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Page

86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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Thursday, September 2, 200o!

Bobadsto open .
with VMI,-Bt

laal•priiiDII
Vlrglat.'

After-school acting class
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GALLIPOLISThe ~d . Enrollment fee is $7 per Wright.s theatrical backAriel Theater .will host atier- s~ssion. and includes all sup- ground includes community
sc hool ;Hoting classes for plies. Classes will begin theater in various roles on
sc hool -age
pe rfo rmers Tuesday, .7. Regi strati ons and off-stage. He has
wtshing to stretch their ere- will be ac cepted until classes worked professionally as a.
ativity. The classes will be are full .
fior
, stage
manager
instru cted by area· native.
The acting classes will be Paramount 's Kings Island,
Jos·eph- Wright. -owrrer -·of--designl'dTo "&gt;tl'l'ngrlled"vpcal and co ntinues to work as a
The hnagmatton Factory. . and physical communication
performer, seasonally, at.Walt
Classes will be held on skills . Each session will
.
Dtsney World. \l{ith his own
Tuesdays and Thursdays include activities that profrom 4-5:30pm. Enn:illmenr . mote creative probkm solv- co mpany, The Imagination
is open to all school-age stu- ing. The sessions will also Factory he has designed and
dents currently in Third provide students skills that presemcd creative drama
grade through 12 grade. The can be used academically, w;'rkshops to more than
bi-weekly 'sessions will con- . ·such as vocabulary, creative.. 3~.000. students throught
.tinu e rhrough th e end of the writing, self-_c.xpression, th e Umted States, and con. school-year, and will involve team-buildin g, etc. ·Each ses- tinues to teach, nationally.
public
performances sions wi ll be designed as a
For more information
throughout · the
year . . .fun, and chalknging experi- regarding the After-School
Although s tudeJ'Its are not ence.
Acting Classes, "p!ease conrequired to attend every sesThe after-school acting tact the Ariel Theater at
sion. regular attendance is classes will be taught by 446-ARTS. . Registrations
suggested.
Joseph Wright, a lisccnsed will be accepted until sesActing class space is limit- elementary school teacher. sions are filled .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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lt:il!~,

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"-lJJj)\j);!J(~..:.r,r,-.+

''·ll.'•l·ll .... rlt•.•l••···

Commissioners seek ~yracuse water project funds

SPORTS
• Buckeyes' Close Calls.
See Page 81

J.

behalf of the vil lage, as pre- fee from $13.50 to $26.50. ing the existing water tank
pared by County Grant~ and increasing the monthly and building a new tank at a
. /-Administrator Jean Trussell.
sewer fee from $25. to $30 higher elevation.
.
POMEROY . . - Me1~s
· The project will cost a total · per month in order to re-pay
A booster station is al so
County Comrmssmners wtll of $673,500, Trussell said. that bank loan.
proposed. Those plans have
seek $210,{)()() in grant funds for · The funding package also
According· to Trussell, the been approved by the Ohio
Protection
new ~ater hnes, a new water includes a grant from the village plans to apply for Environmental
tank and a _water meter system Ohio
Public
Works another grant in hopes of· Agency and the village is
for the Ytllage of SyJliCUse Commission in the amount of reducing or eliminating the ready to proceed when fund·
ing is secured, Trussell said.
through
the
Community $248,500, which has already bank loan .
The
project
involves
Development Block Grant been approved, and a local
Water and Sewer program.
.bank loan to the village in the replacing 400 feet of water
· Meeting Thursday, com· amount of $215,000. ,
line, installing meters on all
mtssmners approved a, grant
The village proposes nearly . 4Q9 residential taps and 12
Commissioner ·
Jeff
application package on doubling the monthly water commercial taps, demolish- Thornton announced a fundBY BRIAN

REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

Other business

raising dinner and auction for
6 p.m. Saturday at th~
Portland Community Center..
Thornton said commi.ssioners are providing food for the
dinner. which will benefic a
roof replacement project and
the. development of a
Buffington Island museum at
the old Portland Elementary
School.
Earlier thi s year, commissioners dedicated $20.000 in
Please see Funds. A5

Adding on to Susiness

OBITUARIES
Page AS
Country music star
Trace Adkins will
play, 7 p.m.,
Oct. 7, 2004
at the
Kanauga· Drive-In,
1483 Ohio 7 North ,
Gallipolis.
Others who
will play at
the drive-in
this fall are
Jimmy Wayne
on Oct. 30
and
Ricky Skaggs
on Nov. 7.
For more
information on
these and to
reserve tickets,
ca'll the drive-in at
(7 40) 446-1088
or
(7 40) 446-8858. .

• Gladys M. Roush

No newspaper
on Monday
POMEROY - The
. DGily Sentinel will
not
publish
on
Monday, and the
business office will be
·closed for the Labor
Day holiday. ·
Normal business
hours will resum~ at
8 a.m. on Tuesday.
'

WEATHER

Loco/ happenings
Cornstalk's Revenge
Chili Cook-Off
The Fifth annual Chili Cqok-otT takes
place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m . Saturday, Sept.
4, at the Farmers Market location under the
Bartow Jones Bridge in Point Plea,.m.
Registration is from 9 to 10 a.m. and the
cooks' meeting is at 10 a.m.
Cash prizes for chili winners are $400 for
first place; second place, $200; third place,
5100.
Other . competitions include peoples
choice chili, best salsa, and best decorated
table. Cash prizes are $200, $50, and $25
respectively.
·
Peoples Choice samples are 50 centS each
and the winner is determined by the most
number of samples sold. The money raised
fium the sale of the samples \viii go to the

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Mason County Nutrition Program ,for
.senior adults.
The Bluegrass Boys will be performing
and Model T's will be on display.
. For more informatio.; about this year's
chili cook-off, contact Bill Reebel, coordinator, at 304-675-2067, or by e-mail at
pepperking@earthlink.net. . ·

DMIIIIaanP... A8
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INDEX
ll SI!CilONS -

Old-fashioned ice
cream social
The annual Baden Community Center
ice cream social begins at 4 p.m. Saturday,
Sept. 4 in Leon .
In addition to -the homemade ice cream,
there will be hop1emade vegetable soup and .
other foods available.
·
Quart containers of ice cream will also be
sold.

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Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials

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Faith•Values
Movies
NASCAR
.Obituaries

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84-6
B7

A:3
A4
A2-3

As
B3

As

Sports

Bt

Weather

A6

© 0004 Ohio Valley Publl&amp;hlnJ Co.

Roy Rose, a worker with Home Creek Enterprises of Pomeroy,
works high above the ground on the roof of the new a.ddition
to Superior Auto Body shop in Middleport. The new 3,200
square foot addition is expected to be completed· in two to
three weeks and will provide additional work area and storage
space for the busy body shop. (Brian J. Reed/photo)

Without Help, Syracuse
Volunteers glean vegetables to benefit Parish Pool Could Close, Too

Volunteers work at ACEnet to process tomatoes they gleaned from the Rac'lne farm of Jim
O'Brien. About 200 gallons of stewed tomatoes were produced and canned. much of which
went to the Meigs Cooperative Parish for distrihution to disadvantaged fam ilies .

STAFF REPORT
~EWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY- "Up to onefifth of America's food goes
to waste -. in fields, commercial kitchens, markets,
sc hool s and restaurant5,"
according to the U.S.
Department of Agriculture.
Meigs County Cooperative
. Parish (MCCP), along with
partners, the Appalachia
Center
for
Economic
Networks (ACEnet), the
Appalachian People's Action
Coalition . (APAC),
and
Community FOods Initiative
(CFI) developed an event, ·
dubbed Appalachia Harvest,
to lower that dismal statistic.
The Appalachia Harvest
began . Aug. 23, when 20
youth and adult · volunteers
from Meigs and Athens counties gathered at the Jim
O'Brien Farms north of
Racine to glean (gather \)'hat
has .been left behind) tomatoes and peppers.
Gleaning is a popular food
sustainability practice in
parts of the United ·States,
said Shannon Kushnick of
ACEnet.
"Late in the summer whe"'
the produce market has
become saturated and the
crops can no longer be sold at
a rate high enough to cover
the costs to pick and market,
the crops are abandoned and
plowed under in order to prepare the ground for next
'

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Muon, WV 25280
Phone (304) 77'M323
2400 b.-m Ave.
(Aci'OM from K.lhlt)

Galllpolla, .Ohio ~1
446-1711

1- .

Yankees conlinue to get
even with Tribe, B8

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Musician Mick Souter returns to Point Pleasant Friday, as he presents
"Celebrate West Virginia," at the Tu-Endie-Wei State Park. The program begins at 7 p.m.
Souter performed during the Sternwheel Regatta .
He wil l play the banjo, fiddle , guitar, dulcimer, auto harp and harmonica. This family
entertainment will highlight the people, history, pride·. beauty and heritage of the 's tate.
There will be sing-alongs and Souter said that audience participation is encouraged.
Celebrate West Virginia is sponsored by the state parks division.
Free admission.

(lan McNemarjphoto)
Miranda Saunders, 5, pours tea for bridal dolls in her grandmother's collection
Tuesday afternoon. Her grandmother. Sharon McNabb, will be one of many displaying
their doll collections at the Our House Museum Doll Show Sept. 18, 19, 25, and 26.
The Our House Museum will hold its third annual doll show from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. ,
Satwday and 1·4 p.m., Sunday Sept. 18·19; 25·26.
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The doll show will feature collections donated by . mbny local residents. Exhibitors
showing both weekends are Sharon McNabb; Beverly Chapman, Susan Breech, Mary
Elllot1 Allee Gills, Ashton Saunders. Helen Null. Mary Wamsley, Phyllis Taylor, Dawn
Clark, Jeannie Jindra, Shirley Arrowood. Jackie Coenen, and Dixie Baker.
Susan Baker of the Ohio River Bear Company and ·Lloyd Middleton owner of the
Middleton Doll Company will-display their dolls and bears on both weekends.
A raffle to win an Ohio River 8e'ar, a Middleton Doll, and a Richard Simmons Doll will
be held .
' Several articles of clothing from the 1800s will be on display as well.

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Donna Peterson. "It needs too
much work."
The yillage was forced to
SYRACUSE - The lone close its pool a few days
·remaining public pool operat- early thi s year when the filter
ing in Meigs County may not svstem failed. causing the
be able to open next year if water· to turn green. Two of
the Village of Syracuse does- four pumps also failed, and
n't gel financial help.
· Councilman
Eric
"We're not going to have Cunningham
reported
the money to do it. unless we Thursday that the pool was
get donations or a grant." said
Please see PooL A5
Syracuse
Councilwoman
BY TIM MALONEY·

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

A volunteer gleans tomatoes· from the vines at the Jim O'Brien
Farms near Racine. When the crops were no longe r going to
market because the price didn't justify the expense of picking,
volunteers came in to salvage the vegetables for food pantries.
year's planting. So instead of over I po, five-gallon buckets An Exxon gas station owned by City Ice and Fuel Co., Point
allowing this produce to go to of tomatoes were picked Pleasant, W.Va., is currently under construction at the Inter·
waste, volunteers enter the equating to about 50 bushels section of state routes 7 and 124. A spokesman for the comfields and hand pick, or of tomatoes. The vegetables pany said' that the station is slated to open in November.
glean, the vegetables," she were transported to . •the Pictured are Jason Rauber and Robert Davis of Petroleum
explained.
Services of Jackson as they install pumps for the station's gas
· During this pilot event.
· PIHH see Parish. A5
· tanks in the bilckground. (Beth Sergent/ photo)

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PageA2

• VALUES

FAITH

Friday, September 3,

tember 3, 2004

BY PASTOR RoN BRANCH

Now that the 2004
God
in Christ Jesus··
•
Usually when I get an
Summer Olympics are over.
(Philippian s
3:12b-14
early morning call, there is
l am left reflecting on my
NKJY).
a problem. ·But not this
own athletic endeavors in
The race is on. The goal
time . It was 4:30 a.'m.
the past. Let's see. There
Pilstor
is before us. The starting
Sunday
morning, the 29th,
was the time that 1 was
Thom
gun has fired . Let's get out
when
our.
oldest son Ron
running Track, tripped on
Mollohan there and win!
called.
my own feet and slam111ed
"Do you not know that
"Hey, Dad. Just calling to
my knee into the cinders
those who om iri a race all
let
Mom and you know that
and the cinders into my
run, but one receives the
Holly
and I are at the hospiknee. The pain didn't bothprize'' Run in such a way
tal. Holly is in labor wtth
er me so much but the indeed am an athlete ... spir- that you . may obtain it.
our new baby boy."
spectacle l had made of itually at least, if not also And everyone who com-.
Later that afternoon after
pete' for .the prize is ternmyself very nearly caused physically.
church, Terry, Jamin, and I
me Jo die of embarrassment.
As Christians arc we not perate in all things. Now
set out for the hospital in
It didn't help. or course. "running
a
race",
a they do it to obtain a perWinchester, Va. We made
that the coach didn 't give marathon run in which only ishable crown, but we for
the trip in five anl¥a-halftuppence about my injury perseyerance brought forth · an imperi shable crown.
hours, and Terry not once
even with the sight of blood · from faith in Him can keep Therefore, 1 ·run thus: not
complained about how fast I
gushing down my leg and us going?
Are we not with uncertainty.
Thus I
drove , That was a first.
Justus · Branch arrived
mingling with the black cin- ·"wrestling" today with pow- fight: not as one who beats
Sunday afternoon at 4:32
ders
on
the
track. erful social and ideological the air. But I discipline my
p.m.. weighing in at 6
Incidentally, I've noticed opponents that watch us body and bring it into subpounds, 10 ounces. Delivery
that coaches . don't cater with shifting eyes. seeking jection, lest, when I have
progressed smoothly until
much to self-pity. Oh. well.. to lay hold of us and topple preached to others, I myself
doctors
determined that the
At least I've got cinders us over with confusion and should become disqualified''
cord
was
wrapped arourid
Corinthians 9:24-27
still in my knee as a sou- "pi nned to the mat" with ( I
his
neck
,
which
prohibited
venir.
doubt'? Are we not · hoping NKJY) .
his fetal exit. A- C-section
Perhaps you can even
I remember too as an to daily "score a goal'" by
was performed, and the
older teenager playing some holding forth Truth. so that hear in your heart's ear the
prettiest, sweetest, and most
two-on-two basketball and someone will see His l.ight crowd in Heaven as they
perfect grandson ever was
slam-dunking
the
ball . of love and reach for the roar .their approval of those
dedared born! The beautiful
through the hoop (with a prize of eternal life'!
who start. the race and then · lady who made it possible,
little .help from short stone
Don 't assume that because stick with it until. fi.nally
, Holly, did . marvelously
wall nearby).
I guess 1 "Rocky's Theme" isn't blar- reaching their goal - the
ihrough it all. Ron w.as preshould not have · hung on ing every moment of every goal of remaining true to
sent throughout the process,
the basket's rim so long. day that we may squander Him until the end.
and . expressed fatherly
Who would have guessed life as spiritual couch pota" ... Since we are surroundamazement concerning all
that the backboard might toes. Are you waiting for ed by so great a cloud of •
that he saw.
not have been designed . for someone else to run into witnesses', let us lay aside
On Monday afternoon we
such abuse? As you might the ring? Hey, you! Put every weight, and the ·sin
took Ron out for lunch.
suppose, the game ended your gloves on. and get in which so easily ensnares us,
Afterward, . we said our
good-byes. But, after startwith my accidental destruc- there!
and let us run with
ing to the truck for our
tion of the basket and backAnd don't get caught run- endurance the race that is
departur~, I turned around
board.
ning on the wrong track! set •before us, looldng unto
Then there was the iime Can you see Him in ·your Jesus, the Author and
that I had just moved. It mind's eye, this One Who Finisher of our faith, Who
was my eleventh grade year shed Hi's blood for you to for the joy that was set
at a new high school and I receive the gift of eternal before Him endured the ·
had just gotten up to bat in life?
Coach and Team cross, despising the shame,
front of my new team . Manager, 'He's also the and has sat down · at the ·
Maybe ·subconsciously hop- Great Reward of those who . right hand of the throne of
in'g to impress my new will receive Him as Lord. . God"
(Hebrew
12:1-2
JACKSON, Miss. (AP)" ... I press on, that I may NKJV).
coaches and teammates with
A group of Pennsylvaniahow tough I was, 1 was . lay hold of that for which
(Thom Mollohan has
based college students held
immediately beaned with a Christ Jesus has also laid ministered in southern
signs and ·handed out
fastball. "What a way to hold of me. Brethren, I do Ohio the past nine years
leaflets riear the Old Capitol
Thursday to support a prostart the season," I thought not count myself to have and is the pastor of
posed Mississippi constituas I crashed backward from apprehended; but one thing Pathway
Community
tional
amendment banning
the impact of the ball. No I do, forgetting those. things Church. He and his wife
same-sex
marriage.
pain, no gain, right?Given which are behind and reach- are the parents of three
"The definition of marmy lack of athletic finesse, ing forward to those things children with another on
riage
is primarily for procre"Going for the Gold" was ·which are ahead; I press the way!
, He may bt ,
ation,
and if you take that
naturally never really a toward the goal for the reached by email at pas·
away,
you're gutting the
catch phrase for me until I prize of the upward call of torthom@pathwaygallipo·
whole meaning of marbegan to understand that I
lis.com).
riage," said John E. Ritchie,
·spokesman for the grouf.
The amendment. wil be
on Mississippi ballots Nov.
2.
The seven men, all wearing
scarlet capes across the front of
their dress shirts, are mc!Qbers

and saw that 1\lOther and · ing sight of what it means
son were having a moment to be appreciative of what
together. I could tell that it others do for us.
was somet)ling special.
For example, all too often
Terry got in quietly, and men lose appreciative perafter a few · moments said, spective of what their w1ves
"Your oldest son just said do for them. Children seem
something to me I will to soak in all that parents do
never forget. He told me, for them with little appre'Mom, I have always loved ciative response. Neighbors
and appreciated you. But often sluff-off what other
after bemg there with Holly, neighbo,rs have done. for
1 really love and appreciate them . People tend to forget
you that much more."'
that the church has helped
On the day before, the in a time of need.
man had been intimately Congregations tum on pasinvolve&lt;;! with the birth of tors who have done nothtng
his first child. He saw. first- but demonstrate loyal serhand the rigors with which vice and ministry.
his wife had ·to .endure to
Above all, many fail to be
bring forth the child. He truly appreciative of what
even got the privilege ,of Jesus Christ did when Hl'
cutting the umbilical cord to suffered, ble'd, and died on
officiall~ separate mother the Cross to make ·an eternal
from ch1ld.
difference for us. Many fail
Through it all , he some- to remember with loyal
how at some point gained a appreciation that it is God
deeper appreciation for what who has abundantly bl~ssed
his mother went through to America.
give him Life back- in 1976.
Remember that, when
It is. by contrast. the rea' Jesus Christ healed the ten
son, after having seen Terry lepers, only one returned to
give birth to six sons, that 1 express loyal appreciation to
have such a deep apprecia- the Lord .
tion for my daughter-in-law,
If more would determine
Holly. She has made us to be loyally appreciative of
proud grandparents, and that what others do for us, our
ts why I openly declare, whole. culture would be
"Hip-hip-hooray for Holly." affected for tire good. There
When someone does would be kinder perspecsomething for you, regard- tives regarding others.
less of what it is or in what Gentler attitudes would rule
fashion it comes, should the days. What' can you do
there not be a loyal appreci- to prove· it true?
ation for it? I am not so sure
In · the meantime, Charlie
that, within the selfish Burgoyne and I ·are brand
grandpappies 1
framework of our con tern- ·new
porary society, we are los- Hallelujah!

F.ellowship
Apostolic

Secund Baptist Church
Ra, cnswuud, WV. Sum.la) s~· huoi 10 am • Monung worship I I am b ening- 7 pm ,
Wcdnc§duy 7 p.m.

Church of Jesus Chrisl Apostolit:

VanZ.1ndt and Ward Rd., Pastor: Jam... s
Mtl ler, Sunday School
IO:JO a.m..
E\'enmg- 7:JO p.m.

Rivtr \'all~y
Apostolk Wo~ h ip Center. 1)73 S . 3nl

A\'c., Mltld\c pon. Kt::\'in Konkle. · P.1~ tor,
Sunday, I(UO a.nl . Wedne sd ay. 7:00
p. m .~ Y('outh Fri. 7:30 p.m.

Emmanuel Apostolk Tabernacle lm·.
Loop Rd off New Lana Rd. Rut land,
. Sen• to.:c~: Sun 10:00 ' a.m . &amp; 7·30 p.m.,

Thun . 7:00 p.m.. P..tstor Man y R. Hutton

Libert)' A,'i.wmbly of God
P.O. Bm; 467. Duddin g Lane. MasOn,
W.Va., Pastor: Nei l Tennant. Sund11y
Sen· tees- 10:00 a. m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Carpenter Baprist Ch4rc:h
Sunday .St· hool - . 9:30am, Preachi ng
!0:30am. Evening Service
Scr\·ice
7:00pm , Wcdncsda~· B.ible Study 7:00 pm,
lnter1m Prettcher - Floyd Ross
Cheshire Baptist Churth

Pastor: Steve- Lillie. Sunday School : 9·.10
am. Morning Wurship : 10:30 am. Sunday

Hope Bop(ist Churrh (Southern)
570 Gmm St.. Middlepon. Sunday ..chool
·9:30a.m .. Worship - II a.m. and 6 p m'.,
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
'
Rutland First Baptisi Chun:h
Sunday Sc.hoo l - I.J:30 a. ~ .. Worship ·
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Bru~kert. Eilst Main St ..
Sunday S·chool - IL~O a.m.. Worship -

10:.10a.m.

\
First Southern Baptist
Pomc n~y Pike.

Pa5tor: E. Lamnr
O'Bryant, .S um.ht y Schoo l - 9:30 a.m.,
4 1872

Woi'QJip - ~: 15 a.m .. 9:45am &amp; H)() p.m.,

Wednesday SerYices- 7:00p.m.

Pustor: Mark Morrow, 6th tfnd Palmer St ..
Middleport, Sund~y School · 9: 15 a.m.,
Wor~hip - 10 : 15 a.m., 7: 00 p .m .,
Wednesday Sctv1tc· 7:00p.m

26

vears In local bustneu

Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
We offer physical,.occupational,
speech. art &amp; musiC therapies

Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH
. 740-992-6215

333.Page Street
(740) 992-6472 '
Middleoort OH
Fax i740i 992-7406

740-667-3156

"Ne$1 and Rest"

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear
before God and man."

Racine, OH

-"if:Jo

Silver Run Baptist
Pasto r: John Swanson. Sunday Sch ool IOa.m .. Worship - \la.m .. 7:00 p.m.
, Wednesday Service~- 7:00p.m.
.Mt. Union Bapli"l
Pastor. , David Wl~man. Sunday Schnol9:4 '5 a.m .. Evening - 6:30 p .m..
Wednesday Serv i~.:e~- 6:30p.m.
Bethlehem Daptis_t l:hun:h
Great 1Bend. Hnut c 12-a. ~&lt;tcin e. OH .
P3Stor :' Dnnid Mecca. Sunday School ·
9 : ~() a.m .. Sunday Worship- 10:30 a.m ,
Wednesday Bible Study-6:00 p.m .

.

Old Bethel F~ Will Ba~list Church
2~ 601 SL Rt. 7, M1ddlepor1, Sunday
School - 10 a.m ., Evening - 7:00 p.m ..
Thursday Services- 7:00

Horne """P'e.

our jobt, M '"IIIIM lllle "-iiion, It II'IIIY bt • t1mt when '"
nuu u our fiNGI'I c·lft lllldour IU!IIefaclion wilh our~· "Do
,...,_ • lll'qn.W job -nty? Am I !Milling.., emplcrpr'a
tlptetaliont? Alii I pltlle,d with..,~ l*fol'mtnet?"

29670 Bashan Rd.

Racine, OH

740-949-2217

P.O. Box683

Sizes available 5x10to 10·x20

Pomero Ohio 45769-()683

-.m.nt.

k

A1911CiM, I founh etntury lheologiM,' epolctlboUt
"l!fou -lei ratlllin to whM rou ••• not y.t, you . - t •hnys 1Mr
cltpl•eltd b!f·whet you - · For wilt,. you _ . pi"IM with JfOurttlt,
theft you have rttn.ln.t .•IIMp lddlng, ·kMp . .lklng, liMp adhnclng."

mutt,.._

M 'we contmueto tlrlve, we
our eplritull progrtta H
Wtlt. It ..... • tl"'ftll•pirit to ••pond to the chahllfl" - mutt
t1r1w to inMt. lb...tor., God hat uid in Exodut 20:t-1 0... "Six dllye
elulll lello!',lind do Ill your work; lhe Mveultl 6ltlj It • S1bbiUI to
LOfd lfOW God." tn H'- wlaclom. ow~ FalltwlcMw we
.
......... oon..
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ehom

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333
1-800-451-9806

Blessed are the pure ·
·in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew ·s:s·

Cooktd Mtals &amp; Daily Specials
Open 7 day s a week

740-992-7713

Hills Self Storage

•-gllr•

Mif[ie's !l{es{aurant
Hom~

·A Home Bank for

Martv

6am-8p.m

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you1 ye sluzll
ask whal ye will, and it sluzll
be done' u.nto you.
John 15:7 .
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON SAllES, 00

5fT7 Mulbe1'1'3' Belglnl
Pomeroy, Oblo 45769 ~­
(740) 992-3Z'J9
-~
Tol Free 1-877-583-1433 ·

Blessed are the pure ·
in heart; for they
shall see God:
Matthew s:·s
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

E. Keesee, Worship - IOa.m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Serviees- 7 p.m..

Faith Baptist Churth
Rai lroad S1 .• Mason. Sunday School - 10
a.m.: Wurs hip - II a.m .. ··6 p. m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m ..

'

, Pastor : Arius Hurt, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - II u.m.

Mt. Moriah Baptisl
Fo unh &amp; Main St., Middleport, Pastor:
kev. Gilberl Craig. Jr . Sunday Sc hool -

ADilquliY Baplist
Sunda y School - 9:30 a.m.. W01ship 10:45 a.m., Sunday Evening - 6:00 p.m..
P~tor: Don Walker

Rutland

F~

Will Baptist

Sal~m S1 .• PastOr: Jamie· Fonner. Sunday
School - 10 a.m.. Evening - 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Sc:rvkes - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy w~stside Church of Christ
,332 26 Children 's Home ·Rd ., Sund ay
Schon ] - I I a. m.. Wmshtp - IOa.m . 0 p.m.
Wedm:sday Servkc~ - 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
5th and Main. Past or· AI Hanson. Yo.uth
Mini ster: Josh Ulm. Sunday School- q:JO

a.m .. Worsh ipW~:dn~ sd ay

~:15. 10.30 ~.m .. 7 p.m ..

h(lOd works and glorify

IF'atlterin heaven."

or Chr~st

Wo rship - 9· -~0 a.m.. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace. 1 ~ 1 und
3rd Sunday

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Second &amp; L ~n n . PonlCro~. l'a~tor · l{e\
Jonntlmn Nnbk, Wor-hip 10:25 n. II\ .
Sunda y Scll(k!l (), I ~ r1 m.

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:I IU:'\7 St.ttc Route J25~ Lan!lsvlk. Past1•r
Victm Rnu ~h . Sunday 'L·hnol · li:JO ,i.m .

Calv11.ry l'ilJ;:rim C'halkl
· Harri~onv !llc
Rnad. Pastor · Cha rk.'
McKcn;i'e, Sunday S\•hnnl 9· ~fl a m .
Worship : II a.m .. 7:CKJ p.m . WcdnesJa)

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White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
110

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M~ni ste r:

Tom Runyon. -~9.'\.'\8 Hradhur y
Road. Middleport. Sunday gchuol - IJ :10

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Communion - 10:30 a.m .. B ob 1. Werry.
Mini ster

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Bradford l:hurth of l:hri~t
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Minister: Onug Shamhhn, Youth Mini ~t c r ·
Bill Amberger. Sunday School 9.30 u.m.

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Hirknry Hills Church of Christ
E\'angdist Mike Mnor~ . Sunda~ School 9 a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m .. 6:JO p.m.
Wednesday Sen·ices - 7 p. m.

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P,astnr : Philip Sturm. Sunday School· &lt;J ·~O
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Study.~dnesday. (dO p m.

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Sunday M:hool 9:30a.m .. Sunday \.\or~lup
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Church of Chrisl
lntcrscction ' 7 and 124 W, Evangl.'h st:
Dennis Sargent. Sunday Bible Study '9 :30a.m., Wur~l11p . 10:30 am . am ' (dO
p.m., Wcdncsdny H1hlc Study- 1 p.m.

Christian Union
Haartford Church or Cbri~l in
Christian Union
. Hartford , W Va .. Pastor:Oa\'!d Gre..-r.
" Sunday Sl·hool - 9· JO tl .m.. Worshi]'l 10 :30 a .m .. 7:00 p m , Wcllncsday
Ser\'ices - 7:00 p.m.

