a stoi)', call Ute newsroom
al (740) 992-2156.

News Dep~~rlments
Tho main number Is 992-2156.
Depar1ment extontions ore:
Ext. 12

Ext. 13
Ext. 14

or

Mail or Bring in this entry form to:

.,

The D.aily Sentinel

''

Adwlllllng

Ext. 3

ctrculdon

Ext. 4

Clliaffied Adl

Ext. 5

' .

"Santa's Helper"

Holzer Clinic has a program to help y~ with all
aspects of your diabetes care . .

oth•r Mrvlcee

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

To und e-mail

. (USPS 213-8110)

Subscription rates
By c.rrter or molar raute

Ono-

52
One month
58.70
Onoyeor
5104
Dolly
50 cents
Subscribers no1 desiring to pay the
carrier may remit In actvance direct to
Tha Dally Sentinel. Credit will be given
carriar each week. NO aubleriptfon by
mall panniHed in areas where hOme
carrier service Is avaltable.

Mills~

lnoklti Molt• COUn1y
13 Weeks
$27.30
26 Weeks
$53.82
52 Wool&lt;&amp;
$105.56

'

Citation issued
RACINE - Delores M .
Cleland, 79, 707 Walnut St.,
Racine, was cited for failure
to yield by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol following a two-vehicle
accident Monday at the intersection of Ohio 338 and Vine
Street in Racine.
Troopers said Cleland was
eastbound on Vine at 10:39
a.m. when she reportedly
failed to yield, crossed 338
and collided with a north. bound pickup truck driven by
Denny P. McKinney, 45,
Huber Heights.
Damage to both vehicles
was slight.

grant to the Rudand Volunteer Fire Department, and the,
funds will be used as seed
money toward the purchase
from Pap 1
of a new thermal imaging
camera.
Such a camera might have
attempting to save the lives of
saved
Yost's and Smith's liVe$,
others. He was one of four
2001 honorees who died in said Danny Davis of the fire
the performance of his heroic department, and, once purchased, will be made available
act.
Yost died April 13, 2000, to other departments in
County and the surwhile attempting to save 4 Meigs
rounding area.
year-old Jordan K. Smith
The potential to help those
from the second-floor bed- .
. .1
.
.
ld
room of a house near Rl!dand
in which she was .a guest.
Yost was sleeping in a first- why they have chosen to .
floor bedroom when he make the contribution to the
awoke to the fire. He and his fire department.
girlfriend immediately ran
"He would have done the
upsttirs and entered the room same thing.'' Peggy Yost said
in which Jordan apd Yost's Tuesday. "If he knew there
girlfriend's two young chil- w:as a piece of equipment that
dren were sleeping.
had the potential to save lives,
As flames advanced rapidly he would have done anything
and engulfed the two-story he could to get it for the
house, Yost's girlfriend fled to community.'.'
safety with her children. Yost
The camera costs around.
was last seen with Smith in S18,000, and the fire departhis arms.
ment has established a fund
Firefighters found Yost's for donations at the Rudand
body and that of Smith Brancll of Peoples Bank, N.A.
among the debris of the Davis rsaid the department
destroyed house.
expecc, to contribute to the
The loved ones Yost left fund, ;t well.
behind hope that some good
"$18,000 seems like a lot of
can come from a $3,500 grant money, but if it helps to save
awarded in Yost's name. Yost's one life, it will be money well
parents have donated the spent," Donald Yost Sr. said.

AAoo- 44.112
Am~-3823

Asl'lar&lt;llm-42.50
AT&amp;T-16.83
Bln&lt;Ona-38.01
BU-9.34
Bob Evlnl-21.72
BorgWarner-45.15
Cllati.... l-2.00
Cl1anni1g Sl1cipa - 5.10
Citt Hd&lt;q- 10.44
Ccl-16.97
DG-14.15
Oll'on1- 44.43

Fedelal Mo!JA -1.14
USB-18,:J:I
Gamll- ff7.!!1)
GemraiEioctlc -41J17
GKI'I.Y- 4.00
H!riBv DIMdoon- 51.40
Km111-6.38
Krogor- 25.14
Lands End- 53
l.ld.-13.83
NSC-19.46
Oak HI Fl'11!fldal- 15SJ
OVB -22.:J:I
BBT-34.53
Peoples -16.35
Pepsico- 46.44

--8.56

Roc:l&lt;wlll-16.56
AodcyBools-8.15
RO Shol- 48.40
Sears-45.26
Shoney'a- Z7
WII-Mort- 55.08
Wenctfs- :J:I.18
WuU~1
14Bl

Daly-"""""' ........

4 pm dciOing qJOIIISd llo
previous day's trarmacllon&amp;, po&lt;Mied by Smlll

P811norSat-lnc.a
Gollpnls.

To aneet

'ter;

8:27 a.m., Hog Hollow,
assisted by Pomeroy, Marjorie
S'!iser, HMC;
11:36 a.m., Leading Creek,
Clair Might, dead on arrival.
RUTLAND
11:55 a.m., Helen Williams,
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Granted

dissolutions
POMEROY - Dissolutions have been granted . in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to Karen L. and
James Robert Lodwick,
Heother D. Smith and Jerry L.
Smith, and Russell Thomas
Hogan and Carolyn Hogan.
A divorce has been filed by
Debra Jean Roush, Racine,
aRagai'_lst Ronny Lee Roush,
c1ne.
1

·

POMEROY -A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Jerry Thomas Juniper, 35,
Cottageville, W.Va. ond Lorri
Ann Laudermilt, 35, Mason,
W.Va.

RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education will
meet in special session on
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
high school.

Settnlval
RUTLAND - Rose of
Sharon Holiness Church will
hold revival services Nov. 30
through Dec. 9 at 7 p.m. each
evening, with Evangelist
David Hall. Special singing is
planned each evening.

Pines speaks
MIDDLEPORT - Gina
Pines, director of the University of Rio Grande-Meigs
Center, will speak about concepts related to information
technology when the Meigs
County tliamber of Commerce meets on Dec. 11 at
noon at Overbrook Center. ,
The presentation will focus
on trends in information
technology and e-commerce,
as well as Internet research
and the factors that drive a
technology-based world.
For details, call 992-5005.

VALLEY WEATHER

Rain may continue into Friday
BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Showers and thunderstorms will continue across
the area tonight and Thursday, the National Weather
Service said.
And more unstalile air
approaching the state ensures
·that the wet weather will
continue at least through Friday.
Temperatures will be one
the rise on Thursday, reachc
ing inear 70.
Overnight lows will be
mostly in the 40s.
Sunset tonight will be at
5:08, and sunrise on Thurs.day is at 7:32a.m.
Weather forec;ast:
Tonight...Variable cloudiness with a chance of showers. Lows near 50. Light and
variable wind. Chance of rain
40 percent.
Thursday... Mosdy cloudy
and warmer with a chance of

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

Ml&lt;k J•lllltr (Being Mick) at·
1ended the London School of

Subscribe today.

Economics and sang back-up on
Carly Simon's "You're So

992-2156

litne c:hailpd

POMEROY
Meigs
County commissioners will
POMEROY ·- Units of meet · Thursday at noon
the Meigs Emergency Service instead of 10 a.m.
answered five calls for assistance on Tuesday. Units
responded as follows:
CENTRAL DISPATCH
RACINE
Racine
12:20
o.m., Mulberry American Legion 602 will
Avenue, Timothy Coates, have a pork chop dinner on
treated;
Sunday. serving to begin at 11
1:59 a.m., Ohio 7, motor a.m. Cost $6. Public welcome.
vehicle
accident, Caleb
Shuler, Holzer Medical Cen-

~:~~'£:e~o~~~~?~:L~w~=~ i 155u.d''lieense

Anti Coal- 21 .65

POMEROY - Caring and
Sharing Support Group will
meet ot the Meigs County
Senior Center on Thursday at
1 p.m. Dr. Samuel Levert will
be the guest speaker and will
discuss Parkinson's Disease.

EMS ftlns

Yost

LOCAL STOCKS

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Chamber of Commerce will
hold ia monthly luncheon on
Dec. 11 from noon to 1 p.m.
at the Overbrook Center in
Middleport.

showers. Highs 65 to 70.
South wind 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thursday night ... Showers
likely with a chance of thunderstorms. Lows in the upper
50s.
Extended forecast:
Friday... Turning
cooler
with a ch.ance of showers.
Daytime
temperatures
remaining in the 50s.
Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Sunday... Pardy
cloudy.
Morning lows in the lower
30s. Highs in the upper 40s.
Monday... Partly cloudy.
Morning lows in the lower
30s. Highs 45 to SO.
Tuesday... Pardy cloudy.
Morning lows in the 30s.
Highs in the lower 50s.

Vain."

The residents of: Suttori Township

We express our thanks and
appreCiation for your vote in
support of the Levy for ,. ,.
Maintaining Cemeteries
Sutton Towmhip Trustres

·newsOmydailysentlnel.com

For more information, contact Debbie or Da~e
at the Dally Sentinel - 992·2155.

Rrpresentatives of Highlander met with local residents Nov: 6 at the Bend Area
Community Center in New
Haven, where it
was
announced that the company
would reopen the plant if it
was successful in its bid.
Leighton Wolf, industrial
researcher for Highlander,
told those attending the
meeting that once the plant is
operating, the company
would ' be hiring at least 150
people at an average gross
salary of S20 per hour. He
said the company will be
operating all three furnaces
with the possible addition of a
fourth.
American Alloys closed
unexpectedly in January
2000, leaving about 125
workers unemployed. Many
of the workers had been
employed there for 25 to 30
years, and the average pay for
the plant was about S14 p,e r
hour.
The plant opened in 1952
and has gone through several
owners. American Alloys pqrchased the plant in 1988, after
Foote Mineral Co. closed it in
1996. For the two years in
between,
state
officials
worked to keep the plant
open with an employee-ownership deal.
One other bid was received
for the plant's assets.West Virginia Alloys bid S1,050,000. A
third company submitted a
bid at the Oct. 11 hearing, but
later dropped out.

Ohio Volley Publlohlng Co.
Publlahed &lt;Nery ahemoon, Mooday
thiOUgh Fnday, 111 Coun 51.,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Second-class
pos!Aige paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Poltmuter: Send address correctlona to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Coun.
St., Pomeroy, Ohio •5769.

LOCAL BRIEFS ·

ly.

purchase agreement, Highlander agreed to recognize
the USWA as the bargaining
representative.
Highlander is a privatelyowned limited partnership
rerendy formed and is an
atl.iliote &lt;lfUbex group, a venture capital group.
Highlander has two primary investment groups behind
it led by Doris Bannai and Eli
Reilinan, both headquartered
in Israel.
Bannai, president of Highlander, has ownership interests
in enterprises related to the
production of manganese
alloys and silicon manganese
products, including a manganese ore mine in Namibia
and a smelter in Poland.
'Reifman is on owner and
officer of Emblaze Systems
Ltd., a privately-owned business ranked among the top
100 Israeli businesses by
Dunn &amp; Bradstreet and traded on '' the London Stock
Exchange (BLZ).
According to the court
order, based upon its limited
research into current market
conditions, including the ·
recent imposition of tariffi on
imports of ferro manganese
products from six countries,
American Alloys believes that,
unlike ferro alloys, a ferro
manganese facility likely
~ould be_ operated successful-

cut about $19 million this
year. That represe~ts about
1.5 percent of its budget.
This would be the first
time Ohio has closed a
prison because of budget
problems. The state closed
the Ohio Penitentiary in
Columbus in 1984 and the
Ohio State Reformatory in
Mansfield in 1990 because of
their ages and deteriorating
conditions.
Dean said seven prisons
will not be closed ..
They are the state's supermaximum-security prison in
Youngstown; the Corrections Medical Center in
Columbus; the Southern
Ohio Correctional Facility
near Lucasville; the Ohio
Reformatory for Women in
Marysville; the state's psychiatric prison facility, Oakwood Correctional Facility
in Lima; and two intake centhe
Correctional
ters,
Reception Center in Orient
and the Lorain Correctional
Institution in Grafton.
AEP-42.47

a-81 maMger

Medical Excellence.
LOC31 Caring·

large as to be nearly impossible.
Many of the measures
included in the security plan
were already in place.

State says prison dosing

, Your Name: ___________ _
:Address:___________ _
:ctty I State/ Zip: _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Are you 45 years of age or older?
Do you have a family history of diabetes?

The Dally Sentinel • PeQe A 3

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

- - Melgo Coun1y
$29 .25
13 Weeks
On the Web
2tl weeks
S56.68
43410 Dutchtown Rd., Racine, Ohio, Kenny Wiggins, Clerk
www.mydallysentlnel.com
52 Weeks
L___
______
_ _ _.___ $109.72
____,,,• ....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

''

(

"

�•

..
0 ~Jinlon

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
WI

I I . ....ey, ...._
IWU

•••• - 1

•-- •-

The Daily Sentinel

~ Hnrl

uww title, Page

7

• Moss, Alrili ~. Pt~ge 10
~ All· 0hio foothtlll, Ptlgt t 0

The Daily Sentinel

•

PageS

:'

Wednesd.y. ,... mblr 21. 2001

f

..
!---------------------------------•
•

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
740-882·2151• Fu: 182·2157

I

', WF.DNffill\Y's
y
I

·Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. ShiiWn l.ftla
Managlnt Edhor

l• HIGHLIGHTS
•

NOW!

:::LerHill

CtwteM Hotfllch
O..W.I U.nager

•
•

OW.
Con

~

f

•

&amp;xrullwiD

•

IB\

••

CIIIIJallli d 94, \"'alii :i ~I 75
• Bolbl64. Mini 63

:.
l•

NATIONAL VIEW

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

Today is Wednesday, Nov: 28, the 332nd day of 2001. There
are 33 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
On Nov. 28, 1942, nearly 500 people died in a fire that
destroyed the Cocoanut Grove nightclub in Boston.
On this date:
In 1520, Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan reached
·the Pacific Ocean after passing through the South American
strait that now bears his name.
In 1919, American-born Lady Astor was elected the first
female member of the British Parliament.
In 1925, the Grand Ole Opry, Nashville's famed home of
country music, made its radio debut on station WSM.
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin met in
Tehran during World War II.
In 1944, the MGM movie musical "Meet Me in St. Louis,"
starring Judy Garland, opened in New York.
In 1958, the African nation of Chad became an autonomous
republi~ within the French community.
In 1964, the United States laullChed the space probe Mariner
4 on a course to Mars.
In 1975, President Ford nominated Federal Judge John Paul
Stevens to the U.S. Supreme Court seat vacated by William 0.
Douglas.
In. 1985, the Irish Senate approved the Anglo-Irish accord
concerning Northern Ireland.
In 1990, Margaret Thatcher resigned as prime minister of
Britain during an audience with Queen Elizabeth II, who con- ·
ferred the premiership on John Major.
Ten years ago: Soviet President Mikhail S. Gorbachev
expresSed unhappiness over reports that the United States
might move toward diplomatic recoguition of Ukraine after
the republic's upcoming independence referendum.
· Five years ago: Defense Se~retary William Perry joined U.S.
soldiers in the mud and freezing rain of Bosnia-Herzegovina to
deliver a Thanksgiving message of discipline and patience for
their peacekeeping mission. A stuck hatch on the space shutde
Columbia prevented two astronauts from going on a spacewalk
(engineers later discovered a loose screw had jammed the hatch
mechanism).
One year ago: George W Bush's la:wYers asked the U.S.
Supreme Court co bring "legal finality" to the presidential election by ending any further ballot recounts; A1 Gore's team
countered that the nation's highest court should not interfere
in Aorida's recount dispute. Former Texas Congressman Henry
B. Gonzalez, who had served 37 years on Capitol Hill, died in
San Antonio at age 84.
Today's Birthdays: Recording executive Berry Gordy Jr. is 72.
Actress Hope Lange is 70. Former Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., is
65. Singer-songwriter Bruce Channel is 61. Singer Randy
Newman is 58. Movie director Joe Dante is 55. CBS News
correspondent Susan Spencer is 55. "Late Show" orchestra
leader Paul Shaffer is 52. Actor Ed Harris is 51. Actress S.
Epatha Merkerson is 49. Country singer Kristine Mnold
(Sweethearts of the Rodeo) is 45. Actor Judd Nelson IS 42.
Rock musician Matt Cameron (Soundgarden) is 39. Comedian Jon Stewart is 39. Actress Garcelle Beauvais is 35. Rhythmand-blues singer Dawn Robinson is 33. Hip-hop mus1c1an
apl.de.ap (Black Eyed Peas) is 27. Actress Scarlett Pomers
("Reba") is 13.
·
1
Thought for Today: "The first duty of love is to listen." Paul.Tillich, American theologian (1886-1965).

E MAIL YOUR OPINIONS: news@mydailysentinel.com

NCAA IIIII's? I td ..

........ o-n.

' CoUrllla 53, l..llistl u
' Dnndl58, Hctt ODIII .f1
HINird68, lbl

' 1161

: La Sale 61, VlancMI58, OT

•

~69. Sl. .,...66

: Mrlsaachllleas 62, ~56
Oral 1\beo&amp; 70, BiQBIUI 54
I RDIB lallnl59, Failekl51
' Siera 8),~ N.Y. 48

Anthrax hoaxes nothing
more than crimunal acts
.newspapers recent)y concerned a number of arrests for
anthrax hoaxes.
From 9 a.m. on Sept. 11 to this very minute, our law
enforcement and public safety agencies have been operating under extreme duress. Officers are working long
hours under very difficult conditions. They don't have
time for investigating a possible case of anthrax that turns
out to be powdered sugar allegedly put in an envelope by
a couple of college students in Kentucky.
This country, too, has frayed neiVes from the terrorist
· attacks and real cases of bioterrorism. Each suspected case
adds to the anxiety of Americans who have reacted quite
commendably to the tragic events of Sept. 11.
These hoaxes aren't remotely funny. They're criminal
acts. Recent arrests and others should send a strong,
unequivocal message to people who need to get a life.

