<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="7610" 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/7610?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T05:03:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="18021">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/498e95bead4353ae62176bd3d53c87a7.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d489ac64983ef470fc307d2430fedf91</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="24776">
                  <text>~

II

Sunday, December 21, 2001

Gallipolis, Ohio

I

Borrowing cheap money to invest is wise idea -for young people
D~

BRUCE: My husband md

I are bod! physic'..tr:. We have our
own office, which " uve owned for
the last seven y=-s. :"'"years ago, we
built a !tome and took a second mongage out to P"Y off our student loans.
Combined, our loans are approxinutely $150,000. Is it wise to take a
thin:! mo~ our on our home for
retirement planning? Please keep in
mind that we are in practice together
with no other source of income: B.M. and R.M., via e-mail

DEAR DOCTORS B. and R.:
For )'lUng people to borrow cheap
money to invest is a wise idea. However, I would not encourage you to gO
out and get secondary financing or
worse, since you will pay a high premium for the privilege. Even if it is

Bruce

Williams
~MONEY

available, the interest would eat you
ali&gt;1!. Furthermore, given the fact that
you took out :,uur mortgage a couple
of years ago, the OlleiWhelming likelihood i$ thar you can get a substantial
reduction in the Interest rate on that
mo~ by refinancing.
DEAR BRUCE: I am planning to
visit my parents and do not wish to

leave my smaU dog with a lrennel. The
airline advised me that the &amp;re is now
$75 each~ for him to ride under a
sn.L I was told that the Bight that I
s... 'Cted al=dy has a pee in first cbss
:&amp;lL one in coach; therefore my dog
will have to ride in th~ baggage area
of the plane. What is the thinking
here? Are they afraid of a fight? -

LP., Terre Haute, Ind.
DEAR L.P.: As one who has occasion to travel back and forth with Mr.
Pistol, my Boston terrier, I can sympathize with your situation. It~ not
just one dog that the airlines allow, but
one pet, whether it's a paralkeet, a cat
or a dog in each cbss, only two to ·a
Oight. I guess they are concerned
about a cat and dog sitting next to
each other. Because they are all in

oontalners. I don't see why this should
be a problem. What ....l.ly aggravates
me is that I have to pay $75 to put my
dog under the scat when someone
can sit next to me with a crying child
in need of a dUper change. and the
Oight attendant will warm up his or
her bonle. In short, the child requires
a lot of attention and rides for nothing. The pet gets absolutely nothing,
not even a coach meal or snack, and I
stiU have to pay the $75.
·
DEAR BRUCE: I write very few
checks. As a matter of fact, it seems
that I haven't replaced the checks for
years. I know that when I opened the
account, the bank gave me the checks
without charge. Now they are going
to charge me $22 to print my checks.
As I understood it, that was a service

that they provided so ~Pat :,uu would
open an account in their bank. When
I asked the bank •about it, they said

that the fee would never be waived.
and if I wanted to continue using the
account, I had to pay for the checks. u
this just my bank, or are all banks
charging? - T.S., via e-mail
DEAR T.S.: It could be that when

Mea 1y Chrisbatas from Ohio Valley Publishing Co.!

you had these checks printed, they
didn't have electronic numbers on the
bottom, and that was a long time ago.
As long as I can remember, banks have
been charging for checks.
(Send your qULStiotu to: Smart MOIIt)l
RO. Broc 503, Elfers, FL 34680. E-mail

•

to: brnct@bnutwilliams.wm. Qwstiotu oj
gtneral i11terest will be &lt;~~t~Wtrtd in foturt
wlumns. Owing to the volumt rf mail,
personal repliQ cannot be provided.)

Melp County's

Hometown Newspaper

FARM SCENE

Jobless•
rates nse

NASA grant encourages
use of global positioning
devices on the farm
BY

•

•

states promote the use . of the
Global Positioning System on
FARGO, N.D. - CaU it farms and ranches and help
"Star Trek:The Next Harvest": train farmers in its use.
An agriculture extension agent
In North Dakota, Nowatzki
strides into a field and. guided plans to · hold workshops
by a hand-held computer and around the state over the next
global-positioning
device, year and give at least 30 counwalks right to the middle of ty extension agents hand-held
the most productive plot In the computers, software and GPS
county.
locators. Farmers will be asked
There, he pulls up a series of to log data to link precise locaoverlayin!\ computer maps and tions with the yield of crops
examines crop yield histories, being harvested.
soil and crop conditions Those yield nups can be
even the closest pest activity.
combined with other ctigital
The details help farmers maps to guide farmers' producanswer the question, "If it's tion decisions. Soil conctitions
good here, why isn't it good for about half of North Dakosomewhere else?" said John ta have been logged in such
Nowatzki, a North Dakota digital maps, and so has infurState University Extension nution about areas susceptible
Service specialist.
to groundwater contaminaThe scenario should become tion.
more common m the next
Daryl Rott, a farmer m
three years, thanks to a southeastern North Dakota, is
S7 42,000 grant from the already using the technology.
National Aeronautics and Soil nups show him what
Space Administration as part of crops might succeed in differa program to find practical ent areas, and the GPS coordiapplications for data NASA nates teU him where to plant
can provide, Nowatzki said.
and fertilize.
Nowatzki 1s using the
"I even use the GPS to keep
money to organize a state pro- my rows straight, sometimes,"
ject that encourages farmers to Rott said.
use sateUite inuges and data in
The North Dakota State
t,heir operations. Scientists and program would allow Rott to
lirrmers also will be able to easily compare data and maps
.Wdy images of fields down to when deciding how to farm
i square meter - enough his fields. He could open a soil
detail to detect crop diseases nup and overlay it with nups
and pest damage.
of where he planted different
: If an outbreak of wheat scab crops and sprayed weed kiUers
~ found in one area, for examor fertilizer, then compare
~le, computers could use the
those to his crop yields.
yisual "signature" of the disease
Nowatzki thinks other uses
to search maps of the rest of a will come.
furmer's fields for similar out"That'D be the nice thing
IOreaks. The disease could be about it, is the individual farmir:acked and the effectiveness of ers and ranchers are going to
fungicides evaluated.
apply their own needs and
; University
agriculture their own imaginations and
extension offices In several find uses for it;'·he said.
••
JACI( SuwvAN

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

FROM AP, STAFF REPORTS

Southern spanks Hannan, Bl

Deaths

:Caldwell
•

•
•

'I

,.
'i

from PapD1

i002, allowing businesses to
expand with new employment opportunities for those
in need. And I have high
ixpectations that the stock
inarket is positioned to react
more positively m light of
potentia] economic resureence, providing us with a

aay

cia/ plmtner at Raymond James
Financial Services, 441 Second
A~-, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631,

Meny Christmas Eve

Marjorie Price, 7S
Details, A3

Doors open at
7:00 AM Sharp Monday.
We'll weleome you into a

Lotteries
OHIO
Pick J (nipt): 9-3-8
"' Pick 4 (niPt):. HHI·S ,
Superlotlo: 7·13-34-3942-49
Bonus Ball: 29

WONDERLAND
OFVUUES!

Kicker: 2-3-8-6+4
Pick J (dll)'): 4·2..()
Pick 4 (day): 7..().5-4

W.VA.
O.Uy J: 1·5..()
o.liy 4: 8·8·6-5
PllwlrtNtll: 14-24-27·33·34 (6)

At 11:06 AM Sharp
'fBIS SALE WILL BE OVER...
but we will resume normal
business hours.
WHITE 2 CHAIR DINETIE

wa1 S259 ................................ From

ASHLEY CURIOS

.

MAYTAG DISHWASHER

,;____

.Index
:a Sedllllll -

7-11 Only$139

StartlntAt ...................................................... Only$129

..........................•...••............................... Only$349

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

AS
82-4
8S
AS
A4
A3
A3
B1,3-4
A2

C 2001 Ohio VaHey Publishin&amp; Co.

SO% OFF ............................ Only$999to$1655

days till
Christmas

LAY-Z-BOYRECLifiER

was $479 ......... , ........................ , ..... From 7·11 Onlv$255
Other Recliners •• ~ .........................starting at $249

•

WHITE DAYBED WITH HEARTS
lncludlnv Mattress and link sprlnv .......................

Only s300

ALL TABLE LAMPS- BUY ONE ... GET ONE FREE!!
.................. ~ .............. , ... i ............. StartinQ at Only 179

446-2125 or 1-800-487-2129,

member NASD and SJPC.)

•

•

•
•

•
•
•

Kneen
flom
Dl
Page

O:lolding or rotting bulbs
t-ould minim1ze further
U&gt;reading of diseases.
; For specific infornution on
~oring fruit and vegetables
ask for extension ,bulletin
NRAES-7,"Home Storage of
"ruits and Vegetables."

:

'

...

: Are you interested in raising
goats? Ohio State University
Extension is holding a Meat
{}oat Production and Market.ing meeting on Jan. 17,2002,
~ta rring at 6 p.m. at our Piketon Research and Extension
Center located at 1864
~hyville Road, Piketon.
: Don Applegate, professor of

.

c •

.

animal sciences at Morehead
State, will be the featured
speaker, discussing 11 Meat
Goat Health and Facilities
Considerations." A marketing
panel consisting of growers
and representatives of the
Ohio Meat Goat Association
and Bluegrass Meat Goats.
For further information call
"947-2121, Pike
County
Extension. for a ·map of
meeting site stop by our
office.

MASON
FURNITURE
2ND STREET, MASON, WV

(304) na-5592
• nne Ltvtt wun Sytlem

hirley Huston and Jane Beegle, and Bob Beegle, not pictured, members of the Sacred Heart
Church's art and envirorunent conunittee,
were putting the finishing touches on the
sancruarys decorations · on Friday in preparation fur .die-traditional Christmas services. The antique
crib scene, shown here, will be blessed at a 7:30 p.m:
Children's Liturgy tonight, to be .followed by an ecumenical choral presentation and Midnight Mass at 11:15
p.m. The creche will play a prominent role in all the services through the Christmas season, said Rev. Father .
Walter Heinz, church pastor. 'The metal angel pic~d
here, and its companion are a "new" addition to the
majestic decorations, unearthed in the church's basement
this year afi:er years of storage. Christmas Day Mass will
be observed,at 9:15 a.m. Tuesday. (Brian]. Reed photos)

CHRISTMAS SHOPPING

Consumer spending slow this holiday
NEW YORK (AP) On what was supposed
to be the biggest shopping weekend of the hoiiday season, consumers
flocked to the nation's
stores but remained fru"
gal, despite heavy discounting and advertising
blitzes.
The restrained spending in the final stretch
before Christmas cast a
further paU on the shopping season, already
expected to be the worst
in at least a dec~de.
"This is supposed to be
the ultimate peak Christmas shopping .weekend,"
said C. Britt !3eemer,
chairman of America's
Research
Group, in
Charleston, S.C. "I think
it was even softer than
Thanksgiving weekend."
Instead of the typical
surge on the final week-

end of the holiday shopping season, traffic and
sales were up only slightly from the previous
weekend, analysts said,
down from.the same time
a year ago .
Holiday sales and profits for many merchants
nuy end up coming in ·
bel~;.v already modest
expectations, said Jeff
Feiner, managing director
of Lehman Brothers.That
may drag retailers' profits
down as much as 5 percent to 10 percent.
"The profit picture
looks a lot worse. Traffic
was· still off for the most
important
weekend
before Christmas, even
with the rampant discounts," Feiner said.
This weekend's disappointing ttirnout is the

PluMieeShop,AJ

Future of
stimulus
depends on
economy.
WASHINGTON (AP) A Senate
Democrat who supported the Republican
economic stimulus plan said Sunday that the
future of the legislation depends on the state
of the economy when Congress reconvenes
in late January.
"If we're still in a recession, we still have
high unemployment, people without health
insurance, without unemployment compensation, I think the move and the drive to pass
something will still be as prevalent as it is .
today," Seli. John Breaux, D-La., said on

"Fox News Sunday."

LAST-MINUTE SHOPPING - Michelle Maxwell
thumbs through a flyer as she waits on line at Toys
R Us in New York. With round-thEH:Iock hours, adver·
tizing blitzes, extra catalogs, discounts and more dis·
counts, merchants are trying lo draw last-minute
shoppers and give a final boost to sales totals In a
trying holiday season. (AP)

The economic stimulus plan endorsed by
President Bush was pushed through the
House ·early Thursday morning, but did not
get a vote in the Democratic-controlled
Senate before lawmakers left town for the
holidays. Congress reconvenes on Jan . 23.
The measure was a blend of extended
unemployment benefits for victims of the
recession and funds to help the newly
. jobless

.

Please see Economy, AS

• e-Hour Dlla.y Stan
• fi..Poinl Flftratbn S)'llem

tfayyy IJ-Co(idays
and best wishes or a

.

•••

The staff from the Meigs
County Extension office
wishes all our readers the best
this holiday season. Our office
will be closed Dec. 24, Dec.
25 and Jan. t.

(Hal Kneen is Meigs County~
Extension agent for agricul,ture
a"d natural resources.)

Please ... Jobleo,AJ

J:a ......

AL~Jt9:8!\9M!LLER GRANDFATHER CLOCkS

•

possible catalyst for portfolio
growth.
Thank you for your continued support and friendship,
best wishes for a joyous holiday season - and a happy,
healthy and prosperous new
year.
Caldwell is a certified.finan·

POMEROY -After posting a decline in
October, area jobless rates increased again in
November, state officials reported.
Ohio's unemploytnent 1;3te increased to 4.7
percent in November, up 0.2 percent from the
revised rate in October, because of continued
weakness in the state and national economy, officials said Friday.
Gallia County unemployment increased 0.5
percent over October to 5 percent last month;
Ohio Department of Jobs and Family Services
found.
·
Meigs County's joblessness was up 0.4 percent
to 8.2 percent in November.
Without exception, the trend was seen in surrounding counties. Athens was 3.6 percent, up
0.3;Jackson, 6.6, up 0.4; Lawrence, 5, up 0.5; and
Vinton, 9. 9, up 0.7.
The unemployment rate of 12.5 percent in
Morgan County was the highest in the state,
ODjFScsaid.
&lt;&gt;-Madison County had t)le .lowest rate for the
month at 2.6·percent.
Among cities with populations of more than
SO,OOO,Youngstown .had the highest jobless rate,
10.4 percent, while Kettering had the lowest, 2.3
percent.
The county and city rates are unadjusted,

'

2nd Street

773-5592

•

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

Mason WV
\

,

'

.

••

�•

s

the Daily Sentinel

Cold, if not white, Christmas
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Christmas Day will be partly sunny, but cold, the National w~ather Service said.
Chilly air will move into
the region today, taking lows
into the teens tonight. Christmas Day highs will be in the
30s, and a chance of snow
showers
continues
from
Wednesday until the weekend.
Weather forecast:
, Tonight ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper teens. West
•wind around I 0 mph.
Christmas ... Partly sunny.
Highs in the lower 30s. West
wind 10 to 15 mph.
Tuesday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
teens.
. Wednesday... Mostly cloudy

with a chance of snow showers. Continued cold. H it~hs 27
to 33.
Wednesday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of snow
showers. Lows 17 to 22.
Extended forecast:
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. Continued cold. Highs 25
to 31.
Friday... Mostly cloudy with
ta chance of snow showers.
Continued cold. Lows 17 to
22 and highs 25 to 31..
Saturday.. . Most!y cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. Continued cold. Lows 18
to 23 and highs 26 to 32.
Sunday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. Lows 19 to 24 and highs
28 to 34.

PageAl

Schools changing emergency plans
LEWIS CINTER (AI') - Administrators in the Olentangy Local School
District spent the summer debating
whether they should require Jockdown
drills in their nine schools.
The lar~ely rural district had resisted
starting tl'" drilL in which teachers keep
students in secured cbs.rooms with
shades drawn because ·of fears it would
increase students' concerns about safety.
Then, terrorists crashed jetliners into
the World Trade Center and th~ Pentagon on Sept. II . A few days later, the disttict decided schools would be required
to run regular lockdown drills, just a&lt;
they do fire and tornado drills.
"We were checking our existing plan
to see if we were prepared if, God for-

bid, something ·were to happen," schools
Superintendent• William Reimer said.
"Then Sept. 11 happened and it reinforced the need to be as prepared as we

.

'

can.

School districts nationwide have
altered emergbncy crisis plans that
before the terrorist attacks and anthrax
mailing; had focused mainly on natural
disasters and student violence.
Administrators want to ensure ·that
their plans that' cover fires, tornados,
floods and school violence also address
' as bioterrorism and
new threats, such
bombings, said llarbara Knisely, spokeswoman for the American Association of
School Administrators.
Most districts altered their emergency

Crecelius, who graduated from Ohio State with a mechanical engineering degree: in 1985., and his wife, Debbie, hop~
their game becomes as popular as Foosball and air hockey.
Crecelius, 39, said he came up with the idea while he was
' . CINCINNATI (AP) -The family of a one-time gravely in college. Players droll steel marbles down chutes onto a
'ill teen-ager has one word for well-wishers who keep send- playing field to knock a miniature soccer ball into their
ing her cards: Stop.
opponent's goal.
Faith Hoenstine, 15, of Imler, Pa., received skin grafts last
year at Cincinnati's Shriners Burns Hospital after a bacterial
infection forced surgeons in Pittsburgh to amputate both. leg;
above the knees, her left arm above the elbow, and the fingers
CLEVELAND (AP) - Federal prosecutors have outlined
how a businessman exchanged S115,000 in work and gifts for
. and most of the thumb on her right hand.
Then someone started an Internet. campaign to get her political favors from U.S. Rep. James Traficant.
Documents filed Friday in US. District Court in Cleveland
enough cards to make the Guinness Book of Records.
. Faith and her parents never asked for the cards and don't say Henry Nemenz will testify against th• congressman. He
want them. But they keep coming, though the number is is the seventh businessman"who prosecutors say was pressured
by the Young; town Democrat for free work.
&lt;;!own from a midyear weekly peak of 10,000 to 50,000.
The trial on I 0 racketeering and bribery charges is set for
Feb. 4.
Nemenz is also one of the witnesses identified by Traficant
when
he unsuccessfully tried to throw U.S. Attorney Craig
' SPRINGFIELD (AP) -·Cincinnati's former city manager
is one of two people interviewing for interim executive Morford off the case. Traficant accused Morford of intimidatdirector of the Springfield Metropolitan Housing Authority. jng witn·esses. The nine-term representative is representing
, ' John Shirey, former Cincinnati city manager, and Robert himself even though he is not an attorney.
Edwards, president of the Springfield accounting company
Edwards Development, interviewed with the housing authori ty's board Fri·day afternoon. One should be offered the job
MARION (AP) - The sheriff's claim that budget cuts
this week.
have
forced him to lay off two dispatchers and two deputies
, · Shirey resigned as Cincinnati's city manager after the city
_erupted in riots in April following the shooting death of an haven't impressed the county's four judges who want him to
unarmed black man by a police officer. Shirey, who served as provide deputies in the courthouse and the county's new
city manager for eight years, has said he is not responsible for administration building in January.
Sheriff John Butterworth said the layoffs are needed
t)le unrest.
Shirey, who also has worked with the housing authority in because his department's budget will shrink from $2.3 mil'I,os Angeles County, Calif., said Friday he would be good for lion in 2001 to $2.14 million next year.
Retirements and staff cuts would leave his office with 36
t,he job because of his management experience.
.employees, down from 42.
"Our first priority is maintaining basic law-enforcement
services for our citizens and the protection of the county." he
·. DELAWARE (AP)- A table g~me invented by a former said.

Sheriff promises layoffs

plans following a wave of school shooting; over the past few ye~rs. including
the de~dliest - the 1999 rampage at
Columbine High School in Colorado
when two students killed 12 studentS
and on~ teacher before killing themselves.
Much like after Columbine, administrators have struggled since Sept. 11 to
keep schools warm and welcoming but
also have stringent security measures,
said Kenneth Trump, president and chief
executive of Cleveland-based National
School Safety and Security Services, a
consulting firm .
"We want kids to go to school being
aware and prepared but not scared," he ·
said.

bar as a possible site for a striptease club or a more upscale
club featuring clothed female dancers.
Neon's Cigar Bar in the Over-the-Rhine area of Cincinnati is one of several sites under consideration, Flynt's brother and Hustler executive Jimmy Flynt said.
Terry Carter, co-owner of Neon's, confirmed that Jimmy
Flynt has had preliminary discussions about buying the bar.
The Flynt brothers are considering two concepts for the
~lub they hope to open by summer. One option would be to
make it another Hustler Club, similar to one they own in
~ew Orleans where female employees are topless.