Church of God
Mt Moriah Churt'h ol God
M1l e Hill Rd ..' Racine. Pastor: Jam c~
Satterfield . Sunday Schoo l - 9:45 a.m ..
Evening ~ 6 p.m.. WcdneWay Sef\iccs- 1
p.m.
Rolland Church or God
Pastor: Ron Heath. Sunda)' Wn~h1p- 10
· a.m .. fJ p.m .. Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.

Syracust Flrsl Chun:h of God
Apple and Second Sts., Pastor: Rev. David
Ru ssdl, Sunday S~.:hool and Won;hip- 10
a .m. E\·enmg Serv1ccs- 6 :30 p.m -..
Wednesday Services - 6:.m p.m.

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17.&amp; Lnne Stmt • PO Ro~ 271
NeW IU1'tn. W\' 25265
I.Jc-tMtd funtrtf llirtctor

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they ·
shall see God.
Matthew'S.

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REHABILITTION CENTER
The c~re yc1u deserre. rfo.W! ro hom;.•

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

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

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If ye abide ;,~ Me, a11d My Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
ask what ye will, and it shall
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
992·5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
A ND ERSON
FU N E RAL HOME

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· Reed~villr
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Mr. Olive Uniled Mf'lhndist
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Pastor· Rev Larry Lemley : Sun day S ~hool

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Study Wedm:sday 7 pm

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Pas10r: Roger Wat son, Sunday Sc)10ol 9:30 a.m.. WOrship - I O:JO ;un .. 7:00
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and Hnly Euchari ~ t I I:00 a m.

Sunday worship -7 p.m..
pray~:r meeting - 7 p.ui .

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Worsht p -.. I 0.30 a. m.. 7:30 p.m ..

Bear"' allow Ridge Churcl1 of Chrisl
Pastor· Bruce Terry. Sunday So.:houl -Y.:UJ

Matthew 5:16

BUSINESS SERVICES

(740)992-7270

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"-11. l',wl

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.1 .111 . Sumla~ '-idn&lt;nl- II~ 15 .1 111

your light so shine before
that they may see

KEBLER

618 E. Main Sum • Pomeroy

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Scr"ices - 7 p m.

992-3785

An lnco-'llu&amp;
Financilll Serric111 Firm

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740-992-6128

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._-om eroy l:hurch of Christ
212 W Main St.. Mlnl'ilt.'r' Anthnn}
Morr is- Sun day Sclwol ; 9:.l0 a.m.,
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.. Wednes~hl)
Services - 7 p.m.

9:30a.m., Worship- 10· 45 a; m.

local source for trophies,
Ia ues t-shirts 11

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19; 11

l arry Aruwn , Wt1Nhtr - q :1 U
am . Sunday School - 10:.10· a.m., Hihl c
Study : ,7 p.m .

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Fornt Run Baplist

Middleport. OH-

"Do not steal. Do not lie. Do not deeeive one another."

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VIctory Baplist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepun, Pastor: James

Ho!l'emade Desserts Made Daily

740-949-221 0

At we appt'OICh Llltor Dey, tu_, VIICIIIIont ,,.
ovw, tnd our
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wll again ~ locua-.1 on our--. and

Hours

Warm Frie11dly
AtmOsphere ·

209 Third

Acts 24:16

~abrook

Rehabilitation Ctr. ,
"A c,debration of Ufe"

Htmlotk Grove Christian Church
Mini ~ t cr :

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Racine First Bapllst
P.o~ stor : Rick Rule, Sunday SchoOi
~
a.m., Worship - 10:40 a.m .. 7:00 p.nl .
•
• Wednesday Services· 7:00p.m.

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Church of-Christ

Keno Church

Hillside Baptist Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 ju~t off R1. -7, Pastor: Rev.
James K. Acree, Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service. W_o rship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Yooog's Cclrpenter Service ·

Heart Ca thulic C hurch
161 Mul be1r_y A\t'., P\&gt;mero). 992-5891\.
Pa~tor: Rev Walt~r E He1111,, Sat. Cl •n .
0
4 :45 -:'i · l.'ip . m.: Ma&lt;&gt;s- :'\ ·10 p.m.. Sun
Con. -R:H -Y: l.'i a.m .. Sun . M us~ - IJ:10
;un., Daily Ma~s - lUli a.m

e\'t':ning: 6 :30pm Wednesdily 6.3 0pm

Family and Property group
· stopped Wednesday · in
Tupelo. Members of the
· organization have already
been to Kentucky and plan
to go to Oklahoma,
Arkansas and Louisiana some of the other states with
marriage amendments on
ballots this fall.
Cathy Sims of Jackson, .
taking home-schooled students on a field trip to the
Old Capitol, said she agrees
with the proposed ban on
same-sex marria¥e.
Alkansas, Georgia, Kenn.tcky,
Michigan, Montana, North
Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon and
Ulab are scheduled to have
amendments on November ballots to ban same-sex maniages.

Michael L. Crites
Director Family &amp;
Community Services

The Da11

Churt'h or God or Prophl'c~
O.J White Rd uft St R1 lf~l. P:.. ..tol: PJ
Chapman. S!mda) S\·hnol
10 .1 m .
'Wnr.. tup I I J.m . \\t•\ID L"'d~} S\' 1"\lt.L"" -7
p m.

Communi!~·

Assembly of God

Students lobby for Mississippi
amendment banning gay marriage

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Coolville, Ohio

Catholic
Sac~d

First Baptist Chun:h

of the American Society for the
Defense of Tradition, Family
and Property. One played bagpipes as some of the others
walked into lunch hour traffic
to hand out leaflets to drivers. .
Ritchie said the group is
based in Spring G.rove, Pa.
MississiJ?.pi already has a
law . prohtbiting marriage
between people of the same
sex, but supporters say a
constitutional amendment
would strengthen the ban.
Jody Renaldo, executive
director of the gay-rijlhts
group E:q_uality MissiSSippi,
said thts spring that
Mississippi lawmakers were
"overreacting" by putting the
amendment before voters.
· Ritchie said the Tradition,

www.m

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEKl

2004

Hip-hip-hooray for Holly!

A Hunger For More

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God and man ."

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Pet , f ct in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9

MY

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•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ghio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
· Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Cougress shall make 110 law respecting an
establislunmt of religion,' or prohibiting the
f ree exercise thereof; or·abridging the freedom
of speec/1, or of the press; or the right of th:e
peopl(• peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemment for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

!{EADER'S

Thanks
To tlwse aazy people
Dear Editor:
W~ wL"re traveling' by boat thru Pomeroy a couple of weeks

Friday, September 3, 2004

What made it so sad was
that while he saved others.
himself he could not save .
And so Robert Disbro closed
the door to his law office one
n,ight and went home and
took his own life.
.
For 40 years he, had been
an inspiration to other physically di sabled persons. Bitter
· during the early yem·s of his
disability. Disbro remarked
some time later. 'I have prct-.
ty well conquered that. It still
may come back periodically,
but I try riot to let it show.'
He covered it up with a
livelv sense of humor. I was
in his office one cold. gray
March morning as he look~d
out the window. 'I'd give my
right ann to be in Hawaii
now,' he said, chuckling. He
chuckled because he had no
right arm. He lost it in 1944
when the Army jeep in which
he was riding backed over a
J.and mine. For a while it
looked as if his right leg
would have to be amputated
too.
'I had tl1ree doctors treating me,· he said, recalling the
experience. 'One . was a
Protestant, one was a
Catholic and one was Jewish.
It was due to their superhuman efforts that I made it. I
have been ecumenical ever
since.'

George
Plagenz .

Successful trial .Jawyer,
matchle s~ storyteller, .amateur poet and faithful friend,
Disbro spent much of his
leisure (and working) hours
alternately scolding and
encouraging people who felt
surry fur themselves.
'I know the feeling ,' he
said. ' I g1'ew up in poverty
and wound up getting my
arm blown off. My mother
had 35 cents in her purse the
day my father ·left us . .My
aunt managed to take $2 out
of her savings without my
unde knowing about it and
gave it to my mother so· we
could eat. I went to nine .or
I0 schools before I graduated from high school. Yeah, I
know- the feeling that life is
·against you.'
But Disbro developed .the
philosophy that 'it's not what
you've lost that matters. It's
what you have left that
counts.· What he had left was
courage, a fertile mind and

It was the judge's turn to
compassion. Although he
.affected a gft!mpy exterior, apologize. ·
This is not the first story I
his heart was all marshmalhave
written about Bob
low. He helped found an
organization for individuals Disbro. Another. written several years ago, was read inio
with physical disabilities.
We were friends from the the Congressi6nal Record by
time' we met in high school , his friend, Sen. Howard·
of Ohio.
and our friendship deepened Metzenbalim
through the long years that Another friend, the wealthy
followed . I buried his mother Cleveland businessman Sam
and officiated at his son~s Miller. · had the article
bronzed.
wedding .
The Congressional Record
. How did he make it across
the great gulf that was fixed tribute hung on the wall ·
between the . weakness a behind Disbro's desk the
cruel fate had handed him night he closed his office
· and the strength he eventual- door for the last time.
What had happened?
ly found? He gave the
In the past couple of years,·
answer in a poem he wrote: ·
It's the struggle for others more physical infirmities
bore down on him until even
that transcends the gorge,
.That arc between weak- his great heart and valiant
. ness and strength that I forge. spirit could not take it. But
When I rise the next moriJ: _ he took it longer - and .
ing feeling sorry for myself, endured it more bravely I')! reach for strength from ' than most of us could have.
God will understand what he
my clients' shelL
Di sbro was referring to the did.
Looking at some of
strength that comes from
final,
poetic .
. helping others through a bad Disbro's
thoughts, I wonder if his
time.
A judge once ·admonished words were designed to be
Disbro for coming into his · his obituary:
The courtroom drama is
courtroom withm1t ,a tie. He
. apologized to the judge. 'I over for the day,
Three more hours in the
can't tie a tie. your honor,' he
said as he rose from his chair · office, then away - ·
Away in the night toward
in the courtroom, exposing
peace and quiet .. .
an empty coat sleeve.

''~" ·

We needed to get out of the sun into a motel for a couple
'
of day' . We pull ed up to some people on a pontoon boat, and
'"'"" if t llL·r~ was a motel or hotel close by. We were told that
tht t\' "'" " tlll&gt;tel. out of town a few miles but no cab service
''" '" ' ~'~ or Sunday . They also told us of some , bed &amp;
hr,·:th.L t' l pl:t.:es (We prefer a motel .) Then this crazy guy .
"'id that he wou'ld GIVE us his car to use·as long as we need~ J it ~

Wedoded m the city dock. his wife picked us up and drove
u' ou t to the motel. He carne a few minutes later with his car
. He ' aiJ that he had to stop and fill the gas tank, and that we
could keep the car as long as we needed. Now I am thinking:
This doesn't happ~n in the real world. Not in this day and age.
We stayed two nights in the motel . Drove into town and did
V&gt;me laundry, had lunch at Mickey D's, went over. the bridge
to Wally world and bought some groceries . That night we
took these crazy people out for. supper to show our appreciation . We must have talked for fo'ur hours.
We are extremely grateful for the extreme graciousness of
.
)
'
the'se people. The city of Pomeroy should also be grateful to
have people like this representing it ·.
A vc'ry big thank you to Mark and Cindy Rhonemus . We
tell everyone that we meet about those crazy people .
Dick and Sandy Drummer
Edgerton, Minnesota

Reader Services
Correction Polley

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tusPs 213-960!

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published

every

afternoon.

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Department extenaiona are: Court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio
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Reporter: Brian Reed, EKt . 14
· Reporter: Beth Sergent Ext. 13

Advertising
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Circula,tion
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lnoide Melge County
13Weeks .... _ _.......'30.15
26 Weeks .......... . ..'60.00
52 Weeks .... . ... . . _'118.80

Ret• Dutolde Meigs County
13Weeks ....... .. . .. .'50.05
26 Weeks .... . .......•1 00.10
'52 Weeks .... , .. . , ...'200.20

from Page A1

Two sons. Milton Ray
Roush of Pomeroy. and Terry
L. Roush of Point Pleasant,
Gladys M. Roush. 72. of
snrvi:ve, as_do_hfLgrandcl:iiL
Clifton. W.Va., passed-away dren
: Michelle Lvnn and her
on Wednesday. Sept. I. 2004. husband. Donnie.Bunce, and
at ~leasant Valley Hospital in
Christopher Ray Roush; great
Pomt Pleasant, W.Va. ·
Zachery
She was born Oct. 21 , grandchildren, ·
Bunce
and
Stevie
Bunce:
sis1931 . · in West Columbia.
W.Va .. · daughter of the late. ters-in-law Hilda (Detner Jr.)
Daniel
H. and
Allie Rou sh of New Haven. W.Va..
Mourning ivlarr. She was a and Irma (Lewis) Gilland of
homemaker and attended the Mason: and . several nieces
Clifton Tabernacle Church.
and nephews.

For the record
Marriage license
POMEROY - A marriage
license has been issued in
Meigs County Probate Court
to Kyle Matthew Roberts . 20.

Besides her parents. she
was preceded in death by her
husband, Milton E. Roush, CDBG formula funds toward
the renovation of the school.
and her brother. Willis Marr:,_,-jf--nnm
Services will be 11 a.m. now ow ned lly the county .
Saturday, Sept. 4. 2004, at including $15.000 . for window replace ment and a sec-uFogle song •Tucker Funeral rity sy stem . and $5.000
Home in Mason. W.Va .. with toward the museum. which
Rev. Sam Cale IV officiating·. · will occupy a classroom in
, Burial will follow at Sunrise the building.
'
'
Memorial Gardens in Letart,
Thornton estimates that
W.Va. Friends may call from $36.000 will be needed to
6 to 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 3. complete the museum space
2004. aqhe funeral home.
alone.
He addoo that ,he met last
month with Rachael Took.
deputy director of the Ohio
Hi storical Society, to inquire
about the availability of state
funds and funds set aside bv
and Brandy Lynn Gullett. 25, · County Common Pleas Court tlie Shelly Co., which own-s
both ofPomcroy.
by Ohio Valley Bank. proeerty adjacent to the
Gallipoli s. against Y. Wavne Buffington Island State Park
Siders. Coolville. and others. and the community center.
A nuniber of auction it~ms
alleging default ·. on a mortPOMEROY -· A foreclo- gage agreement in the
sure has been' ftled in Meigs amount of $182,601.70 .

'

,

Bv TIM MALONEY
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - More and
more , Meigs County teachers
are convincing their students '
to continue their· education
past high school.
At Eastern High S&gt;hool.
guidance counselor Sheryl
Roush said the number of
. students planning on attending a two- or four-year college is up to 90 percent.
At Southern High School.
Principal Gordon Fisher said
the school has sent at least 80
percent of its kidson to col lege for the past six years.
At Meigs High School,
there have been 69 kids tak ing the ACT for the past two
years, up from 46 the year
before.
"We're leading Appalachia
in kids ~oing to college."
Fisher smd. 'They know if
they're down on the corner in
October after their senior
years. that's where they .will
be for the rest of their lives."
As more students decide to
go to college, that means
more of them are taking college entrance exams.
One might expect that as
more students take the test,
the average scores would
drop. That isn't necessarily
the case.
At Southern, · the average
ACT score among the 12 stu-

Bv BETH SERGENT

Kerry's real vulnerability
By now, John Kerry must
rue the day that he and his
campaign strategists decided
to make his four months in
Vietnam the centerpiece of
his campaign.
It seemed ·Jike a good idea
at the time. All the polls
showed that the voters were
deeply concerned over the
war against Muslim terrorists,
and
considered
President Bush and the
Republican Party far superior to the Democrats 'in waging -it. On the other hand,.
Bush:s C{)ntribution to the
Vietnam War had been stateside service in 'the Alr
National Guard, and the liberal media had managed to
raise questions as to whether
he had even completely fulfilled that obligation. Kerry,
oil the other hand, was a
Vietnam veteran, who had
not only volunteered to serve
there, but acquired a Silver
Star, a Bronze Star and thre~
Purple ·Hearts for his heroism. If any Democrat was
qualified to lead the war on.
terrorism,· surely it , was
Kerry.
What the Democrats failed
to foresee, however. was that
war ,is a murky business in
which personal recollections
inevitably differ, and that
there were bound to be
scores (indeed, as it turned
out, 250) of Kerry's fellow
Vietnam veterans wiJOse
memory of those desperate
cjj~ys differed from Kerry's.

· sides are sincere - it is simply a question of conflicting
memories after 35 years. But
there is another aspect of the
. story that threatens to be far
"
deadlier to the Kerry camWilliam
paign.
Rusher
When Kerry returned from
Vietnam, he was thinking
seriously of running for
__
political office, but was not
Ordinatily, this wouldn't notably .concerned with the
have mattered; but when war as an issue. Throug~ the
Kerry and the Democratic latter part of 1969, however,
camr.aign strategists publi- · his attitude hardened, and in
cized Kerry's .,. version of 1970 he ~btained early
events and made it the key- release from the Navy so he
stone of his entire campaign could run for Congress. (He
(or the presidency, these men subsequently dropped out of
were moved to protest the race in favor of Robert
loudly.
Drinan, the antiwar Jesuit
Ever since, the kerry cam- priest.)
paign has been bogged dowp
But by now Ketry was
in an ugly fight with these morphing into a thoroughgoprotesters. · It tried 'to sup- ing antiwar activist. He
press a book stating the joined Vietnam Veterans
angry veterans' side of the Against the War, and particicase; it threatened lawsuits paled in demonstrations
against any· TV station that organized by Jane Fonda,
aired interviews with their among others. In the spring
spokesmen; . it became entan, of 1971 he testified before
gled in obscure arguments the Senate Foreign Relations
over whether there was Committee. It was here that
enemy fire from the river- Kerry made a widely publibank , and whether Kerry cized series of charges conwas or wasn't in Cambodia, cerni ng the conduct of
and if so when. etc., etc. American soldiers
in
Inevitably the brouh3ha took Vietnam. He declared that
its toll on public opinion; antiwar veterans 'told stories
Kerry's ratings dipped. and. that at times they had peras of this writing, haven't sonally raped. cut' off ears,
cut off heads, taped. wires
recovered. ,
My own guess is that we from portable telephones to
will neve-r know the absolute human genitals and turned
truth on these subjects. Both up the power, cut off limbs,
,

blown up bodies, randomly
shot at civilians, razed viilages in a fashion reminiscent of Genghis Khan, shot
cattle and dogs for fun, poiso ned food stocks, and -gen- ·
erally ravaged . the countryside of South Vietnam.'
.
This is the grim bill of par- ·
ticulars that Johfl Kerry laid
at the feet of his fellow
Vietnam veterans in 197.1.
~nd' ·while atrocities did
·unquestionably occur in
Vietnam, as they do in all
WllfS, ~ it was bitterly unfair,
and totally false, for Kerry to
suggest that such behavior
was common. let alone permitted by, higher authority.
('These were,' he declared,
'not isolated incidents but
crimes committed on a dayto-day basis with the full
awareness of officers at all
levels of command.')
Is it any wonder that thousands of Vietnam veterans
who read that testimony,
knowing that ·it was false,
and realizing the damage it
did to their own proud service on behalf of their country, profoundly resent the
man who blackguarded and
slandered them? That is the
real issue that John Kerry's
'boasts about his heroism
have dragged into this campaign.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the.
· Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Phi/osop~t)

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Health Department
will be offering evening clinic hours OJ] Tuesday, Sept. 7
from 4 to 7 p.m.
Courtney Sim, the health
department's assistant administrator. said the evening
hours are part of an effort to
make health care more accessible to the public.
Often people -have work or
transportation issues that
make it virtually impossible
tq keep a clinic appointment
during the morning or afternoon. For this reason, Sim felt
the need to extend the hours.
The follo.wing services
will be available:
, Childhood and adult
be
immunizations
will
administered on a walk-in
basis from 9 to 11 a.m., and ~
to 7 p.m. Residents are asked
to present "shot records" and
Medicaid cards, if applicable.
A $3 donation is appreciated,
but is not required for immunization administration
• Blood pressure measurements and blood sugar assessments are offered for free and

Meigs County Commissioner Jeff Thornton shares plans for
the Portland Community Center and Buffington l's land Museum
with Rachae l Took of the Oh io Historical Society and Dayton
historian Richarp Kane. (Brian J. Reed/ photo)
ha\'e been donated for the
fund -raiser, Thornton said .
ahu
Commi ss ioners
appro\'ed ;i cooperative
agreement with Salisbury
Town ship
and
Orange
Township. to apply for fund-

Foreclosure

·More Meigs seniors going to college

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

The Daily Sentinel

Funds

dents taking the core college · the average score was 21.4 .'
prep curriculum was up to
"We're at least nieeting the
22 .9 for the 2003-04 school · state average and exceeding
year.
the national average ,'' Roush
Very few local students said.
take the SAT, Fi sher ~ aid.
At Meigs , the average ACT
because the vast majority of score has dropped slightly
schools in the area, like Ohio. from 20.2 to 1.9.4, but
Ohio State. Miami and Principal Dennis Eichinger
Marshall universities, all use said the average is bound to
the ACT.
drop as more studems take
"Our scores have continued the test who are not in the
to go up.'' Fisher said. ,
core college curriculum.
Some of the scores by ' Also, preparing students
Southern s!udents have been for the ACT ·becornes more
astoundingly high.
difficult with the introduction
The school had co-valedic- of the new Ohio Graduation
torians last year. One of them Test.
scored 35 of 36 on th.e math
Eichinger said the OGT
portion of the ACT. and the focuses on reading, writing.
other scored 35 of 36 on the math, science and citizenEnglish portion.
Fisher said , Southern's ship, while the ACT focuse s·
math scores have climbed on English, math, reading
steadily since a double-block and science.
The focuses are similar, but
of math, or two straight perinot
exactly the same,
ods. was introduced 'in 1995.
At Eastern, the average Eichinger said.
"It's like winning the Super
ACT score was up to 22.4 for
the 2003-04 school year. an Bowl and coming back and
increase from 20.9 in 2002- having to win the Super'Bowl
·
again," he said.
03 and 20.3 in 2001-02.
The
slightly-lower
average
"We· re improving," Roush
said. "We're preparing our ACT score is a small price to
students better for college pay for the increased numbet
through our core curricu, of students going on to college, Eichinger said.
lum."
"We're having more kids
The Ohio average ACT
decide
to continue their eduscore is better than the
national ·
average. cations, whether at a twoNationwide. the average in year or four-year college, and
2003-04 was 20.9. In Ohio, that's a good thing:·

Health deparbnent offers ·evening hours

LETTEltS TO THE
EDITOR

,.
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be, less than 300 words. All letters·are subject to
editing and mifSt be signed and include address
and telepho~e number. No unsigned ietters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.
The opinions expressed in the column below
are the consensus of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. s editorial board, unless otherwise noted.

Obituaries
Gladys M. Roush

The Qaily Sentinel ~ Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

. Friday, August 3, 2004

The en-d of ajourney

The.Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

PageA4

on a walk-in basis.
• WJC: Personnel will be
available to coordinate individual nutrition education
and coupon issuance for participants. Staff will determine
eligibility for pregnant/postpart um/bre as t feeding
women, infants imd children's
(aged five years or Jess)·pl'ogram enrollment.
Breastfeeding information
and appropriate referrals to
local social service agencies/medical facilities will be
rendered as well. ·
•
Prenatal
services:
Pregnancy. testing will be
offered on a walk-in _basis.
Costs are base!f upon clients'
income. Personnel will offer
assistance with completion of
the Healthy Start (Medicaid)
application, if necessary.
Coun seling/education and
referrals will be rendered as
needed.
• Head lice screenings and
eradication education also
will -be available to residents
an a walk-in basis. Please present Medicaid cards. if
· applicable.
• Environmental · health:
Sanitarians will conduct

scheduled appointments ·for
issuance of household septic
system permits. investigation
of nuisance co·mplaints and
animal bites, inspections of
food service operations (FSO)
and retail food establishments
(RFE).
Operators of FSOs and
RFEs can apply for and
obta:in state-mandated licenses. Personnel should be available to respond to public
inquires/concern during these
evening offerings.
• Yital statistics: The public
will be able to request and
obtain recorded. certified
f b' h d d
copies o . rrt an eath tertificates, which currently cost
$2Q each. Genealogy assislance will be availalile.
Funeral directors are weicome to secure burial permits
and to conduct other state• required business during
evening hours .
• Receipt of answers to general health-related questions
from a public health nurse via
telephone arid on a walk-in
. basis.
for more information . on
the evening clinic hours and
services call 992-6626.

product will be di stri buted to thnse mlunteering for the project with the bulk going to food
pamrie s in the two counties.
Remaining stewed tomatoe, will be finfrom Page A1
ished into a gourmet produ ct such as shrimp
cocktai
l and bruschetta. said Ku shnick.
ACEnet facilitie s in Athens, where on the folThe se items will be canned in pint silc jars.
·lowing day. I 0 volunteers gathered in the
shared-use kitchen to proc~ ss the . tomatoes labeled with the Appalach1a Harvest. logo. and
into a nonperishable product. ·
sold at the Athen s · Farmers ,Mat'ket and
Around . 200 gallons of stewed tomatoes Kroger 10 raise awarene " ' for the project as
were produced and canned. A portion of the well as funds for next year's gleaning .

Parish

Pool
from Page A1
leaking badly the day before
it was closed.
"It lost 18 inches of water
over,nighr.''
Cunningham
said .
Peterson . said she has discussed the pool dilemma with
the Meigs . County commissiOners, who are said to be
considering a contribution of
some c,ounty money.
"Their donation is not
going to touch what the pool
needs before it can be opened
next season," she said.
The village could apply for
$25.000 in Community
Development Block Grant
funds to pay for the pool
repairs. but that would mean
it could not apply for its usual
CDBG street paving money. .·
"We need to decide if we
want the pool or p·aving, the
way it looks to me.'' Peterson
said.
Mayor Mony Wood said
Syracuse geserves help from
the county because it is operating the only public pool

here .
"I would hope the commissioners' would give us some
help,'' he said.
In other action. a di spute is
developing
between
Syracuse and Pomeroy officials over damage done to
Carroll Street in Syracuse by
heavy etjuipment being used
in work on Pomeroy's water
treatment facilitie s located
there.
"It's just a little side street
and it's getting torn up by
their heavy equipment.'' said
Councilman· Kenny Buckley.·
Syracuse
Street
Commissioner Mike Ralston
he
had
told
council
approached Poineroy Village
Administrator John Anderson
about the probiem Thursday
and· gotten a less-than-posilive response.
"He said it's not in their
grant to repair the street,"
Ralston said.
Also in other action, council heard a complaint from
John Replogle. a neighbor of
D&amp;M Pizza and Subs. located at 45267 Ohio Route 124
in Syracuse.
Replogle said the teen-age

Bv TtM MALONEY
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

- POMEROY
Two
Gallipolis men were caught in
the woods behind the Pomeroy
Post Office Thursday afternoon after briefly escaping
from the Meigs County
Sheriff's De~artment.
29.
Ti
h
. Swanson.. will
and tmot
John yK. Shaffer,
27
now face a multitude of additiona] charges, including
escape, in addition to the origina! charge of felony theft for
which they had been arrested.
_Swanson and Shaffer hud
been processed on the theft
charge. and were awaiting transpan to the Gallia County Jail at 3
p.m. Thursday when officers
allowed them to step just outside
the sheriffs department door to
speak with their families.
The men allegedly ran
dowh the steps and east on
Second Street.
to
Meigs
According
County sheriff's Sgt. Dan
Leonard, Swanson and
Shaffer allegedly hid in a eel-

INGELS .

Jar on Lind Street for awhile.
and then crossed Second
Street toward the wooded hill
behind the post office.
The area was saturated with
police officers. as the sheriff' s
department received assistance
from Pomeroy. Middleport ,
Syracuse and Rutland pohce.
Just bet'ore 5 p.m.. K-9
Offircer Mark Boy d got an m
· d't'
cation from his do~. Thor. that
the men were behmd the post
office. Only a few minutes later,
. they ~ere apprehended by
Rutland Officer Randv Arnold
and Depuiy Adam Smith.
Prom~there. it ·was a short
walk back to the sheriff's
department.
By 6:30p.m.. Swanson and
Shaffer wr t e an their way to
the Washington Coimty jaiL
In addition to the escape

.

'

'

The Daily Sentinel
Subsc~e today • 992-2155
www.nlydailysentillel.com

I

I

;Annie qet_~ur q~n. ;
: Saturday, September 4th ·
7:00P.M .

Sunday, September 5th
2:00P.M. &amp; 7:00P.M.

6:30 PM Nightly 12:30 pm
FOR MATINEES

11M11111t

'
'

the

.charge. '~hich ~anic;, a ma~imum penalty of I~ months in
ptison. Leonard said the men
could al so face charges of
breaking and entering for .
allegedly going into the Lind·
Street cellar. and thefl of gov:
emmem property . for leaving
while weanng the orange
·
· that bel onged to the
JUmpsutts
M'ddl
' epon po1ICe De partment.
By the time the men were
arrested. they had repbrtedly
. discarded the · jumpsuits.
fl'
·
Shu er was wearing Jeans and
a ~reen T-shin. while Swanson
wore only shorts and socks.
Originally. the men has been
mrested for allegedly robbing
stores in Pomeroy and
Middlepot1 . According to
Leonard. one of the men would
distract the clerk. while the other
would "start grabbing sruff."

nie.River-Cky Pla~ers p~~~ents;~

:

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE..