SaaWiiet *&gt; 119, Hwlb164

••
••~

No joke
• The Greenvine ·( S.C.) News, on anthrax hoaxes:
There are sick jokes, and then there are sick jokes that are
criminal. A most encouraging front-page story in many

NIW Jlllay 100, Ot:ago 68

Dllllll116, Gc*:lan Slaola 100
• Poland 96, lrdonl90
• Sealllll112. ,.. . . 1~
''• LA l..ahers 104, Mlt·aAaea 85

I

! . &amp;,&lt;!acul8 70, Cdgale 51

• AlDin 78, ~ Sl. 74
Qo., ay 119, Lalilunaau 62
- E.IC8ralcky au, lkl
71
~ Sl. fil, Oladetllon &amp;m7

1111156
._, Part 91, lr'olanlln Wilen 42

. RUSHER'S VIEW

Reagan~

...... ,b75.NorllTaxas74
LP
BlKh 83, Ark..fob....,

1ong march' toward conservative triumph

Ever since the appearance of "Dutch"
(Random House, 1999), Edmund Morris's disappointing "authorized" biography
of Ronald Re~. political observers
have been waiting for an account of the
man and his times worthy of their subject,
and now, at last, we have one.
Steven E Hayward's "The Age· of Reagan: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order,
1%4-1980" (Prima Publishing, 2001),is a
massive achievement, carrying the story
from Reagan's first appearance on the
national scene in a televised address supporting Barry Goldwater in October
1964 to his own election as president in
November 1980.
The book is not, therefore, a biography
of Re~. It omits any detailed account
of his life pFior to 1964,by which time he
was already 53. More disappointingly, for a
book that proposes to describe "the fall of
the old liberal order;• it cmitains no adequate description of liberalism's nemesis,
the conservative movement, which was
born in the early 1950s, became a fullfledged intellectual movement under the
leadership of Bill Buckley and others in
the second half of that decade, and was
transformed into a powerful political
engine by ClifWhite and his small band
of ex-Young Republican politicos in the
first half of the 1960s. In addition, the
whole story of Reagan's two presidential
administrations, which were, of course, the
capstone ofhis career, is reserved for a second volume, which will be forthcoming
in due course.
But it is hard to irnagille anyone doing
better on the job that Hayward assigned
himself: tracing in delail the political history. of those 16 astonishing years from
1%4 to 1980, in which liberalism, having
given BaiTy Goldwater a historic shellacking, found itself confronting a new and far
more dangerous foe, and finally selfdestructed, leaving Ronald Reagan tri-

William
Rusher
COLUMNIST

1

I

66

fur "detente" with the Soviet Union plus, of course, Watergate. And Hayward's
account of Jimmy Carter's single term as
president could easily stand on its own as
a separate book about that exasperating
man.
But slowly, inexorably, the lines of force
in American ·politics were developing in •
ways that favored the ex-governor of Cal- .
ifornia, and it is to Re~ that Hayward
returns incn;asingly as 1980 nears. His
account of the struggles among Reagan's
key advisors - most notably, John Sears'
attempt to oust every rival near the throne
- is fascinating. And he provides yet
another explanation (there are at least
three others) of perhaps the most mystifYing, and potentially dangerous, episode in
Reagan's entire PPlitical; ~a{!le~: ,, the
intrigues at the 1980 Republican convention to make former president Gerald
Ford the vice presidential nominee op
Reagan's ticket. If that conspitacy had succeeded, only the Lord knows what would
have lain in store for the Reagan administration and America.
It only needs to be added that the book
is meticulously researched and footnoted,
but one source of information and interpretation deserves special mention: Again
and again, Hayward returns for commentary to former senator Daniel (l'Pat")
Moynihan, whose observations are always
stimul!ting and often shrewd. But he
appears so often (there are 48 references to
him in the index, or one for every 15
pages of this 7l7-page book) that he practically serves as a son of Greek chorus.
Mr. Hayward, a senior fellow of the
Pacific Research Institute in San Francaco, leaves us awed by his achievement and
looking forward hungrily to Volume II.

umphant.
In an eminendy readable ~tyle laced
with humor, Hayward describes all the
major political battles of those years.While
he is basically sympathetic to Reagan, he
is scrupulously fair to Reagan's opponents, and not at all unwilling to point out
Reagan's weaknesses- such as, for example, his tendency to wander from strict
accuracy in the lively anecdotes that studded his speeches.
Moreover, while Reagan's long march
toward the_presidency is the leitmotif of
the story, and righdy so, Hayward repeatedly allows Reagan to fade from view
when major political developments in the
drama were dominated by other actors.
Thus, Lyndon Johnson's determination
to turn America into a liberal paradise
called "the Great Society;' his equal determination to increase this country's commitment to the war in Viemam without
adequately preparing public opinion, and
his disastrous underestimation of the
strength and hostility of the New r_.;ft, are
carefully documented, and fuJJy explain
the political debacle that left Johnson
unable even to seek reelection in .1968.
Similarly, Hayward methodically outlines the steps on R.ichard Nixon's long
road to political perdition, fiDm his sup(William Rusher is a Distinguished Fellow
port for a guaranteed annual income to if the Claremont Institute for the Study of
his embrace of Henry Kissinger's proposal Statesmanship and Political Philosophy.)

.
Mar)tnl78, lllilois 63
_ SPhm MIL 8S, Alccm Sl. 60
lilt I
1ilt:h fil, l..c¥ila d
' 0t:ago78

,.. TlMne1Bw Va.Cuiildh"

.,

,72

I

;.. lJAB 62, Bnday 50

~70,Eion56

\llrglria Ted190, &amp;Ill Caron 62
• WaiGa Fon!at85, Mhlilll4a 79

,

~-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
So bad W2S North Carolin.1 State on offense in a 6450 loss to Ohio State that
Wolfj&gt;ack
coach
Herb
Sendek contemplated what
would happen if he abandoned his scholarship players.
The Woupack hit just 27
percent of their shots from
the floor Tuesday night in
the ACC/Big Ten Challenge
and misfired o'l 23 of their
27 3-point attempts.
"I don't think we expected
to shoot the percentage we
did," Sendek said. "You don't
need an offense. You don't
even ha~e to have a practice
to do that. You could pick
five guys off the street to
shoot 4-of-27."
Brent Darby scored 22
points and Brian Brown 18
as Ohio State used a late 122 run to nuke a successful
debut in the ACC/Big Ten
·
Challenge.
Ohio State didn't play in
the first two years of the
matchups between two of
the big-name conferences.
The. Buckeyes had declined
to be a part of the series
because coach Jim O'Brien
feared being left out with ·an
8-22 record his first season in
Columbus.
"This is a quality win for
us," O'Brien said. "This gives
us some impetus to say we
helped the conference a little
bit. We're part of this thing
and I think we would all like
to see the Big Ten get the
upper hand."
The Buckeyes (3-0) led
43-40 with ·10:32 remaining
after two fuul shots by the
Wolfj&gt;ack's Julius Hodge.
Over the next 8:40, how-

-

1"....,.,. a...

••
•

II

·auckeyes drub NC St

~fil.~

- 811153
1·- Ark..utla Red&lt; 83, SE t.lalolrt
' 74

" a.r 74,1'11!1Je 611
···ror· a..wu, 94, w. KsnU:tcy 91,
.•. DIJe60,1owa62
, I ..QW::ajJ164, E.a Bola 61
; , !ewe Sl. 64, SaAi U!h Sl. 39
~ Sl. 79, ••
Sl. 73
Qhk) St. 1M,•N.C. - 5 0
'' t.M&lt;C 119. SW If •.ri Sl. 63
·.~. •..,..._ 70, N. lllilois 50
- · W.lllilois ID, Dnlk8 74

r W.MUQi I 83, i'..1orgM Sl. 63
r Wis.-Green Bay 78, Ot:ago Sl.
62

Pl.... see Buckeyes, 7

Middle-aged guys, remember this on New Year~·

BT ScoTT WOU'E
ALEXANDER - Ohio
Division Champion Wellston
dominated the divisional AULeague standings placing
seven on the first team as
selected by the Tri-Valley
Conference coaches. Meigs
placed three men on the AUleague roster.
Wellston senior tailback
Brad Young claimed the
Offensive Most Valuable Player Award, while teammate
Thomas Mayes, a junior ~ne­
backer, claimed the Defensive
Most Valuable Player Award.
That duo joined coach Dave
Lucas, who was named Coach
of the year for leading the
Golden Rockets to a 8-2
overaU mark.
Young and Mayes alsO Jed
the first team voting, joining
Matt Hollingshead, Curtis
Deck, Rodney La}'ne, Keith
Manring, and Lance Phillip$
from Wellston. NelsonvilleYork placed five men on the
roster, led by Rocky Harkless,
Chase Elliott, Jason Meade,
Adam VanDyke, and Blake
Kline. Belpre placed four on
the roster, namely Guy Earley,
Jeremiah
Reams,
Nick
Hamilton, and Jeremy Jones.
Meigs was led on the ballot
by Jeremy Roush, a junior
tailback for Coach Mike
Chancey's club.
He was
joined by senior J.P. Varian at
tackle, and "IYson Lee, a senior
[4ilback and linebacker. Shade
Huntley and Tim Winnett
were the Vinton County
selections and Brad Bean and
LEATHER SAMMICH- Ohio State's Boban Savovic, top, drives to the basket past North
Carolina State's Archie Miller (11) Tuesday. (AP)

I want to tiJk to all the middle-aged
guys out celebrating New Year's this
year. This may seem premature, but don't
be fooled. It's never to soon to start
thinking about the traditional midnight
New Year's kiss. You don't want to .screw
it up again this year. You only have to
remember one thing - kiss your wife
first. Excuses don't work. Like "I thought
I was kissing you;· or "I tried to, but
someone .else's lips got in the way," or
worse still, "Come on, honey, it's New
Year's. I'm supposed to have fun."
Now, in order to kiss your wife at
midnight, you have to be able to find
her. That means you need to stay relatively sober throughout the evening. If
you're too inebriated to see, you can't
recognize your wife. Braille is i10t an
option. And after you do find her, and
you're kissing her like she's your own
personal Beauty Queen, don't be simultaneously making eye contact with Miss ·
Congeniality. A split focus at that crucial
moment can lead 10 other splits - · a
split lip, a splitting headache, or even a
splitting wife. Don't use New Year's as an
excuse to reconnect with ex-girlfriends.
Should. old acquaintance be forgo~?
Absolutely. Especially if she's attractive,
and she's at the party, and she's carrying

around pictures of a 12-year-old boy
who looks exactly like you.
No-fault dent
You just got home and found a new
dent in your car. A dent your wife put
there. You're about to go right off the
deep end. But be careful. A lot of guys
have drowned underestimating just how
deep the deep end is. I know you've
never put a dent in the car. Other people have. Like, when that idiot tore the
door off when you left it open to go into
the store to buy milk. Or when you got
rear-ended because some goof didn't
notice that you stopped on the highway
to pick up what you thought was a
dime. Or when the engine seized
because none of your friends reminded
you to check th e oil. You know your
wife 's not so careful with the· car as you
are. But you don't need to get bent out
of shape about a little dent and cause a
head-on collision. Don't be ti.e one
trapped in your vehicle.Ymir mouth may
be big, but it's not the jaws of life. Just
smile and say, "That's OK, Ho~ey." I
know you still love your car. Just not
enough to sleep in it.
Mum's the word
Although we like to talk, here are
some times when middle- aged men
should not say anything:

• Whenever you're wrong.
• Whenever you 're right.
.
• Whenever you're in the presence of
an expert or your wife.
.
• While the cop is writing the ticket; .
• Whenever anyone is trying to place
responsibility, blame, or charges. ·
Packaging matters
Recently, I bought a cartridge for my
printer. It came in a box mounted on .a
card and wrapped in plastic, When . I
took it apart, I found that the print~r
cartridge itself was actually quite smal),
but they made the packaging unnecessarily large to make it harderto steal and
to make the customer feel better about
the high price. I pointed this out to rriy
wife and mentioned how my weight
gain over the years of our marriage
should have the same effect: It made me
seem more valuable and also made me
harder for other women to steal.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: "When yo_u
sell your house and move into an apartment, you have fewer stairs, but more
stares." - Red Green

(Red Green is the star of "The Red Green
Show," a television series seen in the U.S. on
PBS and in Canada on tlu CBC Networ~,
and the author if "The Red Green Book"
and "Red GreeJJ Talks Cars:A LAve Story.")

'

.

PluH 1H AII·TVC. 7

~92,SMUIIO

I

'' l..ainlr67,TaxasSPhm56
·· Slepher 1F.AusliliiO, Rloa 86
ArizllrB Sl 73, UC ANacltii 64
ca f&gt;drSlO 100, Patin! Sl

Ss

I' Hawal 60, Natm 1 n Sl. 58
lWo 67, .tdml Sl. 51·

- s.

Duke

Cookie· Candy Contest

' ' Sill~ Sl. 96, uc San~
. 53
' &amp;na Clanl66, sM .b!e Sl63

topples

.. First Day kill

Iowa _

...
1 I

numben up

Peoples IMk, Pomet'O)'
December s, zoot,

bf.linnlnc at 9100 .... .
Judlinl alter ltank
cloling, Dec. 8th.

CHICAGO (AP) -The
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
scary thing is, No. 1 Duke
· - Ohio hunters killed 41,'257
is going to get better.
. deer on the first day of gun
Facing its first top 10
1·season Monday. That figure is
opponent of the season,
pretenll
~
18.3 percent higher than last
Duke nude easy work of
year's opening-day total of
No. 7 Iowa on Tuesday
·34,866, the Ohio Division of
night,
beating
the
i Wildlife reported Tuesday.
Hawkeyes 80-62 in the
. "We ·were confident we
first night of the ACC/Big
·_would have a great opening
Sunday, Dec. 2, 2001
Ten Challenge.
day:• said Mike Hudzik, chief
The Blue Devils (5-0)
p.m.
of the division. "I would not
got contributions from just
be surprised to see the gun
. about everyone, and served
season harvest exceed 100,000
notice they can be as domdeer if we have re;lSOnable
inant
as last season's NCAA
..
weather.
championship squad Pomeroy, Ohio
Last year, 96,290 deer were
even without Shane Battikilled during the gun season.
PIIu.seeDuke,7
: · Athens County's deer kill of
1,754 was tops in the state
Monday. The county's open·
· 'ing-day total last year was
1,173.
.
The Wildlife Division said it
·received one report of an
'·opening-day accident in
' Hocking County. A hu"ter's
A staff of over
· ~n barrel exploded pecause
· of an obstruction. The man,
100 doctors in 26
whose name was not released,
llfl"Ciallies provide
~ 'was treated for minor injuries
swe-of·thl&gt;art care.
. and released.
·" A Guernsey County man
feet or back into life as quici:Jy
At t/14 Hoiur Clinic, wluu comes after
as possible. Medical Excellence.
· 'never made it to his favorite
Jurgery or an injury gets as much
Local caring. The rehabilitation
attention as your initial treatment.
· hunting spot Monday mornservices
at Holzer Clinic.
The clinic's rehabilitation team is with
, ing. Gary Johnson, 52~ ~s
you throughout recovery, start ro finish.
· inspecting his shotgun m his
They call on r/14 luJest equipment wuJ
Byesville home when 11 dostechniques to get you back on your
' 'charged accidentally.
" The slug went through a
·wall and grazed his wife, Sherry, on the head.
She was taken to Southeast- ·'
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
''ern Ohio Medical Center in
Proctorville
Jackson
'·cambridge, where she was
South Charleston
Pomeroy
. 'treated and released.
The gun season ends Sun' day.

COOLVILLE COMMUNITY

~~Portraits of Cnristmasll
St. Paul
Lutheran Church

I

BY RED GREEN

Ohio FB
team
announced
OVP CORRESPONDENT

3

RED GREEN'S VIEW

AII-TVC

Personal, Professi
Rehabilitative
Services.
Medical Excellence.
Loca/Caring:

HOLZER
CLINIC

Wooden Toy Contest
FawmenBank
December 11, zoo1,
Toy• ma,- h dl8plaJ'M u

early u Dec. ut
In bank lobb)'1
Judglnc after bank elo•ln&amp;

on Dec. 15th-

�P8ge A 8 •llle Dally SenUnel

Pomeroy, llldcllepor"., Ohio

~------------------------.-----------~

•

tltribune - Sentinel - 1\e

CLASSIFIED

. . . . .,. NcN. . . .a1

r ~= l..t·........_Ava_SM&amp;___.I r

·· woo:'
!!' e'X7
_&lt;illlga , . o.ona
-~.:!d 4 ld. ht 1?1 Ill

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

QE

r· -w- II'" """'""" Ii

\"\\ifl \II \II "\I"

r

~

I

GROW
USI
walt? Sta" meeting we are elqiii1Cing .U, c:1n:u-

PART- TillE

COME

WITH

AE CcnstNCIIon

math akllll, mull enjoy
wortdng with people, be
able to organize your work
artdbaaYIIilabtelorechedu11ng between tho hou111 ol
!1:00am and 5:00pm, Monday llirtiiq. Friday. For Jn.
COI-atlon IIIOld
your ,_.,.and.,.,.., lot·
tororAitontlonoiDlanoHII,

pondablet,.nspoflatlon ba·

N~ect.or_.....,
riO

14x70, 3 bodroom, 2
bath. Only $995 _ , &amp;
$169.62/month. Call Charyl,

In thil n1ott~ n~• It

llot&amp;s

FOR IbM

sic computer knowlodgo
FlriiHolzor'oAnnuaJChnOl· This Is a full ttmo -.rJori
mu c,.ft ~ ~ Sale. poo111on and o11an1 a1 corn.