Prosecutors outline alleged deals

Ex-city official vies for slot

·Landing drowns parachutist
. , MONTEZUMA (AP) -A parachutist who overshot his ~
target and landed in Grand Lake St. Marys apparently , .
drowned, authorities said.
'
~
Jason Krieg, 29, of New Bremen, was one of two parac,butists who landed around 4 p.m. Saturday in the lake.
The second parachutist, Bruce Cyphers of St. Marys, was
r,e scued and was not injured, said Frank Giannola, manager ·of
Grand Lake St. Marys State Park.
._ ..;The men parachuted from 9,000 feet, Giannola said. Windy
conditions caused them to miss their landing spot ;a Montezuma Airport.
'

Canadians press for lines

CLEVELAND (AP) ~Two Canadian companies want to
spend $300 million to run power lines below Lake Erie, connecti'ng major Canadian and U.S. power grids by 2004.
Partners TransEnergie U.S. Ltd. and Hydro One Delivery
Services Inc. have jointly filed -for a-permit with the Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission to install lines that would
link" Ontario with · Ohio and Pennsylvania. The project is
'calle(j Lake Erie Link.
They have talked to customers in both countries about
bu'y ing access to the line, including Akron-based First Energy
Ohio State football player has attracted the attention of the
Disney organization.
and Minneapolis-based NRG Energy. NRG is buying four of
Disney's Family Fun magazine has chosen Boccerball, creatFi~stEnergy's coal-fired power plants.
ed by former Buckeyes defensive lineman Dave Crecelius, as
CINCINNATI (AP) - An adult entertainment empire
,T he project will proceed if the companies can get enough
:6ne of its top 10 toys of the year.
run by Hustler founder Larry Flynt is looking at a Cincinnati cu1tomers.

Disney gives game boost

Flynt ponders club sites

!

l'

·t·..

, OHIO D!I'A"TIIINT 0' INIUIIANC! ·

~~elevance of county homes In question
!;'•\Peting
MEDINA (AP) - Com- May whether property taxes
"That property is prime
sentiments on the should be increased to pay for

lvalue of a 19th century
:1pproach to caring for those
~; fith no other place to live
;have collided in Medina
:tounty.
·: j The county commissioners
;Voted last month to close the
;'ounty home, one of 41
;temalning in the state. They
;said it would save the county
·,$500,000 a year, but the deci~~ion proved to be an instant
blunder.
The commissioners' weekly
meetings turned into standing-room-only
forums
packed with incredulous,
angry residents. ·
"What is it that you want
to be about as a county?" the
· Rev. Teresa Dulyea-Parker, a
Medina minister, asked the
commissioners. uYou can't
turn your back on the old and
the needy."
After several weeks of public scolding;, the commissioners withdrew their plans to
close the home. histead,
. county voters will decide in
'

the home's operation.
Originally known as "poor
houses" when they were
authorized by the Legislature
in 1816, the homes served
people in need well· before
the institution. of Social Security, Medicaid and other
modern social services.
Their relevancy in the 21st
century is uncertain.
"It was extremely tough,"
Marion County Commissioner Ken Frayer said of that
county's decision last summer
to close its home. "There was
some picketing. But it was the
right thing to do."
Frayer said the home was
losing money. The vacant
building is on I 5 acres of
highly valued county-owned
land next to a Wal-Mart, he·
said. He does not rule out
selling the land.

property," he said. "Everything is on the table."
Frayer said the home's residents were placed elsewhere.
The slumping · economy is
pushing county officials to
look more closely at their
budgets. Sales-tax revenues; a
chief source of income, have
plummeted, and the &gt;tate has
added to the fiscal pressures
by cutting outlays to counties.

NOTICe Of QIIIIORTUNITY FOR H!ARINO
Accotdlng 10 rtcordl on !It v.l~ 1111 011~ ~nt 'or !Minna~, 11011 of lilt lnd\ldutll iltld btklw Clmnlly holdl ictnota u an
lnalltnco 1111111 and/or aoii~Jor in 1111 atatt Dl Ohio IIIII tlllil hll flltd to mttl 1111
tductllon rtqulrtrrenli of Ste1ion
31105.411 of lila Ra,;otcl Coda for lilt 1He-1817, 1817·1811, oncUor tlla.Jitt 0011111itnct
1).

con:.:.

Purauanl lo Stcion 390!.482V.l and Chtll!tr 118 of lilt RI'Mtd Coda. ttch lndllidutl Hattd below la harby noti!ed lhol lht
Supennltndonl inltndtlo rowkt hit 01 htr lriiurtnct llctn,.,
Eoch lndlvlduli lltltd btlow Ia htii!!Y notilld IIIII ht ot alit lillY rtqutll 1 hllrhg pullutnt to Ohio Rtillld Code Chol&gt;tor 119. Tho
bt l!'ldlon 01 bt~11 FobNII'I1', 2002. Such !lqllttl ""'"ld bt tddri11td to: Shoron G11on, Hoanng A&lt;*nfnltlralor, Ohio
Dtperlrr'ontof lntu!lnet, 2100 SttHa Courf, Columbut, 01110 4311$-1017.
'
.

""'""""''!

~ NDREV.S• .flAYMOND L. OOB: 05/l&gt;l.tl 41131 STATE ROUTE

K0 UNS, E""A L 008: 06/09n3 BOX 3 MASON OH 45040
MULLEN DON E 008: OM4123 M3 S SE~ONO AV€ MIDDLEPORT OH 45760
NANCE'/ ROBIN L COB: 121311!12 46137 EAST LETART RO, PO BOX 2115 RACINE, OH 45771
PAULE , PAUL J 008: 06123135 804 WMAIN ST POMEROY, OH 45761

II on indi,;dusl does not tin-.~ roquttla htarjng, tn order 111'01dng hll 01 htr lictnl11 thai bt l11uod.
lttP.!tt!! C. Homblch
IIIIICoiiMII

.f' ~
· To
With resounding best wishes from all of us here
all of the people who've stopped by this year,

flt

· · ,-

.v'

,

~erry(}tristmas
HILLS CITGO
SR 124
Racine, Ohio

This message Is trimmed with our gratitude tooSince we owe our success to each one of you!

&amp; ~any CJltanks!

JD Auro SALFS
500 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

-

Brian Keith Armes
(B.K)

Charles
Mugrage

April II , 1964- Sept. 27,2001
Husband

Sept. 27, t926. July 24, 1997
Father/Grandfalher

Though out of sight, you'll
forever be in myheart and
mind.

Your courage and bravery still
inspires us all, and the
memory of your smile fills us
with joy and laughter.

Always my hero
Charlotte M. Armes (wife)

Always in our
thoughls and prayers,
Chuck Peach (Mugrage)
&amp;

LONG BOTTOM, OH 45743

Allho hoanng, the ~di,;'*'•l moy IJIIIIlr in ptiiOII, 17; his 01 ht1 t11ornty or 17; lllch olhor ropres..lllivl •• is permHod to IJICtice
beforolho tltlncy, 011ho in&lt;lividuJII!IIy rtquttl hit..- 1\or potllion, trg111111Ma or conttnlionoln \\liling and, atlho hunng, he or she ltll)
requestovi!ftnce and txtnino .Otn11111 appetring fortnd tglintllllm or htl.

·

THE
FABRIC SHOP
110 Main street
Ohio

Rosfs

R&amp;..G FEED

ExCAVATING

AND SUPPLY
339W. Main
Ohio

Third Street

Racine, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT
FLOWER SHOP
145 N. Second Ave ·
Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Mnday, Dec:e•ber 24, 2001

Family pleads for cards to stop

•

Monday, Dec. 24, 2001

Mlljolt1.Palw

COUNTRY KITCHEN

PizzA ExPRESS

&amp;..RT 7 PIZZA
Pomeroy, Ohio

NI"W V014..K

(AP) POMEROY.- Maljorie Price, 75,, Pomeroy, died Saturday, H,·taldc&lt;l for his steadfast
Dec, 22, 200l,m Veterans Memorial Extended Care Unit, fol- mt&gt;anse to a gri~f-torn city
lowing an extended illness. ·
af'ttot Lite Sept. 1 I terrorist
Born Jan. 4, 1926, in Chica,o,IU., daughter of the late )almS attacks, M~yor Rudolph Giuand Willie C. Tomlin Miller, she WiS a homemaker.
liani on Sunday -was ~med
Surviving are fiv~ daughters, Matilyn S. Price, Jewel N"ly, Time magazine's Person of
Allie F. Mitchell and Aoranell L. Burney, all of Columbus, and theYear.
·
LaJean Arnutrong of Middleport; three sons, Nonnan ·L. Price
"I was stunned, a little,"
Jr., Floyd J,.. Burney J~·· and Frederick L. B,u rney II,
of Giulialli said at a news con•
Pomeroy; five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren; ference Sunday. "It was really
two sisters, Jewel Welch and Sarah F. Hull, both of Pomeroy; a strange. It's hard to think of
sister-in-law, Doris Ervin of Colun1bus; and several nieces and yourself that way."
nephews.
The maaazine 's editors
She was also precedeq in death by a sister and. three brothers. chose Giuliani "for having
Graveside services ~ be I I a.m. Thunday at Miles Ceme- more faith in us than we had
tery, Rutland, with the Rev. Eddie Buffington officiating. in ounelv~s, fot being brave
But bin Laden was "too
Friends may c;ill at Ewing Funeral. Home, Pomeroy, fl'om 6-9 .when required and rude small a man to get the credit
p.m. Wednesday.
where appropriate and ten. der without being trite, for for all that has happened in
America in the autumn of
not sleeping and not quitting
.
and
not
shrinking
from
the
20UI,"
the magazine s~id. "It
the packa·~e as "laughable."
II what came ~ft~r hn men
House . Speaker De11nis pain all around him:··
The
mayor
shared
the
·
had fimshed thtlr JOb that has
Hastert, lt-111., agreed that
praise with New Yorkers.
_come to define this year."
the economic con&lt;iitions
"I got all the tredit restin~ . Giuliani agreed with that
next year will . help deteron the shoulders of these JUdgment.
.
with health insurance. It
d d
b
fc
mine whether a stimulus bill
.
people that have ,had one of
"I think it's much better
a1so me 1u e ~x re ates ~r is still necesjary.
three
months
that
I was selected as a rt'prethe
most
heroic
lower wage earners who d1d
"W, •
t h
1
10
ehre gong ~ havefi.
. not receive checks last sum- ·
1 think any people have ever sen~tive of the people of
see w ere we are Jh t e Its!
.
f
had,'' \It said.
·.
New York City rather than
mer, an d a vanety .o tax
h f h"
f h
r
· d' "d
The award's criteria was set him," the mayor said at his
Cuts ,or
1n
tVl ua1s an d mont o t 11 year, o t e.
. businesses. The bill carried a new year, and then kind of by Time founder Henry news conference. "His ultithree-year price tag of$2 lll make out asseuments from Luce: "The penon· or persons mate objective was obviously
billion.
there," he said on CNN's who most affected the news nor just to ·kill people hi•
of our li,~es, for 800d or ill, objective was. to destru; the
Negotiations had pro- "Late Edition."
But
he
added:"!
don't
dis-·
th11 year.
. . f A
. Th
. .
ceeded over several weeks,
. • Ed"nor j"1m Ke II y ..spmt
o . mer~ca.
e spmt
Ma
count
anything
at
this
nagtng
fA
,
but broke down over health
said 'he knew on Sept. 11 that o
r_nertca ts now strange.~
insurance aid for the jobless point."
the
Person
of
the
Year
would
than
1t has ever been before.
and Democratic resistance · Senate Minority Leader have some connection to the
The Person of the Year
to hundreds of millions of Trent Lott, R-Miss., sug- atiacks on the World Trade package includes an oral hisdollars in co'rporate tax getted the lesislation may Center and the Pentagon, tory .of Sept. I~ as. told by
be tinnecessary in January.
breaks.
Editors spent houri debating G•!'hant and hn udes. The
Senate Majority Leader. "There are .some positivi whethet to name Osama bin issue hits newsstands on
Tom Daschle, D-S.D., said signs in the eGonomy Laden, ·the prime auspect in Monday, one week before
the House bill was "wrong three weeks in a row now . the terror auault, for the Giuliani's last day in office
.on all counts" and Harry with unemployment claims spot, Kelly said.
after eight years.
R~id of Nevada, the No. 2 down," · he said on CBS'
Senate Democrat, described "Face the Nation."

E.

an

Economy
flwnPIIpA1

Shop
fNIII,.AI

·Jobless

10.

ih)m October.
The number of workers
unemployed in Ohio last
month wu 282,000, up from
264,000 in September. The
November unemployment
rite ~ up 0.7 percent &amp;om
4.0 percent in November
2000. The number of u nemployed has increased by 51,000
over the year from 231,000.
Unemployment cia~ can be
accessed from ODJFS at
http://www.state.oh.us/ odj6/

"I just" wanted to spend
more time with my children
and grandchildren," she said.
mesning they do not take Into
Many · merchants, were acco11nt · se111onal a~wtments
latest blow to recailen, which countlna on procrutinat~~n, in employment. .
suffered slui!Bish sales since including Kmart ~orp.,
The state initially reported
the ·shopping season began which kept ill stores' dQOn an unemployment nte of 4.4
open stralilht ftQm 6 a.m. percent In October, but that
the day after Thanksgiving.
·
Consumer electronics like Thursday through 8 p.m. Was adjll&amp;ted later to 4.5 per. ·
same · consoles and DVD Christmas Eve.
ceht. The U.S. unemployment
Bloomingdale's
sent
out an nte rose to 5.7 percent In
players were the only brislu
· spots, along with kitchenware extra catalog to more than 1 November, up 0.3 percent
and toy1 like Harry Potter million homeslut week, hopproducts.
Value-oriented ina to grab last-minute shopchains, particularly Wal-Mart pen.
Stores Inc., fared better than · Bloomingdale'&amp; chairman
department stom and special- Michael Gould said ·he was
pleased with the overall
ty apparel stores.
sales receipts,
weekend's
The holiday season had live
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
full weekends and was 32 days though revenues at iu New Sept. I I terrorist attacks rank. a&amp; the
long, a day longer than 2000. York store were below "most dangerous conflic:t" of the
Manv.. shoppers held. back, expected. Overall, holiday year in a new report that found
sales should be just slightly
however, because of worries
nine feWer conflicts around the
above modest soals, he said.
about job security, or lingerworld than iil 2000.
The prospect of. deep baring concerns about the terOf 193 countries evaluated by
gains made Diane Sha'V, 40, of
rorist ~ttacks.
Topeka, Kan., hold off until the National Defense Council
Last year, a record 30.9 per- the las1 minute.
Foundation, 59 haw had serious
cent of all holiday sales came
"The things in the stores conflicts this year, from separatistin the final sewn days before now are cheaper than they ethnic violence and political fightChristmas, according to the were in the ads two or three ing to drug trafficking, religious
International Council of weeks aso,'' Shaw said as she turmoil and a mutiny by soldiers in
Shopping Centers. The share shopped at a Kansas City, P:ipua New Guinea over army
downsizing.
is expected to drop to about Mo., mall.
The figure is nine fewer than last
20 percent.
Luxury .. retailers weren't as
"This Christmas is more fortunate. Holly Nelson, year's 68 countries, but still tar
about people than · buying manager of Watch Station more than the Cold War average of
gifts," Beemer said.
·
International Shop in Seattle, 35 countries, when the U.S-Soviet
Marilyn Villano, 48, of . said the shop had hoped to standoff brought the wodd some
Auburn, N.Y., used to pro- sell $3,.000 worth of mer- Jmbillty.
The annual report found ·no
crastinate when it came to challdiae on Saturday, but sold
buying holiday gifts. This year, jll&amp;t $500 Worth of merchan- "high-intensity conflicts pitching
one state army venus another."
she finished shopping by Dec. dise.
Instead, most conflicts went "lowmedium intensity and were normally fought between the state and
one or more sub-state actors such
as a rebel force or a terrorist O'l!i'-

flomPiltAI

LOCAL BRIEFS

~~

N . Main St., Middleport, a
passenger in a pickup truck
driven by 13arbara D. Flor:1,
18, Pomeroy, was airlifted to
POMEROY - The Daily Charleston Area Medical
Sentinel, which observed an
Center by HealthNet followearly deadline today, will not
ing the 9:38 p.m. accident,
be published Tuesday so that
troopers said.
its employees may observe the
Flora was transported to
Christmas holiday.
.
Regular publication and Jackson General Hospital,
business
hours
resume Ripley, W.Va., by Meigs EMS,
the report said.
Wedne!day.
Troopers said Flora was
northbound in Lebanon
Township when she lost conGREAT BEND -A one- trol of the vehicle, went off
vehicle accident on Ohio 338 the right side of the road,
Friday sent cwo people to area struck a ditch and overturned.
hospitals with injuries, the The pickup came to rest on
Gallia-Meigs Post of the ·State its top, the report said.
Highway Pattol reported.
The pickup wa. severely
Amber Armstrong, 15, 291 damaged.
.
•

Crash inJures 2

Ohio GOP still faces
political musical chairs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AI') the party must now address
State Treasurer Joseph the race for secretary of
Deters' departure last week state. The incumbent, Kenfrom a potentially divisive neth Blackwell, has said that
Republican primary solved a if Deters ran for attorney
short-term problem for the general, he would leave
GOP. It leaves open the office after one term to run
long-term issue of a surplus for , treasurer, a position he
of party candidates seeking held from 1994 to !999.
statewide seats.
"] like being secretary_of
At play is a combination of state, but I love being treaterm limits pushing people surer,'' Blackwell said.
out of office after eight years
Blackwell said he had
and a crop of GOP politi- Deters' word that the treacians full of ambition to surer's job was his to cammove up the party ladder.
paign for no matter wtlat
"The Republicans are see- happened with the attorney
ing the kinds of problems general's race .
On Friday, after Detert
that emerge when you're the
dominant majority party," withdrew and said he would
said Paul Beck, an Ohio seek re-election as treasurer,
State political analyat. "It's Blackwell hedsed. "The
very, very difficult to handle environment has obviously
all the ambitious people in chansed,'' he said.
-your party who want to
Blackwell't future is not as
move over to another touchy aa· the Deters-Petro
office.''
rivalry, said James Ruvolo, a
Deters' primary rate for Demotratlc political consulattorney seneral was a thorn rant who was co-chairman
in the side to party leaders, of Al Gore's Ohio. campaign.
since it Would have• pitted · "To get them to stop tunhim against fellow Republi- ning against each other is a
can Jim Petro, a two-term . sood thing,'' he said. "You
state auditor leaving office do have a problem with
because of term limits.
Blackwell, but Blackwell can
With that rivalry resolved, run for re-election."

Number of countries in conflict lower

The Daily Sentinel

.
Reader Services
'

Correction Polley

(UII'II1~

Otilo illlltY Publlthlng Co.

Publilhod overy 1hmobn, Monday

through Frlday, 11t Court St.,
l'omtroy,
Ohta. SecOnd-cia"

Our main concern in allllOIIelll . pottigt paid Ill PomtiO¥.
lo be accurate. If you know of bn ...,_, Tho Aolaolotid p - tnd
Aiaoaiallon.
e«or In a atory, Cllfl the ..,..room lho Ohio Now
,_il!tatltJ:
lddrtll oorrte·
at (740) 992·2156.
llorlt lo 1'l1t Doily 64mlnat, t11 Court.

ous conflict" of the year, due to the
possibility of further attacks on
American soil.
"There are multiple terrorist
groups out there beyond O!lanU
bin Laden,'' the report says of the
man believed ~mible for the
Sept. II airliner hijacking1.lt noted
that terrorists could r.:tlce advantage
of U.S. vulnerabilities by staging.
for example, "a catastrophic attack
against one of our nation's ports:'
Army Maj. F. Andy Messing Jr.,
eXI!cutive director of the AleXllndria, Va.-based foundation, a nonprofit, right-leaning group, said the
reports are done to call attention to
dangerous situations worldwide
and to help U.S. officials determine
how to shape any military

response.

A world In

conflict
Ttte National Defelllt Council
F"""""lton 1VIIluollld 1113

COUnlliOI .... -ItO~

10--ollbo.,... for 2002.

- - .......... IQ

-govomn"Onl:
naven.

POIIIbjt lltfOrill

lnlq-OyU.S.ondlk'traft enfOtCing ,.fly .tonte.
- - (IUrm.tJ FtgNing
biiWIIn \1()'4tllh111U IOrOII end

1110 Sllln 811111 Army•• QUtrrlllt
group llllliJng II

11 ~ I ldtUOt for

lho Shan 111111rrmnot11y.