.

buys who deliver piua for
D&amp;M have \·erv loud muftlers on their ,;chide,, and
are disturbing the peace.
· "It's out of control up there
and . I need some help."
Repl ogle said . "I will file disturbing the peace charge&gt;. I
don't have a problem with
that:'
Police Chief Kevin Dugan
said he has talked to the pizza
shop owner. Marty Morarity,
about the problem "until I
was blue in the race ."
Wood said he will prepare
an official letter to ·Morarity
asking him to get the problem
under control.
"I don 't know what kind or
answer we'll get. but we'll go
from there.'' Wood said.
' . Finally. the village is going
to have to wait until midOctober until it s new police
cruiser is delivered. Council
approved the purchase at its
August meeting. but Dugan
said the state bid has not vet
' been appro\'ed and will not
go into effect until Oct. I .. He
said a repre sentative of the
Office
of
Cooperat ive
Purcha sing has apologiLed
for the delay.

Gallipolis men captured after brief manhunt

CARPET
'

ing through the Ohio Publi c
Work s Commi ssion for 2005
pan~g projec t&gt;.
Also - present
we re
c'ommiss t&lt;&gt;n ers Jim She ets
and Mick D'avenpon.

bi.~

.

I Tickets AyailobleAt

play!

~ • Farmers Bank.
! • Peoples Bank. Middleport

• Middleport ltepartment
• Swisher.&amp; Lohse Pharmacy
• Ohio River Bear Con1pio1y

For more lnfc,nn
1:15,3:15, 7:15.9:15

�/

..
..

BY THE BEND

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Jhe Daily Sentinel
'

·Co~JJmunity

Calendar

Public meetings
Monda;, Sept. 6
SYRACUSE
The
Sutton . Township Trustees
·will meet in regular session at
·7 p.m. at Syracuse Vill,age
Hall .
LETART - Letart town·ship Trustees, 5 ·p.m. at the .
·office building.
Thesday Sept. 7
· RACINE
Racine
·Village council 'will meet at 7
·p.m. Tuesday at the Racine
municipal building.
ALFRED . - The Orange·
·Township Trustees will meet
·at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
the clerk, Osie Follrod
Friday, Se.pt. 10
· RACINE - The Racine
Water Board will meet at ·10 ·
a.m. at the municipal building.

.,

I

noon at the Cheshire
Roadside Park.
SYRAC USE - The Ours
reunion will"be held at noon
at the Syrac use Community
'Center. The dinner w\,ll be at
1 p.m. For more infonnation. ·
call 992-2865.

Page A6

Friday, September 3, ::wo4

Loss of costume piece is
·woman's cross to bear

OEAR ABBY: I am in · a
appreciate yo ur feedbacR. DEVOTED MOM IN 'LIVterrible bind . Some years
ago, ·1 made a Halloween
ERMORE. CA.LIF.
costume for a former roomDEAR
DEVOTED
MOM : For friend ships to
mate, "Connie." The cosrume was a nun 's habit and it
Dear
'S tay healthy and vital , there
came out ,great. When I
Abby
mu st be a commonality of
showed her the costume. 1
interests. When you were a
Sunday Sept. 5·
had
a
cross
with
it
that
had
career
woman. you ,had ties
POMEROY
Randy
belonged to an aunt of my .
. · that bound you to these
· P&lt;1rsons will be speaking and
mother's
who
had
been
a
nun
·women. Now that your life
the · Glory Bound Quartet
in a religious order. Connie
.has changed. it's not surprissinging at the 10:30 a.m 1• worgged ·to borrow the cross. new ~ommuility.
I am
now· mg
, that II' C bon·ds o f camabe
~
d
d
b
·
1
ship services at the Laurel
Y a ctrc e of raderie h • loosened.
and I lent it to hey against my surroun e
Cliff Free Methodist Church
better
judgment.
She
then
"mommy'·
girlfriends.
I stay
Howe
before consignon Laurel Cliff Road. At 6
moved to Cali fornia and 1 in touch with my old friends
·
·1 d
h ing the&gt;c ationships to the
p.m. Brad Grant Will . be
lost touch with her.
v1a e-mat , an we see
eac garbage hcttp, please consid·
preaching and
singing .
Now my mother is asking ot her two· or th ree limes a · er that, as . your daughter
Regular services at the church ·
for the cross, and l' m'afraid year. but I fee I that we have
are 9:30 a.m. Sunday school.
·t·t d
grows older. she will no
to tell her that I made a fam- . d n c apart..k t 1
10:30 morning worship: 6
I would l1 e o p 1ase ou t. longer be as dependent as
ily heirloom part of · a
p.m. evening worship, and 7
Halloween costume. What these fri endships for sev~ ral she is now. At that point, you
p.m. Wednesday, Bible study.
' · II· 1 might want to resume your
was I thinking' Connie refus- 1·e. a.sons: \"ve have· noth 1ng
Glen Rowe is the pastor.
"
es to return it t&lt;i me, saying comm on .anymore. The . di s- career. So, my advic,e to you
•
Sunday, Sept. It ·
•
that --she returned it "years lance makes vi siting diffi - is don't burn your bridges SYRACUSE - A diamond
··
·
cult. An d I am tired of hear- you 'may regret it later.
· anniversary
celebration , ,
Friday, Sept. 3
ag~.
have
sent
her
several
ein g the m compl ain about
Dear Abby is wrjtten by
. 1929-2004, will be held a. the
' MIDDLEPORT The
Sunday, Sept. 5
' mails. Now she has changed money problems, boyfriend Abigail Van Buren, . al so
OH-KAN Coin Club will
SYRACUSE
- Qurs Syracuse Church of the
k.-nown as Jeanne Phillips,
.her e-mail address to avoid l·sstles
, ·' the1'r ·,obs · etc
· · ·
have a display in the lobby at reunion 12 poon , dinner at I Nazarene fr'om noon to 6
me. You are my last hope. 1
1 would rather spend my and was founded by her
:!'eoples Bank in Middleport p.m., Syracuse Community · p:ni. "To God Be the Glory"
know
Connie
is
a
devoted
free
time with my hu sband · mother. Pauline Phillips:
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Center. 992-2865 for infor- will be the theme. The Rev.
reader of your column and so and daughter. Should I feel Write Dear Abby , at
Robert Stewart will be speCoins may be brought in for mation.
is her mother _ who also gmlty for want1ng to ph a~e www.DearAbby.com or. P.O.
appraisal.
LETART
Donahue cial speaker at the ·tnorning
wore the costume. I'm pray- · out these friend s ~ips'? I'd Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
RACINE - Meigs C60nty reunion for descendants of service. There will be special
ing they will see themselves
90069.
Pomona Grange will meet at Homer
and
Amanda singing throughout the day
7:30 p.m. at the Racine Donohue will be held at with "Delivered ' to be fe aand save me from the wrath . - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - . ,
-orange hall. Members are 12:30 p.m. at the Letart tured . Food, games lmd felof my mother. - DESPERasked to take winning GOntest Community Center in Letart , lowship will be included.
ATE DAUGHTER, STATThose
attending
are
asked
to
items for judging.
. ,
W. Va. For more information
EN ISLAND
Saturday, Sept. 4
.call Brenda Neutzling, 740- take a lawnchair. Joy FM will
DE!\R DESPERATE
.
have a remote broadcast from
SALEM CENTER - Star 388-9828.
The cross should have been
CHESHIRE -· The annuai I to 3 p.m. For more informaGrange 778 and Star Junior
returned tp you the day after
Grange 878 will meet at 6:30 Fife reunion will be held at tion call 992-2514.
Halloween. If it was inconveni ent for Connie to bring
it to you, · you should have
. made it your business to go
and collect it. It's a shame
that your former friend is
RUTLAND - · Members effective "home remedies" · turtitlms, onions, and even
lying about having returned
. ·and friends of Rutland for pest control.. Many such head lettuce.
the cross . What she's proba'Gardeq Club met recently at remedies ohave been handed
Caring for tender annuals
bly afraid to admit is that
Millie'k Restaurant for a fam- down from generation to gen- or perennials was the topic of
she or her mother lost it, and
:ily night outing. · ·
eration~ long before many of Atkins. She said it is time to
now she 's hiding. (Some
After ·a meal; a brief meet- our present modern pesti- be thinking &lt;9f preparing ten"friend''!)
·ing was held. Pauline Atkins . cides became available.
·der plants and flowers for
c~lled the meeting to order.
Scientific research is need- winter. Tropical plants may
few people
Donna Jenkins had devo- ed to determine whether ccr-' need to come in before the
nizeVery
themselves
whenrecogthey rr~===================:::~
· . .Jions, "My Overseer and tain home remedies do or do temperature reaches 50
are written-about in this col- ~&gt;
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF
.Guide." Roll call was · not always work, she said.
degrees F., generally in 111id
umn, so my advice to you is
THE NAZARENE
There are 42 home reme- September. There are other
.. (\nswered by "What I liked
to level with your mother
most or disliked .about the dies that have been and are plants that can stand cooler
and start praying that she 's
fair. "
yet being used today. An nights but would probably
forgiving. It 's time to· fac e
.7
Comments were given by example is to keep grasses adjust better, if taken in now
the music.
·
/D /
L
/ •
'Atkins, Jenkins and Betty . and .weeds from growin g while there is still good light
DEAR ABBY: Before I
.
l~~t~cl.
l./e
But-a
(,00
~d
·Lowery, who worked with between cracks in a walk. intensity, and the plant will
was a stay-at-home mom to
· · 1929-2004 .
i~~V ~1'-'r
·horticulture displays in the Between stones or bricks, have more .time to adjust to
my
daughter,
I
had
a
circle
"To
God
be
the
Glory"
1-J ''1
flower show on both Monday sprinkle Twenty M~le Team · the indoors growing condiof friends with whom I had
. Saturday September 11, 2004 ·
·ahd Thursday. It was noted Borax, · then sweep into the tions. Some of these are
a
lot
in
common
.
None
of
us
..
Gafiii!S
12-6
1hat Sarah Dawn Jenkins sold areas. Do this ev.ery two coleus, geraniums, and begohad children, and we were ,
Bring a lawnchair
·programs at the grandstand. years.
·
'
mas .
ali
focused
on
advancing
'
.
&amp;
plan
to spend the day!
·Atkins and Jenkins ,won sevShe suggested placing Dial ' Hints · presented at the
eral ribbons for their exhibits soap in a drawstring bag and . meeting including using
ou~ c:~~:r~ince moved to a lcltowfSIIIP EVERYONE WELCOME! .
:in the flower show, and hang in trees or pines to repel chocolate Ex.Lax to control
different town and have ·
·
Info: 740-992-2514
~Lowery assisted the Chester . deer, and to keep deer from chipmunks and moles and
thrown inyselr into my
'
(Leave Message)
.Garden Club in placing rib- raiding bird feeders . Finely- Irish Spring or Dial soap to
daughter's
activities
and
the
Special
Speaker-Rev.
Robert Stewart
bans for both shows. '
ground cayenne pepper sprin- help keep deer from bird
· · "Sunday AM Service
Janet Bolin attended the kled onto damp vegetable feeders.
state convention and brought leaves repel rabbits, she said,
back to the Rutland Garden while a spike nail planted
C.lub superior ratings on both beside tomato plants will
:the fair and Christmas flower repel cutworms.
shows held in 2003.
A comp!tite list is available
The annual open house of from ' Hal Kneen of Meigs
Chester Garden Club on County Extension Office or
Sept. I was announced. OCES Ohio Cooperative
Here are, some of the most popular ":rhank You" ad sizes.
Boli~ was speaker for the
Extension
Service,
evenm~.
Columbus, Ohio 43210.
. Jenkms presented a proThere are also plants that
Please see Dave or Brenda at The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy,
gram on "Home, Yard and repel pests: Asparagus,
Garden· Insects." She said beans, chives, herbs, celery,
or call992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
diere is a growing interest in hemp, marigolds, mint, nas-

:Clubs and
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1

p.m. for a potluck supper followed by a 7:30 p.m. meetIng. Harrisonville grange will
visit and present the progran1.
New officers willl:le installed
and final plans will be made
for a chicken barbecue to be
held Oct. 3. ·
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge · 4'11.
F&amp;AM. will meet at ,7:30
p.m. at the Masonic Hall .
Refreshments will be served.
Thesday, Sept. 7
POMEROY
Eagles
.Auxiliary potluck 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 7. Meat to be
provided . Meeting at 7:30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, will meet at · 7: 30
p.m. at the temple .
Thursday, Sept. 9 .
CHESTER-· Shade Ri ver
Lodge 453 will hold its stated
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments will be served.

.

Church services

Reunions

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Ce/ebroting_ speq~l
.· days with you! .,

:Garden club holds family night

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gram for the third annual raising the most money. .
earth walk to be held on Oct
'9 at the Athens County
Hundreds of area children
Fairgrounds.
·
traditionally take this five
The event takes place in. mile walk. For more inforrmi~
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necessary amenities of Good · months, complaining the
Housekeeping," Goss said in agency was too ~eluctant to
May.
take risks , includin~ those .
He said it took some _time that might result in !ls offi- ·
for the military to establish cers' deaths.
the appropriate interrogation
And his intelligence com- '
systems, but he personally mittee attacked the CIA's
saw no human rights abu ses. clande stine service, saying in ·
Goss also was critical of a bill that without fixes it
the notion that Arab men . could become a "stilted
found it abusive ro have bureaucracy incapable of
women 'guards . because the even the slightest bit of suepractice subjugated them to cess."
women in front of t~eirJelIn a separate. intelligence
low pnsone'rs.
reform b11l mtroduced m
"My basic reaction to that June, Goss a!so broke from a
was, 'Gee, you're breaking 50-year tradition that premy heiirt, and maybe next vents the CIA from operatime you start shooting at lions involving U.S. citizens
Americans, or blowing up 'and' companies .and proposed
Americans, you want to think giving . the . agency law
about that,'" Goss said.
·
enforcement powers · in the
"There was no calchlated United States - when directeffort to send women,'' he ed by the president or when
added.
allowed under law.
While acknowledgi'ng a
Democrats have indicated
vital need to get to the root of they may bring \!P that prothe prisoner abuse J:lroblem, posal during his confirmation
he ·also cited the need to pro- hearings .
teet the practice of interrogaIn the interviews earlier
tion.
this year, Goss .said the fact
"I would make the case that that the United States doesn't
without proper interrogation have domestic intelligence
there would be many more agency lllay mean Americans
dead people - innocent as must adjust their expectation
well as ·military. I would also of how effective t:6untertermake the case that probably . · rorism efforts can be .
Saddam Hussein would not
"We don' t want Kafka
be in custody," he said.
knocking on the door in the
Goss has grown more criti- · middle of the night," he said.
cal of the CIA in recent But "there is some risk."

WASHINGTON (AP) Libyan assets and restrict- · oil companies to return to
Bush adm.inistration is ing air travel there. and to Libya.
. .
.
·
·
unhkely to turt)ler ease remove L1bya from the
"The fact that oil compa.
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - · on Aug. I 3.
million jobs since Bush took sanctions against Libya State Department's li st of nie s and other companies
immediately,
frustrating state' sponsors of terrorism. are being allowed to do
. Retailers saw tepid sales, new · A separate report showed office in January 2001 .
In the productivity report, efforts by families of Pan
Libya negotiated those business, and the families
:claims for unemployment that workers' productivity
·benefits rose and worker pro- increase(\ at an annual rate of the 2.5 percent growth rate Am Flight I 03 ·victims to actions as conditions before are being shut out, is very
:ductivity slowed, according 2.5 percent in tge second was the smallest since a 1.6 collect $1.6 billion more in it will agree to pa.)l $6 mil- frustrating and upsetting,"
to reports that suggested the quarter, the smi'II'lest gain percent rated in the final compensation before a set- . lion more to · the family of Weipz said in a telephone
· quarter of 2002.
tlement · deadline weeks each victim in the explo- interview.
economy was still working since late 2002.
through its rough patch.
The increase in productivic
"The current rate . of pro- away.
sian , which killed 259 peo· The families group urged '
· For the most Jl3rl, monthly ty- the amount an employ- ductivity is still decent given
The administration is try- pie on the plane and I 1 oth- Bush to agree to Libya's
figures . released Thursday ee produces tor every hour on the lackluster pace of overall ing to protect .the families' ers on the ground, .. includ- settlement
conditions
before the election and said
. indicated that merchants had the job - was down from an economic growth in the sec- interest in the settlement, ing 189 Americans.
· sluggish sales in August, a initial estimate of a 2.9 per- .. ond quarter," said Richard State
Department
Libya, which accepted Libya could end up keeping
Richard . responsibility
for . the the $1.6 billion it owes vic:disappointing start to the · cent growth rate for the Yamarone, economist at spokesman
Boucher said Thursday. But explosion, already has paid tims' families if the dead. important
back-to-school April-to-June quarter. By Argus Research Corp.
. shopping season.
comparison, .the rate was 3.7
Effi,iency. gains are impor- lifting of U.S. sanctions, $4 million to the families line were allowed to pass.
Discounters and wholesale percent during the first three ·tant to the economy's long-term
, club operators such as Wal- months of this year.
vitality. They allow the econo- required in exchange for of each v1ct1m. Libya
"It would not only be an
Mart Stores Inc. and Cos teo
Production overall slowed my to grow faster without ignit- the Libyan payments, "'will offered to pa·y $4 more mil- inversion of logic but a
Wholesale Corp. were espe, · in the second quarter, ing inflation. ~ompanies can be based on our legal lion to families if .the presi- double tragedy for Libya to
cially hard-hit. Other stores, restraining the increase in pay workers more without rais- require.men(s, on Libyan dential orders were lifted, recoup hundred's of mil-~
:including Limited . Brands productivity,
. .
. ing prices, which would eat up behavior and our overall plus $2 million more if. it liot'ls of dollars due · to be
and Talbots Inc., also strugThe ~ross domestic prod- ,thosewage gains.
.
national interests." .
were removed from the ter- paid to victims of terrorism
·· gled. But Neiman Marcus uct, wh1ch measures the value
Among ·the economic
"We're not at the point rorism list.
because it stands accused
Group and similar high-end of all goods and services l'ro- barometers closely watched yet where .we can certify,
The group noted that, of supporting . terrorist.
stores fared well.
duced within the· Umted by the Federal Reserve for under the terrorism sane- since Libya's decision in activities," the letter said .
·: "The impact of Hurricane · States, ·rose at' an annual rate signs of inflation · pressures tions, for example, that that ~ecember to dismantle its It was signed by Weipz and
·Charley and the uneven pace of 2:8 percent in the second are unit labor costs- which , behav1or had changed com- unconventional weapons Glenn P. Johnson Jr., whose
·of back-to-school sales has quarter. That compares with a measure how much compa- pletely to the point where program, the Bush adminis- daughter, Beth Ann, was on
retailers reporting ·mixed 4.5 percent growth rate in the nies . pay workers for every · we can lift the sanctions," tration lias permitted U.S. the flight.
results," said Tracy Mullin, first quarter.
· unit of output produced.
he said.
.president of the National
On Wall Street, though,
These costs rose at an
Boucher noted that the ·
Retail Federation. "Retailers stocks rose sharply on a late annual rate of I .8 percent in Sept 22 settlement deadare ready to put the summer surge of bargain hunting. The the second quarter. It was the line had. previously been
Oow
Jones
industrials biggest increase in two years. extended; the deal originalbehind them."
High energy prices and job jumped 121.82 points to
The central bank, wanting Iy expired in ApriL Kara
:Jrd Street Racine · (740) 949-1
worries also made some buy- close at 10,290.28 .
to make sure inflation does M. Weipz, whose brother,
Ch•ck our our wide vorfety of lotions...
ers cautious, analysts said.
President Bush and his not become a problem, has Richard, died in the bombIf I do not hove whot you like, I con order it!
New claims for une'mploy- Democratic riv31, John Kerry, raised short-term interest
·
h'
d ing of the jetliner, said she
REQl.LIAR BED l2o Mlnut&lt; ll&lt;d&gt; . MEDIUM BED (12M;.... ~&lt;pill
ment bene fius rose f or the have sparred over the econo- rates tw1ce t IS year .an
u'nderstood there will be no
·
·
second week in a r0 w, reflect- my and the availability of jobs. pushed a key rate to. 1.50 perPer Session: ................ $3.00
Per Session: ................. $5.80
further
extensions
of
the
·
$
s
sess10ns:
· .....................
s~•''.IIO
ing in part the lingering
The president says making cent. Economists believe
S Sessions: ................ 12.00 ·
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impact of Hurricane Charley. his tax cuts permanent will rates may go up for a third ~~line.
y· .
f p A Fl' h
.10 Sessions: .............. $20.00
10 Sessions: .;............. $30.
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1 Month Unlimited:.$30.00
1 Month Unlimited: .•$40.00
For the week ending Aug. strengthen the economy and time at .the Fed's next meetapplications produce new jobs. Kefl}'_£0n· ing, on Sept. 21.
.. 103 , a group .re'presenting
Owner: Sonia Circle
by a seasonalTy - tends I he tax cut~nave main:- - A brigliCspotThursday ~as most~famil ies of the 2'70,~~1)'
Hooo: MI&lt;J..S;-5111. 9-3; Closed sunda
I 9,000 to 362,000, ly benefited the wealthy, that orders to U.S. factones victims in the 1988 bomb'""'_ _;,;;;;C:=io
:.;.m
;;;.,;,.;;
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the Labor Department said. A squeezed the middle class grew by 1.3 percent in July, fol- ing over Scotland, wrote to
'U1 fjf'Tt
'13 tis 'Ti
little less than half of the rise . and have not led to signifi-., lowing a 1.2 percent advance i~. President Bush on Aug. 20
P
anning e a ry!
was blamed on the storm, . cant job growth.
June,
the
Commerce urging him to lift two presJbu wi[[ a6so[ute6 wve tfum!!!
which ripped through Florida
~The economy has lost 1.1
Department reported,.
identia.l orders freezing

1· • I would like to pun:hase _

PROUB
. TO BE APARr OF.YOUR LIFE.

George H. W. Busl\.
. While in Congress, Goss
• has fought criticism that he .
lacks the objectivity . necessary to conduct oversight in
Congress because he worked
for the CIA during the 1960s.
~.'Some people say I am a
toady for the agency. Some
people say I iun too hard on
the agency. It depends where
.you are coming froin," Goss
said in March, after he
launched into a criticism
about how the agency in the
·1990s had developed a "nicespies problem" and was
. afraid to do business with
unsavory sources.
.Goss talk ~ often about the
importance of oversight. He
trl!veled to Guantanamo Bay.
Cuba, shortly after the
Defense Department 9pened
a holding facility there in
2001.
.
"We were very concerned
that Guantanamo was being
set up by the military to get
the Good Housekeep_ing seal
of approval because tjle
International Committee of
the Red Cross and the human
rights people were there en .
masse, baying in ·large
crowds with cameras, aild
making sure that these people
who were trying to kill us and
blow up airplanes ... that
these mce. friendly people
would be receiving all the

Sluggish retail sales, slower
U.S. says so~e Libya
.productivity indicate economy still sanctions unlikely to ease soon.··
·:wark"tng
· th rough roug·
. h patch . Th~

I eCity,State&amp;Zip: _
I • Telephone:

2 Col. X 3"
$49.20

--------:-,--------

WASHINGTON &lt;AP) him last month .
Porter Goss, tapped as the
The comments are interestnext CIA direqor, say~ the ing not only because 'they
Senate lacked "balance" in its show Goss' more guarded
public hearing ~ investigating approach to . Congress' key
the Iraqi pri son scandal and oversight role on intelligence
should not have plucked mil- , matters, but also because of
Itary commanders from the the' criticism of his Senate
field to question them about colleagues, who ' will decide
the abuse .
whether to confirm him as
Goss took a hard line on Bush's ,intelligence chief.
interrogations in interviews
"It seems to me puUing' the
with The Associated Press general in charge of the
earlier this year, saying ''Gee troops in a hostile combat sit· you 're breaking my heart" to uation back to explain somecomplaints that Arab men thing that they don't need ·
found it abusive to Have him for, and 11¥ doesn't have
women guards at the the answers to, and he could
President Bush
Guantanum6 Bay terror camp get the information through
-statements that could draw subordinates anywa.Y - it pati~nce as investigators did
scrutiny during his Senate seems to me to be some very their work during what he
confirmation hearing, possi- stylish interpretation of over- called a "press frenzy" about
bly next week.
sight," Goss said, "and prob- alleged abuses. His. commitDuring one. intervi ew in ably unnecessary and perhaps tee · held ·a series of closedMay, the eight-term House not helpful to the war effort." door briefings and hearings,
Republican from Florida said
"I am not comfortable with ·. including .one into the imporhe couldn't count the number what t'he Senate is doing," he tance of mterrogat10n as an
•of ongoing pri son abuse added.
intelligence tool.
investigation~. but "we ' ve
A Senate Republican aide
Last week, an Army invesgot the circus in the Senate, said that all the field general s tigation found that CIA
which is always the likely including Gen. John detention and . interrogation
place to look for the circus. " Abizaid, chief of ··the U.S. practices led to a loss of
"Even though I say that . Central .Command - volun- accountability and abuse that
lightheartedly, I do nonestly teered to testify and were "fu·rther poisoned the atmosquest ion whether or not they already in Washington on phere at Abu Ghrl!ib."
have balance over. there on ot~er business. · "They were
If Goss·gets the top post at
this issue," said Goss, former not pulled away from the CIA as is expected. he will be
chairman of the House field." the aide said, speaking only the second director who
Intelligence Committee , who on the condition of anonymi: was also a member of
has declined interviews since ty.
· Congress, following foJmer
President Bush nominated · At the time, Goss urged congressman and president

r • Address:

.

•

'·Bush's CIA.choice says interrogations remain key to war-on terror

leName:

Sgt. Randall Carpenter Jr.

Friday, September 3, 2004 ·

r----~----------~,

$24.60

· Promoted in service
. MIDDLEPORT - Randall
Carpenter Jr. , a Meigs County
native serving in Operation
Iraqi Freedom sinre February,
has been promoted to the rank
of sergeant in the U.S. Army.
He is with the I 50th Armor
Division, National Guard, of
Beckley, W.Va.
He is the husband of Rosa
Carpenter and the son of Randy
Carpenter of Middleport.

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA7

Honor &amp; Memory Wall .that will be ,created in remembrance or tribute to family, friends and loved ones.
The addition will be created in a "quilt" design

to

represent the family unity and. the varied personalities

that comprise our community and hospitaL CoJian tiJe* ~an be purebased for $100 e~ch. The.tiles will be
engraved with the name of the. selected indivi~ual then displayed. The artistic creation will be located in·
'

the main lobby of the hospital and will always remain a part of the organization's walls.
Please complete the attached fo~ in honor or remembrance of someone 'w~o made a difference in
your. life. Return with payment to: Pleasant VaHey Hospltai,ATI'N: Community Relations Department,
'

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2520 Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550. Cash, check and credi! cards accepted. Please make checks
payable to the "Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation.''
For more information please call, (304)
675-4340, Ext
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'

�.,

•.

Page AS

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 3, 2004

.

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE
MAC Preview Roundup, Page 82
Yankees down Indians, Page 88

'

'

Fiiday, September 3, 2004

nnel

Prep Schedule ,
TOday's Games
Football
Gallia Academy at Wheelersburg
River Valley at Nelsonville-York
Green at South Gallia
Zane Trace.at Eastern
' Athens at Meigs
. Southern at Symmes Valley
Saturday's G11mes
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Minford TriMatch
Soccer
, Gallia Academy at Logan
Cross Country
.. Galfia Academy, River Valley,
Me.igs. at Warren ·Invitational
(AP Photo/Mark Duncan)
Inspectors from the Ohio Dept. of Agriculture and the U.S. Dept. of Agriculture stop vehicles
entering Ohio from Michigan in Sylvania, Thursday. The checkpoint is to enforce a ban on the
import of firewood from Michigan to prevent the spread of the Emerald Ash Borer, a destruc·
tive exotic pest that has infected 8 million trees in Michigan.