F*~Actollllt

- - • 11oga1.,

•any

..PI ....WCIICI,I•••'U:Ucw 1 or
- - 011

-·cat.,..........

r

pair.

"'=•••-

I

Now Taking Appllcatlona- Applla.-: RIC DA'&lt;IMIOIIId !
. 35 Weot 2 Bodloom Town- Wullota, D1yM, ~ J
houle Apartmon40, Incl.- Rolrfgnlklra, Up To 111 0oya 1

,. .

1'-·1

~B I~~=*)U·· !
~~~ni r'a .~
Worl&lt;placo DIY'~.
,

• --· "·-• Sma 11
~ . ....... .,.,

rowrJ Orumll'Mtf &amp; bass playllir
. ~
WNie dog. No collar family looking tor muslclano &amp; ~" Ful-timo, bonpot
oftts, ratallo.............._
_....,Rowanl.
__ , __ ,f740)388-0126 .......
-....,. to form -~
···~
..,..,__ roler·
_,,.,_ -·e message.
rary Christian QICUP, rod. Apply at l.lloalylo Fum~
(740)992-3187, 740-675- ture. No phone cal&amp;. Apply
"•~ .... ., poroon 856 3nl Avonuo
2432·
•~"-"£
Gal'""'l 'OH
'

r
~
r

YAID SA1b

GAUJPOLIS
"--ttiiiiiiiiiii-pl
~~-·- Dec I &amp; 2
~raga ~.
·
·
!:~St Rt 554 Near BJd.
;

r

=

I
I

::::;~~;:;:;:~

UP:Oa;ii~Da~
••~
T~ Must . .- Be ~
and ,.W, Good """""' At_,..,. •
~ffT=
~u
'
.
ed COO Galllpolll Dolly Trll&gt;
'""'at (740)+46-2342
ENE o1 WOII Virginia~ now

=.

I

A1JC110N AND

appUcatlona for pack~
8Jjlng dopa•mont, pay rata
Ia $7.25/lv, Also, talcJng appllcatlono lor machlno - -

laking

Fu!A MAioorr

·--iititiiiiiiii-,J
Rick Pearson """""" Company, full time auctionHr,
complota auction oorvica,
UconMd IB6,0hlo &amp; West

atora. Olo•lng pay lo
$7 sMv malntonanco dept
(mOcttarilcai or eloctrlcal .,:
pen..,.• reQuired) pay

,.... I,
URGENTLY

·

I

"---·1
vrn.Jilll.ll'IIU

INOTICEI
OHIO VAU.EY PUBLISHlNG CO. recormtouds that
,
o1
.__,
youdobu noaswtlh....,.o
- · and NOT 10 send
NEEDED· you
monoythf&lt;IUI111homallun~

plasma donotl, earn $50 to you have irwMtlglted the
$eo por lor 2 Dl S offering.

houri wooldy. Call SOra·
Tee 740-592-il6St .
'
WANTED: Experienced
Aoollng &amp; Carpont"' Foreman's, valid drlvor'sllconso,

' . ~
Start YOUt Bullnoss To·
day,.. ,..,. Shopping Can·
ter ~ Avalllblo At AI·
lordablo Rata, Spring Valloy
Plaza, Call 740-446-0101,

hand toola, reliable trans·
po11at1on and ntlaronces re-

p:!U

2683.

.

:;1"::

L

WI/=

;;,e

'-.I I&lt; \ I I I ...,

I

, m· pm,
Full and Pari Time Help

•

.,

~~~!'g$$·

.....
As Easy .. ABCI 2 week
COL Training- Great Pay

And Benefit&amp;. Training and

PlacementAvallabht

No EKperience Necessary

CAU.Arnerlmoxl
5601 HWY 31 E.,
Ciarksvllla, IN 47129

-oom

b"um
. e~t. New nurnlce,
noa•y new root &amp; vtnyllldlng, Quiet nelghborttood
cloMio ICitool &amp; Shotli!Jng
$64 500 coli (740)446-83!0

or (740,i4a-2 425 ·
·

eldo~y. Darst Group Home,

ea1r:,:: :"f'&amp;c'!lce bi;

~or
~

Holl

AC0219
-

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Assemble crafts, wood
11ems. Material provided.
To $480+ wk
Free lnfonnarion J)kQ. 2o4 Hr.

Elm 2nd. Income without

maintenance. (740)192·7261
Send reaume·wtth reference

•I ,

front office tor an applica· Employer

tion, E,O.E,

I

2464

~

. aage.

&amp;.no,

;.;= ~. ~f7'10)2459tt8
I

...

AlmQuls

1.:

1

eel R•-- •~ •
·~·~
1124• Eut
.. _~~~
on ,
fA""•
-·
R t2• E, """'"""'' 740982·2526. Ru" Moort.
·
=--:--:-:--:---Sue'o-onllo"T" :
a' u y

01

Pometay, Naykn Run, 2 or In l&amp;Lk-; twt. Doll, glut- ,

9020

3 br, apartmonl, wld-hu, o/r, - . and •
hrml -r - · 3 oocurlty depooll, ntlorencoa, - . f7401992-o281
•
BR, 1 Bath, $4501 month. call f740)992-8888.
'
Depoolt and Roltlroncos.
Mln!JJAICJIIS 1·
f740)+46-21!01
3 rooma and bath, Fumlalt~
·,
eel Efliclenoy, AI Ullllllot
'
Pilot Program, RoniOfll Paid, Downatalrs, 12851

r

month.

919

2nd

Ava.

S

I

Aflordilbll • ConwniM'd:

r

riO.

HoMfS

FOR S.W:

ALil

14x70 Clayton Trailer. 2.5
Acreo, 32x40 New garaga,
~l~7ti-~"5'" Eotatto,

I.

,
16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
,
Acroa
with
Fleet·
Month,
8.99% Fixed lntoreat
1999
10 5
wood Modular Home Near Rate With , Air And Un·
Gatllpolls. EKCellent Condi· derplonlng 1-888·928·3426
tiort Private, COuntry Set·
ling. Stocked Pond. Addi· 1985 SGoodkyllneC14x7~. 3 bedCa·
11
llonal 7.5 Acres Available. room .
ondlllon.
C8II J 8nell Call I Cantu Harold, 740-385-9948. .
a
ry
~~ I="s &amp;2~: ~Col~ Limited Or No Credtt? Gov( }634·
OrTITlent Bank Finance Only
1·800·731 •90 11),
At Oakwood In Barbour&amp;·
VI
St
"'"dl
vllo,
304-736·3409,
1
1053 ne ret 1•
epon, $25,950, 3 bedrooms New 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom.
MIU

7003

WI/

Loee

10

pound&amp;·

200

Albums . •
Some Rare. Price, $75. Gall

and
For 1 Or 2 People Referen~
eel, Oepoait, No Pets, Foa- bath plut shower, Opwno
ter Trailer Park 740•441 • alalra, Clean. Reference
•
and Deposit Raqulrod, No
0181
'
Pets or amokera. (7~)+48Clean 2 BA Trailer, Aetrig- 1!519
orator and Stove Included, Twin River Toworl now...

:;'~ul:::'/'1:~1 R~:or=-

copting.applk:a11ono 10(
tBR. HUD oiA&gt;oldlzed apt.

69511 or f740)368·9053

r

I

AP.umrnllrs
FORn--

I

.ftl'.l'fl

'

Record

f740)862·7894

Beatltl Scarf, Bealla 1864
COloring Book,

and old

Beallos Trading Carda, S95

for d. Call (140~~7894

Bob Long

pe=,
~hopper; :
,

Red &amp;Dollant

Y'4~' banal,

tanl&lt; and

3000 pol nltrogOn

for eiiJ&amp;rly and dlaablld.

cradle. 1 year old. Cost
$1,200, sell lor $700. Saga

EOH.

(304)875-6679.

D,..mcut, 4 contfQJioro, 10
gemos, memory cer&lt;t and

Rumb.. Packl In original

Very nice, 2-3 bedroom box. S225. (7.40)Ue 0350

apartment, In town, large
1 &amp; 2 BR Economk:al Gas ollchtn, LR, $500/mo. Rot- F~as cargo oover thet
~~~~ W$29510H:kup;.gN::~ e(7'!.!"")44a'-dtpoalt44 required. HttP1ick ~ F~ang-CaJI
'·
, ss·
- uA
or
up,~.~..~.

month, Plus Ulihtiea, lBPB
and o : l t Required..
(740)448 57
.

c

~IE

fOR Ru:rr
,

1

I.

(304)675-8051 ·

Fisher XP7
I

P e a

3-way ttereo'

k

e

r •

,

and 2 bedroom apart· Nice Iota
let cOunt set· 2o4.Hx1A-wx12'D, walnut
menta, fumllhld and unfur· ling, .i.lr accomrZctite Onlsh, $100. (740)992·2369
nlshed. securtty dapoalt re- 16x80 $100 per month call Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp;
~~~· no pets, 740.992 • Ed at Country Homes,
Repalnl. Problems? Need
'
992-2167.
Tuned? Call The Plano Dr.

740-

1 Bedroom Apartmenta,
$289 month. Deposit &amp; Ref·

740-446 4525

·

Tl'lller space tor rent, $120
erence., HUO Approved. per month, In Minersville; Hardy Mums 13·00 each 4
between (740)441- 1519
600 sq n ollk:e building, ole lor$10. Open Sal J!.5pm &amp;
Nonhup.
&amp; ceiling ran, $275 per fMK'I•Ut D:tura~~)8
1br. Vary Clean, Available month, (814)876-1681
~.0 1 ·
o.
9S.
Dec. 1st. Now taking Appll·
eave meaaage. or

lorhome. Wate,andelectrio
already lhOre, $70,000 Call
after 4:00pm f740)992·
::'429=3·--,-·...,.,_· ::---,.-,
Indian Creiok Ealates, 3-6
aero lotS/ west ol Rio
Grandt, from $25,900.
f140)245-5 747

only FumiBhad. $260/mo.
depoolt requlrtd. (740)+467620 altar 7pm.
2 Bedroom Apt In Cantenary, sppllancaa tumlohod,
utllltleo paid except eloclrlc,
clean, 52651 month call
f740l 2511.1135 attar 5'00 ·
2 BR Apt. Newty Remod·
eied. Stove, Refrigerator
Furnished. All Ullll11es Paid.
46 Olive St ·$4751 mo.

Large Co~ner building lol
with ~· Ohio River frontage, elevation shot, sur·
&gt;Jeyed, 8ppraised, serious
Inquiries only, S40,000 (740)446-3945
(304)882-3736 before 5pm

1

(304)895-3769
lnde............., H •·•if
H
nt BIUQl 8 01• ·
OUiUIOlD
tributor, CaH F.or Product Or
~
Goous
. Dpportunlty, (740)441-19112
JET '
Futon aunk Bed, whlta motAERATION MOTORS
al, excellent condition, ask- ..Repaired, New &amp; Robultt In
lng $300, Call (740)4411· Stock, Call Ron Evano, 1·
6626 alter 4:30pm.
, 600·537·9526,
G,E, Whl"pool Washara, - - - - - - - $65 each, White Tappan MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Dryer, $80. G.E. Kenmore lntertherm &amp; Coleman gu,
Almond Dfyers, S60 each. oil &amp; electric fumaces ln-Call after 8pm. (740)448· eluding hi efficiency heat
9066
pump syllems. We cany •
complete line ot Mobile
Maytag Washer, S95. Hot home parts &amp; aqceuorlee.
point Dryer, S95. Tappan BENNEn·s HEAnNG a
Electric Range, $95. Well- COOLING (740)4&lt;18-IMte
lnghouse
RefriQitfator, or 1...eoo.en..tel7

r'o

I .......

· 3 apanmenta tor rent In SyrLooking To Buy A New acuae, 2 bodroomo, $200
Home1 Oon1 Have Land1 deposit, rent lnclucles wa·
We Doll! Hurry Only 1Q Lots ter sower trash (740)378- $150. Upright Freezer Frost www.orvb.comlbennett
Left, 30H36-7295.
et\1
'
'
Frae, $150, Magic Chol
·
Electric Range, Ooublt 1850 WCJOdtn Cedar Drlgl.
Nice ,4 acre tract near 3 Bedroom Apanment with Oven, S150.(740)-M6-7398. nal Sterdlng, tO n long.

yard, (740)992· Only$19,850. Free0elivery GallipoKs- easy
&amp; set Up. 1·668·1128-2426 (740)'\46·35113

•'

not revenge

ltnt
lorII04)67J!.tlll2
....
S21!00,

4.14a.=

*

gaotuma·t

T-

C

---====-

terms, stove and refrigerator In- .SkaggsAppllances. 78VIne $150. Other hand rorgect
cl~td. (740)245·51159
St, Gallipolis, 01' 45631. toolo. (740)992·7869

-·. _

,,ooo

t::l:

tr,

:"_: ;!:"f:

-.brick.-

._,.

i

I

::;...ar:.:_

r

I

i

DU"B · .

I

riO

I

u.orr,..:,:;

&amp;;v sa:e

• ,

(v·

!Mner

a·

NOW
HIRING

r

·aU"""'e
-1•. ·
s
I
fiOM,..

Per Hour

;::======:::=:====:::;
WANTED

·NPUBLIC
TICES'

L011g

rake,

510, MFI!O, - ·
MF12 baler, 3 wag-

ons, log apllltar, doc, bulltt
hog, etc, (3(14)87541!69 .

YANMAR YM 1600 Tractor,
dteoai, 3 polm hitch, $2,150,
Alto, new 4' flnllh mower,
aURin CfOII, S85Q. Shipping
avaJialill, Locattd jUit out·
- ol HunttiYIIIt, lol (256)
778·9435 Www.maynardequlpment.com

r~

llcellle,threeyeanaoocldrl•lq .

expirleol:e and tldequate automobile

(740)286-!385

applkants: ·u/04101.

Equal Opportunity Employer.

t.:-------------....1

Square bales was $2.00
now $1 ,50 . .1 mMo on Rt. 2
N, (J04)675-4669
Hay &amp; Bright Wire Tlo
Straw, Year 'Round DeiNetY

&amp; Volume Discount Avilla·

ble. Haniage
(304)675-5724.

Farm,

Ill\ '\'.I'C II&lt; I\ I l l ' '

$3995,00 and under· 93
Clvatler wagon, 93 Grand
Am, 1M Grand Am, 116 No-

on, 92 Ranger, 9&gt;4 Traoktr,
91 cavalier, · 85 Nlsun
truck, 95 Sunflrt, 1M ,.,.,_
atar, 6 .-n. 7500 Warranty,
Uatk'l
Pomeroy,
' (7401992·3011,
1979 Cornaro RS lei( ulo
tor partl or can bl ~­
$400. (304)675-~153

1981! Buick , Skyhawk, 4
~Unt and '*fYn
grtat. $600 OBO. (740)441door, Auto,
1083

6et4ht:d-:mlcing only 2 of.6

O•n•r•l H•rt1n1er AHMIOnteihiWII!p
Plrkwtty lnd on tile of Mkltl•....;.ri Mall•
biiiiM ot.• 10 , _ , COII61f ;..-tl'uiiCM:
;::., ~·J.:..!:":l- llaluma ~ • ., 111 1l:
00• Eaet,U.I4 feat thence ~ou~lr II
llong tiM 1ou111 riOM'
1D 00 lilt,

ted

1'

k

sco
on ayups to ma r '
55-42 with 2: 12 remainitH .
The \Volfj&gt;ack ended a 5·~- gh
J h '
minuto "uruu ton os I owell's foul shot with 1:52

fk!e throws.
.
'We .'truggled on offense
throughout .the night;' Darby ~mammg,
said. "We inisse.d a lot o( sho~.
"Brown and Darby really
Q'.:.•l. "~.::ln~.!': ::tne~ ~o:tr'1 We, mis!ed a lot , of free had our number," Sendek
=~v-120 .PorkW8, 10111 Iron p111 - - 00' 00" ~ throws, But
did a litde said, ·
In purau~nce 01 1n all' thana lollth ·a 74.110 !HI to 1 flolnt; · better di:rihg th'a \ s(~tch
North Carolina State was
Alia Order of S.le In
00' 00" w.t.
where we got the lead and making jts lint road trip of
10 1" 1the
above
anutlod
74.00
1:00
fMt
'llong
tile
,
th ct! tDO k-'
th•• se••on
after opening with
- n 1 will otter lOr pin HI on lila Iouth
•
••re· o f't"
• '·
,
~
.... .i ,..._
-""lc auction liM ' of Hid Lilt 1t1
II\ liM of Hkl Lot . Ohio Slate hit 69 pereent five wins at home, The Wolf•
• 212 10 JIOinl of ·
11 thti lllellll County Nkllron pin bolnl on :nlnl. Otlntllnlng , of its shots tiom the 6eld in pack was 2-7 on the road a
~rd~0,f.'.;.. 10 , 1 1~ g':u:.orthLo'l~• ~0!
lq. " - IIIOie or, the second half (11 of 16), ,
yearago.
tile 1bove named d••f1Udtnthelle9 laai, aaHpllng 111 . Ahead4j:.4() the Bilek.,.. ~'Both t.eams were grfriiling ..... ~. of ,._,..., ........ ,. 1 c0..... lagll ••~anlants ·and
.
•
-r·· it out," O'Brien said. "Our
COtYm)l,
on ... u - •
,......... , _
· - : l'lll*ofway.
'slowly pulled away. -·
.lantllt'Y, 2002, lit10:00 VOlume H4,
113, liarl~- IN lllk
.
k . If
,
d
, h
1.m., the , following thane a North , ee ,_ tii:"'Makll Co{ •: , ·Dudley dun ed o a hack- guys ha to dig m t ere to
dalcrlbld ruleetste, dlt1WI10' 00" WMI, ,.. .... _. lllddll"p~ door assist tiom Savovic, and win."
liluotld In 1111 COunty lt.n feat alolil the
-....
·
of llafll lftd 1111110 of Iouth liM 01 1111C1 Lot ¥1111.1, lltfarefiOI
Ohio, 1nd In the City 112 1nd Ilona the '••• · 2 0. , TKit - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ol MfddllpOr110 wH:
North liM of tiM •Jtl datorllltlon II ~~~All·~¥
·.
Lltlll DncrlpUon Chllda Lol to •n lton on 1 ...-vi~ au,_.
.•
l!xhlbll "A"
pin HI on the 1!111 In
'Y IIObart fl. ' ·
Trttcl 1: lltua1ad ln tilt IIIII or tilt Nfcl20 foot =:a,on~ ..Ohlo 11:1, ·No,
Yt11t1f11 of lllkldleporl, wide 1111y;, tbanoa PPN tl-ooil4? 000 •
5

=

1

== ,:. :."W.:

.g...

we

"*

HAY&amp;
GtwN

25 Round Bile, Wheal. 30
Round Balea Mbttd Hay.
Bam Stored, 1100 Pound
Baloo. f740)245oll652

..,,
.L- L-'f
~- •
,..,..24 at "'"" (!ill ucspue
1hooting 35 p~rcent from the

,

JacksOn. .