. ~ Protldl&lt;l11ol

•••='nlfion: CMI wer fMiurtng
gaYOmmonl- ogoln11 MLC
rtbtt loroea.
"""""" Ttl'rOr
Dllpolo8ttiK:kal
.... - •"'"'
Klahmlr;

-"Gl·

---Alghonlolon CollUnulng r:IYII

...._;ClptroKon~

"If you don't identify the problem, you carl't develoP, a strategy to
address the problem,' he said.
Messing, a fOrmer Army Special
ForciK member, said America's military was, ill-prepared for the battle
agaimt terrorism because it hasn't
been reorganized to reflect the end
nization."
,
·
of the Colt! War. America should
The United States gained an have led with !pecial oper:1tions
.un\Wilted membership oh the list. fOrces, not conventional forces, he
after the attacks, the "most danger- said.

FI'MdOm: Opium trlrrldOug.
--tonbyFNL

(HIJtul) igM* T u l l l govtn'lmtnt

- Chltl1lono""'-

- --on

'(SPLA) figh1rnQ Muoon- ,
dCirT1In-.ct QOYemmtnl.

ot NljOUM. Whloli &lt;IOClorodlolrw1d

lndtpendenee four )'QI'IIIQO.
Siet'r8 Leone AUF rtbell-and
pro-govemm&amp;nt mllillll fight in
the North: Guinea conducting
anti·RUF alrstrlkea.

News

Departtnente

The main number Ia H2·21158.
Deportmtnl extentlona are:

Generlll ml1111ger

Elll 1a

NIWI

Ext. 13

or

EKt: 14

Adverllolng

Exl. 3

Circulation

Ext. 4

Clo1olflod Ada

Ext 5

To aend•m•ll
nowaOmydallyuntlnel.com

On the Web
www.mydaltyaenllnal.corrl

St.

Mayor
VIllage of Middleport

Pomeroy, Ohio o~ane.

I!IUbecrlptlon
ndee
ey_ .. ......,_

8::=.
Otlt-

'

.

18-~

1104
llolty
.
. 50 .....
· Su-11111 not dlllrlng to pOy lilt

carrier m.y ranlt In 'Mnce dnct to
The Dally Stn~nill. Cl1dll Wilt be given
.:.rn.r oilo~ - · No tuDtcrlPikln b)'
matt pormltltd In IIIII whtrt homo
Clrrier 11:rvloe It avallal*.

~···~$27.30
lnlld• M;!l;t~'!;nly-w~

. w_ _ .....,County
13 Weeks

26 Weeki

$53.62

Stoa.se

s2

t3 Weeki
l!IIW52 W...CO

,

SIU5
HU8
S1 09'12

May you and your loved
ones find Inspiration as
Wfi celebrate the
blessing of this
wondrous season.

Sandy lannarelll

C::

Other aerv.l oea

RAaNE

Rudolph Giuliani named
Time's Person of 2001

The Dally Sentinel• Page A3

'

MI\TINI r S f"Vf F1Ylli\.Y
1212 1•/01 rt-tRU I IO i iO :.t

All AGE'i All TIME~ ~4 00

�---·-- -·

Opinion

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

-

MDd"J. Dll s•w M. Hll

_Th_e_D_a_i_1y_~_n_mn_·_e_I________~I=I~1(.
DEAR ABBY: I am 29 years old
aud have been reading your column since I was 10. Becoming a
high school teacher was always my
dream. I graduated from college
''{ith a degree, but not in secondary
e~ucation. 1 needed to begin workit1g full ti~ne to ·support myself, so I
ntver considered going back to
s&lt;!bool to certifY.
Because I admire the field of
education, I offer· this tiny contribution for teachers everywhere:
TEACHER-PARENT
AGREEMENT
I will teach your child to readif you teach your child to have an
open mind.
I will show your child how to
solve a math question - if you
s!]ow your child how to solve

111 Coul't St., Pomeloy, Ohio

740-9t2-2158 • Fu: 112-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shllwn LAwll
Mllnaglng Editor
ot..IC8y Hill
Controller

NATIONAL VIEW

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Monday, Dec. 24, the 358th day of 2001. There are
seven days lefi'in the year. This is Christinas Eve.
Today'r Highlight in History:
On Dec. 24, 1814, the War of 1812 officiaUy ended as the
United States and Britain sii!l\ed the Treaty of Ghent in Belgium.
On this date:
In 1524, Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama- who had
discovered a sea route around Africa to India - died in
Cochin, India.
'
In 1851, fire devastated the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., destroying about 35,000 volumes.
ln 1865, several veterans of the Confederate Army formed a
private social club in .Pulaski, Tenn., caned the Ku Klux Klan.
In 1871, Giuseppe Verdi's opera "Aida" had its world premiere in Cairo, Egypt, to celebrate the opening of the Suez
Canal.
In 1906, Canadian .physicist Reginald A. fessenden became
the first penon to broadcast a music program over radio, from
Brant Rock, Mass.
· In 1920, Enrico Caruso gave his last public performance,
singing in Jacques Halevy's "La Juive" at the Metropolitan
Opera in New York.
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt appointed Gen.
Dwight D. Eisenhower supreme commander of Allied forces as
part of Operation "Overlord."
In 1951, Gian Carlo Menotti's "Amah! and the Night Visitors," the first opera written specificaUy for television, was first
broadcast by NBC TV
In 1968, th e Apollo 8 astronauts, orbiting the moon, read pas&gt;ages from the Old Testament Book of Genesis during a
Christmas Eve television broadcast.
In 1980,Americans remembered the U.S. hostages in Iran by
burning candles or shining lights for 417 seconds - one second for each day of captivity.
Ten years ago: A day before resigning, Soviet President
Mikhail S. Gorbachev briefed Russian President Boris Yeltsin
on nuclear weapons-firing procedures. Gorbachev also held a
farewell meeting with staff members.
Five years ago: The streets of Belgrade, Yugoslavia, turned
violent as demonstrators traded blows with supporters of President Slobodan Milosevic and then were clubbed by riot
police.
· One year ago: Bombs exploded outside churches in nine
Indonesian cities and towns, killing at least 19 people. Nick
Massi, an original member of the Four Seasons, died at age 73.

the globe - if you point out
that the world is open to him/her.
I will explain the stars and planets - if you explain how your
child can surpass them.
I am able to teach your child
some things, but TOGETHER we
can teach your child everything
and help your child to grow. VERONICA M . DE CRESCIO,
CROYDON, PA. ·
DEAR VERONICA: Something I've learned over the years is
that when people feel they have a
calling, they should follow it.
It's never too late to realize your
dream. With your degree, perhaps
you could begin working now as a
substitute teacher. There is a great
need. It could serve as a giant step
toward getting you back on track.
011

Dear
Abby
ADVICE

,

'

his/her problems.
I wiU tell your child about war
and its aftermath - if y01riell your
child to treat others with eljualiry.
I will introduce your child to
Shakespeare - if you introduce
your child to others he/she may
not now understand, but will come
to respect.
I will point out the many places

I

Changes
• Chicago Tribune, on growing support for American Muslims:
On Sept. 11, 19 foreignen from Middle Eastern countries, acting in the name of Islam, boarded U.S. airliners, hijacked them
and proceeded with plans that killed thousands of people. So in
the last three months, Americans have shown a new distrust and
dislike of Muslims. Right?WeU, no. A new survey makes it clear
that whatever else the public has done in response to the terrorist attacks, it has not blamed them on an Muslims.
In the past,Aniericans might have initiany reacted with anger
and prejudice against the minority group whose members were
responsible, and only later repented of indiscriminate scapegoating. But this time, perhaps heeding the plea of President
Bush and other leaders, Americans immediately recognized
that these atrocities were the bloody work of individuals - not
of entire religions or ethnic groups.
According to a new poll conducted by the Pew Research
Center for the People &amp; the Press, most people have not taken
a more negative view of Muslims than before the attacks they've taken a more positive view. In March, 45 percent of
Americans expressed a positive opinion of Muslims. In
November, 59 percent reported a favorable attitude toward
Muslims, with only 17 percent stating an unfavorable view. By
contrast, only 32 percent of those poUed look favorably on
atheists ....
Compare this experience with the treatment of ethnic Japanese during World War 11. Som• 120,000 of them were placed in
internment camps, losing jobs, homes and businesses in the
process. Many spent most of the war there ....
"Wartime cartoons and posters routinely depicted the Japanese as murderous savages, immature children, wild beasts, or
buck-toothed, bespectacled lunatics," writes historian David
Kennedy. "The long record of racialist disdain made it easy to
demonize the Japanese."
The ethnic transformation of American society has led to
changes in racial attitudes over the last 60 years - changes 50
fundamental that they can withstand even strong countervailing pressures. Three months ago, a lot of people worried that
Americans would succumb to their worst.impulses. Instead, the
war against terrorism. has shown them at their best.

end

Page AS

JIUJman who passed up teaching offers advice from the heart

The Daily Sentinel

Support for US. Muslims
shows ·Americans at their best

lilt!

Please consider it.
DEAR ABBY: I am 100-plus
pounds overweight. My hu~band
has repeatedly asked me to lose
weight but I have not. We no
longer make love.
My husband is cordial and continues to provide beautifully for me
arid the kids- he's a great dad. Do
you think it's fair that he is withholding sex from me? I think he
expects too much, as I love to eat.
Now he has moved to another
bedroom and claims he is turned
off sexually. FRUSTRATED
WIFE
DEAR WIFE: Although everyone has the "right" to weigh whatever he or she wishes, your weight
gain has jeopardized your marriage.
By moving to another bedroom,

•

your husband has given you an
Important message: Your muriage
is in serious trouble. If you think it
is worth saving, ask your doctor for
a referral to a registered dietitian so
you can begin to lose the extra
pounds you have put on.
Next, consult a psychotherapist.
The fact that you have chosen your
love for food over your love for
your husband needs to be
addressed.
CONFIDENTIAL TO MY
READERS: Have a Merry
Christmas. but please keep in mind:
If you're drinking, don't drive; if
you're driving, don't drink.

D.. r Abby is writtw by Pauline ·
Phillips and ~a11ghtcr Jeanne Phillips.

VVhat a Social Security review involves
HENTOFF'S VIEW

FROM EuZABETH CRUMP

L&gt;uis Armstrong and jazz.· TheyJre freedom) baby
This year was the I OOth anniver&gt;ary of
Louis Armstrong's birth. Before he died
in 1971, his last recording was a reading
of"A Visit From St. Nicholas" fqr 1-c!BO's
'"Twas the Night," airing this month for
Vl!rY young children. In a time when we
are keenly mindful of our struggle for
our liberties, his story is especially luminous.
In the early 1950's, some of the
younger black jazz musicians caned
Armstrong a "handkerchief head." Dizzy
Gillespie, a rising star of J!10dern jazz,
spoke ofArmsrrong's "plantation image."
·Louis, the entertainer famous for his big
grin, didn't seem in step with the civil
rights movement.
By 1970, however, Dizzy GiUespie, at
the Newport Jazz Festival said:"lfit hadn't been for Louis, th'ere wouldn't have
. been oone of us. I want to thank Louis
Armstrong for my livelihood." He, and
everyone in jazz, realized that Armstrong
was the most continuany creative and
influential soloist of the oiusic.
Di~zy and other, younger musicians black aod white - had also discovered
the fire for justice in Armsrrong. In
1957, when Gov. Orville Faubus of
Arkansas defied the Supreme Court .and
sent state troops to prevent black stuLittle Rock
dents from enrolling in
public school, Armsrrong said of Faubus
and other white supremacists to the
press: "The way \hey are treating my
people in the South, the government
can go to hell."
Later, when police brntally beat whites
aod black during Martin Luther King's
march on Selma, Ala., Louis, playing in
Copenhagen, said:' "They would beat
Jesus if he was black and marched."
But Louis oever let his anger at Jim
Crow tnrn him into what used to be
called a reverse racist. When he was very
young and poor in New Orleans he
worked for a Jewish family, the Karmofskys. He had been blowing a tin horn,

a

Nat
Hentoff
COLUMNIST

auditorium. I saw thousaods of people,
colored and white; on the main floor,
just aU together - naturally. When you
see things like that,' you know you're
going forward."
Louis had considerable impact on that ·
forward motion. The late Charles Black,
a longtime law professor at Yale Univer- ·
sity, was a key member of Thurgood
Marshan's legal team, which won a historic series of victories agaiost segregated public schools - reaching a climax
in the unanimous 1954 Supreme Court
Brown v. Board of Education decision,
dedaring segregated public schools
inherently unconstitutional.
Charles Black used to cell how, when
he was 16 years old, in Texas, growing up
as a racist, he heard Louis Armsttang in
a hotel in Austin. "He was the first
genius I had ever seen," Black wrote. "It'
is impossible to overstate the significance
of a 16-year-old Southern boy's seeing
genius, for the first time, in a black. We
literally never saw a black then in any
but a servant's capacily. It was just the.n
thar I started walking to the Brown case
•
where I belonged!'·
And so, Louis Artnstrong became p~rt:
of American constitutional history. To
hear what Charles Black heard, I recom.mend the Columbia/Legacy series,_
which includes, "The Complete Loui•
Armstrong Hot Five and Hot Seven
Recordings" and "Louis Armstrong
Plays WC. Handy." And you will also
enjoy "Louis Armstrong: The Complete.
RCA Victor Recordings" (Bluebird). On
the Ver.ve label, there is "Louis Armstrong/Satchmo: A Musical Autobiogra"
phy;' with narration by Louis ..
If it were up to me, Louis Armsrrong
would be on Mount Rushmore with
other American icons. Louis, and jazz,
are part of the spirit of freedom.

but saw a coroet in a pawn shop window, for five dollars one day. Through
the Karmofikys, Louis bought his first
real trumpet.
Mrs. Karmofsky insisted that he eat
dinner regularly with the family, and she
taught him to siog "R_ussian Lullaby." He
never forgot how "soft and sweet" it was,
and bow genrly they)~id goodnight to
each other. As Gary (;,d4ins quotes him
in "Satchmo" (Da Capo Press, 2001 ):
"They were always :Jiarm and kind to
me. When I reachea , the age of 11, I
began to realize it was the Jewish family '
who instilled in m'l singing from the
heart."
On the road, even after he had gone
on overseas tours for, the State Department and had become world famous,
Armstrong remained familiar with Jim
Crow. In 1960, wheJ] his band's bus was
in Connecticut and Louis needed to use
the bathroom, a res~urant owner refused
him the use of the facilities.
Yet, as Dizzy Gillespie said, that grin
-that delight in sharing·his music with
anyone who wanted to hear it "showed his absolu~ refusal to let anything, even anger QYer racism, steal the
joy from his life." '
And he knew that changes in the
country were takiqg place. In a letter to
jazz writer leonard Feather, Louis spoke
(Nat Hent(/jf is a natiot1ally renowned
of"one of my most inspiring moments. authority on the First Amendment and the
I was playing a coocert date in a Miami Bill of Rights.)

Once a decision is made, you your case will be reviewed only they be eligible for any Social she wasn't eligible for Social Secu-

Q. I got a letter from you sayiog will receive a letter. If we decide about once every five to seven Securiry benefits?
rity benefits but she could receive
that my disability case was up for that you are still disabled, your years.
A. If you become eligible for SSI. Why wasn't she eligible for
review. What is involved in a benefits will continue. If our deciQ. If a person begius working at Social Security disability benefits, Social Security benefits?

review?
A. During your review, you will
be .asked to provide information
about any medical treatment you
have received and any work you
may have done. Your file will then
be sent to the state agency that
makes disability decisions for
Social Security. A, evaluation team
that includes a. disability examiner
and a doctor will carefully review
your entire file. If you require
additional testing or examinations,
the government will pay.

BY WIU' LaTER

some retiring and others opting to run
WASHINGTON - The 2002 elec- for governor or senator; Democrats have
tions for the closely divided House of lost seven.
Representatives are shaping up as fierceRedistricting, the redrawing of politily competitive and focused on a relative- cal lines to account for population
ly narrow range of districts and an changes after the once-in-a-decade ceounpredictable issues landscape.
sus, will continue through early summer.
· Democrats need to pick up six more
"Neither side JS getting a big bump,"
seats overall to gain the majority, but said Amy Walters, who analyzes Hou~e
political analysts say a smaller number of races for the Gook Political Report.
House seats thao normal will be in con- "Republicans should have a slight edge
tention because of a cautious approach from one more seat to three or fo!lr
the parties have taken this year to the more."
redrawing of congressional districts.
Big states like New York, Pennsylvania,
"We're starting with fewer races in Ohio and Floridll have not yet settled on
play," said nonpartisan ·political analyst · congressional maps.
Stu Rothenberg. "Redistricting has ere- '. Jenny Backus,' a spokeswoman for the
ated more safe seats and fewer competi- Democratic Congressional Campaign
tive districts."
Committee, said polls tend to shift
Rothenberg said he expects there will around but have repeatedly shown voters
pe. two dozen or more very competitive trust Democrats more on the economy.
House seats by next October. Republi- H er Republican counterpart Steve
cans expect 40, Democrats 50.
· Schmidt said Democrats are engaged in
Republicans think they'll have an wishful thinking.
Democrats say that House R.epublican
edge in the House elections aft er redistricting, ~specially considering their votes on issues suc h as airport security
usual advantage in money. Democrats and the economic stimul\Js package,
have history on their side and have per- which Congress f.1iled to enact this
suaded more of their members to run week, can be used against them in a
for re-election.
'
campa1g1L
Of the current House members, the
Schmidt, spokesman for the National
GOP has 14 not seeking. re-election, Republican Congression,J Com1pittee,

said the congressiooal map remains too
uncertain for the GOP to Start' targeting
many specific districts.
He said Democrats have deceived
themselves about any advantage they
might have on issues such as. the ecooomy.
"Their ad buys are relatively small,"
Schmidt said about the recent ads.
"They're spending money they don't
have. It's mystifying." .
Democrats said Thursday they )lave
raised almost $34 · million in 2001, a
record for an off-election year. But they
won't say how much money they have
on hand. Republicans are expected to
have their 6sual money advantage in
2002.
Democrats believe they have a historical advantage in the House race,
because th e party that holds the White
House has lost seats in midterm elections in an but two elections in the last
century.
"Democrats certainly can argue they
have history on rhdr side," said political
analyst Rothenberg. "But as the playing
fidd gets narrower, Democrats will have
to win a bigger proportion of the seats in
play to take back the House."

(Will Lester covers politics ami polling for
T1w Associated Press i" Was!Ji,.gtofl.)

age 18, at what point will he/she
be insured for Social Securiry disability benefits? ·
A. Generaliy, a young person age
18 would become insured for disability benefits in about 1-1/2
years. For more information, log
onto our website, www.ssa.gov, or
call Social Security's toll-free number and request the booklet, Disability.
Q. I'm the sole provider for my
husband and two small childreo. If
I were to become disabled; would

SOCIETY ScRAPBOOK

Lucky winner

Merchants' ·unle Red wagon Contest.·
Davis, whose name was drawn from
more than 700 contest participants, won ·
a Radio Ayer wagon filled with candles,
clothing, jewelry, and other assorted merchandise from local businesses, Also plc·
tured Is Meigs County Director of tourism
and Retail Development Betsy Nlcode·
mus. (Tony M. Leach photo)

PORTLAND -Army Sgt. Nancy E.
Bennett has arrived for duty at Hohenfels, Germany.
Bennett, who is the daughter of
Thomas R. and Nancy L. Hunt of Portland, is a supply sergeant assigned to the
Combat Maneuver Training Center.
Bennett is a 1990 graduate of Southern
High School in Racine.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Rhonda Davis, Pomeroy, left, was recent·
ly named the winner of the Meigs County

your husband and children may
also qualify for benefits on your
record. Your spouse would .be eligible if he is 62 or older, or if he is
caring for a child of yours who is
under I 6 or disabled and also
receiving benefits. Your children
would be eligible if they are under
age 18 or under age 19 if in high
school full time.
Q. My mother recently started
receiving Supplemental Security
Income (SSI) benefits . .She said the
Social Security representative said

A. Without knowing your mother's exact situation, I will speculate
that she wasn't eligible for Social
Security benefits because she dido 't have enough work credits
(work long enough or recently
enough) to qualify for Social Security benefits. People who do not
qualify for Social Security sometimes qualify for SSJ if they are age
65 or older, blind or disabled. They
also must have low income and few ·
assets.