Ohio cracks down on fireW90d ban, sets up checkpoints '
JOHN SEEWER

pamphlets explaining prob- every tree it attacks and its
!ems with the ash pest to larvae live beneath the bark
300 cars in three hours and. bore into its tissue,
SYLVANIA
State Thursday afternoon at' one stopping the flow of water
highway . patrol troopers of two checkpoints. They
stopped cars and campers searched lJ. handful of cars and nutrients.
Researchers fear that if
at checkpoints Thursday and confis~ated one load of
the ash borer spre~ds, it
along the Ohi,o-Michigari firewood.
Sally ·
Rochotte,
of could lead to , widespread
state line. 'They weren't
much
like
looking for drunken drivers Blissfield, Mich., said she devastation
or drugs - just firewood. was a little surprised that Dutch elm disease, which
Ohio has .banned bringing she was stopped and asked ravaged more than half the ·
firewood. 1!\to the state' whether she was carrying nation's elm populati6n
from . Mtchtgan where a firewood. lnspec(ors decid- after being discovered in
tree-k!lhng .beetle no larger ed not to search her miniOhio in the 1930s.
than a small paperclip has van :
killed ·or infested 8 million
"I guess we didn't
Many towns that lost elm
ash trees.
look like' we
were trees replaced them with
· "People are going to . be going camping," she ash trees, thought to be a
· very surprised to have said.
hardy, disease-resistant tree.
checkpoints at the state ·Although authorities could
Michigan, where the ash
line," &amp;aid Craig Stough, issue fines .of up to borer was first discovered
mayor of 'Sylvania, a $10,000 for viplating the in the United States two
Toledo suburb. "But it's a firewood ban started last years ago, has banned the
critical enough issue that September, they plan only movement of all firewood
we need to stop traffic."
to give out warnings and to
Ohio . ,
. Agriculture confiscate wood, Wilt ,said. out of 13 counties.
"Our goal is not to ruin
The state has been checkDepartment officials think
firewood is at least partial- the holiday of vacationers," ing vehicles at highway
Jy, to blame for the spread she said. "It's a big camp- rest stops for more than a
of the emerald ash borer ing weekend so we see it . year mainly around
into the state, where· it has as a good opportunity to warm weather holidays and
killed thousands of trees educate. ~ople about the hunting season.
mainly in the loledo area. quarantme.
.
.
At four checkpoints durThe state cut ' "down .thouThe two che~kpomt vtes, ing 'Memorial Day weekend
sands ·more to try to stop w~1ch wtll contmue through this ear inspectors ~ d
the spread.
Fnday, are on secondary
Y .•
oun
_10 1 veh1cles that were tak- ·
The firewood checkpoints, roads in the Toledo area.
the first in Ohio, are target''To set up a true quaran- '?g firewood out o~ quar:ming campers and people tine between here and tme area,. Sara Lmsmetertraveling for the Labor Day Michigan involves a lot of Wurfel, spokeswoman for
weekend,
said Melanie roads,"
Stough
said. Jhe Michigan Department of
Wilt, spokeswoman for the ''They 1re not trying to stop . Agriculture.
Agriculture Department.
contraband. They're trying
All of the wood was
They operate much like inform people."
taken away and chipped
The _state plans. more into bits she said. '
DUl checkpoints used . by
police departments nation- cl}eckpomts later thts year
..
.'
.
wide. Troopers and local and likely .will search along
It sttll shows frrewood ts
police randomly stopped · busier routes.
coming," said Linsmeiervehicles and searched some
Scientists " suspect the Wurfel. "A lot 'of times
trunks for firewood.
insect arrived from Asia families are taking wood
Authorities handed· out about a decade ago. It kills up north."
ASSOCIATED P/IESS WRITER

Weather forecast
Friday, September 3
Morning (7 ·a.m.-Noon)
It shou ld be a cloudy
. morning. There might be a
bit of rain around the area.
Temperatures will · climb
from 67 to 73 by late this
morning. Winds will be 5
to 10 MPH from the southeast turning . from the south
as the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It will continue to . be
cloudy. Temperatures will
hold steady around 80 with
today's high of 82 occurring
around 5:OOpm. Winds will
be 5 to 10 MPH from the
south turning from the

southeast as the afternoon
progresses.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It will remain cloudy.
Light rain is forecasted. The
rainfall should begin around
II :OOp,m. Rain should reach
0.04 inches this evening.
Temperatures will diminish
from 80 early this evening
to 67. Winds will be 5
MPH from the southeast
turning ~m the south as
the evening progresses.
Overnight (/·6 a.m.)
It looks like a wet and
cloudy overnight. We are
predicting · light rain. The
rainfall will finish around'

6:00am with total accumu·
lations for this event near
0.24 inches. Temperatures
will linger at 67 with
today's low of 66 occurring
.ftl"ound 2:00am. Winds will
be 5 MPH from the south.
Saturday, Septembe~ 4
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
There could be a few
raindrops around the area.
Temperatures will increase
from 66 to 77 by late this
morning. Skies will range
from mostly sunny to partly
cloudy with 5 MPH winds
from. die southwest.

Local Stocks
ACI-33.77
AEP-33.o7

USB- 29.50
Gannett- 85.33 .
General Electric - 33.12
GKNLY-4.15
Hru;Iey Davidson -· 62.17
Krriart - 79.39
'
Kroger - · 17.04
Ltd.- 20.70
NSC-29.28
Oak Hill Financial- 33.82
OVB-30.75
•
BBT-40
Peoples- 25.85
Pepsico - 50.62
Premier-. 8.96

Akzo - 34.20 .
· Ashland Inc. - · 52.30
. AT&amp;T-14.97
BLI -12.38
· Bob Evans- 25.56
: Borg Warner- 45.17
. Champion- 3.71
Charming Shops - 7. I 3
. ~ity Holding-. 31.94
· Col- 35.52
' DG-20.15
DuPont - 42.60
· Federal Mogul - .19

Rockwell - 39.69
Rocky Boots - 19.33
RD She'l l- 51.73
SBC-26.18
Sears- 39.99
Wai-Mart- :S3.02
Wendy's- 35.73
Worthington - 20.88
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Partners
Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.

.Judge's ruling could give thousands
·of inmates parole hearings
COLUMBUS (AP)
· More than I ,000 Ohio
ininate8 eoold be released or
have their sentences shortened
6ecause of a county judge's
ruling that the Oh10 Parole
BOard used a change in state
sentencing Jaws to unfairly
create two classes of prisoners
serving different sentences for
the same crimes.
· The old law had indeterminate sentences, with release
·determined by the parole
board. A 1996 law shortens
· the maximum sentences but
does aw~:~y with parole for
some· offenses.
Franklin County Common
Pleas Jud!le David Cain said
in an opmion released late
Tuesday that the state parole
board has unjustly penalized
some inmates sentenced to
loitger terms under the old
law by holding them to the
new guidelines and denying
parole. He ordered imiDediate hearings.
"Some are servin!l two or
three times the length of time

they would be serving for the ·
same offenses, either .under
new Jaws or under the old
parole policies," he said. •
Charles Clovis, an assistant
state public defender who
filed the class-action suit for
inmates, said the ruling will
result in several thousand
new hearings.
'
But Parole Board attorney
Greg Trout said the number
would not exceed "a thousand or two."
The ·state is reviewing the
ruling
before
deciding
whether to apPC3,l. Trout said.
. Cain chasttsed lawmakers
who adopted the ''truth in
sentencing Jaw" for, not
addressing the discrepancy.
"The
Ohio · General
Assembly refused to make
the new laws retroactive apparently for no reason
other than political expediency," the ruling .said · '
Rep. Robert Latta, a
Bowling Green Republican
and chairman of the House
criminal justice committee,

was in the Senate when the
law passed. Lawmakers
extenstvely · debated the
retroactivity problem.
~'How would you have
gone back to eve.rybody
who'd already been sentenced?" he said.
Ohio
Criminal
The
Sentencing Commission and
Legislative
. Services
Commission, which helps
draft and analyze bills, both
have reviewed the law extensively over the past eight
years and not found any
problems.
The judge's ruling comes
less than 2 years after the Ohio ·
Su~ . Court struck down
the Parole Authority's system
of categorizing inmates
according to the crime for
which they were indicted
instead of the crime for which
they were convicted.
As a result of that decision,
about 2,500 inmates received ·
parole hearings and more
than half were released or
given earlier release daies.

$tudy begins on·chemic~l· used to make Teflon
: MARIETTA (AP)
b,bout · 300 people have
ureed to participate in a
(Our-year study that aims to
determine whether there are
liealth risks associated with
exposure to a cbemical used
IJl make Teflon.
• Environmental officials say
the DuPont Co.'s plant near
Parkersburg, W. Va,., across .
dJe Ohio River ~m southcast Ohio, has contaminated
area drinjpng. water supplies

..
•

with the chemical C8, also
known as ammonium perfluoroOctaooate.
The National Institutes of
Health has ·given doctors an
$841,000 grant to swdy 400
people wbo Jive in the Little
Hoclcing water district:
About 300 people, who
were selected by randomly
mailed invitallons, 'have
agreed to participate so far.
The study also has asked for
I0 lactatrng women to volun-

I

•

Prep Football

~sa.:Jfes of bl.~ and
Prelimiruvy results could be
available by the end of the year:
Ohio and West Yuginia residents who claim the plant
knowingly
contaminated
.water supplies ftled a classaction lawsuit in 200 I against
DuPont on behalf of up to
50,000 people who Jive near. by. That case is set .for trial
Oct. II in Wood County,
W.Va., Circuit Court.

•

Tuesday's Games
Volleyball
Warren at Gallia Academy
. River Valley at Fairland
Meigs at Miller
Alexander at Eastern
Hannan at South Gallia
· Nelsonville· York at Southern
Heritage at Ohio Valley
Christian
Soccer
: Marietta at Gallia Academy
Cross Country
· Gallipolis Invitational (at Rio
Grande)
Golf
S EOAL meet at Logan
TVC Ohio at Meigs
. TVC Hocking at Trimble

AnoJher tough outing expected for·'Does
RACINE -After being humbled ·
39-7 last week, the Southern
Tornadoes have endured a hard
. week of practice in anticipation of
another tough game thi s Friqay
agamst non-leag\le Symmes Valley
at Willow Wood.
The Symmes Valley Vikings posted a 7-6 come-from-behind win'
over
the
Huntington
Ross
Huntsmen last Friday in the season
op,ener for both teams. Members of
the Symmes backfield combined
their talents for 331 rushing yards.

So-Come On Ol'er...

To lob's Market 6 fireenhouses,
for...

Fall Garden Mums

.

(Eztrtz /tJrge 9 iMit pol!)

Hardy Fall Pansies

uP/ant Now For Beautiful Early Spring Bells"
Variety of Colors To Choose From
New Crop Fal Apples

When game is on
the line, Buckeyes
· have knack for
College Schedule pulling out a win

TOday's Games
Soccer
Rio Grande ar Mid-Continent
.
Volleyball
.Rio Grande at Cornerstone
. (Mich) Tournament
Saturday's Games
. Soccer
Rio Grande at Milligan ·
Volleyball
. Rio Grande at Cornerstone
(Mich) Tournament

Bowling Green's
top scorer is
heading to OSU
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ron
lewis, who averaged 17 points
a game to lead Bowling Green
, in scoring last year, announced
Thursday he will transfer to
Ohio State and become new
Buckeyes coach Thad Matta's
first recruit.
A 6-foot-4 guard from
Columbus, Lewis will have
two years of eligibility remaining after sitting out the 20042005 season under NCAA
transfer rules.
Matta was hired in July to
replace Jim O'Brien, fired after
athletic director Andy Geiger
said O'Brien gave $6,000 to a
recruit in 1999.
Lewis averaged 4.7 rebounds
and 3 assists a game for
Bowling Green while shooting
82 percent on free throws, 40
percent from the field and 34
percent on 3-pointers.

Including: Gala. Ginger Gold, E~re
Maclntoeh and Golden Supreme

Two Convenient Locations:
1/4 .... North Porr.oy," 'M Bridge
.... o.~.. wv 25280
Phol• (304) 773-5323
24011 F•rem Ave.
'Acrau from Klllrt) Gllllpolll, OH 45631

.

· The l-AA Pen~ins (1-0)
scored 21 points m the final
7:40 of the third quarter and
added 14 points in the fourth
after trailing &amp;0 at halftime.
• Zetts' 3-yard 1D run . with
3:19 left in the. third put
:Youngstown State ahead 14-6.
• ~tts. who completed 14 of
~ 6 passes without an interception, also threw a 72-yard scorjng pass to Josh Cayson with
9:51 left in the fourth.
·
.

PaYton ~. Trffin 9
•

: At Dayton, Brandon Staley
scortd on two I -yard sneaks
nnd Da}'!OII rooted Ttffm 3S-9
'lbursday .pght to win its sea•
·Son opener. .
· · Staley completed4 of7 passfor 62 yards and gained 45
yards on I 0 carries. The Ayers
fUShexl for 229 yards, using I2
ball carriers on 59 running
~lays, while holding the
lJrllgons (0-2) to 123 yands on
41 carries.
: The Ayers. a Division 1-AA'
team. outgained the Division n
~ODS 313 Y.ards .to 215
while only runmng SIX more
~s - 72 to 66- and punted JUSI once.
Earl H;tynes led Ttffin with
81 yards I1ISbing on 25 carries,
incfuding a 2-yard IOUChdown.

·t

'

'

championship team that advanced
to the playoffs and finished 9-2 a
year ago.
Symmes is senior and junior
dominated. Vikings coach Rusty
Webb indicated that this is the first
time Symmes has hal¥ a truly veter- .
an · group like this . Just th'e
Tornadoes luck .
Craig Neal returns at quarterback
after completing 34 of 71 passes for
II touchdowns and just two interceptions in 2003.
• Right end Derrick Cremeans, a
senior, is Nealis favorite target,
·
Please see Outlns, 82

VMI

vs.
at Peden Stadium
Athens, Ohio

Kick-off, 7 p.m. , Saturday

BY RusTY MtuEA
Associated Press

. COLUMBUS- Some call
it luck. Ohio State's players .
call it inevitable.
"You're not really fazed by
it," · cornerback Dustin Fox
said of a succession of downto~the-wire
games that
always seem to go the
Buckeyes' way. "You figure
if you just do what you' re
supposed to do. it will turn
out -somehow, someway."
An Associated Press analysis of the results of Big Ten
teams in coach Jim Tressel's
three
years with
the
Buckeyes shows that the
other I0 conference teams
have a 42-percent success
rate in games decided by a
touchdown or less. Ohio
State has won 74 percent of
such games.
The 'Buckeyes are 14"5 in
games hinging on a play or
two - winning almost as
many as the next two most
successful league teams combined, Iowa (7-5) and
Michigan (8-8)l&gt;
Yet Tresse.l can only seem
to remember the infrequent
. times when the Buckeyes
don't pull a win out of the Ohio State quarterback Craig Krenzel (16) and split end Drew Carter (8) jump on
fire.
tight end Ryan Hamby (80) as the referee signals Hamby'S second overtime
"We've lost some •tough, touchdown against North Carolina State Sept. 13. 2003 in Columbus. Ohio
t&gt;tate's triple overtime, 44-38 victory over NC State~ was one of the 14 of 19
Please see aose. B8
games the Buckeyes won that hinged on a play or two. (AP file)

Southern·girls down Trimble

YOUNGSTOWN (AP)
'fom Zetts passed for 207 yands
imd a touchdoWn and ran for a
Score to lead Younptown Sta~
past Division U SliJ?PCry Rock
35-13 Thursday night

es

"Fnshjrom the
SheiiDIIIlotiJr lWIUJ"

Vikings came back to tie the game
on a 61-yard scamper by Holland
with 8:32 left to cap a 71-yard,
three-play drive. Burcham kicked
the deciding extra point
Senior halfback Cory Burcham,
w~o rushed 109 times for I ,062
yards lasl season was keyed upon
heavily last week, allowing Holland
to get some time in the spotlight.
According to the scouting reports,
the game should not have been so
close. The Vikings had the ball
inside the 4-yard line twice in the
first half on ly to lose it on fumbles .
Symmes Valley returns 17 starters
from its Southern Ohio Conferen~e

BUCKEYES' CLOSE CALLS

Penguins defeat
Slippery Rock·
fall Is In the Air...

. Symmes had 31
yards passing.
Quarterback
Craig Neal had
117 yards on 17
carries,
Justin
Holland had 94 on
I 0 . tries, Cory
Burcham 70 on 12
attempts,
and
Derek Carpen ter
added 46 yards on
nine rushes in the
balanced attack.
A
f t e r
Huntington
had
taken the lead, the

BY SCOTT WOLFE

Sports correspondent

BY Scon: WoLFE
Sports correspondent

GLOUSTER
Southern
claimed the ftrst match of the TriValley Conference tilt, setting the
tempo for a three game sweep as
the Lady Tornadoes claimed 2513; 25-21, 25-7.
The Lady Tornadoes are now 3.

~,

I on the young season, 1-1 in the
Tri-Valley Conference.
Southern played an mu:ntlLgood
game, both from the front line and
back row. Southern has .grown
more aggressive at the net as evidenced by its 13 kills. ,
For the Tornadoes, Jordan
Neigler had 14 points, Bethany
Riffle h?.J eleven points, Ashley
Roush had eleven points, and

Brooke Ki~r eight. Kiser was 2931 setting and Riffle 45-47. Roush
had five blocks, Kasie Sellers
three. and Neigler two.
Kristiina Williams had' ·a good
night passing along wi th Roush,
Kiser. Jenny Warner. Nikki Riffle
and Selena SJJ!!ncer. Warner had
five kills, Williams six, and

.Bobcats
to open
with VMI
BY BUTCH COOPER
bcooper@ mydailytribune.com

..

ATHENS -With Pittsbur?h coming up
on the schedu le next week, it d be easy for
Ohio to overlook its l·AA foe Saturday.
Don't count on it.
VMI could be considered a trial run ·
before the Bobcats step foot into Heinz
Field on Sept. II , but 11 is unlikely Ohio
will see it that way.
Two,.years ago, another l·AA team found
itselfon Ohio's home schedule.
Sandwiched in between road games
against Pitt and Florida. Northeastern
seemed like the breather the Bobcats needed .
Instead. the Boston school net only
stunned the Bobcats. but embarrassed them
at Peden Stadium with a Jl-0 win .
Still, VMI isn 't the 1-AA power that
Northeastern was in 2002 (the Huskies that
year went I0-3 and earned a spot in the 1AA playoffs). But. the Bobcats are coming
off a injury·filled 2·10"season that included
a 1-7 mark in the Mid-American
Conference.
Also. Ohio will be testing its single-back
offense for the tirst time Saturday, a com~
pletely different set-up from last year's
triple·option.
,
Brad Young is expected to stfut at running
back. with freshman Kalvin McRae serving
as his backup. according to the most recent
reports.
Justin Roush ...coming off a tom anterior ~~­
cruciate ligament, could also see some
playing time in the backfield for the first
time since his injury during last year's season opener against Southeast Missouri
State.
With the one-back set. the Bobcats are

Please see Ohio, aa

Please see southem, Bl

'

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Prep Golf

Eastern drains Waterford Marauders second
at Hidden Hills

five and four points, respectively, in the
'sports@mydailytribune.com
victory.
Morgan Weber also had nine kills to
lead Eastern, while Smith added six kills
TUPPER,S PLAINS - The ·Eastern in the. win.
volleyball team won its 2004 · home
Eastern hosts Alexander Tuesday at
opener.over Waterford by a score of 25- 5:30p.m. in a TVC matchup.
13. 25-16.25-12.
The Eagles (2-0, 2-0 TVC) rallied
around a strong serving performance
(65-68) on the evening and an l!"ven
stronger team ~effort en route to the vic-'
STAFF REPORT

Meigs falls to
Nelsonville-York

to~phomore Erin Weber Jed EHS with ·

ROCKSPRINGS -. The Meigs vol18 points and had a perfect 23 of 23 ley ball team suffered _ns first setbac~ of .
sevre percentage in the victory. Senior the young season, losm~ to NelsonvilleJennifer Annes was 14 of 15 from the York 25-16,25-22, 25-~.
service line and added 10 points for the . The Marauders (_1-~: 1-1 TV C)
Eagles, ·while sophomore Brittany tmpro~ed thetr servmg dramaucall7 .
Bissell added nine points and a perfect from game one (59 of 6-1 ), but couldn t
eight-of-eight from the setve line. · muster enough ~ffense to overc.ome .the
Morgan Weber and Casey Smith added
PI•••- Val•yblll. 12

STAFF REPORT

sports@mydailytribune.com
ALBANY - ,The Meig s golf
team finished second for the
fourth time this season ·in TVC
Ohio play. this time at Hidden
Hills.
·
The Marauders were 20
strokes behind chamPion Belpre
and continue to hold the runnerup spot (or the season title·chase .
Belpre's Mike ~ellison won
the medalist spot with an even
par 36 on the day. while teammates Dan Cooper and Ricky
Drain. finished one shot \Jack.
Steven Stewart of Meigs also tin-

. ished

the day tied for second
with a round of 37.
Meigs posted a team score of
" 170~. with Jake Ve~oy, (43), Cody
Da\ldson (44). K1rk Legar (46),
Dan Bookman (46) and Dru
Reed (49) round1ng out the
Marauders day.
,
Vinton County finished third
with a 180. while Wellston came
10 fourth w1th a 184 team com·
posite.
Nelsonville-York (195) defeated the .~ost Spartans by 33 shots
~or fifth place.
Meigs will host the ne.x.t TVC
Ohio showdown Tuesday at Pine
Hills.

I. .

-'

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

•

'

'

- --·--

-

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel .

Friday, s ·e pteinber 3, 2004 .

www .mydailysentinel.com

Mid~American· Conference

Friday, September 3, 2004

www.mydail yscn tine I.com

Roundup

MAC once again has a lot to prove against elite opponents
Associated Press

The Mid-American Conference
once again takes on its bigger. badder brethren this weekend.
When will the major conferences
'
ever learn?
. The oddsmakers are again looking
at the following games as mismatches: Akron-Penn State (a 15 1/2-poit)t
favorite), Kent State-No. 19 Iowa
(30), Miami (Ohio)-No. 8 Michigan
(13), Central Florida-No. 2 I
Wisconsin (23), Toledo-No. 25
Minnesota (II
1/2), Central
Michigan-Indiana ( 14 ): . Northern
Illinois-No. 22 Maryland (14). and
Bowling Green-No. 2 Oklahoma (32
1/2).
When will the oddsmakers ever
learn?
"We're all capable of competing to
some extent . (with major conferences), but wins happen if the ball
bounces the right way, too," said
Marshall coach Bob Pruett. whose
team pl.ays at home on Saturday

against Troy but_has meetings with invited to bowls.
that's for sure. The MAC was virtu''When I played at Miami (in the
No. 9 Ohio State and No.3 Georgia
"!think you just have to build on ally invisible on TV as recently as · mid-1960s), there was no scholarcoming right up. ··1 think !he confer- that ," Miami coac~ Tet'ry Hoeppner f9ur years ago; this year MAC teams ship limit," Northern Illinois coach
ence might be even stro11ger."
said. ''I'm sure all of the coaches are featured in a minimum of 18 Joe Novak said. "Then it went from
The red-letter day for the MAC know that last year was history. We'll' games that will be televised to at I05 to 95 and now 85. Now. all the
was last Sept. 20. It's ~ date that use that as a confidence-builder and least the Midwest.
·
good players aren't going to the
should be circled and underlined on motivation. The challenge is to . Marshall gets-much of the credit Nebraskas and Miamis. That has
the calendars of the nation's top increase attendance at our game s, for bringing the MAC national expo- been the great equalizer."
.
teams.
.
and to do that r,ou have to keep·doing sure. The Thundering Herd produced
There is also the risk that teams
First Marshall stung No: 6 Kan sas it on the _field. '
.
.
a pair of first-round NFL draft choic- with more talent, usually playing at
State. then Toledo rocked No. 9 . The MAC is without some of its es in receiver Randy Moss and qt,mr- home; can knock the MAC down a
Pittsburgh and Nonhern Illinois won signature stars that stole all those terbacks Chad Pennington .and few rungs.
at No. 21 Alabama.
2003 headlines: quarterbacks Ben Byron Leftwich. .
.
·
"I just hope that if we don't have
If that was the tirst time ranked Roethlisberger. (Miam!J and Josh
To keep up with that kind 'of talent, another weekend like last Sept. 20.
Jeams took notice of the MAC. then Hams (BG), tat! back Mtchael Turner the rest of tile MAC had .to do a bet- · people won't say, 'See, they couldt)ley hadn't been paying attention . (Nonhern Illinois) and defensive end ter job of recruiting and had to n't do it again.' We just don't have
Bowling Green beat Purdue and Jason Babin (We stem Michigan) are update its facilities.
the budgets of (major conferences )."
Nonhem Illinois whipped Maryland now paying for play in the NFL. ·
. "I think we've . played a part in Novak said.
· .
earlier in the season.
Miami enters tts showdown at The other schools improving and expandNot everybody is aboard the
On top of that. Miami finished Big House with the nation's longest ing their facilities," Pruett said. "It "challenge the big boys" train. ·
with a 13- l record and was ranked Division 1-A winning streak, 14 always has been a league that has
First-year Central Michigan coach
No. I 0 after a win over Louisville in games.
.
been respected .. But when you give Brian Kelly isn' t enthralled with
the GMAC Bowl. Bowling Green
"I told our pla~ers, 'Let's defend good coaches resources, then they'll having to go to Bloomington, Ind. ,
wound up ranked No. 23 with a 10-3 what we've got." Hoeppner said. · succeed."
.
on Saturday.
re.cord after a ~otor City ]3owl win "We need to kec;p scheduling these
The gap between the nation's foot"I'd rather play Ferris State or
over Nonhwestem. Northern Illinois teams, but we have to keep winning ball bullies and conferences such as Wayne State, but this game was
( 10-2) and Toledo and Marshall our share."
;
the MAC has been narrowed because scheduled before I got here," he
(both 8-4) were on the cusp of being
Programmers have taken notice, of NCAA scholarship limits.
said.

~

How much do you know about·
the Ohio State Buckeyes?
BY RUSTY MILLER

Associated Press

COLUMBUS- Here's a 29-poim quiz- a
question for each one of Ohio State's Big Ten
rules - as the Buckeyes embark on their I 15th
year of intercollegiate football; FIRST AND I 0 .
I, Ohio State went 11-2 last year. Who were
the teams who beat the Buckeyes?
·
2, What was Ohio State's final ranking in The
Associated Press poll? ,
3. Simon Fraser is a candidate for the
Hendricks Award. The Hendricks Award honors
those who play what position?
4, The Buckeyes' top two quarterbacks. Justin
Zwick and Troy Smith, played for how many
hicl! schools combined? ·
), This Ohio State defensive lineman scored
what proved to be the decisive touchdown in.last
year's 16-13 overtime victory over Purdue. Who
IS he?,
6, Ohio State's first three-time All-American,
the late Chic Harley, will have his number 47
retired at halftime of the Penn State game. On Iy
Heismim Trophy winners have been accorded
' this honor. How ·many Buckeyes have won at
least one Heisman?
·
7, A record 14 Buckeyes were taken in last
spring's NFL draft. What college held the record
before?
8, Ryan Hamb)' had 13 catches last year while
splitting time at ught end with the graduated Ben
Hartsock. How many collegiate catches do the
rest of Ohio State's tight ends have?
9, I was Ohio State's leading rusher last year.
Who ami?
10, The Buckeyes open against Cincinnati.
When did Ohio State last lose to another in-state
school: Toledo in 1941 , Western Reserve in 1931
or Oberlin in 1921?
COACHING DECISIONS

II , How many years was Jim Tressel the head
coach at Youngstown State?
·
12, Is Tressel's middle name Patrick. Woodrow
.or Donald?
I 3, Who is the Buckeyes' offensive coordinator?
14, How many full-time football coaches and
football administrators does Ohio State have on
staff: 12, 15 or 18?
I5, True or false: Ohio State has two graduate
assistants in charge ofquality control.
16, Tressel spent three years as quarterbacks
coach at Ohio State under Earle Bruce in the
early 1980s. Name one of his starting quarterbacks.
.
.
.

- CONFERENCE CALLS

I 7, How many Big Ten teams were ranked in
last year's final AP top 25?
·
18, True or false: The Big Te,n had a winning
record in bowl games last year. ·
·19, What two Big "I:en schools annually battle
for Paul Bunyan's Axe?

13. Jim Bollman.
14, Ohio State has 11 full-tme assiStants in adcition to head coach
Jim Tresset
•
·
15. True, -....., (JJality coot&lt;OI and detensMI (JJality cootnll.
16, Mike TCifOCzak. Jim Karsatos.
17, FM!. Ohio Slate was No. 4. Michigan No. 6. Iowa No. B. ?..-due
No. 18 and Minnesota No. 20.
18, False. Big Ten teams were 3-5 1'1 bo¥A games.
19. WISCOOsin and Minnesota play ead1 year br Paul Bunyan's Axs.
20, The Bt ICkeyes are 62-12-5 against Indiana.
21. Pur&lt;lJe.

22. Michigan's.

Cha"'' Bailey.
24 , Wide receiYer Michael Jenkins.

• 23.