CIIY"

r

llllgl County

:::,V

for 1111.
(740)245-51184, 1'881 - or, Dry leo, and Gentlll.

Club

Thel-ofOitlo,

North AIHrlclin
lalui'IIICe i:onraae. New llartln&amp;
ComPIIIII
salaey: $7,001hour. Send resume to:
va.
Buckeye Comm:iolty sern-, P.O. Box Mlrltn J. Chapmttn,et
604, Jacksoa, 00·45640. Dea,dUne for .:

--ongutrFarm

"'

••lid

htlllora, · buill and haKer.
jlllceci reaoonalily, Stata

Run

,·

mental retanlatloa. Requirements: Hlah .lhertll'a &amp;eleol -~ plilllll"' on ltoaloulll of Lot aa 01
scbool d1plomaiGED,
drl•er's
~ ·
right of w•r UM· or tiM ..ltl v.l. 110f1oi1

Anoul hiller, malno/ angua

. I991 Eagle Pramlor, 4 door,
Autp, Air, Power, Nice car.
$999. (740)368-o416

.'

MarShall

L 'Byron
·
-rl"
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) - , It thing," said Marshall quarrerbac"
rewnge f:actor at .,
•
was Manhall's lowest point in nearly two Leftwich. "We'~just hoping !h-' we can
All eyes will be on Leftwich, who has
r;:,':h~4': ';;.~ ~~
l:'OC:-~
dn:adts, that October night a year ago make ii 6w."
.
.· ·
.
mahlled signiticandy In the past year,
~at-.
f740'lttl• 41
- . -TIIM. ...,, · when Toledo thumped the Herd 42-0.
. The · last rirM . it played ino the Glass
One dfnlne ManhaD players named to
1kw AND UWD STDL 2001 z.2t c - :MOO (r40') !111&amp;15
When No. 20 Manhall (10.1) plays at Bowl; Marshall ·couldn't do anyching ' the all-MAC tint team Monday, the
~
::.,~~J;'t!:;; ~
~4.~ Toledo (8-2) on Friday night for the right in being shut out for the tint time · junior needs just 89 yards to break the
,.., Ftat a., Stool Gratlna 123.000. (304)1116-3131
or eunraa~. so,ooo - .
Mid~J\metican.
in 1 1 seaiOns. ·
~C single-season p:wing record of
17
c...;,.,Naw
Dnvew
&amp; 14
LTDiarvage
u. veita.
-..':: , . .dr, 511..-r&amp;.
•000. (740J •
COnference •
""ol•do
.. turned ,thre•"'
L•"-'··i•h
3,7~ ya-'·
55 avs
Galan
good
141-0111
14 "
... nw ""
1m held by former Herd quaner~L&amp;~~R:I: f740)e43-2tt7, s&lt;...a..n; 11 a..y - . u•,
championsrup,
tumoven inio''touchdoWns. Leftwich~ '*k Chad Pennington.
Monday, T.-y, Galla Co,
&amp;11,710, LT Pld40ga,
payba~ks wdn't 18-of"32 fot just t't7 yards , and W3$
leftw.i ch has thrown for J4 touch4:30pm,~~:.~~==-:; ~:r-::,,!"1.;. or
be ·on the sac)te4five ·tinift.The Herdwereheldto downHndjustsixinterceptionsthisyear.
$ttturdly
a Sundl)' ~10
minds
of 42 yards rushing on 28 attempu. ·
For the 6rst time, the, MAC champi111100
0'401446-'1'300
' (304)eM41
'
Mon~- I
Herd · play- · M'anhall's del'tnt!C allowed 24'1 Nshins "ruhlp won't )lave any bearing on. bowl
liloW-CarCDP1ayor
·
~
en.
yards.Toledo's Tavam Bolden threw two . 'game. In the past, the winner hu received
$tOO, Z-MTX3000 ItT Subl .. Pratoido S l , Th,..,'ll be m
. passes and nn. for another ttCOte.
the conference's automatic berth in the
bilK and MTX280X ~ 1liok.
.,
~-built In cr-.
thinking
The los; cho~d Ma11h:ill to 2-4. It Mo1;0r City Bowl in Pontiac, Mich.
$300. 080 (304)1175-2153 . - on .,. .,., · ·about their hadn't lost four ganies so ~aHy in a SftJOI'i
This year, the conference secured tWo
1100
~~= =;~~ • oait
seasori-long since 1&lt;;8.3; When it·liad its last · losing bowl berths, Manhall has.accepted a bid
~ ff no ana- toavo 11 Lit-. T - and 11
molto
of ~cord.
, ·,
to the GMAC Bowl on . Dec, 19 in '
"'""'ga
•-.., Air r1r1o, IUio i11t&gt;t
"One fot
Since the TOI$ game, Marshail has Mobile,Aia., while Toledo will play in the
t=!.~=: =-V~11623 "' ~Ohoton.:.'=C:.
the ·
gone 16-2.
·
.
Motor City Bowl on Dec. 29.
1nt1a•c•tion sv.oo a month. 11 a..,,._
flint
.
'Thumb," in
'.'They definitely ambamssed u~ last Still, there is the issue of getting a ,
100
hlnnots.
B~
sam
Van,
low - . exN!tont
reference
to
the
,
team's
four
straight
iide.
.,..ar,
Th:.V
.
ScSorn.,IOriOr~oilolo- -it g&amp;iil COi-l 112,1100 ·1M Ford
,-, be~, I· us ......
r-,,tty' ba.d, but I·· champt'on ship ring.
~ld)~~ ~~ Atpl,., j 1,800, (740)4&lt;18since rerurning to · the conference · in Wt&gt;uldll't .corui~er it. , "' rewn~;·. said · "'the ,bowl game doesn't mean any(304J273-5t155
221:1 - • •
1997,
Marshall linebacker ' Max Yates. "Good thing. Th~t's just icing on· the cake for us;•
!tool It~~~~~-"We'~ not one ofthbse teams thatjult tcami Win fdotball garnet and they were ·Yates said."lt really doesn't mean much at
r-rur:,..~lllng"'::
·I•I-NT
goes out and br.tgs about it, but ·We have better than as that day. · .
·
all, Our goal is to win the MAC champi~
'l'lllaiB
1
WAI•x:aa 110
wonitforthelastfouryeanandtheyall , ·~we'veW&lt;!rkedhardallweckandwe're onship arid that's it. :That's the bottom
til Et1ir:lour:y 11oat
RBlSAU:
Ui""dtlo4"' guor- know that, so we don't have to say 31\Y- not ,so
.· ing in there . 'chinking about. a · line,"
1'-. lao1uring'
~
illorlliOM fur~,..; irW&gt;tdlbll wannty tl72 Fon1 F700 :111 tt. Flat· - · E I 'II&gt;IG 11178,
Por*age
bed T-. _, Ertglno Cal 24 Hro. (740) BENNrirs HEAT1NG " , 1, , . 1~7.()578,
·
n't haVe the 6repo\Ver 10 keejl ·stcoltd half,. things got a little came right back with another
080• 11170,
COOI.lNG~ (7'10,......11 (740)387·737•
Rogwe-proor•IQ.
up,
testy, Both ·coaches protested 3.
or~~.
.
HoME
~,.,ill , _ 11711 GMC 311:1 c- CttD,
~
,
. llecker led · IoWa with 15
to referees, and. there were
Then Williams picked off a
Ill llltiiJIO Bid ~
•
ftaftl,
.
_,
5
·points, but he was 7.-o
. f- 18
sonit hard fouls on each sid11 ba.d pass by Pierre Pierce and
Spocial: 314 200 3110 Ertglno,
.......
PSI $21.116f'W 100: t' 200 11000 080, f740)317-1374 ca.c-- overall and just 1-of-8 tiom . · the rest of the pme,
raced downcourt for,the easy
7
00
PSI S3 • Per too: Ali t118&amp;ato.rS.\O.Auto u Pe1rillng, vtnyt oldtier.
3-point. range.. Rel!!Pe E~. .
In the lint .~ight minutes, dunk, Just like that, Duke had
~upr ••ion Fll11ngt
Ertgino. Oaad
:;:;,.~·.:..:-,:,: "This team is not in com- who came , into the game · the Blu~: Devils turned the a 3~3lead with 4:45 to play
-~~\~;. 01142 • ·
~ vetition·with last,year's teallt:' averaging , 21.6 .points and · ball c;iver five times.· and were iti the 6nt half.
537-8528 ·
Fon1
F-310,
di.
..,_
«123,
,
Duke. coach Mike Krzyzews- , 11,4 reboands; W3$ held to . · ·outrebounded a )Nhopping
The Hawkeyes kept at it,
4
111116
•-~~--.., lily. f)OWor- - ·
ki said. "This team has to mn eight points al)d .nine 15-5. And whm Chicago.. l&gt;llt the Blue Devils had an
BIJUING
~-"":~~lao.~::
a!~ its own race. This team~ to' ' ~bounds: ',
' ~a native Rya,l! HOgan hit a answer for everything, When
riWt'f ~
• go through its own process ' l.t wlis lOWOI's iecon.d los$ to 15-footjump~rto sparb 7-0 lletker hit a 3, Dunleavy
..-IIIIISU'I'ursiiiiiii;;..... .-10
loopl, Rul$4111 or..,,,_ and handling the mande. of . a t!lJI 5 tl'lm ' in ihcputWeek. 'ri:n th at. gave. Iowa a 17-12 , connecte d on a spinning
plpM, optlono
45,000 Itt,
-.
uilng
- · -.ote.Ciauclo $22,000, f740l1412-781t, , -.a. , _ - or tw- being No.1.
The Hawkeyes lost to' :then- · IClld with 10~521eft in the lint jumper. When Pierce made a
~"]];:;_:i~~.n&lt;tt. OH ~
$4,1!00, =.~
"they
have
a
lot
of
presiure
No.
5 Missouri last Wednes- ha):r, the crowd Wlis ·on its feet layup, Dunle~ hit one of his
78
7
1786
Wl/000308, 304-8 &amp;&gt;
· op them, 1 believe we ~n da)l- ,,
. , . , , . ·. and roaring, . :
own a~d Williams followed
~
CHECK THE
. ). become better as. a result."
"We know ·we•re very
: l)ut. in .a two-minute span, with a beautiful alley-oop
.
·
.
They're pretty good already, ~·o~:· Iowa, coach Steve. Ouke took control of. the tiotn. Duhon,
Adorable
Chihuahua pup•vrA
,.,...AD,c:o
r::z'RS,...
"'rd
~,.., • h
•"- H ogan connected
.A, n d w h en Gl en ,y,
ploo. Not realllored. 111
W.l'll\',
~ ..-.
.11
, , Jasrln Williams scored 25
10
sai d , "We· ..iunt
av~ game.nuer
worIey
Sholl.
wormocr. IIOIIy
points and had five as$ists, and . one.. of our
riiShll and Oil a short jllmptr, Duhon 'hit scored·on a layup to pull Iowa
:\a~ :.,~~68Help W.niN
Public NotJce
Carlos Boozer had IUs third Dukehery·good. They had
a 3-,pointer .tiom the left cor-· . to 38-32 with 41 seconds left,
straight double-double, scot- lot :co do with 111 not phying ner. ll.eckt-r responded with. a Dunleary coolly driUed a 3PUIUCLEQAL
AKC Goldin Ratritvor
ing 22 points and grabbing 14 well tonight." , · • .
I'ull-up jumper,. but Dl!hon· pointer from 24 feet,
NOTICI
Pups, Partnta on Pill• 'rrr.
ANdy N&lt;tw, S2S0-$300. No
· The Malle Locel rebounds. ·
·
' The' Blue Devjls improved .
'
Sunday calls, (740)245loard of duo1tlon
Chris
'Duhon
had
I
1
assists
,theit
ncord agai~t ranked -. - -.-. _ _,_~
. ------------53511
h•• oomplatod 111
then Dudley hit two free
General Purp.il•a io,&amp;O with his nine points- teaiJIS to 34-tJ sine~ ·1997.- .
N&lt;C Re=tcl Odden~
Flnanalel ltllemonts inciudihg a nice alley"oop 98, They'* won ·15 ~ of '19 ., :
lrloY8rl,
. G-~
tluows to pulh the lead to 47mao Gift f740)38J!.8972
for Fllall Y•r ending feed to Williams. Mik.e' Dun.- games wheri bOth teams are in · ,
$6~$8
40,
.
~
~
Jun• ·. 30, 1001 1nd
Flwrrs&amp;
Ieavy
had
l8,points,
giling
3'
the
top
10~,
·
.
·
·,
,
:
·
•
,
5
.
·
Grundy co11nte~d with a
they ... •••lllllle lei
ViiXlEil\BID
pub11a lnapectlon et 'of-7 tiom 3-point range.
.It may .oniY,·.be·. th'e end of . '. . '· •
.
, shot inside for the Wolfpack,
FuiiiPart Time the ofllea · of lhl
.
Duke
broke
the
same
open
November,
but
this
))ad
all
tht
.
·
,
er,
the
Woltpack
{5-1)
hit
After an Ohio State ~rnover,
RIChards Bfothtrt Fruit
lleuurer, lll1rk E.
OFFICE
Farm. APPLII Alltr
llhonemua, 320 1. with an 8-2 rut! late· in the · m~king:s ·,of a lau~-~eason. just 1-oi-15 'shots from the the Wolfj&gt;ack had four shots
MUCH MOll. 24 miiOI
ENVIRONMENT
......
IINII, Pomeroy, 6rst half, and Iowa nev~r matchup. Bdth teams P~. · field·with live turnovers,
on one trip down floor but
North of Galllpollo on CourlOhio.
1 888 974-.JOBS I11)D
''
..
recovered. The .Hawkeyes (4- with the mergy _~nd Intensity ' "lt y.oas a njght where die the seqwence ended with
I \ I: \ I "I •'I 'I I' . . ,
CUI the · lead to 73-61 on
of a tournament P!Jie, artd .. ball just wouldn't go down. for Brown hitting a finger-roll at
2)
,\ I \ I .., I • H 1,
110 Help Wlnted
Luke Recker's layup with when WiUiams appeared to · 11s:' Sendek said.. . .
the other end.
4:.2lto play, but they just did- get knocked over early in.the , Will Dudley added 12
While North Carolina State
'
·
. · points. ' :Uch Williams aQd remained stuck in an offensive
r;:::~;;;;;~;;:::;=:;;;;;;:;::::;;::::;;=::;;~~~;::;;;.;;::;;;:;,
Boban Savovic ea'c;h had eight rut :.... frequendy missing
I 10r1 Lowl&gt;oy, 24' L011g,
Beaver Tall and Rempe,
Part·lllllll paaitloo aYIIIJable 1o Melp
i:ebounds for Ohio State.
layups ·or follows within a fe)ll'
1991 GMC Jimmy, 4x4,
County, Houn: lOPM Friday tbroup
. Anthciny Grunjiy and ' feet of the basket - the
Good Condftton, $3000
each. f740)441 1!044
!lAM Monday; rrleepoverrequlred. ·
,., 1 1 .~,.;,.,·-"s.•.•,,.,.,,.,1
Hodge each scored U points Buckeyei made it 51-42 witl1
for
North Carolina State, · ·
4:'4 0·remaining on Dudley'
Dudes Include teaddna ('Ommnnlty aod
, .uur IIIJ,;IIt ~·li•M•I'.Ilrl:lioit"m_l ~.i~hl
1
After three ti,es· . and two · power move inside.
personal .sldlltt to an lndlvldu:al with
lead changes, Ohio State led
Darby and Brown the~

w.

pounds - ·

pm
Vacandel now.
Beautiful River View Ideal Fumlottld Apt 3

I

FOR

•

mercial storefronts available tor leaN. Beatlea

walla. thermal pane win· 7 ·

Newty conaiNCted, tingle Single Parenl ~· Program .
story 1600 sq. foot home. Easy . Financl'liJ Available .