CElEBRITY

Military news

Subscribe today.
992-2156

Bill Monroe.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - On
stage, Bill Monroe was always the dapper showman and band leader, known
as the father of bluegrass music with
his high lonesome sound and a princely, often intimidating presence.
Beginning friday, the world gets
peek at the late entertainer's carefully
guarded private side through an estate
sale that mingles his mandolins, stage
costumes and jewelry with household
possessions such as a bird house, a
water ski vest and denim work clothes.
More than 500 items are going on
display during a public sale at the
Country Music Hall of Fame. Another
100 will be auctioned off Saturday, ·
with simultaneous bidding on the
Internet.
·
The sale is creating a buzz among
collectors and music fans, particularly
enthusians of bluegrass music, enjoying
perhaps its greatest populariiy ever
with the recent release of several highprofile, multi-artist recording projects.

a

~144 8N4oM

q,,.U,94

lo OU4 ••aJ.u cU.J f.iMrk!
The Daily Sentinel
·Eclltort.l Stal'f1 Business Office:
OrculaUor11
Charlene Hoeflich
judy Clark
Mike jenkins
Brian J. Reed
Renee Carson
Tony M. Leach
Retail AdverUslng:
David Harris
Debra Call
.M~(JJ,;,t,,u

~a

.lla.pfM1 h- '!f«VVl

LOCAL HAPPENINGS

WASHINGTON TODAY

Competitiv8 battle stokes up for control ifHouse

sion is unfavorable, your can file an
appeal. If you don't your benefits
will stop three months you were
denied.
· Q. I have terminal cancer. Why is
Social Security reviewing my case?
I'm not going to get any better.
A. Under Social Security law,
ALL disability cases must be
reviewed from time to time. This is
to make sure that people receiving
benefits continue to be disabled
and meet all other requirements. If
medical improvement is not likely,

Community Calendar Is pub·
llshed as a lrH service to nonprofit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
f~nd-ralsers of anY,. type. Items
are printed only. all space per·
mlts and cannot be guaranteed
tb be printed a specific number
ot days,

at Sacred Heart Church. 9:30 lor 2002 to follow.
a.m.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Township Trustees will meet on Thurs·
WEDNESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township day at 6:30 p.m. at Pageville
Trustees end of the year meet· Town Hall. An organizational
ing, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the home of the clert&lt;, Osie Fall·

meeting will follow.
RUTLAND - Leading Creek
Conservancy District resched·
uled December meeting, 5 p.m.
Thursday.

rod.

REEDSVILLE - Olive Town·
ship Trustees, special end ol year
MONDAY
meeting, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m.,
, POMEROY- Enterprise Unit· township office on Joppa Road.
ed Methodist Church Christmas Call clerk at 378-6149 to be
E;ve candlelight services at 7 placed on agenda.
·
p,m. Monday.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Sacred Heart
RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Church, Children's liturgy, 7:30 Council will meet in special ses·
p.m. Monday.
sian on Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. A new
council member will be appoint. POMEROY - Sacred Heart ed.
Church, Choral presentation, fol·
lowed by midnight mass, Mon·
CARPENTER - Columbia
day, 11:15 p.m.
To)Nnshlp Board of Trustees will
hold their regular meeting on
Dec. 26 at 7 p.m. at the fire sta·
TUESDAY
POMEROY- Christmas mass tlon with organizational meeting

Minister seeks help
for scandals, lies
concerning his
reputation and his
Christian associates
for legal action.

1

Mri:hase the JCPenney 2001 Christmas Catalog and discover over
600 pages of holiday gifts and toys.
Purchase your copy lor only $4 and receive a

$10 Catalog Certificate
to use on your next order from JCPenney Catalog or JCPenney.com
Stop by your nearest JCPenney today!
Also available by phone or online
Calll ·800·222-6161 and ask lor TA005-0682A or log on to JCPenney.com

Purposes to be taken against those who have
sought to destroy and bring discredit to my

The residents of Olive Township

name and ministry. Also friends of my

We express our thanks

Christian ministery.
•

and appreciation for your vote
in support of the Levy for
Maintaining Cemeteries

Please contact in writin2:
Clyde Ferrell
909t' State Route 554
Bidwell, OH 45614
Any witnesses to these false claims aft appftclated.

JCPenney
Catalog Merchant
338 Second Avenue • Gallipolis
Hours: Mon - Sat 10 am - 6 pm

740-446·3525

�•World

The Daily Sentinel

WTC replicated - in lights
BOULDER, Colo. (AI') -In Chris Clyncke's front yard. the
World Trnd~ c~mer is m lights.
Clyncke dectded to pay homage to New York's destroyed
tude center this holiday season by erecting a 30-foot replica of
the twin towers, made from 4,000 Christmas lights.
"We wanted to do somethmg dtfferent after Sept. II. It starred out to show the kids who lost their parent.&lt; back in New
York that people around the world do care. Then it got a little
bigger," Clyncke said.
With his wife and 13-year-old son, Clyncke. a concrete conttactor, spent four weeks setting up the display. which includes
an American flag. a Christmas tree, Santa Claus and reindeer.

Crackdown yields 1n a1 aesb
MIAMI (AP) - Troopers stopped about 350 cars, many of
them juiced-up Hondas, Mustangs and Toyotas, and arrested
172 people in a sting targeting drag racers.
Eleven people have been killed in 13roward Counry in che
past two years in drag racing accidents, and two died in MiamiDade County in 1999.
last week, a man speeding at more than 100 mph northwest
of Orlando accidentally plowed Into a slower moving car being
driven by his mother. She died at the scene.
·
Early Saturday, troopers blocked off both ends of a mile-long
stretch of highway west of Miami frequented by drag racers,
then converged on the drivers.

Olympic torch carried in NYC
NEW YORK (AP) - The Olympic torch made . its way
through the boroughs and streets of New York City Sunday.
carried by runners who lost family members and friends in the
Sept. II terrorist attacks.
The torch was carried across Staten Island and imo Brooklyn
Sunday morning as part of the New York leg of it. 46-state,
13,500-mile journey to the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt lake
City.
Among ihe roughly 100 runners carrying the torch Sunday
was Connor Geraghty, who lost his firefighter father in the
World Trade Center attack, and Lyzbeth Glick. Her husband.
Jeremy, was apparently among passengers who struggled with
hijackers aboard United Right 93, which crashed in Pennsylvania on Sept. II.
·

Page A&amp;•

Moncbly. December 24, 200C

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages 82-4
Comics, Page 85 ·

Page 81

Explosives found in passenger's sneakers·
BOSTON (AP) - A prelnniiMry test lound explosives
m the sneakers of a passenger
whO&lt;&lt; attempt to detonate the
substance forced a Miamibound airliner to be diverted
to 13oston under fighter jet
escort.
French authorities identified
the man as a Sri Lankan named
Tariq Raja, traveling on a
British passport. In london,
Scotland Yard said they
believed the suspect was a
British national.
Raja, 28, was expected to
face charges including disturbing a flight crew. An initial
court appearance was set
Monday morning, the Fl31
said. Raja , was being held
under constant watch Sunday
in a jail in Plymouth. according
to Mike Seele, spokesman for

American Ai~ines Flight 63 en route to Miami lrom Paris was
diverted to Boston after a passenger tried 1o ignite an ~mptooised
explosive" in his shoes betO&lt;e being subdued by other pasaengers
and crew. The suspect, iden@ed as Richard Raid, was alone
travelling on a British passpon, which may be lake.

the J&gt;Jymouth County Sheriff's
Department.
French police opened an
investigation Sunday to deternnne how R'\ia eluded
increased security measures at

Charles de Gaulle airport outside Paris, where American
Airlines Right 63 took off Saturday.
Passengers on the flight said
they had noticed the tall, pony-

tailed man standing alone an4
stone-faced before boarding. •
"He had a blank look,
Nicholas Green, a 27-year-olcl
French trader, said. "The pen-:
pie who had seen him, remem~
bered him:'
S
During the flight, the su5f
pt:c't, who wa.&lt; sitting behil\4
the wing in the coach sectiolf
of the Boeing 767, ttied tti
light a fuse prottuding from
one of his shoes, according af
America!) Airlines spokesmaii
AI Becker.
;
A flight mendant intervenea
and the 6-foot-4 suspect resist~
ed and bit her, authorities sai.G
Passengers subdued the man;
some taking off their belts to
strap him into his seat, officiili
said. Two doctors used
from the airplane's medical kif
to sedate him.
·

drufi

Sunday evening, a group of torchbearers was scheduled to for all three grades was $1.56 a gallon. On Dec. 21 the weighP•
board a ferry that would pass the Statue of Liberty and round ed average was $1.12, according to the national Lundberg Sur"
the southern tip of Manhattan.
•
•
~
~

•

...'

Gas prices tumble even lower

RepPrt: Undh met bin Laden

CAMARILLO, Calif (AP) - Gasoline prices fell an aov~rage
of 3 cents a gallon ,nation wide in the last two weeks to their
lo;.vest level in nearly three years.
But motorist. shouldn't expect the trend to last much longer.
Pump prices c9uld bottom out as early as January, as retailers
try to halt sliding profits, oil prices continue to rise, and major
oil-producing nations implement an expected production cut,
said Trilby lundberg, an industry analyst, in a report issued Sunday.
Prices have fallen the past 15 weeks, tumbling 44.61 cents a
gallon since Sept. 7, when the national average weighted price

NEW YORK (AP) -John Walker Lindh, the 20-year-old
American captured fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan;
once met with Osama bin Laden while living in a terrorist
ttaining camp near Kandahar, according to a published reporti
Citing unnamed sources, Newsweek magazine reports Lindh
was given the choice between training for terrorist instructing
or fighting as an ai-Qaida soldier against the northern allianc~
in the months before the Sept. 11 attacks.
!:
A Justice Department official told Newsweek that Lindli
chose to fight- :in issue now at the center of discussions about
Li~~fu~
:

Dec.26&amp;

Pork

Dec.2JONLY
...... Joan of Arc
Dk Red or Lt Red

Shoulder
Roast

Moncl.y. DeceniMr 24. 2001

•

Q

Prices Good Wed

.......

'

Kidney Beans

~

•
"

SUNDAY's

Technical
difficulties
Due to technical problems
beyond its conttol, The Daily ·
Sentinel was unable to report
several local sports stories last
week.
However, those games were
featured in the Dec. 23 Sungay Times-Sentinel.
The Daily Sentinel relies on
an independent firm to host
its e-mail and Internet services, through which the
newspaper receives game
reports from its correspondent&lt; and transmit.&lt; them to
its production facility in Gallipolis. A phone line outage
caused the independent firm
to go offline for an extended
period.
The Daily Sentinel apologizes for any inconvenience
caused by this outage and
thanks its loyal readers for
their continued patience.

Neuheisel next
It Nobe Dame?
Washington's
Rick
Neuheisel has emerged as a
leading candidate to become
the next coach at Notre
Dame,. according to a report
by ESPN.com.
The Fighting Irish were
working on a package that
could be worth as much as
$2.5 million annually, according to the report on ESPN's
Web site.
The report, posted Saturday
night and citing uni4entified
sources, said a contract offer
could be presented to
Neuheisel- as · early 'as· next
week.
However, the Huskies'
· coach said earlier Saturday he
was out of the running to take
over at Notre Dame.
"It's over," Neuheisel said in
San Diego after a team practice for the Holiday Bowl
against Texas on Dec. 28. "I
think that got nipped in th~
bud rather quickly. It never
really got started."
He was not available Sunday to comment on the
ESPN.com report.

Grizzlies 88

Nunn Better
Mini Chunk or
Golden Nugget

Chiquita

Bananas

Dog Food
Royal

Pink
Salmon
14.75 Oz.

United

Valley Bell

Drinking

2%Milk

Water
Gallon

298 SECOND STREE
POMEROY, OHIO
PRICES IEFFECTIVE DEC 26 &amp; 27

Favre,
Pack
bounce

HIGHLIGHTS

Celtics 85,

United

.The Daily Sentinel

•

. BOSTON (AP) -Antoine
Walker had 24 points and 11
rebounds, and Paul Pierce
·added 20 points to lead the
Boston Celtics · to an 85-80
victory over the Memphis
Grizzlies on Sunday night.
The Celtics used an 8-0 run
in the final 1:30 to win their
sixth straight home game.
Shane Battier scored 22
points, and Tony Massenberg
18 for the Grizzlies.
Memphis went on a 13-0
run to start the fourth quarter
and took 'a 72-66 lead on
Massenberg's two free throws
with 8:29 left.
After the Celtics took a 7774 lead on a putback by Tony ,
Battie with 3:52 left, Jason
Williams made two free
throws to give the Grizzlies
the lead back at 2:52.

Browns
GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) The Green Bay Packers are
headed back to the playof!S
thanks to Brett Favre, who is
flashing his MVP form again,
Favre threw three touchdown passes
as 'the Pack•
ers ended a
two-year
postseason
drought with
a 30-7 victo•
ry over the
Cleveland
Browns on~
Favre
cold, snowy
afternoon · at
•
Lambeau Field.
Favre, who completed 18 oT
28 passes for 139 yards and no
interceptions, extended hu
NFL record with his sixth 30~
touchdown season.
.
Green Bay (10-4) remaine4
a game behind Chicago in the
NFC Centtal. If the PackerS
gain a· game on the Bears in
the last two weeks, they own
the tiebreaker and would get
home playoff game with the
division title.
The Packers have never los~
a playoff game at home, an4
Favre has never lost a hom~
game in which the tempera~
ture was 34 or below. ·
He improved to 29-0 in
such games Sunday, 'when it
was 24 degrees at kickoff,
with a wind chill of 11.
Ahman Green, who nm just
10 times for II yards at Tennessee last week, gained 150
yard.&lt; on 21 carries before
going to the bench in the
fourth quarter with labored
breathing. Dorsey Levens
rushed nine times for 72
yards.
The Packers' beleaguered
defense had a big day, too,
forcing four turnovers that led
to 21 points.
'l'frone Williams intercepted Tim Couch twice, return-

BACK IN THE GAME- Hannan's Greg Collins (22) goes toe-to-toe with Southern's Nate Martin during third quarter play
Saturday night at Southern. Collins, who suffered an ankle injury the first week of the regular season, returned to the hard·
wood against the Tornadoes. (Dan Adkins photos)

Tomadoes tame·'Cats
Swarming Southern
difense, hot shooting
foe/ 100-53 rout
· BY SCOTT WoLFE
OVP CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - Southern bounced a
hustling Hannan squad I 00-53 Saturday in Charles W Hayman Gymnasium,
hitting the century mark for the first
time since 198.7.
Southern, which bolstered its schedule by adding 2001 West Virginia state
semifinalist Hannan, improved to S-1,
while Hannan dropped to 0-4.
Southern's defense gave Hannan a
hammering blow right out of the gate,
forcing the Wildcats into 25 turnovers,
12 of which qme in a blistering firstquarter pace. Tornado defender~ manu. factured 19 steals, while Southern's

AROUND THIS WAY ... Southern's
Macy Rees (14) puts up a wall of
defense around Hannan's Brett Jarrett
Saturday night on the Tornadoes'
homecourt. Rees and the Tornadoes
defeated the Wildcats 100-53.
shooters stroked 11 three-pointers.
A pair of 23-point efforts from Dally
Hill and Justin Connolly produced the

a

bulk of the Southern offense. Connolly hit 7-9 from the line and had seven
rebounds. Hill was S-6 from the charity stripe and earned a double-double
by collecting 10 steals.
freshman Craig Randolph chipped
in 16 points and five steals, and Jordan
Hill added 12 points and four assists.
Junior Curt Crouch and Macy Rees
rolled a pair of nines, while Curtis Neigler added three, Jeremy Yeauger three,
and Nate Martin two.
Hannan was led by Jason Powell and
Bruno Barros, who each had 12 points.
Barros recorded a double-double with
12 rebounds, and Powell added a sevenrebound effort.
D. Sabolsky added eight and Brett Jarrett eight, while Greg Collins, coming
off an ankle injury, tossed in five.
The Southern defensive intensity
was high early, forcing four turnovers
and prompting a quick timeout from

Pl•n- Soulhem, 13

PI.-HIHBNWIII,B3

Ravens' defense blanks bumbling Bengals
BALTIMORE (AP) - It
was just like last year for the
.Baltimore Ravens, who thoroughly frustrated Cincinnati
quarterback Jon Kitna in their
long overdue first shutout of
the season.
Ray Lewis had two of Baltimore's three interceptions, and
the Ravens overcame a 127yard rushing performance by
Corey Dillon in a 16-0 rout
Sunday.
Baltimore yielded 476 yards
one week earlier in a 26-21 .

loss to Pittsburgh. But against
the hapless Bengal.&lt;, the defense
looked much more like the
unit that last year had four
shutouts and set an NFL record
for fewest points allowed over a
16-game season (165).
"It was a familiar feel,
because it didn't matter what
our offense did," lewis said. "If
they went three and out, it was
a turnover, whatever it was.
When we stepped on the field,
we ttuly be~eved they couldn't
move the ball on u&lt;:'

Interceptions by Lewis and
Duane Starks ended two
Cincinnati drives deep in Baltimore territory in the second
quarter, and the Bengals didn't
pass midfield in the second half
until midway through the
fourth quarter.
"It felt like we kind of played
old Ravens ball;' Baltimore
~nebacker Peter Boulware said.
Terry Allen scored the
game's lone touchdown and
Matt Stover kicked three field
goals as Baltimore (9-5)

enhanced its wild-card hopes
by avenging an earijer 21-10
defeat at Cincinnati.
''We're thrilled to be where
we're at right now," Ravem
coach Brian Billick said.
Dillon ended Baltimore's
string of 50 straight games
without allowing a 100-yard
rusher. It didn't matter, because
Kitna's interceptions ruined
three promising drives and the
Bengal.&lt; (4-1 0) absorbed their
seventh straight defeat and
third shutout of the season. ·

''How can you satisfied with
some stats if you didn't win?
That's the bottom line," Dillon
said.
As the game .drew to a close,
Kitna and Bengal.&lt; wide receiver Chad Johnson exchanged
heated words on the sideline.
Kitna, who was 16-for-39
with four turnovers, said,
"There was some frustratioQ
between him and I, and it'1
going to stay between .Chad
and I unless he wants to talk to
you about it."

Furious Redmen c:otfteback
too little,·too late at home

Raptors 83,
Heat 76
TORONTO (AP) -Vince
Carter had 27 points and 10
rebounds Sunday, leading the
Toronto Raptors to an 83-76
win over the Miami Heat.
Jim jackson had a teamhigh 12 points for the Heat,
who have lost 18 of their last
21 games. The Heat, who shot
39 percent, entered the game
averaging a league~] ow 82.7
points a game.
Antonio Davis added 12
points and 10 rebounds for
the Raptors, who have nbt
lost since calling a playersonly meeting following a
·four-game losing streak.

•

BY

MARK WIWAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - For the third time this
season, the University of Rio Grande Redmen basketball team lost at· home. The latest
defeat in front of the home folks was Satur-·
day against Huntington (Ind.) College, 9086.
The final score was not indicative of the
game. Huntington controlled the contest
from the 9:48 mark of the first half until the
final five minutes of the game when a furious
comeback by the Redmen fell short.
The Foresters grabbed a 20-17 lead at the
9:48 mark on a jumper by Ryan Thw:iits to
gain the advantage. The lead swelled to 31-21
at the 5:47 mark on a tip-in by Greg Miller.
Huntington led 42-31 at halftime.

Rio Grande (7 -8) was led by senior post
man Joe Delaney (Archbold, Ohio) with 18
point. (8-of-8 shooting from the field), Jerry
Barlow (Otway, Ohio) added 17 points off
the bench and pulled down I 0 rebounds.
Joe Martin (Toledo, Ohio), who sparked
the late Redmen rally, scored 11 points,
ripped down nine rebounds and dished out
five assists. Martin skied to tip-in a basket,
cutting th e deficit to 80-73 with 2:53
remaining. Jason Beller (Cross lanes, W.Va.)
also helped key the comeback by draining
four trifectas (12 points).
Huntington (12-4) placed four players in
double figures, led by All-American candidate
David Porter. Porter scored 19 points (17 in

Please see Rio, 13

•

LOCAL PRODUCT- Rio's Matt Simpson, right, a 2001 East·
ern High graduate, looks for his shot Saturday. (Bryan Long)
J

•

�•
Page 82 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

· Monday, Dec. 24, 2001

~~----------~~~~~~------~~

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\.e~ister
CLASSIFIED

Hoy lor- 1100 lo1100,
112.00. 740-IIW·
0373 or 7~1112·2143.