25, Garcia Lane.
26, Aaron.
. , ·.
. •
lr 1
27. Al1!hooy Schk!gel was the defonslve MVP of the 2002 Diamond
-.,. Bowl before transloniog oot of the ~ Faroe Academy.
28, li'ue. Michigan """ 9'3 " • -IIOino ().b-9 pooolng
with no fi&lt;st downs and 24 pun11t
29. Sousaphone.
.
· How big of a Bud&lt;aye oot are you?
20-29 COrrect Se&lt;iously, you need 1o QOt a holb;.
15-20 COrrect: Admlll \llu paW11ed 1he r)Xterior of yoor house ocar·
let with 'F'f trim and named )OUr kids Btulus and Anne.
.
1D-15 Co&lt;rect: \W apparently """" more tifre at the library 1han a1
Ohio S1adum during )00! undergrad .,...,..
1-10 Correct Do not be ashamed. Yoo hlM! a Iii&amp;. "

~atcolm in the Middle• actor Frar}kie
Muniz, Sen. Slrom Thurmond, rock·
.,d·rolllcon Unte Richard and a guy
wl1o will be remembered for losing th.o
big game, George Armatrong Cutter.

by the numbers

5~onsecutive point·after kick&amp;
converted by Mike Nugent.
18-0hio Slate's bowl losses,1 as

opposed to 16 wins.

the

211o-The Tuttle park Place end of "Le Roglmenr'when the drum
llddreH for the poeh Blackwell Inn at major struta to the top of "i' in Script
F-r CQIIogo. whore the Buckoyeo Ohio to direct the "dott!ng.•
IJ*MI the ntght before every home " 13-The number of tailback Maurice

game.

·

~

national championship since the 1968

Clarett. who will not be a distraction
this year as he was the past two
years; times Cincinnati and Ohio'State

seuon.
'
11114-A dark novel by George

have mol In football (the Buckeyes are
1t ·2).

Orweu that portray• a soullesa future
in which lcwe and passion are not per·
milled by the omnipresent otate, In
• Columbul. 1984 represen .. the laal

11-Number of gariles the Buckeyes
play. not counting a bowl game .

2002-The year of Ohio State'a first

J

•'

'

..,, itl\e8e guy$ week after wee!&lt;

E-mail us your local sports news:

:,;:ti)ll!l never return (the favor):·

sports@mydailytribune.com

Associated PresS ranking tor Ohio

Slate.

.

&amp;-Number of wins n8eded to quali·

ty for a bowl game (or to keep your job
if you coach at a school other than

Ohio State. Miami. Michigan, ate.).
4.3-Yards per carry by Lydoll Ross
in 2003, the lowest average for the
Buckeyes' top ground-gainer since
Vince Workman's 3.9-yard average in

6me Ohio .State won an outright Big
Ten Iitle.
i1 vOOO Minimum annual contribU-

1o-Number of games the Buckeyes
will have played before lhe onl~ . one
that counts to most lana (Michigan.
Nov. 20, at Ohio SladiumJ:
8-Total starters left over from. last

tion to OhiO State , which permits

year for the Buckeyes : preseason

\

3-4-A defensive alignment fealur·
lng three down linemen end tour line·
backers that, the Buckeyes may
employ this season In order to get
rough -and·tumbla Mike D'Andrea and

Anthony Schlegel together on the
field.
2-Number of Tre11ela on the
coaching staff now Jhat older brotht'r
Dick has joined head coach Jim.
1~uckeyes · with a sister playing

high school tootball (Nick Mangold).
.22-ln his media gUide bio, daten·
siva tackle Sian Cotton says if he
weren't a member of the football team
he'd like to Join Ohio State's rifle team. ·
o-Number of Co)Uegiate · punts

anemplod by Kyle Turano, a former

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WHO'&amp;HOT~" ""'
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'

deep-pocketed benefactors to purchase 1wo season tiCkels.
315-Weight of heaviest Buckeye
1
(offens ive lineman Steve Aehring) .
Lightest? Four players weigh 170.
Tallest? Rehring (6·8) again.
Shortest? Tailback Mike DeMaria is 5·
9.
111-career wins at Ohio Slate by
John Cooper,, who will work the
Cincinnati game as a game analyst for

16-Number of measuraa from

Southern

Bethany Riftle qominated the setting. Kiser
was 47-48 while Riftle was 37-41.
In servirig, Kiser was 14-15, Riftle 7-8 ,
Ashley Roush 12-13, Jordan Ndgler 7-9,
from Page 81
Nikki Riffle 5-5, Jenny Warner 9' II with two ·
aces, and Kristiina Wiliams 1:5-17 with one
Sellers and Roush one each.
For Trimble, Carrie Woodgerd had I 0 ace.
Warner and Williams each had seven kills
points and Janelle Nichols had eight points . . with
Warner 28-31 · and Williams 24-29.
Southern won the reserve game 25-18 and
Neigler was 15-16 at the net with two kills
25-14 . .
and
two blocks, including an 11-12 game in
On Tuesday, Southern dropped a four-game
the
fourth
set with one kill. Roush and
match at Vinton County Tuesday ·25-23, I 9Bethany
Riftle
had kills, while Roush had
25,
18-25.
and
18-25.
1
blocks and Warner two.
Southern played to.ugh in all four ~ames, three
The
reserves
fell
in
three
sets
18-25,
13-25,
but didn't take advantage of opportumties to and 12-15.
bring home the road wiii. Brooke Kiser and

1987.
._How many weekends after the
ESPN Plus.
.
12111152-Happy birthday, coach.
$57-Face vatua of a 2004 football season starts before the Buckeyes
Trease! also shares his birthdate with ticket, up 2, percent fr~m lhe $47 cost nave a Sarurday off, an ideal time to"
Goo Goo Dolle guitarist John Rzeznik. a year ago. (For the Michigan game, do yard chores, get reacquainted with
the family and pay overdue bills.
Mickey Mouse creator Wall Disney, add a zero.)

•

..

• • •

12, Patrick.

1he 2004 Ohio State
A n~:~merical look at the upcoming
Ohio Slate tootbalf season:
101,519-Capacily
at
Ohio
Stadium, expecte(L ~o be surpassed
Saturday against Cincinnati in the
11881011 opener.
101,511-Number of people who
will later claim they knew all along.
how the game would come out; also
the number of people second-guesslng coach Jim Tressel if the Budl:eyee
looe.

,.. + ~!&lt;+it~ ~,;;;;,;;~~vi:;ct~torv occurred ex''
the last of
··i' t&gt;ts ::fatlter's nine Bristol Cup vic·
tQri~ts. When Earnhardt Sr. wo~.
· '•he started 26th. When Juniot
. 'Nan, he ·started 30th.
.
• NASCAR officials are undoubt·
edly happy that the first three
drivers In the points standings
are also the drivers with the
most victories. Leader Jeff {j,rdon has won five tirues, followed
by Jimmie Johnson and Earn·
hardtJr., both with four.
1&gt; Could the "Race for the Chase"
possibly -be more e•citing? With
two races remaining before the
· 1()-race.champlonshtp playoffs
begin, only 50 poi~ts separate
eighth place from 15th. There
are only 10 likely slots in the
"chase for the championship.·
1&gt; There's no truth to the rumor
that, after Ryan Newman's second-place finish at Bristol eleva!·
ed him to lOth in "the po ints
standings, his team hoisted him
on ·thelr shoulders and paraded
around, chanting "We're Number
101" That may happen after the
Richmond race, however.
· I&gt; Veterans Mark Martin and Dale
Jarrett are out of the top 10. but
not by much. Here 's hoping at
least one of them gets in. Mar·
tin Is tied for 12th, 35 points be·
hind Newman. Jarrett is tied' for
14th. 45 back.
1&gt; Kevin Harvick, Bobby Labonte
and Newman llave no room for
error. Harvlck il&gt;.in eighth place
but only 31 points out of 11th. ·
Labonte Is ninth, ju st four points
behind Harvi~ k and 27 ahead of
11th-place Kasey .Kahne.
1&gt; Three drivers - Gordon, Johnson and Earnhardt Jr. - have
mathematically clinched spots
In "the chase: · Two more Tony Stewart and Matt Kenseth
- are virtually assured. Odds
strongly favor Kurt Busch and El·
llott Sadler getting in. After that,
it's a crapshoot.
1&gt; Jimmy Spencer was irritated a!
Johl1son after the .Bristol race. "I
· &lt;)on't know what some of these
guys think," said Spencer. ·"Pa·
.. tlenoe is key at Bristol. we had a
····.·~possible top-10 car. and it was
'" .ruln•d early ... by tack of pa·
\i" -~ · l.gave _ [Johnson} plenty of
,:i.roO!t\: and he just hit me In the
''!;. :h!tt fttint fehder and put me Into
',;::the .W.II: we atve and give to

Volleyball

5, ~Kudla.
6, Five: Archle Griffin, Vic Janowicz, Les Horvath, Howard
"Hopalong" Cassady and Eddk! ~. 7. Miami with 12.
B. Zero.
9. Lydell Ross with 826 yaldlt ,
. tO. The Bltd&lt;uim last loBt to ilr&lt;lthaf Ohio School in 1921 , a 7-6
defeat tQ Oberlin.
•
11, Tressa was the Penguns head coach Q 15 seasons.

Race:
Ca liforn iaspeedway.com 300

Fontana (2.0 miles), 25 0

on 's son too k particular rei-

Where: California Spe edwa~" nat1ona1 Race\-.ci) .7r 'n11c~J:

:~n7~~n~~~\ept. 5

~~~;~t~d~~i~~;nf:~~~~th:~·~ ~ii~5 mites ); 150 laps / 300 ~h~~Pl~u~~~a~::~~;pt. 9

•

.••
•
•

Pop Se cret 500

Auto Club 500
~' ay 2

Se:ll

....

,,,.

Last year's winner . T "
Stewart
Qualifying record: Jason Lef
fler. Dodge . 123.378 mptr.
Sept. 5. 2002.
Race record: Bob Keselows ·
ki. Dodge. 104.167 mpl1.
Sept-'4'.1997.
Last 'week : Ford driver Carl
Edwards ~on the O'Rc&lt;ll\.
200 at Bnstol Motor Speed
way.

~AliFDIINIA
~

·

SPEEl1WAY

Dlstaoce: ................... 2.0 mile oval 1 ~ I
Length of frontstretch: ... 2,500 ft. · to~ 1·
Length of backstretoh: ... 3. JOO·ft.. to_'
• ... 500 m1.. • 250 Iaps I .......
,., "'
Mil es/ Laps:.
1,.,, t; ..

I

KUrt Busch has
finishes ..•.
111ree In a rm~.
TdllY Stewart'S .
at Bristol:
. 23rq, 2.4~h
:,. Ricky
higher

NEXTEL CUP SERIES, No.

8

v

BUDWEISER
. CH EVROLET
.

E
R

s
u
Robby
. Gordon

Kevin
Harvick

s

Robby Gordon
vs. Kevin Harvick

"

r&lt;a1V11.J r~'lJUir(~d rt l,ef help from
Ky • "ttl litnnr, tt1~ Sl1arp1e 500.
J\· .: ",.fi'I1Sil•.lll2t!1. HJI\&gt;IGk 24th~
b Gr1 rjn ·:ool' ,~.,lil' tvi:ll I" I' Cit lle. perCelverJ as 111'; It a p:noto·s unw lllmg·
1e% ·o llCIJ) n1m ·1 1111l~. Kevtn Har-

Earnhardt Jr. looks a lot like his father in dominating race at Bristol "
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Dale Earnhardt Jr. has quite the
sense of timing.
This is the year he went back to
Daytona, the scene of his father's
tragic death, and won the Daytona
500.
On the night of Aug . 28, at
Bristol Motor Speedway,
Earnhardt .Jr. won for the
first time at Bristol Motor
Speedway. Not only was it
the site of his father's very
.first victory, but Earnhardt
Jr.'s first Bristol victory ·
came exactly five years to
the date after the last of his
father's. nine Bristol
victories.
Dale Earnhardt won
seven Cup championships. Could this be
the year his son wins his
first? The signs are certainly there. With two
more races leading up to
the 10-race playoff that
will decide the Nextel Cup
champion, Earnhardt Jr. is
in third place in the standings, and
the 75 pojnts that separate him from
leader Jeff Gordon will be aH but
erased after the races in Fontana,
Calif., and Richmond, Va.
"I came to a lot of races here wh~n
my dad drove them," said Earnhardt
Jr. fro.m victory Jane' at Bristol. "He
made this place magical if you were
an Earnhardt fan ... I might not have
done it like he did it just now, but that
was pretty damn close.".
Earnhardt Jr. led 295 out of a possi·
ble 500 laps, marking the third time
this season he has led more than any
other driver in a race. It was his
fourth victory of the season, leaving
him tied in that category with Jimmie
Johnson and one behind Gordon.
"You come here [Bristol] as a child,
and it puts you in awe and you want to

win here so bad," he said. "It's like a with that ever again." he sa id . "I ,Ju n't
lot of tracks with a lot ofhi story like thin k it hdped me in any 11 &lt;1)'. \\'c did·
Charlotte and some other places tha t n't run good. 1\'e had to get a couple 11f
deal you some ~y blows . .. . relief ·dr ivers. I should have lreen
These are the histil'Ilic tracks that healtliv and nevei· neen hurt. ... I felt
have been around for years and . like !'let' (the team ) down a little hit ~
"I don't put any
have been on my list of places to
responsibi lity ·uii
win."
Earnhardt Jr. has now won 13
&lt;I ny hod y 's"shoulders
. for me ge tting blll'ned .
Cup races. The latest one was
his first since. being burned in
I made t h~t deci sio n to
an accident in July whil e
do thcrt, and I'd do it
&lt;Jgain
I wouldn't
preparing for a sports-car race
ch;m~e things."
in Sonoma, Calif.
\II llak Ear nhardt
"I'd never want to deal.
.Jr v~etorit· s are popu . Jar nne.&gt;. !'he grand stands at Br ist0 l lretT ·
aw;" lt in the red !hilt
i~ h·i, leam's- signaturt'
col or
'It mean s a lr&gt;t
to me 1h;1t the Oak
Earnhardt ·.lr. fan &gt;en·
joy what I do." he s;11J.
''.I'm glad that l can d11
~n iM thing

·,· ,k C.OI.IId ildW v\U~('Il \'dth nl€ 3 lit-

.~ Jlt better, s;,

&lt;.! Gnrc'lon. ·1 worked
htth h1m at thf' G·~·~ 11 tlf· was go1ng
tc 9.et out of·~&lt;· .o~ •h rt; was no

for hun ll·'

1('8".

;·.robatlly· CO&lt;, I

IJCK\ dog'

' ' I{

i\1\SCAR ai10\\::. Jl.t
.•.I·J I· on t!JC
·~ac lap· tlur1ng L··r•Ut (In per.o0s). I'm
c1
ltlc dr&lt;;appolnl·•:l !11. ·1,.11 mn tt's
I· ir• 1 0' 'llt: WCII&lt; It-, OHJ, oil \P&lt;'il.

N4SCAR Th is We ek's Monte
Outt 1n gives h1 :- take
C"lo~l·e r
R:·~\ ,&gt;•1! ~~'lildli•L
i.JJ;t1,1C5SI \e.
• tH'Ht!~!:t,_.~ r i 'T\·
gol tv. a of
• . f\. Some, ,• S'.\Ord.'

Raci ng in California
started at Riverside
n

ILt'C

·1':1

~1\'81'·

:•··h •hrough

, ·~ track
:-. at 0'1tar o
Oil lhrough
3 Speecway

out on the
,I,., 1, ;,

rucetr; ll·k and make wmcbody \ d.r1 ... Th at 's rcallr a
goo d fcellll g when you kno11
you'.\·e made a lot or peopk happy.··

'

,'

1'

1 I

..' '
._

?! '18185. It

.

~

.4

,_•s have

~ .1· ~'/·'es

"·
t

Conract
,\lonre. D11tr on
hi nd.J858@peorl fl'&lt;' .c 1J1i1

lllt• IJ')'. Tnat

''J ·,,,

:&gt;

·-1

:.c

l - '-' .,.

metro-

ue r,osted

'ii' '

a/

Helton should put his foot
down in victory lane
1 ' J:JO!o)

1

Dale Earnhardt Jr. became the first
driver to win both the Busch race and
Nextel Cup race at Bristol iri the same
weekend. His victory came on the fifth
anniversary of hrs famous father'~ last
career win at the historic track.

II I!,;

w·kt rl,e lton told tile

!1· 1 . " to grow up ana step

'\, 1"!2

knoch·,.-,g PJ:.•?'8de bottles off the
T"P ~ 1!- )00 '1;-r.o should r.ave

ca~s.

\

·~·

'R~:.·:.

00

'

. • 'lee J?.1f ,;..Jrrtti
e. .Ma·k· \'~,, '1 etc.

c1

"r::l

n.• l f.~

•t ·1·o1

Hobart Holbrook
l~'
:YhC. 01'110
'ft 5 haJJ !u bf'IIUI· ,\
goes 1\hert· ill \'lt,.((ill

.c,or"
,0

·I'

·Ch .J m.1,
\o4;,CAG' ,,- •

jll/O ~

'.•I[

:-.:''1/lSOf

r''t''o'.•'Llltl
1
·I·

de

1 ~rnters} .

iiSDecrs

(1

. .....

•

•
•

Valley

&amp; Sup·ply
Co •

•
•
•
•

555 Park St • Middleport

992.;,661"1
•

·Don !&amp;te llotors ·· ·

Whan : Saturday, Sept. 4
Last year's wlnrier~ Matt
Kenseth
•
Qualifying record : Kevin Harvick, Chevro let. 183.941
mp h, April 26, 2003.
Race record : Hank Parker
Jr., Chevrotet ,155.957 mph.
· Ap ril28. 2001.
Last week : Chevrolet driver
Date Earnhardt Jr. won the
Food City 25D at Bnstol Mo·
tor Speedway.

DALE EARNHARDT JR.

Call Kenney
Frazier at (740) 992-6614
'
.
.
or 800·837·1 094.

~~,ttUQ- 'Pifke,teat/eli M de~..

nine rac es at BMS . The son
won.'his first Bristo l race five
years to the day after his fa·
!her's last. Twelve races had
passed si nce Earnhardt's
last victory. He had finish ed
21st or worst in five of the
previous six. Earnhardt Jr.
had never won at Bri stol 1n
any series until Friday night.
when he managed to captorethe Busch Series race. The
Cup VIC tory enabled him to
. become the first driver ever
to sweep two maj or race s in
the same weekend .

Race : Craftsmiln ,;u.J •
Where . R1chmono &gt;\'a 1 • .tor

~~~~·~~;,S:,~epFEarnM.rd\ Jr.'s

Ohio

•

curred at Br ist ol Moto r
Speedway. The ta te cham p1-

Last year's. winner : Kurt
Busch
Qualllylnc record: Ryan Newman . ~odge, 187.432 mph.
April 26,2002 .
Race record : Jeff Gordon:
Chevro.tet, 155.012 mph,
June 22,1997.
Last week : As Dale Earn·
hard t Jr. said. in his plain·
spoken way, after winning the
Sharpie 500 , " Yeah, we
seem to keep on matching
numbers -somehow or anoth·
er.' The first of Dale Earnhard! Sr.'s 76 victories oc-

Outing

yards and scored the lone Southern touchdown, a 55-yard jaunt in the fourth quarter
with six mmutes showing on the clock.
Ryan. Chapman booted through the extra
from Page 81
point.
.,
.
Overall, .Southern carried 35 times for
having caught 14 passe s, including seven I 07
yards rushing, and Derek Teaford wa s
for touchdowns, last season. Seth Saunders, · 4-9 for
yards passing. Overall. the. team
Joe Otsby and Kirt Shipley are competing totaled 36
143
yards positive offense. Teaford
for time at left end.
,
interceptions.
Southern looked decent between the end- threw two
Nease
caught fhree pas ses for 20
Jake
20, Ohio State's most lopsided record against zones, but could not punch the ball across yards and Marnhout one for 20 yards: Six
another Big Ten school in football is against the line. Coach Grueser saw much improve- fumbles and 24-yards of lost rushing by the
ment last week, but also saw areas of con- quarterback hindered Southern's progre ss,
whom?
cern
the team made special adjustments to however, only one fumble resulted in a loss
21, This Big Ten school plays both Ohio ·state
and Michigan at home and does not have to meet this week. While Symmes is a veteran club, of possession.
Southern is very young with just I 0 players
Michigan State or Minnesota. Who is it?
Southern has to change its mental attiin the upper classes , ..
RED ZoNE
tude,
an area the new coach has worked on
22, What marching band ftrSt performed Script · Last week. Southern was led by the run- enthusiastically, and · also become· more
ning of freshman running back Butch
Ohio?
·
as time moves on toward the
23. Wide receiver/kick returner Brandon Marnhout who rambled 19 times for 113 · consistent
upcoming
league
schedule.
"Bam" Childress is a cousin of this foimer All- .
American defensive back at Georgia who starred
for the Washington Redskins for five seasons and
2 in the Big South Conference. It was the
now plays for the Denver Broncos.
most wins for VMI, · a former Southern
24, Who was Ohio State's 2003 season MVP?
program, since 1981.
Conference
25, Freshman defensive back Shaun Lane is
Their
only
1-A opponent in 2003 was Navy,
from Page 81
the son of what former Ohio State defensive back
a 37-10 loss.
'
who was first-team All-Big Ten in 1983?
For
the
Bobcats,
it
will
be
their
second
FoURTH AND INCHFS
expected to run primarily with three
26 Everybody knows him as A.J. Hawk, but receivers, an experienced group that includes straight home opener after five consecutive
what is the ftrst name of the Ohio State line- Stafford Owens, Anthony Hackett, Scott road starts from 1998-2002.
· Last year, Ohio defeated Southeast
backer?
Mayle and Chris Jackson.
Missouri, another 1-AA opponent, in its home
27, Two cum:nt Ohio State players were
Senior Ryan Hawk will likely get the start opener, 17-3.
selected as the MVP of their last college game. at quarterback.
·
Kick-off Saturday is set for 7 p.m.
One is Hawk, the defensive MVP of the 2004
The Keydets are coming off a 6;6 season, 2Fiesta Bowl. Who is the other?
28, True or false: Michigan did not have a fll'St
down in beating Ohio State in 1950's famous
Megan Games added six points and three
"Snow Bowl" game.
kills for MHS. while Emily Ashley added
29, The band. member who dots the "i" in
three points, eight kills and two blocks.
Script Ohio plays what instrument? (Hint: It's
Games
was 13-of-13 on serves and Ashley
from Page 81
NOT a tuba.)
· .
was nine-of-10.
Joey Haning had 17 assists for Meigs, with
defending TVC Ohio campions.
'lho~
Renee
Bailey adding four kills in the loss . .
1, Wisconsin, Michigan .
Samantha Cole led Meigs with eight points,
2. The BI!Ckeyes were No. 4, behind usc. LSU and Oklahoma.
Meigs travels to Miller Tuesday for a 5:30
seven kills, a block and a perfect 14·of-14 , p.m.
3, De!ensiYe end.
TVC contest.
·
4, Four. Zwid&lt; played at Orrville and Masl;llon Washingloo and
serving effort in the loss.
Smittl at Lakewood St Edward and CleYe1and Glenville.

· restVour·Buckeyes
IQ
.

Race : Pop Secret 500
Whore: California Speedway,

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

.........

,

r

CHECK
OUT THESE
WINNERS!
'"

lo..,...,.,_lllii.
25~

106 North Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

'

Upper River Rd .
Gallipolis; OH

walk-on and transfer from Bowling

Green.. who

wi!l

likely be the

Buckeyes' first-.team punter.
- Complied by Rusty. Miller ·

• '&lt;

......... """·· ...........

""""""_

"""

.........

"

...

'

.............:

..

�•

,•

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 3, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com
I

I

Friday, September 3, 2004

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallysentlnel.com

mrtbitne- Sentinel - l\e ister
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ha1red 7401 446 447 9

:; lernale dogs !Border
Cot llc tC hoc Lab m11o: 2/black
and , )€11ow perfect for 4
l-Ie n; (740)992 3603
Esk1mo Sp1tz med1um SIZe
dog 1ns de or outs1de very
pla~· tu l
lovable
well
behaved (7 40)742-2103

Free K111ens (304)895 3215
L1.~1 \NU
FIM Nl&gt;

5 family yard sale Materntty
clothes brand name baby
Children &amp; adult clothes
D1snay Halloween cosCentenary
Ad
1195
tumes baby furmture basSa turday
Onlyl
9-? kets crafts Home lntenor,
Boys/lad1es clothtng books
Jewelry 82 Arnold Drtve
v1deos toys computer &amp;
Bidwell Sept 2 3 4 9 ?
much more
645 Fourt/1 Ave Clothing all
15710 S~ 554 Bldwe119/3 &amp; sizes toys Longaberger,
914 9am U~ed furniture
Home lntenor household
1tems
crafts 9/4104 9am ?
21am1ly yard sale at 120 and
121 Bast1an1 Dnve Saturday
9 4 Sat Furn1ture carpet,
84
b1kes stove tools cloth1ng
2 fam1ly yard sate Meadows 4 family Kessel s produce
Subd1v s1on 330 Jun1per 1354 Jackson Ptke
Lane Sat Sept 4th Sam
3pm Clothes- g1rls teens 9/4/04 8-4pm 15 m1nutes
women men exerc1se bike past Holzer Hosp1tal on 160
TV storm door home decor 1n V1nton Clothes k1tchen
bed
spreads
curtams tlems lurntture and more
sheets toys Ty ammals
Baby gtrl ladtes &amp; mens

round a Beagle n front of
General Dollar n Pomeroy
furmture
hand
tuesday Very tnendly Took 2 lam1ty yard sa le Sat &amp; clothes
to dog pound (740)992 Sun 4th-5th 1Q-4 1834 St patntad wood crafts Items
3779
At 7 North
appliances lots more 333
Kelly Or Georges Creek Ad
3 fam1ly 1st th1s year Aatn FriJSat 8 7
Found bag of clothes on Will
or shme los of e._.erythmg
Ad near Vmton (740)388
9/3-9/4 491 ~ Bulav111e P1ke Big garage sate Fr1 &amp; Sat
9653
Sept 3rd-4th Ttme 9·? 7
'
9 famtly 112 m1le on nght
m1les from Galhpolts on At 7
F.ou f'\d gray male k tten Bu tav 111e P1ke Ad Baby
South Close to Clay Local
w/wh1te paws w1ll gtve away clothes cral1s and many
School
1! not ci;;nmed (740)992 othe r ttems Thurs Frt Sat
9/2 9/4
3478
Fr1day 9/3 Guts clothes
plus SIZB women s clothmg
toys Sprmg Valley area 224
Oak Drive

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale .
725
Announcement .•.
.. ............030
Antiques
. 530
Apartments for Rent
......... . 440
Auction and Flea Market ••.. .......
. .080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories . ..
760
Auto Reparr.
.................................... 770
Autos for Sale . .
.. 7t 0
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
750
Building Supplies... ..... ...... ........... .. ... 550
Bus1ness and Buildmgs
. 340
Business Opportunity
,
210
Busmess Trainmg .............................. ...... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ..
.. 790
Camping Equipment..... . .... ...... • ...... 780
Cards of Thanks .... ....
.... . ......
.. .. 010
Child/Elderly Care' . ...
.. . t90
ElectricaURelrigeration .......................... 840
EqUipment lor Rent...
.... . .....
480
Excavating.... . .• .. .... .............. . ..... 830
Farm EqUipment.. .............................. , 610
Farms lor Rent ... ...
.430
Farms lor Sale ............ ... ..... ...... . ....... 330
For Lease
............................... 490
For Sale •
.
.
585
For Sale or Trade ....................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables...... ...
...... .580
Furnrshed Rooms.....
..... . .4'50
General Hauling .........................................850
Giveaway.
.. •
... ...
.. .........040
Happy Ads
..... . .. 050
Hey &amp; Grain
...........................640
Help wanted .. ..
...... ... • , ......... 110
Home lmprovemente ..............................810
Homes lor Sale . . ................................. 310
Household Goods
...... . ..... 510
Houses lor Rent ........................................ 410
In Memoriam
.... . ... . .... 020
Insurance........ . .•. . .
...... .. .... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ........................ 680
Livestock.
.... .. .. ....... ..... . . ........ .630
Lost and Found. ... ......... ..... . ...... . ..... 080
Lois &amp; Acreage ..
.. ............................ 350
Miscellaneous ... .... . ..... ........ . ....... 170
Miscellaneous Marchandlu................... 540
¥obile Home Repair.... .. ...................... 880
Mobile Homos for Rant. ..... . ...... . ... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale............................... 320
Money to Loan . ...... . .... ..... . ... • 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelera .................... 740
Musical Instruments ............................... 570
Personals .
.. ....................... • ..... 005
Pels lor Sale ........................................... 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing ......
.. .... 820
Professional Servlcea... ....... • ...... ..... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Real Eateta Wanted ...... . ...
... 380
Schools Instruction ................................. t50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .. ...... ...... ..... 650
Slluat1ons Wanted.
..
..... 120
Space for Rent.. ......................................460
Sportmg Goods ..
... . ..... . ...... .... : 520
SUV's for Sale......................... ..... : ........720
, Trucks for Sale , •
... .... ........ . 715
Upholstery . .... .....
.... .. ................... 870
Vans For Sale.............................................730
wanted to Buy .
• .... • • .... .. ........ 0110
Wanted to Buy· Farm SuppiiH .................. 620
Wanted To Do ... . .
.. ........ " ....... t80
Wanted to Rent... ....., ........................ 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis................................ 072
Yard Sale·Pomaroy/Middle, ..................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

fll
I·

YARD SALE·

~'4

GALLIPOI L.llii

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiao_.l
Saturday 9·3 Little Tykes
toys btkes baby bed Home
lnter~or weed eater r ding
mower wagon and many
more m1sc 1tams Jerry
Street off ot Jackson Pike
Sept 3·4 Northup, 9-? like
new gul clothes (0-12 mo)
boys (5 8) stroller/car seat
combo, car seat walkers
swing, toddler bed matermty clothes &amp; much more

Man 1 m11e out Kerr Ad
Huge 2 fam1ly yard sale from 160
Saturday South on At 7 3 - - - - - - - - - mites past Lock&amp; Dam
Yard sale 9/4 and 916- 9 DOLarge 3 family yard sale 3 00 4 miles out 218
Sat Sept 41h &amp; Man Sept Couch love seat Home
Rite 1Interior tupper ware etc
Sth
88 m. 3pm

Large garage sale 2780
Ne1ghborhood Ad Fn·Sat
Sept 3-4 T1me 8-? Tools
household Items etc
Mov1ng sale 59 Texas Ad
8 30-5pm Thurs Frl &amp; Sat
Sept 16·17·18
Mulll family yard sale 3390
State Route 325 3 1/4 m1les
south
of R1o Grande
McOonalds Fn Sat Sun
Mon 10-6
Sat 914 9am-'i' 90 Magnolia
Dr1ve
(Spring
Valley)
Ga111pol1s
Guts
misses
ck&gt;thlng dOlls a1. furniture
toys household items Ram
date 9/6
Sat 9/4104, 8-? 5 famtly
9684 St AI 7 soulh
Something tor everyone
Sal Sept 4 It 1136A Sl R1
850, Rodney Sam-? Oceans
Aquarium bouncer baby
bed, tOddler bed, strollers,
baby clothes &amp; m1sc horse
reins etc toys, household
items car tires, uttle Tikes
swing. set &amp; lllOVles
Sal Sept 4 Left Fork Ad
(b~slde Caldwefl Truddng)
830om?

r

4

YARD SAib

J'oMERoyiMIIJt&gt;u

-

@ 2004

NEA,Inc,

YARDSAJ.EPr. PLEASANT

YARD SAL!',.
J'oMEROY/MIDDLF.