NoFeeUnljlsaWeWinl
1-888·562-33&lt;15

lletabolllm

no polo, f740)992·2ta7.
Rd R'::!: Dromatlc Rooulla. 100% ,
33140 ~ :...,:
,
"
Nlt\rral, Dr. Recommended.
Nice 28xt!O Double Wide 2br. Mobile Homo within land, Ohio, 740-742-7403, 'Aile about FREE Bamplo' :
181tlng on rented 101 In City Umlts o1 Pclm Pioao· ApartmontCom,
home and ..lor f740)441·19112
·

Nitro. (304)755·588P

i

-:·-==.:_:c::c,.:=::-

shop &amp; mc:Mal. CaU 7o40- Amazing

FOR IV.l"fl

·

Need Flnanctal Help? Alsk rrom S·Spn'), M·F, or
free opportunity, look~ fur· (740 )446•3248 after Spm.

EnoouraQ1n9 Dorothy or Leave a mas· frenced

Workplaco DIWirllty,

Older

Bedroom

101 lnonMason.• $ 4,500 2 bedroom, naw carport, Opportunity.

:·e;.

part·tlmo, pick up appllca· . 24hra., 1~21H1383,
lion at location &amp; bring bar:I&lt;IA ,
AVON! All Aroaal To Buy or between
9:30am ,
WANIID
Sail. Shirley Speare, 3()4. tO.OOom, MondaY lhru Sal· . .
1b Do
675·1429.
u~ay.
.
' '
Be Your Own boool
Goorgao Por1Bblo Sawmill,
Never 9 to 5 Again
Part time Churoh Secrelary donHlfiul your logo to the
Earn Up To
Position. Good People Skills mllljuot Cllli304-675-11157,
$500-$8000/mo
and Computer Expertise
PT/FT
Needed. 20 Htl. (7~}446·
1-8()0.;610..0705
7925
All of your home repairs, ad·
www.CaahNowAndForever. P
I
dltlons &amp; remodeling 24hr
1 r 1 • 1
com
.
m e 8I'YNif080CY &amp;ervle8, senior
- - - - - ' - -- - houeekeeperflaundry staff citizens &lt;llscounl. 22yra.
O...erbrook Center it cur· needed lor 100 bed sWittd exp (304)576-2065
rently accepting appllcat- nuralng far:lllty, lnlareated ' .
for a ful time 11-7 shift LPN applicants ehould apply to: Babyltttlng In my hOme, no
and part tlme 3--11 and 11·7 Aoc~aprlnga Rehatilllt8tion smoking environment, O,ya
. 811111 LPN, Ptoaoo contact Canter,' 36759 -.,rrnge and After School Hours,tK·
Krtstle Madden for more In- Road, ' Pomeroy, Ohio cellent References. Ph9n&amp;
formation or atop by our _.5769, E(lual Opponunlty (740)446·8578. Ask for

4

Nice

Solll'-;

(740)446-·

~11am-3pm.

WOOd1 3 Pc. •
118. :
~- North 4111 Ave, (Citolt, D - w111t inlmif,
4 room fumilhed aportmont, Aookcaao l'"dtloonl, bed ·
~It &amp; relt,..,..., 'I"' - -), Exc, ~

Opportun1t1oo.

'

to Tha Daly Sanllnol, PO Frtll repon. ettow you how thor, our Hnanclal lnBiilullon River vi w g ale In- 9 acreo, $18,000,
Box 129-18. Applicant may to receive unlimited gold provldas you with assla· ground ~
finished Patriot
and
1-8CJ0.218·7543
be required to submit to pr and liNer coins. Cll 1011 lance &amp; Information, Free baaement ' 2 ti;eplaces (740)379-925?
www.Money-Dreams.com lice check and drug teat. free, 1-877~957 1.0. consultation, call now at h
l (7
_
•
EEO
JM3392,
8n·304·3011 .
ugo r., 401992 2943
.
For Sale: eo acroo on lhe cations, (304)e75-497&amp;
- - - - - -- .
dead end of Hysell Run
McClure's Reataurant now Good oi' Bad Credii "Even
.ruANEDDOWNON
MoonvHo·- Road, excellent huhllng 2 Bedroom Apartment,
Housekeeper
Needed. hiring all 3 locations, ful or Bankruptcy, C&amp;ll Toll Free SOCIAL SECURITY /811?
~S l'fu:.;J ·property and building site Stove, Refrigerator, Water

(740)+46-2273

................
F
- • - •~..., ~-" 7'"
...... ~~~ \.OCitl ~
992·5064. Equal -ng
"""""-·~

VUH. ·

Needo moved
4411·2588. Equal l'ouolng ~II
:ffFirmlthyadd(304)n3-5482
.
covered patio, w/d hookup, CMaty'. F mil
Llvt
quick, Faat

Homoworkoro NHdtd Call Todayl740-446-4367,
EIMCES
Located. 10 mlnutos trom 13041755-7191 ' ·
$635 Weekly Processing
1-800-214-CM52,
.
opr,Hoepltal, 20 min~tes
Mall Eaayl No Expon·
~~·90-05·12748.
Flint Financial has been rom easant Vrllley H&lt;iilpi·
BuiiNFl;s
_enc8 Needed. Cal 1-~176
Pt;O&gt;Jidlng small business tal, on SA 180 on a private
AND BI..JnJxNcs
800-652·8726 Ext 2070,
~ 1 tolna tor 13 yea111. Now we 1·112 acre lot. 3 bedroom,
24Hrs
•
• apeclaHze In personal, car &amp; 2·112 baths, big kitchen
•
·
.
&lt;lebt - consolidation. We w/oak cabinets, DR , LA 4,800 sq. foOt Commerdal
Malntena'nce position In S.. Coltectabi•"HS Years and guarantee quality &amp;eiVice wJgas log fireplaCe, central Building with. 10 to 200
nlor apartment building, 51111 Cookwag• Haidback from a trusted name. Call air, laundry room, front acres. ~lo Gr•nde, Qhlo.
Part·tlrrie politlon wtlh du; Cookbook- 900 Old and new Flint Financial SeMces, ap- porch &amp; 2·112 car garage. Owner financing available.
tlet Including byt not Umlted recipes. Donalion: $20.00 + pllcatlons
hotune
11· Immediate posstlllon. "P- Call 740 45- 5747
to ·apartrrier\t pr-atlon, pooiage, Chellar Cou•- 668)368.QI!95
praJoed at St25,500, Make
L01s &amp;
painting, minor rapolr and houtt AoOloratlon, Call
· offer, Call 17401446-4 514
A()II&amp;GE

1-1!01-264-51125
- -'-==.:,;;=-AttentiOn!
preventative
2nd job up to
$25.·$75./hr. PI·Ft.

r

· 1158

· 1
•
•
m, 3pm. 1pm, 11pm- Glilllpolll ear- ean-vlam. caR 740-992·5023.
(Careers Clole To Home)

.00

~~ In""'!~, Houro: Monday lhru

Nice 2 br apt.,lg roomo.\
tully aqulpod kit, conlral
Houoa for Rent: 3 BR, 1 heatln•' cooling. washer/
Bath S500/ ,_, ~- Ulll
"'
itietlncJDopooll,(f40)24i
dryer-.p304-882-2523

Park Trailer 12x60

I

5p

5658·

r

dowl, P"C8d 10 sale: Call
Tlv
bod (304)675·3669 aok lor
·
ee
room, Rosemary
two balhl, one-car garage,
·
family room with fireplace,
OAKWOOD HOMES
Your Cholcell Choose lrcm:
sun room, New central heat·
SUPI!R CINTER
2 w1c COL training, diesel Moaregor &amp; Aaaaclatn lng &amp; ale system. One ml- Over .a homes to ch~
mechanic training or team Trytr:lg to buy a homa and nute off Route 7, but still pri- rrom. Drive a Hnle save a
how 10 operate bulldozoll, bor*s are rejee,Ung you due vato. (740)965-3961
1011 oakwood Homoa·ot
For Sale trade or rent. Com- Nitro. (304)755-5665
2353.
mortgagea, personal and fortable 2 otory, 3br., 2 1/2
REDUCED
small buslneu lOanS with bath home beside commun- All Double Wide Dlaplaya
1141
.BUIINiliS
good or bad credll, Approval lty buMdlng on At 33 In muOl go. Only $995 down,
'l'lwNING . wll~ln 46 hrs. (8116)862· Ha•lord, wv (J04)675· Only 111 Oakwood l'omoa ol

now paying minimum wage,
new shltla· 78 m-3pm 7..,_ ·

Gracious Hvlng, 1 and 2

Slore betow Holidey Inn •
Kanauga. We S.U grave

bedfoom apartmenls at VI· monuments

Rolnt Pleasant area. 2x6 ant (304)675-2359 call after rentals.

.

Hotz,

1.e88·208.()817

- -- - - --

.

Help wanted caring for the

.

Elegant 2
•-···~ . ·oroy no pais f740)992-

financing program avalable. Needed, 3Q4.738-7295. .
Only
Homos

IPIMP------, Needed Chevron/ Little
lfi!Lp WANJID
Jo!ma ; 16 located In Wll·
.._______.. ~~~ri ~ 3pmlnPoroon. g~:i"h~DA~~ ~~~'= ~n~~. ~~~

I

11;1 Bath, Fully Carpeted, f740)446-7444 t-ane'
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Po- 91112. F,.. EllimatM, euy~ .
tlo, Sta• $385/Mo. No P«&lt;. llrtonclng, 111 c1oyo u
Leue Ptt. Slcurtty Deposit cash. VtuJ Muter c.n:t ...
Required, Days: 740-446· on..- 0. - .... 3481; Evonlnge: 740-387· .
J•
0502,740-446-0101,
Now and U- FumHuno

(740)446-3845
WOLfF T~ BIDI
TO L.oAN
rent? govemment BEAUTIFUL
low Monthly lrw8otmonia
~
888·5111Hl167
backed loans from $490
APART·
l'ome DeiNoty
3 bedroom In Mlddllport
_ , (740)448-3093
MEIIT8 AT IIUDGET PRIFREE Colo&lt; catalog '
CREDIT PROBlEMS, Hav- call Tom Anderson after Final Days, NllionlYJdo ·In·
,
CE8 AT JACKSON Ell- Call Today t-eoo-71J.&lt;l1511 ,
lng Financial problema? Is 5pm,~7401992·3348
venlory
Reduction I
MoBiu: lloMfs TAlES, 52 Westwood Drlvo
- .f'4)..oom
Bed crodll, no credtt, or
·
(304)736-3409
n-1rom $297 to 1383, Walk 10

"'!

:U

I

Nice 2 BR Apt., Just put
or 3 bedroom Hollar Hoopltal, (740)441· '
..
.,
-· ·.· ~~or 01 - ·

I3(304)675·5332
Bedroom on Route 2
at Fleetwood
, ot ProctorviRo, Toll Free 1· Why

MoNEY

VJrglnill, 304-773·5785 Or ICIIe baled on experilnoe;
304-n:J-5447.
· Full banott1l aftar 3 ,_,1
W.
Mlnlmu"m of 2 good rereren: America's food banks for PREMIER C~EDIT AE·
ANim
ceo that will be vorllled, Ap- tha holiday ~ and wo SOURCES, All
flnan·
1 ply In poriOn or send ,.. , _ 10 hardworldng, com· clal holp you need , 1~·
TO 1kJY
o1 Weal Vir paaslonate Individuals 10 257-5445, Spociallzlng In,
1~ ENE
• join our team. Sta"'ng pay paraonal, conootMia11on,
1Millwood
5 Jack Bu•l
1"G T;: g:" 18'·p~'
Is $7.00 por hour. 'We dO bu~noss, mortgagoa, flUID.
0
0
08•
•
•
· •'
'
' good 'NOrk•. can 1-888·237·
.
uta,
Diamonds,
Gold Aftn. Human RHOUroet.
5342 8K1. 2232 for more in· LOANS! LOAr,tll loANS!
Rings,
U.S. Currency,. Full and Part nme Help formation.
Problem Paying Bills? In
M.T.S, Coin Shop, 151 Sec· Needed at Cltgol Linlo
Debt? Good, Bad, or no
ond Avenue, GaUipolla, 740- Johns 14 located In Cenl• Work From Home. Free cradh. Bankruptcy Wei·
448-2842.
.
.
Boo+&lt;let. 1-80C)o653.7293.
come. Call Toll- ,,... 1·
~ry8a"PP~f i1 Person. Mono
888-.4ge..948&amp;,
I \l l'll •' \ I I \ I