5I&lt;&amp;-

Hay. squo,. boleo. gooa
Ql.dy hay. cal (1~-5533

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

Ouaiily hoy ,., . .. ., 10
balo; trw miatd dog to
-tlorno(l'40)GM411tO

Ouaiily
hay for - · ll.llO
ba'e; lr"
mi)Ct&lt;J &lt;»g to

-home

(7401815-31110

Squoro bolas now S1.25
each. 1 mile on At. 2 N.
(304)875-1869

''

~....

Square Bales Now $1 .00

on
At Until
2 N. (304)67~8
EaCh.
01-(11.()2. 1 rnn. ::J[!!!!!~l::

In one week With us

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW

\!Crihune

Place

To

Offiae !fo~~·

MEMORY Of

92 Dodge ve, "OOkl Good.
Runs GOOd, $1500 OBO.
(740).4t.Q888

KLAIBER

Word Ads

Display' Ads

Deily In-Colum n: 1 00 p m .
All DISplay 12 Noon 2
Monday - Friday for I nser t ion
=~~:~ce;r~o~avs Prior To
In Nexr [)ay 's Pepf!r
Sunday In-Col umn; 1 00 p.m . sund" Dlsplov : 1.00 p.m .
Friday For Su nda V5 Paper
Thursdav ror Sundavs Paper

Items

110

\\\Ol \(I \II '\h

.r..·.·

_I'ERsoNAis
____

_.l

Why waft? Start maeling
Ohio singles tonight, call toll
free 1-800-766-2623 eKt
1621 .

~aln Confidence In An
• Uncel'llln Wortd. Learn el·
fectlve sell delense moves
today at Ja~ Clark's Kenpo
Karate School. 740-742·
2546

Trim your taxes while helpIng others this holiday season Donate to ReUse In' dustrles.
Albany/Athens
·(140)698·6200

GIVEAWAY

~ale Lab Puppy. 4 months
old (740)446-1892
Puppies to giveaway Part
cocker spanlelfcollle. Call
(304}675_7559
.:..._..:.__ _ _ _ _ _
wooden Pallets to give·
away, Gallipolis Da11y Tnbune, 825 Third Ave., Galllpotis, OH Located beh!nd
t~e bulldmg, first come, first
serve baSIS
l..osr AND
FOUND

Found: Blue Healer dog on
Bladen Road near Swan
Creel&lt;. Call (740)256·6890
lost· I yr. old male Beagle
dog, Whites Hill Fload, Rutlilnd, no collar 742·0106
Lost· mate chocolate lab
wearing red collar, has been
neutered 1 answers to 'Rover last seen Dec. 10 on
~ aoech Grove Ad , Rutland,
~award olfersd! Conlacl
Wayne Adams at {740)742·
2:675 or 740-742·7200: anyOrne.

AUCI'IONAND

I

Fl..F.A MARKE.T

"--,;,;;;;,;,;;,;;;;;,;,;,-'
, AnQie's Flea Market- having
~o day boK sale, $1 a box
V/ad. 26, Thurs 27.

~ Silk:k Pearson Auction Com-

~ny, lull time auctioneer,
complete auction service
Licensed #66,0hio &amp; West
Virginia, 304-773·5785 Or
304-773·5447.

·r

WANIED

ro BUY

I

·--llitiiiii!"o--'
•

~olute Top Dollar. us
Silver, Gold Coins, Proof• !1~19,
Diamonds,
Gold
Rmgs,
U S Currency,M T.S Coin Shop, 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, 740·
«6-2842
1 \ ll'iln \II '\I
..,11&lt;\ltl ...

.f

nO

Ow&gt; WANim

Chalr·Side assistant needed
with in busy local dental
practice to assist dentist
wrth procedures/patients.
Effective
communication/minimum
techn!callproblem·solving
skills required. 35 flextime
hours per week. Salary
commensurate with experi·
ence. Submit resume via
mall to Ofllce Manager C
509 9. Third Ave Middle·
port. Oh 45760 by t2·28·01.

I
•

1

1
200 Warrior Excellent con·
dition. Payoft of take over
payments (304)674·4684
Applications are curr.ently
baing accepted by O~er·
b(ook Center for a full lime
;t;nd part t!me 11 · 7 shift
. LPN. Anyone Interested
should contact KrfsUe Mad·
den at (740)992·6472 for
more Information.

llw&gt;WANIED

I

I

r
t5l

I

MOBILE HOMES

IDRSALE

J8_

I

s

r .

s

r

Poslllon Opening
Community Action Is seek·
lng a Case Manager/P~
gram Developer lor recruit·
men!, assessment and
training assistance. Mus!
have e~~:cellent co"!munlcalion and organizational
skills. Two or four year degree required . Marketing
andlor Social Work back·
ground prelerrad. Send resum&amp; and three references
to . COmmunity Action, Box
272.'Cheshlre, Oh 45620.
Closing dale 1123102 EOE

~?:aoaoona~-J~e~::~oo
I

I

O

j

16 Wide Only $195 00 Per
l..&lt;ri'S &amp;
12 Bedroom, washer/ dryer
Month, 8 99% FIKed Interest
ACREAGE
hook-up. Close to hoSpital
!NOTICEI
Rate With Air And Un- __
• (740)441-Q117. References
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· derpinning 1-888-926-3426
required
INO co recommends that
For Rent trailer Jot in Mason
you dD busjness with people 1970 CMmplon 12xeo 2 WV $100 00 a mon 304- Accepting appiiCatrons at
you know, and NOT to send bedrooms $3 ,000 OBO. 882·2817
THE .MAPLES, 100 Memorlmoney through the mall until Call {30 4)675•2470
.
al Dnva E!"t, Pomeroy, OH.
you have investigated the
lndl80 Creek Estates, 3·6 Age and nlCome guidelines
oHering
1985 Skyl1ne 14x70, 3 bed· acre lots, west or Rio apply Prionty w1ll be g1ven
·
room GOOd Condltron. Call Grande, from $25,900. to those with mcome under
Start Your Business To- Harold, 740-385-9948
(740)245·5747
$9,750 Rents are Con'!PUt·
.. _ P.
S...........1 C
~ _ ed according to your in:y Sp~~eAv~i'b:bi;gAt ~~: 1987 14~~:7d, 3 br /2b~h, Lot for Rent With approvo;ov come. For funher detatls,
V 11
$4995 . Will help with delill· application (304)675-8793 call (740) 992-7022. EHO
fordable Rate. Spring a ey ery. Call Kavena, 740-385P~a. Ca1174Cl-448-0101 · 9948.
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
I
MENTS AT BUDGET PRI·
MoNEY
1990 Fleetwood 2 bedroom
CES AT JACKSON
TO LoAN
home·call Cheryl 0 740Ho~
I TATES, 52 WestwOOd o~r.e
-385·9621 . 2002 Sunpolnta
FOR RENT
from S297to $383. Wa11t to
Look No F~rther wa provide 3 bedrootnl2bath 14 x 70·
shOp &amp; movies Call 7~
top Quality Financing Aasla· mllat sell-call Mike 0 740·
446-2568. Equal Hou&amp;~ng
tanceendHelp Start aNew 385-2434.
15 Court Street. 2 Bed· Opportunity.
~ ~
N 'y.
rooms, 1 1/2 baths, Kitchen
.
1 868
~~~l'.~; fiW ear. • • 1891 Ml\nslr:'n 14x70, d31 with Slova and retrlgerator. One br apt In Pt Pleaalnt
~ ~
bedroom excallanl con • Off Street P.ar1tlng, Cloae to 1 1 · d
•·
~AI. Ilion, call Kavana; '(740)385- Schools and Downtown u;t~ ~~~nl-~ ~~~~~8 " 0
S ellS
G848.
Area. $5951 month pluo do· P P
ERVI
198! 18XSO. excellent con· poelt and ~aferenca. No Flen~•ra Wanted: Pilot Pro·.
dldon will htlp with dtllvfiY, Potl. (740)448-4928
gram. Own your own homo.
TURNID DOWN DN
11 .:lkkl 740
9948
" IIIII or no crldlt QKI. Call
IOCIAL IICURITV /Ill? Cl "
•
·• o·
2 Bedroom Houoo. South (740)44flo3384.
No FH Unleu We Wlnl
on Statt ~oute 7. Refer·
1·888·582·33'6
~~ ~~~ ~ 4sf51:.~~:, ance Aaqulred. Call River Btnd Place now IC·
cau Nikki, (140)385·7571 .
(740)441·1817
otptlng applleauona ror 1 br.
Hud Subeldlzt Apt . lor the
New 2002 14 wldt only 2 bedroom house In Pomer· elderly A dleabled. EOH
lfor,tg
$7GG
down'
&amp; only py. $375 por mo. piul do- (304)882·3t 21
'
$155.38/mo. cau Kavtna, potlt with optiOn to buy, no
• FOR SALE
, 740·•••767t.
ptll (740)698·7244
TWin River Towers now lcI
.-;tO
'
ceptJng applleltlona for
RlmOdtltd 3 bedroom, In New 2002 14 wide. Only Elegant 2 or 3 bedroom 1BR. HUO aubeldlztd apt
Middleport, call Tom Ander- $899 Down &amp; S15!
par houaa, 299 Mulberry, Pornfor elderlyEoOnHd disabled.
,
oon I ttr Spm. (740)992· . monlh. CaII Haro Id. 740• oroy. no pet' · 1740) 992 •
13041675 679
3348.
:385-7671
5858.
'

PPORTllNI'n'

j

,s.

riO

j

6

•a•

r'O

t

38

.5

•

8

Tara Townhouse Apart·
1ments, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 FIOOtl, CA, 1
1/2 Bath. Fully Carpeled.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
tlo, Start $365/Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit
Required, Days: 740-446·
3481; Evenings· 740·367·
0502. 741l-446·0t01.
---------

......... 111111,..
t11L'111........... W.

.... ,.. •..,..,11111
I leU,IIIlofl.......,..httn

-wW1'1,..,

...

CARL

"""' wldo ..
........,..
w.....
, .. Cllrlooy.

;.

AT Clllli8TMAII

TIM£
CHRJSTMAIIIS A
. TIMEWH&amp;N

WETIIINit

OFSANTAAND

TRUCKS

GOOD ChEER
WE ONLY WISH

FOKSALE

OUR IIANTA WAll
mLLHJ!lRI

PB. Air. Good Condition.
67,000 m1101. (740)448·
2311 11ttr 3.00pm

:.~.RFNr--·',.,t--APAR1MENrs·ID·R·RFNr--_.l r ~~ Ir ~: I

I

~'6~P~~~~ ~~r~~ls:d ~

rtO

r

to the Federal Fatr Houalng Act ol 1168 • Thlt

6
L,e._ •••

7

r

87 Ford Thundorbfnj, loath.,. Mall, ILinroof 1 PS, Pl.
PW. CD. IIIV cruiM, ~2.000
mlloa. loaded. (1~0)446·
4241

t980 Dodge t/2 ton. PS.

riO

G

Tickets/Purebred Animal s
or Garage/Yard Sates • Limit 3 Per Person
Mail To: Ohio Valley Publishing , S2 5 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631

EOE ... nd.lrda. Wt

ads

New Double Wide . $195
Per Month! 3 Bedroom, 2
Bath. Free Delivery &amp; Set·
up t -868·926·3426

REM OPTIONS POSITION
OPENING NOTICE. Posl·
lion. Respite Prov1der. Location. Point Pleasant Area.
Qualilicationa EKperience
prelerred but not required In
a human service f1eld . High
School Diploma, Transportation, Cnmlnallnvesllgatlon
ol Background (CIB). Valid
West V1rglnla Driver's Ll·
canse wtlh Proof ol lnsur·
anca. Three letters of rec·
ommendation. Please Ae·
spond to. REM OJ)tlons
Contact: Yollnda Moore ~~
Sheila
Bell.
Phone.
(304)768-5575. Or send lol·
ter of Interest w1th contact
Information
to
6404
MacCorkle Avenue St. AI·
bans. WV 25177

commercial Ads

• No

tny Iota or txs»nMllult r..ult1 from the pubtlc•tlon
Ire tiWIYI confldentl81. • Current rala Clrd tppllel. • All

4 bedroom house In Racine
across from park, nice
All NllleiiiNI advertltlrtg
neighborhood, heat pump
In this newepapet' 11
heat &amp; central air. $500 per
month, $500 deposit In·
IUbfed tO the ~
Fair Houllng Aet of 1118 New/ Used Homes· lmm8(11- dudes water, sewer, trash,
ate Possesion, No pay· (740)949·2217 call 7amwhich mekH It lllepl to
ments unt1l Feb 2002. Pre· 10pm.
1dvert1H "any
quailly by phone. (740)446·
preference, limiUitlon cr
4 Rooms &amp; Bath. S300/
S216.
dlterlmlniUOn baMd on
month 52 Olive Street.
r~~ee, color, rellglcn, Mil
Nice 28)160 Double Wide (740)446·3945
fam11111111tu1 or n11Uon11
sett1ng on rented lot In
origin, or any Intention to
Buy homes from $199/mo ,
Point Pleasant area. 2)16
Foreclosures. 4% down, 30
make any ILICh
walls, thermal pane win·
years at 8.5% APR. For list·
pn~fllrence, limitation ar
dows, priced to sale. Call
Data
Entry
Immediate
tnge 1·800·319·3323 8)(1.
dl.arlmlnatlon."
(S04)675·S669
(606)474·
Openings. Pleasant OHice
t709.
.
4391
ask
lor
Rosemary.
atmosphere, corr,patltive
Thll ntwiPIIPtt Will not
wages &amp; benellts. Position
HOUSE FOR RENT 158
knowingly tccept
1st Time Home Buyers/ 2ND. AVE 3 Bedrooms, 2
requires both accuracy &amp;
advtrtiHmenta tor tftl
FHA/ Government Loans/ batl'ls, 5 Rooms Total, Nice
speed Send resume too
Htltt which•.. In
Single Parent Program and Clean. Great Location.
EB21 200 Main Street Point
violation af tha IIIW. Our
Available.
Call Ideal tor semor couple.
Loans
Pleasant, \NV 25550
(740)446-S09S
rHdlra
are
hertby
Retail Merchandising NaPhone (740)446·9539
lnfonne&lt;f that an
2 bedroom, stove &amp; relrlger· Pilot Program
Dnvers wanted, no COL, 23 tiona! CO. has area Stores
Renters
dwelllngeldver11Md
In
ator, new w111dows &amp; carpet, Needed 304- 7 729 5.
yrs. old or older, good dnv· Open PT Flex Schedule.
thl•
ntftpepar
art
Jng record, banafils, drug Experience Preferred, Over
'
$4.995. 740·992-2167
available on an equal
screen, senlotS welcome. 1· t8 Wllh veh1cle. Call
MOBU..E
Ho~ I
opportunity bun.
28x60 3 Or 4 Bodroom, On·
c800.:.:.-S:.:S:.:t..:
·6-,SS:.:S_ _ _--:- (877)429·2381 or email:
FOR RENT
ib1rch0natlnstorecom
ly $345 00 Per Monlh
•
Family Addiction Communi·
· 8.99 % Fl~ed Interest Rate,
ty Treatment Setv1ces- An Sales Pos1tlon. Immediate
HOMES
11·888-928·3426
2br. Trailer with EK!ra large
Outpatient Alcohol and Drug Opening. Apply In Person
FOR SALE
Expando Nloe yatd, low deCounseling agency Is ec- Bring Resume. Acquisitions
Divorce Forces Bale! 3 Bed- posit.
Available
Now
ceptlng resumes for the lol- Jewelry, 151 200 Ave., Gal·
room/ 2 Bath on private lot (304)875-3959
lowing poshlon: secretary· llpolis
3-4 bedroom, 2 baths, lr, dr, call (740)446·3570.
General duties. Reqwe·
kitchen, central heat &amp; aJc,
,
Beautiful River VIew Ideal
ments: high school diploma URGENTLY
NEEDED- basement &amp; attached ga- Don 1 Own Land? We Dol For 1 Or 2 People, Referenand one {1) year experience plasma donors. earn $50 to rage with 2 br, 1 bath, apt., Lanw HoCen P 8:~~~~s ces. Deposit, No Pets, Fos·
1
In secretariBI and computer $60 per week for 2 or 3 barn, 19 acres fenced, 1 112 Ava ab 8 ·
a (~
· ter Trailer Park, 740·441·
skills, knowledge With expe· hours weekly. Call Sera· miles N. on old 33 from 3583
0181 .
rience In Microsoft Win- Tee, 740·592·6651 .
Meigs H1gh School, by ap- Limited Or No Credit? Gov·
dows, Excel and Word and :;;
polntment only, (740)593- emment Bank Finance Only On Route 160 1rl Porter, 2
must be dependable and 11
BtJSINISI)
6937
At Oakwood In Bartours· Bedroom, $260/ month,
1
posses good telephone
'TRAINING
p v111e, WV 304·736·3409.
References and Deposit
skills
Mobile Home. Like New Required. {740)388-9081
'
Send resume by January Cl 1 Illpo II• C,,.... C0 II ega story, 2 Full
Bath. 3 Bed- Belonged to Older Person
04, 2002 to· FACTS, 45 (Careers Close To Home) rooms . Large
Kitchen, Phone (740)256-1378 after Trailer lor Rent or Sale,
Olive Street, Gallipolis, OH Call Todayl 740·446-4367, Large Utility Room, LRI ORJ Qpm.
14x60, 2 Bedroom, 1 1/2
4563 1
FAX t0 17401.... ~~
'1·600·214.0452,
Family Am. New Carpet
Bath, Gas Heat (740)367·
or MIF/H
~·
Aeg""90.05• t274B ·
8014. EOE
throughout F/A &amp; AJC New 14 Wide, •~ Bed room . 7t67 • (740)S68 •017S·
180
W.
$79,900. (740)446·9585 o; Only $19,850. Free Delivery Trailer In RaCine, 2 bedFull Time- Dental Assistant. 1
lbANfiDDo
(740)446·2205 or (740}446· &amp; Set Up. 1·888·928-2426 room, carport, nice neighSind Resume to. CL.A 458 .
2683
bo
$375
h
c/o Gallipolis Oallu Tribune.
.
New 14x70, 3 bedroom, 2
rhood,
per mortt •
825 T 1d A
111 11
a
Route 2, bath. Only $995 down &amp; $375 deposit Includes wahr
ve,
a po s, All ol your home repa1rs. ad· 3 edroom on
sewer,
garbage,
189.621month Call Cheryl, tar,
4
2
OH 45631:
dilions &amp; remodeling. 24hr (30 )675-533
(740)949-2217 call 7am740-355•7671 .
GetlnTheF••tlane.
emergency se.vk:e, senior
10pm.
COVENANT
citizens discount. 22~rs. For sale b~ owner Nice bl- Winter-Spring Sale
TRANSPORTATION
exp. (304)576·2065
level home on 1 acre near Tak1ng orders now tor dellv· Trailer In Rudand, Ideal for
Chester. Three bedroom, erv in February, March &amp; t-3 people, good location,
II Looking ,Dr
Georges Portable Sawmill • two baths one-car garage, Apnl.
.,
(740)742· 266t
Student Drlver1.
No Experience!
don't haul your logs to the family roo'm with fireplace, Final Clerence
NO PROBLEM II
mill JUSt call 304-675-1957. sun room. New central heal· On 4-2001 sectional homes
~ I
Trelnlng Available by
1i
tt 0
Cl
·
lng &amp; ale system. One ·mi- &amp; 3-2002 models on display
tv:
0
op . to
~ eanmg nute off Route 7, but still pri- plus e single 16 wide homes
FOR RENT
05
Calling
...
11 • Serv1ce · Professtonal clean· vale (740)985-3981
at •··ge savings.
CDL 1-888-845-85
HO.uwr&amp;
ca
ing at allordable prices.
'""
1-IOCriSB-2353.
.Residenhal. office, remodel- Newly constructed, single Special order
(2) Downtown Apartments
d
1 t
1
y~ur new home at reduced for Rent. All Electnc, Ideal
Help want8(1 caring lor the tng an ~s.ruc IOn ~a9 story 1600 sq. loot home. pnces.
lor Senior Persons One is a
elderly, Darst Group Home, up99~o~~fntlal 992- 7 located 10 minutes from Cole's Mobile Homes
Three Rooms- One ·is a 4
now paying minimum wage, or
•
.
Holzer Hospital, 20 minutes 15266 US 50 East
Rooms both on F!rSI Ftoor.
new shills. 7am·3pm, 7am- TAI·COUNTY CONSTRUC· from Pleasant Valley Hospl· Athens Oh 45701
Clean and NicS (740)4465pm, 3pm·11pm, 11pm· TJON.
New tat, off SR 150 on a pnvate 740-592-1972
VIew
953910
7am, call740-992·5023
Construction/Remodeling . 1·112 acre lot. 3 bedroom,
·siding ·Roollng 'Drywall 2-1/2 baths, big kitchen
BUSJNF.S')
I I and 2 bedroom apartHomeworkert
Needed
'
'
' wloak cabinets, DA, LR
B
304 •·674 •01 55/30 4• wJgas log llreplaca, central
$635 Weakly Processing Ect
AND UllDlNGS
ments, furnished and unlur·
674 3855
Mall Easy!
No
EKperi·
"
air, laundry room, front
ms_h&amp;d, s"ecurity deposit re·
ence
Need8(1.
Call 1- w111 Babysit at my home. porch &amp; 2-112 car garage 4,tlOQ sq foot Commercial qwed , no pets, 740-992·
800-652-8726 Ext. 207D, · Fenced in Yard, Sandhill Immediate posse~slon, Ap- Building with 10 to 2~0 2218.
24Hrs.
Ad. (304)895·3741
pra1sed at $125,SOO. Make acres R1o Grande, .Ohto 1 Bedroom Apartments
th Depos t &amp; Ret'
olfer Call (740)446-4514 Owner f1nancmg available $269
1
McClure's Restaurant now Will Work tor elderly day or from e-spm
M-F or call (740)245·5747
mon ·
•
hiring all 3 l.ocatlons, full or night part or lull time. (740 }446 _3248' alter sPm.
erence. HUO Approved
74
41
1
par1-tlme, piCk up appllca· (304)675·7961
6000 Sq. loot commencal ( 0)4 -15 9
lion at location &amp; bring back
storage w1th 14.000 sq. root 1 Bedroom Apt. Gallipolis
belween
9:30am
&amp;
MOBILE HOMES
of outside area. Call ERA Water Paid $275 month
10:00am, Monday thru SatFOR SALE
Town &amp; Country Real Es· plus deposit. No Pets,
urday.
B~
I
tate 304·675·5548
(740)446-4043 alter 6:00pm

Registered Nurses needed
for Horne t-lealth Services.
Full-time, part-time or p8f
diem casas for Gallla, Ath·
ena, Meigs and Maaon
countlaa. Flexible schedule
and ucellanl pay. Fill oul
Anantlonl
appllcallan at Pleasant Val·
Eam 2nd. II'IOome wlthOUI lay Home t-laalth Service•,
1
2nd Job up to
1011 VIand Sl PI Piau·
t
$215.·$76./hr. Pt·Ft.
ant, wv 2!!50, 'or call
•
1·600·218-764S
(304)875·7~00 or 1·800·
: www.Monty·Qraama.com 741.00781or moralntarma·
-:-::::-::-:::-:---::-:::-:;:-::-:: tlon. AAIEOE
••
' AVON I All A,.aol To Buy or \Vyngtlt ol Clalllpolil, l II·
• Sill. Shlrle~ Spears, 304· cenaed Atlllltd Living
; 875·1.428.
COmmunity, 11 now hiring
natdtd
4 tor the following potltlona:
, B•bylltter
.
9
M t
nlghll/wl(, pm·eam. Ul Full·llmt or part·tlme cooka:
, lranlport ID IChool. Btla"f
Part· limo "PN
flegollabll, Call (304)682·
~477. I.HVI MIIIIQI.
Come work In a warm and
'
. bental Hygenllst Needed frJandly atmosphere whtr*
Part Time. (740)44.8•2409
work From Ho.,.. Froo Brlarwood ·Dr.• Golllpolla.
Booklet. t·800-6SS·729S
OH 456SI .

•

1"0

• No

POUCIES: Ohio VIUty PUbllahlng l'eHrVel the right 1o
Trlbun.-Stntlnei-Regtttw wtll be retponaltHe tor nl;)

Oescrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ad$ Should Run 7 Oay5

=

good home Love Children.
A Great Chrtstmas Present!
(304}675-7278

,

llw&gt;WANIED

1
20 ~~~~~·/g~;. ~d;.~~d~~ ~! ~~ced

$. •

1

j

4 Adorable Beagle/Mix PupP'les. DESPERATELY need

-r

1

Includes Free Yard Sale !Sign!
Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ PeraWord
Ads Must Be Prepa!

h-ee ~~~

Baby
bed,
(304)675-280t

playpen 7829
..._
--------:.
Freezer b&amp;el lor sale- gra1n
2- P235 tires, $30 2 P205 fed from birth , no grass or
Tlfes, 125. Sears Furnance hay, cut, wrapped &amp; froze,
Fuel 011 Burnet' Motor with $1 64 per lb hanging wt ,
Translormer and Pump, 740-992·2143 or 740·992·
S75. Guaranteed (740)S67- :6:.S7c:3c.__ _ _ _ __
7729
;..;.::.:.__ _" ' - - - - Stackable
Kenmore
Beech Street, Middleport, 2 3 double hung Cradco metal washer/dryer, 1 yr old, exbadroom furnished apart- clad windows, excellent cellent cond1tlon, runs on
ment, _ulillli&amp;S paid, dap &amp; condition, . 32"x34~ call 120-V, $700, (740)742-2931
rel. no pets. (740)992.0t65 (740)982·5533
o:..:==.c:.:..:_.:__ _ _ Three 5 foot Section 3" Inch
Christy's Family Living, Amazing
u.tebollsm double wall furnace or water
33140 New Lima Rd., Rut- Breakthroughll
heater exhaust pipe, $20
Ohio. 740·742·7403. Looo tO ppunds· 200 each (740)949·26SS
Apartment, home and trailer pounds easy, quick, Fast :::::::..oc..:.::::=-:=-:==::c-:-::
re~s. Cornmen::lal store- Dramatic Results. 100 % Waterline Special· 3.1~ 200
fronts available for lease. Nalufal, Or. ReCommended. PSI $21 95 Per 100; 1 200
Vadaneles now.
.Ask about FREE Sample" PSt $37 00 Pe~ 1PO; All
Furnished Efttclencv. All (740)441·1982
~$~~pressi on Flttmgs
Utilities Paid, Shared Balh.
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS·
$1251 month 919 2nd Ave., Full Size Mattress and. ~x ES Jackson, Ohio, 1.800·
(740)446-3945
Springs,
S95.
Outlttng
_
537 9528
Frames, $25. Oak Talevi- l!ft-~~-----,
Gracious living. 1 and . sion Table with Storage,
BUilDING
bedtoom apartments at VII- 5 17401256• 1529
.
SUPI'LIES
lage Manor and Riverside :::.:::..:c...:.c:_:.::.::..:.:::_-,-......,
Apartments In Middleport. Grubb's Plano- Tuning &amp; · - - - - - - From $278·$348. Ca11 740- Repairs Problems? Need Block, brick, sewer pipes,
992-5064. Equal Housing T.uned7 Call The Piano Or. windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Opportunities.
740.446-4525
Wtnters. Rio Grande OH
c 11740 245-5121
Middleport: North 4th Ave.. Hardy Mums $3.00 each 4 a
·
·
4 room furnished apartment, for $10. Open Sat 8-5pm &amp; Steel Buildings, Factory
deposll &amp; references, no evenings. Oewhurs1 Green· Seconds, Small Up to %
pels, (740)992.0165.
house Ml Alto. (304)895- Off Calllor Availability 50
Bedroom Apart- 3740 leave message or •
Modern
• •
'
1 800 282 0111
m1,1n1. ( 1 )
_
(304)895-3789
740 446 0390
· ..,
Independent Herbalife DisNice 2 br. apl.,tg rooms.\, ' tributor Call For Product Or
tully &amp;qulp&amp;d kll. , central Opport~nity. (
_1982
~
7401441
heating/ cooling. washer/ - - ' - ' - - - ' - ' - ' - - - dryer hookup 304·682-2523
JET
·
96% Hybrid wolf puppies, 7
Now Taking ApplicationsAERATION MOTORS
35 Weal 2 Bedroom Town- Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In weeks old. all males, $100.
houte .a. ... rlnienta. Includes Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1- Call leave message 740·
742·48t5
Water ...,...Sewage, Traah, 800• 5S7•9528

:~

Dave 'Dilbott
8t. Dan talbott
1988 Dodge t SOD l.aramllil
SLT VB, 4x4, T/ wheel,
cruise, power heated mlr..
rors. pi wlndowl, pi locka, pi
seat. club cab aiding, back
glass, bl liner, vinyl cavar
running boards, ctlrome
wheels, Michelin LTX AIS
tires, tires w/ 10,000 miles,
sun visor. 60.000 mlltJB,
$14.500. (740)388·7561

r41 M&lt;JroJtcra.tli

I

2000 BanshH, Pro-circuit

p~pea, new platon kit, never
raced . Needs rear 1x1e
bearings .
$3900 lOBO.
(304)1!82·:3876

"~---iiiiiiiiiiiio-rl

2000 Honda XR80. Like
Now. (740):388·6!!58

- - - - - - -AKC c
Last One, New, All Steel pies.
One Bedroom Apt. 67 V1ne Pedal Pursu1t Plano. Yester'
striet
Gallipolis
OH
Christmas (740)367·0659
·
'
.
·
day's
quallt~
at
discount
or
{740)339-2350
{l.40l 367•7886
prtee. 42 Inch long. Ages 3- ~'::-':=-:-'-::--:Very nice, 2•3 bedroom a. (740)446·1822
AKC Dalmat1on Puppies
apartment In town large
6wks Old. $150 (304)937·
.
•
'
Metal Desk, Shelve on one 2929
kitchen, LA, $500/mo. Ref· side, Very nice, 30x20. Per·
erences &amp; deposit required. teet lor Ch11ds homework. AKC Reg~stered Black Lab
(140)448·:!644
$20.(740)985·4409
Puppies. Males . $200.
:::::..::.::::!=.:.:::.:..._=
~
SPACE ,
I MOBILE HOME OWNERS . (740)446·0080
FOR RfNr
lnterlherm &amp; Coleman gas, AKC Registered Cocker
.-• oil &amp; electriC fumaces in- spaniel Puppies for Sale
F
' am1·1y P"de
Lots or rent eluding hi elfic1ency heat .s 250.. Call i740)44 1·0996 to
,,
1
pump systems. We carry a II'IC(Uife.
call .. Donna
Backus complete hne of Mobile ~~:--;-:--:-:-~)615-5548
home paris &amp; actessorles AKC Registered German
L
.
BENNETI'S HEATING &amp; Shepherd Puppies Large
Nice lots~ quiet country set- COOLING (740)446·9416 Breed, Top Blood Lme
ling, wtl! accommodate
1-800-872 5967
$200. (304}675·5724
lt6x80, $100 per month, call or
b ~
II
Ed a1 Country Homes. 740· www.orv .co
nne
Ducks Unl1m11ed member
992·2167.
Nest Run small chicken has AKC Registered Lab
eggs, 20r: a dozen or $6 per Yellow &amp; black ready lor
0)9S
pick-up. Deo. 24. $200
5•3956
case, (74
(304)675· 1031
HousmoLD
I NEW AND USED
Gooos
FURNANCES FOR SALE! Rat terrier Puppy for sale
• we lnstaN, Free Estimates, Female, 3 months old Tan/
ad If you dent Call us , we both Wh1te, $50. Call (740)245·
~ppllances: Recondition
Loose! {740)446-6308, 1- 0419.
Washers, Dryers, Ranges.
. _
~:lli"'-~~~~-.,
Aefrigrators, Up To 90 Days •800 291 0098 ·
J\iltNCAL