Camper, t11ter van p1ano
ant1que cook stove &amp; tools
portable play pen/ basstnet
bed mtc rowave new ttems
9 4 Fnday/Saturday 7/10
mile up Hysell Run

Garage Sale 946 Gage Ad
Patnot Oh Avon dolls
antiques/glassware tots of Sept 3·4·6 1111 Oh10
m1sc Sept 1-3 Ram or sh1ne Avenue netar GOC/Ftrst
9?
Baptist Church 4 tamlly
Microwave TV table/cha1rs
Garage Satell Christmas &amp;
we1ght bench golf clubs
Fall Oecorattons Cumer &amp;
retired Longaberger enter
tves 01shes Fn-Sat 913-914 talnment center
books
9am ? 1641 Cora Mill Road
much more
( 1 7 m11es from At 588)
Gallipolis OH Aa~n or September 2·3 9am Boys
Shtne
5- 10, brand name Jumors
830 First All9nue
Garage sale Rain or shine
1163 Sec Ave Fn &amp; Sat Two lamlly yard sale Sept
Sept 3 &amp; 4, 8~m Cardlo 3-4 1/4 mtle out at 404
Glide dishes some collect- Bulav111e Pike Clothes, adult
ables dolls, cookbook col· &amp; baby &amp; loys
lectton canner toys &amp; much
more
Yard sale Saturday only 322
St Rl 7 North across lrom
Girls tall &amp; Winter school
Elllons Five tam1ly Golf
clothes, all name brands,
clubs new clothes of all
adult
clothmg
Home
sizes mise
InteriOr lots of stuff 157 St
AI 775, Sept 3-4 9·3
Yard sate, 8-4 Sat Sun &amp;

Cemetery Road off of
P1ke
behind
AddiSon
Butavllle Town House

••t.te

Call (740)992·2272

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

f'

Thit new•paper will not
knowingly accept
adv1rtlsem•nt1 for r.. l
which I• In
vloi•Uon of the law Our
reader• •• har•by
lntcrmad that ell
~111ng• •d,..ertllld In
thl• newapeper ,,.
1velleble on
equ•l
opportunity be..•

3 Dedrooms 1 bath Ready
to move In N1ce level lot

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

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abb~vl•tlont

Items

3 bedroom 2 baths fire
place On 4 3 acres In the
Country ' Scen1c
vtew
$75,000 Cell (740)709
1166

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
or Fax To

All real eatate edvertlaing
In this newspaper Is
subject to the Flderet
Fair Housing Act ot 1968
wt'llch mekea li lll~al to
advertise any
prefarence, limitation or
dlscrimlnatlon baled on
rae•, color religion •••
ftmllitl et•lus or national
origin, or •ny Intention to
meke eny such
prtferenc•, llmttetlon or
dllcrlmln•tlon"

3 Bedroom 2 Bathrooms
Lg Family Rm 7 acres on
'Hill 1/2 m1le past Pauls
Exxon Prices
In 70 s
(304)675 5501 or (304)674
1619

l\egtster

Sentinel

www.orvb.com

with less than perfect cred1t
Easy qual lying Own don 1
rent
local
company
Mortgage locators 740992· 7321

123 Park Dnve Table
wlcha1rs Ant1que Trunks
COs VIdeos, DVOs Home
lntenor, Dtshes B1rd Cage
Scanner Old Records Old
New Chlldrens Suspense
COokmg
&amp; Non-Ftc llon
Cteantng out the garage Books
Spectal
Edttton
sale Sepl 4th &amp; 6th 9·? Barbie Dolls Plus S1ze
different items eat:h day 188 Clothes Formal Gowns s1ze
Walnut (rear) Middleport
22 &amp; 14 Electnc Hosp1tal
F1rst tlma Yard Sale 3 faml Bed Hoyt Hydrollc Invalid
lies
Fr1day &amp; Saturday Lilt Extra large Portable
Seplember 3rd &amp; 4th 8-4 Commadet Friday end
Antique collectables kids s Saturday
&amp; plus SIZB clothes m sc
Family
Yard
Sale
Saturday 1/2 off after 1 00 3
175
Mulberry
Avenue September 4th Along State
At 62 Upper Mason WV 1nto
Pomeroy
(304)882·2049
Hugh 4 family yard sale
v1deos ant.ques household 4 Fam1ly Yard sale Sept 3rd •
Items IQts of odds &amp; enOs 4th 118 mtle out lucas l Bne
584 ltncoln §t Mtddleport 9 OOam-4 00 Toddlers Bed
Sat /Sept 4th
Excel;ceus Statues Sew1ng
Mach 1ne
w/cab 1net
Large after moving garage Clothmg
Longaberger
sale NICe clothmg kitchen Anchor Hocktng glassware
slulf wood crafts home
Tools
mise
Not
Interior kerosene heater
Responsible for Acc1dents
storm door, bar stools, deer
stand too much to lis! lots a miles North Pt Pleasant
mise
Hartford
WV old At 62 Sptllman Ad 1
Caltfornta Street Beside "lie above Lakin
WV
school September 3rd 4th M
Thur Fn Sat 11-7 9 OOam till 1'i'
large Yard Sate 2 Family
large garage sale- Friday
tn Camp
Saturday, 9am ;.\pm k&gt;cated Falrv1ew Rd
Conley
Household
'-ttems
1
112
miles
out
of
H 1
II
Kl
Rd
boys &amp; g1rls clothes s1zes Qerr SOOIII 8 on ng 1 ge 3T unte Tykes Ftre truck
Road
bed Watch tor S~gns ? Friday
Large yard sale, Thursd ay &amp; Saturday
Friday Saturday Behind
Large Yard Sole Sal Sept 4
Masonic Lodge In Racine
Haven
Clothing household Home 9'am 4pm 1 New
Interior furntture mise
Heights Hall Tree w1th
Mtrror 4·nlce 01splay cases
Rummage Sate September Stone Jars &amp; Jugs 20
3rd 4th
9 OOAM 3 OOPM Church Pews Round Oak
MelgB
Senior
enter Table &amp; Chairs
Large
(
)
•
740 992 2161
' - - ' - - - - - - - - amount of glassware

..c.=--'------

I

1/4 mile on ~43 Sept 2 5
home lnter1or Fanton, tools
diShes pans. clothes much
more
Sept 3rd &amp; 4th Caldwell
res1denca 1 m1te tram
3 tamlty garage sate State Aacme on Bashan Ad N1ce
Aou1e 248, Sepl 3rd &amp; 41h, clothes
name brand 1tems
September 3r6 4th 6 lamt
3 family sale. Sept 3-4 ly carport dnveway and
Rain/Shine 8 Q0-6 00 300 flowmg out tnto the yard
sale Women mens name
WetzgaU
Street
ElectroniCS, clothes , toys brand teens and children
clothes Whill knots crafts
and more
collectibles lfome 1ntenor
4 Fam1ly garage sale bed
clothes
curtams
Household 1tems k1ds, miss- camper 1tems and tools,
es mens clothes women s Some new Items some old
plus size scrubs Peach Fork lots of m1sc turn off Route 7
Road ,
follow
signs onto
143
toward
Friday/Saturday September Harnsonville Corner of
3rd-1111
Bailey Run Road and 143
5 famtly ra1n or shme
Thursday 2nd Friday 3rd
Saturday 4th Sam till when
ever go out on Rt 7 north
from Pomeroy turn nght at
Memory Gardens on Eagle
Ridge Ad go 112 m11e to
mter&amp;eet1011 of Eagle Ridge
and Pine Grove 1st house
past Intersection Will have
tools clothes glassware
guns some furniture d1n1ng
rOom table, 6 chatrs come
make offer
1

•

Shelter house sale 786
H~ke11 Street Wednesday
Thursday
and
Fnday
9 OOAM·3 OOPM
Table With cha1rs washer &amp;
dryer Jr &amp; plus SIZe cloth
1ng, etc on nght JUSt past
Soulhern H1gh School Sepl

3 4 5
Yard Sale Furn1ture, mise
38
Hudson
Street
Middleport Friday/Saturday
September 3n:V4th

AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Medtcal Office lnsuranctt
Sell ..,-Shirley Spears 304· Clerk!Typlst- State-of-the-art
675 1429
optometrtc
practice
m
Athens Is seek1ng dynam1c
POSITION and canng mdtvtdual to
CLERICAL
Local Olf1ce Prev ous office serve as 1nsprance ~rk and
experience
requtred typtst KnoWledge of btlllng
Work1ng knowledge ol com lor thtrd party coverage elec·
putei'S Mtcrosott Word typ- tronlcally a must Postmg
ng 11111mg and abtllty to lcom- fmanc1al transactions colpose leners Good commu lecttng payments transcripmcat1on sk1lls a must Only tion typ ng a minimum of 50
qual tfled persons need word per m1nute some med·
apply Semi resume along teal terminology and famll
w1th references to P 0 Box tarlty with Microsoft Word
311 Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
necessary ApP.:IIcant must
be deta1l onented commtt·
Country/Rock band look ng
ted to excellence 1n patient
lor rock gUitanst who also care self-motivated and
likes to play Top 40 Country
possess good commun caCall (740)379-9173 after
l len sk1lls Approximately
3pm
35hrs/wk, 1ncludes some
Saturdays Benef1ts 1nclude
Dnve
pa1d tUitJon and travel lor
career advancement pad
CLASS A CDL
hohdays vacalton and s1ck
DRIVE~S
time
health 1nsuranca and
NEW PAY SCALE
pens1on
plan Wage ts com•Earn between 45 SDK
mensurate With experience
•M1n 2 years exp
EOE Send resume to The
•Home T1me on Weekends
Datly Sent1nel PO Box 729•$500 sign on bonus
12 Pomeroy Oh 45769
•Start at 36 cpm
•95°/o No touch fre1ghl
•NO FORCED NYC

Now H1rtng e~eper10nce walt
staff tor all shtfts please
apply m person Atvers1de
Call 80()-652·2362 tor more
Gotfcourse Rt1 Box 35
mfo
Mason
Due to our recent Agency
expans1on
Med1 Home Overbrook Center IS currentHealth Agency Inc 1s seek ly accept1ng apPftcattons for
mg both a lull·ltme AN Case anyone onlerested In the
STNA classes These class Manager and a fullt1me AN
Patient Care Coordinator es wo11 be held on September
and class space 1n hmned
pos1t10n tn the GallipoliS
Ohto and surrounding area so tf you are mterested
please come 1n and 1111 out
Duttes 1nclude establlshtng
and matntam1ng open lines an application at 333 Page
Street
M1Cidleport
OH
of communtclsilten wtlh area
45760 EOE
phystctans and health care
facilities m the delivery ol
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT S
Home Health ser,..~ees Must
needed Apply at 1354
be licensed m both Oh1o and
Jackson P1ke Galhpol1s
West V1rg1ma We offer a
compet1hva salary benehts Part ttme bartender andlor
package and 401 K E 0 E gnll cook Must be able to
Please send resume to 352 work evemngs &amp; weekends
Second Avenue Galhpohs Send resume to P:O 8&lt;»1:
OH 45631 Attn Bmm K1ng 303 GallipoliS OH 45631
AN
Help wanted Darst Adult
Group Home (740)992
5023 Call for more tnformatlon

S..SSY SCISSORS
Stylist wanted, Salary/
Commtss1on 740 441 1880
or 740-256-6336

~H::-H-:A-,-ne_e_d_Od-,-p_e_rt_t_lm_e_,-:,o~r Temporary painter needed

The Town ol New Haven Will
be accepting applications for
Poltee Off1cer Apphcal1ons
may be obtained at New
Monday
Haven City Hall
through Frtday 7am until
3pm T.he application must
be filled out at the City
Building A Phystcal Agl11ty
test must be taken and
passed by each applicant
before consideration of the
application

ScHooiB
INsmucnoN
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Con lbdeyl 74().446·4367
t-800 214-0452
www gall~1 scareercollege com
Accredited

Member Accred1hng

Councu tor noependenl Cot eges
and Schools t274B

H1gh
School
Jumors
Sen ors and Pnor Serv~ce
you can ltlt vacant posttiOM
tn the West V1rgtma Army
Nat1onal Guard If you are
between the ages of 17 35
or have pnor m1l1tal'y• servICe you won I want to pass
th1s up For Opportunilles tn
your ar~a call
304·6755837
---------

WIIIITED 17 PEOPLE
We Pay You I
SCASH REWARDS$
For the Wetght you lose
1n 30 Days
Call Tracy 740-441-1982
(800)201 083l
wwwfamousnatnt1on com
&lt;http llwww famousnutrt
tlon com!&gt;

K·2 CONSTRUCTION Is
seeking a sales persor1 wtth
5 years experience Send
resume to 86 Kelly Onve.
Gallipolis OH 45631
Make 50% selling Avon
Ltm1ted
time
ONLY
(740)446 3358 Flrsl sto can
receives a gift

Aockspnnga Road Pomeroy
Oh 45769 to till out an appll
caliOn Extendlcare Health
Services Inc Is an Equal
Opponunlty Employer that
encourag(lls
workplace
dlversoly MIF ON
-----'....,.---The
Athens·Metgs
Educational Servrce Center
has a position opening for a
Certified
Occupational
Therapy AasiSiant (COTA)
This 20 hour posttlon would
mvolve working with students tn Athena County
Public Schools during the
nine month school year
under the supervi1ton of a
registered
occupational
therapist The applicant
must haVe met all of the
requirements to acquire and
malntatn a valid Ohio COTA

Home Based Busmass
Earn $200-$500 PIT
Earn $2 000 and up FrT
Pa1d Vacations, Bonuses
74().441-1984
888 540·8097
www workatcasa com
&lt;hHp l!www workatcasa co
mi&gt;

WANJID

To Do

Compassloilate lady wants

relerences (740)448-3649
DRYWALL
Install Ftmsh Painting,
Carpententry, Bathrooms
Aestdentlal Commercial, ....
INSURED
NOTHING TO SMAU
Flat Prices
Steve·(740)388-873t
Wcmtlng to do house cleanIng, have personal refer·
eoces lf needed would also
cons1der slttlng wls)ck or
l!ldeny, (740)992-3422
wur
sit
w1lh
alderly,
dayfnlght weekday/weekends can give references,
frtany years expenence,
(740)949-2543

Mechanlcalty Inclined perMans Yard Sale Sept 3 &amp; 4 son, part time, evenings &amp;
2004 2903 Parrish Ave Pomt weekends apply In person
Pleasant
at Hayes Real Estate 382 E
2nd ~me roy
1
Yard Sale 204 Mam St Pt
t 1\ \ '-1 I \I
Pleasant 9· 3rd &amp; 4th 10 00
Position&amp; Available
• 600
lteense to Pf&amp;CtiCe from the
~
Ol'fokroNITI'
If you want to be part of a Oh&lt;&gt; OT/ PTIAT Board and
Yard Sale 78 Burdette canng tea m with htgh stan·
have~ applied
for and ~~;~:;~~~~
Addition Frl &amp; Sat
an
ASSOCiate
dards ol care come apply to recetved
_,.
-Ya_r_d-sa-le~F-ors_I_T-,m-e----,• JOin our team We currently Ucense from the Ohio
404 1 1
have an office asslstanll Department of Education
Street Sat 9 OOam all day
schedUler PQ6ltlon In the In Pediatric experience Is pre·
but not mandatory
W_ANJID
____,. the nurSing department as ferred,
BUY
w811 as vanous STNA post- You must provide your own
transportation for this pos1·
tlons avatlable at thiS time
t1on (mileage reimbursement
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Is avail-) Salary will be
Sliver and Gold C01ns
base,:t on education and
Proofsets, Gold Amgs, U S
expenence Interested canCu"ency ·M T S Coon Shop
I 51
Second
Avenue
G U I 74().446.2842
references
to
John
Cash! Cashl 3K-350K any
I \ 11 '1 1n '.11 '\I
Costanzo Supanntendent
purpose Good/Bad credit
Athens Meigs Educational
" ' In II I "
1-866-31J6.1337
Need a Heatmg-Coohng ServiCe
Center
507
mstaller w1th at least 1 year RIChland Avenue
Suite
experience
Certlctfted 1108, Arhens Oh 45701
deadline
Techtetan with at least one Appi1C8t1on
year experience
Pay by September 28, 2004 or until
TURNED DOWN ON
An Excellent 'way to earn
experience Only exp8re postt1on Is filled
The SOCIAL SECURITY IBSI?
money The New Avon
lnced - d apply Calf AMESC ts an equal opportu·
No Foe Unleoo W. Wlnl
Call MarHyn 304·682·2645
n1ty employef/provlder
(740)4-41 12¥
1-888 582·3346·

r___
..

riO

ro

...

By Owner US 35 1n Mason
Coi:Jnty 5 Rooms &amp; Batl'l (2
Bedrooms) Large SunRoom 12x32
all new
Carpet Full Basemen! 112
acre lot $41 900 (304}6752933

j

MONEY
=~~~~:=~ :s~~ a~~ ~ ~---10-iil.oANiiiii;;,;,_...

r~1

•
Home For Safe
Hand built log home 6 years
old Private wtth 10 acres
Stunn1ng v1ew1 3 Br 1 1/2
bath Open lofl1
Financing available with
NO OOWN PAYMENTIII
(740)388-0164
Homes
from
$10 0001
Forclosure VA Hud for list·
1ng 1-800-749-8106 ex 1709

Jump
on
SAVINGS

Cpmptete!}l
Befj01shed
1:!Qm.a Great Jocat1on m
Gallipolis Oh1o 3 bedrooms
2 tu II baths Pnce to ~ell
Now Phofle C740\446 9539.

Shop
Classlfleds!

In Memory of

Richard Wayne
Rowe

V1ew photos/info online
EW LISTING Secluded
Bedroom 3 Bath wi1h
eaut1ful A.IYer V1ew
ocated Clo se to town
ode 825 or call
740)441 0323
Bed~oom, 2 Bath ~tver

1ew/ Access Pnvate
at Dock m Gallipolis t
ere lot Code 90303 or
ell (740)446.0531
Bedroom Bnck Home 2
ath 3 Car Bnck
nattached Garage 2
tory outbuilding Code
2704 or call (740)446566
Bedroom 2 112 Bath
lose to Holzer Hosp1tal
n Spnng Valley Cod1
13 or call (740)446624
Bedroom 1 1/2 Bath
ull Basement
1ddleport OH Coda
17 or call (740)992743
Bearoom 3 Bath Pool
10 acres 8 dwell OH
ode 42104 or call
740)368 9839

r

,.

In Memory

MOBILE HOMES
FUR SALE

1985 14~~:70 Wtndsor with
14x26 addtllon New carpet
dishwasher lnterlor/exlerlor
pant JOb storage building
$14 995 Senous nqUifes
call (301:!)593 3768 leave
message

'-======:::;;:;;;:,-:""'=:------.,
,..

FOR LEASE

who left us
August 23, 2004
'l1U 'Bro~n Cliam

'We flttfe K,pew tfwt
monung tfiat (jorf was
g01ng to caf!your
namt In Cife we [ove
you rfeariy, Ill aeatli
we ao ilie same
You fejt us peaceju{

IUJtfung seems tlie
samt, 6ut as (joa Cll!fs
us one 6y one 'IIi£
C!Wm u~[[ {,~(agarn

FALL CRAFT SHOW

'

For sale or rent 2 bedroom month Call (740)446 4555
mobile home:s starttpg at after spm
$270 per month C&amp;ll 74().
1BR part1a11y furnished all
992 2167
oew su~able for 1 person or
Make 2 payments move n 4 a coupt9 no pets 7 riunutes
years on note t (304)736· from town and A1o Grande
all ut1l1tleS
$875/month
34P9
I
Includ ed
740 245 t984
Mobile Home lor Sate 3br In 740-645·4848
Mason
Must be moved
Central Air Gas Furnace 2 bedroom apartment tor
$2500 OBO Call (304)675 renl In Syracuse $200 00
deposit
$330 {}0/month
7783 leave message
renl Includes water sewage
New Oakwood mega. store
and trash Must h'ave sutft
feJiurlng
Homes
by clent mcome to quahfy
Oakwood
Fleetwood &amp; (740)378·6111
Giles One stop " shoppi ng
only at Oai&lt;wood Hom es ot 28A apt altached Qarage
Barboursville WV (304)736 pat10 ...ery qu1et neighbor
3409
hood $450 ~r month no
pats reference + depos1t
Next to new 2000 Redma n
reqUired (740)446 2801
t 6X80 3 bed room/2 bath
" nyl sld1ng/s1ngla roof tully 663 3rd Ave 2 BA- unfur
loaded S27 900 00 Can nlshed $300/month plus
help with delivery Ask for deposll (740)245 9595
Nokk (740)385·9948
Apartment Available Now
Reduced!
1991
~ s~~:ao
R1ver Bend Place New
mobile home 3 BR 2 BA 1
Haven WV now accepting
yr old heat pump Must be applicatiOns for HUD-subSI·
moved Sl2 500 (740)446 d zed 1 bedroom apart
2923
menls Utlht1es mcluded Call
(304)882-3121 Apartmen t
SAVE SAVE SAVE
Stock models at old pnces available for qualllted sen
2005 models arrlv1ng Now IOrfdtsabled person EHO
Coles
Mobile
Homes
15266 US 50 EaSt Atnens

Applications being taken tor
very clean 1 bedroom m
Oh o 45701 (740)592-1972 co untry senmg yet close to
"Where You Get Your
town Washer dryer stove
~M:I:o:l'ne.;y.;s.w-.or.lh-·-::---'., fndge 1nctuded Water and
Lors &amp;
garbage InCluded Total elec
ACREAGE
tnc w1th AC Tenant pay elec
tnc $300 deposit $375 per
month No pets No smok
1/2 acre lot on Tycoon lake lng 740446 2205 or 740

r

Vlr"~"~lnla

CountyEagle
water Road
no septAsking
c bor 446 9585 ask for
ders
~
$B 500 00 (740)247 1100
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
3 adJOining lots 1n Galha Co PRICES AT JACKSON
Apro)( 28 acres 2 wtth large
ESTATES, 52 Wesrwood
houses Call for more 1nfo
Dnve from $344 to $442
(740)245·9549
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
Equal
88 acres huntmg land on 740·446·2568
Route 35 Henderson WV Houstng Opportunity
$45000 Day 740 645 1306 CONVENIENTLY LOCATeventng 740 256 6574
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments
end/or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)44 1-1111
lor application &amp; tnlormatton

FOR LEASE
8eauhful unlurn shed two
bedroom apartment L1v1ng
room overlooks City park
004
and Oh1o A1ver SpaciOUS
k1tchen dmeHe 1 1/2 bath
Lots for sale In Mercerv11e 4
References and secur~ty
acres good bu1ld1ng s1te depos t requtred $600 per
$17 500 (740)256 1825
month No pets Call 740
Mobile home tot for rent al 446--4425 or 740 446 f325
Johnson s Mob1le HOme -G-ra-c-oo_u_s_hv-on_g_l_a-nd-'2'--be-d

tliough we ca mwt see
!JOU, you are a{ways at
our stae Our farmiy
cliam ~ 6ro/(fn, ana

'lJrotkrs, St.5ters,
'Wife arufJa.mtftes

2000 Redman mobile home 1 and 2 bedroom apart
3 brf 2 ba central a1r excel- ments furnished and 4nfur·
lent cond1110n $23 000 740- n1Shed secunty deposit
367 7292 74Q-388-8682
requtred no pets 740-992-·
2218
91 OakwoOd 141(72 very
nice $12 000 1 (740)992 1-bedroom Garage apt
5025
Central heat &amp; a1r $375

WANTED
ndtv dual lookmg to bu
and or possibly leas
XCIUSIVe hunting nghts I
mperty m Me1gs County
h10 Prefe r acreage 5
cres and larger If 1nterest
d please ca ll (304)372

me71WneJ, 'JOUr five~~
stiffourguiie, atUf

WOitK FROM HOME

Expenence prelerred but not to provide personal care
tn tervIew ca II beI ween Sam
"o
"
F 1 necessary If ~ tnterested, light cleaning and TLC fOr
4
and
" pm
m
r
please stop by Rocksprings the elderly In the1r homes 1n
1740)949 •2761
. . . , . - - - : : - : : - - : - - : - - - : - BehabKitatlon Center 36759 the Gatlla area
Excellent----~
Hmng
PIT a1das for
Commun1ty
Nurs1ng
Services I Health Care of
Southeast Ohio If interesled
please call (304)n3 5066
or {740)666~· 1222

5 bedroom
1112 bath
house for sale Pomeroy 3/4
acre 3!4 remodeled 0%
down posSible. payment
approx S425 00 month no
land co ntract
(740 )208·
7080

•n

Home Listings
List your home by calltng
(740)4-46-3620

1991 14x72 3br, 2 lull bath 1 &amp; 2 bedroom apt starhng
Heat Pump w/AC Deck at $290/month
deposit
Cathedral Ce1ltngs Pnce reqUired No pete WD
$11 500 (304)882·36B.2
hookup (740)441 1184

Park (740)446 2003

room apartments at V1tlage

Pnme lot 5 wooded acres
on Buckeye H1lls Great
homes1te
$27 500 Call
740·645 2950 or 74Q-388
9649

Manor
and
RIVerSide
Apartments m Mid dleport
From $295 $444 Call 740
992 5064 Equal Housmg
Opportun1t1es

It I \ I \I "'

large 3br tn Pt Pleasant
Oownstalrs
CIA
&amp;
Appliances
Deposit
Raqwad leave massage
(304)675 7783

Po1nt Pleasant M1ddle School gym
October 2, 2004 t 0 am 6 pm
for more 1nfo call

304 675 4689 or 304·675·5931

In Memory

Fall and Halloween
items available at the
Grafters Loft. Located in
Middleport Dept Store

RIVER WAY CAFE
1n Syracuse invites you
to JOin us
Sunqay, September 5th
for our Breakfast Buffet
7 am -1 pm
$5.99
Call 1n orders welcome
740-992-2507

New 1 bedroom apt Phone
0% Down Payment even (740)446·3736
'Mih less than perfect credtt
Easy quality1ng OWn don t N1ce two bedroom apart
rent
local
company ments Large rooms Fully
Mortgage locators 740- eqUipad k1tchen Central
heat1ng/cool1ng
992·7321
Washer/dryer
hookup
1 bedroom furnished house (304)882 2523
1n town Excellent locat1on
No pats (7 40)446 1162
One bedroom apartment
1 bedroom house m no pets 1n Pome roy
Gaurpofls
$350/monlh (740)992 5858
depoSit requred (740)441·
1184
•
One bedroom garage apart
men! kitchen furnished
2 story home for rent 3br
$400 (740)992·3823
$500/mon111 Calf (740)446·
3481
Tw1n A1vers Tower IS accept
2br House m the New Haven 1ng applications tor wa1t1ng
Area No-Pets must ha._.e IISI for Hud·SUbsiZed 1· br
References
$400 month apartment call 675-6679
$300
Oapos1t
Serious EHO
Inquires only (304)882 2670

r

3br In Syracuse Ohio No
Pets $500 00 a month Hud
Approved (304)675·5332
Room and Board at Cozy
Hollow Montl'lly and weekly
rates available (740)245

ltke new 5ofa chatr With
ottoman rocker cocktai l
table &amp; end table All w1cke r
like new Rattan pedesta l
glass top table w1th 4
padded cha1rs 740 446
6748
--------Mollohan Carpet 202 Clar.k
Chapel Road Porter Oh10
(740)446 7444 1 877 830
9 ~ 62 Free Est1mates Easy
hnancing 90 days same as
cash VtsaJ Master Card
Dn._.e a ilnle save alot