r

~~~.~-:. 5 ~::~~m::;, Yn~~~r?i?P'~~
1709,

appliances and ale, upotalra needed. (J04)755·556tl
completely
renovated, Umhed Otter.
$37 500 (740)992-4486
•
Anumablo
aJJaW-loona·
Call I Many
~.
6 room house on 2 acres o1 typal ay ~.
"';ground, for more lnlo. call lalla, 17401 44 6 35113·
(740)247-3!25
Big 16' - · 3 bedroom 2
, bath, oavo S5 155 cloliYO&lt;td
618 Maln,S-1, PI, Pl. &amp;ootupon;...'iollncludCt:wr;:lala~ Refurbished. 2 lng eldrting &amp; fibero'ua
IIOry, 2 Full Bath. 3 Bad- - · Coloo Mobllo rooms. Largo Kitchen, U.S. 1!0 Eut, Alhona, Oh,
Largo Utility Room, LRI DR/ 740-592·1972.
.
Family Am, Now Carpet
throughout, FIA &amp; NC, End of the model year ilalll
S11l,900, (740)+46-9585 or All 2001 mull go, to make
(740)448-2205"' (740)446· room lor 2002. Spoctallow

work, OICOI·
light portiOn,
.,.__ vacation Apply at
Christian's coOatrucuon,
Inc, 1403 Eutem A..Oue,
Gallipolis, (740)448-45! 4
bankruptcy lha root of y~r 122 Klneon Drive. Newly reWo a r o - hanl to IIH problems? Call us today. modilled 3-4
tun

qulrad. Lnca1
lent pay for

Thr&gt;•-• Al&gt;fll-l

:::d

riO ,

r

r· I

C
'='=
It
I

paired. Small Engine Re·
FAIO Pick-Up and Dolivery Avlllabla, Ovor 20 _ _ . , _
yoero ~ICO. CaH Mlko
~-Avo,
~~-·
st.
pony bonolho Including
f740)+46-7804
-,;:."'!!;:::o''lo
1
~
, -·~
hoa1lh ......,... vocation
-··
- - - - - - - - poraonal dayo and 401K
Top To Boltom Cleaners, '""=.;,~or bedroom exceilll11 condl· f740)992-0175,
Would like to hlwo oman plan Wo oro ,irt ota ,_ Ohio Vlll1oy PIJiillshlng eo., prot-: and alfordal:a~ll Ka..... (740~ 2 BR In Gatllpollo.
, ilhor1 hrllr houoa dOg that Ia ,.,.,;..._ lhlt oilers OiCCOI· 825 Thlni Ave, Gatllpoi{J, ble, homos, olflces, ftlntals,
No Pets, .(740)379-2AOO
already house trained. ;;~t"";i:e.r advancement Ohio ..a5631 .
• consf!'UC'JOn and remodeUng Tl'tli ,,.... $1 wVI not
111 lime ~ GoVem·
P1oooo call (304)675-3264 oppor1 nl1lo8 For iilat iow
cleaning. (7401992·1391 or
mont toano· buy loons &amp; 2 BR houle, Jar:i!8on P1ko
:.__,"~-tlon· ~a..:__ - : Pomeroy Pootal posi- f740)992·2979
Olhw-r••tsfor_,
1 17••,.~...., Ook In llodnoy, f740j245-1418
~-•
-u
- - Ilona. Clerlialcarrior11oo•·
--1101
0 ,=;;;-~ 1 • 2 BR, Cklle to lown. $42151
GIVFAWAY
leHer telling ua why you are ers. NQ_,. required, Bene- TRI.COUNTY CONSTRueuhl llmnOI . . Iew. Our
.......,.., ....,,
..
~------·· the panoon we a'" looking 11ts. For aum aa1ruy and TION.
New
. . hoNIIy
. 28idl0 3 Or 4 Bedroom: On· month, Dapoatt Raquked.
AdonltNe Beagle Ml Pu :or~~= ~ ~: t8stlng lnfo,.,;.alion call, Construction/Remodeling.
lnfolnwcl tMt •••
IY $345.00 Per MOnth {740~1..01~
8
~ , _ a good ':...: &amp;roc'::;.. at~ V•~ Pub- (830) 393-3032 '"· 7151 'Siding, 'Aoollng, 'OrywaH, doolllnp od\-ln 8.119% FIIC8d lnlarost RaJa, 3 Bedroom Houoo, $5501
,....., Lovable!
·
_,
llom-8pm7doyo
Ect... -•:uu::.:
J04·,674-48231304·
thto · - - • • . .
1-888-9283428
'
Very
Call- fishing Co., 825 Third Ave.,
•7
•
month
plus
dlpollt.
""~
•• 'ebhon.n.....
17 .. ..,.\._
..,....
(304)675-7278
Ganipolls, Olilo 45631.
Pe•·tlrno dleiary aida.-.
:i BR, 1112 bath plus.....,_ ,.-,..7-7::--:-:c-c---:-:-:-- --::-:=:-::::=:-:==- eel lor 100 bed llklled nurs- Wll Haul /Wiay, Clean OUt,
-lly-·
or and dryer, All Eloctrlc,
Badroorr), 5 miles 1rnm
Free kitten to good lndool
DATA ENTRY FTIPT.
lng lar:lllty. lnt- appll· Clean Up or Move Almost
. Cantra1 Air and heat. Prlt:o, 3Gall
Cal1
home, 1 gray, 1 gray/white, No Exportenc:e , _
earn. lhould apply to: Roel&lt;· Anything, Taklfllj_C-gnu-· 1 $8000, Will Negotl.ate, (740pol:
aftor 5pm.
1 calico, (740)992-1171).
Training , _1 ' opr1ng1 Can- ....,., Call (740)448-7804
"""""'
(740)+46-!667
,,.
124 5378
'
~ BIHing. Up to $1101(, tor, 36758 Rocl&lt;lp&lt;i!)gl
· RIR S.W:
Buy lftlm $18V/mo,
l,_______

the
, ...
10 . . ,...,.. ,.., ........... ol1-. •lNI

Sewage, Trash, Guerantaedl We Sell New J
15 Court Street. 2 Bed- Water
rooms 1 112 baths Kltchon $350/Mo, 740 448 00011,
Maytag ~
New 2002 '4 wkl4 only with aio.o and rofi;gor.tor
CllyUaylag, 7-TIIIS. •
$799 - . &amp; S155,:181mo, 011 Stroot Parldng Clolo ,0 Rlwlr Bend P1oce now ac,
Call Nikki, f740)386-71171 . Schools and Downtown Ofl)llng lti&gt;PiiCIIIoo• for 1 br, For 8ale: Rocooldl1iotlld ;
,
Area $5951 month pful c»- Hud Sl~ldzt Apl. for the wutww. dfylfl lnd reMgNow Double Wldo. $195 poo1j and Raforenco No -rly &amp; diNbled, EOH, orators.
Per Month! 3 Bedrwn, 2 Pets f740)4&gt;!8-&lt;482II ·
(304)1182-3121
.,.. 3407 ~ AveupBalh.t I.~-~ &amp; Sot·
.
•ara •ownhouaa •··•· ,.,.,i304)67&amp;&gt;7388.
~·~•
"
"
..,..
2 tlldi'"""• ~-· $300 mania,
.
Vary Spacious, 2 Calpot, 202 Clar1&lt;
1991 Mansion 14x70, 3 por month, .,..,., dopolil, Bedr001••, 2 Ftoora, CA, 1 Cliopoi - . Ponao: Oltlo 1
7..0..385-7871 .

oubjlcllollo-..

o

cc.n..r••

111'111......._
~~!l~il''~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.,.....,ln ......
..,........_

... ..

o

!:, ;:-:.

Private Party Ads Under $100

•

•

onrito,-....., ...;.

20 words 7 Days • Each Item Prlc.ed
• No Commerdal Ads
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit J Per Person
Mall To: Ohio Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

... Con

• u ............. ,

All _ , - Olhwllroll4

All Ua10J ~ _,.,.
and Fon:a:t AJr Heatara Re--

6

oraMinla •of•...,atl

Now

-.v

t

I

r

4
.p.rllii
be ,_.,.. . .
Ji:ir...,..
M..,.
.., . . ....,.
• . .U..
, U. oo.t af . . .,...oocuplld
.. .,., .....

·
t
1

We haw a parNirrie posi- rooms, d!ywal, tion ope11 al our Sentinel of· painting, trim doorw, win-11co In Pomeroy. This posi- dowo: FIN Eatlmatos.
lion raquirtll- and (304)675-7738

lvallld

r

~

,..,_lng, roofing, bath

OFRCE POIITKIII

Why
Oh6o single&amp; tonight, can toll tation ssatt to better llt\le
kee 1-800-786-2623 ekl ourc:ustomors. WaoreiOOk11121 .
ing for 1 lhlt hu
~energy - · 11811· mollANNouNalMF.Nrs
and enjoys -wng
"
with people. Must have de--

r

THbun1 I A I " c'

limll Wlgwilllw, E~

•

c=.-,::,:J:'.::

675-5234

S

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

~Otlto....,Jh,

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
DescrJptlon • Include A Prtce • Avoid Ab.brevlatlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

good,

t'
,... w,..

Or Fax To

Thursday rar Sundays

1
- - - 74,701 S2t!OO 080 'H. - . • ~
il:
f740)21U 1111
~.!::'..:::Uc.:
7.;..Pt..O.::

{304) 675-1333

8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

'

~ ,.., , , ,..., • • litn EllColi dllllil 1, -*'d LenaiJ'I C.. 'Ain,

....,., FIN Elflm'l . I 181115 Pont1oo 0ran11 Ml

l\egister

Publication •
Sunday Display: 1:00

MAC CHAM.PI .Q NS .H I.P

llttrqula,

AJIII
11110
.,__,
1'011
SAUl-

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS. YOUR AD NOW

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

...

$75,

In one week With us

Monday thru Friday

=

good

c.luo-011

Display Ads

. The~ lenllnll• liege A 7

RT. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS
Buy any large
&amp; get secnd at 1/2'price

992·9200
'

. 7 PIZZA EXPRESS

Drivers needed
Apply in pe~n
after 4 p.m.
The
Legion 602

will be having a
Pork Chop Dinner

Dec. 2.·11:00
The

Cost$6.00
Is welcome.

c

1*

County o1 · 1111111 anti North 2 dag,....

oo• .

=;. ~~o:-l'll .

Stile of Ohio: llln1 00" E11t, n.DO fHI Uo00027;000

Lot No, 212 In 1111 V.I. 110111 lila bit liM of

ftum ...._
~ -...

·,
',

·, .
, ..
)a5;0n lJrandeberry were the Alexander nominees,
Below is a complete 'Iri-Valley Conference Ohio Division

Horton'• Addllloll to 'thti Hid 20 loot ellew
.
Ylll...
of to tho polnt · ol lllld•IIIDft, 01t 41168
,
Middleport. tktbjloiiO l!olllnntng, con1111nlng , 1111d
l'reml••• ' rost~_r : ,
1ll llgal 11111111n.. 0.10~ acrea, mtlftl or Loe~ta4 · at 11:1 ., ·
2001 AIJ.'M-VIIIey ConfeNnct football team
1nd
loaa, axcapt1n1 Ill . Qen.ntl ·: Hartlntar·'
O!Jio DiviSion
IXCIPl'liiO and logll 81HII1ollll 1nd ·Hrtcw~tY, .Milldttport,
Firat THm:
raurvlng
unto ~ght of way. ••aJh,ga OH 417ti1
.
WELL$TON-BiadYoung,12, TBILB; Thomas Mayes, 11,
1 ,.ntots .._helreand .,. liken :from t._ 1~141 Pratnll..
aaolgna 'foi'IVIr, the 11
Melgl ClonuntlyctTulllll 'Jl 11 r I!! U . . - at LBJF8; M.tt Holltngshaad, 12, G; Curtis Deck, 12, CILB; Rodney
follewlng portion of IP 1 •
...,000-anti t11tm01
tile above dlaoriHtl eurvey on Oc-· ~. '"Mid for IMt lllln. . t..yne, 12, DE; Kellh Manring, 12, DT; Lance Phllllps, 9, LB,
roporty, to , wit: ttt• by Robert ft. two·thlrdt of ·thll , NEL.ONYILLE·YOitK -Rooky Harkless,12, GJDE; Chase
..---~ In tho Ylll- EIIOn, Ohio P.l. No. -nt. .
Edloll 12 TBIOB J·•- .. ~-de 11 Q8 •-'·m "an Dyke 11
.of iild'di_.t, Coumy 7003,
'
.TIRIIII {)#
~'
otllatgo and Btlte of Trttctdt · . .
10% ·Of lflp.ratatd FEIIL8; BlalieKIJne,11, WRJLB, ,
.
Ohio 1 nd being In 2G Foot Wide Strip: vttltlulown, nottillncllr ·, BELPRE "":'Guy Earley, H. WRJLB; Jeremiah Reams, 12, TB/FS;
J!~ ·:f.;::.'[~~~-~ NIClc Hammon, 12, FB/LB;
Janes, 12, OTIDT.
s.cu'on· 21, Town t
North,
ltsnf11113
WMI
..,...
•,..~:"•
,
.
,
_
·
••eiQ
·
S
"'-·-h
TBILB·
"Yarian, 12 ,,,
,., "',yson Lee,
of
the
Ohio of Melga and ..... of lharlff of 11a1g1 , "'
-Jeremy"""" , 11,
, J....
Complny'e Purch111 Ohio, Inti being I Pill C-,, 0H · .
.· , 18, 'J'8/L8.
and baing the ·w1111 of llroldWIY Street u l.all,_..oa I. Lindon
VINTON COUNTY - Sha
. ... H ......., 12 R"'-s· 11 WI
It 12
st.a.tftetofLotltlof recordld1nthtillaltll
u..-,., • "'!I, m nne,
tho v.l . Horton County Pill lteconfe,
tot fltitlntllt . . GIOl
.
. Addition 10 the Vlllllll ~"~~on 28• r;~~ 171 , 8. Tlllrd ltrtllt~
ALEXANDER~ Btl!~ Bean, 11, tEJOE; Jason Brandeberry,10,
of ' Middleport 1nd 0 • rltlflll
lu.._ too
...,...,..
bolng cteaortbed •• of
th,•
Ohlo Cotuni-,Ohlool3215 r ... o,n; . .
,
,
lollowa: llaglnnlng 1t CtHrtpln)' • Purchelil (1141 a.-7aU, Ext.
Oltwn•lva Molt Yaluablt Playw- Brad Yaung, Wellalon
. an Iron pin HI lllhl lndfolbol lne.
ato
·
·
·Dt*IIIYe.Moet Valuable PlaY*!'-. Thomas Mayas, Wellston
Northwaat corner of 11 , owe.
nn...
,
uld Lot aa, Nld Iron 1t the Nor haul , .
C.Oh of 1M YHr- pave l&lt;uc;as, Wellston ·
the

IM...

G:

.,LI,

::'::t.!..:

t;r"':-.,!

' '

·.

=•I.,,., .

;

-

' ' ; """ •·

' '

Jt,.mv

. ,.

,. ,

�Wednetdly, Nov. 28, 2001

Pomeroy, llldcllport, Ohio

Page A a ·The 0.11y Sentinel

HBA Cro ..word Pu••••

PUBLIC
NOTICES

w._,

211-

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead In Service"
35537 SL RL 7 North • Pomeroy, Oh 45710

740-985-3831
12% Economy Stock Feld .......... $8.501100
12% Equine 12
(Formerly We1tem Pride) ........... $5.001511
21 '4 Hunttra Pride Dog Food ....... $6.75150
S-' Lick Deer Blocks ..................... $8.75

Whole Com .................................. $5.251100
CrKked Com ...............................$6.251100

Cellular

o..-.
IMif """
and 111lgn1
11
riCIUdld In Volume

m

211, ' •
of 11oo
Deed, "Record• ot
...... c-ry, Ohio,
tho rtvht of lng-•
end
to the
. . , . . ; : tedonthl
acre of real
eatato dllarlbod
herein. lubJt ct to ell
legal hlthwayo and
JlltWita of IIC D'idRoferlnCo Oood: •
Volume 311, pogo
213, Molt• County
Doed
Recorda.

e,,..,

Owner~

_c,.,..,-.

Name:

o-ld Martin

Property Addrau:
308 Wotqllll Stroot,

...

Pomoroy, Ohio-

Pormanont Parcel
Number; 11-00412,
11"00413, te-ao434 '

, ,.

APPRAISED A'r.
111,000.00
TI!RMS OF lALII:
Cull. Clnnot be IOid
for 1111 then 2/3rdl
of tho opprelaed
vatuo . ,1,000.00
-ondlyotulo,
caeh or certified
cheak, l!alanoe on

6:30 '
~
top!)ne

(740) 949-1521

Thulldayl
Plogreu!ve
Coverall on
Sundaya

· Fllllllldng &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash Avllibible
LlceDOed, IIIIRI.-..1 • Fn:e Estimates .

'

_...._.

CBILD '
CIUlE
SERVICE"'

BISSELL
BUILDeRS INC,

I.OCCIIICIIn Pet iiefOV.
FoJ mote
r , ca1

II*""

(7&lt;10) 992-6127 .

'229.00*

740-992·7599
(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

• FREE INSTALLATION
• FREE IN HOME FSI'IMATE
• FULLY WEWED
• 50 YEAR WARRANTY

P.O. lox 118, MDI
llawnnalld..
1Winlburg, OK 44017
(330) 4H-4201

AU Malill'lndor

:. Equlpnttnt hrts
JladiH'!' Aatborilod

.

QUALI'Il,WIND()W SYS'rEMSI
992-4~,
.

c-·m Parts .

Dillen
11K11111. Itt. 1 Soulh

1-800-291-5600

Of_,,

, , VIIIIOut5bawroataOIISIIteRooto3J
6 Miles North

Ohio, At C..l)o Rood 11

• No u . , l e n o r C o - VIa/MMMI'&lt;Ird

liSUMiy
Blois Open 4:31

fllty 111m dirt

AdvertiSe

6:311

l'rllfessiUt top In

In this

New Hom", Room A~ltloni,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall
&amp;More

FREE.ESTIMATESI

740-742-3411

1llnleys
P1agressh.e .

space
for $50
per

.,n,.t ~,t......t • Mason, WV CoueraiiM Sulldays
n from 111e bridge)

Tel: (304) 773-5800
Hours: Sun- Tbur llam • 10 pm
rrt &amp; Sat u 11111 - llpm

month
MANLEVS
SELF STORAGE

9711edst.
middleport, OH
(10'110' 610'112f)

992-6635

:~~
I
I

WIICH'4.11
I

&amp;;"
t
1
I

5-8 y\l ~ '2.99
9-12yfl -'3.99
I

'

5-8 yrs ~ '3.99
9-12 yrs ~'4.99

• Room AddfUonl &amp;

-ling
•NiwGI,.._
• EIKitlc:ll a Plumbing
• Rooftnga Gutt.a

• Vlnrl Siding a PlllnUng
• Pttto and Porch O.Cb
Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

-.......

992·62t5.

Tonia Re1biir

Licensed Mll&amp;saga

Therapist

740·892-1705
213 N. 2nd Ave. ·
Mldclapo~,

OH 45760

Como In and aok
-utopec:llll
Gift CertlflCIIII
Avtlloblo

• MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Roc ky R Hupp Aqcnl
Rox I H9
Middleport Ol11o 4S 760

•.

Local 843-5284
Mr,dicare Supplement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;
Dental, Retirement,
Pension &amp; 401K Rollovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

...

• Fpolen, WaDs, Slop&amp; •
. Flat Work,
·
ReplaCtmeats, • W1lka
•nd.Drlvn • Stencil

Cme Free Eodmales
.ServlosOIIIo and W.V.
WVIG317n

E\le:~ ecffi Il-l

"WWJ~ WIIO~ PO~

Stop l Compen1
FREE ES'I'IMATES

740-992·1871
,....,.

J6D

BUIII.able to rem:
for parties ··
BlsvDJ. •

,.

~

~

THE. MA.TH
TEST .

IIUIICI!
21 "VVwo Il-l"
271!11Tpod

w-. Nwttt. r.....t

.....
,_

-~
11/l&lt;l

218hui••
atT-111

,rPEANUTS

,;

''

I KNOW THE ANSWER,

MIJ.AM .. I JUST CAN'T

TlliNK .. BUT I KNOW .THE

ANSWER .. I KNOW IT...

..

.

'·

~~
High&amp; Dry

CUT6
WRHPPED

HowardL.

·Self-Storage

maplewood Like

Wrltesel

33795 Hiklnd Rd.
, Pomeroy, Ohio ·

Racine, Ohio

BUFFET ro GO (Dinner- '8.111

Fret Etllmalft
'

East Slate Street Phone (740)593-667
Athens, Ohio ·
·

949-1405
591·5011
VI

Advertise · our
business
•
· on ·:t 1s '-age
for one month for as
5
low as 25.
992·2155
•

..

....

,,~ -

DEER

740~992-5232
1111211 mo.

St. 81.124

._

&lt;

'

. ·-.

Deer Shop
'Yilt till 'Ill!,~~~~ 'IJR' .
SI325,..,Lff

742·2076

3 Cl 77m
4llll I
I GMoln
• Till
7 Noni'l*'l
-""'

IWIIWG.

l=org.
.·~

• Prlatlo
• Had I IIIII
40 Band

av.........

M*

.....

21 Oub:M

. •

--

•

I

n

st-

n

••

•

tc a ...

aI I ••
Ml t 1'1

t

IIIII

40 IDI lilltW

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lui• c.rnpo.

from""'".......,_.~.!!!-­
.

Cellbrtly Clptfer_ CIJ;l U.,. . . ClfMIIId
pooplo, fllllllld ...... Eldl-ln .......

1odiYO ....: J llqUIIo K
TWA I,

'EDCDIH
I!IOVPCI,

T W C C,

F0 I A H

I 0 A 0 IS.'

FIIHS

POll

RSVXCIH

BVXIIIIH

RNDIOAM.,IS

IAFWIA

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'A plano Ia I plano lo I ptano.• GarJrudtt Slelnway (Jack F........,)

game,

I

West cashed two ~~:::;~~==~___,
top hearts, East play- ~
S Y DA N
ing high-low to show J.,.-his doubleton . Next, L-L..-L..-.L.-.L.---J.
West took the club
-

I WEDNESDAY

IT'S RIGHT ON THE TIP
OF M'&lt; TON6UE ..

CAN

ace, but East signaled
diScouragement w1th
the two. So, West
continued with a low
heart, and East, bless
hu cotton socks,
ruffed with the vital
spade seven, effecting
~==~ an uppercut. South
overruffed with the
L;iie;:::!:~_j queen, but eventually
•
lost a trump trick.
(Yes, if West leads the
heart queen at trick
four, East should still
ruff)
Help to make the
free bid an extinct
spectes.

VOU MAKE IT
OVT FROM THERE?

I.G EI. R I'.A NIt. .,

I

1:::;'•

"You were on the phone for so
long and didn't sav a thing" the mom·
said. The llien girl replied, "Well
my boyfriend and I aren't-- -----.

I1-"""1'17.-"'le;-T,-T,--r--iI0
T A p 0

_

E

Complete the

_

ch~.Kkle

quoted

by filling In the missing words
L-..1..-L-..1..-.L--L....j you develop from step No. 3 below.

8

.

1

P~IN T NUMBERED

*==::=*==::=*==::=*==*::::::
1 1 1

~~lE;T;TE~R*S~I~N:;:S~O~U~A=R=E=S

0
UNSCRAMBlE FOR
--A~N..:.S;;;W
~ER;_----'·-•·- • ·-.1-....1.-.1---'-.l.....,j

NOVEMBER 28 I

SCRAM-I.m ANSWERS
Asthma- Outdo· Quota· Notify- THAT'S NOT
. "Say this line ,• the officertold a suspected felon . When
the felon stepped forward he said instead !'THAT'S NOT
what I said!"
'

Thu....Uy, Nov. 29, 2001

U/1 tin nMIIt deer

VOiler's

2 . . . ..,

......
..,.., ..

'•

949-2734
summer $MISIIf/e

11011111-

32~

:1211111io
23KIItNn

.--..,.."""T,..;_rl--l
1 1

I

a•~h :To GO lLU._ •• '4.111

DOWN

I

~1!1!!1

Call for Products

or OpportunitY
Jeanie H9well
740-992-'7036

a,...,.,_

..... 1- ar: ., ...
- .,..
·=.
.27=.,... ·-···11
__.,
.,.,....,

0

rr:o.

..'

101111Pad...
"'
.........
12
11 Clllao,...
.,...
11 ._._
1tl' ...
• .....
:10 lloop
c .....

11=1 I
......
-

bids in the overcaller's
KL AL 1 A
~~~;,~!~.)here, three_1-~~__,r~l2;-;..l..:..:....,l-1

CDIIIIMng I
742-2572
Kip -742-7709
11118 pd 1

II

23c..