~~~o~!e r~~vp~g;

j

~-------pi

r

IIWI)'IIn our btartl.
Metry Orlllmu.

1see lhe C:OUIU.Ieu

.... tlllll .......

ChtlllrtW lteeS
Arouhdthc
world bolow
Wuh liny lights,
lik~ heav4!!n's- stars,
Renec1ina on
the snow.

9el1'J&amp;

ol-

424t

HIRING
$6.·$8
Per Hour

I hear the many
Chritlmu songs
Thol people hold

fluiiiPirt 1'1mt
OFFICE
ENVIRONMENT

1-1188·1174-JOBS
Public Notlc:e

.

For It il boyond
description.
To h&lt;irlhe

on1&lt;l1 1lna.

cllld end, thtftot ln

1n Natertr clllftllon
0.52 111llel to the bounlllr; or II 27.10·
toNI pti'OIIIIn llctlon
23. Tho. hllerlno for
thll roed wHI bo 11
10:00 1.111. Die. 17 It
tho Com1111oalontre'
Office, on t~o third
floor of l~f Collit
Hou.. during tholr
. riiUIII 11101llng.
Anr,- In-tid In
WI OOJlll 1!1 lltond
IMittl thll vtiWing tnd
thllhllalllltl·

I know how milch
you n1111 me.
I

BASEMENT

L..-----~_.1

C&amp;C Cltneral Home Malnt•
nonce- Painting. vloyi oidlng. carpenlry. cloOrl. win·

Spinet piano and bench
Frullwood finish.
.
5600
740-742-2731

- · bothl, mobilt repair and mort. Far frH
0111ma10 col Clttl. 7~992'

INSTRUMENIS

see ""' pnin

inside you~ heon.

WATEAPADOFINO
UnconCitlonal lifetime guarantqe. Local referenofJS fur·
nlshed. Establlohad t 975.
Call 24 Hra. (740) ~48·
0670.
t-800·257-0575.
Rogers W.lerpruollng.

0323.

Out lam not
so fur away.
We really aren't

aporl.
So be happy

ror m.,

deorOMt.
You know I
hold you door.
And be ahad I'm
spendlna Chrillmu
With IOIUI Chri1l

Residential or commercial
wiring, new HtVIcl Qr re·
pairs. Matter LlcenHCiet.o..
lrlclan. Ridenour Eioelllcal,
WVDD0308, 304-875·1785.

4' Roto Tillar for small trac·
tor, 3 pt. h1tch . like new,
pa1d $1700 .00, sell for
$1200.00. 307-773-5 099
Long 510, MF50, Mower,
rake, MF1 2 baler, 3 wag·
ons, disc , bush hog, etc
(304)6754869

A vlowlng of 1
portion of Jllullind
ToWnthlp Rotld 171
(HYlton llold) lrom
o.ao 111110 north of H!AIIINQ MAY II
Junction of TR·171 HELD
ON
It
end TR·447 to 0.78 PROPOSED ACTION
milo north of junction IF
A HIAAINQ
Of TR-171 ond TA-447 III!QUI!IT
OR
for o 101111 dllllnao Of OIJI!CTION · II
0.21 m1111 will Ill AICIIVID IV THI
hold on ThurtdiV, OEPA WITH IN 30
Dlcomber 27, lOot Ill DAYI OP II.UANCI
1:00 t.m., followlciiiY OP THI ·PAOIIOIIO
1 hltrlng II 10:1D ACTION. WlllniN
t.m. Doc. 17, It lho COMMINTI

Aner all,
More prKiou&amp;

Happy Ad

than pureaold.
(I woo olwayo

most important

,.

In the stories

Jcsuatold.

PleiiCiove ond

diesel , 3 point hitch, $2,150
Also, new 4' llnlsh mower
etlllln crate, $850. Shipping
available. LOcated just out·
side ol Huntsville. AI (258)
776·9435 www.maynardeQlllpmant.com

keep each olhor,
A• my P4ther
10ldlodo.
For I c:an t count
lite blenln&amp; or loV6.

j

Ctmmloo~·

Offlo1 during lholr
rogulor moetlng.
Anyono lnWNIOied In
tltllndlng tilt VIIWing
tnd holrlng 11

He n.s fot e110h
of you.

welcome.

So hll'lla

Merry ChrlalltlAI ond

~~) 24, H, 1001

wipe bway thcu 1enr
Remember, l nm
spen ding Christmas
wnh 1' "" chri"
this yoor.

I

seo.

.,

Publlo NotiOI

homelllj»oYe.
I sent you euch
u. memory
Of my undylna love.
love Ia a sin

'YANMAR
-="=:..:::-:.:=-.--YM 1500 Tractor,

r

Thanks for·your
friendship and
loyal support

I ocnt you e110h

I· \In! S( 11111 II S
·""II\ I "il()( h

i!:ii~;;..;;:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

With best
wishes to all
as we celebratt
the birth of our
Savior.

~~ 24, H, 1001

this f'""·
a ,pecial &amp;ift,
From my heavenly

r10
FARM
.,_ _,;;EQiiiiiUiiii'IIiiliiEIINTO..,J

REJOICE!

A IIIOl'l~wlll be
hOld II 11 1.111. 1111
Dtlit111ber
, 100~1
to lflal8 • portio~
lolplo Twp., llo1·
14J botlftlllng II I

The joy their
voices brina.

'- I H\ H I '

1'

NOW

the tellt
For I om apendlna
Chridmas wirh .
Jesus Christ lhi&amp; :year.

'

?.'

HelpWinted

The siahllt so
IJXCIUCl,llar,
Pleote wipe liWI)I

lO tell )'OU, ,

50 Caliber CVA .muule Bab
C
li~--:":'!""---.,
loader with acco1aorlo1, woJ',/~~ 'kmp:r~ C~~r~
WANTEIJ
like New, $150. (740)441· chair,' Both ecro~ngs18o"
roBUY
1851
(740)G~N452. No Anlwor, ~
"•avo Mtllagt
ANn
.
"ooklng lor Acreage ojoln·
QVD
Bauen couch, chair &amp; ott~ lng or Near Chief Cornstalk
m•n tor $350 A.mlsh built to lease or buy. (304)7 52·
Buy CJr Hll Riverine Anti entertainment center, pd 5481
'
.
• 11000. u!e lor $500.
quea, 1124 Ell! Main on (304)875-7349
LJVfo:SIOCK
SA I 24 E. Pomeroy, 740·
992·2528. Au11 Moore , Oelu)Ce Sptlng Large Aiding
owntr.
Horse, Coat $1&amp;0 New, Sell
for
Mint. (140)992· Miniature Donkeys lor sate.
Sue'e Selectabllt on the "T" 7888
(740)388·9488
.
In Mlddlepon. DoUa, glUt·
ware,
end Firewood, $150 Oump Aiding Horses Call for In fer·
more. Aladdin mantels,
•
17401992 0296
Truck Load (740)319-2758 mellon (740)388·8 35 8

10

'ha..........

I have no words

97 Flal~ 32', liidt-oul, 484.
Vonech, auto, loti
10,521 mllel (740)4olli·

...a. .... .

_or,oam

so dear

r10

e-

Willi ..

·~ .........)1.

But the sounds qf
music cun't compute
With the Chri!ltl'llU
clioir up hm

L

rro

Southem

l..olie,

1991 Chev. Aetrc Cargo
Yan, White, 1331&lt;, $2,200.
Phono Nope (304)675-2218

1 '11'-'""----"""'11
Buy, Sell or Trade
In the

b\:hrilly Wa::d
-

.'

.