1995 Chevy Lumma V 6
AMIFM cassette a1r loaded
56 000 m les good cond1
t1on $3 500 (740)245 5157

Chocolate lab pups AKC
Born 7/15/ 04 Dewclaws
removed wormed &amp; fnst 1998
To~a
Avalon
shots (740)441-0643 alter Leather iW power seats &amp;
5pm
moon roof 80 000 m 1tes
Call (740)446 4676
MUSICAL
2000 Neon S3 895 1998
(NSTIUJIIIENTS
5unflre GT S3 795 1999
A.lero $3 795 Others m
For Sate Hammond Organ
stock 3 months 3 000 mle
Model M 101 Sp1net Good
warrant1es
cond1t1on
Su1table
tor
Cook Motors
Church or home (740)992
328 Jackson P ke
Oak table With 6 chairs 011
17~)446 0103
lamps small desk pnnters
tray Ch~na Hutch Call
2002 Dodge Neon SXT
(740)367 0002
Q9 000 mtles Automattc
~ 500 (304)882 3507
Refnger.nor gooo co ndition Potatoes
$10 00
50#
$75 Clglar luel all stove and
Kanabec al"ld Red Pont1ac
275 gallon tank wtth aprox
Monday Saturday B OOAM
60 gallons ot fuel $200 w111
5 OOPM 65002 State Route
sell
separately
Call 124 Reedsv1tte
(740)441 ·9064 alto' 7pm
Sweet corn tor sale $ t 75
TV s $40 each couch $75
dozen Brmg your own con
each tabla &amp; 4 chairs $75
tamer (p1ckmg new patch
l1ke new Maytag stack
11'1 s weekend)
(740)949
washer/dryer set $500 L1ke
1316
new Frtgldalre stack wash
92 Cors1ca V 6 new tires
er/d ryer $425 wooden hutch
FoR SALE
brakes pa1nt (burgundy)
$60 hangmg planters $5
runs great looks great
each 1ult bed $125 Queen
$2 700 (7 40 )7 42 0509
bed $550
Firewood for sale $30 piCk
S•aggs Appl ance
up or $50 del1varad m most 95 Z 28 350 auto T tops
' 76 V1ne Street
areas
Oell,..ery
start s leather dark green tan 1nte
(740)446 7398
Sept6 (740)388 8738
nor great shape $7 000
Th ompsons Appl ance &amp;
(740 )742 4011 leave mes
Re alr-675-7388 For sale For sa te
HP Butfalo air
p
camp and hose L1ke new
ra conditiOned
automatic " $ 75 (740 ) 446 2506
~ Dooge Durango SLT low
washers &amp; dryers relngera
mileage excellent cond1Mn
tors
gas · and etectr1c Wood Pellet Stove 4yrs old 93 Dodge Stealth 92 Dodge
ranges atr cond1t10ners and S650 Call (304)675 5866 or Daytona (needs rransm 1s
wringer washers Will do (304)675·61 12
s1on) (740)441 0797 after
rapa1rs on mator brands 1n
6pm
I \J{\1 "'I 1'1'1 II "
shop or at your home
~ 11\I'IIH h.
Cars from $500 Pol lee
Used Furn lure Store 130
Impou nds For hst ngs call
Butav1lle P1ke dressers
1 800 749 8104 EXT 3901
LIVES'IOCK
couches mattresses reclinRJ s Auto Sales
1995
ers
grave monuments
Grand Am
6 1cly
auto
much more (740)446 4782
5 year Sorrel Quarter male
GalltpOIIs Oh o Hrs 11·3 papered exc d1spos t1on t 06K mce 1ns1ae &amp; out runs
great $1 GOO 1994 Tracker
(M·F)
well broke n great barrel 6/cly 4 wneel dnve 113K
re1n1ng gymkata poten!IBI very ntce (7'40)742 2357
ANTIQUEli
$3 000 (740)441 1013
leave message 1f no answer

r

r

2

ooo

r

2000 Chrysler Voyager V 6'
AM/FM cassette an toadttl:
53 000 m les e~~:cellent con
dillon $9 500 (740)'245
5157

1986 Honda V45 e)(cellent
1 mtles 2
condlt1on 1 3
new helmets $2 500 00 f1rm

ood

- - - , . , : - - : : - -- - : 1997 CR 80 EQuipped tor
racmg Very last $1 200
f1rm (740 )645 0873
1997 RM 125 Runs gdod
$1 000 11rm (740)645-0873

750 BoATS

r

;.

~E~n:; ~i~:f;ft:f~~~ :~~~

MOTORS

12 foot F berg la:;:;s hshmg
bOat tra iler etectr1c and 6
HP Trolling motors mora
(740)446 9791
----~---=

1984
Baytmer
W/ Cuddy
Cabin
(304)S75 8d56
after 6pm

19FT
call

1990 Regal Commodore
boat Stove relngerato1
bathroom sleeps 5 comfort
ably Cell (740)446 4576

C~MJIEilS
MoroN

&amp;

HUMES

1976 Starc raft 24 sell-con
talned In good condlt1on
$2 200 OBO (740)256·1069
after 4pm

I

r

&amp;

·--oifli'UiiRitiiSiiAiitiiEIIIi_.l

Buy or
sell
R1ver ne
Anloques 1124 East Man
on SA 124 E Pomeroy 740

R e c r e a t i onal
Veh cleiCamper
21-loot
Batman Tra1l L1te Furnace
AC Stove Refngerator
To1tet &amp; Shower 2 queen 1
regula r &amp; 1 ha lf Beds
(304)67 5 1695 or (304)593
2724

Sl· l{\ H Is

jiiiO

HmiE
1\U'RO\ F~\l~'&lt;t&gt;

4x4

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond IlOna I htet1me guar
antee local references fur
mshed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
0870 Rogers Basement
Wat er. proo fing

"p;;."""C
..'"L"""A~S-S
...'il'iF; ; I;-;E; ;-; D~S.,j

JET
AERATION MOTORS
flepa1red New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock Call Ron Evans 1
800 537 9528

.

CASH?

Klafsun Saturn Tann ng Bed
24 bulb 30 m1n T1mar Call
(304)675-4858 Evemng or
(304)675 1380 Day1
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams PJpe Rebar
For
Concrete
Angle
Channel Flat Bar Steel
Grattng
For
Dra1ns
Dr1veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday
tuesday Wednesday &amp;
Friday Bam 4 30pm Closed
Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday (740)446-7300

ETHE
EEZE!

Pork custom freezer meat
Call R&amp;R Packing 740 2459440 reference Blacks
Slide In
pup up
truck
camper good conditiOn
while 8 new refr~gerator
$2,000 (740)742 2821

• 3 Siurdy C"'dboaro Ga,.ge'Yaro
Sale S1gns 24' x 12"
• 3 Weeden Slakes

• 216 l'li!:'ng Labels
• Inventory Stlee!
• 4 Mtnt·Stgns to oe posted on bullel tn
boards at lau, Jd~ornats rnarxets ate
• 1 Seven slep rs Jetton s ~ eet ol~s
' Secrets of HO'II to Increase Prchts at
a Garage S.le

• 3 Mounttng Male•tals
• 6 Mutb cotort!d Balloons
• 1 Marker tor Stgns

2 BR CIA newly remodeled
$375
month
1ncludes
water/trash
P/U
$250
deposit (740)367·7092

AKC Reg1stered Basset
Hound pupptes Tn-colored
Psrents
on
prem1ses
(740)256·6887
AKC
Registered
labs
Excellent bloodlmes &amp; certi·
fiC8tlons 1 blond female 2
bled&lt; mates 3 blonp males
Ready Sept
11
Call
, (740)441 0013

\ilr'f!Oi '"'It

~ ....11.'"

C.¥1t1fS I~Ior•,.s•~p~

'l~&lt;,l:tff&lt;rl~~r~l~• ~ r rr

3 Day Ad:

I Day Ad:

3BA 2BA 70Y14 located 6
Dining room set solid oak
m1ies from Gallipolis State
double pedestal claw teet 6
Route 218 SSOO month
cha~rs
l J1gtlted
hutch
(740)256 1417 (740i256
l7 ~)441.()797
6228
GoOd Used Appliances
Mobtle Home At 2 $275
~nd
Aecon?thoned
month (304)593·3053
Guaranteed
WasHers
Ranges
and
NfCe 2BA home 1 mile from Dryers
Gallipolis, $450 per montl'l Befngerators Some start at
S400 deposit Refefences $95 Skaggs .twphanoes 76
Vine St (740)446-7398
required (7~)446 3413

--------For
sale
1998
Jeep
Wrangter 4x4 29 000 m11es
AJC
cru1se
au1oma11c
$ 10
Call (740)388
9 125

r

15
Boer
Male
Goats
TRUCKS
Championship bloodlines
FUR SALE
all ages all lull .blooded reg
1sterect w1th ABGA Adults
200 t F 150 Super Crew
proven
(740)2 45 0485
~~~~~526 Russ Moore
lanat 4~~:4 53 000 m 1tes
1:!::::::~:------, Pygmy goat 6 mas old excellent cond1t1on loaded
MiscELLANEOUs
Wethered Wou ld make a S21 000 (740)3860 151 o'
MEROIANI&gt;ISE
good pet $60 (740)645 (740)339 0564
~
0873
2004 Dodge VB auto quad
1972 Schult tra1ter 12 It
I "\' t'l. I, I.IWI '\ I 1.11 II',
cab bed cover 5 000 m1les
wide tlpout one fiberglass
red /gray 740 256 1417 or
and one aluminum lull SIZe
740 256 6228
p1ckup topper (740)441
8211
95 Chevy 1 ton ctuetlle crew
cab 454 $11 500 96 S-10
-,- - _ w_e_b_e_
o_H_o_rs_e_T-ra-ole-,
99 8
4 cyl $2 500 1740)992
38 wlshowtlme conversiOn
5025
3 horse tra1l er w/lull llvmg
98 Dodge Dakota 3 body &amp;
quarters Excellent cond
suspens1on 1ft standard a1r
han S25 995 DO call Harold
$5001 Police Impounds! 70 000 m1tes $4 000 080
(740 }385 7671
tram (740)256 9031
Cars!Trucks! SUV s
Computer wtth CO burner $500 Honda s
Che,..ys
scanner pr1nters computer Jeeps &amp; morel tor hst ngs
and v1deo table fax scan 800 366 98 13 ex V717
FOR SALE
ner
cop1er
(all1n one)
1986 Chevy El Ca'mmo for
(740 )4 46 8241
19B9 Ford 4x4 runs goOd
sale or trade tor small
$1 800 (740)368 8152
Couch $50 2 TV s $40 ConversiOn Van (304)675
entertainment cente1 $35 2 7790
1997 Ford F 150 4x4 la nat
Ut1hty carts $10 each vacu 1993 Toyota Camf'l LX 4 114K black leather nterJOr
urn
cleaner
$10 00 door auto 4 cyl PW POL cld player $9 200 OBO
(7 40)992-5544
92 93
17
0 U
ISCOUn U e
Grand Open tng Sale
..
S.;o:,'Hc:;..:;0"'
op quat ty warranties
lton WV Flea Marke
even•ngs and weekends
.
C
Fndays
aturdays and Sundays
606 922·7185

~x4
FoH SAt.t

2000 Dodge Durango RT
yellow 360 motor cct.cas
sette te at he1
S1 I 800
080
(740)25~ 1618 01
(740)255 6200

_•_•9::.•-----,.---

i,r,=:--------,

Try the

Classifieds!!

r

A trill!;
mNS\U

Aust raltan Shepherd pup
ptes $100 (740)~88 8~52

TV s from $10 1 OVO
Players
V1deo Game$
Computers Ectl now available lor Info call BOO 366
9850 ax M655

rLOO'king For
ANew Home?

10

$6.00 - 15 wotds or less
t $6,00 Kit
Gets You Great
AdvertiSing!

$9.00 - 15 words or less
t $6.00 Kit ,

11 5Gets
You Great
Advert1s1ng!

~alhpoh~ Bmlp tnbune

~omt ~Iea~ant l\eg1~ter

The Daily Sentinel

�'Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 3, 2004

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, September 3,. 2004
ALLEYOOP

www.mydai~ysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
NE-4\ Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
You.-

PUBLIC NOTICE

Rl~ht

ACROSS

l'"abll•: Notlt••s In New""'P•~-ll
tu Kuow, l""ll""'n.-d Righi 101 \ 'uut·

one-ton lour (4) wheel
drive Diesel truck
vehicle
will
be
received by the Meigs
Counly
Pomeroy Eagles
Commissioners
at
their office, c/o of the
BINGO 2171
Meigs
County
What would you lose if there was a fire
~·Second St, Pomeroy,
tion, or for an
Every Thursday
Courthouse ,
Third
.. ohio. The Farmers appointment
to
&amp; Sunday
Floor,
too
East
Inspect
collateral,
~Bank and Savings
Doors
Open ~:30
Second
Street, , For a Free Quote or Appointment 1
.Company Is -selling · prior to sale date conEarly
birds
starr
Public Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
lor cash In hand or tact Diane Rector or
Call:
·
Randy
Hays
at
992·
until
t2
noon,
c:arlllled check .the
6:30
IN THE MEIGS COON- Thursday, september
following collateral:
2t36.
Last Thursday of
TV COURT OF COM· t5, 2004 and opened
2000
POI!TIAC (9)1,2,3
every month
on that date In said
MON PLEAS
~and
Services~
~RAND
AM
CP
All
pack $5.00
office att :t5 p.m. and
IG2NF12TXYM7972~
Box
189
•
Middleport
Bring
this coupon
.
.
POMEROY, OHIO
read aloud lor the lol·
Public Notice
1992 BUICK REGAL
Buy
$5.00
CASE
NO.
04-CV-()88
I
o
w
i
n
g
:
4
s
lor
2G4WB54L9NI500137
IN THE. COMMON JAMES &amp; VIRGINIA Specifications
Bonanza Get
Licensed in Ohio and WV
said vehicle can be
The Farmers Bank PLEAS
COURT BRANNON, Plaintiffs,
SFREE
-vsobtained
from
·the
COUNTY,
and
Savings MEIGS
SAVILLA &amp;C.A. BAR· Comml'ssloners '
Company, Pomeroy, OHIO
,..,•• Englllft
at.
all, oHice at the above
Ohio, reserves · the Wells Fargo Bank NETI,
820 East Main St.
Dalendants.
Addr11ss
or
from
the
.
as
Minnesota,
N.A.,
right to bid at this
Pomeroy
TO
SAVILLA office of the Meigs
aale, end to withdraw Trustee lor Certificate
beside Larry"s Fruit Stand
the abova collateral Holders of SACO I, AND/OR C.A. BAR· County Emergency
Warranty :Repair •
;prior to sale. Funher, Inc., Series 2()()().3 c/o NETI, WIFE AND . Management Agency,
Mortgage HUSBAND, AND/OR · t17 East Memorial
Lawn Tractot &amp; Push
The Farmers Bank EMC
THEIR
UNKNOWN Drive; Pomeroy, Ohio
. and
Savings CoiporaUon
MOwers. Chain Saws.
ASSIGNS, SUCCES· 45769.
Company reserves Plaintiff
Chain· Sharpened
SORS, ADMINISTRA· Bids shall be sealed
the right to reject any vs.
&amp; Part s
TORS, EXECUTORS, and marked " Bid lor 4
Gary A. Jones
or all bids submitted.
New General Standby
DEVISEES, NEXT OF WD Vehicle"
: The
above Angela Jonea, at el
Generating Systems and
KIN OR HEIRS AT The Meigs County
"described collateral Defendants
Rol-Ai r Air Compressors
LAW, IF DECEASED, Com mIssIoners
Open 8:30-6:00 M-F;
:will be sold "as Is· Case No. 04 CV 072
· where Is'\ with no Judge Fred w. Ciow AND SPOUSES OF reserve the right to
Sat. 8:.10·2:00 ~~2- 1033
SAME, IF ANY.
reject any and or all
Pick-up and ddivel")· se rvice
· expreaaad or Implied Ill
• LEGAL NOTICE
Certain
mineral bids or any part
Now~n·icin l! Kerosene Heatm
;warranty given.
Gary A. Jones, rights were sever_,d thereof and to waive
• · For further lnlor·
::rAatlon, or for an whose last known from the surface In any Informality In any
Ta~e
Public Notice
Public Notice
-Appoln!ment
to address Is PO Box apx. 61.25 +I· AC , proposal.
:-thpect
collateral , 285, Mldd:eport, OH
located
In
the (9) 3, tO
The
application property of Southern
Unknown Southwest Quarter or·
: prior to sale date con· 45760;
process to lncorpo· Ohio Coal Company. Let me do rt for youi
:tact Diane Rector or · Spouse, If any, of Sec. 16, Olive Twp.,
. rale the use of explo· The
ares
perm It
Gary A. Jones, whose
' Randy Hays at
Meigs County. Ohio
Public Notice
slvea and a blasting encompasses 296.0
. 992·2136.
last known addreaa Is by Saville and C.A.
plan to Its current D· acres and Is located
PO
Box
285, Barnett. wile and hua· Notice of public meet- 0354
' 911,2,3
permit. on the Wilkesville and
Middleport,
OH band, In deed record- lng and Information southern Ohio ·coal Vale Mills
7 t/2
45760; Angela Jones, ed on or about March repository lor a Clean Company proposes minute
· U.S.G.S.
whose last known
26th·, 1945. The last · Ohio
Assistance to utilize blasting to quadrangle
• Public Notice
maps,
address Ia 46A Mill ,title
transaction Fund Grant
tacllltata the demon- approximately
4.5
Road,
&lt;ADDENDUM TO ITIEM Creek
Tho Meigs County lion and reclamation miles northeast of
Involving Sevilla and
Gallipolis, OH 4563t, C.A. Barrett concern- C o m m u n I I Y of two (2) coal stor- Wilkesville, Ohio.
"N0.8
and
; PUBLIC NOTICE
Unknowo Ing such mineral I m p r o v e m e n I ago silos. The specll·
The
application
·SOUTHERN
OHIO Spouse, If any, of rights, a lease record· Corporation is 'apply· lc location where process to incorpo·
Gary A. Jones, whol8 ad on or about lng lor a gran! from
: COAL COMPANY
blasting will dccur Is: rate the use of explo! RACCOON MINE NO. last known address Ia Saptember 27th 1948 the
Clean
Ohio Meigs county, Salem sives and a blasting
46A Mill Creek Rd., In Lease Vol. 41 . Page Assistance Fund lor a· township , Fraction 2. plan to Its current D·
3 • SALEM SHAFT
Gallipolis, OH 4563t, 2tt. Melga County Phase
PERMIT D-0453
II. on Southern Ohio 0355
permit.
Southern
.Ohio will take notice that · Lease ·Records. No E n v I r o n me n I a I Coal Company prop· Southern Ohio Coal
Coal Company hlis on June t5, 2004, title trensactlons con- Assessment of the · arty, locatad North ol Company proposes
aubmltted an applies· Walla Fargo Bank earning such severed former Midwest Steel Ohio State Route t24 to utilize blasting to
29670 Bashan Road
lion to revise coal Minnesota, N.A., as minerals exl~t ol proparly located at · approximately
1.8 facilitate the demoliRacine, Ohio
mining Permit NR· Trustee lor ·cenlllcate record
45771
In
Melga 736 E Main - St., miles East ol Salem tion and reclamation
0483·55 to the Ohio Holders of SACO I, County ·since · that • Pomeroy, Ohio. The cenlor, Ohio and of one (t) coal stor. 740·949·2217
Department
or Inc., Sarles 20003 c/o time .
. application Is avail- approximately
t.7 age silos. The specif·
Nalural Res-ources, EMC' ·
Mortgage
The current sur· able lor review at the
miles Northwest ol · lc location where ·
'Division of Mineral Corporation flied fts laca owners, James Meigs County Library
the lnier•ectlon ol blasting will occur is:
· to 1'0'x30' '
Resources Complaint In the and Vlrglnld Brannon. located at 2t6 W Main
Oho state Route t24
Meigs
County,
Management.
This Court of Common submit lhal under St. Pomerl, until ad 325.
Columbia Township,
Hours
permit Is loeated In
Pleas, Meigs County, Ohio Rev. Code Soc. October 27, 2004. A
This application Is Section
25
on
7:00AM
· 8:00 PM
Meigs County, Salem Ohio; Case No. 04 CV 530t.56 .at. seq. none public meetl g to d!s· on file tor public Southern Ohio Colli
072.
The
object
of,
Township, Section 32.
of the conditions cuss and sollch comviewing at the Meigs Company property,
Tho
permit
area and demand lor relief exist which would menta to the grant county
recorder's
approxlmalely
1.4
encompasses lwen· In, the complaint Is to . serve to preserve application will be Office, Meigs County miles Southeast ol
ty·lhree (23) acres foreclose the lien of such severed mineral held on October 26, Court House, tOO E. the Intersection of
and Ia located on the plaintiff's mongaga Interest; that thoae 2004 at the Meigs second ·
Street
.Ohio State Route 689
~WIIkeavllla 7.5 minute ~ recorded upon the
minerals have there· County Library local· Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ,and Meigs County
. U.S.G.S. quadrangle real estate deacrlbed fore re-merged ,. wlth ad at 216 W. Main and shall remain so Road 27; and approx·
:map, approxlmltety 2 below and In which the surlacalntarest In street, Pomeroy at It
for atleastthlrty days lmately 4.5 miles
mllaa southeast of plaintiff alleges that said tract, and are a.m. Any questions following the last Northeast
of
Wilkesville, Ohio on the foregoing defen- now owned by them.
may be referred to Mr. data of publication ol Wilkesville, Ohio ..
. the
properly
of dants have or claim
II you contend oth· Perry
Varnadoe,
this notice. Written
Is ~B~I~S~s=El:-::
· l--,
Franklin Real Eatate to have an Interest:
erwlse, you must fUe
Meigs
County
comments
or
onThis
fileapplication
for public
Situated In the a responsive plead· Economic Director at requests for an lnfor·
Company.
viewing at the Meigs
· The · appllc.atlon · Rutland Township,
mal conference conlng with lha· Cierk· ol 740-992·3034.
recorder's
.propo18a to make' a Meigs County, State Courts office and (9) 3
cernlng this applies· County
9fflce, Meigs County
. •
;post·mlnlng land uao of Ohio, and being In serve legal counsel
tlon may be flied with
Court House, 100 E.
New Homes • Vinyl
;change to provlda lor Section 12, Town 5 lor Plaintiffs on or
the
Division
of Second
Street,
.the permanent reten· North. Range 14 Waet before October 8,
Public Notice
Mineral · Resourcaa • Pomeroy, Ohio 45789 Siding • New Garages
tlon of an olllcelbtlth· of
the
Ohio 2004.
Management, anll shall remain so
• Repl acement
house •
building, Company's Purcha18 RES P E C T F U L L Y LEGAL-NOTICE
Permitting Section, for at least thlny days
Windows
. Roofing
:lfortable water aya. and being described SUBMITTED BY:
Southern Ohio Coal
t855 Fountain Square following the last
;tema Including a as lollowa: Beginning Frank A. . Lavelle, Company' has sub- Court, Building H·3, date ol publication of
COMMERciAL and
· ~ater 1toraga tank,
·at a point West about Esq. Attorney lor milled an application Columbus,
Ohio this notice. Written
RESIDENTIAL
paved and atoned 1830 feet and nonh PlalntiHs
to revise a coal min· 43224, within thirty comments
or
TES
accesa !ioeda, and about 2360 feet and Reg. No. 00t0t95
lng poril'llt •R-354-54 days alter the last requests lor an infor· FREE ESTIMA
-parking areas. The Nonh 1 deg. 30' 54" LAVELLE
LAW to
the
Ohio dale of publication of mal conference con·
740·992·7599
twenty·three (23) acre Eaat 473.78 teet from OFFICES. L.P.A.
Department .
of this notice.
corning
appllcearea aaaoclated wllh the Southeast comer
tlon'
may this
be flied
with r'======:::~
the revlalon had a of said Section t2, ~~= ~~~~ Street. ~r:~;r~n ~~s~~~~~:i (9) 3, 10, 11, 24
the · Division
of
· premlnll'!g land use of aakl point of begin- PostDfflceBox661
Rea our c a a
Mineral Resources
"paaturelantl''t but ning being I~ tha con· Athena, Ohio 4570t· Management.
The
Public Notice
Management,
will now be changed ter of Township Road 066t
permit area Is located
Permitting Section ,
to llllow for post-min· T·176 (Nichola Road) (740) 593-3347
In Meigs County, LEGAL NOTICE
t855 Fountain Sqijare.
lng lend Ul8 as a and being North t
(740) 592~656 • Fax
Salem
Township, Southern Ohio Coal Court, Building H-3,
."commercial alta".
dag. 30' 54" Eaat (8) 6, 13, 20, 27, (9) 3, Sections 8,t1,16, 17, Company has sub- Columbus,
Ohio
· The application Ia 473.78 teet from The tO
25, 26 and
32, mitted an appll~atlon 43224, within thlny
of
the
.on , file for public Junction
Fraction t, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, to revise a coal min- days after .the last •
.viewing at Melga Centerline or said
12, 18; 33, 34, 36; Ing permit tR-355-57 date of publication of
County Recorder's Township road T·178
Public Notice
Gallla
County, to
the
Ohio this notlc.e. omca, .Melga County (Nichola Road) and
Cheshire Township, Department
of (9) 3, 10, t7, 24
Courthouse, 100 E. County Road C-3 LEGAL NOTICE.
Section 36, VInton Natural Rea·o urces,
Creek OHIO
Second
Street, (Leading
County, Wllkeavll!e
Division ol Mineral
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 · Road); thanes South MJ,;IGS
COUNTY Township.
Section Resources
Public Notice
COUNTY 3E, on the propony of Management.
and shall remain ao 88 dag. 28' 06" Eaat MEIGS
The
lor at lealt thirty (30) 2V4.27 teet to the COURT OF COMMON Southern Ohio Coal permit area Is located The Meigs County
PLEAS
.
daya following the Weatarly line or a 1. t
Company and Leon
In Melga County, Floodplain Variance
last d!lle of publica· aero lot aa daecrlbed too · Eaat Second Pierce. The permit Columbia Township, Board will hold a varl·
In Meigs County Deed Street
tlon of thla notice.
· area encompasses Sections 13, t9, 25, ance request meeting
Written oommenta or Recorda Volume 245, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 t041 .0 acres and Ia 26, 31, Fraction 33, September 8 at 2:00
,rwquelta lor an lnlor· page 76, cro11lng . INRE: Woodrow W. located
on
the and Salem Township, p.m. In the Meigs
and Sections t6, t7, 23, C o u n t y
:mal conference may Iron rode at t9.5 leal Hall Jr., at al vt. Wilkesville
and 155.55 IHt lor Peggy L. Halt, at al
Rutland 7 112 minute 24, 29, 30, 34, 35. 36, Commissioners
· be filed with the
lhence c- No.IJ3.CV·150
: Division of Mineral reference;
U.S.G.S. quadrangle Fractions 2, 6, 17, 35,
·R e a o u r c e a Nonh 22 · deg. 42' Defendant Peggy L. mapa, approximately 36; vinton County, Office.
(9) 3, 7
:Management, 1855 Wast 32.731aet along ,Hall's 1181 known 4.5 miles nonheast of Wilkesville Township,
Southweaterly addrel8 Ia P.O. Box Wllkeavllla, Ohio.
•Fountain
Square the
Section 4E, on the
:court,
Columbua, nne of aeld 1.t acre 508, New Haven,Weat
25265.
to
the VIrginia,
·Ohio 43244, within lot
::'l hlrty (30) daya alter Nonhweltarly comer Defendant Peggy L '
:the last dlte of pullll· of aald 1.t acre lot; Hall waa lnvQived In 1
•Free EdllltiS•
thence Nonh B7 dag. motor vahlcle calli·
!cation of this notice.
55' East 139.22 feet •ion which occurred
;erzo,21
along the northerly on August 7, 1999, In
1813,10
line ol aald 1.1 acre the ·Township
ol
tot to a poet; thence Labanon,
Melga
I.
Public Notice
Ohio.
North 2 dag. 00' 33" CO'unty,
( ·,.n,t rul'liow
Weat44.5 lwlalong a Plaintiffs sustained
westerly line of a 1.1 severe and parma:! .
·PUBLIC NOTICE
Vinyl Siding
'NOTICE: Ia hereby acre lot aurveyed nent parsonallnjurlea
R~pliJctment Windows
that
·on April t875, by H. due to this motor
.given
Room Additions
Hyaoll, R.S. No. 2274 vehicle
collision.
;tatu~. September
Decks
are
,4, 2004, at 10:QI)a.m., lo·an Iron rod; thence Plaintiffs
Blown lnsulatio,;
•a public aele will be Nonh 88 dag. 28' 06" demanding · relief
;~w~c~ at 211 w. Second • Weal 405.69 feet to
from the Delendanta,
Pule Buildings
center.
of Including Peggy L.
.St., Pomeroy, Ohio. ·the
Garages
'The Farmers Bank Townllhlp Road T·176 Hall, on all counts of
and
Savings (Nichola Road) croaa· the complaint In an
James Keesee II, Owner
Company Ia selling lng . Iron rods 181 at amount . that exceeds
7411-992-2772
lor oaah In hand or 202.89
teet
and Twenty·llve
740-742-2332
certified . check 'the 387.99 1881 lor refer· Thouaand · dollars
740-416-1570
with
lollowlng colretaral:
enca thence South 1 ($25,000.001 ,
211111 Dodge Caravan deg.30'54" ¥Weat 130 lnteraata and costa of
w laii along the center action. • Defendant
t84GP25GOtB1t273 of Tawnahlp road T· Peggy L. Hall Ia
178 (Nichola Road) to required to Answer
3
yean experience
The Farmers Bank the point of begin- within twenty-eight
Saving• ning, . containing (28) days alter the
and
Homes
Company, Pomeroy, 1.053 acrea, more or publication data of
Log HQmeS
, Ohio, reserves tha l!t••· excepting all Octobat 1, 2004.
Post Frame
.right to ~ld at thla legal rlghla ol way. (7) 30, (8) 1,13, 20, 27,
No;:
It· (9) 3,
·aele, and to wllhdtaw Parcel
: the above collataral 00128.00
The
defendants
• prior to aela. Further,
• Public Notice
·The Farmers Bank named above are
and
and
Savings required Ia aniW8r
NOTICE
TO
BIDDERS
the
complaint
within
Company reserves
Free Estimates
(281 Sealed bide lor the
the right to reject any twenty-eight
740-667·6080
days (the 15th day o1 purchal8 of a 211115
or all bide aubmlttad.

• . NOTICE: Ia hereby
t.il~en
that
on
~~u~. September
·114, 2004, at tO:OO
:.._.m., a publiC aale will
..,. held at 2tt w

The
above
deacrl!;&gt;ttd collateral
will be sold "as Iswhere Is", with no
exprasl8d or Implied
warranty given.
For lunher Informa-

October) alter the last
publication of this
legal notice . This
legal notice will be
publlshad once e
week for six successive weeks.
(8) t3, 20 &amp; 27 and
(9)3, 20&amp; t7

IF YOU RENT

1

Phillip
Alder

MYERS PAVING

·• We can insure your valuables! "

Rocky Hupp Insurance
Financial
740-843-5264

No
• A g 8 7
• K 6 2

Henderson, WV .

sa; ·, .

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

HUPR
IMPORTS
Athena

IT'S I~ONIC

TtMT Ttffr
Al&gt;V~~TIS~

Jfouse Ckaning

Advertise
i·n this
space
for
$50 per
month

*liME

lllmiiDCE
*SEIMlESS
IITTlR