}&gt;

:WAAT'5 RE.O.OY fOR
UP~

14£:

'f-&lt;rSe .....

HEY.
NOT' IIUC.H.
GUYS! .lUST GETTING

Rutlllld, Old• .

IT-11 .IlL
, J7 1•

"'oc::Ir,llll my put~e.' -Jane Ace
North would jump to
three spades. This is a
pre-emptive· jump in· ' • •
competition, showing
four- card support and
f)
~
WOII
tJ;'lY.;t:;:;;::;:;::::======:;J under a limit raise. '::~::~' S@\tot}'~-~
With the strength for ---.,..-..;...~ 1•.... .., ClAY 1. POllAN
at least a limit raise -_,.-,..~.R.arrang• l.tters o 1 th•
~~(?:! r..~~~-4 10-plus support points
four tcramblod ~rda bo(11
- the responder cue- law to form lour simple -ell.

BIG NATE

BllliHRDS~

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

740-985-3948 •New Homes
CONCRETf/BlOCI(,IBRICK . • GaraiJIII

•Compllll
. Remodeling

$50 per

month.

Rooting ·Home
MaintenanCeGutters- Down
Spout

IOIEIT IISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

space.
. . for

.

11l:30am:-2:00pm 5:00pm-7:30pm
I
14 yrs &amp; under FREE •4 yrs &amp; under FREE

• Stump Grinding
· • Bucket Truck

Raclno, Ohio 4&amp;771

'Wow I ~\If. '1'00

Advertise Herbalife'
Independent
In this
Distributor
.
.
.

• Top • Removal • Trim

Theraw

1·121.1U
PUSTID
RIITII•E.
FIIIT IEIIEI

EM111llllrWII

Bryan Reeves

CONTRAOORS, INC.

24'120'

Glllei'Oifegles
IIIIIGO 2171

Sunset Home
Construction

P/B

A QJ
"Q J

tournament

Tree Service

Meigr Massage

G-O ASI&lt;

.JUGMAID!!

$210.11 PD JIIIT
IEIULIILY
$327.11 PEl JIIIT

! WVIOZ3477

(11128, 2001
(12 4; 11,2001

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

60ALIES.

,. ......... ale ••

NewH-•VIaJI
Sldlaa • New Gil......
• Jltploct....l
Wlodowt • Jlooni
Additions • Roolbtl

Attomoya for

Col1larllfOII

lf I

t

The themes for today's vignette, if that
is the word ( want,
came from a column
wriueu more- than a
decade ago. South
opens one spade.
West overcalls two
hearts. North responds two spades.
What does North's
bid promise? Would
it have made any difference if West had
passed? How did
West defeat four
spades?
In the old days -and in the original
column -- if the opponents were silent. a
single raise showed 69 support points -exactly as it does today. Dut if rightie
overcalled, the raise
was called a. "free
bid." Because partner
was going to get another turn, the responder's raise indicated 9-10 points. If
you do this, please
stop -- please! The
raise still shows 6-9
points. If you have
support and some
points, you must tell
partner that he isn't
fighting a one-handed
war. (In the modern

.,.........._ Ill Tttf 6AMf Of '-Iff,
:l KfEP MffTIII/6

u•n1

JIIMI

Yulner1Wt: ..._

•

_. ..

,,,:.:.,.

21 IlLio

omrr..souo.

a

I

AOJ41

9

•

Every Thunday
Sunday
Dools Open -'!30 .
EaJiy bln:lllfart

~)

lleMclng

f I I I I

~""-'.·A

•-c.wron~mcn

GNin,.,.. ,.,......,

f

.lltt •tt

•

81NG02171

FREE ESTIMATES

lerYiclng Colp....

II I

Pomeroy Eaalel

Mllga County, Ohio

...-.ul8d Ptalntlfl,
Cantua Flnlnoe

•

9tl

•• z•
....•• .._
,_

COMMIIOAl .. I!SIDitfiUL

,.....

t

.AI

....

conttmunlan of - ·
IIALPHE.
TRUSSELL, Shlrlfl

DENNIS REIMER CO.,
L.P.A.
llf: Donnla Rollnor
(Reg. 10031101) '

J II I

YA.KQ I I I

992-5479

o.ou

Current

•

eff Warner Ins,

(740) !192-:3194

NOW OPEN

...-

0

Nell•"""' •a-

1: I t I

•

lllnfor

11 Eau
111r II CUrly at
14
11M
'1"1
•••
" It ..

u--.. •

6 1: I II

bevlnnlne. Aloa, 1 IS del. w..t Ilona
CJO.CV-G38
ploco
ol land the South nne ol
betlnnlng 80 IHt Wetzgell SlrHI 1
CONSECOIANK,
Wnt
ol
tho d l 8 - ol 140. 10
INC.
Southllat comer ol 10 on Iron pln 11
Lot 410; thetlce tho true piece or
Pllllntllf
botlnnlng 24 112 botlnnlng lor tho
along the South line parcel
heroin
-v•
at uld lot; -thence Intended to Ill '
DONALD MARTIN, Itt North 10 !*IIIII · convoyed; thonco
·
aL
with tho Eeot line ol llavlnt tho South Hne
uld lot; thence ~ or Wltllpll StrHt,
24 1/2 IHI; thence South I clog. 311' EM!,
South 10 loet ta tho e dlotonco or :12.00
COURT OF COMMON piece ol beginning. IHI to on Iron pin;
PLEAS, MEIGS
II. Tho promlooo thence South II «&lt;eg,
COUNTY, OHIO
lntonded to bo, 11'WHtedla18nceol
convoyed horoln 17.17 to on Iran
In pursuance of on bllng tho promlooo pin ...t In o atone
Order of Silo to me d11dod by Mlchool woll; thence North I
dlroctod from uld Wltzgoll to Henry deg. 30' Welt a
Court In tho abovo Pll1rtck by dood ct.r.d dlefonce o1 at.OOontltlod action, I will November 17, 1877, · to"" Iran pln on 1111
••poao to aolo 1t and Docombor 31, Southllnool-goH
· public 1uctlon on the • 1878, end recorded In Street; thence N~
front atopo of tho Vol1. 47 at P11111 310 81 dog. East, liang
Melga County Court and Vol. 11 11 P.... the south una of
houao on Thuradey, 178 of the Rocanlo af Wetzgall Stroot, a
Doc:omber 27 , 2001 Daod1 of Molg1 . dlatance o111.00 at 10:30 A.M. of uld County, Ohio.
to the place of
dly, tho following
Alea, the following botlnnlna.
doacrlbld . .1H-: doacrlbed promlloo containing thlrtoon
SltUIIId In tho oHualld In tho City of 1-ndthl (0.0 U)
County of Molge, In Pomoroy,
llolga or on acra, mora ar
the Still or Ohio and County, Ohio and - ·
tho
VIllage of bounded
and
Tho
above
Pomoroy
and deocrlbod •• folloW*, - b o d 1'111bou.to-wit: Beginning on wea·aurvoyocl Aug,.l
and doocrlbod 11 tho Iouth oldo of 1, 1179 end w11
followo:
Wotzpll St,.. lithe "'"'"' out ol a largor
Being In 100 aero Narthweltl camor at perCII ot' real 1118te
· lot no. 303, In Town 2 Ellzaboth
men fully diiOII:od
and Range No. 13 Scholnllln'l
lot; In Volume 2711, Pago
beginning at Tho thence South ta tho 211, Mllga County
non-1 comer of a Nortlteaat comor of Roconla. H Ia
'lot formorly owned Clinton Slahl'o lot; Intended to convoy
by Michael Wltzglll; thence Wool to the all ol tho ,...,alnlng
thonco South I dot· Ealtl Una of Win. P. real ooteto to tho
Eaot 313 loet; thonCI Schaonllln'a lot'; grontell formorly
South IS dllg.
fhonce North to the owned by Oint
104 112 faot; thance llouthwwltlcomor of Menohlnl
and
North 5 deg. WHL John llogan'e lot; C-nta
313 fell; thence thonca 1!111 to tho Monohlnl
not
North 81 d'l. Eaat Southolot comor of -afore _,..,...
104 112 feet ta the otld llogan'o lot; ·by tho aald Gina
· 8Rd
ploCI af beginning, thonCI North to tho Menohlnl
being tho ume lot Northllll - o f - Cll1111nto llanchlnl
conYOyod to Henry ..ld Rogan•• lot and ar lhlgm)tar •
Scholaln by V.B. to uld WIIZIJIII heroin. Reflronooa:
Horton and s. w. SIIMI;- EAIII to Volume 271, Pago
Pomeroy by dood the
plaao
of
Volume 274,
. dated April 11th, botlnnlng. R""'•nce Page 113, Melga
3815. Reference Vol. 150, Pip 'Cilu nty
Oeod
Oaed: Volume 141, 244, Daed Recorda, Recorda.
Further
Pogo 524, Deed MolgoCounty,Ohlo.
Excepting
end
Recorda,
Molga
Excepting the Rllorvlng to tho
County, Ohio.
following dooorlbed,
Tho following - 1 - t e aftuatod In
deocrlbed fill oollto tho Stoto of Ohio, ·
altultod In tho County of Molga, '
County of Molgo, In VIllage of PamlfOy,
the City af Pomeroy, Townahlp Twa (2)
bounded
and North;
Ringe
dlocrlbad 11 followa: Thlrt11n (13) Will;
Being tho Eoot hill ol ond a pert or Lot 410;
Lot No. 410 and bolng
more
beginning oi tho pertlcutarly
Southeoat corner of dlllorlbod u fallawa:
Lot No. 410; thonco Commonclrig at tho
Will liang tho South Northeaat cornor at
Uno of oeld Lot 10 11ld Lot 410 . .11
feet: thenca North dollnoated In Plot
perollal wHh the Ealtl look 2, P111 17 of
Uno 10 IHI; thonCI tho Molga County
E11t 10 foot to the Pill Recorda; uld
E11t line ol aald lot; point alao bolng tho
thence South 10 South llno af Wtllgoll
to the place of 111'111. thorico South

44

......

• J.,

CAll! NUMBI!II

YOUNG'S

g::t
....

11 A

l\1l1lil" Sut in•,. in Sr•lliill"l"'"'·l
Yuur Ui:,:ht 1u 1\nu".lk•li,\·rt'd IU::Inlu \ ·uur ~

-=-

a-...

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

' .

'•

Much can be accomplished
in the year ahead in your diUsen profeS1ion by working
hand and glove with selectrd

' association~ . Collectively, productivity will increase, and so
will thl"' rewards .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23Dec. 21} -- You could push
the wrong button today if you
demomd thai a co- worker do a

job for which )'Ou' re re~pomi ­
ble. Not only will thi5 pll"'non
be th:•fiaut, he or sh"e could
walk out on vou. Sagittarius.
treat younclt to a birthJay

gilt. Send for your AstroGraph predic:aiom for the year
ahearl hy Ul&lt;"~ ilin~ S2 omd SASE
to Anro-G raph , c/o this
IH"W ~pa per , 1,.0. Uo.l 175K,
Mu.rray 'l-lill Slation, Nl!'w
York. NY IUI 5h. Uc sure to
Hate your Zodiac sign .
C APRI CO RN (D•c. 22·
Jan. 19) ·-Should you gel in volved in some type uf competitive social ac rivity today,
don't make winning all im portalll. Play for the ;lction
amlnot the title.

AQUIIRIUS (Jau. 20-Feb.
19) - - Unl~~ you're l"!lpe~.:ia lly
carefu l tod:~y, you COllld do

um1ething to 111o1ke yo urse lf
luok good .1t tlw cxpcme' of

' J.l ·

annther. It won' t maUC'r th:u
you dit.ln 't realize it; it stills
hurts.
PISCES (F•b. 2ti·M,dt 20)

-- Usually you're a very companionilt~ and dil'lomatic person, but tmlay these sp lendid
qualities might be replaced
with inscn!iitivity and sh&lt;"~rp
retorts. Get back in character
fa~t.
AttiE~ ;M,.· h 21-April19)
-- De alert for uncertainties,
and be protective of your flmmcial interesu today. Conditions tha t have an influence
on your m:Jtcrial sec urity are

umler attac k.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy
20)
If you m~ke things too
difficult to day over whi ch
friend~ yo u and yo ur mat o
~hmdd spend yo ur day with,
:11l yo u'll arrnmpli\ h is prom o ting a figh t. Ue more
yielding.
GEMINI (May 21 -Ju ne 211)
-- llc l'a rcful today wht&lt; n you ,1
' :mempt to fwd shortctlts to
perfOrm your u~ b ch:~ t you
don't imdvertem\y rn.1kc 5im ple jobs more com plex . Don't
-p

crt":Jtt" fm~trauon dcto11n.

CANCE il.. Oum· 2 1-Jlll y
22} - T rn.by, unlc\S your p31 is

an ex pert on a mauer on
wh ich you need advice, it
isn ' t wise to consult him or
her about it, no mauer how
good a friend . Seek only experienced Kuidrmce.

LEO

Uuly 23- Aug. 22) ·-

False starts .ami inaccurate
premi~cs cou ld p:e-1 you off 10
a bad begi nning tod3y. Don't
~ct emotional o('er it, , however. Get ten acious by re gro upin~~: and char~ing oncr

more.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S•pt. 22)
-- The wisdom of Solomon
might be needed toWy whl'n
dealing with an awkward iuue
concern ing a co uple of
frie nds. Try your ben to appease everyone when ha n -

dling the rnattl!'r.
LlllR/1 (S&lt;pl. 23-0ct. 23) •
- The only way a joint en-

deavor can work today is if
each of the participants con tributes rqually . Wilhout parity, somecme's joinu will be
out of whack, producing a

no-go.
SCOR PIO (Ocl. 24-Nov .
22) -- Partnenhip arran~e­
menrs could be a b1t tricky to- ·
d.1y 1f ev~ryonr has contrary
opinions. Set the example- by
~tr ivin g to be objecti\le and
avoiding dcli~rale ve-toes.

�I

Special section previews Meigs prep hoops

Wednesdlw. Nov. 21. 20Cw,

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

MOSS OUtput reflects
SEGAL TVC players named AII-Oh1o Vikes' misfortuneS
. PREP FOOTBALL

, _ fNP S ff REPORTS

COLUMBUS - Gallia Academy's
Bobby Jones joined 19 other players
from Southeast Ohio Athletic League
schoo~ who were named to the 2001
Assoctated Press Ali-Ohto football
~oms.
.
·~
Jones, • 5-10, 175-pound sentor was
named as a second-teamer at running
· D' · ·
Ill H finish d 'th
b ac k tn
IVISJOn
e W1
.
.• e
xxxx. y=ls
m helpmg lead the Blue
.
Devils mto the second round of the
OHSAA Ia liS
p r~
Aiso receiVIng speaal menuon tn
- - - 111
hi Bl D ·1
D tvtston
were s ue evt teammates end Nathan Kistis, lineman
Aaron Burnett middle guard Nick
Reed, and ta~kle Kyle Forgey,. aU
seniors for the 9-3 and SEOAL runnerup Bhte Devils.
Jones was joined on the D. 111 second
• team by Warren linebacker Chris Hendricks, a 5-11, 170-pound senior.
Two players from SEOAL teams
earned first team honors in Division ll,
Jackson fuUback D•vid Swisher, who
was the SEOAL MVP and the Soutlieast Disttict Offensive Player of the
Year in Division II, and Marietta line-

.