~

CLASSIFIEDSf

·Rio

pen:ent) from the free throw
line.
H untingron
countere!l
with
31
-of-56
(55
percent)
ftWI Pllp II
from the field, 13-of-29 (4~
the second half), Brett Snod- percent) from three-poihr
gr211 added 18 (7 -of-9 at the lond and 15-of-21 (71 perfree throw line), and Marcus cent) from the charity stripe.
Hall and Derek Yoder each
Both teams took re:uonable
added II points. Yoder's pro- care of the basketball as Rio
duction was off the bench. He committed 15 turnovers and
hit three cold-blooded treys Huntington coughed up the
in the second half.
ball 10 times.
The Redmen · closed the
Rio controlled the glass,
gap to 80-78 with 1:36 on 40-25.
the clock on a tip-in by
The Redmen will break for
Delaney. The Foresters were the holiday and return to the
able to push the lead back to court Dec. 28-29 when thl!)'
90-84 with 6even seconds left. host the second Newt Oliver
Rio shor a blistering 64 Classi~. Rio Grande w1U welpercent (21-of-33) from the come Urbana, Tennessee Wesfield in the ,1econd half. For leyan and Alice Lloyd (Ky.)for
the game, Rio was 23-of-63 tho two-day evelll.
(51 percent), induding 7-ofRio f~ces Alice Lloyd Fri24 (29 p~rcent) from three- day at 8 p.m . and Tennessee
point land and 15-of-20 (75 Wesleyan Saturday at 4 p.m.
Despite putting 14 more
points on rhe board, Hannan
mustered just 6-of-25 from the
from Page 11
floor at the half. Southern led
50-16 at the break.
Hannan
Coach
Wayne
Southern started rhe thiid
Richard&lt;on .
stanl.1 with incense half-cot.irt
Dally Hill scored six of the pressure. However, the W&gt;ldcats
first eight points with a basket, never gave up.
then a steal and a_o;sist to Macy
Barros fought tooth-andRees, and two more goals. nail underneath 10 find posiSouthern's defense turned up tion and get position for mal?y
the wick even more, fon:ing of his 12 rebounds. He added
eight more turnovers and forc- six points in the frame, but
ing several off-balance Wildcat Souther's pace proved too fast
shots.
in transition.
·
To co!npound Hannan's
The fust- break attack arid
woes. Southern hit a blistering five three-pointers, mcluding
75 percent fiom the floor as one from junior subsutute
Connolly, Jordan Hill, and Curtis Neigler, overpowered
Randolph lit up the ttets wtth the Wildcat, . Out&lt;eonng jts
three pointer.. Connolly wa&lt;· guests 28-12 m the frame,
red hot fium any spot on the Southern blitzed to a 78-28
floor as was Dally Htll.
tally.
The first period ended at 28Southern had only five field
2.
goals in rhe last round, while
Hannan made some neces- · hitting 9-13 at the free-throw
sary adjustments and started to line. Jeremy Yeauger, Connolly,
have some outside success, yet and Randolph each drilled
still shot low numbers treys 10 continue the victory
throughout rhe half. Hannan's drive.
shooting deficiencies stemmed
Coach ]o[!athan Rees empfium the Tornadoes' continued tied his bench completely at
outstde pressure.
the 4:33 mark. With 48 seconds remaining, Craig Randolph grabbed a loose ball and
drove it in for Southern's 100th
point.
Southern hit 31-of-75 for
41 ~rcent, including 11-of-33
threes for 33 percent. The Tornadoes hit 27-of-35 at the line
for 77 percent.
Hannan hit 17-of-59 for 28
percent overall, including 3-26
threes, and went 10-of-16 at
the line. Southern had 26
rebounds (Connolly 7, Crouch
5), while Hannan added 35
(Barros 12, Powell 7, D. Sabolsky 7).
Southern had 14 assists
(Randolph 4;J. HiD 4), 21 steals
(D. Hill 10, Randolph 5), 12
turnovers, and 21 fouls. Hannan had 25 turnovers, five
assists, five steals (M. Sabolslty
2), and 25 fouls.
The Southern freshmen
played Wellston in a preliminary contest with the Thrnadoes defeating the Li'l Rockets
69-52 after trailing 32-28 at
the half.
Southern was led by Wes
BurroW5 wtth 20 points and
Aaron Sellers \vith 16, while
"JYier Roberts added nine and
Derek Teaford eight.
Wellston was led by Ryan
Collins with 22 points and
Anthony PoweU added seven.

l\1ommy
(Amber Well)

97 F-150 XLT, Extended
Cab, 8' bed, V-8, auto, low
package. PS. A/C, PW. PL,
CD (7ol0)446-42~t

something free throws and thl!)'
took two, and after aU of that
we were up 13 points. You'd
think we'd be up 25;' O'Brien
said.
Eastern Illinois also made 11
field goals in the lim half, but
that was on 35 ohots.
"I thought Ohio State's
changing · defenses really diJrupted our offense," said Panthers coach Rick Samuels.

N••t~·~'~~ in ''""'"''•-·• I

and alway!.

150. St.DDO (740)949-2700

i

Guaranteed! We Sell New NEW AND USED STEEL
M.aytag Appliances, French Steel Beams. P1pe Rebar
City Maytag, 740-446·7795. For COflCfete. Angle. Channei, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Sale· Recondltlon~d For Drains, Driveways &amp;
washers dryers and relng- Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Meterators 'Thompsons Appll- als Open Monday, Tuesda~.
ance. 3407 Jackson Avo- Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bamnue, (304)675 -7388.
4:30pm. Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunda~.
GE washer $95; Whirlpool (
740144 7300
dryer $95, Tappan Electric
Range $95, Amana Refrig- New Healing &amp; Cooling
erator $15,0.
Kenmore System. 71,000 STU Gas
washer &amp; dryer sat $275; Furnace &amp; 3 Ton Air Condl·
GE refrigerator, like new, t1on. "A" Co 11 &amp; Thermostat
$300. Skaggs Appliances, Ready to Install. $1150.
76 Vine Street, Gallipolis, (740)256·1216
OH (740)446-7398 Stop In :.:.:==.c='--'--to see us belore Christmas. Re&amp;idantlal Home Ownars
Tappan Hi elficiency 90 plus
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark gas furnaces includmg oil
Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio. and
electric gas fuma·
(740)446-7444 1-877-830- cas. Hi EHiciency Heat
9162. Free Estimates, Easy Pumps, featuring Teppans
financing, 90 days 88me as Free Incredible warranty
cash. VIsa/ Meeler Card, package.
.
Drive- a· little save slot.
BENNETI'S HEATING &amp;
COOLINQ (740)441-8411
S
PORI1NG
or1-800-872-!iH7.
GooDS
1 www.orvblcomlblnnan

l"lthlit

Ohio Stare also needs to
improve on its tn:e throw
shooting. The Duck~ made
28-of-43 but only 14-.{}f- 23 in
the first half, f:ti!tng to put E:astern Illinois (7 -5) away ~ite
hilling I 1-of- 18 shots from the
field.
"We had(, I ~rcentshooting
in the fint half and they wc:re
like 31, we outrebounded them
in the finl half. we took 20

\1•ur Miahllft ._IMil'l, I k-li lt'F\'tl IU(.!hltn \uur

Otrlstmas~me

64 DOdge. $750: tiS For&lt;! F·

r

$~~Mo., 740-446·0008

ft

Ill
SilcliY missed at

t987 Chevy 5-10 lruok, ~.
V-8 qno. llr. lift. cruloo.
amllm caaa .• 5 op., 67,000
mllos, (740)~·7789

Ia"!!•

s a.

Browns

yard field goal made it 16-7,
the Brown• were driving for
another score .
0 . . . . 11
But . Williams stepped in
fiont of While for an Intering the lim for a game-break- ception he returned for a
ing 69-yard toUchdown !hat acore 43 seconds before halfmade it 23-7 at ltllftime. His time.
second led to Lewns' diving,
Couch also was intercepted
16-yard m catch that made it by rookie Bhawoh Jue on the
30-7.
Browns' lint series, which was
Jamel White gained 131 sandwiched by tight end
yards on 21 carries and added · Bubba Franks' TD catches of'
85 yards on nine receptions I and 4: yards from Favre, the
for Cleveland (6-8), which league's MVP from 1995-97.
lost its fourth nraight.
Green ran for 27 and 19
White rushed for 108 yards yards on his first two runs, setin the fint half.
. ting up Franks' 1-yard TD
His 51-yard scamper to the catch. After Jue's pickoff,
Green Boy 8 set up his own Franks again wasn't jammed
3-yard m catch oh a shovel at the line and sneaked by
pass from Couch that puUed lineliacker Dwayne Rudd to
the "Browns to 13-7.
haul in his ·ninth touchdown
After Ryan Longwell's j9. catch of the season.

t99t 510. 4 Tocll, Sopeod,
Runa Clood. S1500 OBO.
{140)441.-5

2 Amtt'ican. Blsc. Sawns For Sale. Conn Trombone
Antique Dolls· 12 In a set. Uke New, 5300. (740)992·

2

.....
.- ..
----!It¥.
..,..._,..
.......
,.......
.. _..........
••" •_,.v.an

91 Mitsublthl EC!Ipoo ClS.
auto, aunroof, (7"0)441424t

• Start Your .-ds Wi th A Keyword • Include Complete

~

Auros
fORSALE 1

t(~~cfo.k

'•Chrissy''
Walker
· anlllllonlalloo

1G88 llorona Now ~
Engine &amp; Tranemiuton.
l120o . CIIN tfttr 5pm.
(304)875-7552

()ea.rlt/re4

Christine

21111..,. ,.....,..

,-., j tllll\1 111

Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... orFaxTo 446·3008
OrFaxTo
992-2157
brFaxTo
675-;..;5:.:2;:_:_34~---~----=
Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

r

II(\

l\.egtster

Sentinel

In 1111f!10?'

Hay &amp; Bright WI"' Tie
Slrow. Yoar 'Round 0o11w&lt;y
&amp; VOiurM Dilcount Avafa.
blo.
HtrliiQO
Farm.
(304)875-572~.
.

,., fJI

COLUMllUS (AI')- Ohio
He wasn\ enjoying lh., victoState baskdbal! f'la}'fn ;re ry be'cause 19 turnoven,
heading iuro their Christmas including 11 in the fint half.
brcJk &gt;~oithour a mewage liotn · prewnttd the Buckeye. (7-2)
coach Jim O'Brien, not that from widening their lead.
thl!)' don~~ one.
"W• p1a~ •loppy," O 'Brien
"Th= 's nothin&amp; I can say said. "The reason we d.Jdn 't win
that thl!)' haven't hard before," by more ms the turnovers. h is
O'Brien said alter Ohio State a glaring problem we need to
beat Eastem Winois 72-59 Sat- intpnM on. It is a huge conurday night.
.cern for us."

RIOUUTa POll
PUILIC MIITI~~~
ANO ADJIJDICA'nUN
HIARINQ III!QUII'rl
MUIT II liNT T01
HI!ARINQ CLifiiK,
OHIO
ENVlRONMl!NTAL
JIROTICTION
AGENCY, P.O. BOX
1049, COLUMBUS,

OHIO

43218·1049

(TELEPHONE:

I"·

t44·212t). "FINAL

ACTION&amp;:
Alii
ACTIONI OF THE
DIAEC'I'OII WHICH
AAI! EPPICTIVI!
UPON ISSUANCE OR

The Daily
Sentinel

992·2155

~----

llovr. -.riLL BE.
--lOY&amp;..

RANDY E. KI!IG,
EXECUTOR OF THE
ESTATE OF ROLAND
I. KING, DI!CEAIEO,

t 11.~1\

_ _ _ _,

The YOUNGER you art
when you purchase
LIFE INSURANCE...
the LESS IT COSTS!
Call us TODAY!
Downing Childs
Insurance Agency

ITAL.

111 Et11 a-nd StiMt,

OI!~ENDANTI.

NOTICE OF IALI

By

C:LYW.

•lrtuo of 1n
\

Buy, Sill or Trade ,

Pomeroy

(740) ltl-6374

�--Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Monda~Dec-24,2001

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

~------~-----------------------

Jets get early Christmas;

Belrs 20, Redsldns 15
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - Linebacker
Brian Urlacher caught a 27-yard touchdown pass, his first ca....er NFL reception,
tiom holder Brad Maynard with 9:55 left,
putting Chicago ahead .to stay against
Washington.
The victory kept the Bears (11-3) in
first place in the NFC Central.

Steelers 47, Lions 14
PITTSBURGH (AP)- Kordell Stewart threw for th= touchdowns and ran
for another, lifting Pittsburgh to its seventh straight victory.
!he Steelers (12-2) can wrap up homefield advantage throughout the AFC playoffi by winning next Sunday at Cincinnati. Detroit fell to 1-13.
Li~ns quarterback Mike McMahon lost
two fumbles and th,...w an interception in
the first 18 minutes. The mistakes led to
two touchdowns and a 27-7 Steelers lead.
Stewart, who had only two 200-yard
passing games the previous two seasons,
went over 200 for the eighth time this season with 226 yards.

pa.u to Ike Hilliard with 211 seconw lett a•
defending NFC chompion New York
won for the second strail!ht week with a
last-minute touchdown.
Seanle's 105! clinched a playoffb.:rth for
the New England Patriots and d2maged
the Seahawk!' playoff hopes.

Ia• J8, Plla1ll1en 32
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Kurt
Warner became the first player in St. Louis
history to throw fQ! 4,000 yards twice,
Marshall Faulk passed the ~.000-yard
rushinl! mark for the fifth straight season
and lbrry Holt went over 1,000 yards
receiving.
The victory improved the Rams (1 2-2)
to 8-0 on the road. Four. of the five teams
since 1970 who had perfect road records
went on to win the Super Bowl.

Falcons :s:s, Bills :so

ATLANTA (AP) -Jay Feely made all .
four of his field-goal attempts, including a
52-yarder on the final play. and Chris
Chandler passed for a career-high 431
yards to keep Atlanta in the playoff race.
Before Sunday, Feely was 11-for-18 at
Bucs 48, Saints 11
the Georgia Dome and 12-for-12 on the
road. The game-winner was his secondTAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Brad Johnson
longest kick of the season; he had a 55threw three touchdown passes and Martin
yarder at Arizona. ·
Gramatica kicked four field · goals before
being injured as Tampa Bay rebounded
Chiefs 10, Chargers 17
from a 24-point road loss to Chicago.
The Bucs (8-6) took a big step toward
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Tony
making the playoffs for the fourth time in Richardson's 1-yard touchdown run with
five seao;ons and took a one-game lead 48 seconw left handed San Dieb"' its
over New Orleans \l-7) in the race for an eighth straight loss.
NFC wild-card spot.
Mike Alstott rushed for tot yards and
Cllrcllnals 17, Cowboys I0
one touchdown, while Ronde Barber
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) - Dallas ard
returned one of his three interceptions 36
Emmitt
Smith dominated Arizona everyyards for a TD.
where but the scoreboard as the Cowboys
clinched at least a tie for last in the NFC
Giants 17, Seahawks 14
.
'
East.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) Dallas had a 21-11 advantage in first
Kerry Collins threw a 7-yard touchdown downs and led 343-209 in total yarch.

~

;_,,,

Herballfe
IndePendent
Distributor

Randl

Racine, Ohio
4Sn1

Disc Jlc:keg

Clll1or Produclt
or Opportunity
Jeanie Howell
740-992·7036

Serulce

74CH49-2217

Country, Denoe •
RockMutlc

Hou,.
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

740-742-7709

-~
tl

RNIOIIIIble RatH

All Occaalona

DDOYIU
"PIIItl
All Makes Trador 6
· Equlpmen1 Parts

• Bucket Truck

-Mirllli··---

lllnliEPU-EIT WIIDDWI
'· l

CAH-IH Parts
Deal en
1000 St. "Rt. 7 Soutll

I

229.00*

8

• FREE INSTALLATION

• FREE IN HOME FSTtMATE

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE

:97 Beech St.

• FULLY WELDED

• so YEAR WARRANTY

NOW OPEN

Rocky R Hupp. Agent

Meip Massage
Thera/J'V

Box 189
Middleport Oh1o 4~&gt; 160

Tonia Re1b8r
Llcenud Ma11age
Therapist

Local 843-5284
Medi.care Supptement; Life Insurance;
Burial and Final Expenses; Cancer &amp;.
Dental, Retirement,
Pension&amp;. 401K Roliovers;
Mortgage; Major Medical
• Nursing Home

P/B
CONTRACTORS, INC.
Roclno, Ohio 45771

740·985-3948
CONCR£Jf/BLOCK/BRICK
• Foottn, Walls, Seeps •
FlaiWork,
Replacemenu. •' Walks
and.Drives • Sttndl
Crete Free Estimalell
Serving Ohio 1nd W.V.

• I - l l Plumbing

• Rooting I OU!IIrl

213 N. 2ndAvt.
Middleport, OH 45780
Come In and aak

about apeclala

• Ylnytlkltng I l'tlnllllfl
•Potlo.,.._Dool&lt;o
Free Estlmatea

V. C. YOUNG Ill

atn c.rttn-•

992-8215

Available

992-4119

hS00-291-5600

(11'x10',610'K201

VIsit Our Showmaill, On S,.le Routt JJ
6· Miles North or Pomeroy. Ohio. At CoUnty Road 18

(740) 992·3194
992-6635

• No Dealers or Cont.,_dors Please
Vt~" I Ma11lercard
wv 11023477

L \\1\I'S

WJW.Mt!S
ll.~GG~~~

, ()\' IJ(I I Ill J\
SperlellaJge lp •

Roollng, Decks

Naw t:lgJI~I~ tft:U.I[I:
Mon·Fti10AM ·I PM
lllurdoy lOAM· 4PM

RIEW88D

Remodelln1,
Drywall, and
Additions

......... .;lj
.
saa
FIR SAlE

TI'IICII 1.11111

·"'

'

Sunset Home
Construction

Pornerl:iy, OhiO

11111

040J 992-30411

"Owoer: lOrry Lamm

(740) 992-0739

lt'li!IWI, IIII

&amp;More

FREE ESTIMATES!

"740·742-3411

'

.

1·121011lE Will
PlAinI
FIRITCIME.
FIRSTIERVEI

.'

'

...
..,

-

1 ~~'T W

t

~

J60
BilliARDS

~tMf\1

Rutllnd, Ohio

CUT6
WRHPPED

forpertles

lllopiNoM Llhe

Rllllllllle II rent

M.\. IllS

.Cell Dan~
742-2572
Hlp ·742-7709
11/16 pd 1

mo.

949-2734
1111

till,, -

SIIIIIIMfSj

• Rrpl•cement
Windows • Room

(740) 949-1521

740~992-7599

Financing &amp; 90 Days
Same As Cash.Avallable
Licensed, Insured • Free Estimates

(NO SUNDAY CALLS)

Tel: (304) 773-5800
Hours: Sun • Tbur llam • 10 pm
Fri &amp; Sat 11 am • llpm

D

WICK'S
:~?i BUFFETI SPECIAL -~IL\ULING and 1 WNCH.14.11 1DINNIR 'I.H
EXCAVATING :I II :30am- 2:00pm :I 5:00 pm • 7:30 pm
oHaullnO of.lmatloQraVII• Send •Topeoll
•Fill Dirt oMulch

14 yrs

&amp; under FREE '4 yrs &amp;. under FREE
5-8 yrs - '2.99 ~ . 5-8 yrs- '3.99

9-12 yrs -'3.99
I

o 9·12 yrs -,'4.99

in this
space
for $50
per
month

OPED BOWLIDG &amp;
. lfii&amp;UES
-7.. -7dlllllllllt

740-"'"'b-2422
BlacllbUrn

f'ully ln•ured

• Llllll
•

Steve Riffle
\,\jv.., l\,·j ii L"&gt; L' llLll I\ L'

LARRY SCHEY

;

can relieve a debtor of financial obligations and
arrange a fair distribution of assets among
creditors. Aperson going through bankruptcy
may retain certain property, known as
"exempt" property, for his or her personal use.
This may include a car, a house, clothes, and
household goods. You should direct any
questions regilding bankruptcy to an attorney
before proceedlna. For infonnation regarding
Bankruptcy contact:
·
William Safnnek, Altomey
(740) 5'2-5015 .
Athen.,

in this
space
for
$50 per
month

l'at.~~

~

...

t;ll~l

WHAT K'Nb
AN' MOW MMIY,
MAW

.

?