~~~~~
-"'---'--_.__L..L...::::I

~~~

Advertise
in this
§pace
for
$50 per
month

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

740r992·5232

.

~ f\OW'S ~~- _ \ [

~

IT'S UP!

"'~"?~fiJ

LOOK "T • AL'$ AUTO
GLASS'' OVEI&lt;. THERE
WITH THEIR. fiUGE
C.HI\MPIONSHI P
TI'-.OPHIES .

MEANWHILE , HERE

I~:..::;;.~

\

THEIR COACH IS GillINC. THEM ICE &lt;:REAM

"NO SOt&gt;A .

M-Fri 8:30-5:00
SaL 8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

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New&amp;Used

: BEnv .

475 South Church St.

ACWAI.L'!',

Ripley, WV 25271

ALREADY

CHANGED

"W.V's NI Chevy. Pontiac. Buick, Olds

SOME: ...

I!&lt; Custom Van Dealer"

: GARFIELD
l'VE OOffA FINe&gt; t&gt;. WAY
1'0 COOL OFF

CARPENTER
·. SERVICE.

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• Patio and Porch Dec:~
We do K lil·x~

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v.c. YOUNG Ill
1192-8215
P-.OIIIo
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Stop Compare
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
· by Luls Campos

· Celttrity Cipher cryptograms are maled from quotaOOos b'f llmous people, pul and pr-.m
Each letter In the cipher !ltlrds I« rotller

Today's clue: E161Qusis L

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PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'Singing is a trtck to get people lo listen to music
lor longer lhan lhey would ordinartly.' - DaVid Byrne

....

~

·Ofour
ltcrranot lone11 of
tcrambltd ward•

'bar 'lllrthdatY :.

aN~:ElaNPa

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source .

43 Flrll-akl
plan!
44 Type of
bean
48 Paper toy
47 Extend
over
48 Fall mo.
50 Ghost's
hello
52 Slaek plane

r::~:t:~' S(C~dl}\-~t.~s·
Wll
.... .. CLAY l. POllAN ___;;.__ __

you to open up new markets lor your
wares and talents. In tact, you could be
quite .lucky in areas where you had prevl·
oualy had difficulty in making Inroads In
commerce and trade .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ........ Steer clear
of friends or a55ociates who alwaya do
things by rote, because you will be t&amp;r
luckier today in dealings you have w ith
those whO use their imagination. creatlvl·
ty and Initiative.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- If roadblocks
should confront you today, you'll be quite
ingenious at devising ways to outflank
them . Once you &lt;tero in on -a n objective , it
isn't llk:ety you'll "tet anything stand in your
way.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) ~ Valuable
contacts can be made tOday at social
gatherings where there may be a number
ol Individuals you haven 't met before. Set
sail on fresh seas that could take you to
lucky places.
•
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) -You'll
be luckiest today in situations that hOld
high ambitions -nd lofty goals, so now Is
the time to go after those tempting bigge r·
than-life targets you'....e been yearning lor,
and then play to win .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)- People
who58 stature has always intimidated you
will not do 90 today. You'll know how to cut
yOur fears down to manageable propo'r·
liOns and mingle easily In the realm ol the
maje stic.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Today
you 'll be able to see possibilities in places
otherS can'l or won't. Just don 't allow
yourselt to be d6soouraged by tt1e negattve thinking or those who view obstacles
aa insurmountable.
PIS CES (Feb. 20· Marcli 20) Partnership activities coutq be mare fortunate for you than usual today, so It you get
a chance to team up with a go-getter, hop
along' lor the ride and see where it takes
you .
ARI ES {March 21·Apri119)- The PpUIblllties to add .to your resources lOok pretty good today, but rewards are not likely to
come lrom ventures that have speculative
overtones. Don't try to gain through gambling.
TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) - You have
the ability 19 get along with friends B':Jd
aiSSOCiatea today and you shoukt have
many happy aoclal encounters , but watch
what you say to your family, Worda can
hurt.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20) - 1\n irf1)01"tant goal can be realized today through
.ame hard won.. and a bit ol luck that
comes your ytay. The one thing that can
trip you up Ia negative thoughtl directing
your a~tona .
CANCER (June 21.Juiy 22)- Vo!-J'relike·
ly to come IJP with some 8)(Citi ng Ideas
today which could turn out to be lUCky fer
you In your dttallngs, but be careful not to
put any money on them before work ing
out the klnka.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - Outstanding
achievements are poaaibte for you today
In s.varal ar••• ln wh ich you operate
through your concerted effort., yet you
eould diecount • lucky break juat becauH ·
It com.. nay.

ON

i

39 Cylindrical
beg
40 Eggyung
42 A'mbergrla

Who said this? ~How horrible, fantast ic,
incredible it is that we should be digging
trenches and trying on gas masks here
because of a quarrel in a faraway country
between people of whom we know ~th­
ing."
Some bridge deals are ~ke fighting in the
trenches. with neither side sure who can
. make what. Good luck al judging correct-

rH£

• New /;lomes
• Garages

•.Complete
Remodeling

=pa

Double. efforts
to declare

~ 8811:1..\o\&gt;lal'S
DfiJil.
IN'mf. CdR O,.•IS ~a~

-mg

• Vinyl Siding I Painting

,.
5 "'
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TARSAY
1

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0 F MA Y

J'. I ·r I
• Variely may be the spice of
lile," pondered the old genl, •
but the grocery bills get paid by

11

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UN5C RAM6lf LETlERSI

FOR ~NSWER

.

seu M-UTS

ANSWElS

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Drover.,. Gamut- Vague- Potent - MORTGAGED
Father to his newly married son, • A man'sdeeds can be
a worry· to him especially if they're l]eav1ly
MORTGAGED."
.

ARLO &amp;JANIS

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By Berlilea Bede Osol
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West

ly, bul 11 you have a double fil (31 leasl ·
eight combined cards in two suits), try to .
becbme the declaring sid.e.
·
First. though, look only_at·the West hand.
You know th at partner has an opening bid
with club length. South·has a !)pads-diamond two-suiter, and North holds 10·12
support points with four spades. Do you
agree with your penalty double? What
would you lead against five spades dou·
bled?
Note South's four-diamond bid. He knew
about the spade fit. so showed his sec. and suit to help North to judge should the
opponents go to five clubs. And when
West did that, North had an easy fivespade bid because he knew of the double
fit. Observe that five clubs makes easily.
With good defensive cards in the red
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·
This contract always goes tWo down. But
probably the best lead for West is the
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know what to do next. Here, West would
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The quotalion was from Neville
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27, 1938, describing Germany's annexalion of lho Sudelen!Snd . World War II
started almost a year later, on this date.

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�••

: :Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 3, 2004

www.mydailrsentinel.com

'

Yankees continue to·
get even with Tribe
~ NPW YORK {AP) - That
~ord-setting defeat hit the
New York Yankees like a
tiunch in the face, stirring up
iheir pride and refocusing thelJ'
llttenUon.
· Gary Sheffield had three
RBis to reach 100 for the sevenY! time, Jon Lieber pitched
sl!ven shutout innings and Alex
ROdriguez ·hit a three-run
h&lt;nner Thursday night to lead
1)1ew York to its second straight
win, 9-1 over the Cleveland
(ndians.
··
With its AL East .lead over
second-place Boston cuf to 3
112-g&lt;!IDes from 10 1/2 on Aug.
1(). the Yankees have faced a
torrenl, of questions thi:s week,
'
6SpeCially following Tuesday
r · rlight's 22..0 loss to the Indians .
.I
New York rebounded with a 53 victory Wednesday, then
quickly broke on top Thursday.
"A game like that can wake
you .up," Sheffield said. · "We
looked like we were just trying
to get the schedule over with.
We got a wake-up call. Now
we've got a pennant , race
going."
. Jorge Posada hit an RBI sin·
gle in the first and Rodriguez
· hit his 33rd homer to-cap a five·
run second against Cliff Lee
(10-7).

But even with the two wins,
the Yankees failed to increase
their margin over the Red-Sox,
who beat Anaheim 4-3 to
sweep a three-game series. The
Red Sox have won 21 of their
last 25 ,games.
'The other night was a dark
time," Yankees manager Joe
Torre said. "Hopefully, it
increases our detennination to
show ourselves what kind of a
team we are."
Sheffield hit an RBI single
off third baseman Casey Blake
in the second, had a run-scor. ing double in the fourth against
Kazuhito Tadano, doubled
again in the sixth and added a
sacrifice fly in the eighth to
raise his RBis total to 101. He
became only the second player
to reach 100 RBis )Vith five
teams, according to the Elias
Spons Bureau, the first since

Hall of Farner Dan Brouthers
from 1887-94.
.
Fans periodically serenaded
Sheffield with chants of "M-VP 1 M· V-P 1"
"If they decide it; I guess I
win it,'' said Sheffield, wearing
a Jim Brown No. 32 Cleveland
Browns jersey after the game.
Lieber (I 0-8) follo~ed
Orlando Hernandez's seven
innings of. one-ru~ ball
Wednesday with a stellar effort
of his own. He let just one run·
ner get past first base, giving up
five hits. strikjng out three and
walking one.
"It's great, especially with
what this team 'did to us a coupie of days ago," he said. "I
know it's still fresh in my mind,
. my mouth."
Lieber, New York's fifth
starter at .the beginning of the
season, and Hernandez (6-0),
who missed the first half while
recovering from shoulder
surgery, have combined for 16
wins, exactly half the total of
New York's top three starters,
Kevin Brown (10·3), Mike
M ussina (9-8) and ' Javier
V~uez (13-8).
Suil regaining ann strength
following elbow surgery in
August 2002, Lieber .had his
first scoreless outing since
pitching ei~ht shutout innings
for the Chicago Cubs against
the New York Mets on April 9,
2002.
"I finally can say I felt like
my old self tonight.:• Lieber
srud.
. Paul Quantrill pitched the
eighth and was followed by
Steve Karsay, who had been ,
sidelined since the end .of the
2002 season with back and
shoulder injuries !hat needed
operations. After receiving a
btg ovation when he was intraduced, Katsay allowed a home
run on his ftrst pitch to Victor
Martinez.
"Not reall_y the way I envjsioned startmg out after two
years," Karsay said. "I guess he
dido 't ' get the memo that I
haven't pitched in two years, to
kind of take a pitch and see
what I've got."

a. ....... ~ .. ....,.

Close
from Page 81

ALONG THE RIVER

LIVI~(;

At the Movies: 'Paparazzi, C6

Hummer H2 adds truck version, 01

COWl all~- 111nqe Jim -.iml L..Jin. 1, 2002 (01"** Bowl): s. ca••

_.,..

pr1Dr1Dihe2001- 21, Ohlo6t.28
niCIOidl far Big 'llln:
I I IR '
close games," Tressel said, when asked
ld1ool8
in
reguiiHNion
ll1d
bowl
QlltMII
W.SIIlt
21:
No.8
Ohio
St. 23; Clnciolll tt
about the Buckeyes' knack for pulling
decided
b
y
.
or
....,111**:
W()ct. 111: No.4 Ohio St. 111. vnr cl '*114
out narrow wins. (Now you see why . Sltlalll-....:.~. , Jln: 11-.....,.Pcl. , W&lt;)9t.26:No.40hioSt13,'"-M8L7
Tressel says, "I tend to see the glass as
Iowa .......................7-6 ...........:............583
w.Nov. 9: No.3 Ohio St. 10. ~'urdU*.
half-empty.")
Michigan ................... , ........................500
w-Noll. 16; No. 2 Ohio st. 23, lllnola 18 '
"I remember UCLA and Wisconsin
Mtchigart St.n•••••••,.:.&amp;-8 .........."'''''''''''''500
(OT)
.
.
our first year. And P~nn State, we
lndlana ...................3-3 ........................500
W·Nov. 23: No. 2 Ohio · St. 14, No. 12
Mlnnesotil .............,4-5 ........................+44 M!chigar'19
·
·
· ·
could have kicked the game-winner
Wlsoonsin ...............7-11 ........,.....:.......~.
W-darl. 3, 2003 (~Bowl): No. 2 \)1110
.and instead w.e made the record books.
for Joe 'Pa beating the all-time (coach- · ~rthwe~terfl.~ ....,:•..~ ...... :.,.......... ~ .....,.,., · St. 31, No.1 Mleml24 (20T) · · ,
1~ .......... ~........ ~.5:5 ........... :.~.\········.306
~ ·. . . ~ 8 •.• ..,n .~
·
;··.
ing wins) record," Tressel said. "We
12 ....,..................333
Purdue
...................
eW·S~;IJ:
No.2
Ohio
St.
11J,•Siin
Diego
81.
i ·
lost at Wisconsin this past year."
Incredibly, half of Ohio State's 14
3 Ohlo st. 44, ·Nq: 24 N,
wins during its perfect record and .; Ohio State. 1S.:S .750
N""""•
,.,w...
,
.
81 38 1""'1
C8ll8
.
.
national championship in 2002 were
Games deQ&lt;Ied 11y 1 or 1ew1r points
W-Sepl. 20! No.. 5 Ohio St. 2,f. l3owllng
decided by seven or fewer points. The
li001
Srrr~m
Green
, ...
capper was the double-overtime victo- ' · L-stlpt. 22: .... 12 UClA 13, NQ..21 Ohio I.-Oct..17.
11: No. 23 'NIIcol\'11117, ~ 3 Ohio '
ry over top-ranked Miami in the Fiesta
St: 6.
'."""'Sl10
.
: ··
'
Bowl, 31-24.
L-oct.13:wia.20,No,21 Ohlost 11 '
W-Nov. 1'$: , No. 4 &lt;;l!llo. St. 36, No. 11_ ·
A year ago, the' Buckeyes won five
L-Oct. 27: Penn St.·29, 'Qillo St. 21 . ; . Purdue 13 (¢1')
~;c. •
.. 1
of six dose calls. They b,e at North
W.NOY. 3: Ohio st. 31, Minnesota 2&amp;
W..Jan. 1, tool! (Fiesta li?9"'): ,No. 7 Ohio
Carolina State in triple-overtime , 44~NoY-~:pt1kl St.2~~ l~- M~9,1n20 ,· .Sf.35., NO;B~an~~.26
. . . "~ . 1
38, and Purdue 16-13 in overtime and
gives ·you. In other words, Ohio State
edged San Diego State 16-13 and Buckeyes' corner:
Bowling Green 24-17. They closed the
• Extra-special special teams. No seldom turns over the ball and is conyear with a 35-28 win over Kansas team in college football over the past tent to play keepaway with its running
State, again in the Fiesta BowJ.
three years has been better in the kick- game when the game is tight.
While winning II of 13 games and ing game. Over the past two seasons,
"We're a ball-control offense trying
for
example,
place-kicker
Mike
to
maintain the clock," Fraser said.
finishing No. 4 in the final rankings
last season, the Buckeyes lost at Nugent has converted 41 of 47 field "On defense we want to get after them
Wisconsin 17 -I 0 on a fourth-quarter goals.
. and get the ball back to the offense." ·
TD bomb and were manhandled at
He says the coaching staff constant·
• Defense wins the close ones. Ohio
Michigan, ,35-21. ·
ly drills the. Buckeyes .on "situations" State has had 12 defensive players
There are those who see the - . back-against-the-wall phlys that selected All-Big Ten the past three
Buckeyes winning a game on a last- require last-minute heroics.
years, six (seven, if you count Nugent)
minute field goal and consider it
"It's as if they ·(the coaches) get us have been named Ali-Americ'an and
lucky. Or even look at' Ohio State as . ready for every single kind of 14 have been taken in the NFL draft
not that good.
·
moment," he said.
· since 2002. (For the record, every one
"People can say, 'You're not blowLast year's punter, B.J. Sander, of those players was brought to Ohio
ing out teams, you're not winning by a should have been the team MVP. After State by John Cooper, fired to make
lot.' But if you.go undefeated with our three middling years watching games way for Tressel after the 2000 season.)
schedule, no matter what you're going from the sideline, he had a monster
Choose kicking, a lack of mistakes,
to be playing for a national champi- senior season, averaging 43.3 yards defense, talent, luck or guts- but the
onship," linebacker Bobby C,arpenter per punt and winning the Ray Guy Buckeyes always seem to eke out the
said. "So I don't care if we win games Award as the nation 's top punter.
close ones. What's more, they 've done
by 21 points or 3 points."
...
"I saw a stat that was mind-boggling it so much it's become second nature.
Defensive end Simon Fraser said the to me," Tressel sa_Ld. "Our opponents
"The biggest thing is having faith ·
. series of close calls is a tribute to the took over the ball 172 times last year that you know you're going to win
Buckeyes.' mental toughness·.
against our defense. Fifty-six times, that game," Carpenter said .. "We've
"It's the kind of character we have they started inside their own 20. So had so many (close games) over the
on the team," Fraser said. "Even obviously our punt game was out of years, yet there really hasn't been a
though the game might not be going this world."
do].lbt in my mind when the game
the way we want it to - we're not . • Low-risk offense. No one will mis- comes down to it ... that we're going ·
blowing out ·a teall} or we may be take the Buckeyes for Florida State or to get the job done . I remember my
down- we're going to keep on fight- Southern Cal when it comes to wide- freshman year we had 3-4 games
ing until the game's over."
open offensive attacks. Tressel has decided by a touchdown and ~ would
Tressel's and Ohio State's success is said that his ideal quarterback has two start to get nervous.
attributable to many things, but there primary jobs: make no mistakes and
"But I never thought we were in
appear to be se.veral constants in the take advantage . of what the defense jeopardy of losing ."
1011,

tt.. f t

..

'

'

tm
Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs ~ounties

~r=~t;;'~~;;;dj;'i;'&amp;:76~4 ' ~~;:No.
a-

under,.,.....

_.,..._ .

Kerry·crewmate rallies Kerry supporters

SPORTS
• RV struggles at
Nelsonville. See Page B2
• NASCA A .Weekend
See Page B5 ·
• Buckeyes top
Cincinnati. ·See Page 81
• Marauders pound
Bulldogs ~ See Page Bl

Page AS
• Aaron Miahael Rose
• Virgie Mae Sisler ·
.
• Clinton Bailey
• Richard Earl Meadows
• Evelyn Gilliand

The
Gallipolis
Daily
Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not publish on
Monday, and the business
office will be closed for the
Labor Day holiday.
Normal business hours will
resume Tuesday.
I

•

WEATIIER .

- o n Page A&amp;

INDEX
4 SECI10NS :- 24 PAGES

·--·-·--

·-·-·It,-•_

•QIMII

_,1111

_

.... _..

·-·---

J.

REED

AND MtlLtsstA RussELL

MIDDLEPORT -Jim
Wasser of Illinois. who
served ·for six weeks aboard
a U.S. Navy swift boat with
Presidential
Democratic
candidate John Kerry. criticized attacks against Kerry
by fellow Vietnam veterans
during visits to Middleport
and Gallipolis on Friday.
Wasser, a union electrician
who lives near Chicago,
served as a radarman on
PCF-.44 with Kerry. He. was
second in command and the
leading petty officer on the
swift boat.
He said Friday he has
remained friends with Kerry
since their se~vice in

Vietnam during the late Saturday.
1960s. and is traveling
"This is someone who
around the country. volun- know&gt; John Kerry. certainly
teering hi s time to speak in better than' I, and cenainly
support ot his former com- better than the people run·
rade .
· ning those dispicable . ads
He has appeared on a slamming Kerry \ military
number of national radio record," Strickland said.
shows, and answered the roll
''John Kerry is the same
call for the Illinois delega· man now as he was then."
tion at the Democratic · Wasser said. "He's engagNational Convention in ing. caring ancl wmpassion·
Boston when Kerry was ate. He doesn't consider
nominated as the party's himself a hero . although
candidate .
many have called him one.
· Wasser was accompanied Instead, he considers him"
on his trip to Meigs, Gallia self a veteran and a patriot."
and Jackson counti es by
Wasser countered criti·
U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland, D· cism offered by Swift Boat
Lisbpn.
and
other Veterans for Truth, a soft·
Democratic candidates. He money campaign organiza· .
was to conclude his southern lion now running anti-Kerry
Ohio visit by appearing in a advertisements on national
parade in Portsmouth on television.

Around Town
Celebrations
. ' .
Classifieds .
Comics
Editorials
'
Obituaries
Region

.

A3
-C4

D3
insert

A4
As
A2

Sports

·Bl

Weather

A6

© 2004 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

-

The Rev. Keith Rader adds another picture to a collage posted
on a wall at the new Mulberry Community Center. Set to open
this month, more than 5,000 hours of volunteer work have
gone into getting the old Pomeroy elementary school ready for
the upcoming opening day. (Ti m Maloney/photo)
The Gary Stewart Group will be amo~g the performers opening the Valley Artist Series'
2004-05 concert series Sept. 12 from 3 to 6 p.m. at the University of Rio Grande with its
Festive Fall Gala. (Submitted)

Mulberry c;::ommunity
·
Center on·verge of opening Valley Artist Series to kick ofF new season
. BY TtM .MALONEY

Christian community in. the
spirit of helping others.
Sometime this month, that
coming together is going to
take place physically, in addi -

receive a free ticket for the gala.
NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Others, who may be interested
in becoming members
POMEROY - For years,
RIO GRANDE - The of the VAS. are encouraged
the
Meigs
County
Valley Anist Series will kick· to attend at a a cost of$10. If
Cooperative
Parish . has
off the 2004-05 concert series · they purchase a season tickPiease see Verge, AS
brought together the local
with the Festive Fall Gala, · et, their $10 payment will be
scheduled for 3 to 6 p.m. credited to their ticket cost.
Sunday, Sept. 12 in the
Season tickets are $45 for
Student Center Annex Dining adults, entitling ihem to the
Hall on the campus of the gala and six other outstand·
ing performances. Senior
University of Rio Gmnde.
"So many of o.ur suppon- season tickets are $40 each.
ers have purchased season while children, Up to age 16,
tickets and made donations pay only $32 for the series.
Brochures with ticket appl.ias Friends of the Valley
Artist Series over past years, cation and program series listto be sure we continue to · ing are available at the Gallia
bring this series 10 the Fine County Convention and
and Performing Arts Center Visitors Bureau, French An
at the University of Rio Colony and Gall.ia Counly
Grande,'' said Gary Stewart, Chamber of.Commerce.
president of the VAS.
For more information
"We wanted a way to rec· about season tickets. call Lee
Monty Blanton, president of the mental retardation assembly
ognize
their loyalty, as well as Lee in Meigs County at
for the Ohio Civil Service Employee Association, addresses cit·
attract
new
subscribers to the (740) 949-2454 ; Terry Casto
izens Saturday in the Gallipolis City · Park about the lawsuit
upcoming series. The board in Point Pleasant. W.Va .. at
that threatens to close twelve mental retardation facilities .in felt the Festive Fall Gala was (304) . 675-3491 and in
Ohio, including GJ&gt;G; "(Ian McNemar;photo)
the perfect answer.'' h~ added. Gallipolis. Saundra Koby at
The gala will feature enter- {740) 446- 9356. or Jan
tainment by the Gary Stcwan Thaler at {740) 446- 4425.
Group . In addition, area
All concens are held in the
dance clubs will be. in atten· FineandPetfonningArtsCenter
dance to demonstrate their at the Univet&gt;ity of Rio Grande.
Opening season will be
Ohio Civil Service Employee skills on the dance floor.
IAN McNEMAR
IMCNEMAR@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM Association (OCSEA) rallied·
All those who purcha,o;e ~- "Grandstaff' at 8 p.m.. Oct. 9.
in the Gallipolis City Park son tickets lOr the 2004-05 sea- Grandstaff is a duo compri&gt;ed
GALLIPOLIS
Saturday to discuss the pend- son in advance. or become of Wil and Langdon Reid. sons
Friends of the Valley Artist of Harold and Don Reid of the
Concernetl citizens, politi.
Pluse
see
GDC.
AS
Series
cians. and members of the
. through. donations will Statler Bruthe~. Their mw.ic is
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

STAFF REPORT

Possible':federal funding cuts
may result in GDC's closing

•QIIUIII

.• Taxes, Togs, Tttle Fees exira. GM owner lcmiiiY rebate indudecl in ~ price of IIIW whide .._ where apptlalble. ••On approved
cnd'tt. On saledell models. Not responsiYe for IYPc9aplrical.-rcws. Pr~ good Seplemller htlhrauF Seplllnfler 51h.
CMIY8GUI

-

:,

I ~ l II '

West VlJ 'fl tl Gewy, Pat!' , Wdr, W c.t. V._DuhL .

I&lt;,.

'
Take 1-T71o Ripley FAIRPI.AtN lnlerchange

Mond., • lalurd., 9 •• • 9 , . • .._...., I , . • I , . •

L''OIDAY

(exk t32) Tum North on Rl21,
Dealership is 3 miles on left

-----

------ - - -·- -

Harold Norman (right) of Gallipolis talks with Jim Wasser, a
Vietnam veteran who served with Senator John Kerry, outside
the Galli a County Democratic headquarters Friday. Wasser has
been traveling around the country promoting Senator John
Kerry and will continue until the November election. (ian
McNemar /photo)

0BITUARIFS

No newspaper
on Monday

•

BRIAN

-

...

--- .•

positive. tells good stories and
evokes real emotions.
On Oct. 21. "ln the Mood"
will be the featured enter·
tainment. This group presents a retro 1940's musical
revue. featuring the In the
Mood singers and dancers,'
wilh the sensational String of
Pearls big band orchestra.
The River Magic Chorus
of the Sweet Adelines
International, along with the
Treblemakers. will present
Barbershop t'avorites. including a number of patriotic renditions. on Nov. 7.
The Dallas Br.JSS will be coming to URG Jan. 17. This brass
quintet, with a full complement
of drums and percussion, creates
a perfonning entity of extraordinary range. frum classical mas·
teipieces to Dixieland, swing,
Broadway, Hollywood, folk and
patriotic music.
A local production of the
Gilben and Sullivan opera.
"Pirales of Penzance". will
be performed April 2 and 3.
This has been . a favorite of
mu sical theatre fans since its
premiere in 1879.
To close the sea&lt;;on, the Battle
Creek Boychoir will appear in
concen April 23. This boychoir.
which began in 1980, has a
repenoire of . not only great
sacred works. but als6 samplings
fium many other music-.;! styles.

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