.

. .

backer Tony Huffitun, both of whom
are seniors.
Gallia Acdemy's five nods w&lt;'r• !he
most by ~ny SEOAL school. Logan
placed four on the Division I squ•d,
including second-team recognition 'for
senior lineb•cker Matt Mong. Athens
placed tluee on the D-11 speci2 ) menu· "·t d M · tta h d two.
on ...., •n
ane
a
O t her aa
~ miJi'
;ar names on the AlJ Ohio trams ·me1ud ed N ew Conco rd
.
b k D
D
t
d
runrung ac
arren erwac er an
Alliance Morlinton lineman Tony Milli- (
d
D Ill} N
c
ru secon -team,
; ew onrd' r •• _, Bl It J d Th0
111
co s ~, ac • are
~· Ye.r
James, and Rob Baier •nd Mulington s
Mike_Dietz and Paul McCarty (special
menbon, D-Ill).
. Making the ~ivision IV first team
were Ironton hnebacker Ch•d Parker
and WeUston running back Brad Young.
Fighting Tiger lineman Roman Fry and
Golden Rocket fuUback Thomas Mayes
were on the D-IV second team.
Ironton's Bob Lutz was one of four
Coaches of the Year in D-IY.
The Division V and VI teams will be
announced later Wednesday.

•

-•ling

Piqua"- SEoAL ._..
AtOhio hDIIDI'I:
DMIIIIIII
Su 111111
Mong.l.ogan. LB. &amp;-1 ,
180••.
'\ cllht•db'- Ccllhoonp&amp;on, Logan;
Adam PuN, logan; Trent Woortgeard, Logan.
DNI8Ian I
Ant -.n - David Swisher, laclaton, ·RB,
&amp;-2, 215, sr: Tony Hullman, Mariella, LB, 5-10,
180, sr.
Sp+ w mwetlon - Tyler Kelty. Marietta;
Gra1t ~.~Aaron Brinaler, Marielta;. John NiCholson, Jackson; Chris Hewill,

.._-Malt

Alhanl; Tyler wren. Athens.

·-n·
SIC Ill lei 1l.m ON!

Bobby Jones. Galia Acadany, RB. 5-10, 175, sr.; Chris lleudrw, WBIren, LB. 5-11, 170, sr.
st I I .-IIDn - Kyle Forgey, Gallia
Academy; Aaron Burnell, Galla Academy;
Zach &amp;hi¥1, Wamrn; Nlllhan Klllcls, Galla
Acedamy; Nick Reed. Galla Acalemy; Aaron
Colfman, 'f-lamJIL
01lw Schocrrls
DivlsiDn IV
Rnt ...... ~ Brad Young, Wellston, AB, &amp;1, 200, sr.; Chad Parker, Ironton, LB, 6-0, 200,

sr.

s-S.CDitdtdr..n·- Roman Fry, Ironton, OL. 64, 230, sr.;Thomas Mayes, Welslon,LB. 5-11,
200, jr.
Special Mention - Malt Hollingshead,
Wellston; Tommy l.ulz, Ironton; Philip Osborne,
Wellalon; Curtis Deck. Walston; Tyler Scior,

Ironton; Darin Thomas. ProdoMIIe Fair1and;
Hugh Donald Scott, Ironton.

BENGALS FOOTBALL

QB Akili Smith a 'lost child' in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI (AP) the backups.
Miffed by his mop-up role,
After 15 starts over twO seaAkili Smith wondered Tuesday sons, Smith no longer is conwhy he's become an after- sidered an integral part of the
thought for the Cincinnati team's future.
Bengals.
"The way I look at it is,
Smith was touted as the they've wosted their money on
franchise's quarterback of the me," said Smith, who got a
future when he was chosen $10.8 million signing bonus.
third overaU in the 1999 dnft "It's their loss, reaUy. It's not
but has spent aU season at third my loss. I've stiU got a lot of
stting, standing on the sideline footbaU left and I can be suecessful in IllY career."
in a basebaU cap.
Now that the season is slipSmith's frustrations boiled
ping away at 4-6, coach Dick · out after LeBe•u made a surLeBeau is leaning toward ele- prising move in the closing
vating Smith to the No. 2 minutes of an 18-0 loss in
spot, a move that will get him Cleveland on Sunday.
mote pnctice time but no
Kitna threw twO first-half
clearer sense of his role.
interceptions and was benched
He hasn't practiced with the for the first time aU seoson.
starting offense since be hurt Mitchell threw three intercephis shoulder in training camp. tions in the second half, and
"Once I got butt and thole LeBeau decided to let Smith
twO or three weeks went by, I mop up in the closing minute~
was just the lost child;' Smith of an out-of-reach game.
said Tuesday, walking off the
The
decision
stunned
practice field. "I've spent prac- Smith, who hadn't even
tically three months basically worked out with the offense
doing nothing, and they're in more than twO months.
talking about they want me to
"I don't know what they
get better.
put me in the game for;'
"They don't want to take Smith said, with an edge to his
the time to develop me. I voice. "It was totaUy uncalled
don't quite understand it." ·
for. I don't know whose deciSmith's brief ca~eer has been sion it was, but it didn't make
as unexplainable as the Ben- any sense. If I was a coach, I
gals' lost decade.
wouldn't do that."
The NFL's wont team of the
Smith was sacked once,
past 10 yean initi~y planned completed one of his two
to bring Smith along slowly. passes for 2 yards and had an
He was elevated to starter last errant snap fly over his head in
season, ·but coach Bruce the shotgun formation.
"I was hoping to get him at
Coslet - in charge of developing .the young quartetback least seven 9r eight throws and
then we had the snap and that
- quit after the third game.
The Bengals gave up on him stuff' and we didn't get as many
after the 11th game and went throws as we had hoped to in
with Scott Mitchell, who did the situation," LeBeau said.
just 21 poorly in an offense "We have not given up on
relying on two rookie Akili Smith."
receivers. In the offseason, the
Smith had not yet talked to
Bengals decided that Jon Kitna the coaching staff on Thesday
was a better fit at quartetback, afternoon about his anticipatleaving MitcheU and Smith as ed promotion to No. 2.

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn.
(AP) - Randy Moss' production appears to be directly correlated to the Minnesota Vikings' success.
Six days after a threetouchdown, 171-yard per,---. formance in
a Monday
night victory over the
New York
Giants,
Moss was
ineffective
in
Minnesota's 136 loss to
Chicago on
Sunday.
After signing an eight-year
contnct extension worth
$93 miUion bst summer,
Moss is having his least productive season in his fourth
year in the NFL.
On Sunday night against
the Bean, he caught four
passes for 25 yards. He had
his bands on four balls that
fell incomplete, and he also
had a false-start penalty and
was caUed for holding in the
third quarter - negating a
first-down run by Daunte
Culpepper on fourth-and-1.
M&lt;iss, criticized for admittedly taking plays off last
year, has often looked uninterested this season, but it's
impossible to ask him about
his outlook because he hasn't
spoken to local reporters for
more than a month. But he
did tell a Star . Tribune·
columnist last week that he
simply "plays when he wants
to play."
Fans' frustration with Moss
boiled over Sunday night
when he was booed in the
fourth quarter.
On Monday, coach Dennis
Green defended Iris team's
effort.
"I thought the team played
hard," he said. "They played
hard from the start to the
end. If we could've played
better in the four-minute

1

l- j
.

circumstance that took place
at the end of the game. then
we stiU had a chance to
the ballgame. But we didn't.~
Green also declined to single out Moss.
"1 -don't really zero down,"
Green said: "I think that's
what everybody else wants
to talk about, and that's fine.
•
I'm not interested in talking
about any one guy and how
he played because I rarely do.
One guy doesn't win for
you, one guy doesn't lose for
you.''
Culpepper also supported
his close friend.
"I have no doubt in my
mind that Randy wants to
win at all times," Culpepper
said. "He's thai type of player. I have known him a long
time, and I know what is in
.his he•rt-"
Given their sttuggles on
defeDS,t most of the seoson,
an ineWerienced backfield
and a thinned offensive ~""•· I
the Vikings must have ~n,--1
support from their wid~
receivers if they're going t&lt;t
have a chance to win.
•
"Offensive productivity;
we need a lot more of it;'
Green said. "When you get_
penalties and you get in long
yardage situations, that makes,!
it more difficult. We
been trying to get a oroc&gt;dd
balance between run
pass. We were not as proodu,c- ;I
tive with the pass as
should be."
Sunday's offensive strug-'
gles were punctuated by
fine performance from
Vikings'
often-exploited
defense, . ranked 28th in
league. They held Chicag.o·q
Jim _Miller to 97 yards pas1-.1
ing.
"Any time you
only- 13 points defimsi,,e)y,
you should win the
game;' Green said. "If
only score six points, you're
probably' not going to win
the biillgame."

.J

M1lp County's

What's inside

~arshall

BY BRIAN

basketball, Bl

Kathleen Donahue Fink. 79
Katherine Mae Gardner, 74
Clair Might, 66
Mary Jo M!)ser
Details, A3

Weather
HJah: 57, Low: 50

Details, A2

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3 day: 8·Hl

Pick 4 daY: 9-9-6-2
•'
·supert.otfo: 3-:7·14-27-30-39 ·

The finishing touches are In place for Middleport's Christmas kickoff on Saturday evening.
Myron Duffield and village workers were hard at work on Tuesday putting the community Christmas tree In its usual spot on the "T.' Village employees have also been working on repairs to
light fixtures used . to illuminate the village's distinctive snowflake ornaments. Middleport's '
Christmas Parade is 6 p.m. on Saturday. Participants are asked to begin lining up at the Rejoicing Life Church parking lot, across from King's Ace Hardware, at 5:15 p.m. Immediately fo~
lowing the parade, the Middleport Community Association will hoi~ Its annual candlelight caroling service on the "T.' Santa Claus will visit with al'!la children at Peoples Bank, N.A. at 7
p.m., ~nd photos will be available. Merchants ~ri!Jipo11$0~In&amp;JWomotton81t81veaways thrq.u_ghut the season i~- an eff~tCS'encourage loc~l s,h~J!~ . (Chai'lene' HoefllphJ&gt;hoto) ·'·

19lius Bill: 4

'

'

.

ICic:br: G-8+7-8-7

Pick 3
Pick 4

nlibt: 1-6-o
nJiht: 7-4-o-4

Artwork displayed at Riverbend

2 s.ctlon - 12 ......

AS
82-4

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials .
Movies
Obituaries

85

AS

· A4
A3
A3

81,3.4

Weather.

REED

POMEROY
State
Rep. John Carey doesn 't
expect a decision on Senate
BiD 128 until early in the
new year, but hopes that a
compromise on the legislation might help to avoid a
governor's yeto.
S.B:\28, which' passed the
House earlier this month,
would require boards of
health to seek approval from
local legislative
bodies
before enacting smoking
bans and other tobaccorelated regulations.
While the bill has passed
both House and Senate, it
now rests with a conference
committee charged with
reconciling
difrerentes
between the House and
Senate versions.
Three state representatives
and three senators serve on
the committee. Sen. Lynn

A3

C 2001 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

days till
Christmas

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

M

SEfoiTINEL NEWS STAFF

IDDLEPORT - Tho'se who love
looking at art work wiU get a special
treat when they visit the display at
the Riverbend Art Council this weekend.
Talented . Deloris Long wiU be exhibiting
about 30 of,her oil and water color paintings at
the armual holiday open house at the Arts Council headquarters on Second Street in Middleport.
Hours of the open house are 1 to 7 p.m. Saturday, and 11 a.m. to' 4 p.m. on Dec. 8. Refreshments wiU be served both days.
While Long has been paintir .g for many years,
her paintings have rarely been exhibited and seldom sold.
"1 give them to my daughters and for gifts, or
hang them in the hallway upstairs;' said Long
who has been painting for more than 30 years.
A few times she exhibited some oils in the
Meigs County Fair art shows, on one or two
oc~asions displayed paintings in the Art in the
Park program at Pomeroy, and for the past several years has sent a couple pieces to Peoples Bank

ART SHOW- Oil and water color paintings by
Deloris Long will be on exhibit at the Riverbend
Arts Council Saturday from 1 to 7 p.m. and on
Dec. 3 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.

in Marietto fur its annual art show.
Long has always been interesied in painting
and took her first lessons in oil from the late
Ruth Gosney, an architect and art instructor.
Later she studied with Juanita Lodwick, and
Pleue see Artwoltc. A!

a

Please- Smoldftl, A3

Approved professional
growth reimbursement for
Jared Spencer;
, Approved a resolution to
keep the budget reserve fund
in a separate category in the
district budget·
• Approved 'a budget for
h
·
I
·
t e semor c ass;
A
d I
• pprove a ease agreernent with Bethel Worship
Center for use of the Thppers
Plains elementary building;
• Approved advertisement
of the sale of surplus items;
• Set the next meeting for
Dec. 19 at 7 p.m. at the
administrative office.
Present were John Rice,
Greg Bailey, Rick Sanders,
Shelia Taylor and Roger
Willford, Superintendent
Deryl Well and Treasurer Lisa
Ritchie.
•

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local Board of
Educatron hrred substitute
staff and approved . suppkmental contr:'cts durmg thetr
regular meetmg last week
.Dorinda Thompson was
htred as a subsmute secretary,
. R
h
b _
Darm
ous as a su sotute
custodian and Ann Barr,
Amanda Pratt and John
Chilmonik as substitute
teachers, pending certification.
Supplemental contracts
wqe awarded to JoAnn CalaWity as Drug-Free Schools
coordinator, Chris Kuhn as
high school choir director,
Susan Parsons as elementary
school choir director and
Chad Griffith as National
Honor Society advisor.
The board also:

.

·Dorsey touts higher education at chamber banquet
By TONY M. L£Ac:ti

GUEST SPEAKER - Dr.
Barry Dorsey, president of
the University of Rio
Grande, spoke to members
of the Meigs Chamber of
Commerce during the organization's annual dinner
and business meeting.
Dorsey discussed the
importance of education
and the economic impact
higher learning has on the
area. (Tony M. Leach photo)

lighted the accomplishments munity is "beyond compare."
Following the recognitions,
and achievements of both curMIDDLEPORT - lndivid- rent and past chamber members. Triplett, Heighton and Cross¥ike Kloes, chamber presi- man were presented with
ual recognitions were observed
and the importance of higher
plaques.
· was
· '-"scusse
~'
d durrng
dent, opened
ed ucaoon
~
. .
. the. membe~hip
.
Receiving the David P. Baler
the Meigs County Chamber of apprecJ~~on ~rm;ter_by recogruzaward
for h.is excellence In assistConunerce's annual dinner and mg Metgs County Engmeer
business meeting' Tuesday at Eugene Triplett, · Emerson ing the ·chamber and dedication
Middleport Church of Christ HeiW11on and the. Rev. Crarg to improving Meigs County,
Family Life Center.
. . CroJinan as outgomg chamber namely the Ravenswood ConThe theme of the dinner, " An memtien whose unreserved and n~ctor Project, was former
Evening of R ecognition ," high- dedi~ed service to the comPleiH IH Chl•ber, A3
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

Sponaored by

Home
National Bank
3rd 51. Racine

Blood Drive
PVH Wcllness Center
Thwsda); November 29, 2001
Noonto6p.m.

Watchmann, R-Napoleon,
who sponsored the legislation in the Senate, serves as
chairman of the committee.
Gov. Bob Taft has pledged
to veto the measure as it
stands now, and while legislators expect enough votes
to override a veto, Carey
said Wednesday the committee will attempt to reach a
compromise in an effort to
avoid a veto.
"The idea is to find
common gro\lnd between
the version •passed in the
Senate and the changes
made in the House vote,"
Carey said, "in hopes that a
version can be agreed upon
by both chambers and the
governor.''
The \egislation, Carey
said, is not .retroactive, so
Clean
Meigs County's
Indoor Air Act, which passed
in September, would not be

Eastem bpa"'
o·Ks contractS
FROM STAFF REPORTS

Index.

Sports

J,

SEfoiTINEL NEWS STAFF

Patuat• S.IS.IB-2~ (16)

"I hate the fact that it took
10 games for me to start finally ~etting some (practice
time):' Smith said. "This being
my third year as quatterback, I
guess the Bengals are going to
try to develop me now with
six games left in the season. I
don't understand."
Kicker Neil Rackers also
was uncertain about his fate
Thesday. LeBeau has declined
to say whether Rockers will
remain the kicker after his two
wind-blown misses in Cleveland left him 9-for-18 on
field-goal attempts.

SMOKING BAN

committee ~

Dally 3: 8-2-S
Dally 4: 3-9-S-o

ALE)

Christmas preparations

Legislation
back in

W.VA.

NUTHIN' TO DO - Bengals
quarterback Akili Smith takes
a break during practice. Smith
was touted as the franchise's
quarterback of the future
when he was chosen in the
'99 draft but has spent all
season at third string. (AP

Hometowa News,.per

740-949..;.2210
SyracuH
74~-992-6333

~~,..:

'

...,'

Holzer

e FREE Gift To All Donors

Equipment, Inc.

O*gen and Related Services.
Med~al Equipment and Supplies.

Sponsored By:

'

288 State Route 160 • Gallipolis

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary

:For more infQrmation, call

&amp;

American Red Cross

!

•.

__________

___..,

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the H9lzer Difference

' www.holzer.org

(740) 446·40,5

-----------;;------------------...._-------------~,----------- ·

,

'

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="458">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9903">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="24712">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="24711">
              <text>November 28, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="364">
      <name>gardner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="536">
      <name>jackson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="643">
      <name>willet</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