TlJE I)ORN LOSER
P"

'

. - ~,

-

""'q

HON DOCS I\ LOOK. TO YOU,
~?
_ _...,

·~
3 Toke care

n~r

18 Pllltot
Nathan
20 Sundial't

noon
41 Pal
22 Llmpreya 42 ""MIMry"
ol
23 Revenue,.
COllar
world"
4 Copy
24 Writer
43 Vardl,...
32 IWro
5 Soothing
Ambler
ttrp1tce
undWich
herb
25 Bridge bklr. 44 hta
33 El.,...le
8 Kind tlttn- 26 Obligation 45 Type ol
34 ·-tnlht
tlon, brltlty 27 Undorwoy
aock
!Ygl"
7 -vu
28 "SIIItt'
48 -out
35 Swampa
8 With, to .
Act" roleo
(mtkn
38 Combative
Pierre
21 Cookbook
ondt moell
31 Hug tlflhttr 8 Piece ol
qty.
47 ArrtH of
411 NATO
lnoulltton 31 llttlt blrko
old TV
COUiin
11 OH-rood
35 Otort about 50 "Yuck!"
41 Greek ..X"
31 NASA
52 Strong
vthlelea
42Kf91
12 Cloltl
thumba-up
longing

..w....

ll•ad, • :J

thought and a blush
for nau~;ht,
And a blud1 for just
hl"HUII it.
l'rnbably you can
think of soone other
blushes too. South
certainly blushed after
this deal. How would
you hove helped him
to avoid a deep n·ddening of his chet•ks?
Declarer had to make
four spades after East
had opt·ned oue heart
and West had kd a
. low heart.
If you smell a g;nnc,
bid a ~;ame. And the
quirktor you bid that
game, the harder you
make life tor the oppoucu ts.
Declarer won with
the heart at·e, c;uhcd
the ltt•art king, drew
three rounds of
trumps ending in the
dummy, and called
fur a low club. Ean
went in with the
king, cashed the club
ace, and exited with a
low club. After
ruffing, with a shrug
of the shoulders, declarer pl.aycd a 4iamond ·to dummy's
queen. llut East won
==---=:::-----, with the king andreturned the diamond
10 to defeat the contract. South lost two

2 Urgent

31 Brvnntr of

having done It:
There's a blush fur

BARNEY

1 Broadcast

30 COI&amp;I81

flyor

,\il rau

A

"""'
"
DOWN

23 Touchtl
2$ Rtbelllout

,.......,.....,._

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lula Campos
Calebrity Cipher cryp1ogr1m1 are craated from quotations by famoua
P'OP't· pall and preunt. Eaet'l letter In lhe cipher 1landllor anothtf,

· Today's clue: P equals G

'SA

KT WWJ

F

F 8 L SA

LIR Y

" I'FeSDYKILP,

Y FF V

WRTD

T8FIJ.'-

SA

ER
JFFO

8 R

F

8

s

SAF

KIS

FDF

FRVABRIFJ

RWLG8R

VWIVERY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "You jus! throw anything out In

Oklahoma, and all you have to do Is come back and harvel! n.·

-wm Rogers

·

'::~:t:~' S©~4tllA-~£~s·

::::

- - - - - - ldl,.d by cli,v R. ,OUAN _.;__ _.;__

0

~eorrang11

I

leiters

cf

the

four scrombl.d word1 be·

l

lew 'o form four slrnple words.

diamonds and two
H U D S I) L
dubs.
'--,.,-,.,....,--,--,-~
11 2
North pointed out
1
I
-,r--''1 that East had opened ~=~-::;~-;:~=~the bidding, so surely
p E R r: T
h c ld the d i amo n J -11:""-r-.-~~·
king. Without it, he
would have at most L-....L-.1.-....L-.L-..J ~

I

IJ

I I

::;:· I--'·

rI I r

I r. I I I

.__..., possible,
11 high-c;ord
points;
C. R 0 F E . "S ucce ss has notht'ng to do
but unlikely.
.---------~~ So, Somh should have . •
with gains or accomplishments for
- . .
~ ·yourself," a come to hts audience.
Played a diamon.d to ·
r--;:;--;;r;-~-:;:--;=--, "What counts is what you do···
the ace and continued
R U Q0 T E
with . dummy's dia- .
• · · · · ·.
9
Complere tht chuckle quoted
monJ five, which
.
by filling in lila missing words
would have brought '--'----,'--'--'---'--' you develop from soep No. 3 below.
Ju\\(n the king and
A PRINT NUMBERED
brought home the
~ LrTTE~S
co11tract.
While blushing
bright red, South aJSCRAM-LETS. ANSWERS
mittcd that he had
never stopped to
Openly- Floss • Groan • Notify· ON the LINE
counl the points.
One executive to another: "Did you ever notice how
Fiually. please keep hard it is to keep your head when your neck is always
this deal for tomor- ON the LINE?"
N
" N'.·.

I

!\larks l'orkd 1\.niH·s
~' ( 'ollertihles
Case • Remington • Buclc • Schrade
Guitars • Some Furniture • Crafts
Now Available. Tiger Sharp Knives

I• I I I

Ie ;

I'

row.

•

.
Tm·.;d,Jy, Dec 25, 200 I
A mmlht.•r of fL&gt;rtun.ac m•w
"'~so , i:1tion~

.ALI.t&amp;L
Cellular

.~~~
Jeff Warner Ins.
High &amp; Dry
992-5479
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy fagles
BIDG02171

740-992-5232
1 1 /1~/1

44087 Wlpple

:

N.rwll

Info
Strlout

Advertise

21211 ,..,.

'•

Euel!l Thursdlly

mo.

Advertise your business on this page for
Tire Barn
one
month
for
as
low
as
$25
Road
Pomeroy
740.992-5344
Phone 992·21 SS
• F~

Rt'flll

W• ~l

1-·

I

c..; II ' il Ill ; Il l d \L'L'

11=
17 Stick
•
,. Pr.ciN
21 w.22 v•grtd

John KeaL• wrote:
Thcr~'s &gt; blush firr
won't, and a blush for
slun 't,
And a blush for

St. Rt. 124 .
Rldne, Ollil .

New Homes• VInyl

FREE ESTIMATES

o\ K 2

I IIi j I

V~lncr~blto .

DffR ·

Siding • New Garages
,\ddltlons • Roonng
Ci!MM!RCIAl and I!SIDEIIIIAL

&amp;

lll"illt•r F:Allt

f&gt;f~"IV SNol"ll\
~~SH

Q J I I II

A W .l U11

ROBOTMAN

REIIliRlY
$321.00 PER JOINT

BUILDERS INC.

BANI{RUPTCY

HOURS:

.....

24'120'

BISSELL

East State Street Phone (740)593-6671
Athens, Ohio

Bryan·Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall

742·2076

' ... . ' . ..'.
,

•

A blush

Rise OJ. en
request.

Weekly Specials
Nov. 26 - Dec. 24
SR 12•1, Mlnf'l'nillfl, OI~Jct
(740) 992-4559

$111D••Tnd

lcHiVRO~~T/

7122{l'FM

.11115,~1

-

·-......,.

:

r.,

;_
--·-----1 --- - -:

T•d'il,~rdl'll'

217 E. 2nd, Pomeroy, Ohio
--------------------YOUNG'S
1
10AM-4PM Mon·Sat
BUFFET TO GO ILunch •• 4.11)
CARPENTER
SERVICE (740) 992·3470 IUFFn TO GO IDinner .. 1&amp;.11) (740) 992-5908
• Room Add111ono 1
Romodollng
.

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSIRUCIIOII

WV NOJI71l

'

•NtwGaraOH

740-992-1705

•New Homes
• Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES
740-992·1671

Deer Shop

. .. '

,~

'!1, 'p ·•.' tA 1" '

.$211.00 PEl JIIIIT

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS

D,llddleport, OH

~u.s

MONUMENTAL LIFE INSURANCE W.

·~'-

FACTORY DIRECT
PRICING

Factory Authorized

57-.,....._

d I W
~
7 Pilon
10 Stlntvillll 13 Fllony
11M IIOdtt't
13111La..
14c:N Ctpt'a
CIIIhuthut
hlldlnt
15 T1nlo
MF-

.. ~\~!'.'1.\J\ . ..
'

1

Shade River AG service
•Ahead In Service•

• Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

VOiler's

loxtd up

45

41 Ootl
41 Ontofthe

1 Prone to

(1000 n rroni the bridle)

35537 St. Rt. 7 North • Pomeroy, OH 45720
Equine 12
12% SWMI HorH IHd ................ $5.00/S0
Stull
12% s-1 HorH IHd ................ $4.40150
Hunllll'l Pride 21% dog food .........$US/50
Economy llell12% atoclt IHd ..... $8.75150
liT,,.. . Mlnll'll Blookl .................... $4.71/100

ACROSS
4 Ship

1066 2nd Street • Mason, WV

Tree Service

NEA Crouword Puzzle

ALO!R

Advertise

JONES'

·-·

ALLEYOOi&gt;

.lapllirs JJ, Vlklnp :s
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)- Stacey Mack
rushed for two touchdowns and 111 yards
in Jacksonville's rout of Minnesota.
The Viki"S' lost another quarterback to
injury. went without a touchdown for the
second time in the last three home games
and dropped to 5-9.
Mike Hollis kicked four field. goals for
Jacksonville (6-8). Jimmy Smith caught
eight passes for 122 yards, and Mark
Brunell WIIS 17-for-24 passing for 217
yards.

The Dally Sentinel • Page 85

PHILLIP

Bears keep on winning
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The New
York Jm .,... closing in on a playoff spot
thanks to a pair of one-point victories and
short touchdown passes from Vinny Tc-staven:le to Anthony Becht.
On Sunday, Testaven:le's 6-yard pass to
Becht with 58 seconch left gave the New
York Jets a 29-28 victory at Indianapolis.
The Jets stopped the Colts on dowm on
the next series to p....serve the victory and eliminated Indianapolis, Denver,.Tennessee and Cleveland fium playoff contention.

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Home Improvements
Siding • Remodeling
l•orthts • Decks
Add-on's • Rooflna

Work

&amp;SUnday
· Doors Open 4:10
Early birds start

6:30

Progressive tap line
Tllursdllys

Progresslue
Coueroll an SUndays

:~nd fril.'nd~hips

rould rl.l)'

;'I

hdpi1i~

;u.:h il'Vt' yom
yt•;•r olhl·.td. St.'\'•
Ullllilrt~ nmld h"-•

11\;Jj,)r

fl)lc

in

ytiU

I/."·• I~

i11 tlu.•
t•r.ll tlf lh~·~c.·
hhd!•d "sht•l.'r lurk."
CAI'IUClli~N

(J),·c 2!-

J.m. l 'J) ·- Ym1r nmltm•ni,,:,tl i\·~· sk tll~

;m.• h~·m·r th .111 ,1\'!.:rt&lt;Jd .• y. Ch:uJn·~ ar~· you'll
milizc tlll'lll wl'll i11 l11~· ~ol'ial

,,~~,·

n·.1l111~

:u wdl

.1~

li.1r

~mil'-'

kim! ur jWmlllal 1\WI~·r. Tryill).: tu •'••ld,l up a bruk~· n m m., nn•? Tlu.• A~tm-&lt;.iraph
M.1td11mkcr l'.\11 lwlp yu\1 un dt~l·st:m d what ru du Ill 111ah•
thl' n•l.ttinmhip wurk . Mail
$] ;;,

w

M.lrdu)l,lk~·r, ~/o tlai~

lh.'W~P·•P~·r.

1'.0, Bu .. : 175H,
Murr:l)' llill Sr:I(Jtlll, Nt.·w

Yt,rk. NV Ill!%.
Al~UAiliUS (1 1111. lll·l'&lt;b.
t«J) -- ~lthnuph ~ou fn:ty per
utl' lo ;1 'low slart to~l.1y, your
'lr~nt-:lh~. nrp.mil:atiunal uhili·

th.·' mul kllnwintc huw tu pull
t•wrythin~ to~cth~·r will ni:d;.c
tlu: d.1~· .1 mdy tillllllilltl nnt•.
I 1 ISC[:~ (l :~,•h . 2o.M.1rd1 211}
-- M:mv l int·~ of nmmHmic ·.l Lill!l '\ l(llw op,•n w you lnd.•y
fl'nlll .1\1 '-'"rn~·n ui' )'um

liL\·.

'

Throll~h onC' of thc.·m.
bt• f.;l'ttin~ some very

rou '11

guoc.l
IUr which you'n• bt'C'II
llllj)illg.
ARIES (Mard1 21 -Ap•iii'J)
-- Even if ynu aw.tkcu tod.ty
Jlt'\\'s

tu

~n m~· type ~~r
itl s t i~.Hl·d

lllt'llt

ror~c~. ~ton't ~t·t

dts.•ppoincby out~idc
upset. Tlw

lby j, deHinl!d to tmn out c~­
trt'IIU.'l~· hiiJ'IIY .\lld llt'llt'fil'i.tl.

TAURUS (April 211-M.•y
lU) -- Dmt ' t w :me your time
on pl·tty im1c~ wd.ty; rhcy're
m~anin~lc~~ .

It'll l•t• the wl.Jdct·ply nwtcd
c.•lcmt·nts that'll brin~ thc
~r.:uuive

:\IHI

bles~in._~

nfthl' day.
GEMINI (May 2Hnn&lt; 211)
-- Tl,J:ty ymt ~·o~1kl bt.• luckh:r
th:m

u~ua\

in wlmt yttll n•n•ive

.

.

tr:t ptZl:17Z :thnm Y"" tlt:lt ynu
may uot cn·n be aw.nt· tlf
Hll\Vt'Vl'r, nwy bod~· cl~~· will
tlo~-k

to you iu ord~T to dun•

in ym1r ckrtri~· ity .
Vtlu;o (Au~;. 2J.Sl'p!. 22)
-- 1\l"ti\'itit·" ~pl'lll with fm•ml ~
r111d t:mtily rod.1y mil prm't.' to
he h~.:11dki.•l for :~11 w ho .1 1tend. Th e (,H\1 ,Jr.llil-nl' .md
rnmp.m1Cl;l,h1p yn tl'l l ~ 1 1 :1fC
will uplilt .md ~·nru:h.
!.IURA (~~·pt . 2J -0l't. 2.1)-

- Tht·rc .~rt' nur~·l'lou ~ orportunitit·t ;~bout you wdJy 10
Strt'll!--:thl'tl r nur pmltlUil in Ol
niti::tl ar~ll or your life.
You'll know wh.u it n when
it ~how~ up oH yo ur door.

SCOI\1'10 (Uri. 2·1-Nov.

22) -- Uy

~imply

bdng who
.1 grC';It

:tml ti·um \\'IH-!111 . Sontcnnc

yQu :~_rc anJ ~huwipi(

yo\t'w been ~.·~p~·~· ia\1)' kind to
will ~how )'U\1 hi~ ur h~·r :\j'('rcd;niun in a bi~ w.1y.
CANCEil (juno 21-July
'!2) -- CJ..mn:s aa· &gt;
:uu 'll In•
the n11:1l~·~t tu whmn all will
~.ttht-r tml.1y. It'll be ht''-':IUh'
)'ll\1 know ~~~'w tu lll&lt;lh• ~un:
l'Wrybmly h :t~ .1 ~nud time
whik jninin~ m tht- pbnm·d

imcrcst i11 l'Vcrybudy who

,Ktivitic~.

LL:ll Uul~· ~JaAU~ . 1~) ' . .\·tm'll h,l\"l' a hll vl-..·x-

Tu~l.1v ,

5lutre-~ yuur tl.1y , yum prob ~
;\hilitic.•~ f~1r 5Lll'I.:CU IClday :m •
~·umi~tc.•r.l l'lV Clllt.tlll't'd.

SAGITTAiliUS (Nuv. 2.1n~.·r.

21) ·- Wlw

tml.•y will not be.•

or

\ "IHI fL't:l' iw

by

h.lJ,PL'Il·

~ti1 1Kt' or 0\ll
t1bli~.ll il) l1.
On tlw rut1tr.1 r y, thin~"' will
hl· ~ivcn to )' 11\1 hl·~· ...... ~ .... ur
hnw lllll(h rtw'vc dtllh.' flll'
(ldlt'r'i.

�..
~·
Mercury
==1001 ESCORT (21HSTOCK)
WAS$11,995 ••••• •HOW$10,600
2001 FOCUS
WAS$1l.995 ••.•• *HOW$1 1,800
1 ........ MUSTANG (liHSTOCK)
WAS$15,995 ...• ..NOW$13,900
1001 TAURUS (41HSTOCK)
HEW ARRIVAL •••••••••••••• $ I 4,995
:.--::::::::2000 TAURUS (liN STOCK)
:;,. ;
WAS$11,995 .... *HOW$11,900
=::;lOOOFOCUS (AUTO)
~
WAS$11,995 .... •HOW$10,800
~lOOOFOCUS (SSPEED)
.::;::::::.
WAS $10,995 •••••.• ..HOW $9700
~ 1999 CONTOUR
WAS $10,995 ••••••. ..HOW$9800
:=:: 1999 MUSTANG
WAS$11,995 •••• •HOw $11,700
~1999ZX2
WAS $9995 •••••••.••• •HOW$8800
1998ESCORT
WAS$6995 ••••••••••• •NOW$5300
1998ESCORT
WAS $6850 •••••••••.• •HOW$8500
1998 MUSTANG "GOOD BUDDr'
WAS$11,995 ••••• •HOW$10,400
1998TAURUS
WAS $9995 ••••••.•••• •HOW$8800
1997 CROWN VIC
WAS $9995 ••••••••••• "HOW$8300
1997 MUSTANG
WAS$9995 ••••••••••• •HOW$8300
1198 MUSTANG
WAS $9350 ••••••••••• •HOW$7900

LINCOLN
AMIIt \ CAN

LUICUit'f'

.

RANGER
*HEWARRIVAL •••••..•.•$12,995
EXPLORER
WAS$19,995 ••. *HOW $18,800
WIHDSTAR
*HEW ARRIVAL ••••••••••• $18,995

ESCAPE

WAS$19,995 .... *HOW$18,300
F-150
WAS$13,995 •••• *HOW$12,400
lOOO RANGER
•
WAS$9995 ......... *HOW $7800
lOOO RANGER 4 X 4
WAS $14,995 ••• *HOW$ 1· .;r~CKlO
lOOO RANGER SUPERCAB (liN ST
WAS $13,995 ••• *HOW $12,800
lOOO RANGER SUPERCAB 4X 4
WAS$14,995 •••• *HOW$13,800
lOOO W1HDSTAR LIMITED
JUST ARRIVED •••••••••••• * $23,H5
1999 EXPEDmOH
WAS$19,995 •••• *HOW $18,800
1999 EXPLORER "GOOD BUDDY"
WAS$11,495 •••• *HOW $10,400
1999F-1SOSC4X4
WAS$17,995 •••• *HOW $15,800
1999 RANGER SC 4X 4
WAS$1 5,995 ••• *HOW $14,800
1998 EXPLORER ·
WAS$16,995 •••• *HOW $14,800
·1998 EXPEDmOH (EDDIE BAUER)
· WAS$l8,995 ••• *HOW$17,900
1998F-150
.
WAS$9995 •.•••.••• *HOW $8800
1997RANGER
WAS $7995 •••••••••• *HOW $8850

.tja&gt; Oldsmc;&gt;blle~

1001 MOUNTAINEER
(liN STOCK)
WAS $l3,995 •••• *HOW $22,500
2001 GRAND MARQUIS LS
(liN STOCK)
JUST ARRIVED •••••••••••••• .$ 18,995
.o&amp;VV\1 MOUNTAINEER PREMIER
JUST ARRIVED ••••••••••••• *$22,995
1999MOUHTAIHEER
JUST ARRIVED ••••••••••••• *$19,195.
1999 COUGAR
·
WAS$13,995 ••••• ,;HOW $12,900

•

1914 LElCUS ESIOO
·"GOOD BUDDr'
WAS $10,995 •••••• •HOW $10,400

1997 LESAIIRE
WAS $11,995 ••••• •NOW.E l v, 011,11j

~

~

12000 FIREBIRD
;:1001 CAVALIER ·
WAS $16,995 .... *NOW$15,500 .....::
· wi.S $9350 ••••••••• •HOw $8,800 I HI GRANDAM
1H8 CAMERO (liN STOCK) .
WAS $11,995 .... *HOW $10,800
WAS $1l,995 •••• •HOw $H,400
1HIGRAHD
PRIX
1997CHEYY1500
.
WAS $12,995 .... *HOW $11,800
WAS$16,995 •••• *HOW $151800
1t98GRAHDAM
1997BLAZER
WAS $6850 .......... *NOW $5500
WAS $13,495 •••• *HOW $12,200
1993BLAZER
JUST ARRIVED ,. ••••••••••••••"'450

1998RAM 1500VAN
WAS$11,995 .... •NOW $11,700
1996 VOYAGER
~'-~~
WAS $6950 .......... *HOW $5400 ~~
1995LHS
WAS $5950 ............... •HOW $5500 _
_

2001 TOWHCAR
lOOOALERO V-6
.JUST ARRIVED ............ *$23,995
*JUST ARRIVED ........... *$13,495
lOOOCONTIHEHTAL
1997 AURORA V-8
WAS $l4,995 .... *HOW $22,600
WAS$13,495 .... •HOW $12,800
lOOO LS
1994 CIERRA
WAS$17,995 .... •HOw $25,800
WAS$5850 .......... •HOW $4900

*

LINC

LN

=

- -

.......

NOBEnER
METOBUYII

GUl

'35,105
or ·S699mo

I :• ' II II

I

'17,300
or '344-:;:r-••

-=

'll,9~0

or '249•o
4ftL,AiaC._. .~

.......
sa

'22,450
or '455mo

TAIDillllS
FULLY EQUIPPED
Maintenance
Included for
. 3 years or
36,000 miles

II '·

I

'18,862
or '37t)•o

--·--

........

......

l:

THE AREA'S ONLY\.
TAl-CERTIFIED DEALER

. j.

740-446-9800 •1-800-212-5119

'

HOURS:
Mon - Fri 9-7;
Sat. 9-5
Service Prices Exclude Tax.

a • wa .•

• •

T

a•

E

• •

LINCOLN
PREMIER
EXPERIENCE

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="459">
    <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="9904">
                <text>12. December</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="24778">
            <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="24777">
              <text>December 24, 2001</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
